United States v. Robinson

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In 2006, Robinson opened Paideia Academy, a non-profit charter St. Louis charter school. State and federal monies, disbursed through the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, exclusively funded the school, and were restricted to operating kindergarten through eighth grade. Robinson directed $242,533 from Paideia to develop a pre-kindergarten child care center. Robinson also worked, beginning in 1990, purporting to inspect parking meters. On weekly timesheets, he always recorded 40 hours, regardless of holidays, and even after parking meter services were outsourced. In 2009, the FBI investigated his “employment,” interviewing former Parking Division employees and watching Robinson’s car. They reasonably suspected that Robinson did not inspect meters. The agents installed, without a warrant, a GPS device on his car while parked on a public street. Tracking confirmed that Robinson did not inspect meters. The government charged Robinson with Paideia-related wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. 1343; two Paideia-related counts of federal program theft, 18 U.S.C. 666(a)(1)(A); and five parking-related counts of federal program theft. The district court denied Robinson’s motion to suppress the GPS evidence, motion to sever counts 1-3 from counts 4-8, and Batson objection to the jury’s composition. At trial, the court rejected his challenges to certain testimony and parking-related jury instructions. The court sentenced him to 24 months’ imprisonment and awarded $419,333 in restitution. The Eighth Circuit affirmed View "United States v. Robinson" on Justia Law