United States v. Richard Messina

131 F.3d 36, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 28600, 1997 WL 794188
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 1997
Docket410, Docket 96-1789
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 131 F.3d 36 (United States v. Richard Messina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Richard Messina, 131 F.3d 36, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 28600, 1997 WL 794188 (2d Cir. 1997).

Opinion

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Richard Messina appeals his conviction and 151-month sentence on a single count of extortion. We conclude that his arguments are meritless, and affirm.

I. Background

MeSsina, a disbarred lawyer, was working as a business and financial consultant. One of his clients, Richard Spence, ran an operation that laundered drug money. Messina appears not to have had any knowledge of the money laundering scheme, and was never charged with involvement in it. He did, however, assist Spence in making and managing an investment in Biltmore Mortgage Company, which Spence had decided would both afford new business opportunities and serve as a good vehicle for laundering fimds.

Biltmore proved to be a bad investment. Its president, James Clooney, had so mismanaged the company’s escrow accounts that the company was in serious danger of losing *38 its operating license if state or federal regulators learned of its perilous financial condition. Working through Messina, Spence agreed to provide Clooney with large additional sums of money to replenish Biltmore’s depleted escrow accounts, thereby staving off the company’s collapse. In exchange, Cloo-ney agreed not only to repay those sums but also to refund Spence’s original investment. The total amount Spence hoped to receive from Clooney was $237,000.

Clooney did not, however, make the agreed-upon repayments to Spence. Messi-na therefore engaged in more earnest attempts to collect on the “debt” on Spence’s behalf. He negotiated with Clooney for partial payment in the form of, among other things, two houses that Clooney owned, and some paintings that belonged to Clooney’s girlfriend. But Clooney had also promised these same items to other disgruntled Bilt-more investors, and, perhaps for that reason, did not deliver them to Messina.

As a result, Spence modified his collection tactics. He had Clooney kidnapped and held for ransom (which was eventually paid, in part in cash by Clooney’s uncle, and in part by a turning over of the paintings and various houses). Over the course of the four-day period during which Clooney was held captive, Messina had numerous telephone conversations with several of the individuals involved, including Spence, Clooney’s uncle, Clooney’s girlfriend, one or more of the kidnappers, and Clooney himself. Clooney’s uncle and girlfriend both told Messina that Clooney had been kidnapped. Messina maintained at trial, however, that at the time he had not believed that the kidnapping had actually occurred, and instead had thought that Clooney had faked his own abduction in order to get relatives to help him pay his debts.

According to Messina, the kidnapping was contemporaneous with, but independent -of, Messina’s lawful efforts to arrange for Cloo-ney’s repayment of the debt to Spence. The government believed, instead, that Messina both engaged in extortion and also participated in the kidnapping scheme. Messina was therefore charged with one count of extortion (the “extortion” charge) and one count of conspiracy to obtain money and property by extortion and kidnapping (the “kidnapping” charge). Following a five-week jury trial, he was convicted on the extortion charge but acquitted on the kidnapping charge.

The presentence report calculated Messi-na’s adjusted offense level as 29. That level reflected a base offense of 18; a two-point upward adjustment for the amount of money involved ($237,000); a five-level enhancement because Clooney had seen the kidnappers with a gun; and a four-point adjustment for the abduction: The district court (Kevin Thomas Duffy, /.) imposed an additional two-level increase, for obstruction of justice (perjury). Messina was in a criminal history category of II, and, as a result, his sentencing range became 121 to 151 months’ imprisonment. The district court imposed the full 151 months.

Messina appeals his conviction on two grounds: that he did not receive a fair trial because the district court questioned him improperly; and that his Sixth Amendment right to counsel was violated by the district court’s refusal to appoint “CJA” counsel after a conflict arose between Messina and his retained counsel over Messina’s non-payment of attorney fees. Messina also appeals the imposition of the upward adjustments to his sentence. He argues that the district court erred in excluding polygraph evidence that would have shown that he did not know about the kidnapping. And he contends that the district court improperly imposed upward adjustments for obstruction of justice, for abduction, and for his knowledge of the kidnappers’ use of a gun without making adequate factual findings to support those adjustments.

II. District Court’s Questioning of Messina

Messina claims that, although “[f]or the vast majority of this trial, the district judge presided with an evenhanded decorum with which no one should find fault,” the court on three occasions questioned Messina in ways that “evidenc[ed] a startling lack of restraint and culminated] in an inquisitorial and baseless attack on [Messina’s] credibility.” Messina raised no objection to the *39 court’s behavior at the time, however, so the issue before us is whether the judge’s actions constituted plain error. 1

The first occasion to which Messina points involves his trial testimony about contacts he had with one of the kidnappers, Anthony Persichetti. On the first day of direct examination, Messina testified that he had not met Persichetti. The next day, however, Messina admitted that he had met “Tony.” The district court then questioned Messina about the apparent contradiction. In response, Messina explained that he had made a mistake about Persichetti’s surname, but that the two of them had, in fact, met.

The second line of questioning that Messi-na challenges concerned testimony' he gave about his having served as chairman of the Federal Bar Council (“Council”). At the end of Messina’s re-cross examination, the district judge returned to this issue, and said that the Council did not have a chairman, but instead had a “posted chairman,” which was a combination of president and chairman. He then showed Messina a listing of past Council presidents printed in the Second Circuit Redbook (a resource published by the Council). Messina conceded that his name was not on the list, but nonetheless maintained that, he had been chairman (and not president). The court then recessed for lunch, and, since the evidence was by then closed, the jury was excused for the weekend.

After lunch, the district court asked counsel to return for a charge conference. When they did, the court informed them that it had received a fax confirming that Messina had indeed been the Council chairman during 1975-76. The court then said that it would inform the jury of its mistake. Accordingly, when the jurors returned on Monday morning, the district judge made an abject apology to them. He admitted that he was wrong about the organizational structure of the Council, stated that Messina had been its chairman, and told the jurors that his error demonstrated that judges are not infallible. At no time did Messina raise objection to any of this. He was silent both when the district court was questioning him and when it made its correction and apology.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 F.3d 36, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 28600, 1997 WL 794188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-richard-messina-ca2-1997.