United States v. James Carter

412 F.3d 864, 2005 WL 1558009
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 5, 2005
Docket04-1495
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 412 F.3d 864 (United States v. James Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. James Carter, 412 F.3d 864, 2005 WL 1558009 (8th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

James Carter appeals from the sentence imposed on him after he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 371 (2000), and eleven counts of wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (2000), in connection with home mortgage loans made through Carter’s loan brokerage business. The loans were based on falsified applications that overstated the value of the homes. Carter’s sentence of 18 months’ imprisonment, four years’ supervised release, and restitution of $181,774.93 payable to the lenders, was based on the district court’s assessment of the loss from the fraud. We affirm the sentence of imprisonment but remand for further consideration of the restitution order.

We take the facts from the indictment to which Carter pleaded guilty. Carter was in the loan brokerage business in Little Rock. From February 2000 to October 2001, Carter and Kerrie Joiner falsified documentation on eleven loans to obtain greater loans than the lender would have otherwise lent on the homes being financed. Carter sent falsified documentation to the lenders stating a sales price higher than the true sales price. Carter used false gift letters, purporting to show that the borrower had been given money from relatives or friends for the down payment; sham second mortgages; and false information on HUD-1 statements to obtain the inflated loans. The lenders would wire the money to fund the loan to Beach Abstract and Guaranty Company, the closing and title company. Joiner, who was the escrow agent for Beach Abstract, helped Carter by issuing checks from Beach Abstract payable to entities controlled by Carter, Circle CM Enterprises Ltd. Co. or River City Contracting. Carter would negotiate the checks. Some of the proceeds were used to make the down payment and pay closing costs, but the rest of the money Carter and Joiner kept.

Carter and Joiner were indicted together. Joiner entered an agreement with the government agreeing to be liable for restitution in the amount of $80,429. Carter pleaded guilty without benefit of a plea agreement.

At the sentencing hearing, Carter testified that the loans in question were sub-prime loans because the borrowers had low credit rating scores. The lenders required a down payment before they would lend money on the house, and they were generally not willing to lend more than 80 to 85% of the house’s value. The FBI agent who investigated the case, Drew McCandless, testified that Carter would falsify the house sale contract in order to apply to the lenders for a loan amount greater than the sales price agreed to by the parties. The lender would then lend more money than the 80 or 85% of the sales price that it intended to lend. The money would be wired to Beach Abstract before the closing. Joiner would draw a check on Beach Abstract’s account payable to Carter’s company, Circle CM, and in one case, River City Contracting. Carter would deposit the cheek at Pinnacle Bank, then obtain a cashier’s check to cover the down payment and closing costs. Carter would also keep some of the money himself and give some to Kerrie Joiner. Carter testified that he had used some of the money given to Circle CM to do repairs on the houses, but Agent McCandless testified that he did not know of any instance of Carter repairing a house, although he knew of one case where Carter promised to do repairs, but did not do them.

*867 The government submitted an exhibit showing that the total amount of checks received by Circle CM was $149,288.43 and the total fees received by Carter as broker on the loans was $32,486.50. Based on the sum of these numbers, the government contended that Carter’s total gain, and hence the total loss amount, was $181,774.93. Carter contended that some of the moneys paid to Circle CM were used to pay down payments and other costs for the borrowers and some of the fees were paid to the lenders, not retained by Carter. The government’s witness, Agent McCandless, stated that he did not know whether any of the mortgages had been foreclosed:

Q: So these mortgages are actually being paid?
A: I don’t know about that. I know there’s a couple of them that were behind when I talked to them.
Q: Do you have any documentation showing what loss these banks suffered on these loans?
A: No.
Q: So you just did your own calculations, you talked to the banks, but you don’t have anything showing that they lost any money?
A: Right. No loans that I know of have been foreclosed at this point.

Carter was sentenced under U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1 (2000), which had been deleted from the Sentencing Guidelines by the time of sentencing, see U.S.S.GApp. C vol. II amendment 617 (effective Nov. 1, 2001), but which the parties agree is applicable, presumably to avoid an ex post facto problem. See U.S.S.G. § 1B1.11 (2004) (Guidelines manual in effect on date of sentencing used unless it would violate the ex post facto clause; in that case, earlier version of manual should be used in its entirety).

The presentence report arrived at a total offense level of 14, by adding the base offense level of six from § 2F1.1; six levels as a specific offense characteristic resulting from the loss of $80,429 (the amount the government had stipulated to in Joiner’s case); a two-level enhancement for more than minimal planning; another two-level enhancement for role in the offense; and a two-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The court found that the amount of loss was $181,774.93, not the $80,429 listed in the presentence report:

After carefully considering the totality of the circumstances involved in this matter, the Court finds-and this is central-that Mr. James Carter was the moving force in this alleged scheme. He was the leader and the director. And the Court finds that the government has established by a preponderance of the evidence that the total loss is in the neighborhood of $181,774.93. And given the circumstances, the Court is persuaded that this is a reasonable estimate of the loss since the amount paid to the defendant company was used to continue the fraud, and any amount paid to him directly, through closing, to which he had no lawful claim for services, as testified to by the FBI agent, services allegedly rendered would also be considered as fraudulent.

By finding a loss amount of $181,774.93 instead of the $80,429 in the presentence report, the court raised the offense level to 15. The resulting sentencing range was from 18 to 24 months. The court sentenced Carter to 18 months, with a term of supervised release of four years.

The court asked for further briefing on the issue of whether the sentence should include an order of restitution, and if so, whether it should be in the amount of $181,774.93 or in the $80,429 amount for which Joiner was assessed. The court *868

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Bluebook (online)
412 F.3d 864, 2005 WL 1558009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-james-carter-ca8-2005.