United States v. Skeddle

989 F. Supp. 873, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22507, 1997 WL 661451
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMay 12, 1997
Docket3:95CR736
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 989 F. Supp. 873 (United States v. Skeddle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Skeddle, 989 F. Supp. 873, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22507, 1997 WL 661451 (N.D. Ohio 1997).

Opinion

Order

CARR, District Judge.

This is a criminal case in which the defendants are charged in a superseding indictment with conspiracy to commit and committing mail and wire fraud, laundering, and tax evasion. (Doc. 232). Three of the nine defendants, who will be referred to as the “LOF defendants,” are former officers and directors of Libbey-Owens-Ford Company (LOF): the defendant Skeddle was formerly President and C.E.O. of LOF, and the defendants Costin and Bryant were formerly Vice-Presidents of LOF. 1

The indictment alleges that the LOF defendants, aided by the other defendants, knowingly and willfully used the mails and wire communications to devise schemes and artifices to defraud LOF and to obtain money and property from LOF by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises, and to deprive LOF of the honest services of the LOF defendants.. The LOF defendants, according to the indictment, violated their fiduciary duties to LOF by engaging in undisclosed self-dealing, which enabled them to acquire money and property worth several million dollars from LOF.

This was accomplished, the indictment states, by the creation of outside companies controlled by the LOF defendants, including Computer Technology Management (CTM), Energy Systems Management of Ohio (ESMO), Visual Data, Inc. (VDI), and Flexible Automation Systems (FAS). These outside companies then engaged in various transactions with LOF. The indictment also alleges that the LOF defendants received $7.7 million from transactions involving CTM, acquired property worth $1.3 million from the ESMO transactions, earned excessive profits as the result of over billing with regard to the VDI transactions, and, but for the intervening discovery of their undisclosed self-dealing, would have obtained $18 million from contracts with FAS.

The CTM transactions resulted from a decision by LOF to “out source” its management information (i.e., computer) services. According to the indictment, the LOF defendants, working with the defendant Purser, set up CTM to provide those services. The indictment charges that CTM obtained the services from MCN Computer Services, Inc. (MCN). The LOF defendants are alleged to have concealed a proposal from MCN to LOF.' The defendant Skeddle allegedly instructed LOF’s general counsel, Alan Miller, to negotiate with CTM and told Miller that the defendant Purser had “stretched himself pretty far in terms of the savings he was offering LOF.” The defendant Skeddle is also alleged to have told LOF’s board of directors that the company would realize substantial savings from the CTM contract. The indictment also alleges that the CTM contract with LOF was at a price far in excess of the fair market value of the services received by LOF.

The indictment states that the LOF defendants, with the aid of the other defendants, took several steps to conceal their activities from LOF, including: use of the defendant Purser as nominee owner of CTM to conceal the LOF defendants’ interest in CTM (while also making arrangements to preserve their control over CTM during Purser’s nominee ownership); creation of an “audit free trail” to avoid detection of their activities by LOF *876 and its tax accountants (who prepared the defendant 'Skeddle’s tax returns); payment of putative “management fees” by CTM to companies created and controlled by the LOF defendants to obtain, disburse, and conceal the proceeds obtained from LOF as a result of its contract with CTM; and execution of backdated agreements.

With regard to the ESMO transaction, the indictment alleges that the LOF defendants, aided by other defendants and other persons, caused rigged bids to be submitted to LOF for purchase of two gas wells at less than the wells’ fair market value. The monies used by the LOF defendants to buy the gas wells are alleged to have come from the proceeds of the CTM contract with LOF. In addition to buying the wells with rigged bids, the LOF defendants, according to the indictment, used a nominee purchaser to deal with LOF; that nominee, in turn, allegedly immediately transferred its interest in the gas wells to ESMO.

With regard to FAS, the indictment alleges that the LOF defendants and other defendants sought to have LOF enter into a contract with FAS to lease robots. The proposed lease with FAS, the indictment alleges, was not negotiated at arms-length and was priced in excess of fair market value, because the machines were to be purchased by FAS for $6 million and leased to LOF for four years for $24 million. The defendants involved in this transaction are alleged to have taken steps deliberately to exclude disinterested LOF officers and board members from financial and legal review and approval of the proposed contract and its negotiation.

With regard to the VDI transactions, the indictment alleges that the defendant Costin caused inflated invoices to be submitted to LOF for services provided by VDI to LOF, and Costin or a subordinate at his direction approved payment of the invoices. The defendants Skeddle and Costin allegedly obtained automobiles and cash from VDI, and Costin is alleged to have received funds for a vacation rental from VDI. The defendant Costin, the indictment states, prepared false documents to conceal the VDI payments from LOF investigators following LOF’s discovery of the defendants’ self-dealing. The defendant Costin is alleged to have represented falsely that the VDI payments were for consulting services (which were not provided to. VDI).

The indictment additionally alleges that the LOF' defendants signed agreements to abide by LOF’s Standards of Business Conduct, which, inter alia, required the LOF defendants to place the interests of the company ahead of any private interests in the performance of their duties. The defendant Skeddle is alleged to have represented that he always complied with LOF’s Standards of Conduct.' The LOF defendants also signed employment agreements agreeing not to become directors of any outside business without LOF’s prior consent.

The LOF defendants, with the aid of the other defendants, are also alleged to have laundered the proceeds of the CTM, ESMO, and VDI transactions through other corporations which were created for that purpose and, as well, to conceal their activities from LOF ánd its tax accountants. In the course of doing so, the defendants are alleged to have committed various tax offenses (which have been severed for trial from the other charges). (Doe. 454):

The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the mail fraud counts on the basis that under Ohio law the LOF defendants were not required to disclose their self-dealing absent proof by the government that the transactions were unfair to LOF. (Doc. 118). According to the defendants’ motion, which was addressed to the original indictment, no offense was stated under the mail and wire fraud statutes because the indictment “failed to identify a single allegedly false pretense, representation, or promise made by any defendant to LOF in furtherance of an alleged scheme to defraud” or “a single overt act involving an allegedly false statement made to LOF.” (Id. at 2) (emphasis in original). In the defendants’ view, “the government appears to predicate the mail fraud and wire fraud counts of the indictment solely upon defendants’ alleged failure to disclose certain information to LOF.” (Id. at 3).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Galang
2016 COA 68 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
989 F. Supp. 873, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22507, 1997 WL 661451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-skeddle-ohnd-1997.