United States v. Clifford Blount

339 F.2d 331
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1965
Docket14558
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 339 F.2d 331 (United States v. Clifford Blount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Clifford Blount, 339 F.2d 331 (7th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit Judge.

Clifford Blount, defendant, has appealed from a judgment of conviction on the verdicts of a jury and concurrent prison sentences on each of 14 counts of an indictment. Specific violations of 26 U.S. C.A. § 7206(2) were alleged in said counts.

Defendant procured the lawyer who represented him at the trial in the district court.

There is no contention now made that there is not sufficient evidence in the record to support the verdicts and judgment below.

The evidence shows that defendant purported to act through an “organization” called the “Wonder Movement”. As income taxpayers testified for the government, several stated that at defendant’s urging they signed a Wonder Movement application. Defendant him *332 self described these people as very illiterate. He impressed upon them how to take deductions for contributions to charities, interest payments, sales tax, etc.

Typical of the testimony of the taxpayer witnesses was that of Raymond Bolden, 1 who said that on March 30, 1962 he went to a place in Chicago and saw defendant there. It was the address of the Wonder Movement, Incorporated. Bolden talked to him about preparing his 1961 income tax return. Among other things, defendant asked if Bolden wanted to get refunds and, if so, to bring in prior returns and he would file amended returns for him. He then began to tell Bolden about the Wonder Movement and produced an application form, which Bolden filled in. Defendant told him that this organization was powerful and was designed to combat the white man. 2

Bolden then told defendant that he had a girl friend, off and on, whereupon defendant stated she was married to him if he cared for her, and that a “marriage certificate was a white man’s law”. Defendant prepared Bolden’s tax return and therein indicated that Bolden was married. Then, according to Bolden, defendant discussed income tax deductions. In response to a query, Bolden gave defendant the name of a Dr. Wilson but said that he did not see him very often. Defendant said “Don’t tell me that, tell me you saw him yesterday”. Asked if he drank whiskey, Bolden said he did from time to time and defendant said that could be a medical deduction because “doctors prescribe it all the time”.

The witness testified that defendant said that “some people’s returns that he had prepared had been called in by the Internal Revenue Service and he was instructing me, in the event that it should happen to me, not to give the Internal Revenue Service any information whatsoever, to tell them that he was my accountant and to turn the matter over to him”. f

Before leaving defendant, Bolden signed a power of attorney and an agreement to allow defendant to get Bolden’s tax refund. 3 During this interview Bolden gave defendant a W-2 form which was shown to Bolden at the trial, but he said that it was different because the address was scratched out and in its place was written “c/o Wonder Movement Inc. 325 E. 58th St”.

Bolden categorically denied telling defendant that he was married, that he had a daughter named Barbara, that he gave $104 to a church, or that he gave all charities $75 and had any conversation with defendant about an automobile, telling defendant that he had auto tags in the amount of $52 or a gas tax in the amount of $85, or that he had eye glasses in the amount of $37.50, or that he *333 had been treated by a Dr. Rodgers or had paid Dr. Rodgers $75 for medical expense, or that he had paid $100 for union dues, or $125 on uniforms and upkeep. However, the return as prepared by defendant represented these to be facts.

In nearly every instance, each taxpayer paid defendant for preparing his tax return. In no instance did any of 15 such government witnesses receive a refund check from defendant.

1. What we have pointed out in the evidence is sufficient to clearly indicate that defendant relied upon the illiteracy of negro taxpayer witnesses and their pride of race in perpetrating a scheme to defraud any such persons who went to him confidently expecting honest treatment. He took advantage of them for his own personal gain. What he called the Wonder Movement was actually an opiate which might deaden whatever suspicions any of these victims might have entertained in regard to the propriety of what defendant was doing. Through the means which he employed he was able to secure a victim’s signature on a form which enabled him to secure refund checks from the government arising out of the fraudulent preparation and filing of the respective tax returns.

We hold that the evidence supports the verdicts finding defendant guilty under 26 U.S.C.A. § 7206(2) which reads:

“Any person who— * * *
“(2) * * * Willfully aids or
assists in, or procures, counsels, or advises the preparation or presentation under, or in connection with any matter arising under, the internal revenue laws, of a return, affidavit, claim, or other document, which is fraudulent or is false as to any material matter, whether or not such falsity or fraud is with the knowledge or consent of the person authorized or required to present such return, affidavit, claim, or document ;
shall be guilty * *

2. Defendant contends that a mistrial should have been declared, because, his counsel say, he was tried before an all-white jury when the prosecution knowingly elicited testimony over objection that defendant, a negro, belonged to the Wonder Movement, whose purpose was to combat the white man.

There was evidence from which the jury could have found that defendant’s use of the Wonder Movement was to prey upon, if not actually to create in the minds of his victims, a prejudice against members of the white race. Defendant’s reference to the requirement of a marriage certificate, as Bolden testified, was that it was a “white man’s law”, thus indicating a racial prejudice which is consistent with his expressed views as to the purpose of the Wonder Movement. This prejudice was a vehicle used by defendant in perpetrating upon his victims a nefarious scheme. While defendant, testifying in his own behalf, on direct examination by his counsel, denied that he had ever been a member of such an organization, we cannot say that there was insufficient evidence to justify the court’s denial of a mistrial. Although there is no proof in the record that the jury was composed exclusively of white persons, we do not think that its racial composition is germane to its consideration of the evidence in the record as to the method and persuasion used by defendant in carrying out his operations.

3. The court refused to give an instruction tendered by defendant which reads:

“You have heard the testimony from the witness Raymond Bolden that the defendant, Clifford Blount, has on a prior occasion stated that he was a part of an organization which has as one of its purposes, combating the vicious beast, i. e. the white men.

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339 F.2d 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-clifford-blount-ca7-1965.