Those who in these whirling times still genuflect to tradition will be gratified to learn that the “Chicago Outfit,” once led by A1 Capone himself (see ITT Research Institute & Chicago Crime Commission, A Study of Organized Crime in Illinois 36-43 (1971)), was still alive and kicking in the otherwise much changed Chicago of the 1980s. Organized Crime in Chicago: Hearing before the Permanent Subcomm. on Investigations of the S. Comm. on Governmental Affairs, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. 157-96 (1983) (statement of William F. Roemer, Jr., of the Chicago Crime Commission, linking the defendants in this case to Capone, Nitti, Accardo, and other Outfit bosses in an unbroken line of descent). One of its rackets was the protection racket, in which owners of restaurants, automobile dealerships, and other small firms were commanded to make substantial cash payments under threat, if they refused, of the destruction of their property and death and injury to themselves and their families. The racket was conducted at the operating level by the Outfit’s “street crews,” such as the “Patrick Street Crew,” headed by the well-known Outfit member Leonard Patrick. Organized Crime in Chicago, supra, at 177. The indictment in this case, handed down in 1991, charged Patrick and two members of his crew, Nicholas Gio and Mario Rainone (the latter being Patrick’s second in command), along with Gus Alex, the higher-up in the Outfit (id. at 170-71) to whom Patrick reported, with various offenses. The principal one was conspiring to conduct the business of the Patrick Street Crew between 1983 and 1989 through a pattern of racketeering activity, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), a provision of the RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) statute. The indictment listed as predicate offenses of RICO numerous acts of arson, intimidation, and extortion. Patrick turned state’s evidence and testified against the other defendants. In return he was permitted to plead guilty to offenses predating the federal sentencing guidelines and was sentenced to only six years in prison, later increased to seven when he violated the plea agreement by perjuring himself in another case (more on this later). Rainone pleaded guilty without engaging in plea bargaining, while Alex and Gio were convicted by a jury after a trial in 1992. Alex, Gio, and Rainone received prison sentences of 188, 137, and 210 months, respectively. Alex was also fined $250,000, and both he and Rainone were subjected to heavy forfeitures. Each of these three defendants has appealed, though Rainone’s appeal is limited to the sentence.
The details of the crimes are not important. Typical is an incident in which Rai-none, on the orders of Patrick and with the approval of Alex, went to a restaurant owned by a man named Moss and demanded $2,000 a month. He told Moss that if he didn’t pay “they would find [Moss] in his walk-in freezer.” To underscore the threat Rainone punched Moss in the jaw and said, “I know where your family lives. I know how to get your kids.” So Moss paid.
The evidence against Alex and Gio was overwhelming. The government’s principal witness was Patrick himself, admittedly an unreliable person, as we shall see — but there was also a highly incriminating tape, testimony by another member of the street crew who had turned state’s evidence named La-Valley, and testimony by two friends of Patrick and Alex who had carried messages between them because the two mobsters were reluctant to use the phone. Alex and
The judge did not act unreasonably (“abuse his discretion,” in the standard jargon) in determining that the notes were indeed protected by the privilege. (On the scope of the privilege, see generally
Fisher v. United States,
Evidentiary privileges are not absolute, however. Even privileges recognized when the Constitution was written can be trumped by constitutional rights, such as the right of confrontation conferred by the Sixth Amendment and interpreted to include the right of cross-examination.
Olden v. Kentucky,
As this case also illustrates, the incremental contribution of communications within the scope of the attorney-client privilege to effective cross-examination is likely to be small. The lawyers for Alex and Gio spent three days cross-examining Patrick and brought out among other things that he had committed perjury on a number of occasions, had
The right of cross-examination, whether as a matter of constitutional law or the law of evidence, is not absolute.
Olden v. Kentucky,
The appeals raise several other issues.
1. Shortly after the trial Patrick perjured himself while testifying against the current boss of the Chicago Outfit, Carlisi, in another case. Under cross-examination about the six murders, which in that trial as in this one were flagged to the jury in an effort to discredit Patrick’s testimony, Patrick falsely claimed that one of the murders had been committed in self-defense and so hadn’t been murder at all. Alex and Gio describe this perjury as newly discovered evidence of Patrick’s utter unreliability, warranting a new trial. Newly discovered it may have been, evidence it may have been, but evidence important enough to warrant a new trial it was not. It is conceded all ’round that Patrick is a liar. Most criminals turned government witnesses are. The motive for this particular lie is obvious and has little if any connection with Patrick’s credibility with respect to the issues in this case: he was afraid of being charged with murder. He has in fact since been charged by the State of Illinois with three murders. Newly discovered evidence is not a good ground for a new trial unless the evidence if believed would be likely to change the outcome of the old trial.
United States v. DePriest,
2. Alex was 75 years old when the case was tried in 1992, and was showing early signs of senile dementia of the Alzheimer’s type. Expert reports were submitted to the district judge, but only the government’s addressed the statutory standard for competency (18 U.S.C. § 4241(d)), finding that Alex met it; and even one of the reports submitted on behalf of Alex described his “neuro
It is true that such a defense is not the same thing as a defense of insanity or mental incompetence. Indeed it is not really a- defense at all, but an effort to derail the government’s attempt to prove whatever mental element the criminal statute that it is enforcing requires. See generally
Haas v. Abrahamson,
The other issues relating to guilt are either resolved by decisions of this court that we are not disposed to reexamine or have no possible merit, and we turn therefore to the sentencing issues.
3. Was a two-level upward departure from the normal guidelines range for persons convicted of participating in a RICO conspiracy warranted because of threats made by the defendants against the victims of their extortion and the members of the victims’ families? A subsequent amendment to the guidelines authorizes a two-level adjustment for threats of bodily injury and death, U.S.S.G. § 2B3.2(b)(1), and a subsequent amendment is an appropriate guide for a departure in sentencing a defendant under an earlier guideline.
United States v. Boula,
4. The judge departed upward another two levels because the defendants were engaged in “organized crime.” Concern with the penetration of legitimate businesses by criminal syndicates, such as the Chicago Out
We grant that the term “organized crime” is nebulous, and that there are dangers in too casually attaching the appellation to gangs that happen to seem particularly ominous. But we need not explore the outer bounds of the permissible “organized crime” departure in this ease. The Chicago Outfit is the clearest possible example of a gang operating on such a scale, with such success, over such a long period of time that the danger which it poses to society is not adequately reflected in the guideline range. It is not your average criminal RICO violator.
5. Gio committed arson in a caper with LaValley, for which he was convicted.
United States v. Gio,
AFFIRMED.
