After a jury convicted him of three counts of
honest-services fraud in violation of 18 U.S. Code § 1346, one count of paying
an illegal gratuity in violation of 18 U.S. Code § 201(c) and one count of
conspiracy to pay illegal gratuities and commit honest-services fraud in
violation of 18 U.S. Code § 371, Kevin A. Ring appealed. U.S. v.
Ring, __ F.3d __, 2013 WL 276020 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit 2013).
On appeal, he made three arguments, only one of which I’ll
address in this post. That argument
challenged his conviction under 18 U.S. Code § 201(c), the paying an illegal
gratuity charge. U.S. v. Ring, supra.
The
first of the other two arguments challenged his convictions for honest-services
fraud; more precisely, Ring claimed that the district court judge who presided
over his trial improperly instructed the jury on “the quid pro quo” element of the offense. For more on that issue, check
out the article you can find here. The other argument challenged the judge’s
admission of certain evidence.
To understand the illegal gratuity charge (and the whole
prosecution), it is necessary to understand what Ring was doing prior to being
indicted:
[A]fter stints working for a member of
the U.S. House of Representatives, a U.S. Senate committee, and the House
Republican caucus, [Ring] joined Jack Abramoff's lobbying team in 1999. Until
its fall from grace, Abramoff's group maintained a successful and wide-ranging
lobbying practice in Washington, D.C. Playing a role some characterized as the
team's `chief operating officer,’ Ring managed some of Abramoff's most
important clients and maintained close relationships with several public
officials.
Ring and the other Abramoff lobbyists relied heavily
on campaign contributions to maintain relationships with elected officials and
promote their clients' political interests. But it was Ring's other lobbying
tactics that got him in trouble.
These tactics chiefly included treating
congressional and executive branch officials to dinners, drinks, travel, concerts,
and sporting events. Ring referred to officials with whom he had the closest
ties and with whom his lobbying efforts were most successful as his `champions’ As regular beneficiaries of Ring's largesse, these `champions’ often took
actions that were favorable to Ring's clients.
U.S. v. Ring, supra. The opinion notes that in 2004, a “federal
investigation of a kickback scheme masterminded by Abramoff and another of his
associates . . . spawned the broader investigation that ultimately ensnared Ring.” U.S.
v. Ring, supra.
That brings us to the illegal gratuity charge. The appellate court noted explained that the
illegal-gratuity statute makes it
unlawful to `give[ ], offer[ ], or promise [ ] anything of value to any public
official . . . for or because of any official act.’ 18 U.S. Code § 201(c). The
statute defines `official act’ as `any decision or action on any question,
matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy, which may at any time be
pending, or which may by law be brought before any public official, in such
official's official capacity, or in such official's place of trust or profit.’ 18 U.S. Code § 201(a)(3). This Circuit treats the question whether an action constitutes an `official act’ as
one of `sufficiency of the evidence.’ See Valdes v. U.S., 475
F.3d 1319 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2007). .
. .
U.S. v. Ring, supra.
The court then addressed the factual basis of this count,
noting Ring was charged
with paying an illegal gratuity when he
gave Washington Wizards tickets to an attorney at the Justice Department's
Office of Intergovernmental Affairs as a reward for helping to expedite review
of a visa application for a foreign student seeking to attend a private school
owned by Abramoff. Upon receiving a request for assistance from Ring, the
attorney forwarded Ring's email to another Justice Department official who
recommended he contact someone at the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization
Service (`INS’).
Following this advice, the attorney called
an INS official's secretary and urged her to expedite the application. He then
forwarded Ring's email to the secretary along with a personal note:
`Thank you for looking into this. I do not know if
anything can be done but I said I would look into it. If, for any reason,
nothing can be done, please email me so I can pass that along. Thank you very
much for you[r] assistance.’
The secretary, in turn, passed the email along to five different INS officials in an effort to, as she testified, `make sure . . . action was being taken to answer the request’ because it had come from `higher headquarters’ at the Department of Justice.
Within a single business day, INS
agreed to expedite the application. After getting the news that the attorney's
efforts had been successful, Ring sent Abramoff an email reporting that the
attorney had `[h]elped on the school and [was] now looking for tickets’ to two
Washington Wizards basketball games. Abramoff promptly agreed, and the attorney
attended the games on Abramoff's dime.
U.S. v. Ring, supra.
The Court of Appeals noted that by
convicting on the illegal-gratuity
count, the jury found -- and Ring does not now dispute -- that he provided the
tickets `for or because of’ the attorney's assistance with the visa application.
Instead, Ring argues that the government failed to offer sufficient evidence
that the attorney took an `official action’ within the meaning of the
illegal-gratuity statute.
U.S. v. Ring, supra.
The court explained that in Valdes v. U.S., supra, it considered the
scope of `official act’ in the
illegal-gratuity context. There, a police officer accepted money from an
undercover agent and, at the agent's request, conducted searches of
license-plate and warrant databases. . . . Emphasizing that the
illegal-gratuity statute is concerned not with purely informational inquiries,
but rather with `inappropriate influence on decisions that the government
actually makes,’ . . . we held that the jury lacked sufficient evidence to
find that the officer's searches constituted `official acts’. . . .
In so doing, we listed some examples of
acts that `the statute easily covers: a clerk's manufacture of official
government approval of a Supplemental Security Income benefit, as in U.S. v.
Parker, 133 F.3d 322 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit 1998);
a congressman's use of his office to secure Navy contracts for a ship repair
firm, as in U.S. v. Biaggi, 853 F.2d 89 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2d Circuit 1988); and a Veterans' Bureau official's activity securing a
favorable outcome on a disability claim, as in Beach v. United States, 19
F.2d 739 (U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit 1927) (based on a
predecessor statute).’ Valdes v. U.S., supra. We further noted that
`official acts’ include acts that have been established as part of an
official's position by virtue of past practice or custom. Valdes v.
U.S., supra.
U.S. v. Ring, supra.
Ring based his argument on the Court of Appeals’ holding in Valdes, claiming that here, as in that
case,
no reasonable juror could have found
that the attorney's forwarding of the email constituted an `official act.’
Because the attorney lacked decision-making authority with respect to visa
applications, Ring argues that the attorney's intercession was not a `decision
or action’ on a `question, matter, . . . [or] proceeding’ that was or ever
would be `pending’ or `brought’ before him. 18 U.S. Code § 201(a)(3).
Instead, according to Ring, the
attorney's act of forwarding the email to the INS secretary amounts to nothing
more than an informational inquiry, analogous to the database search in Valdes or
a receptionist's transfer of a phone call.
U.S. v. Ring, supra.
The Court of Appeals did not buy his argument. U.S. v.
Ring, supra. It noted, first, that
[c]onsidering the evidence in the light
most favorable to the government,. . .
we think it clear that a rational
jury could have found that the attorney's efforts to expedite the visa
application qualified as official action.
The secretary who received the attorney's
email testified that the Justice Department's Intergovernmental Affairs Office
was part of INS's `higher headquarters’ and was `responsible for . . . assisting
other agencies and other state and local governments if they ha[d] an issue.’
In other words, unlike attorneys in DOJ units who litigate on behalf of agency
clients, attorneys in the Intergovernmental Affairs Office are responsible for
reaching across agency boundaries to get things done. And as the secretary went
on to explain, she felt unable to ignore the attorney's request because of the
office he held. Ultimately, the attorney's swift success in procuring expedited
review spoke for itself.
U.S. v. Ring, supra.
The court then explained that
[c]ontrary to Ring's contention, the
attorney's actions are categorically different from those Valdes suggests
fall outside the scope of `official action.’ Unlike the Valdes police
officer, the attorney was neither `moonlighting’ nor making a purely
informational inquiry. . . .
Rather, the attorney acted in his official capacity to influence the
visa application process, conduct better analogized to an action Valdes
explained was clearly within the statute's coverage: `a congressman's use
of his office to secure Navy contracts for a ship repair firm.’ Valdes
v. U.S., supra.
To be sure, the attorney himself lacked
independent authority to expedite visa applications. But Ring's attempt to
import a requirement that the official in question have ultimate decision-making
authority into the definition of `official act’ has no statutory basis. .
. . Indeed, the statute states that `official act[s]’ include both decision[s]’ and `action[s].’ 18
U.S. Code § 201(a)(3).
U.S. v. Ring, supra
(emphasis in the original).
For this and other reasons, the Court of Appeals affirmed
Ring’s convictions and sentence. U.S. v. Ring, supra. If you would like to read more about the
case, check out Wikipedia’s entry on Kevin Ring.
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