United States v. Mark Kuhrt

788 F.3d 403, 2015 WL 3540700
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 2015
Docket13-20115
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 788 F.3d 403 (United States v. Mark Kuhrt) 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. Mark Kuhrt, 788 F.3d 403, 2015 WL 3540700 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

JENNIFER WALKER ELROD, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Mark Kuhrt and Gilbert Lopez challenge their convictions and sentences on multiple counts of wire fraud and conspiracy. Appellants argue insufficiency of the evidence and errors at trial, involving the district court’s jury instructions and exclusion of certain expert testimony. Appellants also assert numerous procedural and substantive errors regarding then-sentences. We AFFIRM.

I.

Kuhrt and Lopez were both employees of Allen Stanford’s investment companies for over a decade. During that time, Stanford ran a multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme and stole billions of dollars from his investors. See United States v. Stanford, 4:0 9-cr-00342-1, [Dkt. No. 808] (S.D.Tex. Mar. 6, 2012). At trial, the government alleged that Appellants actively helped Stanford hide his fraud for over a decade. The government’s case consisted of documents and e-mails spanning almost a decade and witness testimony from other Stanford employees. The government’s key witness was James Davis, who orchestrated much of the Ponzi scheme before he reached a plea deal with the government. 1 After a five-week trial, Appellants were each convicted of nine counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

A brief overview of Stanford’s scheme and the institutional structure of his companies is provided here. The facts and events prior to Appellants’ employment, and unrelated to Appellants’ respective roles in the Ponzi scheme, are undisputed.

Stanford established Guardian International Bank (GIB), on the island of Montserrat, a British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean, in 1985. GIB sold certificates of deposit (CDs) to customers outside the United States, representing to customers that their money would be invested in liquid financial products and that the bank would not use their money to make loans. Stanford also owned a real estate company, Guardian Development Corporation' (GDC), and a service company in Houston, *409 Texas, Stanford Financial Group (SFG), which provided accounting, legal, and other services to both GDC and GIB.

Stanford soon hired James Davis, who became SFG’s controller and eventually played a major role in Stanford’s illegal activities. Stanford also enlisted the services of a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), Harry Failing, and an Antigua-based auditor, C.A.S. Hewlett. At the beginning of Davis’s employment, Davis tracked GIB’s liabilities and expenses, but he was not privy to investment information. In the early 1990s, GIB moved to Antigua and Davis became the Chief Financial Officer of SFG and GIB. Jean Gil-strap was hired as the new controller of SFG. Davis soon gained access to GIB’s financial statements and learned that the reported investment returns were grossly inflated and that the missing money was being funneled to Stanford’s personally owned companies. After his discovery, Davis began working to cover up the fraud.

Beginning in 1992, Stanford, Davis, and Gilstrap worked together to make false revenue entries in GIB’s books. Around this time, GIB became Stanford International Bank (SIB). As SIB, the company continued to market and sell CDs with the promise that these were safe investments. Marketing materials claimed the CDs were “strong, safe and fiscally sound,” using a “conservative” investment strategy, and investing to “minimize risk and achieve liquidity.”

Several years later, Stanford founded Stanford Group Company (SGC) in Houston, Texas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, which hired “financial advisors” to sell SIB CDs to customers in the United States. Through SGC, Stanford collected money from American investors.

In 1997, Lopez, a Certified Public Accountant, was hired as an SFG accounting manager, reporting to Gilstrap, and Kuhrt was hired as a fixed assets manager, reporting to Lopez. Kuhrt was not a Certified Public Accountant, but had a Masters of Business Administration and accounting experience. The following year, Lopez was promoted to controller. Davis testified that he was comfortable promoting Lopez into that position because “[Lopez] had demonstrated his loyalty to Ms. Gil-strap, [and] had been aware of what was happening in the financial record keeping.”

In 2000, Failing, Stanford’s accountant, reported that while the IRS was looking at Stanford’s personal finances, the IRS had discovered that Stanford received money from SIB. Failing indicated that the IRS could view this money as taxable income, which Stanford wanted to avoid. Failing proposed creating fake promissory notes to make it appear that .Stanford had received a loan from SIB and would pay the money back. Failing explained this plan in an e-mail that Lopez received. Lopez was also mentioned by name in this e-mail (“Gil seemed to like this as well.”).

Over the next several years, there were many material inaccuracies in SIB’s annual reports. The reports inflated SIB’s investment numbers and did not disclose that significant sums of money were being diverted to Stanford’s other, personally held companies. The information in these reports was communicated to prospective customers through the financial advisors, who were aggressively selling CDs. At trial, Davis testified that “[Lopez and Kuhrt] were responsible for the content and accuracy of the annual report.” Davis also testified that “Mr. Lopez was responsible for the content and accuracy of the [2002 annual] report,” and that “[Mr. Kuhrt] was the senior most accountant reporting to Mr. Lopez and had responsibility for [the 2002 annual report’s] content and accuracy.” Lopez and Kuhrt testified that they *410 had minimal authority over the reports and were not responsible for the reports’ content and accuracy. This was one of the key factual disputes at trial.

At trial, the government introduced evidence showing that Appellants were aware of the money that Stanford had taken from the company. Specifically, in 2003, Lopez sent a spreadsheet, prepared by Kuhrt, which tracked all of the outstanding “loans” to Stanford. In addition, Davis testified that in 2004 he met with Lopez and Kuhrt and they had a lengthy discussion regarding whether the amounts diverted to Stanford should be disclosed in the annual report. Davis testified that all three men believed the amounts should be disclosed, but that they nevertheless agreed not to disclose any of the money. Appellants dispute that this meeting occurred, but assert that any discussion of “footnoting” the money diverted to Stanford ended in their objection to non-disclosure, and Davis’s overruling of them.

To keep the appearance that the diverted money was part of a loan, Failing advised that Stanford should “service” the “loan.” Therefore, according to Davis’s testimony, Appellants designed a “private equity flip,” which was a sham, transaction that would make it appear that Stanford had paid back a significant amount of money to SIB. To execute this “flip,” Stanford used $132 million of SIB depositors’ money to purchase private equity assets from Stanford Venture Capital Holdings (SVCH), another of his companies. Stanford then “sold” these assets to SIB for $385 million, a sham value. On paper, it appeared that Stanford had injected money into SIB to service his loan interest and pay down some of the principal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
788 F.3d 403, 2015 WL 3540700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mark-kuhrt-ca5-2015.