Legal Sidebari

Time Is Time, but Money Is Money
May 26, 2020
Introduction
In United States v. Saccoccia, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit (First Circuit)
recently refused to vacate a 1993 judgment ordering Stephen Saccoccia—who is serving a 660-year
prison sentence for money laundering—to forfeit $136 million to the government, the amount of money
that Saccoccia and others had laundered through bank accounts that Saccoccia controlled. Saccoccia did
not ask the court to overturn his convictions or to shorten his prison sentence. He sought only the return
of the $136 million he forfeited as a consequence of his convictions. Saccoccia argued that the Supreme
Court’s 2017 decision in United States v. Honeycutt—which held that the doctrine of joint-and-several
liability does not apply to federal forfeiture actions arising from drug crimes—should be read to
retroactively invalidate the forfeiture order in his case. The First Circuit rejected that argument, holding
that Saccoccia would not be entitled to relief even if Honeycutt applied retroactively.
Background
Saccoccia owned a string of coin, gold, and precious metal businesses that he used in a multimillion
dollar money laundering operation conducted for the benefit of Colombian drug traffickers. Eventually,
Saccoccia, a few family members, and several employees were convicted on money laundering and RICO
(Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) conspiracy charges.
RICO convictions permit the government to seek the criminal forfeiture of property constituting or
derived from a corrupt enterprise. In some circumstances when the criminally-tainted assets have been
dissipated and cannot be reached, a court may order the confiscation of substitute assets instead. In
addition, federal forfeiture law allows the government to elect to take a money judgment in lieu of the
tainted property. When multiple defendants are convicted of participating in the same RICO offenses, the
question becomes from which defendants the government may seek forfeiture. Under federal criminal
law, co
nspirators are liable for any reasonable foreseeable offenses committed by any of their co-
conspirators. There is a similar principle in civil tort law, under which wrong-doers who collectively
contribute to an injury are said to be jointly and severally liable for damages, that is, each of the wrong-
doers is liable for the entire amount of the damages, although the plaintiff can recover that amount only
once.
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At one point, a number of federal courts recognized the merger of all of these concepts in the criminal law
context and entertained government petitions for joint-and-several money judgments against each co-
conspirator for the total value of all property made forfeitable by the criminal conspiracy. In other words,
each conspirator could be held liable for a forfeiture judgment based not only on property that he used in
or acquired because of the crime, but also based on property obtained or used by his co-conspirators. And
so it was with Saccoccia. In 1993, the district court entered a joint-and-several money judgment against
him for over $136 million in lieu of tainted property and substitute assets. Almost 25 years later, the
Supreme Court held in Honeycutt that the application of joint-and-several forfeiture liability to defendants
convicted of conspiring to violate federal drug laws was “inconsistent with the [drug forfeiture] statute’s
text and structure.” Saccoccia then commenced an action in which he claimed that Honeycutt
retroactively invalidated the forfeiture order in his RICO case. The district court was unconvinced, as was
the First Circuit.
Honeycutt
The defendant in Honeycutt was a clerk in a store that realized considerable profits from the illicit sale of
a chemical used to manufacture methamphetamine. The grand jury indicted Honeycutt and the store
owner on drug conspiracy charges, and the government sought joint-and-several forfeiture judgments
against the store owner and Honeycutt for $269,000, the total profits earned by the store on the sale of the
chemical. The store owner plead guilty and agreed to forfeit $200,000. The district court convicted
Honeycutt, but refused to enter a judgment against him for the remaining $69,000 balance of criminal
profit. The Court of Appeals reversed.
In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals’ judgment. The Supreme
Court pointed out that joint-and-several liability in the criminal context was in tension with the traditional
distinction between in rem civil forfeiture and in personam criminal forfeiture. In civil forfeiture, tainted
property is forfeitable without regard to the innocence of its owner, unless otherwise provided by law. In
criminal forfeiture, only the guilty owner’s tainted property is forfeitable. Thus, the Supreme Court
explained that, “[b]y adopting an in personam aspect to criminal forfeiture, and providing for substitute-
asset forfeiture, Congress made it easier for the Government to hold the defendant who acquired the
tainted property responsible. Congress did not, however, enact any significant expansion of the scope of
property subject to forfeiture.” Consequently, under the drug confiscation statute, forfeiture “is limited to
property the defendant himself acquired as the result of the crime.” Because “the Government conceded
that … Honeycutt had no ownership interest in [the] store and did not personally benefit from the [illicit]
sales,” the Court held that he could not be subject to forfeiture intended to recover the store’s illicit
profits.
Saccoccia v. United States
Saccoccia argued that the holding in Honeycutt should be interpreted to extend beyond the drug statutes at
issue in that case and to preclude joint-and-several liability for forfeited assets under the RICO statute as
well. Saccoccia also argued that Honeycutt should be applied retroactively to bar the forfeiture judgment
against him. The First Circuit held, however, that it did not need to decide either of those questions
because it found “it clear that Saccoccia’s interpretation … neglects a critical part of Honeycutt’s holding:
That any bar against joint-and-several co-conspirator liability articulated there applies only to defendants
who did not actually possess or control the funds at issue.” Saccoccia, by contrast, “[did] not dispute on
appeal that he exercised control over and oversaw distribution of” the sums of money he laundered and
did not “allege any facts … that contradict[ed] the district court’s finding that all of the money at issue
passed through a bank account he controlled.” The First Circuit noted that its interpretation of Honeycutt
is consistent with those of the Second, Third, and Eleventh Circuits.


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Congressional Options
Forfeiture can be both a harsh and effective law enforcement tool. From time to time, Congress
has considered proposals purporting to make it more fair or more effective or both. See e.g., H.R.
2835
(Representative Sensenbrenner); CRS Report R43890. Congress may elect to codify the
Honeycutt defense generally. Conversely, Congress may wish to make it clear in legislation that
conspiring drug dealers and racketeers should not be shielded from the consequences of joint-
and-several liability for crime-tainted property.

Author Information

Charles Doyle

Senior Specialist in American Public Law





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