United States v. Adam Bagdasian, 291 F.2d 163, 4th Cir. (1961)
United States v. Adam Bagdasian, 291 F.2d 163, 4th Cir. (1961)
United States v. Adam Bagdasian, 291 F.2d 163, 4th Cir. (1961)
2d 163
arrange to place their bets on horses that had already won. The plan he
proposed called for equal division of the spoils between himself and the bettor.
3
Allen, on the other hand, testified that he never accepted the proposal to
defraud Bagdasian's employer, but that he did place bets with the defendant,
thinking that he was employed by a bookmaker. He was not required to put up
betting money in advance, since Bagdasian told him, with simulated
graciousness, that he had satisfied himself of Allen's financial responsibility.
Apparently Allen had some independent knowledge or advice about racing, or
was fortunate, and did phone in bets on horses that turned out to be actual
winners. Then he was told by Bagdasian that he had won, but that it would now
be necessary for him to put up a deposit of $5,000 before he could collect his
winnings. More wary than Culpepper, Allen put up no money and was content
to forego the reported winnings.
On this appeal Bagdasian asserts (1) that the indictment does not properly
charge the offense; (2) that there was a fatal variance between indictment and
proof; and (3) that the evidence is not legally sufficient to support the verdict.
As to the indictment, it was pointed out preliminarily that it does not allege that
the defendant converted the money to his own use; but the short answer is that
this is not an essential part of the crime of devising a fraudulent scheme and
using interstate wire facilities for the purpose of executing such scheme.
The principal fault found with the indictment by the appellant is that after
reciting the representations made by the defendant to his intended victims, and
averring that they were false and known by the defendant to be false, the
indictment fails to show 'why the representations alleged to be false were false
in fact.' Appellant's counsel explained that by 'why,' as here used, he means
wherein, or in what respect. The point attempted to be made is that the
indictment should have continued with a recital of the opposite of the
representations, such as that the defendant was in fact not employed by the
bookmaker, that he was not in a position to change losing bets into winners
after the race had been run, etc. We do not perceive how in this case such a
form of traverse would have been more enlightening than the allegation that
was embodied in each count, namely, 'that each and all of the pretenses,
representations and promises made by the defendant, as listed (in the preceding
paragraph) * * * were false and fraudulent and were at all times known by him
to be false and fraudulent.'
8
10
11
We need not dwell upon the appellant's contention that there was a variance
between the charges made in the indictment and the proof. It is argued that the
evidence in fact showed a scheme between Bagdasian, Culpepper and Allen to
cheat Bagdasian's employer, of whose actual existence there is no evidence.
The Judge, however, was well justified in his view of the evidence that the plan
to cheat the 'employer' was a fiction held out to bait Culpepper and Allen, and
that Bagdasian's real scheme was to cheat them by pretending that he was in
league with them to cheat someone else.
13
The evidence amply supports the District Judge's verdict, despite the alleged
discrepancies in the testimony. At most, the matters stressed go only to the
credibility of witnesses-- an issue not reviewable here. See United States v.
Bagdasian, D.C.Md.1960, 188 F.Supp. 683.
14
Affirmed.
At the bar of this court counsel for the defendant relied upon United States v.
Larson, D.C.Alaska 1954, 125 F.Supp. 360, for the proposition that an
indictment is not necessarily valid merely because it is drawn in accordance
with a form contained in the Appendix of Forms of the Federal Rules of
Criminal Procedure. But, cf. Ochoa v. United States, 9 Cir., 1948, 167 F.2d
341. The Larson case presents no analogy helpful to the defendant here. The
present indictment would qualify as full complance not only with the form but
with the general requirements of the law