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Archive for the ‘Kickbacks’

Feds Take on More Accused of Kickbacks of $300-$600 for Home Health Care Referrals

September 25, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Ana Nerissa Tolentino, Edgardo Hernal, Frederick Magsino, Halley Guren, Home Health Care, Kickbacks, Medicaid, Medicaid Fraud, Medicare, Medicare Fraud, Rosner Home Healthcare, Ttenej Senior Referral Agency

A press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office:

NINE DEFENDANTS, INCLUDING TWO OWNERS OF A HOME HEALTH CARE AGENCY AND TWO PHYSICIANS, INDICTED FOR ALLEGEDLY PAYING AND RECEIVING KICKBACKS FOR MEDICARE PATIENT REFERRALS

CHICAGO — Two owners of a home health care agency in suburban Skokie and two physicians were among nine defendants indicted on federal charges for paying and receiving kickbacks in exchange for the referral of Medicare patients for home health care services, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

Defendants Ana Nerissa Tolentino, a registered nurse, and Frederick Magsino, both part owners of Rosner Home Healthcare, Inc., and Edgardo Hernal, a former Rosner employee, allegedly conspired to pay kickbacks to six co-defendants for the referral and retention of Medicare patients that enabled Rosner to bill Medicare.

Also indicted were

  • Emmanuel Nwaokocha and Masood Syed, both physicians;
  • Jenette George, who operated Ttenej Senior Referral Agency which provided senior citizens with referrals to home health agencies; and
  • Jennifer Holman, who was an office manager at a doctor’s office.

Co-defendants Titis Jackson and Carla Phillips-Williams were marketers of Rosner’s services.

The 27-count indictment was returned by a federal grand jury last Thursday.

Tolentino, 43,of Morton Grove; Magsino, 59, of Morton Grove; Nwaokocha, 59, of Skokie; Syed, 53, of Mt. Prospect; Jackson, 36, of Chicago; George, 59,of Chicago; and Phillips-Williams, 42, of Chicago, were initially arrested and charged in criminal complaints in late July of this year.

All seven were released on bond. Hernal, 55, of Westchester, and Holman, 53, of Chicago, were charged for the first time in the indictment.

All nine defendants will be arraigned in U.S. District Court on dates to be determined.

Three defendants — Tolentino, Magsino, and Hernal — were charged with one count of conspiracy to pay illegal kickbacks for Medicare patient referrals. Eight of the nine defendants were charged with two or more counts of violating the anti-kickback statute.

Gary Shapiro

The indictment was announced by Gary S. Shapiro, Acting United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; Lamont Pugh III, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Region of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General; and William C. Monroe, Acting Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

According to the indictment between January 2008 and July 2012, Tolentino, Magsino, and Hernal conspired with others to pay kickbacks and bribes to

  • doctors, such as Nwaokocha and Syed;
  • marketers, such as Jackson, George, and Phillips-Williams;
  • medical office employees, such as Holman;
  • nurses, and
  • others to refer Medicare patients to Rosner.

The three defendants charged with conspiracy allegedly paid kickbacks to increase Rosner’s patient census and to enrich Rosner and themselves.

The amount of kickbacks varied but generally ranged from $300 to $600 for each new patient’s completion of five home health visits in one cycle, and ranged between the same amounts for the repeat admission of a previous patient in a new cycle of home health care.

According to the previously filed complaints, Medicare paid Rosner approximately $13 million for claims submitted for home health services between January 2008 and January 2012. Neither the complaints nor indictment allege how much of Rosner’s total Medicare billings were fraudulent.

The complaints charged that between March and July 2012 alone, the following co-defendants received the amount of kickbacks listed:

  • Nwaokocha, $4,800;
  • Syed, $1,500;
  • Jackson, $24,000;
  • George, $13,500; and
  • Phillips-Williams, $3,000.

Conspiracy and each count of violating the anti-kickback statute carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. If convicted, the Court must impose a reasonable sentence under federal statutes and the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Halley Guren.

The public is reminded that an indictment is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

The case falls under the umbrella of the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, which expanded operations to Chicago in February 2011, and is part of the Health Care Fraud Prevention & Enforcement Action Team (HEAT), a joint initiative announced in May 2009 between the Justice Department and HHS to focus their efforts to prevent and deter fraud and enforce current anti-fraud laws around the country. Nearly five dozen defendants have been charged in health care fraud cases since the strike force began operating in Chicago last year. Since June 2012, 16 defendants, including owners of other Chicago area home health care agencies and several other physicians, have been indicted in unrelated cases alleging Medicare referral kickback schemes.

Since their inception in March 2007, Strike Force operations in nine locations have charged more than 1,330 defendants who collectively have falsely billed the Medicare program for more than $4 billion. In addition, the HHS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, working in conjunction with the HHS-OIG, are taking steps to increase accountability and decrease the presence of fraudulent providers.

To learn more about the Health Care Fraud Prevention & Enforcement Action Team (HEAT), go to: www.stopmedicarefraud.gov.

20 Months for Home Health Care Kickback Scheme

August 30, 2012 By: Cal Skinner Category: Chalice Home Healthcare Services, Fraud, Frederick Kapala, Home Health Care, Kickbacks, Medicare, Medicare Fraud, Merigrace Orillo

A press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office:

HOME HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATOR SENTENCED TO 20 MONTHS IN FEDERAL PRISON FOR HEALTH CARE FRAUD AND KICKBACK SCHEME

ROCKFORD — An Elmhurst, Ill., woman was sentenced today in federal court to 20 months in federal prison on her conviction for health care fraud and a kickback scheme. Merigrace Orillo, 45, co-owned and operated Chalice Home Healthcare Services, Inc., with her husband Virgilio Orillo. Chalice had offices in Chicago, Freeport, and Morris, Illinois.

Medicare is a national healthcare program which provides free or below-cost health care to eligible beneficiaries, primarily persons who are 65 years of age or older. Chalice was an enrolled provider with the Medicare program since 2004.

According to a written plea agreement, Chalice’s nurses, nurses aids, physical therapists, and occupational therapists provided services to patients in their homes. Chalice was usually paid for these services through the Medicare program.

Orillo admitted that from January 2007 through April 2010, she and her husband falsified documents in order to increase the payments Chalice received from Medicare.

The falsifications made Chalice’s patients appear to be sicker than they actually were and in need of greater care than they actually required.

Orillo also admitted that she knowingly assisted her husband in paying cash kickbacks to a Chicago doctor.

The kickbacks were paid in return for the doctor referring patients to Chalice for home healthcare services.

Orillo admitted that she withdrew cash from Chalice’s bank account and provided that cash to her husband to be used to pay these kickbacks. At the sentencing hearing, the court found that Orillo’s scheme caused a loss of more than $700,000 to the Medicare program.

The indictment, which was filed on February 15, 2011, charged both Orillo and her husband Virgilio with healthcare fraud.

The charges against Virgilio Orillo were dismissed after he died on August 30, 2011.

Frederick Kapala

Today’s sentencing hearing was conducted by United States District Judge Frederick J. Kapala.

In addition to the 20 month federal prison sentence, Judge Kapala also ordered Orillo to pay $744,481 in restitution to the Medicare Trust Fund. Orillo will not be eligible for parole on her prison sentence.

The investigation was conducted by the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, which expanded to the Northern District of Illinois in 2011, and is part of the Health Care Fraud Prevention & Enforcement Action Team (HEAT), a joint initiative between the Justice Department and HHS to focus their efforts to prevent and deter fraud and enforce anti-fraud laws around the country.

The sentencing was announced by Gary S. Shapiro, Acting United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Lamont Pugh, III, Special Agent-in-Charge of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General in Chicago.
The government was represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott A. Verseman.

17 1/2 Years for Man Causing $14.5 Million Mortgage Loss

August 18, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, George Lindberg, Kenneth Steward, Kenneth Yeadon, Kickbacks, Megan Church

A press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office:

FORMER SOUTH HOLLAND MAN SENTENCED TO 17½ YEARS IN PRISON FOR DIRECTING $35 MILLION MORTGAGE FRAUD SCHEME INVOLVING MORE THAN 120 RESIDENCES IN THE CHICAGO AREA

CHICAGO — A former South Holland man was sentenced to 17½ years in federal prison for directing a $35 million mortgage fraud scheme involving more than 120 residences on the city’s south side.

The scheme caused various lenders and financial institutions to lose approximately $16 million on mortgage loans that were not repaid by the borrowers or fully recovered through subsequent foreclosure sales.

The sentence imposed yesterday on Kenneth Steward is one of the longest ever given to a mortgage fraud defendant in Federal Court in Chicago, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

Steward, 45, who was arrested and charged in July 2010, pleaded guilty in June to

  • nine counts of wire fraud,
  • four counts of bank fraud and
  • three counts of mail fraud.

During nearly four years between 2004 and 2008, Steward personally orchestrated the fraudulent purchase and resale of dozens of residences, and he was responsible for approximately 109 fraudulent transactions, causing lenders to issue nearly $27.8 million in loans and lose more than $14.5 million against those mortgages.
Of the 109 residences in sprinkled through the city’s south side in neighborhoods like

  • Englewood,
  • Back of the Yards and
  • Roseland,

at least 74 fell into foreclosure.

Steward pocketed undisclosed payments and kickbacks from each transaction and Steward controlled approximately $3.1 million in post-closing funds during the course of the scheme, according to court records. Steward directed a larger scheme that overall involved a total of 122 residences and caused losses totaling approximately $16 million.

Despite almost no prospect of recovery, Senior U.S. District Judge George Lindberg yesterday ordered Steward to pay more than $13.1 million in mandatory restitution and indicated he will enter a preliminary forfeiture judgment of $35 million.

“Steward accomplished a wide-ranging fraud scheme that caused massive losses to lenders and blighted communities because many of the properties … have been abandoned or are in poor condition,” the government told Judge Lindberg in urging a sentence within the advisory guideline range of 210 to 260 months.

Peter Fitzgerald

Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, announced the sentence today with Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Thomas P. Brady, Inspector-in-Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Chicago.

Charges remain pending against six co-defendants. The charges contain merely allegations and are not evidence of guilt. These defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Megan Church and Kenneth Yeadon.

The case is part of a continuing effort to investigate and prosecute mortgage fraud in northern Illinois and nationwide under the umbrella of the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which was established to lead an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. For more information on the task force, visit: www.StopFraud.gov.

Five, including Female School Board Member & Transportation Director, Indicted in $800,000 School Bus Kickback Scheme

July 14, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Alice Sherrod, Bagman, D’Amoto Transportation, Fraud, Gloria Harper, Greg Deis, Illinois, IRS, Kickbacks, Matthew Getter, North Chicago, Quality Trans, Safety First, School, School Bus

This press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office tells of how a female North Chicago School Board member conspired with the female Transportation Director to get kickbacks from school bus companies. I mention the public officials’ gender because it is rare that women are involved in public corruption cases.

FORMER NORTH CHICAGO SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER AND TRANSPORTATION DIRECTOR AMONG FIVE DEFENDANTS INDICTED FOR ALLEGED ROLES IN $800,000 KICKBACK SCHEME INVOLVING STUDENT BUSING CONTRACTS

CHICAGO — A former North Chicago school board member and the district’s former transportation director were indicted on federal fraud charges for allegedly receiving kickbacks totaling at least $800,000 from three co-defendants who controlled several different companies that received at least $21 million in student bus contracts over nearly a decade.

All five defendants were charged in a 26-count indictment alleging that, between 2001 and August 2010, they schemed to defraud and deprive the citizens of North Chicago, located in Lake County, and the approximately 4,000-student North Chicago Community Unit School District 187 (NCSD) of the honest services of former school board member Gloria Harper and former transportation director Alice Sherrod.

The indictment was returned by a federal grand jury late yesterday and announced today by Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Alvin Patton, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division in Chicago.

The North Chicago School District cooperated with the investigation.

Among the debris remaining in Joplin, Missouri is the crumpled school bus you see at the rear of the high school's property.

Harper, 59, of North Chicago, who was a member of the NCSD board from 1999 to May 2009, and Sherrod, 59, of Gurnee, who was District 187′s transportation director from 2001 to July 2010, allegedly used their positions to enrich themselves secretly by soliciting and accepting gifts and cash from their three co-defendants in exchange for favorable official action regarding student transportation contracts.

Initially, Harper and Sherrod allegedly received kickbacks of approximately $4,000 to $5,000 a month but, by 2003, they were collecting approximately $20,000 a month, the indictment alleges.

Also indicted were:

  • Derrick Eubanks, 47, of Lake Villa;
  • Tommie Boddie, 66, of Wadsworth; and
  • Barrett White, 52, of Matteson.

All five defendants were each charged with six counts of wire fraud and various counts of soliciting or paying bribes. All but White were also charged with multiple counts of filing false federal income tax returns. All five defendants will be arraigned on dates still to be determined in U.S. District Court.

The indictment seeks forfeiture of more than $9.67 million, as well as 48 buses and vans and seven personal automobiles.

According to the indictment, from the late 1990s until mid-2003, the NCSD contracted with various companies to provide student transportation, including T&M Transportation, which was owned at least in part and controlled by Boddie, and Eubanks Transportation, which was owned at least in part and controlled by Eubanks.

In approximately 2001, Harper and Sherrod met with Boddie and told him they would arrange for the NCSD to increase the number of students that T&M transported if Boddie agreed to pay them in return, and Boddie agreed.

At Harper’s request, White began acting as an intermediary, or “bagman,” receiving cash from Boddie, keeping some for himself, and providing the bulk to Harper, who, in turn, shared the money with Sherrod, the indictment alleges.

To facilitate his role as the scheme’s bagman, White established D’Amoto Transportation, which he used to funnel money from Boddie’s T&M company to Harper and Sherrod. Sometime in 2002 or 2003, White established BWT Transportation to replace D’Amoto. In approximately May 2003, Harper allegedly suggested to Boddie and Eubanks that they join together to form one company to bid on NCSD transportation contracts.

Both Harper and Sherrod told Boddie and Eubanks that if they won the contract they would have to split the profits with the two school officials, and the two men agreed to do so, the charges allege.

As a result, Boddie and Eubanks created Safety First Transportation, Inc., which won the NCSD’s transportation contract in 2003.

Once Safety First began to receive school district payments, White allegedly converted Safety First’s funds into cash to pay Harper for her to share with Sherrod, while White kept a portion for himself. Neither White nor his company, BWT, did any work for Safety First and their sole role was to funnel cash to Harper and Sherrod, according to the indictment.

As a result of an IRS audit of Safety First in 2006-2007, Safety First began providing funds to White as an employee, as well as continuing to provide him with funds as a contractor, in late 2006, even though he continued to provide no service other than paying kickbacks as an intermediary.

Also as a result of the audit, Harper allegedly agreed that White’s portion of the proceeds should be increased to compensate him for the tax debt White owed the IRS.

All five defendants agreed that an amount of Safety First’s revenues from the NCSD would be excluded from the profits to be split with Harper and Sherrod and instead would be used to repay tax debts owed by Boddie, Eubanks and White, the charges allege.

The fraud scheme and individual tax counts allege that Boddie and Eubanks filed false federal tax returns for Safety First claiming that they paid White hundreds of thousands of dollars in consulting fees and wages for assisting them in obtaining the transportation contract with NCSD. In fact, the indictment alleges that money paid to White was intended solely to fund the kickbacks to Harper and Sherrod in exchange for helping them win and maintain the transportation contract.

In April 2008, the defendants allegedly agreed to set up a new company, Quality Trans, LLC, to replace Safety First and to assume its contracts with the school district.

All five allegedly agreed to split among them Quality Trans’s profits, and Boddie, Eubanks and White continued to make cash payments to Harper and Sherrod. In June 2009, Quality Trans won a five-year contract to provide NCSD with transportation services.

Various tax counts allege that Boddie and Eubanks took false deductions for the money that Safety First paid to White and which White then funneled as kickbacks to Harper and Sherrod. Other tax counts allege that Harper and Sherrod filed false individual tax returns failing to report the kickbacks they received as income.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Matthew Getter and Greg Deis.

Each count of wire fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, and each count of soliciting or paying bribes carries a maximum of 10 years in prison, as well as a $250,000 fine. As an alternative, the Court may impose a maximum fine totaling twice the loss to any victim or twice the gain to any defendant, whichever is greater, and restitution is mandatory. Filing a false federal income tax return carries a maximum penalty of three years in prison and a $250,000 fine. In addition, a defendant convicted of tax offenses faces mandatory costs of prosecution and remains civilly liable to the Government for any and all back taxes, as well as a civil fraud penalty of 75 percent of the underpayment plus interest. If convicted, the Court must determine a reasonable sentence to impose under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

The public is reminded that an indictment contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Feds Go After Health Care Businesses for Medicare Kickbacks, Chiropractor from LITH Arrested

February 17, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Andrew Carr, Blue Cross, Chiropractor, Cottage Grove Community Medical Clinic, Home Health Care, Inc., Jasmin Best, Jay's Save Rite Thorndale Pharmacy, Joel Hammerman, John Kness, Kickbacks, Lake In the Hills, Medicaid Fraud, Medicare, Medicare Fraud, New Covenant Home Health Agency LLC, OASIS Form, Pharmacist, Rick Young, Samuel Cole, Scott Verseman, Shoba Pillay, Shoshana L. Gillers, Steven Grimes

A press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office:

FOURTEEN AREA DEFENDANTS CHARGED IN

EIGHT SEPARATE FEDERAL HEALTH CARE FRAUD CASES

CHICAGO – One Chicago area physician, two chiropractors, three nurses, a pharmacist, and several home health industry administrators and recruiters are among fourteen defendants charged this week in eight separate, unrelated federal health care fraud cases, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

Federal arrest warrants were executed this morning for ten of the defendants. Nine defendants allegedly work in the home health care industry, of which seven were charged with conspiring to violate the criminal anti-kickback statute, which makes it illegal to offer or solicit kickbacks in exchange for referrals of Medicare patients.

Several of today’s enforcement activities in the Chicago area are being conducted as part of a nationwide takedown by Medicare Fraud Strike Force operations that led to charges against 111 defendants for their alleged participation in numerous Medicare fraud schemes.

The Medicare Fraud Strike Force is a multi-agency team of federal, state and local investigators designed to combat Medicare fraud through the use of Medicare data analysis techniques and an increased focus on community policing.

The Departments of Justice and Health and Human Services today announced that the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, previously operating in seven locations across the country, has expanded operations to Chicago and Dallas. Five of the eight cases announced today were brought as a part of strike force operations.

“With this takedown, we have identified and shut down large-scale fraud schemes operating throughout the country. We have safeguarded precious taxpayer dollars. And we have helped to protect our nation’s most essential health care programs, Medicare and Medicaid,” said Attorney General Holder. “As today’s arrest prove, we are waging an aggressive fight against health care fraud.”

U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald

Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, announced the formation of the HEAT Strike Force in the Northern District of Illinois.

“Health care fraud has become an increasingly important priority of federal law enforcement in the Chicago area. We are organizing to deploy all of our resources to ensure that dishonest medical providers do not profit from cheating Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers,” said Mr. Fitzgerald.

Speaking particularly of the kickback violations alleged against several defendants in the home health care industry, Mr. Fitzgerald explained,

“Paying for Medicare and Medicaid patients is a crime. We are focusing our resources on making sure that those who offer or solicit kickbacks are held accountable by the criminal justice system.”

Also announcing the charges was Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“Healthcare fraud will not be tolerated,” said Mr. Grant. “It affects every citizen through increases in insurance premiums and rising costs for both Medicare and Medicaid. As consumers of healthcare services, we should all be cognizant of possible fraud and promptly report suspicious charges to our insurance carriers or law enforcement.”

“Health care fraud is a crime committed against vulnerable patients, U.S. taxpayers, and the government programs funding vitally-needed health services,” said Lamont Pugh III, the Chicago Region’s Special Agent in Charge for the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health & Human Services.

“The actions we have taken today are part of a coordinated, nationwide crackdown in our continuing battle against criminals who enrich themselves at our great expense.”

James Vanderberg, Special Agent-in-Charge for the Chicago Regional Office of the United States Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General said: “Today’s charges represent the OIGs firm commitment to actively investigate health care fraud schemes in which union sponsored health and welfare funds are defrauded. We will continue to work vigorously with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and our law enforcement partners to investigate crimes that undermine the financial well-being of union affiliated benefit funds.”

Mr. Fitzgerald announced the cases, all eight of which were charged this week in U.S. District Court, with Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of Federal Bureau of Investigation; Lamont Pugh, Special Agent-in-Charge of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General in Chicago; and James Vanderberg, Special Agent-in-Charge of the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General in Chicago. The Office of Criminal Investigations of the Food and Drug Administration, the Office of the Inspector General of the U.S. Railroad Retirement Board, the City of Chicago Office of Inspector General, and the U.S. Department of Labor Employee Benefits Security Administration also participated in the investigations.

The defendants were each charged with one or more counts of

  • health care fraud,
  • mail fraud,
  • false statements relating to health care matters, and/or
  • conspiracy.

If convicted of health care fraud, each count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. If convicted of mail fraud, each count carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. If convicted of false statements relating to health care matters, each count carries a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. If convicted of conspiracy, each count carries a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The Court, however, would determine the appropriate sentence to be imposed under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

In each case, the public is reminded that charges are not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The details of each case follow:

United States v. Virgilio Orillo and Merigrace (“Grace”) Orillo

Virgilio Orillo and Merigrace (“Grace”) Orillo, who co-own and operate Chalice Home Healthcare Services, Inc. (“Chalice”), with offices in

  • Chicago,
  • Freeport, and
  • Morris, Illinois,

were charged with three counts of health care fraud in a criminal indictment filed on Tuesday.

According to the charges, Chalice nurses, nurse aides, physical therapists, and occupational therapists provide services to patients at their homes.

The indictment alleges that the Orillos falsified documents in order to increase the payments Chalice received from Medicare. These falsifications were allegedly made on documents known as OASIS forms and made Chalice’s patients appear to be sicker than they actually were and in need of greater care than they actually required. The indictment alleges that the Orillos’ fraud scheme cause a loss of more than $500,000 to the Medicare program.

Virgilio Orillo, 68, and Merigrace (“Grace”) Orillo, 44, both of Elmhurst, will be arraigned on February 22, 2011, at 10:30 a.m. at U.S. District Court in Rockford, Illinois, before Magistrate Judge P. Michael Mahoney.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Verseman. The case was investigated by the FBI and the Inspector General’s offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Labor.

United States v. Marilyn Maravilla, Junjee Arroya, Ferdinand Echavia, Kennedy Lomillo, and Baltazar Alberto

Five individuals associated with Goodwill Home Healthcare, Inc. (“Goodwill”), were charged by criminal complaint with conspiracy to violate the federal anti-kickback statute by agreeing to offer or pay or to solicit or receive kickbacks for the referral of Medicare patients for home health care services.

According to the charges, Marilyn Maravilla, a nurse who became the controlling owner of Goodwill in approximately August 2008, began causing kickbacks to be paid for the referral of Medicare patients to Goodwill.

Goodwill’s Medicare billings, which were approximately $679,596 in 2008, increased to approximately $2,133,391 in 2009 and approximately $2,700,000 in 2010. According to records seized during a search of Goodwill headquarters, approximately $410,998 in kickbacks were paid to approximately 28 persons for the referral of approximately 912 patients.

In addition to Marilyn Maravilla, the complaint charges Junjee Arroyo, director of nursing; Ferdinand Echavia, a nurse; Kennedy Lomillo, an accountant and bookkeeper; and Baltazar Alberto, a nurse. The investigation is ongoing.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney John Kness. The case was investigated by the FBI and Inspector General’s offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Labor.

Marilyn Maravilla, 54, of Chicago; Junjee Arroyo, 42, of Elmurst; Ferdinand Echavia, 37, of Chicago; Kennedy Lomillo, 43, of Mundelein; and Baltazar Alberto, 47, of Morton Grove, were arrested earlier today and will appear before the Honorable Jeffrey Cole, U.S. Magistrate Judge, for an initial appearance today at 3:30 p.m.

United States v. Alona Dizon Bugayong and Han Woo

Han Woo and Alona Dizon Bugayong were charged by a criminal complaint unsealed today with one count of conspiring to pay kickbacks for the referral of patients to home health care agencies run by Han Woo.

According to the charges, Woo operates New Covenant Home Health Agency LLC and Healthquest Homecare LLC.

The complaint alleges that Bugayong and Woo conspired to pay kickbacks in exchange for physician referrals of home health care patients.

Bugayong and Woo devised a scheme in which they would provide an initial kickback to a physician in exchange for a patient referral and would continue to pay smaller fees for subsequent re-certifications for subsequent cycles of care. The investigation is ongoing.

Alona Dizon Bugayong, 35, of Lincolnwood, and Han Woo, 35, of Hoffman Estates, were both arrested this morning and will appear before the Honorable Jeffrey Cole, U.S. Magistrate Judge, for an initial appearance today at 1:30 p.m.

AUSA Jasmin Best represents the government. The case was investigated by the FBI and the Office of the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

United States v. Jaswinder Rai Chhibber

Dr. Jaswinder Rai Chhibber, president and owner of the Cottage Grove Community Medical Clinic in Chicago, was charged by a criminal complaint unsealed today with one count of health care fraud.

The complaint alleges that Chhibber devised and participated in a scheme to defraud health care insurance providers including

  • Medicare,
  • Medicaid, and
  • Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois,

which administers medical claims for several union health and welfare funds in the Chicago area.

According to the charges, Chhibber submitted medical services reimbursement claims for procedures never rendered, or if performed, carried out despite not being medically necessary.

In particular, Chhibber is charged with performing complicated diagnostic tests on patients, such as e

  • chocardiograms,
  • electrocardiograms (“EKGs”),
  • non-invasive vascular studies,
  • nerve conduction studies and c
  • arotid doppler ultrasounds,

without a medical need for those tests.

The complaint further alleges that Chhibber billed insurance providers for diagnostic tests never actually performed on patients. To justify the charges submitted to insurance providers, the complaint alleges that Chhibber submitted false patient diagnoses in the reimbursement claims he submitted to insurers. The investigation is ongoing.

Jaswinder Rai Chhibber, 48, of Schaumburg, was arrested this morning and will appear before the Honorable Jeffrey Cole, U.S. Magistrate Judge, for an initial appearance later today.

AUSAs Joel Hammerman and Samuel Cole represent the government. The case was investigated by the FBI and Inspector General’s offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Department of Labor, and the U.S. Railroad Retirement Board.

United States v. Jay Hammerman

Jay Hammerman, a pharmacist and the owner of Jay’s Save Rite Thorndale Pharmacy, was charged earlier today by criminal information with two counts of health care fraud.

According to the charges, Hammerman devised and participated in a scheme to defraud health care insurance providers, including

  • Medicare,
  • Medicaid,
  • Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois,
  • Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota,
  • Health Net,
  • Humana, and
  • Caremark,

by submitting fraudulent reimbursement claims for prescription medications that were never actually dispensed. The criminal information alleges that Hammerman was able to obtain more than $200,000 in reimbursement claims for prescription medications never ordered, dispensed or purchased by the pharmacy’s customers.

Hammerman, 62, of Chicago, will be arraigned at a later date in U.S. District Court.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Joel Hammerman, who is not related to the defendant. The case was investigated by the FBI, the Inspector General’s offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Labor, and the Office of Criminal Investigations of the Food and Drug Administration.

In addition to the foregoing cases, which address allegations of fraud against Medicare or Medicaid as part of the HEAT partnership between the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the following cases announced today involve allegations of fraud against private insurers and/or the City of Chicago.

United States v. Brandy Howard

Brandy Howard, a licensed chiropractor, was charged with two counts of health care fraud, three counts of mail fraud, and two counts of false statements relating to health care matters, in a criminal indictment filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court and unsealed today.

Howard allegedly submitted false claims to Blue Cross Blue Shield for orthotics.

According to the charges, Howard participated in health fairs at school districts and a police department, where she advertised that she could provide Blue Cross PPO subscribers with free shoes.

She then prepared and submitted to Blue Cross fraudulent letters of medical necessity stating that the subscribers required orthotics because they had reported chronic pain, when in fact Howard knew that they had not made such statements. The indictment alleges that Howard submitted claims to Blue Cross in excess of $20,000.

Howard, 35, of Naperville, was arrested upon surrendering to authorities today and will appear today before the Honorable Young B. Kim, U.S. Magistrate Judge, for an initial appearance at 1:00 p.m.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Shoshana L. Gillers. The case was investigated by the FBI and the Inspector General’s office of the U.S. Department of Labor.

United States v. Andrew Carr

Dr. Andrew Carr, a licensed chiropractor, was charged with one count of health care fraud.

According to the charges, Carr operated numerous chiropractic businesses in the Chicago suburbs over the past six years.

The complaint alleges that Carr submitted claims to

  • Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois (which administers several union health and welfare funds in the Chicago area),
  • Aetna, Inc., and
  • Professional Benefits Administrators

for chiropractic services that were never rendered. The investigation is ongoing.

Andrew Carr, 41, of Lake in the Hills, was arrested this morning and will appear before the Honorable Jeffrey Cole, U.S. Magistrate Judge, for an initial appearance today at 1:15 p.m.

AUSAs Steven Grimes and Shoba Pillay represent the government. The case was investigated by the FBI, the Office of the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Labor, and the U.S. Department of Labor Employee Benefits Security Administration.

United States v. U.S. Occupational Health

U.S. Occupational Health, a medical services company that performed physical examinations and medical testing for employees of private and governmental entities, was charged by criminal information yesterday today with one count of mail fraud.

According to the charges, the City of Chicago (“the City”) used USOH to perform physical examinations and medical testing on applicants and employees of various City departments, including

  • the Chicago Police Department (“CPD”) and
  • the Chicago Fire Department (“CFD”).

USOH’s contract with the City required, among other things, that the results of certain medical tests performed for the CPD and CFD — specifically,

  • pulmonary function studies,
  • EKGs, and
  • x-rays

– be reviewed and interpreted by board-certified specialists in pulmonology, cardiology, and radiology.

The criminal information alleges that between 1999 and 2005, USOH defrauded the City by falsely representing that the results of tests performed at USOH had been reviewed by board-certified specialists in pulmonology, cardiology, and radiology when, in fact, such board-certified specialists had not reviewed or interpreted the results of these tests.

USOH accomplished this, in part, by using signature stamps of actual board-certified specialists to sign letters indicating that the specialists had reviewed and interpreted the results of tests performed at USOH. Overall, USOH examined in excess of 10,000 applicants for the CPD and CFD, and USOH caused the City to overpay USOH approximately $600,000 as a result of the fraud.

U.S. Occupational Health, an Illinois corporation, will be arraigned at a later in U.S. District Court.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Rick Young. The case was investigated by the FBI and the City of Chicago Inspector General’s Office.

Looks Like It’s Not Just Politicians Who Take Kickbacks

November 10, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Chicago White Sox, Christopher Veatch, Kickbacks, Michelle Nasser, White Sox

This will probably be the biggest White Sox scandal since the Black Sox days, although management cooperated with the investigation that led to the indictments. The press release below comes from the U.S. Attorney in Chicago.

White Sox News page.

It hasn’t made the White Sox News Page yet.

FORMER CHICAGO WHITE SOX EXECUTIVE AND TWO FORMER SCOUTS FORSOX IN LATIN AMERICA INDICTED FOR ALLEGEDLY OBTAINING ILLEGAL KICKBACKS FROM PLAYERS’ SIGNING BONUSES

CHICAGO — A former professional baseball player scouting executive for the Chicago White Sox and two former scouts for the team in Latin America were indicted today on federal fraud charges for allegedly accepting kickbacks totaling approximately $400,000 from signing bonuses and contract buyouts paid to secure 23 prospective players between December 2004 and February 2008.

A seven-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury alleges that the White Sox baseball team was defrauded of money, as well as the honest services of the defendants, who allegedly concealed the kickbacks from the team and its more senior officials.

Charged with seven counts of mail fraud were

  • David S. Wilder, the White Sox farm system director from late 2003 to 2006, when he became the team’s senior director of player personnel until May 2008, and
  • Jorge L. Oquendo Rivera, the White Sox Latin American scout between November 2004 and October 2007.
  • Victor Mateo, a White Sox scout in the Dominican Republic between November 2006 and May 2008, was charged with three counts of mail fraud.

The indictment also seeks forfeiture of unspecified illegal proceeds from the alleged fraud scheme.

Wilder, 50, of San Francisco, and Oquendo, 49, of Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, are expected to voluntarily appear for arraignment at a later date to be determined in U.S. District Court in Chicago. A domestic arrest warrant was issued for Mateo, 39, of Arroyo Hondo, Dominican Republi

“The defendants were supposed to recruit players by paying amounts of money that matched their skills and were no greater than the amount needed to sign the players. Instead, the indictment alleges that the defendants secretly inflated those signing amounts to fund kickbacks for themselves,”

said Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.

“These defendants allegedly defrauded their employer and enriched themselves by taking advantage of vulnerable ballplayers, who were anxious to pursue their dreams of stardom in the major leagues,”

said Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The investigation began after the Chicago White Sox reported internal findings to Major League Baseball and baseball officials referred the matter to federal authorities.

Both the White Sox and Major League Baseball cooperated with the investigation.

To provide for kickbacks, Wilder, Oquendo and Mateo allegedly misrepresented to the White Sox the amount of money necessary to sign certain players and omitted information about the payments, causing the Sox to pay artificially and fraudulently inflated signing bonuses to players and causing the Sox to purchase the contracts of and rights to players from other teams at artificially and fraudulently inflated prices.

The indictment does not specify the amounts of kickbacks allegedly obtained from signing certain players, nor does it name specific players.

According to the indictment, the White Sox maintained a Latin American scouting program to identify and recruit prospective players in such countries as

  • Brazil,
  • Colombia,
  • the Dominican Republic,
  • Mexico,
  • Panama and
  • Venezuela,

and to sign them to written contracts.

The Sox either paid a signing bonus, a one-time, up-front payment made to new players to induce them to sign a contract, or they purchased the contract rights to a player who was already affiliated with a Mexican baseball team by paying that team or its representative an amount necessary to induce the team to release the player to the White Sox.

Wilder was responsible for supervising the team’s scouts in Latin America, and he either authorized payments himself, or obtained authorization from additional Sox personnel, to sign new players based on recommendations made by the scouts.

Wilder was authorized to approve recommended signing amounts less than $100,000, but he was required to obtain approval from the team’s general manager to pay signing amounts of $100,000 or more.

After Wilder or the team approved a player’s signing amount and a written contract was secured, and Major League Baseball conducted a background check and approved the signing, the White Sox issued a check drawn on a bank account in Chicago, which was made payable either to the player or the Mexican team with which a player was affiliated or the Mexican team’s representative.

If the player was located in the Dominican Republic, the Sox sent the signing bonus check to the Major League Baseball office in Santo Domingo directly, or through its offices in New York, and baseball personnel would then provide the check to the player.

If the player was located in another Latin American country, the Sox sent the signing bonus check to the scout who recruited the player and the scout was responsible for providing the check to the player.

As part of the scheme, Oquendo and Mateo allegedly scouted for and identified prospective Sox players in Latin America from whom they could obtain a portion of the players’ signing bonuses.

They also allegedly engaged in discussions with these players or their representatives about the amount of signing bonuses, as well as the amount the players were willing or expected to pay in kickbacks to them and Wilder.

Oquendo allegedly engaged in these same practices in his negotiations with Mexican teams and their representatives.

After this initial phase, Oquendo and Mateo, directly and indirectly, allegedly informed Wilder of the prospective players’ skill levels, the preliminarily negotiated signing bonus and contract purchase amounts, and whether kickbacks could be obtained from the players’ signings.

Wilder then allegedly approved signings under $100,000, knowing that the amounts were inflated to include undisclosed kickbacks for himself and his co-schemers, and misrepresented to other team officials the amount that was necessary to sign the players.

Similarly, in instances when Wilder obtained authorization from the team’s general manager to sign players for more than $100,000, he allegedly deceived the general manager, knowing that the amounts were fraudulently inflated to obtain undisclosed kickbacks for himself and his co-schemers and were greater than necessary.

The seven mail fraud counts allege the mailing of various checks from the White Sox, in amounts ranging from $30,000 to $525,000, to unnamed players, or teams for the contract rights to players, in various Latin American countries.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Christopher K. Veatch and Michelle Nasser.

Each count of mail fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, and restitution is mandatory. The Court may also impose a fine totaling twice the loss to any victim or twice the gain to the defendant, whichever is greater. If convicted, the Court must impose a reasonable sentence under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

An indictment contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.I’t Not Just

Why the U.S. Attorney Wants to Keep George Ryan in Jail

October 08, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: ADM, Art Swanson, Arthur Swanson, Bribe, Cancun, Comguard, Currency Exchange, Debra Riggs Bonamici, Disney World, Don Udstuen, Fee, Fee Increase, George Ryan, Harry Klein, Honest Services, IBM, Illinois State Medical Society, Irwin Jann, Jamaica, Kickbacks, Lake Tahoe, Larry Warner, Laurie Barsella, License Plate, Lobbyist, Marc Krickbaum, Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority, Patrick Fitzgerald, quid pro quo, Ron Swanson, Scott Fawell, Secretary of State, Skilling v. United States, Vacation, Viisage, Wedding, Wedding Reception

This is a long one and for that I apologize. But I want to have the basics of the U.S. Attorney’s case against former Governor George Ryan on McHenry County Blog and this seemed a good way to put it up.  For newcomers to McHenry County, Don Udstuen lived in Crystal Lake and was appointed by the McHenry County Board to the Metra Board.

GOVERNMENT’S RESPONSE TO
DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO VACATE, SET ASIDE, OR
CORRECT SENTENCE PURSUANT TO 28 U.S.C. § 2255

The UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, by its attorney, PATRICK J. FITZGERALD, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, respectfully submits this response in opposition to defendant’s Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255.

INTRODUCTION

George Ryan from an exhibit in his trial.

Defendant George Ryan challenges his convictions on one count of racketeering and seven counts of mail fraud based on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Skilling v. United States, 561 U.S. __, 130 S.Ct. 2896 (2010). Contrary to Ryan’s contentions, nothing in Skilling undermines Ryan’s convictions. The instructions in this case permitted the jury to convict Ryan of honest services fraud only if the jury concluded that Ryan took bribes and kickbacks, the very conduct Skilling held is prohibited under the honest services statute. Because there was no instructional error, there was no error at all.

Even if the Court were to conclude that the instructions permitted the jury to convict Ryan for conduct that fell short of taking bribes and kickbacks, any error would be harmless for three reasons.

First, even if a jury could have convicted Ryan without finding that he took bribes and kickbacks, no reasonable jury actually would have. Any jury that was properly instructed on honest services fraud would have convicted Ryan of taking bribes and kickbacks because the evidence that Case he did so was overwhelming.

The evidence showed that over the course of many years, Ryan accepted a stream of benefits from benefactors, and that Ryan awarded state contracts and leases to those benefactors in return.

In other words, Ryan took bribes and kickbacks, and any properly instructed jury would have reached that finding.

Second, even if the jury could have convicted Ryan of honest services fraud for conduct that fell short of taking bribes and kickbacks, any reasonable jury that would have convicted Ryan of honest services fraud also would have convicted him of money-property fraud, which the government properly charged.

The government alleged a single fraud scheme in which Ryan not only deprived the state of its right to his honest services, but also obtained state money under false pretenses, by steering state money to his benefactors through lucrative state contracts and leases, while actively concealing and lying about the substantial personal and financial benefits his benefactors were giving him in return.

In many cases, Ryan’s awarding of state money through fraud resulted in a significant loss to the state.

This is money-property fraud, and it was so inseparable from Ryan’s honest services fraud that no reasonable jury would have convicted on the latter ground without convicting on the former, making any error in the honest services instructions harmless.

Finally, any reasonable jury that was properly instructed only on the money-property fraud theory would have convicted Ryan. The evidence that Ryan committed money-property fraud was overwhelming, and so any error in the honest services instructions could not have prejudiced Ryan.

Because there was no error, and any potential errors were harmless, this Court should deny Ryan’s § 2255 motion.

BACKGROUND

I. Second Superseding Indictment

In December 2003, a federal grand jury returned a 22-count second superseding indictment (“indictment”) against defendant George Ryan and his co-schemer, Larry Warner. The indictment alleged that over the course of many years as Secretary of State (SOS), and then as Governor of Illinois, Ryan awarded to Warner and others lucrative state property in the form of state contracts and leases in exchange for substantial personal and financial benefits, and that he and his coschemers concealed these exchanges from the people of Illinois.

  • Count One of the indictment charged Ryan and Warner with racketeering conspiracy in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), alleging that Ryan and Warner conspired to conduct the affairs of the State of Illinois through a pattern of racketeering activity involving multiple acts of mail fraud, money laundering, extortion, obstruction of justice, state-law bribery, and related offenses. R110:1-16.1 [FN 1]
  • Counts Two through Ten charged that Ryan, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 and 1346, devised and carried out a scheme to defraud the State of Illinois of money, property, and the right to the honest services of Ryan and other state officials and employees, and used the United States mails and other interstate carriers in furtherance of the scheme. R110:17-67.2 [FN2]
  • Counts Eleven through Thirteen charged Ryan with making false statements to the FBI, in violation of 18 U.S.C.§ 1001(a)(2). R110:68-71.
  • Counts Eighteen through Twenty-Two charged Ryan with tax crimes. R110:76-88.

= = = = =
FN1 Citations to Ryan’s § 2255 motion are to“Mot__.” Citations to record documents and trial transcripts are to “R__” and “Tr__,” respectively. Citations to the government’s trial exhibits are to “Gx__.”

FN2 Warner was also charged in Counts Two through Five, and Seven through Ten. R110.
= = = = =

II. The Evidence Presented at Trial

The evidence established that, throughout Ryan’s tenure in statewide public office, Ryan, his friends, and his family received financial benefits from benefactors, including

  • Larry Warner and other key figures,
  • Harry Klein,
  • Arthur (“Ron”) Swanson, and
  • Donald Udstuen,

in exchange for state contracts and leases worth millions of dollars, and that Ryan concealed the benefits he received.

A. Official Actions Taken by Ryan in Return for
Personal Benefits Provided by Warner and Udstuen

1. The ADM Contract (Count Two)

Shortly after Ryan was elected SOS, Warner told Udstuen, another Ryan friend and political supporter, that Warner was going to capitalize on his relationship with Ryan by entering the lobbying business. Tr11620.

Warner said Udstuen “should be part of it” because no one had done more for Ryan than Udstuen, and Udstuen, therefore, “deserved some of this.” Id. [FN3] Warner explained that he had talked to Ryan about this plan, and Ryan was “fine” with it. Tr11620-21.

Warner added,

“I will take care of George.” Tr11622.

One of Warner’s first clients was ADM, a manufacturer of validation stickers for license plates. Tr11637. Before Ryan became SOS, ADM had won the annual stickers contract, which had specifications calling for a “metallic security mark,” which only ADM could provide. Tr8032-33,8064,8067-68,8112-13. From 1991 through 1998, to keep the contract, ADM paid Warner a monthly fee ranging from $2,000 to $5,000.  Gx02-004,02-005,02-015,02-500,02-501.

= = = = =
FN3 In addition to giving political support to Ryan and assisting on Ryan’s political
campaigns as a part of a group of supporters providing advice on such things as strategy and fundraising, Tr.11604-10, Udstuen also provided a valuable personal benefit to Ryan in the mid-1980s when, at Ryan’s request, he gave a job to Ryan’s daughter, who was recuperating from a very serious car accident. The daughter’s employment at the Illinois State Medical Society, where Udstuen worked as a lobbyist and administrator for many years, continued through the period in which Ryan was SOS and governor. Tr11593,11600-01,11612-13.
= = = = =

In early 1993, an official in the SOS office decided to change the contract’s specifications by eliminating the metallic security mark. Tr8120-26,8135-36. An upset Warner told the SOS official that Warner would “take care of it,” and a day or two later, Ryan sternly told the official to quietly retract the revised specifications. Tr8140-45. The official did so, even though he believed the new specifications were in the State’s best interests. Tr8146. As a result, ADM continued to be awarded the contract, and from 1991 to 1999, ADM paid Warner $399,000. Tr2801,8146-47.

Warner funneled $122,000 of this money to Udstuen, who did nothing to assist ADM. Tr16905,16916;Gx02-500,02-501.

Neither Warner nor Udstuen were ever registered as lobbyists for ADM. Tr13755-56;Gx02-093.

2. The IBM Mainframe Computer Contract (Counts Four and Five)

Ryan chose Warner and Udstuen to search for a director of the SOS department that dealt with mainframe computer issues, and then hired Warner and Udstuen’s hand-picked candidate for the job. Tr12526. Warner and Udstuen chose the candidate because he said he would support a transition to IBM, one of Warner’s clients. Tr12528-29. In 1996, as planned, the SOS office awarded IBM a $26 million mainframe computer contract. Tr3125,12541;Gx04–043. Warner
received lobbying fees calculated as 3.5 percent of SOS revenues received by IBM. Tr12931.

In total, Warner received almost $1 million from IBM, most of which came as a result of the award of the mainframe contract. Tr12981-87; GX04-014,04-021.

Warner funneled $298,371 of this money to Udstuen, although Udstuen’s interest was never disclosed to IBM or to the public through lobbyist disclosure documents. Tr16918,16923;Gx04-500,04-501.

3. The Viisage Digital Licensing Contract (Count Seven)

In July 1996, when the SOS office was considering switching to digital driver’s licenses, several companies, including a company called Viisage, made presentations to Ryan. Tr3091-94.

Shortly after the presentations, Warner entered into an arrangement with Viisage which provided that he would receive 5 percent of Viisage’s revenues on the licensing contract in return for his help in landing it. Gx03-015,03-016. A businessman named Irwin Jann served as a front man in this arrangement. Jann’s name was on the original lobbying agreement with Viisage, and Jann was registered as Viisage’s lobbyist, even though Jann did no actual work for Viisage. Tr13178,13188-206;Gx03-020, 03-023, 04-045.

In December 1996, months before the bidding process for the contract began, Ryan directed Warner to cut another Ryan friend and supporter, Swanson, in on the Viisage deal, and Warner did so, guaranteeing Swanson $36,000 for his non-existent “lobbying efforts.” Tr3102-04;Gx03-009.

After the State awarded the $20 million contract to Viisage in June 1997, Tr13195, Warner removed Jann as the front man and had the Viisage lobbying arrangement transferred to Warner’s company. Tr13202-05; Gx03-028. Warner never registered as Viisage’s lobbyist, and only in 2001 did Viisage file a record showing that the lobbying arrangement had been transferred to Warner’s company in 1997. Tr13756-63. Warner received fees totaling $834,000 on the Viisage contract, of which he provided Swanson $36,000, as Ryan had directed, even though Swanson did no work for Viisage, and Swanson never registered as Viisage’s lobbyist. Tr3103-04,16923-25;Gx03-023,03-500,03-501.

Five days after landing the Viisage contract, Warner wrote Ryan a blank check, which Ryan used to pay over $3,000 to a band for playing at his daughter’s wedding. Gx23-003.

4. The Bellwood and Joliet Leases (Counts Three and Eight)

Ryan steered two SOS leases to Warner, costing the state hundreds of thousands of dollars.

In 1992, Warner told Ryan that Warner had found a building in Bellwood to house the SOS Police.

When Ryan’s chief of staff, Scott Fawell, expressed concern that the press might discover Warner’s involvement, Warner told Ryan and Fawell not to worry because Warner’s ownership interest in the building was “buried in the paperwork.” Tr2774. Indeed, before the lease was signed, Warner’s interest in the property was hidden behind front men, whose names were put on the real estate trust documents. Tr16939-40; Gx07-500. Ryan approved the Bellwood lease, and after the lease was signed, Warner’s ownership interest in the property surfaced through a series of transactions, and Warner went on to receive about $171,000 in profits. Tr16950-51, 16954;Gx07–011,07-501,07-502. The state overpaid on the Bellwood property by about $246,583 for the first five years. Tr11045,11399.

In about 1994, Warner told Ryan that Warner was looking for property in Joliet for the SOS Office to lease, and Ryan directed an SOS official to deal with Warner on the lease. Tr. 7822-24, 2804-05,10463. Warner bought property in Joliet for $200,000, but as with the Bellwood lease, Warner used front men to hide his ownership interest. Tr16954-58; Gx06-500. Warner again told Fawell that Warner’s ownership in the property was buried in paperwork. Tr2812,3005. After Ryan personally signed a four-year SOS lease, Warner’s 90% ownership interest in the property emerged through various transactions, and Warner ultimately received about $854,258 in rental payments. Tr16959-62; Gx06-016,06-028,06-501,06-502. [FN4]

The state overpaid for the lease by $296,485. Tr11021.

When Warner’s role in the lease came to light publicly, Warner told Udstuen that he never should have done the Joliet lease because it was “too good a deal.” Tr11727.

= = = = =
FN4 It was unusual for Ryan to personally sign a lease. The evidence showed he signed only two as SOS: the Joliet lease (for Warner) and the South Holland lease (for Klein). Tr6289-91.
= = = = =

5. Financial Benefits Provided by Udstuen and Warner

In return for the state contracts and leases Ryan steered to Warner, Warner gave Ryan a stream of benefits to Ryan and to Ryan’s family members and associates. Warner provided over $400,000 in payments to Udstuen relating to the ADM and IBM contracts; $145,000 in loans and financial support to Comguard, a financially distressed company partly owned by Ryan’s brother, Gx09-001,09-002,09-020,09-500; $36,000 to Swanson relating to the Viisage contract; and provided Ryan and Ryan’s family members with approximately $25,000 in loans, gifts, insurance services,

investments and payments. E.g.,Gx08-087,08-088,08-089,22-004. Udstuen, in addition to getting Ryan’s daughter a job at the Illinois State Medical Society, also arranged, at Ryan’s request, for Ryan’s son-in-law to work for the Medical Society beginning in 1994. Tr11678-83. When, in early 1997, Udstuen told Ryan’s son-in-law that the Medical Society was contemplating terminating his
services, Ryan called Udstuen and insisted that the Medical Society retain the son-in-law and also give him a raise. Tr11690-91. Ryan told Udstuen,

“John needs the help, and you should continue to help. And he could use a little more help.”

T11691. Ryan added,

“Look, this is important.” Id.

Udstuen gave in to Ryan, and the Medical Society not only did not terminate Ryan’s son-in-law, but also gave him a raise, as Ryan had asked. Tr11691-96.

B. Official Actions Taken by Ryan in Return for Personal Benefits Provided by Harry Klein (Count Six)

Beginning in the 1990s, Ryan and Fawell made trips to a Jamaican villa owned by Harry Klein, an Illinois currency exchange owner. Tr2832-34,9421-23;Gx01-044. On Fawell’s first trip, Ryan said that because Klein’s business was regulated by SOS, they should each give Klein a check for the $1,000 lodging fee, and have Klein return to them the same amount in cash. Tr2838-42. In this way, they would create a false paper trail giving the appearance that Ryan and Fawell were paying for their lodging, whereas, in truth, the transaction was actually a “wash”; in other words, Klein was actually providing free lodging. See id.

This is what happened every year from 1993 to 2001. Tr2844,9432-33;Gx10-001-10-009. Ryan later falsely represented to FBI agents that he paid his own way at Klein’s villa, and went so far as to produce negotiated checks reflecting annual lodging payments, while concealing the cash-back arrangement. Tr18143-49;Gx10-013.

Throughout Ryan’s first SOS term, currency exchanges repeatedly requested a fee increase, but Ryan opposed it. Tr. 2843-44.

In January 1995, however, during one of Ryan’s and Fawell’s complimentary stays at Klein’s villa in Jamaica, Klein asked Ryan to approve a fee increase.
Tr2851. Having been treated to lodging at Klein’s Jamaica for several years, Ryan subsequently agreed, and the increase was implemented. Tr. 2852-53.

In late 1996 or early 1997, while Ryan, Fawell and Klein were relaxing around a picnic table during another free stay at Klein’s Jamaican villa, Klein said that he wanted to lease his building in South Holland to the SOS. Tr2858-59.

Upon returning from his free Jamaican vacation, Ryan ordered an SOS director to work out a lease for the Klein property. Tr6552.

Without reviewing other sites, the director cancelled a less-expensive lease in order to move an SOS office to Klein’s property, even though, according to the head of SOS’s property management division, the building was not in an ideal location. Tr3010-11, 6263, 6266-67, 6557-6560;Gx01-062. When the SOS
director asked Ryan’s view about certain disputed lease terms, Ryan responded,

“What does Harry want?”

and then approved Klein’s terms, telling Fawell he wanted “Harry to be happy.” Tr 2870, 6578-80;Gx01-006. In June 1997, Ryan personally signed the South Holland lease, authorizing $600,000 in payments to Klein over five years. Tr6289-91; Gx11-001.

Over a two-and-a-half year period, the state paid significantly more for the South Holland lease than it had for the previous lease, for a total difference of over $170,000. Tr11036.

C. Official Actions Taken by Ryan In Return for Personal Benefits Provided by Arthur Swanson

Swanson gave many benefits to Ryan and his family, including a trip to Cancun and a trip to Lake Tahoe in 1995, Tr15262-77,15333, as well as a figurine worth over $1200, which he gave the Ryans for their anniversary in 1996. Tr15275-77;Gx16-045.

Lincoln Towers is in the background of this Springfield photo.

In early 1995, around the time Swanson gave Ryan a free vacation at a timeshare in Mexico, Ryan steered an SOS lease to Swanson (the Lincoln Towers lease). Tr15261-71, 2910-20;Gx34-004. Ryan told Fawell to work out the Lincoln Towers lease, even after Swanson proposed a rental figure well above market rate. Tr2914-16.

By including non-useable space in the cost figures, Fawell manipulated the cost per square foot to make it appear lower than it actually was. Tr2919;Gx01-036. The Lincoln Towers lease cost $97,000 more than the SOS office paid at its former location, and Swanson made over $21,000 on the deal. Tr15345;Gx15-027, 15-029, 16-002,01-036.

Disney World at night near Independence Hall.

In about August 1999, Swanson paid $2,200 for Ryan’s daughter to take a family trip to Disney World. Tr1665-66, 16880-81;Gx28-009.

Shortly thereafter, Ryan told Fawell to hire Swanson as a lobbyist for the Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority (MPEA). Tr2929-30(JA791). When, after several weeks, Fawell had not yet hired Swanson, an agitated Ryan repeated his directive, adding that Swanson should receive $5,000 per month. Tr2934. Fawell then hired Swanson on Ryan’s terms. Tr2937-38. As a result, Swanson’s firm was paid $180,000 in state money over three years, even though it did virtually no meaningful work. Tr17238;Gx16-503.

D. False Statements of Economic Interest

Every year from 1991 to 2002, Ryan, as SOS and then governor, filed statement of economic interest forms, as state law required. Gx28-012. The forms required Ryan to list the source of all gifts over $500 that he received during the previous calendar year. Id. Ryan’s forms for 1991 through 2002 listed none of the payments or other benefits he and his family received from Warner, Klein, or Swanson. Id. Ryan signed each form, declaring it to be “a true, correct, and complete statement of my economic interests,” and filed or caused the forms to be filed with the SOS. Id.

III. Conviction, Sentencing, and Appeal

After a seven-month trial, on April 17, 2006, the jury convicted Ryan and Warner on all counts. R770,771. This Court granted Ryan’s motions for acquittal on Counts Nine and Ten (mail fraud counts relating to one of Warner’s leases and one of Swanson’s lobbying deals). R867:20-23.

The Court otherwise denied Ryan’s motions for acquittal and a new trial. R867.

On September 6, 2006, this Court sentenced Ryan to the low end of the guideline range, 78 months’ imprisonment on Count One, the racketeering conspiracy. The Court ordered this sentence to be served concurrently with sentences of 60 months on each mail fraud and false statement count, and 36 months on each of the tax counts. R888. Ryan appealed, and the Seventh Circuit affirmed his conviction and sentence on direct appeal. United States v. Warner, 498 F.3d 666 (7th Cir. 2007).

IV. Section 2255 Motion

On August 31, 2010, Ryan filed the instant motion pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255, arguing that the Supreme Court’s decision in Skilling invalidated his convictions and sentences on Counts One through Eight, the racketeering and mail fraud counts.[FN5] Ryan does not challenge his convictions and sentences on the remaining counts, but asks the Court to re-sentence him on those counts if the Court vacates his racketeering and mail fraud convictions.[FN6]

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FN5 Skilling applies retroactively because it “narrow[s] the scope of a criminal statute by interpreting its terms,” and therefore announces a new substantive rule of criminal law. Schriro v. Summerlin, 542 U.S. 348, 351-52 (2004).

FN6 The government disagrees with Ryan’s analysis of this Court’s reasoning in imposing sentence on the false statement and tax counts. Since the Court will not need to reach the issue if it denies Ryan’s motion, the government has deferred any discussion of re-sentencing at this time.
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ARGUMENT

THE SUPREME COURT’S DECISION IN SKILLING DOES NOT UNDERMINE THE VALIDITY OF RYAN’S CONVICTIONS ON COUNTS ONE THROUGH EIGHT.

As the Seventh Circuit stated in the direct appeal of this case,“[a]lthough the intangible rights theory of federal mail fraud may have its problems when applied to other fact settings, it is not unconstitutionally vague as applied here,” and “the evidence supporting the jury’s verdict was overwhelming.” Warner, 498 F.3d at 698-99, 675. Nothing in the Supreme Court’s decision in Skilling changes that analysis. The mail fraud offenses of which Ryan was convicted involved
bribes and kickbacks, and therefore fell squarely within the definition of “core” honest services fraud under the Supreme Court’s decision in Skilling. Even before Skilling, the Seventh Circuit described Ryan’s convictions as arising from his “channel[ing of] state contracts and leases to a friend in return for paid vacations.” United States v. Sorich, 523 F.3d 702, 707 (7th Cir. 2008) (emphasis added).

Moreover, the jury’s verdict may be supported by the alternative valid theory of guilt—money-property fraud—which was properly presented to the jury and is unaffected by Skilling. For both of these reasons, the Skilling decision does not undermine the validity of Ryan’s convictions on Counts One through Eight, and Ryan’s motion should be denied.

I. Standard of Review

A prisoner is entitled to relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 only if his “sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States,” the Court lacked jurisdiction, the sentence exceeded the maximum authorized by law, or the sentence is otherwise subject to collateral attack. 28 U.S.C. § 2255(a). In considering a motion under § 2255, the Court must
“review evidence and draw all reasonable inferences from it in a light most favorable to the government.” Carnine v. United States, 974 F.2d 924, 928 (7th Cir.1992). This standard requires that the Court uphold the jury’s verdict unless “the record contains no evidence, regardless of how it is weighed, from which the jury could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Blanchard, 542 F.3d 1133, 1154 (7th Cir. 2008) (quotations omitted).

This Court reviews de novo the legal correctness of the instructions provided to the jury. United States v. Cote, 504 F.3d 682, 687 (7th Cir. 2007). The Court reviews the instructions as a whole, and finds error “only if the instructions, viewed as a whole, misguide the jury to the litigant’s prejudice . . . .” Id. (quoting United States v. Palivos, 486 F.3d 250, 257 (7th Cir. 2007).

Where an instructional error has occurred, this Court reviews for harmless error. Neder v. United States, 527 U.S. 1, 19 (1999). As the Supreme Court made clear in Skilling, harmless error review applies where, although the jury has rendered a general verdict after having been instructed on a legally invalid theory of guilt, the verdict may be supported by an alternative, valid legal theory. Skilling, 130 S. Ct. at 2934 (citing Hedgpeth v. Pulido, 129 S. Ct. 530, 532 (2008) (per curiam) (citing Neder, 527 U.S. at 19)). On collateral review, an instructional error will result in reversal only if the error had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.” Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 637 (1993) (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S.750, 776 (1946)); Carter v. DeTella, 36 F.3d 1385, 1392 n.14 (7th Cir. 1994).[FN7]
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FN7 Ryan argues that Brecht may not apply because it was decided in the context of a postconviction challenge to a state conviction under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Mot26-27. Most Circuits have held that the Brecht standard applies to a post-conviction challenge to a federal conviction under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. See, e.g., United States v. Dago, 441 F.3d 1238, 1246 (10th Cir. 2006); United States v. Montalvo, 331 F.3d 1052, 1057-58 (9th Cir. 2003); Ross v. United States, 289 F.3d 677, 682 (11th Cir. 2002); Murr v. United States, 200 F.3d 895, 906 (6th Cir. 2000). United States v. Montalvo, 331 F.3d 1052, 1057-58 (9th Cir. 2003); Ross v. United States, 289 F.3d 677, 682 (11th Cir. 2002); Murr v. United States, 200 F.3d 895, 906 (6th Cir. 2000).

The Seventh Circuit has not specifically addressed the issue. In Lanier v. United States, 220 F.3d 833 (7th Cir. 2000), the Seventh Circuit applied a more stringent standard on collateral review, requiring the government to show the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Lanier applied the heightened standard without analysis, however, and the issue does not appear to have been raised by the parties. Accordingly, Lanier is not controlling. See, e.g., United States v. L.A. Tucker Truck Lines, Inc., 344 U.S. 33, 37-38 (1952). No Circuit that has specifically considered the issue has concluded that the heightened standard applies to § 2255 motions.

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The Brecht standard requires more than “a reasonable possibility” that the error contributed to the verdict. Brecht, 507 U.S. at 637; Carter, 36 F.3d at 1392 (quotations omitted). Instead, on habeas review, a court may reverse a conviction only if after looking at the record as a whole, the court concludes—or has a “grave doubt” about whether—the error resulted in “actual prejudice.” Brecht, 507 U.S. at 637-38; O’Neal v. McAninich, 513 U.S. 432, 435 (1995); Carter, 36 F.3d at 1392.

II. The Supreme Court’s Decision in Skilling

In Skilling v. United States, the Supreme Court held that the honest services statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1346, is constitutional when limited to mail fraud schemes involving bribes and kickbacks. Skilling, 130 S. Ct. at 2905. Skilling noted that after the Supreme Court invalidated the honest services theory in McNally v. United States, 483 U.S. 550 (1987), Congress passed § 1346 “to reinstate the body of pre-McNally honest-services law,” which “dominantly and consistently applied the fraud statute to bribery and kickback schemes,and the Court declined to extend the reach of the honest services statute to schemes involving “undisclosed self-dealing” in the absence of a bribe or kickback, that is, to the mere “taking of official action by the employee that furthers his own undisclosed financial interests while purporting to act in the interests of those to whom he owes a fiduciary duty.” Id. at 2932 (quotations omitted).

Although the Court in Skilling confined honest services fraud to bribes and kickbacks, it did nothing to change the elements of proof required to establish a mail fraud violation based on moneyproperty fraud. Id. at 2933-34.

III. Because the Jury Instructions on Honest Services Fraud Required the Jury to Find that Ryan Took Bribes or Kickbacks, There Was No Instructional Error.

A. Bribes and Kickbacks as Described in Skilling

Skilling did not redefine bribes and kickbacks, but rather explained that those terms draw content from pre-McNally case law involving bribe and kickback schemes, as well as from federal statutes prohibiting bribes and kickbacks. Skilling, 130 S. Ct. 2933-34.8

Cases cited as examples in Skilling , as well as recent federal bribery and kickback cases, reveal three essential points.

  • First, to take a bribe, a public official must receive a benefit and perform or promise to perform official acts in return. See United States v. Whitfield, 590 F.3d 325, 353 (5th Cir. 2009), cert. denied, ___S. Ct. ___ (Oct. 4, 2010); United States v. Kincaid-Chauncey, 556 F.3d 923, 943 (9th Cir. 2009); United States v. Ganim, 510 F.3d 134, 141 (2d Cir. 2007) (Sotomayor, J.); United States v. Kemp, 500 F.3d 257, 282 (3d Cir. 2007); United States v. Giles, 246 F.3d 966, 972 (7th Cir. 2001); United States v. Jennings, 160 F.3d 1006, 1014 (4th Cir. 1998). This requirement ensures that the bribe payer must get more for his money than mere access or general goodwill; he must get the promise of an official act or acts. See Kemp, 500 F.3d at 281.
  • Second, it is not necessary that the bribe payer and the official express their agreement to exchange benefits for official acts in so many words. “The official and the payor need not state the quid pro quo in express terms, for otherwise the law’s effect could be frustrated by knowing winks and nods.” United States v. Evans, 504 U.S. 255, 274 (1992) (Kennedy, J., concurring); accord Giles, 246 F.3d at 972; Kemp, 500 F.3d at 284. Instead, an agreement may be “implied from [the official’s] words and actions.” Evans, 504 U.S. at 274; Giles, 246 F.3d at 972.
  • Third, one form of bribery occurs when an official accepts a benefit and agrees in exchange to take official actions to benefit the bribe payer in the future, and in such cases the official does not need to specify those future acts at the time he takes the bribe. See, e.g., Whitfield, 590 F.3d at 349-50; Ganim, 510 F.3d at 147; Kemp, 500 F.3d at 281. In other words, there is bribery as long as there is “a course of conduct of favors and gifts flowing to a public official in exchange for a pattern of official actions favorable to the donor.” Jennings, 160 F.3d at 1014 (quotations omitted); accord Whitfield, 590 F.3d at 352-53; Ganim, 510 F.3d 147, 149; Kincaid-Chauncey, 556 F.3d at 943; Kemp, 500 F.3d at 282.9 Indeed, such schemes have been described as “some of the most pervasive and entrenched corruption in existence.” See, e.g., Ganim, 510 F.3d at 147. This “stream of benefits” theory is what the government charged and proved in Ryan’s case.

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FN8 Skilling cited two federal bribery statutes, 18 U.S.C. § 201(b) and 666(a)(2), and one kickback statute, 41 U.S.C. § 52(2). Skilling also singled out three post-McNally decisions about bribes and kickbacks. United States v. Ganim, 519 F.3d 134 (2d Cir. 2007), United States v. Whitfield, 590 F.3d 325 (5th Cir. 2009), cert. denied, ___ S. Ct. ___ (Oct. 4, 2010), and United States v. Kemp, 500 F.3d 257, 282 (3d Cir. 2007). See Skilling, 130 S. Ct. at 2934.
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Ryan’s motion devotes much attention to the argument that bribery requires a “quid pro quo.” [Emphasis added.] The case law on this issue depends on how courts define that term. In United States v. McNair, 605 F.3d 1152, 1187-88 (11th Cir. 2010), for instance, the Eleventh Circuit defined “quid pro quo” narrowly to mean “a specific payment given . . . in exchange for a specific official act,” id. at 1187, and held that because bribery does not require that each specific payment be linked to a specific official act, it does not require a “quid pro quo.” See also United States v. Gee, 432 F.3d 713, 714-15 (7th Cir. 2005) (bribery under § 666 does not require a specific “quid pro quo”); United States v. Agostino, 132 F.3d 1183, 1190 (7th Cir. 1997) (same). Similarly in Ganim, the Second Circuit held that each specific payment need not be linked to a specific official act, so long as there is an exchange of benefits for official action. Ganim, 510 F.3d at 147. However, because Ganim defined “quid pro quo” more broadly to include “an ongoing course of conduct” where “favors and gifts flow[ ] to a public official . . . in exchange for a pattern of official actions . . . ,” id. at 149, the court said that bribery requires a “quid pro quo.” The point is that, regardless of the label, bribery simply requires an exchange of benefits for official action. [Emphasis added.]

In the present case, the evidence showed that Ryan agreed to exchange benefits for official action, and such conduct clearly constitutes bribery, as that term is used in Skilling.[FN10]
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FN9 Skilling cites Whitfield, Ganim and Kemp approvingly, including the specific portions of those decisions cited here. Skilling, 130 S. Ct. at 2934.

FN10 Ryan’s motion says little about kickbacks, but the Supreme Court used the term broadly in Skilling, citing a federal statute that defines a kickback as “any money, fee, commission, credit, gift, gratuity, thing of value, or compensation of any kind which is provided, directly or indirectly, to [enumerated persons] for the purpose of improperly obtaining or rewarding favorable treatment in connection with [enumerated circumstances].” Skilling, 130 S. Ct. at 2933-34 (quoting 41 U.S.C. § 52(2)). This definition—focusing on payments made to get favorable treatment from a person who controls a source of income—is consistent with the way the Seventh Circuit has defined kickbacks. See United States v. Hickok, 77 F.3d 992, 1005 n.12 (7th Cir. 1996); United States v. Hancock, 604 F.2d 999, 1002 (7th Cir. 1979). If anything, the definition of kickbacks is broader than that of bribes.
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B. The Jury Instructions on Honest Services Fraud Required That the Jury Find Bribes or Kickbacks.

In the context of this case, the instructions provided to the jury permitted a conviction ofhonest services fraud only if the jury found that Ryan took bribes or kickbacks. The first relevant instruction stated:

A public official or employee has a duty to disclose material information to a public employer. If an official or employee conceals or knowingly fails to disclose a material personal or financial interest (also known as a conflict of interest) in a matter over which he has decision-making power, then that official or employee deprives the public of its right to the official’s or employee’s honest services, if the other elements of the mail fraud offense are met. Tr23905.

On the facts of this case, this instruction is consistent with Skilling because it permitted the jury to convict Ryan for failing to disclose a conflict of interest only if the conflict took the form of a “material personal or financial interest . . . in a matter over which [the official] has decision-making power”—which in this case, included only a bribe or kickback. For purposes of the mail fraud counts of which Ryan was convicted, the matters over which Ryan had decisionmaking power were the state contracts and leases he awarded to Warner, Klein, and Swanson.

And the only “material personal or financial interest” the jury heard that Ryan had in those matters was the stream of benefits he received in return for awarding Warner, Klein, and Swanson those contracts and leases.

Ryan did not own or have any other interest in buildings leased by the state or the companies that received state contracts, nor did he steer state business directly to himself or his own family.

Instead, the only conflict of interest a reasonable jury could have found that Ryan failed to disclose was his agreement to receive personal and financial benefits in exchange for official action—in other words, his receipt of bribes and kickbacks—and not the type of conflicts of interest that Skilling excluded from the ambit of the honest services fraud statute.

Just as importantly, the Court’s instructions to the jury required that to convict Ryan for undisclosed conflicts of interest, the jury had to find that all of the other elements of the mail fraud statute were met. The Seventh Circuit emphasized this point on direct appeal when it rejected Ryan’s attack on the portion of the instructions that related to conflicts of interest, explaining that:

The portion of the jury instructions quoted by the defendants about “conflict of interest” is taken out of context, as the jury instructions explicitly stated that a conflict of interest violated the statute only “if the other elements of the mail fraud statute are met.” The district court explained that the government must also show that the public official allowed or accepted the conflict of interest with the understanding or intent that she would perform acts within her official capacity in return. Warner, 498 F.3d at 698.

Accepting a conflict of interest or benefit with the understanding or intent to perform official acts in return constitutes taking a bribe. See supra at 15-17. Thus, in context, the conflict of interest instruction permitted the jury to find honest services fraud only if it found that Ryan took a bribe or kickback. There was no error under Skilling.

The three instructions that followed [FN11] properly defined bribes and kickbacks and, as the Seventh Circuit made clear on direct review, correctly informed the jury about the “exchange” element at the heart of a bribe and kickback scheme. Ryan waived or forfeited his right to challenge any of these instructions,12 however, even if he had not, there would be no error because individually and collectively they correctly emphasized the need to find that the scheme involved the performance of official acts in return for personal benefits. First, in an instruction that Ryan proposed, the Court instructed the jury:

The law does not require that the government identify a specific official act given in exchange for personal and financial benefits received by the public official so long as the government proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the public official accepted the personal and financial benefits with the understanding that the public official would perform or not perform acts in his official capacity in return. Tr23905-06 (quoted in part by the Seventh Circuit, Warner, 498 F.3d at 698.).

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FN 11 There was a fourth instruction that addressed bribery in the context of campaign contributions, but it is not relevant to this discussion. Tr23907-08.

FN12 Of the three instructions discussed below, Ryan proposed the first and third
instructions, them.R703:6; R703:5 (modified in court), and thus waived any challenge to them. E.g., United States v. Yu Tian Li, 615 F.3d 752 (7th Cir. 2010). Ryan failed to challenge the second instruction on direct appeal, and so any challenge is procedurally defaulted. E.g., United States v. Podhorn, 549 F.3d 552, 558 (7th Cir. 2008).
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This instruction was accurate, and numerous courts, including three cited in Skilling, have approved similar language. See, e.g., Whitfield, 590 F.3d at 353; Ganim, 510 F.3d at 144; Kemp, 500 F.3d at 281-82. Ryan’s only quibble with the instruction is that it focuses on the understanding of the public official, not on “whether two parties had agreed to an exchange.” Mot23. But his § 2255 motion omits the second half of the instruction, which requires the same understanding on the part of the bribe-payer. See Tr23906.13 More importantly, the law is clear that a public official’s “intent to perform an act in exchange for a benefit” is sufficient to show the official took a bribe. Ganim, 510 F.3d at 147. For example, the solicitation of a bribe from an unwilling payer or from an undercover agent, neither of whom “agreed” to the exchange, would constitute a bribery scheme.

The next instruction stated:

A benefit or benefits received by a defendant or given by a defendant with the intent that such benefit or benefits would ensure favorable official action when necessary can be sufficient to establish the defendant’s intent to defraud the public of its right to honest services. You need not find that such a benefit was conferred or received in exchange for a specific official action. Tr23906. This instruction also accurately states the law—before and after Skilling. Ryan asserts, without authority, that “[a]n intent to ensure favorable action when necessary is not enough.” Mot24n.15.

For decades, courts, including courts cited as paradigmatic bribery and kickback cases in Skilling, have held otherwise. See United States v. Isaacs, 493 F.2d 1124, 1145 (7th Cir. 1974) (“There is bribery if the offer is made with intent that the offeree act favorably to the offeror when necessary.”); accord United States v. Abbey, 560 F.3d 513, 518 (6th Cir. 2009); Kinkaid-Chauncey, 556 F.3d at 943 & n.943; Kemp, 500 F.3d at 282; Jennings, 160 F.3d at 1014; United States v. Arthur, 544 F.2d 730 (4th Cir. 1976).

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[FN13] The second half of the instruction provided: “Likewise, the law does not require that the government identify a specific official act given in exchange for personal and financial benefits received by the public official so long as the government proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the personal and financial benefits were given with the understanding that the public official would perform or not perform acts in his official capacity in return.”
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Another photo of George Ryan from an Exhibit in his trial.

The third instruction—another of Ryan’s proposals—stated that to prove a mail fraud violation, it is not enough that a public official received benefits from a person who has business with the state and that, instead, “that receipt violates the law only if the benefit was received with the public official’s understanding that it was given to influence his decision-making.” Tr23906-07.

Ryan does not explain why this instruction is incorrect, especially when read in light of the instruction cited above requiring that the “public official accepted the personal and financial benefits with the understanding that the public official would perform or not perform acts in his official capacity in return.” Tr23906. Contrary to Ryan’s contentions, this instruction passes muster under Skilling.

Finally, the Court instructed the jury about certain provisions of Illinois law. Tr23908-11.

Ryan claims a violation of state law can never form the basis for an honest services fraud conviction, Mot25, but Skilling did not so hold. Skilling acknowledged a circuit conflict on the issue, and did not resolve the conflict. 130 S. Ct. at 2928 n.37. In any event, this is a non-issue for several reasons. First, as the Seventh Circuit noted on direct appeal, the instructions made clear that

“[n]ot every instance of misconduct or violation of a state statute by a public official or employee constitutes a mail fraud violation,”

Tr23908, 23911, and that, to the contrary, an official or employee defrauds the public of his honest services only “[w]here a public official or employee misuses his official position . . . for private gain for himself or another,” “and the other elements of the mail fraud offense have been met,” Tr23911 (emphasis added). And, in discussing the conflict-of-interest provision, the Seventh Circuit explained, the required showing that “the other elements of the mail fraud statute have been met” meant that the official must accept a benefit for private gain “with the understanding or intent that [he will] perform acts within [his] official capacity in return.” Warner, 498 F.3d at 698.

In other words, the instructions required a bribe, particularly in the context of the evidence, which established that the private gain at issue was limited to benefits given to Ryan in exchange for Ryan’s steering of valuable contracts and leases. Moreover, as the Seventh Circuit noted:

[m]any of the state law provisions in the instructions explained what kinds of
financial transactions are not prohibited for state officials. This explanation was
more likely to undermine than to assist the prosecution in showing the defendants’ intent to deprive Illinois citizens of Ryan’s honest services.
Warner, 498 F.3d at 698.

Thus, the instructions emphatically did not permit the jury to convict based
on something other than a bribe or kickback scheme.

Accordingly, in order to find that Ryan committed honest services fraud in this case, the instructions, read as a whole and in the context of the evidence, required the jury to find that Ryan took bribes and kickbacks. There is no instructional error here, and therefore no error at all.

IV. Even if There Were Instructional Error Here, a Properly Instructed Jury Would Have Reached the Same Result, In Light of the Overwhelming Evidence Showing that Ryan Took Bribes and Kickbacks.

Even if this Court were to conclude that the honest services instructions permitted the jury to convict Ryan for actions that did not involve the taking of bribes and kickbacks, the instructional error would be harmless. In light of the evidence, a properly instructed jury would have found that Ryan took bribes and kickbacks because the evidence that he did so was overwhelming. Thus, Ryan suffered no actual prejudice. See Brecht, 507 U.S. at 637-38.

A. The Evidence Established Bribes and Kickbacks.

The indictment charged, and the evidence proved, that Ryan took bribes in the form of a stream of benefits from Warner, Klein and Swanson with respect to each count of honest services mail fraud of which Ryan was convicted. In the face of this evidence, Ryan attempts to define bribes and kickbacks so narrowly that little more than an express agreement to trade a particular sum of cash for a particular official action would ever qualify. The law provides no support for Ryan’s cramped definition of bribery.

1. The Currency Exchange and South Holland Bribes

For years, Ryan enjoyed free lodging at Klein’s Jamaican villa, gifts Ryan lied about on his disclosure forms and actively concealed through the secret cash-back arrangement. In 1995, while Klein and Ryan were relaxing at Klein’s villa in Jamaica, Klein asked Ryan for favorable official action in the form of a fee increase for currency exchanges.

Ryan later agreed, even though he had opposed a fee increase for years. As the government reminded the jury in its rebuttal argument, Ryan’s change of heart occurred “right after a trip to Jamaica.” Tr23714.

During a later vacation at Klein’s villa in Jamaica, Klein told Ryan that Klein wanted to lease his building in South Holland to the SOS, and when Ryan returned from the trip, he made that happen. Ryan caused the SOS to cancel a less-expensive lease and move to Klein’s ill-suited property without considering other locations, directed his subordinate to agree to Klein’s lease terms, and told his chief of staff he wanted to make Klein “happy.”

Ryan personally signed the lease, giving Klein $600,000 in lease payments over five years. As the government argued to the jury, the $13,000 in cash-back that Klein paid Ryan in Jamaica over the years was a striking example of the “corrupt payments” that Ryan took in return for state action. Tr23085; see also Tr23708.

Ryan’s motion argues there was no bribe because four years passed between Ryan’s first vacation in Jamaica and the lease signing, Mot18, but Klein’s benefits to Ryan were ongoing—Ryan vacationed in Jamaica for free every year, including the year he awarded Klein the lease.

And contrary to Ryan’s assertion, there is nothing “extraordinary” about years passing between a bribe and the payoff. In Whitfield, a case the Supreme Court cited favorably in Skilling, an attorney secured a state court judge a favorable loan, which the judge did not list on his disclosure forms. Whitfield, 590 F.3d at 336. After the attorney arranged the loan, he filed a personal injury lawsuit, and over a year later, the judge assigned the case to himself. Id. Nearly a year and a half after that, the judge ruled for the lawyer’s client, awarding him millions of dollars in damages. Id.

The Fifth Circuit affirmed the honest-services bribery convictions of both defendants without hesitation, despite the passage of time, and even though the lawyer and the judge never expressly agreed to trade the loan for the legal ruling at the time the loan was made. Id. at 373. See also Abbey, 560 F.3d at 515-16 (affirming bribery conviction of developer who gave city administrator a free subdivision lot in exchange for favorable consideration in the future; one year later the administrator pushed for developer to receive funding through municipal bonds, resulting in hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments).

2. The Warner Bribes and Kickbacks

Ryan awarded Warner contracts and leases in return for the many times Warner “took care” of Ryan through financial favors to Ryan, his family, and friends. Warner’s relationship with Ryan epitomizes a stream of benefits given in exchange for a serious of favorable official acts. Warner usually was not buying any one specific action; the benefits Warner gave Ryan, his family, and friends, served to keep Ryan on “retainer,” so that when opportunities arose, Ryan used his influence to favor Warner. See Kincaid-Chauncey, 556 F.3d at 943& n.15; Abbey, 560 F.3d at 518.

In this respect, Ryan’s relationship with Warner was similar to that between the defendants in Kemp, a case Skilling cited with approval. In Kemp, the Third Circuit affirmed the defendants’ convictions of honest services fraud based on bribery, concluding that bank executives gave a city treasurer benefits such as loans to the treasurer’s friends and family members who had “shaky credit.” Kemp, 500 F.3d at 284-85. This was similar to the way Warner, among other benefits,

  • loaned $145,000 to Ryan’s brother’s financially unstable company, Comguard, and
  • invested $6,000 to Ryan’s son’s company. Gx08-087-89,09-001,09-002,09-020,09-500. In Kemp, the city treasurer,

in exchange for the loans, rigged bids to ensure that the executives’ bank got a lucrative government contract, Kemp, 500 F.3d at 269, much as Ryan overruled his subordinate to make sure Warner’s client ADM kept the lucrative sticker contract, Tr8140-46, steered a state contract to Viisage because Warner was its lobbyist (though Warner concealed that fact), Tr13206, Tr3102-04; Gx03-020, 03-023, 03-009, and caused the SOS to relocate to buildings Warner owned in order to benefit Warner. Tr16954, 7822-24, 2804-05, 10463; Gx07-011, 07-500, 07-501, 07-502.

The court in Kemp had no difficulty finding that the city treasurer took bribes, relying on the
same stream of benefits theory the government pursued at Ryan’s trial. 500 F.3d at 281-82. Among other things, the court noted that on one occasion when a bank executive agreed to waive an appraisal fee for a loan the treasurer wanted approved, the treasurer told the executive, “you are my f–king guy. . . . So you get special treatment.” Id. at 286.

Similarly, when Warner recruited Ryan’s friend Udstuen to join Warner’s effort to make money from their relationship with Ryan by entering the lobbying business, Warner told Udstuen that no one had done more for Ryan than Udstuen, and that Warner would “take care of George,” Tr11620-22, thereby drawing a direct link between the benefits Warner and Udstuen gave Ryan, and the money Warner and Udstuen would make after Ryan steered them state business.14 The court in Kemp emphasized that the bank executives, like Warner, did in fact get special treatment, with the treasurer rigging bids for a city contract to ensure the bank got it. Id. at 286. From this “course of conduct,” the court held, the jury could conclude that the treasurer, like Ryan, agreed to take official action in exchange for the benefits he received. Id.

In addition to bribes, Warner’s Viisage contract also involved at least two instances of kickbacks. Months before the bidding process began, Ryan told Warner to cut Ryan’s friend Swanson in on the deal, and Warner eventually paid Swanson $36,000 for no work. The government highlighted this as another example of Ryan’s “corrupt payments,” telling the jury,

“When George Ryan directed Warner to give a piece of the Viisage lobbying fee to [Ryan’s] good friend Ron Swanson, that was the equivalent of him claiming a piece of those fees for himself.” Tr23085.

In addition, five days after landing the Viisage contract, which earned him over $800,000, Warner wrote Ryan a blank check, which Ryan used to pay the band at his daughter’s wedding.

The proximity between the award of the contract and Warner’s payment to Ryan is evidence the two were linked, see Giles, 246 F.3d at 973; Jennings, 160 F.3d at 1018, as is Warner’s use of a front man to conceal that he was the one getting paid as Viisage’s lobbyist. See Jennings, 160 F.3d at 1018.

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FN14 To take another example, when Ryan was asked about disputed terms in the lease with Klein, he replied, “What does Harry want?” and told Fawell he wanted “Harry to be happy.” Tr2870,6578-80.
= = = = =
The ADM and IBM contracts also involved kickbacks—this time to Ryan’s friend Udstuen.

With Ryan’s approval, Warner gave Udsteun a cut of Warner’s fees on the contracts, totaling about a third of the money Warner made, even though Udsteun did little or no work. These kickbacks to Ryan’s friend are no different than kickbacks to Ryan himself. Cf. Ganim, 510 F.3d at 138-39 (affirming honest services conviction of mayor who agreed to kickback of one-third of fees earned on city contracts he awarded).

Who would have thought that a trip to Disney World would result in a criminal indictment for one's father?

3. The Swanson Bribes

Swanson’s bribes were similar—Ryan awarded Swanson lucrative leases and contracts soon after Swanson paid for vacations for Ryan and his daughter. The $2,200 Swanson paid so Ryan’s daughter could go to Disney World netted Swanson a lobbying contract worth $180,000 for no work, showing, as the government explained to the jury, that “Ryan is willing to sell his office in order to give a government benefit to the friend who buys that vacation.” Tr23805, 23807-08. After Swanson paid for Ryan’s vacation in Cancun, Ryan ordered his subordinates to give Swanson the Lincoln Towers lease for which the state paid well above market rate. As the government told the jury, the state paid Swanson

“for one reason: Because Ron Swanson got in George Ryan’s office, and George Ryan just got back from Cancun with Ron Swanson.” Tr23783.

Ryan does not dispute that over the course of many years, his benefactors gave him a stream of benefits, or that Ryan gave a stream of state business to his benefactors. Nevertheless, Ryan argues

he did not take bribes and kickbacks because, he claims, he and his benefactors never agreed that the benefits were in exchange for state business.

The jury heard ample evidence permitting it to reject this claim. Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the government, as is required, the evidence clearly showed that Ryan’s relationship with Warner, Klein, and Swanson was a classic arrangement of “I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine,” see Jennings, 160 F.3d at 1014, in which people “with continuing and long-term interests” in matters under Ryan’s control, gave Ryan numerous benefits “to coax ongoing favorable official action.” United States v. Sawyer, 85 F.3d 713, 730 (1st Cir. 1996). See also United States v. Woodward, 149 F.3d 46, 55 (1st Cir. 1998)
(affirming honest services bribery conviction of state representative who took years worth of undisclosed free meals, rounds of golf, and other payments from a lobbyist and friend, and in return repeatedly ruled in the lobbyists’s favor).

The Seventh Circuit has joined many others in calling conduct like Ryan’s bribery. In United States v. Martin, 195 F.3d 961 (7th Cir. 1999), for example, a contractor, mimicking the actions of Warner, Klein, and Swanson, “showered” a state official with gifts worth thousands of dollars, including upgraded airline tickets, trips, and money to spend at casinos. Id. at 964-65.

The official, like Ryan, failed to disclose any of the gifts, as he was required to do by department regulations. Id. What the official did do was make recommendations and prepare misleading cost estimates that allowed the contractor to be awarded a lucrative contract on favorable terms, costing
the state money and lining the contractor’s pockets. Id. at 964-65.

The Seventh Circuit held that the official’s “guilt of receiving bribes is not open to serious doubt,” and that he accepted the gifts intending to be influenced in connection with his official acts, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 666—one
of the statutes Skilling cites as helpful in defining bribery in the honest services context. See Martin, 195 F.3d at 965.

In United States v. Gorny, 732 F.2d 597 (7th Cir. 1984), a pre-McNally bribery case, the Seventh Circuit affirmed the mail fraud conviction of a deputy commissioner on the Cook County board of tax appeals who took cash payments from lawyers who appeared before him, and failed to disclose those payments on his statements of economic interest. Gorny, 732 F.2d at 599-600. Even
though none of the cash payments were “linked directly to any action on a particular real estate assessment file,” the people who paid bribes “enjoyed an unusually high rate of success in their practice before the Board.” Id. at 600.

In light of this circumstantial evidence of a stream-of-benefits agreement, and the testimony of several bribe payers who said they paid the money intending to receive some favorable treatment in exchange, the Court concluded that sufficient
evidence had been presented to establish that the defendant accepted the payments intending to be influenced by them. Id. at 601.

Just so here.

B. The Government Argued to the Jury that Ryan Took Bribes and Kickbacks.

As outlined above, the government argued that Ryan exchanged official action for the benefits he received from Warner, Klein, and Swanson—in the government’s words, that Ryan “sold his office” in return for “corrupt payments.” Tr23084-85, 23817-18, 23809, 23826. The government explained Ryan’s bribes and kickbacks using the stream-of-benefits theory courts repeatedly have approved. As the government argued, “the flow of benefits, when Ryan received, referred, and advocated for these financial benefits and then took some action to benefit those who had provided the benefits to him or his family, he was, in essence, selling his office brick by brick.” Tr22971; see also Tr22836.

The government told the jury:

C “George Ryan actively perverted the decision-making process to tilt the gain in favor of his friends who were taking care of him and his family. And that is not politics, ladies and gentlemen. That’s a crime.” Tr23100.

C Ryan “decided that the benefits of his public office were his to give out like candy to Larry Warner and to other friends of his who at the same time were giving him and his family financial benefits and gifts.” Tr23140.

C “Warner hit the jackpot during George Ryan’s terms as secretary of state and as governor . . . $3 million in total benefits,” and Warner, in turn, “did a very nice job of taking care of George Ryan.” Tr22835.

Ryan’s motion notes correctly that more than once, the government told the jury it did not have to find a “quid pro quo.” Tr22956-58, 23083-84, 23763-64, 23817-18. But, as is clear from the context of those statements, the government was simply arguing, correctly, that in order to convict Ryan, the jury did not have to find that Ryan had a conversation in which he expressly agreed to accept a specific benefit in exchange for a specific official act.

Instead, the government emphasized that Ryan received benefits from Warner, Klein, and Swanson over many years, and in return, Ryan took official action for these benefactors as opportunities arose. The government made this point several times, perhaps most clearly in its initial closing argument:

[Ryan] did not make announcements or press releases when Warner, Swanson, or Klein gave him or his family something in order to influence his decision-making.

The loans, the vacations, the other benefits did not come in packages with bright red lettering that said, “This is to influence you.”

Most importantly, keep in mind that this is not a case in which a public official had a specific price for each official act that he did, like a menu in a restaurant where you pick an item and it has a particular price. The type of corruption here—that type of corruption where you give me this, I will give you that, is often referred to as a quid pro quo.

The corruption here was more like a meal plan in which you don’t pay for each item on the menu. Rather, there is a cost that you pay, an ongoing cost, and you get your meals. Tr22852-53.

This, in a nutshell, is the stream of benefits theory of bribes and kickbacks, one that courts—including courts cited favorably in Skilling—repeatedly have approved. See supra at 16-17.

C. In Light of the Evidence and the Government’s Arguments, a Reasonable Jury, Properly Instructed, Would Have Found that Ryan Took Bribes and Kickbacks.

Three features of Ryan’s scheme, as alleged in the indictment and proved by the evidence, make it particularly clear that a properly instructed jury would have convicted Ryan of taking bribes.

First, Ryan, Warner, Swanson, and Klein carefully concealed what they were doing. These “elaborate efforts at concealment provide powerful evidence” of Ryan’s consciousness of guilt, see United States v. Dial, 757 F.2d 163, 170 (7th Cir. 1985), and powerful evidence that Ryan hid his transactions precisely because he was awarding friends in exchange for the benefits they gave him.

Second, as the government emphasized to the jury during rebuttal, Ryan was not the type of friend who did favors for Warner, Klein, and Swanson other than giving them state business. Ryan did not pay for Warner, Klein, and Swanson to go on vacations, invest in their relatives’ companies, or write checks to their families. Tr23763-64. These men did not do favors for Ryan because he
reciprocated in kind; they did favors for him because Ryan awarded them state contracts and leases worth millions of dollars. See Woodward, 149 F.3d at 58. Finally, Warner, Klein, and Swanson did not seek mere general goodwill, they sought specific official actions—leases, contracts, currency exchange rates—and it was in exchange for these things that they “took care” of Ryan.

In light of the evidence presented by the government at trial, there is no basis for “grave doubt” concerning whether the jury convicted Ryan only of conduct that does not constitute a crime after Skilling. See O’Neal, 513 U.S. at 435. If properly instructed, any reasonable jury would have convicted Ryan of taking bribes and kickbacks.

V. The Jury Necessarily Concluded that Ryan Committed Money-Property Fraud.

The Court should deny Ryan’s motion for a third reason. Even if the jury convicted Ryan of honest services fraud based on undisclosed conflicts of interest that did not involve taking bribes and kickbacks, the jury must have also concluded that Ryan committed money-property fraud, and so any error resulting from the honest services instructions is harmless. [FN15] [FN13]

On direct appeal, Ryan raised no claims relating to money-property fraud, and any such claims are procedurally defaulted. Ryan’s § 2255 motion likewise fails to raise such a claim.

A. Post-McNally Money-Property Cases

After the Supreme Court invalidated the honest services theory in McNally, numerous appellate court decisions affirmed mail fraud convictions and found that erroneous jury instructions on the honest services theory were harmless because the government proved a valid money-property theory. See, e.g., Moore v. United States, 865 F.2d 149, 153-54 (7th Cir. 1989); United States v. Asher, 854 F.2d 1483, 1496 (3d Cir. 1988); United States v. Perholtz, 836 F.2d 554, 558-59 (D.C. Cir. 1987). While courts generally overturned convictions that were “based entirely on the intangible rights theory,” courts affirmed convictions, such as Ryan’s, where the “bottom line of the scheme or artifice to defraud had the inevitable result of effecting monetary or property losses to the . . . state.” Asher, 854 F.2d at 1490, 1494; see also Messinger v. United States, 872 F.2d 217, 222 (7th Cir. 1989); United States v. Saks, 964 F.2d 1514, 1521 (5th Cir. 1992). In judging whether an error was harmless, courts looked to the trial as a whole, including the indictment, the evidence, the arguments, and the jury instructions. See Messinger, 872 F.2d at 221; Perholtz, 836 F.2d at 559.

The same harmless error analysis applies here.

B. The Indictment Charged a Single Scheme that Included Money-Property Fraud.

The indictment alleged that Ryan devised and participated in one scheme “to defraud the people of the State of Illinois, and the State of Illinois, of money, property, and the intangible right to honest services. . . .” R110:19. Counts Two through Eight alleged specific mailings of state money, or money derived from state contracts, in furtherance of the single scheme. Id. at 59-65.

That the scheme involved money and property is central to the indictment’s allegations: the indictment describes numerous state contracts and leases that were the objects of the fraud. See, e.g., R110:19-21 (referring to “contracts” and “real property lease[s]”).

C. The Evidence Established a Single Scheme that Included Money-Property Fraud.

The elements of mail fraud are a scheme to defraud, intent to defraud, and use of the mail. United States v. Sorich, 523 F.3d 702, 708 (7th Cir. 2008). “A scheme to defraud requires the making of a false statement or material isrepresentation, or the concealment of [a] material fact.” United States v. Powell, 576 F.3d 482, 490 (7th Cir. 2009) (quotations omitted). “A failure to disclose information may constitute fraud if the omission [is] accompanied by acts of concealment.” Id. at 491.

For money-property fraud, the scheme must also have “a substantial potential” to deprive someone of money or property, which includes state contract and leases. United States v. Barber, 881 F.2d 345, 349 (7th Cir. 1989); Sorich, 523 F.3d at 713; United States v. Leahy, 464 F.3d 773, 788 (7th Cir. 2006). At trial, the same evidence that supported the honest services fraud theory based on undisclosed conflicts of interest also established the elements of money-property fraud.

1. South Holland Lease Steered to Klein

The South Holland lease resulted in $600,000 of state money going into Klein’s pockets over five years. Tr.6289-91; Gx11-001. At the same time Ryan obtained state money for Klein, Ryan used the false paper trail from the cash-back arrangement to hide the free lodging Klein gave him. In its closing argument, the government correctly called this a “sham transaction.” Tr22906.

As the government also pointed out during closing, during this same period, Ryan lied on his annual statements of economic interest by failing to disclose these gifts from Klein, as Illinois law required. Gx28-012; Tr22918-20. Later, Ryan lied to the FBI, claiming he paid his own way in Jamaica, and producing the bogus checks as proof. Tr18143-49; Gx10-013.

Ryan did not just obtain state money for Klein through fraud, he caused actual loss to the state. Ryan let Klein decide disputed lease terms, telling Fawell he wanted “Harry to be happy.” Tr2870, 6578-80; Gx01-006. Making Harry happy meant the state lost money, paying $173,000 more for Klein’s lease than it had for the previous lease. Tr.6289-9111036; Gx11-001.

2. Contracts and Leases Steered to Warner

a. Bellwood and Joliet Leases

Warner pocketed hundreds of thousands of dollars of state money on the Bellwood and Joliet leases, and both leases were accompanied by acts of concealment and misrepresentations. On the Bellwood lease, Warner assured Ryan and Fawell that the press would never find out about Warner’s interest, because Warner’s name was “buried in paperwork.” Tr2772-73, 2774. Warner concealed his interest in the property until after Ryan signed the lease in the spring of 1993, and then allowed his interest to surface through various transactions. Tr16950-51, 16954; Gx07-011, 07-501, 07-502. Warner did the same for the Joliet lease, again telling Fawell that his interest was buried in paperwork, and again hiding his interest until after Ryan awarded the lease. Tr2812, 3005, Gx06-500. In its closing argument, the government told the jury these leases were filled with “concealment and deceit.” Tr22922.

Both leases resulted in a loss to the state. The state paid above market rate for the Bellwood property, for a total of about $246,583 for the first five years. Tr11045,11399 For the Joliet property, the state overpaid by about $296,485. Tr11021. When Warner’s role in the Joliet lease ultimately became public, Warner told Udstuen he never should have done the lease because it was “too good a deal.” Tr11727.

b. Viisage Contract

In 1996, Ryan awarded Viisage, one of Warner’s clients, a contract for $20 million in state money, again using concealment and misrepresentations. As the government’s closing argument pointed out to the jury, Warner actively concealed his role as a lobbyist for Viisage by failing to register as a lobbyist, and by using a front man whose name went on the paperwork. Tr23009, 13206; Gx03-015, 03-016, 03-020, 03-023, 04-045. It was only after Viisage won the contract that Warner removed the front man and had the lobbying arrangement transferred to his company, raking in $834,000 in fees. Tr3103-04, 16923-25; Gx03-500, 03-501. Ryan knew Warner had an interest in the contract from the start.

Indeed, before the bidding process even began, Ryan told Warner to cut Swanson in on the Viisage deal, and Warner promised Swanson $36,000 on a contract Viisage hadn’t been awarded yet. Tr3102-04; Gx03-009. Five days after Ryan steered the contract to Warner, Warner wrote Ryan a blank check, which Ryan made out for over $3,000 to pay the band at his daughter’s wedding. Gx23-003. Ryan lied on his statements of economic interest by not disclosing this benefit, as well as other benefits Warner gave to Ryan and his family. Gx28-012.

c. ADM and IBM Contracts

In 1991, Warner leveraged his access to Ryan and convinced ADM to hire him as a lobbyist to ensure that ADM would keep a lucrative contract for license plate stickers. Tr8032-33, 8064, 8067-68, 8112-13, 11637. ADM paid Warner between $2,000 and $5,000 every month to keep the contract. Gx02-004, 02-005, 02-015, 02-500, 02-501. In 1993, an official at SOS decided it was in the state’s best interest to eliminate ADM’s security mark, which may have cost ADM the
contract, but an angry Warner told the official Warner would “take care of it.” Tr8140-44. A few days later, Ryan told the official to quietly retract his proposal, and asserted—falsely—that the security mark was necessary for public safety. Tr8140-44, 9143-46. The official retracted his proposal, even though he believed doing so was against the state’s best interests, and in this way, ADM continued to receive state money from 1991 to 1999, and Warner continued to be enriched as ADM’s lobbyist. Tr8143-47, 2801.

In 1996, Ryan allowed Warner and Udstuen to rig the bidding on a computer mainframe contract by allowing them to choose the director of the SOS department who dealt with mainframe issues. Tr12526. Warner and Udstuen specifically picked a director who had expressed support for giving the contract to IBM, a Warner client. Tr12528-29

The official did, in fact, award IBM the $26 million mainframe contract, and Warner received $1 million in fees from IBM, most of which was contingent on IBM landing the contract. Tr3125,12541,12931,12981-87;Gx04-043,04-014,04-021.

Warner gave about one-third of these fees to Udstuen, who never registered as IBM’s lobbyist and was, in fact, unknown to IBM.

During the same time period the state paid money to ADM and IBM on these contracts, Warner gave a number of financial benefits to Ryan and Ryan’s family. In 1994 and again in 1997, Warner loaned a total of $145,000 to Comguard, Ryan’s brother’s financially unstable company. Tr10677, 17243-49; Gx09-020, 09-008, 09-500, 09-501.

Also in 1997, Warner provided a slew of benefits, including waiving a $1,000 insurance adjustment fee Ryan owed, waiving an insurance adjustment fee for Ryan’s son-in-law, giving the same son-in-law a $5000 loan, and making a $6,000 investment in Ryan’s son’s company. Tr15515-19,17092-118,15157-63, 17088-91; Gx32-001,32-004,22-004,22-005,08-087-89. Ryan reported none of these benefits on his disclosure statements. Gx28-012.

The actions of Ryan and his co-schemers, summarized above, were part of a scheme to defraud the state of money and property. The government proved that Ryan and his co-schemers did not merely fail to disclose a conflict, they actively concealed and misrepresented material facts about the benefits he received and the benefits he provided. Each misrepresentation arose in a single context:

Ryan awarding a state contract or lease to one of his benefactors. In that context, Ryan “directly targeted [the state’s] coffers and its position as a contracting party.” Leahy, 464 F3d at 788.

Ryan and his co-schemers obtained this state money under false pretenses, by lying or concealing material information.

In some cases, such as the Bellwood and Joliet leases and the Viisage contract, Ryan or his co-schemer Warner took active steps to conceal that Warner was the person receiving state money, by “burying Warner’s name in paperwork” and using front men to appear on documents—the type of “acts of concealment” that constitute fraud. See Powell, 576 F.3d at 491 (involving failure to disclose information plus active concealment in the form of forged signatures).

In other cases, such as the ADM contract, Ryan made misrepresentations by lying to state officials about why he was acting to preserve ADM’s contract, claiming that it was for security reasons, when in fact it was to ensure that Warner could keep getting rich on a state contract.

For the South Holland lease and the Viisage deal, Ryan lied on his disclosure statements by failing to report Klein’s free Jamaican vacations and Warner’s blank check for the wedding band. And for all of Warner’s contracts and leases, Ryan lied on his disclosure statements by failing to report any of the benefits Warner gave Ryan and his family, benefits the government argued, and the jury was entitled to conclude, were in fact benefits to Ryan himself. Tr22967-69.

The acts of concealment and misrepresentations by Ryan, Warner, and Klein were material because the state would have wanted to know, and was entitled to know, who was receiving state money, why they were receiving it, and whether the recipient had showered Ryan with personal and financial benefits. See United States v. Bush, 522 F.2d 641, 647 (7th Cir. 1975).

If Ryan had truthfully disclosed this information, it would have been capable of influencing the state when the state decided whether to award the contracts and leases to Warner and Klein in the first place, and whether to continue the contracts and leases over the course of several years.

Indeed, it is precisely because such information is capable of influencing the state that Illinois requires its public officials to file annual statements of economic interests. See Bush, 522 F.2d at 645, 647-48 (false statements of economic interests are material misrepresentations).

The state might have decided it did not want to award a contract or lease to someone who had benefitted Ryan, or that the state wanted different terms for the contracts and leases than the terms Ryan permitted.

By depriving the state of this information, Ryan obtained state money “through false pretenses,” that is, active concealment and material misrepresentations, and engaged in a scheme to defraud the state of money. See Leahy, 464 F.3d at 788; United States v. Lack, 129 F.3d 403, 406 (7th Cir. 1997).

Ryan’s fraud cost the state hundreds of thousands of dollars on the South Holland, Bellwood, and Joliet leases.

On the ADM stickers contract, Ryan caused the state to continue to pay ADM for a contract based on specifications that the relevant state official no longer believed were in the state’s best interest.

The Viisage and IBM contracts were essentially no-bid contracts in which Ryan picked, or allowed Warner to pick, one of Warner’s clients to receive the contract. Whether or not Ryan caused the state actual loss on these contracts, he exposed the state to a substantial risk of loss, which is all the mail fraud statute requires. Barber, 881 F.2d at 349; see also United States v. Riley, No. 08-3758, 08-3759, 2010 WL 3584066, at *10 (3d Cir. Sept. 16, 2010); United States v. Welch, 327 F.3d. 1081, 1108 (10th Cir. 2003).

Here, the risk of loss was inherent in the scheme. Ryan awarded the contracts to Warner’s clients because they were Warner’s clients—as the ADM example makes clear, Ryan was less interested in whether the deal was in the state’s best interests.

Even if by chance the contracts were favorable to Illinois, Ryan deprived the state of the chance to make a better deal, or the best deal possible, because he awarded state business based on what was best for Warner and himself, by making misrepresentations and actively concealing information. See Bush, 522 F.2d at 648; see also Riley, 2010 WL 3584066, at *10.

D. The Government Argued, and the Court Properly Instructed the Jury, Concerning Money-Property Fraud.

The government argued the money-property fraud scheme to the jury, explaining,

“When you are given – when you are stealing from the state, people’s resources, that’s property. That’s money. You can’t do that and lie about it, and there is a mailing in furtherance of it. That’s money or property.” Tr23771.

The prosecution used various formulations, but the argument was the same:

Ryan and his co-schemers obtained state money by awarding contracts and leases, while concealing or misrepresenting various facts about the transactions.

The government marshaled the same evidence to argue that Ryan both failed to disclose conflicts of interest, and defrauded the state of money and property.

For example, the government’s initial closing argument described

“the core of the case” as Ryan violating his duty to provide honest services by “giving state benefits, like contracts and leases to his friends . . . while at the same time they were providing various undisclosed financial benefits to him. . . .” Tr22836.

Later, the government explained that

Ryan’s friends gave him things of value “at the same time that Ryan was giving them government money in the form of leases.” Tr22851-52.

And whether discussing Ryan’s failure to disclose conflicts of interest or Ryan’s fraud involving state money, the

prosecutors zeroed in on the concealment and
misrepresentations of Ryan, Warner, and Klein, arguing that Ryan concealed benefits on his disclosure forms, Tr22958, 22967, and that “concealing is fraud.” Tr 23757.

The government also made clear the scheme was not just about an intangible right to honest services, but that the state was defrauded of “tangible things,” such as the South Holland, Joliet, and Bellwood leases, and the ADM sticker contract for which there was no competition. Tr23099.

The government emphasized the loss to the state, explaining that the state was “ripped off” for $173,000 for the South Holland lease, Tr22914, and that “Warner, Swanson, Klein take in thousands and thousands of dollars on these leases. The state was a loser . . . where the state moved out of one location, where they were paying less, moved into another Ryan-picked location, where they end up paying more, costing the taxpayers money.” Tr22892-93.

Finally, unlike in some cases where courts have found harmless error even when the judge gave no instruction on money-property fraud, see Moore, 865 F.2d at 153-54; United States v. Doherty, 867 F.2d 47 (1st Cir. 1989) (Breyer, J.), this Court properly instructed the jury on the money-property theory. Tr23902-03. The Court also informed the jury that the money-property fraud was part of “a single scheme to defraud.” Tr23903.

E. The Jury Must Have Convicted Ryan of Money-Property Fraud.

This case was not “based entirely on the intangible rights theory,” but is one where the “bottom line of the scheme or artifice to defraud had the inevitable result of effecting monetary or property losses to the . . . state.” Asher, 854 F.2d at 1490, 1494.

As described above, the evidence and arguments that Ryan failed to disclose conflicts of interest and that Ryan and his co-schemers defrauded the state of money were identical. Any reasonable jury that convicted on the former basis must also have convicted on the latter.

The Seventh Circuit has found harmless error in similar cases where money-property fraud was inherent in the scheme, even where the jury was only instructed on an intangible rights theory.

In Moore, for example, the Seventh Circuit found the failure to give a money-property instruction was harmless, concluding that, as here, the government “plainly lost money or property as a result of the proven bid-rigging scheme,” and the jury “could not have found a scheme to defraud [the government] of its intangible rights separate from a criminal scheme to obtain money or property by the bid rigging charged and shown.” 865 F.2d at 153-54.

See also Asher, 854 F.2d at 1495-96 (finding harmless error where scheme involved award of no-bid contract in exchange for a bribe, resulting in “a substantially greater cost to the Commonwealth than a contract obtained through traditional competitive bidding.”); Perholz, 836 F.2d at 558 (finding harmless error where kickback scheme caused the government to overpay for a subcontract).

Since, on the facts presented, if the jury found Ryan guilty of honest services fraud they necessarily found him guilty of money-property fraud, Ryan suffered no prejudice.

VI. A Properly Instructed Jury Would Have Convicted Ryan of Money-Property Fraud.

Even if the Court finds that the honest services and money-property frauds were not so closely intertwined, there is a final basis to deny Ryan’s motion. Any jury that was instructed solely on the valid theory of money-property fraud would have convicted Ryan of that crime because the evidence that Ryan committed money-property fraud was overwhelming. Therefore, any errors in the honest services instructions could not possibly have prejudiced Ryan The South Holland lease provides the clearest example.

There is no question that Ryan

  • obtained state money through false pretenses,
  • by awarding the lease to Klein,
  • actively concealing the free vacations Klein had given Ryan through the cash-back arrangement, and
  • lying on his disclosure forms by not listing those free vacations,

resulting in a state lease for a property with serious drawbacks that cost the state $173,000 more than the previous location. These actions deprived the state of money through fraud.

Because of this evidence, and the evidence related to the other contracts and leases, any
reasonable jury properly instructed solely on money-property fraud would have convicted Ryan.

Therefore, the honest services instructions did not affect the verdict, and Ryan’s convictions and sentence should stand.

VII. Skilling Provides No Basis for Finding Prejudice Based on the Evidence Admitted at Trial.

Finally, Ryan complains about several pieces of evidence he claims are inadmissible in light
of Skilling. Mot15-16. Because all of the evidence was admissible even without a mail fraud theory based on undisclosed conflicts of interest, Skilling has no effect on the admissibility of this evidence.  See Riley, 2010 WL 3584066, at *7; United States v. Prosperi, 201 F.3d 1335, 1345 (11th Cir. 2000).

For example, the following evidence was admissible both before and after Skilling.

  • C That Ryan accepted gifts in excess of the $50 limit imposed by SOS regulations and
    Ryan’s personal policy was admissible to show Ryan’s intent to defraud and his
    credibility, the latter of which was at issue because of the false statements counts.
  • C The consulting fee Ryan took from the Gramm campaign was specifically charged
    in the tax counts. See R110:80-81.
  • C The evidence of Ryan’s dismantling of the SOS Inspector General’s Office was
    admissible to show Ryan’s intent to protect the ability of Citizens for Ryan to make
    money. Ryan used this money for personal use, but, as charged in the tax counts, did
    not pay taxes on it. See R110:76-84.
  • C Warner’s access to low-digit plates was admissible to show how Ryan gave Warner
    complete access to SOS operations, which was relevant to the government’s mail
    fraud theories based on both money-property and bribes and kickbacks. As the
    government argued to the jury, that Ryan’s secretary kept a kitty at her desk so
    Warner could order low-digit plates for his friends showed the types of governmental
    favors Ryan did for Warner, and made it more believable that SOS employees
    recognized Warner’s clout and acceded to his demands about state contracts and
    leases. Tr22975; see also Tr23047.
  • C The evidence that Ryan told Swanson the location of the Grayville prison was admissible to show how Ryan showered Swanson with government benefits, including confidential information. Although the Court later vacated Ryan’s conviction on Count Ten related to this episode, the evidence was admissible to prove the flow of benefits between Ryan and Swanson. In any event, Ryan waived his right to challenge this evidence by failing to do so on direct appeal.
  • C Ryan’s conversion of state property, such as using state employees and state resources on his campaigns, was admissible as evidence of how Ryan used false pretenses, including false time sheets, to obtain state money and property.

Even if the Court were to conclude that some of this evidence was inadmissible, any error
was harmless because its admission did not affect Ryan’s “substantial rights.” See United States v. Jones, 389 F.3d 753, 758 (7th Cir. 2004). In light of what the Seventh Circuit called the “overwhelming” evidence of Ryan’s guilt, Warner, 498 F.3d at 675, a reasonable juror’s view of the case would not have changed had this evidence been excluded. See United States v. Owens, 424 F.3d 649, 656 (7th Cir.2005).

CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the Court should deny Ryan’s motion.

Dated: October 7, 2010 Respectfully submitted,
PATRICK J. FITZGERALD
United States Attorney
By: /s/ Marc Krickbaum
LAURIE BARSELLA
DEBRA RIGGS BONAMICI
MARC KRICKBAUM
Assistant United States Attorneys
United States Attorney’s Office
219 South Dearborn Street
Chicago, Illinois 60604
(312) 469-6052
marc.krickbaum2@usdoj.gov
44

Another Crooked Democrat Goes Down

November 01, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Crook, Kickbacks, Maine Township, Nick Blase, Niles, Township Committeeman

Nick Blase, 47-year mayor of Niles and former Maine Township Democratic Party Committeeman copped a plea admitting to getting $420,000 in insurance kickbacks over the last 20 years.

The power mayors and village presidents can develop over the years can be awesome and the temptations of such virtual absolute power are obviously great.

Blase is 80 years old.

Click to enlarge the image.

Another Crooked Democrat Goes Down

November 01, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Crook, Kickbacks, Maine Township, Nick Blase, Niles, Township Committeeman

Nick Blase, 47-year mayor of Niles and former Maine Township Democratic Party Committeeman copped a plea admitting to getting $420,000 in insurance kickbacks over the last 20 years.

The power mayors and village presidents can develop over the years can be awesome and the temptations of such virtual absolute power are obviously great.

Blase is 80 years old.

Click to enlarge the image.

So, Did Your School or Local Government Buy from Lawson or Drummond American and Did Its Employees Get Checks from Former Woodstock Firm Koegh?

August 12, 2008 By: Cal Skinner Category: Brandon Fox, Drummond American, Keogh Inc, Kickbacks, Kruti Trivedi, Lawrence Keogh, Lawson Products, Nancy Miller

Mentiioned specifically in the press release from the United States Attorney about corrupt sales practices to area governments are

  • U46 School District out of Elgin,
  • the City of Elgin and
  • the Village of Rosemont.

There is a Woodstock connection in that Keogh, Inc., was based in Woodstock before it moved to Lake Bluff. (Anyone know if Lawrence Keogh, now 79, lived or near McHenry County?)

The company writing the incentive checks having been based at one time in Woodstock, I’d be surprised if this “incentive” program did not include local schools and governments.

Here is the U.S. Attorney’s press release:

Lawson Products to Pay $30 Million under Deferred Prosecution Agreement Involving Corrupt Sales Practices

CHICAGO – A suburban Des Plaines company has agreed to pay $30 million in forfeiture and restitution for the corrupt conduct of its sales agents in Chicago and elsewhere who systematically provided nearly $10 million in illicit purchasing incentives over 13 years to employees of its customers to buy more products at higher prices, federal authorities announced today.

Lawson Products, Inc.
, a publicly- traded company that sells tools, hardware and chemicals to entities in the public and private sectors, was charged today with mail fraud in a criminal information filed in U.S. District Court.

At the same time, the company entered into a deferred prosecution agreement under which the criminal case will be dismissed in three years so long as Lawson abides by all of the terms and conditions.

Separate criminal charges were also filed today against two former sales managers for Lawson and a third man who allegedly aided and abetted the corrupt incentive scheme, bringing to 19 the number of defendants who have been charged in connection with the Lawson scheme in Chicago and other cities since early 2007, said Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.

Mr. Fitzgerald announced the charges with Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; Thomas P. Brady, Inspector-in-Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Chicago; and Alvin Patton, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division. The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago coordinated the investigation nationwide, while the U.S. Attorney’s Offices in Dayton, Philadelphia and Springfield, Ill., assisted by handling cases in their respective jurisdictions.

All but one of the cases involve the recipients of bribes or kickbacks or commissioned sales agents for Lawson or its subsidiary, Drummond American Corp., which together with other Lawson affiliates have approximately $400 million in annual sales of systems, services and products.

Thirteen defendants, including seven former Lawson sales agents were charged in April 2007 in Chicago and other cities. Twelve of those 13 have been convicted so far.

All of the charges are part of an investigation that resulted in federal search warrants being executed in December 2005 at Lawson and Drummond offices at 1666 East Touhy Ave., and 2150 Frontage Rd., Des Plaines, and the offices of a third company, Keogh, Inc., in Lake Bluff and formerly of Woodstock.

Among the individuals charged today was Lawrence Keogh, president of Keogh, Inc.
, which administered one of the incentive programs used by Lawson sales agents.

According to the documents filed today, between at least 1992 and December 2005, the maintenance and repair operation of Lawson Products engaged in corrupt sales practices through its sales agents. These agents were permitted to negotiate with customers over the prices the customers would pay for Lawson’s merchandise. As a general rule, Lawson’s profits and the agents’ commissions were greater if they sold more products at higher prices. Lawson maintained programs through which its sales agents could provide items of value to individuals purchasing Lawson’s merchandise on behalf of those individuals’ employers. Among the illicit programs were “Winners Choice,” “Cavalcade of Awards,” “LPI” and “Spike Special.”

Lawson and its sales agents often provided a greater amount of incentive rewards through the illicit programs if the purchasing individuals ordered a greater amount of merchandise on behalf of their employers. Some Lawson agents received training suggesting that they provide customers’ employees with rewards totaling approximately four to five percent of the amount of the sale. Lawson set up “promotional funds” for each sales agent that allowed the company and the agents to split the cost of the illicit programs.

Through the Winners Choice program, which was administered by Keogh, Inc., Lawson provided approximately $9.7 million in Winners Choice checks to employees of Lawson customers to induce them to purchase and to reward them for purchasing merchandise from Lawson on behalf of their employers.

Under the program, sales agents would order “Certificates of Award” for designated purchasing individuals and Keogh would issue checks to those individuals. The certificates, often awarded in multiple $25 increments, entitled recipients to receive checks for a certain amount that could be used to purchase items at various retail stores. Keogh, Inc., would then issue the checks, often times in multiple $50 increments.

Under the deferred prosecution agreement, Lawson Products admits that it is responsible for the acts of its officers, employees and sales agents. The company agreed to continue implementing a compliance and ethics program designed to prevent and detect corrupt sales practices.

Lawson will fund a $30 million escrow account in three installments of $10 million payable now, in a year and in two years.

Those payments will fund an agreed civil forfeiture judgment of $29,177,639 that Lawson will not contest, as well as $822,370 in restitution payments.

The restitution will be paid to Lawson’s customers that

  1. employed individuals who received more than $10,000 in Winners Choice checks;
  2. employed individuals who have been or later are convicted of mail fraud as a result of receiving Winners Choice checks; and
  3. purchased Lawson’s merchandise from sales agents who have been or later are convicted of mail fraud for providing Winners Choice checks to the customers’ employees.

Upon successful completion of the terms of the agreement, the Government will dismiss the criminal charges in three years.

In Chicago, the government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brandon Fox, Nancy Miller and Kruti Trivedi.

Details of the cases against the three new individual defendants follow. All three will be arraigned later in U.S. District Court. If convicted, restitution is mandatory and the Court would determine the appropriate sentence to be imposed under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines. The statutory maximum penalties are provided with each case.

The public is reminded that criminal charges contain only allegations and are not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

United States v. Lawrence Keogh

Lawrence Keogh, 79, of Lake Forest, was charged with aiding and abetting a tax evasion and tax fraud conspiracy. Keogh allegedly knew that Lawson Products did not issue or file any IRS Form 1099s to individuals who received more than $600 in a year in income from Winners Choice checks. Keogh also allegedly knew that Lawson improperly deducted the cost of the Winners Choice program as business expenses on its federal tax returns. If convicted, the charge carries a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

United States v. Roger Cannon, Jr.

Roger Cannon, Jr., also known as “RJ Cannon,” 38, of Palatine, who was a Drummond American sales agent, district manager and regional manager in succession between 1995 and January 2006, responsible for selling Drummond products to customers in the Chicago area, was charged with mail fraud. Cannon allegedly directed Winners Choice kickback rewards ranging from $650 to $3,550 to each of six employees of his customers. These included four employees of

  • Illinois School District U-46, which encompasses Bartlett, Elgin, South Elgin, Streamwood, Hanover Park, Carol Stream and Wayne, as well as an employee of the
  • Village of Rosemont and an employee of the
  • City of Elgin.

Cannon received commissions totaling $54,302 on sales to these public bodies and the charges seek forfeiture of that amount. If convicted, the charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

United States v. Leroy Wittle

Leroy Wittle, 65, of Alexandria, Va., who was a Lawson district manager responsible for selling products to customers in the Washington, D.C., area, was charged with bribery for allegedly providing a $300 gift card to an unnamed public employee of a federal executive branch agency in return for the employee’s decision to purchase merchandise from Wittle and Lawson on behalf of the unnamed federal agency. If convicted, the charge carries a maximum penalty of 2 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.