United States v. Robert Scully
United States v. Robert Scully
Opinion
Appellant Robert Warren Scully was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and aiding and abetting a wire fraud scheme.
BACKGROUND
Robert Warren Scully was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and aiding and abetting a wire fraud scheme on November 25, 2015. The Government filed a motion to restrain Scully's assets on July 7, 2016; the motion was granted that same day. The motion specifically mentioned over $220,000 from the sale of a home in Florida. The Government moved to restrain these proceeds (and Scully's other assets) to preserve them for Scully's expected restitution obligations. The district court sentenced Scully to 180 months of imprisonment and ordered him to pay $1,206,539.94 in restitution, a $5,000 fine, and a $500 special assessment. The district court entered judgment on November 29, 2016.
Scully filed his notice of appeal for his conviction and sentence in early December 2016. He then filed a motion to partially vacate the July 7, 2016 restraining order so he could use $65,000 of his house proceeds to cover attorney and transcript fees for his appeal. The district court denied Scully's motion. Scully filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Scully contends that the district court reversibly erred by denying his motion to partially vacate the restraining order as to the funds from the sale of his home in Florida. He argues that the proceeds are "untainted" because they are not fruits or instruments of crime, and the *551 district court's continued restraint on his untainted assets denies his Sixth Amendment right to counsel of his choice on appeal.
This court has jurisdiction over the instant appeal pursuant to
Appellant argues that
United States v. Floyd
,
The Supreme Court's opinion in
Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered v. United States
lays out important principles for this court's analysis. The defendant there was charged with violations of the RICO statutes and their forfeiture provision.
Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered v. United States
,
The Court in
Luis
addressed whether the Sixth Amendment bars the Government from restraining a defendant's untainted assets before trial. Similar to Scully, the defendant in
Luis
was indicted for violations of
Luis owned the assets, while the Government's interest in them was entirely contingent on a conviction at some later time.
This court's precedent is in line with
Luis
. In
United States v. Floyd
, this court held only that a district court erred in issuing a "
pretrial
restraining order freezing certain ... assets that were untainted by the alleged criminal offenses."
Caplin & Drysdale , Monsanto , Luis , and Floyd compel the conclusion that Scully may not use the house proceeds to pay for appellate counsel and fees. Caplin & Drysdale addressed restraint of tainted assets postconviction, while Luis and Floyd each addressed the pretrial restraint of untainted assets. Moreover, Scully is not appealing the district court's initial order restraining his untainted assets (which occurred after trial, but before entry of judgment), but rather, the district court's denial of his post-conviction motion to vacate the restraining order.
More than six months passed between the district court's initial restraint of Scully's assets and his motion to vacate the order. Two legally significant events occurred during this time. First, the district court entered judgment against Scully, which included restitution. The district court's entry of judgment triggered the second event, a statutory lien against all of Scully's property.
[A]n order of restitution made pursuant to [relevant sections] of this title, is a lien in favor of the United States on all property and rights to property of the person fined as if the liability of the person fined were a liability for a tax assessed under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. The lien arises on the entry of judgment and continues for 20 years or until the liability is satisfied, remitted, set aside, or is terminated....
Precedent strongly suggests that the Government's lien against the untainted funds outweighs any Sixth Amendment right Scully has to them.
See
Caplin & Drysdale
,
The instant case is more analogous to
Caplin & Drysdale
than
Luis
. Unlike the defendant in
Luis
, Appellant challenges the continued restraint of his funds
after
conviction and entry of judgment.
Luis
turned on the balance between Luis's property interest in her untainted assets and the Government's interest in her untainted assets, which was no more than a contingent interest hinging on the outcome at trial.
Luis
,
The Government's lien on Scully's funds is superior to Scully's alleged Sixth Amendment interest in using them to pay appellate counsel.
Caplin & Drysdale
,
Luis
, and section 3613(c) dictate that Scully no longer has any equity interest in the untainted funds he wishes to use for appellate counsel.
3
He has no Sixth Amendment entitlement to use the Government's money to pay for appellate counsel, "even if those funds are the only way that [he] will be able to retain the attorney of his choice."
Caplin & Drysdale
,
For all these reasons, the Sixth Amendment does not entitle Scully to use funds subject to the Government's forfeiture lien to pay for appellate counsel of his choice. AFFIRMED .
JENNIFER WALKER ELROD, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
Because a valid statutory lien for restitution attached upon entry of judgment as to all of Scully's property, tainted and untainted, I agree that the district court did not err in denying Scully's motion to partially vacate its earlier order restraining his assets. I write separately to emphasize that the dispositive issue is not that the restraint of Scully's untainted assets was postconviction rather than pre-trial, but rather that Scully's motion came after a valid lien attached to all of his untainted assets post-judgment. Had Scully challenged the restraint of his untainted funds before the lien attached at the time of judgment, we would confront a much more difficult constitutional question: whether a post-conviction but pre-judgment restraint of untainted assets violates the Sixth *554 Amendment. Because Scully did not challenge the pre-judgment restraint of his assets until after judgment was entered and the lien attached, the inquiry is a relatively straightforward one.
I.
Under the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act (MVRA), the government may enforce restitution orders in the same way that it enforces fines and by any other available means.
A restitution order may be enforced to the same extent as a tax lien.
"Although federal law thus creates a lien on property, it is state law that 'defines the property interests to which the lien attaches.' "
Mire
,
Here, Scully sold a house in Florida, and over $220,000 of the sale proceeds were placed in his attorney's client trust account before the district court issued a restraining order prohibiting him from transferring or dissipating the funds. The government
*555
does not contest that the proceeds from the sale of the home are assets untainted by crime. However, Scully did not move to partially vacate the order restraining the untainted assets from the Florida house sale until approximately two months after sentencing and entry of judgment. Upon entry of judgment, a lien arose in favor of the United States on all Scully's property.
The problem for Scully is that he is appealing a denial of a motion that he filed post-judgment. The Supreme Court has rejected the proposition that there is "an interference with a defendant's Sixth Amendment rights whenever the Government freezes or takes some property in a defendant's possession before, during, or after a criminal trial," noting that IRS "seizures of assets to secure potential tax liabilities ... may impair a defendant's ability to retain counsel" but are nevertheless constitutional.
Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered v. United States
,
Had Scully transferred some of the proceeds from the Florida house sale to his attorney of choice after conviction but before entry of judgment or restraint of those assets, the government (as it conceded at oral argument) arguably would have had no right to obtain a lien on those funds under
II.
"It is settled that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel includes the right to counsel on appeal and that this right does not depend upon a request."
Crawford v. Beto
,
Whether there is a Sixth Amendment right in the restitution context to use untainted funds to pay for appellate counsel of choice prior to entry of judgment is a thorny question.
4
The majority opinion correctly relies on
Luis v. United States
for the proposition that "whether property is 'forfeitable' or subject to pretrial restraint under Congress' scheme is a nuanced inquiry that very much depends on who has the superior interest in the property at issue."
See
Luis v. United States
, --- U.S. ----,
As the plurality noted in
Luis
, the distinction between tainted and untainted property is not a mere "technicality."
Luis
,
As noted above, the statutory lien under
The Sixth Amendment's text and the common-law principles informing it support a general distinction between pre-conviction and post-conviction in the forfeiture context.
See
*557
Luis
,
Here, the district court restrained untainted assets from the Florida house sale in July 2016 but did not enter judgment until November 2016. While Scully failed to challenge the restraint until after the lien properly attached to his assets, a restraint of untainted funds after conviction but before sentencing and entry of judgment implicates Sixth Amendment concerns. While I would affirm the district court's denial of Scully's post-judgment motion, I would do so because the statutory lien arose upon entry of judgment and because our precedents indicate that once the lien arises the government can reach funds in an attorney's client trust account.
The Supreme Court decided another forfeiture case,
United States v. Monsanto
, on the same day
Caplin & Drysdale
was announced.
Floyd
is similarly distinguishable, as that defendant appealed a pretrial restraining order freezing untainted assets before entry of judgment.
See
Floyd
,
The court notes that all nine members of the Supreme Court have not disclaimed the Government's right to post-conviction forfeiture.
See
Luis
,
Scully does not contest the district court's authority to restrain at least some of his untainted assets post-conviction but pre-judgment, stating at oral argument that the government has a pre-sentencing interest in preserving funds for payment. Scully contests the restraining order only to the extent it impacted his right to appeal, and he seeks to vacate the order only as to the $65,000 allegedly needed for attorney's fees and costs associated with his appeal.
Moreover, at oral argument, defense counsel admitted that he could have taken a larger retainer in advance to cover the cost of trial and appeal.
I agree with the majority opinion that Scully has "a constitutional right to be represented by counsel for his first appeal of right" and that "court-appointed counsel are readily available if he qualifies as indigent."
Because of the potential Sixth Amendment implications, district courts may wish to exercise caution in entering orders restraining untainted assets after conviction but before entry of judgment.
The majority opinion refers to the untainted assets at issue here as the "Government's money." While this may be merely shorthand, I would point out that Scully's assets were held in trust and subject to an order of restitution for victims only after entry of judgment.
If the common law did not always speak specifically of the
judgment
of conviction as being the critical point for commencing forfeiture, this generality of language finds explanation in the historical context. "For much of English history, and for most of the colonial period in the United States, the criminal justice system relied heavily on the death penalty." Erik Lillquist,
The Puzzling Return of Jury Sentencing: Misgivings About
Apprendi,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.