Not to beat a dead horse but:
Hendrickon's Puppets wrote:Secondly, the indictment charged that the defendant had knowingly and willfully falsely stated that he had received no wages when he had, in fact, received wages, the approximate amount of which was also alleged.3 However, the indictment fails to give any indication that the Grand Jury found probable cause on this essential element of the charge or included this essential element in the charge.
I have no idea what the second sentence is supposed to mean. The indictment starts with the following:
1. Defendant PETER HENDRICKSON was employed by Personnel Management, Inc., in various capacities, including as a purchaser.
2. Defendant PETER HENDRICKSON received wages from Personnel Management, Inc., for his employment. Wages paid to HENDRICKSON were reported to the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") on Forms W-2 by Personnel Management, Inc. in the amounts of $51,666 in 2000, $53,965 in 2002, $60,608 ins 2003, $62,433 in 2004, $63,310 in 2005, and $20,494 in 2006.
So the indictment states that PH was employed, and he received wages, and states the amounts of the wages.
And the footnote 3 in the first quotation above is interesting:
3 Defendant believes that the approximate amounts stated in the various counts of the indictment are the amounts reported to the IRS through the filing of a w-2 information return.
Defendant "believes"? "Approximate amounts"? The footnote makes me wonder if PH or his lawyers ever even read the indictment.
After going through the usual song and dance about the meaning of "wages," the brief states:
Hendrickon's Puppets wrote:[N]owhere in the indictment is there any indication that the Grand Jury found probable cause that the defendant was an “employee” or in “employment”, and did, in fact, receive “wages”, as those terms are defined in the relevant statutes, after giving due consideration to the definitions within the statutes and to the statutory exceptions. There is no indication that the Grand Jury was properly informed by the Assistant United States Attorney of these essential elements of the offense charged or, indeed, that it did anything other than find probable cause that the defendant was an employee who received wages as those terms are commonly understood. [Footnotes omitted] It is the defendant’s position that although he may have been an employee and may have received wages, as those terms are commonly understood; he was not an “employee” or in “employment”, and he did not receive “wages”, as those terms are defined in the relevant portions of the Internal Revenue Code. That crucial distinction is not recognized by the indictment. The indictment thus fails to include all the elements of the offense charged.
What Hendrickson is arguing is that it is not enough for the Grand Jury to have issued an indictment stating that Hendrickson received wages. According to Hendrickson, the indictment must specifically state that the Grand Jury found probable cause to believe that Hendrickson received "wages" as defined by particular statutes, and that the Grand Jury were instructed on, and considered, all of the possible differences between wages and "wages" before issuing the indictment.
I don't think that's what the law requires. The indictment charges that Hendrickson received wages, and states the years and amounts of wages received and the name of the employer that paid them. And the indictment charges that Hendrickson willfully filed false returns reporting $0 wages. It can't get much clearer or simpler than that. I don't think that the indictment needs to recite the words "probable cause" in each paragraph, or that the indictment needs to recite what instructions were given to the Grand Jury about the law, or
that the Grand Jury must consider the defenses that might be raised by the defendant even before the defendant raises them (which is what Hendrickson is demanding).
So I don't think that the government is going to play "The Price is Right" with Hendrickson and take a second guess at what wording might be satisfactory to him in a superseding indictment, but will oppose the motion on the merits. (And will win.)
And, as has been pointed out many times in the past, the definitions of "wages" in the FICA and withholding provisions have nothing to do with the definition of gross income in section 61, so even if Hendrickson could convince a jury that he believed that his Form 4852 correctly reported $0 in "wages," he would still have the problem of convincing a jury that he believed that he was correctly reporting $0 in earned income on his Form 1040.
Finally, Hendrickson's admission that he received wages as "commonly understood" is a good indication of the problems that he faces with his own personal Cheek defense.