United States v. Michael Dowlen

514 F. App'x 559
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 2013
Docket11-6406
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 514 F. App'x 559 (United States v. Michael Dowlen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Michael Dowlen, 514 F. App'x 559 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

A federal jury convicted Michael Dowlen of twenty-nine counts of bank fraud for kiting checks worth nearly two-million dollars. On appeal, Dowlen challenges his conviction and thirty-seven-month, within-Guidelines sentence. He argues that the evidence was not sufficient, that irrelevant and prejudicial testimony was admitted, that the jury instructions were improper, that the district court incorrectly calculated the losses he caused, that he should have received a reduction for acceptance of responsibility, and that the district court should have granted his request for a downward departure. None of Dowlen’s arguments warrants reversal.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Michael Dowlen operated a real estate construction business in southeastern Tennessee for over thirty years. Dowlen borrowed most of his funds from Colony LP and used business checking accounts with Northwest Georgia Bank and Cornerstone Community Bank. Following the decline of the real estate market in 2008, Colony refused to allow Dowlen to make further draws and Dowlen experienced cash flow problems.

This was not the first time that Dowlen experienced cash flow problems. According to Dowlen, for years he had regularly written checks to his subcontractors before *561 he received funds to back the checks. Northwest Georgia Bank covered any overdrafts and charged Dowlen “nonsuffi-cient fund” fees amounting to $1000 to $1500 a month. Dowlen saw these fees as analogous to interest costs and says he treated his checking account as a line of credit. Dowlen says he always expected to cover the checks.

The Government put forth evidence showing that from July 2008 to September 2008, Dowlen cross-deposited fifty checks between his accounts at Northwest Georgia Bank and Cornerstone Community Bank. Dowlen deposited twenty-nine checks, totaling $1,910,500, from his Northwest Georgia account.into his Cornerstone account. During the same time period, he deposited twenty-one checks, totaling $1,812, 100, from his Cornerstone account into his Northwest Georgia account. This suggests a classic check-kiting scheme. 1 Dowlen maintains that he expected all of these checks to be covered by legitimate funds.

In late August 2008, Dowlen’s loan officer at Cornerstone spoke with Dowlen about the bank’s suspicion that Dowlen was kiting checks and instructed him that if he wanted to make deposits from his Northwest Georgia account into his Cornerstone account, he would need to use cashier’s checks. The loan officer said that Dowlen agreed. However, Dowlen continued to write checks on his Northwest Georgia account and deposit the checks into his Cornerstone account.

According to the Government, Dowlen was able to continue his behavior because on August 25, 2008, he deposited $250,000 in third-party funds into his Northwest Georgia account. These funds came from two couples, the Howards and the Shoemakers, for whom Dowlen was building houses. Although both couples had already made their down payments and were not obligated to give Dowlen more money before the closing, Dowlen was able to convince them to pay him before their houses were complete. The Howards gave $100,000, and the Shoemakers gave $150,000. These funds appear to have covered two of the Northwest Georgia checks Dowlen deposited into his Cornerstone account in late August (checks from August 25th and August 26th totaling $98,000). However, subsequent checks were written without sufficient funds.

A few weeks later, the loan officer at Cornerstone became aware of Dowlen’s continued check kiting and decided to close *562 Dowlen’s account. After Cornerstone closed Dowlen’s account on October 8, 2008 and Cornerstone and Northwest Georgia resolved all outstanding checks, Dowlen was left with a positive balance at Cornerstone of $56,000. However, Northwest Georgia was left with a $810,000 loss and said they would go to the police if Dowlen did not cover the loss. Dowlen covered the $810,000 by entering into a settlement agreement with Colony LP. Colony paid Northwest Georgia $310,000 in exchange for Dowlen’s release of any extortion claims he may have had against Colony. Colony did not lend Dowlen further funds and Dowlen was forced to file for bankruptcy.

The superseding indictment charged Dowlen with two counts of interstate transportation of fraudulently obtained money, two counts of criminally derived monetary transactions, and twenty-nine counts of bank fraud (corresponding to the twenty-nine Northwest Georgia checks that Dowlen deposited into his Cornerstone account). Following a two-day trial, the jury found Dowlen guilty of the bank-fraud charges and acquitted him of the other charges.

The district court sentenced Dowlen to a within-Guidelines term of thirty-seven months’ imprisonment. The presentence report calculated the total amount of the loss at $560,000, summing the $310,000 loss to Northwest Georgia and the $250,000 loss to the Howards and Shoemakers. Dowlen challenged both alleged losses. He argued that because Northwest Georgia received the $310,000, it had not lost money, and that the losses to the Howards and Shoemakers were unrelated to the check-kiting scheme. The district court— relying upon Application Note 3(E) of U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 — determined that the $310,000 was an attributable loss because the repayment occurred after Northwest Georgia detected the scheme. The district court allowed for a reduction in the loss related to the Howards’ and Shoemakers’ funds to account for a portion of the funds that may have been used by Dowlen for legitimate business purposes. For Guidelines-caleulation purposes, the court found only $100,000 of the losses to be attributable to Dowlen’s check-kiting scheme. In total, the district court found the attributable losses to be $410,000. Because the offense level increases occur at $400,000 and $1,000,000, see U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b), the change from $560,000 to $410,000 had no effect on Dowlen’s Guidelines range.

Dowlen also moved for a downward departure. Dowlen argued that he was an atypical white-collar defendant because he had been a law-abiding businessman for over thirty years and only got into trouble because Colony LP decided not to provide him with needed funds. The district court rejected this motion because the court found that Dowlen was “not outside of the heartland of offenders” that the particular guideline was written for and that check kiting was “specifically the type of offense that the Sentencing Commission had in mind.” Sentencing Hr’g Tr. 39, Nov. 3, 2011. Accordingly, the court did not find a downward departure to be appropriate.

Dowlen appeals his conviction and sentence.

II. Analysis

On appeal, Dowlen raises six challenges to his conviction and sentence. None warrants reversal.

A. Sufficiency of the Evidence

Dowlen first argues that the Government failed to offer sufficient evidence showing he intended to defraud Cornerstone Community Bank. A rational jury could have found that when Dowlen continued to cross-deposit checks without suffi *563

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Related

United States v. George Skouteris, Jr.
51 F.4th 658 (Sixth Circuit, 2022)
United States v. Jerry Kerley
784 F.3d 327 (Sixth Circuit, 2015)
Dowlen v. United States
134 S. Ct. 192 (Supreme Court, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
514 F. App'x 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-michael-dowlen-ca6-2013.