United States v. Conteh

234 F. App'x 374
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 2007
Docket05-3715
StatusUnpublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 234 F. App'x 374 (United States v. Conteh) 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. Conteh, 234 F. App'x 374 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

RICHARD MILLS, District Judge.

I. BACKGROUND

On December 18, 2003, a Federal Grand Jury returned a 23-count Second Superseding Indictment charging Appellants Issa Conteh, Michael Yanni, Keith Edward Walker, and others with conspiracy to commit money laundering, uttering and possessing counterfeit securities, and bank fraud. They pled not guilty to all counts.

A jury trial commenced on February 2, 2004. The next day, Walker moved to represent himself. The district court denied the motion as untimely. Trial then resumed.

The Government called a total of 46 witnesses. The evidence showed that Con-teh, Yanni (a/k/a “Mitch Cooper”), and Walker were part of a Columbus, Ohio-based check counterfeiting ring that had ties to New York, New York and Portland, Oregon. Conteh obtained counterfeit checks from an unidentified source and had the checks delivered to him in Ohio. On at least one occasion, Yanni picked up a bag of checks while in New York and brought them to Conteh in Ohio. Checks were transported from Ohio to Indianapolis, Indiana and Wheeling, West Virginia in order to be cashed. The fake checks appeared genuine, having routing and ac *379 count information which corresponded to real companies.

Conteh organized the scheme and directed its participants. Yanni and Walker were “middlemen” who recruited college-age men and women to deposit bogus checks and withdraw the proceeds. The people who deposited the bad checks and withdrew the proceeds were called “runners”. Yanni and Walker gave the names of the runners to Conteh and Conteh created counterfeit checks made payable to the runners. The runners included James Kombe, Melanie Micah Bowles, Akeshia Monet Jacobs, Sharmila Isaiah, Haniyyah I. Sabir, Shannon D. Weikert, Lemoyne Jackson, Shauna Philabaum, and Nath Chhuom. They often received a portion of the proceeds they withdrew. The runners’ numerous withdrawals were timed to avoid detection of the scheme.

Witnesses testified that the runners presented bogus checks to financial institutions as if the checks were genuine. The runners routinely withdrew tens of thousands of dollars in this manner. Runner James Kombe withdrew $27,968 via a bogus check from Vascular Solutions and deposited the money into his personal account—at Conteh’s direction—knowing that Vascular Solutions owed him no money. Kombe had been introduced to Con-teh by Yanni in 2000. Kombe testified that Yanni took him to Conteh’s home where Conteh provided directions about the check scheme. Another runner, Nath Chuuom, testified that Yanni and Walker jointly recruited her into the scheme, promising her money if she deposited and cashed checks and then remitted the proceeds.

Yet another runner, Shauna Philabaum, was brought into the scheme by “Mitch Cooper”, an alias used by Yanni. Yanni had a sexual relationship with Philabaum and promised to help her when she told him that she was pregnant and concerned about her finances. Yanni gave Philabaum a bogus corporate cheek made payable to her for $54,060.80. Philabaum deposited the check. When the bank advised her it was counterfeit, she phoned Yanni. She explained what happened and Yanni hung up on her. Philabaum subsequently decided to terminate her pregnancy. The district court prohibited Yanni from cross-examining Philabaum on this issue and the matter of her intimate relationships with other individuals.

After the district court denied Conteh’s motion for a continuance in order to further prepare a cross-examination of witness Mahamadou Tunkara, Tunkara testified. A Gambian who lived in the United States since 1988, Tunkara recounted how he knew Conteh in Gambia and how Con-teh told him about the money he got by depositing bogus checks. Tunkara was in New York at the time of the conversation, but Conteh and Conteh’s brother convinced him to move to Denver, Colorado to assist in their scheme. Tunkara arrived in Denver in 1998. The Conteh brothers provided him with false identification and an apartment. Conteh told Tunkara to open a bank account, directed him to deposit a check for about $20,000, and had him withdraw thousands of dollars via an automatic teller machine. The proceeds from these transactions went to Conteh and Conteh carried the money to New York. Conteh informed Tunkara that a similar scheme existed in Portland and that he had plans to expand the operation to other states. Tunkara testified that he pled guilty to bank fraud, received a prison sentence of time served, completed his probation, and paid his restitution.

Conteh’s attorney objected to Tunkara’s testimony about the Colorado scheme, but the district court admitted it pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b). The *380 court issued a limiting instruction explaining that Tunkara’s testimony about Con-teh’s “other acts” was to be considered only with respect to Conteh’s intent. Con-teh’s attorney assumed that law enforcement officers must have made notes or reports about Tunkara’s criminal activities and moved for the production of documentary evidence under the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500 et seq., after Tunkara’s direct examination. The Government stated that it had no Jencks Act materials to disclose and the district court denied Con-teh’s motion.

Another witness, Sharmila Isaiah, testified that a bank investigator contacted her and asked her to write a letter of explanation for a counterfeit check she cashed. The letter, which was shown to the jury on an overhead projector, explained that Yan-ni asked her to deposit the check in her account; that Ikenna Myers called her and told her to write him and Yanni checks from the credited funds; that Myers and Yanni came to Indianapolis to cash the checks; that Myers later told her to withdraw the remaining funds in $5,000 increments; and that Myers and Yanni returned to Indianapolis to pick up the cash. Because the district court ultimately found Isaiah was not a co-conspirator, the letter could not be admitted under Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E). The court struck the letter from the record and instructed the jury to disregard it.

Witness Lemoyne Jackson testified that Walker introduced him to Conteh and that Conteh promised to pay him $500 to cash checks. Walker was with Jackson when Conteh gave Jackson a $24,869.10 check that Jackson thought was “kind of fishy.” Walker traveled with Jackson from Columbus to Wheeling to cash the check. When Jackson cashed it, he gave $24,000.00 to Walker so Walker could deliver the money to Conteh.

During closing arguments, the Government—when recounting how Yanni hung up the phone on Philabaum as she explained that the bank told her the $54,000 check he gave her was bogus—characterized Yanni’s reaction as “laughing in [Phi-labaumj’s face”. Subsequently, Yanni’s attorney argued that Philabaum was not credible because she was the sort of person who sought money from her boyfriend and mother to pay for her abortion. The Government, in its rebuttal, said:

And somehow, we are to excuse Yanni’s conduct because the word abortion comes into this courtroom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 F. App'x 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-conteh-ca6-2007.