United States v. Beckman, No. 13-1162 (8th Cir. 2015)
Annotate this CaseIn 2006-2009, the five defendants’ partial Ponzi scheme received more than $193 3 million from hundreds of investors. Only $49 million was returned, all from new investors’ money. Some investors lost their life savings. Each defendant took between $432,000 and $12.2 million. Defendants described investing in foreign currency trading, which was guaranteed and had a fixed rate of return. Some money was invested in foreign currencies, but none was invested in a safe, guaranteed currency product. They also promised instant liquidity and that each investor’s account would be “segregated.” Defendants, who used fund names such as “Oxford” and “UBS” were apparently sued by the Swiss bank, UBS. After the scheme collapsed, two pled guilty. A jury found the others guilty of committing or aiding and abetting commission of wire fraud or mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1341 and 1343; conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1349; and money laundering, 18 U.S.C. 2 and 1957. Defendant Beckman, individually, was also convicted for his interactions with elderly victims; his attempt to purchase an interest in an NHL hockey team; filing false tax returns; and tax evasion. The district court sentenced Beckman to 360 months and the others to 240 months imprisonment. The Eight Circuit affirmed the convictions and sentences,
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Court Description: Riley, Author,with Wollman and Bye, Circuit Judges] Criminal case - Criminal law and sentencing. Evidentiary challenges, including a challenge to Rule 404(b) evidence and a claim the court improperly admitted attorney-client privileged evidence, rejected; evidence was sufficient to support defendants' convictions for fraud, conspiracy and tax fraud; claim of ineffective assistance of counsel based on alleged conflicts of interest rejected; denial of motion for new trial based on newly-discovered evidence affirmed; claims of Brady and Giglio violations rejected; Jencks Act claim rejected; the district court correctly calculated the amount of the loss in defendant Beckman's sentencing; no error in imposing enhancements for vulnerable victims, violation of a securities law by an investment advisor, use of sophisticated means and obstruction of justice; claim of unwarranted sentencing disparities rejected; the trial evidence contradicted defendant Durand's claim that he was less culpable and the court did not err in determining that he was responsible for the loss of more than $100 million; defendant Kiley's below-guidelines sentence was not substantively unreasonable. Judge Bye, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
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