United States v. Russell M. Bliss

735 F.2d 294
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1984
Docket83-2194
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 735 F.2d 294 (United States v. Russell M. Bliss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Russell M. Bliss, 735 F.2d 294 (8th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

FLOYD R. GIBSON, Senior Circuit Judge.

Russell M. Bliss appeals his conviction for filing false income tag returns for the years 1976, 1977, and 1978 (26 U.S.C. § 7206(1)). Bliss principally contends, as grounds for reversal, that the district court * prejudicially erred in refusing to grant him a change of venue; he urges that intensive and inflammatory pretrial publicity surrounding his spraying of dioxin contaminated substances in eastern Missouri made it impossible to impanel a fair and impartial jury there. He additionally claims there was prejudicial preindictment delay and insufficient evidence to support his conviction. We reject all of these claims and affirm Bliss’ conviction. .

I. Factual Background

During the relevant taxable years 1976, 1977, and 1978, and for many years prior, Bliss was the sole proprietor and operator of Bliss Waste Oil Service, a St. Louis business engaged in buying used or “waste” motor oil from gas stations, treating it, and then reselling or reusing it for various purposes. Bliss reported income and expenses for his waste oil service business on a Schedule C, which was attached to his personal income tax returns filed in 1976, 1977, and 1978. The criminal charges against Bliss concerned his overstatement of “purchases” expenses on his Schedule C’s for 1976, 1977, and 1978. The government’s position was that Bliss willfully overstated his expenditures for waste oil by $23,570.00 in 1976, $27,550.00 in 1977, and $18,100.00 in 1978. 1

The overstated purchases expenditures were generated by bogus transactions between Bliss and three other individuals. First, in 1976 and 1977, twenty-two checks written on the Bliss Waste Oil Service account were made payable to variations of the “G-L Oil Co.,” a fictitious business entity. The checks were delivered to Gary Lambarth, an employee of Bliss, who cashed them at a local bank and paid Bliss back 90% of the full amount; the 10% retained represented Lambarth’s “service commission.” For each check, either Bliss or Lambarth prepared an invoice or receipt indicating that the entire amount represented the payment of oil purchases. Bliss provided the receipts or invoices to the IRS as documentation of the purchases expenditures entry on his returns. Lambarth testified that the G-L Oil Co. was a fictitious entity and that Bliss never purchased any oil from him. Lambarth further testified that Bliss characterized the money generated by the transactions as “tax free money.”

When Lambarth left Bliss’ employ in 1978, Bliss had another young employee of his, Dave Covert, cash four Bliss company checks made payable to “Dave Covert Oil Co.,” a fictitious business. Covert, like Lambarth, paid Bliss back all but 10% of the full amount. Again, the full amounts of the checks were claimed by Bliss as expenditures for oil “purchases,” purchases that were never in fact made. Both Covert and Lambarth testified that after the IRS investigation began, they were advised by Bliss to tell the IRS that they had sold Bliss the oil as shown on the checks they had cashed.

Finally, in 1977, Bliss purchased a truck from a business acquaintance for $6,000.00, which was paid with a check written on the Bliss company account. On the face of the check, Bliss noted that the payment represented a purchase of 60,000 gallons of oil at 10 cents per gallon. That check comprised part of the oil “purchases” expense on Bliss’ Schedule C for 1977. Callahan testified that after the IRS began investigating Bliss, the latter advised Callahan to tell the IRS that the $6,000.00 payment represented a legitimate oil purchase.

*297 At trial, Bliss admitted the “G-L Oil” and “Dave Covert Oil” checks were cashed as Lambarth and Covert had testified. However, he asserted that the money generated by the checks were used to make cash payments to Larry Gooden, the manager of a barge cleaning business that removed residue liquid cargo — including oil— from barges and stored it in “slop tanks.” Bliss testified that in order to purchase the residue, he was required to make “under the table” cash payments to Gooden. Bliss claimed all the money generated by the “G-L Oil” and “Dave Covert Oil” checks went to Gooden; thus, to Bliss’ way of thinking, the full amounts of those checks were properly deductible oil purchases expenses. Bliss further explained that the $6,000.00 check to Callahan was for an oil hauling truck, worth only $1,000. Since he “felt” the truck payment should be deductible, he claimed the full amount of the check as an oil purchase.

Larry Gooden testified, under a grant of judicial immunity, that, in 1976, Bliss made four cash payments to him for the slop tank residue, but the total amount of these payments was only $4,000.00, considerably less than the $23,570.00 in checks written by Bliss to “G-L Oil” in that year. Moreover, the cash payments Gooden received in 1977 and 1978 were “brokerage commissions” for Gooden’s participation in arranging Bliss’ sale of over $180,000.00 in oil to the Kiesel Oil Company. Gooden was “secretly married” to Lorraine Kiesel, the president of Kiesel Oil Co. Gooden testified that the brokerage payments from Bliss amounted to $7,500.00 in 1977, considerably less than the $27,550.00 in checks written that year to “G-L Oil” and Callahan. And, Gooden testified that he received $2,500.00 in cash payments from Bliss in 1978, again far short of $18,100.00 in checks written that year to “G-L Oil” and “Dave Covert Oil.” Bliss stopped making brokerage payments to Gooden once he found out about the close relationship between Gooden and Kiesel.

The indictment against Bliss was returned on December 20, 1982. Bliss sought to dismiss because of preindictment delay and requested a change of venue because of prejudicial pretrial publicity concerning his involvement in spraying dioxin contaminated substances in eastern Missouri. The court continued the initial trial setting of January 1, 1983, and reset the case of July 18, 1983. The district court adopted a magistrate’s recommended denial of the preindictment delay motion. The court deferred ruling on the motion and supplemental motion for a change of venue until the jury selection process was undertaken. Satisfied that it had impaneled a fair and impartial jury, the court denied the requested change of venue. Bliss was convicted on all three counts after a five-day. trial.

II. Change of Venue

Bliss claims the court abused its discretion in failing to, grant his motion for a change of venue, either before or during voir dire, because of prejudicial pretrial publicity. He refers to the widespread publicity surrounding his spraying of dioxin contaminated oil substances in eastern Missouri — specifically, Times Beach, Missouri. Allegedly, the extensive and inflammatory nature of this publicity made it impossible to impanel a fair and impartial jury in the Eastern District of Missouri. As proof of the prejudicial effect of the pretrial publicity, Bliss refers to the fact that all but one of the veniremen admitted they had heard about Bliss’ dioxin problems.

First, we do not believe the court abused its discretion by refusing to rule on the transfer motion prior to voir dire. United States v. Brown,

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Bluebook (online)
735 F.2d 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-russell-m-bliss-ca8-1984.