A father convicted of stealing more than $160,000 from a trust fund
his dying wife set up for their young daughter has failed to convince a
state appeals court panel that his lawyer was incompetent.
By the way, Gary Blank represented himself during his trial.
The Superior Court's rejection of the Bucks County man's appeal means
Blank's 18-month to 4-year prison term will stand. So will an order
requiring him to repay $161,495 to his daughter, who was 5 when her
mother, Theresa, died from breast cancer in 2002.
The state court's opinion was penned by Judge Jacquelyn O. Shogan,
who cited county court filings that stated Blank was a drug addict when
his wife set up their daughter's trust. After Theresa's death, Blank
secured a $1 million settlement in a medical malpractice lawsuit.
At its height in 2006, the trust account contained $539,000. Blank, 58, and his brother-in-law, Mark Mangano, were co-trustees.
Although the money was supposed to be used only for his daughter's
needs, Blank and Mangano started making regular withdrawals for their
own use, investigators said.
In one case, Blank withdrew $158,676 he claimed was his share of the
marital estate, Bensalem Township police said. They said that at least
twice Blank and Mangano, who struck a deal with prosecutors to testify
against Blank, withdrew large chunks of money and split it.
The criminal investigation began after an attorney Blank hired to
work for the trust filed a lawsuit when Blank refused to pay him. Blank
and Mango were removed as trustees in 2009.
Prosecutors accused Blank, who had not been employed since 2002, of
using his daughter's money to, among other things, pay his mortgage and
utilities, to pay fees to a dating site, buy lingerie and tickets to a
U2 concert and pay a bar tab.
A county jury convicted Blank of theft, receiving stolen property,
access device fraud and conspiracy charges after a three-day trial in
2012.
Blank acted as his own lawyer for two of those three days. That's the
main reason his latest appeal to the Superior Court failed.
As Shogan noted, Blank claimed he was the victim of ineffective
assistance of counsel tied to the cross-examination of one of his former
lawyers who was called as a prosecution witness. He claimed the
questioning of the lawyer violated attorney-client privilege.
Blank was the one who questioned the lawyer, Shogan observed, so that
argument falls flat. "We will not entertain (Blank's) claim of
ineffectiveness for failure to object to the questioning...which
occurred while (Blank) represented himself," she wrote.
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Dad who looted trust fund dying wife set up for their daughter can't evade prison term
1 comment:
He deserves prison.
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