United States v. Reid, No. 13-1769 (6th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseReid was the Executive Director for State and Federal Programs for the River Rouge School District. One of the vendors who received contracts for the district was Flaggs, owned by Reid’s brother-in-law. In a scenario typical of their relationship, Reid made a false representation that the program was mandatory, parents enrolled their children, Flaggs received a total of $75,000 for a “Jump Start” program, and Flaggs returned $2,500 to Reid as an individual. Reid ultimately admitted that she had received $10,000 to $20,000 from Flaggs for providing preferential treatment to his company. The Sixth Circuit affirmed her convictions for bribery and mail fraud, rejecting, as having not been timely raised, claims that the prosecution committed a Batson violation when it struck jurors for cause after asking them whether they would be prejudiced against the government’s use of information from Reid’s prayer journal and that the government violated Miranda in questioning Reid without a Miranda warning. The court also rejected her claim that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to challenge the sentencing guidelines computation and in failing to timely raise objections to the other claims.
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