Government Drops Prosecution of Miami Attorney Ben Kuehne for Receipt of Legal Fees from Drug Kingpin

 

Last Wednesday, the Government, through Deputy Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Blanco, filed a brief Motion to Dismiss Third Superseding Indictment with Prejudice seeking to dismiss its indictment against Miami, Florida, attorney Benedict P. Kuehne, and also Colombian attorney Oscar Saldarriaga Ochoa, in the criminal action of U.S. v. Velez, 1:05-cr-20770-MGC, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The Government’s motion stated that it was based upon the “totality of the circumstances,” including the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals’ affirmance of the District Court’s dismissal of the Government’s charge of conspiracy to launder money against Mr. Kuehne. The Government stated that it believe that dismissal was in the interest of justice. On the same day, U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke entered an order dismissing the Third Superseding Indictment.

The dismissal marked the end of a long ordeal for Kuehne, who was indicted over two years ago for alleged money laundering conspiracy, money laundering concealment conspiracy, concealment money laundering and wire fraud conspiracy. According to the Government’s indictment, Fabio Ochoa Vasquez was one of the leaders of the Medellin Cartel, one of the largest cocaine trafficking and money laundering organizations in the world. In 2001, Ochoa was extradited from Colombia to the U.S. to face charges of conspiring to smuggle approximately 30 tons of powder cocaine into the U.S. per month between 1997 and 1999. Ochoa hired distinguished attorney Roy Black, of the Miami law firm of Black, Srebnick, Kornspan & Stumpf, P.A., and other attorneys to represent him, and the defense in turn retained Mr. Kuehne, of the Law Offices of Benedict P. Kuehne, P.A., to investigate the funds which Ochoa would use to pay his legal team. Kuehne drafted various opinion letters for the offense. The Government alleged that Kuehne was paid for his investigation and opinions by various wire transfers with monies which were the proceeds of specified unlawful activity—the distribution and sale of illegal drugs, including monies from the Colombian “Black Market Peso Exchange” and drug proceeds supplied by undercover U.S. agents.

Kuehne, through his attorney, Jane Moscowitz of Moscowitz & Moscowitz, P.A., filed a motion to dismiss the indictment in July, which may be viewed here, relying on the fact that one of the federal money laundering statutes, 18 U.S.C. § 1957, contains an express exemption for “any transaction necessary to preserve a person’s right to representation as guaranteed by the sixth amendment to the Constitution.” 18 U.S.C. § 1957(f)(1).The motion began with a quote from Banking Crimes: Fraud Money Laundering and Embezzlement, by John K. Villa: "There is an inestimable difference... between expecting a defendant to be able to find an attorney willing to risk his fee, and expecting him to find an attorney willing to risk his personal liberty." Kuehne argued that Congress enacted the exemption in § 1957(f)(1) out of a concern that the threat of prosecution of criminal defense attorneys for accepting fees would have a “chilling effect” on attorneys’ willingness to accept clients, and therefore impose an unacceptable burden on the exercise of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The defense argued that the monies paid fell squarely within § 1957(f)(1)’s exemption and that Count One of the indictment should be dismissed. The District Court agreed and dismissed Count One, and the Eleventh Circuit affirmed in United States v. Velez, No. 09-10199, 2009 WL 3416116 (11th Cir., October 26, 2009).

As reported by the Miami Herald, Kuehne addressed reporters on the steps of the courthouse, stating that he always believed “things would turn out well in the end.” Prior to the allegations against him, he had been a prominent member of the legal community, serving on the Florida Bar board of governors, as a past president of the Dade County Bar Association and as a member of Vice President Al Gore’s legal team in the 2000 Florida presidential election dispute. Kuehne expressed his appreciation to the Department of Justice for the dismissal of the matter. Cynthia Hujar Orr, President of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, which filed amicus briefs in Kuehne’s case, called the Government’s prosecution of Kuehne “disgraceful.”

 

Columbus, GA, Attorney Acquitted; Middle District of Georgia Instruction on Money Laundering of Fees Paid for Legal Representation

Mark Shelnutt, a distinguished attorney and member of the Columbus, Georgia, community, was found not guilty by a jury in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia, the Honorable Clay D. Land, United States District Judge, presiding, on 36 counts brought by the government, including conspiracy, aiding and abetting a conspiracy to distribute cocaine, concealment money laundering, false statements and attempted bribery. Mr. Shelnutt was represented in the trial by attorneys Thomas Withers and Craig Gillen and the firm of Gillen Withers & Lake LLC. The Government was represented by attorneys Charles Bourne, David Stewart and Joe Newman of the United States Attorneys Office for the Southern District of Georgia.

The 6 day trial saw testimony by convicted drug dealers, federal agents and attorneys, as well as numerous supporters of Mr. Shelnutt, including several ministers with the United Methodist Church, which included the late Reverend Joseph Roberson, head of the South Columbus United Methodist Church and Cabinet member of the South Georgia United Methodist Conference, who died in an auto collision near Statesboro, Georgia, on Saturday. This blog has been on a hiatus for the trial, and we would like to thank all those who supported Mr. Shelnutt throughout the trial, as well as to send our condolences to Reverend Roberson's family and congregation.

The allegations arose from Mr. Shelnutt's representation of Torrance Hill, a convicted drug trafficker. The central allegation was that Mr. Shelnutt laundered money which Hill paid him as legal fees.

Mr. Shelnutt was charged under the concealment money laundering provision, 18 U.S.C. s 1956(a)(1)(B). The companion federal money laundering statute, 18 U.S.C. s 1957, contains an express exemption for "transaction necessary to preserve a person’s right to representation as guaranteed by the sixth amendment to the Constitution…" 18 U.S.C. s 1957(f)(1). However, no such exemption for legal fees exists in s 1956. Two weeks before Mr. Shelnutt's trial began, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion in United States v. Velez, No. 09-10199, 2009 WL 3416116 (11th Cir., October 26, 2009), in which it reaffirmed s 1957(f)(1)'s exemption of payment of fees for legal representation from transactions which can constitute money laundering.

The parties and the Court agreed that mere payment of attorney's fees, even from drug proceeds, was lawful. Mr. Withers and Mr. Gillen argued to the Court that if legal fees were lawful in an attorney's hands, the fees could not be "magically transformed" into unlawful fees no matter what the attorney might do with them afterwards. After considering these issues, Judge Land crafted an instruction to the jury on s 1956(a)(1)(b), which read as follows:

 

             I am first going to explain the law to you regarding the substantive offense of money laundering. I will then explain to you the separate charge of conspiracy to commit money laundering. I will then explain the other offenses alleged in the Indictment.

             Counts Five through Thirty-Five of the Indictment allege that Defendant engaged in money laundering. Title 18, United States Code, Section 1956(a)(1)(B), makes it a Federal crime or offense for anyone to knowingly engage in certain kinds of financial transactions commonly known as money laundering. The Government alleges that the Defendant committed this crime on thirty-one separate occasions. You must consider each separate alleged count and determine whether the Government proved beyond a reasonable doubt the essential elements for each separate count.

             The Defendant can be found guilty of the offense of money laundering only if all of the following facts are proved beyond a reasonable doubt:

First: That the Defendant knowingly conducted, or attempted to conduct, a “financial transaction;”

Second: That the Defendant knew that the funds or property involved in the financial transaction represented the proceeds of some form of unlawful activity;

Third:    That the funds or property involved in the financial transaction did in fact represent the proceeds of “specified unlawful activity” - - in this case the proceeds of the distribution of controlled substances, also known as illegal drugs; and

Fourth:            That the Defendant engaged in the financial transaction knowing that the transaction was designed in whole or in part to conceal or disguise the nature, location, source, ownership or the control of the proceeds of the distribution of a controlled substance.

             The term “conducts” means initiating, concluding, or participating in initiating or concluding a transaction. “Knowingly conducted” means that conduct was done voluntarily and intentionally and not because of accident or mistake.

             The term “transaction” means a purchase, sale, loan, pledge, gift, transfer, delivery or other disposition of funds or property; and, with respect to a financial institution, includes a deposit, withdrawal, transfer between accoiints, exchange of currency, loan, extension of credit, purchase or sale of any stock, bond, certificate of deposit, or other monetary instrument, or use of a safe deposit box.

             The term “financial transaction” means a transaction which in any way or degree affects interstate or foreign commerce involving one or more “monetary instruments” which includes coin or currency of any country, travelers or personal checks, bank checks or money orders, or investment securities or negotiable instruments in such form that title thereto passes upon delivery. The term “financial transaction” also means a transaction involving the use of a “financial institution” which is engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce in anyway or degree. The term “financial institution” includes a bank.

             The term “interstate or foreign commerce” includes any commercial activity that involves transportation or communication between places in two or more states or between some place in the United States and some place outside the United States.

             The term “proceeds of some form of unlawful activity” means profits of some form of unlawful activity and not simply gross receipts.

             The term “knowing that the funds or property involved in the financial transaction represented the proceeds of some form of unlawful activity” means that the Defendant knew that such funds or property involved in the transaction represented proceeds from some form, though not necessarily which form, of activity that constitutes a felony offense under state or Federal or foreign law.

             The term “specified unlawful activity means distribution of a controlled substance. “Controlled substances” means illegal drugs.

             In this case, the Government alleges that the Defendant committed the crime of money laundering for each of the separate amounts listed in Counts Five through Thirty-Five of the Indictment by doing the following:

1)       Knowingly receiving the money as alleged from Torrance Hill;

2)       That the money Defendant received from Torrance Hill which he is accused of laundering actually came from illegal drug proceeds;

3)       That Defendant knew that the money he received from Torrance Hill came from illegal drug proceeds; and

4)       That the Defendant received the money and deposited it for the purpose of concealing or disguising the nature, location, source, ownership, or control of the proceeds from the distribution of illegal drugs.

In order for you to find the Defendant guilty as to these money laundering counts, you must find beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of all of these elements.

             I instruct you that it is not illegal for an attorney who represents a defendant accused of a crime to accept payment of his attorney fees in cash. It is also not illegal for an attorney to receive attorney’s fees from someone accused of a crime who pays those attorney’s fees from money that the person got from illegal activities. In other words, if you found here that Torrance Hill paid the Defendant attorney’s fees and that the source of those fees was Hill’s illegal drug activities, then the Defendant’s receipt of those attorney’s fees, without proof of concealment as described previously, is not money laundering or a federal crime.

              Just as it is not a federal crime for a Defendant to receive an attorney’s fee from illegal drug activities, it is not a federal crime to conceal a legitimate attorney’s fee, even if the fee comes from illegal proceeds. To be money laundering, the concealment must be concealment of illegal proceeds other than those that are paid for legitimate attorney’s fees.

The Shelnutt prosecution raised serious issues and concerns for criminal defense attorneys who represent clients charged with drug offenses, or in other contexts, where there is a high likelihood that any legal fees paid to counsel may be derived from unlawful activity. The defense argued that the prosecution of Mr. Shelnutt for money laundering could set a frightening precedent whereby the government could choose to prosecute any criminal defense attorney or money laundering for accepting payment for legal fees which was also proceeds of unlawful activity. The Court acknowledged these concerns and addressed them in the instruction it crafted for the jury. Fortunately, there have to date been very few prosecutions of attorneys under s 1956 for receiving attorney's fees, however the Shelnutt prosecution and the Court's instruction illustrate the need for either an amendment to s 1956 to contain an exemption for payment of legal fees similar to s 1957, or for the courts to make clear, as the Court's instruction did in this case, that (1) it is not illegal for an attorney to receive attorney's fees from money a person got from illegal activity and (2) it is not illegal to conceal monies received as legitimate attorney's fees.

Receiver in Stanford Case to Defend $27 Million in Legal Fees

The sums which investors were allegedly defrauded of in the matter of Sir Robert Allen Stanford aren't the only jaw-dropping amounts involved in the case. As reported by the Associated Press, a hearing is being held today in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas concerning the $27 million in legal fees claimed by the receiver appointed by the Court to manage Stanford's companies. The receiver, attorney Ralph Janvey of Krage & Janvey, L.L.L.P. in Dallas, Texas, is claiming the legal fees for hundreds of attorneys and consultants his firm had to hire in an effort to trace the alleged billions of dollars Stanford and his network of companies allegedly defrauded investors of. Mr. Janvey, a former Assistant Director of Securities for the United States Comptoller of the Currency, has served as a court-appointed equity receiver for the Securities and Exchange Commission on previous occasions.

 

 

Sir Robert Allen Stanford Changes Counsel; Government Opposes Counsels' Move to Determine Payment of Legal Fees

Financier Sir Robert Allen Stanford continues to seek access to funds to pay for his defense to charges of defrauding investors of hundreds of millions of dollars. On July 31, Mr. Dick DeGuerin of DeGuerin & Dickson filed a Motion to Withdraw as Attorney of Record for Stanford. The Motion stated that Stanford had received a press release and a facsimile informing Mr. DeGuerin that Stanford was replacing him with Mr. Robert Luskin and other attorneys with the firm of Patton Boggs LLP.

On August 4, Stanford filed an Expedited Motion to Permit New Attorneys to Appear for Limited Purpose, seeking to allow the firms Patton Boggs and Sydow & McDonald LLP to appear in the case for the limited purpose of resolving Stanford's access to monies to pay his legal fees and expenses. The memorandum in support of the Motion, filed by Michael D. Sydow of Sydow & McDonald, relates that the Securities and Exchange Commission has seized and frozen Stanford's assets and those of his companies and placed the assets and Stanford's records under the control of a Receiver. The memorandum also relates that, although Stanford is the beneficiary of directors & officers liability provisions of insurance policies through his companies, the insurers have denied coverage because the Receiver has claimed that all insurance proceeds belong to the Receivership Estate. The attorneys state that, if they are successful in receiving sufficient assurances that their legal fees will be paid, they will enter full appearances on Stanford's behalf.

The Government has filed a Response to the Motion. It maintains that allowing such a conditional appearance would create a risk of indefinite delay in the proceedings. It also points out that Patton Boggs already represents Stanford in the SEC proceeding, and that it is capable of litigating Stanford's access to funds in that proceeding. The Government requests that the attorneys' request to make a conditional limited appearance be denied.

Stanford's dilemma is a familiar one in white collar criminal cases. A defendant's assets are frozen, depriving him or her of the means to pay for private counsel to defend against complex criminal charges. The defendant is then given appointed counsel who, in most cases, provide a skilled and competent defense, but in others merely increase the Government's chances of obtaining a plea or conviction.  

Largest Legal Fees in U.S. History, $688 Million, in Wake of Enron Scandal

The attorneys who have assisted shareholders and investors in recovering for their losses in the wake of the prosecution and demise of Enron will receive a handsome reward for their labors-$688 million in legal fees, the largest amount ever earned in a case in U.S. history. The settlement is part of a $40 billion lawsuit by investors alleging that Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup participated in the accounting fraud which led to Enron's collapse.

Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins had the fee approved yesterday. The court stated that the fee was reasonable and was earned by "an extraordinary group of attorneys."

Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins and others helped investors recoup $7.2 billion, mostly from Enron's former banks. Approximately 1.5 million individuals and institutions will be eligible to share in the distribution under the settlement plan. The plan will pay about $6.79 per share of common stock and $168.50 per share of preferred stock to investors or shareholders who purchased Enron-related securities between 1997 and 2001.

Several financial institutions, including Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse First Boston and Barclays Bank, have not yet entered a settlement and remain defendants in the case.