United States v. Robert Bates

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 31, 2019
Docket17-6284
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Robert Bates (United States v. Robert Bates) 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. Robert Bates, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0391n.06

Nos. 17-6263/6273/6284/6288

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) Jul 31, 2019 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT CHARLES LARRY BATES, et al., ) COURT FOR THE WESTERN ) DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE Defendants-Appellants. ) ) )

BEFORE: ROGERS, DONALD, and THAPAR, Circuit Judges.

ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Larry Bates held himself out to the public as an apocalyptic

economist committed to helping customers safeguard their wealth by purchasing precious metals

from his company, First American Monetary Consultants. The reality was quite different. First

American Monetary Consultants regularly failed to deliver gold and silver coins to its customers

after they had mailed checks or wired money for their orders, and it ultimately defrauded hundreds

of people to the tune of over twenty million dollars. After a joint jury trial, Larry Bates and three

of his family members were convicted of mail fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit mail

and wire fraud. In this consolidated appeal, the defendants challenge their convictions on multiple

grounds, including sufficiency of the evidence and the allegedly improper denial of their motions

for severance. Defendants also argue that their sentences were procedurally and substantively

unreasonable, that they should not have been held joint and severally liable for forfeiture, and that Nos. 17-6263/6273/6284/6288, United States v. Bates, et al.

the forfeiture amount was disproportionately excessive in violation of the Eighth Amendment.

None of their arguments succeeds.

I.

First American Monetary Consultants acted as a broker for precious metal transactions,

purchasing gold and silver coins from wholesale suppliers and selling them to individuals looking

for investment opportunities. Established in 1984, First American was initially incorporated in

Colorado and subsequently became incorporated in Tennessee. Its founder, President, and CEO,

Dr. Larry Bates, was a former member of the Tennessee House of Representatives with a doctorate

in Christian education. Larry Bates and his wife, Barbara Bates, were First American’s sole

shareholders.

First American began as a small consulting business consisting of Larry Bates and a

secretary. It eventually expanded, in no small part due to the public outreach conducted by Larry

Bates. Bates had turned his dissertation into a best-selling book entitled “The New Economic

Disorder,” and he capitalized on that success by becoming a frequent guest on Christian television

shows and radio programs by the mid-2000s. First American also organized conferences

throughout the country in which Larry Bates would speak to prospective customers. The pitch

was always similar. Larry Bates would warn his audience about an imminent economic disaster,

characterizing it as an “end time scenario” out of the Book of Revelation that would destroy the

value of currency and threaten the savings of everyone invested in the stock market. First

American offered a solution. With the assistance of its “economists,” First American’s term for

its sales staff, customers could invest in precious metals that would not lose value in an economic

collapse. First American also sold other products to help its customers prepare for Armageddon,

including Larry Bates’ books and freeze-dried food.

-2- Nos. 17-6263/6273/6284/6288, United States v. Bates, et al.

Each of Larry Bates’ immediate family members worked for First American. Barbara

Bates served as the Vice President and was responsible for maintaining the company’s financial

records. The couple has two sons, Charles Edward Bates (“Chuck Bates”) and Robert Bates (“Bob

Bates”). Chuck Bates was a Senior Monetary Consultant and Larry Bates’ second-in-command,

whose responsibilities included selling precious metals to customers, hiring and training new

salesmen, and calculating sales commissions. Bob Bates also served as a Senior Monetary

Consultant, but his role was limited to that of a salesman. Kinsey Bates (formerly Kinsey Brown)

was hired in 2009 and became Larry Bates’ personal assistant in 2010. She was responsible for

handling customer calls, picking up First American’s mail from the post office, sorting mail, and

delivering mail to Larry Bates. Kinsey married Bob Bates in October of 2012.

All of the defendants worked in First American’s Memphis office. Chuck and Bob Bates

had offices in a locked hallway behind the receptionist’s desk, where the First American

economists worked as well. At the end of the hallway there was another locked door that opened

into an executive suite where Larry, Barbara, and Kinsey Bates worked. Kinsey Bates stayed with

a First American employee named Sherry Barnett in the “outside area” of the executive suite, while

Larry and Barbara Bates had separate offices within it. The executive suite also contained a locked

shipping room with two safes, and only Larry, Bob, and Chuck Bates knew the combinations.

Larry, Barbara, Chuck, Bob, and Kinsey Bates were each able to access the executive suite, and

other economists could only do so when accompanied by a member of the Bates family or another

authorized employee. If an economist had a message or customer order to provide to Larry Bates,

then the standard practice was to “slip it under the door where it was retrieved by somebody in the

executive suite.”

-3- Nos. 17-6263/6273/6284/6288, United States v. Bates, et al.

In addition to running First American, Larry Bates served as the CEO and majority

shareholder of Information Radio Network (“IRN”), a Tennessee corporation and First American’s

affiliate. Larry Bates used IRN as an additional source of advertising for First American. A couple

of the other Bates family members were also involved in managing IRN. Barbara Bates was a

director, and Chuck Bates worked as an officer and news director for the company. Larry Bates

also produced a radio show through IRN called “News and Views,” and Chuck Bates assisted as a

co-host.

The process for ordering precious metals through First American would work as follows.

Customers typically contacted First American after hearing Larry Bates speak on a TV show, on

a radio program, or at a First American conference. First American would respond by mailing an

information packet and assigning an economist to advise the customer on how to invest in gold

and silver coins. After the customer placed an order, First American would fill out a transaction

form and instruct the customer to either send a check through U.S. mail or pay through a wire

transfer. Larry Bates was in charge of purchasing the requested coins from a wholesale supplier.

First American would then send order confirmations through U.S. mail advising customers that

they should expect to wait twenty-five to forty-five business days for their coins to be delivered.

Although customers were initially drawn to First American based on Larry Bates’

reputation as a Christian, many of them became disillusioned after experiencing delivery delays of

months or years. The volume of customer complaints increased from 2009 to 2013, as the orders

for hundreds of customers remained partially or completely unfulfilled. Customers attempted to

obtain their coins by contacting First American employees—including each of the defendants—

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