United States v. Segal, Michael

432 F.3d 767
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 29, 2005
Docket05-1511
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 432 F.3d 767 (United States v. Segal, Michael) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Segal, Michael, 432 F.3d 767 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

MANION, Circuit Judge.

After a conviction and a forfeiture verdict, Michael Segal relinquished his interest in several Chicago-area insurance companies to the United States. The court appointed a trustee to manage these interests for the government’s benefit. Segal challenges the district court’s approval of the trustee’s transfer of one of Segal’s former businesses, International Film Guarantors, Incorporated (“IFG”), to an outside firm, Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company (“Fireman’s Fund”). We affirm.

I.

Michael Segal owned a large number of insurance-related companies based in Chicago. While Segal’s businesses had numerous subsidiaries and affiliates, as relevant for our purposes, he was the one hundred-percent owner of Near North National Group, Inc. (“NNNG”), which, in turn, was the sole owner of Near North Insurance Brokerage, Inc. (“NNIB”), which held a one hundred-percent interest in North Sun, Inc. (“North Sun”). We take this whirlwind tour through a small section of the Near North corporate maze because the present appeal centers on IFG, which North Sun and Fireman’s Fund 1 jointly owned, each having a fifty-percent stake. IFG provided completion guarantee bonds for the film and television industry, guaranteeing that a project would be completed on time and within budget. Basically, Fireman’s Fund supplied the underwriting and insurance.support for IFG, while North Sun performed backroom operations, human resources, accounting, and marketing. Importantly, Segal added value to this joint venture through his extensive relationships with people in the entertainment industry.

In 2004, a federal jury convicted Segal on a variety of charges, including a wide-ranging violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) arising out of illegal business dealings. Two days later, the jury returned a forfeiture verdict under RICO, expressly finding that: (1) Segal should forfeit $30 million in property; (2) Segal held an interest in an enterprise that he operated and controlled in violation of RICO; and (3) 60% of Segal’s interests in NNIB and NNNG were tainted and subject to forfeiture. The district court entered a preliminary order of forfeiture in *770 July 2004, holding that Segal’s entire interest in the “Near North enterprise” was forfeited to the government. The district court’s ruling named twenty-three separate companies,' including NNIB, NNNG, North Sun, and IFG, as part of the Near North enterprise. In addition, the district court ordered Segal to forfeit $30 million in property. Soon thereafter, the district court appointed M. Scott Michel as Trustee to manage “Segal’s interests in NNNG and its subsidiaries and affiliates” on behalf of the government.

Segal objected to the district court’s definition of the Near North enterprise, contending that several of the companies listed in the preliminary forfeiture order were not involved in any RICO violations. Since these companies did not participate in the racketeering activities, Segal argued that they should not have been listed in the preliminary forfeiture order, which dealt with companies directly involved in the RICO scheme. On October 6, 2004, the district court agreed that these companies were untainted by the RICO violation and issued an order modifying the preliminary forfeiture order by excluding seven companies, including North Sun and IFG.

Around this time, Fireman’s Fund and the Trustee began to meet to resolve various claims and ownership interests relating to the Near North enterprise. In addition to its ownership stake in IFG, Fireman’s Fund had also extended a loan to Near North Entertainment Insurance Services in the amount of $4 million in 1997 and a loan to NNNG in the amount of $10 million in 2001. These loans were guaranteed both by NNNG and Segal himself. Further, as part of the 2001 loan agreement, North Sun pledged as security its ownership interest in IFG. At the time of Segal’s conviction, the loans were in default in the amount of $6.8 million.

On December 7, 2004, Fireman’s Fund submitted a confidential written settlement proposal to the Trustee. Fireman’s Fund wanted to end its IFG relationship with North Sun after Segal’s conviction and proposed to release its secured claims on the defaulted loans in exchange for North Sun’s interest in IFG. Fireman’s Fund set out an expedited time frame to obtain a court-approved settlement, first indicating that any deal had to be done by the end of the year (eventually Fireman’s Fund relented and extended the deadline to the middle of January). Fireman’s Fund informed the Trustee that if a settlement were not reached by the deadline, it would foreclose on the security interests and cease its underwriting support for IFG. While other companies made initial inquiries about North Sun’s stake in IFG, Fireman’s Fund made clear that it would not accept another company stepping into the shoes of North Sun.

Recognizing that the October 6 modification order seemingly foreclosed his authority to dispose of IFG, the Trustee alerted the district court to Fireman’s Fund’s settlement overtures. At an early December hearing at which Segal’s counsel was present, the district court authorized the continuation of negotiations on the settlement, but did not rule on IFG’s status. On December 29, the Trustee filed a motion for the court’s approval of a settlement with Fireman’s Fund, and the court set a final hearing to decide IFG’s fate on January 12, 2005. The proposed settlement provided that, in exchange for North Sun’s fifty-percent ownership in IFG, Fireman’s Fund would release the $6.8 million in secured claims that it held against Segal’s Near North enterprise. 2 The Trustee not *771 ed in the motion for approval that, given Fireman’s Fund’s contractual rights, the only alternative to approval would be liquidation, which would take several years, incur administrative liabilities, and ultimately result in substantially less benefit than offered in the settlement. Segal made a timely objection to the Trustee’s motion.

At the January 12 hearing, the district court allowed both sides to present arguments regarding the status of IFG and the proposed settlement. As a preliminary matter, Segal objected to the hearing because of the absence of his lead counsel, but the court overruled the objection because of the tight schedule imposed by Fireman’s Fund and the fact that Segal was represented at the hearing by two different law firms, including a member of his lead counsel’s firm. The court then proceeded to consider the status of IFG. The Trustee contended that the forfeiture of NNIB and NNNG encompassed all of their interests and assets, meaning any subsidiaries were also forfeited. Following the corporate chain, this meant that North Sun was forfeited as a wholly-owned subsidiary of NNIB and therefore North Sun’s interests also belonged to the government. Segal did not object to the Trustee’s description of the Near North corporate organization, and the court concluded that North Sun and its interest in IFG were forfeited as subsidiaries of forfeited companies. 3

The district court next heard testimony about the general prospects for IFG,. as well as the different elements of the settlement. On the financial side, while IFG had some assets, those assets were not easily accessible.

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