Lead Opinion
In a return trip following retrial after we reversed his first conviction, United States v. Boulware,
I
Without belaboring the background recited in our prior opinion, Boulware is the founder, former President, and majority owner of a closely held corporation, Hawaiian Isles Enterprises (HIE). HIE dealt in tobacco distribution, coffee processing and sales, arcade games, vending machines, and bottled water. A second superceding indictment charged Boulware with thirteen (later reduced to nine) counts of tax evasion and tax fraud in connection with his failure to report funds diverted from HIE as income for the years 1989-97; one count of conspiracy to make a false statement to influence a financial institution in connection with HIE’s use of false invoices in applying for a loan from GECC Finance Corporation; and four counts of making a false statement to influence a financial institution in connection with the false invoices. Boulware was convicted on the tax counts and the conspiracy count, which we reversed on the ground that the district court had erroneously excluded evidence of a Hawaii state court’s adjudication of property rights in certain funds diverted from HIE. Boulware I,
Boulware timely appeals.
II
Boulware first claims that the district court erred in excluding evidence that he contends would have shown that the funds he took from HIE were nontaxable returns of capital rather than income. An essential element of the crime of tax evasion is the existence of a tax deficiency. Boulware I,
Boulware contends that the district court misread Miller. In his view, the issue in Miller was whether the evidence was sufficient to convict the taxpayer in spite of his return of capital defense, not whether the taxpayer had made a sufficient initial showing to introduce evidence pertaining to that defense; thus, the rest of Miller — upon which the district court relied — is dicta. We disagree that any part of Miller’s reasoning can be disregarded. See Barapind v. Enomoto,
Boulware also posits that requiring a defendant in a criminal case to show that a distribution was intended to be a return of capital unconstitutionally shifts the burden of proof to the defendant, but again, we held in Miller and Boulware I that once the government has shown that the taxpayer diverted funds from the corporation and failed to report them, the burden shifts to the taxpayer to show that the
Finally, Boulware points out that accepting the district court’s interpretation of Miller puts us in conflict with the Second Circuit, which has held that a taxpayer need not show that the distribution was characterized as a return of capital at the time of the transaction. See United States v. D’Agostino,
III
Secondly, Boulware challenges exclusion of evidence that he believes would have shown that HIE overpaid tobacco taxes and was simply making up for the overpayment by under-reporting income. The district court sustained a relevance objection to testimony by Boulware’s attorney regarding advice he had given Boul-ware about payment of these taxes, and to testimony by HIE’s controller regarding tax adjustments made on HIE’s books. Boulware himself, however, was allowed to testify that HIE had been overpaying its tobacco taxes and had tried to recoup these overpayments by underpaying in subsequent periods and adjusting its books accordingly. He admitted that this was “self-help,” and testified that he did not understand the increase in HIE’s income to have any effect on his own taxes.
We discern no error. Boulware failed before the district court to link the excluded testimony about HIE’s tobacco taxes to his personal income taxes, and fares no better before us. His suggestion that tobacco tax evidence was probative of intent lacks factual or legal support. In any event, nothing about it indicates that Boul-ware did not have income that he failed to report on his personal return. Although the court allowed some exploration of the subject at Boulware’s behest, it retained discretion to curtail the extent of it. As the subject itself lacked relevance, the court likewise properly refused to read HRS 245-7 to the jury; whether or not HIE’s method of tax recovery was legal under state law had no bearing on whether Boulware was guilty of federal tax evasion or tax fraud.
IV
Boulware next asserts that the court’s receipt of a summary exhibit categorizing and organizing a series of schedules listing each financial transaction pertaining to his taxable income over the relevant period offended Rule 1006 of the Federal Rules of Evidence. The government introduced the compilation (Exhibit 3300) through its summary witness, IRS Agent Randall Tanahara. Boulware objected on the ground that Exhibit 3300
Boulware relies on United States v. Wood,
V
The government questioned Boulware during cross-examination about a letter that he had written to his girlfriend, Jin Sook Lee, soon after divorcing his wife in 1994. The letter referred to gifts Boul-ware had bought for Lee, including a diamond that he testified was purchased with a credit card. The letter was not received into evidence. A 1991 invoice with the name “Gina Lee” reflecting sale of a 5.03 carat diamond for $70,000 was in evidence; this purchase was evidently by cashier’s check. The Assistant United States Attorney (AUSA) argued in closing that, based on his recollection, Boulware had “lied to you during the course of this case” about how he bought the diamond and that if he would lie about how he bought a diamond for $70,000, he would lie about how he got $10 million. The day after closing arguments were concluded, Boulware moved for a mistrial, or alternatively, for an instruction about the government’s misstate
Even if the AUSA’s recollection— thus his statement to the jury—were incorrect, the district court did not clearly err in its findings or abuse its discretion in denying Boulware’s requests. The inaccuracy of the AUSA’s characterization was not immediately apparent, and the record was somewhat ambiguous given references to different diamond purchases. Regardless, it is unlikely that the statements materially affected the trial. The jury was instructed that statements of counsel are not evidence, and that the jury’s recollection of the evidence controls. See United States v. Kerr,
VI
We reversed Boulware’s first conviction because the district court had erroneously excluded evidence of a state court judgment establishing that money Boul-ware had taken from HIE and given to Lee was not a gift to her, but rather belonged to HIE and was being held in trust by Lee. Boulware I,
Boulware now maintains that the state court judgment resolving the property dispute between Lee and HIE is binding on the federal courts and, additionally, that Boulware I was wrong in concluding otherwise. However, Boulware I is the law of the case, and controlling. Jeffries v. Wood,
VII
Boulware’s press for reversal based on cumulative error fails as there is no accumulation.
VIII
Boulware raises two issues with respect to his sentence. First, he contends that the court’s imposing a 60-month term of custody on the tax evasion and conspiracy counts is vindictive given that his orig
Additionally, Boulware argues that his sentence of 60 months on the conspiracy conviction is unreasonable and must be vacated if the tax counts are reversed. As we affirm conviction on the tax counts, the premise of Boulware’s challenge to the conspiracy sentence disappears.
AFFIRMED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I agree entirely with the analysis and conclusions of the majority. I write separately only to comment that if we were writing on a clean slate, rather than under the controlling precedent of United States v. Miller,
I believe the Second Circuit’s analysis is more consistent with the statutory requirements of criminal tax evasion. The elements of criminal tax evasion under 26 U.S.C. § 7201 are: “(1) the existence of a tax deficiency, (2) willfulness in attempted evasion of taxes, and (3) an affirmative act constituting an evasion or attempted evasion.” United States v. Marabelles,
I emphasize that even if we were to apply Bok and D'Agostino to the case at hand, the outcome would not be affected. Bok expressly holds that the return to capital defense does not apply if the diversion itself were unlawful. Bok,
