Posts Tagged ‘mail fraud’

The En banc Court reversed the panel decision that overturned a fraud conviction for the failure to give the defense requested jury instruction.

Monday, April 27th, 2009

U.S. v. SVETE, 556 F.3d 1157 (11th Cir. 2009)

The panel reversed the conviction because the pattern jury instructions failed to instruct concerning whether it was reasonable for prudent investors to rely on defendants’ statements. The panel held that the inaccuracy in the jury instruction impaired the defendants’ ability to argue that, in light of the available documentation, it was unreasonable for any prudent investor to have relied on the defendants’ contrary statements, or not to seek independent advice. Svete, 521 F.3d 1302. The en banc Court reversed the panel, finding that the mail fraud statute does not require proof that a scheme to defraud would deceive persons of ordinary intelligence. A jury must only find that the scheme would have deceived a prudent and ordinary investor, and not simply one who may be gullible.

The Eleventh Circuit reversed two bribery related convictions of the former governor of Alabama.

Monday, April 27th, 2009

U.S. v. SIEGELMAN, 2009 WL 564659 (March 6, 2009)

The Court found that he should not have been convicted of honest services mail fraud based on Richard Scrushy’s self dealing once Scrushy became a member of the Board of Health Review. Siegelman had a lack of involvement in Scrushy’s self dealing and there was no agreement between the two at this point.

Denial of defense jury instruction upheld.

Siegelman wanted a jury instruction for the bribery charge stating that a quid pro quo agreement must be express. The Court noted that the case law merely requires an “explicit” agreement which can be achieved through winks and nods, if not express words. Furthermore, an agreement can be implied from words and actions

Denial of statute of limitations challenge upheld.

The Court rejected Siegelman’s statute of limitations challenge, noting that he failed to raise it until the filing of the motion for judgment of acquittal under Fed. R. Crim. P. 29(c), post verdict. If a defendant fails to raise the statute of limitations defense at trial, the defense is waived.

Sentencing upward departure upheld.

The Court affirmed an upward sentencing departure based on the fact that the Governor’s conduct had seriously undermined public confidence in the executive branch of the Alabama government.