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Monday, June 13, 2011

Victoria Sprouse's conviction is overturned!

Two years ago, a Charlotte federal jury convicted Victoria Sprouse of "mortgage fraud," and I had a strong comment on that verdict in this column on Lew Rockwell's page. I have not changed my mind in the interim.

This past Friday, U.S. District Judge Martin Reidinger overturned her conviction and ordered a new trial, basing his decision upon the fact that the prosecution wove a highly-expansive view of "honest services fraud" into all of the charges, even though she was not actually charged with "honest services fraud." (I have this commentary on "honest services fraud" on the LRC page.)

The U.S. Supreme Court recently overturned most of that open-ended federal law and it was abundantly clear from Judge Reidinger's decision that the feds had no case at all without using the part of the statute that was overturned. I have my doubts as to whether or not the feds even can refile charges, and her counsel, Pete Anderson, will be a highly-effective force against anything that the U.S. attorney's office there throws against him.

Because the former assistant U.S. attorney, Matt Martens, now is the Chief Litigation Counsel of the Division of Enforcement of the Securities and Exchange Commission, he will no longer be leading the new prosecution team in that case. Let us just say that I have nothing good to say about Martens, and his appointment by the Obama administrations speaks volumes about the respect that administration has for the law. However, because Martens is extremely vindictive and unethical, I will not say much about him.

I will note, however, that in the Sprouse trial, he had her property seized so that she could not defend herself. The judge declared Sprouse indigent and then allocated $25,000 for her defense. Pete Anderson, at the time, was her attorney and he agreed to stay on as counsel.

Martens, however, told the court that it would take "4-6 weeks" to present the material to the jury, and Anderson had to back out, and Sprouse's court-appointed counsel turned out to be less-than-enthusiastic in defending her. During the trial, Martens presented his material in about three days.

That is correct; About three days. One can draw his or her own conclusion as to whether or not the government was skillfully able to consolidate its supposedly massive amounts of evidence and narrow its focus, or Martens did not tell the judge the truth about the evidence, especially given that Anderson is well-known as a criminal lawyer and had represented Rick Graves, who was acquitted of charges that Martens brought against him. The reader is left to decide what the truth might be in this situation.

There will be a hearing Tuesday to set the current terms of bond. Sprouse, since the conviction, has been under house arrest.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I am HIGHLY disappointed that she and all the others involved in the mortgage fraud did not have to actually serve time. Yes, she lost her NC & SC law license but that is minor to what my life has been like since then. I have lost nearly all my retirement trying to hang on to my house because of Ryan Homes, NVR Mortgage, the appraisal that had 23 mistakes and this money grubbing attorney. GREED....thats all it is! While the innocent victims are losing their homes and credit ruined for their lavish lifestyle and greed. I went to a HUD counselor for a year and he found out Bank of America was the original mortgage holder. I was able to get a loan modification a few years ago and now have been trying to do a short sale for the past 10 months. I can't begin to speak of the absolute hell I've been through because of her and those she partnered up with!!