Lead Opinion
OPINION
I. BACKGROUND
Antоnio M. Aagotti was convicted on six counts arising out of his fraudulent conduct in obtaining a loan: four of making false statements to a federally-insured financial institution, one of money laundering, and one of conspiracy to commit the substantive offenses.
Angotti was prosecuted primarily because he filed false documents to obtain a $480,000 loan from Western Federal Savings and Loan Association to buy a condominium unit in northern California. Unbeknownst to Western Federal, the condominium was part of a financially troubled real estate project developed by Angotti and his father. Angot-ti made just one payment on the loan and then defaulted. Western Federal is a federally insured savings and loan headquartered in Orange County, in the Central District of California. In accordance with Western Federal’s usual policy, Orange County headquarters made the final decision approving Angotti’s loan.
Angotti made all of his false statements to Western Federal through an innocent middle agent, Guarantee Mortgage, whom Angotti hired to help him obtain the loan. Guarantee Mortgage is located in the Northern District of California. Angotti submitted to Guarantee Mortgage a draft loan application that contained false statements. Guarantee Mortgage then unwittingly reiterated the false information in a loan package that it sent to Western Federal’s Redwood Shores branch office, also in the Northern District of California. The branch office conditionally approved the loan and then sent the application to Western Federal’s head office for the final decision.
After reviewing the application, Western Federal informed Guarantee Mortgage that Angotti would have to provide a “verification of deposit” to confirm the existence of some of his assets. Angotti asked Raymond Ar-thun, who was in the Central District, to prepare the verification of deposit. Arthun faxed the verification to Guarantee Mortgage, which sent it on to Western Federal’s Redwood Shores office, which then directed it to Western Federal’s head office in the Central District.
Two of Angotti’s four false statement convictions concern statements in the original loan application package. Another is for misrepresentations in the Arthun verification of deposit. The remaining false statement conviction is for the false representation in a letter from Angotti found in a loan file at Western Federal’s head office in Orange County. The letter stated that thе down payment for Angotti’s condominium would be a gift from Eugene Di Basilio, when in fact Di Basilio gave Angotti a twenty-four hour loan for the down payment, not a gift.
Additionally, Angotti was convicted of one count of money laundering for depositing $20,000 of the loan proceeds in a bank in the Northern District, and of one count of conspiracy to commit all of the underlying false statement and money laundering charges. The district court sentenced Angotti to concurrent 41 month terms of incarceration.
II. VENUE
On appeal, Angotti argues that venue did not lie in the Central District of California fоr any of the six counts on which he was convicted. “The existence of venue is a question of law [that] we review de novo.” United States v. Childs,
Our venue law grows out of important concerns that a criminal jury trial be held near the place where the crime was committed and where prosecution can conveniently рroceed. “In criminal cases venue involves important considerations of policy, with deep historical roots, that are now expressed in a complicated interplay of constitutional provisions, statutes and rules.” Charles A. Wright, Law of Federal Courts § 43, at 271 (5th ed. 1994). The Supreme Court has, at
The Constitution, which protects venue rights in Articlе III, § 2, and the Sixth Amendment, states that a defendant must be tried in both the state and the district where the crime was committed. The criminal rules and code spell out that requirement, along with the need to consider the convenience of the defendant and the court:
Except as otherwise permitted by statute or by these rules, the prosecution shall be had in a district in which the offense was committed. The court shall fix the place of trial within the district with due regard to the convenience of the defendant and the witnesses and the prompt administration of justice.
Fed.R.Crim.P. 18; 18 U.S.C. § 3232.
Determining where an offense was committed, however, has often been a sticky question. See 2 Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 302; Armistead M. Dobie, Venue in Criminal Cases in the United States District Court, 12 Va.L.Rev. 287 (1926). Many offenses, like complex conspiracies or transporting contraband, may continué throúgh multiple venues. Congress has eased the burden of answering this question by providing that continuing offenses may be prosecuted where they are begun, continued, or completed:
Except as otherwise expressly provided by an enactment of Congress, any offense agаinst the United States begun in one district and completed in another, or committed in more than one district, may be inquired of and prosecuted in any district in which such offense was begun, continued, or completed.
18 U.S.C. § 3237(a). A key question in this case is whether Angotti’s offenses should be treated as continuing offenses that could have been prosecuted in either the Northern District or the Central District of California, or whether, as Angotti contends, venue was proper only in the Northern District.
A. The False Statement Charges
Angotti was convicted in the Central District of California of four counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1014, which punishes anyonе who “knowingly makes any false statement ... for the purpose of influencing ... the action” of a federally insured institution. This statute does not indicate a method for determining the location of the crime for the purpose of establishing venue. Therefore, the location “must be determined from the nature of the crime alleged and location of the act or acts constituting it.” United States v. Anderson,
Angotti was charged with making false statements for the purpose of influencing the actions of bank officials, who in this ease were located in the Central District of California. The statemеnts were actually communicated to those officials; indeed the officials acted upon the statements and approved Angotti’s loan. We conclude that venue was therefore proper in the Central District, where the communication reached the audience whom it was intended to influence, even though some of the criminal conduct occurred in the Northern District, where the statements were submitted.
Our conclusion is consistent with the decision of another circuit that has considered materially similar facts and held that the crime of making а false statement is a continuing offense that may be prosecuted in the district where the false statement is ultimately received for final decisionmaking. United States v. Candella,
Angotti, however, contends that proper venue could only lie in the Northern Dis-triet of California, where the statements were first lodged. Angotti does not argue that prosecution in the Central District posed any hardship on him, or otherwise fettered the proper administration of his trial. Rather, Angotti relies on the so-called “key verb” test that this court applied in United States v. Corona,
Angotti points out, correctly, that the key verb in the crime of making false statements is “make.” See 18 U.S.C. § 1014. Angotti then urges that all of the false statements were “made” in the Northern District because that is where they were submitted to Western Federal.
We reject Angotti’s argument, for it erroneously assumes that a key verb can describe conduct occurring in only one venue. Our conclusion that venue lies in the Central District is fully consistent with our use of the key verb test in Corona. In Corona we held, quite logically, that the crime of distribution of narcotics is сommitted in the district where the narcotics are distributed. Id. at 880. Deciding where a false statement is “made,” however, requires some analysis of where the statement came from and where it went. We agree with the decision of the Second Circuit in Candella that the act of making a communication continues until the communication is received by the person or persons whom it is intended to affect or influence. See also In re Palliser,
The dissent incorrectly contends that the subjective intent of the defendant is the controlling factor, and attempts to distinguish Candella on the ground that Candella knew where the information would ultimately be received, whereas Angotti, at least on this record, did not. The defendant’s subjective knowledge, however, does not necessarily determine who the real intended recipient of his statement was. Angotti’s statement was made for the purpose of influencing the bank official who had the power to approve his loan. It is irrelevant whether Angotti subjectively knew the identity or location of that official; that official is nonetheless the person to whom Angotti’s statements were directed. His act of “making” the false statements continued until the statements were received by the person whom they were ultimately intended to influence.
There is no question that a crime was committed once Angotti’s statements reached the bank office in the Northern Distriсt; the statements did not have to reach their intended destination in order to constitute a crime. United States v. Smith,
The dissent correctly observes that a result of this analysis is that venue will often be possible in districts with which the defendant had no personal connection, and which may occasionally be distant from where the defendant originated the actions constituting the offense. As a distinguished observer has
Our holding in this case is also supported by established caselaw relying on banking law and practice to determine the place of criminal conduct involving financial transactions. Thus when a bribe was received in the form of a check, the Supreme Court early on recognized that venue was proper not only ~vhere the defendant received the check, but also where he received the funds it represented-i. e., where the check was paid. See Burton v. United States,
Moreovеr, in applying the key verb test in Corona, we did not state that verbs must be considered to the exclusion of all other factors. Other circuits have rejected the view that verbs are the sole. consideration in determining venue. See, e.g., United States v. Newsom,
In three of the false statement charges Angotti prepared false documents that were transmitted first to the branch office in the Northern District and then to the head office in the Central District. We hold that venue is proper in either the Northern or Central District and thus affirm the convictions in the Central District.
Afflrmance of venue for the remaining false statement count, relating to the Arthun verification of deposit, is even more compellingly required. At Angotti's direction, Arthun both prepared and transmitted the false statement in the Central District, and it was acted upon in the Central District. Because Arthur transmitted the communication from the Central District to the Northern District, prosecution in the Northern District would also have been appropriate, but was not required. As the Tenth Circuit explained in Zwego, venue for a § 1014 prosecution is proper where "the false statements were prepared, executed, or made... ."
B. Money Laundering
The money laundering charge was predicated on Angotti's deposit of funds obtained from the Central District, where the loan was approved. Nevertheless, Angotti contends that proper venue lay only in the Northern District because Angotti deposited the funds there. Doubtless venue could have been laid in the Northern District, but not to
C. .Conspiracy
Angotti was additionally convicted of conspiring, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, to commit the underlying substantive offenses. "Venue for a conspiracy charge is appropriate in any district where an overt act committed in the course of the conspiracy occurred. It is not necessary that [the defendant] himself have entered or otherwise committed an overt act within the district, as long as one of his coconspirators did." United States v. Corona,
The government argues correctly that venue for the conspiracy charge properly lay in the Central District because acts in furtherance of the conspiracy were committed there. Specifically, the government points to Ar-thun, who created the false verification of deposit in the Central District and faxed it from there to Guarantee Mortgage in the Northern District. The government also points to other acts by coconspirators which, it contends, confer venue in the Central District. Because we hold that venue properly lay in the Central District where Arthun created the verification of deposit, we need not address the government's remaining arguments.
Angotti challenges the government's reliance on Arthun's acts on three separate grounds. First, Angotti argues that the evidence at trial was insufficient to establish that Arthun was a member of the conspiracy because "{t]here was no showing that Arthun even knew what the object of the scheme was, or that hе stood to benefit by its achievement." The evidence, however, showed that Arthun prepared the false verification of deposit at the request of Angotti, knowing that statements in the document were false and that the document was being prepared to help Angotti qualify for a loan. This evidence is sufficient to show that Ar-thun was a coconspirator.
Second, Angotti argues that Arthun's acts cannot place venue in the Central District because Arthun was not himself indicted or even described in Angotti's indictment, and therefore the government's reliance on Arthun's acts prejudiced the defense. Before trial, Angotti moved to dismiss the indictment for lack of venue, arguing that venue for the conspiracy count did not lie in the Central District because the indictment contained no allegations that any acts in furtherance of the alleged conspiracy took place there. The government responded that the indictment alleged that an unnamed cocon-spirator had "provide[d]" or "submit[ted]" a false verification of deposit to Western Federal, and that the evidence at trial would show that Raymond Arthun had committed this аct in the Central District. Angotti was fully apprised of the factual allegations supporting venue in the Central District. Thus, there was no possibifity for prejudicial surprise. See United States v. Alvarez, 972 F2d 1000, 1004 (9th Cir.1992) (per curiam) (defendant was not prejudiced by variance between facts alleged in indictment and facts proven at trial when defendant was "advised well before trial" of what government would attempt to prove); Carbo v. United States,
Third, Angotti argues that venue could not lie where Arthun prepared the verification of deposit because that act was not foreseеable to Angotti. However, the authority he cites does not require that the defendant foresee where the overt act will occur. See United States v. Tannenbaum,
Because the preparation of the verification of deposit constituted an overt act by a co-conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy, venue was proper in the Central District for
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The false statements were in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1014. The money laundering was in
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part, dissenting in part:
Appellant Antonio Angоtti was convicted of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1014 for filing false statements in a loan application he submitted to Western Federal Bank in the Northern District of California. Section 1014 makes it a crime to “knowingly make[] any false statement ... for the purpose of influencing in any way the action of ... any institution the accounts of which are [federally] in-sured_” 18 U.S.C. § 1014. A violation of § 1014 is “a crime of subjective intent.” United States v. Kennedy,
The Sixth Amendment guarantees an accused the right to be tried in the district wherein the alleged crime was “committed.”
The majority holds that venue was proper in the Central District of California — where Angotti was tried — because Western Federal sent Angotti’s loan application to that district for approval. I dissent because this holding has no support in the Sixth Amendment, in case law or in logic. The subjective intent crime of which Angotti was convicted was committed when he submitted the loan application to Western Federal in the Northern District. What Western Federal did or did not do with the application thereafter is irrelevant.
The Loan Application Counts. The majority accepts that the crime was committed when the loan application was submitted to Western Federal in the Northern District. Maj. op. at 543 (“[t]here is no question that a crime was committed once Angotti’s statements reached the bank office in the Northern District”). The majority holds, howevеr, that the crime was also committed in the Central District. I am at a loss to understand how. What is painfully clear from the majority’s opinion, however, is that under the majority’s holding, a person accused of making false statements in a loan application filed with a bank in San Francisco may be prosecuted in Los Angeles, or New York, or Chicago, or any other city where the loan application happens to be sent for approval, regardless whether the applicant has any idea where the bank will send it.
The majority bases its holding upon its charаcterization of the § 1014 crime as one that “continues until the communication is received by the person or persons whom it is intended to affect or influence.” See maj. op. at 543. However, the majority cites no authority — Ninth Circuit or otherwise — for the proposition that fraudulent statements intended to influence an “institution the accounts of which are [federally] insured,” see 18 U.S.C. § 1018, are not received by that institution until they find their way to the individual officers with authority to act upon them. United States v. Zwego,
The principal case the majority relies on is United States v. Candella,
The bottom line is that Angotti committed the § 1014 subjective intent crime when the federally insured institution — Western Federal — received the false statements. That, of course, happened in the Northern District of California. Where Western Federаl chose to send the loan application for approval thereafter is irrelevant for the purpose of deciding Angotti’s guilt or innocence and irrelevant for the purpose of determining venue. The crime was committed — it was over — when Angotti delivered the fraudulent documents to Western Federal in the Northern District. It was at this point that Angotti “knowingly ma[de the] false statement^] ... for the purpose of influencing” that institution. See 18 U.S.C. § 1014.
The Verification of Deposit Count. Venue in the Central District was also improper on the count relating to the Verification of Deposit (“Verification”). In upholding venue on this count, the majority relies on the fact that Arthun “prepared and transmitted the false statement in the Central District, and [on the fact that the false statement] was acted upon in the Central District.” Maj. op. at 544. Arthun’s preparation and transmission of the Verification were, however, merely acts that were preparatory to the crime. And the law of this circuit is that “‘[a]ctions which are merely preparatory or prior to the crime are not probative in determining venue.’ ” Corona,
The majority ignores Corona in its analysis of venue on the Verification count, citing only out-of-circuit cases: United States v. Greene,
The Conspiracy Count. Because the preparation by Arthun of the Verification consti
The Money Laundering Count. I also agree with the majority that venue for a money laundering count is proper in the district where the underlying crime producing the funds was committed. See United States v. Beddow,
In sum, I would affirm the convictions on the conspiracy and money laundering counts, and reverse the convictions on the false statement counts for improper venue.
. The Sixth Amendment provides:
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law....
U.S. Const, amend. VI.
