United States v. May, No. 12-30016 (9th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseDefendants pled guilty to one count of receipt of stolen mail and one count of mail theft. During the 2010 holiday season, defendants drove through neighborhoods on "Christmas shopping" trips in search of packages on porches, doorways, or in community mailboxes to steal. On appeal, defendants argued that the district court erred by including certain expenses the USPS incurred to avert future mail thefts as loss, for purposes of both sentencing and restitution. The court held that the district court was not clearly erroneous in concluding that the expense the USPS incurred was a reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm resulting from defendants' actions. The USPS theft prevention measures were directed at defendants' ongoing crime spree that concluded after the USPS changed its delivery procedures. The court held, however, that the district court plainly erred in ordering restitution for the USPS's expenses where mail theft - not unlawful possession - caused the USPS to change its procedure. Accordingly, the court affirmed defendants' sentences but vacated that portion of the restitution order awarding restitution for the USPS's expenses.
Court Description: Criminal Law. The panel affirmed sentences but vacated a portion of a restitution order in a case in which the defendants were convicted of receipt of stolen mail and mail theft. The panel held that the district court did not err by including in the loss calculation expenses the United States Postal Service incurred to avert future mail thefts. The panel wrote that uncharged mail thefts that occurred prior to the date the USPS changed its delivery policy are, simultaneously with the pre-change possession (receipt) offenses, relevant conduct the district court may consider; and that the expenses were a reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm resulting from the defendants’ ongoing crime spree of numerous and widespread thefts. The panel held that the district court improperly ordered restitution for the expenses because the mail theft of which the defendants were convicted occurred after, and could not have caused, the USPS’s delivery procedure change. The panel wrote that the defendants’ pre-change possession of stolen mail did not support the restitution order because it is clear that mail theft – not unlawful possession – caused the USPS to change its procedures.
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