Rasch v. State

579 S.E.2d 817, 260 Ga. App. 379, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 1082, 2003 Ga. App. LEXIS 390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 19, 2003
DocketA02A2345
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 579 S.E.2d 817 (Rasch v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rasch v. State, 579 S.E.2d 817, 260 Ga. App. 379, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 1082, 2003 Ga. App. LEXIS 390 (Ga. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Adams, Judge.

Wayne Rasch appeals following his conviction on eighteen counts of securities violations and two counts of theft by taking. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

The state accused Rasch of operating a Ponzi scheme 1 over a four-year period. The evidence at trial showed that he induced a *380 number of individuals to invest their money with his company with the promise of a high return. The charges in the case stem from transactions with six individuals.

Barbara Stevens

Barbara Stevens testified that in January 1993 she found Rasch’s business, Financial Plans & Services, in the yellow pages and consulted him about investing for her retirement. Rasch told her that he could get her a higher return on her money than she was currently receiving through an investment in a business that she recalled dealt with toners or copy machines. She knew no other details about the business, except that Rasch told her that her money would go to individuals who could not get a loan from a bank. Stevens agreed to place $10,000 with Rasch and signed a “Private Placement Investment Note” that promised her a 13.8 percent annual return on her money. Stevens understood that Rasch would earn one percent for managing the investment. She testified that she did not consider this a loan of her money, but rather an investment. She said that Rasch held himself out as knowledgeable in financial matters, and she made the investment because she believed that Rasch would be able to achieve better results with her money than she could.

Stevens began receiving monthly interest checks from Rasch. But after talking with friends and her tax attorney, Stevens became nervous because the guaranteed return was so high. In April 1993, she asked for the return of one-half of her investment. And in July 1993, she received a check for $5,000 plus interest from Rasch. Later, Stevens began to experience problems with the interest payments. Once, she was unable to cash an interest check because there was no money in Rasch’s account. Then Rasch began directing her to different banks, and on one occasion he paid her with a money order. She became “scared” about her money and asked to close her account. She eventually received all of her money back.

Ada Jo Sisk

Ada Jo Sisk met Rasch through her brother-in-law, and Rasch asked her if she would be interested in investing through his company. Rasch told her that he “invested for people,” and he offered a good rate of interest. In April 1993, Sisk decided to place $15,000 with Rasch. He told her that her money would be invested in a local business that sold computer paper. Rasch said that the man who owned the business did not want to deal with banks because they refused to loan him money when he was just starting out. Sisk signed a document entitled “Private Placement, Commercial Investment Note,” which provided for a 12 percent annual return. She invested *381 an additional $10,000 in June 1993 and signed a similar note with the same return. In September 1993, she invested $5,000 more, but the note she signed at that point provided for a 15 percent return. All three notes stated that she would receive the interest upon the expiration of the note.

Sisk understood that these notes represented investments in the computer paper company, and she relied on Rasch to make her a profit on these investments. Rasch would bring monthly statements for her account to Sisk at her office. Later, he stopped bringing monthly statements, until she specifically asked for one in December 1994. Sometime that month she requested the return of all her money, but she did not receive her money until the end of May 1995.

A few months, later, in November 1995, Rasch approached Sisk about making another investment. He told her that this investment would be used to help a local businessman acquire some equipment or machinery at a “rock bottom price,” and that she would receive a 12 percent return within 90 days. Sisk decided to put $15,000 into this “opportunity,” and she signed a “Factoring Agreement — Short Term.” In the agreement, Sisk agreed to purchase an invoice that would be held as collateral for the agreement to repay her investment with interest.

A few months later, Sisk began experiencing some health and financial problems, and in June 1996, she asked for her money back. Rasch promised her that her money would be returned and eventually gave her a check for $16,410.41, but the check was “no good.” Although Sisk obtained a judgment against Rasch, she has never received her money back. The state presented evidence that instead of investing Sisk’s money, Rasch deposited it into his own account and used the proceeds to buy a car.

Edna T. Davis

Edna T. Davis placed $42,104 with. Rasch on February 3, 1994, and another $25,000 on April 13,1994. The two agreements signed in connection with these investments were entitled “Private Placement Commercial Note,” and provided for a return of eight and one-quarter percent and eight percent respectively. In 1996, the attorney for Davis’s executor contacted Rasch to discuss the investment. He testified that after speaking with Rasch, he was left with the impression that the investment involved some kind of mutual fund that Rasch’s company was operating, and not a transaction with an individual. He stated that Rasch did not refer to Davis’s transactions as loans, but rather as investments. The attorney eventually recovered the entire principal amount invested by Davis, but Rasch charged her service charges for collection, accounting, check issue and defer *382 ment in the amount of $3,850.98, which exceeded any remaining interest earned on the account.

The state presented testimony indicating that Rasch never invested Davis’s money, but rather used it to pay back other investors; to cover personal and business expenses; and to make an interest payment to Davis herself.

Carolyn A. Schmitt and John Alexander

At the time of trial, Carolyn A. Schmitt was residing in the state Alzheimer’s Unit in Social Circle, Georgia. Delores Benedict, the wife of Schmitt’s cousin, testified at trial that in 1995 when Schmitt was 80 years old she moved back to Georgia to live with her brother, John Alexander. Benedict described Schmitt’s mental state at that time as “confused.” Alexander died on January 7, 1996. The next day, Rasch told Schmitt’s family that he was handling her business affairs. Benedict became concerned when she learned that Rasch had power of attorney for Schmitt and that he planned to sell Schmitt’s assets, and those of her late brother. Rasch told Benedict that he was planning to invest the money, but Benedict was aware that Schmitt already had someone in Colorado who handled her investments. Schmitt’s family hired an attorney to investigate, and on her advice they applied for a guardianship for Schmitt. The probate judge eventually appointed a guardian for Schmitt’s property, and later a guardian of her person, due to her deteriorating mental condition.

Rasch initially failed to respond to inquiries asking him to account for the money he retained on Schmitt’s behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
579 S.E.2d 817, 260 Ga. App. 379, 2003 Fulton County D. Rep. 1082, 2003 Ga. App. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rasch-v-state-gactapp-2003.