KILBY v. THE STATE.
A15A1596
Court of Appeals of Georgia
November 19, 2015
Reconsideration denied December 11, 2015
335 Ga. App. 238 | 780 SE2d 411
ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.
Thеft by taking, etc. Rabun Superior Court. Before Judge Smith. Mark R. Jeffrey, for appellant. Brian K. Fortner, District Attorney, Anna C. Vaughan, Emily K. Richardson, Assistant District Attorneys, for appellee.
Lowanda Kilby was charged under a 60-count indictment with 29 counts of theft by taking, 29 counts of computer theft, and one count each of theft by deception and violation of thе Georgia Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (“RICO“) Act. A jury found her guilty on every count. The trial court merged three counts of theft by taking into the racketeering conviction and each of the computer theft counts into the theft by taking convictions for sentencing. On appeal, Kilby argues that the evidence was insufficient tо support her convictions on theft by taking and racketeering, and that the trial court erred in sentencing her for felony theft by deception and in failing to merge the remaining counts of theft by taking into each other when imposing her sentence. We find no error and affirm.
On appeal from a criminal conviction, the defendant no longеr enjoys a presumption of innocence. See Preston v. State, 300 Ga. App. 433 (685 SE2d 420) (2009). We do not weigh the evidence nor assess the credibility of the witnesses, but determine only whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury‘s verdict, “a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of [each] crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id.; see Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U. S. 307, 319 (III) (B) (99 S Ct 2781, 61 LE2d 560) (1979).
So construed, the evidence adduced at trial showed that in 2008, Kilby was hired as the director of the Boggs Mountain Humane Shelter (“Boggs Mountain“), a non-profit animal shelter and animal control facility located in Rabun County. In January 2012, Boggs Mountain created a separate entity to perform its animal cоntrol functions (i.e., euthanizing unadoptable and/or dangerous animals), and Boggs Mountain itself became a no-kill shelter whose mission it was “to reduce animal overpopulation without euthanasia.” Kilby remained director of both facilities and reported to Boggs Mountain‘s Board of Directors.
Boggs Mountain offered a “Lucky Dog/Lucky Cat” sponsorship program whereby it accepted donations to cover the adoption fees and expenses associated with spaying/neutering and vaccinating less-adoptable (i.e., elderly or physically challenged) animals in an effort to make them more appealing to potential owners. Donations сould be made by the individual surrendering the animal or by any well-wisher desiring to support Boggs Mountain‘s mission.
At some point, Kilby‘s promotion of the Lucky Dog/Lucky Cat program morphed into an absolute guarantee that for $100, a sheltered animal would be adopted and not euthanized. She trained her staff to promote the program in the same manner. Kilby gave no regard to the condition of the animal or whether it fell within the sponsorship program‘s intended scope when making such guarantees and, indeed, went so far as to procure sponsorship money on dangerous and terminally ill animals that otherwise mandated euthanasia and were prohibited from entering Boggs Mountain.
At the same time, Kilby began randomly ordering that sheltered, otherwise healthy Lucky Dogs and Lucky Cats be euthanized, sometimes on the same day on which they were admitted. On at least one occasion, Kilby accepted sponsorship money on two animals that had already been euthanized. The euthanizations were conducted without notice to the individual who paid the sponsorship fee and to whom, under Kilby‘s direction, messages were often sent that the euthanized animal had been successfully adopted.
In June 2012, a whistleblowing employee at Boggs Mountain contacted the investigative team of a local television network to report Kilby‘s misconduct. On July 10, 2012, an investigativе reporter
The airing of the story prompted a criminal investigation through which the investigator learned that Kilby controlled all aspects of Boggs Mountain‘s operations, including all euthanasia and money handling decisions. Kilby repeatedly reminded her staff that “[t]here is only one supervisor or boss herе, and it‘s me” and explicitly instructed them to “do as [they]‘re told” and to never “question what I do or why.” The staff reported that all cash received at Boggs Mountain was given to Kilby, and that employees were not trained to give receipts to financial donors and rarely did so. The investigation further revealed that Kilby had linked two PayPal acсounts intended for Boggs Mountain donations to her personal bank accounts and routed to herself a total of $10,500 in donation money. Finally, the investigator learned that, despite earning at most an annual salary of $42,000, Kilby played a total of $258,000 cash at Harrah‘s Cherokee Casino for the years 2010, 2011, and 2012.
The investigation resulted in Kilby‘s indictment. The 29 counts of theft by taking and 29 counts of computer theft were based upon specific transactions occurring in March 2012 through July 2012 during which Kilby transferred Boggs Mountain‘s sponsorship money into her personal bank accounts, and the single count of theft by deception was based upon Kilby‘s solicitation of Lucky Dog/Lucky Cat sponsorship money using the false guarantee that sponsored animals would not be euthanized. The RICO violation was predicated upon four specific incidences of theft by taking. A jury ultimately convicted Kilby on every count. She filed a motion for new trial, which was denied, and this appeal follows.
1. Kilby asserts that the evidence was insufficient to support her cоnvictions on theft by taking and racketeering.1 Specifically, she contends that the State failed to prove the money that she diverted to her
(a) Counts 2 thru 30 alleged that Kilby, while a fiduciary of Boggs Mountain, committed theft by taking in that she transferred a series of donations intended for Boggs Mountain into her own personal bank accounts. Specifically, the State presented the expert testimony of a forensic accountant who tracked 29 individual transactions in which money flowed from PayPal accounts attached to one of two e-mail accounts, directorbmhs@windstream.com or directorbmhs@gmail.com, into one of two of Kilby‘s bank accounts, First American Bank & Trust or 1st Franklin Financial. The expert identified the date and amount of each individual transaction, as well as the e-mail account associated with the transaction and the receiving bank account. The expert then explained that a total of $2,680 was transferred into Kilby‘s personal bank account at First American Bank & Trust using the PayPal account associated with directorbmhs@windstream.com, $824 was transferred into Kilby‘s personal bank account at 1st Franklin Financial using the PayPal account associated with directorbmhs@windstream.com, and $7,046 was transferred into Kilby‘s personal bank account at 1st Franklin Financial using the PayPal account associated with directorbmhs@gmail.com. The total amount of misappropriated funds was $10,550.
According to Kilby, the State‘s failure to identify the payor in each PayPal transaction and to present testimony that the money was intended tо go to Boggs Mountain as opposed to Kilby personally rendered insufficient the evidence of theft by taking and racketeering. Evidence of that sort was unnecessary, however, because Kilby herself testified and expressly admitted that the subject transactions involved donation money intended for and belonging to Boggs Mountain. Kilby maintainеd, however, that she was simply “fundraising” using her own personal accounts and had not yet informed the Boggs Mountain Board of Directors that she was doing so. But two members of the Board testified unequivocally that Kilby was never authorized to solicit funds and deposit them into her personal bank accounts, which both the expert witness and Boggs Mountain‘s accountant deemed an unacceptable business practice.
Based upon this evidence, this jury was clearly authorized to conclude that the money involved belonged to Boggs Mountain and to otherwise reject Kilby‘s explanation for the transactions. See Vaughn v. State, 301 Ga. App. 391, 392 (687 SE2d 651) (2009) (“It is the jury‘s prerogative to choose what evidence tо believe and what to reject. Issues regarding the credibility of witnesses are in the sole province of the jury and only the jury may analyze what weight will be given each witness‘s testimony.“) (citation and punctuation omitted). It follows that the evidence sufficiently supported Kilby‘s convictions on 29 counts of theft by taking. See
(b) Kilby further argues that the Statе failed to prove venue as to the theft by taking charges.2 Georgia law provides that in a prosecution for the crime of theft by taking, venue is proper “in any county in which the accused exercised control over the property which was the subject of the theft.”
2. Kilby argues that the trial court erred in sentencing her for a felony, as opposed to a misdemeanor, on her cоnviction for theft by deception.3 The delineation in the law is defined by the monetary amount of the theft: if the property which was the subject of the theft is more than $1,500 in value, the crime is a felony; if the property which was the subject of the crime is $1,500 or less, the crime is a misdemeanor. See
Count 1 of the indictment alleged that Kilby committed theft by dеception in that she unlawfully obtained money, the property of 25 listed individuals with a value greater than $1,500 in the aggregate, with the intent to deprive the owners of the property by deceitful means in that she created a false impression that Boggs Mountain was a no-kill shelter and that payment of funds would ensure that the listed individual‘s animal(s) would not be euthanized.4 Kilby argues that she was entitled to a misdemeanor sentence because several of the individuals alleged in the indictment either did not speak directly to Kilby or could not identify with whom he or she spoke and/or because the State failed to establish that more than $1,500 of the money at issue was paid directly to Kilby (as opposed to her staff).
Kilby‘s argument lacks merit. The evidence fully supported a finding that Kilby guardedly controlled all aspects of the Boggs
3. Finally, Kilby argues that the trial court erred in failing to merge each of the remaining non-merged counts of theft by taking into one count because, she contends, there is no material distinction between the offenses.5
The doctrine of merger prohibits the impositiоn of multiple punishment when the same conduct establishes the commission of more than one crime. See
Here, each and every transaction in which Kilby, a fiduciary of Boggs Mountain, took money belonging to Boggs Mountain with the intent of depriving the facility of that money constituted a separate and distinct completed crime. See
Judgment affirmed. Miller and Branch, JJ., concur.
ANDREWS
Presiding Judge
