United States v. Peterson-Knox, Kelly

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2006
Docket05-3554
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Peterson-Knox, Kelly (United States v. Peterson-Knox, Kelly) 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. Peterson-Knox, Kelly, (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-3554 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

KELLY PETERSON-KNOX, Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 01 CR 1093—Harry D. Leinenweber, Judge. ____________ ARGUED APRIL 13, 2006—DECIDED DECEMBER 20, 2006 ____________

Before COFFEY, KANNE and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. COFFEY, Circuit Judge. On October 3, 2002, a federal grand jury indicted Kelly Peterson-Knox (“Peterson”), and her fellow conspirators, Michael Knox, Joe Fasanella, Charlie Rogers, and James Babiarz for mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1346, and 2. The sixteen-count indict- ment alleged that Peterson and the above-named con- spirators engaged in a scheme to defraud Ameritech by arranging for Ameritech-owned computers to be shipped and sold for profit to non-Ameritech personnel without authorization. Peterson initially pleaded not guilty to each of the sixteen counts charged, but subsequently withdrew her plea and entered a plea of guilty to one count of mail fraud, without the benefit of a formal written 2 No. 05-3554

plea agreement. After accepting Peterson’s plea and entering a judgment of conviction, the district court judge sentenced her to a term of 30 months’ imprison- ment and three years’ supervised release, restitution (to Ameritech) in the amount of $507,600, $100 special assessment, and dismissed the remaining fifteen counts. Peterson appeals her sentence, contending that the dis- trict court improperly applied the advisory Sentencing Guidelines. She argues that the evidence presented at sentencing failed to support the findings underlying the three enhancements in her offense level. She requests that her sentence be vacated and remanded for resen- tencing. Affirm.

I. Factual Background According to the indictment, Peterson and Knox (her husband) were the organizers and lead conspirators in a plan to defraud the Ameritech company between Septem- ber of 1999 to early May of 2000. During this time frame the two became romantically involved and also began to share a residence. During the course of the fraud, Peterson served as manager of Ameritech’s Business Communica- tion Services—Desktop Support Division and was respon- sible for supplying laptop computers exclusively to Ameritech personnel at various locations within the United States for use in conducting Ameritech business. Her position authorized her to order computers and arrange for the shipment thereof based on orders received from various department heads within the corporation. It is interesting to note that Michael Knox, in his capacity as a manager of the Information Technology Department, also had the authority to order and ship computers to Ameritech employees. In connection with their employ- ment, both Peterson and Knox had agreed and were obligated to follow Ameritech’s Code of Business Conduct, No. 05-3554 3

which required that employees are not allowed to use corporate property for personal use nor engage in any form of fraud. Despite that agreement, the two organized and operated a scheme to sell and ship Ameritech-owned computers to themselves and their co-conspirators. The conspirators, on occasion, also on their own arranged for the sale of the computers to third parties as part of this venture. Peterson let her co-conspirators know that she expected to receive $800 from each sale, while allowing Fasanella and others in the conspiracy ring to retain any additional funds received from the transaction. Peterson and Knox would submit an inflated number of orders, calling for the shipment of a greater number of new Dell laptops to be purchased than requested by the department heads. Due to Peterson’s and Knox’s manage- rial positions in the organization, the orders were ap- proved without hesitation. Peterson’s department was solely responsible for the delivery of the computers to authorized Ameritech employees, thus leaving Peterson in control of the excess laptops generated with falsified purchase orders. Peterson or Knox would take possession of the surplus laptops, and would usually package them into different boxes. Once received in Peterson’s depart- ment they would arrange to address the packages to their fellow conspirators, fraudulently indicating on shipping labels that the packages were destined for Ameritech employees, and arrange for the transfer thereof to the shipping dock to be delivered via United Parcel Service (“UPS”). During the first four months of the operation, Knox and Peterson addressed the computer shipments to their shared residence or to Joe Fasanella’s (Peterson’s brother), his home or work address. Initially, Fasanella would hold the packages until Peterson was able to pick them up. In the fall of 1999, Fasanella began selling the new Dell laptop computers at his home via classified newspaper advertisements. 4 No. 05-3554

Shortly after Fasanella became a retailer for the stolen laptops, Peterson inquired of him whether he knew of anyone else that might be interested in buying or selling the ill-gotten computers. Fasanella in turn contacted one Charlie Rogers, who had earlier purchased one of the computers from him in the fall of 1999, and at the time expressed an interest in receiving additional laptops. During an earlier conversation with Fasanella, Rogers agreed to take part in the retailing of the hot computers and then began to receive shipments in January of 2000 at his place of employment, a car dealership. Rogers pro- ceeded to sell a number of the computers, and returned the unsold laptops to Fasanella. Rogers, like Fasanella, was allowed to keep any proceeds in excess of the $800 per computer he was obligated to give to Peterson pursuant to their agreement. In January of 2000 alone, Rogers received ten shipments, each consisting of four new laptops. After several weeks Rogers’s immediate superior at the car dealership ordered him to cease receiving any more shipments at work. In light of the inability of Rogers to continue to receive computers at work, Fasanella attempted to convince Rogers to accept the shipments at his residence. In fact, Fasanella went so far as to detail to Rogers the inner- workings of the conspiracy and assured him that no one at Ameritech had or would detect the missing laptops because of the supervisory and upper managerial positions Peterson and Knox held in the company. Fasanella also explained that because of Ameritech’s lack of sufficient internal controls and inadequate security, the laptops were sitting out in the open in the hallways, leaving them open to the opportunity for almost any passerby to walk off with a computer. Based on this information, Rogers agreed to receive the computer shipments at his home and, in order to ensure his anonymity, he asked that the laptops be addressed to his father-in-law, “Joe No. 05-3554 5

Koszela.” Fasanella agreed and arranged for the necessary arrangements, and the shipments resumed. From January 26, 2000, to February 10, 2000, Rogers received approximately sixty of Ameritech’s new Dell laptops at his home via UPS. Despite the enterprise’s ongoing success and Fasanella’s assurances that Ameritech would not be tracking the packages, Rogers became increasingly wary of his participation in the illegal sales plot. Thus, after serving as the sole sales person for 100 hot computers for nearly two months, in early February of 2000, Rogers told Fasanella he was no longer interested in continuing to participate in the computer sale out of his home.

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