On March 26, 2004, Defendants Charles C. Stone and Dora B. Stone (collectively “Defendants” or “the Stones”) were convicted by a jury of one count of conspiring to defraud the United States by impeding the Internal Revenue Service in the ascertainment and collection of tax, in violation of Title 18 U.S.C. § 371, and three counts of attempting to evade income tax, in violation of Title 26 U.S.C. § 7201. They were both sentenced under the then mandatory U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual (Guidelines). On appeal, they jointly and individually raise errors with respect to both their convictions and their sentences, primarily based on the United States Supreme Court’s rulings in
Crawford v. Washington,
BACKGROUND
Defendant Charles Stone owned Benton Manufacturing Company (BMC), a textile facility, located in Benton, Tennessee. Mr. Stone managed the company, and his wife, Mrs. Dora Stone, handled many administrative tasks, including keeping its books. BMC kept a corporate ledger of all expenses for the company. The ledger contained a stub for each check drawn on the corporate account. Mrs. Stone coded each stub to indicate what kind of corporate expense each check had been drawn to pay. She then provided the stubs to the corporate accountant, a Mr. Robert George, who would use those codes to determine whether each expense was a proper tax deduction on BMC’s corporate tax return.
Between 1993 and 1995, Defendants drew on corporate accounts to pay for over $200,000 in personal expenses. Checks drawn on the corporate account during this period were used to remodel and furnish a summer home, for portraits of family members, and for several trips to Florida. Defendants also charged large sums on their corporate American Express card for retail clothes, jewelry, household furniture, tanning products and services, hotels in the Carribean, pool and spa equipment, and monogrammed bathrobes. Defendants did not report any of these payments on their personal income tax returns. All of the expenses were coded in the corporate ledger and deducted from BMC’s corporate tax return as ordinary and necessary business expenses.
The Government’s principal witness was Internal Revenue Service Agent Theresa Cantrell (“Agent Cantrell”). Agent Cantrell was heavily involved in the investigation of the Stones. She testified at both the trial and during the sentencing phase.
ANALYSIS
Defendants first challenge their convictions. They allege that Agent Cantrell based much of her testimony on testimonial hearsay statements in violation of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in
Crawford v. Washington,
Defendants, however, do not point to any testimony by Agent Cantrell that was not supported by prior in-court witness testimony or by documents properly admitted into evidence. In fact, the Government points to an exchange in which Agent Cantrell indicated that her expert opinions were based on witness testimony and documents properly admitted into evidence. Because Defendants do not establish that Agent Cantrell relied on out-of-court interviews of witnesses not called to testify, their Crawford argument is not well taken. As this Crawford argument is the only assignment of error relating to guilt Defendants make on appeal, their convictions are affirmed.
Defendants also allege several errors with respect to their sentences. First, Defendants allege that
Crawford
prohibits Agent Cantrell from opining on the amount of loss caused to the government based on out-of-court statements made by witnesses not called to testify at trial. Unlike during the conviction phase of the trial, Agent Cantrell arguably relied on “testimonial hearsay” statements during the sentencing phase of the trial. It is an open question in this circuit whether our rule that “confrontation rights do not apply in sentencing hearings ... ’’applies after
Crawford. U.S. v. Silverman,
Defendants’ final joint challenge to their sentences is based on the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in
United States v. Booker,
Insofar as Defendants argue that the district court should not make judicial findings of fact as to the amount of tax loss, or as to whether Defendants obstructed justice, those assignments of error are not well taken.
Booker
did not eliminate
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judicial fact-finding. Instead, the remedial majority gave district courts the option, after calculating the Guideline range, to sentence a defendant outside the resulting Guideline range.
Booker,
Finally, we address the argument made by Defendant Charles Stone that the district court should have reduced his sentence to reflect his claimed minor role in the offense pursuant to United States Sentencing Guideline (“U.S.S.G.”) § 3B1.2. Defendant Charles Stone has the burden of proving this mitigating factor by a preponderance of the evidence.
See U.S. v. Lloyd,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM Defendants’ convictions, but we VACATE their sentences and REMAND for re-sentencing.
Notes
. We make no finding at this stage as to the reasonableness of sentences above or below the advisory Guideline range in this case. In addition, because we are remanding the case for re-sentencing, the district court must also determine anew the amount of restitution that the Defendants should pay. We note that we recently decided that
Booker
does not apply to orders of restitution.
See United States v. Sosebee,
