United States v. Russel J. Lesperance

25 F.3d 553, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 13074, 1994 WL 234536
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1994
Docket92-3318
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 F.3d 553 (United States v. Russel J. Lesperance) 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. Russel J. Lesperance, 25 F.3d 553, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 13074, 1994 WL 234536 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

BAUER, Circuit Judge.

On February 25,1992, a federal grand jury indicted Russel J. Lesperance for willfully falsifying material facts in order to obtain a Small Business Administration (SBA) disaster loan in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. A jury of his peers convicted Lesperance on this charge later that year. The district court sentenced Lesperance to four months imprisonment, four months of home confinement, and two years of supervised release. In addition, although the district court did not fine Lesperance as permitted under the Sentencing Guidelines, it did order Lesperance to make restitution to the SBA. Les-perance appeals both his conviction and the district court’s order of restitution. We affirm.

I. Facts

As a result of flooding in early August 1986, Milwaukee, Wisconsin was declared a federal disaster area. The SBA, operating under the aegis of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, offers low interest loans to qualifying homeowners and businesses harmed by a disaster to enable these borrowers to repair the damage wrought by the disaster. In late August 1986, United Research Center, Inc. (URC), through Russel Lesperance as president, applied for such a loan. The stated purpose of the loan was to finance repairs on a residential rental property, consisting of a six-unit building and a duplex, owned by URC.

Prior to granting the loan and during the course of managing the disbursement of the proceeds of the loan, the SBA conducted several inspections of the property to ascertain the extent of the necessary repair work and to verify its actual performance. Loss verifier Troy Dale Stagner performed the first such inspection and determined that the property required over $22,000 worth of repairs. Stagner determined that the heating units in the.duplex should be replaced. In addition, he noted that the heating units in the six-unit building should be replaced, but was told by Lesperance, who accompanied Stagner on the inspection, that central heating units need not be installed in the six-unit building because heating units had been installed in the individual units prior to the flood.

*555 The SBA initially denied URC’s application for a loan due to its questionable credit. In response, URC reorganized in late October 1986 and named Mark Lesperanee, Russel’s son, president. Russel Lesperanee was named secretary. Subsequently, the SBA approved URC’s loan.

The loan authorization and agreement, dated December 22, 1986, was signed by Mark Lesperanee, president, and Russel Lesperance, secretary, and authorized a loan in the amount of $22,400. The loan authorization was based upon Stagner’s assessment of the cost to repair the damages to the property wrought by the flood. A provision in the agreement permitted an alteration of the loan amount if later inspections revealed more or less damage. The loan also required URC to obtain itemized receipts and contracts for all work financed by loan funds.

In accordance with the loan agreement, Lesperanee, as URC’s secretary, sent a letter dated January 7,1987, to the SBA stating that the repairs had been made and that URC had paid ninety percent of the amount due. Lesperanee included with the letter four lien waivers totaling $22,900. These lien waivers were signed by four contractors who apparently had performed the repairs.

Soon after sending the letter, Lesperanee contacted the SBA to request a disbursement of his loan. The SBA informed Lesperanee that a disbursement could not be made until outstanding taxes were paid. Lesperanee responded that he had used money earmarked for taxes to pay the contractors making repairs. Based on Lesperance’s statement and the lien waivers, the SBA agreed to issue two checks jointly payable to URC and the taxing body in the amount of $6,400. After the disbursement, the SBA received another letter from Lesperanee dated January 27,1987, to which a borrower’s disbursement certification was attached. The borrower’s disbursement certification submitted by Lesperanee stated that the repairs were completed and that the contractors had been paid. The SBA noticed that one of the contractors named was Lesperanee Associated Contractors, Inc.; sensing a possible impropriety, the SBA ordered an inspection to verify that the repairs had been made and the contractors paid.

In February 1987, Stagner conducted another inspection of URC’s property. At this inspection, Lesperanee told Stagner that individual furnaces were placed in the individual units after the flood in the six-unit building; Stagner consulted his prior report and determined that Lesperanee had told him otherwise. Lesperanee also told Stagner that the furnaces in the duplex had been replaced; upon inspection, Stagner believed that Lesperanee had not replaced those furnaces. Suspecting something strange afoot, Stagner requested some proof of payment on the lien waivers from Lesperanee, who told him that no check payménts had been made. Finally, Stagner concluded that only $3,900 worth of repairs had been made at that point and filed his report with the SBA office.

On March 6, 1987, Lesperanee, as URC secretary, sent another letter to the SBA in which he detailed contracts between URC and four contractors and articulated the work these contractors had performed. Lesper-anee attached to the letter the contracts, all dated August 9, 1986, and signed by Russel J. Lesperanee as URC’s secretary. These contracts indicated some sort of bartering arrangement between URC and the contractors by which URC promised the contractors' services or the use of certain land owned by URC in return for the repair work. The purpose of this letter was to dispel the SBA’s concerns of possible improprieties and to induce the SBA to disburse the balance of the loan amount. Although the SBA continued to receive letters from URC, it communicated to Lesperanee that it would make no further disbursements until URC complied with the terms of the loan agreement.

At the urging of Lesperanee (and, according to the government, a Wisconsin Senator), the SBA agreed to perform another loss verification of the property. Stephen Andru-zak inspected the property for the SBA and was told by Lesperanee that he was forced to install individual heating units in each unit of the six-unit building because the flood had damaged the central heating units in the basement. Failing to note the section in Stagner’s report to the contrary, Andruzak *556 reported that Lesperance’s loss was greater than originally determined and recommended an increase in URC’s loan. Based on Andru-zak’s report, the SBA agreed to increase the amount of the loan to approximately $30,000 and disbursed $10,000 to URC.

Despite ongoing correspondence between URC and the SBA, URC failed to provide any receipts for repair work actually performed. The SBA then ordered another on-site inspection to verify that all repairs had been or would-be made in accordance with the authorized use of the loan proceeds. Robert McCubbins and Robert Raniewics, two experiéneed field personnel, performed this final inspection on December 17, 1987. These two men determined that very little repair work had been done, estimating the value of this work to be approximately $4,000. Consequently, McCubbins recommended that the SBA reduce the loan to $16,400, the amount already disbursed, and close URC’s file.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F.3d 553, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 13074, 1994 WL 234536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-russel-j-lesperance-ca7-1994.