United States v. Lawson, No. 14-1233 (7th Cir. 2015)
Annotate this CaseLawson’s business, Evangel Capital, held itself out as a lender with $250 million in assets available to churches and other religious institutions. It issued firm commitment financing letters for multi-million-dollar projects but never closed a single loan and never had more than $10,000 in its bank accounts. Potential borrowers paid fees totaling $270,000, which they were told would be used to pay for appraisals and required documents. The fees were used for personal expenses. A jury convicted Lawson of wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1343, and he was sentenced to 52 months’ imprisonment. The judge had allowed the prosecutor to show that Lawson failed to report his income, but not that he failed to file tax returns, telling the jury that the evidence was admitted for the purpose of showing whether Lawson acted with knowledge or fraudulent intent, but not how it illuminated those issues. Lawson did not object. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. The tax evidence could not have affected a rational jury’s verdict, even if taken as propensity evidence, given the undisputed proof that Lawson converted the fees to his personal use and did not spend the money for the purposes he told clients it was needed.
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