People v. Kozlowski
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
In this appeal relating to the convictions of two former execu
I.
Defendants are the former chief executive officer (L. Dennis Kozlowski) and chief financial officer (Mark H. Swartz) of Tyco International Ltd., a publicly-held diversified manufacturing company. After a nearly six-month trial, a jury convicted defendants of 12 counts of first degree grand larceny (Penal Law § 155.42), eight counts of first degree falsifying business records (Penal Law § 175.10), one count of fourth degree conspiracy (Penal Law § 105.10 [1]) and one Martin Act count of securities fraud (General Business Law § 352-c [5]).
Defendantsâ convictions arose primarily out of their abuse of two Tyco loan programs: the Key Employee Loan Program (KELP) and the relocation loan program. KELP allowed defendants and other executives to borrow funds to pay taxes due upon the vesting of restricted stock. The relocation loan program covered certain moving expenses incurred when the company transferred an employee to a new geographic area. Defendants did not, however, utilize these programs for permissible purposes. Instead, they incurred debts under them that were used to finance opulent lifestyles.
Under the Plan, defendants were entitled to a base salary regardless of the companyâs performance, but had the potential to earn âperformance awards,â or bonuses, by exceeding certain performance goals or âhurdles.â These awards took the form of cash payments and the vesting of restricted stock. In general, Swartzâs potential awards were half those of Kozlowskiâs.
Performance goals were established by Tycoâs four-member Compensation Committee, under authority delegated to it by the corporationâs board of directors. The Incentive Compensation Plan specifically provided that prior to any payments the Committee would certify that the performance goals had been satisfied. Such certification generally took place at the close of Tycoâs fiscal year, which ended on September 30, when audited financial results were available.
These procedures were not employed with respect to the four so-called âmega-larcenyâ bonus counts, under which the jury
The remaining bonus counts concerned payments made in November 2000 and August 2001. In the first, defendants ordered cash payments for themselves, totaling $17.2 million (Kozlowski) and $8.65 million (Swartz). In connection with the November 2000 bonus, defendants also received $8.2 million (Kozlowski) and $4.1 million (Swartz) worth of stock. The August 2001 bonus took the form of a vesting of restricted stock. After the bonus transaction was processed, defendants sold that stock for $8.2 million (Kozlowski) and $4.1 million (Swartz).
Common to all four of these bonuses was the absence of documentation in the information packets provided to the Compensation Committee or that Committeeâs minutes authorizing the bonuses that defendants received. In addition, every member of the Compensation Committee who was available to testify at trial denied approving these purported bonuses.
Defendants asserted, however, that the bonuses had been properly authorized. As to the first three bonuses, their claim rested primarily upon Kozlowskiâs communications with the late Philip Hampton, the former chair of the Compensation Committee.
Hampton died prior to defendantsâ receipt of the August 2001 bonus. Kozlowski claims that this bonus was approved by Stephen Foss, then-chair of the Compensation Committee. After Kozlowski told him that the bonus had been approved, Swartz ordered that it be processed. Under the heading âFY 2001 Projected Incentive Plan Projected Payments,â the Compensation Committeeâs October 2001 minutes contain a resolution stating that the restricted stock bonus âvested on June 20, 2001.â But defendants had already sold this stock to a Tyco subsidiary in August 2001, long before the Compensation Committee passed this retroactive vesting resolution. There is no documentation or third-party testimony demonstrating that the Committee was aware at the time of passage that such sales had occurred.
In April 2002, Tyco retained the law firm of Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP (Boies Schiller) to conduct an internal investigation into Kozlowskiâs payment of a $20 million investment banking fee to a member of the companyâs board, Frank Walsh.
At least a dozen Boies Schiller attorneys assisted in the investigation, which was headed by the firmâs founding partner, David Boies. Although initially confined to the circumstances surrounding the Walsh payment, the Boies Schiller investigation expanded in June 2002, when Kozlowski resigned as CEO after being indicted for his failure to pay sales taxes owed on
On July 17, 2002, Boies interviewed Swartz regarding the August 1999 bonus. Boies met with Swartz alone and he did not take notes or otherwise memorialize the interview. That same day, Boies met with director, and then-interim CEO, John Fort to report the results of his interview with Swartz; Swartz was present for a portion of this meeting. Subsequently, Boies also met with Tycoâs new CEO, and Fortâs replacement, Ed Breen, regarding Swartzâs continued employment and recommended that Tycoâs board of directors accept a severance package that would pay Swartz $50 million.
As part of their investigation, Boies Schiller attorneys also interviewed Tycoâs directors. As evidenced by Boies Schillerâs retention letter, the purpose of these interviews was to assist the company in preparing for potential litigation, particularly shareholder derivative suits. Thus, on June 6, 2002, a Boies Schiller attorney interviewed director Fort. As summarized in privilege logs that Tyco filed in connection with the federal multi-district litigation in New Hampshire, this interview concerned the âWalsh payments.â On August 12 and 13, 2002, Boies Schiller attorneys interviewed all the surviving members of the Compensation Committeeâdirectors Stephen Foss, Peter Slusser and James Pasman. The federal privilege logs summarize these interviews as concerning the KELP and relocation loan programs, âCompensation Eventsâ and âUse of Company Assets.â
On August 1, an agreement was reached whereby Swartz would resign from Tycoâs board of directors immediately, but continue as CFO until a successor was found. The August 1 agreement also limited Swartzâs severance, in the event that he was terminated as CFO prior to being convicted of a felony, to $50 million. This reduced Tycoâs severance obligation, as set forth in an earlier retention agreement, by $100 million. Around the time that the August 1 agreement was entered, Tyco publicly announced that Swartz would leave the company when a new CFO was hired.
The subpoena duces tecum in question, joined in by Kozlowski, was served by Swartzâs counsel on October 13, 2004â approximately six months after the initial mistrial in this caseâin preparation for defendantsâ second trial. It sought from Boies Schiller â[a] 11 memoranda and notes of [the firmâs] personnel (or forensic accountants working on their behalf) relating to interviews of employees, directors or auditors of Tyco.â The relevant interviews covered a range of 19 topics, including executive compensation, the $20 million payment to Frank Walsh and the payment or recording in Tycoâs books and records of the bonuses.
On behalf of Tyco, Boies Schiller moved to quash the subpoena, arguing that it was overbroad and impermissibly sought disclosure of materials shielded by the attorney-client and work product privileges.
Defendants acknowledged that there was âlittle disputeâ that the requested materials were either attorney-client or work product privileged, but claimed that Tyco waived both privileges. According to defendants, waiver had occurred through: (1) Tycoâs production to the District Attorney of a large volume of privileged documents, predating the Boies Schiller investigation, (2) testimony by Tycoâs in-house and corporate counsel and employees regarding privileged conversations prior to the investigation, (3) the introduction in evidence of privileged communications and work product prepared by Tycoâs corporate
To justify their demand for the director-witness interview notes, defendants argued that such documents âgo directly to the issues underlying this indictmentâ and âlikely reflect a better recollection by those witnesses of details and facts th[a]n the witnesses had at trial, or will have upon a retrial almost three years after the interviews.â In sum, defendants argued that they were entitled to these privileged documents because they are ârelevant and materialâ and because they âmore than adequately identified those specific memoranda and notes th[at] . . . [are] responsive to the subpoena.â
In response, Tyco argued that defendants had not shown a substantial need for the Boies Schiller work product and an inability to duplicate the same because âSwartz and his lawyers have access to the same witnesses Tyco does. He can interview them, he has already cross-examined them, and he can investigate them as well as Boies Schiller did.â In addition, Tyco contended that disclosure of attorney-client and work product privileged documents produced âin the ordinary course of Ty-coâs businessâ or for âlitigations no longer at issue,â which the company referred to as âhistorical privileged communications,â could not effect a subject matter waiver over privileged materials prepared in the course of a subsequent internal investigation.
Finally, Tyco asserted that defendantsâ âsupposition]â that it had âpresented to the District Attorney the substance of everything contained in its attorneyâs memoranda and notes [was] . . . incorrectâ (emphasis added). The company argued that it could respond to subpoenas and document requests, answer questions and otherwise cooperate with the District Attorneyâs Office without âpresenting . . . Boies Schillerâs analysis and strategy from its investigation.â To bolster this point, Tyco cited the statement of an assistant district attorney during the related criminal trial of Tycoâs former general counsel, Mark Belnick: âI cannot agree with the representation that the Boies firm have been reporting the results of their interviews to the District Attorneyâs Office.â At oral argument, Tycoâs counsel stated that, with respect to âBoies Schillerâs communications
On January 14, 2005, Supreme Court quashed the subpoena. The court ruled that no waiver of the work product privilege had occurred because âthere is no showing that Tyco has disclosed work product created by Boies, Schiller to the District Attorney.â In addition, the court concluded that defendants were not entitled to the director-witness materials under CPLR 3101 (d) (2) because, although they pointed to the importance in this case of the witnessesâ knowledge and the passage of time since the interviews were undertaken, defendants had not explained why they could not have sought to conduct their own interviews of these witnesses at an earlier time.
At trial, defendants did not move to reopen the subpoena question following the director-witnessesâ testimony. In the course of Boiesâs direct, however, they objected that they had not seen a privileged memorandum that described how Boies Schiller had discovered the illicit August 1999 bonus. The prosecutor responded by reiterating Tycoâs claim that no materials prepared by Boies Schiller during the investigation had been shared with the People, stating: âI want to emphasize that neither the defense nor the prosecution has access to . . . materials that have been held to be privileged.â Defense counsel further explained, however, that â[i]t seems like that memorandum is the sole source of information that [Boies is] relying on for his testimony, and I think it would be inappropriate for us not to have access to [it].â The court agreed and ordered production of the memorandum.
Defendants were convicted and Supreme Court imposed concurrent prison terms of SVs to 25 years on each of the four bonus counts. In addition, the court ordered joint restitution of $134,351,397 and that fines of $35 million and $70 million be imposed on Swartz and Kozlowski, respectively. With one exceptionâwhere the amount was $3 million lessâeach of these fines corresponded to the amounts set forth in the indictment and amounts that defendants affirmatively testified to having taken. Responding to defendantsâ constitutional argument against imposition of the fines, Supreme Court held that âApprendi applies to the terms of prison sentences as opposed to fines.â
The Appellate Division affirmed in all respects (see 47 AD3d 111 [2007]). The court concluded that Boiesâs testimony and the
A Judge of this Court granted defendants leave to appeal (10 NY3d 767, 772 [2008]) and we now affirm.
II.
Defendants first argue that they are entitled to a new trial because of the prejudicial effect of Boiesâs testimony and the Peopleâs summation comments on that testimony. Because the testimony and summation complained of merely set forth facts enabling the jury to draw an inference of defendantsâ guilt, we disagree.
As an initial matter, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in permitting the People to elicit Boiesâs background, a general overview of internal investigations and the scope of the Tyco investigation. Defendants assert that testimony regarding Boiesâs credentialsâincluding his having lectured on the topic of internal investigationsâand his statement that law firms conducting internal investigations often work both with forensic accountants specially trained to ferret out âwrongdoingâ and with law enforcement authorities, impermissibly cast a âpatina of officialdomâ over Boies Schillerâs work on behalf of Tyco. This background testimony was not unduly prejudicial. Indeed, such testimony is generally admissible, especially where, as here, it provides helpful context for the jury about complex subject matter, such as an internal investigation. In addition, such evidence was also admissible to allow the jury to evaluate defendantsâ contention that Boiesâs representation of Tyco in ancillary civil litigation gave him a motive to slant his testimony in favor of the People (see 2-401 Weinsteinâs Federal Evidence § 401.04 [4] [a]). We turn then to the substance of Boiesâs direct testimony at the second trial.
The purpose of Boiesâs testimony was twofold. First, the People sought to use Boiesâs account of his conversation with Swartz to undercut defendantsâ claim that they had taken the August 1999 bonuses in good faith (see Penal Law § 155.15). Second, in response to Swartzâs eliciting testimony tending to show that the board continued to employ him as CFO after it
Boiesâs testimony on these subjects was limited to a firsthand factual account. Thus, Boies told the jury that, on July 17, 2002, he explained to Swartz that his firmâs investigation had uncovered âno documentation,â either from Tycoâs board or the Compensation Committee, authorizing the August 1999 multimillion-dollar bonuses. Boies then explained that Swartzâs response to this factual assertion was that a âjournal entryâ authorizing those payments was âa mistake.â As Boies further testified, never in the course of the July 17 interview did Swartz refer to the KELP loan reduction authorized by this journal entry as âa bonus.â Rather, said Boies, Swartz stated that he instructed Tycoâs director of financial operations, Mark Foley, to process the loan reductions because Kozlowski had told him to do it.
Similarly, Boiesâs testimony concerning his interactions with Tycoâs senior management and its board did not stray from its factual focus. Thus, Boies explained that during the July 17 interview he told Swartz that in response to questioning from Boies Schiller attorneys, Foley stated that Swartz directed him to process the August 1999 bonuses. Boies then recounted for the jury another July 17 meeting with director Fort during which Swartz confirmed his undertaking to repay the August 1999 bonus with interest; Boies then told the jury that Swartz did eventually discharge that obligation. Further, Boies explained that he provided new CEO Breen with certain âfactsâ and âinformationâ concerning Swartz, which carried an âinherentâ recommendation regarding Swartzâs continued employment. Indeed, said Boies, Breen decided to terminate Swartz âas soon as a replacement could be identifiedâ and to reduce his role as CFO in the interim. Boies then discussed the mechanics of the August 1 agreement that facilitated the removal of Swartz
It is fundamental that facts, such as those Boies provided regarding his firmâs investigation of the 1999 bonus, his conversations with Swartz and Fort, his recommendation to Breen and his advice to the board âare the appropriate subject of evidenceâ (see People v Creasy, 236 NY 205, 222 [1923]). At bottom, defendantsâ complaint is that Boies was permitted to rebut their testimony and theory of the case with certain facts that may have led the jury to convict. This, however, is not prohibited. The line is crossed not when a witness relates facts that may be prejudicial, but when he or she conveysâeither directly or indirectlyâa personal opinion regarding the defendantâs criminal guilt (see id. at 209, 221-222; People v Ciaccio, 47 NY2d 431, 439 [1979]).
Contrary to defendantsâ assertion, this case is markedly different from Ciaccio. There, a police detective was called to corroborate a victimâs account of a hijacking by answering a hypothetical question that assumed the facts set forth in the victimâs testimony. We held that the detectiveâs testimony that the victimâs account âwas not unusualâ constituted improper opinion evidence because it usurped the function of the jury to test the credibility of the victim-witness (see Ciaccio, 47 NY2d at 439). What was impermissible about the testimony was that its sole purpose was to bolster the testimony of another witness by explaining that his version of the events was more âbelievableâ (id.). It was thus the equivalent of an opinion that the defendant was guilty, which is impermissible.
Here, in contrast, Boies testified to facts. This testimony was in no sense hypothetical. Indeed, defendants were provided with Boies Schillerâs work product memorandum that led to the discovery of the 1999 bonuses. Boiesâs testimony, when considered as a whole, relayed to the jury his preliminary findings during the investigation and the reaction of Tycoâs directors and senior management when they were confronted with those findings. For example, Boiesâs discovery that â[t]here was no documentationâ of the bonuses does not constitute a legal conclusion of guiltâthe jury still had to determine defendantsâ intent at the time of the taking. Similarly, testimony that Breen resolved on the basis of Boiesâs âinherentâ recommendation to remove Swartz immediately or that the board took Boiesâs
We likewise reject defendantsâ assertions that the prosecutorâs summation of Boiesâs testimony was prejudicial. Defendants place particular emphasis on the prosecutorâs statementâmade in response to defendantsâ assertion that Tycoâs directors had branded them as scapegoats to avoid their own civil and criminal liabilityâthat the board only became aware of defendantsâ illicit activities âafter the forensic auditors had come in and combed through all the tens of millions of pages that are the books and records of Tyco [a]nd after the Boies lawyers ha[d] done their investigation.â But this, as well as the prosecutorâs references to Boiesâs factual testimony, did not convey a âpersonal belief or opinionâ regarding the trial evidence or defendantsâ guilt (see People v Bailey, 58 NY2d 272, 277 [1983]). Instead it quite properly âconcentrated, in argument, on proved facts and circumstances and the inferences to be drawn therefromâ (id.).
III.
The second issue we address is whether Supreme Court abused its discretion in quashing defendantsâ subpoena. Our standard for enforcing a third-party subpoena duces tecum was set forth nearly 30 years ago in People v Gissendanner (48 NY2d 543, 550 [1979]). Under it, defendants must proffer a good faith factual predicate sufficient for a court to draw an inference that specifically identified materials are reasonably likely to contain information that has the potential to be both relevant and exculpatory.
Here, the Peopleâs case centers on the charge that defendantsâ bonuses were not approved by the Compensation Committee or the board of directors. Defendants maintain that the bonuses were properly approved through the efforts of either the late Philip Hampton or Stephen Foss. Among other things, their
The proper purpose of a subpoena duces tecum, of course, is to compel the production of specific documents that are relevant and material to facts at issue in a pending judicial proceeding. The relevant and material facts in a criminal trial are those bearing upon âthe unreliability of either the criminal charge or of a witness upon whose testimony it dependsâ (see Gissendanner, 48 NY2d at 550). Here, defendants seek to challenge the director-witnessesâ testimony that they did not approve the four charged bonuses, evidence that bears directly on the question whether defendants took those bonuses under a good faith claim of right (see Penal Law § 155.15 [1]).
In meeting the burden for production, defendants need notâ and indeed could notâshow that director-witness statements are âactuallyâ relevant and exculpatory (see Gissendanner, 48 NY2d at 550).
Here, defendants were not engaged in âgeneral discoveryâ regarding the director-witness statements. Instead, they identi
We conclude that defendants met their burden under Gissendanner: they identified specific director-witness statements and proffered facts that permitted an inference that those statements were reasonably likely to contain material that could contradict the statements of key witnesses for the People. In this case, however, there is a claim that the relevant documents are privileged and thus not subject to production. Additional analysis is therefore required.
IV
As frequently occurs today, the director-witness statements were obtained in the course of corporate internal investigation, which inevitably implicates the attorney-client and work product privileges (see McNeil and Brian, Internal Corporate Investigations, at 18-19 [3d ed] [hereinafter McNeil and Brian]). In that connection, private law firms conducting internal investigations may consult with law enforcement authorities to advance their corporate clientâs interest in avoiding potentially serious criminal sanctions (see e.g. United States v Stein, 541 F3d 130, 137, 142 [2d Cir 2008]). While collaboration between prosecutors and attorney investigators may provide a public benefit through the more efficient detection and punishment of corporate wrongdoing, it may come at the expense of the proper safeguarding of the rights of individual corporate employees (see Stein, 541 F3d at 156-157). Courts must be sensitive to these competing considerations and endeavor to strike an appropriate balance between the rights and interests of law enforcement, corporations and their employees, and the accused. We cannot say that the balance struck by the
This case highlights a tension in CPLR 3101âs treatment of attorney work product (which is not obtainable) and trial preparation materials (which may be disclosed âonly upon a showing that the party seeking discovery has a substantial need of the materials in the preparation of the case and is unable without undue hardship to obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials by other meansâ [CPLR 3101 (c), (d) (2)]). The separation of work product and trial preparation materials was apparently an attempt to shield materials protected by the attorney-client privilege from disclosure (see 11th Ann Rep of NY Jud Conf, at 152 [1966] [âWhoever drafted the âwork productâ provision . . . was doubtless thinking of such things as private consultations between attorney and client and memoranda of themâ]; Connors, Practice Commentaries, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C3101:27, at 53-54; Siegel, NY Prac § 347 [4th ed]). Thus, when particular work product is generated for litigation, courts have tended to classify it as trial preparation material, unless it contains otherwise privileged communications (see Connors, Practice Commentaries, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C3101:27, at 53-54).
Here, the director-witness interview notes and memorandum were prepared to assist Tycoâs preparation for civil litigations that eventually commenced. In its motion to quash the subpoena, Tyco asserted that these materials were shielded by the attorney-client privilege, stating at oral argument that â[t]hose are interviews with Tyco employees . . . [who] are communicating with counsel for a . . . legal purpose.â Assuming that these communications were confidential, this assertion may well be correct.
Although we agree with defendants that the director-witness statements are trial preparation materials and not absolutely privileged, enforcement of their subpoena was directed to the trial courtâs discretion (see Gissendanner, 48 NY2d at 550; cf. People v Hodge, 53 NY2d 313, 319 [1981]). In making its discretionary determination that defendants did not establish an inability to âobtain the substantial equivalentâ of the facts contained in the director-witness interview notes without âundue hardshipâ (see CPLR 3101 [d] [2]; Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac ¶ 3101.55), Supreme Court relied upon defendantsâ failure to âexplain[ ] why the defense could not have sought to conduct its own interviews of these witnesses at an earlier time.â We cannot say that this conclusion represents an abuse of the trial courtâs discretion. Defendants made no effort to show any âundue hardshipâ that would have prevented them from securing their own âsubstantially] equivalentâ interviews with the director-witnesses (see CPLR 3101 [d] [2]). As Tyco pointed out in its reply submission on its motion to quash, defendants âhave access to the same witnesses as Tyco does.â
Even on appeal, defendants have not proffered an explanation for their failure to seek interviews with the directors at an earlier time or stated whether they ever made an independent attempt to secure the relevant statements, a requirement for
Since they failed to make the requisite showing of âundue hardshipâ under CPLE 3101 (d) (2), defendants would only have been entitled to production of the director-witness statements if Tyco had waived the qualified privilege covering those documents (see United States v Nobles, 422 US 225, 239 [1975]). The qualified privilege governing trial preparation materials âis waived upon disclosure to a third party where there is a likelihood that the material will be revealed to an adversary, under conditions that are inconsistent with a desire to maintain confidentialityâ (see Bluebird Partners v First Fid. Bank, N.J., 248 AD2d 219, 225 [1st Dept 1998]). In response to defendantsâ specific waiver allegations, Tyco bore the burden of establishing that no such waiver had occurred (see Spectrum Sys. Intl. Corp. v Chemical Bank, 78 NY2d 371, 377 [1991]).
The determination of whether and to what extent waiver has occurred is inherently factual and turns on case-by-case considerations of âfairnessâ (see John Doe Co. v United States, 350 F3d 299, 302 [2d Cir 2003], quoting In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 219 F3d at 183). Although review of this discretionary determination is âhighly deferentialâ (John Doe Co., 350 F3d at 306), the U.S. Supreme Court has indicated that a trial court properly exercises its discretion when it orders disclosure of âthe portionâ of trial preparation materials that is directly relevant to another, previously-disclosed, portion (see Nobles, 422 US at 240). Thus, a party is essentially precluded from using its trial preparation materials as both a sword and a shield. In evaluating defendantsâ waiver claims, we must confine our analysis to those arguments they asserted before Supreme Court (see People v Nieves, 2 NY3d 310, 315 [2004]). We affirm Supreme Courtâs discretionary determination that Tyco met its burden of establishing the absence of waiver in this case.
Defendants cite no authority for the proposition that disclosure of historical privileged documents waives the privilege covering trial preparation materials created in a subsequent internal investigation. We decline to so hold. We reach this conclusion because a trial court has discretion to limit waiver of the qualified privilege covering trial preparation to matters actually referenced in disclosed materials. Here, the materials produced to the grand jury did notâand could notârefer to director-witness interview notes and a memorandum produced in a subsequent internal investigation.
Next, defendants argue that waiver occurred through Tycoâs cooperation with the District Attorneyâs investigation. It is be
Defendants also urge that âtestimonialâ waivers occurred at the first trial when Tycoâs lawyers and employees testified regarding privileged communications that occurred prior to the internal investigation. Here, again, however, there is no showing that the jury in the first trial needed the director-witness interview notes and memorandum to properly assess the evidence.
But defendants say that âTycoâs [testimonial] waivers were not limited to events that occurred prior to the investigation.â They assert that a Tyco employeeâs testimony that Boies asked her about the 1999 bonus and instructed her to âreally think about it because he was talking about fraudâ and that another Boies Schiller attorney asked her for a relocation loan plan document constituted waiver. This testimony certainly references communications with the Boies Schiller attorneys, but it does not impermissibly use the relevant director-witness statements as both a sword and shield (see In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 219 F3d at 192). Indeed, the referenced testimony does not even mention those statements.
According to defendants, the âmost damagingâ testimonial waiver occurred during the testimony of David Boies. But they point to no impermissible use of the director-witness statements. Boiesâs direct testimony was limited to facts concerning the interview with Foley, his July 17, 2002 conversations with Swartz and Fort, his recommendation to Breen regarding Swartzâs continued employment and his recommendation that
V
Finally, defendants challenge the constitutionality of the fines that were imposed upon them. They contend that these fines contravened their right to a jury trial, as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the US Constitution.
Penal Law § 80.00 (1) provides that
â[a] sentence to pay a fine for a felony shall be a sentence to pay an amount, fixed by the court, not exceeding the higher of
âa. five thousand dollars; or
âb. double the amount of the defendantâs gain from the commission of the crime.â
When a fine is imposed on the basis of âgain,â âthe court shall make a findingâ as to that amount (see Penal Law § 80.00 [3] [emphasis added]). This finding may be based upon facts brought out at trial, a plea allocution, sentencing, or a fact-finding hearing conducted pursuant to CPL 400.30 (see Donnino, Practice Commentary, McKinneyâs Cons Laws of NY, Book 39, Penal Law art 80 [âFinesâ], at 6). Here, Supreme Court did not hold a CPL 400.30 hearing and instead appears to have based defendantsâ fines upon facts brought out at trial or conceded in âsentencing lettersâ that defendants filed with the court.
Assuming without deciding that an Apprendi violation occurred here, we nonetheless affirm because error, if any, was harmless. Our precedents establish that âall the elements of an indicted crime which are not conceded by defendant or defendantâs counsel must be charged [to the jury]â (see People v Flynn, 79 NY2d 879, 881 [1992] [emphasis added]; see also People v Walker, 198 NY 329, 335 [1910] [â(W)hen a fact, even of great importance, is admitted by the defendant or his counsel in open court during the trial, that fact is established by the admission, and no evidence need be given in relation to itâ]). Here, defendantsâ trial testimonyâwith respect to each of those counts upon which the trial court imposed finesâestablished gains that corresponded to or exceeded the fine amounts. Thus, the Apprendi violation here, if any, was harmless (see Recuenco, 548 US at 215).
We have considered defendantsâ remaining arguments and conclude that they are either unpreserved or without merit. Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Graffeo, Read, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur.
In each case: Order affirmed.
. This was a second trial. The initial trial ended in a mistrial during jury-deliberations.
. Kozlowski characterized this residence, which was only used by him and his wife, as a âhotel room,â albeit one that was âlarger and more elaborate.â
. A 1997 amendment to the Incentive Compensation Plan permitted the Committee to authorize payments prior to the close of the fiscal year. No documentation or third-party testimony was presented that this authority was exercised with respect to any of the alleged larcenies.
. At the time that he allegedly authorized the first bonus payment in August 1999, Hampton was suffering from cancer and receiving radiation treatment and chemotherapy.
. Without informing Tycoâs board of directors or its shareholders, defendants arranged this payment to Walsh in exchange for his efforts in facilitating Tycoâs merger with the CIT Group in March 2001. Because they believed that payments of less than $15 million did not need to be disclosed in Tycoâs proxy statement, defendants had $10 million paid to Walsh and another $10 million paid to a charity of his choosing. Walsh pleaded guilty to a securities fraud charge for concealing the payment and was sentenced to a fine and a conditional discharge. Defendants were convicted of first degree grand larceny for having approved and facilitated the Walsh payment.
. The relevant interviews were memorialized in handwritten notes and a draft memorandum.
. Before filing their reply brief on the motion to quash the subpoena, Tyco did provide 4 of the 72 requested documents to defendants. These were notes and memoranda describing interviews with Swartz, âredacted to exclude attorneyâs opinions or mental impressions,â that Boies Schiller delivered to both defendants and the People.
. Only three of those entriesâthose that described the June 6, August 12, and August 13 director-witness interviewsâare relevant here.
. The Appellate Division held that it was error to admit this statement against Kozlowski under the theory that it was made in furtherance of a conspiracy. The court concluded, however, that the error was harmless because Kozlowski testified that he instructed Swartz to make the entry after the late Philip Hampton approved the bonus (see 47 AD3d at 119). We agree.
. The People do not urge us to adopt the Appellate Divisionâs framing of the Gissendanner test, which would require defendants to show that âthe documents sought were . . . material and exculpatoryâ (see 47 AD3d at 120 [emphasis added]). In any event, we reject this standard, as it is âimpossibleâ to satisfy absent review of the relevant documents (see Pennsylvania v Ritchie, 480 US 39, 57 [1987]).
. As the People point out, defendants did not raise a constitutional argument in support of their subpoena below, and we therefore address none.
. A trial court may conduct an in camera review of subpoenaed materials to assess an opposing partyâs privilege claims (see Matter of Subpoena Duces Tecum to Jane Doe, 99 NY2d 434, 442 [2003]; accord Matter of Nassau County Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum Dated June 24, 2003, 4 NY3d 665, 679 n 11 [2005]). Here, however, no such review was necessary because defendants failed to meet the statutory criteria necessary to obtain production of the director-witness statements (see CPLR 3101 [d] [2]).
. In its letter accompanying production of these documents, Tyco referenced an agreement with the District Attorney, whereby âproduction . . . would not constitute a waiver of any privilege.â In light of our conclusion that these documents were unrelated to the director-witness statements, we need not pass upon the effectâif anyâof Tycoâs âreservationâ of its privilege.
. Defendants also premise their documentary waiver claims on the introduction in evidence of KELP summaries prepared by UKWÂĄ a forensic accounting firm that assisted Boies Schiller in its investigation, and the minutes of the boardâs August 14 meeting, which described Boiesâs recommendation that Tyco fire Swartz and summarized Tycoâs counselâs discussion with an assistant district attorney regarding Swartzâs potential indictment. Having failed to present these claims to Supreme Court, defendants may not raise them here. But, we note that like their other examples of purported waiver, neither of these documents references or relies upon the key director-witness interview statements.
. During Boiesâs testimony, defendants also specifically requested handwritten notes taken by director Slusser at board meetings conducted on July 2 and 17, and August 14, 2002. In response to a claim of privilege, Supreme Court reviewed these materials in camera and declined to order their production.