OPINION AND ORDER
On September 27, 2000, this court issued a decision in
United States v. Corrado,
J. FORFEITURE APPEAL PERTAINING TO PAUL CORRADO, NOVE TOCCO, AND ANTHONY CORRADO
Most of the forfeiture-related issues raised against these defendants are identical in law and fact to the issues resolved in оur former opinion pertaining only to Jack Tocco and Giacalone. We summarize the following conclusions made in our former opinion, which apply with equal force to Paul Corrado, Nove Tocco, and Anthony Corrado:
A. A criminal forfeiture award is a part of the defendant’s sentence, not a part of the substantive offense of conviction. Thus, where the government alleges that the district court’s award of forfeiture (or the determination of no forfeiture) was imposed in violation of the law, the government has the statutory authorization to appeal.
See Corrado,
B. Because the criminal forfeitures in this case constituted a part of the defendants’ sentences, double jeopardy principles do not apply to prohibit the government from appealing the district court’s forfeiture award as to any of the defendants.
Corrado,
C. The “shall forfeit” language of 18 U.S.C. § 1963(a) mandates that the district court assess forfeiture against the defendants when the facts support a finding of a sufficient nexus between the property to be forfeited and thе RICO violation. Id. at 552.
D. Co-conspirators participating in a RICO enterprise should be held jointly and severally liable for any proceeds of the conspiracy reasonably foreseeable from conspiratorial operations. Id. at 553.
E. Unlike the general cоnspiracy statute, § 1962(d) requires no “overt or specific act” in carrying the RICO enterprise forward. Furthermore, “the supporters are as guilty as the perpetrators ... so long as they share a common purpose, conspirators are liable for the acts of their co-conspirators.”
Salinas v. United States,
F. The government has met the “relationship plus continuity test,” which requirеs the government to show that the predicate acts in connection with the conspiracy were related to its illegal purposes, and that these acts constituted a threat of ongoing criminal activity.
Corrado,
We must now apply these principles to the govеrnment’s argument that the district court erred in its findings that the evidence was insufficient to support a for *938 feiture against Paul Corrado, Nove Tocco, and Anthony Corrado.
A. Paul Corrado and Nove Tocco
In our former opinion, we explained that the district court denied any forfeiture award against Paul Corrado and Nove Tocco, despite much evidence of recorded conversations between Nove and Paul regarding their collections of the $234,700 in street taxes. In attributing the amount of street taxes against Jack Tocco and Vito Giacalonе, our opinion concluded that the district court erred in requiring the government to justify said forfeiture and prove that Nove and Paul shared their collections with the other partners. It was sufficient, in our view, that Nove and Paul were empowered by the larger organizatiоn in which Jack Tocco and Giacalone were members.
On this appeal, Paul and Nove claim that their collections of street taxes were not a part of the conspiratorial enterprise, but that the illegal activity was just between the two of them and separate from the other conspirators. We have already rejected that position and have found that the collection of the street taxes was supported and made feasible by the larger organization. Therefore, for the reasons more fully explained in our former opinion, the district court erred in failing to hold Paul Corrado and Nove Tocco jointly and severally hable for the forfeiture of the $234,700 in street tax proceeds. Id. at 554-55.
B. Anthony Corrado
The government claimed that Anthony Corrado was jointly and severally hable with the other four defendants not only for the forfeiture of the $234,700 in street tax proceeds, but also that he was liable with Jack Tocco and Giacalone for the $4.2 million in profits in the conspiratorial enterprise allegedly received from the sale of two hotels in Las Vegas (the Frontier Hotel and the Edgewater Hotel), $1 million that the conspiracy extorted from Sal Vi-tello, and $38,400 it received in proceeds from the collection of unlawful gambling debts. Thus, the government sought a total forfeiture against Anthony Corrado in the amount of $5,473,100.
Consistent with our original opinion pertaining to Jack Tocco and Giacalone, we reject the government’s contention with respect to the $1 million in proceeds related to the sale of the Frontier Hotel, because “therе was no evidence that any of the defendants were personally involved, nor is there any evidence to corroborate the alleged statements made by Michael [Polizzi] and related to his son regarding the involvement of the enterprise.”
Corrado,
With respect to the street taxes, we held that the collection of the street taxes was attributable to the criminal enterprise and, thus, we held Jack Tocco and Giacalone liable as members of that enterprise. The government argues that Anthony Corrado should also be held responsible as a “capo” of the enterprise, as the evidence of his participation in the enterprise was proven beyond a reasonable doubt. We agree *939 with the government and now hold that Anthony Corrado should be held liable for the $234,700 in collected street taxes.
As we stated in our opinion, “[t]he government should not have been required to prove that Nоve and Paul shared their collections with other partners. Nor was it required to show the proportion of sharing or to trace these extortionate collections back to each member. The entire illegal scheme could not have succeeded were it not for the support, or the use of the name and the reputation of, the conspiratorial enterprise.” Id. at 555. Furthermore, we noted that “[rjecorded conversations between Nove and Paul indicate that they were working with (or for), or were еmpowered by, the ‘capos’ Jack Tocco and Anthony Corrado.” Id. Because the evidence showed that Anthony Corrado was a member of the conspiratorial enterprise that empowered the collection of the street taxes, we hold him liable for the forfeiture of the proceeds from that illegal endeavor.
We also find that, because of his involvement in the enterprise, Anthony Corrado should be held liable for the $1,000,000 extorted from Sal Vitello. Though the district court was of the view that forfeiture was nоt required where there is no showing that extortion money was ever actually shared by the partnership, we held that the government need only show that Giacalone was empowered by his membership in the enterprise. Consequently, because of Anthony Corrado’s involvеment as a member in the enterprise, the district court erred in failing to assess against him a forfeiture amount of $1,000,000 attributable to the extortion from Sal Vitello.
Accordingly, we find that the district court erred in failing to assess against Anthony Corrado forfeiture amounts of $234,700 in street tax рroceeds and $1,000,000 for the extortion from Sal Vitel-lo. In addition, we REMAND to the district court to consider, along with the cases pertaining to Jack Tocco and Vito Giacal-one, the degree and extent, if any, of Anthony Corrado’s forfeiture related to the salе of the Edgewater Hotel.
II. PETITION FOR REHEARING
We now consider the petition for rehearing filed October 23, 2000, by Jack William Tocco, joined by the other four ^defendants, and the government’s response thereto. 1 We have carefully considered the issues presented in the petitiоn for rehearing and the full response by the government, and we conclude that the petition to rehear must be denied.
Jack Tocco’s brief raises no new issues not previously treated. We do not presume that the Supreme Court intended to overrule
Monge v. California,
Requiring the forfeiture of property used to commit federal narcotics violations encourages property owners to take care in managing their property and ensures that they will not permit that property to be used for illegal purposes. See Bennis v. Michigan,516 U.S. 442 , 452,116 S.Ct. 994 ,134 L.Ed.2d 68 (1996) (“Forfeiture of property prevents illegal uses ... by imposing an economic penalty, thereby rendering illegal behavior unprofitable”)....
Neither of these cases, in our view, supports the argument of the defendants. We discussed fully the inapplicability of Ap-prendi in our earlier opinion, and we do not further speculate or surmise as to its futurе implications in the event this particular double jeopardy issue reaches the Supreme Court in light of its prior precedent. Apprendi, suffice it to say, involves a different issue, and is not controlling under the facts of this case.
On the other hand, the government cites
United States v. Bajakajian,
We сonclude that other asserted bases for rehearing on the forfeiture questions have been covered in our prior decision, and the defendants have raised no new and material issues for further consideration.
Accordingly, we OVERRULE and DENY the petition for reheаring as to all defendants.
Notes
. We granted the requests of the other defendants to join in Jack Tocco’s petition and amended petition despite objections filed by the government.
. In
Ursery,
Justices Scalia and Thomas stated that "the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits successive prosecution, not successive punishment."
Id.
at 297,
