United States v. Rudy Yujen Tsai

954 F.2d 155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1992
Docket91-1202
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 954 F.2d 155 (United States v. Rudy Yujen Tsai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Rudy Yujen Tsai, 954 F.2d 155 (3d Cir. 1992).

Opinion

*157 OPINION OF THE COURT

BECKER, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Rudy Yujen Tsai was convicted by a jury of three counts of violating and one count of conspiring to violate the Arms Export Control Act (“AECA”), 22 USC § 2778(b)(2) and (c) (1988). The conviction stems from defendant’s part in a conspiracy to export to Taiwan certain components of military equipment without the required export license. Defendant was sentenced by the district court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania pursuant to the United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines (“the Guidelines” or “USSCG”), and he appeals from the judgment of sentence.

Defendant challenges the conviction itself by arguing that (1) the evidence was insufficient to establish that the infra-red domes alleged to have been illegally exported in Count Three of the indictment were items for which an arms export license was required and that (2) the district court erred in its definition of willfulness in a supplemental charge to the jury. We reject both of these claims. We are satisfied that the government’s case was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict. We also conclude that the court did not commit plain error when it supplementally instructed the jury that it was sufficient for conviction to find that defendant knew that he could not export the particular item. This is so even though the court’s initial instruction implied that defendant had to know specifically about the export license requirement. Because we reject these claims, we will affirm the conviction.

Defendant also challenges his Guidelines-based sentence on several grounds. We reject defendant’s contention that the government failed to prove that “sophisticated weaponry” was involved in this case and therefore hold that the district court properly raised the Guidelines offense level from 14 to 22. However, we agree with the defendant that the district court failed to justify its large upward departure from the Guidelines offense level that the district court found applicable under the facts (level 24) to the equivalent of level 29. We reach this conclusion because the facts found at the sentencing hearing placed the offense within the Guidelines “heartland” for AECA, thus rendering departure inappropriate. Consequently, we will vacate the judgment and remand for resentencing.

The defendant has also argued that even though he was found to be a manager or supervisor in the criminal scheme for which he was convicted, justifying a two-level upward adjustment, see USSCG § 3Bl.l(c), he could still qualify as a “minor participant” in the offense, justifying an offsetting two-level downward adjustment. See USSCG § 3B1.2. The government views this position as illogical. We disagree. While we intimate no view on the factual aspects in this matter, we hold that the two adjustments are not logically inconsistent and that, on remand, the district court should determine whether there is any basis for defendant’s contention that he was a minor figure because he was merely carrying out instructions from others. 1

*158 I. THE RELEVANT FACTS OF RECORD

The relevant facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, see United States v. Gonzalez, 918 F.2d 1129, 1132 (3d Cir.1990), may be summarized as follows. Defendant, a Taiwanese-born, naturalized American citizen, the defendant’s brother, Tommy Tsai, and Dr. David Rosen were involved in an enterprise known as TRT International Corporation (“TRT”), headquartered in Boston. Tommy Tsai founded TRT, apparently in part to facilitate the illegal export of weapons to Taiwan. In 1987, Tommy Tsai began working from Taiwan, and defendant began directing export of the weapons from the United States. As part of the scheme, defendant instructed Rosen to represent himself falsely to suppliers of military equipment as a doctor of engineering and as TRT’s director of research. This was part of TRT’s plan to procure United States military technology for export to Taiwan. Defendant would receive facsimile (“fax”) messages from Taiwan and instruct Rosen which military technology to obtain based on the information contained in the messages.

In early 1987, Rosen, at defendant’s direction, began searching for DSU-15 optical receivers, which are prisms used in the proximity fuse of the guidance system of the 9-M Sidewinder, an air-to-air missile. Rosen located Pennsylvania Optical Company, a defense subcontractor in Reading, Pennsylvania, and at defendant’s direction sought quotations for prices on behalf of TRT for 5,000 optical receivers.

In March 1987, Rosen purchased from TRT ten of these optical receivers, and shipped them without an export license to the Chung Shan Institute of Science and Technology in Taiwan, the top military research center of the Taiwanese government. They were paid for by a check signed by defendant. Taiwan had sought to obtain the DSU-15 optical receiver through official channels, but the United States had refused to release the technology-

Next, defendant obtained specifications from Chung Shan for the purchase of infrared domes. The infra-red dome apparently serves as a “windshield” for the guidance of infra-red military missile systems such as the Sidewinder missile or the Maverick missile. The domes were to be manufactured to military missile specification. Ro-sen gave the dome specifications to Pennsylvania Optical. Suspicious that TRT was illegally shipping defense articles to Taiwan, Pennsylvania Optical notified United States Customs. As a result, the Customs Service placed an undercover agent at Pennsylvania Optical posing as a salesman handling the TRT account.

Around the same time that the agent was installed, defendant contacted Pennsylvania Optical to request delivery of the infra-red domes. There was evidence that during the next year, defendant exported three infra-red domes and an additional DSU-15 optical receiver to Taiwan. 2 Defendant used a system of falsifying shipping documents and letters of credit to smuggle the defense articles through Customs. Evidence at trial suggested that the domes were defense articles. The government produced John Shepherd, head of the office of Advanced Development for the Sidewinder missile system at the U.S. Naval Weapons Center in China Lake, California, who testified that the infra-red domes were critical to operation of a missile. Based on factors such as flight velocity, wave-length transmission, and flight altitude, he opined that the dome specifications supplied by defendant were military and not commercial in nature. In an exchange relied on by defendant, when Shepherd was asked if the dome was for a military missile, he replied, “Yeah, I would think so.”

Additionally, Michael Danis, an advisor to the President on the missile systems of *159 China and Taiwan, testified that the infrared domes manufactured by Pennsylvania Optical at defendant’s request “would be used on infra-red guided missiles, a missile such as the AIM-9M [Sidewinder] or air-to-surface missiles such as the AGM-65 Maverick missile.” Danis added that Taiwan is attempting to develop similar infra-red domes for use in its missile program.

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954 F.2d 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rudy-yujen-tsai-ca3-1992.