United States v. Jerry Pardue

134 F.3d 1316, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 1046, 1998 WL 25694
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 1998
Docket97-1730
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 134 F.3d 1316 (United States v. Jerry Pardue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Jerry Pardue, 134 F.3d 1316, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 1046, 1998 WL 25694 (7th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge.

On December 20, 1996, a jury found Jerry Pardue guilty of embezzlement and misapplication of bank funds. He was sentenced to 18 years imprisonment and ordered to pay $10,000 restitution. The only thing at all remarkable in the case is that the events occurred in 1986 and the indictment was returned almost 10 years later, just before the expiration of the statute of limitations. Predictably, Pardue contends that the indictment should have been dismissed because of prejudicial preindictment delay.

Pardue was indicted with Eldon Schoch, the president of the Mendon State Bank, and Eldon’s brother Donald Schoch, the chairman of the bank’s holding company. Both of the Schochs entered guilty pleas and testified at Pardue’s trial.

Pardue was the chairman of Choice 2000, a company which presented itself to the bank as a business established to sell real estate throughout the country. When Choice 2000 began to receive loans from the Mendon State Bank, Pardue was aware that the bank had already reached its lending limit. Nevertheless, the company obtained a loan to purchase a site with the unlikely name of Lake Little Tweet. Choice 2000 did not generate sufficient funds to avoid a negative checking account balance from January 1986 until the bank closed in August 1986. Donald Schoch discussed the negative balance with Pardue, who nevertheless continued to write checks on the account.

Both Donald and Eldon Schoch personally borrowed $100,000 from the bank and transferred the funds to the Choice 2000 account. In addition, for the purpose of further fund *1318 ing Choice 2000, Pardue and the Schoch brothers formed E & D Financial, Inc., which unsuccessfully attempted to fund Choice 2000.

In constant need of funds, Pardue convinced some Choice 2000 employees to sign Mendon Bank promissory notes and to allow the company to have the use of the funds. In early March 1986 persons involved with Choice 2000 formed a corporation and obtained a $100,000 loan so that Choice 2000 could obtain a new building. In April 1986 Pardue personally signed for a $350,000 business loan and his financial officer signed for another $100,000 loan. Funds from Pardue’s loan were used to cover Choice 2000 overdrafts, and funds from the financial officer’s loan were applied to repay Pardue’s loan. Also in April 1986, two other loans for $100,-000 and two loans for $120,000 were made in the names of employees. Loan proceeds went to Choice 2000’s checking account and to repay the loan for which the defendant signed. On June 30, 1986, Mendon Bank loaned an additional $420,000 which benefited Choice 2000 through loans to four individuals associated with the company.

In July 1986 the Sehochs were aware that the loans constituted unsecured credit. But because Choice 2000 constantly required funds, John Kolp, the bank’s consultant, and Pardue devised a plan by which the bank would loan funds to Choice 2000 associates and the funds would be used to purchase zero coupon bonds. Pardue had represented that a third party, whom he introduced to the bank, would then be willing to provide funds to Choice 2000 and, more importantly, pick up the loans currently at Mendon Bank. Donald Schoch had never worked with zero coupon bonds, and he did not realize that the Mendon Bank funds were being funneled directly into the account of the third party who was supposed to be providing financing to Choice 2000, with the result that the bonds were never delivered to the bank.

Although Donald Schoch did not, Pardue clearly understood how such bonds worked and explained them to his employees, one of whom recognized the problem with the bonds. The $350,000 loans were due in one year, and the bonds, which ostensibly were security on the loans, would not mature for 13 years. At maturity in 1999 the bonds, purchased for $140,000 each, would be worth only enough to pay the principal on the loans and were not nearly sufficient security for the loans made to purchase the bonds.

If that wasn’t enough, six loans of $350,000 were made to others, ostensibly to establish Choice 2000 centers around the country. It should be no surprise by now to learn that the money went to make payments on loans and to the third-party bond purchaser, and that no Choice 2000 centers were ever established with the funds. Meanwhile, Choice 2000 continued to flood the bank with overdrafts.

By July 30,1986, the Illinois Commissioner of Banks entered Mendon Bank. Again not surprisingly, the bank was closed shortly thereafter. But it wasn’t until June 1996 that a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Pardue, along with Donald and Eldon Schoch, in the present case. Pri- or to trial Donald Schoch moved to dismiss the indictment, claiming that delay in indictment had prejudiced his defense. Pardue adopted that motion on October 23, 1996.

The motion to dismiss noted the dates on which unlawful activity was alleged to have occurred and claimed a good faith defense, for which the testimony of bank consultant John Kolp was essential. Kolp, however, had died in 1989. Pardue claimed that it was Kolp who structured the first loan made to Choice 2000 and that the January 17, 1986, FDIC examination report recognized that Kolp was “significantly involved in all lending decisions of Mendon State Bank.”

The district court denied the motion to dismiss because Pardue 1 failed to demon *1319 strate that preindictment delay resulted in concrete and substantial prejudice to him:

Defendant has not shown that if Kolp were present and able to testify that he would testify as to Defendant’s innocence, to Defendant’s version of events, and/or to Defendant’s good faith.... [I]f Kolp were still alive, he would in all likelihood be Defendant’s co-defendant rather than his witness in this matter.

Finally, the court noted that it was

not convinced that John Kolp’s testimony would have withstood cross-examination or that the jury would have found him to be a credible witness had he been alive and able to give testimony on behalf of Defendant.

The ease proceeded to trial. Following the guilty verdict Pardue filed a motion for judgment of acquittal pursuant to Rule 29 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The motion, however, was really a supplement to the pretrial motion to dismiss the indictment. He again sought dismissal of the indictment, this time asserting that, in addition to Kolp, several other potential witnesses who could have assisted his defense were also dead:

Michael Crocker testified at the trial that it was Ray Grisham not the Defendant, Jerry Pardue, who approached him and solicited him to execute the loan documents referred in Count 5 of the Superseding indictment. Also, Michael Crocker testified that he knew the purpose of the loan and, although he had been advised that Choice 2000 would repay the loan, and that he knew he, as signator, he [sic] was personally responsible for the loan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 F.3d 1316, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 1046, 1998 WL 25694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jerry-pardue-ca7-1998.