Appellants Maury Kemp, Perry Pressley, and Donna Frydenlund were convicted of bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344(1), and of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. All three were sentenced to terms of imprisonment and were ordered to pay restitution of approximately $1.5 million. Kemp and Pressley challenge their sentences. Pressley and Frydenlund challenge their convictions. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.
I.
In late 1989, Kemp owned three car dealerships in California. Frydenlund served as comptroller and general manager of
Kemp Group had a checking account at MBank in El Paso. The three California dealerships had accounts at First Interstate Bank in California. As the businesses began to fail in late 1989 and 1990, Kemp devised a check-kiting scheme to keep them running until he could sell them as ongoing businesses. He instructed Pressley to send blank Kemp Group checks to California, • which would then be filled out by Fryden-lund in the amount needed to keep the businesses’ accounts current. In return, Frydenlund would send back checks drawn on the First Interstate accounts to Pressley in Él Paso to cover the amounts of the Kemp Group checks. Pressley would then deposit these checks in the MBank account. Over the next few months, hundreds of checks traveled back and forth in this manner between Kemp Group and the California dealerships.
In January 1991 First Interstate uncovered the scheme and informed MBank that it was returning 37 checks totalling more than $1.5 million. MBank posted the checks as overdrafts. A jury convicted the three defendants of bank fraud and of conspiracy to commit bank fraud. The trial judge gave them prison sentences and ordered them to pay restitution of approximately $1.5 million.
II.
Appellants Pressley and Frydenlund challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to convict them. In such challenges, the court must decide whether a rational jury could find evidence that establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Es-pinoza-Seanez,
The jury in this case could reasonably conclude from the evidence presented at trial that both Pressley and Frydenlund knowingly participated in a scheme to defraud MBank and FIB. Both Pressley and Frydenlund admit full knowledge of the scheme. They also admit that they acted under Kemp’s orders to carry the scheme forward. They argue in defense only that they lacked the specific intent to deceive or cheat the bank. These arguments are unpersuasive.
Check kiting is a scheme “designed to separate the bank from its money by tricking it into inflating bank balances and honoring checks drawn against accounts with insufficient funds.”
United States v. Doherty,
Notwithstanding Pressley’s and Frydenlund’s declared intent that the banks not be permanently deprived of
There was also ample evidence that the defendants took part in a conspiracy to keep the check kite operating for months. The defendants acted in concert with Kemp to facilitate the exchange of hundreds of checks. To find a conspiracy violation under 18 U.S.C. § 371, a jury need only find an agreement between two or more persons to violate the law and an overt act by one member of the conspiracy in furtherance of the conspiracy. A specific agreement need not be shown, but may be inferred from concert of action.
See United States v. Magee,
III.
Appellants Kemp and Pressley argue that the district court erred in calculating their base offense level under the sentencing guidelines. Persons convicted of check kiting are sentenced under section 2F1.1 of the Guidelines.
See Doherty,
The appellants argue that it was inappropriate to use the total amount of the overdraft, because after the dust settled MBank’s loss was much less than the amount of the overdraft. The defendants believe that the real loss to MBank is zero, because Kemp executed a promissory note to MBank for the full amount of the overdraft, secured by a second lien on the California dealership properties, and because Kemp will eventually pay back MBank when he sells the dealerships. According to the appellants, because MBank’s losses, if any, will be lower than the amount of the overdraft at the time the scheme was uncovered, the court erred by sentencing them according to the higher, “inflated” number.
Appellants characterize their argument as directed not at the district court’s finding of MBank’s actual loss, which is shielded by the clearly erroneous rule on appeal, 2 but at its legal misapplication of the guidelines, a matter we review de novo. 3 The appellants contend that check kiting should be treated like a fraudulently obtained loan, for which an application note accompanying § 2F1.1 specifies that the victim’s (i.e., the bank’s) loss “is the amount of the loan not repaid at the time the offense is discovered,” reduced by whatever the bank might recover from collateral pledged to secure the loan. U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1 appl. note 7(b).
Second, no matter which part of § 2F1.1 is applied, the sentencing standard depends upon the bank’s actual loss. Kemp did not disagree that the out-of-pocket loss to MBank was $1.5 million: he agreed to repay that amount. The only question here is whether his agreement, his good intentions, and the second lien on the California dealerships reduced that actual loss. 4 The district court implicitly found they did not, and this finding is not clearly erroneous. At the time of sentencing, Kemp’s financial empire was in trouble, the appraisals of the dealerships could be seen as optimistic, the sales proceeds for one were tied up in litigation, and no payments had been made to reduce the $1.5 million loss. Without hearing further explanation, the court was not required to credit the bank’s lower estimate of its loss to a third party. Thus, although it is possible that the actual loss may in some cases be less than the overdraft when the kite is discovered, Kemp did not persuade the court of that in his case.
The Seventh Circuit has rejected a similar argument in
United States v. Carey,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment and sentences of each appellant are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At least six Circuits have expressly held that bare check-kiting schemes fall within the scope of section 1344(1).
See Doherty,
.
United States v. Rodriguez,
.
United States v. Ruff,
. The fraudulent loan cases cited by Kemp are distinguishable on the facts, because in each of those, the “actual loss” was subject to reduction by actual payments made on the loans before default and valuable collateral given for those loans.
See United States v. Kopp,
. The government suggests by innuendo that the sum total of the defendants’ fraud approached $47,000,000, the total of all of the checks used in the kiting scheme. That figure grossly misstates the nature of the scheme. Each check worked only a temporary float. A check-kiting scheme involving only two checks would inflate the account balances for only a very short time, perhaps only a few days. In a more involved scheme, each check replaces the previous checks, merely sustaining the float, rather than adding to the amount floated.
See United States
v.
Deutsch,
