United States v. Madeline Maxwell and Walter Archibald Younge

588 F.2d 568
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1978
Docket76-2139, 76-2140
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 588 F.2d 568 (United States v. Madeline Maxwell and Walter Archibald Younge) 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. Madeline Maxwell and Walter Archibald Younge, 588 F.2d 568 (7th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

TONE, Circuit Judge.

This opinion addresses three issues, (1) whether funds disbursed by a college under a student financial aid program were federal funds and thus covered by 18 U.S.C. § 641, (2) if so, whether transportation of fraudulent checks of the college drawn on the funds violated 18 U.S.C. § 2314 in view of the exception for federal securities contained in that section, and (3) whether the instructions given to the jury on the necessity of knowledge or foreseeability of interstate transportation under the latter statute constituted reversible error. We decide the other issues by an unpublished order and affirm the convictions.

Defendants were jointly tried before a jury and convicted under all counts of an 18-count indictment. Counts 1 through 9 charged that the defendants “did steal, purloin and convert to their own use, money” in various amounts “by making and negotiating false checks drawn upon checking accounts ... at State Community College, East St. Louis, Illinois, of which 88.4% of said money . . was the property of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, ... of the United States,” in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 641. Counts 10 through 17 charged the defendants with transporting in interstate commerce falsely made and forged securities which were not the property of the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 2314. Count 18 of the indictment charged the defendants with conspiracy to defraud the United States by depriving it of its money and property by making false checks, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371.

During the period July 1974 through April 1975, defendant Madeline Maxwell was in charge of the accounting office of student financial aid at State Community College, a small junior college in East St. Louis, Illinois. The college had obtained federal funding for certain student financial aid programs from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and, through Maxwell, administered four financial aid accounts: (1) National Defense Student Loan Fund; (2) College Work-Study Program; (3) Educational Opportunity Grant — Basic Grant; and (4) Educational Opportunity Grant — Supplemental Grant.

A separate bank account was maintained for each of these student aid accounts at the Union National Bank in East St. Louis. The money deposited in the accounts came from a “parent account” called the Illinois Junior College Board Account, which was maintained at the same bank by the Illinois College Board. Upon request by Maxwell, the Board would transfer funds from the parent account into the subaccounts.

*570 When Maxwell determined that additional money was needed for the parent account, she would request that money and it would come in the form of a check payable to the college drawn on the United States Treasury. These checks were then deposited in the parent account.

Student aid checks were drawn payable to the students upon the various subaccounts. Ordinarily the checks were prepared by computer and then sent to the accounting office of financial aid, where they were checked for accuracy and signed. When the time report of a student on which a payment was based came in late or a student was left off the disbursement list for computer prepared checks for some other reason, the accounting office of financial aid would prepare the check on a typewriter and issue it to the student.

Maxwell, as head of the accounting office of financial aid, supervised that office and was responsible for the disbursement of funds and keeping the records thereof. These duties included making sure the checks were properly prepared' and disbursed to students, preparation of typewritten checks, seeing that all checks were signed by a mechanical checkwriter, reconciling bank accounts, and posting to the books.

When HEW auditors audited State Community College’s financial aid programs in April 1976, they discovered that checks which had been cashed were missing, that the missing checks were in much larger amounts than those that were normally issued to students, and that the purported payees were either fictitious persons or persons who did not attend the college. In addition, the auditors found that thousands of dollars had been transferred from the parent account into the subaccounts without any record being made of the transfers in the records maintained by Maxwell. In addition, the records maintained by Maxwell showed more money in the various accounts than the records maintained by the bank, in some instances the difference being between a negative balance and a positive balance.

The actual expenditures of funds for the programs during the period in question, including the checks to nonexistent students, greatly exceeded the amounts reported on the books as expenditures and the total available funds, which were $674,000. In attempting to reconcile the college records and the bank records, the auditors determined through examining microfilms that $167,390 had been paid to nonexistent students under the College Work-Study Program; $38,045 under the National Defense Student Loan Program; $46,255 under the Educational Opportunity Grant Program— Supplemental; and $17,205 under the Educational Opportunity Grant Program — Basic. These defalcations totaled $268,895.

Although the period covered was July 1, 1974 to June 30, 1975, the last check to a nonexistent student was issued on March 26, 1975. Maxwell left the college in April 1975.

The auditors found entries in the books which could reasonably have been found to be attempts to cover up the defalcations. All of these were made by Maxwell.

All of the irregular checks, 262 in number, were typewritten. The cancelled checks themselves were missing. When cancelled checks were returned by the bank to the college’s financial accounting office, Maxwell had the first opportunity to handle them.

The 262 fraudulent checks were cashed at Lafayette Federal in St. Louis, Missouri. The first endorsement on the back of each check was purportedly made by the payee. The second endorsement on all checks was that. of defendant Walter Archibald Younge, who would bring the checks to Lafayette Federal and purchase money orders with these and other checks he brought in to negotiate. Over the nine-month period charged in the indictment, Younge negotiated through Lafayette Federal approximately 900 checks, 262 of which were the fraudulent checks described above.

Younge would frequently stay at Maxwell’s apartment. From time to time one of his employees would carry money and Lafayette Federal money orders from him *571 to Maxwell.

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588 F.2d 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-madeline-maxwell-and-walter-archibald-younge-ca7-1978.