UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Duane HUBER, Appellant. United States of America, Appellee, v. Huber Farms, Inc., Appellant. United States of America, Appellee, v. Huber Farms General Partnership, Appellant. United States of America, Cross-Appellant, v. Duane Huber; Huber Farms, Inc.; Huber Farmers General Partnership, Cross-Appellees.
Nos. 03-2510, 03-2517, 03-2520, 03-2854
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
April 21, 2005
404 F.3d 1047
Moore also contends the district court improperly granted summary judgment on the issue of issue preclusion. According to Moore, his claim amounted to a civil rights action over which the small claims court lacked jurisdiction, and thus, the judgment is void. We need not resolve this contention given our disposition on the qualified immunity issue. Last, Moore does not challenge the grant of summary judgment to the City of Poplar Bluff, so we need not address it.
We thus affirm the grant of summary judgment to the officers and City.
Submitted: June 16, 2004.
Filed: April 21, 2005.
Irvin B. Nodland, argued, Bismarck, ND, for appellant.
Clare R. Hochhalter, Asst. U.S. Attorney, argued, Bismarck, ND, for appellee.
Before SMITH, BEAM, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.
BEAM, Circuit Judge.
I. BACKGROUND
Duane Huber, doing business as HFGP and HFI, operated a large farming operation in North Dakota. Steven Huber, Jeff Greff, Douglas Bergan, and Chad Bickett were involved with Huber in what Huber claimed was a “coordinated farming” operation. According to Huber, he, HFGP, and HFI facilitated these individuals’ farming efforts by renting or sub-leasing land to them, providing the machinery that was used on their farms, providing the labor force that worked the land, and co-signing the individuals’ operating notes. Like many farmers, Steven Huber, Greff, Bergan, and Bickett enrolled in the federal farm program by submitting a form (Form 502) to the local Farm Services Administration (FSA) office, representing their eligibility to participate in the program.1 Once enrolled, these individuals could receive payments under a variety of federal-farm-program mechanisms. The four also insured their crops against loss through federally subsidized crop insurance, again representing their eligibility to purchase such policies. During the typical year, they received income from the government through the federal farm program, from private insurers through claims on their crop-insurance policies, and through grain sales. This money was then paid to Huber, HFGP, HFI, or third parties. Huber claimed these payments were for the land, machinery, and labor he provided to them.
The government viewed these four individuals’ involvement with Huber‘s farming operation differently. According to the government, Huber enlisted them to defraud government programs of millions of dollars in benefits in the form of farm-program payments and federally subsidized crop-insurance benefits. This belief rested on the notion that these individuals were not eligible to receive such benefits because they had no farms of their own. More specifically, the government believed that the group had set things up to look as though they were eligible to enroll in the federal farm program—i.e., to look like they were “actively engaged in farming.” Once the four had fraudulently enrolled by
The government presented its case to a grand jury, which returned a twenty-count indictment, charging Huber, HFGP, and HFI with various violations of federal law. The indictment also included a forfeiture allegation. At trial, the government produced witnesses that were allegedly part of Huber‘s operation and experts on federal-farm-program and crop-insurance eligibility, as well as tax-reporting requirements. The jury found Huber, HFGP, and HFI guilty of all charges.
The jury, in a subsequent forfeiture proceeding, was also charged with determining the amount of funds involved in the conspiracy to launder money that was charged in Count Eighteen of the indictment. The jury concluded, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Huber was accountable for $5,876,970. This amount reflected the value of federal-farm-program payments, crop-insurance benefits, and crop-sales proceeds received by Greff, Bergan, Steven Huber, and Bickett from 1994 through 1999.
The district court sentenced Huber to sixty-months’ imprisonment, declining to enhance Huber‘s sentence as requested by the government. And the district court entered a money judgment against Huber for the $5,876,970 the jury found should be forfeited.
Huber, HFGP, and HFI appeal their convictions. Huber also assigns error with regard to the forfeiture phase of the proceeding.2 The government cross-appeals with regard to sentencing.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Huber‘s Appeal
Huber‘s brief raises approximately six assignments of error: the district court erred in concluding that (1) Dawn Rose‘s involvement in the investigation did not render her testimony or the evidence she helped procure inadmissible, (2) Rose‘s testimony about what Bergan told her was admissible, (3) Huber had not been selectively prosecuted, (4) sufficient evidence supported the jury‘s verdict, (5) the amount of the forfeiture judgment was proper, and (6) Huber‘s due process rights had not been violated by a late disclosure of incriminating evidence. Huber raised the first two purported errors below in an appropriate motion to suppress. The re-
1. Rose‘s Involvement
Dawn Rose kept Huber‘s books in conjunction with the farming operation. Special Agent Ward, the government‘s main investigating officer in Huber‘s case, approached her on August 5, 1999, and asked her some questions about Huber‘s operation. On that day, she offered to turn over the financial data she had in her possession. Agent Ward declined the offer, advising her to wait until he could present her with a grand-jury subpoena. He returned with that subpoena on August 9, 1999, along with an offer of immunity for her cooperation. Rose then gave him the information.
At trial the government offered evidence gleaned from this information—the allocation of expenses and income with regard to Huber and each of the individuals allegedly involved in the conspiracy. Huber moved to suppress the evidence and the court held a hearing out of the jury‘s presence. At that hearing, the district court questioned Rose extensively about her motivation to assist the government. She testified that she turned over the information voluntarily and that she collected no information at the government‘s behest. Even though she continued to enter data into the bookkeeping software from August 5 until August 9, she said she did this at Huber‘s direction.
The district court denied Huber‘s motion to suppress, citing a lower expectation of privacy in business records, the grand-jury subpoena, and inevitable discovery. The court concluded that Rose was not an agent of the government and “she was trying to protect herself.” Huber renewed his challenge to the evidence in his Rule 29 motion. The district court again addressed the issue, restating its conclusion that Rose was not an agent of the government and, thus, the information she gave to the government was not obtained improperly under the Fourth Amendment.
Huber challenges the district court‘s ruling on his motion to suppress, claiming Rose was a government agent for purposes of the Fourth Amendment after she spoke with Agent Ward on August 5. We review the denial of a motion to suppress for clear error when the appellant challenges the district court‘s factfinding, and de novo with regard to its “interpretation of the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment.” United States v. Smith, 383 F.3d 700, 704 (8th Cir. 2004). A private citizen‘s conduct4 can nonetheless implicate the Fourth Amendment if the private citizen is acting as a government agent. The Fourth Amendment analysis with regard to whether a private citizen acted as a government agent includes several factors—“whether the government had knowledge of and acquiesced in the intrusive conduct; whether the citizen intended to assist law enforcement agents or instead acted to further his own purposes;
Agent Ward did ask Rose to turn over the data in her possession on August 9. However, the grand-jury subpoena, the validity of which Huber does not challenge, required her to produce it. And while Agent Ward knew as of August 5 that Rose had information that could be helpful to his investigation, there is no evidence in the record from which the district court could conclude that Agent Ward acquiesced in, knew about, or asked Rose to engage in any of the other actions she took. Rose may have been motivated, to some extent, by an urge to help the government, either as a means of protecting herself through the prospect of immunity or by the “simple but often powerful convention of openness and honesty.” Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 488 (1971). But this is not enough to make her a government agent. See United States v. Malbrough, 922 F.2d 458, 462 (8th Cir. 1990). We find no error in the district court‘s denial of the motion to suppress.
2. Hearsay Evidence
Next, Huber assigns error to the district court‘s admission of evidence in the guilt phase of the proceeding under
Huber also assigns error to the district court‘s failure to make an explicit finding of admissibility on the record. See United States v. Bell, 573 F.2d 1040 (8th Cir. 1978). However, Huber did not request such a ruling, the district court heard and ruled on Huber‘s motion for acquittal, and we find no plain error in its determination. United States v. McCracken, 110 F.3d 535, 542 (8th Cir. 1997) (employing plain-error standard under similar circumstances).
3. Selective Prosecution
Huber raised a selective-prosecution claim in his Rule 29 motion. This claim was not properly before the district court because Huber raised it for the first time in a Rule 29 motion. A selective-prosecution claim “alleg[es] a defect in instituting the prosecution” that “must be raised before trial,”
The district court held that Huber had not made out a prima facie case of selective prosecution because he had not established that (1) he was “singled out for
4. Guilt-Phase Evidentiary Sufficiency
“In reviewing a district court‘s denial of a motion for acquittal based on the insufficiency of the evidence, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and will reverse only if no reasonable jury could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of the offense charged.” United States v. Lacey, 219 F.3d 779, 783 (8th Cir. 2000). Much of what Huber argues with regard to the sufficiency of the evidence pertains more to the forfeiture proceeding than the guilty verdict. The arguments pertaining to forfeiture are discussed below. As to the evidentiary sufficiency of the guilty verdict, Huber does not identify which counts of the indictment, let alone which elements of those counts, are lacking evidentiary support. In fact, he makes no mention of the statutory provisions at issue, leaving us to wallow in the twenty-count indictment, eighteen of which name Huber, and the voluminous record of the proceeding below.
Count One charged Huber with conspiring to make false statements to influence the actions of the Department of Agriculture in connection with claims for crop insurance and federal-farm-program benefits, in violation of
One discernible argument from Huber‘s brief cites the lack of evidence of a bribe that Huber was alleged to have paid the coconspirators. We take this argu-
Huber may also be making his bribery/overt-act argument with regard to the conspiracy charged in Count Eighteen—a conspiracy to launder money in violation of
We have carefully examined the evidence presented to the jury, United States v. Kenyon, 397 F.3d 1071, 1076 (8th Cir. 2005), in light of Huber‘s other sufficiency-of-the-evidence arguments pertaining to guilt. We find them to be without merit.
5. Forfeiture
Huber argues that there was insufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that the amounts of money included in Forfeiture Exhibit 1 were involved in the conspiracy to launder money. Forfeiture Exhibit 1 is a spreadsheet summarizing other evidence of payments received by the coconspirators. It depicts the amounts of money that Bickett, Greff, Steven Huber, and Bergan received in their bank accounts as farm-program payments, crop-sales proceeds, and crop-insurance benefits. The jury found that Huber was accountable for all of these amounts, totaling approximately $5.9 million.
The amount of forfeiture was submitted to the jury based solely on Count Eighteen of the indictment, and the court ordered forfeiture only with regard to that count in the form of a money judgment. See
The theory of forfeiture that the government appears to present in this case is that the farm-program payments, the crop-sales proceeds, and the crop-insurance benefits represent the corpus of the money-laundering conspiracy. While that reasoning is sound with regard to most of the funds, we conclude Huber‘s argument has merit with regard to that portion of crop-insurance benefits that the individuals never received.
The corpus of a money-laundering conspiracy is the funds that the defendant conspired to launder. Thus, the corpus of a money-laundering conspiracy rests on whether certain conduct involving funds constitutes money laundering. To determine that, we look to the statutory text, winnowed by the allegations of the indictment. Count Eighteen alleged a conspira-
(a) Farm-Program Payments
With regard to the farm-program payments, the funds were deposited in the four individuals’ bank accounts. The indictment characterizes the money-laundering conspiracy as involving further transactions from the individuals’ accounts to Huber or third parties that were labeled as payments for machinery, labor, and land. Those payments, made by check, are qualifying transactions.
The farm-program payments the individuals received also qualify as “proceeds of specified unlawful activity.” Count Eighteen alleged that the farm-program payments were obtained through violations of
Finally, the jury could reasonably conclude that the transactions were undertaken either to promote the farm-program-payment scheme or with knowledge of a design to conceal the ownership, nature, or control of the funds derived from that scheme.
(b) Crop-Sales Proceeds
Huber argues that the value of the crop-sales proceeds should not have been included in the forfeiture judgment. The money the four individuals received from the sale of crops is not derived from a specified unlawful activity. Selling crops is not illegal, even if the seller falsifies his farm-program or insurance eligibility. Thus, these monies do not immediately appear to be the “proceeds of specified unlawful activity.” The government proceeded in the indictment, in its brief, and at oral argument on a commingling theory of forfeitability with regard to these funds.
The crop-sales proceeds were properly forfeited under
Huber argues that the crop-sales proceeds should have been offset by the expenses that went into producing the crops that generated those funds. But he offers no authority for this proposition. Huber appears to argue that he could not be forced to forfeit all of the crop-sales proceeds that were funneled through the individuals’ accounts because the payments made to Huber were for expenses he actually did incur in producing the crops on the land he allocated to those individuals. Two problems exist with that argument. First, the legitimacy of those expenses was brought into question by the evidence at trial. And, second, even if the expenses were legitimately incurred by Huber, they would not reduce the amount subject to forfeiture. See United States v. Grasso, 381 F.3d 160, 166-69 (3d Cir. 2004) (collecting cases and concluding that expenses should not be deducted), vacated on other grounds, 544 U.S. 945 (2005);
(c) Crop-Insurance Benefits
Much of the reasoning above holds true for the crop-insurance benefits the individuals received. Like the farm-program payments, the crop-insurance benefits the individuals received were paid out of the individuals’ accounts by check; the funds were obtained through violations of
Forfeiture Exhibit 1 was the basis for the forfeiture amount the jury found and, thus, the district court‘s forfeiture judgment. The exhibit included a portion of insurance benefits that were never received by Greff, Bickett, Bergan, or Steven Huber. To possibly oversimplify, under the federally subsidized crop-insurance program, once a claim is filed and approved, the insurer deducts the farmer‘s share of the premium from the claimed amount of loss, and the insurer receives a subsidy from the government to pay the remaining portion of the policy premium. The government included in its forfeiture calculations both the amount of the premium withheld by the insurer (the “premium charge“) and the amount the government paid to the insurer (the “premium subsidy“). Huber argues that these funds were not subject to forfeiture under
These funds were not part of the corpus of the money-laundering conspiracy. To violate
As we have explained above, the transactions at issue with regard to the money the individuals actually received are the further payments from the individuals’ accounts. The same sorts of transactions did not occur with the premium charges and premium subsidies because the funds never came into the individuals’ accounts. With regard to the premium charges, no “financial transaction” occurred because no funds ever moved and no monetary instruments were involved.8 See
The premium subsidies—payments made by the government to the insurer—are a closer question. There, funds did move, likely by wire, so a “financial transaction” did arguably occur. And the situation cannot be characterized as a return of misappropriated funds. The question thus becomes whether the individuals conducted the transaction by “participating in initiating ... a transaction,”
But were the premium subsidies and premium charges nonetheless forfeitable under
Causally speaking, the premium subsidies and premium charges did allow the individuals to receive the crop-insurance benefits. After all, the government‘s role in this market is what makes this sort of insurance available to producers at reasonable rates, and premiums enable the insurer to pay insureds’ claims. But neither of these effects is sufficient to establish
Huber‘s brief represents that the premium charges totaled $649,368 and that the premium subsidies totaled $357,872. Appellants’ Br. at 61. The government does not question these amounts, but we cannot reasonably verify the accuracy of Huber‘s representation because he offers no basis for his calculations or citations to the record that substantiate these amounts. Thus, the district court should determine
George Chamberlin, J.D., What is Considered Property “Involved In” Money Laundering Offense, and Thus Subject to Civil or Criminal Forfeiture, for Purposes of Money Laundering Control Act, 135 A.L.R. Fed. 367 (1996) (collecting cases); William G. Phelps, J.D., Validity, Construction, and Application of
We address the issue because the jury was instructed in the forfeiture proceeding that facilitating property could be forfeited and Huber challenges the jury‘s verdict, which concluded this property should be forfeited.
6. Late Disclosure
Forfeiture Exhibit 1, which summarized various forms and amounts of income to Greff, Bickett, Bergan, and Steven Huber from 1994 through 1999, was not given to Huber until just before the close of the trial. Huber argues that his due process rights were violated by the late disclosure of this document13 under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). We disagree. There was no exculpatory evidence in the exhibit or anything that could be used for impeachment. Thus, Brady did not require the exhibit‘s disclosure. See United States v. Thomas, 940 F.2d 391, 392 (8th Cir. 1991) (incriminating evidence is not favorable to the accused).
Huber also cites Rule 16, but does so without argument or authority.
We have considered all of the other arguments Huber raises, and we find them without merit.
B. The Government‘s Cross-Appeal: Sentencing
The district court made a valiant effort at finding an appropriate sentence for Huber, HFGP, and HFI under the
The government‘s cross-appeal assigns a variety of errors concerning the district court‘s guidelines calculations. Specifically, it claims the district court chose the money-laundering conspiracy count as the guideline with the highest offense level without calculating the offense level for the other counts of the conviction, misapplied the guideline it chose to apply and thereby failed to increase Huber‘s offense level for various specific offense characteristics that were present, failed to enhance Huber‘s base offense level under three provisions of Chapter 3, and erred in its downward departure.
In light of recent developments in the sentencing arena, namely United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005), and because we remand this case in any event, we decline to address many of the government‘s assignments of error. Because this case will be remanded and the district court will be operating under a new sentencing regime, we are not compelled to express an opinion about the district court‘s pre-Booker use of the guidelines. See United States v. Selwyn, 398 F.3d 1064, 1067 (8th Cir. 2005) (declining to address other sentencing issues raised on appeal after deciding to remand the case). “Because the district court might impose a different sentence on remand, and because the parties might choose not to appeal that sentence, consideration of objections to the court‘s original guidelines calculations would be premature at best and unnecessary at worst.” United States v. Coumaris, 399 F.3d 343, 351 (D.C. Cir. 2005).14
The government also argues that the district court erred in failing to impose a fine. The government argues that
The district court also refused to order restitution because of the delay associated with the complex task of calculating the loss to the government. This is a permissible ground for refusing to award restitution.
Finally, Huber has filed Rule 28(j) letters with this court assigning as error the district court‘s imposition of sentence under the then-mandatory guidelines based on the forfeiture amount of laundered funds that, while proven to the jury, was not proven beyond a reasonable doubt.15 Huber at least has an argument under Apprendi, as applied in Booker, that the
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed except with regard to the amount of the forfeiture judgment and the sentences imposed. We reverse the district court with regard to the forfeiture amount, and remand with directions to enter a forfeiture judgment consistent with this opinion. We vacate the sentences the district court imposed, and remand for resentencing consistent with this opinion and the current state of the sentencing guidelines. We also deny the pending motion to reconsider our denial of Huber‘s motion for release on bond pending appeal.
