[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FILED
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
________________________ ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
NOV 20, 2007
No. 06-10868 THOMAS K. KAHN
________________________ CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 03-00531-CR-2-SLB-TMP
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
JIMMIE D. CHILDERS,
KENNON R. PATTERSON, SR.,
LARRY E. BISHOP,
Defendants-Appellants.
________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Alabama
_________________________
(November 20, 2007)
Before TJOFLAT, HULL and WILSON, Circuit Judges.
HULL, Circuit Judge:
After a jury trial, defendants-appellants Kennon R. Patterson, Sr.
(“Patterson”), Larry E. Bishop (“Bishop”), and Jimmie D. Childers (“Childers”)
appeal their convictions for bank fraud conspiracy and related offenses. Patterson
and Bishop also challenge the restitution portion of their sentences. After review
and oral argument, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND 1
A. The parties
Defendant Patterson was the CEO and Chairman of the Board of
Community Bank, a federally-insured financial institution headquartered in
Blountsville, Alabama. Patterson was also the CEO and Chairman of the Board of
Community Bancshares, Inc. (“Bancshares”), the holding company for Community
Bank.
Additionally, Patterson (personally) owned and operated Heritage Valley
Farms (“HVF”), a 1000-acre horse and cattle farm located in Blountsville. In
1998, Patterson commenced construction of a 17,000-square-foot mansion at HVF,
which was to serve as his personal residence. Beyond HVF, Patterson had ties to
several other pieces of personal property: a mobile home in Auburn, Alabama,
1
Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence presented against them at trial, and
because Defendants were convicted, we recount the facts in the light most favorable to the
government. See United States v. Garcia, 405 F.3d 1260, 1269 (11th Cir. 2005).
2
where his son lived; a parcel of land in Blount County, Alabama, known as Royal
Acres that Patterson co-owned with another individual; and a house in Leeds,
Alabama that was owned and occupied by Patterson’s mother. As explained
below, defendants’ convictions in this case arise out of the fraudulent billing of
Community Bank for construction work performed for Patterson at HVF and at
Patterson’s other personal properties.
Defendant Bishop was Community Bank’s Vice President of Construction
and Maintenance. Bishop was hired in the mid-1990s, and he essentially served as
the “in house” general contractor on various ongoing Community Bank
construction projects throughout Alabama. Bishop chose which subcontractors
worked on Community Bank’s construction projects, communicated with the
subcontractors on an ongoing basis, and approved all subcontractors’ invoices for
payment by Community Bank.
Bishop also acted as the general contractor for work performed at
Patterson’s HVF. Bishop received nominal payments—approximately $5000 per
year—from Patterson during the course of the HVF construction, and Patterson
promised Bishop that he would be “well compensated” upon the project’s
completion.
Defendant Childers owned and operated J&M Materials, Inc. (“J&M”), one
3
of the subcontractors hired by Bishop. J&M performed various construction
services on several Community Bank projects and at HVF. J&M’s two biggest
customers were Patterson and Community Bank.
Separately indicted co-conspirators Dewey and Linda Hamaker owned and
operated Morgan City Construction, Inc. (“MCC”). MCC, like J&M, provided
construction services for various Community Bank projects and HVF. In addition,
MCC provided construction services on two of Patterson’s other personal
properties. Cf. United States v. Hamaker, 455 F.3d 1316, 1319 (11th Cir. 2006).2
B. Offense conduct
Again, defendants’ convictions arise out of a scheme to fraudulently bill
Community Bank for construction work performed for Patterson at HVF and his
other personal properties, and to have Community Bank—rather than
Patterson—pay for the bulk of that work. Defendant Bishop, as the general
contractor on both Community Bank’s construction projects and Patterson’s
personal construction projects, acted as the intermediary and facilitated
Community Bank’s payment of Patterson’s personal projects.
Because the scheme involved several subcontractors, some of whom were
2
The Hamakers were separately indicted, tried, and convicted. Further details about this
same Community Bank scheme can be found in Hamaker, in which this Court affirmed the
Hamakers’ convictions for their roles in the scheme.
4
indicted and others of whom were not, and because the activity of the
subcontractors impacts our analysis of defendants’ convictions, we detail the
relevant conduct of each subcontractor and explain how that conduct pertains to
each defendant.
1. MCC
MCC, owned and operated by the Hamakers, fraudulently billed Community
Bank for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of construction services that MCC
performed for Patterson. See also Hamaker, 455 F.3d at 1319. According to the
evidence presented at the trial of these three defendants, the MCC component of
the scheme worked as follows.
MCC recorded the number of hours worked by each construction employee,
as well as the location at which each employee performed the work, in a
computerized accounting system called Quickbooks. MCC’s Quickbooks records
included accounts for each of MCC’s individual construction projects, and
documented the materials, labor, and other costs that MCC incurred on each
particular project.
Between 1995 and 2001, MCC provided construction services at
Community Bank branches throughout Alabama, as well as services at a site in
Tennessee. Additionally, beginning in late 1997, MCC began providing services at
5
defendant Patterson’s HVF.
Between January 1, 1998 and July 15, 2000, MCC billed and received from
Community Bank a total of $3,122,977 for work reportedly done on several
Community Bank construction projects. The trial evidence established that
MCC—even accounting for price mark-ups in accordance with MCC’s “cost-plus”
billing arrangement3—overbilled Community Bank by over $1.6 million. In the
meantime, MCC barely billed Patterson at all while performing substantial work on
HVF and Patterson’s other personal properties.
For example, of the more than $3 million that MCC invoiced to Community
Bank, MCC attributed approximately $500,000 to work performed at Community
Bank’s Guntersville, Alabama branch. However, MCC’s records established that
MCC incurred only approximately $30,000 in direct labor costs on the Guntersville
project. MCC was due approximately $48,000 for such work after its “cost-plus”
mark-ups, but MCC submitted, Bishop approved, and Community Bank paid
invoices totaling $484,750 for work at Guntersville—more than ten times the
amount actually due.
Moreover, MCC’s records established that MCC incurred no labor costs at
3
MCC and Community Bank agreed to a “cost-plus” billing agreement whereby MCC’s
labor costs were used as a benchmark and then percentage markups were added for workers’
compensation, taxes, overhead, and profit.
6
all on the Guntersville project between February 9, 2000 and June 20, 2000. MCC
nevertheless invoiced Community Bank for $178,500 of work purportedly done at
the Guntersville site during that time, and Bishop approved and Community Bank
paid those invoices as well.
By contrast, over the same two-and-a-half year period, MCC received only
$10,000 from defendant Patterson for MCC work performed at HVF.4 MCC
received this relatively small amount of compensation despite the fact that MCC’s
Quickbooks records reflect that MCC employees worked over 61,000 hours at
Patterson’s personal HVF during that time period, incurring a total labor cost of
$691,359.58. In other words, “during the same time frame in which MCC billed
Community Bank over 1600% of the labor costs at the Guntersville project, MCC
received from Patterson less than 1.5% of the labor costs at [Patterson’s] Heritage
Valley Farms.” Hamaker, 455 F.3d at 1320-21.
Additionally, at Community Bank’s Albertville, Alabama site, MCC
4
MCC sent Patterson two invoices during this period: a December 28, 1998 invoice for
$37,500, and an April 21, 1999 invoice for $10,000. The government presented evidence that
Patterson only paid MCC $10,000 prior to the discovery of the conspiracy in approximately
June-July 2000. The government also presented evidence that Patterson requested the $37,500
invoice from MCC in the latter part of 1998. At that time (November-December 1998), certain
Bancshares stockholders threatened and ultimately filed a shareholder derivative suit in which it
was alleged that Community Bank funds were being spent improperly. (This shareholder
derivative suit is referred to infra as the “Townes litigation.”) In other words, the government
presented evidence that, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, established that
Patterson only requested the $37,500 invoice in late 1998 in response to the Townes litigation.
7
incurred approximately $70,000 in direct labor costs, which should have equated to
about $110,000 in invoices under the “cost-plus” arrangement. Instead, MCC
billed Community Bank approximately $585,000 for the Albertville project. Just
as with the Guntersville project, Bishop approved MCC’s Albertville invoices, and
Community Bank paid the full overcharge of approximately $475,000.
Further evidence of MCC’s fraudulent billing of Community Bank was
introduced in the form of handwritten entries made on a printout of MCC’s
Quickbooks records. On a November 9, 1998 report reflecting numerous printed
entries for labor costs and expenses on HVF-related projects, there were
handwritten entries in the margins next to each HVF project that bore the names of
various Community Bank projects. MCC administrative employee Tina Rogers
testified that she made the handwritten notes next to the HVF-related entries at the
direction of Linda Hamaker. Comparison of the November 1998 report with data
found in MCC’s computer systems in 2000 revealed that each entry from the HVF-
related accounts was subsequently shifted to Community Bank accounts, and
Community Bank was invoiced to cover those charges.
Finally, evidence established that MCC charged Community Bank not only
for HVF-related work, but also for work performed at other personal properties
connected to Patterson. MCC employees performed construction services on
8
Patterson’s Royal Acres property in Blount County, Alabama in March 2000, and
at Patterson’s mother’s house in Leeds, Alabama in 1999. Former MCC
employees testified that Bishop directed them to work on both the Royal Acres and
Leeds sites.
2. J&M
Again, defendant Childers owned and operated J&M. J&M itself performed
excavating and hauling services at certain Community Bank locations and at HVF,
and J&M subcontracted other excavating and hauling services at those locations.
Between January and July 2000, J&M submitted approximately $325,000 in
invoices to Community Bank for construction services purportedly performed at
Community Bank’s Guntersville and Albertville locations. Evidence established
that J&M (and its subcontractors) performed little work at those Community Bank
sites during that time, but a great deal of work at HVF. Nevertheless, the
approximately $325,000 in invoices from J&M were approved by Bishop and paid
by Community Bank.
The three subcontractors hired by J&M to perform work at Community
Bank’s Guntersville and Albertville locations testified at trial. One of the
subcontractors stated that he completed work on all Guntersville and Albertville
projects by December 1999; the other two subcontractors testified that they
9
invoiced Childers for a total of approximately $68,000 in work performed at those
sites between January and June 2000. Moreover, the subcontractors stated that
they rarely, if ever, saw Childers or any other J&M employee on site at the
Guntersville and Albertville locations, and former J&M employees confirmed that
they performed little work at the Guntersville and Albertville locations between
January and July 2000. By contrast, the government presented testimony that J&M
and its subcontractors performed extensive work at HVF in 1999 and 2000.
In addition, the government presented evidence of two false charts created at
Childers’s direction that purported to show construction services performed by
J&M. The charts, which were prepared as the scheme was being discovered,
reflected that J&M had performed hundreds of thousands of dollars of construction
services at the Guntersville and Albertville sites. However, Russell Speegle, a
former Childers employee, testified that upon beginning work for Childers in June
2000—around the time the scheme was being discovered—he was assigned the
task of preparing the charts. Speegle testified that Childers gave him a list of
invoices and instructed him to “fabricate” hours worked, so that the hours reflected
on the charts would be roughly commensurate with the amounts billed. Speegle
explained that in making the charts, he never reviewed any J&M time sheets,
general ledger entries, or evidence reflecting the amount of time J&M machines
10
were in use. Speegle further testified that he never spoke to any other J&M
employees or contacted any of J&M’s subcontractors before making the charts.
3. Defendants’ other fraudulent conduct
The government also presented evidence that Bishop directed other
contractors to bill Community Bank for work performed on HVF and Patterson’s
other personal properties.
a. CAC
The architectural firm of Coker, Anderton & Cosper (“CAC”) provided
services for HVF and for various Community Bank projects. In early 1998, when
CAC was first approached by Patterson and Bishop to work on HVF and
Community Bank projects, CAC set up separate billing numbers and separately
invoiced the work it performed for HVF and Community Bank. However, Wesley
Anderton, one of the principals of CAC, testified that in May 1998, CAC was
instructed by defendant Bishop to combine all work for HVF and Community
Bank on one invoice. CAC complied with Bishop’s directive, although Anderton
testified that CAC found Bishop’s request “rather strange.” As such, CAC began
to combine its charges for HVF and Community Bank on one invoice as directed
by Bishop, but CAC persisted in submitting cover sheets in which the charges were
separated by each job.
11
Bishop then removed the explanatory sheets from the invoices, approved
them, and submitted them to Community Bank for payment.5 The government
submitted evidence that Community Bank paid approximately $35,000 in charges
for CAC work on HVF projects between May 1998 and November 1998.
In approximately November 1998, at Bishop’s request, CAC began to
provide separate invoices for Community Bank and HVF work. Bishop also asked
CAC to provide a separate breakdown of costs incurred on Community Bank and
HVF projects between May 1998 and November 1998. Anderton testified that
Bishop told CAC that the original, lump-sum billing arrangement had been a
“mistake.” By approximately March 1999, the money originally paid by
Community Bank for CAC work at HVF had been refunded to the Bank.
However, the government presented evidence that in approximately
November 1998—i.e., at the same time Bishop instructed CAC to ignore his
original lump-sum billing directive and to start separating HVF and Community
Bank charges again—certain Bancshares stockholders threatened and then filed a
shareholder derivative lawsuit. This lawsuit, known as the “Townes litigation,”
questioned the general manner in which Community Bank funds were being spent.
5
Occasionally, the combined invoices would contain relatively small charges that were
specifically attributed to miscellaneous expenses incurred at HVF. Bishop paid those amounts
by separate check; the government’s theory is that Bishop did this “so as not to arouse suspicion
by Community Bank’s accounts payable department.”
12
William Caughren, who was the general counsel of Community Bank in 1998,
testified that he met with Patterson and Bishop in November or December 1998 to
discuss the Townes litigation. According to Caughren, during that meeting,
Patterson said to Bishop that “the next thing that . . . Townes would raise a concern
about was the building of [Patterson’s] house.” Caughren further testified that
Bishop agreed with Patterson, and that Caughren then assisted Patterson “in
draft[ing] some statements for the contractors to sign, stating that they were
keeping the two projects [i.e., HVF work and Community Bank work] separate.”
b. L&L
Lighting and Lamp Wholesalers, Inc. (“L&L”) provided light fixtures for
HVF and for Community Bank projects. When Bishop began doing business with
L&L, he did not request separate accounts, and when L&L supplied fixtures for
HVF, the invoices for the fixtures were submitted to and paid by Community
Bank.
In November 1998, after commencement of the Townes litigation, Bishop
opened a separate account for HVF, and thousands of dollars were refunded to
Community Bank’s L&L account.
Moreover, on an L&L invoice from September 1998, charges were
specifically marked as having been incurred by L&L at the “Arena” at HVF.
13
Nevertheless, Bishop crossed out the “Arena” designation and wrote in
“Demopolis,” which is the name of a Community Bank branch that was under
construction in Demopolis, Alabama. Bishop approved the invoice for payment by
Community Bank, and Community Bank paid accordingly.
c. Langford
C.A. Langford Company, Inc. (“Langford”) provided stone materials for
both Community Bank projects and HVF. In October 1997, Bishop opened a
single account with Langford, in the name of Community Bank. Bishop routinely
asked Langford to provide materials to be billed to that account, and Bishop then
provided driving directions to the specific locations where he wanted the materials
delivered. The directions often led to HVF. Moreover, Langford drivers often
were directed to deliver materials to Community Bank’s headquarters in
Blountsville and then re-directed to HVF upon their arrival.
In December 1998, shortly after the Townes litigation began, Bishop
directed Langford to create separate accounts for Community Bank and HVF.
d. Sheffield
Sheffield Electrical Contractors, Inc. (“Sheffield”) also provided
construction services for HVF and Community Bank projects. In December 1998,
Bishop directed three Sheffield employees to travel to Auburn, Alabama to
14
perform services on a trailer then occupied by Patterson’s son. Patterson’s son
testified that he did not hire or pay Sheffield for the work that was performed.
At the time Bishop directed Sheffield to perform the work for Patterson’s
son, neither Patterson nor Bishop maintained personal accounts with Sheffield;
Community Bank had the sole account. Bishop never told Sheffield’s personnel to
bill the Auburn work separately, and the services provided at Auburn were billed to
and paid for by Community Bank.
e. Avant
Avant Painting (“Avant”) also provided construction services for HVF and
Community Bank projects. In September 1998, Bishop directed Avant to paint
Patterson’s son’s trailer in Auburn. Avant did so, and the cost was billed to
Community Bank and paid after Bishop’s approval. Patterson’s son testified that
he never hired nor paid Avant for the painting work.
C. Discovery of the conspiracy
On June 20, 2000, at a Community Bank board meeting, several directors
raised questions about the progress of the Guntersville project. Michael Alred, an
executive vice president and board member, noted that over $700,000 had been
spent on the site (beyond land acquisition costs), yet nothing had been built above-
ground. Defendant Patterson expressed his surprise and pledged to investigate.
15
On July 11, 2000, Patterson asked Community Bank director Wayne
Washum to come to Patterson’s office. Patterson recorded their conversation,
unbeknownst to Washum. Patterson asked Washum several times for the identity
of those who were raising questions about the Guntersville project, and after
learning that Alred was among the group, Patterson stated several times that Alred
“need[ed] to be fired.”
On July 15, 2000, at Patterson’s request, the board of Bancshares (the
holding company for Community Bank) convened a special meeting. Bishop,
Childers, and Dewey Hamaker (one of MCC’s principals) attended, and each
denied that there had been any wrongdoing in the invoicing of Community Bank.
Notably, Dewey Hamaker stated at this meeting that he invoiced Patterson “about
every six months” for the work that MCC performed at HVF. In actuality, as noted
supra at note 4, over the approximately thirty-month period between January 1998
and July 2000, MCC billed Patterson twice, and one of the invoices was never
paid.
During the July 15, 2000 Bancshares board meeting, local sheriffs executed
a search warrant at MCC’s offices, seizing time sheets, other documents, and
computers. MCC’s computer records and time sheets were admitted into evidence
in this case.
16
On July 17, 2000, MCC invoiced defendant Patterson for approximately
$50,000 of work performed at HVF—the first invoice that MCC had sent Patterson
since April 1999. MCC then sent Patterson twenty-nine invoices over the next five
months, totaling over $460,000. These invoices sought payment for construction
services performed years earlier, as far back as 1998. Patterson paid each of the
invoices.
On July 18, 2000, the Community Bank board met, and three board
members—Alred, Michael Bean, and George Barnett—voiced concerns about the
Guntersville project. Defendants Bishop and Childers, along with Dewey
Hamaker, attended this meeting as well. Hamaker told the board that MCC had not
billed Community Bank for services provided at HVF; Childers told the board that
he had not billed Community Bank for HVF services; and Bishop assured the
board that no improper conduct had occurred.
Immediately thereafter, defendant Patterson met with Community Bank’s
general counsel, Bancshares’s general counsel, and an outside lawyer for
Community Bank, and sought approval to fire Bean. It was strongly recommended
that Patterson not fire Bean; nevertheless, Patterson convened a meeting of
Community Bank’s executive committee and raised concerns about the ability of
Alred and Bean “to perform their normal duties during the investigation” into the
17
Guntersville project.
Shortly after the Community Bank executive committee meeting, Alred and
Bean were reassigned to new positions at Community Bank. In September 2000,
Alred, Bean, and Barnett were removed from the board, and in November 2000,
Alred and Bean were fired. In a deposition given in a civil suit filed by Alred and
Bean, defendant Patterson asserted that he did not know why Alred and Bean were
fired and that he tried to remove himself entirely from the firing process.
In July 2000, several Bancshares shareholders filed a derivative action
against the company (the “Benson litigation”), in which it was alleged that
Patterson, Bishop, the Hamakers, and others harmed Community Bank by
fraudulently using bank funds for non-bank purposes. The Community Bank and
Bancshares boards formed a committee (the “Benson Special Litigation
Committee”) to investigate the allegations raised in the Benson litigation.
The three defendants in this case—Patterson, Bishop, and Childers—were
interviewed and deposed in connection with the Benson litigation and other
ensuing lawsuits and investigations, and their statements in those interviews and
depositions are relevant to the allegations in this case, as follows.
During his interview with the Benson Special Litigation Committee,
defendant Patterson asserted that he did not pay MCC on an ongoing basis for their
18
work at HVF because the parties agreed that MCC would “hold the bill” until the
work was completed. Patterson reasserted this claim during a deposition, stating
that defendant Bishop told him that the Hamakers preferred a lump sum payment at
the conclusion of the job.
Financial statements prepared by the Hamakers and Patterson during the
relevant time period contradict this claim. The Hamakers never listed any account
receivable for HVF on any financial statement. In fact, when they applied for a
general contractor’s license in December 1998, the Hamakers had an incentive to
declare the highest amount of accounts receivable possible, in order to qualify for a
license on larger projects, but the Hamakers still listed no money owed by
Patterson.
Likewise, Patterson’s financial statements for 1998, 1999, and 2000 list no
account payable to MCC or the Hamakers, and Patterson’s accountant testified that
when he communicated with Patterson to prepare those financial statements,
Patterson never stated that he owed the Hamakers any money.
When defendant Bishop was asked about MCC’s December 1998 invoice
sent to Patterson, he first told bank regulators, in August 2000, that he could not
speak to MCC’s billing practices. Then, in a later deposition, Bishop stated that he
had personally requested that the December 1998 invoice be sent. Finally, Bishop
19
told an FBI special agent that he had not requested the invoice.
As for defendant Childers, the two false charts discussed earlier (created by
Speegle, at Childers’s direction) were submitted to the Benson Special Litigation
Committee.
Finally, when asked in a civil deposition about the nature of his relationship
with Dewey Hamaker, defendant Patterson stated that he barely knew Hamaker
and could not recall any conversations with him. However, the government
adduced evidence in this case that after the Hamakers were indicted in May 2002
and received court-appointed counsel, Patterson took numerous steps to help the
Hamakers be able to afford private counsel.
Patterson first contacted a law firm that provided outside legal services to
Community Bank and secured an opinion from the law firm that payment of the
Hamakers’ legal expenses by Bancshares would not be illegal. The proffered
reason for payment of the Hamakers’ legal fees was that publicity resulting from
their prosecution could lead to a fatal run on Community Bank. The Bancshares
board was presented with this idea at a board meeting on July 2, 2002, and
ultimately rejected it. Nevertheless, Patterson continued to work toward funding
the Hamakers’ defense. On July 11, 2002, Patterson informed the same outside
law firm that he had been approached by the pastor at his church with an offer to
20
help the Hamakers. The law firm then put Patterson’s pastor in contact with
Colonial Bank, another of the firm’s clients, to see if Colonial Bank would loan
money to the church to pay the Hamakers’ fees. In early August 2002, Colonial
Bank agreed to make a $200,000 loan to the church, the stated purpose of which
was “to begin improvements to church property.” Colonial Bank was not told that
the purpose of the funds was to pay for the Hamakers’ defense.
After the loan was funded, Patterson’s pastor disbursed $50,000 to Hamaker
Construction Company (“HCC”), an entity formed by the Hamakers’ son. HCC
purportedly had a contract to perform construction services at Patterson’s church,
but HCC never performed any such services. Instead, HCC transferred the money
to Walter Braswell, the Hamakers’ trial counsel.6
D. Indictment
Patterson, Bishop, and Childers were charged in a twenty-five count
superseding indictment returned in September 2004. Count 1 charged all
defendants with conspiring to defraud Community Bank, to misapply bank funds,
to make false entries in bank books and records, and to make false statements to
the Bank, in violation of 18 U.S.C §§ 371 and 2. Counts 2-4 charged all
6
The government made clear before the district court and in its brief before this Court
that it does not believe that Braswell knew the source of his payments or engaged in any
wrongdoing.
21
defendants with bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1344 and 2. Counts 5-7
charged all defendants with making false statements in bank books and records, in
violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1005 and 2, and Counts 8-13 charged only Patterson and
Bishop with making false statements in bank books and records, in violation of
those same statutes. Counts 14-19 charged Patterson alone with making false
statements in loan applications, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1014 and 2; Counts
20-21 charged Patterson alone with money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§
1957 and 2; and Counts 22-23 charged Patterson alone with making false
statements on tax returns, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 2.
Count 24 sought criminal forfeiture from all three defendants.
E. Trial
Each of the defendants pleaded not guilty, and in January 2005, the case
proceeded to trial. The government presented evidence as described above. In
March 2005, the jury found Patterson guilty on all counts except those counts
charging false statements in loan applications (Counts 14-19) and those counts
charging money laundering (Counts 20-21).7 The jury found Bishop and Childers
guilty of all counts against them.
F. Sentencing
7
The money laundering counts (Counts 20-21) against Patterson were dismissed, on the
government’s motion, prior to trial.
22
In December 2005, the district court sentenced Patterson. With an offense
level of 30 and a criminal history category of I, Patterson’s advisory guidelines
range was 97-121 months’ imprisonment. After consideration of the 18 U.S.C. §
3553(a) factors, the district court imposed a downward variance: 60 months’
imprisonment on the conspiracy, bank fraud, and false entries convictions, and 36
months’ imprisonment on the false tax returns conviction, all to be served
concurrently.
In January 2006, the district court sentenced Childers and Bishop. With an
offense level of 26 and a criminal history category of I, Bishop’s advisory
guidelines range was 63-78 months’ imprisonment. After consideration of the 18
U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors, the district court imposed a downward variance, and
sentenced Bishop to 48 months’ imprisonment.
With an offense level of 16 and a criminal history category of I, Childers’s
advisory guidelines range was 21-27 months’ imprisonment. The district court
sentenced Childers to 21 months’ imprisonment, the low end of his advisory
guidelines range.8
Also in January 2006, the district court held a separate hearing on restitution.
The district court ordered Patterson and Bishop, jointly and severally, to pay
8
Neither the government nor defendants appeal the duration of defendants’ sentences.
23
$1,776,974.24 in restitution.
II. DISCUSSION
All defendants contend that the government presented insufficient evidence
to sustain their convictions.9 Defendants further contend that the district court
improperly admitted evidence of: (1) Patterson’s attempts to help fund the
Hamakers’ defense; (2) Patterson’s attempts to have Alred, Bean, and Caughren
fired; (3) MCC’s Quickbooks records, a printout of an MCC Quickbook record
with former MCC employee Tina Rogers’s handwriting in the margins, and MCC’s
employee timesheets; (4) summary charts of J&M’s billings prepared by an FBI
special agent; and (5) only a selected portion, as opposed to the entirety, of certain
“statements” given by Childers.10 Patterson further argues that the superseding
indictment was obtained improperly,11 and that his convictions should be reversed
because the district court was biased against him.12 Childers further contends that
9
We review a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence de novo, and view all evidence
in the light most favorable to the government. United States v. Garcia, 405 F.3d 1260, 1269
(11th Cir. 2005).
10
A district court’s evidentiary rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion. United States
v. Range, 94 F.3d 614, 620 (11th Cir. 1996).
11
Generally, the denial of a motion to dismiss the indictment is reviewed for abuse of
discretion; however, to the extent that the motion to dismiss implicates questions of law, the
review is de novo. United States v. Noriega, 117 F.3d 1206, 1211 (11th Cir. 1997).
12
A district judge’s conduct during trial is reviewed for abuse of discretion. United States
v. Verbitskaya, 406 F.3d 1324, 1337 (11th Cir. 2005).
24
the district court should have severed his trial from Patterson’s and Bishop’s.13
Finally, Patterson and Bishop argue that the district court erroneously ordered them
to pay over $1.7 million in restitution.14
After careful review and oral argument, we conclude that each of these
arguments lack merit. Only defendants’ sufficiency-of-the-evidence arguments
warrant further discussion.
A. Conspiracy
All defendants contend that the government presented insufficient evidence
that they agreed to defraud Community Bank, misapply bank funds, and/or make
false entries in bank books. We disagree.
To sustain a conspiracy conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 371, the government
must prove: “(1) the existence of an agreement to achieve an unlawful objective;
(2) the defendants’ knowing and voluntary participation in the agreement; and (3)
the commission of an act in furtherance of the agreement.” United States v.
Adkinson, 158 F.3d 1147, 1153 (11th Cir. 1998) (emphasis omitted). The key
element of conspiracy is the agreement to commit an unlawful act. See United
13
The denial of a motion to sever is reviewed for abuse of discretion. United States v.
Garcia-Jaimes, 484 F.3d 1311, 1320 (11th Cir. 2007).
14
The legality of a restitution order is reviewed de novo, but the factual findings
underlying the restitution order are reviewed for clear error. United States v. Washington, 434
F.3d 1265, 1267 (11th Cir. 2006).
25
States v. Chandler, 388 F.3d 796, 805 (11th Cir. 2004). However, “[b]ecause the
essential nature of conspiracy is secrecy, such an agreement may be proved by
circumstantial as well as direct evidence.” United States v. Browning, 723 F.2d
1544, 1546 (11th Cir. 1984); see also United States v. Tampas, 493 F.3d 1291,
1298 (11th Cir. 2007) (conspiracy can be proven by circumstantial evidence).
After having outlined the trial evidence in great detail above, we conclude
that substantial evidence supports defendants’ conspiracy convictions. The
government established that Patterson and Bishop engaged in a fraud scheme
whereby they had contractors (including Childers’s J&M) perform substantial
construction work at Patterson’s personal properties and invoice that work to
Community Bank as purportedly done for the Bank. Patterson and Bishop then
had Bishop approve the invoices for payment by Community Bank, and in turn,
Community Bank actually paid the invoices.
Specifically, the government presented ample evidence from which the jury
reasonably could have concluded that: (1) Patterson was building a multi-million
dollar mansion for himself at HVF and having other construction work performed
at his personal properties; (2) Patterson, as CEO and Chairman of the Board of
Community Bank, knew that Community Bank was simultaneously engaged in
various corporate construction projects throughout Alabama; (3) Bishop personally
26
managed both Patterson’s personal construction projects and construction on the
Community Bank projects; (4) the same contractors, including Childers’s J&M and
the Hamakers’ MCC, were retained to work on both Patterson’s personal
construction projects and on the Community Bank projects; (5) between January
1998 and July 2000, those contractors performed hundreds of thousands of dollars
of work at Patterson’s personal properties, including HVF, and Patterson knew
such substantial work was performed; (6) between January 1998 and July 2000,
Patterson received essentially no bills from the contractors, and paid essentially no
money to those contractors, for the substantial work on Patterson’s personal
properties; (7) between January 1998 and July 2000, there was very little work
actually performed by the contractors at Community Bank sites; and (8) Bishop
approved Community Bank’s payment of hundreds of thousands of dollars for
work reportedly performed at Community Bank sites, when Patterson and Bishop
knew the work performed and billed by the contractors was actually performed at
HVF and Patterson’s other personal properties.15
There was also evidence that although Patterson had Bishop manage
Patterson’s personal construction projects, Patterson paid Bishop very little money
15
To give one example, although hardly anything had been built above-ground at
Community Bank’s Guntersville site, various contractors charged, Bishop approved, and
Community Bank paid, over $700,000 of work as purportedly performed at Guntersville when in
fact that work had been performed at Patterson’s HVF and other personal properties.
27
during the course of HVF’s construction and promised Bishop that he would be
“well compensated” upon HVF’s completion. The government further established
that after defendants’ scheme was discovered and the Hamakers were indicted for
MCC’s fraudulent billing of Community Bank for work on Patterson’s personal
projects, Patterson went to great lengths to orchestrate payment of the Hamakers’
legal bills so that they could have the benefit of private counsel. Additionally, the
government showed that until the Townes litigation commenced in late 1998,
Patterson was never invoiced by MCC for work on his HVF project, and Bishop
never requested separate invoices for HVF and Community Bank projects. Even
after commencement of the Townes litigation—and despite MCC’s substantial
work on HVF—MCC invoiced Patterson only twice, and Patterson was not
invoiced at all by MCC between April 1999 and July 2000. However, between
July 2000—the time defendants’ scheme was discovered—and December 2000,
MCC sent Patterson twenty-nine invoices, seeking to recover for construction
services at HVF as long ago as 1998. There was also evidence that CAC actually
tried to separately invoice HVF and Community Bank projects from the beginning,
but Bishop expressly resisted those efforts.
As for Childers, the evidence showed that, through J&M, he fraudulently
billed Community Bank for approximately $325,000, representing that it was for
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work performed on Community Bank sites. In actuality, most of the $325,000 that
Childers invoiced was for work performed by J&M or its subcontractors at
Patterson’s HVF, and not Community Bank sites. As part of the scheme, Bishop in
turn approved, and Community Bank paid, these invoices from Childers. The
evidence also established that in June 2000, as the defendants’ scheme was being
discovered, Childers directed a new employee—Speegle—to falsify charts that
purported to reflect work performed by J&M and its subcontractors at Community
Bank sites. Speegle testified that Childers gave him a list of invoices and
instructed him to fabricate hours worked at Community Bank sites, so as to match
the amounts billed to the hours reflected as worked on the charts. From this
evidence, the jury reasonably could have concluded that Childers knowingly
participated in the conspiracy with Bishop and Patterson.
Thus, contrary to defendants’ contentions, the government presented ample
evidence that defendants agreed amongst themselves, and also with the Hamakers,
to defraud Community Bank. While mere presence or close association with co-
conspirators is insufficient to establish knowing participation in a conspiracy, see
United States v. Perez-Tosta, 36 F.3d 1552, 1557 (11th Cir. 1994), the
government’s substantial evidence here establishes far more than association.
Moreover, while defendants emphasize that there was evidence that “Patterson told
29
Bishop to keep the billings separate,” in actuality, the evidence only established
that Bishop told investigators, after-the-fact, that Patterson told him to keep the
HVF and Community Bank billings separate. Such after-the-fact statements by
Bishop are not altogether unsurprising, and regardless, the jury was free to
disregard this evidence. See United States v. Calderon, 127 F.3d 1314, 1324 (11th
Cir. 1997) (recognizing that “‘[a] jury is free to choose among the constructions of
the evidence’”) (citation omitted).16 Accordingly, we conclude that there was
sufficient evidence to sustain defendants’ conspiracy convictions.
B. Bank fraud
Counts 2-4 charged defendants with defrauding Community Bank by
causing the Bank to pay J&M invoices that purported to charge for work
performed at Community Bank sites but actually charged for work performed at
HVF. In order to sustain a conviction for bank fraud, the government must show
that a defendant knowingly executed or attempted to execute a scheme (1) to
16
Likewise, we reject Childers’s claim that the district court erred because it “failed to
[require the jury to] exclude every reasonable hypothesis except guilt.” Although this Court
once subscribed to that standard, we rejected it long ago. See United States v. Bell, 678 F.2d
547, 549 (5th Cir. Unit B 1982) (en banc) (“It is not necessary that the evidence exclude every
reasonable hypothesis of innocence or be wholly inconsistent with every conclusion except that
of guilt, provided a reasonable trier of fact could find that the evidence establishes guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.”); see also Calderon, 127 F.3d at 1324 (same); Stein v. Reynolds Sec., Inc.,
667 F.2d 33, 34 (11th Cir. 1982) (adopting all post-September 30, 1981 decisions of Unit B of
the former Fifth Circuit as binding precedent in the Eleventh Circuit).
30
defraud a financial institution, or (2) to obtain by false or fraudulent pretenses,
representations, or promises any of the monies or other properties of a financial
institution. See United States v. McCarrick, 294 F.3d 1286, 1290 (11th Cir. 2002)
(quoting 18 U.S.C. § 1344). “[C]ircumstantial evidence may prove knowledge and
intent,” United States v. Williams, 390 F.3d 1319, 1325 (11th Cir. 2004), and
knowledge and intent may also be proven through defendants’ false exculpatory
statements, see United States v. McDowell, 250 F.3d 1354, 1367 (11th Cir. 2001).
Defendants acknowledge that the government’s evidence as to the bank
fraud counts is essentially the same as for the conspiracy count, and defendants do
not raise any new arguments as to bank fraud. Defendants argue only that the jury
drew unreasonable and unsupported inferences from the circumstantial evidence in
convicting defendants of the bank fraud counts. As discussed above, we disagree.
Accordingly, we conclude that there was ample evidence to sustain defendants’
bank fraud convictions.
C. False entries
Defendants proffer two arguments as to why the government presented
insufficient evidence to sustain their false entries convictions. We reject both.
First, defendants contend that the government failed to present any evidence
that they knowingly caused false entries in Community Bank’s books and records.
31
We disagree. 18 U.S.C. § 1005 prohibits knowingly and willfully making, or
causing to be made, a false entry in a book or record of a federally insured bank,
with the intent to defraud or deceive. “The prohibition of false entries is in broad
and comprehensive terms,” and “[t]he purpose of the statute is to help insure that
inspection of a bank’s books will yield a true picture of the bank’s condition.”
United States v. De La Mata, 266 F.3d 1275, 1296 (11th Cir. 2001). As discussed,
the government presented substantial evidence that defendants knowingly caused
false invoices from J&M and MCC to be paid by Community Bank, which
defendants knew would cause false entries to be made on Community Bank’s
general ledgers. Accordingly, we reject defendants’ first challenge to their false
entries convictions.
Defendants’ second attack on their false entries convictions is premised on
United States v. Manderson, 511 F.2d 179 (5th Cir. 1975),17 in which our
predecessor Court stated that “[i]t cannot be a false entry to make an entry on the
books of the bank which correctly reflects the transaction and was so intended.”
Manderson, 511 F.2d at 181. According to defendants, the entries made on
Community Bank’s general ledger as a result of the MCC and J&M invoices
17
In Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), this
court adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit handed down prior to
October 1, 1981.
32
accurately reflect the Bank’s payment of those invoices, so the entries “correctly
reflect[] the transaction[s]” that occurred and cannot amount to illegal false entries
under Manderson.
We find Manderson materially distinguishable. As the Manderson Court
itself recognized, in that case, “[t]here was no attempt to defraud” the bank, and the
bank was not defrauded. Id. at 180. Instead, in Manderson, the defendant bank
employee knew that funds had been (properly) issued by the bank, and he
attempted to extort some of those funds after-the-fact. As the Manderson Court
noted, the entry made in the bank’s books for the check in that case “was the very
entry that should have been made had there been no later effort to extort.” Id. at
181. By contrast, in this case, entries were made that reflected Community Bank
payments for services that were not actually performed for Community Bank.
Moreover, as discussed supra, there certainly was an “attempt to defraud”
Community Bank. Id. at 180. Accordingly, we conclude that there was sufficient
evidence presented to sustain defendants’ false entries convictions.
D. False statements on tax returns
Finally, Patterson challenges his convictions under 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) for
making false statements on his 1998 and 1999 income tax returns by omitting
income received in the form of work performed by MCC at HVF. Under § 7206,
33
the government was required to prove that Patterson willfully filed a tax return that
he did not believe to be true and correct as to every material matter therein. See
United States v. Kaiser, 893 F.2d 1300, 1305 (11th Cir. 1990).
Patterson acknowledges that the government used the same evidence to
prove the tax return counts (Counts 22-23) as it did to prove the bank fraud and
false entries counts, and accordingly, the only argument that Patterson makes as to
the sufficiency of the evidence on the tax return counts is that the government’s
evidence as to the bank fraud and false entries counts was insufficient. Because we
have already rejected Patterson’s sufficiency arguments as to the bank fraud and
false entries counts, we also reject those arguments here.
III. CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we affirm defendants’ convictions and sentences.
AFFIRMED.
34