120 F.3d 1338, *; 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 19867, **;
155 A.L.R. Fed. 755
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. ANTHONY C. ZIZZO, JAMES J.
MARCELLO, RICHARD GERVASIO, ANTHONY N. CHIARAMONTI, BRETT K. O'DELL, and SAMUEL
A. CARLISI, Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 95-1643, 95-1886, 95-3369, 95-3434, 95-4083, 96-1762 (Consolidated)
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT
120 F.3d 1338; 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 19867; 47 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. (Callaghan)
739; 155 A.L.R. Fed. 755
January 17, 1997, Argued
July 29, 1997, Decided
SUBSEQUENT HISTORY: [**1]
Certiorari Denied December 1, 1997, Reported at: 1997
U.S. LEXIS 7130.
PRIOR HISTORY: Appeal from the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern
Division. No. 92 CR 1064. Paul E. Plunkett, Judge.
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED.
CORE TERMS: crew, conspiracy, juice, gambling, extortionate,
illegal gambling, juror, organized crime, racketeering, bet, interstate
commerce, indictment, collection, loansharking, big, murder, coconspirator,
prosecutor, sentencing, departure, abuse of discretion, admit, conversation,
guideline, theater, fine, collecting, perjury, betting, assigned
COUNSEL: For UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA, Plaintiff - Appellee: Marsha A. McClellan, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY, Criminal Division, Chicago, IL USA. Mark J. Vogel, Barry Rand Elden,
Chief of Appeals, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Criminal Appellate
Division, Chicago, IL USA.
For ANTHONY C. ZIZZO, Defendant - Appellant (No. 95-1643): Robert S. Bailey,
Cynthia Giacchetti, Chicago, IL USA. Julius L. Echeles, Pompano Beach, FL USA.
For RICHARD GERVASIO, Defendant - Appellant (No. 95-3369): Terrence P. LeFevour,
Chicago, IL USA. Samuel V.P. Banks, LAW OFFICES OF SAMUEL V.P. BANKS, Chicago,
IL USA. For JAMES J. MARCELLO, Defendant - Appellant (No. 95-1886): George N.
Leighton, NEAL & ASSOCIATES, Chicago, IL USA. John Thomas Moran, Jr.,
Chicago, IL USA. For ANTHONY N. CHIARAMONTI, Defendant - Appellant (No.
95-3434): David G. Duggan, Chicago, IL USA. For BRETT K. O'DELL, Defendant -
Appellant (No. 95-4083): Ralph E. Meczyk, Chicago, IL USA. For SAMUEL A.
CARLISI, Defendant - Appellant (No. 96-1762): Thomas P. Sullivan, [**2]
JENNER & BLOCK, Chicago, IL USA. Arthur N. Nasser, Chicago, IL USA. Raymond
J. Smith, SMITH, LODGE & SCHNEIDER, Chicago, IL USA. Herbert Shafer,
Atlanta, GA USA.
JUDGES: Before BAUER, FLAUM, and
EVANS, Circuit Judges.
OPINIONBY: EVANS
OPINION: [*1343] EVANS, Circuit
Judge. In December 1992 a grand jury indicted eleven members of the Chicago
Outfit, the Windy City's notorious crime syndicate, for their roles in the
illegal gambling and loansharking operations of two of the Outfit's street-crew
subdivisions. Two mobsters pled guilty and the rest of the indictees took their
chances with a jury. All but one were convicted, and six appealed. After we
consolidated their appeals, one of the defendants, Samuel "Wings"
Carlisi, the Outfit's former boss of all bosses--a title once held by the likes
of Al Capone and Tony "Big Tuna" Accardo--died. As
we'll explain below, we vacate his conviction but affirm the convictions and
sentences of the other defendants in all respects. First let's meet the cast of
characters in this appeal.
The lion's share of the defendants below were members of the Carlisi Street
Crew, an arm of the Outfit operating in western Cook and DuPage Counties
throughout the 1980's. As the [**3] crew's name suggests,
Carlisi--dubbed "Wings" in his youth for his unrivaled ability to
elude the authorities while swiftly shuttling fellow gangsters from place to
place--was the leader and financial backer of the group. James Marcello worked
as Carlisi's chauffeur, emissary, and all-around right-hand man. Third in
command was Anthony Zizzo. Known on the street as "Little [*1344]
Tony," Zizzo supervised both Frank Bonavolante, the head
of the crew's gambling operations, and Anthony "Big Tony" or
"Tony the Hatch" Chiaramonti, who managed the crew's juice loan
racket. The crew also employed a horde of other charming characters including
Brett O'Dell, who helped Big Tony with the juice loan operation, and Richie
Gervasio, who took bets for the crew and sometimes collected gambling debts.
It's a safe bet that the crew's decade-long, illegal gambling operation was its
biggest moneymaker. Through an extensive network of "offices," which
were often relocated to throw nosy government agents off of the trail, the crew
took bets on professional sports and horse races. Just how lucrative was the
crew's business? One of its bookies, Kenton "Kappy" Pielet, took in
between $ 75,000 and $ 125,000 in wagers [**4] on an
"average" weekend. And another office--one which cost over $ 500,000
to open--had a weekly payroll of around $ 30,000 and served a whopping 800
customers.
Because all bets, no matter how large, were accepted on credit, the crew prided
itself on its effective debt-collection practices and held its bookies
personally responsible for their customers' past-due accounts. Often the crew
would dispatch muscle to threaten or rough up deadbeat debtors. For example,
when a gambler named Anthony Pape failed to make good on his $ 15,000 gambling
debt, Bonavolante let him know that "not even God was going to help"
him. Another of Carlisi's heavies threatened to beat the completely bald Pape
until his head turned so black and blue people would think he had hair. Pape
eventually saved his scalp by persuading his father to cash in a $ 16,000
retirement annuity.
Another illustrative collection involved the debt of Michael Huber. After
betting with crew bookies Kappy Pielet and Thomas Briscoe, Huber was referred to
Gervasio, with whom he bet over $ 60,000 in an 18-month period. When Huber
failed to make timely payments on a $ 2,500 losing wager, however, Gervasio
revoked his betting privileges. [**5] After a series of meetings
failed to resolve the matter, Gervasio sent Huber to the parking lot of a local
restaurant, where he was grabbed, "tapped" in the face by two thugs,
and told to return in a week with a payment. When Huber failed to report as
directed, Gervasio explained that the matter would soon be out of his hands and
Huber would be unwise to miss any more appointments. Huber made it to the next
meeting; the money didn't. Less than pleased, one of the crew's enforcers
checked Huber for a wire, choked him, and threatened to mess him up. Huber was
so frightened that he defecated in his pants. Although Huber managed to steer
clear of the crew for almost 2 years after that incident, an Outfit thug named
Joe Cumbo later knocked on his door and sought to collect his debt. When Huber
explained that he couldn't pay, Cumbo suggested that Huber sell his wife's car.
Two days later someone threw a flare into the car, burning its backseat.
On other occasions the crew squeezed additional profits from its delinquent
gamblers by referring them to Zizzo, Chiaramonti, and O'Dell for juice loans.
For example, when gambler Frank Perri's favorite horse failed to out-pace the
other ponies and [**6] Perri couldn't cover his bet with Kappy
Pielet, Chiaramonti and O'Dell graciously extended him a juice loan. When Perri
failed to make a couple of his weekly interest payments, Pielet was forced to
pay Zizzo on Perri's behalf. Unhappy about being left on the hook for Perri's
past-due loan, Pielet asked O'Dell to look into the matter. O'Dell located Perri,
slapped him in the face, and forced him to make a payment on his account.
Carlisi's men also made juice loans unrelated to its gambling operation.
Unfortunately for the crew, one of its "business" juice loans was made
to Anthony LaBarbera, a cooperating FBI witness. In 1988
LaBarbera needed money to purchase insurance and license plates for his trucking
company. When he was unable to secure a bank loan, one of his employees, Vince
Falzone, explained that he had worked for Zizzo and Chiaramonti and could check
into a juice loan. True to his word, Falzone arranged for Chiaramonti to meet
LaBarbera and loan him $ 5,000 (at the crew's normal annual interest rate of
260%). Chiaramonti instructed LaBarbera to drop off $ 250 in interest payments
[*1345] each week in envelopes addressed to "LT," a
reference to Little Tony Zizzo. After making payments [**7] on the
loan (often with cash fronted by the FBI) for 13 months, LaBarbera fell behind.
Chiaramonti called him late at night, informed him that Zizzo was
"hollering about the money being late," and warned LaBarbera to pay up
"or else." In response, LaBarbera, who had once been choked by
Chiaramonti for accusing Falzone of theft, explained that he was caught short
when a customer failed to pay his trucking company. Chiaramonti then offered
LaBarbera some keen practical advice. He explained LaBarbera had the "legal
right to bust [the] head" of anyone who owed him money. Chiaramonti added,
"When you got your foot on his throat then tell him now to go get my
money."
With that cheery little picture of Carlisi's crew in mind, we turn our attention
to the second Outfit subdivision whose activities are relevant to this case, a
street crew controlled by infamous mobster Lenny Patrick. In 1986, when Carlisi
took the reins as the head of the entire Outfit, the Patrick Street Crew came
under his control, and Carlisi was able to call on Patrick's henchmen to help
out with his own criminal chores.
One such undertaking involved an attempt to make Willis Johnson an offer he
couldn't refuse. Johnson [**8] owned a chain of movie theaters and
had been in a labor dispute with the projectionists union since 1983. In 1985
Johnson decided to automate projection at one of his cinemas, the Lake Theater.
In early 1988, when negotiations with the union broke down, Johnson announced
plans to automate all of his theaters. This didn't sit well with Carlisi,
Marcello, and Zizzo, whose sons just happened to be card-carrying members of the
projectionists union. As a result, Marcello contacted Patrick and explained that
Carlisi wanted him to give Johnson "a little trouble" and make him
"join the union."
Patrick assigned the task to his second in command, Mario Rainone, a skilled
burglar who often branched out into more violent felonies. See United
States v. Rainone, 32 F.3d 1203 (7th Cir. 1994). Rainone in turn
delegated the job to crew members James LaValley and Nicholas Gio. LaValley and
Gio decided the best way to make Johnson "join the union" was to torch
the Lake Theater. Although they huffed and they puffed, LaValley and Gio just
could not bring the theater down. First, they threw gasoline on the theater's
roof and tried to light it with an incendiary grenade. They were unable to get
the [**9] grenade onto the roof. Next they tried a Molotov cocktail.
It, too, failed to do the trick. Figuring he would just have to do the job
himself, Rainone, escorted by underling Albie Vena, threw a fragmentation
grenade on the theater's roof. Alas, the third attempt at burning down the Lake
Theater was simply not the charm. The grenade failed to detonate and was later
found by a janitor, who promptly turned the dud over to the police.
In late 1989 the Carlisi crew assigned another task to a member of Patrick's
crew. After Anthony "Jeep" Daddino, an Outfit street tax collector,
was convicted of extorting cash from porn shops, he appeared ready to spill the
beans on the crew's operation in order to shave a few months off of a
potentially lengthy prison sentence. Hoping to nip any problem in the bud,
Carlisi and Marcello decided to bump Daddino off. As Carlisi put it during a
chat with Marcello and Patrick, "There is a million people gonna get hurt,
including me, if we don't kill that Jeep." Marcello then met with Rainone
and recruited him to pick the lock on Daddino's house (Daddino was out on bond
pending sentencing) in order to let the hit men in. Marcello was even kind
enough to lend [**10] Rainone a walkie-talkie to make sure the job
went off without a hitch. When Rainone arrived at the scene, however, he became
convinced that he--and not Daddino--was the real target of the hit. Despite
Patrick's assurances that there was no contract out on him, Rainone began cooperating
with the FBI in exchange for protection from the Outfit.
In addition to using Patrick's men for his own affairs, Carlisi financed the
Patrick crew's juice loan operation. Through Marcello, he loaned Patrick $
200,000. In return, Carlisi demanded repayment of his investment plus one-third
of the profits from the loans. In order to protect his financial interests,
Carlisi installed a trusted lieutenant, [*1346] "Singing
Joe" Vento, as the head of Patrick's loan business. It proved to be a sound
investment: Patrick steadily repaid the loan, and within 2 years the seed money
had ballooned into $ 500,000.
Things started to go south for both crews in 1989. First, after incriminating
himself in a taped conversation with Rainone, Patrick became
the highest ranking Outfit member ever to turn state's evidence. A few months
later another Patrick crew member, Gary Edwards, began cooperating
with the FBI. When the Outfit [**11] got wind of that possible
defection Vento ordered Patrick to shut down his loan operation. Despite the
order, Patrick had Edwards funnel a $ 5,000 payment to Carlisi's crew through
LaValley. LaValley gave the money to Zizzo, who confirmed that Patrick's debt
was down to $ 26,000 and assured LaValley that he would pass the cash along to
Marcello. Patrick and LaValley also persuaded Zizzo to overrule Vento's order
and allow the crew to resume its loansharking activities. Finally, when LaValley
was set to carry another payment to Zizzo, he heard that Edwards was cooperating
with the FBI, became frightened, returned the money to Patrick, and called Zizzo
to ask if he would be rubbed out for unwittingly aiding Edwards. Zizzo told
LaValley not to worry and that he would let Marcello and Carlisi know of
Edwards' defection.
In December 1992 a grand jury indicted Carlisi, Marcello, Zizzo, Chiaramonti,
O'Dell, Gervasio, and five others for their roles in the Outfit's shady
activities. About a dozen of the indictment's 27 counts are
relevant to this appeal. Chief among them is Count One. It charged nine of the
defendants with conspiring to conduct the affairs of the
Carlisi Street Crew through [**12] a pattern of racketeering
or the collection of unlawful debt, in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1962(d), the federal RICO statute. The specific offenses
underlying that conspiracy included arson, intimidation and
murder conspiracies, running an illegal gambling business, as
well as the making, financing, and collection of extortionate extensions of
credit. Count Two charged all eleven defendants with operating an illegal
gambling business in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1955. Counts Three through Seven alleged that various defendants
engaged in a number of extortionate credit transactions prohibited by 18
U.S.C. §§ 892-94. For example, Count Three charged Carlisi and Marcello
with financing Patrick's juice loan operation. Counts Four and Five charged
Zizzo and Chiaramonti with making and collecting extortionate extensions of
credit, and Count Seven charged Gervasio with attempting to collect a debt
through extortionate means. The remaining relevant counts charged Chiaramonti
and O'Dell with willful failure to file tax returns.
Two of the defendants pled guilty; the others opted for their day in court.
After a 10-week trial, a jury convicted eight of them. Only Joseph Braccio, a
restauranteur [**13] accused of allowing the crew to use his
establishment to cover up its shady activities, was acquitted. Carlisi,
Marcello, Zizzo, Chiaramonti, Gervasio, and O'Dell appealed, and we consolidated
their cases in this proceeding. We consider Carlisi's appeal first.
After his appeal had been fully briefed, Carlisi, then 75 and in failing health,
died. His death raises two issues. The first relates to his conviction. Because
Carlisi died before we were able to decide his appeal on the merits, his
conviction abates. United
States v. Moehlenkamp, 557 F.2d 126 (7th Cir. 1977). We therefore
remand the appeal in case No. 96-1762 to the district court with instructions to
vacate Carlisi's convictions and dismiss the outstanding indictment
as to him.
The second issue is more interesting. Before he died, Carlisi paid a $ 50,000
fine, $ 450 in special assessments, and $ 9,115 to cover the bills racked up by
the government in prosecuting him on the tax counts. Pursuant to an agreement
also signed by Marcello, Zizzo, and Chiaramonti, Carlisi additionally chipped in
$ 137,500 to cover his share of a stipulated criminal forfeiture. Stressing that
Carlisi's conviction abates ab initio, his attorney [**14]
claims that all monies paid before Carlisi's demise should be refunded to his
estate.
We are not persuaded. The fine and assessments served to deprive Carlisi--who
the district judge, Paul E. Plunkett, noted had used bombs, beatings, and murder
to increase [*1347] his profits--of some of his resources during his
lifetime. They are analogous to time served and are not refundable. United
States v. Schumann, 861 F.2d 1234, 1236 (11th Cir. 1988); United
States v. Bowler, 537 F. Supp. 933, 936 n.5 (N.D. Ill. 1982) (Flaum,
J.) (citing United
States v. Morton, 635 F.2d 723, 725 (8th Cir. 1980)); see also United
States v. Asset, 990 F.2d 208, 214 (5th Cir. 1993) ("The rule of
abatement has never been applied to require the return of money paid by a
defendant prior to his death and has, in fact, been held inapplicable to fines--
obviously penal--paid by a defendant before his death."). And although a
lone district court has gone the other way, see United
States v. Sheehan, 874 F. Supp. 31 (D. Mass. 1994), we see no reason to
cast aside the conclusion of every other circuit and district court to have
addressed this issue. Sheehan down-played the immediate punitive
purpose of [**15] fines and assessments paid before death, was
unable to rationalize its holding with the fact that the other effects of a
conviction, such as time served, could not be erased by a defendant's death, and
raised an unrealistic fear that the nonabatement of paid fines will lead savvy
convicted felons to avoid paying their fines in a timely manner in case they die
before their appeals are heard.
Carlisi is also out of luck on the costs of prosecution, which served both to
deprive him of some of his illegal profits during his lifetime and compensate
the government as the victim of his tax offenses. See Asset,
990 F.2d at 213; United
States v. Dudley, 739 F.2d 175, 178 (4th Cir. 1984). The criminal
forfeiture is also not refundable. Like the paid fine and assessments, it served
to strip away a small fraction of the millions of dollars Carlisi raked in from
his illegal activities. Finally, the agreement signed by Carlisi made clear that
even if he won his appeal, he was not entitled to a refund of his share of the
forfeiture unless Marcello, Zizzo, and Chiaramonti also prevailed. Because we
(as is explained below) affirm their convictions, the forfeiture agreement also
bars a refund [**16] of Carlisi's $ 137,500 payment.
With Carlisi's appeal behind us, we turn to four issues raised by the
defendants' consolidated brief. Their first common target is Lenny Patrick, the
government's star witness and a lifelong criminal once accused by Cuban
television of playing a lead role in the Kennedy assassination. Citing Patrick's
admitted history of crime, deceit, and perjury, the defendants claim the
district court should not have allowed him to testify during the trial without
first ordering a psychiatric exam. The defendants also stress that during
cross-examination Patrick was asked, "The oath doesn't really mean anything
to you, does it?" and he replied, "No, it don't." Based on that
exchange, the defendants assert Patrick renounced his oath to testify truthfully
and the district court should have excluded his entire testimony.
Whether a witness should be forced to endure a psychiatric examination before
being allowed to testify is a matter best left to the discretion of the district
court. United
States v. Tucker, 773 F.2d 136, 140 (7th Cir. 1985). There was
certainly no abuse of that discretion here. Although Patrick had perjured
himself in other proceedings, even the [**17] most dastardly
scoundrels, cheats, and liars are generally competent to testify. See Fed. R.
Evid. 601. And while a district court has the authority-- to be used
sparingly--to order a psychiatric evaluation when a prospective witness displays
"definite indications of serious mental illness," United
States v. Gutman, 725 F.2d 417, 420 (7th Cir. 1984), the defendants
have pointed to absolutely no evidence suggesting that Patrick displayed signs
of mental illness at the time he testified. Rather than rendering him
incompetent to testify without some sort of psychiatric examination, Patrick's
penchant for perjury simply provided the defense with an ample opportunity to
undermine his credibility on cross-examination.
The defendants made the most of that opportunity. During the heat of a lengthy
cross-examination--it covers over 400 pages of the trial transcript-- Patrick
stated, as we noted, that the oath to testify truthfully meant nothing to him.
The defendants argue Patrick's shocking revelation rendered him an unsworn
witness, whose entire testimony should have been thrown out, sua sponte, by
Judge Plunkett. Because this issue was not raised below, we will reverse [*1348]
only if we find [**18] plain error. United
States v. Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 123 L. Ed. 2d 508, 113 S. Ct. 1770 (1993).
We detect no error in the district court's failure to strike Patrick's
testimony. Federal Rule of Evidence 603 requires every witness to swear or
affirm that he will tell the truth. The idea behind the rule is to preserve the
integrity of the judicial process by awakening the witness' conscience and
making the witness amenable to perjury prosecution if he fibs. In this case
Patrick swore to tell the truth and repeatedly acknowledged the district judge's
admonishments that he was under oath. Patrick was also aware of the consequences
of perjury. In 1991 he agreed to testify against the Outfit in exchange for a
reduced sentence of 6 years. A year later Patrick perjured himself while
testifying against Carlisi in a federal case in California. In the wake of that
perjury, which led to Carlisi's acquittal, the government sought to revoke
Patrick's plea agreement and have 3 more years tacked onto his sentence. A
district judge agreed that an increase was warranted but found that an extra 12
months would do the trick. Patrick, who was nearly 80 years old at the time,
called the additional year a "death sentence." Given that experience,
[**19] Patrick certainly knew that if he lied in this case, his
sentence could be jacked up again and he would likely die behind bars. It
follows, then, that his single remark on cross-examination did not require the
district judge to sua sponte strike his entire 3-days' worth of
testimony.
The second argument outlined in the defendants' consolidated brief is that the
district court erred by allowing the jury to hear Mario Rainone's end of conversations
he taped with unindicted coconspirators Patrick, Vento, and LaValley. The conversations
at issue covered four topics: the Daddino murder conspiracy;
the alleged plot to kill Rainone; Carlisi's investment in Patrick's crew; and
the details of Patrick's loan business. Because Rainone was no longer a member
of the conspiracy, but instead a cooperating
government agent at the time he made the tapes, the defendants claim his
statements do not fit within the coconspirator exception to the hearsay rule,
Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(E).
While the defendants' interpretation of Rule 801(d)(2)(E) is certainly on
target, their argument generally misses the mark. The district court admitted
only the statements made by Patrick, Vento, and LaValley under [**20]
that exception. Rainone's remarks on the other hand were not admitted for their
truth but rather to give context to the conspirators' ends of the conversations.
That was certainly a permissible move. See United
States v. Plescia, 48 F.3d 1452, 1463 (7th Cir.), cert. denied sub nom.
Bonavolante
v. United States, 133 L. Ed. 2d 247, 116 S. Ct. 351 (1995); Lee
v. McCaughtry, 892 F.2d 1318, 1324-25 (7th Cir. 1990) (citing United
States v. Davis, 890 F.2d 1373, 1380 (7th Cir. 1989) (collecting
cases)). The district court properly instructed the jury that nothing Rainone
said could be used to prove the truth of the matter asserted and that the
parties had stipulated there had been no plot to rub out Rainone. We presume the
jury followed those instructions. United
States v. Butler, 71 F.3d 243, 252 (7th Cir. 1995). Finally, we note
that the district court was careful to keep out Rainone's statements which
failed to elicit any response and admit only those which the coconspirators were
in a position to deny or adopt based on information they had learned from
sources other than Rainone.
The defendants next allege that their hopes for a fair trial were dashed when
the district court refused [**21] to remove a pair of biased jurors.
The defendants' argument centers on two incidents. The first occurred during a
lunch break on October 5, 1993, the first full day evidence was presented in the
case. A juror named Scholtens saw defendant O'Dell in the cafeteria in the
Dirksen Federal Building. Scholtens noticed that O'Dell had something strapped
to the side of his leg, thought it might have been a weapon, and alerted the
court's staff. As it turns out, O'Dell was out on bond and wearing an electronic
monitoring device. After conferring with the parties, the district judge called
Scholtens into chambers, questioned him, and informed him that the device O'Dell
was wearing was for his own well-being and had nothing to do with a weapon.
Based on Scholtens' answers and demeanor, Judge [*1349] Plunkett
determined that he could still function as an impartial juror.
Over 3 weeks later, on October 23, 1993, Judge Plunkett was walking into his
chambers when an alternate juror named Zichterman mentioned that he wished he
had been wearing a body recorder at lunch. Zichterman explained that he had been
sitting near some of the defendants in the cafeteria and heard one of them
mention "30 or 40 or $ 50,000 [**22] or something." The
judge stopped him from saying anything more and called in the defendants'
attorneys. All agreed that Zichterman should be questioned. In chambers
Zichterman stated that he heard some of the defendants talking about large
amounts of money and figured that they were probably talking about bets placed
on a recent Monday Night Football game involving the Chicago Bears. n1
Zichterman also stated that he mentioned the conversation to a
couple of other jurors. Judge Plunkett investigated the matter and learned that
Zichterman had passed word of the incident to jurors Huemmer and Scholtens.
After questioning the three jurors individually, the court excused Zichterman
from the panel but allowed Huemmer and Scholtens to remain. The defendants argue
the judge should have sent Huemmer and Scholtens packing as well and then should
have questioned the entire panel about the matter.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 The Bears lost to the Minnesota Vikings by a touchdown on Monday, October 25,
1993; six days later they were drubbed by the Green Bay Packers, 17 to 3.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[**23]
We review the district court's decisions regarding allegations of prejudicial
juror contact for an abuse of discretion, United
States v. Best, 939 F.2d 425, 429 (7th Cir. 1991) (en banc), and will
reverse only for "manifest error." Mu'Min
v. Virginia, 500 U.S. 415, 114 L. Ed. 2d 493, 111 S. Ct. 1899 (1991).
The district court's conclusion that Huemmer and Scholtens could still discharge
their duties as jurors was a far cry from an abuse of discretion. The defendants
make much-- too much--of the fact that when asked whether he still presumed the
defendants innocent, Huemmer replied "Well, I'll put it this way. They are
having their day in court. The prosecution is building a case." We do not
see this as the clearcut evidence of bias that the defendants claim it to be.
Huemmer did not state that he no longer presumed the defendants innocent or that
the government had already made its case; he simply stated that the prosecution
was building a case. As Judge Plunkett noted, that was certainly a fair
assessment since the government had been presenting evidence for over 3 weeks at
that point. In addition, Huemmer's reply must be read in its proper context.
When first asked what Zichterman told him, Huemmer replied [**24]
that he had heard the defendants had been discussing large numbers. Huemmer
added that he didn't think the conversation had anything to do
with the trial and for all he knew, "they could have been talking about
jelly beans." Huemmer stated that he could still be impartial and knew that
there was still a lot of evidence to be presented. Based on his answers and
demeanor, Judge Plunkett did not abuse his discretion when he concluded that
Huemmer could still function as an unbiased juror. We also see no problem with
the decision to keep Scholtens on the panel. He agreed that the defendants' conversation
was probably taken out of context and stated that he would have no problem
basing his decision solely on the trial evidence. There is simply no indication
that Scholtens--even when we factor in his earlier concern about O'Dell's
legband--was biased against the defense.
We also find no abuse of discretion in the district court's decision not to ask
each of the jurors whether they had heard of the defendants' lunchtime chat.
When defendant Joe Bonavolante's counsel made that request below, it was opposed
by Braccio's attorney and later withdrawn. It would seem, then, that the issue
has [**25] been waived. However, even were we to consider the
argument on the merits, we can find neither an error nor prejudice here.
Questioning each juror would likely have "compounded the problem by drawing
attention to it," United
States v. Carson, 9 F.3d 576, 590 (7th Cir. 1993), and any claim of
prejudice is undercut by the fact that the jury ended up acquitting Braccio, one
of the defendants involved in the conversation. United
States v. Sanders, 962 F.2d 660, 673-74 (7th Cir. 1992).
[*1350] The final argument raised by all five defendants is a
constitutional challenge to 18
U.S.C. § 1955, which makes it a federal crime to run a gambling business of
a certain size where prohibited by state or local law. Relying on United
States v. Lopez, 514 U.S. 549, 131 L. Ed. 2d 626, 115 S. Ct. 1624 (1995),
the defendants assert that Congress overstepped its Commerce Clause authority in
enacting § 1955. They also contend that the statute is unconstitutional as
applied to their "purely local" operation. n2
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n2 The defendants also suggest § 1955 violates the Constitution's Equal
Protection Clause because it applies only to citizens who live in states where
it is illegal to run a gambling business. This argument has been
"definitively refuted." United
States v. Balistrieri, 779 F.2d 1191, 1224 (7th Cir. 1985). Despite an
obligation to do so, the defendants fail to cite--let alone distinguish--Balistrieri.
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[**26]
Neither argument carries the day. Under the Commerce Clause, Congress has the
power to regulate three broad categories of activity: the use of the channels of
interstate commerce; the protection of the instrumentalities of interstate
commerce or persons or things in interstate commerce; and activities that
substantially affect interstate commerce. Perez
v. United States, 402 U.S. 146, 150, 28 L. Ed. 2d 686, 91 S. Ct. 1357 (1971);
Lopez,
514 U.S. at 558-59. In Lopez the Supreme Court addressed the third
category of permissible regulation and determined that in enacting 18
U.S.C. § 922(q), the Gun-Free School Zones Act, Congress exceeded the
"outer limits" of its Commerce Clause power. The Court reasoned that
§ 922(q), which made it a federal offense to carry a gun near a school, had
"nothing to do with 'commerce' or any sort of economic enterprise,"
contained no jurisdictional element to tie the possession of a particular gun to
interstate commerce, and did not contain legislative findings which would enable
the Court to evaluate Congress' judgment. Id.
at 561-63.
Section 1955 stands in sharp contrast to the GunFree School Zones Act. First, §
1955 has a commercial aspect. It prohibits illegal [**27] gambling businesses.
To fall within the statute's reach, an illegal gambling operation must involve
"five or more persons who conduct, finance, manage, supervise, direct, or
own all or part of such business[.]" The business must also have been in
substantially continuous operation for over 30 days or have generated gross
revenue of $ 2,000 in any single day. Second, although § 1955 does not contain
an explicit jurisdictional element, Congress supported the statute with
extensive findings outlining the significant impact largescale, illegal gambling
operations can have on interstate commerce. Congress found that illegal gambling
fills the coffers of organized crime, which in turn has a
substantial effect on interstate commerce. See United
States v. Sacco, 491 F.2d 995, 998-1001 (9th Cir. 1974) (discussing
Congress' findings); see also United
State v. Wall, 92 F.3d 1444, 1450 (6th Cir. 1996), cert. denied,
136
L. Ed. 2d 613, 117 S. Ct. 690 (1997) (rejecting Lopez challenge to
§ 1955 and upholding congressional findings linking illegal gambling to
interstate commerce); United
States v. Cleveland, 951 F. Supp. 1249, 1255-56 (E.D. La. 1997) (same).
In rejecting pre-Lopez challenges [**28] to § 1955, we
concluded that these findings were rational. See United
States v. Hunter, 478 F.2d 1019, 1021 (7th Cir. 1973).
We see no reason to retreat from that position. First, our decision in Hunter
was based largely upon Perez,
402 U.S. 146, 28 L. Ed. 2d 686, 91 S. Ct. 1357. In Perez the Court upheld
the constitutionality of 18
U.S.C. § 894, which prohibits collecting an extension of credit through
extortionate means. The Court concluded that Congress had rationally found that
even purely intra-state loansharking operations substantially affect interstate
commerce because they often provide revenue for organized crime.
Id.
at 155-57. Lopez did not undercut Perez's reasoning or holding. Rather,
Lopez cites Perez, an example of the appropriate use of Congress' commerce
clause power. See 514
U.S. at 559. n3
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n3 Because Lopez cited Perez with approval, we also reject
Chiaramonti's constitutional challenges to his extortionate credit transaction
convictions under 18
U.S.C. §§ 892-94.
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[*1351] Second, this case illustrates [**29] that the
congressional findings attached to § 1955 were on target. The Carlisi crew's
gambling profits certainly funded additional organized crime
activity (including Patrick's loansharking operation), and the Outfit surely had
its thumb in many pies which affected interstate commerce. In fact, the crew's
gambling business alone involved an extensive network of offices, one of which
cost $ 500,000 to open, served 800 betting customers, had a weekly payroll of $
20,000 to $ 30,000, and accepted $ 80,000 in wagers in a single week. And in
addition to paying its employees' salaries, the crew had to shell out for rent,
phone service, utilities, pagers, and sports journals printed out of state.
Given that a single gambling office had some effect on interstate commerce,
Congress was certainly entitled to conclude that organized crime,
when considered as a whole, substantially affects interstate commerce.
We also reject the defendants' claim that § 1955 cannot constitutionally apply
to their "purely local" operation. This argument misses the point. As
we have already mentioned, Congress has the authority to regulate intrastate
activities which, taken in the aggregate, have a substantial [**30]
effect on interstate commerce. Lopez,
514 U.S. at 559; Perez,
402 U.S. at 154 ("Where the class of activities is regulated and that
class is within the reach of federal power, the courts have no power 'to excise,
as trivial, individual instances' of the class.") (emphasis in original).
Based on Congress' findings that loansharking--as a class of activity--was
linked to organized crime, Perez held that even
intrastate loansharking operations fall within Congress' Commerce Clause power.
Because Congress rationally determined that large-scale illegal gambling
operations are also often tied to organized crime, we can
safely conclude that § 1955 properly reaches even "purely local"
gambling businesses. Accord Wall,
92 F.3d at 1450-51 n.14; Cleveland,
951 F. Supp. at 1256-57.
We turn now to the conviction-related arguments raised by the individual
defendants. Because many of the approximately three dozen issues outlined in
their briefs clearly go nowhere, we will address only their better arguments. To
the extent their claims are not discussed in this opinion, they have been
determined to lack merit and are hereby dismissed.
We first address a number of their challenges [**31] to district
court's evidentiary rulings, all of which we review only for an abuse of
discretion. United
States v. Williams, 106 F.3d 1362, 1366 (7th Cir. 1997). Because
Marcello is the highest ranking defendant left in the case, and in the Outfit
rank has its privileges, we'll consider his arguments first.
Marcello believes the district court erred in refusing to admit four statements
from other cases, in which the prosecutors handling this trial called Mario
Rainone and Lenny Patrick liars. The first three were made in the course of
prosecuting Rainone. In that case, the government: (1) submitted a memo to the
probation office dubbing Rainone "an inveterate and unrepentant liar";
(2) sent Rainone's attorney a letter stating that Rainone was "unworthy of
belief"; and (3) argued to the court that Rainone was a liar. The fourth
statement, regarding Patrick, was made during a hearing on the government's
motion to revoke his plea agreement following his perjury in the California case
against Carlisi. The prosecutors simply argued to the court that Patrick's
testimony would be more difficult to sell to juries in future Outfit trials.
Marcello thinks that all four opinions are classic [**32] examples
of admissions of a party-opponent covered by Federal Rule of Evidence
801(d)(2)(D).
Judge Plunkett did not abuse his discretion in keeping the statements out. For
even if Marcello could convince us that the statements qualified as nonhearsay
under Rule 801(d)(2)(D), n4 the judge cited a number of [*1352]
reasons why he felt the statements should be excluded, any one of which supports
his exercise of discretion. For example, the defendants sought to admit the
statements calling Rainone a liar in order to impeach his credibility as a
nontestifying declarant under Rule 806. Specifically, the defendants hoped to
show that Rainone lied when talking with LaValley and Patrick. However, the
judge noted that even if the defendants were careful not to use the prosecutors'
statements to impermissibly attack the government--a danger which alone could
justify excluding the statements under Rule 403--the opinions in question would
likely mislead the jury. The judge reasoned because the opinions were based only
on Rainone's tendency to mix fact and fiction when describing Outfit activities
to the prosecutors, they did not shed any light on whether Rainone lied during
his earlier dealings with his [**33] mob pals. In addition, the
judge noted that whether a prosecutor believes a witness is irrelevant and, if
argued to the jury, reversible error. See United
States v. Dotson, 799 F.2d 189, 194 (5th Cir. 1986). Finally, the
district court reasonably found that the need to introduce this evidence was far
from compelling since the government's own star witnesses--Patrick and
LaValley--had already testified that Rainone lied on a regular basis.
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n4 Based on the common law principle that no individual should be able to bind
the sovereign, we generally decline to apply Rule 801(d)(2) to statements made
by government employees in criminal cases. See United
States v. Prevatte, 16 F.3d 767, 779 n.9 (7th Cir. 1994). We note,
however, that a number of courts have rejected that approach when dealing with
statements made by government attorneys. See e.g., United
States v. Kattar, 840 F.2d 118, 130 (1st Cir. 1988) ("Whether or
not the entire federal government in all its capacities should be deemed a
party-opponent in criminal cases, the Justice Department certainly should be
considered such.") (citations omitted); United
States v. Morgan, 189 U.S. App. D.C. 155, 581 F.2d 933, 938 (D.C. Cir.
1978) (government cannot object to a statement as hearsay when its attorneys
have already sworn that the statements are trustworthy).
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[**34]
We reach the same result on the prosecutors' opinion that Patrick's perjury
would make his testimony a tough sell in future Outfit cases. As the judge
noted, this opinion would not serve to help the jury in any way (a prerequisite
for admission under Rule 701) and was cumulative to Patrick's own testimony. n5
After all, he readily admitted he had testified falsely in the California case.
We also fail to see how the defendants planned to get around Rule 608(b), which
precludes the admission of extrinsic evidence of a witness' lying ways.
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n5 The government also argues allowing this opinion into evidence would have
opened the door to the admission of evidence that a federal district judge had
found that Patrick testified truthfully against Outfit boss Gus Alex.
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Zizzo is up next. He claims the district court erred in admitting Vince
Falzone's statements under the coconspirator exception to the hearsay rule, Fed.
R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). In support, Zizzo points to an affidavit, submitted in
support of his post-trial [**35] motions, in which Falzone
(unsurprisingly) declares that he was not involved with the Carlisi crew and
that his talks with LaBarbera only repeated "barroom scuttlebutt."
In order to admit the statements under Rule 801(d)(2)(E) the district court had
to find: a conspiracy existed; Falzone and Zizzo were members
of that conspiracy; and Falzone's statements furthered the conspiracy's
objectives. United
States v. Godinez, 110 F.3d 448, 454 (7th Cir. 1997); Bourjaily
v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 97 L. Ed. 2d 144, 107 S. Ct. 2775 (1987).
The district court did not clearly err in finding that Falzone's statements
satisfied Bourjaily. First, the evidence sufficiently showed that Falzone,
Chiaramonti and Zizzo were coconspirators. Falzone's own statements, which we of
course may consider when determining whether a conspiracy
existed, Godinez,
110 F.3d at 454-55, made clear that he had worked first for Zizzo's father
(who once ran the Northern Indiana branch of the Outfit's gambling business) and
later for Zizzo and Chiaramonti in juice loan activity. Falzone's claims were
corroborated by independent evidence. For example, at a meeting arranged and
attended by Falzone, Chiaramonti told LaBarbera that he could [**36]
speak freely about his juice loan because Falzone "knows my business."
In addition, Falzone told LaBarbera that Zizzo would have a say on whether his
loan was approved and later claimed to have been present when Chiaramonti handed
Zizzo a $ 1,000 payment from LaBarbera. Because Falzone's statements (despite
his later self-serving affidavit to the contrary) were supported by independent
evidence, we conclude that the district judge did not err in [*1353]
finding that Falzone and Zizzo were coconspirators.
Second, the district court did not clearly err in finding that Falzone's
statements furthered the conspiracy. Falzone's statements
"need not have been made exclusively, or even primarily, to further the conspiracy."
United
States v. Powers, 75 F.3d 335, 340 (7th Cir. 1996). Rather, the only
question is whether "some reasonable basis" exists for concluding that
his chats with LaBarbera were intended to move the conspiracy
closer to its objectives. United
States v. Shoffner, 826 F.2d 619, 628 (7th Cir. 1987) (citing United
States v. Mackey, 571 F.2d 376, 383 (7th Cir. 1978)). When LaBarbera
needed money for his trucking business, Falzone explained that he worked for
Chiaramonti [**37] and Zizzo, who controlled all loan activity on
the streets of Chicago, and could help LaBarbera obtain a loan. Falzone then set
up a meeting with Chiaramonti and encouraged LaBarbera, who needed only $ 2,000,
to borrow at least $ 5,000. Finally, Falzone warned LaBarbera to keep up on his
payments if he wanted to steer clear of trouble with Chiaramonti and Zizzo.
Those statements and actions sufficiently support the district court's
determination that one purpose of Falzone's remarks was to inform a potential
borrower of the procedures for obtaining a juice loan, explain the crew's
collection practices, and increase the conspiracy's profits by
prompting the borrower to take out as large a loan as possible.
Chiaramonti also raises a bunch of evidentiary challenges. Big Tony's big
argument is that the district court erred by admitting testimony regarding his
past violent acts and reputation for violent conduct. For example, after
instructing the jury that the statements were not to be used for their truth but
rather only to show LaBarbera's state of mind, the trial court allowed LaBarbera
to testify about three conversations he had regarding
Chiaramonti. LaBarbera stated that his friend [**38] Diane Cutler,
his employee Mary Rice (who as fate would have it was a close friend of Big
Tony), and "Jeep" Daddino individually warned him not to upset
Chiaramonti because he was very dangerous. Second, the jury was allowed to hear
two of Falzone's taped statements to LaBarbera. One of the statements was
admitted for its truth under Rule 801(d)(2)(E) and described Chiaramonti's
supervisory role in the Carlisi juice loan operation. The other, admitted only
to show LaBarbera's state of mind, recounted how Big Tony, who owned a limousine
rental agency, had severely beaten one of his drivers after catching him running
prostitutes out of company cars. Third, the jury was allowed to listen to a
number of Chiaramonti's own statements to LaBarbera. For example, Chiaramonti
stated that he disciplined his son by hitting him with a "backhand" to
the mouth, giving him "a boot in [the] ass" and treating him
"like a motherfucking stranger." Chiaramonti added that his son had
seen him "work on different guys . . . at the race track." The jury
also heard Chiaramonti advise LaBarbera, as we noted earlier, that he had the
"legal right to bust [the] head" of anyone who owed him money.
Finally, LaBarbera [**39] was allowed to testify that after he had
accused Falzone of theft, Chiaramonti, who didn't believe the allegations,
choked LaBarbera and threatened to "fuckin' shoot" him, "break
[his] fuckin' head," "bury" him, and "fuckin' knock [his]
head off." Chiaramonti also threatened to put LaBarbera, who had a serious
heart condition, "right back in the hospital." LaBarbera was so scared
that he avoided Big Tony by having undercover FBI agents drop off his next few
juice loan payments.
The district judge did not abuse his discretion in admitting these statements
for the limited purpose of showing what LaBarbera understood and believed. In
Count Four Chiaramonti was charged with making an extortionate extension of
credit (the LaBarbera loan) under 18
U.S.C. § 892. That charge required the government to prove that Big Tony
and LaBarbera had an understanding that failure to repay the loan in a timely
fashion "could result in the use of violence or other criminal means to
cause harm to" LaBarbera. 18
U.S.C. § 891(6). The term "understanding" does not mean that the
government needed to show that a mutual agreement was reached. Rather, the
statute only requires that both parties "comprehended" [**40]
that a threat of violence existed. [*1354] United
States v. Annoreno, 460 F.2d 1303, 1308-09 (7th Cir. 1972); accord United
States v. Dennis, 625 F.2d 782, 803 (8th Cir. 1980); United
States v. DeVincent, 546 F.2d 452, 455 n.1 (1st Cir. 1976). As a
result, it was not an abuse of discretion for the district judge--who reasonably
applied Rule 403's balancing test and gave the jury proper limiting
instructions--to admit evidence bearing on LaBarbera's understanding of the
juice loan.
This is true even though none of the "state of mind" evidence was
directly linked to the loan. E.g., United
States v. Oreto, 37 F.3d 739, 749-50 (1st Cir. 1994) (juice loan
borrower allowed to testify that he knew the defendant had "got out of jail
for murder" even though the conviction had nothing to do with
loansharking); DeVincent,
546 F.2d at 452, 456-57 (testimony regarding loansharking defendant's
20-year-old armed robbery conviction and 10-year-old murder indictment
properly admitted to show debtor's state of mind). After all, Chiaramonti's
reputation for violence and his connection to the Outfit surely shaped
LaBarbera's understanding that he could be roughed up if he failed to repay
[**41] his juice loan. See United
States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 11 (1st Cir. 1990) (jury properly
allowed to consider defendant's nexus to organized crime when
evaluating a debtor's understanding).
And despite Chiaramonti's protests to the contrary, admission of this type of
testimony is not conditioned on the unavailability of a juice loan debtor. Oreto,
37 F.3d at 750; Dennis,
625 F.2d at 801; see also United
States v. DeVincent, 632 F.2d 147, 150 (1st Cir. 1980). Although §
892(c) provides that if evidence of a juice loan debtor's actual belief is
unavailable the district court may admit reputation evidence "as to
collection practices of the creditor in any community of which the debtor was a
member at the time of the extension" of credit, that provision does not bar
evidence of prior bad acts, admissible under Rule 404(b) "when offered to
show the basis for a victim's fear." Oreto,
37 F.3d at 750. Section 892(c) simply allows the receipt of reputation
evidence--often otherwise inadmissible-- when a juice loan debtor's direct
testimony is unavailable. For example, had LaBarbera been unable to testify, the
government could have attempted to use § 892(c) to admit testimony [**42]
from coconspirators such as James Palaggi--to whom Chiaramonti had once bragged
that he extorted a juice loan payment by placing a delinquent debtor on a hot
restaurant griddle--even though LaBarbera had never heard of the incident. n6
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n6 Apparently Chiaramonti thinks this evidence did come in under § 892(c). He
argues that the district court impermissibly allowed Palaggi's testimony as well
as that of coconspirators Saverio Musillami and Kappy Pielet without first
showing that LaBarbera's testimony was unavailable. None of the coconspirators'
testimony was received under § 892(c). Rather, their testimony was admitted as
direct, relevant evidence of the racketeering activities
underlying the RICO conspiracy.
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We likewise find no merit in Chiaramonti's suggestion that admission of the
challenged evidence violated the Confrontation Clause. Chiaramonti's own
statements, admitted under Rule 801(d)(2)(A), obviously pose no problem.
Falzone's statements, to the extent they were admitted for their truth under
Rule [**43] 801(d)(2)(E), likewise did not interfere with
Chiaramonti's confrontation rights. Bourjaily,
483 U.S. at 182-83. Finally, because the jury was properly instructed not to
consider the remaining statements for their truth, we reach the same result on
the "state of mind" evidence. See Lee,
892 F.2d at 1326.
O'Dell is up next. He believes the district court ignored Federal Rule of
Evidence 404(b) and improperly allowed the government to admit evidence of a
number of his prior bad acts in order to sully his character. O'Dell
specifically complains that the court should not have allowed testimony showing
that he: (1) made and used extortionate means to collect a juice loan to a
borrower named Ilcho Yovanof; (2) vandalized a barbershop with Chiaramonti in
1975; (3) served as Chiaramonti's lookout for a jewelry store burglary in 1979;
(4) sold a load of stolen tires in 1987; and (5) failed to file tax returns in
years predating those listed in the indictment.
[*1355] O'Dell's argument misses the mark. With one exception, the
testimony cited above did not come in under 404(b). Testimony about the Yovanof
loan was properly allowed as evidence of an additional act underlying the RICO conspiracy.
[**44] The evidence relating to the barbershop vandalism and jewelry
store burglary was either excluded from or never even offered during the
government's case. The court only allowed testimony on those events after O'Dell
"opened the door" by claiming on direct that he never had any criminal
relationship with Chiaramonti. That was not an abuse of discretion. See
e.g., United
States v. Saadeh, 61 F.3d 510, 522 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 133
L. Ed. 2d 428, 116 S. Ct. 521 (1995); Prevatte,
16 F.3d at 776-77 n.8. Testimony concerning the stolen tires was likewise
only brought out on cross. O'Dell never objected, and because the incident was
probative of his truthfulness, the district court did not plainly err in
admitting the testimony. United
States v. Smith, 80 F.3d 1188, 1193 (7th Cir. 1996) (defendant's prior
thefts proper topic for cross-examination under Rule 608(b)). Finally, although
the court did admit (without objection) evidence of O'Dell's failure to file tax
returns in years prior to those charged in the indictment under
404(b), we can find no error, let alone a plain one. O'Dell was charged with
willful failure to file tax returns under I.R.C.
§ 7203. His failure to file in earlier years [**45] was
relevant to his specific intent. United
States v. Kalita, 712 F.2d 1122, 1130-31 (7th Cir. 1983); United
States v. Serlin, 707 F.2d 953, 959 (7th Cir. 1983).
O'Dell mounts one other evidentiary challenge. After Carlisi was arrested
he told federal agents that he knew Marcello, Zizzo, and Chiaramonti but had
never heard of the others named in the indictment. O'Dell
thinks that statement would have shown the jury that he was not mixed up with
the Carlisi crew. He maintains that the district court abused its discretion in
declining to admit Carlisi's remarks either as statement against interest under
Rule 804(b)(3) or as an excited utterance under Rule 803(2).
Neither argument goes far. We apply a three-step test to determine whether a
statement qualifies for admission under Rule 804(b)(3): (1) the statement must
be against the declarant's penal interest; (2) corroborating circumstances must
clearly establish the statement's trust-worthiness; and (3) the declarant must
be unavailable to testify. Butler,
71 F.3d at 252. O'Dell can't get over the first hump. He has not shown how
Carlisi's statement could be construed as against his penal interest. A simple
remark that [**46] he only knew three of his codefendants did not
tend to subject Carlisi to criminal liability.
Yet another three-part test spells doom for O'Dell's excited-utterance theory.
Rule 803(2) comes into play only when (1) a startling event occurs; (2) the
declarant makes a statement while under the stress and excitement caused by the
event; and (3) the statement relates to the startling event. United
States v. Sowa, 34 F.3d 447, 453 (7th Cir. 1994). Even were we to
assume that Carlisi's arrest at O'Hare airport qualified as a
"startling event," O'Dell's claim bogs down on step two. That is, he
cannot show that by the time Carlisi arrived at the Dirksen Building in downtown
Chicago he was still in such an excited state as to exclude "the
possibility of conscious reflection." United
States v. Moore, 791 F.2d 566, 571-72 (7th Cir. 1986). On the contrary,
the federal agents who interviewed Carlisi described Carlisi as calm and
collected.
Finally, Gervasio claims the district court erred by allowing Michael Huber to
testify about Joe Cumbo's attempt to collect his debt to the crew. Gervasio
argues because nothing links him to Cumbo's later collection efforts, the
prejudicial effect of [**47] Huber's testimony about Cumbo
substantially outweighed its probative value. See Rule 403. Gervasio asserts
this error was compounded by the decision to allow the jury to see pictures of
the backseat of Huber's wife's car, which had been mysteriously burned just 2
days after Cumbo suggested that Huber sell the car to pay off his debt.
The district judge felt that although the link was not strong there was a
connection between Cumbo and Gervasio. As a result he allowed Huber to testify
about Cumbo's [*1356] collection efforts. That was not an abuse of
discretion. Cumbo told Huber that he was trying to collect a debt which traced
back to Briscoe. Briscoe had already testified that Gervasio collected his debts
for the crew. Although the jury later chose not to credit some of
Briscoe's testimony--the jury's special verdict rejected the idea that Gervasio
agreed to collect gambling debts for Briscoe--there was certainly a sufficient
basis, at the time the judge allowed Huber to testify, to link Cumbo to
Gervasio. As for the pictures of the car, when Carlisi objected to their
admission Judge Plunkett responded, "Really? They're just pictures of a
seat." As the judge's comment suggests, the pictures [**48]
were not inflammatory or misleading, so it does not strike us as an abuse of
discretion to let the jury have a look at them.
Having found no reason to second-guess the district court's evidentiary rulings,
we turn to the rest of the defendants' conviction-related arguments, most of
which attack the sufficiency of the evidence. In ruling on those challenges we
view the facts in the light most favorable to the government and will reverse
only if no reasonable juror could have found the defendant guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt. United
States v. Alcantar, 83 F.3d 185, 189 (7th Cir. 1996). As before,
Marcello gets to go first.
Only one of his claims merits discussion. Marcello argues his various Rule 29
motions for acquittal should have been granted. His argument is somewhat
puzzling. Although the jury found that he had agreed to six of the racketeering
acts underlying the RICO conspiracy, Marcello challenges the
jury's findings on only two: the conspiracy to intimidate
Willis Johnson and the plot to murder "Jeep" Daddino. Because he does
not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence proving that he agreed to commit
the other four racketeering acts, it would seem that his
conviction [**49] on Count One would remain intact regardless of
whether the jury credited his involvement in the Lake Theater and Daddino
events. Marcello tries to get around this little snag by suggesting the district
court's failure to grant him "an acquittal" on those acts improperly
allowed the jurors to consider highly prejudicial allegations, which in turn
tainted the entire verdict. While this argument doesn't strike us as
particularly strong, we can easily dismiss his sufficiency claims on the merits
and need not address his allegations of prejudice. We'll start with the Lake
Theater incident.
Based on his alleged order to Patrick to make Willis Johnson join the
projectionists union, one of the racketeering activities
Marcello was charged with involved a conspiracy to commit
intimidation and arson, felonies under Illinois law (and, of course, racketeering
activities under 18
U.S.C. § 1961(1)(A)). At the close of the government's case the district
court granted Marcello's dismissal motion on the arson claim, reasoning that the
government could not show, as required under Illinois' arson statute, that
property had been damaged. Because the owner of the Lake Theater never received
a threat, [**50] Marcello argues that his actions also did not
satisfy the elements of Illinois' intimidation statute. See 720 Ill.
Comp. Stat. 5/12-6 (requiring proof that the accused threatened someone with the
intent to cause that person to perform or omit the performance of any act).
Marcello believes that the government proved only an incomplete attempt to
intimidate, a misdemeanor which does not qualify as a racketeering
offense. See 18
U.S.C. § 1961(1)(A).
Marcello misunderstands the law of conspiracy. The indictment
alleged that he conspired to commit intimidation. Marcello was not
charged, as he repeatedly suggests, with misdemeanor attempted intimidation.
When a defendant is charged with conspiracy to commit a
particular crime, the government need only establish that the defendant and at
least one other person intended their future conduct to include all of the
elements of the substantive offense. As a result, the government needed only to
show that Marcello agreed to exert improper influence on the owner of the Lake
Theater in an effort to compel him to act against his will. See United
States v. McNeal, 77 F.3d 938, 942-43 (7th Cir. 1996). A rational juror
could have concluded [**51] that the government met that burden. The
trial evidence made clear that Carlisi and Marcello had a motive to intimidate
the [*1357] owner of the Lake Theater. After all, Johnson was
butting heads with their sons' union. Patrick, whose crew had come under
Carlisi's thumb in 1986, testified that he was then summoned to a meeting with
Marcello, who explained that Carlisi wanted Patrick to give the owner of the
Lake Theater a little trouble and make him "join the union." Patrick
in turn assigned the job to Rainone and company, whose failed attempts to torch
the theater conjure up images of the Keystone Kops. And although the evidence
revealed that Marcello was upset by the decision to bomb the theater, his order
set the conspiracy in motion, and he certainly could foresee
that Patrick or his cronies might use violent means to make Johnson join the
union. See United
States v. Williams, 81 F.3d 1434, 1441 (7th Cir. 1996). As a result,
the jury was entitled to find that Marcello agreed to intimidate the owner of
the Lake Theater.
The plot to murder Daddino was also supported by sufficient evidence. Marcello's
main contention here is that the government failed to prove that any of the
coconspirators [**52] engaged in an act in furtherance of the plot. See
720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/8-2(a). This argument goes nowhere. The evidence, again
viewed as it must be in the light most favorable to the government, established
that Joe Vento asked James LaValley to locate Rainone. Rainone then met with
Marcello, who asked him to "pull the lock" at Daddino's house in order
to let the hit men in. The evidence also showed that Marcello gave Rainone a
walkie-talkie to use when breaking in and later asked Patrick to get his
walkie-talkie back. Given this testimony, the jury could have taken its pick of
acts in furtherance.
Zizzo next argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of making
and collecting the LaBarbera loan. He contends that the loan was a personal deal
between Chiaramonti and LaBarbera. In support, Zizzo stresses he never met
LaBarbera, and that unlike the other loans--which were all cash
deals--LaBarbera's loan was disbursed via check from an account bearing the name
of "A. Chiaro."
Although LaBarbera dealt directly with only Chiaramonti, the evidence
established that Zizzo, as third in command, supervised the
crew's juice loan operation. It also made clear that he was mixed [**53]
up in the LaBarbera loan. For example, Chiaramonti originally told LaBarbera to
make his interest payments in envelopes marked "LT." The jury could
certainly conclude that those initials referred to "Little Tony"
Zizzo. But that's not all. Falzone also told LaBarbera that he saw Chiaramonti
give the "little guy" LaBarbera's $ 1,000 payment toward the principal
of the juice loan. Finally, and certainly most damning, Chiaramonti explained to
LaBarbera that Little Tony had agreed to settle his delinquent interest on the
juice loan for $ 2,000. Based on that evidence, a rational juror could find that
Zizzo had made and collected the LaBarbera loan.
Chiaramonti next maintains that the jury's verdicts against him on the racketeering,
gambling, and tax counts cannot stand. Only his challenges on Counts One and Two
warrant discussion. Noting that a 5-year limitations period applies to both §
1962(d) and § 1955, he first argues that his convictions on both counts are
infirm because the jury could not have rationally concluded that he was involved
in either the RICO conspiracy or the illegal gambling business
after 1987. (The indictment, you'll recall, was returned in
December 1992.) Rather, [**54] Chiaramonti asserts that he was out
of both rackets by the early 1980's. Chiaramonti also thinks the jury received
bum instructions on the gambling charge.
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the government, we see no
reason to trump the jury's findings. A rational juror could certainly find that
Big Tony was mixed up in the RICO conspiracy throughout its
existence. Chiaramonti concedes the evidence linked him to O'Dell and Zizzo but
argues he was out of the loop by 1983. However, the LaBarbera loan was not even
made until 1988, and the weekly interest payments stretched into 1990. And
although Chiaramonti claims the LaBarbera deal was a business loan made with
personal funds, we have already detailed Zizzo's role in that transaction. In
addition, coconspirator James Palaggi testified that after he was released
[*1358] from prison in 1988 he saw the "two Tonys"
exchange juice loan payments on a regular basis. Palaggi also stated Chiaramonti
told him he worked for Carlisi and had to share all of his profits with
him--including any money he made on the LaBarbera loan. Although Chiaramonti
claims Palaggi's testimony should be disregarded because the jury found he had
not agreed [**55] to one of the racketeering acts
about which Palaggi testified, we leave credibility matters to the jury. See
Best,
939 F.2d at 431 n.2 ("Speculation on the jury process is a futile
pastime at best.").
Chiaramonti's attack on the jury's verdict on the illegal gambling charge fares
no better. He concedes he and O'Dell ran a crew betting location in the early
1980's but argues that nothing links him to the conspiracy
after 1983. He also admits that he took horse racing bets for the crew in 1988.
He simply asserts that horse racing was not one of the sports covered by the
crew's gambling operation. First, the indictment clearly
alleged that the crew's illegal gambling business took bets on horse racing.
When that little fact is coupled with Chiaramonti's statements to Palaggi that
he had to share his profits with Carlisi, who did not allow "outlaw"
gambling operations, the jury could rationally conclude that the bets
Chiaramonti took on horse races in 1988 were related to the crew's gambling
business. Additionally, one of Chiaramonti's employees testified that Frank
Bonavolante, the head of the crew's illegal gambling operation, called
Chiaramonti on a daily basis from 1987 through [**56] 1989. The
evidence also showed that Chiaramonti spearheaded a 1989 crackdown on non-Outfit
betting offices. And since the jury only needed to conclude that Chiaramonti
"aided and abetted" the gambling business, that crackdown alone
provided a sufficient basis for Big Tony's conviction. Finally, crew bookies
sent losing bettors to Chiaramonti's juice loan operation, which Palaggi
testified was still up and running after 1987. Because those loans played a
major role in keeping the gambling business in the black, the jury was certainly
entitled to conclude that Chiaramonti, through his juice loan operation, aided
the crew's illegal gambling business.
We next address Chiaramonti's claim that the jury's verdict on the § 1955 count
was the product of improper instructions. Chiaramonti alleges the district court
should have specifically instructed the jurors that they needed to unanimously
agree on both the identity of the five persons involved in the gambling business
as well as their relevant periods of participation. Because Chiaramonti did not
object to the instructions, we review his claim only for plain error. Olano,
507 U.S. at 734.
One court has found the lack of a specific [**57] unanimity
instruction as to the elements of § 1955 to constitute plain error. See United
States v. Gilley, 836 F.2d 1206 (9th Cir. 1988). In Gilley,
the gambling operation at issue was started by only two people and originally
operated out of one defendant's home. At times during the business' 18-month
period of operation, however, the enterprise employed more than five people.
Because the numbers of participants sometimes dipped below the statutory
threshold, the Ninth Circuit held that the district judge erred in failing to
instruct the jurors that they needed to specifically agree as to "who did
what when." Id.
at 1212.
Our case is a far cry from Gilley. First, even Gilley
recognized that a specific unanimity instruction is unnecessary when the
evidence clearly establishes that more than five people were involved in the
gambling business at all times. Id.
at 1212. That was certainly the case here. Carlisi, Marcello, Zizzo,
Chiaramonti, Frank and Joe Bonavolante, O'Dell, and Gervasio conducted the
business throughout its existence. In addition, a whole host of others were also
involved in the operation for definite and substantial periods. They included
[**58] Pielet (1980-85), George Friedel (1981-87), Briscoe
(1986-89), Marvin Showalter (1983-86), Gill Valerio (1988-90), James DiDomenico
(1988-90), Alphonse Tornabene (1989), Anthony Carvatta (1990), Victor Plescia
(1989-90), "Joe the Hat" (1982-83), and "Little Frankie"
(1983-89). And even were we to consider the lack of the specific instruction an
error, the error was certainly not plain. For in order to constitute plain
error, the flaw in [*1359] question must have resulted in a
miscarriage of justice. See United
States v. Wing, 104 F.3d 986, 989 (7th Cir. 1997). That is, the error
must have affected the outcome of the case. Olano,
507 U.S. at 734. Here the district judge gave the jurors a general unanimity
instruction and twice properly instructed them on the elements of § 1955. When
those instructions are coupled with the extensive cast of characters detailed
above, Chiaramonti simply cannot show that, had the district court given a
specific unanimity instruction, he likely would have been acquitted on the
gambling charge.
A final sufficiency challenge pops up in Gervasio's appeal. He points out that
when an assistant United States attorney tried to get Michael Huber to identify
[**59] Gervasio as his bookie in front of the grand jury, the
following exchange took place:
AUSA: When you went back to [Tommy Briscoe] you asked him if he was betting with
someone?
Huber: Yes.
AUSA: What did he tell you?
Huber: He said that he was.
AUSA: Did he give a name at that time?
Huber: Yes, he did.
AUSA: Who was it?
Huber: I think the guy's name was Tom. I just knew him by sort of a synonym.
AUSA: Tom?
Huber: Yes.
AUSA: How about Richie?
Huber: Richie. That sounds right. Richie it is.
AUSA: Is it Richie?
Huber: Richie. That's correct.
Based on that testimony and a number of Huber's inconsistent statements about
the details of his gambling history, Gervasio suggests that Huber is a chronic
liar whose testimony was incredible as a matter of law. And without that
testimony, Gervasio argues, no rational jury could have found him guilty on any
of the charges against him.
At trial Gervasio impeached Huber with his grand jury testimony and inconsistent
statements, and although his identification of Gervasio may have been something
less than a prosecutor's dream, we cannot say Huber's testimony was so
unreliable that the jury was not allowed to credit it. A witness' [**60]
testimony is only incredible as a matter of law when it is unbelievable on its
face--that is, when it would have been "physically impossible for the
witness to observe what he described, or impossible under the laws of nature for
those events to have occurred at all." Alcantar,
83 F.3d at 189. Gervasio has not shown that either circumstance is at work
here.
Because Huber's testimony was not inherently unreliable, there was certainly
sufficient evidence to convict Gervasio on all charges. Huber testified that he
had bet over $ 60,000 with Gervasio in an 18-month period. Huber also explained
that after he failed to pay off a losing wager, Gervasio warned him on a number
of occasions that the matter would soon be out of his hands. Finally, Huber
described how Gervasio twice sent him to a parking lot, where he was threatened
and assaulted. That evidence-- which was corroborated by the testimony of other
witnesses such as bookies Pielet and Friedel (who indicated that Gervasio and
Bonavolante used the office at his auto parts store to take bets)-- sufficiently
supports Gervasio's convictions for conspiring to conduct the
affairs of the Carlisi Street Crew through a pattern of racketeering
[**61] or the collection of unlawful debt (Count One), helping
conduct the crew's illegal gambling business (Count Two), and collecting an
extension of credit through extortionate means (Count Seven).
With the defendants' evidentiary and sufficiency challenges in our rearview
mirror, we turn to their attacks on their sentences. As with their
conviction-related claims, we will address only their better arguments, and like
before, those not discussed have been considered and are dismissed as meritless.
First up is an interesting issue raised by three of the remaining defendants.
Marcello, Zizzo, and Chiaramonti contend that the district court improperly
imposed a 2-level upward departure to their adjusted offense levels on their
RICO convictions to [*1360] account for their involvement in organized
crime. They argue organized crime was an improper
ground for departure because it was already considered by the Sentencing
Commission in formulating the guidelines. n7 Whether a district court has based
a departure on an aggravating circumstance "of a kind, or to a degree, not
adequately taken into consideration" by the guidelines is a question of law
we review de novo.
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n7 To avoid any ex post facto concerns, the defendants were sentenced
under the 1989 version of the sentencing guidelines.
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[**62]
The district court based its departure on our decision in Rainone,
32 F.3d 1203. In that case the defendants (a group which included two of our
would-be movie theater arsonists--Mario Rainone and Nick Gio) challenged the
district court's authority to impose a 2-level upward departure based upon their
ties to the Outfit. The defendants argued because they were convicted of racketeering,
and one of the purposes of the RICO statute was to keep organized crime
out of the hair of legitimate businesses, the departure constituted double
counting. Id.
at 1209. We found the departure kosher, distinguishing between
garden-variety RICO and conspiracies involving organizations
like the Outfit. We noted the "motivation for and the scope of a statute
are often . . . different things" and "had the guideline range for
RICO offenses been set with the Chicago Outfit in mind, it would have greatly
overpunished the run of the mill criminal activities that are the routine grist
of RICO prosecutions." Id.
Marcello, Zizzo, and Chiaramonti attempt to slip out from under Rainone
by stressing that their sentencing calculations started from a different
subsection of the guidelines. They note [**63] the jumping off point
for all RICO sentencing calculations is U.S.S.G. § 2E1.1(a), which sets a
defendant's base offense level at the higher of: (1) 19; or (2) the level
applicable to the underlying racketeering activity. In Rainone,
the applicable base was determined to be 19 under § 2E1.1(a)(1). Here, because
many of the predicate racketeering acts were extortionate
credit transactions carrying base offense levels of 20 under § 2E2.1, the
defendants were sentenced under § 2E1.1(a)(2). The crux of the defendants'
argument is that the Sentencing Commission already took organized crime
into account when setting the base level for extortionate credit offenses. In
support, they cite the background commentary to § 2E2.1, which explains:
These "loan-sharking" offenses typically involve threats of violence
and provide economic support for organized crime. The base
offense level for these offenses is higher than the offense level for extortion
because loan sharking is in most cases a continuing activity.
They also note although loansharking is a continuing activity, multiple
convictions for § 2E2.1 offenses do not group under § 3D1.2(d). As a result,
they believe [**64] that the organized nature of loansharking is
already adequately reflected in the guidelines.
Unfortunately for the defendants, we have recently rejected a similar attempt to
distinguish Rainone. In United
States v. Damico, 99 F.3d 1431 (7th Cir. 1996), cert. denied, 137
L. Ed. 2d 220, 117 S. Ct. 1086 (1997), we affirmed a 2-level upward
departure for organized crime, holding:
[A] defendant's involvement in organized crime is not reflected
in the base offense level assigned to him under section 2E1.1. That is so
regardless of whether the offense level is established under subsection (a)(1)
or (a)(2) of the RICO guideline, for neither the RICO statute nor the
underlying offenses to which it applies are limited in application to defendants
engaged in organized crime.
Id.
at 1439 (emphasis added). We reached that conclusion even though Damico's racketeering
act with the highest base offense level was--as here-- an extortionate credit
transaction. See id.
at 1436. The simple fact of the matter is that although the commentary to §
2E2.1 mentions that loansharking typically provides cash for organized
crime, a defendant need not belong to a crime syndicate to be sentenced
[**65] pursuant to § 2E2.1. That obviously holds true for the rest
of the guidelines covering the crew's [*1361] racketeering
activities as well. See § 2E3.1 (conducting illegal gambling
business); § 2A2.1 (conspiracy to commit murder); § 2X1.1 (conspiracy);
and § 2B3.2 (extortion). As a result, we hold that membership in an extensive
and ruthless organization like the Chicago Outfit is a proper ground for
departure even when the defendant's predicate racketeering
activity includes extortionate credit transactions.
The defendants' solo sentencing challenges meet with no greater success. For
example, Marcello challenges the district court's calculation of his offense
level for the conspiracy to intimidate the owner of the Lake
Theater. He argues that the district judge should not have assigned him a base
offense level of 18 for extortion under § 2B3.2 but rather a mere level 12 for
making a threatening communication under § 2A6.1. n8
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n8 Because this conspiracy proved unsuccessful, the district
court reduced Marcello's offense level for this act by 3 points under §
2X1.1(b)(2).
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[**66]
In order to pin down Marcello's offense level for the conspiracy
to intimidate Willis Johnson, a felony under Illinois law, Judge Plunkett had to
determine the "most analogous federal offense," U.S.S.G. § 2E1.1(2),
comment. (n.2), and select the "most applicable" sentencing guideline.
§ 1B1.2(a). Here the district court properly settled on § 2B3.2. While the
defendant's choice, § 2A6.1, covers a wide array of "Threatening
Communications," § 2B3.2 specifically "applies if there was any
threat, express or implied, that reasonably could be interpreted as one to
injure a person or physically damage property[.]" U.S.S.G. § 2B3.2,
comment. (n.2); see also United
States v. Johnson, 965 F.2d 460, 468 (7th Cir. 1992). Section 2B3.2,
not § 2A6.1, also is meant to cover ambiguous threats, such as "pay up or
else." Id. In this case, there can be little doubt that property
damage (and likely personal injury) was contemplated when the conspirators threw
gasoline, a Molotov cocktail, and two grenades on the roof of the Lake Theater.
The intended threat to Johnson was clear: "join the union" or have
your theaters blown to smithereens.
Marcello also argues the district court improperly [**67] grouped
the racketeering acts under § 3D1.2. Marcello believes that
rather than the nine victim-based offense groups found by the district court,
only three offense groups were proper: (1) one for making extortionate
extensions of credit; (2) one for collecting extensions of credit through
extortionate means; and (3) one for financing Patrick's operation. Although
Marcello's argument is of dubious merit, see Damico,
99 F.3d at 1436 (convictions for extortionate extraction of street tax
grouped by victim), we need not address the issue. The nine groups found by the
district court led to an increase of 5 levels under § 3D1.4. Marcello's
interpretation of the grouping rules would lead to the same result. He would
receive one unit for each of the three groups he identifies, a fourth for the
Lake Theater incident, a fifth for the Daddino murder plot, and another one-half
unit for conducting the illegal gambling business. Those units, like the
district court's totals, would translate to a 5-level increase under § 3D1.4.
Little Tony next raises two arguments regarding his sentence. First, he
complains because nothing tied him to the collection of debts owed by Frank
Perri, William [**68] Stone, Michael Huber, and Anthony Pape, those
collections should not have been counted against him at sentencing. Second,
Zizzo claims that he should not have been assigned a 3-point increase in his
offense level for his role as a manager or supervisor under § 3B1.1(b). Zizzo
concedes that he qualified as supervisor but contends that fewer than five
people were involved in a couple of the predicate acts underlying the conspiracy.
Neither argument is a winner. The jury found Zizzo agreed that the Carlisi crew
would commit multiple acts of collecting and conspiring to
collect gambling and juice loan debts through extortionate means. The jury then
determined that the crew had used extortionate means to collect a host of debts,
including ones owed by Perri, Stone, Huber, and Pape. In holding Zizzo
responsible for these offenses for sentencing purposes, the district court
reasonably found a preponderance of the evidence established that Zizzo [*1362]
served as the supervisor for all of the crew's juice loan and gambling
activities. Because Zizzo, as the crew's third in command and street-level
supervisor, could reasonably foresee the collections challenged here, all four
of which were handled [**69] pursuant to the crew's standard
operating procedures, he was properly left on the hook for them at sentencing. See
Williams,
81 F.3d at 1441.
Zizzo's attempt to knock out the 3-level boost he received under § 3B1.1(b)
also comes up dry. Zizzo's focus on whether fewer than five individuals took
part in two of the collections underlying the RICO conspiracy
is misplaced. United
States v. Morgano, 39 F.3d 1358, 1379 (7th Cir. 1994). n9 Rather than
narrowly considering each predicate offense, we tally up the number of
criminally responsible participants by looking at the overall conspiracy.
Damico,
99 F.3d at 1437-38; Morgano,
39 F.3d at 1379 ("Section 3B1.1(b) applies if the 'criminal activity
involved' five or more people, a phrase broad enough to include the entire racketeering
conspiracy rather than the particular predicate act alone."). In
this case the RICO conspiracy certainly involved at least five
people. The indictment itself named nearly twice that many. See
United
States v. Zarnes, 33 F.3d 1454, 1474 (7th Cir. 1994) (conspiracy
"unquestionably" involved more than five persons where the indictment
listed ten defendants).
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n9 Ironically, the case that dooms Zizzo's argument involved his father. See
Morgano,
39 F.3d at 1363.
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[**70]
We next address Gervasio's claim that he was entitled to a 2-point decrease in
his offense level for his minor role in the crew's activities pursuant to §
3B1.2(b). In support, he argues that he was merely a penny-ante phone man. The
district court did not buy his argument, and we are not left with the definite
and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. The testimony showed that
Gervasio--as a full-fledged bookmaking agent--took in over $ 60,000 in bets from
a single customer (Huber) in an 18-month period. In addition, after Huber
welched on a $ 2,500 wager, Gervasio cut off his betting privileges and
repeatedly met with him to discuss his delinquent debt. It's hard to imagine
that the crew would allow a small potatoes phone man (as Gervasio claims to have
been) to make discretionary calls on who could bet with the crew's bookies.
Finally, Gervasio twice sent Huber to a parking lot where Outfit thugs were
waiting to rough him up. That evidence made clear that Gervasio was not
"substantially less culpable than the average participant" in the
offenses for which he was convicted. U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2, comment. (backg'd.); see
also United
States v. Kerr, 13 F.3d 203, 206 (7th [**71] Cir. 1993).
One sentencing issue remains. O'Dell maintains the district court clearly erred
by bumping up his offense level 2 points for obstruction of justice under §
3C1.1. In order to apply § 3C1.1, the district court must find that the
defendant willfully obstructed or attempted to obstruct the administration of
justice and that the obstruction was material. United
States v. Mitchell, 64 F.3d 1105, 1107-08 (7th Cir. 1995), cert.
denied, 116
S. Ct. 1549 (1996). In this case, Judge Plunkett found that O'Dell triggered
the enhancement in two ways. First, O'Dell failed to fully comply with a grand
jury subpoena for his financial records. It seems in response to the subpoena
O'Dell's accountant gave him all of his financial records, including copies of
IRS 1099's which had been prepared for--but never filed by--O'Dell. Rather than
turning over the 1099's, O'Dell insisted that he never received the forms and
submitted only some canceled checks and receipts. Second, the district court
found that O'Dell perjured himself while testifying in his own defense.
The district court did not err in applying § 3C1.1. Based on the evidence that
came to light at trial, the judge reasonably [**72] found that
O'Dell successfully avoided tax evasion charges by only turning over a portion
of the records underlying the disappearing 1099's. That alone justified a
finding of obstruction of justice. But that was merely the tip of the iceberg.
The judge specifically found that [*1363] O'Dell perjured himself at
trial. Even when viewed in the light most favorable to O'Dell, we agree that
much of his testimony was, as Judge Plunkett put it, preposterous. One
comparatively small example will suffice. In mounting his defense against the
charges that he willfully failed to file tax returns, O'Dell testified that he
didn't file because he didn't have enough money to pay his taxes and was afraid
tax liens would ruin his credit. We can't say the district judge was off base in
finding that this testimony was somewhat "less than truthful," United
States v. Hofer, 995 F.2d 746, 750 (7th Cir. 1993). The trial evidence
showed at the time he was too "broke" to pay Uncle Sam, O'Dell
purchased a $ 450,000 home, pumped another $ 100,000 into improvements on it,
had his business buy a $ 54,000 Cadillac limo for his personal use, shelled out
$ 68,000 for a 28-foot boat, sought to buy a 32- footer for $ 102,000, [**73]
and purchased a "dockominium" (a fancy boat slip) for the
bargain-basement price of $ 42,000. Various financial records and unfiled tax
forms prepared during that same period also listed substantial amounts of
income, which O'Dell claimed to be unable to identify. We should all be so down
on our luck.
Finally, we address a motion for a new trial. Marcello argues he was entitled to
a new trial based upon newly discovered evidence that the prosecutors had
suborned perjury. Marcello alleges that the prosecutors allowed James LaValley
to testify that he had committed every crime in the book "short of
murder" when in "reality," they knew of--and illegally
withheld--evidence linking LaValley to a killing. This issue was originally
raised by Carlisi some 6 months after Marcello had been sentenced and filed this
appeal. Carlisi's motion, which was joined by Marcello, was promptly denied by
the district court. Carlisi filed a notice of appeal from the denial. Marcello,
on the other hand, did not bother to do so. As a result, we lack jurisdiction to
hear this claim. United
States v. Douglas, 874 F.2d 1145, 1162 (7th Cir. 1989); see also United
States v. Harvey, 959 F.2d 1371 (7th Cir. [**74] 1992).
For all these reasons, we remand the case of Sam Carlisi to district court with
instructions to vacate his conviction and dismiss the indictment
as to him. As noted, however, the fine, costs, assessments, and forfeitures paid
by Mr. Carlisi need not be refunded. The judgments as to Zizzo, Marcello,
Gervasio, Chiaramonti, and O'Dell are
AFFIRMED.