Head of Georgia Medical Equipment Provider Indicted for Medicare Fraud; Atlanta Inmate Indicted for Selling "Cooperation" Information to Defendants

Samuel Curtis, III, a Texas resident, has been charged with four counts of health care fraud and aggravated identity theft in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia for allegedly attempting to steal more than $500,000 from Medicare, according to an article in the Florida Times-Union. Curtis is alleged to have operated Perferred Prosthetics and Orthotics, a medical equipment supply company doing business in Georgia and Texas, and to have allegedly stolen information from Medicare physicians and recipients and used the information to submit false claims to Medicare. The indictment alleges that Curtis and others routinely billed Medicare for ankle, knee and back braces and other medical devices that either were never provided to patients, were not medically necessary or had not been prescribed by a doctor. Curtis' associate, Cecil Risher, of Brunswick, Georgia, was arrested earlier in the investigation.

In other Georgia news, according to 7th Space, Sandeo Dyson, a former inmate of the Atlanta City Detention Center, has found himself indicted once again in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for allegedly obtaining information about crimes being committed in Georgia and North Carolina from other inmates and then selling the information to criminal defendants in cases in the Northern District for five to ten thousand dollars apiece, earning an approximately $50,000 from the scheme. The defendants would offer the information provided by Dyson to have their sentences reduced for cooperation. Dyson allegedly instructed the defendants to lie to authorities by concealing the fact that they had no real personal knowledge of the proffered information, and had  purchased the information from Dyson. Dyson is charged with one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice and to make false statements, three counts of obstruction of justice, and two counts of false statements.

 

Wesley Snipes, Actor, "Foreign Diplomat" and "Fiduciary of God," Has Tax Convictions and Sentence Affirmed by Eleventh Circuit

On Friday, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion in the highly-publicized tax evasion case against actor Wesley Snipes, U.S. v. Snipes, No. 08-12402, which may be read here. The odd facts in the case are as follows: around 2000, Snipes became involved with a tax resistance organization, American Rights Litigators (“ARL”), operated by Snipes’ co-defendant Eddie Ray Kahn, which made various arguments on behalf of its clients against the IRS’ collection of taxes, including that domestic earnings of individuals allegedly do not qualify as “income” under 26 U.S.C. § 861 because the earnings do not come from a listed “source.”
 

From 1999 to 2004, Snipes earned more than $37 million, however he did not file income tax returns for any of these years. During this period Snipes did, however, send the IRS correspondence, altered tax forms and demands for income which he had paid in earlier years. Snipes made wildly outlandish arguments to the IRS, including that he was a non-resident alien; that earned income must come from sources wholly outside the U.S.,; that taxpayers are legally defined as persons operating “a distilled spirit Plant;” that the Tax Code is limited to the District of Columbia and insular possessions of the United States, and excludes the other 50 states; and that Snipes was “a fiduciary of God” and a “foreign diplomat” who was not required to pay taxes. In addition, Snipes’ companies ceased deduction of income and payroll taxes for employees. Snipes invited his employees to attend an “861” seminar at his home and threatened one employee who questioned the theory, Carmen Baker, that if Baker was “not going to play along with the game plan,” she should find another job.
 

Snipes, Kahn and Douglas Rosile were indicted in 2006 in the Middle District of Florida for conspiracy to defraud the United States by impeding the IRS in its collection of income taxes, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, filing a false claim for a refund, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 287; and willfully failing to file tax returns, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7203. Snipes filed several motions to transfer venue to the Southern District of New York pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3237(b) and Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 21(b), which were denied by the district court.
 

Snipes’ trial commenced in January 2008. Carmen Baker testified at trial that Snipes had allegedly ordered her not to talk to anyone or disclose any information when she received a grand jury subpoena, telling Baker that he had a confidentiality agreement with her signature, and that if she contacted the government, she would have to “pay the consequences.”


Snipes requested several specific jury instructions, including that the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects a defendant’s right to trial in the district where a crime is committed, and on good faith and good faith reliance on advice of counsel.

Defense attorney and former Deputy Independent Counsel Craig Gillen also notes regarding the case that Snipes was charged with six counts of willfully failing to file his individual tax returns for tax years 1999 through 2004, in violation of Section 7203. In May of 2002, Snipes and his lawyer had a telephone conference with an IRS agent wherein Snipes was informed that he was under investigation for tax crimes. The agent read Snipes his non-custodial rights which included the right to remain silent. Snipes replied "very interesting." At trial, Snipes requested a jury instruction based on good faith reliance on his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Snipes claimed that because the IRS agent advised him of his right to remain silent, he believed he had a 5th Amendment privilege not to file his tax returns. Snipes claimed that because he had a good faith belief in his right not to incriminate himself, he could not be guilty of willfully failing to file the returns. The trial court refused to give the requested instruction.
 

On February 1, 2008, the jury convicted Snipes on three--misdemeanor--counts of willful failure to file individual federal income tax returns for calendar years 1999, 2000, and 2001. The presentence investigation report calculated Snipes’s intended tax loss at $41,038,051 under U.S.S.G. §§ 2T1.1(a) and 2T4.1. It also recommended an enhancement for obstruction of justice pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1, for Snipes’ direction to Baker to conceal evidence from the grand jury’s investigation, and recommended an overall sentence of 36 months’ imprisonment. The district court overruled Snipes’ objection to the obstruction enhancement and, discussing the sentencing considerations in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), imposed a sentence of 36 months. Snipes appealed.
 

In its opinion, the Eleventh Circuit panel affirmed Snipes’ conviction and sentence. On appeal, the government conceded that Snipes' proposed instruction on good faith reliance on the privilege against self-incrimination was substantially correct. The Court of Appeals, however, held that there was no error because the conduct which formed the basis for Snipes' counts of conviction occurred before  the May 2002 conversation with the IRS agent, and also held that the trial court's instruction on good faith was sufficient. Although the trial court had refused to give the Snipes instruction, in closing arguments, Snipes' counsel did argue to the jury that Snipes' reliance on the IRS agent's pre-interview advice of rights constituted a good faith basis for his failure to file the tax returns. Apparently this argument resonated with the jury--on all counts for tax years subsequent to the May 2002 interview, Snipes was acquitted.

In regard to Snipes' other arguments, the Court rejected Snipes’ argument that the district court erred in denying his motion for elective transfer under Section 3237(b) as untimely, finding that Snipes failed to properly move to extend the elective transfer deadline. The Court also held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in not holding a pretrial evidentiary hearing on venue, concluding Snipes was not entitled such a hearing, but rather had a Sixth Amendment right to have the issue of venue decided by the jury. The Court also held that the district court did not err in sentencing Snipes pursuant to Section 2T1.1, or in enhancing his sentence by two levels for obstruction of justice under Section 3C1.1. It concluded that Snipes’ comments to Baker amounted to encouraging Baker to avoid complying with a grand jury subpoena, which may be considered obstruction of justice. Lastly, the Court held that Snipes’ 36 month sentence was reasonable.
 

It's April First

April Fool's Day is not listed among the "legal holidays" in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(a)(6). The courts do not close when April 1 falls on a weekday. It cannot be excluded in calculating the amount of time one has to file a response to a motion (even a frivolous one). In general, the law takes little or no notice of this occasion for hoaxes and practical jokes and when it does, it is typically not amused.

Furthermore, few noteworthy April 1 pranks surface in caselaw, especially criminal caselaw. The exact origin of the occasion is lost in history, but there are 16th century references to Dutch noblemen sending servants on "fool's errands" on the first day of April, and 17th century English writer John Aubrey referred to April 1 as the "Fooles holy day."

There is, however, one criminal law development on April 1, which should be more widely known than it likely is. On that date, a former Army Corporal received five year court sentence for treason. He ended up serving only eight months, however.

The defendant, perhaps the most infamous defendant to ever answer in a court of law, was Adolph Hitler, leader of the National Socialist German Worker's Party, or Nazi Party, who had been arrested for organizing the "Beer Hall Putsch," or coup d'etat, in Munich, Bavaria, in an effort to overthrow the German Weimar government. The coup was so named because Hitler and members of the SA, or "brownshirts,"  the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party, initiated it when the conspirators stormed a Munich beer hall where the Bavarian Commissioner and other officials were making speeches to a crowd of about 3,000. Hitler proclaimed a revolution and called on various officials, the police and the Army to rally to his side. The police and the military were unmoved, and 16 SA members were killed by soldiers in a conflict at the Odeonplatz the following day. The SA members were led by General Erich Ludendorff, a hero of the First World War, who had allied himself with Hitler in order to overthrow the Weimar government. General Ludendorff had marched directly into hostile fire while Hitler fled the conflagration, gaining him a reputation as a coward.

Hitler was arrested two days after the putsch. Hitler, Ludendorff, Ernst Rohm, leader of the SA, and other leaders were arrested and charged with high treason to be tried by a panel of judges. Coincidentally, the presiding Judge, Georg Neithardt, had seen defendant Hitler before--having sentenced Hitler to a three month sentence in 1921 for disrupting a meeting of the Bavarian legislature with members of the SA (Hitler only served one month). The trial began on February 26, 1924, and lasted a month. Hitler used the trial as a vehicle to deliver incendiary speeches which were reported in the papers. Judge Neihardt allowed Hitler to run the trial, and showed sympathy for the defendants. Ludendorff was acquitted and Rohm was convicted but released. Hitler served less than a year at Landsberg am Lech prison in Bavaria, where he and Ruldolph Hess composed Hitler's manifesto, Mein Kampf.

Hitler's experience during the putsch and the subsequent trial caused him to realize that legal methods were the way to seizing power, as opposed to violent revolution. He would become Chancellor and dictator of Germany through political alliances and machinations less than ten years after his release, and would become the catalyst for history's costliest war and the mastermind of its most unspeakable genocide six years later. Much of history would have been different and many lives spared had those Bavarian judges sentenced the defendant thug and agitator--who had a previous criminal history--to the sentence recommended by the German statute for "high treason"--ten years to life imprisonment. It was the last time history's most notorious mass murderer would ever be subject to the rule of law.