United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT August 9, 2007
Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
No. 05-10894
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
versus
DUNYELL LASALLE WRIGHT,
Defendant-Appellant.
--------------------
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
--------------------
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
Defendant Dunyell Wright plead guilty to wire fraud stemming
from a scheme which defrauded mortgage lenders. He challenges the
district court’s enhancements to his sentence for obstruction of
justice, abuse of position of trust, and use of sophisticated
means, as well as its finding of relevant conduct and order of
restitution. We vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
I
Defendant Dunyell Wright founded MFG Financial Services, a
mortgage brokerage, in Arlington, Texas in November of 2001. From
December 10, 2002 through January, 2003, Wright worked with David
Hale to fraudulently secure a mortgage in Hale’s name, the
purchased house to be used by Hale and his partner K&B One Stop
Real Estate Services as part of a business venture. As part of the
scheme, Wright misstated Hale’s creditworthiness on applications to
WMC Mortgage Corporation, the eventual lender, secretly used his
own funds to pay the closing costs, and used a cashier’s check from
his account to pay the down payment, then submitted a copy of the
check to WMC that had Hale’s name on it to imply that Hale had paid
the down payment. All of this, of course, was to ensure that Hale
was approved with a good rate, increasing Wright’s commission, and
possibly garnering him a side payment. Chase Home Finance
eventually purchased the mortgage from WMC and lost $104,000 on it.
As part of another scheme, Damon Tippie sought to purchase a
house, which K&B would then turn into an assisted living center,
after which K&B would pay Tippie a salary and pay Tippie’s mortgage
for six months. Tippie, who knew he didn’t have the means to get
the required $750,000 mortgage, was told by K&B to work with
Wright. Wright again performed his sleight of hand. Chase Home
Finance eventually purchased this mortgage as well, suffering a
$149,727 loss.
Following Wright’s indictment, FBI Special Agent Frank Super
found Wright at an apartment in Grand Prarie, Texas. After
knocking on the door, Wright appeared and initially denied his
identity. After Wright admitted his identity, Super advised him of
the warrant for his arrest. While standing in front of the door,
Super told Wright to get dressed because he was going to be
2
arrested and transported to jail in Forth Worth. Wright briefly
argued with Super, then abruptly closed and locked the door. Super
called local police, who arrived fifteen minutes later and knocked
on the door. They suspected Wright was inside because they heard
noises and saw the blinds move. Sometime later, the police
forcefully entered the house and determined that Wright had earlier
fled out the back door. Wright remained a fugitive until his
capture in Irving, Texas six weeks later.
The Government charged Wright with three counts of bank fraud,
one count of false use of a Social Security Number, and one count
of wire fraud. Wright eventually plead guilty to the last count
without a plea agreement. The PSR concluded that the loss amount
was $270,446, representing the two losses to Chase Home Finance and
about $16,755 of losses to other banks alleged in counts one
through four. It then added two levels for obstruction of justice
based on Wright’s flight, two levels for abuse of trust, and two
levels for use of sophisticated means. After deducting three
levels for acceptance of responsibility, the range was 70 to 87
months.
Wright objected to all three enhancements and the inclusion of
the Tippie loss and the $16,755 in the loss amount. Regarding the
obstruction of justice enhancement, Wright argued that “the
Application notes for U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 specifically exclude
‘avoiding or fleeing from arrest’ as grounds for an enhancement for
obstruction of justice.” In its response, the Government agreed
3
that the obstruction of justice enhancement should not apply but
defended the other two. It conceded that the $16,755 should not be
included in the loss amount, but it defended inclusion of the
Tippie loss. The amended PSR reaffirmed all three enhancements and
inclusion of the Tippie loss.
At sentencing, the parties discussed the enhancements and the
loss amount with the court. The district court applied all three
enhancements and found the loss to include the Tippie loss, but
apparently not the $16,755 - it never mentioned that number. After
sustaining Wright’s objection to the calculation of his criminal
history points, the final range was 46 to 57 months. The court
gave Wright 57 months and ordered him to pay $270,466 in
restitution, a figure which includes the $16,755. Pursuant to the
Government’s motion, the court dismissed the first four counts.
Wright appeals application of the three enhancements, the
inclusion of the Tippie loss in calculating the offense level, and
the inclusion of the Tippie and $16,755 losses in the order of
restitution. We address each in turn.
II
U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 provides a two-level increase for obstruction
of justice. Application Note five lists conduct for which the
increase doesn’t apply, and 5(d) is “avoiding or fleeing from
arrest.” Note 4 lists conduct for which the increase does apply,
and 4(c) is “escaping or attempting to escape from custody.”
4
As an initial matter, Wright argues that we review de novo the
applicability of this enhancement to the undisputed facts of this
case.1 The Government urges plain error because, as we explain
later, the parties and the court used the wrong standard in
analyzing the issue. Thus, the Government asserts, Wright’s
“theory” on appeal is different from that advanced below. While it
is true that a defendant can’t argue a new “theory” on appeal,2
Wright is not presenting a new theory here - he objected to the
enhancement, citing the exact note to the Guideline provision that
controls the issue, he just didn’t cite this court’s controlling
precedent interpreting that note. The cases cited by the
Government all involve more than just lack of citation to the
proper cases. And, of course, it was up to the district court to
apply the proper law. Wright preserved the issue, which we review
de novo.
The PSR stated that the enhancement applied because Wright
fled in a “deliberate” rather than “spontaneous” manner. In
response to Wright’s objection, the amended PSR urged again that
Wright’s flight was deliberate. At sentencing, Wright’s counsel
disputed the enhancement, stating: “[T]he probation officer says
the flight [was] other than spontaneous, but actually, the facts
show just the opposite. They show a spontaneous flight. They
don’t show any kind of deliberation.” The court and counsel then
1
See United States v. Chavarria, 377 F.3d 475, 478 (5th Cir. 2004).
2
See United States v. Green, 324 F.3d 375, 381 (5th Cir. 2003).
5
discussed whether Wright’s flight was spontaneous or deliberate.
The district court ultimately ruled:
I’m going to hold on to my position there. If he just
fled and had been caught promptly, I think I would not
tip over the line, but when he’s been told he’s about to
be arrested, closes the door, and he goes out the back,
and then he’s out for six more weeks, they can’t find
him, he doesn’t report, he knows at that point that he is
– has an arrest warrant outstanding for him and still
stays out, I think that’s obstruction.
In United States v. Huerta,3 this Court adopted the reasoning
of the Fourth Circuit in United States v. Williams4 and Sixth
Circuit in United States v. McDonald5 that the critical, simple
inquiry under 5(d) and 4(e) is whether the defendant escaped from
custody or was avoiding custody, regardless of his state of arrest.
In Williams, the defendant escaped soon after being placed in the
back of a police car. On appeal, Williams argued that although he
had technically been arrested when he fled, he was not “truly in
custody” at that time because he escaped during the “arrest
episode,” noting that most § 3C1.1 enhancements were levied for
escape long after arrest, after the defendants were clearly in
“custody.” The court rejected this reach for a “gray area” between
5(d) and 4(e) because “custody” and “arrest” are “well-settled” as
separate legal concepts, hence a defendant who escapes from
“custody,” even if he does so during the “arrest episode,” has
3
182 F.3d 361 (5th Cir. 1999).
4
152 F.3d 294, 304 (4th Cir. 1998).
5
165 F.3d 1032, 1035 (6th Cir. 1999).
6
obstructed justice. In other words, the court reconciled 5(d) and
4(e) by holding that “custody” is the key question - once a
defendant is in “custody,” he is no longer “avoiding or fleeing
from arrest” if he escapes. This court in Huerta explicitly
rejected the reasoning of the Second and Seventh Circuits, which
focused on whether the defendant’s conduct was deliberate or
spontaneous.6 Consequently, the parties and the court below used
the wrong standard, as the parties recognize on appeal. We ask
only whether Wright was in custody when he fled.7
This court recently defined “custody” under § 3C1.1 as the
Miranda standard of “custody.” In United States v. Brown, deputies
responded to a domestic violence call.8 They picked up the victim
and drove her to her boyfriend’s trailer. On the way, they learned
the boyfriend’s name and discovered he had a warrant for his
arrest. After arriving at the trailer, they informed Brown of the
warrant and one deputy grabbed him, but he broke free and ran away,
remaining on the lam for about eight months before he was finally
captured. The court, quoting a Supreme Court case defining
“custody” for Miranda purposes, framed the question as whether
there was “a formal arrest or restraint on freedom of movement of
6
See United States v. Draves, 103 F.3d 1328 (7th Cir. 1998); United
States v. Stroud, 893 F.3d 504 (2d Cir. 1990).
7
We note that “avoiding or fleeing from arrest” under Application Note
5(d) must mean “avoiding arrest,” not “avoiding arrest or escaping after being
arrested,” otherwise Application Note 4(c) makes no sense. In any event, our
only inquiry is what constitutes “custody.”
8
470 F.3d 1091 (5th Cir. 2006).
7
the degree associated with formal arrest.”9 The court then held
that Brown was never in such “custody” because he broke free and
escaped and the deputies never exercised “a degree of formal
control or restraint over him.” Unable to distinguish our case
from Brown,10 we must conclude that Wright was not in “custody” when
he fled. Indeed, here Agent Super never had physical contact with
Wright before Wright ran. We must vacate the sentence and remand,
although we address the remaining issues for reasons of economy.11
III
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3 provides a two-level increase for abuse of
position of trust. “The district court’s application of section
3B1.3 is a sophisticated factual determination that we review for
clear error.”12
9
Id. at 1095 (quoting Stansbury v. California, 511 U.S. 318, 322
(1994)).
10
The court in Brown also held that § 3C1.1 did not apply because
Brown’s flight did not occur “during the course of the investigation,
prosecution, or sentencing of the instant offense of conviction,” as § 3C1.1
requires, because the deputies found the gun which led to the federal
conviction under § 922(g) in Brown’s trailer after Brown escaped. That
holding is inapplicable here because Wright escaped during the investigation
for fraud. The Government argues that Brown’s “custody” holding was,
therefore, dicta. But it’s well-settled that alternative holdings are
binding, they are not dicta. The Government also suggests that statements in
Brown after the court’s “custody” holding permit a different result here, but
those statements - discussion of policy and some particulars of Brown’s case -
were only in “further support” of the court’s holding. Brown’s custody
holding is clear.
11
See United States v. Farfan-Carreon, 935 F.2d 678,679 (5th Cir. 1991)
(electing to address legal issues, even after concluding that remand was
appropriate for another reason, as a guide to the court on remand).
12
See United States v. Burke, 431 F.3d 883, 889 (th5 Cir. 2005).
8
Section 3B1.3 provides a two-level increase if “a defendant
abused a position of public or private trust, or used a special
skill, in a manner that significantly facilitated the commission or
concealment of the offense....” Application note 1 provides:
‘Public or private trust’ refers to a public or private
trust characterized by professional or managerial
discretion (i.e., substantial discretionary judgment that
is ordinarily given considerable deference). Persons
holding such positions ordinarily are subject to
significantly less supervision than employees whose
responsibilities are primarily non-discretionary in
nature. For this adjustment to apply, the position of
public or private trust must have contributed in some
significant way to facilitating the commission or
concealment of the offense.
In United States v. Jobe, this court interpreted that note to mean
that 3B1.3
encompasses two factors: (1) whether the defendant
occupies a position of trust and (2) whether the
defendant abused her position in a manner that
significantly facilitated the commission of concealment
of the offense. To determine whether the position of
trust ‘significantly facilitated’ the commission of the
offense, the court must decide whether the defendant
occupied a superior position, relative to all people in
a position to commit the offense, as a result of her
job.13
Recommending enhancement here, the PSR stated:
The defendant abused his trust as the owner and operator
of MFG Financial Services, a mortgage brokerage business,
to facilitate the offense and his scheme and artifice to
defraud. As a mortgage broker, WMC Mortgage Corporation
and Ameriquest Mortgage entrusted the defendant to
truthfully and accurately submit financial information
about the loan applicants. Instead, the defendant
entered false information on loan applications with the
intent of deceiving the lenders into approving loans.
13
See 101 F.3d 1046, 1065 (5th Cir. 1996).
9
Responding to Wright’s objection, the amended PSR stated:
[Wright’s] position of trust was characterized by the
faith given to him by financial institutions to present
truthful and accurate information to make their
credit-based decisions. His ability to function as an
independent broker further illustrates [his] position of
trust since he could only operate with a license.
At sentencing, the court heard Agent Super’s testimony that
“brokers are expected to do some diligence when putting a loan
together. In essence, when that package goes to the mortgage
company, they expect that most of that stuff that’s on there, the
employment, income, and other information, has pretty much been
proven by the broker.” The district court applied the enhancement.
Wright argues first that, while no cases are directly on
point, he did not occupy a position of trust with WMC because he
didn’t work for that company and because borrower-lender
relationships, and by extension broker-lender relationships, are
arms-length. He cites Jobe, where the defendant was a director of
the bank which he defrauded through a check-kiting scheme, as the
classic position of trust case. He also cites the Second Circuit’s
decision in United States v. Jolly, where the court, in striking
down the enhancement where the defendant fraudulently raised money
from investors by providing them false information, stated that
borrower-lender relationships are generally arms-length and solely
contractual.14 Second, he argues, even if he occupied a position
of trust, that position did not “significantly facilitate[] the
14
See 102 F.3d 46, 48 (2d Cir. 1996).
10
commission of concealment of the offense” because he simply
forwarded the loan applications to WMC, and the application could
have been submitted just as easily by the individuals themselves.
The Government focuses on Agent Super’s testimony about the
trust that lenders give to mortgage brokers, arguing that that
trust placed him in a superior position than most people to
victimize WMC. It also emphasizes Wright’s license, arguing that
the license highlights and justifies the presence of such trust.
For this proposition it cites United States v. Gonzalez-Alvarez,15
where the First Circuit held that a licensed dairy farmer who
intended that contaminated milk reach the public abused a position
of trust, partially because of the license.
Although this is a close case, we will not disturb the
district court’s conclusion that Wright occupied a position of
trust that significantly facilitated his fraud. Although there is
no legally recognized-relationship of trust between brokers and
lenders, such legal recognition is not required, and the undisputed
record in this case reveals that lenders often rely to some degree
on statements by brokers in evaluating applications. That lenders,
who are generally distrusting and like to verify information for
themselves, would do so makes more sense given that brokers
independently verify all relevant information before submitting
applications and that brokers deal repeatedly with the same lenders
and multiple lenders, unlike the average borrower. The
15
277 F.3d 73, 81 (1st Cir. 2001).
11
relationship here is not lender-borrower, which we agree will
seldom be a relationship of trust. It’s lender-middleman, and
there is a difference. We inquire if there is a position of trust
against the background reality that, wherever there is fraud the
victim relies on the defendant’s statements, so there must be more
than just reliance based on factors idiosyncratic to the case at
hand. Here there is reliance that flows from the structure of the
mortgage industry itself, which sets a patterned process for loan
application that over time cultivates trust between brokers and
lenders.
In sum, on the facts before it the district court did not
clearly err in concluding that Wright abused his position of trust
as a mortgage broker.
IV
U.S.S.G. § 2B1.3 provides a two-level increase for use of
“sophisticated means” in certain crimes. We review the district
court’s determination of this enhancement for abuse of
discretion.16 Application note 1 provides:
Sophisticated Means Enhancement - For purposes of [this
enhancement], ‘sophisticated means’ means especially
complex or especially intricate offense conduct
pertaining to the execution of concealment of the
offense. For example, in a telemarketing scheme,
locating the main office of the scheme in just one
jurisdiction but locating soliciting operations in
another jurisdiction ordinarily indicates sophisticated
means. Conduct such as hiding assets or transactions, or
both, through the use of fictitious entities, corporate
16
See United States v. Powell,124 F.3d 655, 666 (5th Cir. 1997).
12
shells, or offshore financial accounts also ordinarily
indicates sophisticated means.
Recommending enhancement here, the PSR stated:
As part of the scheme to defraud financial institutions,
the defendant used his own funds to purchase cashier’s
checks for closing costs in the names of the loan
applicants, made copies of the same checks which were
forwarded to the lenders, then deposited the same
cashier’s checks into his account. The defendant
committed these acts with the intent of misrepresenting
the applicants’ available funds, in order to bolster
their creditworthiness, thereby facilitating the approval
of their loans.
In objecting to this rendition of the facts, Wright asserted that
although he paid for the cashier’s checks, he was later reimbursed
for them. The amended PSR tried to clarify:
The defendant did not use his own funds to purchase
cashier’s checks in the names of the loan applicants to
somehow assist them. Instead, he misrepresented the
buyers as having proceeds in order to deceive the lenders
and acquire financial gain. The manner of sophistication
involved his steps of purchasing the cashier’s checks in
the names of the buyers with his own funds, forwarding
copies of the same checks to the lenders as if they were
legitimate buyer assets, then returning the original
cashier’s check/proceeds to the bank. His actions were
intricate, complex, and calculated so as to facilitate
the commission of the offense without being detected on
either end by his bank or the lender.
At sentencing, the court distilled what actually happened after
Wright called Agent Super as a witness:
Q [Wright’s counsel]: Okay. What you’re saying is, no, he
did not take the cashier’s check for that particular deal
[described in count 5 of the indictment] and deposit it
back into the account. That was actually someone wrote
him a check to put in that account; is that correct?
A. That’s correct. Someone wrote him a personal check or
a business check off their business checking account,
13
gave it to Mr. Wright. He deposited it into his account
and then purchased a cashier’s check.
THE COURT: And what was the purpose of doing that?
THE WITNESS: The purpose is to get a cashier’s check for
the borrower that is not in Mr. Wright’s name but in the
borrower’s name as if the borrower bought it and then use
the cashier’s check to pay the borrower’s closing costs
at the closing.
THE COURT: And what does that achieve?
THE WITNESS: It tells the lender that the borrower has
that money when they really don’t. That’s the act of
deception in that count of the indictment.
On cross-examination by the Government, Agent Super further
testified as follows:
Q. What happened in Count 5 is what you have been
describing; is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. But was this part of a pattern where the third party
would routinely round up borrowers who didn’t have the
cash for down payments and would, through this type of
similar deception, have Mr. Wright falsely represent that
the closing funds came from the borrower when, in fact,
it came from the third party?
A. That’s correct.
Q. This happened over and over again; isn’t that right?
A. Yes.
The court overruled Wright’s objection, stating:
[T]he scheme was advanced by the fact that funds were
made apparent and present for the closing of the deal,
which would not have been closed but for the inaccurate
impression left that the funds or closing costs came from
the borrowers. So that isn’t changed by whether the funds
came from his account or from a third party’s account,
and he was the one who was managing that part of the
scheme.
14
So whether they came from his funds or someone else’s
funds, the point is he was involved in a little mini
scheme there to mislead the lenders into thinking that
the borrowers had enough money to pay closing costs.
That’s important to lenders because they know that if a
person can’t even scrape up the money to pay closing
costs, they probably are not a very good risk on the
loan.
So it seems to me that on the specific offense
characteristic, while it’s true that it’s not extremely
sophisticated, the question that I have to answer is [if]
it’s sufficiently sophisticated that this defendant ought
to be punished for it, sufficiently sophisticated beyond
the base kind of offense that we ought to add on the two
points. I conclude that it is. It’s not the most
sophisticated plot I have ever seen, but I think it’s
sufficient to punish him more than the person who didn’t
do this as part of the scheme.
...
And I agree that it’s not rocket science or brain
surgery, but I think it does show a level of
sophistication sufficient to trigger additional
punishment.
Wright argues summarily that his actions weren’t
sophisticated, pointing to the court’s own tepid language. The
Government argues briefly to the contrary, noting that the bar is
low and citing to United States v. Clements,17 where this court
upheld the enhancement against a defendant who took payments under
a contract, converted them into cashier’s checks, then deposited
the checks into a separate account in his wife’s name. In so
holding, we held that “[e]ven though [the defendant’s] transactions
did not involve the use of offshore bank accounts or fictional
17
See 73 F.3d 1330, 1340 (5 Cir. 1996).
15
entities, his use of multiple cashier’s checks and his wife’s
separate bank account to obscure the link between the money [and
the scheme] made it more difficult for the IRS to detect his
evasion.” The Government cites this language, arguing that if the
simple use of cashier’s checks to make discovery of the crime “more
difficult” is use of sophisticated means, then use of such checks
as part of the scheme, to make it impossible for the lender to
discover the fraud, is too.18
We find no error in the finding that Wright used sophisticated
means. Depositing a check from someone else into your account, and
then using that money to purchase a cashier’s check in someone
else’s name, are means as sophisticated as those in Clements, at
least as part of a scheme to defraud a mortgage broker.
V
The district court included loss from both the scheme of
conviction and loss from the Tippie scheme in sentencing Wright.
We review that determination for clear error.19
U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(2) provides that a defendant’s offense
level may be determined on the basis of “all acts and
omissions...that were part of the same course of conduct or common
18
We have held that the sophisticated means must relate to the scheme
itself, see United States v. Stokes, 998 F.2d 279, 282 (5th Cir. 1993)
(holding that efforts by defendant to hide embezzled money was related to
embezzlement, not tax evasion for which she was convicted), and in reply
Wright suggests that his use of the cashier’s check wasn’t related to the
scheme itself. That’s ridiculous, of course.
19
See United States v. Cockerham, 919 F.2d 286, 289 ( 5th Cir. 1990).
16
scheme or plan as the offense of conviction....” “Only after the
government has met its burden of establishing, by a preponderance
of the evidence, ‘a sufficient nexus between the [extraneous]
conduct and the offense of conviction,’ may the sentencing court,
in its sound discretion, make a ‘relevant conduct’ adjustment.”20
Count five of the indictment alleged that the fraud of
conviction occurred from December 10, 2002 to January 17, 2003.
Wright argues that because the Tippie loan didn’t “generate” - that
is, it wasn’t funded by WMC - until January 30, 2003, it wasn’t
relevant conduct. Relatedly, he urges, nothing else in the
indictment or the stipulation of facts mentioned the Tippie loan.
Moreover, he continues, the scheme was entirely separate - as
evidenced by the Government’s own reference to the schemes as
“different” schemes. In sum, he argues, although the schemes were
similar, they weren’t part of the same “course of conduct” or a
“common scheme or plan.”
The Government cites United States v. Anderson,21 which held
that:
It is not necessary for the defendant to have been
charged with or convicted of carrying out the other acts
before they can be considered relevant conduct. However,
for the acts to constitute relevant conduct, the conduct
must be criminal. Two or more offenses form part of a
common scheme or plan where they are substantially
connected to each other by at least one common factor,
such as common victims, common accomplices, common
20
See United States v. Bennett, 37 F.3d 687, 692 n.8 (1st Cir. 1994).
21
See 174 F.3d 515, 526 (5th Cir. 1999).
17
purpose, or similar modus operandi. Offenses that do not
qualify as part of a common scheme or plan may
nonetheless qualify as part of the same course of conduct
if they are sufficiently connected or related to each
other as to warrant the conclusion that they are part of
a single episode, spree, or ongoing series of offenses.
Relevant factors in making this determination include the
degree of similarity of the offenses, the regularity
(repetitions) of the offenses, and the time interval
between offenses.
The Government then points to Agent Super’s testimony at
sentencing, where he stated that the Tippie scheme was “practically
identical” to the scheme of conviction, other than the identity of
the borrowers. Super further explained that “[b]oth Tippie and
Hale, their loan packages, when the applications, the requests,
were sent to WMC Mortgage, [were] both December of 2002. Now, it
just so happens that Mr. Hale’s loan I believe closed on January 17
of 2003, and Mr. Tippie’s loan closed, I believe on January [30] of
2003.” Thus, the Government asserts, the two schemes were part of
a common scheme or plan because they involved a common victim, a
common purpose, and a similar modus operandi; moreover, they were
part of the same course of conduct because they were similar and
near in time. It’s irrelevant that the Tippie loan closed a few
days after January 17, it continues, citing Anderson.
The district court did not clearly err in including loss from
the Tippie loan. It is reasonable to conclude under Anderson that
the Tippie scheme was part of a “common scheme or plan” with the
indicted scheme because there was a common purpose, similar modus
operandi, a common accomplice, and, arguably, a common victim. And
18
it is reasonable to conclude that the Tippie scheme was part of the
same “course of conduct” as the indicted scheme given the
similarity and temporal proximity of the offenses.
VI
Finally, Wright challenges the award of restitution for the
Tippie and $16,755 losses. He argues that we should review the
award of restitution for abuse of discretion, contending that his
objection to inclusion of the Tippie and $16,755 losses for
purposes of the Guidelines range preserved the issue, even though
he never objected to the restitution specifically.22 The Government
urges plain error. The standard for “relevant conduct” under the
Guidelines is more lax than that for determining what conduct can
be the basis of restitution, hence the two arguments are distinct
and the district court never had the opportunity to address the
restitution argument. On the other hand, in this case the
arguments are essentially the same, and this court’s opinion in
United States v. Cockerham could be read to hold that an objection
to the Guidelines loss calculation preserves a restitution
argument.23 In any event, we need not decide the issue because,
22
See United States v. Hughey, 147 F.3d 423, 436 (5th Cir. 1998)
(reviewing preserved argument against award of restitution for abuse of
discretion).
23
919 F.2d 286, 288 & n.1 (5th Cir. 1990). Cockerham isn’t entirely
clear, however. The court stated, “Upon review of the record, we determine
that Cockerham’s objections were sufficient to require adherence to the [Rule
of Criminal Procedure governing restitution] and the VWPA. [fn 1.]” Although
that statement does not by itself help, the footnote’s parentheticals for two
cases are more significant: “(when defendant objects to the factual accuracy
of the PSI, [the same Rule of Criminal Procedure regarding restitution]
requires the district court to append written findings to the PSI)” and “(loss
19
assuming Wright has preserved the issue, it was not error to award
restitution for the Tippie loss, and the Government concedes it was
error to award restitution for the $16,755.
Under this court’s decision in United States v. Inman, “[a]
defendant sentenced under the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act
(“MVRA”) is only responsible for paying restitution for the conduct
underlying the offense for which he was convicted.”24 However,
“[w]here a fraudulent scheme is an element of the conviction, the
court may award restitution for ‘actions pursuant to that
scheme.’”25 Yet, under Inman, “the restitution for the underlying
scheme to defraud is limited to the specific temporal scope of the
indictment.” Wright argues that the Tippie loan was both unrelated
to the scheme of conviction, incorporating his Guidelines argument,
and outside the temporal scope of the indictment here.26 The
Government responds that the Tippie loan was related to the scheme
of conviction, incorporating its Guidelines argument. And it
contends that Wright’s reading of “limited to the specific temporal
amount in PSI challenged at sentencing hearing necessitates procedural
requirements of [same Rule of Criminal Procedure])”.
24
See 411 F.3d 591, 595 (5th Cir. 2005).
25
See United States v. Cothran, 302 F.3d 279, 289 (5th Cir. 2002).
26
In his plea agreement, Wright conceded the court’s ability to order
“restitution which may be mandatory under the law, and which the defendant
agrees may include restitution arising from all relevant conduct, not limited
to that arising from the offense of conviction alone....” This language,
using the term “relevant conduct,” could be read as authorizing restitution
more broadly than Inman, a questionable propostion. In any event, the
Government does not argue that Wright’s concession alters the strictures of
Inman.
20
scope of the indictment” regarding the Tippie loan is unduly
narrow, technical, and unsupported because here almost all parts of
the Tippie fraud occurred before January 17 - most notably, the
preparation and sending of the loan packets.
We conclude that the Tippie scheme was part of the same scheme
as the scheme of conviction for purposes of the MVRA, for the
reasons stated in the previous section. Moreover, we conclude that
the Tippie scheme fell within the “temporal scope of the
indictment.” Count five of the indictment alleged that Wright
perpetrated the fraud of conviction from December 10, 2002 through
January 17, 2003, although it alleged that Wright made the wire
transfer prompting the actual wire fraud charge on January 21. The
Tippie scheme did not predate the main scheme. And the only part
of the Tippie scheme occurring after January 17 was the actual
funding of the loan. Everything else - most notably, the planning
and the preparation and sending of the applications - occurred
before that date. In short, the two schemes occurred
simultaneously. Inman is easily distinguishable because there the
transactions for which restitution was ordered “were not alleged in
the indictment and occurred over two years before the specified
temporal scope of the indictment.”
The Government concedes that the $16,755 order of restitution
was error because it was for losses unconnected to the scheme of
conviction. The district court on remand should remove that amount
from the order of restitution.
21
SENTENCE VACATED AND CASE REMANDED.
22