United States v. John Joseph Waters, Jr.

799 F.3d 964, 116 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5796, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14692, 2015 WL 4978769
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 21, 2015
Docket14-3045
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 799 F.3d 964 (United States v. John Joseph Waters, Jr.) 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. John Joseph Waters, Jr., 799 F.3d 964, 116 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5796, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14692, 2015 WL 4978769 (8th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted John Waters of mail fraud, wire fraud, and tax-related crimes after hearing evidence that Waters embezzled money from his employer and lied on his taxes. The district court 1 sentenced Waters to 108 months in prison. In determining Waters’s sentence, the district court found Waters embezzled somewhere between $2.5 and $7 million, used sophisticated means to perpetrate the fraud, and obstructed justice. On appeal, Waters argues there was insufficient evidence to convict him, the district court erred in its loss calculations, the district court erred by applying enhancements for sophisticated means and obstruction of justice, and the district court gave him a substantively unreasonable sentence. We affirm.

I

John Waters first met Gerard Cafesjian in the early 90s. In 1994, Waters obtained a job at West Publishing, where Cafesjian served as a senior executive. In 1995, the company announced it was putting itself up for sale. In preparation for the sale, Cafesjian moved to Florida. Cafesjian soon retired, and, when Thomson Reuters purchased West, Cafesjian sold his shares for approximately $250 million.

When Cafesjian retired, he founded the Cafesjian Family Foundation, Inc., a charitable foundation, and a family office, GLC Enterprises, Inc. GLC had offices in Naples, Florida, and in Minneapolis. In Au *968 gust 1996, Cafesjian hired Waters to manage GLC. Cafesjian and Waters signed a written employment agreement. Cafesjian continued residing in Florida, and Waters was in charge of the day-to-day operations at GLC in Minneapolis.

Cafesjian opened a personal account with Northern Trust Bank of Florida. Cafesjian, Waters, and Cafesjian’s personal assistant in Naples, David Stark-weather, were signatories on the account. Northern Trust operated a branch in the same building as the Naples GLC office, so, if Cafesjian needed cash for personal use, he would have Starkweather write and cash checks and bring him the proceeds. Using cash, however, was atypical for Cafesjian; he preferred to use credit cards to accumulate rewards points.

In 1998, Waters opened an account at a U.S. Bank branch in Minneapolis. Both Cafesjian and Waters were signatories and had access to the account. Transfers from Cafesjian’s Northern Trust account provided the majority of the funds for the U.S. Bank account. Between 1999 and 2004, Waters wrote and signed more than 120 checks drawn on the U.S. Bank account made out to “cash” or U.S. Bank. The amounts on those checks were not uneven, varied amounts generally typical of personal expenses. Instead, Waters wrote most of the checks for even, round amounts — generally exactly $5,000, $6,000, or $7,000. All but one of the checks were under $10,000. Waters endorsed and cashed the checks. The checks written to cash or U.S. bank totaled $1,373,525.

Waters was highly protective of the U.S. Bank account statements. He had them sent to his office and took great care that no one else saw or opened the statements. Waters also instructed GLC’s bookkeeper as to how to itemize expenditures from the account in company records. Most of the time, Waters instructed the bookkeeper to group the expenditures into large, general groups. Generally, he instructed the bookkeeper to mark the sums as “household unallocated expenses,” a category that corresponded to money spent for Cafesjian’s personal use. Meanwhile, Waters documented account activity in a more detailed spreadsheet on his own computer. For example, where the official company records reported “household unallocated expenses” as $40,000 for one month, Waters’s detailed records showed five checks for $7,000 and one check for $5,000.

In 2004, Waters closed the initial U.S. Bank account and transferred the small remaining balance (approximately $12,000) into a new U.S. Bank account. Cafesjian and Waters were signatories on this new account as well, but the signature card used to open the account did not include Cafesjian’s original signature. Rather, it contained only Cafesjian’s signature stamp — in the possession of Waters — and Waters’s original signature.

Waters operated the new U.S. Bank account in the same manner as its predecessor account. Cafesjian’s Northern Trust account funded the new U.S. Bank account. Waters was protective of the bank statements and did not allow any other employees to see account activity. Between 2004 and 2009, Waters wrote and endorsed more than 140 checks to “cash,” totaling roughly $950,000. He also wrote approximately 140 checks to his then-mistress (now-wife), Cheri Kuhn, for an approximate total of $750,000. Further, Waters used money from the new U.S. Bank account to fund an account he opened in the name of an exchange student who lived with him, Ani Yeranosyan. Waters was a signatory on the Yeranosyan account, and although Yeranosyan returned to Armenia in 2004, Waters continued using the account. He wrote approximately 195 *969 checks made out to Yeranosyan, for over $1 million total.

Yeranosyan died in a snowmobile accident in Armenia in 2007, but Waters continued to use the account. After Yeranosyan’s death, Waters wrote and deposited more than 130 checks drawn from the new U.S. Bank account into the Yeranosyan account. The value of checks written after Yeranosyan’s death totaled roughly $800,000.

Waters used the Yeranosyan account to distribute money to others. He transferred over $230,000 from the account to an account he held jointly with Kuhn; approximately $251,000 to an account he held jointly with his first wife; approximately $324,000 to his younger daughter; and approximately $103,000 to his older daughter. He also used the Yeranosyan account to pay for personal expenses, including car payments, vacations, and a $13,200 diamond ring. Further, he withdrew over $50,000 in cash.

In early 2009, Waters’s and Cafesjian’s relationship deteriorated. Waters resigned from GLC on March 30, 2009. After Waters resigned, an account statement from the new U.S. Bank account arrived at the Minneapolis GLC office. GLC Chief Financial Officer Gary Jones reviewed the statement and recognized odd activity for an account that supposedly was used for personal expenses; the amounts of various checks showed round, even numbers, generally exactly $5,000, at regular intervals. And most of the checks were not to third parties; rather, the checks were made out to U.S. Bank, signed by Waters, and endorsed by Waters.

Jones called Cafesjian to verify the statement reflected Cafesjian’s understanding of the account. 2 Cafesjian sounded surprised to learn about the activity on the account. Jones searched for additional statements in the office but was unable to find any, so Jones requested past statements and copies of checks from U.S. Bank. Jones learned that approximately $3 million had traveled through the new U.S. Bank account, but he was unable to determine where the money went.

Cafesjian instructed Jones to ask Waters where the money from the U.S. Bank account had gone. Jones confronted Waters, and Waters responded the money “was used to purchase art, political contributions, and other things that you don’t want to know about.” Jones found this response disconcerting.

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799 F.3d 964, 116 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5796, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 14692, 2015 WL 4978769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-john-joseph-waters-jr-ca8-2015.