United States v. Brian Black

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 2020
Docket19-5374
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Brian Black (United States v. Brian Black) 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. Brian Black, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0359n.06

Nos. 19-5088/5374

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jun 18, 2020 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF BRIAN BLACK, ) TENNESSEE Defendant-Appellant. ) )

BEFORE: MERRITT, MOORE, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. Brian Black served as the trustee for the Oleen Fewell Estate

Trust, a trust that Oleen Fewell created to ensure that her daughter would have enough money after

Fewell died. In 2012 the Trust’s bank account totaled $204,894.49. Two years later it totaled

$6.99. Where did the money go? The government alleged that Black used the Trust’s money to

cover his personal expenses, including expenses for his go-karting and hunting hobbies. A jury

convicted Black of mail and wire fraud. After imposing a 57-month sentence, the district court

ordered him to repay $150,422.53 in restitution. Black now challenges the sufficiency of the evi-

dence for his fraud convictions, and argues that the district court erred in choosing the restitution

amount. Finding no error, we affirm. Nos. 19-5088/5374, United States v. Black

I

Given the jury verdict against Black, we recount the facts in the light most favorable to the

government. See, e.g., United States v. Brown, 732 F.3d 569, 576 (6th Cir. 2013).

Oleen Fewell died in 1996. Fewell’s will created a trust for the benefit of her middle-aged

daughter, Sharon Conner. According to her brother, Sharon was “terrible with money.” The Trust

documents thus instructed the trustee to give Sharon a monthly stipend and to use its assets to

maintain the Trust’s property (including the farmhouse in which Sharon lived and some surround-

ing farmland in western Tennessee). Fewell initially named her nephew, Gerald Fewell Harber,

to serve as trustee. He did so until his 2003 death. Before Fewell died, she had asked her great-

nephew Lionel Hughes, a local insurance agent, to serve as a substitute trustee once Harber could

no longer serve in that role. Hughes took over in 2003.

When Fewell died, her roughly $300,000 estate consisted mostly of the 88-acre farm. Thir-

teen years later, the Trust had run out of cash. Hughes began loaning money to the Trust to pay

for Sharon’s monthly expenses, which totaled about $1,500 a month. He believed that he had the

discretionary power to sell the farmland and replenish the Trust’s cash, but petitioned the probate

court for advice. The court agreed. Hughes sold the farmland at a public auction for around

$325,000. The buyers paid a $52,000 down payment to the Trust, and promised to pay the remain-

der with interest over ten years. Hughes repaid himself the money he had loaned the Trust and

petitioned the probate court to withdraw as trustee, a role he found stressful.

In 2010 the probate court appointed Brian Black to replace Hughes as the trustee. Black

was good friends with Sharon (and her husband Tommy and son Chris). The probate court re-

quired Black to post a $310,000 bond. Without this bond, Black could not serve as trustee or

2 Nos. 19-5088/5374, United States v. Black

access the Trust’s money. Black purchased this bond from a Michigan insurance company through

Hughes’s local insurance agency and paid an annual premium to renew it each year.

When Black took over, the Trust was still largely illiquid. It held the farmhouse and a note

receivable from the farmland sale, but had only about $17,000 in cash. Things changed two years

later. In February 2012, the farmland’s buyers paid the Trust the remaining $200,000 they owed

in a lump sum. When that payment arrived, the Trust held $204,894.49 in its bank account. By

July 2014, the account had dwindled to $6.99. This rapid spending caught the bank’s attention.

Bank officials noticed that Black had written many checks to himself rather than to merchants,

leading them to suspect that he was mishandling the Trust’s money. The bank reported Black to

the authorities.

A postal inspector employed by the U.S. Postal Service and Jack Dietz, a contract postal

inspector employed by a private company, began to investigate Black’s conduct as trustee. After

interviewing witnesses (including Sharon), reviewing bank records belonging to the Trust and to

Black, and subpoenaing the records that Hughes and Black had kept in their successive tenures as

trustee, the postal inspectors confirmed the bank officials’ suspicions. The inspectors concluded

that Black had embezzled $178,372.53 from the Trust.

Some of the Trust’s money went to improve the finances of Black and his friends. Black,

for example, spent $5,500 to pay off his personal debts: $2,800 to a maxed-out American Express

card and $2,700 to Morgan & Pottinger, a debt-collection firm collecting an old debt. Black also

used over $18,000 of the Trust’s money to provide interest-free loans to his friends, only $10,500

of which was ever repaid. And Black frequently wrote checks from the Trust’s account to himself

and either cashed them or deposited them in his own checking account.

3 Nos. 19-5088/5374, United States v. Black

Some of the Trust’s money went to improve Black’s home. Black spent nearly $9,000 to

purchase what the seller described as a “top of the line” storage building and some “very nice”

backyard furniture. He spent over $1,000 for a Texas Elite meat smoker. And he spent nearly

$11,000 on a tractor with a lawnmower attachment. (Black later sold this piece of equipment for

$11,000 but deposited the proceeds in his own bank account rather than in the Trust’s account.)

Black also used the Trust’s money to, among other things, install a new air conditioner at his home

(nearly $3,000), fertilize his lawn ($350), and buy a high-end Rainbow vacuum ($2,000).

But most of the Trust’s money went toward Black’s hobbies. A St. Louis Cardinals fan,

Black spent nearly $6,000 to attend a “fantasy camp” and receive instructions from former players.

Black was also an avid hunter and member of a hunting club. He bought a range of hunting-related

items. These included: (1) two shotguns and a rifle (around $900), (2) three all-terrain vehicles

and an amphibious vehicle ($5,100, at least $2,500, $3,845, and $4,000) for the club’s members

to ride between hunting locations, and (3) a large trackhoe excavator ($17,000) to clear paths at

the club.

After becoming trustee Black also developed an interest in go-kart racing. He used $13,500

from the Trust to purchase two go-karts, a trailer, and some parts and paraphernalia from a father-

and-son pair in Illinois. To fund the hobby, the son had sold go-kart parts to other racers under

the business name Bang Bang Kart Supply. Once Black purchased this “business,” he opened and

controlled a bank account using the Bang Bang Kart Supply name. And he began racing go-karts

and operating a similar business selling go-kart parts under that name. From then until the Trust

ran out of money, Black used its funds to subsidize his go-karting, ultimately transferring $74,528

from the Trust account to his Bang Bang Kart Supply account. Besides those transfers, Black also

used the Trust’s money to buy two more go-karts ($1,000) and another trailer ($5,600).

4 Nos. 19-5088/5374, United States v. Black

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