Justia Daily Opinion Summaries

White Collar Crime
December 29, 2023

Table of Contents

USA V. GALECKI

Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Drugs & Biotech, Health Law, White Collar Crime

US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

United States v. Conley

Banking, Criminal Law, White Collar Crime

US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

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White Collar Crime Opinions

USA V. GALECKI

Court: US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

Docket: 20-10288

Opinion Date: December 27, 2023

Areas of Law: Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Drugs & Biotech, Health Law, White Collar Crime

The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld the drug-trafficking and money-laundering convictions of Benjamin Galecki and Charles Burton Ritchie for their distribution of "spice," a synthetic cannabinoid product. The defendants were found guilty of manufacturing and distributing spice through their company, Zencense Incenseworks, LLC. The drug-trafficking charges were based on the premise that the cannabinoid used, XLR-11, was treated as a controlled substance because it was an "analogue" of a listed substance. The court rejected the defendants' arguments that their convictions should be set aside due to Fourth Amendment violations, insufficient evidence, and vagueness of the Controlled Substance Analogue Enforcement Act of 1986. However, the court reversed their mail and wire fraud convictions due to insufficient evidence. The case was remanded for further proceedings.

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United States v. Conley

Court: US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

Docket: 22-5112

Opinion Date: December 22, 2023

Areas of Law: Banking, Criminal Law, White Collar Crime

In this case, Pamela Kathryn Conley appealed her sentence for bank fraud and aggravated identity theft. She argued that the district court incorrectly calculated her loss amount for the bank fraud offense, and that the court erred in accepting her guilty plea for aggravated identity theft.

Conley had applied for loans at seven financial institutions using false employment and salary information, and in some cases, she forged the signatures of financial institution employees to create false lien releases for vehicles she used as collateral. She pled guilty to 24 counts of bank fraud and 4 counts of aggravated identity theft.

On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit found that the district court had erred in calculating the loss amount for the bank fraud offense. The court vacated Conley's sentence for bank fraud and remanded for resentencing on those counts. The court determined that the district court had relied on disputed facts in the presentence report to calculate Conley's U.S. Sentencing Guidelines range for bank fraud, which was procedurally unreasonable.

However, the court affirmed Conley's convictions for aggravated identity theft. Conley had argued that the court erred in accepting her guilty plea for this offense in light of the Supreme Court's decision in Dubin v. United States. But the appeals court found that any potential error in accepting the guilty plea was not plain or obvious under current, well-settled law.

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