United States v. Reyes

239 F.3d 722, 2001 WL 55600
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 2001
Docket99-20188
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 239 F.3d 722 (United States v. Reyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Reyes, 239 F.3d 722, 2001 WL 55600 (5th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

DAVID FOLSOM, District Judge:

After a three-month-long trial, Appellants-Defendants Ben T. Reyes and Elizabeth (“Betti”) Maldonado (hereinafter “Reyes” and “Maldonado” respectively) were convicted of bribery and conspiracy to commit bribery and Reyes of mail fraud. Reyes and Maldonado appeal their convictions and the sentences that followed. We find no error as to either defendant and therefore affirm the district court’s rulings in all respects.

*726 I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In August 1995, the FBI instituted a sting operation in connection with its investigation into allegations of official wrongdoing by Houston city councilman Ben Reyes. The allegations centered on charges by Berta Flores — Reyes’s “political enemy” and a paid informant to the FBI — that Reyes had received kickbacks on city contracts. The centerpiece of the FBI’s operation was a fictitious corporation dubbed the “Cayman Group.” The Cayman Group was purportedly interested in investment opportunities in hotels, resorts, and real estate. It was also represented that the company was comprised of wealthy, Hispanic foreign nationals and was based in South America. The FBI made one of its agents, Robert Dogium, president; Julio Molineiro, a paid confidential informant, agreed to act as a representative for the company. 1 The account of the sting operation that follows is largely undisputed.

A. Reyes’s Initial Involvement with the Cayman Group

First contact between the Cayman Group and Reyes occurred August 1, 1995, when Molineiro and Reyes met at Reyes’s district office. The meeting, like most during the operation, was recorded. Moli-neiro stated that the Cayman Group was looking for opportunities to invest in hotels, resorts, and the like. Reyes referred Molineiro to his brother, Gregg, who, Reyes said, had in the past received $20 million in city contracts. Reyes also introduced Molineiro to a second brother, Tony, who likewise had been successful in obtaining city contracts.

On August 16, Gregg, along with Tony, met with Molineiro. The three discussed the city’s plan to build a hotel adjacent to the downtown convention center (the “hotel project”). Gregg explained that one of the bidders on the project, Wayne Dud-dlesten, had submitted a plan that called for ethnic minority financing (the “Dud-dlesten plan”). Gregg urged Molineiro and the Cayman Group to consider the project “carefully.” The next day, Gregg touted Reyes’s ability to push business through the city council. Gregg noted, however, that Reyes’s assistance came at a price: “It’s not free, that’s what Ben says.” Gregg requested that Molineiro keep their conversations “very confidential.” Later that day, Reyes confirmed that he expected to receive a fee from the developer that won the hotel project.

On August 23, Gregg called Molineiro to confirm the Cayman Group’s interest in the hotel project. The next day, Molineiro asked whether Reyes was committed to any other bidders, “or is he going to get the contract for us?” Gregg responded: “For us! For us! Because, well, he’s going to be part of this.” On August 25, Tony emphasized that the Cayman Group’s involvement in the hotel project would be a joint venture, involving “myself, you, ... Ben, and Gregg.” Tony, however, cautioned Molineiro that Reyes “has to be careful ... [because] it’s a conflict of interest.” At the same time, though, Tony emphasized that “it’s almost certain [that Reyes] can get the deal.” On September 7, regarding Reyes’s involvement in the hotel project, Tony stated that Reyes’s “expenses are included there in several areas.... We have always asked between forty-five and fifty percent. Let’s say fifty. I, Ben, and Gregg are going to be included in the fifty.”

On September 13, Tony asked Molineiro to meet him the next day. Tony said the meeting was needed to discuss “something very urgent” but explained that he would “rather not talk too much about this on the phone.” The next day, Tony provided Mo-lineiro with a letter expressing interest in the hotel project and asked him to send it to Duddlesten. Tony explained that it was Reyes “who is asking for this.” Tony said the letter was drafted by a friend of Reyes’s who is a consultant to Duddlesten. Tony also recommended that the Cayman Group change its name but cautioned that, *727 whatever name was chosen, it must not suggest a conflict of interest. Tony explained that if the Reyeses’ interest in the hotel project were exposed, “we’ll lose Ben’s vote. So we don’t want to do that.”

Before the September 14 meeting ended, Tony urged Molineiro to send the letter to Duddlesten by the following day. Molineiro responded that he had to confer with his associates first. Tony called Reyes to explain that the letter might be delayed. Reyes insisted that if the letter was not sent by the next day, the opportunity to invest in the hotel project might be lost. Tony decided he would send the letter himself, an idea Reyes said would be “a good way for [Duddlesten] to see that we’re working on it.”

Molineiro had several times invited Reyes and his family to Florida to meet with a partner in the Cayman Group. On September 23, Reyes, his son, and Tony flew first-class to Florida on tickets purchased by the Cayman Group. The Reyeses’ lodging at a Florida resort was also paid by the Cayman Group. Reyes and Tony met with Molineiro, Agent Dogi-um, and a second FBI agent, Len Carey. The five discussed the opportunity presented by the Duddlesten plan. Like he had before, Tony warned that Reyes’s interest could not become public; further, Reyes himself said that he could not be part of the deal because of his position on the city council. The last day of the trip, however, Tony backpedaled: he told Moli-neiro that Reyes expected to be paid for his work on the project but that he felt uncomfortable admitting as much in front of Carey. Later, with Reyes present, Tony again asked Molineiro to change the Cayman Group’s name. Tony also explained that he and Reyes had selected a Houston representative for the Cayman Group: “[W]e already have a Hispanic lawyer who’s very smart ... [and] a trustworthy friend.... He’s going to be your partner in this.” The lawyer, Isaías Torres, was described as Reyes’s “political friend.” Reyes explained that Torres would act as “the front.”

On October 5, Torres delivered to Dud-dlesten’s office the September 14 letter Tony had provided Molineiro. The letter represented that Torres was the Cayman Group’s agent; instead of “Cayman Group,” however, the company was referred to as the “Latin American Enterprise Group.” On October 19, Torres attended a city council meeting, the purpose of which was to discuss the competing bids for the hotel project. Torres’s attendance was at the invitation of Duddlesten, who had previously written Torres about the meeting. Reyes in his capacity as a city councilman was also present at the meeting. Though he never revealed that he might have an interest in the Duddlesten plan, Reyes asked a number of questions about the competing bids. In a letter dated October 31, Duddlesten thanked Torres for his support, promised to keep in touch, and enclosed a number of documents concerning the Duddlesten plan.

On November 3, Tony declared to Moli-neiro that he would no longer participate in the hotel project: “I told Ben, well, if you want to be in charge, you be in charge....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 F.3d 722, 2001 WL 55600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-reyes-ca5-2001.