NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 17a0030n.06
Nos. 15-1641 and 16-1555
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) Jan 13, 2017
) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE
) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
MARK J. CARPENTER, ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN
) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
Defendant-Appellant. )
)
)
Before: BATCHELDER, SUTTON, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.
KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. A federal jury convicted Mark J. Carpenter of mail fraud
and wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343 for his participation in two schemes
involving an Arizona gold mine. Carpenter appeals his convictions and sentence. We affirm.
I.
In January 2008, after working for several years in the financial industry, Carpenter
founded his own investment company, TGBG Financial Planning. One of Carpenter’s early
investments, in what he told clients were Saudi Arabian crude oil bonds, turned out to be a Ponzi
scheme. Carpenter was not charged for his involvement in that scheme, but he soon began
pitching another dubious investment—this time in a defunct gold mine in Arizona.
In June 2008, Carpenter met Ronald Brito, who ran a company called “GetMoni.com,”
which was supposedly raising capital to operate the mine. Thomas Moore, a business associate
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United States v. Carpenter
of Brito’s, owned the rights to the mine. Carpenter agreed to recruit investors for Brito in
exchange for a 5% commission. Over the next four months, Carpenter collected more than
$2 million from his clients and wired it to GetMoni.com. In return, he received about $114,000
in commissions. Only about 20% of the money sent to GetMoni.com went to developing the
mine, which barely produced any gold. Brito and Moore used the rest to run a Ponzi scheme—
pocketing investors’ money for their own use or using it to pay off earlier investors in their failed
gold-mine venture.
After October 2008, Carpenter continued soliciting investments, but stopped sending
money to Brito and began keeping it in his own accounts. Over the next 14 months, he collected
about $1 million. Instead of investing the money, however, he used portions of it to pay off
earlier investors and cover personal expenses. When clients complained about not being paid,
Carpenter and Brito held conference calls to reassure them that their investments were safe and
stall them from filing charges. In phone calls, e-mails, and face-to-face meetings, Carpenter tried
to allay investors’ suspicions that the gold-mine project was a scam. As new investments dried
up and regulators started investigating, however, the scheme unraveled.
Federal prosecutors indicted Carpenter and four alleged co-conspirators, including Brito
and Moore, in March 2012. Everyone but Carpenter pled guilty. The charges against Carpenter
were dismissed without prejudice, and he was re-indicted for the same gold-mine scheme. The
government added charges for a second fraud scheme based on Carpenter’s misrepresentations
after he stopped sending money to Brito altogether. After a six-day trial, the jury convicted
Carpenter of 36 counts of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud.
A few days later, Carpenter’s trial counsel moved to withdraw, citing a breakdown in
their relationship. The district court granted the motion and appointed Jerome Sabbota, who had
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United States v. Carpenter
represented Moore in the earlier proceedings before a different judge, to represent Carpenter for
sentencing. The court sentenced Carpenter to 125 months in prison (10 months below the
guidelines range) and ordered him to pay about $3 million in restitution. Carpenter appealed.
While the appeal was pending, he filed a motion for a judgment of acquittal, a new trial, or re-
sentencing. The district court denied the motion. Carpenter appealed that order as well, and the
two appeals were consolidated for our review.
II.
A.
Carpenter first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying his convictions.
On appeal, “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). To convict Carpenter of wire and mail fraud, the government was required to prove
that he “devised or willfully participated in a scheme to defraud,” that he used interstate wire
communications or mailings in furtherance of the scheme, and that he “intended ‘to deprive a
victim of money or property.’” United States v. Faulkenberry, 614 F.3d 573, 581 (6th Cir. 2010)
(citation omitted).
The jury convicted Carpenter of fraud arising from two distinct though related schemes.
The first involved Carpenter’s representations and omissions in soliciting investors for Brito’s
gold-mine project. The second involved the false statements Carpenter had made after he
stopped forwarding investor money to Brito and kept the money in his own accounts.
As to the first scheme, Carpenter argues that the government failed to prove that he acted
with intent to defraud—i.e., that he “willfully participated” in Brito’s Ponzi scheme. Id. In
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United States v. Carpenter
Carpenter’s telling, he was a poor financial planner who sold some bad investments. The real
culprits, he says, were Brito and Moore; according to Carpenter, he was as much a victim as his
clients.
Yet the government presented plenty of evidence from which a rational juror could infer
that Carpenter acted with intent to defraud. When Carpenter pitched the gold-mine investment,
he assured clients that he had worked with Brito on “numerous occasions” and had found him
“very trustworthy.” Carpenter said that he had personally visited the mine and that it was
“flourishing.” He also told investors that the gold-mine investment was “safe” and “a sure
thing,” while promising astronomical returns of up to 120% annually.
In reality, per Brito’s testimony at trial, Carpenter had never worked with Brito before or
visited the mine. The mine itself remained dormant long after Carpenter told investors it was
flourishing. Meanwhile, Carpenter did not tell investors that he was getting a 5% commission
and that their money was going to Brito at GetMoni.com rather than to the mine. In September
2008, one of Carpenter’s clients alerted him that Brito was on an internet list of “suspected
scammers.” Yet Carpenter continued to solicit investments for Brito. Moreover, at trial a
financial expert testified that the rates that Carpenter promised to investors were “ludicrous and
not reality-based.” A rational juror could easily infer that Carpenter, a certified financial planner
with several years of industry experience, knew as much.
Carpenter contends that this evidence was insufficient because no one testified directly
that Carpenter knew about the fraud. “Circumstantial evidence alone,” however, “if substantial
and competent, may support a verdict and need not remove every reasonable hypothesis except
that of guilt.” United States v. Humphrey, 279 F.3d 372, 378 (6th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted);
see also United States v. Davis, 490 F.3d 541, 549 (6th Cir. 2007) (citation omitted). Given
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United States v. Carpenter
Carpenter’s material misrepresentations and omissions here, a jury could find that Carpenter was
a perpetrator of the gold-mine Ponzi scheme.
As to the second scheme, Carpenter concedes that after October 2008 he continued to
accept investor money without passing it on to Brito, GetMoni.com, or the gold-mine venture.
His defense is that he did so to “make his investors whole,” not to defraud them. A defendant
acts with fraudulent intent, however, whenever he means to deprive investors of their money—
“even if only in the short term.” United States v. Daniel, 329 F.3d 480, 487 (6th Cir. 2003). The
defendant’s ultimate motivation for deceiving investors is irrelevant. Id. at 488. Here, that
Carpenter misled investors with the intention of getting them to “accept a substantial risk that
otherwise would not have been taken” was enough to show his intent to defraud. Id.
If Carpenter’s clients had known that he was going to keep their money or use it to pay off past
investors, rather than investing it in the gold mine, they very likely would not have entrusted him
with their money in the first place. Hence there was enough evidence for the jury to convict
Carpenter of both frauds. That the evidence was plainly sufficient to support Carpenter’s fraud
convictions likewise refutes his claim that the district court should have granted his motion for a
new trial on weight-of-the-evidence grounds. See United States v. Hughes, 505 F.3d 578, 592-93
(6th Cir. 2007).
B.
Carpenter also argues that he should have received a new trial because, he says, his trial
counsel was constitutionally ineffective. See United States v. Munoz, 605 F.3d 359, 373 (6th Cir.
2010). As a general rule, however, “a defendant may not raise ineffective assistance of counsel
claims for the first time on direct appeal[.]” United States v. Ferguson, 669 F.3d 756, 762 (6th
Cir. 2012). Instead a defendant normally should raise those claims in a post-conviction
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United States v. Carpenter
proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, where the parties can develop an adequate record. See
Massaro v. United States, 538 U.S. 500, 504-05 (2003). Here, we have “scant information in the
record to illuminate whether it might have been sound strategy” for defense counsel to make the
choices he made at trial. Ferguson, 669 F.3d at 763. Thus we decline to address this claim in
this appeal.
C.
Finally, Carpenter argues on two grounds that the district court should have granted his
motion for re-sentencing. After Carpenter’s trial counsel withdrew, the district court appointed
attorney Jerome Sabbota to represent Carpenter at sentencing. Sabbota had previously
represented Thomas Moore, one of Carpenter’s alleged co-conspirators in the Ponzi scheme,
with whom Carpenter was initially indicted in an earlier proceeding before a different judge.
Carpenter first contends that, before appointing Sabbota, the district court should have
held a hearing under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 44(c). That rule requires trial courts to
“inquire” into possible conflicts in cases of “joint representation,” which is “simultaneous
representation occurring in the same proceeding.” Moss v. United States, 323 F.3d 445, 455 n.15
(6th Cir. 2003). But Sabbota represented Moore in a different proceeding, which ended over a
year before he represented Carpenter. This representation was thus successive rather than joint,
which means that Rule 44(c) does not apply. Thus, the district court’s appointment of Sabbota at
sentencing, though perhaps unwise given his prior association with a co-conspirator, did not
require a Rule 44 hearing.
Second, Carpenter argues that Sabbota’s representation at sentencing was constitutionally
ineffective. Specifically, Carpenter contends that Sabbota should have contrasted Carpenter’s
culpability favorably with that of Moore, who Carpenter says was the “real villain” and who
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received a lighter sentence (71 months instead of 125). Carpenter also faults Sabbota for failing
to file post-trial motions and make certain other arguments at sentencing. Given the lack of a
developed record for adjudicating any of these claims, we decline to address them in this appeal.
See Massaro, 538 U.S. at 505. Carpenter may bring them together with his other ineffective-
assistance claims in a § 2255 petition.
* * *
The district court’s judgment is affirmed.
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