United States v. Swanson, David H.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 2007
Docket05-4432
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Swanson, David H. (United States v. Swanson, David H.) 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. Swanson, David H., (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 05-4432 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

DAVID H. SWANSON, Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 1:01CR00083—Sarah Evans Barker, Judge. ____________ ARGUED MAY 8, 2006Œ—DECIDED APRIL 20, 2007 ____________

Before BAUER, RIPPLE, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. For the second time David Swanson, who worked as an independent consultant and briefly as the chief executive officer of Countrymark Cooperative, Inc., appeals his prison sentence and the restitution and forfeiture orders entered on his convic- tions arising from a fraudulent scheme to siphon funds for his personal use from his consulting clients and Countrymark. We remanded previously, instructing the

Œ Pursuant to Operating Procedure 6(b), this successive appeal has been submitted to the same panel that decided Case No. 03-1863. 2 No. 05-4432

district court to reconsider the amounts it ordered as restitution and forfeiture, and for recalcuation of the guidelines imprisonment range using the 1998 version of the guidelines, which the parties agreed should apply. We also recognized that aspects of Swanson’s sentence under the guidelines might be affected by the then-forthcoming decision in United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005). Now in this second appeal, Swanson renews his disagree- ments with the district court’s calculation of the fraud loss and the amount of restitution, and he also presses a new contention that in formulating his guidelines sen- tence the court erroneously applied an upward adjust- ment for his role as an organizer or leader of extensive criminal activity. We are not persuaded by these argu- ments—or by others that rest on views about Booker that we have rejected in other cases—and accordingly affirm the judgment of the district court.

I. We presume familiarity with our prior opinion, United States v. Swanson, 394 F.3d 520 (7th Cir. 2005) (“Swanson I”). Briefly, as an independent consultant and as the CEO of Countrymark, Swanson managed the acquisitions of related agricultural enterprises. He used his positions for personal gain, however, by obtaining “reimbursement” for phony expenses and by inflating the reported purchase price of one acquisition and keeping the extra money for himself. After a three-week trial, a jury found Swanson guilty of wire fraud, money laundering, interstate trans- portation of stolen funds, and income tax evasion. At the first sentencing, the district court found that Swanson’s fraud led to $6.7 million in losses; that conclusion was based in part on what the court characterized as “the government’s proof at trial that the jury accepted.” The court also entered orders of restitution and forfeiture No. 05-4432 3

but failed to consider whether the restitution figure should have been offset by money repaid to the victim corporations and by the value, if any, they received from Swanson’s work on the acquisitions. The court also neglected to ensure that the forfeiture figure encom- passed only proceeds from Swanson’s illegal activities. Because of these errors, we remanded for resentencing. We noted that the jury returned general verdicts and thus did not make any findings relevant to the fraud loss; accordingly, we instructed the district court to revisit the loss determination and, if necessary depending on the outcome in Booker, other guidelines findings as well. See Swanson I, 394 F.3d at 526 n.1. We also directed the district court to reconsider the amounts of restitution and forfeiture after making additional factual findings, and to recalculate the imprisonment range using the 1998 guidelines rather than the 2001 version that the court employed. Id. at 530. At resentencing the parties and the district court all agreed that Swanson should be sentenced using the 1998 version of the guidelines. The government, however, argued that our remand in Swanson’s first appeal did not require the district court to recalculate the fraud loss for purposes of the guidelines. In a memorandum supported by an extensive compilation of trial exhibits, the gov- ernment offered revised calculations for the amounts of restitution and forfeiture. For his part, Swanson argued that our remand did require a recalculation of the fraud loss, and that the government failed to support its revised calculation with adequate evidence. He also objected that he had acted alone and thus a four-level upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1 for organiz- ing and leading the criminal activity should not be reim- posed. This was not an argument he made at the first sentencing hearing or that he raised in his prior appeal. Swanson further objected to the government’s proposed 4 No. 05-4432

restitution figure. He argued that the requested amount still failed to account for the value that his work, even if fraudulent in part, may have conferred on the victims, but he refused to suggest an alternative figure for restitu- tion or produce any evidence that part of what he did for his victims was legitimate. The district court recalculated the fraud loss using the government’s new itemization but still arrived at $6.7 million, just as before. The court used this figure in applying U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1, the applicable offense guideline from the 1998 version of the guidelines, and once again added four levels under § 3B1.1(a). The court then sen- tenced Swanson to 151 months of imprisonment, the high end of the resulting range of 121 to 151 months. In addi- tion, with no proposed restitution figure from Swanson, the court adopted the government’s calculations, which credited Swanson for repayments made to Countrymark, and ordered Swanson to pay $2.2 million in restitution.

II. A. Fraud Loss Amount Swanson first argues that the district court erred in calculating a $6.7 million fraud loss. The court’s calcula- tion subjected Swanson to a 14-level upward adjustment under the 1998 version of the guidelines. See U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(1)(O), (P) (1998) (increasing offense level by 14 if loss caused by fraud totals more than $5 million but less than $10 million). The two largest components of the loss stem from Swanson’s conduct during Country- mark’s acquisition of Malta Clayton, an agriculture feed company, and his role in promoting a start-up company called GreenHeat, LLC. He says the loss figure is over- stated since it includes (1) amounts that even now he characterizes as “closing costs” for the Malta Clayton No. 05-4432 5

acquisition, (2) investments in GreenHeat that Swanson says were lost because the company failed and not be- cause of his fraud, and (3) losses stemming from conduct not charged in his indictment. As to the acquisition, Swanson told Countrymark’s board of directors that acquiring Malta Clayton would cost $33 million. In fact, as Swanson knew, the actual cost was only $31 million, but he collected a total of $35 million for the deal from Countrymark and another investor. Swanson left the $4 million surplus in a bank account that he alone controlled, and from that account he di- verted half to his personal use before he was discovered. At trial the chairman of Countrymark’s board confirmed that Swanson misrepresented the acquisition cost to be $33 million. The government also introduced phony invoices that Swanson created to convince Countrymark that nearly all of the $2 million he used for personal expenses and funneled to his private accounts had gone to Vickers and Allen, Inc., a consulting firm, for “closing costs” associated with the acquisition.

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