The defendant pleaded guilty to conducting an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering, in violation of a provision of the RICO statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). He was the police chief of Northlake, a suburb of Chicago, and during his tenure in this job, which lasted from 1990 to 1994, he received some $500 a month from the “Outfit” (the Chicago branch of the Mafia, the Outfit is the lineal descendant of the Capone mob) to protect illegal gambling in the town’s bars and restaurants. He was sentenced to 88 months in prison and to pay restitution to Northlake equal to a year’s salary as police chief. His appeal challenges a number of the rulings of the district judge relating to his sentence.
The federal sentencing guidelines base the severity of punishment for a crime that involves taking bribes, as Sapoznik’s RICO violation did, on the “benefit received” in return for the bribe. U.S.S.G. § 201.1(b)(2)(A) and Application Note 2;
United States v. Krilich,
But the question of causation is different, in criminal as in civil law, from the question of quantification. (In tort law the difference is between the fact of injury and the amount of damages.) It is sufficiently clear that the bribes contributed to the illegal gambling; it is profoundly unclear how much they contributed to the profits of the
illegal
gambling. Cf.
United States v. Ellis,
This won’t do. We have no idea what the costs associated with the gambling activities of Northlake’s bars and restaurants are and there is nothing in the record to fill the void in our knowledge. We don’t even know whether these establishments paid excise taxes on their gambling revenues; excise taxes are deducted from gross revenues to determine net revenues, or profit.
Commissioner v. Sullivan,
The government’s point about fixed costs is sound in general, see
United States v. Landers,
Were it
obvious
that at least 83.33 percent (5/6) of Northlake gambling revenues are
*1120
net, we wouldn’t insist on evidence; rough approximations, which are usually all that is available for estimating the costs of an illegal enterprise, are good enough. U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1, Application Note 8;
United States v. Hang,
Sapoznik next complains about the district court’s having deemed his receipt of similar bribes in his previous job “relevant conduct” within the meaning of U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a)(2). (A critical move, because most of the $6 million in gambling revenues were earned by the bars and restaurants that he protected in his previous job.) Between 1980 and 1990 Sapoznik was police chief of another Chicago suburb, Stone Park, and he took bribes from the Outfit (indeed from the same member of the Outfit) to protect illegal gambling in Stone Park. From Stone Park he moved directly to Northlake in 1990 and without missing a beat began engaging there in the offense for which he was convicted.
The guideline defines “relevant conduct” as criminal acts “that were part of the same course of conduct or common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction.” Possibilities for abuse abound if this language is given too elastic an interpretation. For then the offense of conviction becomes the handle on which the court can punish the defendant for additional crimes (though only up to the statutory maximum penalty for the offense of conviction) on the basis of a bare preponderance of evidence at a sentencing hearing in which there is no right to trial by jury or to other procedural safeguards deemed fundamental in a criminal trial. That would be the pure “real offense” (as distinct from “charge offense”) sentencing system that the Sentencing Commission rejected.
United States v. White,
The least problematic case is one where the relevant conduct is part of the same criminal transaction that includes the offense of conviction but the transaction constitutes more than one crime yet the defendant was tried for only one.
United States v. Wyss,
More troublesome is the situation in which the offense of conviction is successive to the relevant conduct
and
the sequence of offenses covers years rather than days or weeks. Cf.
United States v. Patel,
We are not impressed by Sapoznik’s argument that he was unfairly surprised when the government sprang the relevant conduct on him for the first time at the sentencing healing. The plea agreement, which recites that it is “preliminary in nature and based on facts known to the government as of the time of the agreement,” had clearly reserved this right to the government.
Sapoznik argues that the judge should not have given him additional punishment points for obstruction of justice because he concealed his Stone Park bribes from the probation service. Relying on dicta in
United States v. Partee,
Last is a challenge to the order of restitution. The order directs Sapoznik to restore to Northlake a year of his salary as police chief. The federal criminal code requires the sentencing judge to order a convicted defendant to “make restitution to any victim of’ the offense of conviction, 18 U.S.C. § 3663A(a)(1), and a government agency can be a victim.
United States v. Martin,
This possibility would require vacating the order of restitution if the judge had ordered him to pay back the entire salary that he received from Northlake during the four years that he worked for the town and took bribes. But she didn’t do this. She ordered him to pay back only one year’s salary, that is, one fourth of his total salary from the *1122 town. Although this is an arbitrary fraction, it rather generously credits Sapoznik with being worth to the employer three-fourths of his salary even though he was corrupt. Given the difficulty of estimating the loss that he actually imposed on the city (as opposed to the gain that he conferred on the gambling dens and the Mafia), we think the district judge acted within the limits of her discretion. Seventy-five percent of Sapoznik’s salary, unlike 16.67 percent of the gambling revenues, is cushion enough to keep within reasonable bounds the rough approximation that is all that is feasible in the computation of loss in a case such as this.
To summarize, Sapoznik’s sentence must be vacated, though only because of the error in the computation of the net benefit generated by the bribes, and the case remanded to the district court for resentencing.
Vacated and Remanded.
