United States v. Nicole Gates

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 2018
Docket17-3393
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Nicole Gates (United States v. Nicole Gates) 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. Nicole Gates, (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0234n.06

No. 17-3393

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) FILED ) May 07, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NICOLE M. GATES, ) NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO ) Defendant-Appellant. ) ) )

BEFORE: DAUGHTREY, STRANCH, and THAPAR, Circuit Judges.

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge. Nicole Gates appeals her criminal

convictions for wire fraud and making a false statement to obtain federal employees’ workers’

compensation. On appeal she makes two arguments, both challenging the district court’s partial

exclusion of testimony from two of Gates’s witnesses. Because Gates cannot show that the

district court abused its discretion and that any such error was not harmless, we affirm.

Gates was a mail carrier for the U.S. Postal Service. In 2010, Gates sprained her knee on

the job and started receiving workers’ compensation. She received payments for that claim until

March 2015, when she injured her knee again.

After Gates filed a second workers’ compensation claim, the Office of the Inspector

General flagged Gates as presenting a high risk for fraud. The office started what would become

a long-running investigation into Gates’s activities. The investigation began when the office, No. 17-3393, United States v. Gates

under the guise of a marketing company, sent Gates a lifestyle survey. The survey asked Gates

what kind of activities she enjoyed and whether she would partake in additional surveys for cash

or free tickets to sporting and recreational events. Gates returned the survey, letting the

“marketing company” know that she was interested in follow-up surveys and that she enjoyed,

among other activities, baseball, softball, bicycling, physical fitness, walking, aerobics, skiing,

and travel.

Between March and December, government agents conducted surveillance on Gates

when she was outside of work. The agents videotaped her taking out the garbage, going to lunch

with a friend, going to the doctor’s office, unloading the family car, and other assorted everyday

activities. As part of that surveillance, the government used Gates’s survey responses to lure her

into situations that would allow evaluation of her physical capabilities. When Gates arrived at

the various locations, a team of government agents would follow her and videotape her activities.

For the first surveillance set up, the government gave Gates and her family tickets to a

Cleveland Indians game in June and videotaped Gates going up and down stairs and walking

with ease. A few weeks later, they gave her family a two-day trip to Cedar Point, an amusement

park. Over the course of her time there, she walked hundreds of stairs and over 20 miles. At one

point, they videotaped Gates briefly jogging through the amusement park. Finally, in October—

when Gates was receiving full-time workers’ compensation—the government set up and

videotaped a ranger-led hike at Brandywine Falls National Park. The hike lasted more than an

hour and involved stairs and uneven terrain.

During the first two government-organized outings, Gates was still working a limited

schedule, and so she was not on full-time workers’ compensation. For example, during part of

July, Gates worked six-hour days—including on the day after the trip to Cedar Point. But on

-2- No. 17-3393, United States v. Gates

July 24, Gates contacted her doctor and told him that her pain was an eight out of ten and that her

knee was significantly swollen. After that day, through the end of the year, Gates was

purportedly completely unable to work and received eight hours of daily workers’-compensation

pay. During the time that she received workers’ compensation payments, Gates was required

to submit regular forms—sometimes filled out by her treating physician—certifying her medical

restrictions and hours worked. At the end of those forms, Gates certified that the information she

was providing was true. On December 9, 2015, Gates attended an interview with a government

agent and was asked to bring a form that she had filled out called a Current Medical Assessment

Evaluation. In that document, Gates stated that walking and standing bothered her and made her

pain worse; that her injury prevented her from going on hikes and walks; that she had slight

difficultly shopping, running errands, and standing from a sitting position; that she had

significant difficulty walking outdoors on uneven terrain and climbing stairs; and that she was

unable to kneel, squat, or bend using her knees. As with her other documentation, Gates certified

that all of the information that she provided was true.

In the same form that she filled out in December—in which she said that she could not

kneel or squat—Gates stated that she did not consider herself unable to perform any assignment

for the Postal Service and that she would be willing to be trained for another career field. But

she never affirmatively told the government that her condition had improved or that she wanted

to return to work.

What is more, five days before she submitted the form, Gates spent an hour and a half

shopping. During her shopping trip, she bent at the knees, squatted, carried her child on her left

side, and propped her injured leg against the counter to rest her child on her injured knee while

she paid.

-3- No. 17-3393, United States v. Gates

A grand jury indicted Gates and returned a superseding indictment a few months later

that charged her with 16 counts of wire fraud and one count of false statement and fraud to

obtain federal employees’ compensation. She pleaded not guilty and went to trial before a jury.

At trial, the government presented comprehensive proof of its investigation. That

included videos that were taken of Gates over the course of months, security footage from the

store where Gates shopped in December, the forms that Gates and her physician submitted, and

the testimony of the agents who conducted the investigation. The agents’ testimony tended to

show, among other things, that Gates’s activities were not consistent with someone who claimed

an inability to work. Further, they testified that—other than in March 2015, shortly after her

injury—the officers never saw Gates limp, use a cane, or wear a knee brace during their months-

long surveillance.

For her part, Gates attempted to show that her out-of-work activities were perfectly

consistent with the limitations caused by her injury. Specifically, Gates tried to show that the

specific prohibitions against carrying a heavy mailbag on her route (which involved plenty of

stairs) did not preclude her leisure activities that did not put the same strain on her knee as her

work. She presented testimony of two of her medical caretakers to show that she was indeed

injured and serious about her recovery.

Dr. Timothy Nice was Gates’s orthopedic surgeon from early 2015 through October

2015. He testified that objective evidence corroborated Gates’s claims of problems with her

knee. Between 2010 and the end of 2015, for example, Gates underwent four knee surgeries.

But Nice also relied on subjective impressions—that is, how Gates described the condition of her

knee. Nice testified that he was the one who had imposed work restrictions on Gates throughout

the time that he treated her.

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