State v. R. Brandt ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                                04/07/2020
    DA 17-0398
    Case Number: DA 17-0398
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2020 MT 79
    STATE OF MONTANA,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    RICHARD (RICK) BRANDT,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Custer, Cause No. DC 2015-59
    Honorable Michael B. Hayworth, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Chad Wright, Appellate Defender, Moses Okeyo, Assistant Appellate
    Defender, Helena, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Timothy C. Fox, Montana Attorney General, Micheal S. Wellenstein,
    Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    Wyatt Glade, Custer County Attorney, Miles City, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: January 15, 2020
    Decided: April 7, 2020
    Filed:
    cir-641.—if
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    .
    Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     The State of Montana charged Richard (Rick) Brandt with six felonies stemming
    from a Ponzi scheme he devised that ultimately defrauded investors of $2 million. A jury
    found Brandt guilty of all six counts. The Sixteenth Judicial District Court sentenced him
    to a total period of sixty years with twenty years suspended. Brandt appeals, arguing that
    the “multiple charges statute,” § 46-11-410(2), MCA, bars his convictions and punishment
    for five of the six felonies. We hold that Brandt’s convictions may stand on all but one of
    the six charges, reverse the remaining conviction, and remand for resentencing consistent
    with this Opinion.
    PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2     From 2011 until 2015, Brandt ran an ostensibly legitimate house-flipping business,
    Home Investors LLC. Brandt, who was not licensed to sell investment opportunities in
    Montana, solicited investments from eighteen mostly elderly individuals, many of whom
    he knew from church or because he had served as their financial advisor or insurance
    salesman.   Brandt promised his investors high rates of return—ranging from ten to
    twenty percent—to be paid on a monthly or annual basis as he used their investments to
    buy houses, renovate them, and sell them at much higher prices.           He issued them
    “business agreements” to memorialize the terms of the investments, but no prospectus.
    ¶3     Brandt’s business turned out to be a Ponzi scheme—a fraudulent investment
    arrangement in which returns to investors are paid not from any profits of the underlying
    venture, but from money obtained from later investors. See Mosely v. Am. Express Fin.
    Advisors, Inc., 
    2010 MT 78
    , ¶ 3 n.1, 
    356 Mont. 27
    , 
    230 P.3d 479
    . Though Brandt did
    2
    purchase and resell several homes, after several years he ran out of money and stopped
    making payments to his investors. Some of Brandt’s investors tried contacting him when
    they stopped receiving payments. At first, Brandt offered excuses or promised that
    payments were forthcoming, but ultimately he stopped responding. Several investors
    reported Brandt to local law enforcement and to the Montana Commissioner of Securities
    and Insurance (the “CSI”).
    ¶4        Brandt’s arrangement with Roger and Melba Losing is illustrative. Roger Losing
    met Brandt when Brandt sold him Medicare supplemental insurance. Roger considered
    Brandt a close friend. Brandt convinced the Losings, both in their late 70s at the time, to
    invest $50,000 in Home Investments LLC, and promised a 15% return to be paid annually.
    The Losings invested another $36,000 a month later. On the second investment, Brandt
    guaranteed a 15% return to be paid in monthly installments of $450. For a while, the
    Losings received monthly $450 installments, but the payments eventually stopped. Roger
    called, e-mailed, and wrote letters to Brandt but never heard back. In 2015, he finally
    contacted the local sheriff’s office to report that Brandt had defrauded him and his wife.
    Brandt never repaid the Losings either the principal of their first investment or the promised
    profit.
    ¶5        Another elderly woman, Oleta Geis, lost approximately $88,000 to Brandt’s
    investment scheme. Brandt knew Geis through church. Beginning in 2010, when Geis
    was approximately 95 years old, Geis’s daughter paid Brandt $150 per month to pay Geis’s
    bills and gave him authority to write checks from Geis’s bank account. Over the next few
    years, Brandt wrote multiple unauthorized checks from Geis’s account to Home Investors
    3
    LLC, overdrew Geis’s account, and failed to pay her bills, including $20,000 owed to her
    assisted living facility. As a result, Geis’s daughter had to borrow money from friends to
    pay the assisted living bill and prevent the facility from beginning eviction proceedings.
    Brandt had depleted her life savings.
    ¶6     Lynn Egan, Deputy Securities Commissioner at the CSI, launched an investigation
    into Home Investments LLC after receiving numerous similar reports of Brandt’s activities.
    She determined that Brandt was not registered to sell securities; had not registered any of
    the “business agreements” as securities; was operating a Ponzi scheme; and was using his
    investors’ money for personal use, including to pay for his own mortgage, insurance bills,
    and multiple trips.   The investigation revealed that Brandt had solicited a total of
    $1,939,132 from his investors and repaid only $404,740 of their cumulative principal. The
    investors did not make any profit as Brandt had promised. In fact, some of his investors
    were forced to liquidate their remaining assets, and others no longer have any savings on
    which to subsist.
    ¶7     On August 24, 2015, the State charged Brandt by Information with the following
    six counts: Count 1-Exploitation of an older person (common scheme); Count 2-Theft by
    embezzlement (common scheme); Count 3-Failure to register as a securities salesperson
    (common scheme); Count 4-Failure to register a security (common scheme);
    Count 5-Fraudulent practices (common scheme); and Count 6–Operating a pyramid
    promotion scheme (Ponzi scheme) (common scheme).
    ¶8     The case was tried before a jury in March 2017. Mid-trial, at the District Court’s
    direction, the State amended its proposed jury instructions on each of the six charges to
    4
    include a companion element of “common scheme” to reflect the offenses as charged in
    the Information. The jury was so instructed.
    ¶9     The jury found Brandt guilty of all six counts.          At a separate hearing, the
    District Court sentenced Brandt to consecutive terms of ten years on each count,
    suspending a combined total of twenty years.                Brandt appeals, arguing that
    §§ 46-11-410(2)(a) and (d) and 46-1-202(9), MCA, preclude his convictions on five of the
    six counts with which he was charged because they are all “included offenses” or “specific
    instances” of fraudulent practices. He asserts that defense counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance of counsel by failing to object to the sentence on double jeopardy grounds or,
    alternatively, that we should review his unpreserved claims under the plain error doctrine.
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶10    A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel constitutes a mixed question of law and
    fact that we review de novo. State v. Hooper, 
    2016 MT 237
    , ¶ 5, 
    385 Mont. 14
    ,
    
    386 P.3d 548
     (citing Deschon v. State, 
    2008 MT 380
    , ¶ 16, 
    347 Mont. 30
    , 
    197 P.3d 476
    ).
    Where ineffective assistance of counsel claims are based on facts of record in the
    underlying case, they must be raised in the direct appeal. Hooper, ¶ 5 (citing State v. White,
    
    2001 MT 149
    , ¶ 12, 
    306 Mont. 58
    , 
    30 P.3d 340
    ). We may exercise our discretion to review
    unpreserved issues alleging violation of a fundamental right under the plain error doctrine.
    See, e.g., State v. Barrows, 
    2018 MT 204
    , ¶ 8, 
    392 Mont. 358
    , 
    424 P.3d 612
    ; State v. Reim,
    
    2014 MT 108
    , ¶ 38, 
    374 Mont. 487
    , 
    323 P.3d 880
    .
    5
    DISCUSSION
    ¶11    Although Brandt cites the Montana Constitution as one of two bases for his appeal,
    he provides no distinct constitutional analysis, focusing instead on the “multiple charges”
    statute, § 46-11-410, MCA. We resolve the issues on appeal by applying the multiple
    charges statute and decline to consider constitutional double jeopardy principles.
    See State v. Parks, 
    2013 MT 280
    , ¶ 22, 
    372 Mont. 88
    , 
    310 P.3d 1088
    .
    ¶12    Brandt argues that the District Court violated the “multiple charges” statute,
    § 46-11-410, MCA, when it sentenced him on all six counts with which he was charged.
    He contends that his fraudulent practices conviction (Count 5) subsumes the remaining
    offenses (Counts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6) because all six counts are part of the same transaction,
    and Counts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 are included within or are specific instances of Count 5. He
    thus contends that only his conviction for fraudulent practices may stand.
    ¶13    Section 46-11-410, MCA, provides in pertinent part:
    Multiple charges. (1) When the same transaction may establish the
    commission of more than one offense, a person charged with the conduct
    may be prosecuted for each offense.
    (2) A defendant may not, however, be convicted of more than one offense if:
    (a) one offense is included in the other; . . .
    (d) the offenses differ only in that one is defined to prohibit a specific
    instance of the conduct[.]
    ¶14    We first determine whether Brandt’s offenses were part of the same transaction.
    Parks, ¶ 24. Section 46-1-202(23), MCA, defines “same transaction” as:
    [C]onduct consisting of a series of acts or omissions that are motivated by:
    (a) a purpose to accomplish a criminal objective and that are necessary or
    incidental to the accomplishment of that objective; or
    6
    (b) a common purpose or plan that results in the repeated commission of the
    same offense or effect upon the same person or the property of the same
    person.
    To determine whether offenses are part of the “same transaction” under § 46-11-410, MCA,
    we look to the facts underlying the charged offenses, including the defendant’s motivation
    by a common purpose or plan. State v. Ellison, 
    2018 MT 252
    , ¶ 21, 
    393 Mont. 90
    ,
    
    428 P.3d 826
     (internal quotations and citations omitted). “Whether two offenses arise from
    the same transaction or involve the same criminal objective does not depend on the
    elements of the charged offenses, but rather on the defendant’s underlying conduct and
    purpose in engaging in that conduct.” Ellison, ¶ 21 (citing State v. Glass, 
    2017 MT 128
    ,
    ¶ 12, 
    387 Mont. 471
    , 
    395 P.3d 469
    ).
    ¶15    State v. Ellison is instructive. There, Ellison staged a crime scene to frame a local
    detective, Fritz, for arson. Ellison, ¶ 2. Ellison tied the doors shut to the trailer home he
    shared with his parents, started a fire, and placed a knife on the ground outside the home
    with the word “Fritz” scribbled on it. Ellison, ¶ 2. The State charged Ellison with four
    separate counts, including two counts of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.
    Ellison, ¶ 4. A jury found Ellison guilty of both tampering charges. Ellison, ¶ 7. On
    appeal, Ellison argued that his convictions on these two counts violated § 46-11-410, MCA.
    Ellison, ¶ 19. We agreed, concluding that the two tampering convictions—one for tying
    ropes to the door handles and the other for planting the “Fritz” knife—were motivated by
    the common objective to stage a crime, mislead investigators, and frame Fritz, and that
    they thus arose out of the same transaction. Ellison, ¶ 22.
    7
    ¶16    Here, as in Ellison, all of Brandt’s convictions were motivated by a common
    criminal objective: to induce individuals to invest in Home Investors LLC by making
    payments to him and to use those investment payments to fund his personal expenditures.
    What’s more, as Brandt points out, “by charging all offenses as ‘common scheme,’ the
    State conceded that these six offenses were part of the same transaction.” In order to
    convict Brandt of each offense charged, the jury was required to find the element of
    “common scheme” beyond a reasonable doubt. The District Court instructed the jury that
    “common scheme” means a series of acts or omissions motivated by a purpose to
    accomplish a single criminal objective or by a common purpose or plan that either results
    in the repeated commission of the same offense or affects the same persons or their
    property. This language is identical to the definition of “same transaction.” That the State
    conceived of Brandt’s offenses as part of one transaction was also apparent in its closing
    argument, during which it referred to Brandt’s “grand plan” that “kept happening over and
    over again [with] [m]ore and more people [] getting affected.”
    ¶17    The State has broad discretion in determining when to prosecute a case and what
    crime to charge. See State v. Matt, 
    2005 MT 9
    , ¶ 10, 
    325 Mont. 340
    , 
    106 P.3d 530
    . This
    Court is “bound by ‘the State’s choice in framing the charges.’” State v. Tellegen, 
    2013 MT 337
    , ¶ 25, 
    372 Mont. 454
    , 
    314 P.3d 902
     (quoting State v. Russell, 
    2008 MT 417
    , ¶ 27, 
    347 Mont. 301
    , 
    198 P.3d 271
    ). The State did not charge Brandt for distinct offenses against
    each separate victim; it instead elected to charge each offense as part of a common scheme.
    The jury was instructed that, to convict him, it had to find Brandt’s conduct part of a
    8
    common scheme. On this record, we are convinced that the offenses as charged and proven
    were part of the “same transaction.”
    ¶18     We turn now to the second step of the analysis—whether any of Brandt’s offenses
    is “included” in another or whether any is “defined to prohibit a specific instance of the
    conduct” proscribed in the other. Section 46-11-410(2)(a), (d), MCA. See Parks, ¶ 28.
    “Our case law evaluating double jeopardy defenses brought under these two provisions has
    employed a single standard in which we consider the elements of each charge to determine
    whether each charge requires proof of a fact that the other does not (if so, prosecution for
    each charge is not statutorily prohibited).” State v. Weatherell, 
    2010 MT 37
    , ¶ 12,
    
    355 Mont. 230
    , 
    225 P.3d 1256
    . See also State v. Hooper, ¶ 11. Brandt contends that Count
    5, fraudulent practices (common scheme), subsumes the remaining five counts of which he
    was convicted. The State disagrees, arguing that all six counts contain at least one distinct
    element and thus are not included in each other.
    ¶19     An “included offense” is one established by proof of the same or less than all the
    facts    required   to   establish     the   commission     of    the    offense    charged.
    Section 46-1-202(9)(a), MCA. In contrast to the “same transaction” inquiry, the term
    “facts” as used in § 46-1-202(9), MCA, refers to the statutory elements of the offenses, not
    to the individual facts of the case. Parks, ¶ 29 (citing State v. Beavers, 
    1999 MT 260
    ,
    ¶¶ 28-30, 
    296 Mont. 340
    , 
    987 P.2d 371
    ). We therefore examine whether Counts 1, 2, 3, 4,
    and 6 each contain the same or fewer than all the elements of Count 5 or constitute specific
    instances of Count 5. See Ellison, ¶ 23; Parks, ¶ 30. If so, those convictions violate the
    multiple charges statute and must be vacated.
    9
    ¶20    We begin by considering the elements of Count 5, fraudulent practices
    (common scheme). The District Court defined fraudulent practices in accordance with
    § 30-10-301(1), MCA: “It is unlawful for any person, in connection with the offer or sale
    [of] any security, directly or indirectly, in, into, or from this state, to willfully engage in
    any act, practice, or course of business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit
    upon any person.” The jury was instructed on the elements that it must find beyond a
    reasonable doubt to convict Brandt of Count 5. The jury instruction—proposed by the
    State and not objected to by Brandt—set forth the elements of fraudulent practices
    following the language of the statute and further explained the third element as defined in
    Admin. R. M. 6.10.401(1)(u) (2008):
    (1) Brandt offered or sold a security;
    (2) the offer and/or sale took place in, into, or from Montana;
    (3) in connection with the offer or sale, Brandt engaged in conduct such as
    embezzlement, nondisclosure, incomplete disclosure, or misstatement of
    material facts, or misstatement of material facts which operated as a fraud
    or deceit upon a person; and
    (4) he acted as part of a common scheme.
    ¶21    We compare Counts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 to Count 5 in turn to determine whether they
    are included in or are specific instances of Count 5.
    Count 1-Exploitation of an older person (common scheme)
    ¶22    A person commits the offense of exploitation of an older person (common scheme)
    when that person purposely or knowingly exploits an older person as part of a common
    10
    scheme. Section 52-3-825(3), MCA (2009).1 The jury was instructed that it must find the
    following elements beyond a reasonable doubt to convict Brandt of Count 1:
    (1) Brandt exploited an older person;
    (2) acted purposely or knowingly; and
    (3) acted as part of a common scheme.
    The jury instructions defined “exploitation” as an act taken by a person who has the trust
    and confidence of an older person to obtain control of or to divert to the advantage of
    another the ownership, use, benefit, or possession of or interest in the person’s money,
    assets, or property by means of deception or fraud with the intent or result of permanently
    depriving the older person of the ownership. The jury instructions defined “older person”
    to mean a person who is at least 65 years of age.2
    ¶23    The offense of exploitation of an older person is not an included offense of
    fraudulent practices because it requires proof of an element that fraudulent practices does
    not: that the defendant abuses the trust of a person 65 years or older to acquire that person’s
    property. The offense of fraudulent practices does not require a victim over 65 years old
    or that the defendant had gained that person’s trust or confidence. Nor is exploitation of
    1
    The offense of exploitation of an older person is now codified at § 45-6-333, MCA. The
    Information, filed in August 2015, alleged that Brandt committed the offenses “on or between the
    dates of January 2011 and June 2015.” He was charged with exploitation of an older person
    under § 52-3-825(3), MCA. The controlling statute at the time of the offense was
    § 52-3-803(3) and (8) (2009), MCA, which defined an “older person” as a person who “is at least
    60 years of age.”
    2
    The trial court instructed the jury, apparently using the 2015 version of the statute, that an
    “older person” is “a person who is at least 65 years of age.” We use the age of 65 as instructed in
    this case.
    11
    an older person a specific instance of fraudulent practices. The offense of exploitation of
    an older person does not require offer or sale of a security. “Where each offense requires
    proof of a ‘fact’ which the other does not, there cannot be a specific instance of conduct
    which is included in the other offense.” Hooper, ¶ 11 (citing Weatherell, ¶ 12). In Hooper
    we rejected the argument that elder abuse was a “specific instance” of aggravated burglary
    because each required proof of an element the other did not:
    First, elder abuse requires that the person abused be at least 60 years of age;
    aggravated burglary is not dependent upon age of the victim. Second,
    aggravated burglary requires that the intent to commit an offense occur
    within an occupied structure; elder abuse does not have to occur within an
    occupied structure. Both statutes therefore require an additional element
    which the other offense does not require.
    Hooper, ¶ 14. Similar to the statutes we construed in Hooper and Weatherell, the offense
    of exploitation of an older person strives to protect the distinct legal norm of preventing
    abuse and exploitation of Montana’s elderly individuals. Section 52-3-802, MCA (2009).
    See Weatherell, ¶ 14 (concluding that defendant’s convictions of PFMA and assault on a
    minor vindicate different legal and societal norms and thus do not violate
    § 46-11-410(2)(d), MCA). Here, exploitation of an older person seeks to protect people
    over 65, a distinct status of victim, as reflected in the legislative purpose of criminalizing
    that conduct. See also Matt, ¶ 15 (holding that assault with a weapon is not an offense
    included in assault on a peace officer). Brandt’s conviction of and punishment for the
    offenses of both exploitation of an older person and fraudulent practices do not violate the
    multiple charges statute.
    12
    Count 2-Theft by embezzlement (common scheme)
    ¶24    In contrast, the charged offense of theft by embezzlement is included within and a
    specific instance of the offense of fraudulent practices as defined in the jury instructions.
    This is made clear by the fact that the instructions listed embezzlement as one of several
    examples of specific conduct that would satisfy the third element of the latter. By proving
    embezzlement, the State proved one of those elements of fraudulent practices. Thus,
    embezzlement was subsumed in the charged offense of fraudulent practices. Brandt’s
    conviction for theft by embezzlement violates § 46-11-410, MCA, and must be vacated.
    Counts 3 and 4-Failure to register as a securities salesperson (common scheme) and
    Failure to register a security (common scheme)
    ¶25    The offenses of failure to register as a salesperson (common scheme) and failure to
    register a security (common scheme) are neither included within nor specific instances of
    fraudulent practices.   It is unlawful to transact securities business in this state as a
    salesperson unless the person is registered with the state. Section 30-10-201(1), MCA.
    The jury was instructed that it must find the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt
    to convict Brandt of Count 3-Failure to register as a salesperson (common scheme):
    (1) Brandt transacted securities business in this state as a salesperson;
    (2) was not registered to transact securities business in this state as a
    salesperson;
    (3) acted willfully; and
    (4) acted as part of a common scheme.
    13
    The jury was instructed that it must find the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt
    to convict Brandt of Count 4-Failure to register a security (common scheme) in violation
    of § 30-10-202, MCA:
    (1) Brandt offered or sold a security;
    (2) did not register the security in the state;
    (3) acted willfully; and
    (4) acted as part of a common scheme.
    A comparison of the elements reveals that Counts 3 and 4 are not included offenses of
    Count 5. Counts 3 and 4 each required proof of elements that fraudulent practices did not:
    that Brandt was not registered to transact securities business or had not registered the
    securities in Montana.
    ¶26    The offenses charged in Counts 3 and 4 also are not specific instances of fraudulent
    practices. Brandt contends that these offenses constitute conduct such as embezzlement,
    nondisclosure, incomplete disclosure, or misstatement of material facts, or misstatement of
    material facts which operated as fraud or deceit upon a person. We disagree. We have
    held that “[a] factual hallmark of separate offenses arises when acquittal on one charge will
    not affect the others.” State v. Goodenough, 
    2010 MT 247
    , ¶ 21, 
    358 Mont. 219
    ,
    
    245 P.3d 14
    . Acquitting Brandt of the fraudulent practices offense as charged here would
    necessitate acquittal of theft by embezzlement as charged. It would not, however, work
    the same result on his convictions under Counts 3 and 4; those convictions arose from his
    failure to be licensed and his sale of unregistered securities, and each could be proven
    independently of any conduct in which he engaged to defraud his investors. Brandt could
    14
    have committed the offense of fraudulent practices even had he and the securities he sold
    been registered. We therefore hold that Brandt’s convictions for failure to register as a
    securities   salesperson   (common    scheme)     and   failure   to   register   a   security
    (common scheme) do not violate § 46-11-410, MCA.
    Count 6-Operating a Ponzi scheme (common scheme)
    ¶27     The State charged Brandt with Count 6, operating a Ponzi scheme
    (common scheme) under §§ 30-10-324(7)(b) and 30-10-325, MCA. A Ponzi scheme
    “consists of funneling proceeds received from new investors to previous investors in the
    guise of profits from the alleged business venture, thereby cultivating an illusion that a
    legitimate profit-making business opportunity exists and inducing further investment.”
    Mosely, ¶ 3 n.1. As a result of the absence of sufficient assets to generate funds necessary
    to pay the promised returns, the success of such a scheme guarantees its demise because
    the operator must continue to attract funds, which thereby creates a greater need for funds
    to pay previous investors, all of which ultimately causes the scheme to collapse.
    Mosely, ¶ 3 n.1. Although fraudulent in nature, the offense of operating a Ponzi scheme
    requires proof of more: that “a person makes payments to investors from anything of value,
    including anything of purported value, obtained by later investors, rather than from any
    profits or other income of an underlying or purported underlying business venture.”
    Section 30-10-324(7)(b), MCA. This is the definition that the District Court included in
    the jury instructions. Because these elements are not necessary to prove the offense of
    fraudulent practices, we conclude that Count 6 is not included within or a specific instance
    of the offense charged in Count 5.
    15
    ¶28    As with Counts 3 and 4, acquitting Brandt of fraudulent practices would not affect
    his conviction for operating a Ponzi scheme because the latter requires proof of the
    payment from money invested by later investors even without proof that Brandt made any
    false or misleading disclosures or misstated material facts. This point is illustrated by
    Brandt’s theory of the case. Defense counsel argued in closing that Brandt had a “business
    plan,” and the purpose of the business was to flip houses. Brandt testified to each of the
    twenty houses he had bought and to the difficulties he had run into with each house. He
    took issue with the State’s accounting method and argued that he was using investor funds
    for the business and not for his own purposes. Even when it was bleeding money, “he
    couldn’t stop because of the promise that he had made to [the investors.]” Assuming for
    the moment that the jury had believed Brandt did nothing to mislead investors or to
    misrepresent   his   “business   plan”    at    the   time   he   took   their   investments
    (fraudulent practices), it still could convict him of Count 6 if it found that he used those
    investments—instead of profits from the house-flipping business—to pay other investors
    (Ponzi scheme). Brandt’s conviction for operating a Ponzi scheme does not violate
    § 46-11-410, MCA, and may stand.
    Failure to preserve
    ¶29    Brandt argues that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to raise
    these multiple charges issues before the District Court. We analyze claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel using a two-part test enunciated in Strickland v. Washington,
    
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
     (1984). Ellison, ¶ 24. The defendant must show first that
    counsel’s performance was deficient and second that counsel’s deficient performance
    16
    prejudiced the defendant. Ellison, ¶ 24. Defense counsel’s failure to make a valid
    objection based on the statutory prohibition on multiple charges constitutes deficient
    performance. Ellison, ¶ 25 (citing State v. Becker, 
    2005 MT 75
    , ¶ 20, 
    326 Mont. 364
    ,
    
    110 P.3d 1
    ). Such deficient performance is prejudicial because the defendant “would have
    been sentenced to a lesser term had counsel made the appropriate argument[.]”
    Ellison, ¶ 25 (quoting Becker, ¶ 21) (internal quotations omitted).
    ¶30    Brandt’s counsel failed to make any objection in the District Court to his conviction
    and sentencing for the multiple offenses of embezzlement and fraudulent practices as
    charged in this case. As in Ellison, we conclude that this failure constituted deficient
    representation that prejudiced Brandt because, without the error, Brandt would have been
    convicted of five, rather than six, felonies.
    ¶31    “When a criminal defendant is improperly convicted of two offenses arising out of
    the same transaction, the remedy is to reverse the conviction for the lesser-included offense
    only and to remand for resentencing.” Ellison, ¶ 26 (citing Becker, ¶ 25). Accordingly,
    we reverse Brandt’s conviction for Count 2-theft by embezzlement (common scheme), and
    remand the case to the District Court for resentencing.
    ¶32    Having determined that Brandt’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim is the
    appropriate vehicle to address the unpreserved multiple conviction challenges, we decline
    to conduct further review under the common law plain error doctrine.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶33    In sum, Brandt’s counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to raise the
    multiple convictions issue in the District Court. We affirm Brandt’s convictions for
    17
    Count 1-Exploitation of an older person (common scheme), Count 3-Failure to register as
    a securities salesperson (common scheme), Count 4-Failure to register a security
    (common      scheme),    Count     5-Fraudulent    practices   (common     scheme),    and
    Count 6-Operating a Ponzi scheme. We reverse his conviction for Count 2-Theft by
    embezzlement (common scheme) as violative of § 46-11-410, MCA, and remand to the
    District Court for resentencing.
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    We concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ JIM RICE
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    Justice Jim Rice, concurring.
    ¶34    I concur in the decision of the Court. In this regard, I emphasize that my agreement
    to reverse Count 2 (theft by embezzlement) is necessitated, as the Court notes in ¶ 17, by
    the manner in which the Counts were charged in this case—not separately, but as a common
    scheme. A different charging scheme may well have preserved the Count 2 conviction
    under § 46-11-410, MCA.
    /S/ JIM RICE
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    Justice Laurie McKinnon, concurring and dissenting.
    ¶35    I concur in the decision of the Court on Counts 1 through 4, but dissent as to Counts
    5 and 6. I would conclude that fraudulent practices is an included offense of exploitation
    of an older person. I would also conclude that Count 6—operating a Ponzi scheme—is an
    included offense of fraudulent practices and, concomitantly, exploitation of an older
    person.
    ¶36    The Court correctly states the test for determining whether one offense is a lesser
    included offense of another: “we consider the elements of each charge to determine
    whether each charge requires proof of a fact that the other does not (if so, prosecution for
    each charge is not statutorily prohibited).” Opinion, ¶ 18. However, the Court misapplies
    this test when it concludes that “exploitation” of an older person does not include the
    fraudulent sale of a security, as set forth in the securities fraudulent practices statute,
    § 30-10-301(1), MCA; and similarly when it concludes, albeit implicitly, that an
    “older person” is not a “person,” who can be fraudulently or deceitfully sold a security
    under § 30-10-301(1), MCA.
    ¶37    The Court’s error stems from its overly simplistic analysis that exploitation of an
    older person requires proof the victim was over 65 years of age and fraudulent practices
    requires proof that a security was used. As a result, the Court reasons each offense requires
    proof of a fact that the other does not and fraudulent practices is, therefore, not a lesser
    included offense of exploitation of an older person. However, fraudulent practices in
    connection with the sale of a security is a form of “exploitation” under § 52-3-825(3), MCA
    (2013). The jury instructions defined “exploitation” as an act taken to obtain control over
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    an older person’s money, “by means of deception or fraud” (emphasis added). The jury
    was similarly instructed that conduct which “operated as a fraud or deceit upon a person”
    was a fraudulent practice (emphasis added).          Accordingly, here, “exploitation” and
    “fraudulent practices” have the shared element of “fraud,” with the same facts establishing
    the “fraud” for each offense. The offense of fraudulent practices is subsumed and becomes
    a lesser included offense of exploitation of an older person because the latter offense
    requires proof of an additional fact—the “person” who is a victim of the fraudulent sale of
    securities must be 65 years or older. The legal and societal norms of preventing abuse and
    exploitation of older persons remain protected.
    ¶38    The relationship of the two offenses is easily illustrated through a Venn diagram.
    See Weatherell, ¶12 (“The relationship of such charges could be illustrated by a
    Venn diagram of concentric, rather than merely overlapping, circles.”). In my opinion, the
    Court fails to properly examine the facts and proscribed conduct underlying each offense,
    implicitly finding the offenses are illustrated by concentric circles with partially shared
    elements, rather than one offense subsuming or overlapping the other offense. Here,
    fraudulent practices and exploitation of an older person are not concentric circles, but rather
    are overlapping offenses. Fraudulent practices is subsumed within the larger circle of
    exploitation of an older person when the victim of fraudulent practices is an older person.
    ¶39    The Court similarly errs when it concludes a Ponzi scheme is not a fraud under the
    fraudulent practice statute, and, concomitantly, “exploitation” under the exploitation of an
    older person statute. As this Court recognized in Mosley, “[a] Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent
    investment arrangement in which returns to investors are paid not from any ‘profits’ of an
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    underlying business venture, but from monies obtained from later investors.”
    Mosley, ¶ 3 n.1 (emphasis added).       Accordingly, the “fraud” consists of “funneling
    proceeds received from new investors to previous investors in the guise of profits from the
    alleged business venture, thereby cultivating an illusion that a legitimate profit-making
    business opportunity exists and inducing further investment.” Mosley, ¶ 3 n.1. There is no
    dispute that a Ponzi scheme constitutes a fraudulent practice which satisfies, and is
    therefore subsumed, into the statutes prohibiting fraudulent practices and exploitation of
    an older person. Again, as in the case of fraudulent practices, exploitation of an older
    person requires the additional element and proof that the victim was 65 years of age or
    older. As such, the offense of operating a Ponzi scheme is not a concentric circle sharing
    some elements of the offense of exploitation of an older person statute. Operating a
    Ponzi scheme is subsumed as a more specific form of exploitation. Because exploitation
    of an older person requires the additional element and proof that the victim was 65 years
    of age or older, operating a Ponzi scheme is a lesser included offense.
    ¶40    The Court cites Hooper as an illustration that because elder abuse was not a
    “specific instance” of aggravated burglary, fraudulent practices and operating a
    Ponzi scheme are not specific instances of exploitation. Opinion, ¶ 23. This comparison
    is fundamentally flawed and distorts both the Hooper and Weatherell analysis.
    In Hooper, the defendant was charged with elder abuse, which requires the “infliction of
    physical or mental injury,” § 52-3-803(1), MCA, on a person over 65 years of age,
    § 52-3-803(8), MCA. Hooper, ¶ 13. Aggravated burglary is not dependent upon the age
    of the victim and requires the additional element of intent to break into an occupied
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    structure. In Hooper, the offenses were clearly concentric and, although having some
    overlapping elements, each required proof of an additional fact not included in the other.
    Reliance by the Court on Hooper is flawed because here the conduct constituting
    exploitation is fraudulent practices and operating a Ponzi scheme, both of which are
    subsumed into exploitation.
    ¶41   I would conclude that fraudulent practices and operating a Ponzi scheme are lesser
    included offenses of exploitation of an older person. As to Counts 1 through 4, I concur
    with the Court.
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    Justice Ingrid Gustafson joins in the Concurrence and Dissent of Justice McKinnon.
    /S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
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