United States v. Scarfo

Decision Date15 July 2022
Docket Number15-2811,15-2826,15-2844,15-2925,19-1398
PartiesUNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. NICODEMO S. SCARFO, SALVATORE PELULLO, WILLIAM MAXWELL, and JOHN MAXWELL, Appellants
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Third Circuit

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
NICODEMO S. SCARFO, SALVATORE PELULLO, WILLIAM MAXWELL, and JOHN MAXWELL, Appellants

Nos. 15-2811, 15-2826, 15-2844, 15-2925, 19-1398

United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit

July 15, 2022


Argued July 6, 2021

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Nos. 1-11-cr-0740-001 thru 004) District Judge: Honorable Robert B. Kugler

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Michael E. Riley [ARGUED]

Law Offices of Riley and Riley

Counsel for Nicodemo S. Scarfo

Troy A. Archie [ARGUED]

Afonso Archie & Foley

Counsel for Salvatore Pelullo

Michael N. Huff [ARGUED]

Counsel for William Maxwell

Mark W. Catanzaro

Counsel for John Maxwell

Rachel A. Honig

Sabrina G. Comizzoli

Mark E. Coyne

Bruce P. Keller [ARGUED]

Office of United States Attorney

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Norman Gross [ARGUED]

Office of United States Attorney

Counsel for Appellee

Before: AMBRO, JORDAN, and BIBAS, Circuit Judges

OPINION OF THE COURT

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

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Table of Contents

I. Overview ..................................................................... 7

II. Background ................................................................. 8

A. The Organized Crime Origins ........................... 8

B. The FirstPlus Takeover ................................... 10

C. The FirstPlus Fraud ......................................... 14

D. The Investigation and Takedown .................... 19

E. The Damage .................................................... 20

F. Indictment and Pretrial Proceedings ............... 21

G. Trial ................................................................. 23

H. Post-Trial Proceedings and Sentencing ........... 26

I. Appeals ............................................................ 26

III. Investigation Issues .................................................... 27

A. Collection of Pelullo's Cell Site Location Information ..................................................... 28

B. Filter Teams ................................................... 37

1. Background .......................................... 38

2. Challenges to Filter Team Procedures . 41

3. Challenges to Ex Parte Proceedings .... 44

4. Crime-Fraud Exception ........................ 47

IV. Pretrial Issues ............................................................. 48

A. Speedy Trial Act Claim .................................. 49

B. Admission of La Cosa Nostra Evidence and Denial of the Maxwells' Motion for Severance ......................................................................... 54

1. Admission of LCN Evidence ............... 55

2. Denial of the Maxwells' Severance Motion .................................................. 62

V. Trial Issues ................................................................. 65

A. Scarfo's Joint Trial with Former Counsel Donald Manno ................................................. 65

1. Background .......................................... 67

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2. Sixth Amendment ................................ 68

3. Due Process .......................................... 72

B. Pelullo's Sixth Amendment Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim ......................... 74

1. Background .......................................... 74

2. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim .............................................................. 78

C. Convictions for RICO Conspiracy Under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) ............................................. 84

1. Constructive Amendment of Indictment .............................................................. 85

2. Jury Instructions and Sufficiency of the Evidence .............................................. 89

D. Firearm Conspiracy Conviction Following Rehaif ............................................................. 90

E. Sufficiency of Evidence to Support William Maxwell's Convictions .................................. 95

1. Conviction for Conspiracy to Unlawfully Transfer or Possess a Firearm .............. 95

2. Convictions for Wire Fraud and Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud ...... 98

F. Juror Issues ................................................... 101

1. Background ........................................ 101

2. Disclosure of the District Court's First Conversation with Juror #8 ................ 110

3. Purported Coercion of the Jury by the District Court ...................................... 113

4. Purported Coercion of the Substituted Juror by Other Jurors .......................... 117

5. District Court's Response to Report of Juror Misconduct ................................ 122

VI. Sentencing Issues ..................................................... 124

A. Pelullo's Sentencing Challenges .................. 125

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1. Guidelines Sentencing Range Calculation ......................................... 126

2. Loss Amount Enhancement ............... 129

3. Victim Number Enhancement ............ 133

4. Substantive Reasonableness ............... 136

B. Joint and Several Forfeiture Liability Following Honeycutt ..................................................... 136

1. Background ........................................ 136

2. Honeycutt and Its Progeny ................. 139

3. Post-Honeycutt: John Maxwell .......... 141

4. Post-Honeycutt: Pelullo...................... 142

C. Delay in Forfeiture of Pelullo's Property ..... 144

1. Background ........................................ 144

2. CAFRA .............................................. 148

3. Due Process ........................................ 150

VII. Brady Issues ............................................................. 155

A. Denial of Scarfo's Request to File a Motion for a New Trial Pursuant to Rule 33(b) ............. 156

B. Pelullo's Motion for Remand Based on Giglio Evidence ....................................................... 161

VIII. Conclusion ............................................................... 169

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I. Overview

Everybody calls me a racketeer. I call myself a businessman.

- Alphonse Gabriel Capone

The four appellants before us - Nicodemo Scarfo, Salvatore Pelullo, William Maxwell, and his brother John Maxwell - were convicted for their roles in the unlawful takeover and looting of FirstPlus Financial Group, a publicly traded mortgage loan company. Their scheme commenced with the Defendants'[1] and their co-conspirators' extortion of FirstPlus's board of directors and its chairman to gain control of the company. Once they forced the old leadership out, the Defendants proceeded to drain the company of its value by causing it to enter into expensive consulting and legal-services agreements with themselves, causing it to acquire (at vastly inflated prices) shell companies they personally owned, and using bogus trusts to funnel FirstPlus's assets into their own accounts. The Defendants and their crew ultimately bankrupted FirstPlus, leaving its shareholders with worthless stock.

Each Defendant was convicted of more than twenty counts of criminal behavior and given a substantial prison

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sentence. Now, in this consolidated appeal, their combined efforts challenge almost every aspect of their prosecutions, including the investigation, the charges and evidence against them, the pretrial process, the government's compliance with its disclosure obligations, the trial, the forfeiture proceedings, and their sentences. Although they raise a multitude of issues, only one entitles any of them to relief: the government has conceded that the District Court's assessment of John Maxwell's forfeiture obligations was improper under a Supreme Court decision handed down during the pendency of this appeal. Having jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a), we will affirm all the convictions and sentences, except for the forfeiture portion of John Maxwell's sentence. We will remand that for the District Court to reassess what share of the forfeiture sum he should pay.

II. Background[2]

A. The Organized Crime Origins

This case has its roots in organized crime, and, like other mob cases, it gets its start with family - both biological and made. Nicodemo Domenico "Little Nicky" Scarfo Sr. was the "boss" of the Philadelphia branch, or "family," of La Cosa

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Nostra ("LCN") for most of the 1980s.[3] See United States v. Pungitore, 910 F.2d 1084, 1098 (3d Cir. 1990). He oversaw nearly a decade of murders, gambling, and extortion for the benefit of LCN. Id. at 1097-1102; see also United States v. Scarfo, 850 F.2d 1015, 1016 (3d Cir. 1988).

By the time the Defendants here began their FirstPlus scheme, however, he was out of the game, serving a lengthy federal prison sentence. Pungitore, 910 F.2d at 1152. His son, Nicodemo Salvatore "Nicky" Scarfo (the "Scarfo" in this opinion), wanted to fill the power vacuum, but his attempted takeover of the Philadelphia LCN family did not go according to plan. On Halloween in 1989, as he was having dinner at a restaurant, masked assailants ambushed him, shooting him several times but, no doubt to their chagrin, not killing him.

When he recovered, Scarfo sought the help of the Lucchese LCN family, which operated in northern New Jersey. He had an "in" with the Luccheses: their boss was incarcerated in the same prison as his father. According to the government's expert on the structure and operations of LCN, eventually the

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Lucchese family integrated Scarfo into their organization as a "made member" - someone who has been "fully inducted" and has "taken an oath of loyalty to the family." (JAC at 8280-81.) Being a made member meant that he had to generate money for the Lucchese family and share with it the profits of any criminal activities he pursued.

Scarfo's longtime friend Salvatore Pelullo, although not a blood relative, had a close relationship...

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