United States v. Richard James Tucker

345 F.3d 320
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 2003
Docket02-41104
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 345 F.3d 320 (United States v. Richard James Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Richard James Tucker, 345 F.3d 320 (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

FURGESON, District Judge:

Defendant-Appellant Richard James Tucker appeals from a jury verdict finding him guilty of one count of securities fraud and one count of mail fraud on the ground that the district court improperly excluded his securities expert. Tucker also appeals the district court’s 1) failure to submit an element of the crimes charged to the jury, 2) misstatement of the intent element in the jury charge, 3) failure to provide a specific unanimity-of-theory instruction to the jury, and 4) imposition of consecutive sentences. For the reasons stated below we AFFIRM Tucker’s conviction and sentence in full.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

First Fidelity Acceptance Corporation (“FFAC”) was a Nevada corporation founded in 1991 and headquartered in Plano, Texas. Its purpose was to purchase and sell automobile loans in the form of installment sales contracts, secured by automobiles and light trucks. Upon acquiring the automobile loans, FFAC would then “package” the loans and sell them to financial institutions and large investors.

Tucker joined FFAC in April of 1992 as a consultant to aid the corporation in its first private placement of asset-backed securities. In September of that year, the FFAC Board of Directors named Tucker Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board. According to Tucker, FFAC was performing exceptionally well from 1992 until the first quarter of 1996, with total assets worth $11,672,000. The Government, however, maintains that FFAC experienced mixed financial results from *324 1991 through 1995, at which time FFAC was facing a financial crisis.

In 1996, FFAC created a wholly-owned subsidiary, Automobile Receivables Corporation (“FFAC-ARC”), for the purpose of establishing certain investment trusts. Thereafter, FFAC-ARC organized three trusts with the goal of raising money to be borrowed by FFAC and its subsidiaries for investment in automobile loans. In order to generate capital, the trusts facilitated the offer and sale of certificates; the minimum investment amount was $25,000.

To entice potential investors to purchase the trust certificates, Tucker drafted a Private Placement Memorandum (“PPM”) describing the investment, the trust, and the trust’s relationship to FFAC. The PPMs also contained a number of representations regarding how FFAC would handle and use the money collected from the investors. Notably, the PPMs promised that (1) the proceeds from the sale of the certificates would be used only for the purposes denoted in the PPM; (2) the trust at all times would have investments and cash with an aggregate value exceeding the balance of the certificates; (3) none of the assets in the trust would be available to FFAC or its subsidiaries without first paying to the trust the entire carrying value of such assets; and (4) investors could obtain refunds of their entire investments within ninety days of their requests. Each PPM’s “specific use of proceeds” section indicated that the proceeds from the sale of the certificates would only be invested in automobile loans and automobile floor planning, or placed in insurance reserves or cash reserves. 2 Finally, the PPMs advised all potential investors that the investments were risky and subject to total loss, and that FFAC might be unable to sell the loans it acquired with the proceeds from the sale of certificates.

Tucker described the investments as securities in both the PPMs and in two Regulation D filings with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). 3 Tucker also represented to the SEC in the Regulation D filings that the money raised would not be used for “salaries and fees” or “repayment of indebtedness.”

The Government presented as part of its case Tucker’s conversations with various securities brokers in which Tucker assured them that the proceeds from the certificate sales would be used only for the purchase of automobile loans and not FFAC’s business costs. Tucker allegedly made the same statements to a member of the FFAC Board of Directors.

The Government also offered evidence that Tucker prepared false financial records demonstrating that the funds raised by the sale of the certificates were invested as represented in the PPMs. Securities broker Joe Miller testified that his firm continually requested from Tucker financial statements reflecting the use of the trust funds. In response, Tucker, in July of 1997, sent financial statements to Miller indicating that he had purchased a large number of automobile loans with the proceeds, and that each of the trusts, not FFAC, possessed cash and automobile loans in excess of the amounts invested. Tucker made a similar representation to Miller’s firm in March of 1998, weeks before the collapse of FFAC. 4

*325 The Government contended at trial that Tucker did not use the majority of the money raised from the sale of the certificates to purchase automobile loans. Instead, Tucker had used substantial amounts of the investors’ funds to pay FFAC salaries, rent, legal fees, and other operating costs such as travel and entertainment expenses. Moreover, Tucker, it was maintained, had used the investors’ funds raised in the third trust to repay investors in the second trust who had demanded reimbursement; had paid interest and principal on securities that FFAC had issued in 1995, as well as debts incurred prior to the creation of the trusts; and had paid a settlement in a civil lawsuit against him and FFAC with the proceeds of the certificate sales.

In April of 1998, the Chief Financial Officer of FFAC reported to FFAC’s Board of Directors that the corporation was insolvent. Thereafter, the Board forced Tucker to resign. A team charged with reviewing the books and records of the trusts and FFAC concluded that FFAC was bankrupt and that the trusts held almost no assets of value. Those investors who had not withdrawn their investment by April 15, 1998, lost the principal of their investment in addition to any interest accrued. The losses incurred by all investors totaled over $15 million.

On November 14, 2001, a federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Texas returned a two-count indictment against Tucker, charging him with one count of securities fraud and one count of mail fraud. 5

The first count accused Tucker of the “[u]se of interstate commerce for [the] purpose of fraud or deceit.” 6 The indictment alleged that Tucker had engaged in all of the activities prohibited in 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)(l), (2), and (3). 7 The Government averred in the indictment that Tucker’s “scheme and artifice” to defraud was evinced in the various statements contained in the PPMs, as set forth above. 8

Specifically, count one of the indictment included charges that while making certain *326 promises in the PPMs, Tucker neglected to disclose to potential investors, inter alia,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 F.3d 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-richard-james-tucker-ca5-2003.