Court Opinion

ID: 2966670
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-22 00:58:41.789571+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:45:25.075646
License: Public Domain

PUBLISHED

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.                                                                    No. 96-4757

BARBARA BENTON LIS,
Defendant-Appellant.

Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of North Carolina, at Elizabeth City.
W. Earl Britt, District Judge.
(CR-96-3-2-BR)

Argued: June 5, 1997

Decided: July 15, 1997

Before HALL and MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judges, and
GARBIS, United States District Judge for the District of Maryland,
sitting by designation.

_________________________________________________________________

Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Hall wrote the
opinion, in which Judge Murnaghan and Judge Garbis joined.

_________________________________________________________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: George Alan DuBois, Assistant Federal Public Defender,
Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellant. Yvonne Victoria Watford-
McKinney, Assistant United States Attorney, Raleigh, North Caro-
lina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Janice McKenzie Cole, United States
Attorney, Anne M. Hayes, Assistant United States Attorney, Raleigh,
North Carolina, for Appellee.
OPINION

HALL, Circuit Judge:

Barbara Benton Lis appeals her conviction by a jury of embezzling
government funds, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641. Benton contends
that the district court abused its discretion by excluding, as hearsay,
evidence corroborating her explanation of how she came to possess
approximately $50,000 in undocumented income. We agree that the
evidence should have been admitted and that its exclusion was not
harmless. We therefore vacate the conviction and remand for a new
trial.

I.

For 20 years, until April 1995, Lis worked at the Coast Guard
Exchange System (CGES) office at the Coast Guard Support Center
in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. The CGES office oversaw the oper-
ation of four retail stores, all of which accepted manufacturers' dis-
count coupons. At three of the stores, the store manager collected the
coupons and, after several thousand dollars' worth had accumulated,
took them to Lis, who wrote a check on the CGES account for the
coupons' face amount. The CGES checks were then entered into the
stores' cash registers as sales, offsetting the refund entries that had
been made when the coupons were initially accepted from the cus-
tomers.

The procedure at the Main Exchange was different. There, the non-
discounted price of every product sold was entered into the registers,
and the coupons were treated as cash. Elizabeth Marx, the head cash-
ier, collected the coupons from the register drawers and exchanged
them for cash from the store's $6,500 change reserve. Whenever the
reserve ran low, Marx telephoned Lis and requested a check in
exchange for the coupons. These checks were not entered into the reg-
isters at the Main Exchange, however, because there were no refund
entries to offset. Instead, the checks were cashed at a nearby credit
union, and the cash was returned to the store's change reserve. From
September 1991 until late 1992 or early 1993, Marx cashed the
checks at the credit union. Throughout 1993 and 1994, Lis cashed the
checks and took the cash to Marx. At trial, Lis testified that she

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always made the checks out in the amount requested by Marx, and
that she never bothered to total the coupons herself before mailing
them in for redemption.

An audit of the CGES in March 1995 revealed a shortfall of as
much as $100,000 between the ledger account of coupons receivable
and the total of the actual coupons on hand or being processed; about
$85,000 of the shortfall had arisen since January 1993. The calcula-
tion was made a bit more difficult by the mysterious disappearance
of the redemption records on the eve of the audit, but the amounts that
had been received by CGES from the coupon vendors and clearing-
houses were ascertained from other sources. The shortfall was traced
to the Main Exchange, and the auditor proffered two explanations:
either Marx had requested checks in amounts exceeding the sum of
the coupons, or Lis had issued the checks for amounts exceeding the
requests.

Agent Andrew Dunphy of the Coast Guard Investigative Service
interviewed Lis on March 30, 1995. In response to Dunphy's inquiries
regarding her financial history, Lis said that she had received life
insurance settlements of approximately $130,000 following her hus-
band's death in April 1992, but that she had spent virtually the entire
amount. Upon further questioning, it became evident that, even after
the insurance proceeds had been exhausted, Lis's monthly expendi-
tures continued to substantially exceed her wage income. Confronted
with the seeming discrepancy, Lis confided that she kept a stockpile
of cash -- almost $50,000 -- at her residence. Pressed by Dunphy,
Lis offered several different, unconvincing explanations of the source
of the additional funds. Lis finally told Dunphy that, after her husband
had died, she had found the money in a box beneath the couple's bed.

Lis was found guilty of the single count of embezzlement charged
in the indictment, and she was sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment.
She appeals her conviction.

II.

A.

In 1993 and 1994, Lis's deposits to her personal account exceeded
her documented income by almost $30,000. Lis testified that, three or

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four months after her husband died, she found a large sum of dirty,
crumpled money, mostly twenties and fifties, in one of several brief-
cases lying among miscellaneous items that had been stored under the
camper shell of her late spouse's pickup truck. Lis explained that her
husband had sold chemicals for a living, and that, in violation of com-
pany policy, he frequently broke down larger lots to fill smaller
orders. Mr. Lis collected a premium for this "service," which he kept
for himself.

Lis testified that she was uncertain as to what she should do with
the money, so she stowed the briefcase in a closet for a few months,
where it remained until October 1992, when her sister, Nancy Prone-
chan, arrived from California to visit her. Lis, with the assistance of
Pronechan, finally counted the money, which amounted to very nearly
$50,000.

The briefcase also contained a large envelope. Inside the envelope
were paper strips of various sizes, upon which Lis's husband had
written summed columns of numbers. On one strip is a column of
four-digit numbers, summed to total 41,424; the number 42,810 was
written by itself on a separate slip of paper. The columns on the other
strips totaled significantly smaller amounts.

The government objected, on hearsay grounds, to the introduction
of the strips into evidence. The district court sustained the objection.

B.

1.

The strips are not hearsay. Hearsay is "a statement, other than one
made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered
in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted." Fed. R. Evid.
801(c) (emphasis supplied). If the summed columns are "statements"
made by the late Mr. Lis, they assert only that certain numbers add
up to a particular sum. Lis did not seek to admit the papers as an
assertion of the accuracy of her late husband's math skills, but as evi-
dence of a link between her husband and the money in the briefcase.

                     4
There was no writing from Mr. Lis explicitly stating, for example,
that "The money in this briefcase, currently exceeding $40,000,
belongs to me." Had the defense attempted to introduce such a naked
assertion, it would have been properly excluded under the hearsay
rule. The statements that Lis instead attempted to place before the jury
would have required it to draw an inference, i.e., that the numbers on
the strips somehow related to the contents of the briefcase, as a pre-
requisite to arriving at the conclusion manifest in the hypothetical
example. Because the probative value of the statements set forth on
the strips did not depend on their being particularly accurate or reli-
able, they should have been admitted into evidence.

2.

The exclusion of these statements was not harmless. Lis's only real
chance for acquittal hinged on her success in persuading the jury that
the funds enabling her to live beyond her ordinary means, though per-
haps ill-gotten, were attributable to her husband's misdeeds and not
her own. Her task was made doubly difficult by the highly unusual
way in which she asserts that she came to possess the money.

Although Lis's own testimony and that of her sister might appro-
priately be viewed with skepticism by the jury, the powerful inference
invited by the admission of the strips bearing her husband's handwrit-
ing is harder to assail; this corroborative evidence, neutral on its face,
lends plausibility to an otherwise incredible yarn. If Lis's story is
believed, the government is left without a "smoking gun," and its cir-
cumstantial case becomes significantly weaker. At bottom, had the
jury been allowed to consider the strips of paper, it may well have
harbored a reasonable doubt that Lis was guilty of the charged
offense. We are compelled to conclude that the exclusion of this evi-
dence prejudiced Lis's right to a fair adjudication of her guilt, and,
therefore, that she is entitled to a new trial. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a)
("Any error . . . which does not affect substantial rights shall be
disregarded.").1
_________________________________________________________________
1 Lis maintains that the district court also erred by allowing the govern-
ment to present evidence that, between December 11, 1990, and March
30, 1992, in excess of her authority as treasurer of her son's Boy Scout

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III.

The conviction is vacated and the case is remanded for a new trial,
which, inasmuch as Lis has already served nearly half of her
18-month sentence, should be conducted as soon as practicable.

VACATED AND REMANDED
_________________________________________________________________
troop, she deposited more than $7,000 in non-troop funds into the troop
account, writing checks totaling a similar amount for deposit into her
personal account. Lis testified that the money belonged to her husband,
and that he had asked her to process it through the troop account; indeed,
the unauthorized transactions ceased almost simultaneously with Mr.
Lis's death.

Lis contends that the evidence is irrelevant, because the government
failed to prove the specific losses to the CGES arising from irregularities
in the coupon-handling procedure prior to January 1993. The evidence
did show, however, that as much as $15,000 of the $100,000 shortfall
must have accrued prior to 1993, and that Lis had the authority to issue
checks on behalf of the CGES no later than February 4, 1992, about two
months prior to the cessation of the unauthorized activity in the troop
account. As Lis points out, though, the government has been unable to
explain exactly how Lis could have been responsible for any shortfall in
the coupon accounts prior to her taking over the check-cashing duties for
Marx in late 1992 or early 1993.

It is nevertheless conceivable that Lis embezzled money from the
CGES prior to March 30, 1992, and that she attempted to launder at least
some of it through the troop account. The evidence, then, can be said to
be somewhat relevant. The court below, however, does not appear to
have engaged in any significant analysis under Fed. R. Evid. 403, which
requires that the probative value of the troop account evidence be
weighed against the danger of unfair prejudice resulting from its admis-
sion. On remand, the district court shall have the opportunity to consider
the matter anew.

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