United States v. Frank J. Teers

591 F. App'x 824
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 2014
Docket13-15677
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 591 F. App'x 824 (United States v. Frank J. Teers) 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. Frank J. Teers, 591 F. App'x 824 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Frank J. Teers appeals his convictions and 97-month total sentence for one count of conspiracy to commit wire and bank *827 fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343, 1344, 1349, six counts of aiding and abetting wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2, and three counts of aiding and abetting bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1344 and 2. After careful review of the entire record, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm Teers’s convictions and sentences.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case involves defendant Teers and his codefendants’ scheme to obtain multimillion dollar loans from financial institutions under the false representations that one of the defendants controlled a large bond portfolio that could serve as collateral. Through this scheme, the defendants obtained a loan of more than $60 million. We discuss the facts of the scheme below.

A. The Conspirators

Paul Hulse, Sr., was the principal of the Cayman Island entity, G & H Holdings, Ltd. (“G & H”), and also controlled H & H Worldwide Financial Service, Inc. (“H & H”), a Texas corporation formed in January 2004. Defendant Teers, a licensed securities trader at all times relevant to the offense conduct, served as Hulse’s broker and set up various investment accounts for Hulse over the years. Teers worked at various Texas brokerage firms between 1992 and 2007, including at Tri-Star Financial during the time period relevant to this case. Steven P. Mock was a Texas attorney who served as counsel to H & H and Hulse and also as a director of H & H.

B. The Scheme to Defraud Begins

Starting in 2003, Hulse attempted to secure loans from various lenders with the representation that he controlled a large portfolio of bonds that could serve as collateral. Hulse, however, did not in fact own such a bond portfolio during the relevant period. None of these prospective loans went through. More than one of the loans fell through, at least in part, because Hulse never produced verification to the lender that he actually owned or controlled any bond portfolio.

Defendant Téers and Mock made multiple statements to the prospective lenders, including through letters and other documents, supporting Hulse’s false representation that he owned a substantial bond portfolio. For instance, Hulse faxed to one prospective lender seventeen pages of printouts from the Bloomberg system that appeared to include Teers’s name as the original sender. Brokerage firms use the Bloomberg system to obtain information about publicly traded securities, and Teers had access to Bloomberg and used it routinely. The Bloomberg printouts related to eight of the nine bonds listed on a forged brokerage statement earlier sent to the lender by Hulse that purported to show G & H’s ownership of nine bonds worth a total of $28 million.

C.The August 2005 Loan

Richard Crouch was an employee of the Federal Land Bank Association of South Alabama (“the Bank”) in Montgomery, Alabama. The Bank had hired Crouch to head a project called Capital Markets of the South (“CMS”), an unincorporated joint venture of the Bank and four other land banks to make large loans. The documentation for loans that Crouch originated through CMS was all done in the name of the Bank.

In 2005, Hulse contacted Crouch and expressed interest in a line of credit in the $25 to 30 million range to use for acquiring and developing a property in the United States. Crouch traveled to Houston, Texas for a face-to-face meeting with Hulse. At the meeting, Hulse stated that he had a very significant bond portfolio, but he did *828 not give an estimate of its value. Hulse proposed that the bonds would be used to secure the contemplated loan. Crouch admitted to Hulse that he did not have much experience using bonds as collateral for loans or otherwise and that he required “an education from somebody who understood about how [a lender] would use [the bonds].” Hulse stated that Teers was his broker and that he would set up an appointment for Crouch to meet with Teers.

The next day, Crouch met with Hulse and defendant Teers over breakfast. Teers told Crouch that he was Hulse’s ' broker, that he and Hulse had been doing business together for almost ten years, and that he was very familiar with the bond market and how bonds worked. Although Teers did not give a specific dollar value of the bonds, Teers described Hulse’s bond portfolio as “significant.” Crouch understood Teers to be referring to a current bond portfolio. Crouch testified that it mattered to him whether H & H had bonds, and he would not have pursued the loan if Teers had revealed that he did not then manage any money for Hulse.

Hulse and Crouch left the meeting together, and when Crouch asked for specifics as to the size of the bond portfolio, Hulse indicated that it was enough to cover the cost of a Canadian property that the men earlier had discussed, which Crouch knew to be worth $400 million.

Crouch subsequently emailed Hulse to discuss a potential $30 million line of credit. Crouch thanked Hulse and Teers for educating him on Hulse’s business model and plans, and noted that H & H would be the borrower on the loan and would pledge land and government securities as collateral for the loan. Crouch’s proposal stated that the lender did not expect the value of the bonds to fully secure the loan, but that the bonds pledged would need to produce income sufficient to cover the interest payments on the loan. Crouch also requested a detailed description that would help the lender understand the overall nature of Hulse’s financial holdings and businesses. On March 17, Hulse responded by fax, describing how he first started investing in bonds (“March 2005 fax”). Hulse also faxed to Crouch a cash flow sheet indicating that the bond portfolio produced enough interest income to service the debt on the loan.

Crouch told Hulse that he needed Hulse’s attorney to provide independent verification of up to $18 million in AAA-rated securities, including names and terms. On March 28, Hulse sent Crouch an email, attaching Bloomberg descriptions of the bonds. That same day, Mock wrote a letter to Crouch stating that Mock was-the senior trust officer for Hulse and Hulse’s companies and that the transfer of bonds from the trust to H & H was permitted under the conditions of the trust agreements. Crouch subsequently discussed the Bloomberg descriptions with defendant Teers, and Teers told him that they represented the bonds that could be used as collateral. Crouch secured approval for the $30 million line of credit from the CMS banks contingent on $16 million in bonds being pledged as collateral.

Crouch had additional communications with defendant Teers before the Bank loaned the money to Hulse.

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Related

Frank J. Teers v. United States
Eleventh Circuit, 2018
White v. City of Birmingham
96 F. Supp. 3d 1260 (N.D. Alabama, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
591 F. App'x 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-frank-j-teers-ca11-2014.