The government appeals from the district court’s dismissal of a thirty-four count indictment charging Defendants-Appellees, Richard Marchese, Orville Sandberg, David Nemelka, and Laura Lee Sorenson, with mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 and money laundering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731 and reverse.
Background
The government charged Defendants with thirty-four counts of mail fraud and money laundering, alleging a scheme to defraud the customers of Power Securities Corporation (“Power”). The district court dismissed the indictment, finding that the government had only implicated the right of Power’s customers to “honest and faithful brokers,” and hence no property right was taken or placed at risk as required by
McNally v. United States,
The indictment identified Defendants Márchese and Sandberg as owners and directors of Power, a broker-dealer specializing in the sale of penny stocks. Defendant Nem-elka was a stock promoter and Defendant Sorenson was his assistant. The indictment alleged that beginning on or about May 1987, and continuing until January 1993, Defendants engaged in the unlawful scheme by *1022 inducing Power’s customers to purchase and sell penny stocks through the use of false or misleading statements or omissions. Allegedly, Defendants Márchese and Sandberg made false representations to Power’s customers to induce them to buy and sell certain publicly traded securities. The Defendants failed to disclose that these stocks were secretly controlled by Defendant Nemelka and that Defendants Márchese and Sandberg were to receive kickbacks for retailing the Nemelka-controlled securities.
On October 18, 1993, Defendants Nemelka and Márchese filed a motion to dismiss the indictment. The district court initially denied these motions on December 7, 1993.
On February 18, 1994, with the acquiescence of the government and the trial court, all four Defendants waived their right to a jury trial. On March 11, 1994, Defendants Nemelka, Sorenson, Sandberg (and later Márchese) filed a motion for clarification concerning the court’s December 7th order denying the motions to dismiss the indictment. The court then asked all parties to submit briefs on the issue of whether the indictment complied with the dictates of
McNally v. United States,
On March 17, 1994, the district court held a second hearing and ruled that according to McNally and its progeny, the prosecution’s theory was improper. The next day, Defendant Márchese filed a motion requesting an order dismissing the indictment, stating that the government could appeal any dismissal. On March 21, 1994, the district court held a third hearing. Concluding that all of the necessary elements for mail fraud could not be established because the government could not trace property of the customer back to the kickbacks, the court dismissed the entire indictment, including the money laundering charges which stemmed from the predicate charges of mail fraud.
Discussion
A. Double Jeopardy
Defendants contend that during arguments on the motion to dismiss the indictment, the district court considered evidence that “went outside the indictment,” and as a consequence jeopardy attached. They then argue that the government’s present appeal is improper because any retrial would constitute a violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause. We disagree.
The government’s indictment was dismissed pursuant to a pretrial motion made by the Defendants. Defendants were “not then, nor [have they] ever been, ‘put to trial before the trier of facts.’ ”
Serfass v. United States,
In a nonjury trial, jeopardy does not attach until the court begins to hear evidence from which a factual determination of guilt or innocence can be made.
See id.
at 388,
For the court’s dismissal to function as the equivalent of an acquittal, the judge would need to have considered evidence that would constitute a defense on the merits.
See United States v. Brewster,
Furthermore, the trial had not commenced, literally or constructively. It is clear from the record that anything the court considered was only in connection with Defendants’ pretrial motion to dismiss the indictment. Counsels’ arguments on this motion did not constitute the presentation of evidence for the purpose of determining guilt or innocence, which is “the essence of the attachment of jeopardy.”
Olson,
B. Dismissal of the Indictment
The district court determined that the government was attempting to prosecute this ease on the basis of a constructive trust theory, alleging that Defendants defrauded Power’s customers of their right to honest and faithful brokers. Because this Circuit expressly rejected the constructive trust theory of prosecution in
United States v. Shelton,
Title 18 U.S.C. § 1341 permits prosecution of whoever “having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises ...” utilizes the mail to facilitate such plan or scheme. This statute “clearly protects property rights, but does not refer to the intangible right of the citizenry to good government[,]” or for that matter, to the public’s right to honest brokers, absent any transaction involving a property interest, tangible or intangible.
See McNally v. United States,
The district court held that the Government must establish a nexus between the money paid by Power’s customers and the kickbacks Nemelka paid to Power, in order to satisfy McNally. We disagree.
Neither
McNally
nor its progeny hold that such a nexus must exist in order to prove mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341. These cases merely determined that the mail fraud statute requires the loss of a property interest. Indeed, the
McNally
problem is not present in this case. The government’s indictment alleges that Power’s customers were deprived of such a property interest when they transferred funds to Power, based upon the brokers’ materially false statements and omissions. The fact that the government cannot trace the kickbacks to the particular stock sales involved is legally insignificant, as the ultimate success or failure of the mail fraud scheme is immaterial.
See United States v. Dunning,
It should also be noted that pecuniary loss is not a requirement under
McNally. See Carpenter,
that as the action comes to us, there was no charge and the jury was not required to find that the Commonwealth itself was de *1024 frauded of any money or property. It was not charged that in the absence of the alleged scheme the Commonwealth would have paid a lower premium or secured better insurance.
McNally,
Unlike the citizens of Kentucky, Power’s customers may not have invested in the stocks controlled by Mr. Nemelka, absent the Defendants’ enticements. This factual scenario is distinct from the “honest government cases,” such as
McNally
and
United States v. Holzer,
where the victims may have been the general public and the prosecution did not show the loss of any discrete property interest as a result of the scheme.
See United States v. Holzer,
REVERSED.
