United States v. Wanda Love

553 F. App'x 548
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 2014
Docket13-3743
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 553 F. App'x 548 (United States v. Wanda Love) 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. Wanda Love, 553 F. App'x 548 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

BERNICE B. DONALD, Circuit Judge.

A jury found Defendant-Appellant Wanda Love guilty on one count of conspiring to prepare false tax returns in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count 1) and fifty-nine counts of aiding the preparation and filing of false tax returns in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2) (Counts 2-60) based on Love’s conduct during the 2006, 2007, and 2008 tax seasons. The district court sentenced Love to fifteen months’ imprisonment on each count, with all of the sentences to be served concurrently, followed by two years of supervised release for Count 1 and one year of supervised release for each of Counts 2-60, again to run concurrently. The district court also ordered Love to pay $134,149 in restitution and a $6,000 special assessment. Love appeals, arguing that the district court violated her Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses against her by denying her motion to compel disclosure of her co-defendant’s 2004 and 2005 tax returns. Additionally, Love argues that the government did not present sufficient evidence to prove her guilt beyond a reasonable doubt for five of her fifty-nine counts of aiding the preparation and filing of false tax returns and that these five convictions merit reversal. For the reasons stated below, we AFFIRM Love’s convictions and sentence.

I.

Wanda Love worked as a tax preparer at a branch of the tax preparation company H & R Block, located in a Walmart in Toledo, Ohio. According to evidence adduced at trial, beginning in the 2006 tax season, Love generated extra money by having certain tax filers claim that they were self-employed, regardless of whether the filers actually worked, and taking a kickback from the refunds these filers subsequently received. As a part of this plan, Sonya Moses (“Moses”) — Love’s cousin, co-defendant, and eventually a cooperating witness for the government — began referring people, usually family and friends, to Love to participate in this plan. Although H & R Block had a policy that prohibited employees from personally receiving payments or gratuities for preparing tax returns, the participants in this scheme compensated Love directly for her assistance. Moses explained that she and Love split the money obtained from the people Moses recruited, and other participants testified that Moses had explained this fee-sharing arrangement to them.

As part of this scheme, Love would file false Schedule C self-employment income based on individuals’ fabricated involvement in fictitious businesses in order to allow them to receive Earned Income Credit (“EIC”) refunds. These “businesses” often included a version of the filers’ names in their titles; typically purported to sell some combination of belts, hair accessories, or purses; and tended to report identical sales numbers. A number *550 of the tax filers assisted by Love admitted that they did not run any businesses and were not self-employed during the tax years in question. For example, while preparing Tephanie Moses’s 2007 returns, Love knew Tephanie Moses did not have a business but nonetheless listed “Tephanie’s Purses” on her Schedule C form. Similarly, Laura Simpson testified that she told Love she did not own a business but that Love and Moses told her to claim she owned “Laura’s Belts and Purses.”

Of the forty fraudulent returns that Love prepared in 2006 and 2007, none of them reported expenses or costs of goods for the businesses listed on their Schedule C forms. This absence is notable for two reasons. First, as Robert Miller, an IRS Revenue Agent, testified, “legitimate businesses have cost of goods sold or expenses.” Second, according to Cynthia Kowalski — an H & R Block manager who taught several tax preparation training classes that Love had completed, including a course about EIC and preparing Schedule C forms — asking someone who sells purses or belts about expenses would have been a basic question for any tax preparer.

In 2008, the IRS made clear that it expected tax preparers like Love to exercise due diligence, which included questioning a business’s gross receipts if they were not accompanied by expenses. In response, after not listing any business expenses on the tax returns that she prepared in 2006 and 2007, eighteen of the nineteen fraudulent returns prepared by Love in 2008 listed expenses and costs of goods. The same fraudulent filers for whom Love did not list any end-of-year inventory on December 31, 2007 in their 2007 returns suddenly had beginning-of-the-year inventory on January 1, 2008 in their 2008 returns. Agent Miller testified that this would be “impossible,” and IRS Special Agent Jason Failing explained that a business’s inventory value at the end of one year should match the starting inventory for the next year

Under the EIC program, refunds increase to a plateau at the maximum credit level before beginning to decrease as income increases. Of the false returns Love prepared for tax years 2006 to 2008, the vast majority — all fourteen of the returns from 2006, twenty-four of the twenty-six from 2007, and thirteen of the nineteen from 2008 — received the maximum earned income credit. The evidence at trial indicated that Love offset higher gross receipt numbers for the 2008 filings she prepared by reporting cost of goods and expenses in order to lower the net profit on the returns and thereby maximize the EIC refund amount. In total, Love’s customers for whom she prepared false returns fraudulently obtained $134,149 in refunds.

II.

On July 11, 2012, a grand jury returned a sixty-count indictment against Love and Moses, charging each of them with a single count of conspiring to prepare false tax returns in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 and charging Love with fifty-nine additional counts of aiding the preparation and filing of false tax returns in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2). On December 12, 2012, Love filed a motion to compel the government to disclose the 2004 and 2005 tax returns for Moses and others, claiming that without them she would not be able to cross-examine Moses effectively. The district court, however, denied this motion, both because the U.S. Attorney’s Office did not possess the returns and because Love had not shown that the 2004 and 2005 returns were material to the charges concerning false tax returns for tax years 2006 through 2008. During her trial, Love renewed her request and again asserted that not having Moses’s tax returns violat *551 ed her right to meaningfully cross-examine witnesses against her as provided by the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause.

After voir dire on February 11, 2013, the proof in Love’s trial began on February 12. On February 14, 2013, at the close of the government’s case-in-chief, Love moved for a judgment of acquittal on all charges under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29.

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Bluebook (online)
553 F. App'x 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wanda-love-ca6-2014.