United States v. Jobe

77 F.3d 1461, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 3992, 1996 WL 101744
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 1996
DocketNo. 94-50646
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 77 F.3d 1461 (United States v. Jobe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Jobe, 77 F.3d 1461, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 3992, 1996 WL 101744 (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Billie Mac Jobe (“Billie Mac”), Stanley Pruet Jobe (“Stanley”), Stephen Taylor, Philip Mark Sutton and Fernando Novoa were convicted by a jury of various offenses undertaken to organize, conduct, and maintain an elaborate and expanded check-kiting scheme through El Paso banks for over a year and a half. On appeal, they pose numerous challenges to their convictions and sentences. After carefully considering these challenges and the underlying record, this court AFFIRMS the conviction as charged in Count 2 for all of the appellants, VACATES Stanley’s managerial or supervisory sentencing enhancement, and REMANDS Stanley’s case for resentencing.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND 1

The appellants were indicted for bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344 and 2, and for conspiracy to commit bank fraud, to make false entries in bank records, and to obtain loans via false statements in loan applications, contravening 18 U.S.C. § 371. In addition, the indictment charged that some or all of the appellants had made false statements on loan applications,2 false bank entries, reports, and transactions,3 laundered funds,4 or aided and abetted such activities.5 The indictment requested a criminal forfeiture of property.6

The district court bifurcated the criminal trial and the request for criminal forfeiture. After nearly two weeks of trial on the criminal charges, the jury returned the following-verdicts: all defendants were convicted of conspiracy to commit bank fraud (“Count 1”); Billie Mac was convicted of bank fraud, while Stanley, Taylor, Sutton, and Novoa were convicted of aiding and abetting this bank fraud (“Count 2”); Taylor and Sutton were convicted of making false bank entries in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1005 and 2 (collectively, Counts 4, 6, and 16); and Stanley was convicted both of aiding and abetting Sutton to make a false bank entry (Count 6) and of making false statements on a bank loan application (Count 5).7

Although each appellant was convicted by the jury of various offenses undertaken to organize, conduct, and maintain an elaborate check kiting scheme, at the sentencing hearing, the district court found no evidence of monetary loss to any of the financial institutions involved. In part for this reason, the appellants received light concurrent sentences: Billie Mac was sentenced to eighteen months incarceration and fined $30,000; Stanley received five months incarceration, five months of community confinement in a residential facility or half-way house, and a $15,000 fine; Taylor, ten months incarceration; Sutton, ten months incarceration; and Novoa, five months incarceration and five months of community confinement in a residential facility or half-way house; the appellants were also ordered to serve three-year terms of supervised release.

A discussion of some of the voluminous evidence concerning the appellants’ relationships to the involved financial institutions and the crucial transactions involved in the prosecution is necessary to understand this opinion’s analysis.

Billie Mac was a ]é owner, officer and director of Jobe Concrete Products, Inc., in El Paso, Texas. He also owned the Jobe Bar Track Ranch and was a part owner, officer and director of Cal-Tex Spice Co. He and [1466]*1466his son, Stanley, owned a 40% share of First Park National Bank (“FPNB”) of Livingston, Montana, a federally insured financial institution. Billie Mac maintained checking accounts at FPNB as well as at El Paso State Bank (“EPSB”), a federally insured, state chartered bank in El Paso; Jobe Concrete Products and Cal-Tex Spice had checking accounts at EPSB. Billie Mae was a shareholder of EPSB.

Stanley, Billie Mac’s son, was president and a H\ owner of Jobe Concrete Products, Inc., a partial owner and director of Cal-Tex Spice Co. and a shareholder and director of EPSB. At FPNB in Montana, Stanley maintained a checking account and sat on the board of directors.

The remaining appellants are employees of some of the financial institutions involved. Taylor was the president of EPSB. Novoa, as a cashier and officer of EPSB, approved significant wire transfer transactions involving Billie Mac. After leaving his employment with EPSB, Novoa became president of Cal-Tex Spice and performed various financial and administrative work for Jobe Concrete Products. Sutton was the president of another federally insured bank used in the kite, Continental National Bank (“CNB”).

The scope of the expanded check kite was uncovered essentially by FBI special agent Randy Wolverton (“Wolverton”), whose analysis of the activity in several Jobe checking accounts from December of 1989 through July of 1991, revealed that a large kite was underway involving Billie Mac and Stanley and their checking accounts at CNB, TCB, FNPB, and EPSB.

In order to manipulate and maximize the float, or lag time between transactions in the banking system, Billie Mac and his cohorts inflated his account balances artificially by making countless wire transfers based on uncollected funds, by writing checks against uncollected or nonexistent funds, and by consummating fraudulent loans that were camouflaged by false entries or statements in bank records. As a result of these machinations, very large checks were routinely paid in full despite the actual insufficiency of funds to cover them. Billie Mac’s check kite was remarkably efficient; unlike the vast majority of check kites, this one not only stayed constantly ahead of the lag but never did self-destruct. Evidence at trial demonstrated that none of the checks written by Billie Mac was ever dishonored or returned for insufficient funds, and all of the loans used to commence the kiting scheme were paid in full and with interest to the lenders.

Further evidence of the “success” of the check-kiting is revealed by the vast sums of money floated. Wolverton testified that bank records for December 1, 1989 through March 12, 1990, created the impression that $150,000,000 had been deposited into the Jobe accounts, although less than 15% of that figure, or approximately $20,000,000, was actually present in these accounts. Similarly, from April through June of 1991, Wol-verton explained that although bank records indicated that $58,000,000 was deposited into these accounts, “77% of those, or about $44,-000,000 worth of those deposits, were nothing more than checks and wire transfers being exchanged with each other through these accounts, thereby artificially inflating the accounts.” Only $13,000,000 was actually deposited into the accounts.

Profits from the scheme were used to finance business ventures for Billie Mac and Stanley. For example, in late 1989, Jobe Concrete Products purchased a spice plant from the Baltimore Spice Co. for nearly $3,500,000 and Cal-Tex Spice Co. Austin Hale (“Hale”), the credit manager and eventually vice-president of Jobe Concrete Products, testified that neither Jobe Concrete Products nor Billie Mac had enough liquidity to fund these purchases.

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77 F.3d 1461, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 3992, 1996 WL 101744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jobe-ca5-1996.