Tax accountants and former business partners Emile Rabinowitz and Gary Rieland designed a convoluted series of financial transactions, including wire transfers, to divert $701,000 from a client and to conceal the diversion from the client and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Rabinowitz and Rie-land did not pay income taxes on the fraud income. The IRS eventually unraveled the scheme, and in Count I of a multieount indictment, the Government charged Rabinow-itz and Rieland with violating 18 U.S.C. § 371, which prohibits conspiracies to commit an offense against the United States or to defraud the United States or one of its agencies. A jury rendered a general verdict convicting both men of the conspiracy and other crimes. The district court sentenced Rabi-nowitz to forty-one months in prison on the conspiracy count. Rabinowitz appeals his conspiracy conviction and sentence. We affirm.
Rabinowitz argues Count I of the indictment is duplicitous because it joins two separate crimes in a single count, and thus the district court should have granted his pretrial motion to dismiss the indictment. Count I charges Rabinowitz with conspiracy to defraud the client by using a wire transfer and to defraud the United States by impeding the IRS’s assessment and collection of income taxes on the fraud proceeds. The Government believes Count I charges a single conspiracy with two objects. According to the Government, there is only one conspiracy in this case because the criminal acts supporting the two objects are interrelated.
We need not decide whether Count I is duplicitous because the district court’s jury instructions cured any duplicity. “The principal vice of a duplicitous indictment is that the jury may convict a defendant without unanimous agreement on the defendant’s guilt with respect to a particular offense.”
United States v. Karam,
Rabinowitz also argues his conspiracy conviction must be set aside because of a statute of limitations problem. To satisfy the statute of limitations, the Government had to show the conspiracy continued to exist within five years before the indictment and a conspirator performed at least one overt act to further the conspiracy within the five-year period.
United States v. Hauck,
The district court instructed the jury that to find Rabinowitz guilty of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, it must find the conspiracy continued past August 25, 1988. The jury could reasonably make this finding. Rabinowitz filed a tax return omitting the
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fraud income in 1989, and during a tax audit later that year, Rabinowitz continued his efforts to conceal the wire fraud by lying to a revenue agent about some of the 1985 financial transactions. The jury could reasonably find these efforts at concealment were part of a conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The district court properly instructed the jury that acts of concealment further a conspiracy when concealment is a central purpose of the conspiratorial agreement.
Grunewald v. United States,
Rabinowitz next argues the district court committed plain error in failing to instruct the jury on an essential element of defrauding the United States in violation of § 371: the use of deceitful or dishonest means.
See United States v. Caldwell,
Rabinowitz also challenges the sufficiency of the conspiracy evidence, the admission of certain evidence offered by the Government, and his guidelines sentence, specifically, the selection of the base offense level and the application of enhancements for more than minimal planning, use of a special skill, and obstruction of justice. Having carefully considered the merits, we reject these challenges. Accordingly, we affirm.
