United States v. Demmler

655 F.3d 451, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17511, 2011 WL 3667642
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2011
Docket09-3660
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 655 F.3d 451 (United States v. Demmler) 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. Demmler, 655 F.3d 451, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17511, 2011 WL 3667642 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Karl Demmler was convicted of obstruction of justice, witness tampering, and conspiracy. He was sentenced to eighty-four months’ imprisonment. On direct appeal, he argues that the district court deprived him of his constitutional right to a fundamentally fair trial and a reliable verdict by refusing to give an entrapment instruction to the jury; the district court plainly erred in defining the corrupt intent required to convict Demmler as “characterized by improper conduct”; and the district court’s eight-four month prison sentence was unreasonable because of “significant procedural error” in the district court’s calculation of the advisory guideline imprisonment range. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm Demmler’s conviction and sentence.

I.

Demmler and Lance Poulsen became friends in Columbus, Ohio, in the mid-1980s. The two men played golf and traveled together, and, in the early 1990s, Demmler served as best man at Poulsen’s wedding. Poulsen owned a small insurance company, and Sherry Gibson was one of his employees. Gibson met Demmler through Poulsen, and the three became friends.

In 1991, Poulsen formed NCFE, a company focused on financing health-care providers by securitizing and pooling their accounts receivable. Sherry Gibson ascended the ranks of NCFE and ultimately became Vice-President of Compliance. By 1998, a senior advisor of Chase JP Morgan bank, which had become a part owner of NCFE, was recommending changes in NCFE’s accounting department, including the removal of Gibson. Gibson testified that, after NCFE made the recommended changes, she felt Poul *454 sen was shifting the blame to her for certain accounting discrepancies.

Ultimately fraud, including the accounting discrepancies, ended NCFE’s operations. The FBI searched the company, a crisis management team took over, and NCFE declared bankruptcy. Shortly afterwards, Gibson learned she was the target of an FBI and SEC investigation into the company. In April 2003, Gibson pled guilty to conspiracy to commit a massive securities fraud that had caused over two billion dollars in losses to clients and investors. Gibson admitted that “the entire company worked on defrauding investors.” Her plea agreement required her to meet with prosecutors and truthfully answer all questions regarding NCFE. The district court accepted Gibson’s plea, granted the government’s motion to reduce her sentence in light of her cooperation, and sentenced Gibson to four years’ imprisonment beginning in October 2004. Gibson also had to pay $420,000 in restitution.

Demmler and Gibson continued their friendship. They corresponded while Gibson was in prison, and Demmler sent her money and came to visit her. Gibson testified that she was surprised to hear from Demmler so often and that she was unsure of Demmler’s motives. However, because the two had a long-standing friendship, which included Demmler’s sending Gibson a birthday card for eighteen straight years, the conduct was not entirely surprising.

While Gibson was in prison, Demmler told her during his first visit, in July 2006, that she could get her sentence overturned, a prospect of which Gibson later said she was wary. In January 2007, shortly before Gibson finished her prison sentence, Demmler wrote her a letter in which he mentioned that Poulsen had “a $3 billion lawsuit against Chase Bank” and that “there is still hope you can get your assets back.” Gibson wrote back and expressed her desire to find “a way to reclaim [her] assets without nullifying, voiding or in any way imperiling [her] plea agreement.”

After being released from prison, Gibson asked Demmler for assistance in finding a place to live. Then, on June 19, 2007, Gibson thought of Demmler when driving by their favorite restaurant. She called him, and he proposed that they meet for dinner that evening.

At dinner, Demmler began by saying, “Business first.” He mentioned having met with Poulsen and told Gibson that Poulsen would like to make her “whole” if her testimony as a material witness in Poulsen’s trial would help Poulsen “win his case.” Demmler suggested that Gibson would receive one or two million dollars if she agreed. He promised to be in touch with Poulsen soon and recommended that he and Gibson meet weekly.

Gibson believed that Demmler was offering her a bribe in exchange for favorable testimony. For this reason, on June 20 Gibson contacted the FBI. From that point on, Gibson followed the instructions of federal investigators when meeting or corresponding with Demmler. Gibson’s meetings and phone conversations with Demmler were recorded.

In the conversations between Demmler and Gibson, Demmler told Gibson that Poulsen wanted to help her so that he might “win his case,” that Gibson should “not remember” what had happened, that Gibson should watch the movie The Godfather for examples of how she should testify, that Demmler would manage funds for Gibson in “an existing account outside of the country” for a ten-percent fee, that she should “prevaricate,” and that he understood if she needed “to have some moolah to not remember.” Demmler also asked Gibson to email him with details of testimony she could alter. He cautioned Gib *455 son not to put her name on the email, and he suggested she explicitly ask Poulsen for $25,000. He promised Gibson, “whatever you get, it’s not going to be trackable.” But then he noted that if anyone found out about the arrangement, “[W]e’d all be in ... a big bag of shit.”

The FBI also issued subpoenas for Demmler’s phone records, which indicated that Demmler and Poulsen had spoken more than thirty times between January and June of 2007. The FBI then obtained a pen register on Demmler’s cellular phone. On August 6, 2007, Special Agent Jeffrey Williams of the FBI submitted an affidavit in support of the application for the interception of wire communications from Demmler’s cellular phone. The wiretap was authorized on that same day. The recorded conversations provided the following evidence: discussions between Poulsen and Demmler about getting Gibson a new attorney who was preapproved by Poulsen; multiple conversations between Poulsen and Demmler and Demmler and Gibson about how Gibson would be paid; instructions on how Gibson should answer prosecutors’ questions and how she should testify; Demmler’s statement to Poulsen that he should pay Gibson with funds that were not trackable and that he was pleased that Gibson, in a few years, “went from a hostile witness to one that can be ... worked”; and Poulsen’s and Demmler’s concerns about discussing Gibson over the phone.

Demmler took questionable actions too. The day he was arrested, Demmler was at the airport on the way to Venezuela. He had just handed Gibson a blank check drawn on the account of “Paragon Legal Services” with the promise that Poulsen would transfer funds into the account once Gibson had contacted one of three lawyers whose names she had been given.

Demmler and Poulsen were tried together. At trial, the jury heard all of the evidence noted above. Poulsen testified on his own behalf and also presented the testimony of several attorneys. Demmler did not present evidence. His argument, however, was that he did not try to bribe Gibson; rather, he wanted to help her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
655 F.3d 451, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17511, 2011 WL 3667642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-demmler-ca6-2011.