United States v. Stephens

148 F. App'x 385
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 9, 2005
Docket04-3781
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 F. App'x 385 (United States v. Stephens) 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. Stephens, 148 F. App'x 385 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

KENNEDY, Circuit Judge.

The defendant was found guilty by a jury on two counts of attempted tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. The district court sentenced the defendant to 33 months imprisonment. The defendant appeals from both his conviction and sentence. In appealing his conviction, he argues that the district court erred when it refused to permit his counsel to elicit certain testimony from two witnesses. Specifically, the defendant contends, the district court erred when it refused to permit defendant’s counsel to introduce evidence that the defendant had voluntarily agreed to submit to a polygraph examination. Moreover, the defendant asserts, the district court erred when it refused to permit defense counsel to introduce evidence that even if the defendant were found not guilty of the criminal charges, he would still be civilly liable for his back taxes. Finally, with respect to his sentence, the defendant maintains that his Sixth Amendment right to trial by a jury was violated when the district court enhanced his sentence under a mandatory guideline regime based upon facts not admitted by the defendant or found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the defendant’s conviction, VACATE the defendant’s sentence, and REMAND for re-sentencing in light of Booker.

BACKGROUND

A grand jury indicted the defendant on three counts of attempted tax evasion for the years of 1997, 1998, and 1999 for not reporting $1,680,846 of income over those years. 1 During those years, the defendant *387 reported income only from his regular day job with the United States Department of Defense, Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS), plus other modest amounts of interest, dividends, capital gains, and rental income.

The sources of unreported income were the defendant’s fees as minister of the Abundant Life Church and the defendant’s spiritual consulting income from his client Robin Lipsky. As minister of the Abundant Life Church, the defendant received, if funds were available, $500 per week. The defendant did not report this income to the IRS. The substantial majority of the defendant’s unearned income, however, was obtained from Robin Lipsky. The defendant met Lipsky, a wealthy New York City resident who receives most of her income from family trusts, in 1985 at the home of a mutual friend who had studied tarot card reading with the defendant and who had invited the defendant to give tarot card readings. At the defendant’s trial, Lipsky testified that she and the defendant maintained occasional contact until, in the late 80s, Lipsky agreed to become a client of the defendant. Lipsky initially agreed to pay the defendant $2,500 per month for spiritual counseling conducted over the phone approximately once or twice a week. Later, they agreed to increase the fee to $5,000 per month based on more frequent phone sessions. Beyond the monthly fees, Lipsky would pay the defendant substantial “overages” for additional services, including prayer work, meditation, and ritual work. The amount of these “overages” charges ranged from $10,000 to $25,000. From 1996 to 1999, Lipsky paid the defendant approximately $2,000,000 for his spiritual counseling services.

In April of 2001, two IRS special agents contacted the defendant to notify him that he was under criminal investigation pertaining to his 1996 through 1999 income tax liabilities. Around the same time, the defendant contacted Lipsky and told her that he wanted to repay some of the money that she had “loaned” him. After she said that she had not loaned him any of the money she sent him, he responded by telling her that if anyone called her about the money she should say that he was repaying a loan. In late November or early December of 2001, Lipsky received a telephone message from an IRS special agent asking her to call him back regarding the defendant. Before returning the call, Lip-sky spoke with the defendant twice. During the first conversation, he reminded her of his earlier admonition to tell anyone who called that she had made him a loan. In the second call, he again asked her to tell the agent she had made him a loan.

During the presentation of its case-in-chief, the government also called Department of Defense Special Agent Robertson to testify. In November of 1999, before the defendant was under investigation for tax evasion, Agent Robertson interviewed the defendant as part of an investigation into embezzlement in the DFAS unit that the defendant supervised. The investigation did not uncover participation by the defendant in the embezzlement. Aside from his supervisory role, the defendant caught Agent Robertson’s interest because of a published news article that the defendant was building a new home at a cost of $485,000. Agent Robertson inquired as to the defendant’s source of money to build this home. The defendant responded that nearly half the money came from a bank loan, and that the other half came from savings and from loans from wealthy friends. The defendant refused to tell Agent Robertson the name of these wealthy friends. When Agent Robertson asked the defendant if he had sources of income outside of his DFAS income, the defendant replied that he had a position *388 with a local church that provided him with income on an irregular basis.

During the trial, the government called Agent Robertson to testify to establish the defendant’s consciousness of guilt by his false and deceptive responses that he had borrowed money from numerous wealthy friends, whose names he would not reveal, and by not disclosing his counseling business. On cross-examination, defense counsel sought to elicit testimony that the defendant, at the end of Agent Robertson’s interview of him, offered to take a polygraph test. As disclosed on Robertson’s voir dire examination, the defendant never took the polygraph examination because his attorney subsequently placed conditions on the test which were unacceptable to the government. The district court refused to permit defense counsel to elicit from Agent Robertson that defendant offered to take a polygraph test.

During the trial, the government also called IRS Special Agent Curtis to testify. Agent Curtis was responsible for the criminal investigation of the defendant’s suspected tax evasion. During recross of Agent Curtis, defense counsel pursued a line of questioning attempting to establish that a tax evader who is not indicted for tax evasion would nonetheless be subject to civil tax assessment proceedings. The district court refused to permit defense counsel from continuing this line of questioning and informed the jury that “the IRS has the right to proceed both criminally and civilly” against a tax evader.

After both sides rested, the jury returned a guilty verdict on counts 1 and 2, relating to the defendant’s tax evasion in 1997 and 1998, and returned a not guilty verdict on count 3, the defendant’s alleged tax evasion in 1999. In sentencing the defendant, the district court applied the 1998 Guidelines. The district court determined that the defendant’s base offense level was 18 because the tax loss was greater than $550,000 but less than $950,000. See United States Sentencing Commission, Guidelines Manual, § 2T4.1(M) (Nov.1998).

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Bluebook (online)
148 F. App'x 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stephens-ca6-2005.