United States v. Lucy Owens

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2020
Docket19-2822
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Lucy Owens (United States v. Lucy Owens) 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. Lucy Owens, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued August 4, 2020 Decided August 12, 2020

Before

DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge

DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge

AMY C. BARRETT, Circuit Judge

No. 19-2822

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellee, Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. v. No. 2:17CR65-001 LUCY OWENS, Defendant-Appellant. Joseph S. Van Bokkelen, Judge.

ORDER

After a jury found Lucy Owens guilty of wire fraud, three psychological reports assessed whether Owens had a mental illness that prevented her from distinguishing reality from fiction. At sentencing, Owens argued that her condition warranted a sentence of house arrest, not prison, but the district court disagreed. Relying on the third report, which said that Owens did not have “hallucinations” or “delusions” (though she had other mental impairments), it imposed a term of 57 months in prison— the top of the Guidelines range. On appeal, Owens argues that the court did not adequately address her arguments about her mental illness. We conclude that the court sufficiently addressed and reasonably rejected Owens’s contention that hallucinations and delusions affected her actions, so we affirm. No. 19-2822 Page 2

While working as an accounts-payable clerk for a trucking company from 2010 to 2015, Owens paid herself nearly $850,000 through interstate wire transfers. At her trial on charges that these transfers were unauthorized and therefore wire fraud, Owens maintained that she believed her boss had permitted her to take the money. A jury found Owens guilty on seven counts of wire fraud. 18 U.S.C. § 1343.

After trial, the issue of Owens’s mental health arose. During a presentencing interview, Owens reported a history of untreated mental-health issues, so the court ordered that she be evaluated and treated; this process took a year. Three psychologists assessed whether Owens displayed symptoms of a serious mental illness—including “delusions,” “dissociation,” and “derealization.”

We briefly define these three terms. A “delusion” is a “false belief maintained … in spite of incontrovertible … proof … to the contrary.” See Delusion, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary, ELSEVIER, https://www.dorlands.com/dorlands/def.jsp?id=100028137 (last visited August 7, 2020). So a “delusional disorder” is a cognitive impairment “marked by well-organized, logically consistent delusions” though “[m]ost functioning is not markedly impaired.” Disorder, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary, ELSEVIER, https://www.dorlands.com/dorlands/def.jsp?id=100031622 (last visited August 7, 2020). A “dissociation” is an impairment characterized by the “segregation of a group of mental processes from the rest of a person’s … consciousness.” Dissociation, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary, ELSEVIER, https://www.dorlands.com/dorlands/def.jsp?id=1000 31746 (last visited August 7, 2020). It can warp perception, degrade memory, and cause patients to become unable to discern truth from reality because their thought patterns are so disjointed. Dissociative Disorders, MAYO CLINIC, https://www.mayoclinic.org/ diseases-conditions/dissociative-disorders/symptoms-causes/syc-20355215 (last visited August 7, 2020). Finally, “derealization” is the loss of sense of “the reality of one’s surroundings.” Derealization, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary, ELSEVIER, https://www. dorlands.com/dorlands/def.jsp?id=100028605 (last visited August 7, 2020).

The first psychologist, Dr. James Bovan, treated Owens for six months beginning in mid-2018 and concluded that she experienced auditory hallucinations, delusional thinking (paranoia), emotional instability, and large memory gaps caused by impaired “cognitive functioning for proper memory encoding.” Though Owens’s symptoms did not affect her “mental status for things such as Person, Place, or Time,” the doctor emphasized that “knowing where, when and who she is doesn’t preclude disruption to rational thought and decision making.” Moreover, a sense of derealization, combined with her memory loss left Owens uncertain about what happened in her past and No. 19-2822 Page 3

unsure if something “really happened or if it was a dream.” With treatment, Owens’s hallucinations decreased to “near elimination,” but other symptoms persisted: “paranoid thoughts” continued to trigger memory gaps and emotional outbursts, and “her perception of reality continue[d] to be variable given her uncertainty of what was real.” Indeed, “[e]ven with medications” and treatment, “the clarity in her thought process has only lessened her certainty … regarding her past actions.” Dr. Bovan thus considered Owens to be a “questionable reporter of her own experience.”

The second evaluation, by forensic psychologist Dr. Gary Durak in March 2019, also found that Owens had a “lifelong untreated serious SMI” (Serious Mental Illness). It stated that Owens showed symptoms of “thought disorders” including “unusual thoughts and perceptions” and “possible psychotic symptoms with delusions,” and “symptoms related to dissociations including … derealization.” Further, Dr. Durak opined that given the success of her post-trial treatment, her earlier lack of treatment likely “played a role in her choices … related to her alleged criminal conduct,” and that “appropriate Mental Health treatment would reduce the risk of her re-offending.” So, he concluded, a sentence of house arrest (in which Owens could continue treatment) instead of prison was appropriate.

The third report, prepared in June 2019 to evaluate Owens’s competence to appear at sentencing, came to a different conclusion. Dr. Amor Correa, a psychologist at the Bureau of Prisons, discredited Owens’s self-reports of hallucinations and delusions as “exaggerated or feigned.” Owens’s report of a longtime, imagined friend resembled a plot device from the movie A Beautiful Mind. The movie retold the life of a man with schizophrenia who was depicted as having a lifelong imaginary companion, but that depiction was “created for cinematic effect” and did not reflect “[t]rue hallucinations,” which are fleeting. Owens may have “mild paranoia involving fears that others are speaking negatively of her,” but not “perception-like physiological experiences” “typically observed in individuals with a genuine psychotic disorder.” Owens could also “understand the nature and consequences of the proceedings” and nothing would “prevent her from assisting her attorney in her defense.” Although Dr. Correa found that Owens had no delusions or hallucinations, she acknowledged that Owens “complained of forgetfulness, difficulty concentrating, and sometimes struggling to know whether events really happened or if they were ‘a dream.’” These complaints were consistent with “dissociative experiences” as well as the “derealization” noted by Dr. Bovan and Dr. Durak. No. 19-2822 Page 4

The probation officer then prepared a presentence investigation report. He calculated an offense level of 23, which included a two-step enhancement for obstruction of justice based on Owens’s trial testimony that she had permission to take the money she stole and that she had no knowledge of the actions of two accomplices. Combined with her criminal-history level of I, the imprisonment range under the Sentencing Guidelines was 46–57 months. Although he acknowledged evidence of Owens’s mental-health issues, the officer nonetheless faulted her for not “accept[ing] responsibility for her criminal conduct” and recommended a sentence of 52 months’ imprisonment.

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United States v. Lucy Owens, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lucy-owens-ca7-2020.