United States of America, Appellee, v. Cathryn M. Simmons, Appellant. United States of America, Appellee, v. Michael L. Fisher, Appellant.
Nos. 97-4025WM, 98-1070WM, 97-4027WM
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
September 8, 1998
Submitted: June 9, 1998; Filed: August 17, 1998; Amended: September 8, 1998. On Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri.
ORDER
Counsel for the United States has drawn our attention to a factual mistake in this opinion. The opinion states that Mr. Griffin was acquitted of the RICO count, whereas in fact the jury was unable to reach agreement on that count.
Accordingly, the opinion is amended to correct this error, and the Clerk is directed to file an amended opinion containing the appropriate change.
This change does not affect the merits or the legal analysis, and the filing of the amended opinion does not supersede the running of the time period within which to petition for rehearing.
September 8, 1998
Order Entered at the Direction of the Court.
Clerk, U.S. Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
A jury convicted Cathryn M. Simmons of twelve bribery violations under
I.
On October 31, 1996, a grand jury returned a twenty-six-count indictment
The indictment set forth the racketeering and other charges in the context of five different “schemes.” The first scheme involved the Motor Fuel Tax Bill, which was introduced in the Missouri House of Representatives on January 9, 1992, and which was proposed to increase the state motor fuel tax by six cents a gallon over five years to pay for construction of highways, roads, and bridges in Missouri. Proponents of this legislation included the Heavy Constructors Association of Kansas City and the Associated General Contractors of Missouri, two organizations representing construction companies in Missouri. The indictment alleged that shortly after the introduction of the Motor Fuel Tax Bill, Griffin met with members of the Heavy Constructors Association, the Associated General Contractors, and other construction groups in a hotel in Jefferson City, and recommended that members of the construction industry hire Simmons to assist them in lobbying for the new motor fuel tax. The Heavy Constructors Association and the Associated General Contractors hired Simmons to lobby for the Motor Fuel Tax Bill -- which eventually passed the Missouri House of Representatives -- and paid her a total of $264,000 for her efforts. According to the indictment, in February 1994, after the passage of the fuel tax, Simmons gave Griffin two checks for $5,000 each. App. 13-15.
The second scheme alleged in the indictment involved Health Midwest, Inc., a Kansas City corporation which owned and operated hospitals in Missouri and Kansas, and which sought to purchase North Kansas City Hospital, which was owned by the City of North Kansas City, Missouri. To facilitate this sale, Health Midwest hired Richard E. Moore and his public-relations firm, Moore, Sturges and Associates. Moore in turn hired Simmons to aid in the purchase of the hospital, and agreed to pay Simmons $9,200 per month for her services. Around this time, Simmons also entered into a contract with City Management Corporation, a corporation that operated landfills in Missouri, under which Simmons would assist City Management Corporation in establishing a landfill in Clay County, Missouri. According to the indictment, Simmons agreed to forego the $9,200 monthly payment for her work on the hospital purchase in exchange for Moore’s using his position as a Clay County Commissioner to influence the Clay County Commission to approve the establishment of the new landfill. App. 21-23.
The third scheme alleged in the indictment involved the Certificate of Need (CON) Committee, a committee established by Missouri statute to determine the need for health care facilities at different locations in the state. The members of the CON Committee are appointed by the Governor of Missouri, the President Pro Tem. of the Missouri Senate, and the Speaker of Missouri’s House of Representatives. According to the indictment, officials with Health Midwest, Inc., believed that Missouri State Representative Bill Skaggs, a member of the CON Committee appointed by Griffin, was hostile to some of their activities. In August 1992, Griffin, Simmons, Fisher, Hurst, and Moore met and discussed the possibility of Griffin’s removing Rep. Skaggs from the committee. In January 1993, Griffin removed Rep. Skaggs from the CON Committee, allegedly in exchange for a $10,000 check paid to him by Simmons. App. 25-26.
The fourth scheme alleged in the indictment involved a special session of the Missouri legislature called in September 1993, in the wake of heavy flooding that
The final scheme alleged in the indictment involved a Health Care Reform Bill considered by the Missouri legislature in late 1993 and early 1994. The indictment alleged that in January 1994, executives at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City, a health insurance company, met with Simmons and Fisher and entered into an agreement under which Simmons and Fisher, through Simmons’s public relations firms, would assist them in defeating or substantially amending any health care reform legislation being considered by the legislature. In February 1994, Griffin met with Blue Cross Blue Shield officials at Simmons’s home in Jefferson City to discuss the health care legislation. And in late January and early March, Simmons and Fisher allegedly paid Griffin a total of $41,000 for his help in advising Blue Cross Blue Shield executives about the pending Health Care Reform Bill. App. 31-33.
After several weeks of trial in May and June 1997, a jury convicted Cathryn Simmons of 18 of the 20 counts against her, including the RICO count. Simmons was acquitted of the bribery count involving the removal of Rep. Bill Skaggs from the CON Committee and the bribery count involving the payment of money to Jeff Griffin for his work on the highway bond bill. Michael Fisher was convicted of four of the five counts against him, including the RICO count, and was acquitted of the bribery count involving the removal of Rep. Skaggs from the CON Committee. Bob Griffin was acquitted of three of the counts against him, and the jury was unable to reach a decision
For purposes of the federal Sentencing Guidelines, Simmons’s offense level was determined to be 29, Criminal History Category I, which has a range of 87 to 108 months’ imprisonment. Fisher’s offense level was determined to be 26, Criminal History Category I, which has a range of 63 to 78 months’ imprisonment. However, because Simmons and Fisher both agreed to testify against Griffin at Griffin’s retrial, they each received downward departures below the applicable Sentencing Guidelines pursuant to
On appeal, Simmons argues the District Court erred when, for purposes of the Sentencing Guidelines, it found that she was a leader or organizer of a criminal enterprise. Fisher and Simmons also challenge the District Court’s rulings with respect to the forfeiture issues in this case.
II.
When the District Court calculated Cathryn Simmons’s offense level, she
The District Court’s ruling that Simmons was a leader or organizer of criminal activity, and therefore subject to the four-level increase, was not clearly erroneous. Testimony at Simmons’s trial showed that she was heavily involved with organizing the schemes alleged in the indictment. Rick Moore testified that Simmons attended several meetings in the summer of 1992 with Hurst, Moore, and Fisher to discuss the purchase of the North Kansas City Hospital by Health Midwest, Inc., and that she organized at least one of these meetings. Trial Tr. at 720-23. John W. Walker and Larry Chastain, executives with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City, testified that Simmons organized a meeting at her town house in Jefferson City between Hurst, Fisher, Bob
Much of Simmons’s argument that she did not deserve the four-level enhancement relies on her assertion that Bob Griffin, as an experienced politician and lawyer, was in control of the RICO enterprise and at times directed her actions. This argument ignores the Sentencing Guidelines comment that “[t]here can, of course, be more than one person who qualifies as a leader or organizer of a criminal association or conspiracy.”
III.
A.
The District Court ordered forfeiture of $366,000 from Simmons and Fisher, a sum which included $264,000 in proceeds paid by construction and transportation interests for lobbying on the 1992 Motor Fuel Tax, and $102,000 paid by Blue Cross Blue Shield for lobbying on the 1994 Health Care Reform Bill. Fisher argues that the
The three individual counts on which Fisher was convicted had nothing to do with the Motor Fuel Tax scheme. He was also convicted, however, on the RICO count, which alleged that all five schemes were part of the illegal enterprise. In addition, the forfeiture portion of the indictment alleged that Fisher was responsible for the $264,000 paid to Simmons’s company as part of the Motor Fuel Tax scheme. The District Court, sitting as the trier of fact by agreement of the parties on forfeiture issues, found that Fisher’s complicity in the Motor Fuel Tax scheme had been established beyond a reasonable doubt. The RICO statute, alone to our knowledge among federal criminal laws, expressly states that it is to be construed broadly to effect its remedial purpose of combating organized crime. In these circumstances, we see no error in the District Court’s decision to hold Fisher liable for forfeiture of the proceeds associated with the Motor Fuel Tax scheme.
Codefendants are properly held jointly and severally liable for the proceeds of a RICO enterprise. See United States v. Hurley, 63 F.3d 1, 22-23 (1st Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 517 U.S. 1105 (1996); United States v. Masters, 924 F.2d 1362 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 919 (1991); United States v. Benevento, 836 F.2d 129, 130 (2d Cir. 1988) (per curiam); United States v. Caporale, 806 F.2d 1487, 1506-09 (11th Cir. 1986), cert. denied, 482 U.S. 917 (1987). The government is not required to prove the specific portion of proceeds for which each defendant is responsible. Such a requirement would allow defendants “to mask the allocation of the proceeds to avoid forfeiting them altogether.” Caporale, 806 F.2d at 1508. In addition, the District Court found that the actions of the other defendants with respect to the Motor Fuel Tax
In this case, after Fisher and Simmons elected to have the District Court render the verdict on the forfeiture issue, the Court found that “funds obtained and used by Simmons in connection with her violation of the RICO statute were reasonably foreseeable to Fisher . . ..” Order at 10. Indeed, Fisher recognizes in his brief that a factfinder could reasonably find that he assisted Simmons in obtaining the contract to work on the Motor Fuel Tax. Fisher Br. at 18. Given Fisher’s knowledge of the funds obtained by Simmons, and his status as a member of the RICO enterprise, we hold him jointly and severally liable for the full $366,000 forfeiture.
B.
Simmons and Fisher also challenge the District Court’s refusal to deduct the direct costs associated with their lobbying efforts from the amount they were required to forfeit because of their participation in the 1992 Motor Fuel Tax Bill scheme. Based on the evidence of costs offered at trial, Simmons and Fisher argue that the costs associated with their lobbying for the Motor Fuel Tax Bill, or $101,787.07, should be deducted from the amount of money Fisher and Simmons received for their work on the Motor Fuel Tax Bill, or $264,000, so that the amount they would forfeit would be $162,212.93. See Fisher Br. Add. at 1. The District Court refused to deduct any costs associated with lobbying and ordered a forfeiture of the full $264,000.
At the heart of Simmons’s and Fisher’s argument is a disagreement with the
We think the better view is the one that defines proceeds as the gross receipts of the illegal activity. As noted above, the RICO Act calls for the forfeiture of “any proceeds which the person obtained, directly or indirectly, from racketeering activity . . ..”
Simmons and Fisher rely heavily on United States v. Riley, 78 F.3d 367 (8th Cir. 1996), for their interpretation of the meaning of “proceeds.” We read Riley more narrowly than do the defendants. In Riley, the RICO defendants, who were accused of bribing state officials and defrauding insurance regulators, appealed a preconviction order appointing a receiver to manage their insurance and finance companies. While there was some evidence that the defendants’ companies had gross receipts of $28 million from 1988 to 1992, the period in which they were accused of engaging in the illegal activity, the government could not identify what property was potentially subject to forfeiture if the defendants were convicted, and could not establish the extent of the defendants’ interests in the companies which the government wanted to put in receivership. Id. at 368-69. In an attempt to save the preconviction restraint order issued by the District Court, the government alleged that it intended to forfeit “at least $28 million,” or the gross receipts of the defendants’ companies over the four-year period. Id. at 371. This Court characterized this argument as “absurd,” noting that under RICO’s forfeiture provisions, “ ‘proceeds’ means something less than the gross receipts of a defendant’s insurance business because an insurer’s gross receipts would include, for example, amounts needed to pay policyholder claims.” Id. The $28 million “gross receipts” referred to in Riley apparently included money obtained through legal activity (e.g., premiums paid by insureds) as well as that obtained through the defendants’ allegedly illegal behavior.
C.
Finally, Fisher also argues that because he was not a shareholder or principal in the corporations used by Simmons to engage in the bribery schemes, he should be responsible only for the wages he received from the corporations related to the 1992 Motor Fuel Tax Bill and the 1994 Health Care Reform Bill. In this case, the District Court chose to disregard the corporate legal fiction, writing, “the Court finds that in this case there was no difference between Simmons and Fisher’s actions and the actions of [Simmons’s corporations]. These corporations were used to allow Simmons and Fisher to perpetuate their bribery schemes. In such a case defendants should not be allowed to hide behind the corporate shell of an enterprise engaged in violating the RICO statute.” Order at 6. We agree. At trial, Richard Moore, discussing Fisher’s relationship with Simmons, testified that while Fisher did not receive as much money as he thought he deserved from the work on the Motor Fuel Tax Bill, Fisher worked “as
IV.
For the reasons discussed above, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
