USA v. Christopher Spears, No. 11-1683 (7th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseThis opinion or order relates to an opinion or order originally issued on September 26, 2012.
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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 11- 1683 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff- Appellee, v. CHRISTOPHER L. SPEARS, Defendant- Appellant. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 2:10cr55 Rudy Lozano, Judge. ____________________ ARGUED APRIL 16, 2013 DECIDED SEPTEMBER 6, 2013 ____________________ Before EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and CUDAHY, POSNER, FLAUM, KANNE, ROVNER, WOOD, WILLIAMS, SYKES, TINDER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges. EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge. Christopher Spears made a counterfeit handgun permit for Tirsah Payne, who was awaiting trial on a drug charge and could not obtain a legit- imate permit. Payne used the fake credential which con- tained her own name and birthdate when trying to buy a gun. The dealer was not deceived and did not sell Payne the 2 No. 11- 1683 weapon she wanted. An investigation led to Spears s arrest and the discovery that he had sold other fake credentials, such as drivers licenses. He was convicted of five felonies, including aggravated identity theft, 18 U.S.C. §1028A, and sentenced to 34 months in prison: 10 months on four of the five counts, to run concurrently, plus two years imprison- ment under §1028A, which prescribes a mandatory consecu- tive term of that length. Spears appealed three of the five convictions. A panel af- firmed two while reversing the third. 697 F.3d 592 (7th Cir. 2012). Spears then asked for rehearing en banc. Our order granting that petition vacated the panel s opinion and judg- ment, which we now reinstate with respect to the convic- tions other than the one under §1028A. Section 1028A(a)(1) provides that anyone who, in connec- tion with a list of other crimes, knowingly transfers, pos- sesses, or uses, without lawful authority, a means of identifi- cation of another person shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such felony, be sentenced to a term of impris- onment of 2 years. Section 1028A(c) provides the list of predicate offenses; an unauthorized person s attempt to pur- chase a weapon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §922(a)(6), is on it. Spears acknowledges that he lacked lawful authority to sell counterfeit permits. But he contends that a permit is not a means of identification ; only intangible details such as names and Social Security numbers are means of identifica- tion , he maintains. Spears also contends that he did not transfer[] anything to another person because Payne used her own name and birthdate; no information was sto- len from, or transferred to, anyone who did not consent. He believes that the phrase without lawful authority helps to No. 11- 1683 3 show that transfer and another person refer to a victim rather than to persons who consent to the transaction. The panel rejected the first of these arguments, 697 F.3d at 598, and we agree with its conclusion. Nothing in ordi- nary usage or statutory context limits the phrase means of identification to intangible information. People speak of a passport or driver s license as a means of identification. Oth- er physical objects, including firearm- owners cards, also come within that phrase because they identify their owners. The Supreme Court s only encounter with §1028A, Flores- Figueroa v. United States, 556 U.S. 646 (2009), treats both per- sonal information and documents containing it as means of identification . See, e.g., 556 U.S. at 653. Although the Court did not grant certiorari in Flores- Figueroa to define means of identification and did not produce a holding on that sub- ject, the Justices understanding confirms that the common usage of means of identification includes physical objects. And although §1028A does not define means of identifi- cation , a neighboring statute 18 U.S.C. §1028, dealing with identity fraud does. Section 1028(d)(7) provides a list, some members of which (e.g., iris image ) are physical objects. Section 1028A(a)(1) forbids not only transferring but also possessing a means of identification . Although it is possi- ble to possess information without committing it to paper, many forms of possession entail embodiment in an object such as a passport, Social Security card, or alien registration document. We therefore conclude that the document sold to Payne was a means of identification . Accord, United States v. Sash, 396 F.3d 515, 524 (2d Cir. 2005) (counterfeit police badge is a means of identification under §1028A). 4 No. 11- 1683 Spears insists that he did not transfer the means to Payne, because she knew her own name and birthdate. Be- cause the means of identification was the counterfeit card, however, it was indeed transfer[red] from Spears to Payne. But a transfer is not enough. The means of identifi- cation must be that of another person . From Payne s per- spective, the card she received did not pertain to another ; it had her own identifying details. The prosecutor says that this is irrelevant because, from Spears s perspective, Payne was the another . On this view, Spears could give Payne a card bearing Spears s name but not anyone else s. If the prosecutor is right, §1028A acquires a surprising scope. It would, for example, require a mandatory two- year consecu- tive sentence every time a tax- return preparer claims an im- proper deduction, because the return is transferred to the IRS, concerns a person other than the preparer, includes a means of identifying that person (a Social Security number), and facilitates fraud against the United States (which §1028A(c)(4) lists as a predicate crime). In trying to understand the meaning of another person we draw on the statute s caption Aggravated identity theft. Providing a client with a bogus credential containing the client s own information is identity fraud but not identity theft; no one s identity has been stolen or misappropriated. A caption cannot override a statute s text, but it can be used to clear up ambiguities. Florida Department of Revenue v. Piccadil- ly Cafeterias, Inc., 554 U.S. 33, 47 (2008); Porter v. Nussle, 534 U.S. 516, 528 (2002). Flores- Figueroa used the caption of §1028A to help explicate its text. 556 U.S. at 655. The phrase another person is ambiguous: neither text nor context tells us whether another means person other than the defend- ant or person who did not consent to the information s No. 11- 1683 5 use . That §1028A deals with identity theft helps resolve the ambiguity in favor of the latter understanding, while read- ing another person to mean person other than the de- fendant treats §1028A as forbidding document counterfeit- ing and other forms of fraud, a crime distinct from theft. To appreciate the difference, one need look no farther than §1028, the aggravated- identity- theft statute s next- door neighbor. Section 1028, captioned Fraud and related activi- ty in connection with identification documents , makes it a crime to do any of the following under circumstances (speci- fied in §1028(c)) that bring the activity within the scope of national authority: (1) knowingly and without lawful authority produces an identification document, authentication feature, or a false identification document; (2) knowingly transfers an identification document, au- thentication feature, or a false identification document knowing that such document or feature was stolen or pro- duced without lawful authority; (3) knowingly possesses with intent to use unlawfully or transfer unlawfully five or more identification documents (other than those issued lawfully for the use of the posses- sor), authentication features, or false identification docu- ments; (4) knowingly possesses an identification document (other than one issued lawfully for the use of the possessor), au- thentication feature, or a false identification document, with the intent such document or feature be used to de- fraud the United States; (5) knowingly produces, transfers, or possesses a docu- ment- making implement or authentication feature with the 6 No. 11- 1683 intent such document- making implement or authentica- tion feature will be used in the production of a false identi- fication document or another document- making imple- ment or authentication feature which will be so used; (6) knowingly possesses an identification document or au- thentication feature that is or appears to be an identifica- tion document or authentication feature of the United States or a sponsoring entity of an event designated as a special event of national significance which is stolen or produced without lawful authority knowing that such document or feature was stolen or produced without such authority; (7) knowingly transfers, possesses, or uses, without lawful authority, a means of identification of another person with the intent to commit, or to aid or abet, or in connection with, any unlawful activity that constitutes a violation of Federal law, or that constitutes a felony under any appli- cable State or local law; or (8) knowingly traffics in false or actual authentication fea- tures for use in false identification documents, document- making implements, or means of identification; 18 U.S.C. §1028(a). The transaction between Spears and Payne fits comfortably within paragraphs (1) and (2). And in a statute about identity fraud it would make sense to say that Spears violated paragraph (7) as well, because he made a document that aided and abetted Payne s effort to obtain a gun by fraud. But instead of using §1028, the prosecutor charged Spears under §1028A which, if it means what the prosecutor says, would convert most identity fraud into identity theft and add a mandatory, consecutive, two- year term to every conviction, even though §1028 lacks any equivalent sentencing provision. No. 11- 1683 7 Congress borrowed and modified the language of §1028(a)(7), which stems from 1982, to produce §1028A(a)(1), which was enacted in 2004. Section 1028(a)(7) deals with document fraud committed with intent to aid or abet any federal crime, or any state felony. Section 1028A(a)(1) deals with identity theft in connection with a short list of serious crimes. The abbreviation of the list of predicate offenses is one reason why §1028A carries a harsher sentence; the fact that identity theft has a victim other than the public at large is another. The usual victim of identity theft may be out of pocket (if the thief uses information to buy from merchants) or may be put to the task of rehabilitating a damaged reputa- tion or credit history. Flores- Figueroa observed that the ex- amples in the legislative history of §1028A involve people injured when a third party used their names or financial in- formation (credit card or Social Security numbers) without their consent. 556 U.S. at 655. And the Court also observed that Congress separated the fraud crime from the theft crime in the statute itself (ibid.) by giving §1028 and §1028A different titles and placing the rules in different sections. The Solicitor General told the Supreme Court that [t]he statutory text makes clear that the sine qua non of a Section 1028A(a)(1) offense is the presence of a real victim. Brief for the United States in Flores- Figueroa v. United States, No. 08- 108, at 20 (Jan. 2009). Pages 19 22 of that brief give several reasons why the Solicitor General concluded that identity- theft crimes entail a victim whose information has been used without consent. The United States Attorney has not ex- plained why his position in this prosecution differs so dra- matically from the Solicitor General s in Flores- Figueroa. 8 No. 11- 1683 The most one could say for the United States current po- sition is that another in §1028A(a)(1) is ambiguous. If that ambiguity is not resolved by the statutory caption and the contrast between §1028 and §1028A, it must be resolved by the Rule of Lenity, under which conviction is possible only when a law declares in understandable words what is for- bidden. See, e.g., Skilling v. United States, 130 S. Ct. 2896, 2932 (2010); Rewis v. United States, 401 U.S. 808, 812 (1971). Crimes are supposed to be defined by the legislature, not by clever prosecutors riffing on equivocal language. A reasonable per- son reading §1028A(a)(1) would not conclude that Congress has definitely used the word another to specify every per- son other than the defendant, as opposed to a person whose information has been misappropriated. We have not located any appellate decision discussing the meaning of another person . Although one court of ap- peals stated that the phrase means anyone other than the defendant (United States v. Zuniga- Arteaga, 681 F.3d 1220, 1224 (11th Cir. 2012)), the parties had not contested that is- sue, and the court did not explain why it chose that defini- tion over anyone other than a person consenting to the use of the information or something similar. The sole question at issue in Zuniga- Arteaga was whether the person had to be alive; the eleventh circuit held, as we also had done, see United States v. LaFaive, 618 F.3d 613 (7th Cir. 2010), that un- authorized use of a dead person s identifying information can violate §1028A. The eleventh circuit s decision does not resolve other issues not contested by the parties. Section 1028A, we hold, uses another person to refer to a person who did not consent to the use of the means of identification . This decision, in conjunction with the panel s No. 11- 1683 9 disposition of the convictions under statutes other than §1028A, mean that two of Spears s convictions have been re- versed, while three remain. The district court s judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded for resentencing on those three convictions.
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