United States v. Sippola, No. 10-2331 (6th Cir. 2012)
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In 2004, actor John Stamos visited a resort with a group of male friends and met Coss, then 17 years old. Coss and her friend attended a party at Stamos's hotel room. Alcohol was served. Stamos and Coss corresponded for several years and, in 2005, Coss flew to Chicago to visit Stamos while he was filming a television show. In 2008, Coss began dating Sippola. After Sippola saw photographs that Coss had of Stamos, the two devised a plan to obtain money from Stamos in exchange for the photographs. They created two fictitious personas. Emails from a fictional 17-year-old girl whom Stamos had purportedly impregnated while on vacation resulted in a cease-and-desist letter. Coss then indicated that another party had pictures of them using drugs and trashing the hotel room. Stamos's lawyer contacted law enforcement. The FBI stepped in and reached an agreement with Sippola’s fictional character to purchase the photographs for $680,000. Sippola and Coss were convicted of conspiracy to commit extortion 18 U.S.C. 371; 875(d) and sentenced to 48 months.. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, rejecting a challenge to sufficiency of the evidence and a claim to downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility under USSG 3E1.1.
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