ORDER ON REHEARING
In his petition for rehearing, appellant Kenneth E. Haddock points out that our decision not to address his insufficiency of the evidence claim on Count 1 is inconsistent with cases in our circuit. The panel grants rehearing limited to this issue.
In this circuit, we have consistently held that when we reverse on appeal because of a procedural error at trial and remand for a new trial, we nevertheless must address the defendant’s claim that evidence presented at trial on the reversed count was insufficient. We have reasoned that if evidence indeed was insufficient, retrial is barred by double jeopardy principles.
United States v. Perez,
Count 1 charged Haddock with violating 18 U.S.C. § 656 by presenting a $960,892 check to the Bank of Herington as part of an agreement with the FDIC to acquire control of another bank, the First National Bank of Herington. The check was written on a Herington Bancshares account held at the Bank of Herington. The government presented evidence suggesting that Haddock knew that only $611,000 had been deposited in the account to cover payment of the check. The government contends that this allowed Herington Bancshares to have interest-free use of approximately $350,000 of the Bank of Herington’s funds from April 3, 1987, when the check was written, until April 15,1987, when Haddock deposited enough additional funds in the checking account to cover payment of the check. For reasons that were not made clear at trial, the check was not returned for insufficient funds during that twelve-day period.
To prove a violation of § 656, the government must show beyond a reason
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able doubt that (1) the defendant was an executive officer of the bank, (2) the bank was connected in some way to the Federal Reserve System, (3) the defendant willfully misapplied the funds of the bank, and (4) the defendant acted with the intent to injure or defraud that bank. 18 U.S.C. § 656;
United States v. Unruh,
Haddock cites several cases, including
Williams v. United States,
Overdrafts alone are insufficient to establish a violation of § 656.
United States v. Hughes,
At the time Haddock signed and presented the $960,892 check, he was chairman of the board, president, and chief executive officer of the Bank of Herington — the payee of the check. He clearly exercised substantial control over the bank’s twelve or so employees and over much of what occurred at the bank. He also was the primary shareholder of Herington Banc-shares — the holding company on whose account the check was written. Because he negotiated with the FDIC to acquire control of the First National Bank of Hering-ton, Haddock clearly was aware of the amount of money that was to be injected into the Bank of Herington on April 3, 1987. Although the amount of the check exceeded deposits in that account by almost $350,000, the check oddly was never returned.
3
Given the amount of control Haddock exercised over all aspects of this transaction and over the Bank of Hering-ton, we conclude that evidence presented regarding Haddock’s actions — viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution — was sufficient to warrant a reasonable jury’s finding that Haddock willfully
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misapplied bank funds with the intent to injure or defraud the bank.
See Unruh,
The remainder of Haddock’s contentions raised in his petition for rehearing are without merit.
In accordance with Rule 35(b), Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, the suggestion for rehearing en banc was transmitted to all of the judges of the court who are in regular active service. No member of the panel and no judge in regular active service on the court having requested that the court be polled on rehearing en banc, the suggestion for rehearing en banc is denied.
Notes
. We note that several of our sister circuits recently have arrived at an opposite conclusion based on
Richardson v. United States,
. In
Cronic,
we reversed a defendant’s conviction under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343 & 1344 for overdrafting his checking account. However, we did not — as appellant implies — hold that a check written on an account with insufficient funds cannot violate these statutes. Instead, we held that the government, by allowing the jury to be instructed only according to the language of § 1341 and not according to §§ 1343 and 1344 (prohibiting a "scheme to defraud"), "saddled itself with the burden of establishing that money was obtained
... by means of
false and fraudulent
pretenses, representations, or promises.”
. We also note that, according to evidence presented at trial, a significant portion of the approximately $350,000 that Haddock finally deposited into the Herington Bancshares account to cover the check written on April 3 came from the $250,000 that Haddock received from the Bank of White City as a downpayment for the purchase of the Easton loan package. The receipt and use of this $250,000 is the subject of Haddock’s conviction on Count 3.
