United States v. Marilyn S. Velasco

471 F.2d 112, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6416
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 1972
Docket71-1808
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 471 F.2d 112 (United States v. Marilyn S. Velasco) 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. Marilyn S. Velasco, 471 F.2d 112, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6416 (7th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

KILEY, Circuit Judge.

Marilyn Velasco (appellant) appeals from her conviction of aiding and abetting her mother, Verda Lou Stevison, in the misapplication of funds of the federally insured Bank of Sesser, Sesser, Illinois, 2 in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2 and § 656. We affirm.

The following facts were stipulated: Appellant drew 48 checks against her Bank account in the period between May 12 and October 10, 1970. The account held insufficient funds for payment of the checks. Her mother, the Bank’s cashier, paid the cheeks from Bank funds, as a result of which the Bank lost $100,671.51. The Bank Board of Directors, upon learning of the mother’s misapplication, deferred action against her upon her promises that money would be forthcoming to repay the “loans” from the Bank. The promises were not kept, the Bank demanded her resignation, and the indictments, trial and convictions 3 followed.

The sole issue presented on appeal is whether the district court erred in denying appellant’s motions for acquittal made at the close of all the evidence and after the jury returned a guilty verdict.

In ruling upon appellant’s motion for acquittal at the close of all the evidence, the question for the district judge was whether all reasonable men, on all the evidence presented, would of necessity find that the government did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant was sane in the relevant period, in that she was capable of forming the intent to commit the alleged crime. United States v. Westerhausen, 283 F.2d 844, 852 (7th Cir. 1960). And once the jury had returned a guilty verdict, the trial court would be bound to apply the same standard established in Westerhausen in order to grant a motion for acquittal.

In anticipation of an insanity defense the government moved before trial, under 18 U.S.C. § 4244, that appellant be examined to determine her competency to stand trial. Appellant objected, but the government’s motion was granted. Appellant’s sole defense at trial was that she was insane at the time the offenses occurred and therefore incapable of forming the intent necessary to commit the crimes charged. 4

*114 As in Westerhausen, supra, at 852, once the government established a prima facie case there was a presumption of the appellant’s sanity. Appellant presented evidence to rebut the presumption of sanity and to require submission of the issue to the jury. Several lay witnesses testified concerning appellant’s eccentric behavior commencing in 1965 and extending to 1970: her mental breakdown in January, 1968, her delusions of grandeur, her assumption of the role of Ann Drury, a fictional wealthy Chicago businesswoman, appellant’s fictional businesses, her falsehoods, her profligacy with money, her fears and attempted suicide. In addition there was testimony in her behalf by three expert psychiatric witnesses, Doctors Radcliffe, Smith and Schuster, who examined her after the time of the alleged offenses. All three testified that she suffered from mental illness or defect from May 12 to October 10, 1970, the relevant period of the indictment.

The foregoing testimony having rebutted the presumption of sanity, the presumption “disappeared” (see United States v. Bohle, 445 F.2d 54, 70 (7th Cir. 1971)) and the’government had the burden, under Westerhausen, of going forward with its evidence to prove beyond reasonable doubt that appellant was sane and capable of forming the intent required to aid and abet her mother in committing the alleged offenses.

The substance of the expert opinion testimony for appellant is that she was psychotic during the relevant period, suffering from “thought disorder” rendering her incapable of guiding her conduct in a “logical and thoughtful manner,” causing her to swing between moods of depression and euphoria and that she was incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong and of conforming her conduct to the law.

The government produced two expert witnesses, Doctors Fain and Groder. Their opinions, in response to the government’s hypothetical questions, did not “rule in” a “separation from reality.” Their diagnostic opinions differed from those of appellant’s experts. In substance they found that the person described in the government’s hypothetical questions was neurotic rather than psychotic, and that she suffered from “hysterical personality disorder” and that such a person could distinguish between right and wrong and conform her conduct to the requirements of the law.

It is unlikely that the jury was persuaded one way or another by the contradictory technical terms used and conclusions reached by the experts. Nor do we think that the experts’ opposing testimony, in less technical terms “thought disorder” and “hysterical personality disorder,” would mean very much to the jury. In our view it is the expert testimony of the symptoms of the diagnosed diseases that would be the guiding light toward the jury verdict.

Each expert witness testified to the usual symptoms displayed by a victim of the disease diagnosed by each. Appellant’s experts stated that the symptoms of a psychotic separated from reality were: delusions of grandeur, as in appellant’s case the euphoric delusion that she was Ann Drury, an extremely wealthy businesswoman; and the other extreme, her attempted and threatened suicide and fears of physical illness; and also “attention seeking” and “pathological lying.”

The expert testimony for the government of symptoms of “hysterical personality disorder” overlaps to a considerable extent the symptoms attributed by defense experts to a psychotic suffering from “thought disorder.” The relevant overlap is in the symptoms of “attention seeking,” “pathological lying,” “dishonesty,” “delusions of” and “fantasies of” great wealth. It was those constants, among the symptoms, that we think could cause reasonable doubt in the minds of reasonable men as to whether appellant was incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong and incapable of conforming her conduct to the law during the period when she wrote the worthless checks.

*115 In deciding whether the trial court erred in denying the appellant’s motions for acquittal we must take the evidence in the aspect most favorable to the government. Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 80, 62 S.Ct. 457, 86 L.Ed. 680 (1942).

We see no merit in several arguments aimed by appellant at the lack of lay testimony by government witnesses to meet the lay testimony of appellant’s witnesses. The determination of the credibility of appellant’s lay witnesses, as well as experts, was for the jury. United States v. Cooks, 359 F.2d 772, 773 (7th Cir. 1966).

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Bluebook (online)
471 F.2d 112, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marilyn-s-velasco-ca7-1972.