In the context of a petition for habeas corpus, this case considers whether, after the Supreme Court’s decision in
Cleveland v. United States,
Petitioner appeals from a decision and order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Thomas J. McAvoy, District Judge) denying his motion for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 but granting a certificate of appealability on two issues. We hold that taxes owed to a government can constitute *252 property in its hands within the meaning of the federal mail and wire fraud statutes, and that Trapito remains good law in this Court.
I. BackgRound
After retiring from twenty-one years of service to the New York State Police, Petitioner John Fountain entered the currency exchange business in Hogansburg, New York, adjacent to the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation. Using cashier’s checks and wire transfers, he began exchanging Canadian for U.S. currency in conjunction with a scheme to transport cigarettes from Canada into the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation then back to Canada to be sold on the black market. The enterprise was designed to circumvent the high Canadian taxes on tobacco products.
As a result of these currency exchange activities, Fountain was indicted, along with others, in July, 1997 (the “Miller Indictment”), on the charge of conspiracy to launder the proceeds of a wire fraud scheme in violation of the money laundering statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(l)(A)(I), 1956(h). The illegality of the underlying conduct derived from the wire fraud statute, which provides that:
Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire ... in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1343. The government claimed that the conspiracy was intended to defraud both the United States and Canada, asserting that both countries were deprived of tax revenues.
Other individuals involved in the scheme had already been indicted in 1996 (the “Trapilo/Pierce Indictment”), and litigation had progressed in their case. These defendants had successfully moved, in the district court, to dismiss the indictment based upon the First Circuit’s application of the common law revenue rule to bar a similar prosecution in
United States v. Boots,
Although Fountain had been charged with the intent to defraud both the United States and Canada, he admitted only to a scheme to deprive the Canadian government of revenue at his plea allocution. As Petitioner stated, “I didn’t defraud the U.S. government.” Nor did the prosecutor attempt to force Fountain to acknowledge that he was guilty of doing so. As the government responded, “Mr. Fountain doesn’t have to enter his plea on the basis of his participation in a conspiracy to defraud the United States of any tax revenue.” The court added, “Yes, as I understand it, there is no technical requirement to fulfill the elements ... that comprise the crime that you’re pleading to that there be any defrauding of the United States Government of dollars. The Court accepts that.” As a result of his plea, Fountain was sentenced to 84 months’ imprisonment by a judgment of conviction entered in October, 1999. This term was subsequently reduced to 60 months.
Following Petitioner’s conviction, two legal developments occurred. First, the Supreme Court held, in
Cleveland v. United States,
As a result of these decisions, Fountain brought a habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, alleging that he had not violated the wire fraud statute because:
(i) the Canadian Government did not possess “property” in its hands at the time of the alleged fraud;
(ii) the wire fraud statute was not intended to protect a foreign government’s rights against a scheme to defraud; and
(iii) the alleged act of fraud occurred beyond the territorial jurisdiction of the United States, and therefore failed to meet the “essential conduct element” giving jurisdiction of a United States court over the crime alleged ....
In the alternative, Petitioner claimed that his counsel had been ineffective in failing to raise these issues.
The district court ruled against Fountain, determining that he had procedurally defaulted, and that he could not surmount the default by showing either cause and prejudice or actual innocence. Furthermore, the court held that Petitioner’s counsel had not been ineffective for failing to raise a revenue rule defense. However, the court did certify two issues for review by this court:
(1) whether counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to pursue the Revenue Rule defense in light of Pe *254 titioner’s assertion that he did not defraud the United States; and
(2) whether the conviction was obtained without proof beyond a reasonable doubt of each element of the crime and therefore whether Petitioner is being unconstitutionally held.
These are the questions that we consider below.
Ix. Analysis
A court of appeals reviews a district court’s denial of a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 petition
de novo. Coleman v. United States,
A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
In order to demonstrate that he suffered from ineffective assistance of counsel, a petitioner “must show that the attorney’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and that the outcome of his case would have been different had the attorney performed adequately.”
United States v. Perez,
Fountain argues that his trial lawyer should have pursued an appeal on the grounds that the common law revenue rule barred his conviction, and that, had such an appeal occurred, the outcome of his trial would have differed. We need not consider whether Petitioner can fulfill the first prong of demonstrating that his “attorney’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness,” because it is clear from our precedents that, even if it did, Fountain was not prejudiced. In R.J. Reynolds, we distinguished between “civil suit[s] brought by a foreign sovereign” and criminal “actions prosecuted by the United States,” determining that the revenue rule applied in the former but not in the latter context. R.J. Reynolds, 268 *255 F.3d at 123 and n. 24. In so doing, we did not challenge the validity of our prior decision in Trapilo, which held that the revenue rule permitted prosecution under the wire fraud statute for tax fraud against foreign governments. 1 Because Fountain would not be able, under Trapilo, to invoke the revenue rule to invalidate his criminal conviction, he was not prejudiced by his attorney’s failure to raise this defense on appeal.
B. Actual Innocence
We read the second issue that the district court certified — “whether the conviction was obtained without proof beyond a reasonable doubt of each element of the crime and therefore whether Petitioner is being unconstitutionally held” — as asking whether Fountain is actually innocent of money laundering because taxes, the object of his scheme to defraud, do not constitute property under the wire fraud statute after the Supreme Court’s decision in
Cleveland v. United States,
As we have previously summarized, “[t]he essential elements of a mail [or wire] fraud violation are (1) a scheme to defraud, (2) money or property [as the object of the scheme], and (3) use of the mails [or wires] to further the scheme.”
United States v. Dinome,
Under this new statutory language, courts construed the “property” requirement liberally. In particular, the Second Circuit, following a number of other courts, permitted prosecutions for tax fraud to proceed under the mail and wire fraud statutes.
See United States v. Helmsley,
In deciding
Cleveland,
the Supreme Court reaffirmed that the scope of the mail and wire fraud statutes is not unbounded. The modest extent to which we understand the
Cleveland
decision to have reconfigured the existing landscape dictates our resolution of Petitioner’s claim that, after
Cleveland,
taxes can no longer be considered property under the mail and wire fraud statutes. In
Cleveland,
Justice Ginsburg, writing for a unanimous Court, held that “[s]tate and municipal licenses in general ... do not rank as ‘property,’ for purposes of [the mail fraud statute], in the hands of the official licensor,” and that “[i]t does not suffice ... that the object of the fraud may become property in the recipient’s hands; for purposes of the mail fraud statute, the thing obtained must be property in the hands of the victim.”
Cleveland,
The factor upon which the Court appears to have placed most weight is whether the government’s right is regulatory or revenue-enhancing. Some of the language in
Cleveland
suggests that the Court balanced the regulatory against the revenue-collecting aspects of the video poker licens
*257
ing scheme.
See Cleveland,
Tellingly, as to the character of Louisiana’s stake in its video poker licenses, the Government nowhere alleges that Cleveland defrauded the State of any money to which the State was entitled by law. Indeed, there is no dispute that TSG paid the State of Louisiana its proper share of revenue, which totaled more than $1.2 million, between 1993 and 1995. If Cleveland defrauded the State of “property,” the nature of that property cannot be economic.
Cleveland,
This result accords with the manner in which the government’s right to collect taxes has historically been treated even outside the context of the mail and wire fraud statutes. In
Manning v. Seeley Tube & Box Co. of New Jersey,
Likewise, before
Cleveland,
none of the circuits considering the question whether
*258
taxes are property in the hands of the government determined that they are not.
See, e.g., United States v. Dale,
The contrast between this relatively clear picture and the turmoil within federal courts over the question of whether licenses constituted property under the mail and wire fraud statutes before
Cleveland
is additionally instructive. By the time that the Supreme Court intervened to resolve the debate, a majority of the circuits had already determined that “the government does not relinquish ‘property’ for purposes of [the mail fraud statute] when it issues a permit or license.”
Cleveland,
Other courts’ interpretations of
Cleveland
have likewise confirmed the conceptual difference between treating taxes and considering licenses as property. Most applications of
Cleveland
have occurred in the licensing context.
See, e.g., United States v. LeVeque,
A few circuits have, however, considered the relevance of
Cleveland
to prosecutions based upon tax fraud. In a similar case involving a scheme to evade Canadian taxes on liquor through smuggling alcohol from Maryland to Canada via Niagara Falls, New York, the Fourth Circuit held that, “because a government has a property right in tax revenues when they accrue, the tax revenues owed Canada and the Province of Ontario by reason of the Defendants’ conduct in the present case constitute property for purposes of the wire fraud statute.”
United States v. Pasquantino,
In Pierce, the defendants were “not accused of scheming to defraud the Canadian Government of its property, but of its right to obtain property, its right to be paid money.” The court assumed that such a right could constitute “property” for the purpose of RICO. These decisions predate Cleveland v. United States, in which the Supreme Court held that an unissued video poker license held by the state did not constitute “property” for the purposes of the mail fraud statute. Given that we decide this case based on the revenue rule, it is unnecessary for us to visit the issue of what constitutes “property” under RICO in light of Cleveland.
R.J. Reynolds,
Although one
post-Cleveland
case appears, at first glance, to undermine the identification of taxes as property under the mail and wire fraud statutes, analysis demonstrates that tax credits are quite different from run-of-the-mill sales and income taxes. In
United States v. Griffin,
Finally, at oral argument, Petitioner expressly disavowed reliance on an argument that others involved in the same conspiracy have made — that the government did not prove the existence, under federal law, of the statutory scheme according to which Canada enjoys the right to collect taxes.
See United States v. Pierce,
Because the decision in Cleveland did not affect courts’ pre-existing consensus that taxes owed to a government — whether state, federal, or foreign' — are property in the hands of that government, Fountain cannot meet his burden of demonstrating actual innocence.
Conclusion
Because we interpret the Supreme Court’s decision in Cleveland as effecting a limited alteration in the course of interpretation of the mail and wire fraud statutes rather than as completely redirecting the stream, we continue to deem taxes owed to governments — whether foreign or domestic and whether state or federal — “property” within the meaning of the mail and wire fraud statutes. Petitioner’s claim of actual innocence must therefore fail. We likewise reaffirm our decision in Trafilo that the common law revenue rule does not bar prosecutions for defrauding foreign governments of taxes. In light of this precedent, Petitioner cannot demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel. Fountain’s petition for habeas corpus is therefore denied.
Notes
. Petitioner would have us, a three-judge panel, overrule the law of the Circuit as expressed in
Trapilo.
We were not free to do so in
R.J. Reynolds,
and we are not free to do so now.
See Monsanto v. United States,
