RULING ON DEFENDANTS’MOTIONS PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 29 AND 33 AND DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO SEVER
The Superseding Indictment in this case charged defendants Ferguson, Graham, Milton, and Monrad with one count of conspiracy, seven counts of securities fraud, five counts of making false statements to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), and three counts of mail fraud; defendant Garand was charged with one count of conspiracy, three counts of securities fraud, three counts of making false statements to the SEC, and three counts of mail fraud. The charges stemmed from a fraudulent reinsurance contract between American International Group, Inc. (“AIG”) and General Reinsurance Corp. (“Gen Re”). At trial, after the close of the government’s case and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendants moved for a judgment of acquittal under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29(a) (“Rule 29”), or, in the alternative, for a severance under Fed.R.Crim.P. 14 (“Rule 14”). The Court reserved judgment on these motions pursuant to Rule 29(b). The jury subsequently returned a verdict convicting all five defendants of every offense with which he or she was charged. The defendants did not make additional post-verdict motions for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to Rule 29(c), but rather moved the Court for a new trial under Fed.R.Crim.P. 33(a) (“Rule 33”) if the Court were to grant their Rule 29(a) motions as to any of the counts of conviction. The Court now addresses the defendants’ Rule 29(a), Rule 14, and Rule 33 motions.
I. Background
The defendants were convicted of crimes associated with a loss portfolio transfer
Counts Two through Five and Eight through Ten charged defendants Ferguson, Graham, Milton, and Monrad with securities fraud, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) & 78ff. Counts Eight through Ten also charged defendant Garand with securities fraud, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) & 78ff.
Counts Six and Seven and Eleven through Thirteen charged defendants Ferguson, Graham, Milton, and Monrad with making and causing to be made false and misleading statements with the SEC, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(a) & 78ff. Counts Eleven through Thirteen also charged defendant Garand with making and causing to be made false and misleading statements with the SEC, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(a) & 78ff.
Counts Fourteen through Sixteen charged all five defendants with mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2461.
II. Rule 29(a) Motions
A. Standard of Review
“[A] defendant challenging his verdict on sufficiency grounds bears a heavy burden.”
United States v. Lewter,
In considering the sufficiency of the evidence presented at trial to prove the charged crimes, “the Court must be careful to avoid usurping the role of the jury,” and accordingly “may not substitute [its] own determinations of credibility or relative weight of the evidence for that of the jury.”
Autuori,
B. Evidence at Trial 1
The Indictment charged the defendants with structuring and carrying out a fraudulent, no-risk reinsurance contract between Gen Re and AIG in order to falsely boost AIG’s publicly reported loss reserves. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, and drawing all inferences favor of the jury’s verdict, the government established the following facts at trial concerning the transaction at issue in this case. 2
On October 26, 2000, AIG publicly announced that its loss reserves had decreased by $59 million for the third quarter of 2000. Gov. Ex. 1. Several days later, AIG’s CEO, Maurice “Hank” Green-berg (“Greenberg”), contacted defendant Ferguson, then the CEO of Gen Re, seeking a deal through which AIG could obtain up to $500 million of loss reserves. Gov. Ex. 6, 8; Trial Transcript 649-652, 655-658 (Napier testimony) [hereinafter “Tr.”]. The defendants and other co-conspirators structured a deal, undertaken through two contracts, through which AIG appeared to reinsure Gen Re. Gov. Ex. 23, 31, 171, 184; Tr. 2143-45 (Houldsworth testimony). Specifically, over the course of the two effectuating contracts, the deal appeared to provide for AIG to reinsure Gen Re for up to $600 million in limit of liability in exchange for $500 million of premiums.
3
Gov. Ex. 171, 184; Tr. 814-15 (Napier testimony); Tr. 2144 (Houldsworth testimony). The loss reserves associated with the underlying insurance contracts ostensibly ceded from Gen Re to AIG totaled $500 million. Gov. Ex. 171, 184. AIG appeared to take on $100 million in risk through the deal; in fact, however, there was no risk transferred to AIG.
4
Tr. 2256,
According to the testimony of two insurance stock analysts described more fully below, the amount of an insurance company’s loss reserves, especially when viewed in conjunction with the amount of its premiums, provides investors with evidence of the company’s financial health; if premiums increase during a period where loss reserves decrease, the insurance company could be under-reserved to pay for claims on its policies, which would impact future earnings. Tr. 406-11 (Schroeder testimony); Tr. 3549-50 (Cohen testimony). The government presented evidence at trial that AIG pursued the no-risk reinsurance deal with Gen Re to artificially inflate AIG’s loss reserves to quell industry analysts’ concerns that the company’s loss reserves were declining during a period of premium growth. Gov. Ex. 8 (“Chris [Milton] confirmed that this [transaction] is to address the criticism [AIG] received from the analysts.”), 18, 18A; Tr. 2139 (Houlds-worth testimony) (“She [Monrad] said [the transaction] was to appease some analysts who had concerns over AIG’s third quarter [2000] numbers.”); Tr. 2179-80 (Houlds-worth testimony). The Gen Re/AIG deal enabled AIG to publicly report an increase in loss reserves of $106 million in the fourth quarter of 2000 and $62 million in the first quarter of 2001. Gov. Ex. 250; Tr. 306-08 (Hamrah testimony). In these two financial reporting quarters, AIG would have reported decreases in its loss reserves during periods of premium growth if not for the deal. Gov. Ex. 250; Tr. 279-80, 294, 306-08 (Hamrah testimony). AIG continued to include the $500 million of additional reserves ostensibly obtained through the deal in its required SEC financial statements until AIG restated its financial statements in May, 2005, several months after AIG received notice that the SEC and the New York Attorney General’s Office were investigating the transaction. Gov. Ex. 243, 250.
C. Materiality of Charged Misstatements
Defendants Ferguson and Garand
5
as
1. Legal Standard for Materiality
To support convictions of securities fraud, false statements to the SEC, and mail fraud, the jury must have found beyond a reasonable doubt that AIG’s misstatements about its loss reserves constituted misstatements of
material
facts. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b)
&
78ff; 17 C.F.R. §§ 240.10b-5 & 240.12b-20; 18 U.S.C. § 1341. In this context, material facts are those “that a reasonable investor would have considered significant in making investment decisions.”
Ganino v. Citizens Utils. Co.,
The absence of a bright-line test for materiality requires the Court to consider the charged misstatements in context. Although quantitative indicators of a misstatement’s significance to investors could be determinative of materiality, “[w]ith respect to financial statements, ... ‘[qualitative factors may cause misstatements of quantitatively small amounts to be material.’ ”
Id.
at 163 (quoting SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 99, 64 Fed.Reg. 45150, 45152 (1999));
see United States v. Forbes,
No. 02-CR-264,
2. Discussion
The Court concludes that there was sufficient evidence at trial for a rational jury to find that AIG’s misstatements about its loss reserves were material. Ferguson argues that the LPT had a minimal quantitative effect on AIG’s financial statements, so any misstatements about the amount of AIG’s loss reserves were immaterial as a matter of law. Although the Court recognizes that the $500 million of loss reserves at issue in this case could be quantitatively insignificant when viewed in the larger context of AIG’s overall business, the Court rejects Ferguson’s argument in light of controlling case law that emphasizes using qualitative considerations to assess materiality.
6
Ganino,
At trial, several witnesses testified about the importance AIG’s investors
The testimony of two prominent insurance industry analysts, Alice Schroeder
11
and Jay Cohen,
12
further explained the significance to investors of accurate
Finally, the fluctuations in AIG’s stock price after evidence of the misstatements was publicly revealed further weighs in favor of the misstatements’ materiality. The government presented evidence at trial that AIG’s stock price declined in February and March of 2005 after it was publicly revealed that government regulators were investigating the LPT and that AIG and Gen Re’s senior management had been involved with the deal.
15
Gov. Ex. 243, 244A, 245A, 248A, 314, 315, 316; Tr. 303-04, 371 (Hamrah). Although this factor is not determinative, the jury could
After taking these qualitative factors into account, drawing all inferences in favor of the government, and considering the evidence discussed above, the Court finds sufficient support in the record to sustain the jury’s finding that AIG’s misstatements about its loss reserves were material. 16 Ferguson’s and Garand’s motion for judgments of acquittal on this basis, therefore, are denied.
D. Ferguson’s Other Arguments
Defendant Ferguson also moved under Rule 29 for a judgment of acquittal in conjunction with his written motion for a mistrial pursuant to
United States v. Geaney,
Ferguson made several arguments in support of his motion, none of which provide an adequate basis for granting it. First, Ferguson argues that, in considering the sufficiency of the evidence against him, the Court should discount the testimony of Richard Napier as unreliable. Since the Court reserved decision on Ferguson’s motion until after the jury’s verdict, however, the Court may not make its own credibility assessments of the government’s witnesses.
Autuori,
Lastly, Ferguson argues that the government presented insufficient evidence that a secret side agreement ensured that the LPT was a no-risk deal, and that Ferguson knew of it and agreed to it as part of the overall deal. This argument, however, is also unavailing, in light of the evidence at trial supporting both
Ample evidence also supports the jury’s conclusion that Ferguson knew of and agreed to this side deal as part of the conspiracy. Ferguson reviewed John Houldsworth’s November 15, 2000 email, to which the draft LPT contract was attached, in which Houldsworth explicitly stated that Gen Re “will not transfer any losses under this deal” and discussed AIG’s payment of a fee to Gen Re for undertaking the deal, as well as AIG’s repayment of Gen Re’s $10 million premium payment.
21
Gov. Ex. 23. Napier testified that he, Ferguson, and Monrad discussed Houldsworth’s draft contract as a no-risk deal during a meeting on the same day. Tr. 804-05. Napier also testified that, after this meeting, Ferguson discussed the proposed deal with Greenberg, including the fact that AIG would not bear risk from the deal, and told Greenberg that Gen Re wanted a fee for agreeing to complete the deal in addition to repayment of Gen Re’s premium payment. Tr. 815-18; Gov. Ex. 30. Emails Ferguson received from Monrad, Napier, and Houlds-worth in 2001 concerning the manner by which Gen Re would recover its premium payment and fee from AIG further undermine Ferguson’s claimed ignorance of the side deal, as do email updates Ferguson continued to receive and forward to other co-conspirators through the fall of 2001 concerning Gen Re’s recovery of the premium and the fee.
See, e.g.,
Gov. Ex. 105, 170, 172, 175, 177, 186. From this, as well as other evidence in the record, a rational jury could conclude that Ferguson knew that a side agreement rendered the LPT a no-risk deal for AIG and guaranteed Gen Re the return of its premium payment in addition to a fee for participating in the transaction.
Cf. United States v. Snow,
Accordingly, as there is sufficient evidence in the record from which a rational jury could conclude that the charged conspiracy began on or about October 31, 2000, that the LPT was a no-risk deal for AIG due to a side agreement outside the terms of the written contract, and that Ferguson knew the deal was no-risk and agreed to it nonetheless, his Rule 29 motion is denied.
During the trial, all five defendants orally moved for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to Rule 29(a) at the end of the government’s case and at the close of all evidence, but the defendants neither submitted papers in support of these oral motions nor argued them in court. 22 Tr. 4111-4112; 4182-84. In accordance with Rule 29(b), the Court reserved decision on the motions until after the jury’s verdict or discharge. After the verdict, all five defendants filed post-verdict Rule 83 motions, which are addressed below, but none of the defendants filed post-verdict Rule 29 motions. Rather, in a letter to the Court, the defendants explained that they had jointly decided against filing post-verdict Rule 29 motions and chose to rest on their oral motions during the trial; in light of this decision, they submitted no written memoranda supporting their motions and asked the Court to resolve those motions solely on the trial record and without oral argument. Letter from Counsel for Christopher P. Garand to the Court (Apr. 8, 2008) (“Defendants make no request for oral argument ... on those pending Rule 29(a) motions.... We apologize to the Court if there was any confusion caused by defendants’ decision not to file post-trial Rule 29(c) motions.”). The defendants reiterated this request in other post-verdict submissions to the Court. Defs. Joint Mem. of Law in Supp. of Their Mot. in the Alternative for a New Trial, 1 n.l, April 3, 2008 (“Defendants do not seek oral argument on their Rule 33 motions, nor on their pending Rule 29(a) motions made at trial. Defendants respectfully withdraw their request for the oral argument currently scheduled for May 1, 2008.”); Letter from Counsel for Ronald E. Ferguson to the Court (Apr. 21, 2008) (“We have now reviewed the government’s opposition brief and we respectfully submit that, on behalf of Mr. Ferguson, we do not believe there is a need for oral argument.”).
After reviewing the evidence presented at trial, including the evidence discussed above in the context of defendant Ferguson’s written Rule 29 motions, the arguments made in Ferguson’s written Rule 29 submissions, and the government’s papers opposing all of the defendants’ Rule 29 motions, the Court concludes that there was sufficient evidence in the record to support all counts of conviction for defendants Ferguson, Garand, Graham, Milton, and Monrad. Therefore, their Rule 29 motions are denied.
III. Motions to Sever
During the trial, at the same time that the defendants orally moved for a judgment of acquittal under Rule 29, they also made renewed motions, in the alternative, for severance from the other defendants pursuant to Rule 14. 23 As this ruling denies the defendants’ Rule 29 motions in full, the Court now addresses the defendants’ severance motions.
All five of the defendants moved for a severance on several occasions during the pre-trial stages of this case and during the trial. Each time, the Court denied the defendants’ motions. “There is a strong preference in the federal system for joint trials of defendants who are in-
After reviewing the trial record, the Court concludes that none of the defendants’ trial rights was violated by their joint trial. The Court reaches this conclusion for the same reasons articulated in its written pre-trial rulings addressing the defendants’ severance motions and the Court’s oral rulings at trial. In addition, the Court notes that several factors weigh heavily against granting the defendants’ motions. First, although the defendants did not present entirely identical defenses, their defenses were certainly not antagonistic to the point of significantly prejudicing any co-defendant.
Blount,
Second, all of the charged crimes, including the conspiracy and the substantive objects of the conspiracy, stemmed from a common set of facts — specifically, from one reinsurance transaction.
Salameh,
Finally, as the Court already discussed above, there was sufficient evidence in the record to convict each defendant of each count against him or her.
See United States v. Sampson,
Accordingly, the defendants’ Rule 14 motions are denied.
IV. Rule 33 Motions
All five defendants seek limited relief under Rule 33. Rule 33, by its terms, gives the trial court “ ‘broad discretion ... to set aside a jury verdict and order a new trial to avert a perceived miscarriage of justice.’ ”
United States v. Ferguson,
The defendants seek a new trial under Rule 33 only in the event that the Court grants any portion of their Rule 29 motions. The defendants argue that, should the Court determine that the government presented insufficient evidence at trial to sustain one or more (but not all) of the counts of conviction, the Court should grant a new trial on the remaining counts of conviction out of concern for prejudicial spillover to the defendants for those remaining counts.
See United States v. Rooney,
In light of the Court’s above ruling denying the defendants’ Rule 29 motions in
V. Conclusion
For the above reasons, the defendants’ oral and written Rule 29 motions [docket # s 951, 955, 956] and their oral motions to sever are denied. The defendants’ written Rule 33 motions [docket # s 1011, 1012, 1013,1016,1017] are denied as moot.
Notes
.A significant portion of the government’s evidence at trial consisted of taped telephone conversations between the defendants and their co-conspirators talking about the transaction as they structured it and carried it out. John Houldsworth, a co-conspirator who cooperated with the government, explained in his trial testimony that the tapes were created because of a telephone line taping policy in his office in effect at the time of the transaction. Trial Transcript 2170-73 [hereinafter ''Tr.”]. The system automatically created tapes of all telephone conversations to or from his office telephone. Id. At the time of the transaction Houldsworth believed that the tapes would be periodically reused and taped over, but several years later he learned that, in fact, all of the recordings had been preserved. Tr. 2172-73. The government obtained copies of the tapes in the course of its investigation.
. The following facts are those pertinent to the Court’s resolution of these motions, not an exhaustive list of the facts established at trial. Additional facts established at trial are noted where necessary for the Court's discussion of these motions.
. Gen Re and AIG entered into both written contracts through subsidiary companies. Cologne Reinsurance Co. Dublin (“CRD”) served as the nominal party to the deal for Gen Re, and National Union Fire Insurance Co. ("NUFIC”) served as the nominal party for AIG.
. The defendants and their co-conspirators reinforced the appearance of a legitimate reinsurance transaction by creating a fake offer letter through which Gen Re falsely appeared to solicit the deal from AIG. Gov. Ex. 62, 62A, 64; Tr. 2372-73 (Houldsworth testimony:
. Although at trial each defendant orally moved under Rule 29(a) for a judgment of acquittal, only defendant Ferguson submitted a written motion under Rule 29(a) that argued for an acquittal based upon this particular issue, and only defendant Garand joined that written motion. Because of this, the Court’s discussion focuses on Ferguson's ar
. Ferguson's papers in support of this motion presented several quantitative comparisons between the $500 million of loss reserves derived from the LPT and AIG’s net loss reserves and total liabilities, which totaled, respectively, in the tens and hundreds of billions of dollars between 2000 and 2005. Ferguson argues that this evidence conclusively shows the LPT’s quantitatively immaterial effect on AIG’s net reserves and total liabilities. Even assuming, however, that these comparisons accurately portray the true impact of the LPT on AIG's net reserves and total liabilities, trial testimony explained that the $500 million of artificially inflated reserves would have reduced earnings per share should AIG ever have had to take a charge to earnings to pay for claims purportedly covered by the phony reserves. See, e.g., Tr. 630 (Schroeder testimony). Accordingly, although the Court’s ruling on materiality rests primarily on the evidence at trial of qualitative factors as outlined in Ganino, the Court also notes that a rational jury could have credited the evidence of the LPT’s potential quantitative effect on earnings in finding that AIG's misstatements about its loss reserves were material.
. Although Ferguson cites several decisions in which courts dismissed claims on the basis of quantitative immateriality, most of those courts recognized that context is relevant to materiality.
Parnes v. Gateway 2000, Inc.,
. As mentioned above, the Court will not discuss all of the relevant evidence presented in five weeks of testimony, but will instead focus on the evidence most significant to the Court’s analysis of this issue.
. Hamrah described her primary responsibility in this position to be serving as the "liaison between the company and the investment community,” meaning "individual investors who own AIG stock,” institutional investors, "as well as research analysts that do research on the company and make a recommendation to their clients with respect to buying or selling or holding the [company’s] stock.” Tr. 186-87.
. Ferguson argues that the nature of loss reserves as an estimate, rather than a precise calculation, weighs against the materiality of AIG’s misstatements. See SAB No. 99, 64 Fed.Reg. at 45152 ("Another factor in materiality judgments is the degree of precision that is attainable in estimating the judgment item. The amount of deviation that is considered immaterial may increase as the attainable degree of precision decreases.”). While the Court agrees that the evidence at trial explained loss reserves to be an insurance company’s best estimate of expected future losses, this fact does not negate the evidence that investors and industry analysts would have considered intentionally concealed information about negative trends in loss reserves to be significant, nor does it establish that the amount by which AIG intentionally misstated its reserves was unimportant to them. See Tr. 257-58, 309-10 (Hamrah testimony); Tr. 406-11, 417-20 (Schroeder testimony); Tr. 3549-51, 3630-31 (Cohen testimony).
. At the time of the LPT Schroeder was a managing director at Morgan Stanley and was among the top ranked property and casualty insurance industry analysts. Tr. 382-83. The team she led regularly advised institutional investors about AIG. Tr. 377, 409.
. At the time of the LPT Cohen was a senior equity analyst at Merrill Lynch focusing on property and casualty insurance companies,
. In reaching this conclusion, the Court also notes that a misstatement is material so long as investors would consider the misstated facts significant in making investment decisions, even if investors would consider other information to be more important.
See Gemi-no,
. Although Ferguson urged the Court to disregard Napier's testimony as unreliable when he first moved for a judgment of acquittal during the trial, the jury’s verdict now requires the Court to credit Napier's testimony.
Autuori,
. The Court further notes that the jury also could have considered evidence of AIG’s management's involvement with the misstatements as weighing in favor of the misstatements’ materiality to investors.
See Greenhouse v. MCG Capital Corp.,
.The Court rejects Ferguson’s contention that the government presented no evidence of the misstatements’ materiality after the first quarter of 2001. Ferguson points to no evidence in the record indicating that the same qualitative considerations that support the statements’ materiality in the fourth quarter of 2000 and the first quarter of 2001 did not apply for the entire period in which AIG included the misstatements in its financial statements, and he identified no evidence showing that investors would have considered these misstatements unimportant after the first quarter of 2001. Until AIG restated its financial statements in May 2005, the LPT’s artificial inflation of AIG's publicly reported loss reserves by $500 million prevented investors and analysts from suspecting that AIG could have been under-reserved and could be forced to take a $500 million charge to future earnings. See Gov. Ex. 250; Tr. 496-99, 501-03 (Schroeder testimony); Tr. 3630-31, 3684 (Cohen testimony). Although Ferguson correctly points out that AIG's reserves steadily increased after the first quarter of 2001, when presumably no other fraudulent deals provided additional padding for AIG’s reported loss reserves, he presented no evidence that these increases compensated for the $500 million of illusory reserves attributable to the LPT.
. The Court denied Ferguson’s Geaney motion during the trial. Tr. 4182.
. The Court notes, however, that Napier's testimony was strongly corroborated by other witness testimony and exhibits, and that the Court found his testimony credible.
. At the time of the deal, John Houldsworth, a co-conspirator and cooperating witness for the government at trial, was the CEO of CRD, the Gen Re subsidiary that served as Gen Re's nominal party to the LPT. Tr. 2137, 2150, 2156-58; see supra note 3. After being recruited to work on the deal by defendant Monrad, he drafted the initial contract that ultimately became the LPT. Tr. 2138-46.
. Ferguson argues that the government’s evidence of the fee paid to Gen Re shows an increased risk to AIG from the deal, not that the deal was no-risk. After the jury’s verdict, however, the Court cannot reexamine the weight of the evidence, and must draw all inferences in favor of the government.
. Ferguson's former secretary, Donna Rizzi, confirmed that Ferguson’s handwriting appeared on a paper copy of this email found in Ferguson’s files relating to the deal. Tr. 1865.
. As the Court already noted above, defendant Ferguson also made written motions pursuant to Rule 29 that defendant Garand joined. Beyond this, however, neither of these defendants provided any papers or arguments in support of the generalized oral Rule 29 motions they made during trial.
. Counsel for defendant Milton made the motion, and counsel for the other four defendants orally joined Milton's motion. Tr. 4182-84. None of the defendants submitted papers supporting these motions or argued them before the Court.
