Case Information
*1 Before LOKEN and BEAM, Circuit Judges, and PERRY [1] , District Judge.
____________
PERRY, District Judge.
Lоren George Jennings was convicted of two counts of mail fraud and one
count of money laundering in 2005. His conviction and sentence were affirmed on
direct appeal.
See United States v. Jennings
,
I. BACKGROUND
The complete facts of this case are discussed in the opinion affirming
Jennings’s conviction and sentence on direct appeal.
See Jennings
,
Jennings was a Minnesota state representative from 1984 through 2002. He served on the House Regulated Industries Committee, including serving at times as chairman or the ranking minority member. He also had a partnership interest in two companies: M & M Sanitation (M & M) and C & J Properties (C & J). One of Jennings’s other business associates, John James, was a banker at Town & Country Bank in Almelund, Minnesota. The bank had previously made a loan to a company called Poletech, which had been working to develop “hollow veneer” utility poles. By the time of Jennings’s involvement, the Poletech loan had become a problem loan. Banker James formed a company сalled Northern Pole to purchase Poletech’s assets, and he asked Jennings to make a “bridge loan” to Northern Pole. To do this, Jennings caused M & M to borrow $315,000 from Town & Country Bank in April 1997; M & M then lent those funds to Northern Pole. Jennings personally guaranteed the loan in order to get his partners’ consent. Northern Pole gave M & M a promissory note, which was extended several times but never paid down. This loan was not reported in M & M’s financial statements. In April 1998, C & J borrowed an additional *3 $355,000 from Town & Country Bank and made a loan in that amount to Northern Pole, again personally guaranteed by Jennings. Jennings thus had personally guaranteed a total of $670,000 in loans from M & M and C & J to Northern Pole.
In the summer of 1998, Northern Pole suffered a fire at its work site and changed its business enterprise from developing hollow poles to researching new recycling methods for the utility poles currently in use. In order to get funding for the struggling company, Jennings used his political position to sponsor and pass a bill in the Minnesota legislature amending the Conservation Improvement Program (CIP) in a way that would benefit Northern Pole. The CIP used surcharges from utility customers to fund conservation projects. The amendment made research projects such as Northern Pole’s eligible for CIP funds.
After the CIP amendment was passed, Jennings approached two Minnesota utility companies, NSP and Minnesota Power, to see if they would provide CIP funds to Northern Pole. Jennings told the utility companies that he was working on behalf of a constituent and that he had no other interest in Northern Pole. The utilities decided to award money to Northern Pole; testimony showed that the decision was made primarily because of Jennings’s political power and influence. When each CIP pаyment was awarded, Northern Pole paid part of the money directly back to M & M and C & J to repay the loans that Jennings had personally guaranteed. Because CIP payments are public funds, they must be approved by the Minnesota Department of Commerce. In May 2000, Jennings, James, and the acting president of Northern Pоle fabricated a report for the Department of Commerce, accounting for the use of its CIP funds. In reality, the only work done by Northern Pole for the utility companies was preparation of a three-ring binder of research, which was merely a summary of research already done in the field. It had been compiled by the acting president’s daughter-in-law. By 2002, the CIP funds that had been awarded to Northern Pole totaled $650,000, of which $284,398 was used to make payments directly to M & M and C & J.
At trial, Jennings was convicted of two counts of mail fraud (using an honest-
services fraud theory) and one count of money laundering. He was sentenced to 48
months’ imprisonment and ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $284,398, the
amount of money from the scheme that personally benefitted him, and to forfeit the
same amount to the government. His conviction was affirmed on appeal.
Jennings
,
II. DISCUSSION
This court reviews a district court’s denial of a § 2255 motion
de novo
.
Hodge
v. United States
, 602 F.3d 935, 937 (8th Cir. 2010). “Habeas review is an
extraordinary remedy and will not be allowed to do service for an appeal.”
Bousley
v. United States
,
As relevant to this count of conviction, Jennings raised the following arguments
on his direct appeal: (1) the evidence was insufficient to prove that he had a duty to
*5
disclose his interest in Northern Pole; (2) the jury instructions were erroneous because
the jury should have been instructed that the gоvernment was required to prove his
violation of a state law; (3) the jury instructions were erroneous because the jury
should have been instructed that the government was required to prove gain or loss
in an honest-services mail fraud scheme; (4) the district court erred in two evidentiary
rulings; (5) the district court erred in the amount of its forfеiture order because
forfeiture was only authorized for the money laundering offense, not the mail fraud
offenses; and (6) the district court erred by applying the sentencing guideline for
honest-services fraud rather than the guideline for conflict of interest or receipt of
unauthorized compensation.
See Jennings
,
In
Skilling,
the Supremе Court held that honest-services fraud under 18 U.S.C.
§ 1346 is limited to schemes involving bribery or kickbacks.
The main argument in Jennings’s § 2255 motion was that his conduct was not unlawful under ’s nеw interpretation of honest-services mail fraud because the evidence supporting his conviction did not involve bribes or kickbacks. The district court held that Jennings had procedurally defaulted this argument by failing to raise it on direct appeal. Although the district court recognized that Jennings’s argument was based on , which was decided after his direct appeal had been denied, Jennings could have at any time raised the same legal issue that had been raised in *6 Skilling : that the honest-services fraud statute was unconstitutionally vague and should be limited to cases involving bribes or kickbacks.
Jennings now argues that he did raise the same argument presеnted in Skilling on his direct appeal; he thus argues that this claim is not procedurally barred. In his direct appeal, Jennings argued generally that 28 U.S.C. § 1346 did not encompass his conduct. Specifically, he argued that it did not reach his conduct because he did not violate state disclosure laws or any other duty to disclose his intеrest in Northern Pole. Thus, Jennings claims that he made the same basic argument as that presented in Skilling : that the statute did not criminalize his conduct.
The government responds that the argument made in Skilling was not as broad as Jennings proposes. In , the appellant argued that 28 U.S.C. § 1346 did not cover his conduct because the statute was unconstitutionally vague. Jennings’s specific argument was that the statute did not cover his conduct because the government did not prove that he violated a state law. Thus, according to the government, Jennings procedurally defaulted the argument he now raises on appeal.
Jennings’s arguments on appeal challenged the jury instructions concerning whether the government had to prove the source of his duty to disclose the conflict of interest, or whether the scheme must involve proof of a “gain” or “loss.” Jennings’s briefs never discussed the constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. § 1346 generally, nor did they discuss any requirement that the statute must be limited to bribery or kickbacks to pass constitutional muster. Although he now asserts that he made a vagueness сhallenge, each allegation of vagueness was raised specifically in relation to his arguments regarding disclosure of a conflict of interest or proof of a gain or loss. [3] A claim that *7 the statute is unconstitutionally vague for entirely different reasons than those proposed in is not sufficient to preserve Jennings’s currеnt claim. Therefore, we hold that because Jennings did not raise this issue on direct appeal, he has procedurally defaulted the claim.
In order to obtain collateral review on a procedurally defaulted claim, a habeas petitioner must show either that there was cause for his procedural default and actual prejudice, or that he is actually innocent of the crime for which he was convicted. See Bousley , 523 U.S. at 622. Jennings does not raise the exception for cause and prejudice, presumably for the reason that, as the district court pointed out, he argues that he did not procedurally default this argument. Therefore, he does not provide any cause for his default.
enlarged the scope of honest services fraud. ‘[P]eople are entitled to clear notice of
what the criminal law forbids, and courts must take care not to enlarge the scope of
illegality.’” J.A. at 159 (quoting
United States v. Genova
,
Second, in arguing that honest-services fraud for public officials should be
limited according to state law, Jennings cited to a case from the Third Circuit Court
of Appeals that stated: “Rather than substituting one ambiguous standard for another
in holding that an official deprives the public of his honest services only if he misuses
office for personal gain, we believe that state law offers a better limiting principle for
purposes of determining when an official’s failure to disclose a conflict of interest
amounts to honest services fraud.” J.A. at 159-60 (quoting
United States v. Panarella
,
Finally, as support for his argument that the statute should require proof of a
gain or loss, Jennings argued that the court should “exercise[] restraint in assessing
the reach of a federal criminal statute . . . out of a concern that ‘a fair warning should
be given to the world in language that the common world will understand, of what the
law intends to do if a certain line is passed.’” J.A. at 161 (quoting
United States v.
Aguilar
,
Jennings does argue, however, that he is actually innocent of honest-services
fraud, as it is now defined by the Supreme Court after
Skilling
. To invoke the actual
innocence exception, Jennings must show that in light of all the evidence, “it is more
likely than not that no reasonable juror would have found petitioner guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.”
Schlup v. Delo
,
As modified by the Supreme Court in
Skilling
, honest-services fraud under 28
U.S.C. § 1346 criminalizes only schemes involving bribery or kickbacks. ,
The government analogizes Jennings’s conduct to the facts underlying the
sсheme in
McNally
. In
McNally
, two petitioners, Charles McNally and James Gray,
along with the former chairman of the Commonwealth of Kentucky’s Democratic
Party, Howard Hunt, were charged with mail fraud for devising a scheme to deprive
the public of their “intangible right” to have the affairs of the Commonwealth
performed honestly.
McNally
,
The
Skilling
Court thus described McNally’s scheme as involving several
elements, and those elements are present here. First,
McNally
involved a “public
official.” ,
The evidence at trial was sufficient to demonstrate a kickback scheme as contemplated by , thereby supporting a conviction under 28 U.S.C. § 1346, *10 even under the more restricted interpretation of that statute. Because we find that Jennings cannot demonstrate that it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him of this offense under the statutе’s narrower interpretation, Jennings does not meet the exception for actual innocence to excuse his procedural default.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
______________________________
Notes
[1] The Honorable Catherine D. Perry, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri.
[2] The Honorable Richard H. Kyle, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
[3] Jennings only mentioned the statute’s vagueness in his brief on direct appeal in three specific contexts, each of which is distinguishable from the vagueness challenge made in . First, Jennings argued that in rejecting his proposed jury instruction regarding the duty to disclose a conflict of interest, “the Court improperly
