United States v. Gregory Claude Brown

393 F. App'x 686
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2010
Docket08-16912
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 393 F. App'x 686 (United States v. Gregory Claude Brown) 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. Gregory Claude Brown, 393 F. App'x 686 (11th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Defendant-appellant Gregory Claude Brown (“Brown”) appeals his conviction and sentence for conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, failure to timely file income tax returns, and tax evasion. He argues that the district court erred by allowing him to represent himself, improperly commenting on his right to represent himself, admitting evidence of prior convictions and bad acts, and imposing the statutory maximum sentence. We find that the district court did not err and AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

Brown moved to Florida in the late 1990s and became involved with Emy Del-monaco (“Delmonaco”). R5 at 158-60. They had a daughter in 2001. R5 at 166; R18 at 2768-69. Brown sold mobile homes, opened a nightclub, and, eventually, decided to acquire, renovate, and resell *688 houses. R5 at 159-62; R18 at 2768-70. Because of his limited resources, he conducted transactions in Delmonaco’s name, using her credit and her bank accounts, and concocted false income statements and assets, misrepresenting their residential intentions and financial liabilities. R5 at 168, 172, 178-79, 185-89, 193-98, 215, 222-25, 228-31, 236-41, 246-47; R18 at 2770-71. Delmonaco acknowledged that Brown completed at least one mortgage application and misrepresented her employer, her position at the employer, the balance in her bank account, additional income from rents, an employer letter and bonus, and her annual earnings as indicated on a W-2 form. R5 at 193-98. Through these endeavors, he procured financing, and, during 2000-01, purchased five residential tracts based upon fraudulent mortgage applications. R5 at 173; R18 at 2770-73. The mortgages were structured with seller’s concessions for repairs on the distressed homes so that Brown and Delmo-naco received cash back at the closings. R5 at 170, 208-09. They used the cash that they received not only for the needed repairs but also for living expenses and to purchase additional properties. Id. at 169, 176-77, 185-86, 194, 214, 222-23. After Brown and Delmonaco separated in 2002, Delmonaco obtained a court order for $1,000 per month child support. Id. at 178-79; R6 at 291-92. Brown satisfied that and other obligations from his real estate transaction proceeds and profits but filed no income tax returns. R18 at 2665.

Through his real estate transactions, Brown met Nick DeAngelis (“DeAngelis”), who operated a company named “Giasi” and also engaged in fraud and tax evasion. Id. at 2776-80. In 2003, Brown established Global Dynamics Consulting (“GDC”) and also began working for Giasi. R5 at 256. At Giasi, he received a salary and sales commissions but did not report these earning to the IRS. R2 at 1954-56; R5 at 256.

DeAngelis’ and Brown’s activities were investigated by federal agents. Brown was charged with knowingly and willfully making a false statement on a loan application and creating false earning statements and W-2 wage and tax statements for Delmonaco. R6 at 338-39. He negotiated a guilty plea and his cooperation against DeAngelis was made known to the district judge. R19 at 2966-68. Brown testified against DeAngelis in three separate proceedings, and was subsequently sentenced to time served, three years supervised release, and 100 hours of community service. R6 at 339, 366-67; R19 at 2958, 2968. After Brown, however, failed to file his delinquent tax returns, actively concealed his business activities from his probation officer, Janet Guthrie (“Guthrie”), and falsely claimed to have completed his community service, his supervised release was revoked. R10 at 1214-25; Rll at 1237-1306; R19 at 2961-62.

Following his release from custody, Brown began a number of speculative ventures using his own funds and funds he obtained from business acquaintances, family, and friends: stock investments, casino ownership, acquiring and reselling raw diamonds, and land purchases. Rll at 1444-45; R14 at 1911; R18 at 2693, 2834-35, 2856-57; R19 at 2899.

Brown became involved with Monica Martinez (“Martinez”) and they had a daughter in 2004. R6 at 296. That same year, Brown and Martinez leased with an option to purchase property at 326 Kenil-worth Boulevard, West Palm Beach, Florida (“Kenilworth”). Id. at 463-64, 472-74. After taking possession, however, Brown failed to make rental payments and began extensive renovations contrary to the rental agreement and without the landlord’s permission. Id. at 474-80. To avoid evic *689 tion for these acts, Brown exercised his option to purchase and acquired the property in April 2004 with $329,000 in mortgage financing provided by his landlord. Id. at 484-90.

Brown failed to make his mortgage payments and foreclosure proceedings commended in July 2004. Id. at 492. To avoid foreclosure, Brown sold the property to Martinez for $550,000. Id. at 496, 498-500. Martinez’s application for mortgage financing was submitted by mortgage broker Kimball Johnson. R9 at 819-22. In the application, Martinez falsely stated that she was the owner of GDC, and had worked for GDC for two years earning $20,000 per month. Id. at 835-36, 1016. Brown’s accountant, Terry Forman, provided false verification for Martinez’s employment. Id. at 1016. Brown composed a letter purportedly from a contractor inaccurately detailing improvements to the property to justify the increase in value. R7 at 686-88. The application was granted by an out-of-state lender who wire transferred the proceeds to Martinez’s account. 1 R9 at 835-36.

Brown next purchased a residence at 186 Yale Circle, Lake Worth, Florida (“Yale”). R10 at 1068-69. He initially portrayed the buyer as his stepfather who was mis-identified as the well-paid owner of GDC. Id. at 1056, 1059-61. Before the closing, however, Brown substituted himself as the buyer and, working with mortgage broker Brent Woodson (“Woodson”), submitted a request for $430,000 for mortgage financing. Id. at 1079. Brown falsely claimed that he had been employed for ten years by GDC where he received a significant salary, and that the property, which was uninhabitable at that time, would be his primary residence. Id. at 1079-80; R19 at 2914. He submitted verification of long-term rental payments made to Martinez, omitted his child support payments from his application, and detailed $60,000 due to contractor Tony Piedra for work done on the property. 2 Id. at 2916. This loan was financed by an out-of-state wire transfer. 3

During the spring of 2005, Brown bought three more properties: 311 Greenwood Drive, West Palm Beach, Florida (“Greenwood”); 2409 Zeder Ave., Delray Beach, Florida (“Zeder”); and 245 Ford-ham Drive, Lake Worth, Florida (“Ford-ham”). Delmonaco served as a real estate agent on all three properties, 4 Woodson handled the mortgage applications for the Greenwood and Zeder properties, and Brown’s half-brother, Joseph F. Farmer (“Farmer”), handled the Fordham mortgage application. R6 at 299-300, 303-16, 318, 320-21, 323-24, 327, 328-36; R10 at *690

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Related

Brown v. United States
180 L. Ed. 2d 257 (Supreme Court, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
393 F. App'x 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gregory-claude-brown-ca11-2010.