People v. Dillard

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 2018
DocketA141998
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Dillard (People v. Dillard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Dillard, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 3/29/18 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A141998 v. NANETTE SHEREE DILLARD, et al., (Alameda County Super. Ct. Nos. CH-53179A & Defendants and Appellants. CH-53179B)

Nanette Sheree Dillard and Paul Daniels appeal their convictions, following a jury trial, of crimes related to their work at an anti-poverty agency, the Associated Community Action Program (ACAP or the Agency). We conclude two of appellants’ convictions were preempted by federal law and reverse these convictions. We otherwise affirm. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Dillard and Daniels were charged by amended information with the following: Count 1: Conspiracy to commit grant theft by false pretenses (Pen. Code, §§ 182, subd. (a)(1), 487, subd. (a))1, with overt acts of drafting, signing, and delivering a letter to the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) “falsely attesting”

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts II–IV. 1 All undesignated section references are to the Penal Code.

1 that ACAP had more than $426,000 in “ ‘non-federal match funds’ ” in a Citibank account, and sending a draft of such a letter to a Citibank manager. Count 2: Grand theft by false pretenses (§ 487, subd. (a)) by unlawfully taking grant funds from HHS. This count included an allegation that the property taken exceeded $200,000 (§ 12022.6, subd. (a)(2)). Count 3: Making a false account of public moneys (§ 424, subd. (a)(3)) by signing and sending false and inaccurate letters to HHS. A third co-defendant, Vivian Rahwanji, was also charged with this count. Rahwanji entered into a plea agreement with the People on the eve of trial and, as part of this agreement, testified as a prosecution witness. Count 4: Using public moneys for a purpose not authorized by law (§ 424, subd. (a)(2)), by improperly using over $280,000 of funds intended for a HHS grant program to fund Agency payroll and other Agency expenses. In addition, Dillard was charged with the following: Count 5: Appropriating public moneys to her own use (§ 424, subd. (a)(1)), by instructing employees to work on her personal residence at below-market rates and obtaining reimbursement for improper business expenses, such as massages and expensive meals. Count 6: Preparing false and ante-dated documentary evidence (§ 134), by preparing a memoranda regarding the residency status of Agency clients and an agenda of a seminar at a hotel. Following a lengthy trial, the jury convicted appellants of theft by false pretenses (count 2) and making a false account of public moneys (count 3), and convicted Dillard of preparing false documentary evidence (count 6). The jury acquitted appellants on all remaining counts. FACTUAL BACKGROUND The Agency ACAP was an anti-poverty agency created pursuant to a joint powers agreement between Alameda County (the County) and several cities in the County. A governing board (the Board) consisted of representatives from each of the municipalities and,

2 among other powers, selected the Agency’s executive director. Dillard was appointed the Agency’s interim executive director in 2004 and its executive director in 2005. Daniels was hired as an administrative assistant at the Agency in 2004, and was promoted to grants manager the following year. Daniels and Dillard married in 2007. The Assets for Independence Grant Program In June 2005, the Agency sought, and was awarded, a five-year, $500,000 Assets for Independence (AFI) grant from HHS. Two HHS employees testified about the rules governing AFI grants: Katrina Morgan, an HHS grants management officer, and Anne Yeoman, a 10-year contract employee with HHS who worked primarily on the AFI program. AFI grants are awarded to organizations or agencies to fund programs that help low-income people build assets. We will refer to the organizations or agencies administering the AFI programs as “grantees,” and the low-income individuals served by these programs as “savers.” In an AFI program, savers deposit money in a designated individual bank account. These deposits are matched with federal AFI grant funds and an equal amount of nonfederal funds. The matched deposits can be withdrawn for approved uses, including higher education, starting a business, or buying a house. Grantees do not receive the federal AFI money when the grant is awarded. Instead, during the five-year grant period, grantees periodically “drawdown” some or all of the federal grant funds into a dedicated bank account maintained by the grantee, called the reserve account. A grantee can only drawdown federal funds for which it has an equal amount of nonfederal funds on deposit, referred to as “matching nonfederal funds.” Before each drawdown, grantees must submit to HHS a letter requesting the drawdown and a letter from the bank holding the reserve fund confirming the presence of matching nonfederal funds in that account. AFI federal grant funds must be drawn down into the reserve account within the five-year grant period, and the distribution of grant funds to savers must be completed by the end of an additional year. Grantees can spend no more than 15 percent of the drawn down federal AFI funds on program administration; the remainder must be used to match saver deposits. HHS provides grantees with an “AFI

3 Grantee Handbook,” an AFI resource center available to answer grantee questions by phone or email, and in-person trainings at grantee conferences. The Agency’s Drawdowns of Federal AFI Grant Funds The Agency’s AFI reserve account, and the hundreds of individual saver deposit accounts participating in the Agency’s AFI program, were held at a Citibank branch. The reserve account was the “umbrella” account, and the individual saver accounts were attached to the reserve account. Vivian Rahwanji was the manager of that Citibank branch. Dillard was the sole signatory on the AFI reserve account, and both she and Daniels had access to the AFI account records. The Agency’s five-year AFI grant period ended on June 14, 2010; this date was the last day the Agency could drawdown federal AFI funds. As of the beginning of that month, the Agency had drawn down less than $75,000 out of the $500,000 available federal AFI funds. On June 10, although the Agency only had approximately $47,000 in its AFI reserve account, Daniels emailed Rahwanji a template letter to HHS stating the Agency had $426,874.44 of “non-federal match funds” on deposit in its AFI reserve account and requested she “place the letter on Citibank stationary [and] sign it.”2 Rahwanji did so. Daniels sent the Citibank letter to HHS and HHS transferred the requested federal AFI grant funds to the Agency’s reserve account. The prosecution argued this letter was the basis for the theft by false pretenses and false account of public moneys counts (counts 2 and 3)—even though the letter was signed by Rahwanji, the People argued appellants prepared the letter knowing Rahwanji would “rubber-stamp” it and/or aided and abetted her act.3

2 The parties presented evidence of emails and telephone calls leading up to this June 10 email; we omit these facts as unnecessary to our resolution of the appeal. 3 Dillard, Daniels, and Rahwanji all testified they believed the savers’ deposits could be counted as “non-federal match funds.” The combined individual saver accounts contained less than $200,000. Daniels testified he relied on Rahwanji to verify the amount before she signed the letter. Rahwanji testified she attempted to so verify but abandoned the cumbersome task, believing based on an “eyeball” assessment that the figures were about right.

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People v. Dillard, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-dillard-calctapp-2018.