UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. LARRY E. JENNINGS, SR., Defendant-Appellant.
No. 96-4170
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided: November 19, 1998
PUBLISHED. Argued: July 11, 1997. Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Frederic N. Smalkin, District Judge. (CR-95-283-S). Before NIEMEYER, MICHAEL, and MOTZ, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: George J. Terwilliger, III, MCGUIRE, WOODS, BATTLE & BOOTHE, L.L.P., Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Kathleen O‘Connell Gavin, Assistant United States Attorney, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Laura A. Colombell, MCGUIRE, WOODS, BATTLE & BOOTHE, L.L.P., Washington, D.C.; E. Duncan Getchell, Jr., Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Lynne A. Battaglia, United States Attorney, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
OPINION
MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:
A jury found Larry Jennings, Sr., a housing repair contractor, guilty of three counts of violating
I.
The Housing Authority of Baltimore City (HABC) is a local government agency that operates and maintains subsidized housing units within the City. HABC receives funds from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. In late 1991 HABC began a special program to renovate hundreds of vacant housing units owned by that agency in Baltimore. To expedite the renovations, a housing emergency was declared, which allowed HABC to dispense with the usual bidding procedures for selecting contractors. As a result, HABC developed a list of about thirty contractors who were awarded work by purchase order without competitive bidding. This no-bid program was known as the Vacancy Special Funding Program (VSFP). Between 1992 and 1994 Charles Morris, a HABC employee, was the administrator of VSFP. Morris had the discretion to decide what jobs were awarded to each contractor on the list as well as the authority to negotiate the price for each contract.1
Jennings was a construction contractor who owned two businesses, Elias Contracting Co. (Elias) and Environmental Protection Co. (EPC). He was vice-president of both companies and his daughter, Georgia Jennings Page (Page), was president. In 1991 Jennings became interested in obtaining HABC contracts for Elias. He and his son, Larry Jennings, Jr. (Jennings Jr.), met with Morris at a restaurant that year to discuss the possibility of doing VSFP work. Jennings Jr. was a member of the HABC Board of Commissioners, which oversaw HABC‘s activities. Sometime after this meeting Morris placed Elias on the VSFP contractor list.
While Elias was performing VSFP work in 1993, Jennings made cash payments to Morris on five occasions. The first payment occurred in early spring when Morris went to Jennings‘s office to deliver a HABC check for work that Elias had completed. There, Jennings gave $200 to Morris and told Morris that he (Jennings) would not “have made it” without Morris‘s help. After this payment, VSFP contracts and payment checks flowed on a regular basis from HABC to Jennings‘s companies.
Later that spring, on April 26, 1993, Elias deposited in its account a $75,786.43 check from HABC for work performed under the VSFP program. That same day, Jennings telephoned Morris to arrange a meeting in Jennings‘s car. As the two men drove around downtown
On May 4, 1993, Elias deposited another HABC check in the amount of $46,408.75, received in payment for VSFP work. The next day Jennings again met with Morris. Jennings gave Morris $2,500 in cash and thanked him, just as before. Over the next week Elias submitted eight new proposals for VSFP work, with a total price tag of $170,440. Morris approved all of the proposals for a total price of $163,973. In authorizing this work, Morris bumped up some of the in-house estimates, approved several proposals for the exact amount Elias requested, and approved others for amounts slightly less than the Elias estimates.
In June 1993 Jennings‘s other company, EPC, began efforts to obtain work under another no-bid program at HABC, lead testing on VSFP units. Morris gave Page a sample proposal to use in preparing EPC‘s submission for this work. Soon thereafter, Page gave Morris a draft of EPC‘s $254,000 proposal, and Morris worked over a weekend to help Page finalize the proposal. At about the same time, Elias submitted eight new proposals, totaling $151,535, for VSFP rehabilitation work. On June 25, 1993, Morris approved all eight of these proposals for amounts near or equal to what Elias requested, for a total authorization of $148,841. That same day HABC issued a purchase order awarding the lead testing contract to EPC, and Elias deposited a HABC check for $16,506. Also on that day, Jennings gave Morris $1,500 in cash. Jennings told Morris, “If it wasn‘t for you, I don‘t know what I would have done.” In July 1993 Jennings gave Morris an additional $200 in cash.
Jennings used various ploys to get the cash for the three payments charged in the indictment. For the first payment (of $2,500 to $3,000) Jennings, on April 26, 1993, wrote a $3,000 check on the Elias account, payable to Moe Construction, a small company that had sub-
Cash for the second payment, for $2,500, came from a $15,000 check, dated May 5, 1993, that Jennings wrote on the Elias account, payable to B.H.S., another Elias subcontractor. Jennings did not deliver the check to B.H.S. Once again, he took the check to Moe Armwood at Doc‘s Liquors, who cashed it. Jennings used part of the cash to pay Morris.
Money for the last charged payment came from a $1,500 personal check that Jennings cashed at Doc‘s Liquors on June 26, 1993. Jennings took the full $1,500 to Morris that day.
Although Morris admitted to accepting cash from Jennings, he testified that he took gifts, not bribes. Morris also said that while he often assisted Jennings‘s companies with paperwork, he never did any special favors for Jennings‘s companies as a result of the gifts. Morris admitted, however, that Jennings was the only contractor to whom he personally delivered HABC payment checks. Morris dropped off Jennings‘s checks at his (Jennings‘s) place of business, while all other contractors picked up their checks at Morris‘s office. Finally, Morris claimed that he put Elias on the no-bid contractor list at the request of his supervisor.
James Karim, who was a subcontractor for Elias on three VSFP jobs, was another witness for the government. According to Karim, Jennings required him to do extra work that was not covered by the subcontracts and then refused to pay for this work. Karim‘s partner called Morris at the VSFP office to complain about Jennings‘s methods of dealing, including his failure to pay for all work completed. When Jennings learned of the call, he told Karim that the calls were of “no use.” Jennings said, the “people downtown report right back to [me] . . . . I have that under control. So, your complaints are . . .
Jennings testified in his own defense. He denied giving any money to Morris.
II.
Jennings argues that district court erred when it denied his motion for a judgment of acquittal under
Jennings claims that the statute under which he was convicted,
A.
Some background on
Whoever . . .
corruptly gives , offers or agrees to give anything of value to any person, with intent to influence or reward an agent of an organization or of a State, local or Indian tribal government, or any agency thereof, in connection with any business, transaction, or series of transactions of any such organization, government, or agency involving anything of value of $5000 or more; shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 10 years, or both.
This subsection prohibits payoffs to state and local officials who influence the distribution of federal funds. Before
Jennings‘s argument on appeal -- that he paid gratuities, not bribes -- draws upon the language of
Whether a payment is a bribe or an illegal gratuity under
Direct evidence of intent is unnecessary, however. To prove bribery under
Although the distinction between bribes and illegal gratuities under
B.
Jennings argues that
As we explain below (in part II.C.), Jennings‘s conviction must stand because the evidence was sufficient to prove that he intended to influence Morris‘s official acts by paying him money, that is, Jen-
C.
We turn to the evidence in Jennings‘s case. To begin with, Jennings is mistaken to focus on Morris‘s testimony that he believed he
As administrator of the VSFP program at HABC, Morris was in a position to award no-bid contracts to companies doing housing rehabilitation. Jennings‘s company, Elias, got on the no-bid list after Jennings and his son, Jennings Jr., met with Morris at a Baltimore restaurant. Jennings Jr. was a member of the Board of Commissioners that oversaw HABC activities, and it would be fair to infer that his father brought him to the meeting in order to influence Morris to put Elias on the VSFP list. Not only did Morris place Elias on the list after this meeting, Morris also began awarding contracts to the company.
An uncharged payment of $200 from Jennings to Morris got the ball rolling. In the context of all that happened in this case, it would be reasonable for a juror to find that Jennings made the first payment as well as the succeeding ones with the intent to signal Morris that more payments were in the cards if more contracts came Elias‘s way. A reasonable juror could have found that Jennings intended the three charged payments to be either arranged-in-advance rewards in return for Morris‘s official acts on behalf of Jennings‘s companies or paid-in-advance bribes for Morris‘s future acts on behalf of the companies, or both.
However, because the evidence was sufficient to prove that Jennings committed bribery, we need not decide whether
Jennings made the second charged payment of $2,500 to Morris the day after Elias deposited a $46,000 check from HABC. Shortly thereafter, Morris approved more new jobs for Elias, again bumping up some of the in-house estimates.
Jennings made the last charged payment of $1,500 the same day Morris approved eight new projects for Elias, the same day Elias deposited another HABC check, and the same day HABC issued a lead testing contract to EPC, Jennings‘s other company.
The timing of each charged payment from Jennings to Morris closely corresponded to a payment from HABC to Elias and to Morris‘s approval of new jobs for Jennings‘s companies. Moreover, each time Jennings made a cash payment to Morris, he thanked Morris for his help and told Morris that he (Jennings) could not have made it without him. Finally, Jennings used an underhanded method to generate much of the cash for his payments to Morris: Jennings cashed two checks written to his subcontractors at a check cashing establishment whose proprietor forged the endorsements.
On this evidence we believe a reasonable juror could have found that Jennings‘s payments to Morris were bribes, that is, gifts made with the corrupt intent to induce Morris to engage in, or to reward him for engaging in, official actions on behalf of Jennings‘s companies. In traditional terms, Jennings paid Morris with the intent of having a quid pro quo arrangement with him.
Even if the evidence did not necessarily link each of Jennings‘s payments to a specific official act by Morris, a reasonable juror could still conclude that Jennings paid bribes. Over a fairly short period Morris approved over $650,000 worth of contracts for Jennings‘s companies, and Jennings paid Morris over $7,000 in cash. Again, a reasonable juror could have concluded that there was a course of conduct involving payments flowing from Jennings to Morris in
III.
Jennings‘s second argument is that the district court erred (1) by failing to instruct the jury about the difference between a bribe and a gratuity and (2) by misdefining for the jury
A.
As we said in part II.B., we have left open the question of whether
When instructing the jury on
Even if a court does not properly define “corrupt intent,” it can adequately convey that concept to the jury by describing the exact quid pro quo that the defendant is charged with intending to accomplish. For example, a court may inform the jury that it may find the defendant guilty only if it determines “that (defendant‘s name) gave (the charged payment) corruptly, that is, with the intent to induce (official‘s name) to commit (the specific official act or omission that defendant is charged with intending to induce).” See, e.g., Committee on Model Criminal Jury Instructions Within the Eighth Circuit, Manual of Model Jury Instructions for the District Courts of the Eighth Circuit, § 6.18.201A (1996) (instruction for
Additionally, when there is some evidence to suggest that the defendant‘s payment was a gratuity as defined in
On our assumption that
The district court gave the following instruction to the jury on the intent required for a
In order to establish [Jennings‘s] guilt . . . the government must prove . . . that [he] gave a thing of value to [Morris] . . . .
. . . .
. . . [and] that [Jennings] did so corruptly, that is, with the intent to influence or reward [Morris] in connection with [HABC] business. . . .
So, in order to find [Jennings] guilty . . . you must find beyond a reasonable doubt that . . . [Jennings] corruptly gave to [Morris] a bribe . . ., [and] that . . . [Jennings] had the intent of influencing or rewarding [Morris] corruptly in connection with HABC contracts obtained and performed by Elias . . . .
If you do find that [Jennings] gave the reward or thing of value, then the government must prove that [Jennings] did so with a corrupt intent to influence or reward [Morris]. An act is done with a corrupt intent if it is performed voluntarily and intentionally -- that means willfully, not as a mistake or accident -- and with the purpose, at least in part, of either
accomplishing an unlawful end or result or accomplishing some otherwise lawful end or result by an unlawful manner or means. In other words, in order to prove [Jennings] guilty, the government must prove to you . . . that he acted with corrupt intent, that is, that he gave [Morris] money with the purpose of influencing or rewarding him with respect to HABC business or transactions.
The phrase to influence means that a payment was made before the official action. The phrase to reward means that a payment was made afterwards. Payments made to influence official action and to reward official action are both prohibited . . . . Payments made, however, without corrupt intent are not criminal acts.
Now, if you find the government has not proved beyond a reasonable doubt that [Jennings] gave money to [Morris] with corrupt intent to influence or reward him with respect to HABC business or transactions, then you must find [Jennings] not guilty.
1.
Jennings argues that the district court erred because it did not instruct the jury on the difference between a bribe and a gratuity. Jennings did not request such an instruction or object to its omission. Omitting an explanation of the bribe/gratuity distinction was not error, much less plain error, in this case. Jennings did not defend the case on a gratuity theory. Rather, he disclaimed that theory by claiming that he paid Morris nothing at all. And, although Morris testified that he considered the payments to be gifts, Jennings urged the jury to reject Morris‘s testimony. A gratuity instruction therefore would have been inconsistent with Jennings‘s defense. In these circumstances, the district court did not err in failing to inject a gratuity defense into the trial by offering an unrequested instruction on the subject. Cf. United States v. Matzkin, 14 F.3d 1014, 1018 (4th Cir. 1994). As a result, it was appropriate for the district court to instruct
2.
Jennings next argues that the district court plainly erred by giving a wrong instruction on the “corrupt intent” element of bribery -- an instruction that left out the requirement of intent to engage in a quid pro quo. We agree.
A first glance at the instruction reveals that the court correctly explained the meaning of the “to influence or reward” language in
Yet the court‘s accurate explanation of the terms “influence” and “reward” did nothing to ensure that the jury found that Jennings‘s payments were, indeed, bribes. This is because the court incorrectly defined the “corrupt intent” element of bribery, which is the intent to engage in a relatively specific quid pro quo. A correct description of this element is essential because the gravamen of a bribery offense is a payment made to corruptly influence or reward an official act (or omission). As a result, to explain properly the quid pro quo element of
In defining “corrupt intent” the trial court told the jury that “[a]n act is done with a corrupt intent if it is performed voluntarily and intentionally . . . and with the purpose . . . of either accomplishing an unlawful end or result or accomplishing some otherwise lawful end or result by an unlawful manner or means.”6 This was error. The defi-
Reading the district court‘s jury instruction as a whole cannot save it either. In an attempt to clarify the meaning of “corruptly,” the court
If any of the court‘s four explanations of “corrupt intent” required the jury to find a relatively specific quid pro quo, the jury instruction would have been saved (despite the court‘s failure to include in its core definition of “corruptly” the quid pro quo element of bribery). This is because requiring the jury to find that Jennings intended to trade specific payments for specific favors from Morris would have notified the jury of the quid pro quo element of the
B.
Because the district court‘s plainly erroneous instruction misdefined bribery‘s “corrupt intent” element by omitting the basic quid pro quo requirement, we will assume that the instruction affected Jennings‘s substantial rights. Yet we will not exercise our discretion to correct the plain error if it did not “result in a miscarriage of justice, such as when . . . the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of [the] judicial proceedings.” Hastings, 134 F.3d at 244 (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). “`Central to this inquiry is a determination of whether, based on the record in its entirety, the proceedings against the accused resulted in a fair and reliable determination of guilt.‘” Id. (quoting United States v. Cedelle, 89 F.3d 181, 186 (4th Cir. 1996)).
We conclude that there was a fair and reliable determination of Jennings‘s guilt. Jennings did not claim at trial that he paid gratuities to Morris. Jennings took the stand and testified that he did not pay Morris a dime, and Jennings‘s lawyer pressed this point at length in his closing. The jury completely rejected Jennings‘s testimony. We are convinced that a quid pro quo instruction would not have changed the jury‘s assessment of Jennings‘s story or its determination of his guilt.
Although Jennings now argues that at most he paid gratuities to Morris, he can only point to two snippets of Morris‘s testimony to support his argument. First, Morris testified that he never did any special favors for Jennings‘s companies. Yet Morris admitted to the dubious practice of personally delivering Elias‘s checks for VSFP work to Jennings‘s office, something Morris did not do for any other contractor. Second, Morris testified that he considered the payments from Jennings to be gifts. This seems to be a self-serving assumption on Morris‘s part. Regardless, it is Jennings‘s intent, not Morris‘s, that is dispositive.
The conviction is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Because (as we discuss below) the evidence was sufficient to convict Jennings under the traditional (and somewhat narrow) meaning of “reward,” we need not decide whether
The Seventh Circuit in Agostino did not acknowledge that under
The Second Circuit has discussed the relationship between
In Crozier the defendant (convicted under a former version of
In support of his contention that
The Crozier court, after consulting the statutory history of the 1986 amendment to
However, a closer analysis of Bonito suggests that its holding was the same as ours today: that regardless of whether
In any event, a court squarely addressing the issue could reasonably conclude that
Second, a court interpreting the statutory history of the 1986 amendment to
However, we believe that our court in Arthur set forth a better definition of corrupt intent than the one in the Devitt treatise. As explained in part II.A. above, Arthur defined “corrupt intent” as the intent to engage in “some more or less specific quid pro quo.” Arthur, 544 F.2d at 734.
Also, we question the Devitt treatise‘s support for its definition of “corrupt intent.” The treatise attributes the definition to United States v. Strand, 574 F.2d 993, 996 (9th Cir. 1978). See Devitt, et al., supra, § 25.09 (Notes). However, the Strand court did not adopt the definition of “corruptly” that Devitt attributes to it.
In Strand the Ninth Circuit quoted the trial court‘s definition of “corruptly,” which was later adopted by the Devitt treatise. Id. at 995-96. The appeals court also quoted parts of the trial court‘s jury instruction on the elements of the offense of bribery. See id. at 995 (stating that the defendant must have accepted money “in return for being induced to . . . violat[e] . . . his official duties” (emphasis added)). The Strand court then held that “[t]he trial court‘s instructions, taken as a whole, correctly and clearly charged the jury that . . . the requisite corrupt intent consisted of the defendant‘s . . . acceptance of money for financial gain, in return for a violation of his official duty, with the specific intent to violate the law.” Id. (first and fourth emphases added). Here, the Ninth Circuit was alluding to the “financial gain” and “specific intent” language in the trial court‘s definition of “corruptly.” But the appeals court also was referring to the trial court‘s discussion of the “in return for . . . violation of his official duty” element of the offense. See id. Thus, the Ninth Circuit in Strand did not hold that the trial court‘s definition of “corruptly” was sufficient in itself to convey to the jury the proper intent element for bribery. Rather, the appeals court held that the trial court‘s instructions, “taken as a whole,” adequately conveyed the proper intent requirement to the jury. Therefore, Strand merely stands for the proposition that a jury instruction may be sufficient on the whole when it allows the jury to convict only if it finds that the defendant gave (or received) money “in return for” a violation of some official duty. In fact, it is possible to read Strand as adopting the Arthur definition of corrupt intent. Cf. id. at 995 (explaining that the crucial difference between a bribe and a gratuity under
