UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. $ 448,342.85, et al. (J.M. DISTRIBUTORS and WESTMONT CORPORATION, Claimants), Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 91-2912, 91-2913, 91-3159, and 91-3160
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT
969 F.2d 474
July 7, 1992, Argued
July 29, 1992, Decided
Before
CUDAHY, COFFEY, and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
Competition
among sellers, coupled with bargain-hunting by buyers, leads to prices that
protect ignorant, lazy, or busy customers. Comparison shopping by even a fairly
small portion of potential customers drives prices to the level reflecting
full information about goods of their quality. * Because buyers know this
effect, if only hazily, sellers try to persuade them that they need not shop.
"Look what knowledgeable people pay!" is the sales pitch. All to the good, if
the claim be true; sometimes, however, the come-on is too good to be true.
* See Alan Schwartz & Louis L.
Wilde, Intervening in Markets on the Basis of Imperfect Information: A Legal and
Economic Analysis, 127 U. Pa. L. Rev. 630 (1979); Schwartz & Wilde, Information,
Monopolistic Competition, and Public Policy, 72 Am. Econ. Rev. 18 (Pap. & Proc.
1982); Schwartz & Wilde, Product Quality and Imperfect Information, 52 Rev.
Econ. Stud. 251 (1985); David M. Grether, Schwartz & Wilde, The Irrelevance of
Information Overload: An Analysis of Search and Disclosure, 59 S. Cal. L. Rev.
277 (1986). Cf. George J. Stigler, The Economics of Information, 69 J. Pol.
Econ. 213 (1961), reprinted in The Essence of Stigler 46 (Kurt R. Leube & Thomas
Gale Moore eds. 1986).
Brothers Gary, Thomas, Robert, and Ray Sophie teamed up with Thomas McGough to
exploit customers' belief that any price less than savvy people pay is a
bargain. McGough and the Sophies formed Network Sound, Inc., to make, and
Westmont Corporation and J.M. Distributors to sell, stereo speakers in the
United States, Canada, and Australia. Although Network Sound manufactured the
speakers for about $ 36 per pair, Westmont and J.M. were able to unload them for
between $ 200 and $ 500 to gullible souls, raking in some $ 24 million during
1988 and half of 1989. Network Sound packed the speakers in unmarked boxes. Then
Westmont or J.M. loaded them into unmarked trucks, which driver-salesmen took
cruising in search of marks. After pulling into a driveway or parking lot, the
drivers would feign delivery of speakers to nearby stores or taverns. To
onlookers, the drivers would explain that the warehouse had mistakenly loaded
too many of these fancy speakers into the trucks. Anyone who seemed interested
in taking the "excess" off the drivers' hands would be shown literature touting
the quality of the speakers or "power invoices" purporting to show actual sales
at high prices. Some customers must have been impressed with the glowing verbal
descriptions, others with the invoices seeming to show what commercial buyers at
ritzy establishments had paid, and still others must have concluded that
unmarked boxes in unmarked vans were stolen and hence deeply discounted. Buyers
paid cash, received trash, and had no clue where to complain.
Salesmen deposited the money in the organization's local bank accounts, where it
was pooled for transfer to other accounts, often via cashiers' checks of less
than $ 10,000. Further transfers routed the money to the three corporations at
the pinnacle, which filed few currency transaction reports despite receiving
millions in currency. Eventually the Sophies, McGough, and the three
corporations pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit mail and wire fraud and
"launder" the proceeds. The United States froze the balances in the
corporations' principal accounts--about $ 750,000 in the name of Network Sound,
$ 450,000 for J.M. Distributors, and $ 205,000 for Westmont. Invoking 18 U.S.C.
§ 981, the United States demanded forfeiture of these sums, which it depicted as
proceeds of the fraud. The district court granted summary judgment against J.M.
and Westmont, 1991 U.S. Dist. (N.D. Ill.), entering a partial final judgment
under Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). (Network Sound is a debtor in bankruptcy, and the
district judge has bucked questions concerning that firm to the bankruptcy judge
while retaining control of the account.)
Section 981(a)(1)(A) provides that "any property . . . involved in a transaction
or attempted transaction in violation of . . . section 1956 . . . of this title,
or any property traceable to such property" is forfeit, unless the claimant
satisfies the "innocent owner" defense of § 981(a)(2). Section 1956(a)(1) in
turn makes it criminal when a person, "knowing that the property involved in a
financial transaction represents the proceeds of some form of unlawful activity,
conducts or attempts to conduct such a financial transaction which in fact
involves the proceeds of specified unlawful activity--(A)(i) with the intent to
promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity; or . . . (B) knowing
that the transaction is designed in whole or in part--(i) to conceal or disguise
the nature, the location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the
proceeds of specified unlawful activity; or (ii) to avoid a transaction
reporting requirement under State or Federal law". Finally, § 1956(c)(7)(D)
defines "specified unlawful activity" to include mail and wire fraud. Counsel
for the government submits that the money it seized represents proceeds of the
fraud and that Westmont and J.M. Distributors used their accounts with both the
forbidden intent (§ 1956(a)(1)(A)(i)) and the prohibited designs (§
1956(a)(1)(B)(i) and (ii)).
Westmont and J.M. Distributors concede this much--concede, indeed, that their
guilty pleas establish it--but deny that sums seized in September 1989 can be
traced to a fraudulent scheme that they insist ended late in 1988. Although the
three corporations had no business other than the manufacture and sale of
speakers, they say that their 1989 sales were honest. The indictment to which
they pleaded guilty charged that the conspiracy lasted through August 1989, but
a judgment based on a guilty plea forecloses only those issues necessarily
determined. Appley v. West, 832 F.2d 1021, 1026 (7th Cir. 1987). The terminal
date of the conspiracy was not a necessary element of their convictions. When
pleading guilty, the Sophies and McGough said that they cleaned up their acts by
early 1989. Because the pleas do not settle the issue, the claimants contend,
there must be a trial in the forfeiture action.
Shooting for the moon, the United States insists that it matters not whether the
balances in the accounts may be traced to "specified unlawful activity". The
accounts were "involved in" the fraud during 1988, and that is that. This
approach treats the accounts as the criminals, taking the concept of deodands
one step further (an account is not even a tangible object). Bank accounts do
not commit crimes; people do. It makes no sense to confiscate whatever balance
happens to be in an account bearing a particular number, just because proceeds
of crime once passed through that account. Suppose Westmont abandoned the
speaker business at the end of 1988, sent the balance to the victims as
restitution, and used the same account (replenished from an untainted source) to
buy and sell Treasury bills. That the "account" had been "involved" in the fraud
would be irrelevant; the government confiscates the funds, not the account.
Recall that § 981 authorizes forfeiture of "any property . . . involved in a
transaction or attempted transaction in violation of . . . section 1956"
(emphasis added). An "account" is a name, a routing device like the address of
a building; the money is the "property". Once we distinguish the money from its
container, it also follows that the presence of one illegal dollar in an account
does not taint the rest--as if the dollar obtained from fraud were like a drop
of ink falling into a glass of water. To the extent United States v. Certain
Funds on Deposit in Account No. 01-0-71417, 769 F. Supp. 80, 84-85 (E.D.N.Y.
1991), and United States v. All Monies ($ 477,048.62) in Account No. 90-3617-3,
754 F. Supp. 1467, 1472-76 (D. Hawaii 1991), treat the account as the "property"
for purposes of § 981, we disapprove their holdings.
Only property used in or traceable to the "specified unlawful activity" is
forfeit. Money need not be derived from crime to be "involved" in it; perhaps a
particular sum is used as the bankroll facilitating the fraud. That is not the
United States' theory here, however; it treats these balances as proceeds. It is
easy to imagine difficult problems in associating proceeds with crime. The law
of trusts supplies an elaborate set of tracing rules, see Restatement (2d) of
Trusts § 202 (1959); Restatement of Restitution § 212 (1937), but rules designed
to adjust accounts between (apparently) honest persons are not suited to frauds
in which funds have been shuffled at least in part for the purpose of disguising
their source. Section 981(d) incorporates the provisions of the customs laws,
including the rule that a showing of probable cause shifts the burden to the
claimant. United States v. On Leong Chinese Merchants Association Building, 918
F.2d 1289, 1292 (7th Cir. 1990) (parallel provision in 18 U.S.C. § 1955(d));
United States v. Edwards, 885 F.2d 377, 389-90 (7th Cir. 1989) (21 U.S.C. §
881(a)(6)). Probable cause to believe that the proceeds of the fraud exceed the
balance of the account at the time of seizure justifies calling on the claimant
to identify sums derived from lawful activities. Cf. United States v. Banco
Cafetero Panama, 797 F.2d 1154, 1157-62 (2d Cir. 1986) (discussing appropriate
tracing presumptions when the balance exceeds the proceeds of crime).
Even if the fraud stopped at the end of 1988, the criminal proceeds vastly
exceed the sums on deposit at the time of the seizure. J.M. Distributors and
Westmont had only one line of business: selling speakers. Although eleven
affidavits filed in this case assert that by the end of 1988 the Sophies had
told their salesmen to phase out the use of "power invoices", and another three
that power invoices were not used during 1989, none of the affiants says that
the firms barred the other fraudulent sales techniques (or, for that matter,
that the claimants started making complete currency transaction reports).
Abandoning one deceitful device among a large repertory does not make the
operation lawful. Drawing all inferences in favor of the persons opposing the
motion for summary judgment does nothing to help these claimants. Details of
tracing are accordingly irrelevant; the United States is entitled to the entire
balances.
AFFIRMED