United States v. Beal

352 F. Supp. 2d 14, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 750, 2005 WL 112402
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 19, 2005
DocketCR-04-58-B-W
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 352 F. Supp. 2d 14 (United States v. Beal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Beal, 352 F. Supp. 2d 14, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 750, 2005 WL 112402 (D. Me. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR A DOWNWARD DEPARTURE

WOODCOCK, District Judge.

Defendant Jessica Beal’s husband is a drug addict. Living with him, raising their young child, 1 and making enough money to support both their family hrid his habit has been hard. When his demand for Oxycontin exceeded their income, Mr. Beal harassed his wife for money and Ms.' Beal looked for other sources. Unfortunately, she chose to steal $47,000.00 from her employer, Union Trust Company. Claiming she embezzled the money because her husband and his drug dealer coerced her, she-urges this Court to depart downward under U.S.S.G. § 5K2.12, Coercion and Duress. 2 This Court DENIES the Defendant’s Motion for Downward Departure, because she failed to sustain her burden to demonstrate she committed the crime due to coercion and duress.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. Jessica Beal

Jessica Beal, twenty-three years old, .is a resident of Milbridge, Maine. She grew up in Washington County, Maine, having been graduated from Narraguagus High School in 1999. During high school, when she. was sixteen, she met Donald Beal. They were married on September 21, 2002, and now have two children, ages four and six months. After high school, Ms. Beal worked various jobs until 2000, when she became employed as a traveling teller at Union Trust Company, working in four of the bank’s branches. ■ In September 2002, she became a vault -teller at the Cherry-field branch, gaining' access to large amounts of cash and entrusted to account for it. ■

B. Donald Beal

A lobster fisherman, Donald Beal grew up in the Maine coastal town of Jonesport. Sometime during the year 2002, Mr. Beal became addicted to Oxycontin and his addiction gradually grew. From September 2002, when they were married, until June 2003, when Mr. Beal entered a drug rehabilitation program, his daily Oxycontin purchases ballooned from $60.00 to $250.00 per day.

C. The Financial Crunch

Mr. Beal’s need for drug money quickly exceeded the young couple’s resources. As a lobster fisherman, Mr. B.eal earned *16 about $30,000.00 per year, but lobstering is a seasonal affair, running generally from April to December each year. During the Maine winter, the lobstering income stopped, but Mr. Beal’s addiction did not. As a Union Trust teller, Ms. Beal was earning about $8.00 per hour, roughly $17,000.00 per year. The math did not work. The Beals’ annual income of roughly $47,000.00 could not sustain the cost of Mr. Beal’s habit, which was exceeding $90,000.00 per year.

There were other expenses. The Beals had bought a house for $50,000.00 and had a $41,000.00 mortgage with a monthly payment of $379.00. Then, there was the regular cost of running a household. They began to fall behind: Ms. Beal’s credit card was charged to the limit; they fell behind in their mortgage payments; and the IRS placed a lien on their home. Ms. Beal began to borrow from her family. Her mother, Jennifer Strout, testified it seemed Jessica and Donald were “forever needing money.” Ms. Beal borrowed $200.00 to $300.00 at a time from her parents, and at one point, the Strouts found about $200.00 missing from their home and concluded Mr. Beal had stolen it. The breaking point came in the winter and spring of 2003.

D.“The Bad Donald”

Ms. Beal described her husband as “the good Donald” and “the bad Donald.” When he had his drugs, he was the good Donald; when he did not, he turned bad. Each morning, he would feel the need for drugs. If he had drugs or money, he was happy; if he did not, he would lapse into physical withdrawal symptoms and would throw up and get a headache and chills. He would then proceed to badger Ms. Beal for money. From a generally bad mood, he would gradually work himself into a rage. He became cranky, yelled, and would get “madder and madder” until she came up with some money. He would throw things, and three times he punched the wall hard enough to make holes.

E. “The Bad Donald’s” Coercion

When her husband acted this way, Ms. Beal was scared. During at least one of his tirades in late 2002, he physically threatened her: “You’d better give me the money or I’ll slap you.” 3 He never, however, carried out this threat; he never touched her in anger. On one occasion, he spat at her. 4 His rants and tirades frightened her and she felt a profound sense of shame.

F. Doris Dorr: The Drug Dealer and Her Threats

Mr. Beal’s drug dealer was Doris Dorr, a woman in her late forties. Mrs. Dorr is a big woman, ranging 5'11" to 6'0 tall and weighing in at 180 to 190 pounds. The Beals paint different pictures of Mrs. Dorr. Mr. Beal testified Mrs. Dorr never threatened him for money. He said the most money he ever owed Mrs. Dorr was only about $300.00, and when he fell behind, she would only say: “Pay me when you get it.”

Ms. Beal tells a different story. She said that although she did not personally know Mrs. Dorr, she knew she was her *17 husband’s supplier. On about three occasions, Mrs. Dorr called her husband at home when he was not there and Ms. Beal answered. Mrs. Dorr told her that her husband owed her money, and that she knew where they lived, where she worked, and where their daughter went to day care. Ms. Beal took this as a threat and she became concerned for herself, for her child, and for her husband. She never knew the amount of money her husband owed Mrs. Dorr, but thought it ran into the thousands of dollars.

Mrs. Strout testified that while babysitting at the Beals’ home, Ms. Dorr called. Mrs. Strout had known Mrs. Dorr while growing up. Mrs. Dorr asked to speak with Mr. Beal and then left a message, saying that he owed her money and she wanted it. When Ms. Beal returned, Mrs. Strout told her daughter about the call and she replied: “Mom, let me handle it.”

G.The Crime

Ms. Beal began to steal money from the teller drawer at Union Trust as early as January or February 2003. By late April 2003, she was stealing in earnest. As vault teller, she was entrusted with counting the currency inside the vault at the close of business each day and manually entering the daily total into the computer by denomination. Conducted correctly, the running computer total by transaction matches the daily total, both by the breakdown in denominations and the total vault amount.

On May 22, 2003 and June 2, 2003, bank supervisors conducted “fine counts” of the money in the vault, manually counting the currency to determine whether the vault total matched the running totals. They came up $47,000.00 short. The bank then conducted a formal audit, which concluded that between April 29, 2003, and June 2, 2003, on twenty separate days, there were discrepancies between the denomination amounts on the computer running tallies and the daily vault totals prepared and entered by Ms. Beal. The audit later confirmed the missing total equaled $47,000.00. Union Trust fired Ms. Beal on June 9, 2003. .

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Bluebook (online)
352 F. Supp. 2d 14, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 750, 2005 WL 112402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-beal-med-2005.