United States v. Barry L. Knipp (91-5312), and Vernon L. Hamilton (91-5452)

963 F.2d 839
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 3, 1992
Docket91-5312, 91-5452
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 963 F.2d 839 (United States v. Barry L. Knipp (91-5312), and Vernon L. Hamilton (91-5452)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Barry L. Knipp (91-5312), and Vernon L. Hamilton (91-5452), 963 F.2d 839 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

MILBURN, Circuit Judge.

Defendants Barry L. Knipp and Vernon L. Hamilton appeal their jury convictions on one count of conspiracy (a) to defraud a federally insured financial institution and (b) to misapply the monies, funds, credits and securities of a federally insured financial institution in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and six related counts of aiding and abetting each other in devising a scheme to defraud federally insured financial institutions in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1344. On appeal, the issues are (1) whether Congress’ extension of the statute of limitations from five years to ten years violates the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution, (2) whether the district court abused its discretion in denying defendants’ motions for mistrial based on the questioning of a prospective juror, (3) whether the district court erred in denying defendant Knipp’s motion for a judgment of acquittal, and (4) whether the district court abused its discretion in denying defendant Knipp’s motion for new trial. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

Defendant Barry L. Knipp was president of the People’s Bank of Olive Hill, Kentucky (“PBOH”), and his co-defendant, Vernon L. Hamilton, was president of Hamilton Hardwood Lumber Company, Inc. (“HHLC”), a lumber business in Carter County, Kentucky. HHLC maintained a cheeking account at PBOH. Hamilton also maintained a checking account in the name of Hamilton Farms at the First National Bank of Grayson, Kentucky (“FNBG”). Both banks were insured by the FDIC.

In 1983 and early 1984, HHLC borrowed $1,200,000 from PBOH and also established a $750,000 ready reserve account that functioned as a demand loan to cover overdrafts up to $750,000. Defendant Knipp was the bank’s account officer for all these loans. By November 1984, the ready reserve account established for HHLC had reached its $750,000 limit, but Hamilton continued to write checks on the account which drove it into an overdraft status. By March 1985, the HHLC account had been overdrafted to the extent of $552,153.06. Because PBOH was at its legal lending limits with HHLC, and in order to disguise the overdraft status of the account, a check kiting system was set up by defendant Hamilton to cycle checks between the HHLC account at PBOH and the Hamilton Farms account at FNBG.

According to various employees of PBOH, the kite was operated by the daily transfer of checks, drawn on uncollected funds, between the two banks. On instructions from defendant Knipp, employees of PBOH kept a daily watch on HHLC’s checking account for overdrafts beyond the *842 $750,000 ready reserve fund. When an overdraft check was presented, payment of it was delayed while a telephone call was placed to defendant Hamilton to advise him of the amount of the deposit he would be required to make to cover the overdraft. Hamilton would then deposit at PBOH one or more checks drawn on the Hamilton Farms account at FNBG. As the amount of the overdrafts spiraled upward, Hamilton was required to come to PBOH daily and deposit checks drawn on the Hamilton Farms account at FNBG to cover HHLC’s overdrafts. He kept the Hamilton Farms account stocked with checks written on the HHLC account at PBOH.

The evidence shows that defendant Knipp knew about this situation and facilitated its continuance by instructing his employees to hold certain overdraft checks while they advised Hamilton of the amount of the deposit necessary to cover them. When Julia Sparks, a bank employee, raised her concerns about this procedure with Knipp, he told her that Hamilton was simply loaning money from one business to another. At Knipp’s direction, Sparks kept track daily of all the checks and deposits passing through the HHLC account, and she prepared a weekly report of these transactions for Knipp. The reports showed that the daily deposits required of Hamilton grew larger and larger until they exceeded $200,000 a day.

Sometime in December 1984, Knipp asked Charles Marshall, then a partner in an accounting firm which did tax work for PBOH, to attend a meeting with Knipp and Hamilton. At this meeting, and in front of Marshall, Hamilton assured Knipp that he was not kiting checks and that there were sufficient funds in the FNBG account to cover the deposits he made at PBOH. Nothing was done to stop HHLC’s continuing overdrafts and the daily deposits required to cover them.

Also in December 1984, Knipp telephoned Paul McGuire, chairman of the board of Bank Josephine in Prestonburg, Kentucky, and asked McGuire to make a loan to Hamilton in the sum of $176,750. It was McGuire’s understanding that PBOH could not extend this loan to Hamilton because PBOH was at its lending limits as to Hamilton. Bank Josephine made the loan, and the proceeds were deposited into the Hamilton Farms account at FNBG.

Matters began coming to a head in February 1985 when FNBG installed a new computer system that could track floats on items being deposited in that bank. The Hamilton Farms account immediately appeared on that new report with a large uncollected balance in excess of $200,000. In investigating the Hamilton Farms account, FNBG’s controller determined that 3, 4, or 5 checks, all for different amounts, and totaling between $230,000 and $250,-000, were being written and deposited back and forth between the Hamilton Farms account at FNBG and the HHLC account at PBOH on a daily basis. The same number of checks in the same amounts were being deposited each day.

Based on this investigation, FNBG returned four checks drawn on the Hamilton Farms account at FNBG and deposited in the HHLC account at PBOH for collection. Defendant Knipp immediately requested a meeting with FNBG officials to discuss the returned checks, and on February 28, 1985, a meeting was held at which FNBG officials explained their concern over Hamilton’s use of uncollected funds. Knipp assured FNBG that the activity between the two accounts would stop. It did not stop, however, but continued for several weeks until, in April 1985, FNBG returned fourteen checks totaling $907,476 to PBOH as drawn on uncollected funds. FNBG then closed the Hamilton Farms account.

II.

A.

Both defendants argue that the district court should have granted their motions to dismiss this case because it was brought in violation of the Ex Post Facto provisions of Article I, Section 9, of the *843 United States Constitution. 1 The date of the last offense mentioned in the indictment is April 30, 1985, and the statute of limitations in effect on that date was the five-year limitations period established by 18 U.S.C. § 3282. On August 9, 1989, before the five-year statute of limitations ran as to this case, Congress enacted 18 U.S.C. § 3293, which extended the limitations period applicable to the offense as charged from five years to ten years. Defendants were indicted on July 24, 1990.

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Bluebook (online)
963 F.2d 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-barry-l-knipp-91-5312-and-vernon-l-hamilton-91-5452-ca6-1992.