Justia White Collar Crime Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in Criminal Law
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California posts information about unclaimed property on a public website. Bolt made claims in 2011 and 2012 in the name of his company, Situs Cancer Research Center,. Bolt created fraudulent donation agreements which purported to transfer the unclaimed assets from their lawful owners to Situs. In some instances Bolt created fictitious employees of the companies and signed their names; in others he forged the signatures of actual people. He also fabricated notary stamps and used interstate mail and wire systems to transmit the fraudulent documents to California. The assets transferred to Situs totaled approximately $2,400,000. Bolt bought cars and real estate with funds from the Situs bank account. In another scheme, Situs similarly acquired unclaimed funds from a trust account ($108,251.78) held by the state of Nevada, which were a woman's life savings. Bolt pled guilty to wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1343; mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1341; and money laundering, 18 U.S.C. 1957. The Eighth Circuit affirmed the sentence of 100 months, calculated by applying an enhancement for the use of sophisticated means and concluding that an upward departure was warranted based on the inadequacy of his criminal history category under the guidelines. View "United States v. Bolt" on Justia Law

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Curtis, a lawyer, filed 1996-1997 returns reporting tax obligations of $218,983 and $248,236, but made no payments. His partner had taken $600,000 from the practice and declared bankruptcy; Curtis underwent an expensive divorce. Curtis failed to file a return for 1998. Curtis entered into an installment agreement. He filed a return for 2000 but failed to pay $90,000. He entered into a second agreement, but filed returns for 2003 and 2004 reflecting unpaid tax liabilities of $176,802 and $61,000. Curtis did not make estimated payments and stopped making installment payments. He filed returns for 2007, 2008 and 2009, but paid nothing. Curtis was charged with misdemeanor willfully failing to pay taxes owed for 2007, 2008 and 2009, 26 U.S.C. 7203. The court allowed evidence under Rule 404(b), of Curtis’s history of failing to pay his taxes and his withdrawals of money from his law practice for personal expenses. Curtis did not object, but objected to the government’s proposed evidence that he failed to pay payroll taxes for his employees in 2013, arguing that any violations after the charged years did not bear on his state of mind during the time of the charged offenses. Although the court gave Curtis’s proposed instruction on good faith, it declined to modify the pattern instruction to include a requirement for bad motive, with respect to willfulness. The Seventh Circuit affirmed his convictions. View "United States v. Curtis" on Justia Law

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DiFoggio worked as an FBI cooperating witness and introduced Medrano to a man purporting to be Castro, a health care consultant. Castro told Medrano that by bribing a corrupt official he could obtain contract approval from Los Angeles County for the purchase of bandages for its hospital system. Castro was an undercover FBI agent. There was no corrupt official. When the medical bandages deal was concluded, Medrano approached Castro about making another deal to involve his friend, Buenrostro. Buenrostro and Castro brought Barta into the discussions; A bribe would be paid to the corrupt official by Castro to obtain a county contract for Sav‐Rx, a company founded by Barta, to provide pharmaceutical dispensing services. Sav‐Rx would service the contract through a business started by Buenrostro and Medrano. Barta wrote a check for $6,500 to Castro. Buenrostro and Medrano were to pay their 35 percent share after that last meeting. Before that happened, they were arrested. In a separate opinion, the Seventh Circuit held that Barta was entrapped as a matter of law. Neither Buenrostro nor Medrano argued entrapment. The Seventh Circuit affirmed their convictions for conspiracy to commit bribery, rejecting challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence and the sentences. View "United States v. Buenrostro" on Justia Law

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In 2006, Robinson opened Paideia Academy, a non-profit charter St. Louis charter school. State and federal monies, disbursed through the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, exclusively funded the school, and were restricted to operating kindergarten through eighth grade. Robinson directed $242,533 from Paideia to develop a pre-kindergarten child care center. Robinson also worked, beginning in 1990, purporting to inspect parking meters. On weekly timesheets, he always recorded 40 hours, regardless of holidays, and even after parking meter services were outsourced. In 2009, the FBI investigated his “employment,” interviewing former Parking Division employees and watching Robinson’s car. They reasonably suspected that Robinson did not inspect meters. The agents installed, without a warrant, a GPS device on his car while parked on a public street. Tracking confirmed that Robinson did not inspect meters. The government charged Robinson with Paideia-related wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1343; two Paideia-related counts of federal program theft, 18 U.S.C. 666(a)(1)(A); and five parking-related counts of federal program theft. The district court denied Robinson’s motion to suppress the GPS evidence, motion to sever counts 1-3 from counts 4-8, and Batson objection to the jury’s composition. At trial, the court rejected his challenges to certain testimony and parking-related jury instructions. The court sentenced him to 24 months’ imprisonment and awarded $419,333 in restitution. The Eighth Circuit affirmed View "United States v. Robinson" on Justia Law

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Singer, a Muskegon, Michigan landlord who claimed insurance proceeds for nine rental units that were burned, was convicted of 12 counts of mail fraud, use of fire to commit mail fraud, arson, tax fraud, and obstruction of the administration of the internal revenue laws, and was sentenced to a total term of 55 years in prison. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, rejecting arguments that: the mail-fraud count of his indictment was duplicitous; the district court should have severed the tax-fraud counts from the other charged offenses; certain counts in the indictment were outside of the relevant statute of limitations or brought within an improper venue; and the district court erred by imposing consecutive sentences under 18 U.S.C. 844(h). View "United States v. Singer" on Justia Law

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Jones owned SAM Packaging and owed several hundred thousand dollars in back taxes for 2006-2008. Jones refused to provide the IRS with bank statements, and later submitted statements, with blacked-out parts. He submitted financial disclosure forms, disclosing accounts at Mutual of Omaha Bank (MO), but not accounts at Community Credit Union. He directed his financial activity to the undisclosed accounts. When the IRS levied on Jones’s MO accounts, they were nearly empty. Jones commingled personal and business accounts, then began dealing in cash. He refused to turn over accounts receivable, stating that he would terminate the business before doing so. In 2010, he declared that SAM had been “suspended” and he was unemployed. He had started a new company to secretly serve his customers. The IRS summonsed customers and learned Jones had performed work without billing them, preventing levy on his accounts receivable. Jones pled guilty to tax evasion, 26 U.S.C. 7201. The district court imposed a two-level enhancement for use of sophisticated means, as recommended in the PSR. After a three-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, the district court calculated a Guidelines range of 30 to 37 months and sentenced Jones to 24 months. The Eighth Circuit affirmed, rejecting an argument that Jones’s actions were typical of tax evasion offenses and did not make detection more difficult. View "United States v. Jones" on Justia Law

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For about three years ending in 2009, five schemers bilked unsuspecting investors of an estimated $190 million in a Minnesota Ponzi scheme. They took more than $79 million of the investors’ funds with the help of Associated Bank. After the scheme was exposed, the district judge in a related case appointed a receiver to take custody of funds owned by the schemers’ estates and by organizations under their control (receiver entities). The receiver filed suit on behalf of the receiver entities, alleging Associated Bank aided and abetted the scheme. The district court granted Associated Bank’s motion to dismiss. The Eighth Circuit reversed and remanded, stating that, while it could not predict whether a jury will find Associated Bank either had actual knowledge of or substantially assisted in the asserted torts, the facts alleged in the complaint give the receiver’s claims “facial plausibility.” The receiver pled “factual content that allows the court [and a jury] to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” View "Zayed v. Associated Bank, N.A." on Justia Law

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While inspecting a commercial fishing vessel in the Gulf of Mexico, a federal agent found that the catch contained undersized red grouper, in violation of conservation regulations, and instructed the captain, Yates, to keep the undersized fish segregated from the rest of the catch until the ship returned to port. After the officer departed, Yates told the crew to throw the undersized fish overboard. Yates was convicted of destroying, concealing, and covering up undersized fish to impede a federal investigation under 18 U. S. C. 519, which applies when a person “knowingly alters, destroys, mutilates, conceals, covers up, falsifies, or makes a false entry in any record, document, or tangible object with the intent to impede, obstruct, or influence” a federal investigation. Yates argued that section 1519 originated in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, to protect investors, and that its reference to “tangible object” includes objects used to store information, such as computer hard drives. The Eleventh Circuit affirmed. The Supreme Court reversed, holding that “tangible object” refers to one used to record or preserve information. Section 1519’s position within Title 18, Chapter 73 and its title, “Destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in Federal investigations and bankruptcy,” signal that it was not intended to serve as a cross-the-board ban on the destruction of physical evidence. The words immediately surrounding “tangible object,” “falsifies, or makes a false entry in any record [or] document,” also indicate the contextual meaning of that term. Even if traditional tools of statutory construction leave any doubt about the meaning of the term, it would be appropriate to invoke the rule of lenity. View "Yates v. United States" on Justia Law

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Adejumo pled guilty to bank fraud and aggravated identity theft and was sentenced to 124 months in prison. Adejumo did not waive his ability to present argument on the amount of the loss to the victims. A year later, the government moved to amend the judgment to add a restitution obligation of $1.1 million. In support, it provided a single page exhibit containing the names of four asserted victim banks and amounts owed to each. Although Adejumo's trial counsel received electronic court filing (ECF) notice of this motion, he did not respond nor inform Adejumo of it. Trial counsel had withdrawn as appellate counsel. Substitute counsel had been appointed, but the ECF system still showed trial counsel as counsel of record. The district court entered the requested restitution order. Two months later it denied Adejumo's motion to reopen or for reconsideration. The Eighth Circuit reversed, finding that the district court lacked sufficient information to set restitution. View "United States v. Adejumo" on Justia Law

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Defendant, employed as the property manager of a condominium association, was convicted of wire fraud for embezzling funds from the condominium association and bank fraud for taking out an unauthorized loan in the condominium association's name. The district court applied a four-level sentencing enhancement under U.S.S.G. 2B1.1(b)(2)(B), which applies to offenses involving 50 or more victims. The court affirmed the sentence, concluding that the district court properly counted the individual tenants as victims (more than 70 tenants total) and, therefore, properly applied the enhancement. View "United States v. Iovino" on Justia Law