United States v. Benjamin Suarez , 617 F. App'x 537 ( 2015 )


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  •                           NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    File Name: 15a0521n.06
    Nos. 14-4192/4249                             FILED
    Jul 22, 2015
    DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                               )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                           )
    ON APPEAL FROM THE
    )
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT
    v.                                                      )
    COURT     FOR     THE
    )
    NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    BENJAMIN SUAREZ,                                        )
    OHIO
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                          )
    )
    OPINION
    BEFORE: BOGGS, SUHRHEINRICH, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Benjamin Suarez (Suarez) appeals his conviction
    of attempted witness tampering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1), asserting that the jury
    instructions eliminated the required mens rea and rendered the charge duplicitous by failing to
    require the jury to specify which acts he committed, thus leaving him vulnerable to reprosecution
    in violation of the protection against double jeopardy. We AFFIRM.
    I.      The Allegations and Proceedings
    The Government contends that in 2011 Suarez agreed to raise $100,000 each for
    Republican congressional candidate Jim Renacci’s and Republican senatorial candidate Josh
    Mandel’s 2012 campaigns.          Suarez and Michael Giorgio (Giorgio), the CFO of Suarez’s
    corporation, Suarez Corporation Industries (SCI), then recruited SCI employees and their
    spouses to make contributions to the candidates’ campaigns in their own names, with the
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    United States v. Suarez
    promise that SCI would fully reimburse them. Giorgio collected the checks and contribution
    forms from the SCI contributors and sent them to the candidates’ campaigns. In some instances,
    Giorgio completed the forms on the contributors’ behalf. Suarez and Giorgio disguised the
    reimbursements first as additional salary and then as profit sharing. In addition, the company
    “grossed up” the reimbursement amount for payroll and other taxes to ensure that contributors
    were made whole. On March 28 and May 17, 2011, Suarez asked Mandel to write letters to
    public officials advocating for positions favorable to SCI. On May 29, 2011, Suarez asked the
    same of Renacci.
    In late August of 2011, local newspapers published articles questioning the significant
    number of maximum contributions made by SCI employees to Renacci’s and Mandel’s
    campaigns. After the scheme became public, Suarez, Giorgio, and others at SCI attempted to
    disguise the reimbursements as advances on profit sharing and required the contributors to repay
    the reimbursements to SCI, including the amounts that had been “grossed up” to cover payroll
    and other taxes. The articles also prompted the FBI to begin investigating SCI, and in January of
    2012, a federal grand jury in the Northern District of Ohio began looking into the alleged
    conspiracy.
    In late July 2012, after learning that SCI’s controller, Barbara Housos (Housos), planned
    to testify before the grand jury, Suarez sent her a handwritten letter late at night by private
    courier suggesting that she could write an affidavit instead. Attached to the letter was a five-
    page account of Suarez’s “memory of what happened.” Suarez asked Housos to confirm, via
    courier, the accuracy of his account. Suarez stated that if Housos agreed, he would turn his
    statement into an affidavit for her to sign. Suarez’s account detailed SCI’s profit sharing plan
    and explained that there was no conspiracy regarding the contributions. Instead, SCI’s top
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    earners, whose income was 80% profit sharing, wanted to ensure a Republican majority in the
    United States House and Senate to put an end to the Democrats’ “socialist policies” that “crashed
    the economy.” However, Suarez’s account contained details that Housos later testified were
    false or beyond her knowledge. Suarez’s letter concluded:
    Do not tell anyone about his. Also, the new attorneys said no one should admit to
    wrongdoing even with a letter of immunity. That’s a lie. They will still prosecute
    you as a co-conspirator. Also, do not admit to anything you think might be
    wrongdoing to the attorneys. They could turn you in. Your testimony is key to
    keeping Mike G[iorgio] from getting indicted which could take down SCI. Do
    not call me on this as our lines may be tapped.
    Housos sought formal immunity, delaying her testimony until November of 2012. After
    Housos testified before the grand jury, Suarez attempted to undermine her testimony by falsely
    accusing her at SCI’s annual meeting of having confided to him in the past that she suffered from
    memory lapses. Further, in January 2013, Suarez drafted a letter and demanded that human-
    resource director Julianne Dalayanis sign and hand deliver it to all 500 SCI employees. The
    letter accused the United States Attorney of engaging in malicious prosecution and asserted that
    the prosecutors aggressively investigated SCI donors suffering from personal crises. Suarez used
    Housos as an example, detailing her struggle with colon cancer and the suicide of her son. Prior
    to distribution of the letter, Housos “begged” Suarez not to include her personal information
    because although her name was not mentioned, she would be easily identified by her coworkers.
    On September 24, 2013, the grand jury returned the original indictment charging Giorgio,
    Suarez, and SCI with campaign-finance violations and other related charges. On October 22,
    2013, the grand jury returned a superseding indictment charging Suarez with: conspiracy to
    violate campaign-finance laws in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count 1); violation of campaign-
    finance laws by contributing in the name of another (Count 2); violation of campaign-finance
    laws by making corporate contributions (Count 3); causing false statements (Counts 4–6);
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    conspiracy to obstruct justice (Count 7); witness tampering (Count 8); and obstruction of justice
    (Counts 9–10). SCI was charged with all counts except Count 8, and Giorgio was charged with
    all counts except Counts 8 and 10. Count 8 alleged that Suarez
    did knowingly attempt to use intimidation, threaten, and corruptly persuade
    another person and engage in misleading conduct toward another person who
    worked at SCI, whose initials are B.H., by a) writing and having delivered to B.H.
    at B.H.’s home a one-page note in Suarez’s handwriting with an attached five-
    page typewritten document relating to and providing direction regarding B.H.’s
    upcoming testimony before a federal grand jury, telling her not to communicate
    with her own lawyer, and containing an inaccurate version of events that Suarez
    wished her to present; b) writing and circulating an inaccurate letter to the
    employees of SCI opining that B.H.’s mental abilities had been compromised,
    referencing medical issues experienced by B.H., alleging that B.H. had suffered a
    tragic loss as a result of the investigation; and c) making statements opining that
    B.H.’s mental abilities had been compromised, all with the intent to influence,
    delay, and prevent the testimony of B.H. in an official proceeding . . . .
    Giorgio pleaded guilty to counts 1–7 and Suarez and SCI proceeded to trial. At the close
    of the Government’s case, the district court granted motions for acquittal as to Suarez on Counts
    9 and 10 (the obstruction counts) and SCI on Count 9.
    During deliberations, the jury asked the district court regarding the acts charged in Count
    8: “In order to find as it pertains to [Count 8], does the burden have to be met on [a], [b], and [c],
    or any one [of the three acts alleged in the superseding indictment]?”1 The court and the parties
    discussed a response over the phone, without a court reporter present, and then later agreed to an
    account of the discussion. Suarez initially objected, but eventually agreed that the answer should
    be “any one act.” However, Suarez argued that the court should add “unanimously beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” The court provided the jury with the following answer: “any one beyond a
    reasonable doubt.”     Suarez later filed a written motion requesting that the jury be further
    instructed that: “You must be unanimous as to which one of the alleged acts identified in (a),
    1
    See the text of Count 8, quoted above.
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    (b), and (c) satisfies this element beyond a reasonable doubt. If you are not unanimous on this
    point, you must acquit Mr. Suarez on Count 8.” The government filed a motion in opposition the
    next day, but the jury returned its verdict shortly thereafter without further instruction.
    The jury found Suarez and SCI not guilty on counts 1–7; SCI not guilty on Count 10; and
    Suarez guilty only on Count 8 (witness tampering). After the verdict was read, the court polled
    each juror. Suarez then requested a second poll “as to which of the three acts [charged in Count
    8] . . . that they found on. If they, in fact, they found unanimity as to one of those three, we
    think we need to preserve that for appeal.” The Government objected, and after discussion
    Suarez eventually expressed agreement with the district court’s language: “as to defendant
    Benjamin Suarez and as to Count 8, did you unanimously agree on at least one of the three acts?”
    Each juror answered in the affirmative.
    Suarez filed a motion for acquittal or a new trial on Count 8, arguing that the verdict was
    duplicitous and therefore violated double jeopardy, that the government’s burden was reduced
    when the jury was permitted to find him guilty based on only one charged act rather than all
    three, and that the attempt instruction omitted the necessary element of intent. Finding that the
    claims were not properly raised during the course of the litigation, the district court reviewed
    them for plain error and denied the motion. The district court sentenced Suarez to 15 months’
    imprisonment and denied his motion for reconsideration.
    II.      Count 8 Jury Instructions
    Suarez first argues that the jury instructions on attempted witness tampering require
    reversal because they eliminated the intent element of the offense. The Government responds
    that the jury instructions provide an accurate statement of the applicable law, and that because
    Suarez failed to preserve his objection to the instructions, plain-error review applies. The district
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    court reviewed Suarez’s post-trial objection to the instructions for plain error, holding that
    Suarez did not properly object during trial. Suarez disagrees, asserting he is entitled to de novo
    review because he timely informed the district court in a joint trial brief of his specific objection
    to the instruction and of the grounds of the objection. Rather than engage in a lengthy discussion
    of the preservation issue, we will assume arguendo that Suarez preserved his objection and
    review his claim of instructional error accordingly.2
    The Supreme Court has emphasized that jury instructions are to be considered as a whole.
    “Our decisions repeatedly have cautioned that instructions must be evaluated not in isolation but
    in the context of the entire charge.” Jones v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 373
    , 391 (1999).
    The district court instructed the jury:
    Defendant Benjamin Suarez is charged in Count 8 with knowingly intimidating or
    attempting to intimidate a witness, in violation of Title 18, United States Code,
    Section 1512(b)(1).
    Section 1512(b)(1) . . . provides in part that: “Whoever knowingly uses
    intimidation, threatens, or corruptly persuades another person, or attempts to do
    so, or engages in misleading conduct toward another person, with intent to
    influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of any person in an official proceeding”
    shall be guilty of an offense against the United States.
    For you to find the defendant Benjamin Suarez guilty of the crime of witness
    tampering charged in Count 8 of the superseding indictment, the government must
    prove each of the following two elements beyond a reasonable doubt.
    First, that on or about the date charged, Benjamin Suarez knowingly intimidated,
    threatened, corruptly persuaded, or engaged in misleading conduct toward the
    person identified in the superseding indictment as a witness, or attempted to do
    so.
    And, second, that Benjamin Suarez did so intending to influence, delay, or
    prevent the testimony of that person in an official proceeding.
    2
    Because we treat this claim of error as preserved for purposes of our review, we do not
    address Suarez’s claim of error regarding the district court’s striking the attorney declarations
    regarding in-chambers conferences.
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    An act is done knowingly if it is done voluntarily and purposely, and not
    by accident or mistake.
    The term “Intimidation” as used in these instructions means the use of any
    words or any actions that would harass, frighten or threaten a reasonable, ordinary
    person to do something that person would not otherwise do, or not to do
    something that the person otherwise would do.
    To corruptly persuade means to act knowingly with a wrongful, immoral
    or evil purpose to convince or induce another person to engage in certain conduct.
    As I indicated, the first element may be satisfied if Benjamin Suarez
    actually used intimidation, threats, corrupt persuasion, or engaged in misleading
    conduct, or if he attempted to do so. A defendant may be found to have attempted
    to intimidate, threaten, corruptly persuade, or engage in misleading conduct if his
    conduct constituted a substantial step towards committing the crime. The act
    which constitutes a substantial step must corroborate the defendant's criminal
    purpose.
    The government is not required to prove that an official proceeding was
    ongoing, or even about to be instituted, at the time of the offense. The law
    requires only that the proceeding was foreseen by the defendant such that the
    defendant knew that his actions were likely to affect the proceeding.
    If you are convinced that the government has proved all of these elements, say so
    by returning a guilty verdict on this charge. If you have a reasonable doubt about
    any one of these elements, then you must find the defendant not guilty of this
    charge.
    The phrase “With intent to influence, delay, or prevent testimony” means to act
    for the purpose of causing any person to change her testimony or information in
    any way or to withhold testimony or information, permanently or only for a
    period of time.
    Suarez argues that the instruction is improper because it completely eliminates the intent
    element of the attempt offense. Specifically, he argues, the instruction does not make clear that
    intent to commit witness tampering is a requisite element of the crime. We disagree.
    Attempted witness tampering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1) has two elements:
    the defendant 1) “knowingly uses intimidation, threatens, or corruptly persuades another person,
    or attempts to do so, or engages in misleading conduct toward another person,” and 2) does so
    “with intent to influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of any person in an official
    proceeding.” Suarez argues that the instruction given by the court, which read: “A defendant
    may be found to have attempted to intimidate, threaten, corruptly persuade, or engage in
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    misleading conduct if his conduct constituted a substantial step towards committing the crime,”
    allowed the jury to return a guilty verdict based solely on his conduct without regard to his
    intent.
    There is no dispute that intent is an essential element of attempt. “The two requisite
    elements of an attempt are (1) an intent to engage in criminal conduct and (2) the performance of
    one or more overt acts which constitute a substantial step towards the commission of the
    substantive offense.” United States v. Williams, 
    704 F.2d 315
    , 321 (6th Cir. 1983). However,
    the instruction read as a whole does contain an intent requirement. Tracking the language of
    Section 1512(b), the district court required the jury to find that Suarez “knowingly intimidated,
    threatened, corruptly persuaded, or engaged in misleading conduct toward witness Barbara
    Housos, or attempted to do so.” The court instructed the jury that “an act is done knowingly if it
    is done voluntarily and purposely, and not by accident or mistake.” The court further instructed
    regarding the intent element that the jury had to find “that Benjamin Suarez did so intending to
    influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of that person in an official proceeding.” The court
    then went on to address the concept of attempt and connect it with the instructions already given
    regarding the elements of the offense:
    As I indicated, the first element may be satisfied if Benjamin Suarez actually used
    intimidation, threats, corrupt persuasion, or engaged in misleading conduct, or if
    he attempted to do so. A defendant may be found to have attempted to intimidate,
    threaten, corruptly persuade, or engage in misleading conduct if his conduct
    constituted a substantial step towards committing the crime. The act which
    constitutes a substantial step must corroborate the defendant’s criminal purpose.
    Suarez argues that “Knowledge that a crime will occur and intent to commit a crime are
    different levels of culpability,” and that the instruction does not adequately convey the specific
    intent required.     “[A]ttempt crimes require proof of a specific intent to complete the acts
    constituting the substantive offense. The intent to finish the crime, coupled with affirmative acts
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    toward that end, is a sine qua non of a punishable attempt.” United States v. Calloway, 
    116 F.3d 1129
    , 1135–36 (6th Cir. 1997). This is true. However, taken in their entirety, the instructions
    told the jury both that Suarez had to have acted knowingly and that he had to have had the intent
    to affect the testimony, and nothing in the attempt portion of the instruction negated these
    requirements.
    Suarez also takes issue with the instruction that “the substantial step must corroborate the
    defendant’s criminal purpose” portion of the instruction: “the substantial step analysis entails an
    objective inquiry that assumes that the requisite intent exists.” This argument too is unsupported
    by the instructions as a whole. The attempt portion of the instructions first describes what kind
    of act must be found in order to convict for attempted witness tampering: one that is a substantial
    step toward committing the crime. It then requires that the substantial step corroborate the
    defendant’s criminal purpose. However, the jury was already instructed that the purpose had to
    have been to influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of Housos. Read as a whole, the
    instructions make clear that in addition to finding that Suarez took a substantial step toward
    committing the offense, the jury also had to find that he “did so intending to influence, delay, or
    prevent the testimony of that person in an official proceeding.” Further, after the attempt portion
    of the instruction, the district court explained:
    The phrase “With intent to influence, delay, or prevent testimony” means to act
    for the purpose of causing any person to change her testimony or information in
    any way or to withhold testimony or information, permanently or only for a
    period of time.
    In sum, viewing the instructions as a whole, we find no error.
    III.    Count 8 Verdict
    Suarez next argues that the district court rendered Count 8 duplicitous when it instructed
    the jury that it need only find that he committed one of the three acts charged in the indictment to
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    return a guilty verdict. He maintains that this error could have been fixed had the district court
    allowed him to poll the jurors regarding which act or acts each juror found he committed. Suarez
    further contends that the guilty verdict violates his protections against double jeopardy by
    exposing him to a potential second prosecution for one or more of the same acts.
    The parties again dispute the applicable standard of review. The district court applied
    plain-error review: “Here, defendants filed numerous pretrial motions, which included a motion
    directed at duplicity. In that motion, defendant expressly identified double jeopardy concerns
    associated with other counts in the indictment. Nowhere in that motion does defendant challenge
    that Count Eight is duplicitous or that defendant’s double jeopardy rights are implicated.”
    Moreover, the court noted that defendants made no objection to the jury instructions on this
    ground during trial.      “Immediately after the jury charge and before the jury retired for
    deliberations, the Court specifically inquired at sidebar as to whether any party objected to the
    instructions. Twice counsel for defendant indicated that there were ‘no objections’ to the jury
    instructions.” The district court also noted that Suarez’s counsel ultimately agreed both to the
    answer given to the jury’s question regarding the acts in the indictment and to the language of
    the jury poll. Therefore, we review this claim for plain error.
    Suarez maintains that the because the jury returned a general verdict of guilty on Count 8,
    without specifying on which of the alleged acts the conviction was based, he is subject to being
    prosecuted again for any of the acts and the verdict therefore violates the protection against
    double jeopardy.3 The Government responds that it may constitutionally charge multiple means
    3
    Suarez does not claim on appeal that the duplicitous charge deprived him of a
    unanimous verdict, although this is generally the “primary concern” regarding duplicity. United
    States v. Kakos, 
    483 F.3d 441
    , 443 (6th Cir. 2007).
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    of commission of a single offense in one count and that Suarez’s challenge regarding double
    jeopardy is speculative and thus not ripe for review.
    “Separate offenses must be charged in separate counts of an indictment.” Fed. R. Crim. P.
    8(a). “An indictment is duplicitous if it sets forth separate and distinct crimes in one count.”
    United States v. Davis, 
    306 F.3d 398
    , 415 (6th Cir. 2002). This court has stated that “[t]he
    overall vice of duplicity is that the jury cannot in a general verdict render its finding on each
    offense, making it difficult to determine whether a conviction rests on only one of the offenses or
    on both.” United States. v. Washington, 
    127 F.3d 510
    , 513 (6th Cir. 1997). “The test announced
    most often in the cases is that offenses are separate if each requires proof of an additional fact
    that the other does not.” 
    Davis, 306 F.3d at 416
    .
    However, Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 7(c)(1) provides that “[i]t may be alleged
    in a single count that the means by which the defendant committed the offense are unknown or
    that the defendant committed it by one or more specified means.” The Supreme Court explained:
    We have never suggested that in returning general verdicts in such cases the
    jurors should be required to agree upon a single means of commission, any more
    than the indictments were required to specify one alone. In these cases, as in
    litigation generally, different jurors may be persuaded by different pieces of
    evidence, even when they agree upon the bottom line. Plainly there is no general
    requirement that the jury reach agreement on the preliminary factual issues which
    underlie the verdict.
    Schad v. Arizona, 
    501 U.S. 624
    , 631–32 (1991). Thus,
    the indictment on such a statute may allege, in a single count, that the defendant
    did as many of the forbidden things as the pleader chooses, employing the
    conjunction and where the statute has ‘or,’ and it will not be double, and it will be
    established at the trial by proof of any one of them.
    Griffin v. United States, 
    502 U.S. 46
    , 51 (1991) (quoting 1 J. Bishop, New Criminal Procedure
    § 436, pp. 355–356 (2d ed. 1913)) (collecting cases). Here, rather than describe three separate
    crimes, Count 8 alleged three means of committing the same offense, which this court permits.
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    The determination of whether a group of acts represents a single, continuing
    scheme or a set of separate and distinct offenses is a difficult one that must be left
    at least initially to the discretion of the prosecution. This discretion, however, is
    not without limits. Ultimately, the indictment must be measured in terms of
    whether it exposes the defendant to any of the inherent dangers of a duplicitous
    indictment. Those dangers include the possibility that the defendant may not be
    properly notified of the charges against him, that he may be subjected to double
    jeopardy, that he may be prejudiced by evidentiary rulings during the trial, and
    that he may be convicted by a less than unanimous verdict. If any of these
    dangers are present, the acts of the defendant should be separated into different
    counts even though they may represent a single, continuing scheme.
    United States v. Alsobrook, 
    620 F.2d 139
    , 142 (6th Cir. 1980) (internal citations omitted).
    Alsobrook found that an indictment charging defendant with one count of violating the Travel
    Act based on six separate trips was not duplicitous.
    Here, Count 8 similarly describes an ongoing attempt to tamper with Housos’s testimony,
    not individual crimes that must be separately charged. Thus, the indictment is not duplicitous.
    Further, the district court required unanimity in its instruction, and when polled, the jurors
    affirmed that they unanimously found at least one of the acts charged in the indictment.
    Lastly, as pertinent here, the Fifth Amendment guarantee against double jeopardy “is a
    guarantee against being twice put to trial for the same offense.” Abney v. United States, 
    431 U.S. 651
    , 661 (1977). The Government argues that Suarez’s claim of double jeopardy is, at this point,
    only hypothetical and thus not ripe for review. “Here, jeopardy has only attached once. There is
    no later indictment, much less an empaneled and sworn jury, on any second prosecution, let
    alone one for the same offense. The only basis for Suarez’s Double Jeopardy claim is pure
    speculation about what might occur in the future.” We agree. There has been no second
    indictment, nor any indication that further charges are contemplated, and it is difficult to
    understand why Suarez speculates that he will again be charged with an offense for which he was
    already tried. Thus, we find no error regarding the Count 8 verdict, plain or otherwise.
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    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.
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