NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 10a0461n.06
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405 FILED
Jul 28, 2010
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
DONALD H. AYERS, ) THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
) OHIO
Defendant-Appellant. )
)
)
Before: SUTTON, KETHLEDGE, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. National Century Financial Enterprises (NCFE) defrauded
its investors of more than $2.4 billion. The question here is whether Donald Ayers participated in
that fraud. A jury concluded that he did, convicting him of securities fraud, conspiracy to commit
securities fraud and wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Ayers now appeals,
primarily challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting each conviction. We reject his
arguments on the fraud convictions, but agree that the government did not prove a conspiracy to
commit money laundering. We therefore affirm Ayers’s fraud convictions, reverse the money-
laundering one, and remand the case for resentencing.
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
I.
The facts surrounding NCFE’s collapse are described in greater detail in United States v.
Faulkenberry, Nos. 08-4233 and 08-4404, ___ F.3d ___ (6th Cir. July 28, 2010), an appeal by one
of Ayers’s co-defendants. The facts below suffice for Ayers’s arguments.
NCFE’s business was to purchase, at a discount, the accounts receivable of healthcare
providers. These transactions benefitted providers by affording them immediate cash flow; and in
theory, they generated profits for NCFE based on the discounted purchase price.
Of course, NCFE itself needed money to purchase the receivables, so it sold bonds to
investors. Technically, two of NCFE’s subsidiaries, NPF VI and NPF XII, issued the bonds. But
NCFE fully controlled those subsidiaries, and NCFE remained responsible for marketing the bonds.
Most of that marketing occurred through monthly presentations or through the Private Placement
Memorandum (PPM), which was a document sent to investors describing the bonds.
When marketing the bonds, NCFE executives made specific representations about certain
investor protections, four of which are relevant here. First, NCFE promised investors that their
monies would be used only to purchase “eligible receivables.” A receivable was eligible only if it
met certain criteria demonstrating a low risk of default. Second, the purchased receivables would
serve as collateral for the amounts that NCFE owed its bondholders. Thus, each time NCFE sent
investors’ monies to a provider, the investors obtained roughly equivalent collateral in the form of
purchased receivables.
-2-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
Third, NCFE told investors that it would maintain reserve accounts equal to 17% of the
“outstanding Purchased Receivables.” If any of the purchased receivables were not paid, NCFE
could then cover itself by withdrawing the unpaid amount from the reserve accounts. And fourth,
NCFE established Trustee oversight for the accounts containing investors’ funds. The Trustees were
responsible for ensuring that the reserve accounts were adequately funded, and for distributing
monthly investor reports that NCFE created. NCFE raised billions of dollars from investors.
The record makes clear that those representations were false. NCFE executives repeatedly
lied to investors from approximately 1995 until 2002, when NCFE ceased operations. The deception
centered on the practice of “advancing.” Contrary to what it told investors, NCFE routinely wired
funds to healthcare providers without obtaining any receivables, much less eligible ones, in return.
These advances—consisting of investor monies—were the equivalent of unsecured loans.
Nevertheless, NCFE sent many of the advances to providers on the verge of bankruptcy, sometimes
even to providers in bankruptcy.
Unsurprisingly, the providers consistently failed to re-pay NCFE; and over time, the advances
rendered NCFE’s investors increasingly under-collateralized. They did so on a massive scale: by
August 2002, eight providers each owed NCFE over $100 million, one of them as much as $600
million, little of which was secured by eligible receivables.
NCFE went to extraordinary lengths to conceal these aspects of its business. Under the
governing documents for investor bonds, the Trustees could wire funds to providers only to the
extent that NCFE documented that it was obtaining eligible receivables in return. To evade this
-3-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
limitation, NCFE submitted a phony Receivables Purchase Report to the Trustees for every advance.
NCFE also hid the advances, and the losses caused by them, from investors. Sherry Gibson, NCFE’s
“Director of Compliance,” testified at trial that the monthly investor reports “would be manipulated
in any way necessary in order to make compliance[.]” Indeed, she testified that every report from
1995 until NCFE’s collapse in 2002 was falsified.
NCFE also concealed shortages in NPF VI’s and XII’s reserve accounts, albeit in a different
way. Each month, the Trustees were obligated to “test” the sufficiency of the accounts’ balances.
NCFE arranged for the NPF VI and XII testing to be conducted on different days, however, and then
shifted funds between each account as needed to make each appear to have sufficient funds on its
testing day. That shifting of funds—first to one NPF entity, then back to the other—occurred every
month from approximately 2000 onward, frequently involving sums over $100 million. By 2002,
NCFE would transfer the entire balance from one entity to the other.
Finally, on September 30, 2002, a Trustee refused to shift funds between the accounts. That
refusal triggered a cascade of events that revealed the full extent of NCFE’s fraud to its investors.
NCFE declared bankruptcy in November 2002, resulting in investor losses of approximately $2.4
billion.
That NCFE defrauded its investors does not necessarily mean that all of its executives
participated in the fraud. The person before us in this appeal is Donald Ayers. He was one of
NCFE’s three original founders, and considered a “principal.” While at NCFE, he served as Chief
Operating Officer and as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors.
-4-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
After NCFE’s collapse, the government indicted Ayers on six counts of securities fraud, one
count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud, and one count of conspiracy to
commit money laundering. The government tried him with four co-defendants. After a six-week
trial, the jury convicted all defendants on all counts. The district court sentenced Ayers to fifteen
years’ imprisonment: five years on each of the fraud-related counts, and fifteen years on the
conspiracy to commit money-laundering count, with all sentences running concurrently. The court
also ordered Ayers to pay restitution in the amount of $2.4 billion.
This appeal followed.
II.
Ayers challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting each conviction. When
reviewing a guilty verdict, “the relevant question is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light
most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements
of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979) (emphasis
in original).
A.
Ayers first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his securities-fraud
convictions under 15 U.S.C. §§ 77q(a) and 77x. The former provides in relevant part:
It shall be unlawful for any person in the offer or sale of any securities . . . by the use
of any means or instruments of transportation or communication in interstate
commerce or by use of the mails, directly or indirectly
(1) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, or
-5-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
(2) to obtain money or property by means of any untrue statement of
a material fact or any omission to state a material fact necessary in
order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading; or
(3) to engage in any transaction, practice, or course of business which
operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon the purchaser.
Section 77x makes it a criminal offense to “willfully violate[]” § 77q(a). The parties here focus on
subsection (2), which prohibits material misrepresentations.
Each of Ayers’s six counts is based on a particular issuance of bonds by NPF VI or NPF XII.
The first issuance occurred on June 20, 2001, and the last on May 31, 2002. Ayers does not dispute
that the bond issuances constituted offers of securities, or that instruments of interstate commerce
were used in connection with the offers. Instead, he argues that the government did not prove that
he “willfully and knowingly represented anything false” in connection with the offers. Ayers’s Br.
at 68. Ayers’s argument encompasses three separate issues: whether he made any statements;
whether those statements were false; and whether Ayers knew they were false. We address each
issue in turn.
First, Ayers made actionable statements when he authorized the bond issuances. It is
undisputed that, as a principal, Ayers was responsible for deciding whether and when to issue new
bonds. And as a member of the Board of Directors, Ayers signed Resolutions authorizing each of
the six charged issuances. Thus, any statements accompanying those issuances are fairly attributable
to Ayers. See generally S.E.C. v. Tambone, 597 F.3d 436, 444 (1st Cir. 2010) (en banc) (discussing
“the expansive language” of § 77q(a)(2), which “cover[s] the ‘use’ of an untrue statement of material
-6-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
fact (regardless of who created or composed the statement)”). Here, each bond issuance was
accompanied by a PPM, which described the terms of the bonds, including the investor protections
discussed above. The statements within the PPMs are attributable to Ayers.
The second question, then, is whether the PPMs contained any material falsehoods. A
rational jury could find that they did. Specifically, each PPM stated that the bond issuer—either NPF
VI or NPF XII—would “restrict[] its business to the purchase of Eligible Receivables[.]” The
practice of advancing was a patent violation of this restriction. A rational jury could find, therefore,
that the PPMs contained misrepresentations that were both false and material.
That leaves only the question whether Ayers knew that the PPMs’ representations were false.
The jury had ample reason to conclude that he did. As an initial matter, Ayers’s status as a principal
ensured that he knew about the overall fraud. He attended Executive Committee meetings, where
the practice of advancing, the problems caused by advancing, and the compliance issues surrounding
investor reports were discussed. Sherry Gibson also described Ayers as one of “the eight most
knowledgeable people when it came to the practice of advancing money to health care clients
without purchasing eligible accounts receivable[.]”
Documentary evidence likewise supported the inference that Ayers was aware of the fraud.
In particular, he received a number of documents, some of which brazenly discussed the fraud. One
was a memorandum dated February 11, 1999—stamped both “CONFIDENTIAL” and “For Internal
Use Only”—that Gibson sent only to the principals. In it, she discussed an upcoming audit:
-7-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
I know that the random audit is a necessary requirement for the securitization(s);
however, due to our business practices, it takes several weeks of preparation before
the audit can be scheduled. The preparation time is not due to gathering copies of
reports, obtaining file copies, etc., the delay is due to the necessity of CREATING
the backup that matches the investor report.
Gov’t Exh. VII-32A (emphasis in original). Gibson went on to note: “Due to advances with no
collateral and high volumes of defaulted [receivables],” NCFE has become “UNDERcollateralized
in all portfolios and the investor report numbers are adjusted in order to meet the default triggers.”
Id. (emphasis in original).
There were other incriminating documents as well. In March 1999, Ayers received a
memorandum discussing NPF VI’s noncompliance, and attaching two versions of an investor
report—one version labeled “draft,” the other “draft with revisions.” The former showed NPF VI
in default, whereas the latter showed it fully compliant. Yet another memorandum from Gibson, this
one covered in “Confidential” stamps, discussed problems with the reserves: “NPF VI is
$45,000,000 SHORT in reserves. . . . We are unable to move monies between books to ‘fix’ this
problem.” Gibson ends the memo by stating: “We are creative with month end and the investor
reports – but this is beyond our capability to create. This is a crisis – we need help!”
There was also evidence of Ayers’s direct participation in the fraud. First, Ayers participated
in the decision to conceal the reserve accounts’ shortages by shifting funds between them. Second,
in preparation for a year-end audit, Ayers helped “reconcile” data that revealed certain clients had
been funded beyond their collateral. Third, Gibson testified that the principals decided to issue new
bonds whenever they needed to conceal account shortages: “The status of the portfolio, particularly
-8-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
when the reserves were short, meant that we could not meet compliance tests, meant that we did not
have cash available for new purchases, so that would be a deciding factor in whether new notes
would be required.” And fourth, Ayers personally authorized advances to providers, totaling
millions of dollars.
This evidence speaks for itself. A rational jury could conclude that Ayers knew about the
fraud that surrounded him. And based on that knowledge, he also knew that each of the six bond
issuances contained material misrepresentations. Sufficient evidence supported his securities-fraud
convictions.
B.
Ayers next challenges his conviction of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud,
in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. To obtain a conviction under that statute, the government must
“prove an agreement between two or more persons to act together in committing an offense, and an
overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy.” United States v. Hunt, 521 F.3d 636, 647 (6th Cir. 2008)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, Ayers concedes—and the government proved—that there was a conspiracy. But he
argues that he was not a member of it. To be found a member of a conspiracy, “[t]he defendant need
only know of the conspiracy, associate himself with it and knowingly contribute his efforts in its
furtherance.” United States v. Beverly, 369 F.3d 516, 532 (6th Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
-9-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
The evidence recited above establishes all of those elements here. Ayers knew about the
overall fraud and indeed participated in it by authorizing the bond issuances on which it was based.
Sufficient evidence supported Ayers’s conviction for conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire
fraud.
C.
Ayers’s final sufficiency challenge is to his conviction of conspiracy to commit money
laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h). To sustain a conviction under that provision, the
government must prove that the defendant “agreed with another person to violate the substantive
provisions of the money-laundering statute during the period alleged in the indictment.” United
States v. Hynes, 467 F.3d 951, 964 (6th Cir. 2006). Here, the indictment alleged that Ayers
conspired to violate the concealment provision of the money-laundering statute, which states:
Whoever, knowing that the property involved in a financial transaction represents the
proceeds of some form of unlawful activity, conducts or attempts to conduct such a
financial transaction which in fact involves the proceeds of specified unlawful
activity . . . knowing that the transaction is designed in whole or in part . . . to conceal
or disguise the nature, the location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the
proceeds of specified unlawful activity . . . shall be sentenced to a fine . . . or
imprisonment for not more than twenty years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i).
Ayers’s primary argument is that, even assuming he conspired to conduct certain transactions,
none of them were “designed to conceal” as the statute requires. Ayers did not raise this argument
in his opening brief, so we would normally decline to review it. But in the companion case to this
one, United States v. Faulkenberry, Nos. 08-4233 and 08-4404, ___ F.3d ___ (July 28, 2010), the
-10-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
defendant squarely raised the “designed to conceal” argument. That case was briefed simultaneously
with this one, argued on the same day as this one, and arose from the same underlying fraud. At oral
argument in Ayers’s case, the panel gave government counsel (the same counsel in both cases) an
opportunity to address our concerns about this issue. Whether we think about the point as a matter
of plain error or as simply identifying the relevant legal issues in an appeal dealing with the meaning
of a statute, it is well within our discretion to apply the published binding precedent in Faulkenberry
to a companion case that arose from the same underlying fraud, that was argued on the same day, and
that is being decided on the same day.
The Supreme Court recently interpreted the money-laundering statute, holding that the word
“designed” requires proof of a purpose. See Cuellar v. United States, 128 S. Ct. 1994, 2003 (2008)
(“[W]hen an act is ‘designed to’ do something, the most natural reading is that it has that something
as its purpose”). Thus, for a transaction to violate § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i), the government must prove
that concealment was an animating purpose for entering into the transaction.
The government points to two sets of transactions as proof that Ayers conspired to launder
money. First, the government relies on the advances that Ayers personally authorized. The
government’s theory is that the advances constituted money laundering, that Ayers authorized the
advances, and therefore that Ayers conspired to commit money laundering. So this theory is
predicated on the premise that the advances constituted money laundering. To support that
proposition, the government relies on the phony Receivables Purchase Reports that Ayers submitted
-11-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
with each advance. Those Reports, the government says (without much explanation), prove that the
advances were designed to conceal the fraudulent nature of the funds.
We rejected the same argument in Faulkenberry’s appeal, and do so again here. The
government is correct that the Receivables Purchase Reports involved concealment: They falsely
represented that investors’ funds were being legitimately used, and thereby induced the Trustees to
wire the funds to providers. But that explains only how, and not why, the money was moved. The
proposition that Ayers authorized the advances for the purpose of submitting phony Reports is
simply implausible on this record. The government proved only that the Reports facilitated the
advances; it did not prove that the Reports, or concealment generally, were the transactions’ purpose.
See Cuellar, 128 S. Ct. at 2005 (“The evidence suggested that the secretive aspects of the
transportation were employed to facilitate the transportation, but not necessarily that secrecy was the
purpose of the transportation” (internal citations omitted, emphasis in original)). Ayers’s conviction
for conspiracy to commit money laundering, therefore, cannot be upheld based on the advances that
he authorized.
But the government also seeks to uphold that conviction based upon a second set of
transactions; namely, those underlying Counts 18-23 of the Indictment. The Indictment alleges that
two of Ayers’s co-defendants committed money laundering by “improperly divert[ing] investor
funds” to satisfy the debts of a provider in which Ayers had an ownership interest. The
government’s theory as to Ayers’s liability is the same: These transactions constituted money
laundering, and Ayers’s role in them is evidence of his agreement to launder money.
-12-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
But this theory fails for a more basic reason: We have identified no evidence that Ayers was
even aware of these transactions. On this record at least, transactions of which Ayers was not even
aware are not proof that he formed an agreement to launder money. Thus, even assuming that the
transactions constituted money laundering, there is no proof that Ayers conspired to that end.
We see no evidence that would support a finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Ayers
conspired to launder money. We therefore reverse Ayers’s conviction for conspiracy to commit
money laundering.
III.
Ayers raises a number of other arguments: he challenges the admission of summary-witness
testimony; he alleges that the prosecution withheld exculpatory evidence; and he argues that the
government should have disclosed that one of his own expert witnesses had previously been a
confidential informant. We rejected these same arguments in Faulkenberry’s appeal, see United
States v. Faulkenberry, Nos. 08-4233 and 08-4404, ___ F.3d ___ (6th Cir. July 28, 2010), and for
the same reasons do so here.
IV.
There remains the question of what to do about Ayers’s sentence. Based upon his
convictions in the district court, the Sentencing Guidelines recommended that Ayers receive a life
sentence. In that respect, Ayers received a light sentence, since the district court sentenced him to
only a fifteen-year sentence. Moreover, as a practical matter, Ayers’s sentence is based solely on his
money-laundering conviction: His seven other convictions each resulted in a five-year sentence, all
-13-
Nos. 08-4166 and 08-4405
United States v. Ayers
of which ran concurrently. And the money-laundering conviction is the one that we reverse today.
But that does not mean that this court should reduce Ayers’s sentence to five years. As we
explained in Faulkenberry’s appeal, had the district court known that the money-laundering
conviction was invalid, it might have chosen to make some of Ayers’s other sentences run
consecutively, rather than concurrently. We therefore remand the case to allow the district court to
determine, in the first instance, what Ayers’s sentence should be in light of our decision.
We reverse Ayers’s conviction of conspiracy to commit money laundering, affirm the rest,
vacate all the sentences, and remand the case for resentencing.
-14-