Matthew Ianniello appeals from an order entered on May 5, 1993 in the Southern District of New York, Stanton, dismissing his petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. Ianniel-lo asserted that his RICO conviction should be vacated because the jury was not charged that it had to find a relationship among the predicate acts supporting the RICO violation. Judge Stanton doubted the inadequacy of the jury charge, and found any error harmless. On appeal, Ianniello contends that the district court erred in so finding. We agree with the district court’s finding of harmless error, and affirm.
I.
Ianniello’s crimes are detailed in our opinion on his direct appeal.
United States v. Ianniello,
The government established the following facts at trial:
■ — Ianniello and his partner skimmed cash from bar and admission receipts of the businesses, and failed to report the income on personal tax returns.
—The books, records and tax returns of the businesses were falsified to conceal the diversion of money and to avoid payment of taxes by the businesses.
—The Peppermint Lounge underwent chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings and was obligated to file monthly financial statements with the bankruptcy court. Cash was skimmed during this period and the statements filed with the court were falsified.
• — The interests of Ianniello and his partner were concealed from State liquor licensing authorities in furtherance of the cash skimming scheme.
• — -The facilities of the New Peppermint Lounge were acquired when the original *61 Peppermint Lounge was closed for fire code violations. The transaction was concealed from State liquor licensing authorities.
—Ianniello and his partner ran the scheme from the offices of C & I Trading at 135 West 50th Street in Manhattan.
The indictment contained multiple counts of mail fraud, bankruptcy fraud and tax evasion. It also contained counts for substantive and conspiracy violations of RICO, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), based on multiple alleged predicate acts of mail fraud.
Judge Weinfeld, who conducted the trial, held a Fed.R.Crim.P. 30 conference to entertain the parties’ objections to proposed jury charges. One of Ianniello’s objections concerned the RICO pattern requirement:
MR. Burstein [for defendants]: Page 42, your Honor, the third sentence of the second paragraph, “You need not find any connection or interrelation between the racketeering acts,” we submit that that is an incorrect statement of the law in light of the Sedima case in the Supreme Court which says that the racketeering acts must and in order for there to be a pattern there must be some relationship upon them.
Judge Weinfeld eventually charged the jury without stating whether a relationship between racketeering acts was necessary:
The fourth element of the offense requires that the government prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant whose case you are considering engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity.
To establish this element, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that during the course of his association with the enterprise, the defendant committed or aided and abetted the commission of at least two of the racketeering acts specified in the indictment.
Again in conference, counsel objected to the jury charge:
Mr. RoCCO [for the defendants 1 ]: ....
... I believe that after the Rule 30 conference, counsel asked your Honor to charge the jury under RICO that predicate acts had to be interrelated under Sedima against Imrex.
I listened to your Honor’s charge. I didn’t hear that in the charge as given by the court. I respectfully except to that portion of the charge that failed to charge that the predicate acts had to be interrelated.
The government responded to the objection: “[M]r. Rocco’s point that the predicate acts have to be charged as being related I think was rejected by the Court of Appeals in U.S. vs. Weis[ ]man, specifically.”
The jury convicted Ianniello on thirty-five counts of mail fraud and six counts of tax evasion. The jury also found that Ianniello committed every one of the forty-four acts of mail fraud submitted to it by the trial court for consideration as predicate RICO acts, and convicted Ianniello of substantive and conspiracy violations of RICO. Judge Wein-feld sentenced Ianniello on the RICO counts to concurrent six year prison terms and separate $10,000 fines, and on the remaining counts to concurrent five year prison terms, separate $1,000 fines, and two years of probation.
Ianniello appealed his conviction on the ground that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on RICO’s “pattern” requirement. Ianniello complained that the trial court failed to instruct the jury that conviction required a finding that the predicate acts were interrelated. According to Ianniello, the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
*62
We affirmed, based on the teaching of
United States v. Weisman,
Under Weisman, relatedness is supplied by the concept of “enterprise” expressed in section 1962(c) and the ten year requirement of section 1961(5). The link between the acts [was] supplied by the fact that “the predicate acts constituting a ‘pattern of racketeering activity’ must all be done in the conduct of the affairs of an ‘enterprise.’ ” This also supplies the necessary element of continuity, since an enterprise is a continuing operation.
Id.
at 190 (footnotes omitted) (quoting
Weisman,
Three years later, we reconsidered the relatedness issue en banc, found that “the
Sedima
dictum was entitled to far greater deference than
Ianniello
gave it,” and changed course.
United States v. Indelicato,
On July 24, 1992, Ianniello filed a § 2255 petition seeking review of his conviction in light of the revised interpretation of the pattern requirement. The district court denied that petition by order entered May 5, 1993. Ianniello, who is still serving his sentence, appeals.
II.
Ianniello’s claim, in the abstract, is that his conviction is tainted because the jury instruction permitted the jury to convict him for conduct that Indelicato placed beyond the reach of punishment. We agree that Ianniello’s abstract claim is sufficiently fundamental to warrant collateral review and retroactive application of Indelicato, but we find that overwhelming evidence against Ianniello renders harmless the jury instruction error in this case.
The crux of Ianniello’s § 2255 petition is that he might have been convicted for conduct that is not illegal. The jury instructions permitted a finding of guilt if the jury found that “during the course of his association with the enterprise, [Ianniello] committed or aided and abetted the commission of at least two of the racketeering acts specified in the indictment.” No mention was made of a requirement that those acts be related to one another. It is possible that a defendant whose acts are not related — and therefore not illegal under RICO — could nevertheless be convicted upon such a defective jury instruction. That defendant suffers a fundamental wrong: conviction for conduct that is not illegal.
See Davis v. United States,
The government contends that the change wrought by
Indelicato
was a mere refinement of nuances in legislative interpretation. That may be so, but if the refinement of nuances means that a person might have been convicted for conduct that is not illegal, then it ceases to be a matter of interpretive curiosity and becomes a matter of fundamental importance.
Ingber v. Enzor,
Some decisions suggest that the Supreme Court, since
Teague v. Lane,
We nevertheless affirm the dismissal of Ianniello’s § 2255 petition, because the evidence demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt the missing element in the jury instruction: the relatedness among Ianniello’s predicate acts. The jury found that Ianniello committed all forty-four of the predicate acts of mail fraud that the trial court submitted for the jury’s consideration. Those forty-four acts are densely related. As the district court explained,
evidence that the predicate acts were interrelated was overwhelming. According to Indelicato,865 F.2d at 1382 , the interrelationship between acts suggesting the existence of a pattern may be established by “their temporal proximity, or common goals, or similarity of methods, or repetitions.” Here, the forty-four predicate acts involved mailing fraudulent applications for liquor licenses and fraudulent sales tax returns. They occurred continuously over a six-year period, were related to the common goal of skimming money from the bars and restaurants while keeping Ian-niello’s interest in them hidden, and were similar, if not identical in method. There is no danger that Ianniello’s RICO convictions rested on “ ‘isolated’ or ‘sporadic’ criminal acts.”
Ianniello v. United States,
No. 92 Civ. 5562, at 4,
*64
This case thus differs from
United States v. Long,
Ianniello asserts that a court cannot constitutionally supply the missing factual element, because that is the province of the jury.
See Sullivan v. Louisiana,
— U.S. -, -,
First, the Supreme Court avoided Ianniel-lo’s extreme position that a court never can supply a missing link. The Court used the example of a charge that erects a presumption regarding an element of an offense:
[T]he jury-instruction error in this case [ (failure to instruct on reasonable doubt) ] is quite different from the jury-instruction error of erecting a presumption regarding an element of the offense. A mandatory presumption — for example, the presumption that a person intends the ordinary consequences of his voluntary acts — violates the Fourteenth Amendment, because it may relieve the State of its burden of proving all elements of the offense. But “[w]hen a jury is instructed to presume malice from predicate facts, it still must find the existence of those facts beyond a reasonable doubt.” And when the latter facts “are so closely related to the ultimate fact to be presumed that no rational jury could find those facts without also finding that ultimate fact, making those findings is functionally equivalent to finding the element required to be presumed.”
Id.
(quoting
Rose v. Clark,
Second,
Sullivan
concerned a failure to charge on reasonable doubt, which the Court found to be among a select few constitutional lights, the violation of which cannot be excused as harmless.
See id.
at -,
Harmless error analysis is the rule rather than the exception, and courts may constitutionally play a guarded role in judging whether facts found by a jury are so conclusive on an ultimate factual issue — an issue undecided by the jury because of a faulty charge — that the error in the charge and resultant absence of an actual jury finding on the ultimate issue are harmless.
Pope v. Illinois,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The participants at the post-charge conference agreed to avoid repetition by "consider[ing] the lawyers [as] speaking for everyone” unless specific exception were taken.
. Sedima stated:
[W]hile two acts are necessary, they may not be sufficient. Indeed, in common parlance two of anything do not generally form a "pattern.” The legislative history supports the view that two isolated acts of racketeering activity do not constitute a pattern. As the Senate Report explained: "The target of [RICO] is thus not sporadic activity. The infiltration of legitimate business normally requires more than one 'racketeering activity’ and the threat *62 of continuing activity to be effective. It is this factor of continuity plus relationship which combines to produce a pattern.” Similarly, the sponsor of the Senate bill, after quoting this portion of the Report, pointed out to his colleagues that "[t]he term 'pattern' itself requires the showing of a relationship.... So, therefore, proof of two acts of racketeering activity, without more, does not establish a pattern....” Significantly, in defining "pattern” in a later provision of the same bill, Congress was more enlightening: “[C]riminal conduct forms a pattern if it embraces criminal acts that have the same or similar purposes, results, participants, victims, or methods of commission, or otherwise are interrelated by distinguishing characteristics and are not isolated events.” This language may be useful in interpreting other sections of the Act.
Sedima,
. Ianniello cites
United States v. Long,
