Court Opinion

ID: 5081
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-25 05:02:15+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:04:23.814531
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                         For the Fifth Circuit

                           ________________

                              No. 91-3574

                           ________________

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                    Plaintiff-Appellee,

                                VERSUS

DAVID L. LEVY and HOWARD MC NAUGHTON,

                    Defendants-Appellants.

          Appeals from the United States District Court
              For the Eastern District of Louisiana
                         ( August 11, 1992 )

Before WISDOM, SMITH, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.
     The defendants/appellants were convicted on several counts as

active participants in a money laundering scheme and conspiracy to

evade currency reporting requirements. They contend that they were

not required to file currency transaction reports with respect to

the alleged money laundering because their activities fell within

a loophole in the law.    We hold that this loophole does not exist.

We are also asked to interpret the aiding and abetting statute, 18

U.S.C. § 2, so that a defendant may not be found guilty of causing
                                       2

a violation to be committed by an undercover operative. We decline

the offer to restrict the plain language of the statute in such a

manner. Finally, one defendant contends that his sentence reflects

an improper application of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.                We

reject this contention.

I.   BACKGROUND

     In 1987, the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Bureau

of Investigation began a joint investigation into money laundering

in New Orleans.      The agencies established an undercover "sting"

operation   utilizing    the   services     of   Mr.   Amado    Hernandez,    a

"cooperating undercover source", who posed as a money manager for

drug dealers.     In January 1987, Mr. Hernandez met with Mr. Charles

LeChasney   in    Atlanta,   Georgia   to   discuss    the     possibility   of

laundering millions of dollars in drug money.           Mr. LeChasney then

sought the assistance of a New Orleans attorney, Mr. David Levy.

     In April 1987, Mr. Hernandez, Mr. LeChasney, and Mr. Levy met

in Miami to discuss the money laundering scheme.                Mr. Hernandez

explained to the others that they would be exchanging cash from

drug traffickers.     Mr. Levy informed Mr. Hernandez that he could

deposit the cash in client trust accounts and give Mr. Hernandez

checks drawn against these accounts.        The three men discussed bank

reporting requirements and Mr. Levy agreed that Mr. Hernandez's

name would not be reported in any of the transactions.                The men

also agreed upon a six point fee for their services.

     In May 1987, Mr. Hernandez and Mr. LeChasney met with Mr. Levy
                                      3

in New Orleans.       Mr. Hernandez gave Mr. Levy $200,000 in cash (plus

the $12,000 fee), and Mr. Levy gave Mr. Hernandez four checks

totaling $200,000 drawn against one of Mr. Levy's trust accounts

and signed by Mr. Levy.        The cash was deposited into Mr. Levy's

trust accounts over the next few days in the form of small (under

$10,000) cash deposits or small cashier checks.           Between May and

October 1987, Mr. Levy and Mr. LeChasney laundered an additional

$550,000 of cash from Mr. Hernandez, using the same basic cash for

checks system utilized in the first transaction, and they received

an additional $33,000 in fees.

     In October 1987, Mr. Hernandez met in New York City with Mr.

LeChasney, Mr. Levy, and Mr. Joe DiFlumera, an acquaintance of Mr.

Levy.     The   men    discussed   laundering   drug   money   through   Mr.

DiFlumera's contacts with American Airlines and Red Apple grocery

stores.   In November, Mr. Hernandez travelled to Boston to meet

with Mr. DiFlumera.       Mr. DiFlumera introduced Mr. Hernandez to Mr.

Howard McNaughton, a food broker.           The three men discussed a

proposed money laundering operation in which Mr. DiFlumera would

give Mr. Hernandez a personal check in exchange for the cash and

the check would later be exchanged for a number of checks drawn

against grocery accounts. The plan was to exchange cash for checks

drawn on the grocery accounts, with Mr. DiFlumera's personal check

serving as collateral until Mr. Hernandez received the grocery

account checks.       Mr. DiFlumera indicated to Mr. Hernandez that Mr.

McNaughton would be in charge of the mechanics of the operation.

     Over the next few weeks, Mr. Hernandez, Mr. DiFlumera, and Mr.
                                      4

McNaughton discussed the operation over the telephone. They agreed

upon a ten point fee.     The men finally agreed to make an exchange

of $200,000 in Boston on December 18, 1987.               On December 18, Mr.

Hernandez travelled to Boston as arranged.          He gave Mr. McNaughton

and Mr. DiFlumera $200,000 in cash in exchange for sixteen checks

totalling $200,000. Mr. McNaughton explained to Mr. Hernandez that

grocery stores could deposit large amounts of cash because they

were exempt from the reporting requirements, and therefore, there

would be no reporting problems with these transactions.

     In January 1988, Mr. Hernandez again travelled to Boston to

meet with Mr. DiFlumera and Mr. McNaughton.              Again they exchanged

$200,000 in cash for several checks totalling $200,000.                    The men

agreed to meet in ten days for another exchange.                     This meeting

never occurred, however, because Mr. Hernandez's undercover role

ended on January 27, 1988 when several of the defendants were

arrested.

     In October 1989, a federal grand jury returned a forty-count

indictment against fourteen defendants, including the appellants

Mr. David Levy and Mr. Howard McNaughton. Thirty-two counts of the

indictment charged Mr. Levy with: (1) conspiring as a financial

institution, and in exchange for a fee, unlawfully to evade federal

monetary    reporting   requirements      by    failing    to       file   required

currency transaction reports, by structuring currency transactions,

and by using interstate commerce to facilitate the commission of

these crimes in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (the conspiracy

count);    (2)   participating   in   the      affairs    of    a    racketeering
                                         5

enterprise in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) (the RICO count);

(3) travelling in or using interstate commerce, or causing the use

of   interstate   facilities        in     furtherance   of     a   racketeering

enterprise in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1952(a)(3) (the

Travel Act count); and (4) aiding and abetting the failure to file

and report currency transactions and the structuring of currency

transactions to evade reporting requirements in violation of 18

U.S.C. § 2 and 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313(a), 5322(b), and 5324 (the

currency transaction count).

     Mr. McNaughton was charged in the conspiracy count, the RICO

count, and in two separate Travel Act counts.

     Six of the defendants entered into plea agreements with the

government prior to trial, and the district court dismissed all

charges against one of the defendants under a Rule 29 motion.

After a two month trial, the jury considered the guilt of the

remaining seven defendants and reached a guilty verdict with

respect   to   three   of   them,    the     two   appellants   and   one   other

defendant.

     The defendants who appealed were convicted on all counts in

which they were named.         Mr. Levy was sentenced to a total of

seventy months imprisonment and three years of supervised release.

Mr. McNaughton was sentenced to a total of twenty-four months

imprisonment and three years supervised release.                    This appeal

followed.
                                         6

II.    DISCUSSION

A.    The Definition of "Financial Institution"

       The Currency Transaction Reporting Act, 31 U.S.C. § 5313,

authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to issue regulations

requiring    that   domestic    financial       institutions      report   certain

domestic currency transactions.              Pursuant to this authority, the

Secretary promulgated 31 C.F.R. § 103.22(a)(1) which requires that
          [e]ach financial institution . . . shall file
          a report of each deposit, withdrawal, exchange
          of currency or other payment or transfer, by,
          through, or to such financial institution
          which involves a transaction in currency of
          more than $10,000.

Almost all of the counts against the defendants were based on the

failure to file currency transaction reports (CTRs) with respect to

the cash for checks transactions.               Mr. Levy and Mr. McNaughton

contend on appeal that they had no obligation to file CTRs because

the transactions in which they engaged did not make them "financial

institutions".

       Definitions of the term "financial institution" are found in

the statute and in the regulations issued by the Secretary under

the   statute.      The   defendants'        first    argument    is   that   their

activities    do    not   fit   within       the     definition   of   "financial

institution" found in the regulations.                Their second argument is

that, if their activities do fit within that definition, then the

Secretary of the Treasury exceeded his authority under the statute

by impermissibly enlarging the meaning of "financial institution".
                                   7

1.   The Regulations

     "Financial institution" is defined in the regulations as

including

            [e]ach agent, agency, branch, or office within
            the United States of any person doing
            business, whether or not on a regular basis or
            as an organized business concern, in one or
            more of the capacities listed below:
                           *    *    *    *
            (3) A currency dealer or exchanger, including
            a person engaged in the business of a check
            casher.1

     The defendants contend that they do not fall within this

definition   because   a   "currency   dealer   or   exchanger"   must   be

involved in the exchange of foreign currency.           This argument is

without merit.

     The term    "currency dealer or exchanger" is defined in the

regulations as "[a] person who engages as a business in dealing in

or exchanging currency, except for banks which offer such services

as an adjunct to their regular services"2.

            "Currency" is defined in the regulations as

            [t]he coin and paper money of the United
            States or of any other country that is
            designated as legal tender and that circulates
            and is customarily used and accepted as a
            medium of exchange in the country of issuance.
            Currency includes U.S. silver certificates,
            U.S.   notes   and  Federal   Reserve   notes.
            Currency also includes official foreign bank
            notes that are customarily used and accepted
            as a medium of exchange in a foreign country.3

     1
         31 C.F.R. § 103.11(g) (1987).
     2
         31 C.F.R. § 103.11(e) (1987).
     3
         31 C.F.R. § 103.11(d) (1987).
                                         8

Contrary to the defendants' assertions, there is no requirement in

the       regulations   that   foreign       currency    be   involved      in    the

transaction.      It is true that the defendants' activities were not

those provided in the example given in the regulation--a person

engaged in the business of a check casher.                    Rather, they were

receiving cash from the undercover agent, and for a fee, would

convert that currency into checks. The defendants argue that while

the   business     of   cashing   checks      is   a   business   dealing    in    or

exchanging currency, the business of issuing checks in exchange for

cash is not.       This argument elevates form over substance.                   Both

businesses involve dealing in currency.                  Thus, the defendants'

business of exchanging checks for cash is within the definition of

"financial institution" found in the regulations.4

2.    The Secretary's Authority

      Having found that the defendants' activities fall within the

definition of "financial institution" in the regulations issued by

the Secretary, this Court must now consider whether the Secretary

exceeded his authority by issuing this regulation.                  The argument

runs that while the Secretary was given the authority to specify

various aspects of the reporting requirements, that authority does

not include the authority to expand the definition of "financial

institution".

      This argument rests upon a false premise.                   The statutory

      4
       This Court has previously held that similar activities fall
within the definition of "financial institution".      See, e.g.,
United States v. Gollott, 939 F.2d 255 (5th Cir. 1991).
                                            9

definition of "financial institution" includes "another business or

agency carrying out a similar, related, or substitute duty or power

the   Secretary         of   the   Treasury     prescribes"5.    Thus,   Congress

intended that the Secretary supplement the definition of "financial

institution".6          The regulations under which the defendants were

convicted are well within that grant of authority.

B.    Mr. McNaughton's Travel Act Convictions

       Mr. McNaughton was convicted on counts 38 and 40, which

charged that "Howard McNaughton did cause Amato [sic] Hernandez to

travel from New Orleans, Louisiana, to Boston, Massachusetts, with

the intent to promote, manage, establish, carry on, and facilitate

the promotion, management, establishment, and carrying on of an

unlawful activity . . .".              Mr. McNaughton raises two arguments

contesting the validity of his conviction on these counts.                 First,

Mr. McNaughton argues that he could not be convicted for causing

Mr. Hernandez to travel because Mr. Hernandez was a paid government

agent.          Second, Mr. McNaughton argues that the evidence of his

ability to cause Mr. Hernandez to travel was insufficient to

support         his   conviction.      In   the   context   in   which   they   are

presented, these arguments are so intertwined that they must be

discussed together.

       5
               31 U.S.C.A. § 5312(a)(2)(U) (West 1983).
           6
         This conclusion is bolstered by later amendments which
provide that "financial institution" includes "any other business
designated by the Secretary whose cash transactions have a high
degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory matters". 31
U.S.C.A. § 5312(a)(2)(Y) (West Supp. 1992).
                                             10

       18 U.S.C. § 1952 makes it a crime to travel in interstate

commerce to facilitate the carrying on of any illegal activity.

Mr. McNaughton's liability under this statute is a result of 18

U.S.C. § 2, which provides that "[w]hoever willfully causes an act

to be done which if directly performed by him or another would be

an   offense        against    the    United       States,    is    punishable     as    a

principal".           In his opening brief, Mr. McNaughton states that

"[t]here was no evidence to even suggest that Howard McNaughton or

anyone other than the government had the power to cause Amado

Hernandez to travel interstate".                  The evidence at trial, viewed in

the light         most    favorable   to     the    government,     showed   that    Mr.

Hernandez's travel to Boston on both occasions was at the request

of Mr. McNaughton and was for the purpose of exchanging cash for

checks.          Mr. McNaughton's argument is that the "cause" of Mr.

Hernandez's travel was the instructions he received from the

government rather than the request he received from Mr. McNaughton.

       Mr. McNaughton attempts to analogize his case to cases holding

that a defendant cannot be convicted for conspiring solely with a

government        agent.      There   is     no    analogy.        The   essence    of   a

conspiracy is a meeting of the minds--a shared criminal intent.

Under 18 U.S.C. § 2(b), there is no requirement of shared intent;

only       the   person    charged    need    have     the    criminal    intent,    the

individual whom the defendant has caused to perform the act may be

entirely innocent.7

       7
       E.g., Pereira v. United States, 202 F.2d 830, 837 (5th Cir.
1953), aff'd, 347 U.S. 1 (1954).
                                    11

      Nor is this a case in which the government has manufactured a

crime.    The defendants were aware from the outset that interstate

travel would be necessary to carry out the money laundering scheme.

Moreover, the evidence at trial showed that the two instances of

interstate travel charged in counts 38 and 40 were at the request

of Mr. McNaughton and Mr. DiFlumera.      The fact that the government

gave Mr. Hernandez permission to follow through on Mr. McNaughton's

request does not affect the fact that Mr. McNaughton's request

caused Mr. Hernandez to travel interstate for this illegal purpose.

      Mr. McNaughton would have this Court interpret the phrase

"causes an act" to mean that the defendant must be the sole and

proximate   cause    of   the   performance   of   the   act.   Such   an

interpretation would render 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) meaningless.              The

evidence is sufficient to support Mr. McNaughton's convictions on

counts 38 and 40.8    There is no reason why Mr. McNaughton, on the

pretext that Mr. Hernandez was cooperating with the government at

the time, should escape the consequences of causing Mr. Hernandez

to travel in interstate commerce to facilitate the money laundering

scheme.

C.   Sentencing Guidelines

      Mr. Levy contends that the district court erred by adding five

levels to his base offense level under the applicable sentencing

     8
       Because we affirm Mr. McNaughton's convictions on counts 38
and 40, we do not consider his argument that his RICO conviction
must be overturned if either Travel Act conviction is overturned.
                                        12

guidelines.9    The contested increase was the result of the district

court's finding that Mr. Levy believed the laundered funds were

indeed criminally derived funds. Section 2S1.3(b)(1) of the United

States Sentencing Commission Guidelines provides for a five level

increase when the "defendant knew or believed that the funds were

criminally     derived".     Although        the    guideline    says     "knew   or

believed", Mr. Levy argues that the five level increase applies

only if he knew that the funds were criminally derived.                    Further,

because the funds Mr. Levy laundered were actually provided by the

government, he argues that such knowledge would be impossible.

     Mr.    Levy   relies   on   the    Application       Note   to     support   his

argument.    The "Background" section of the Application Note to §

2S1.3 states in part that "[t]he offense level is increased by five

levels if    the   defendant     knew    that      the   funds   were    criminally

derived".    Mr. Levy argues that this one sentence restricts the

application of § 2S1.3(b)(1) to cases in which there is knowledge

of the nature of the funds, not just a belief.               The interpretation

of the Guidelines is a question of law, subject to de novo review.10

     The Eleventh Circuit addressed this exact issue in United

States v. Ortiz Barrera, 922 F.2d 664 (11th Cir. 1991).                  That court

held that the plain language of the guideline controlled because

"[w]here the terminology of a statute is clear, we do not need to

rely on the commentary for its construction".                We agree.

     9
        The guidelines at issue are those that were in effect on
January 26, 1988.
      10
            United States v. Gaitan, 954 F.2d 1005, 1008 (5th Cir.
1992).
                                  13

     The guideline itself says "knew or believed".      There is no

ambiguity in this language requiring us to look to the Application

Note for guidance.11 A subsequent amendment to the Application Note

has made it clear that a belief that the funds were criminally

derived is sufficient to support the five level increase.12 We find

it significant, as did the Eleventh Circuit, that this change to

the Application Note was made without any change in the guideline

itself.    "This indicates to us that the Guidelines were amended to

reflect an original intent that a defendant's belief alone can

trigger subsection (b)(1)."13

     Because the language of the guideline encompasses knowledge or

belief, we hold that the district court correctly applied the five

level increase to Mr. Levy.

     The Court has considered carefully all the arguments of the

defendants/appellants not directly addressed in this opinion.

     The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.

          11
            Section 1B1.7 of the Guidelines provides that the
commentary accompanying the guidelines is in the nature of a policy
statement or legislative history.
    12
        The amended language provides in part: "Subsection (b)(1)
applies if the defendant knew or believed the funds were criminally
derived property." The purpose of the amendment was "to clarify
the guideline and commentary, to provide more complete statutory
references, and to conform the format of the guideline to that used
in other guidelines."       United States Sentencing Commission
Guidelines Manual, Appendix C, amendment 218.
     13
          Ortiz Barrera, 922 F.2d at 666 n.4.