NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
_____________
No. 22-1002
_____________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
v.
AARON DAVIS,
Appellant
_____________________________________
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the
District of Delaware
(District Court No. 1-19-cr-00101-001)
District Judge: Hon. Leonard P. Stark
_____________________________________
Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a)
November 8, 2022
(Filed: January 17, 2023)
Before: JORDAN, SCIRICA, and RENDELL, Circuit Judges.
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O P I N I O N*
_________
*
This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not
constitute binding precedent.
RENDELL, Circuit Judge.
Defendant-Appellant Aaron Davis challenges his conviction for taking part in a
large fraud scheme that targeted financial institutions, a healthcare company, and the
Government. He lodges two objections. The first is to the District Court’s admission of
victim impact testimony from a representative of the targeted healthcare company that
lost money due to the scheme. The other is to the Government’s urging the jury to use
common sense during the portion of the Government’s closing argument about willful
blindness, which Davis construes as a “Golden Rule” instruction. For the reasons set
forth below, we reject Davis’s arguments and will affirm.
I. 1
In the summer of 2017, Davis and a few accomplices hatched an ambitious fraud
scheme. The group targeted two banks, a nonprofit healthcare company called Sutter
Health, and the Social Security Administration (“SSA”). The plan unfolded in three parts
over a three-month period: they used a check kiting 2 scheme to steal money from the
1
Ordinarily, we write not precedential opinions with the benefit of a written opinion from
the District Court. But Davis’s claimed errors arose from the District Court’s oral rulings
on his objections, none of which were reduced to writing. We do not fault the District
Court for that decision under the circumstances. Still, the absence of a written opinion
obliges us to explore the facts, procedural background, and legal analysis more fully than
usual for a non-precedential opinion, and we do so here.
2
Check kiting takes advantage of the lag time in the process banks use to reconcile the
balances of accounts involved in a transaction between them:
Check kiting is a systematic pattern of depositing nonsufficient funds (NSF)
checks between two or more banks, resulting in the books and records of
those banks showing inflated balances that permit these NSF checks to be
honored rather than returned unpaid. In addition, other checks and
2
banks; a business email compromise 3 scheme to steal money from Sutter Health; and a
wire fraud scheme to steal SSA funds by applying for benefits in the name of a retiree
without his knowledge or consent. 4 But the banks involved quickly grew wise: they froze
Davis’s accounts and, by doing so, limited the group’s theft to just over $225,000 of the
$1.3 million they managed to deposit in the accounts through fraud. A federal grand jury
later indicted Davis for two counts of bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344(2);
withdrawals may be honored against these inflated balances, resulting in
actual negative balances, to the extent that banks allow withdrawal of
uncollected funds.
Johnny S. Turner et al., Check Kiting: Detection, Prosecution, and Prevention, 62 FBI
Law Enforcement Bulletin 12, 13 (Nov. 1993),
https://www.ojp.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/145802NCJRS.pdf.
3
The FBI explained the nature of business email compromise scams in a recent report
commissioned by Congress:
BEC scams rely on deception and social engineering to convince victims—
including companies, charities, schools, real estate purchasers, and the
elderly—to send money, usually via wire transfer, to bank accounts
controlled by criminal actors. While there are many variations, BEC schemes
often involve the spoofing of a legitimate, known email address or the use of
a nearly identical address to appear as someone known to or trusted by the
victim. BEC scams are initiated when a victim receives false wire
instructions from a criminal attempting to redirect legitimate payments to a
bank account controlled by fraudsters; such scams are constantly evolving as
criminals become more sophisticated.
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Business Email Compromise and Real Estate Wire
Fraud, 4 (2022).
4
Davis’s scheme targeted Jay Abraham, who testified at trial that he had previously
applied for Social Security benefits but never took disbursement of the money because, as
a successful marketing consultant, he did not need to do so. Abraham learned of Davis’s
fraudulent application purely by chance when Medicare denied his claims for treatment
of a catastrophic medical condition because the disbursement of his Social Security
benefits triggered irregularities in Medicare’s claims process.
3
two counts of wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343; and one count of money
laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1957.
Davis’s trial lasted five days, and the Government put on a dozen witnesses and
introduced more than 100 exhibits to explain the nature and breadth of Davis’s scheme.
The Government’s case included evidence showing the banks told Davis that they
suspected fraud, though Davis and his cohort continued their efforts undeterred. The jury
also heard that Davis alleged in a police report that the suspicious money appeared in his
account because of fraud against him, and he supported those allegations with documents
that law enforcement officials later found to be false.
During the trial, Davis challenged the Government’s efforts to elicit so-called
“victim impact testimony” from Sutter Health’s Chief Financial Officer, Mark Wheeler.
Wheeler testified that Davis redirected $1.1 million in company funds to his account and
over $220,000 of that money remained outstanding. Having established the company’s
loss, the Government asked Wheeler to “tell the jury about the impact of [the] loss on
Sutter Health.” App. 613 (emphasis added). Davis quickly raised a relevance objection,
arguing the impact on Sutter Health bore no relation to the charged offenses. The
Government argued the testimony was “clearly relevant” because “the company was
defrauded out of the lost money.” App. 613. After weighing the objection and response,
the District Court allowed Wheeler’s testimony but did not explain its ruling.
Wheeler then told the jury that the losses hurt the company’s ability to fulfill its
mission:
4
So I mean the impact for us—we’re not for profit, you know,
healthcare. We provide a lot of services in our communities.
So missing money or losing money to fraud means less patients
we can serve, less community impact we can have. We do a
lot of charitable, charitable contribution to our individual
communities so, yes, it had a financial impact. We’ve had
negative years over the last two years operating losses.
COVID has taken a toll. Fraud just continued to impact us,
you know, or undermine what we can do in the community. So
it is very impactful to Sutter Health.
App. 613–14. Davis challenged the testimony a second time after Wheeler finished and
the jury left the room. He attacked on three fronts: he moved to strike the evidence as an
unfair attempt to gain the jury’s sympathy; he moved for a mistrial because the District
Court would send a “mixed message to the jury” if it both allowed the testimony and
issued an instruction to disregard sympathy and bias, App. 621, and he moved for the
District Court to exclude the testimony under Federal Rule of Evidence 403 as unfairly
prejudicial and lacking any probative value. This time, the Government defended the
impact testimony as relevant to provide “color and background” for the jury about Sutter
Health’s monetary losses. App. 624.
The District Court made an oral ruling from the bench denying each of Davis’s
objections. To begin, Wheeler’s testimony did not call for a mistrial, and in any case,
Davis offered the District Court no standard to determine whether he was entitled to the
relief he sought. The motion to strike was also a non-starter: Wheeler’s testimony “was
relevant, perhaps not highly relevant, but relevant to complete the background of the
story as to why Sutter Health” was part of the proceedings. App. 626.
5
Finally, the reasons for denying Davis’s first two challenges also persuaded the
District Court that the Rule 403 balancing test did not favor exclusion—especially since
Wheeler’s testimony confirmed “what the jury probably already inferred.” App. 626.
The District Court also concluded that sufficient safeguards were in place to mitigate
Davis’s risk of suffering unfair prejudice from Wheeler’s testimony: the jury had already
been instructed not to let sympathy or bias govern their decision and would receive that
same instruction before closing arguments; the court was willing to give a limiting
instruction of Davis’s choice; and at the end of the day, Davis was challenging “one
question in the context of . . . 15 minutes or so of testimony.” App. 625. Yet when the
District Court followed up on its offer to give the limiting instruction Davis preferred, he
declined.
Later, the Government’s closing argument to the jury about Davis’s state of mind
provoked a fresh objection from him. The Government described Davis’s multiple
attempts to withdraw funds after the banks confirmed their fraudulent nature, posing a set
of rhetorical questions and a proposed response: “[a]t the very least, did the defendant
stick his head in the sand? Was he willfully blind to whether the money in that account
belonged to him? Absolutely he was.” App. 1366–68. Then the Government asked the
jury to imagine how they would have reacted to the unexpected appearance of several
large deposits to their bank accounts from unknown sources like the ones Davis received:
But members of the jury, also just listen to your common sense.
Ask yourself, if $1.3 million from unknown or strange sources
showed up in your account, wouldn’t you want to find out
where the money was coming from? Wouldn’t you wonder
why some company you have never heard of was depositing
6
over a million dollars into your account? Why the Social
Security Administration was sending you tens of thousands of
dollars when you had never filed for benefits? Wouldn’t you
ask yourself why you were getting checks for 5, 20, 40,
$75,000 from people you had never met? Wouldn’t you leave
that money alone, especially after you had been told that the
money was likely fraudulent, until you could figure out what
was going on?
App. 1359–60. Pressing that theme further, the Government referred to the specific
deposit of SSA funds to Davis’s account and asked the jury once again to contemplate
what they would have done if similar deposits landed in their own accounts:
Well, it was right there in black and white on his statement,
because the money that was being deposited was from the SSA
Treasury of the Social Security Administration Treasury,
$21,195. And even if the defendant didn’t know what SSA
treasury means, members of the jury, ask yourselves if $21,000
showed up in your account and you didn’t know where it was
coming from.
App. 1373. Davis objected to the Government’s appeal as an improper “Golden Rule”
argument and requested a mistrial, though when pressed by the District Court, he could
provide no authority for the objection. So the District Court overruled Davis’s
objection, 5 reasoning that the Government’s argument was “entirely consistent with the
[willful] blindness instruction” the jury was given earlier, which required the jury to “use
their common sense and think about what a reasonable person might do if they saw a
deposit they didn’t know about in their account.” App. 1375.
5
Despite overruling the objection, the District Court gave Davis the chance to file
supplemental briefing “at any time” to support his position. App. 1375. Nothing in the
record reveals Davis took the District Court up on its offer.
7
In the end, the jury deliberated less than two hours before convicting Davis on all
counts. On December 21, 2021, Davis received a 36-month prison sentence. Davis
timely appealed his conviction.
II.
We have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, while the District Court
had subject matter jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3231. We review a district court’s
decision to admit or exclude evidence for abuse of discretion. United States v. Desu, 23
F.4th 224, 233 (3d Cir. 2022) (internal citation omitted).
III.
Davis presents three issues on appeal: (1) whether the District Court committed
prejudicial error when it “admitted victim impact testimony during the Government’s
case-in-chief”; (2) whether the District Court committed prejudicial error when it
“allowed the Government to make [a] Golden Rule argument during its closing”; and (3)
“[e]ven if the above errors were individually harmless . . . [whether] their cumulative
effect [was] prejudicial[.]” Appellant’s Br. at 2. We need only address the first two
issues because we find no error.
First, Davis relies on United States v. Copple, 24 F.3d 535 (3d Cir. 1994) and
United States v. Sokolow, 91 F.3d 396 (3d Cir. 1996) to argue that victim impact
testimony is inadmissible. But Davis reads those cases too broadly. We explained in
Copple that the difficulty of proving a defendant’s specific intent in fraud cases requires
“a liberal policy . . . to allow the government to introduce evidence that even peripherally
bears on the question of intent.” 24 F.3d at 545. In that way, evidence that “someone
8
was victimized by the fraud” provides us with “some evidence of the schemer’s intent.”
Id. (citing United States v. Heimann, 705 F.2d 662, 669 (2d Cir. 1983)). Further,
evidence of a victim’s loss suffices to prove the defendant’s specific intent to defraud, as
does evidence of “the defendant’s failure to take any steps to ameliorate the loss.” Id.
(citing Anderson v. United States, 369 F.2d 11, 15 (8th Cir. 1966)). The same goes for
testimony about the effect of those losses, but we have cautioned district courts to
“exercise their wise discretion” and admit only testimony that is “reasonable to prove [the
defendant’s] specific intent to defraud.” Id.
Considering that framework, Copple and Sokolow offer Davis little help. Copple
featured a group of funeral directors who fell victim to a huckster promising to manage
assets the funeral directors used to fund the prepurchase of funeral services. 24 F.3d at
538–40. Not only did the district court admit evidence that the funeral directors lost
money in the scheme, but it also admitted the testimony of multiple directors about the
negative impact 6 of those losses. Id. at 545–46. We agreed that the district court abused
its discretion when it admitted the testimony, but we qualified that assessment: the district
court did not err by admitting any impact testimony; instead, the error arose from
admitting too much testimony and from the fact that some of it “went beyond anything
that was reasonable to prove [the defendant’s] specific intent to defraud.” Id. at 545. The
same was true in Sokolow, where we observed that the district court’s decision to admit
6
Among other things, the funeral directors testified that the loss of the funds forced them
to raid their children’s college funds and other personal savings and caused adverse
effects on their health. Copple, 24 F.3d at 545–46.
9
the impact testimony of twenty witnesses “provided significant embellishment concerning
adverse personal consequences” since the Government asked “every victim who testified
whether [they] suffered any adverse consequences from the unpaid claims” in a clear
attempt “to highlight [their] personal tragedies.” Sokolow, 91 F.3d at 407 (alterations and
emphasis added).
Copple and Sokolow thus boil down a simple proposition: district courts may
admit victim impact testimony, but they may not admit too much of it, nor can they admit
testimony that goes “beyond anything that was reasonable to prove [the defendant’s]
specific intent to defraud.” 24 F.3d at 545. Unlike in those cases, the victim impact
testimony offered against Davis checks neither of the forbidden boxes. Davis points to a
single witness—Wheeler—who testified on behalf of a corporation, rather than a natural
person. In response to the Government’s question about the impact of Davis’s fraud,
Wheeler gave a single response about Sutter Health’s diminished ability to serve its
community. Yet the Government chose not to venture beyond Wheeler’s single answer
even though the scope of Sutter Health’s loss and its impact on the company’s charitable
mission likely would have justified a deeper inquiry than the Government undertook. So
the District Court did not err when it allowed Wheeler’s testimony.
Davis’s “Golden Rule” argument fares no better. Davis says the Government
committed misconduct when it “directed Jurors to make findings about [his] state of mind
by placing themselves in his shoes at the time of the offense and to ask themselves what
their own state of mind would have been in those circumstances.” Appellant’s Br. at 16.
He urges that the alleged misconduct deprived him of a fair trial—and entitles him to a
10
new one—because the Government’s argument led the jury “to convict Davis in
comparison to their own sense of innocence” and not based on the evidence. Appellant’s
Br. at 16. We disagree.
The bottom line is that Davis’s position rests on a misunderstanding of “Golden
Rule” arguments. Like other advocates, prosecutors can “make[] effective use of themes,
metaphors, and references to popular culture” in their arguments to a jury. Gov’t of the
Virgin Islands v. Mills, 821 F.3d 448, 458 (3d Cir. 2016). But “Golden Rule” arguments
“cross the line” and amount to misconduct because they are emotional appeals that
“invite the jury to render a decision on grounds of bias, passion, prejudice, or sympathy.”
Id. Those arguments take two basic forms. One is where prosecutors make an improper
“put yourself in the defendant’s shoes argument” that “encourages the jury to depart from
neutrality” and decide the case based on “personal interest and bias rather than on the
evidence.” Edwards v. City of Philadelphia, 860 F.2d 568, 574 (3d Cir. 1988) (quoting
Spray–Rite Serv. Corp. v. Monsanto Co., 684 F.2d 1226, 1246 (7th Cir. 1982)). The
other is where prosecutors use “comments like ‘it could have been you’ the defendant
killed or ‘it could have been your children’” so that jurors “identify individually with the
victims,” or try to scare jurors into a conviction “by predicting that if they do not convict,
a crime wave or some other calamity will consume their community[.]” Mills, 821 F.3d
at 458 (quoting Bedford v. Collins, 567 F.3d 225, 234 (6th Cir. 2009)).
The Government did nothing of the sort in Davis’s trial. Rather, as the District
Court concluded, the Government’s argument was “entirely consistent” with the earlier
instruction on willful blindness. App. 1375. That instruction gave the Government two
11
ways to prove Davis’s fraudulent intent. The more direct way was to show Davis
actually “knew of the fraudulent nature of the deposits.” App. 1324. The alternative
route was to show Davis “acted with deliberate disregard” as to “whether the deposits
were legitimately intended for him or with a conscious purpose to avoid learning whether
the deposits were legitimately intended for him.” App. 1324–25 (emphasis added).
Read against that backdrop, and in light of Davis’s conduct regarding the deposits
to his account, the Government’s argument gave the jury a way to test whether Davis
acted with the intent required by the charges against him. All the more because the
Government prefaced its argument with a recap of the evidence showing Davis kept
trying to withdraw the stolen money after multiple bank representatives raised red flags
about it and then cast himself as a victim of fraud. Not only that, but the Government
also drew an explicit link between that evidence and the concept of willful blindness
when it asked jurors if Davis had “st[uck] his head in the sand” or was “willfully blind to
whether the money in [the] account belonged to him[.]” App. 1366–68. And how was
the jury to determine whether those things were true? By doing precisely what the
Government asked them to do: “use their common sense” to consider “what a reasonable
person might do if they saw a deposit they didn’t know about in their account.” App.
1375. The Government’s request was appropriate, and it did not invite jurors to
substitute bias, prejudice, or fear for the evidence before them.
Yet, Davis tries to sidestep all of that by pointing to two of our cases and two
cases from our sister courts. None get him very far. Start with our decisions in Mills and
Edwards, both of which featured prototypical “Golden Rule” arguments. In Mills,
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prosecutors argued that jurors “were not safe in their home” while the defendant
remained at large, and they sowed further fear of an “ongoing threat to schoolchildren
created by the [defendant’s] discarded gun[.]” 821 F.3d at 458–59. That led us to call
out the prosecution for coaxing jurors into a decision based on “bias, passion, prejudice,
sympathy” and fear created by the “specter” of “purely ‘inflammatory’” public safety
concerns. Id. at 458–59. In a similar vein, we recognized in Edwards that counsel’s
opening statement instruction was inappropriate in telling jurors that they should not only
listen to the defendant police officer’s testimony, but they should also “put [themselves]
in his shoes,” “see through his eyes that evening,” “hear what he heard,” and “try to
experience was he was feeling.” 860 F.2d at 573 n.5; see also id. at 575 (finding that the
District Court’s final instructions “sufficiently negated any prejudice that might have
resulted from [defense] counsel’s errant arguments to the jury.”). In sum, Mills and
Edwards involved blatant “Golden Rule” appeals that bear no resemblance to the
Government’s benign—and necessary—argument about Davis’s state of mind.
For somewhat different reasons, our sister courts’ decisions in United States v.
Teslim, 869 F.2d 316 (7th Cir. 1989) and United States v. Palma, 473 F.3d 899, 901 (8th
Cir. 2007) do not rescue Davis’s claim. In Teslim, a defendant convicted for drug-related
offenses alleged that prosecutors encouraged jurors “to disregard the presumption of
innocence” when they placed a cloud over his behavior during the pivotal stop by saying
“if it happened to you, and you had nothing to hide . . . .” 869 F.2d at 327–28. True
enough, Teslim involved a similar sort of appeal to the jury, but the defendant faced the
wrong kind of charges to help Davis: that defendant’s drug charges made the prosecutor’s
13
statement inappropriate, while Davis faced fraud charges that made it necessary for jurors
to probe his state of mind in the way they did. And Palma presents the mirror image
problem: it has the right kind of charges (social security fraud) but the wrong kind of
appeal to the jury (inflammatory remarks about how the defendant’s fraud stole money
from them). 473 F.3d 89. None of these cases help Davis’s cause, and his “Golden
Rule” argument fails.
IV.
In sum, the District Court did not abuse its discretion in connection with the
rulings Davis challenges, and we will accordingly affirm.
14