United States v. Morris

573 F. App'x 712
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2014
Docket12-1474
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 573 F. App'x 712 (United States v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Morris, 573 F. App'x 712 (10th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

*714 ORDER AND JUDGMENT **

GREGORY A. PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

The evidence at trial proved that Curtis L. Morris played an integral part in a tax-fraud conspiracy. Although complicated in its implementation, the basic premise of the conspiracy’s scheme was fairly simple: Morris would claim nonexistent tax with-holdings on tax returns, and, ideally for the conspirators, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) would then pay a refund when the tax withholdings were greater than the tax liability. In all, he fraudulently prepared tax returns that led the IRS to pay out more than $2.2 million in undeserved tax refunds. After the jury convicted him, the district court varied downward and sentenced him to 120 months in prison. Morris now challenges his conviction and sentence. We conclude that the district court committed no error and affirm.

BACKGROUND

Morris has a bachelor’s degree in accounting and had long worked for various businesses as a bookkeeper or accountant. He also operated a side business preparing tax returns for individuals. Through this side business he prepared returns that misused Form 1099-OID to help clients obtain unjustified tax refunds. The IRS requires financial institutions to generate Form 1099-OID if they issue or hold certain investments for their clients. See generally I.R.S. Publication 1212, 2013 WL 6859821 (Dec. 20, 2013). In this circumstance, the institutions then send the form to the IRS and also to the taxpayer to enable the taxpayer to report income and income tax withheld from those investments. Id. at *12.

Morris fabricated Forms 1099-OID for his clients to deceive the IRS into believing that the forms had originated from various financial institutions. Although these financial institutions had indeed lent Morris’s clients money for mortgages, car loans, and credit cards, they had not held any investment for the clients that required a Form 1099-OID. Despite this, Morris’s falsified Forms 1099-OID that reported his clients’ outstanding debt with the institutions as income and income tax withheld. 1 Next, he prepared and filed tax returns with the fabricated Forms 1099-OID attached, claiming false tax withhold-ings.

The scheme worked when the IRS matched the withholdings claimed in the tax returns to the Forms 1099-OID and paid refunds after being fooled into believing that more taxes had been withheld than required. For his services, Morris charged a modest fee, but requested 1% of the refund from two clients and actually received that amount from one of them. In total, Morris prepared Forms 1099- *715 OID and returns for himself and 20-25 clients requesting $21,166,468.00 in refunds. The IRS mistakenly paid $2,299,775.26. 2

By July 2009 the game was up. An IRS team led by Agent Greg Flynn secured a warrant and searched Morris’s house. During the search, Morris agreed to answer Agent Flynn’s questions. Agent Flynn asked about Morris’s personal use of Forms 1099-OID: “I asked Mr. Morris, Sir, why do you think the Internal Revenue Service owes you $74,000? He replied, “You don’t.’” R. vol. 6, at 1481. Morris admitted that he, not the financial institutions, had prepared Forms 1099-OID and that he lacked authority to do so. He also said he’d individually filed his 2008 return with falsified Forms 1099-OID “to keep his wife out of harm’s way.” Id. at 1492. Finally, Morris told Agent Flynn that, although he believed that he was owed the tax refunds, his “preparation of the Forms 1099-OID without the authority of banks or creditors was wrong.” Id. at 1517.

Eventually, Morris was arrested, and a grand jury returned a 28-count superseding indictment against him and two others — Richard Kellogg Armstrong and Larry Ray Hall. The indictment charged Morris with three counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 2 (counts 1-3), 17 counts of making false claims against a department or agency of the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 287 and 2 (counts 6-22), and one count of conspiracy to defraud the government in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 286 (count 28). Armstrong and Hall were similarly charged, but Hall died before trial.

In the ensuing joint trial, the jury convicted both Armstrong and Morris of all counts charged. The district court sentenced Morris to 120 months in prison. Morris now appeals his conviction and sentence. Now we turn our discussion to the facts relevant to his challenges.

1. Armstrong’s Statements During Trial

Armstrong chose to represent himself at trial. Although he wasn’t combative with the district court, he repeatedly made non-responsive and nonsensical remarks when the court sought his comments as pro se counsel. From the beginning, Armstrong attempted to present some sort of procedural defense to the charges against him. In his opening statement, Armstrong began:

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen of the jury. I conditionally accept these proceedings on proof of claim that I am not here today as the paramount security interest holder in all property and collateral, both registered and unregistered, belonging to Richard Kellogg Armstrong appearing specially, not generally, and on proof of claim that there is not a notice before this Court to continue this public proceedings [sic] pending completion of the ongoing private administrative record which, when completed, will have the likelihood to set off, settle, and resolve this matter without wasting valuable public resources.
I now move this Court to continue these proceedings, these public proceedings, for 60 days to resolve the matter privately. Thank you.

R. vol. 6, at 34.

Armstrong repeated this “proof of claim” mantra when asked for his position on objections and the introduction of evidence. Almost every time Armstrong made a remark of this variety, the court cut him off. Eventually, the court “en *716 joined and restrained” Armstrong from repeating these comments. Id. at 473.

Undeterred, Armstrong continued to bring up “proof of claim” and alleged that the court was forcing him to answer under duress:

Your Honor, so I am not in contempt of court, I conditionally accept on proof of claim I’m not in contempt. I will say whatever you want me to say or do, whatever you want me to do under threat of duress and coercion, and I will sit down and be quiet.

Id. at 568.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
573 F. App'x 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-morris-ca10-2014.