United States v. Brett Muscatell, Lewis H. Bower, Jr.

42 F.3d 627, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 942, 1995 WL 1544
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 1995
Docket93-3194
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 42 F.3d 627 (United States v. Brett Muscatell, Lewis H. Bower, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Brett Muscatell, Lewis H. Bower, Jr., 42 F.3d 627, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 942, 1995 WL 1544 (11th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

FLOYD R. GIBSON, Senior Circuit Judge:

Brett Museatell and Lewis Bower appeal their convictions for multiple counts of conspiracy, fraud, and money-laundering in connection with a land flip scheme. We AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

In the fall of 1988, Museatell, a Tampa real estate broker, agreed to sell two separate groups of adjacent quadriplex rental units to John Rico, a self-employed maintenance worker. Rico needed financing in order to purchase the quadriplex units. Local lenders, however, required a downpayment of ten to thirty percent of the purchase price before financing such a purchase and limited commercial mortgages to eighty per cent of the lesser of either the appraised value of the property or its purchase price.

In order to obtain financing, Rico, Musea-tell, Bower, a C.P.A., and John Slater, a local mortgage broker, engaged in a land flip scheme to artificially boost the real estate values and thereby increase the amount of financing available. Museatell and Bower agreed for Bower’s corporation, Palladino, to purchase the quadriplex units from the original owners. Palladino then resold them at a substantial markup to Rico through Musea-tell, who acted as the real estate broker. As president of Palladino, Bower purchased each of the first four rental units (the North 15th properties) for $90,000.00 per unit and resold them to Rico for $160,000.00 per unit. Palladino purchased the second group of qua-driplex units (the North 50th properties) for $85,000.00 each, and resold them to Rico for $163,000.00 each.

As a means of boosting the units’ appraisal value to match the inflated purchase prices, Museatell attempted to inflate the units’ rental values by renegotiating new leases in which Palladino would pay tenants cash bonuses in order to offset large rental increases. These bonuses were not disclosed to the appraisers. Museatell and Slater unsuccessfully offered several appraisers $500.00 per unit, double the going rate, as compensation in exchange for favorable appraisals. Musea-tell also attempted to purchase additional documentary stamps on each sale of the second quadriplex units in order to make it appear to subsequent appraisers that Palladi-no had paid more for the property than it actually had.

*629 In order to qualify Rico for financing, Mus-catell instructed Slater to generate falsified income documentation for each purchase. This false income information was submitted on all eight loan applications, which were made to separate federally insured financial institutions in an attempt to conceal Rico’s true income to debt ratio. The applications failed to disclose the fact that Rico was attempting to purchase additional rental units. Each application was submitted, pursuant to Museatell’s instructions, close enough in time to the others so that none of the lenders would learn of the other pending applications.

Museatell, Bower, Slater, and Rico employed a complex buyer rebate scheme as a means of circumventing the downpayment requirement. Rather than disclosing the true source of Rico’s downpayment income, Rico, Museatell, and Bower generated false documentation in order to create the illusion that Rico was funding his own downpayment. After Rico received the required financing, he forwarded the funds to Bower. Bower’s corporation, Palladino, then used these funds to pay the original owners of the rental units, to finance the rental subsidies, and to pay the remainder of Muscatell’s commission. Mus-catell’s commission rates were over twenty-five percent of the inflated total sales price, well in excess of the standard commission rates of five to ten percent for these types of transactions. In total, Rico was able to borrow $1,001,000.00 to purchase eight quadri-plex units from Palladino. Museatell received total real estate commissions of $153,-000.00 above the amount rebated to Rico. Rico eventually defaulted on his mortgage payments, and the lenders foreclosed on the properties.

Museatell and Bower were tried in federal district court under an eleven-count indictment. The government’s witnesses included Allen Steinberg, a residential real estate appraiser who appraised the North 50th properties, and Valerie Jones, a former real estate purchaser involved with Museatell and Bower in similar transactions. Slater and Rico also testified against Museatell and Bower pursuant to plea agreements.

Steinberg’s testimony related to the appraisal of another Tampa quadriplex that took place after the transactions charged in the indictment. Steinberg testified that sometime after he had completed his appraisals of the North 50th properties, Slater offered to hire him to appraise another quadri-plex. Steinberg testified that he refused this second appraisal when his subsequent research revealed that comparable properties did not support the value suggested by Slater. Steinberg also testified that during the course of a May 1989 meeting with Slater and Museatell, Museatell offered Steinberg half of a $20,000.00 note in exchange for favorable appraisals on the aforementioned quadriplex properties.

Valerie Jones testified that in mid-1988, prior to the charged transactions, she had purchased several quadriplex units through a similar land flip scheme involving Bower, Museatell, and Slater. Jones testified that she had formed a corporation, Sonrisa Bay Corporation, at the direction of and under the control of Bower in order to avoid the appearance that they were buying property from themselves. Jones also confessed to submitting fraudulent loan applications at the direction of Museatell, who had instructed her not to list all of her rental properties on her loan application.

John Slater testified that he had represented other buyers in similar rebate schemes and land flip transactions both prior and subsequent to the charged transactions. In each transaction, Bower acted as the president of the flip corporation, either Palladino or Sonrisa Bay, and Museatell acted as the real estate broker. In total, Slater testified that he and Museatell had been involved in eleven similar rebate and land flip transactions for which Museatell had not been indicted.

Slater also testified to several incriminating conversations that took place either before or after the charged transactions. Those conversations included a discussion in which Museatell explained the necessity of not disclosing the rebates to the lending institutions because the rebate would be considered a reduction in the sale price. Slater testified about a conversation that took place *630 after the meeting with Steinberg. In that discussion, Muscatell stated that a new “flip corporation” was needed to create the impression that more people were involved in the transactions because Steinberg had figured out that they were “creating [their] own market for multi-family [rental units].” Slater also testified as to a conversation that took place between Muscatell and other prospective purchasers in which Muscatell explained the use of rent subsidies to artificially boost appraisal values.

The jury convicted Bower of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and conspiracy to make false and fraudulent statements in matters within the jurisdiction of a federal agency, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (1988); wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 F.3d 627, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 942, 1995 WL 1544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-brett-muscatell-lewis-h-bower-jr-ca11-1995.