US Department of Justice Antitrust Case Brief - 00787-200528
US Department of Justice Antitrust Case Brief - 00787-200528
US Department of Justice Antitrust Case Brief - 00787-200528
CHARLES A. JAMES
Assistant Attorney General
JAMES M. GRIFFIN
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
prosecutorial misconduct.
A. Course of Proceedings
On May 31, 2000, David Salomon, M&F Meat Products Company (M&F),
and thirteen others were charged in a one count indictment with conspiring to rig
the bids on contracts to supply frozen food items to the New York City Board of
Education (NYCBOE or BOE). All of the defendants except Salomon and M&F
pled guilty.
October 22, 2001, the district court (Hon. Denny Chin) sentenced Salomon to 18
months’ imprisonment and a $60,000 fine. M&F was sentenced to two years
probation with no fine. Salomon and M&F were also made liable for restitution.
A1747-49. The court denied Salomon bail pending appeal and he is currently
incarcerated.
B. Statement of Facts
Between 1996 and 1999, the NYCBOE solicited bids to supply frozen food
for future delivery to the schools (“warehouse” bids). The regular bids were
awarded twice a year, A755-56; the warehouse bids were awarded approximately
once a year. A745. M&F was on the list of bidders that the NYCBOE directly
notified of upcoming bids about two weeks before the bids were due. A730-33,
741-42. The bids were also publicly advertised, so that anyone else could submit a
bid as well.
The NYCBOE divided its regular bid awards into seven principal classes, or
zones: the Bronx, Manhattan, Brooklyn I, Brooklyn II, Richmond (Staten Island),
Queens, and high schools. A772. Regular contracts were awarded for each zone
separately. NYCBOE added up the prices bid for the specific quantities of the
approximately 70 items requested in a particular zone and the lowest total bid
2
usually determined the winner for that zone. Bidders could bid on more than one
zone, but each zone had to be bid separately, and prices might be different for
different zones. A762. Each regular bid also included “drayage.” See A1384
(denoted as “Pickup & Delivery” on bid form). This was a price for transporting
items that were donated by the federal government or purchased in bulk through
warehouse bids from the NYCBOE warehouse to the bidder’s warehouse and then
frequently used frozen food items to be shipped to the NYCBOE warehouse and
stored for future use. A745. Warehouse bids were awarded on a per item basis,
2. The Conspiracy
and continuing until approximately April 1999. For many years prior to 1996,
however, distributors, including Salomon for M&F, had been rigging bids and
allocating contracts for frozen food contracts; some distributors, but not M&F, had
also been rigging bids for the supply of meat, produce, and other foods to the
activity was interrupted for a brief period in 1994 and 1995 when a former frozen
3
food conspirator, Schaffer Food Co., then in financial straits, decided to start
bidding competitively in order to increase its sales, even at the expense of higher
profit margins. A790-91, 988-90. As long as one bidder refused to go along with
the allocation and rigging there was no way to ensure that the intended winner of
each zone would be the low bidder, and the conspiracy could not function. A988-
89, 1255. In 1994 and 1995, therefore, the frozen food bidders had no agreement
among themselves and, for the most part, quoted prices that were competitive.
A789-90.
reassigned Schaffer’s existing contracts to other vendors. A792. The frozen food
conspirators now saw an opportunity to renew their bid rigging. A989, 1097-1100.
NYCBOE frozen food contracts from 1996 to 1999 testified that Salomon
participated in that conspiracy on behalf of M&F. Paul and Alan Schneider were
owners of Food Service Purchasing Agency, Inc. dba Pennco (Pennco); Arthur
Goldberg was Vice President of Sales of Loeb & Mayer, Inc. (L&M); and Selwyn
4
Prior to 1996, Pennco’s principal source of revenue came from meat
contracts with the NYCBOE. A760. In May 1996, however, the BOE eliminated
the separate meat bid and included meat items in the frozen bid. A792-94, 761.
The Schneiders now wanted a share of the frozen food contracts for Pennco,
having given up those contracts in exchange for meat contracts as part of an earlier
suggest that, with Schaffer out of the picture, it now “ma[de] sense . . . [to] go back
to splitting up the business.” A800, 794-800, 1227-28. The Schneiders met with
Lempert and Nicholas Penachio at the Penachio office. Lempert realized that if
Pennco insisted on having a part of the frozen food business, there would be too
many vendors and not enough pieces of the market. A804. So Penachio and
Lempert agreed that, “if it all could be put together,” Penachio Co. would give up
its “assigned” zone in the frozen food market, which had been Brooklyn I, in
Approximately two weeks prior to the bid opening, Paul and Alan
(Bohrer), Frank Russo of FHR Meats, Inc. (FHR), Stuart Libertoff of Irving
Libertoff, Inc. (Libertoff), Alan Adelson and Thomas Ryan of West Side Foods
5
(West Side), and Lempert and Penachio met at the Holiday Inn Crowne Plaza
Hotel near LaGuardia Airport in Queens. A795, 807-08, 986, 1092-93. Salomon,
whose business was in New Jersey, did not attend, but Alan Schneider, who had
invited Salomon to the meeting, promised to let him know how it turned out.
A800-01, 1093-94, also 758, 976. At the meeting, the conspirators agreed that,
with Penachio stepping aside, there were enough zones for everyone. They
decided that West Side would take the Bronx, Pennco Brooklyn I, L&M Queens,
Libertoff Brooklyn II, Bohrer the high schools, and FHR Manhattan. The
conspirators allocated M&F Staten Island, the smallest zone, even though M&F
had won the much larger Queens zone in the previous bidding when competitive
bids were submitted, because Staten Island had been allocated to M&F during prior
bid rigging. A809-10, 994, 1230-31, 1240. They also agreed on a markup of 22 to
25 percent “of sell,” and 25 cents per pound for drayage 1 -- prices that were
substantially higher than those bid in 1995. A809, 813, 994-95,1240-41. Prior to
this agreement, for example, Pennco’s markup had been 6 percent. A978. They
agreed that each company would bid slightly higher on some items, and slightly
1
“Of sell” denotes the percentage of the selling price that is gross profit.
Drayage, an important item because of its dollar volume and profitability, needed
to be discussed separately because it was not an item for which there was an
identifiable cost. A1101-02.
6
lower on others. A813. Goldberg and Russo then agreed to go to M&F’s facility
to talk to Salomon because, unless Salomon agreed not to try to win any zone but
Staten Island, the conspiracy could not work. A809, 1100-02, 1203-04, 1239-40.
A few days after Goldberg and Russo visited Salomon, Alan and Paul
Schneider also went to see him to be sure that he was in agreement. A814-17, 2
996, 1231, 1306-07, SA32.3 Although Salomon was not completely happy to be
allocated Staten Island, he accepted it for this bid, partly because he had been
having trouble with NYCBOE in fulfilling his Queens contract and because M&F
would net more profit performing the Staten Island contract at a 25 percent profit
than Queens at 10 percent. A818, 821, 1000-03, 1056-57, 1239. Salomon also
agreed to the profit and drayage figures agreed on at the Holiday Inn. A818. In
turn, the Schneiders offered to have Pennco “cover” M&F’s bid, i.e., submit a
higher bid for Staten Island to make M&F’s bid look competitive. A820, 1237-38.
The Schneiders contacted the other vendors to tell them of Salomon’s agreement.
A821, 1240. Goldberg also assured the others that Salomon was “taken care of.”
A1003, 1187-91. Before the bid opening, Alan Schneider called Salomon again to
2
Paul Schneider testified that Douglas Barash, M&F’s General Manager, was
at their meeting with Salomon at M&F. A816.
3
“SA” refers to the Supplemental Appendix filed with this brief.
7
exchange assurances that everything was in place and to be sure that M&F’s gross
profit and drayage figures were in line with the other bidders’. A1241-42. The
May 1996 bid awards went as planned; every company that was assigned a zone
The same group of conspirators continued to meet in this way, usually at the
Holiday Inn, to discuss bids, allocate contracts, and agree on profit margins,
through the spring of 1998 bid. Although Salomon did not attend these meetings,
Alan Schneider briefed Salomon on the details of the meetings and secured
were aware that Alan Schneider informed Salomon of the meetings and discussions
A1240 (Alan “was the liaison” between Salomon and the group); A1255 (Salomon
made excuses for not attending the meetings, but always asked Alan Schneider to
Goldberg on the morning of a bid for assurance that “everything was in place”).
The bid immediately following the May 1996 regular bid was a warehouse
bid for seven items in June 1996. A823, 1389. Representatives of Pennco, L&M,
8
Libertoff, FHR, West Side, Bohrer, and Penachio 4 met at the Holiday Inn to
discuss that bid. Alan Schneider called Salomon to say they were meeting and not
to do anything until he heard back from him. A824, 1246. At the meeting, the
conspirators decided it would look suspicious if each of them won a single item, so
they agreed that three of them -- Libertoff, Penachio, and West Side -- would split
up the items, determine the gross profits, and divide the profits equally among the
eight companies, including M&F. A825-27, 1007-10, 1244-46. They also agreed
on prices for each item, allocation of items, and who would supply cover bids.
Alan Schneider called Salomon after the meeting to tell him of the plan and
Salomon agreed to “give it a shot.” A828-29, 1247. After the bids were awarded
as planned, Salomon called Alan Schneider several times to ask about his share of
the profits. A1250-51. M&F and the others were then paid approximately
For the November 1996 regular bid, the conspirators met at the Holiday Inn
and at Penachio offices a few days later. A858-59. Russo wanted a larger zone
4
Although Penachio had agreed to give up its zone for the regular frozen
food contracts, it continued to meet and supply cover bids for the regular contracts
and it insisted on being included in the warehouse bids. A1022-23, 1103-04, 1115-
18, 1201-03.
9
than Manhattan for FHR. So he, Adelson, Goldberg, and Greenspan agreed that
FHR, West Side, Bohrer, and L&M would rotate Manhattan, Queens, the Bronx,
and the high schools with each bid. A858-60, 1265-67, also 1003-05 (Goldberg
testified that rotation discussion and agreement occurred at the first meeting in
spring of 1996). All agreed to increase the price of drayage. A854. Paul
Schneider said that his zone, Brooklyn I, was requiring delivery of a brand of
Jamaican beef patties made locally, which cost more than other brands, so the
conspirators agreed to raise their prices for beef patties in all zones, from
discussion about a company called Jitney Ltd. that had expressed interest in
bidding but indicated it would accept a payoff not to bid. A855. Although they
did not believe that Jitney represented a serious threat because it did not have a
warehouse, they decided to make a small payoff to be sure there was no problem.
A856. They agreed that Pennco, which had the next to the smallest zone, would
only pay two-thirds of what the others contributed to the payoff and M&F, with the
The Schneiders went to see Salomon to tell him of the arrangement for the
November 1996 bid and secure his continued agreement to stay in Staten Island.
Salomon agreed to the increased prices for beef patties, as well as the higher
10
drayage figures, and was happy not to have to contribute to the payoff. A861-62.
Salomon asked if Pennco and M&F could switch zones so that M&F would get
Brooklyn I on the next contract, but Alan Schneider would not agree and Salomon
agreed to stay in Staten Island. A861-64, 1283-84, also A966 (M&F bid only for
Staten Island for the remainder of the conspiracy). Bid documents confirm that
M&F, having bid 15 cents for drayage (“Pickup & Delivery”) in 1995 before the
conspiracy resumed, bid 25 cents for drayage in May 1996, and 28 cents in
November 1996, as the conspirators had agreed (A1368, 1378, 1382); M&F also
raised its price for beef patties (item FS 101) on the November 1996 bid from 48
The November 1996 bid awards did not go exactly as planned. A company
from Long Island, DiCarlo Distributors, Inc. (DiCarlo), surprised the conspirators
The usual group met again when a March 1997 warehouse bid was
announced. Alan Schneider called Salomon to tell him of the meeting and of their
plan to try to “work it out again.” Salomon said that he would go along if there
was a program in place. A873, 1013-14, 1253-55. The primary discussion at the
independent sales representative who had been responsible for the DiCarlo bid.
11
Doody told Goldberg that if DiCarlo could win one of the items on the warehouse
bid, it would leave the rest of the items alone. A874-75. The conspirators were
unwilling to give DiCarlo an item but agreed that DiCarlo could share in the
profits. Goldberg was to relay this offer to Doody. At the remainder of the
meeting, the conspirators agreed which three companies would divide the
warehouse items, and, as before, share the profits equally among them all. A1017.
All they needed was confirmation from Doody and Salomon that it was a “go.”
A877-78. Salomon assured Alan Schneider that M&F would continue to go along,
and M&F did not bid any of the items. A878, 881. Although DiCarlo did not bid,
another company, GAF Seelig (Seelig), surprised the conspirators by bidding, and
The profits earned by the winning bidders on the remaining items were
shared, as agreed, among all the conspirators, including M&F, using the issuance
and payment of phony invoices to camouflage those transactions. FHR, one of the
agreed on winners, issued checks -- all for about $47,000 -- to M&F, Pennco,
Penachio, and West Side, on four successive Fridays. A1552-61. Both FHR’s
FHR’s check to M&F were unusual because there was no indication that FHR had
received any of the goods listed on M&F’s invoice, and the transaction was many
12
times larger than any other transaction between the companies. SA33, A881-85,
half dozen times after the bids were awarded to ask about his payment).
In preparation for the next regular frozen food bid, the representatives of the
seven companies met at the Holiday Inn on April 8, 1997. A886. Alan Schneider
called Salomon to tell him there might be a problem but they were meeting to try to
work it out. A888, 1133. At the meeting, the group discussed the threat of
offered a cash payment to DiCarlo and Doody for DiCarlo not to bid, but they had
refused. A890-93, 1025-26. The conspirators agreed to increase their offer but, on
April 16, 1997, the day before the bids were due, Goldberg reported that DiCarlo
had again refused to “sit out” the contract. A1025-26. The conspirators arranged
to meet that night at a conference room at the Hunts Point Market to work on their
bids and combat DiCarlo. A895, 1027, 1132, 1269. Alan Schneider told Salomon
about the plan to meet at Hunts Point “to protect” each others’ zones and to unite
against DiCarlo; Schneider told Salomon he would call later with specific details.
A895-96, 1270.
because he was the most knowledgeable about costs and his company maintained
13
the warehouse facility for the NYCBOE. A898-901, 973-74, 1029-30. The group
agreed generally to a 9 percent markup, which they believed would be low enough
to beat DiCarlo. But they agreed to submit much lower prices on items they
predicted they would not ultimately have to supply because the items were already
items, they agreed they could put higher markups -- 14 per cent -- on items that
were new or items that they predicted would be purchased in larger quantities.
A898-901, 1068. Thus, they could keep the total price of their bids low -- which
was ultimately what determined the winning bid -- while still making a sizeable
profit. A901, 1030-32, 1271-72. The conspirators placed two calls on Libertoff’s
cell phone to Salomon’s home during the Hunts Points meeting. A1273, 1562.
They told Salomon of the general percentages agreed to, which items they agreed
to “tank” by bidding very low, and of their agreement on 25 cents for drayage.
A901-03, 1274-75. Salomon appreciated the information and said he would take
care of the bid (A1276-77), and M&F’s quote conformed to the prices agreed on at
Hunts Point. A905, 1384. The agreement was successful; each conspirator won its
The conspirators met at the Holiday Inn a few weeks before the next regular
bid announced for November 7, 1997. A906-11. Lempert had told the Schneider
14
brothers that it looked like they could work things out with DiCarlo, and Alan
Lempert said that DiCarlo had agreed not to bid competitively on any more frozen
food contracts in exchange for an assurance from a company called Landmark that
DiCarlo would win a produce zone. Landmark wanted a cash payment for its
conspirators, Lempert said it was their responsibility to pay off Landmark and,
after discussion, they agreed. A911-13, 1137-41, 1278-80. Doody also asked for a
payoff, and the conspirators agreed to contribute equally toward these two
payments, except that Pennco, with the second-smallest zone, would pay only two-
thirds, and M&F, with the smallest zone, would pay nothing. A913, 1034-36,
1142, 1279-80. With DiCarlo out of the way, the conspirators then agreed to raise
prices to the levels used before the April 1997 bid, when prices were lowered to
defeat DiCarlo. They also had to decide on a new drayage figure because the BOE
had changed the way in which drayage was quoted, from a per pound basis to a per
box basis for cases under and over 20 pounds. They agreed on figures of $3.25
down a little so they would not all be exactly the same. A916, 1037. After the
meeting, Alan Schneider called Salomon to tell him the drayage prices and that he
15
could raise his prices again because DiCarlo would not be a problem. A918, 1281-
82. Schneider also called Salomon on the morning of the bid to tell him what
A warehouse bid was announced for January 1998 and the regular attendees
met to discuss it at the Holiday Inn. Alan Schneider called Salomon to tell him of
the meeting and expressed the belief that they could “work it out.” A921-23.
Goldberg had come to the meeting with assurances from DiCarlo that it would not
bid. A925. Lempert said he had talked to a representative of Seelig and reported
that Seelig wanted one of the items -- stuffed shells -- and would leave the rest to
the group. A924, 1260-61. Russo did not want to give anything up to Seelig but,
when the others seemed to agree to give up the stuffed shells, Russo left the
meeting saying they should do what they wanted. The others in the group believed
that Russo would “double-cross” Seelig on the stuffed shells (A924-25), but they
discussed the other items and decided that the three companies that had taken the
first warehouse bid -- Libertoff, Penachio, and West Side -- should divide the
remaining items, and distribute the profits. A924, 926, 1041-42, 1260-61. After
the meeting, Alan Schneider called Salomon to report on the meeting and “confirm
that everything was still intact.” A925, 1262 (Salomon also called Alan Schneider
at home and on Schneider’s pager). When the bids were opened on January 14,
16
1998, Russo’s company, FHR, was the low bidder for the stuffed shells. The other
items were awarded as the conspirators had planned, except that a non-conspirator,
TA Morris, Inc. (Morris), won the breaded chicken strips. A926, 1263-64.
The next regular bid was announced for April 28, 1998. A932. The same
group met at the Courtyard Marriott two weeks before the opening. A933, 1143-
44. They discussed the problem with Morris, which had won an item on the
warehouse bid. They did not think that Morris represented as much of a threat as
DiCarlo because Morris was not as knowledgeable about prices and would not
have the expertise to outbid them on a regular bid. Nevertheless, Goldberg said
that he would contact Morris’s owner to try to find out whether Morris was
bidders, including M&F (A1517, 1533), prepared two bids, a “low” bid and a
“high” bid, and took them both to the bid opening, intending to decide which one
to submit depending on whether Morris bid. The margins in the low bid did not
have to be as low as those in the bid prepared when DiCarlo was a threat, but they
could not be as high as they were when there were no outside bidders. A939-41,
945-46, 1148-49, 1289. Salomon attended this particular bid opening, although he
did not normally do so. A943-44, 1477. Goldberg was unable to ascertain before
the bid date whether Morris was going to bid, and one of the conspirators had only
17
brought a low bid to the opening, so they all -- including Salomon -- decided to
submit their low bids (so that their prices would not be greatly out of line). A942,
1287, SA25-26. As it turned out, Morris did not bid, and the contracts were
Penachio, and West Side, relating to a grand jury investigation into bid rigging and
other unlawful activities concerning Odyssey House, a New York City drug
rehabilitation center. A928, 1045. Lempert met with the Schneiders to tell them
about the subpoenas and the progress of the investigation. They decided that it
would not be a good idea to continue their hotel meetings. A930, 1045, 1264 (they
also were fearful of distributing the checks on the profits of the 1998 warehouse
bid). Alan Schneider talked to Salomon in person and several times by phone to
apprise him of the investigation and to keep him up to date. A931, 1265.
trade show at the New Jersey Meadowlands complex before the regular bid on
September 29, 1998. Alan Schneider told Salomon, whose offices were in New
Jersey, about the plan and Salomon attended the meeting, along with other
group. Goldberg told them that it was a waste of time to worry about Morris and
18
they could safely raise their prices to higher levels. He said they should “be
discreet,” “obviously don’t talk on the phone,” “just protect your own area,” and
there was no reason to “bid cheap.” With the investigation going on, it wouldn’t
look good if prices went up and down, and dropping them now would not look
good. A951-52. Greenspan (from Bohrer) had a piece of paper with a gross profit
percentage written on it. He said if they worked on this percentage, they would be
safe -- that they did not have to worry about cover bids, but they should bid around
this percentage. A952,1291-93. Then the group separated into smaller groups.
Alan Schneider and Salomon walked outside, where they agreed to stay in their
zones and raise prices to the levels quoted before the last bid. SA27-28, A952,
1292-93 (Goldberg or Greenspan possibly joined them as well). The bid awards
For the next warehouse bid, in January 1999, the conspirators did not meet
to discuss bids. A955, SA29-30. Libertoff, a large company with great bargaining
power with manufacturers, won most of the items. But M&F submitted a bid and
won one of the items as well. This was the first and only time M&F bid on a
Nor was there a general meeting before the next regular bid in April 1999.
The Schneiders met with Lempert who told them that Penachio was going to bid 20
19
percent over cost. Although he had no expectation of winning the bid, he wanted
frozen foods. A957. Alan Schneider discussed the investigation and the bid with
Salomon. They assured each other that they “would have no problem” from the
other. A1294-95. Right before the bid was due, Pennco was served with a grand
jury subpoena and the Schneiders decided not to submit a bid. Within days, the
1053, 1295-96.
Telephone records and bids (as well as other business records) confirmed the
M&F phone records showed that several calls were always placed to the offices of
other conspirators in the two business days preceding the nine bids that were
rigged between 1996 and 1999, but few if any calls were placed at other times of
the year. A1565-67. In addition, a comparison of bid documents shows that all of
the conspirators’ prices, including M&F’s, went up or down during the conspiracy
period to the levels testified to, and that drayage prices of all the conspirators,
which had varied widely among the bidders in 1995 before the resumption of bid
rigging, tracked the prices agreed to at the Holiday Inn meetings from 1996 on.
A1563 (for May 8, 1995 bid, M&F drayage was $.15 and others’ ranged from $.10
20
to about $.20; for November 13, 1996 bid, M&F drayage rose to $.28, and others’
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
Defendants were not prejudiced by the court’s refusal to order immunity for
defense witnesses or by the court’s missing witness instruction. After the court
granted defendants’ request to have Douglas Barash’s grand jury testimony read at
trial, defendants decided not to offer it; and after the government agreed to
immunize Barash, defendants decided not to put on any defense. Defendants thus
cannot credibly claim that they were foreclosed from using Barash’s testimony or
that his testimony would have been material and exculpatory. Moreover, there
Helder Coelho, a long-time M&F employee. Even if Coelho had testified and
have been material since he was not claimed to have been part of any meetings,
discussions, or agreements among the frozen food conspirators. Finally, the court
gave a missing witness instruction, taken from a pattern jury instruction, that
permitted the jury to draw adverse inferences against the government for failing to
call Barash and Coelho even though those witnesses were not within the
government’s peculiar control. That instruction did not prejudice the defendants.
21
A properly charged jury found that defendants knowingly and intentionally
joined the single conspiracy charged in the indictment. The evidence at trial
overwhelmingly supports the jury verdict. But, even if multiple conspiracies were
the nine rigged bids about which there was testimony at trial. Thus, there was no
background to the conspiracy charged, (2) to show that defendants joined the
witnesses. This evidence was properly admitted under Fed. R. Evid. 403, and
404(b).
The court did not abuse its discretion by admitting evidence in the form of
a proper foundation was laid for its admission, it was relevant, and it was not
unfairly prejudicial. Indeed, even if there was error in admitting any of the
evidence, defendants have not shown that they were prejudiced by it.
The court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the jury to decide the
22
The court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting claims of prosecutorial
misconduct which had no foundation. And the court did not abuse its discretion in
refusing to read to the jury a portion of the indictment that was unrelated to the
restitution and its determination of loss to the victim and defendants’ ability to pay
ARGUMENT
Defendants’ claim that the trial court was required to order immunity for two
M&F employees, and that the missing witness instruction given in lieu of their
testimony was erroneous (Deft. Br. 12-21), is specious. Defendants forfeited the
right to claim error by declining to offer Douglas Barash’s grand jury testimony or
the court and the government. In any event, defendants were not prejudiced by the
court’s refusal to grant immunity because the court gave a missing witness
instruction.
Barash, M&F’s General Manager, testified before the grand jury under a
23
grant of statutory immunity on February 1, 2000, and March 1, 2000. The district
court properly concluded that this grand jury immunity did not extend to trial. 5
SA63; United States v. Salerno, 505 U.S. 317, 320-21, 324 n.* (1992) (because
grand jury immunity does not extend to trial, it does not foreclose trial witness
from asserting Fifth Amendment privilege); accord, In Re Hitchings, 850 F.2d 180
(4th Cir. 1988); United States v. Housand, 550 F.2d 818, 821-824 (2d Cir. 1977);
In re Corrugated Container Antitrust Litigation, 644 F.2d 70, 75-78 (2d Cir.
1981);6 see also Pillsbury Co. v. Conboy, 459 U.S. 248, 257 n.13 (1983) (“original
Throughout the trial, and up until the day before the close of the
government’s case, defendants repeatedly asked the court either to order immunity
for Barash or admit his grand jury testimony. A1308. Ultimately, the court ruled
5
The immunity order states that “no testimony or other information
compelled under this Order (or any testimony or other information directly or
indirectly derived therefrom) may be used against [him].” A216 (emphasis added);
compare Deft. Br. 12, which takes a portion of the preceding paragraph out of
context.
6
The Container Litigation, on which defendants mistakenly rely, shows that a
witness who has formerly testified pursuant to immunity and then testifies at a later
proceeding without immunity is not automatically immunized. Only questions in
the later proceeding that have been taken from his former immunized testimony
fall within the original statutory immunity grant because they “derive from” the
original immunized testimony. But, as the court emphasized, “no de facto grant of
immunity will have occurred.” 644 F.2d at 75-78.
24
that both sides would be allowed to read portions of the grand jury transcripts into
evidence. A1308-09. The next day, defendants withdrew their request, essentially
conceding that Barash’s testimony, if read in its entirety, was problematic for the
defense. A1312-13, also A1319. The court then agreed, over the government’s
concerned that this would create the impression that Barash’s testimony would
have been more favorable than was warranted by the evidence and his testimony to
date (see A223-656), the government decided to obtain immunity for Barash. But
defendants reneged again. A1318-23. Although the government said it could have
to close and end.” A1329-30. Since defendants refused the government’s offer to
immunize Barash, they cannot complain that the court refused to compel immunity.
In any event, the court properly held that defendants had not established the
extraordinary circumstances that would justify departure from the general rule that
a court cannot compel the government to grant immunity to defense witnesses. See
SA3, 63-64, A1216;7 United States v. Turkish, 623 F.2d 769, 774 (2d Cir. 1980);
7
Defendants’ claim that the trial court “ultimately found” “extraordinary
circumstances” warranting court-ordered immunity (Deft. Br. 14, citing A1318)
misstates the record. The citation is to the court’s ruling on the missing witness
25
United States v. Diaz, 176 F.3d 52, 115 (2d Cir. 1999) (burden is on defendant to
LeFevre, 924 F.2d 434, 441-42 (2d Cir. 1991) (“A person suspected of a crime
cases).
claim of “overreaching” with respect to Barash simply notes that the government
initially considered calling Barash as a direct or rebuttal witness, but changed its
mind and did not place him on its witness list (which was made known to
defendants before trial). See Deft. Br. 14. The government’s decision not to call
Barash resulted from its concerns as to his veracity, and it was reinforced by
his behalf. A737-38. Neither this decision, nor the government’s legally correct
position that Barash’s grand jury immunity did not extend to trial, constituted
“overreaching.”8 United States v. Shandell, 800 F.2d 322, 324 (2d Cir. 1986) ;
instruction, not immunity, and the court does not mention “extraordinary
circumstances.” See also SA3-4 (court finds no discriminatory use of immunity to
gain a tactical advantage or overreaching).
8
The government did not “withdraw” immunity. Deft. Br. 9, 13, 14. Grand
jury immunity, having been conferred, could not be withdrawn, and trial immunity
had never been granted.
26
Blisset, 924 F.2d at 442 (must show harassment or intimidation, or substantial
“material and exculpatory” and that “[t]here was no other way for the defendants to
obtain the testimony” (Deft. Br. 15) are not credible in light of defendants’ refusal
to call Barash as a witness or introduce his grand jury testimony when given the
chance to do so.
That, of course, is no basis for compelling immunity. Shandell, 800 F.2d at 324
subpoenaed Coelho to testify before the grand jury in connection with the
(Newark) contracts, but the subpoena was quashed on defendants’ motion, A54-76,
and Coelho’s attorney denied the government access to the witness. The district
for the grand jury did not mean that it was required to immunize him for trial since
“[t]he circumstances between the grand jury and a trial, obviously, are very
27
different.” SA64.
Nor can defendants seriously claim that Coelho’s testimony would have
Coelho to rig bids to Newark. The trial court struck all of Lempert’s testimony
relating to Coelho, SA37-38 (see also note 17, infra), and defendants’ claim that
credited. The only remaining evidence relating to Coelho is that his salesman’s
number appears on the invoice used to camouflage the $47,000 payment by FHR to
M&F on the 1997 warehouse bid. A1546. Defendants’ only proffer as to what
Coelho’s testimony might be concerning the invoice was made after trial in
defendants’ post-trial motion, and it states merely that Coelho would have testified
show that Coelho’s testimony would have been either material or exculpatory.
Nothing else in the government’s case suggests that Coelho had any involvement
evidence before the jury, not only as to the warehouse check, 9 but as to all the other
M&F's former controller testified that everyone in the office knew Coelho's
9
salesman’s number and anyone could have used it to prepare the invoice. A1086.
There was no evidence on the invoice indicating that the goods had been received
by FHR, although every other invoice that M&F issued to FHR in 1996 and 1997
had some indication that the goods listed on the invoice had been delivered.
28
aspects of the conspiracy and defendants’ involvement in it, any testimony Coelho
could have offered on the subject of this invoice would not have made him a
“crucial” or “essential” defense witness. See Deft. Br. 16 & n.9, 17. Thus, the
Even if it could be claimed that there was error in the failure to immunize
defense witnesses, the error would be harmless. These witnesses were only
remotely and tangentially related to the conspiracy and their testimony could not
conversations that did not involve or implicate them. United States v. Turkish, 623
F.2d 769, 778 (2d Cir. 1980) (testimony that would have been impeaching only on
850 F.2d 927, 933 (2d Cir. 1988) (in the absence of showing that the loss of the
testimony altered the trial outcome, error is harmless); United States v. Diaz, 176
F.3d 52, 108 (2d Cir. 1999) (“impeachment evidence is ‘material if the witness
whose testimony is attacked supplied the only evidence linking the defendant[s] to
the crime, or where the likely impact on the witness’s credibility would have
Moreover, the court gave the jury a missing witness instruction that
precluded any possibility of prejudice resulting from the refusal to immunize. The
court gave this instruction even though defendants had failed to meet their burden
of proving that (l) the power of producing the witnesses in question was peculiarly
unfavorable testimony from an absent witness was a natural and reasonable one.
United States v. Meyerson, 18 F.3d 153, 159 (2d Cir. 1994). Because both
witnesses would have claimed their Fifth Amendment right not to testify, neither
Barash was described as a "very key part of M&F" and Salomon's "right hand
man” (A816, 1234); and defendants had more access to the witnesses and their
attorneys for purposes of securing information as to what the witnesses would say
than did the government. A658, 1210. Thus, there is no basis for finding that the
Defendants’ unwillingness to have Barash testify when they had the chance to do
30
so strongly suggests that his testimony would not have been entirely helpful. With
respect to Coelho, defendants claimed that his attorney told them Coelho would
deny any knowledge or participation in bid rigging. A1210. But, even accepting
defendants’ hearsay allegations, the government’s proof did not suggest that
Coelho had anything but the most marginal connection to the conspiracy; thus, his
erroneously left “the questions of both ‘peculiar control’ and materiality to the
jury.” Deft. Br. 21. But the substance of the court’s missing witness charge
(A1354) was taken essentially verbatim from 1 L. Sand et al. Modern Federal Jury
Instructions § 6.04 (2001), and is correct. Indeed, defendants' own proposed jury
instruction left the question of "materiality" to the jury. SA56. While the
proffered instruction stated that “defendants have argued that this witness . . . was
peculiarly within the power of the Government to produce,” the instruction did not
require the jury to accept that argument. Id. 10 Thus, defendants’ claim of error
10
Defendants’ proposed “Uncalled Witness” instruction (SA56) states in
relevant part:
court to take the issues of materiality and availability from the jury. And the Sand
treatise expressly rejects that argument (disagreeing with the Seventh Circuit, the
only one to adopt it). As Sand explains, “[s]ince the issues of availability and
by the record here, where the trial court stated that “[i]t wasn’t necessarily . . .
crystal clear to me that in fact the government was in the best position to call
them.” SA65.
In short, the court ultimately gave defendants exactly what they asked for --
strenuously argued the significance of the missing witnesses in closing, telling the
jury it could infer that Barash and Coelho would have provided important evidence
bearing on defendants’ guilt or innocence. SA41-43. The jury was instructed that
“is a question of fact for a properly instructed jury.” United States v. Berger, 224
F.3d 107, 114 (2d Cir. 2000) (quoted case omitted); accord United States v. Sureff,
15 F.3d 225, 229-30 (2d Cir. 1994) (court must conclude that “no rational trier of
fact could have concluded that a single conspiracy existed”). In reviewing the
sufficiency of the evidence to support a jury verdict, the evidence must be viewed
in the light most favorable to the government. United States v. McDermott, 277
In challenging the evidence, defendants do not deny that the jury was
properly charged. They merely reargue facts that the jury understandably rejected.
33
A. The Evidence Proved A Single Continuing Conspiracy
will not continue without the continuous cooperation of the conspirators to keep it
up, and there is such continuous cooperation,” is a single conspiracy. United States
v. Kissel, 218 U.S. 601, 607 (1910); United States v. Bullis, 77 F.3d 1553, 1560
(7th Cir. 1996). “[I]t is a perversion of natural thought and of natural language to
various companies over a seven-year time period. 77 F.3d at 1560. “The fact that
the conspirators generally changed the pricing levels each year [did] not make each
year a discrete conspiracy;” nor did the fact that “some of the participants . . .
interests,” a single conspiracy exists. Id. (quoted case omitted); accord, United
States v. David E. Thomson, Inc., 621 F.2d 1147, 1152 (1st Cir. 1980) (single 15-
year conspiracy to rig bids where evidence showed core group of conspirators,
implied reciprocity, and facility in rigging each additional series of bids with a
34
minimum of planning and communication).
conspirators, including defendants, to rig every NYCBOE frozen food bid from
1996 to 1999. The conspirators established a routine that was generally followed
for each successive bid -- meeting at hotels, conferring with Salomon before and
after each such meeting to ensure his agreement with the matters discussed,
engaging in a series of phone calls in the days before each bid to provide cover
the agreed-on allocation scheme, and distributing the profits on the warehouse
contracts among all the conspirators. E.g., A849, 1013-14, 1048-49, 1165-66.
With respect to the regular frozen food bids, some of the conspirators were
allocated the same zones bid after bid without renegotiating those allocations
(A859-60), while others agreed that they would rotate the less desirable zone of
conspirator to accept Manhattan as its allocated zone in return for an assurance that
another company would accept that zone in the next bid is powerful evidence that
the conspirators anticipated that their scheme would continue. In the case of the
warehouse bids, some conspirators agreed to forgo bidding competitively for the
35
substantial warehouse contracts, something they would not have done had they not
received assurances that they would be allocated items on the next warehouse bid.
A825-26. And the formula for dividing the profits from those contracts did not
change once the conspirators had arrived at a plan for rigging the first bid. A837,
1244-46. Moreover, the fact that all the participants bidding on regular contracts,
including M&F, shared in the profits on the warehouse contracts, and the fact that
items sold pursuant to the regular bids could be sold pursuant to the warehouse
bids, motivated the conspirators to attempt to bring the two sets of prices in line
with each other, and shows that these contracts were part of the same scheme.
did not “concede[]” or even suggest that the warehouse bids were a separate
conspiracy. It simply stated in opening that “the master plan for the warehouse
bids was slightly different.” A727. Because the format for the warehouse bids was
different from the regular bids, “they had to have a slightly different plan.” Id.
The fact that a conspiracy has multiple aspects does not make each part of the
conspiracy a separate crime. United States v. Berger, 224 F.3d at 114-15 (“a single
there is sufficient proof of mutual dependence and assistance”). Nor does the fact
36
that the conspirators had to meet to work out the details of each bid negate the
existence of a single continuing agreement. See Deft. Br. 26-31. Discussions and
from Morris, Seelig, or DiCarlo (which they dealt with as a “common enemy,”
Landmark. But that continuing cooperation was needed to further the overall
conspiracy to rig the NYCBOE frozen food bids. A850 (sometimes discussions
were simply that “everything was fine, there were no changes, . . . whose turn it
Consolidated Packaging Corp., 575 F.2d 117, 128 (7th Cir. 1978) (if, to
conspiracies, the variance did not prejudice defendants and there is no basis for
reversal. Berger, 224 F.3d at 115, distinguishing Kotteakos v. United States, 328
U.S. 750 (1946). Since the evidence of each “separate” conspiracy would have
been admissible against defendants because they participated in every one of the
rigged bids, no prejudice exists. United States v. Johansen, 56 F.3d 347, 351 (2d
37
Cir. 1995) (must be showing “that the evidence proving the conspiracies in which
the defendant did not participate prejudiced the case against him in the conspiracy
to which he was a party”); accord, Berger, 224 F.3d at 115-16. Defendants’ claim
of improper “spillover” (Deft. Br. 33-38) rests solely on their denials that they
rigged every bid. But the testimony of Paul and Alan Schneider, corroborated by
other conspirators and M&F bid records and phone calls, shows that M&F agreed
to the price levels and drayage figures discussed at every regular bid meeting and
that it agreed to refrain from bidding on every warehouse bid until the conspiracy
began to unravel in 1999, in return for a share of the warehouse bid profits. A833-
Defendants’ claim that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury
verdict that they knowingly and intentionally 11 joined the conspiracy charged
(Deft. Br. 54-56) similarly ignores the record. The argument rests on the fact that
they did not engage in every aspect of the conspiracy. See also Deft. Br. 31. As
11
Defendants use the word “willfully,” rather than “intentionally.” Deft. Br.
37, 54. But they did not ask for a “willful” instruction, which would have been
contrary to law, and they have never challenged the court’s “knowing and
intentional” instruction.
38
furthering it, however, they need not have to be aware of every aspect of the
United States v. Rosa, 17 F.3d 1531, 1543-44 (2d Cir. 1994). Defendants’ claim
that Salomon did not attend the hotel meetings ignores the fact that he did attend
meetings in his own office and at the Meadowlands, that he was consulted on the
telephone or in person before and after every other meeting to be sure that he was
in agreement, and that he called his co-conspirators a day or two before bids were
due to be sure that everything was in place. A1060, 1567. Further, the claim that
M&F was not required to contribute to payoffs ignores that fact that this was the
co-conspirators’ quid pro quo for M&F’s agreement to accept the assignment of
the smallest zone (A857, 1281-82); and, finally, the fact that M&F did not submit
any “cover” bids ignores the fact that M&F agreed to refrain -- and did refrain --
from submitting any competing bids in any zone other than Staten Island or on any
warehouse item -- although before the conspiracy started M&F had bid and won
the Queens zone and, as soon as the conspiracy started to unravel, M&F bid and
The evidence showing that M&F bid and won an item on a warehouse bid
12
in 1999 thus refutes defendants’ claim that it did not have the wherewithal even to
compete for warehouse bids. Deft. Br. 32. Moreover, M&F’s co-conspirators
believed M&F had the ability to bid and win those contracts; thus, they needed its
assurances that it would not bid before they could submit their inflated warehouse
39
Defendants claim that they were entitled to a judgment of acquittal because
they “never asked to change zones,” “never asked to get any profits from the
warehouse bids” and “never asked the hotel group for anything.” Deft. Br. 55. But
the issue in a Sherman Act prosecution is not what defendants “asked for,” but
rather what defendants “agreed to.” See, e.g., Kissel, 218 U.S. at 607; United
States v. Koppers Co., 652 F.2d 290, 297 (2d Cir. 1981) (bid rigging). See also
page 11, supra (Salomon “asked” to change zones with Pennco, but Pennco refused
and Salomon agreed to stay in Staten Island); pages 9, 13, supra (Salomon called
participate in the conspiracy, M&F was assured by the “hotel group” conspirators
that it could bid Staten Island without fear of competition: it could, and did,
submit bid prices with profits far exceeding those reflected in earlier competitive
bids. M&F was well-rewarded for its participation in this conspiracy. It is not
surprising, therefore, that the jury heard all of defendants’ arguments, A1339-46,
In short, the testimony of Alan and Paul Schneider, Goldberg, and Lempert,
and the corroborating bids, telephone calls, invoices, and checks overwhelmingly
discretion. United States v. Williams, 205 F.3d 23, 33 (2d Cir. 2000). This Court
favors an “inclusionary rule, allowing the admission of such evidence for any
evidence is relevant and satisfies the probative-prejudice balancing test of Rule 403
of the Federal Rules of Evidence.” United States v. Inserra, 34 F.3d 83, 89 (2d Cir.
1994) (emphasis added). Thus, “it is within the court’s discretion to admit
evidence of prior acts to inform the jury of the background of the conspiracy
charged, in order to help explain how the illegal relationship between participants
in the crime developed, or to explain the mutual trust that existed between
coconspirators.” United States v. Rosa, 11 F.3d 315, 334 (2d Cir. 1993); accord,
"provide[s] a reasonable basis for inferring knowledge or intent" on the part of the
defendant. United States v. Aminy, 15 F.3d 258, 260 (2d Cir. 1994). 13
The court properly instructed the jury, each time the evidence was admitted
13
and, again, in the final charge, as to the very limited nature of the other crimes
41
The evidence of defendants’ earlier bid rigging to the NYCBOE was
necessary to explain the background of the charged conspiracy and how the illegal
relationships formed among its members. For example, evidence that M&F had
been assigned Staten Island in the past (A784, 809, 996, 998, 1232-33) helped the
jury understand why the Schneiders came to Salomon in the spring of 1996 to ask
him to join the conspiracy, and why they expected that Salomon would agree to
relinquish Queens, one of the largest zones, for Staten Island, the smallest zone.
United States v. Carboni, 204 F.3d 39, 44 (2d Cir. 2000) (“evidence of uncharged
defendants -- was background to explain how the charged conspiracy came into
evidence -- either as evidence of how the conspiracy was formed and the
relationship of participants, or to show defendants’ intent, or as impeachment
evidence of government witnesses. A781-83, 785-86, 1090, 1154-55, SA44-45.
See Huddleston v. United States, 485 U.S. 681, 691-92 (1988). The jury is
presumed to follow the court’s instructions. United States v. Moskowitz, 215 F.3d
265, 269 (2d Cir. 2000).
42
helped explain their entry into the frozen food conspiracy when the NYCBOE
changed the way it ordered meat, A786-87, 1226-31, and Penachio’s involvement
frozen food conspiracy. Page 5, supra. Similarly, the testimony about the
government investigation into bid rigging at Odyssey House (see Deft. Br. 44) was
many of the same conspirators, and evidence that Salomon contemporaneously was
rigging a food bid to Newark with one of the same conspirators, was also properly
admitted to prove defendants’ intent, i.e., to show that defendants joined the
United States v. Pitre, 960 F.2d 1112, 1119 (2d Cir. 1992); United States v. Misle
Bus & Equip. Co., 967 F.2d 1227, 1234 (8th Cir. 1992); United States v. Caputo,
808 F.2d 963, 968 (2d Cir. 1987); United States v. Gordon, 987 F.2d 902, 908 (2d
14
Defendants cite a litany of additional conspiracies (Deft. Br. 44-45), which
were mentioned briefly at trial to show a witness’s bad acts, in order to take the
sting out of cross-examination. As it did throughout the trial, the court gave the
jury a limiting instruction as to this evidence. A1090. Indeed, defendants cross-
examined government witnesses extensively about these other bad acts, usually in
more detail than the government had on direct. SA14-24. Defendants were not
implicated in these other conspiracies, and the jury could not have been confused
by such testimony.
43
Cir. 1993) (evidence may be admissible where there is a “‘close parallel’ between
the crime charged and the acts shown”). Such evidence is not “unfair prejudice,”
where “the evidence did not involve conduct more inflammatory than the charged
crime, and the district court gave a careful limiting instruction.” United States v.
Livoti, 196 F.3d 322, 326 (2d Cir. 1999); see note 13, supra.
was too generalized (Deft. Br. 42-43), they point to no testimony in support of this
claim, and the record refutes it. Indeed, they also complain about the testimony of
Lempert (Deft. Br. 41-42), who testified quite specifically about events
surrounding the rigged Newark bid in the summer of 1996. A1159-65. Lempert
called Salomon to propose that Penachio would stay away from the meat and dairy
portions of the bid if M&F stayed away from the produce portion. Salomon agreed
and said that M&F would submit a cover bid for Lempert. A1160-61. But when
Lempert, whose prices for the produce were 50% higher than they would have
been in the absence of Salomon’s agreement, found out that M&F had won the
produce items as well as the meat items he called Salomon, who was surprised and
apologetic. A1162-65. Salomon later called Lempert to say that he would advise
Newark that his produce buyer had become ill and that M&F would be unable to
44
perform the contract. A1165.15 Penachio was then awarded the produce portion of
the testimony of witnesses who participated in those conspiracies and who testified
to their own acts and conversations with defendants (compare Deft. Br. 42 n.12),
A. The Government Did Not Shift Its Legal Theory, And Its
Summary Charts And Exhibits Were Properly Admitted
Defendants claim that they were “surprised” on the eve of trial when they
learned that the government was going to use exhibits and charts analyzing prices
in the various bids, because this represented a “shift” from a “market allocation”
case to a “pricefixing” case. Deft. Br. 48, also 53. This claim is frivolous. The
indictment charged defendants with conspiring “to rig bids and allocate contracts.”
A48 (emphasis added). The indictment also alleged that, to effectuate the
conspiracy, the conspirators “discussed and agreed on the prices or price levels
they would bid on specified parts of contracts . . . sometimes rais[ing] the prices in
15
Defendants’ claim that the Lempert’s testimony should not have been
admitted because of his questioned credibility is discussed at pages 47-48.
45
their bids by 10% or more.” A49. Thus, the court properly concluded that the
government could show that prices on specific key items in the bids submitted by
M&F and its co-conspirators went up substantially after the commencement of the
it. SA66. And, although defendants claim that they were “foreclosed” from
Deft. Br. 48, also 53, defendants had every opportunity to challenge the pricing
evidence as it was introduced over the course of this three-week trial. Indeed, they
introduced into evidence at trial. It was merely a demonstrative aid used in the
on two popular food items. SA1.16 The court interjected to tell the jury that “What
16
We are puzzled by defendants’ reliance on United States v. Bilzerian, 926
F.2d 1285 (2d Cir. 1991), as the only support for the claim that “[t]he selection of
one item over another in a competitive bid case must be judged with skepticism
and scrutiny.” Deft. Br. 48. Bilzerian, a securities fraud case, had nothing to do
with bid rigging.
46
is up on the screen now is an illustrative device. This is not evidence . . . the
question will be whether the government presents evidence during the trial to
support these figures that you see in the chart.” SA2. The underlying evidence
drayage figures for each of the conspirators went up substantially and in close
unison once the conspiracy started and for its duration. A1563. All of the
foundation evidence for the summary chart was in evidence in the form of
defense. The chart was thus properly admitted pursuant to Fed. R. Evid. 1006.
Defendants claim that the court should have struck the testimony of Lempert
because the court characterized his testimony at one point as “incredible.” But,
whatever the trial court may have thought about Lempert’s credibility, the jury did
not have to agree, and it is the jury’s function to assesses credibility, not the
court’s. United States v. Weinstein, 452 F.2d 704, 713-14 (2d Cir. 1971) (even
where the trial judge goes on record that he does not believe the prosecution’s
47
corroborated by other co-conspirators, including “both of the Schneider brothers”
his testimony about the Newark conspiracy was corroborated by a letter found in
M&F’s files.17 Thus, the trial court properly concluded that, although “Mr.
make the determination. More importantly, there was substantial credible evidence
Defendants claim that the district court improperly admitted certain “partial
17
Although the court instructed the jury to disregard all of Lempert’s
testimony concerning conversations with Coelho about the Newark bid in the
summer of 1996 (SA37-38), Lempert’s testimony about conversations with
Salomon to rig the bid were admitted. See pages 44-45, supra. Lempert’s
testimony that Salomon’s underbid to Newark was a mistake and that Salomon
promised to withdraw the bid (A1159-62) was corroborated by a letter found in
M&F files, requesting the Newark BOE to release M&F from its bid because of the
illness of its produce buyer. A674. Defense counsel conceded at trial that Coelho
admitted that he had prepared the letter, although he said he personally had not sent
it. A658. The court refused to admit the letter because it was unsigned, A1113,
1161-65, 1210, but since Lempert never saw that letter, he could not have
fabricated his testimony. And the letter adds weight to the court’s decision to
allow the jury to decide whether Lempert was telling the truth.
48
work sheets” with “unidentified handwritten notations” and “draft workpapers.”
Deft. Br. 49-50 (emphasis in original). This allegation refers to GX 42, 46, and 47,
which defendants conceded to be M&F business records, taken from M&F’s own
files, and produced by M&F pursuant to a grand jury subpoena. SA10, 12-13.
They are documents that M&F normally maintained in the course of its business
during the time period at issue in this case. See, e.g., A838 (regular bidders
on June 11, 1996. On it are handwritten entries in the “Unit Price” and “Total
Price” columns of the form for each of the items to be awarded. A1500. Paul
Schneider testified that he was familiar with that particular bid, had knowledge of
how bids were generally filled out, and had “personal knowledge of the ballpark
prices and quantities” of “the items in question.” SA11 (“As long as it is made
clear that he is in essence testifying to what this appears to be, that’s fine”). Thus,
Schneider could testify that whoever had filled in the numbers for the seven items
listed on the bid was apparently filling in numbers that represented prices and gross
profits for those items. A839-47. This could lead the jury to infer that someone at
M&F (Schneider could not identify the writing) had at some point considered
submitting a warehouse bid in June 1996. The fact that M&F ultimately did not do
49
so supports the inference that it was refraining from bidding pursuant to its
The other M&F business records to which defendants object (Deft. Br. 50)
are GX 46 and GX 47, which show that M&F filled out two bids for the regular
frozen food contract awarded on April 28, 1998. One bid was marked “high” in
the upper left hand corner of the first page, and the other was marked “low.”
A948, 1517, 1533. These bid documents support Paul Schneider’s testimony that
some of the conspirators prepared two bids for the April 1998 contract because
they did not know until the last minute whether or not Morris, an “outside” bidder,
was going to bid against them. The conspirators prepared a high bid to submit if
Goldberg received assurances from Morris before the bids were due that Morris
would not be competing for the contract. If Goldberg did not get that assurance,
however, the conspirators were prepared to submit a lower bid to meet the possible
competitive threat. A939-44. NYCBOE’s attendance list for that bid opening
shows that Salomon attended for M&F, something that was unusual for Salomon,
and something that Salomon would not have needed to do if he did not have to wait
until the last minute to decide which bid to submit. A943-44, 1477.
abuse of discretion.
50
D. The Court Properly Admitted Co-Conspirator Statements
relating to the pre-1996 NYCBOE bid rigging and the Newark bid rigging. Deft.
Br. 42 n.12, 50-51. As discussed above, most of that evidence was admitted, not as
own participation in activities with Salomon and others that served to explain the
Salomon’s intent.
to Salomon and M&F, and the trial court carefully instructed the jury to consider
these allocutions only as proof of the existence of the conspiracy, not as to these
defendants’ participation in it. A982-85. See United States v. Dolah, 245 F.3d 98,
101-03 (2d Cir. 2001). The court admitted the allocutions based on representations
of the government and written representations of counsel for declarants that they
claim that, because the declarants were not called and made to invoke their Fifth
51
Amendment privilege in court, the court should not have determined that the
The court, however, did not abuse its discretion in finding that the witnesses
were indeed unavailable, given the representations of government counsel and the
defendants do not deny that, if called to testify, the co-defendants would in fact
have invoked their Fifth Amendment privilege, thus making the allocutions
demonstrate how they were prejudiced by either the court’s procedure or the
The parties stipulated at trial that M&F sold approximately $5.4 million of
frozen food to the NYCBOE during the period of the charged conspiracy. Due to a
alleged that M&F sold approximately $9 million during that period. Consistent
with its usual practice, SA39, the court read to the jury only the “charging”
paragraphs (27, 28, and 29) of the indictment, which contain the required elements
of a Sherman Act conspiracy. The amount of sales is not relevant to prove any
element; indeed, a defendant can violate the Sherman Act even where it makes no
52
sales pursuant to the conspiracy. E.g., United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.,
310 U.S. 150, 224-225 n.59 (1940); United States v. SKW Metals & Alloys, Inc.,
195 F.3d 83, 92 (2d Cir. 1999). Thus, the fact that M&F's volume of commerce
was incorrectly stated does not “change an ‘essential’ or ‘material’ element of the
F.2d 130, 133 (7th Cir. 1989) (citations omitted) (government permitted to amend
the serial numbers of money orders that defendant was charged with altering); see
Stewart v. United States, 395 F.2d 484, 487 (8th Cir. 1968) (indictment amended to
read June 21, 1967 rather than July 21, 1967); United States v. Torres, 901 F.2d
205, 232-33 (2d Cir. 1990) (indictment redacted to remove reference to one
(Deft. Br. 52), the decision not to read paragraph 25 was not an abuse of discretion.
Defendants claim that the court should have granted a mistrial based on
prosecutorial “gamesmanship and improper conduct.” Deft. Br. 52-53, also 18.
Coelho and Barash. That claim is refuted at pages 25-28, supra. Moreover, the
trial court did not find that the government had acted improperly. In fact, the court
stated that “probably both sides were engaging in tactics, to some extent, although
53
I don’t think that either side acted in bad faith.” SA63.
The second basis for defendants’ claim of misconduct -- that the government
shifted its theory of the case on the eve of trial -- is also refuted above, pages 45-
46.
relating to missing witnesses. Defense counsel had told the jury in closing that
Coelho and Barash, who were essential for the defense; that the defendants
“couldn’t call” them and that the government “chose not to.” Defendants argued
that the jury could infer that these witnesses’ testimony would have been
unfavorable to the government, that these were “two people who could have
cleared David’s name for him.” Defense counsel asked “What is a possible or
good explanation for not letting the truth come out on that stand? . . . . the only
people that grant immunity in this room is the government. It’s not the defense.”
made in responding to those remarks. First, the government stated that “standing
here we can’t be sure what they would say if they were on that witness stand.”
That remark was certainly true, and hardly improper. See also A223-656 (Barash
54
Yes, Alan Schneider and Paul Schneider say that Douglas
Barash was in the room back in ‘96 when they went
down and had a conversation with David Salomon about
starting to rig the bids. How many more witnesses do
you need to tell you what went on in that room? And
how many witnesses do you need to tell you what went
on for the next three years when Mr. Barash wasn’t
around?”
Defendants object that the statement “Barash wasn’t around” was untrue.
What the government was referring to, of course, was the fact that there was not a
single reference to Barash in any of the testimony at trial concerning the bid
rigging meetings and conversations that occurred over the next three years after the
1996 meeting. The remark, when taken in context, was proper because Barash was
not “around” any of the conspiratorial events involving M&F and Salomon.
argument that the government had made a deal with Lempert but not with Barash
immunizing Mr. Barash or Mr. Coehlo [sic] with Selwyn Lempert? Selwyn
Lempert was convicted of eight counts. Selwyn Lempert will stand in front of a
A1351. After defendants objected to the suggestion that an immunized witness can
never be prosecuted, the court instructed the jury on the limited nature of “use
55
perjury. A1353. In the context of closing, the government’s remarks were not
improper and the court’s instructions foreclosed any possibility of jury confusion
or prejudice.
Kinlock, 174 F.3d 297, 299 (2d Cir. 1999), United States v. Ismail, 219 F.3d 76, 78
(2d Cir. 2000). Failure to object to a payment plan for restitution is reviewed for
plain error. United States v. Tran, 234 F.3d 798, 813 (2d Cir. 2000).
without a “hearing” and without adequate consideration of the loss to the victim of
the conspiracy and defendants’ ability to pay. Deft. Br. 56-59. They had an
adequate hearing on these issues, however, and the record shows that the court
F.3d 109, 113-14 (2d Cir. 1996). See 18 U.S.C. 3563(b)(2),(c); 18 U.S.C. 3583(d);
and U.S.S.G. 5E1.1(a)(2),(b)(2); 8B1.1(a)(2), (b)(2).
56
A. Defendants Had An Appropriate Hearing
“corrections” to their financial statements, and stated that they “dispute[d]” the
government’s calculation of loss to the NYCBOE, and their ability to pay. A1681-
99. Although defendants now claim that they requested a hearing on the issue of
their “ability to pay the restitution and fine and over what period of time,” Deft. Br.
58, their only request for a “hearing” related to their dispute as to the amount of
restitution. A1624, 1681, 1697, 1699. Indeed, they never even mentioned, no less
requested a hearing on, the “period of time” over which payments should be made.
Defendants do not point to any case or statute that requires a court to hold an
Moreover, defendants never offered any evidence or made any proffer as to what
At the Rule 29 hearing on September 5, 2001, the court stated that it did not
believe an “evidentiary hearing” was necessary, but that it would consider one if
defendants believed they needed to supplement the wealth of factual material that
was already in the record. SA71. Defense counsel responded that she was “happy
57
delaying the restitution part, if I can,” id., but, apart from simply seeking a delay,
she did not indicate that she had any evidence to add to the record, claiming merely
that there were “records” and “specific excerpts,” previously “brought . . . to the
Court” indicating that the conspiracy “kept prices down.” SA71-72. No effort was
At the opening of the sentencing hearing on October 22, 2001, the court
asked whether defendants had anything to add to their submissions, noting that the
issues defendants had raised on “the question of restitution” included “whether the
10 percent figure is reasonable and has a basis in the record, what the amount of
In addressing the restitution issue, the court first noted that all of the
sentencing recommendation that 10% of the total sales to the NYCBOE during the
term of the conspiracy was the appropriate measure of loss for the purposes of
restitution. A1735. The court concluded that “[t]here is evidence in the record to
support the figure. The government lays it out at page 12 of its brief. And I’m
58
persuaded that the government has proven that the loss was approximately 10
percent of the sales by a preponderance of the evidence and I will use the 10
out that, beginning in December 1999, after Salomon knew that he was going to be
on the “ability to pay” issue was that Salomon had submitted “corrections” to the
PSR (“corrections” which, even if accepted, conceded that Salomon had a net
worth of over $685,000 and a net monthly cash flow of $3,500, A1695-96), and
that he was not trying to hide his assets. A1743-44. Salomon’s counsel asked the
court to “sentence at the very low end of the guidelines,” but made no specific
the PSR] is two years’ probation. I gather M&F has been out of business since
June of 2000, and has sold all of its assets, and has no assets at this time.” A1745.
The court asked if the government objected to the recommendation of “no fine, no
19
The transfers included the sale of his half interest in his $350,000 residence
to his wife for a dollar, transfers of money to his children, and trusts that were set
up with Salomon as trustee. A1693, 1740.
59
restitution.” Id. The government responded that the corporation might
subsequently acquire assets as long as it was not dissolved and that it would not be
inappropriate to make the corporation jointly liable, “on the assumption that Mr.
Salomon [the sole owner of the corporation] in fact is going to be making the
appropriate restitution payments out of his own money.” A1745-46. Counsel for
M&F responded that, although M&F was not dissolved, it was not “an ongoing
imprisonment and a $60,000 fine, which was near the bottom of the guidelines fine
range.20 The court stated that the fine was “to be paid without interest within 120
days of today.” A1747. The Judgment of Conviction states that “[t]he court has
determined that the defendant does not have the ability to pay interest and it is
ordered that [t]he interest requirement is waived.” A1756. The court imposed a
two-year sentence of probation on M&F, stating that “I will not impose a fine.”
A1748.21
$3,024,000. A1676.
60
Salomon, on a joint and several basis with the other co-defendants who had also
been ordered to make restitution in that amount (representing 10% of the sales on
that total, $540,000 (representing 10% of the $5.4 million in sales by M&F during
the conspiracy, A1670) was to be paid on a joint and several basis with M&F
without interest within 120 days. A1747-48. The court explained that it
anticipated that the remainder of the $12.3 million would be paid by the other co-
conspirators. A1747.22 The court did not impose the balance of the $12.3 million
on M&F, stating that “in light of his [sic] financial circumstances, I will not impose
After ordering the restitution and fine to be paid within 120 days, the court
22
The court explained (A1747-48):
the unpaid balance of the $12.3 million, giving credit for any and all
payments by the other defendants, the co-defendants, is due at the end
of the period of supervised release, which will be in approximately
two and a half years. I don’t expect you to pay it then. I will impose
as a condition that the government -- that no judgment be entered for
any outstanding balance and the government refrain from any
collection efforts until August of 2006, at which time, after we see
what has been paid, any outstanding balance will be prorated among
the defendants with assets. And my expectation is that there will not
be much of this $12.3 million still unpaid by that time.
The defendants do not specifically object to this provision for the contingent
payment.
61
asked counsel specifically whether there were “any other issues with respect to the
payment provisions or to any other aspect of the sentencing. A1749, also A1751.
The record shows that the trial court took the necessary factors into account
in ordering restitution. This Court does “not insist on any particular recitation of
Kinlock, 174 F.3d at 299, 301.23 “Courts are statutorily required to consider the
enumerated restitution factors, but not to make detailed factual findings as to each
factor . . . Instead, the record must contain ‘an affirmative act or statement allowing
an inference that the district court in fact considered’ the mandated factors.”
United States v. Stevens, 211 F.3d 1, 6 (2d Cir. 2000), citing Kinlock.
After listening to argument by counsel for both sides on the question of the
calculation of loss to the victim and defendants’ ability to pay, the court adopted
23
Thus, unlike the cases on which defendants rely, the Second Circuit does
not require the court to make “specific findings.” Cf. United States v. Maurello, 76
F.3d 1304, 1316 (3d Cir. 1996) (noting that the requirement is a circuit-made rule).
And unlike United States v. Stover, 93 F.3d 1379, 1389 (8th Cir. 1996), in which a
restitution order was found deficient because it left the name of the payee blank,
the trial court in this case named as “payee” the “NYCBOE.” A1756, 1761.
62
M&F’s inability to pay the fine, and adopted the government’s argument that
Salomon had assets sufficient to pay a fine and restitution and that M&F and
Salomon should be jointly liable for restitution. In imposing only part of the full
restitution order on M&F, and in ordering Salomon to pay a fine without interest,
circumstances” and “ability to pay.” A1749, 1756. The “refusal to impose a fine
or costs supports an inference that the court considered [defendant’s] ability to pay
restitution.” Kinlock, 174 F.3d at 300. Indeed, even accepting defendant’s own
calculations, Salomon had the ability to pay the fine and restitution.
In addition to the specific statements made by the court at the hearing, the
fact that the court did not impose any fine on M&F, imposed a fine at the low end
of the range for Salomon, and expressly stated in the Judgment of Conviction that
it was waiving interest because of the defendant’s inability to pay, indicates that
the court considered defendants’ inability to pay. Indeed, defendants concede that
the court took defendants’ ability to pay into consideration by expressly stating in
the Judgment of Conviction that it was waiving interest on the fine. Deft. Br. 58
n.17.
The record amply supports the court’s use of a 10% overcharge to calculate
63
the loss to the NYCBOE. 18 U.S.C. 3664(e) (burden is on government to prove
properly imposed under U.S.S.G. 5E1.1(a)(1) for the “full amount of the victim’s
loss.” The total amount of sales pursuant to the contracts that were the subject of
this conspiracy was over $120 million. Defendants conceded that M&F’s share of
those sales totaled $5.4 million. A1683, 1686. The testimony at trial and M&F’s
own bidding records support the court’s finding that the overcharge to the
NYCBOE on those contracts was, on average, at least 10% of the contract price.
See, e.g., A812-13 (prices in spring 1996 were 15% higher than existing prices),
A954 (prices in fall 1998 would have been 10-15% lower without agreement),
A818 (getting a 25% profit in Staten Island over pre-conspiracy 10% in Queens
induced Salomon to agree to stay in Staten Island); compare A1359 (M&F 1995
bid prior to conspiracy) with A1377 (M&F 1996 bid during conspiracy), and
A1563 (showing M&F drayage rose from 15 cents before conspiracy to 25 cents
during conspiracy, a rise of 67%); compare SA52 (M&F’s warehouse bid post-
conspiracy) and A1470 (M&F worksheet for 1996 warehouse bid, which
SA50 and SA51 (warehouse items actually bid during conspiracy, showing prices
at least 10% higher, and as much as 18% and 29% higher for popular items --
64
breaded chicken patties and BBQ chicken); 24 see also A1718, 1724 (comparison of
M&F’s pre-conspiracy and conspiracy prices). The defendants have not submitted
a scintilla of evidence to contradict the 10% figure. See Deft. Br. 57, n.16, citing
A1616 (making completely unsupported claim that prices to BOE increased after
the conspiracy, citing nothing more than their own similarly unsupported trial court
3664(e), and “[a] defendant’s limited financial resources at the time restitution is
See also Application Note 3 to U.S.S.G. 2R1.1, which estimates that the
24
Zvi, 242 F.3d 89, 100 (2d Cir. 2001). In this case, even by the defendant’s own
calculations, Salomon had net assets of $685,000. A1695, Deft. Br. 56. Even
though defendant is incarcerated, he and his family have income from stocks and
securities, interest, and rents that exceeds their monthly expenses. A1696.
Moreover, despite his claim of inability to pay, Salomon paid the $60,000 fine on
November 16, 2001 (A38), and M&F paid $200,000 on January 9, 2002 (A40), in
partial payment of the restitution order, despite its allegations that it has no assets
And, although they now object to the requirement that the fine and
restitution be paid within 120 days, defendants never objected to the payment
schedule in the district court. A1749. “The propriety of the payment schedule
Thus this case is distinguishable from Kinlock, 174 F.3d at 301, where the
26
court reversed the term of a restitution order that required immediate payment
instead of considering payments over time in light of evidence showing that the
defendant had “no assets” and had no ability “to improve his financial condition”
while he was in prison.
66
CONCLUSION
Respectfully submitted.
CHARLES A. JAMES
Assistant Attorney General
JAMES M. GRIFFIN
Deputy Assistant Attorney General
67
RULE 32(a)(7) CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
prepare this brief, the number of words in this brief is 15,993. (On March 8, 2002,
the Court granted the United States’ motion to file a brief of up to 17,000 words.)
_______________
Andrea Limmer
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on this 11th day of March, 2002, I served two copies of
Cathy Fleming
Harold J. Ruvoldt, Jr.
Edwards & Angell
750 Lexington Avenue
New York, NY 10022
(212) 756-0329
_________________________
Andrea Limmer
Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
601 D Street, N.W.
Room 10535
Washington D.C. 20531
(202) 514-2886