In Sacramento on Wednesday, US District Judge Lawrence Karlton sentenced community activist and fundraiser Julie Lee of San Francisco to one year and one day in prison in connection with the illegal diversion of state grant money to a political campaign. In July, a federal jury convicted Lee on two counts of mail fraud and three counts of attempted witness tampering. Evidence showed that she took $125,000 of a $500,000 state grant to develop a community center (which was never built) and funneled it through intermediaries to the Secretary of State campaign of Kevin Shelley. She also allegedly attempted to persude three witnesses not to cooperate with the investigation of her activities. Shelley resigned in 2005 after the story broke but has never been charged and has denied invovement. Lee still faces state charges in the matter (San Francisco Chronicle, DOJ).
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Ending this week’s sentencings of former executives of National Century Financial Enterprises, US District Judge Algenon Marbley today sentenced former CEO and co-founder Lance Poulsen to 10 years in prison for witness tampering. Poulsen and his associate Karl Demmler were convicted on March 26 on one count each of conspiracy to obstruct justice, witness tampering, witness tampering by influencing testimony and corruptly persuading a federal witness. They allegedly attempted to pay former executive VP for compliance Sherry Gibson $500,000 to $1 million to plead unfamiliarity with the fraud charges against Poulsen and other executives. Gibson, who had pleaded guilty in 2003 to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and agreed to cooperate, went to authorities instead. She was a key witness in the fraud trial of the five executives who were convicted in March, testified against Poulsen and Demmler in this case and is expected to testify against Poulsen in his fraud trial which begins October 1. Demmler’s sentencing was postponed pending completion of a psychological evaluation (Columbus Dispatch).
After about 6 hours of deliberation yesterday and today, a federal jury in Columbus, Ohio has convicted former National Century Financial Enterprises CEO and co-founder Lance Poulsen and his associate Karl Demmler on one count each of conspiracy to obstruct justice, witness tampering, witness tampering by influencing testimony and corruptly persuading a federal witness. They face a possible maximum of 55 years in prison. The charges arose from their attempt to pay former National Century Executive VP for compliance Sherry Gibson $500,000 to $1 million to have a “memory lapse” when called to testify against Poulsen in his fraud trial in connection with National Century’s 2002 collapse. Poulsen’s trial on 47 counts including conspiracy, wire fraud, securities fraud and money laundering is now scheduled to begin August 4.
US District Judge Algenon Marbley has not set a date for sentencing but ordered Demmler held without bond because of threats he made against two local judges and an attorney in the taped conversations which were entered into evidence at the trial. Poulsen is already in custody because his bond on the original fraud charges was revoked after he was indicted on the witness tampering charges. Columbus Business First, Bloomberg, our earlier trial coverage here, here and here.
The defense rested on Monday in the in the witness tampering trial of former National Century Financial Enterprises CEO and co-founder Lance Poulsen and his associate Karl Demmler (earlier here and here). The government rested on Friday after playing tapes of conversations between Poulsen and Demmler which appear to confirm that Poulsen suggested to Demmler that former Executive VP for compliance Sherry Gibson should plead unfamiliarity with the fraud charges against Poulson and other executives (AP here). The defense had contended that it was all a misunderstanding and that Poulson was merely seeking to help Gibson; however, when Poulson took the stand in his own defense Monday, he alleged that Gibson was an abusive employee “both sexually and physically” and that she had stabbed him in the back by agreeing to become a government witness. The case is expected to go to the jury today Columbus Business First here.
In opening statements on Tuesday in the witness tampering trial of former National Century Financial Enterprises CEO and co-founder Lance Poulsen and his associate Karl Demmler (earlier), the defense sought to portray Poulson’s $500,000 offer to former Executive VP for compliance Sherry Gibson as a misunderstanding. According to defense attorney Peter Anderson, Poulsen only sought to “make her whole” because she had gone to prison and given up her assets in her plea deal. And according to Demmler’s attorney Darryl Parker, Demmler was the intermediary because he was a longtime friend of Gibson and was only urging her to use the money to get a new attorney. However, Gibson took the stand on Tuesday afternoon and testified that she construed the initial offer as a bribe, contacted the government and agreed to wear a wire at future meetings with Demmler. The jury heard tapes in which Demmler offered to set Gibson up with an offshore account for a 10% fee if she took Poulsen’s offer and told her ” “Money laundering is my business on private contracts.” And regarding the testimony she was to give in Poulsen’s now-delayed fraud trial, Demmler said “Don’t remember. You don’t have to lie. You’re not lying. He’s not asking you to lie” and referred to a scene in Godfather II where a witness forgets testimony. The government also has taped conversations between Poulsen and Demmler in which they allegedly used code words in case their phones were bugged. Poulson is expected to take the stand in his own defense. Gibson’s testimony in the recently completed fraud trial of five other National Century executives (earlier) also included testimony implicating Poulsen in the fraud. Columbus Business First here and here.
A jury was selected Monday in the witness tampering trial of former National Century Financial Enterprises CEO and co-founder Lance Poulsen, and opening arguments are to begin today in Columbus, Ohio before US District Judge Algenon Marbley. Poulsen had been indicted in 2006 on 47 counts including conspiracy, wire fraud, securities fraud and money laundering in connection with the same acts for which five former executives were convicted last week (earlier) and is scheduled for trial on August 4 in that case. But in this case, he and an associate, Karl Demmler were indicted on one count each of conspiracy to obstruct justice, witness tampering and witness tampering by influencing testimony. The indictment alleges that they attempted to bribe Sherry Gibson, National Century’s former Executive VP for compliance, with $500,000 to “develop amnesia” on the witness stand in the fraud case. Gibson pleaded guilty in 2003 to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors; she was sentenced to 48 months in prison in June 2004. She was the government’s star witness in the case that concluded last week and is scheduled to testify in this case. Columbus Business First has the story here.
Jodi Andes in the Columbus Dispatch analyzes last week’s verdicts here.
