The three defendants-appellants were found guilty by a jury in the Southern District of Indiana on an indictment charging them and others with securities fraud (15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)) and mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341). Fourteen counts of the original twenty-one count indictment were ultimately submitted to the jury. Defendants Perrault and Good were convicted on each count submitted to the jury; defendant Aldridge was convicted on the eight counts in which he was charged. Defendant Ba-gal, an attorney, and defendant Brown, an accountant, were acquitted on all counts pertaining to them. A co-defendant Calvin Mummert entered a plea of guilty during the course of the trial. Each of the three convicted defendants has filed a separate appeal which this court has ordered consolidated. We affirm the judgments of conviction as to each defendant.
As set forth in the indictment, the scheme to defraud may be briefly summarized. The several defendants in various combinations organized American National Trust on May 7, 1963 and controlled its operation until June 8, 1963. On that date defendants Aldridge, Mum-mert and Perrault became trustees, continuing in that capacity until 1965, 1966 and 1967 respectively. Under an agreement which predated the formation of the trust, defendants Aldridge and Good together with Mummert caused the trust to purchase a property owned by a company controlled by Aldridge, and divided the proceeds of the sale among themselves. A satellite corporation controlled by the defendant Good, American Trust Management, was utilized by the defendants to effect the sale of 7.5 million dollars in shares of American National Trust and an additional 7.5 million dollars in shares of Republic National Trust, which was organized by defendants Good and Perrault. Self-dealing in the management of these trusts was alleged in the indictment, including the purchase by American National Trust of two properties from American Trust Management for a total of $763,000.00 with a resulting profit to American Trust Management of $322,000.00, and the payment of $305,000.00 in real estate commissions to the defendant Good and to Midwest Trust Associates, a company controlled by Good.
*658 Three central misstatements of material fact and three corresponding omissions to state facts necessary to make the statements made not misleading, were also charged in the indictment as follows:
1. A statement that investors in the Trusts would earn 8% on their investments, and the failure to state that the Trusts were suffering continuing operating losses;
2. The statement that the Trusts paid monthly distributions to investors out of earnings and the failure to state that the distributions were returns of capital.
3. The statement that an investor could obtain the return of his entire investment from the respective Trusts and the failure to state that the Trusts would redeem their shares only until the end of the initial offering period.
Each defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence against him. The evidence shows that the three convicted defendants were familiar with the sales presentations taught at the sales training sessions conducted by the trusts. The material misrepresentations outlined above were passed on to prospective salesmen during those training sessions. That the defendants were aware of the poor financial condition of the trusts is apparent from the fact that outside accountants’ financial reports had been made available to them. The proof also indicated that the three defendants knew that the distributions were not being made from income, as represented, but were being made from capital. The defendants further knew that there was no intention to permit redemption of the trusts’ certificates beyond the initial offering period. The self-dealings of defendants Aldridge and Good were known to all defendants, but no effort was made to inform prospective purchasers of these dealings. Summarized in the light most favorable to the government, this evidence reveals that the three defendants were the organizers and promoters of the two trusts involved in the indictment, that they participated fully and elaborately in all of their operations and that they were aware of the misrepresentations passed on to the public by their salesmen, and finally that they knew of the trusts’ bad financial condition as well as their own self-dealings. The evidence was thus sufficient to support the convictions.
All three defendants also maintain that the testimony of co-defendant attorney Seymour Bagal violated their attorney-client privilege. As previously stated, attorney Bagal, who had represented the two trusts involved in the indictment, was also indicted in this case but was found not guilty by the jury. He testified regarding several conversations he had with the three defendants. Significantly, his testimony was offered as part of his own defense and was not placed in evidence as part of the government’s case in chief.
A uniformly recognized exception to the privilege extends to communications made to an attorney in furtherance of a continuing or future fraud or crime. Petition of Sawyer,
It is further contended by the three defendants that the trial court improperly instructed the jury that codefendant Calvin Mummert had pleaded *659 guilty to fourteen counts of the indictment and that Mummert’s plea was in no way evidence of guilt against the remaining defendants. Some nine days into a six week trial the defendant Mummert asked leave to change his plea of not guilty in order to enter a plea of guilty. The remaining defendants requested the court to inform the jury that Mummert was no longer a part of the case but asked that the guilty plea not be communicated to the jury. The defendants sought to have the jury instructed only that Mummert was no longer a part of the case and that they should not consider his departure as evidence against any of the defendants or as evidence against the position of the government. The government maintained that the unexplained departure of one of the defendants might be taken as inference against its position, and therefore requested the court to inform the jury of the plea of guilty but to instruct it not to infer anything adverse as to the guilt of the remaining defendants. The district judge elected to follow the latter course.
The instruction as given was approved by this court in substantially the same form in United States v. Kahn,
The defendant Perrault next questions the sufficiency of the government’s proof of venue as to six counts of the securities fraud charges and two counts of the mail fraud charges on which he was convicted. In this regard, the government’s burden is to demonstrate venue by a preponderance of the evidence rather than beyond a reasonable doubt. Hill v. United States,
The defendant Perrault also contends that he was prejudiced by certain remarks made during the prosecutor’s closing argument. It is claimed that these remarks amounted to impermissible comment on the defendant’s failure to take the stand and testify. See Griffin v. California,
Another comment of the prosecutor complained of by Perrault appears in the record as follows:
“He also signed the March, 1966, letter which came out stating the intent of the Trustee only to say, only to make redemption until the end of the period when the shares were sold. He would deny that, but his signature was on the letter saying that was the intent.”
This argument was made in reference to letters signed by Perrault in which trust affairs and policies were misrepresented to the shareholders. It is not clear that the jury would construe this as a comment on Perrault’s failure to testify. In any event, there was no repetition of the argument, and it was certainly not an argument manifestly intended to be or of a character that the jury naturally and necessarily understood it to be a comment on Perrault’s failure to testify. See United States v. Lyon,
The final contention of error raised by the defendant Perrault concerns the district judge’s refusal to appoint an accountant for Perrault in order to determine the benefits paid to him by the trust. Funds for the payment of expert assistance are authorized by 18 U.S.C. § 3006A(e)(3), a portion of the Criminal Justice Act, which provided that such compensation was not to exceed three hundred dollars. The district judge indicated that he would permit the four defendants to aggregate the three hundred dollars and hire an expert with authority to pay him twelve hundred dollars, but that he had no authority to permit additional compensation. Perrault stated that the purpose for which he wished the assistance of an appointed accountant was to determine the exact amount of money he had received directly or indirectly from the trust. In this regard, there is no showing of a need for an accountant since other documentary evidence showed the amount of money Perrault received from the trust. Additionally, Perrault does not even claim that he was prejudiced by not being able to hire an accountant. This contention does not require a reversal.
The defendant Good maintains that the indictment is multiplicious since only one scheme was alleged in support of the several substantive counts; that the indictment is duplicitous in both the securities and mail fraud counts by its allegations that the statues involved were offended in more than one matter; that the indictment is duplicitous by reason of its failure to designate who were principals and who were aiders and abettors; that the mail fraud count failed to state an offense; and that the indictment failed to set forth a scheme to defraud. Each argument is without merit.
As to the mail fraud counts, it is settled that the gravamen of the offense is the use of the mails and that each such use of the mails constitutes a separate offense. United States v. Eskow,
Lastly, the defendant Aldridge claims that the case as to him requires reversal because of a delay in returning the indictment. Aldridge makes no claim or showing of prejudice and, therefore, under United States v. Marion,
Accordingly, for the reasons set out above, the judgments of conviction are each affirmed.
Affirmed.
