United States v. Bold

412 F. Supp. 2d 818
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 5, 2011
DocketCR-1-03-129, CR-1-04-76, CR-1-04-77, CR-1-04-140, CR-1-05-11, CR-1-05-74, CR-1-05-86
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 412 F. Supp. 2d 818 (United States v. Bold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bold, 412 F. Supp. 2d 818 (S.D. Ohio 2011).

Opinion

ORDER ADOPTING MAGISTRATE’S REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION ON RESTITUTION

DLOTT, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on Magistrate Judge Hogan’s Report and Recommendation on Restitution (“R & R”) (doc. # 28 in CR-1-05-86 1 ), restitution petitioner Price Hill Will’s Objection (doc. # 31), and Defendant Ronald Trester’s Response (doc. # 32). The Court, subject to the supplemental discussion set forth in this Order, ADOPTS the R & R and declines to order Defendant Trester to pay restitution to Price Hill and associated Cincinnati neighborhoods. The Court does not rule on restitution against Defendants Charlene Bold, Horace Roberson 2 , John Todd Killinger, Philip Jasper, Donald Powers, Jr., and Steven Minger, in part because the relevant demands have been withdrawn pursuant to civil settlements.

1. BACKGROUND 3

In October 2005, this Court sentenced Defendants Bold, Roberson, Killinger, Jasper, Powers, Minger, and Trester to terms of incarceration ranging from six to forty-six months for their participation in a *821 mortgage fraud or “flipping” scheme involving an estimated 800 homes in greater Cincinnati. In the early 2000s, many of these homes-typically small properties in poorer Cincinnati neighborhoods-were purchased and then resold under inflated mortgages secured with the use of falsified appraisals and buyer financial statements. Well over a hundred of the “flipped” mortgages have since gone into default, triggering a string of foreclosures on properties worth well less than their associated debt burdens. Some of the homes have remained unoccupied and untended since foreclosure, fostering-according to petitioner Price Hill Will-property value declines and other ills in the surrounding communities. (See, e.g., doc. # 20 at 8-8 and Ex-hib. 2 (discussing vacant properties’ impacts on neighborhoods)).

Representatives of Trustcorp Mortgage Company (“Trustcorp”), an Indiana bank that sustained losses on a number of fraudulent loans, and Price Hill Will, a nonprofit community group based in Cincinnati’s Price Hill neighborhood, where a number of the flipped homes are located, appeared at Defendants’ sentencing hearings to petition the Court for awards of criminal restitution- pursuant to the Victim and Witness Protection Act (“VWPA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3663 et seq., and the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (“MVRA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3663A. Trustcorp initially sought restitution from Defendants Bold, Roberson, Jasper, Powers and Killinger, 4 while Price Hill Will sought restitution from Defendants Minger, Killinger and Trester. Pursuant to its authority under the restitution statutes, the Court set Trustcorp’s and Price Hill Will’s restitution demands for a hearing before Judge Hogan. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 3664(d)(5), (d)(6) 5 ; doc. # 17.

Judge Hogan held an evidentiary hearing on December 1, 2005, continued the hearing on December 8th, and issued his R & R on December 14th. (See generally docs. ## s 24, 26, 28.) Counsel for the above-referenced Defendants, Trustcorp, Price Hill Will, and the United States entered appearances. While the hearing was initially designed to determine the propriety of all the restitution claims referenced above, all but one of these claims-Price Hill Will’s claim against Defendant Trester-were gradually withdrawn as Trust-corp and Price Hill Will reached out-of-court settlements with the other Defendants. 6 (See id. at 1-2.) The two-day *822 proceedings, and Judge Hogan’s R & R, therefore focused on Price Hill Will’s restitution claim against Defendant Trester.

At the hearing and in its pleadings, Price Hill Will presented detailed evidence-including customized expert witness reports and testimony-linking the individual home foreclosures and resultant vacancies triggered by Trester’s mortgage flipping to declines in the resale value of other properties within one-eighth and one-quarter-mile radii of the flipped homes. (See generally doc. # 28 at 2^4; see also doc. #20 and attached exhibits.) Price Hill Will’s experts began by explaining the findings of a large-scale, Chicago-based regression study that attempted to isolate and capture the effect of property foreclosures as expressed through percentage declines in the dollar resale value of neighboring properties. (See, e.g., doc. # 28 at 2-3.) They then applied the percentage declines identified in the Chicago study to local county assessor’s records for all properties located within a one-eighth 7 mile radius of each of a sample of eleven greater Cincinnati homes Price Hill Will’s counsel, Legal Aid of Greater Cincinnati, had identified as foreclosed as a result of the “flipping” scheme. (See Price Hill Will’s Restitution Hearing Exhib. # 35 at 1.) They determined the total property losses associated with each foreclosed home in the representative sample and averaged the results to determine the average property value loss, expressed in dollars, associated with each representative foreclosed property. (Id.) Finally, because Legal Aid knew Trester to be involved with at least eleven foreclosures, Price Hill Will’s experts multiplied the average dollar loss figure by eleven to estimate the total property value losses stemming from Trester’s flipping activities. (Id.) Price Hill Will submits, based' on this analysis, that it is entitled to a restitution award of up to 8 $1,114,751 from Trester. (Id.)

Price Hill Will also described, in its papers and through the testimony of fact witness and State Representative Steve Driehaus, how any restitution ordered by the Court would be used to establish a community rehabilitation fund. (See docs. ## s 25 at 1-2, 28 at 2-3, and 31 at 7-9.) The fund would be administered by the nonprofit Greater Cincinnati Foundation and used to finance projects in both Price Hill and other Cincinnati neighborhoods targeted by the flippers. (See docs. ## 25 at 1-2 and 31 at 8-9.) Significantly, the proposed fund would focus on targeted, high-profile rehabilitation work by nonprofit groups operating pursuant to community development plans, rather than grants to individual homeowners. (Id. at *823 7-9.) Price Hill Will, noting that no individuals have petitioned this Court for restitution in any event, submits that these pooled, targeted investments will be a far more efficient way to ensure that any restitution the Court orders actually “remedies] the harm caused to the community at large.”

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Bluebook (online)
412 F. Supp. 2d 818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bold-ohsd-2011.