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Date: 07-15-2014

Case Style: United States of America v. John Edward Mullikin

Case Number: 13-1290

Judge: McKay

Court: United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit on appeal from the District of Colorado (Denver County)

Plaintiff's Attorney: J. Bishop Grewell, Assistant United States Attorney (John F. Walsh, United States
Attorney, with him on the brief), Denver Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Defendant's Attorney: Peter R. Bornstein of the Law Offices of Peter R. Bornstein, Greenwood Village,
Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant.

Description: In 2008, the Food and Drug Administration’s Office of Criminal
Investigation opened an investigation into two purported clinical weight-loss
studies. Participants were solicited for these purported studies between 2006 and
2008 by Defendant John Edward Mullikin. As a result of this investigation,
Defendant was indicted by a grand jury sitting in the District of Colorado in
November 2011. The indictment consisted of nineteen counts of mail fraud.
Defendant was arrested in January 2012 at his residence. In August 2012, a
superseding indictment was filed asserting the same nineteen counts of mail
fraud. The superseding indictment alleged that Defendant’s purported weight-loss
studies were part of an “advance fee scheme” in which Defendant made false
representations—such as promising the refund of initial deposits and
compensation for participation—to induce participants to submit deposits which
he had no intention of refunding. (R. vol. 1 at 123.) In September 2012,
Defendant’s residence was searched pursuant to a warrant. Law enforcement
officials seized two hard drives, a computer, two binders, and two folders during
the search.
Prior to trial, Defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized
pursuant to the September warrant. At a pretrial hearing, the district court denied
the motion to suppress, determining that “the search and seizure were reasonable .
. . based upon probable cause and that the Magistrate Judge did not commit any
error in issuing the warrant.” (Final Pretrial Conference Tr, R. vol. 4 at 1736.)
At trial, evidence was presented that persuaded the jury to find Defendant
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guilty of seventeen separate counts of mail fraud.1 Defendant now appeals the
district court’s denial of his pretrial motion to suppress the evidence seized
pursuant to the September warrant. In his appeal, Defendant challenges the
district court’s determination that the search of his residence was supported by
probable cause. Particularly, Defendant argues the affidavit underlying the search
warrant failed to establish probable cause that the items to be seized would be
located at the residence. Defendant also argues the affidavit failed to establish a
nexus between the criminal acts and the residence to be searched. Defendant
further argues the list of items to be seized in the search warrant was
impermissibly broad.2
Normally, when “reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, this court
views the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and upholds the
district court’s factual findings unless clearly erroneous,” while reviewing de
novo the district court’s legal “[d]eterminations relating to the sufficiency of a
1 Two of the nineteen counts articulated in the superseding indictment were
dismissed because the alleged victims did not testify at trial.
2 In his opening brief, Defendant conceded for the purposes of appeal that
probable cause existed to search his residence for two envelopes discussed in a
jailhouse telephone conversation relied on in the affidavit for the September
search warrant. (Appellant’s Opening Br. at 14.) Defendant sought to withdraw
this concession in his reply brief. (Appellant’s Reply Br. at 8.) Seeking to
withdraw a concession in a reply brief and submitting arguments in support of
that withdrawal is tantamount to raising arguments for the first time in a reply
brief. “This court does not ordinarily review issues raised for the first time in a
reply brief.” Stump v. Gates, 211 F.3d 527, 533 (10th Cir. 2000). Therefore, we
will not permit Defendant to withdraw his original concession.
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search warrant.” United States v. Danhauer, 229 F.3d 1002, 1005 (10th Cir.
2000). However, we need not reach the merits of Defendant’s arguments
regarding the sufficiency of the underlying search warrant in a case such as this
where, “assuming arguendo that the district court erred [in denying Defendant’s
motion to suppress], any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” United
States v. Mikolon, 719 F.3d 1184, 1188 (10th Cir. 2013).
Indeed, “[t]he Supreme Court has instructed that a constitutional error may
be harmless.” Id. (citing Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18, 22 (1967)).
However, the government bears the burden to “prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that an error is harmless.” United States v. Miller, 111 F.3d 747, 751 (10th Cir.
1997). “In cases that are decided by a jury, a court will only find a constitutional
error harmless if the court can conclude ‘beyond a reasonable doubt that the error
complained of did not contribute to the verdict obtained.’” United States v.
Benard, 680 F.3d 1206, 1213 (10th Cir. 2012) (quoting Chapman, 386 U.S. at
24). In other words, we must determine “whether the guilty verdict actually
rendered in this trial was surely unattributable to the [alleged] error.” Sullivan v.
Louisiana, 508 U.S. 275, 279 (1993) (italics in original). To accomplish this, we
must consider the alleged error “in the context of other evidence presented in
order to determine whether its admission was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt.” Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 308 (1991).
We hold that the government has met this burden and, even if evidence
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seized pursuant to the September warrant was admitted in error, that admission
was harmless and does not warrant reversal of Defendant’s conviction.
At trial, the jury was instructed that Defendant could only be convicted of
each count of mail fraud in the superseding indictment if the government
established beyond a reasonable doubt the following elements for each individual
count: (1) Defendant “devised or intended to devise a scheme to defraud, that is a
scheme involving luring individuals throughout the United States into paying
monies to participate in a bogus clinical study with the promise the monies would
be returned along with further compensation”; (2) Defendant “acted with specific
intent to defraud”; (3) Defendant “caused another person to mail something
through the United States Postal Service for the purpose of carrying out the
scheme”; and (4) “the scheme employed false representations that were material.”
(R. vol. 2 at 33 (Instruction No. 18) and R. vol. 4 at 1543-44; see also United
States v. Schuler, 458 F.3d 1148, 1152 (10th Cir. 2006) (outlining essential
elements of a mail fraud claim under 18 U.S.C. § 1341).)
The government marshaled a significant body of evidence at trial, which
the jury considered in its decision to convict Defendant on all seventeen counts of
mail fraud ultimately pursued by the government. Very little of the evidence
produced at trial was seized in the search pursuant to the September warrant.
Indeed Defendant only specifically identified four exhibits presented at trial (41,
44a, 44b, and 45) that he claims ought to have been suppressed by the district
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court. (Oral Argument (March 17, 2014) at 13:55-15:17.) Defendant has
conceded these are the only four exhibits that we need consider in our harmlesserror
analysis. (Id.)3 Exhibits 41 and 44a are pictures, the former of a laptop
seized during the search of Defendant’s residence and the latter of a desktop
computer, the hard drive of which was seized during that search.4 Exhibit 44b is
a copy of an electronic document regarding one of Defendant’s purported studies
retrieved from one of the computers seized during the search.5 Finally, Exhibit 45
is a printed version of an email correspondence between Defendant and his father
in which Defendant offers various defenses against public allegations leveled
against him during a segment of Good Morning America.6
3 We note here that Defendant failed to provide these exhibits as part of the
record on appeal. The government contends this failure constituted a waiver of
Defendant’s entire challenge to the admission of the contested evidence. Cf.
United States v. McClatchey, 217 F.3d 823, 835-36 (10th Cir. 2000) (holding that
a challenge to the admissibility of evidence was waived where appellant failed to
“provide citations to the record where [the challenged evidence] might be
found”). We need not determine whether such oversight constitutes a waiver
since we hold that even if Defendant’s evidentiary challenge was not waived, the
admission of the challenged evidence was harmless.
4 While these exhibits were not included in the record on appeal, they are
described in the trial transcript. (See R. vol. 4 at 393-94, 397-99.)
5 Again, while this exhibit was not included in the record on appeal, the
document was described in witness testimony, and portions of it were read into
the record as part of witness testimony. (See R. vol. 4 at 423-28.)
6 Again, this exhibit was not included on the record on appeal. However, it
was described in witness testimony, and it was read into the record as part of
witness testimony. (See R. vol. 4 at 436-462, 479-482.)
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In its effort to persuade us that any possible error was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt, the government points to a wealth of incriminating evidence
unrelated to the four exhibits that Defendant claims were erroneously admitted.
For instance, all seventeen victims of the seventeen counts of conviction testified
at trial. The victims testified that Defendant’s advertisements and websites
induced them to apply to participate in what Defendant represented as legitimate
weight-loss studies. They testified that the advertisements and websites claimed
they would be compensated for their participation. They further testified that
they were instructed to submit a payment through the mail and told the payment
would be treated as a refundable deposit. Each victim testified to signing up and
mailing a deposit to Defendant’s purported weight-loss programs.7 The victims’
checks and money orders, endorsed by Defendant, were introduced into evidence
through their testimonies. According to their testimonies, none of the victims
received a refunded deposit or any other compensation. None of this evidence
was based on any of the evidence seized at Defendant’s home pursuant to the
September warrant.
In arguing that the admission of the four exhibits identified for suppression
was harmless, the government further points to damning evidence in Defendant’s
7 All but one of the victims testified to sending their checks and money
orders via U.S. mail. The remaining victim could not remember whether she had
sent hers in via U.S. mail or by some other carrier.
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own testimony. For instance, Defendant admitted to lying to the participants of
his studies when he represented to them that the studies utilized a purported
weight-loss drug that was a non-placebo, when in fact the drugs supplied were
placebo products. (R. vol. 4 at 1430.) Defendant admitted to using a number of
aliases in conjunction with his purported weight-loss studies. (Id. at 1375, 1403-
04, 1431.) Furthermore, Defendant admitted to destroying records associated
with his studies, including relevant financial and participant information. (Id. at
1406.)
Defendant concedes he “did not challenge [at trial] the existence of the
weight loss study, the payment by study participants of money, the use of a
placebo, or the failure to make refunds.” (Appellant’s Reply Br. at 9.) Rather,
Defendant challenged the government’s contention that “he acted with the
specific intent to defraud.” (R. vol. 4 at 259.) To combat the intent element of
the mail fraud charges, Defendant argued at trial that his weight-loss studies were
designed “with the intent to make a positive contribution to knowledge and
learning, and not with intent to defraud people out of money.” (Id. at 1570-71.)
Defendant accused the government of “cherry-picking” nineteen disgruntled
participants out of several hundred participants, some of whom were allowed to
participate without making a deposit. (Id. at 1570.) However, Defendant did not
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present any of these purported hundreds of other participants to the jury.8
In response to evidence offered by the government indicating that
Defendant liquidated funds related to the purported weight-loss studies (id. at
1196-97), Defendant offered an implausible story alleging a successful extortion
attempt by one of his program participants “or someone known to her” (id. at
1459). This story was rebutted by the program participant, who testified she had
never seen the purported extortion letters and she, like the other victims, signed
up for one of Defendant’s purported weight-loss studies and never received a
refund of her deposit or any compensation. The postal inspector who investigated
Defendant’s extortion allegation when it was first alleged also testified there were
“a lot of things that [he] found suspicious about the whole allegation.” (Id. at
307.) Defendant further admitted he never followed up with law enforcement
after the initiation of the investigation into the alleged extortion, despite the fact
that he claimed the extortion “destroyed” his finances. (Id. at 1470.)
The government argues the inherent incredibility of Defendant’s testimony,
coupled with the multiple lies and falsehoods to which Defendant admitted in his
testimony and Defendant’s four criminal convictions of felony theft provided
ample evidence for the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant
8 In light of the fact that none of these alleged other participants were
presented at trial, whether they would have told a more favorable story about their
dealings with Defendant does not undermine the integrity of the jury’s verdict
regarding the evidence that was actually before it.
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possessed the specific intent to defraud each of the seventeen victims who
testified at trial. Furthermore, the government argues the jury’s conclusion was
not affected by the admission of the four exhibits now challenged by the
Defendant.
After reviewing the challenged exhibits in light of the unrelated evidence
introduced at trial we agree with the government that, even if the admission of
Exhibits 41, 44a, 44b, and 45 was constitutional error, it was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt.
First, Exhibits 41 and 44a cannot have influenced the jury’s conclusions
regarding Defendant’s intent to defraud since they are simply pictures of the
computers seized during the search of Defendant’s residence. Exhibit 44b is a
document describing the role of the placebo effect underlying one of Defendant’s
purported studies. It also references another study that required a deposit prior to
participation. This document’s discussion of the placebo effect in relation to
Defendant’s purported weight-loss programs is duplicative of much of
Defendant’s testimony independent of Exhibit 44b or any other evidence seized
pursuant to the September search of Defendant’s residence. (See e.g., id. at 1332-
72.) As for this document’s discussion of the practice of requiring deposits from
participants, Defendant testified at trial that he had found this practice “was
considered a helpful parameter in weight loss.” (Id. at 1420.) Thus, the portion
of Exhibit 44b that is not entirely duplicative was, under Defendant’s theory of
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the case, in fact exculpatory rather than inculpatory, since it allegedly served to
justify his decision to require refundable deposits from the participants in his
trials.
Finally, in light of all of the undisputably admissible evidence offered
during the course of Defendant’s eight-day jury trial, the admission of Exhibit 45,
if erroneous, must be deemed harmless. As mentioned, Exhibit 45 is a copy of an
email correspondence between Defendant and his father. In the correspondence,
Defendant responded to public allegations leveled against him and his purported
studies. Defendant specifically quoted portions of a transcript from critical
coverage of his activities, which aired on Good Morning America, and responded
to each quoted portion. This exhibit was originally submitted subject to a
limiting instruction allowing the jury to only consider the statements attributable
to Defendant for their truth and to consider statements from any other sources
(e.g., Defendant’s father and the Good Morning America transcripts) “to explain
the context of the [D]efendant’s response.” (Id. at 439.) For the most part, this
exhibit contained Defendant’s defenses of his studies, which were largely
articulated elsewhere in the trial transcript. The exhibit also includes an
interchange in which Defendant’s father asks Defendant not to get his mother and
father “caught up in this mess.” (Id. at 441.) However, this portion of their
correspondence was admitted as a separate exhibit, Exhibit 56A, as “the source
email to which [Defendant] responded to in [Exhibit] 45,” and was independently
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provided to the government and a law enforcement officer by Defendant’s father.
(Id. at 497-98.) Therefore, the portion of Exhibit 45 originally written by
Defendant’s father need not be considered in our harmless-error analysis because
it was also admitted through Exhibit 56A,9 which is not being challenged on
appeal.
When viewing the admission of these four challenged exhibits, the
independent probative value of which is minimal, against the “the otherwise
strong evidence against” Defendant admitted at trial, we are persuaded that, if the
pretrial suppression motion was denied erroneously and the challenged exhibits
were consequently admitted in error, any such error was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt. Mikolon 719 F.3d at 1189.



9 As with the other exhibits discussed above, Exhibit 56A was not included
in the record on appeal, but it was described as part of the witness testimony of
Defendant’s father.
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Outcome: Therefore, the district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to suppress is
AFFIRMED.

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