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A Public-Service Announcement, and What Did Dennis Baranowski Know?

If you get a “State­ment” from UST Devel­op­ment, Inc.—an invoice like this one:

(from here)—do not pay it. It’s a scam. You prob­a­bly don’t owe UST Devel­op­ment any money because they haven’t pro­vided you with any “pre­ven­ta­tive maintenance.”

Ken at Pope­hat got the same state­ment; he didn’t pay it, but he’s call­ing UST Devel­op­ment (and likely its prin­ci­ples, David Bell and Bran­den Tomeric Bell) to the atten­tion of fed­eral author­i­ties who pros­e­cute fraud cases.

This looks like a solid fed­eral mail-fraud case: UST Devel­op­ment is using the mail to try to obtain money by false pre­tenses. Nail down who was involved in the con­spir­acy, count the num­ber of let­ters sent, and cal­cu­late a guide­lines num­ber under 2B1.1.

Ken dis­cusses briefly why the scam­mers’ appar­ent defense (that the state­ment says that it is not a state­ment for ser­vices ren­dered “but for pre­ven­ta­tive main­te­nance”) doesn’t work.

When Ken got the fraud­u­lent invoice, he emailed the reg­is­tered agent for ser­vice of process of UST Devel­op­ment. Ken didn’t reveal the reg­is­tered agent’s name, but it’s a pub­lic record and not hard to find: the reg­is­tered agent is Den­nis R. Bara­nowski of Ran­cho Cuca­monga, California.

Bara­nowski is a lawyer.

Ken wrote to the reg­is­tered agent, in part:

I Googled today, Mr. —, and I observed mul­ti­ple reports on sites like ripoffreport.com and scaminformer.com and scamchasers.com sug­gest­ing that other busi­nesses had got­ten invoices from [Scam­mer], Inc. for ser­vices not actu­ally rendered.

What is Den­nis Baranowski’s duty now that Ken has called it to his atten­tion that UST Devel­op­ment is send­ing out fraud­u­lent invoices?

It depends.

If Bara­nowski is just the reg­is­tered agent for UST Devel­op­ment, and does not rep­re­sent them, he has no duty that I can see under the dis­ci­pli­nary rules to do any­thing about UST Development’s fraud. Reg­is­tered agents are not liable in their capac­ity as reg­is­tered agents for the acts of corporations.

If Bara­nowski is just the reg­is­tered agent for UST Devel­op­ment and does not rep­re­sent the cor­po­ra­tion or either David Bell or Bran­den Bell, he may con­sider that he has a moral duty to stop enabling UST Development’s scam, or even to try to stop the cor­po­ra­tion, which has taken advan­tage of his ser­vices as reg­is­tered agent, from defraud­ing peo­ple fur­ther. He might decide—as a mat­ter of conscience—to assist Ken in shut­ting down the scam. In that cir­cum­stance, there is no priv­i­lege pro­tect­ing his com­mu­ni­ca­tions with UST Development.

If Bara­nowski rep­re­sents UST Devel­op­ment or the Bells, Cal­i­for­nia has a strong rule of priv­i­lege pro­tect­ing their con­fi­den­tial infor­ma­tion. A Cal­i­for­nia lawyer must “main­tain invi­o­late the con­fi­dence, and at every peril to him­self or her­self to pre­serve the secrets, of his or her client.” There is, how­ever, as at com­mon law, a “crime-fraud excep­tion” to the priv­i­lege: “There is no priv­i­lege under this arti­cle if the ser­vices of the lawyer were sought or obtained to enable or aid any­one to com­mit or plan to com­mit a crime or a fraud.” So Bara­nowski may find him­self in a priv­i­lege bat­tle over his com­mu­ni­ca­tions with UST (the crime-fraud excep­tion in Cal­i­for­nia applies to priv­i­leged com­mu­ni­ca­tions but not to work product).

It is almost unfath­omable that any lawyer vet­ted UST Development’s scam let­ter. But not incon­ceiv­able: what you or I might imme­di­ately rec­og­nize as a scam, a lawyer in other cir­cum­stances might think is okay. What cir­cum­stances? Des­per­a­tion and addic­tion come imme­di­ately to mind. In the unlikely event that Bara­nowski coun­seled the com­pany to send these “state­ments,” or even approved their send­ing, he’s going to have some explain­ing to do. A lawyer may not, of course, coun­sel a client to break the law. Not only is it a vio­la­tion of the rules, but it also sub­jects the lawyer to pos­si­ble crim­i­nal liability—for exam­ple lia­bil­ity for a mail-fraud con­spir­acy. A bar card is not carte blanche to conspire.

A conspirator’s lia­bil­ity for a crim­i­nal con­spir­acy con­tin­ues until the con­spir­acy ends, or until the con­spir­a­tor with­draws from the con­spir­acy. “With­drawal” is not just walk­ing away, but requires some affir­ma­tive action to defeat or dis­avow the conspiracy’s pur­pose. One may with­draw by doing acts which are incon­sis­tent with the pur­pose of the con­spir­acy and by mak­ing rea­son­able efforts to tell the co-conspirators about those acts. When a per­son becomes involved in a con­spir­acy, he’s all in—responsible for the bad acts of the con­spir­acy that were fore­see­able when he joined—or he’s all out.

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

6 Responses to “A Public-Service Announcement, and What Did Dennis Baranowski Know?”

  1. Ken says:

    At this point I have no idea whether Bara­nowski reviewed the fraud­u­lent invoice or not. I do know that when Mr. Bell called me to try to run a con on me, he rep­re­sented that Mr. Bara­nowski told him about my email. I’m get­ting ahead of mysel to future chap­ters, but Mr. Bara­nowski is also rep­re­sent­ing Bell in Bell’s bank­ruptcy case, includ­ing in con­nec­tion with var­i­ous adver­sary pro­ceed­ings alleg­ing var­i­ous frauds.

  2. Ric Moore says:

    That was a very strange link, Mark. Appro­pri­ate for 9/11, the fire­men make out very well in the end.

  3. […] of the day-to-day oper­a­tions of the enti­ties for which they are the reg­is­tered agent of process. Mark Ben­nett says as much, but sug­gests — cor­rectly, I assert — that if any attor­ney reviewed and […]

  4. […] Bell in their bank­ruptcy case. Mark Ben­nett had some rather pointed ques­tions for this attor­ney even before these addi­tional con­nec­tions became evi­dent. One won­ders why Mr. Bara­nowski has not with­drawn from his agent posi­tion, when the evi­dence appears […]

  5. Dan Austin says:

    UST is still at it. I reveived a fraud­u­lent invoice from them yes­ter­day 6÷18÷2012. He has moved on to Ari­zona now. I don’t under­stand how these peo­ple keep on get­ting away with this, and have not been pros­e­cuted for, at the very least, using the US mail to com­mit fraud.

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