United States v. Rodney Sherman

372 F. App'x 668
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 2010
Docket09-1362
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 372 F. App'x 668 (United States v. Rodney Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Rodney Sherman, 372 F. App'x 668 (8th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

VIKEN, District Judge.

Rodney Sherman entered conditional guilty pleas to one count of making a false declaration on his 2003 personal income tax return and one count of making a false declaration on his 2004 corporate income tax return in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). His pleas reserved the right to appeal the decision of the district court 3 denying a motion to suppress a search warrant of his business premises and the refusal of the district court to allow expert witness testimony to calculate the appropriate advisory guideline range for sentencing purposes. We affirm.

I. Background

On September 15, 2005, an Associate Circuit Court Judge of St. Charles County, Missouri, issued a search warrant for Budget Towing, which was owned by Sherman and located in Wentzville, Missouri. The search warrant was supported by two affidavits, which were sworn to before the judge who issued the search warrant. The first affidavit was executed by Officer Buehrle of the O’Fallon Police Department and the second by Lesley Schellert, a former employee of Budget Towing.

The affidavits contained the following information. Schellert, who was an office employee, believed that her employer, *671 Sherman, was defrauding insurance companies by his billing practices under a contract Budget Towing held with the City of O’Fallon. While vehicles without insurance coverage were billed $15, Budget Towing was charging the insurance carriers for insured vehicles an increased fee of between $140 and $160 for the same services. Schellert told Officer Buehrle that Budget Towing charged an additional fee of $35 for clean up following an accident, even if the tow-truck operator did no clean up. When Schellert confronted Sherman about these billing practices, she was fired.

Schellert also described in her affidavit a procedure by which Budget Towing would sell towed vehicles to a salvage yard for $50 without the proper title work having been completed. These were cash sales in which the tow driver would receive $5 for towing the sold vehicle to the salvage company and the remaining cash would belong to Budget Towing. She also described how the other office employee, a Ms. Walters, who was still employed, would burn or shred all cash receipts so the money could not be tracked to Sherman and his business.

Schellert related that Sherman maintained two separate safes, one in his office and one in the back area, where all cash was secured. At the end of the day, Sherman would separate the cash from check receipts, putting the checks into a bank bag for deposit. Cash receipts were given to Walters for shredding and the cash would go into Sherman’s pocket or a separate money bag, which he would take home. Finally, Schellert stated that Sherman had access to all of the computers on the business premises and he was able to change the data on them.

Schellert’s affidavit disclosed she had allowed Officer Buehrle to tape record a detailed interview at her home and she would cooperate and testify, if necessary. She acknowledged she feared criminal charges would be possible against her for participation in these activities and that she had been fired for confronting Sherman about the fraudulent charges to the insurance companies.

Officer Buehrle’s affidavit described his nineteen years of police experience and the details of his interview with Schellert. His affidavit described a handwritten document produced by Schellert which indicated Budget Towing had been paid for a number of vehicles sold to the salvage yard without titles between April 2002 to June 2004.

Officer Buehrle also reviewed three separate billings of Budget Towing which included the $35 clean-up fee. When interviewing two of the drivers from one of those accidents, both stated that no clean up was performed by the tow driver. In a separate collision, another driver reported it was the fire department which had removed vehicle parts from the highway, not Budget Towing.

The search warrant, in relevant part, allowed for the seizure of the following items:

1. All documents, receipts, invoices, insurance billings, vehicle titles, salvage titles and other articles regarding tow bills ... to private individuals, insurance companies.... All documentation regarding the sale or transfer of motor vehicles with or without titles that had been towed by Budget Towing....
2. Any and all electronic data processing and storage devices, computer and computer systems including central processing unit, internal peripheral storage devices such as fixed disks, external hard disks, floppy disks and diskettes, tape drives and tapes, optical storage devices, or other memory storage devices, peripheral input/output devices related *672 communication devices such as modem; system documentation, operating logs, handwritten notes in the computer area that could be a password, instruction booklet or other operational manuals for the computer system, and documentation to show any computer assigned or used by Budget Towing and it’s [sic] employees, and to take photographs of the area surrounding the computer.

The search warrant was executed on September 16, 2005, by Officer Buehrle, officers from the O’Fallon Police Department, and federal agents with the U.S. Postal Inspector’s Office. Sherman was ultimately charged with seven counts, alleging violations of 26 U.S.C. § 7206 for making false declarations on both his personal and corporate federal tax returns for the years 2002 through 2004.

Sherman filed a detailed affidavit in support of his request for a Franks' 4 hearing and his motion to suppress the evidence seized under the search warrant. A Franks hearing was held before a United States Magistrate Judge. Sherman alleged the affidavits intentionally and recklessly misled the state judge by including affirmative false statements or by omitting material information which would have affected the probable cause determination.

Sherman’s testimony for the Franks hearing challenged Schellert’s dates of employment and her position with Budget Towing, the clean-up fee claim, the sale of untitled vehicles, the destruction of cash receipts, and the charges made to insurance companies. Sherman challenged Officer Buehrle’s affidavit for failing to disclose to the state judge that the city attorney had informed Officer Buehrle that the increased billings to insurance companies were permitted under the city contract. Sherman also asserted Officer Buehrle knew Schellert was not a credible witness for a number of reasons. Of particular concern to Sherman was the failure of Officer Buehrle to advise the court that Schellert had been circulating a flyer to the public with the same allegations of insurance fraud and that Sherman’s own private investigator had concluded Schellert was not a credible witness because of her vendetta against Sherman.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
372 F. App'x 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rodney-sherman-ca8-2010.