United States v. Lewis

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From 2006-2013, Lewis fraudulently held herself out as a Fidelity account representative to at least 12 “investors,” ages 75-92. Although she had been a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority registered broker, 1990-2006, she was neither a registered broker nor affiliated with Fidelity. Lewis set up joint accounts for her investors, including her name on each. Lewis obtained debit cards and forged signatures on checks associated with the accounts to embezzle more than $2 million. She pled guilty to wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1343; the government agreed to recommend no more than 10 years’ imprisonment. The court imposed a sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment. The Seventh Circuit remanded for resentencing based on her conditions of supervised release. Before the resentencing hearing, Lewis filed a motion, arguing for the first time, that the government had breached the plea agreement. The district court denied the motion, holding that Lewis had waived this argument, then again sentenced Lewis to a 15‐year term. The Seventh Circuit affirmed, upholding the court’s refusal to consider Lewis’s argument. The court erred by not affirmatively acknowledging that it could have considered it, but the error was harmless because it alternatively rejected the argument, and the argument is meritless. The court did not err with respect to the vulnerable-victim enhancement; the sentence was substantively reasonable. View "United States v. Lewis" on Justia Law