Former Community Bank & Trust Executive Pleads Guilty to Fraud Charges

Randy Jones, a former executive vice president with Community Bank & Trust who worked for the bank for 30 years, pled guilty last week in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for an alleged multi-million dollar fraud scheme, according to an article in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Specifically, Jones was alleged to have made loans to a customer, Joseph Penick, Jr., to purchase tracts of land in North Georgia. Penick is alleged to have paid Jones $770,000. Penick has pled guilty to his involvement in the scheme.

Jones was also alleged to have used family members and friends to obtain more than $800,000 in loans from Community Bank & Trust to purchase an interest in six Zaxby's restaurants.

 

Community Bank & Trust was shut down by regulators in January of 2010. The bank opened in 1900 and had been insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation since 1934. Before it failed, it had 36 branches across the region and $1.1 billion in assets. An FDIC report in September of 2010 found that Community Bank & Trust failed to follow its own loan policy and had made more than $10 million in bad loans. Georgia has had more failed banks than any other state--52 since 2008. 

Investigators say he used the names of family members without their consent to obtain more than $800,000 in loans from the bank, which he used to buy a stake in six Zaxby's restaurants. And they claim he approved more than $2.8 million in loans to fraudulent borrowers so that a customer who was a real estate developer could pay down interest on loans.

The bank failures have also led to a number of prosecutions and suits against former bank executives, employees and others. Five people with ties to Omni National Bank of Atlanta were convicted on bank fraud and other charges after the bank collapsed during a federal mortgage fraud probe. A lawsuit by the FDIC also alleges that former officers of Alpharetta-based Integrity Bank engaged in gross negligence and breach of fiduciary duty relating to making bad loans. One of the defendants is State Senator Jack Murphy, a former bank official and the new Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. Sen. Murphy has denied any wrongdoing.

 

Sentencing Considerations for Corporations and Organizations

            We received an excellent reader question regarding what factors do Federal courts consider in imposing punishment on corporations or organizations in criminal proceedings. Corporations of course, don’t “go to jail.” The Government does collect its $200 however, since the organization sentencing provisions of the United States Sentencing Guidelines are primarily fine-driven. And while there is a massive body of law concerning factors which must be considered in imposing sentence on individuals, caselaw relating to considerations in imposing punishment on corporations is relatively sparse.

However, areas which courts consider in sentencing corporations or organizations, and conversely areas which corporate criminal counsel may emphasize in order to attempt to mitigate the consequences to their corporate clients, may be discerned from the Guidelines themselves. In many cases, such as relating to acceptance of responsibility and role in the offense, these considerations closely parallel those for individual defendant. The questions facing a corporation at sentencing will boil down to how much will the corporation be made to pay in the form of fines and restitution, and what conditions will be imposed on the corporation.

The relevant portion of the Guidelines is Chapter Eight. Imposing a sentence on a corporation or organization in a Federal criminal case involves a complex determination by the sentencing court. In brief, the court must:

1. Determine whether any restitution, remedial orders or community service should be ordered;

2. Determine the amount of the fine, including determining the corporation’s or organization’s “culpability score”;

3. Determine whether any departures or probation is appropriate.

The Introductory Commentary to Chapter Eight states that it is designed “designed so that the sanctions imposed upon organizations and their agents, taken together, will provide just punishment, adequate deterrence, and incentives for organizations to maintain internal mechanisms for preventing, detecting, and reporting criminal conduct.” U.S.S.G., Ch. 8, Pt. A, Introductory Commentary. The sentencing provisions of Chapter Eight are intended to reflect the general principles that:

First, the court must, whenever practicable, order the organization to remedy any harm caused by the offense. The resources expended to remedy the harm should not be viewed as punishment, but rather as a means of making victims whole for the harm caused.

Second, if the organization operated primarily for a criminal purpose or primarily by criminal means, the fine should be set sufficiently high to divest the organization of all its assets.

Third, the fine range for any other organization should be based on the seriousness of the offense and the culpability of the organization. The seriousness of the offense generally will be reflected by the greatest of the pecuniary gain, the pecuniary loss, or the amount in a guideline offense level fine table. Culpability generally will be determined by six factors that the sentencing court must consider. The four factors that increase the ultimate punishment of an organization are: (i) the involvement in or tolerance of criminal activity; (ii) the prior history of the organization; (iii) the violation of an order; and (iv) the obstruction of justice. The two factors that mitigate the ultimate punishment of an organization are: (i) the existence of an effective compliance and ethics program; and (ii) self-reporting, cooperation, or acceptance of responsibility.

Fourth, probation is an appropriate sentence for an organizational defendant when needed to ensure that another sanction will be fully implemented, or to ensure that steps will be taken within the organization to reduce the likelihood of future criminal conduct.

U.S.S.G., Ch. 8, Pt. A, Introductory Commentary. The provisions are designed to offer “incentives” to corporations or other organizations to police and eliminate criminal conduct through compliance and ethics programs. U.S.S.G., Ch. 8, Pt. A, Introductory Commentary.

The Introductory Commentary to Part B of Chapter Eight states:

As a general principle, the court should require that the organization take all appropriate steps to provide compensation to victims and otherwise remedy the harm caused or threatened by the offense. A restitution order or an order of probation requiring restitution can be used to compensate identifiable victims of the offense. A remedial order or an order of probation requiring community service can be used to reduce or eliminate the harm threatened, or to repair the harm caused by the offense, when that harm or threatened harm would otherwise not be remedied.

U.S.S.G., Ch. 8, Pt. B. Guideline Section 8B1.1 requires a court to enter a restitution order for the full amount of a victim’s loss if such an order is authorized. Section 8B1.3 authorizes a court to order community service as a condition of probation “where such community service is reasonably designed to repair the harm caused by the offense.” U.S.S.G. § 8B1.3. The commentary on Section 8B1.3 notes that the community service should be “related to the purposes of sentencing.” U.S.S.G. § 8B1.3, Cmt.

            Guidelines Section 8B2.1 describes an “effective compliance and ethics program.” It states that, in order to have an effective compliance and ethics program, a corporation or organization must:

1. Exercise due diligence to prevent and detect criminal conduct and establish standards and procedures to prevent and

detect criminal conduct;

2. “[P]romote an organizational culture that encourages ethical conduct and a commitment to compliance with the law”;

3. Ensure that the corporation’s or organization’s governing authority is knowledgeable about the compliance and ethics program and that specific individuals have day-to-day responsibility for the program; and

4. Take reasonable steps to ensure that the compliance and ethics program is followed, enforced and evaluated.

            A critical provision is Guidelines Section 8C2.5, which governs determination of a corporation’s “culpability score.” That section provides for a base score of 5 points with increases or decreases to the level for:

1. Condoning, tolerating or “willful ignorance” of criminal activity by corporate governing authorities or high-level personnel;

2. Any prior history of misconduct;

3. Any violation of orders or obstruction of justice; and/or

4. Self-reporting, cooperation and acceptance of responsibility.

With regard to a decrease in culpability level for cooperation, the Application Notes state that:

[C]ooperation must be both timely and thorough. To be timely, the cooperation must begin essentially at the same time as the organization is officially notified of a criminal investigation. To be thorough, the cooperation should include the disclosure of all pertinent information known by the organization. A prime test of whether the organization has disclosed all pertinent information is whether the information is sufficient for law enforcement personnel to identify the nature and extent of the offense and the individual(s) responsible for the criminal conduct.

U.S.S.G. § 8C2.5, Note 12.

            Another vital provision is Guideline Section 8C2.8—the corporate equivalent of Code Section 3553(a) which courts must consider in sentencing individuals. Section 8C2.8 provides:

(a) In determining the amount of the fine within the applicable guideline range, the court should consider:

(1) the need for the sentence to reflect the seriousness of the offense, promote respect for the law, provide just punishment, afford adequate deterrence, and protect the public from further crimes of the organization;

(2) the organization’s role in the offense;

(3) any collateral consequences of conviction, including civil obligations arising from the organization’s conduct;

(4) any nonpecuniary loss caused or threatened by the offense;

(5) whether the offense involved a vulnerable victim;

(6) any prior criminal record of an individual within high-level personnel of the organization or high-level personnel of a unit of the organization who participated in, condoned, or was willfully ignorant of the criminal conduct;

(7) any prior civil or criminal misconduct by the organization other than that counted under §8C2.5(c);

(8) any culpability score under §8C2.5 (Culpability Score) higher than 10 or lower than 0;

(9) partial but incomplete satisfaction of the conditions for one or more of the mitigating or aggravating factors set forth in §8C2.5 (Culpability Score);

(10) any factor listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3572(a); and

(11) whether the organization failed to have, at the time of the instant offense, an effective compliance and ethics program within the meaning of §8B2.1 (Effective Compliance and Ethics Program).

(b) In addition, the court may consider the relative importance of any factor used to determine the range, including the pecuniary loss caused by the offense, the pecuniary gain from the offense, any specific offense characteristic used to determine the offense level, and any aggravating or mitigating factor used to determine the culpability score.

U.S.S.G. § 8C2.8. The Application Notes to Section 8C2.8 further state, in relevant part, “[i]f punitive collateral sanctions have been or will be imposed on the organization, this may provide a basis for a lower fine within the guideline fine range.” U.S.S.G. § 8C2.8, Note 2.

            Finally, Part C of Chapter Eight provides for departures from a sentence/fine if a court finds “that there exists an aggravating or mitigating circumstance of a kind, or to a degree, not adequately taken into consideration by the Sentencing Commission in formulating the guidelines that should result in a sentence different from that described.” U.S.S.G., Ch. 8, Pt. C, Introductory Commentary. The relevant potential grounds for upward or downward departures are:

1. Substantial assistance to authorities under Section 8C4.1;

2. Risk of death or bodily injury under Section 8C4.2;

3. Threat to the environment under Section 8C4.4;

4. Threat to a market under Section 8C4.5;

5. Public entity (ground for downward departure) under Section 8C4.7;

6. If members or beneficiaries of the corporation or organization are also victims (ground for downward departure) under Section 8C4.8;

7. Whether the remedial costs exceed the gain from the offense under Section 8C4.9; and

8. Mandatory programs to detect and prevent violations of the law under Section 8C4.10.

            From this maze of Guidelines, the following potential points can be derived for corporate criminal counsel to potentially argue in favor of a low or lesser punishment or fine, departure or for mitigation generally:

  1. Any compliance and ethics programs instituted or proposed by the corporation either before or following the alleged conduct;
  2. Any actions the corporation has taken to remedy any harm from the alleged conduct, including:
    1. Restitution to any victims;
    2. Institution or proposal of a compliance and ethics program;
    3. Any other efforts the corporation has made to detect or prevent criminal activity, or to detect or prevent any recurrence of the alleged conduct;
  3. The corporation’s service to the community before or following the alleged conduct;
  4. Whether the corporation reported the alleged conduct to law enforcement;
  5. Whether the corporation cooperated and/or rendered substantial assistance to the Government, and the degree of such cooperation and/or assistance;
  6. Whether the alleged conduct constituted a distinct, isolated instance, as opposed to demonstrating that the corporation had an alleged criminal purpose;
  7. The relative position of the individuals involved in, or having knowledge of, the alleged conduct—i.e. whether governing or high level officers or lower level personnel;
  8. Whether the corporation has any history of similar conducts;
  9. The seriousness of the alleged conduct, including whether it resulted in any physical harm, threat to any market, third party, etc.;
  10. The corporation’s role in the alleged conduct, including whether the corporation or its officers, members or employees were also victims of the alleged conduct;
  11. The lack of likelihood of recurrence of the alleged conduct;
  12. The corporation’s efforts to investigate the alleged conduct and actions against culpable individuals;
  13. Whether the alleged conduct resulted in collateral consequences to the corporation, including costs from investigation, civil lawsuits relating to the alleged conduct, etc.; and
  14. Whether the gains from the alleged conduct were outweighed by the costs incurred by the corporation in responding to and remedying the alleged conduct.

These points may also furnish useful guidelines or tips for corporate officers or members and counsel in attempting to devise appropriate responses in the event of notice of alleged wrongdoing and/or a criminal investigation.