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In brief: Dissent in the air, taco shop heist and more

Rolling Stone resists

The magazine was back in court February 9 in Roanoke to ask a judge to throw out a $3 million jury award to UVA administrator Nicole Eramo for defamation, arguing Eramo didn’t prove reporter Sabrina Erdely acted with actual malice and that running a correction isn’t defamatory republication. Judge Glen Conrad will rule in a few weeks.

Behind-the-scenes civil rights activist

Paul Saunier, who helped recruit black students to UVA in the ’60s, support them once here and who convinced most Corner businesses to desegregate in 1962 while he served as an adviser to the university’s then-president Edgar Shannon, died February 8 at age 97.

Patriot boycott

Super Bowl winner Chris Long, a St. Anne’s-Belfield and UVA grad and son of Howie, says he will not join his fellow New England Patriots in the traditional visit to the White House.

Coran Capshaw
Coran Capshaw. Photo Ashley Twigg

Still powerful

Music and development magnate Coran Capshaw comes in at No. 11 on Billboard’s Power 100 list—he was No. 7 last year.

Psychic’s husband sentenced

Donnie Marks will spend 33 months in prison and was ordered to pay $5.5 million in restitution to the victims he and his wife, Sandra Marks, aka Psychic Catherine, bilked when she claimed she could remove curses by cleansing large sums of cash. Marks, who is serving 30 months, met her marks at Synchronicity, a spiritual facility in Nelson.

Photo: Tom McGovern
No tacos were harmed during the Brazos burglary. Photo Tom McGovern

Brazos bandits

The Austin-style taco shop posted a video of two hooded thieves attempting to break into its cash register with what appeared to be a hammer over the weekend. The “knuckleheads,” as Brazos Tacos called them on Instagram, were caught by the Charlottesville Police Department.

Weekend warriors

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GOP candidate for governor Corey Stewart, center, with Joe Draego, left, who sued City Council, and Thaddeus Dionne Alexander. Photo Eze Amos

Demonstrations are becoming the new norm since the election of Donald Trump, and last Saturday saw at least three occasions of citizens exercising their rights to assemble. Although mostly peaceful, the demonstration and counterprotest at Lee Park got loud.

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Counterprotesters. Photo Eze Amos
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A local blogger with Harper Lee’s book. Photo Eze Amos

Gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart came to denounce City Council’s decision to remove the statue of General Robert E. Lee, bringing with him Thaddeus Dionne Alexander, who became a social media sensation for telling Hillary Clinton supporters to “stop being crybabies.” Stewart was met by protesters shouting, “Hey hey, ho ho, white supremacy’s got to go,” and his campaign described them as “an aggressive mob of liberal protesters.” WINA’s Rob Schilling captured on video WCHV’s Joe Thomas being verbally blasted by a bullhorn-wielding demonstrator.

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Rob Schilling and Corey Stewart. Photo Eze Amos
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Jennifer Tidwell, holding sign up, protests across town at Congressman Tom Garrett’s office.

Congressman Tom Garrett’s Berkmar Crossing office has been the venue of regular Tuesday protests since he was sworn in, and Charlottesville NOW’s February 11 protest brought hundreds to decry the defunding of Planned Parenthood. Down the road, a smaller anti-abortion group carried signs outside of Planned Parenthood’s facility.

Richmond watch

Last week was crossover week, when each chamber had completed work on its own bills and began considering legislation passed by the other body. Local delegates had these bills passed.

Delegate Steve Landes. File photoSteve Landes, R-Weyers Cave

Free speech on campus bill: For when the First Amendment isn’t enough.

Beloved bill redux: Requires boards of education to notify parents when materials have explicit content that would be defined as felonious sexual assault.

Photo: Amy JacksonRob Bell, R-Albemarle

Tebow bill: Bell carries his bill for about the 18th time that would allow homeschooled kids to play public school sports. The governor vetoed it last year.

Delegate David Toscano will stick around as House minority leader for at least one more session. Submitted photoDavid Toscano, D-Charlottesville

Misdemeanor DNA: Resolution requesting a study on expanding the use of DNA is headed to the Crime Commission for consideration.

Matt Fariss

Matt Fariss, R-Rustburg

Dangerous dog: Amends law to specify a nip doesn’t make a canine a menace.

Quote of the week

“Newby Gov candidate @Denver4Governor’s inexperience is showing. Doesn’t he know I voted AGAINST moving Lee statue?!”—Mayor Mike Signer responds to Denver Riggleman on Twitter

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Psychic’s husband gets 33 months in prison

The husband of Sandra Marks, aka Psychic Catherine, was sentenced to 33 months in prison and ordered to pay $5.5 million in restitution to the clients seeking spiritual solace the couple bilked.

Donnie Marks, 43, who was charged with mail fraud and money laundering, appeared in the same U.S. District Court February 10 where his wife was sentenced to 30 months in prison in November.

The couple ran Readings by Catherine on U.S. 29 North, and Sandra Marks, 42, offered palm, tarot card, astrological and spiritual readings, and he was the money manager.

When Sandra Marks was sentenced, her attorney contended she would still be doing $35 palm readings had she not crossed paths with Master Charles Cannon in 2003. Cannon introduced her to his Nelson County spiritual retreat, Synchronicity, and to clients with higher incomes.

Donnie Marks’ attorney, Fred Heblich, objected to one of the points in the pre-sentencing report, because the criminal conduct occurred at Synchronicity. Sandra Marks was there every day, and her husband didn’t know what was happening there, he said.

Attorney Fred Heblich says he believes his client, who bilked victims of millions, is remorseful. Staff photo
Attorney Fred Heblich says he believes his client, who bilked victims of millions, is remorseful. Staff photo

Prosecutor Ron Huber disagreed, and said Marks was managing his wife’s work. “I would say they were equals with different skills,” he said. “Hers was to persuade, face to face. His was finance and opening accounts. I think they’re equally culpable.”

Huber did acknowledge that Sandra “definitely had closer ties to Synchronicity. I don’t think they were fond of him. I don’t think they were interested in him.”

The couple used the money they obtained from victims who were “looking for hope and relief” to support a “lavish lifestyle,” said Huber. “Sandra Marks never had the ability to cleanse money. What they did have was the power to swindle people.”

In discussing probation, Huber expressed some concerns that with limited education and “lifelong ties to the gypsy lifestyle,” and that Marks would “return to a life of crime.” Judge Glen Conrad ordered Marks to get a full-time job upon his release and not be self-employed.

Huber and Conrad commended Marks on his cooperation with authorities. And Conrad noted that six family members were there.

Marks addressed the court before he was sentenced. “For the past 26 to 28 months, me and my family have grown to realize the extent of hurt. If I could turn back the clock, I would. I will do my best to make amends and restitution.”

He did not complete a financial statement, said Huber, and Marks told the court he was not able to begin the restitution.

“This was pretty serious stuff and the victims were hurt to a serious degree,” said Conrad. He ordered Marks to file the financial statement within 10 days and to begin restitution payments while in prison, using income from a prison job. And he ordered a “rigorous” four years of probation.

“I believe he is remorseful,” said Heblich outside the courthouse. Marks will self-report to prison.

 

 

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Psychic sentenced to 30 months, blames Synchronicity

Sandra Marks, aka Psychic Catherine, was sentenced to 30 months in jail November 18 in federal court for bilking victims in search of spiritual solace, and she was ordered to pay more than $5.4 million in restitution.

In court and in a sentencing memo, Marks’ attorney, Bill Dinkin, said that she didn’t start bilking clients big time until she met Master Charles Cannon, who visited her in 2003 and invited her to his Nelson County spiritual organization, Synchronicity.

“If not for Synchronicity, she’d probably be reading palms for $35,” said Dinkin. “That brought her clients with higher incomes.”

Marks ran a business known as Psychic Readings on U.S. 29 North that was the site of a 2014 raid. She was arrested a year later and charged with 34 counts of wire and mail fraud for telling her victims that she detected a curse or a “dark cloud,” which she could get rid of by cleansing large sums of money through prayer, meditation and rituals.

She said she’d return the money, but instead, she and husband Donnie Marks used the funds to support a “lavish lifestyle,” buying cars and expensive jewelry, according to prosecutor Ron Huber. Donnie Marks entered a guilty plea following his wife’s sentencing Friday.

Marks’ original indictment listed five victims, but in her plea, she was charged with embezzling from two, one who suffered from depression and another, Kerry Skurski, who had ALS and has since died, and who met Marks at Synchronicity.

“That’s quite a light amount of incarceration considering she was charged with 32 counts,” says Mike Skurski, Kerry’s ex-husband, in Colorado. “It’s a mathematical improbability she can’t pay the restitution so she should pay with her time in jail.”

In a sentencing memo, Dinkin alleged that as an “employee and counselor at Synchronicity,” Marks was introduced to a practice Master Charles Cannon called “the Big Process,” in which clients placed funds ranging from thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars into the care of Synchronicity as a sign of “unwavering faith in Cannon as a deity” and to keep his followers from the “negative temptations of materialism.”

“This is the first time I’ve ever heard that,” says Master Charles. “It’s really shocking to me because it isn’t true.”

He says Marks was a shaman and a paid consultant at Synchronicity. “The work Catherine did for us was excellent,” he says. “All the people who worked with her never had any complaints. We were really shocked because it was a different person from what we knew.”

Synchronicity cooperated with the federal investigation, he says. “They found we weren’t complicit in this.”

And while most of the victims met Marks at Synchronicity, Master Charles cautions against calling them members. “We have retreats and programs,” he explains. “You might meet a massage therapist here and contract with them outside of Synchronicity. That’s what happened here.”

In court, both the prosecution and defense said Marks did not target her victims because of their vulnerabilities.

Judge Glen Conrad disagreed. “I think these  folks were targeted for these very reasons.”

Marks, 42, cited her Romani background, also known by the politically incorrect term gypsy, which contributed to her illiteracy and her marriage at age 16 to Donnie Marks. She was the family’s primary breadwinner, working as a spiritual counselor and conducting “mystic exercises involving prayer, the use of crystals and idols, tarot card readings and attempted communication with the dead,” while her husband took care of the financial aspects, according to court documents.

Mike Skurski calls Marks’ claim of illiteracy “flat out false and offensive.” He has copies of texts Marks exchanged with his ex-wife, including one in which Marks provides her bank routing numbers. He also has what he says is a 2010 contract Kerry Skurski signed retaining Marks for “shamanic consulting services” for $50,000, which was witnessed by a Synchronicity staffer.

A statement was read in court from victim J.D., who was “embarrassed” by the bilking and had not let anyone in her family know. J.D. also called Marks “manipulative.”

Dinkin stressed that his client, who has been in jail for 16 months, cooperated fully with law enforcement, and has already been punished for fingering her husband. “The couple was extremely loving,” said the attorney. “Within her culture, she wasn’t the one in charge. Her husband was.”

Judge Conrad was concerned that Marks, with limited job skills, would slide back into psychic activities, and ordered three years of “rigorous” supervised probation, including of her financial documents.

“Your case was a little out of the ordinary from what we normally see with white collar crime,” he said. “I realize your culture is one where women have limited opportunity to realize their potential and fulfill their dreams. And I realize you’re virtually illiterate.”

The judge added, “Those are good chunks of money. It was a big scheme.”

He ordered that Sandra and Donnie Marks pay $5,479,994.60 in restitution, but acknowledged their ability to do so would be limited. The couple will forfeit $87,000 in assets held by the government.

After the hearing, Dinkin said his client “feels extremely remorseful. She became very close to these folks.”

And when Marks addressed the court, he said, “She had tears in her eyes and it was heartfelt.”

Related links:

Sandra Marks sentencing memo

 

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‘Psychic’ pleads guilty in $2 million scheme

A Charlottesville woman who billed herself as a psychic has seen something about her own future: up to 40 years in prison.

Sandra Stevenson Marks, who used to offer “Readings by Catherine” from a rented house on U.S. 29, stole over $2 million from five people, according to a court document. She pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court to a count of mail fraud and a count of money laundering.

“She knows exactly what she’s looking at,” said Assistant United States Attorney Ron Huber. “She bilked these people out of a lot of money, and it was just a flat-out theft case.”

Marks was arrested last July, three months after a grand jury indicted her on 34 charges. She has been incarcerated at Central Virginia Regional Jail in Orange.

“I talked many people into trusting me with their money and keeping it safe,” Marks testified, “when all along, I had the intention of keeping it and spending it for myself.”

The 42-year-old, short of stature and solid of build, was accompanied in court by her lawyer while three family members watched from the gallery. She smiled slightly as she first approached the witness podium.

“I have a half of first-grade education,” she told the judge, who then asked her occupation. “A life coach, Your Honor, a psychic.”

Court documents indicate that Marks portrayed herself as clairvoyant, able to see into the past and future, and that she would tell clients that their money was cursing them. To remove the curse, she promised to bury their money– often six-figure sums– in a box near her cabin and then return it. But she conceded in court that she simply put it in bank accounts.

“I would take it and then pay bills with it,” she testified. “Or withdraw from it.”

Since details of the case emerged, social media has been awash with scorn– and not all of it for Marks.

“Fools and their money,” sniffed a commenter at nbc29.com.

Clinical and forensic psychologist Jeffrey Fracher, however, urges compassion for those who lost money.

“These are folks who are desperate because they have a terminal illness or they have lost a relative,” says Fracher. “And all it takes is a glib, charismatic and probably sociopathic individual to convince them that they can somehow respond to that desperation.”

Kerry Skurski of Evergreen, Colorado, was one such victim, according to an interview that her ex-husband gave last year. Updated court records indicate that the terminally ill woman lost $400,000 to Marks before her death to ALS in February 2015.

“A psychic, once they get a foot in the door can be pretty convincing and pretty compelling,” notes Fracher.

According to a plea document, Marks won introductions to several out-of-state victims via a Central Virginia “organization,” and Skurski’s ex-husband has alleged that his dying ex-wife was introduced by the Synchronicity Foundation, a Nelson County spiritual retreat. A foundation official has previously downplayed the connection, and a reporter’s effort to speak to Synchronicity’s resident guru, known as “Master Charles,” was unsuccessful.

“The investigation is ongoing,” was prosecutor Huber’s answer to questions about whether any additional charges could be filed in the case.

Another victim mentioned in a new court document, listed only by the initials J.D., transferred $729,000 to Marks in addition to a diamond and emerald ring, gold earrings, a Chantilly silver salad fork, and a vial of mercury– all of which would be spiritually “cleansed.”

“It’s a big day,” Judge Glen Conrad told Marks as he repeatedly warned her that her plea was irrevocable. “Your life will never be the same.”

At that moment, Marks dabbed her eye but then quickly regained composure and smiled again. “I plead guilty, sir.”

Marks will learn her sentence on August 11.

Marks-Facts

Marks-PleaAgreement

Correction: Fork was misspelled in the original version.

 

Related Links: 

Sept. 1, 2015: No bond for psychic

Aug. 29, 2015: Psychic indicted: Found some victims at Synchronicity

Feb. 12, 2015: No charges filed in Psychic Catherine raid

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Judge will consider bond for psychic

Sandra Marks, aka Psychic Catherine and Catherine Marks, had a bond hearing October 22 in U.S. District Court and Judge Glen Conrad said he would consider it if she and her attorney can come up with an acceptable plan for her release.

Marks, 41, has been in jail since her July 23 arrest in New York for 34 counts of fraud—31 wire fraud, two mail fraud and one money laundering—and is accused of bilking clients for more than $3.5 million. She’s now being held at Central Virginia Regional Jail.

At an August 28 hearing in New York, the judge denied bond, citing concerns that she was a flight risk because she left Charlottesville right after a raid on her Seminole Trail place of business in June 2014, and because of missing funds.

A motion filed by her Richmond lawyer, Bill Dinkins, says Marks does not meet any of six conditions that must be met to deny bond: She’s not charged with a violent crime and facing life imprisonment or death; she’s not charged with a crime under the Controlled Substances Act; she’s not previously been convicted of those crimes; she’s not charged with a crime involving a minor victim, firearm or dangerous weapon, and she’s not charged with failing to register as a sex offender.

Dinkins also argues that she doesn’t meet the sixth condition—a serious risk of flight—because when she left Charlottesville, she had not been indicted, was living openly with her family in Georgia in a house titled in her husband’s name and she used bank accounts, credit cards and cell phone service in her own name. Nor did she attempt to conceal her identity when her family moved to New York in December 2014, says the motion.

Her husband, Donnie Marks, now lives in Richmond and works for a cab company and sells scrap metal, according to the motion.

In court, how much bond Marks would need to put up was not discussed, says U.S. Attorney’s Office spokesperson Brian McGinn. “The judge left the door open for bond,” says McGinn.

“Most certainly a plan is in the works,” says Dinkins. “First we’ve got to raise an adequate amount of money for her bond.” He declined to specify what that amount might be.

Marks’ incarceration has been “tough,” says her attorney. “She’s never been incarcerated before, she’s never been charged before. It’s a shock.”

According to the indictment, some of Marks’ victims came to her business for palm readings, candle readings, tarot card readings, astrological readings and spiritual readings, and often they’d suffered traumatic events and were “emotionally vulnerable, fragile and/or gullible.” She met others at the Synchronicity Foundation for Modern Spirituality in Nelson County, where she was an outside consultant, according to the foundation.

Marks would tell her alleged victims they were under a curse and “dark cloud,” according to the indictment, and to be healed, they had to sacrifice cash and jewelry, which she would cleanse through prayer, meditation and ritual.