United States v. Prange

771 F.3d 17, 95 Fed. R. Serv. 1169, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 21091, 2014 WL 5659648
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 2014
Docket13-2262, 13-2328
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 771 F.3d 17 (United States v. Prange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Prange, 771 F.3d 17, 95 Fed. R. Serv. 1169, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 21091, 2014 WL 5659648 (1st Cir. 2014).

Opinion

BALDOCK, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Co-Defendants James Prange and John Jordan of multiple fraud-related counts based on their participation in an FBI securities fraud “sting.” The district court sentenced each defendant to 30 months in prison. Defendants’ consolidated appeals raise multiple challenges to their convictions and sentences. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742, we affirm Defendants’ convictions but remand for resen-tencing because the district court procedurally erred when formulating their guideline sentencing ranges.

I. Introduction

Penny stocks are stocks issued by small companies that trade at less than $5 per share. These stocks, generally speaking, are thinly traded and not listed on organized securities exchanges. As a result, their prices are often volatile and subject to manipulation.

To investigate fraud in the penny stock market; the FBI launched “Operation Penny Pincher.” This sting operation posed an FBI agent as a corrupt hedge fund manager named “John Kelly” from a fictitious fund called “Seafin Capital.” In this role, the agent proposed a particular investment deal to the executives of companies with low market capitalization. The agent offered to use up to five million dollars of his clients’ money to overpay for restricted shares of the executives’ companies in return for a fifty percent kickback disguised as a consulting fee to one of the agent’s nominee companies. 1

The FBI created a New York address, website, and business cards, and rented a *22 Massachusetts office for Seafin Capital. It also used former stock broker E.H. as a cooperating witness willing to speak to executives interested in the kickback arrangement. E.H. had previously been convicted of wire fraud through this same operation and was seeking a lenient sentence.

A. Defendant Prange

Defendant Prange is a self-described financial consultant. A mutual acquaintance introduced E.H. and Prange over the phone in early 2011. In June 2011, Prange called E.H. asking for details about the kickback program. E.H. explained the program as a “program of last resort” where fifty percent would go right back to the agent-manager “and basically it’s a kickback to him.” E.H. also emphasized that the executives had to “fully understand the program” and that those who were uncomfortable could “just walk away.” When Prange asked whether the manager had “a little one page term sheet” documenting the kickback arrangement, E.H. responded “no, no ... he would never put anything in writing.” Prange then replied “Exactly. Right.”

Prange recommended a number of executives as participants in this scheme and later participated in conference calls where E.H. explained to these executives that the hedge fund did not know about the kickback because the manager “slip[ped] this money in” with his “legitimate business” deals. He also explained that the manager used “seven or eight different nominee names” to receive the consulting fee even though there was “no consulting work being done for the company.” With Prange on the call, E.H. told one of these executives that the arrangement was “inappropriate ... definitely inappropriate ... in my mind illegal.”

Prange met the undercover agent in Massachusetts on July 22, 2011. The agent explained that his fund’s typical investments involved a great deal of due diligence. But alongside these “legitimate deals,” the agent said he invested in long-shot corporations in a way that made it look like he had done due diligence when, instead, he would simply “paper the file in order to get it through, and have the hedge fund, make the capital investment.” The catch? He took “a fifty percent kickback, right off the top.” The agent then offered Prange a choice: “if at the end of today ... there’s something about me you don’t like, then, we decide to part ways.” But if Prange decided to participate he would receive ten percent of each kickback, “so if ... we do five million, I get two and a half, I can give you ten percent.”

The agent then explained logistics. He would fund the companies “in tranches ... just to make sure all the mechanics ... work out.” Each tranche would “overpay” for restricted shares of the company’s stock. As for the kickback, the agent explained, “it’s me, personally, and through my nominee company, that gets the money ... so the fund doesn’t know, they don’t need to know.” To “mask the payment,” the agent would “execute a consulting agreement” with one of his nominee companies, but he made clear that “[the] consulting agreement ... is in paper only, there’s no consulting.” The agent then told Prange “the ball is in your court ... if you wanna continue these meetings.” Prange responded, “[absolutely ... it’s excellent.” Prange then sat through two meetings where the agent repeated the kickback pitch to two of the executives Prange had recommended for participation in the scheme.

B. Defendant Jordan

Several weeks later, Defendant Prange suggested the undercover agent invest in *23 Vida Life International. On August 22, 2011, the agent met with Prange and Defendant Jordan — Vida Life’s president, CEO, and CFO. The agent had a two-hour, face-to-face conversation with Jordan, during which he explained the kickback scheme. He then told Jordan “the decision now is yours whether you want ... to continue.” Jordan asked if Vida Life would need to report the kickback on “a 1099” tax form; the agent said no, because they would “mask[the] payment through a consulting agreement” even though no one would ever perform any consulting. The agent then told Jordan, “my biggest concern ... is your ability to ... feel comfortable and ... cover or hide the payment that you’re making back to me.” Jordan responded, “I have no issues.” The agent also told Jordan, “I’m screwing my investors on the hedge fund side,” but qualified that, “They have done so well in the past that anything I do like this is ... not gonna really hurt them.” He then asked if Jordan “had any pangs ... of conscience] with that.” Jordan responded simply: “No.” Jordan then gave the agent materials the agent could use to “mislead” his partners on the nature of the investment. Jordan also pledged to make Vida Life’s press releases say the cash was coming from the sale of fishmeal, and not from Seafin.

At the close of the meeting, Jordan proposed they sign the consulting and stock subscription agreements right then and there. The agent signed the consulting agreement, but directed Jordan (who lived in California) to take the subscription agreement home with him, fill in certain information, and then send it back. By August 31, 2011, Jordan had finalized these agreements.

. Once the executives finalized the stock purchase agreements and the consulting agreements, which listed “Waters Edge” as the nominee corporation to receive the kickback, the FBI (posing as Seafin) wired the first tranche of approximately $30,000 to each company. Of the $32,000 Vida Life received, it sent $16,000 to Waters Edge. Vida Life then disbursed the remainder to Jordan, his credit card, his niece, his attorney, and his business partner.

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771 F.3d 17, 95 Fed. R. Serv. 1169, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 21091, 2014 WL 5659648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-prange-ca1-2014.