745 N.E.2d 511 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2000
DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY This is an appeal from a sentencing order issued by the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas in a pattern of corrupt activities case. Because we conclude that the six-year prison term and $5.1 million fine imposed upon appellant did not constitute an abuse of discretion and was in conformity with the law, we affirm.
On November 18, 1998, an off-duty police officer working security in a Toledo department store arrested a New York woman for attempting to purchase merchandise with a counterfeit credit card. The officer notified agents of the United States Secret Service who identified the credit card the woman used as one of more than ten thousand card blanks which had been stolen from a Nebraska bank nearly two years earlier. The number of the Visa account on the card used in Toledo had been issued by the National Bank of New Zealand to one Trevor Banks of Christchurch.
The arrest of the Toledo credit card "shopper" put into play a sequence of events which eventually unraveled a credit card fraud ring that had been operating in seventeen states and two Canadian provinces. Seemingly at the center of this operation was a thirty-three year old Lebanese national living in Dearborn, Michigan — appellant, Ali Abdul Hassan Nasrallah.
Much of the information on this enterprise comes from Jose Diaz, the self-described leader of the "shopper" crew to which the woman arrested in Toledo belonged. Jose Diaz was arrested on a Wisconsin theft warrant when he appeared to post bond for the jailed Toledo "shopper." According to Diaz, appellant approached him in 1994 in New York City with an offer to provide fraudulent credit cards and counterfeit identification to match. Diaz was to recruit "shoppers" to use the cards to purchase expensive electronic equipment which would be given to appellant. In return, the shopping crew would be paid five percent of the purchase price. In time, the organization began to focus solely upon the purchase of laptop computers and expanded outside the borders of New York.
Eventually, appellant moved the operation to Florida and then to Michigan. Even so, Diaz continued to recruit shoppers from the New York Hispanic community. Additional crews were recruited from the Detroit-Dearborn Arabic community.
According to Diaz, appellant would travel from Detroit to Toledo to deliver the counterfeit credit cards, a list of the laptop computers to be purchased, and an itinerary with the locations of large retailers which sold the goods. Once the computers were purchased, they were shipped to one of several addresses in the Detroit-Dearborn area. *725
Using the Diaz information, authorities obtained a search warrant for appellant's Dearborn home. However, before they executed the warrant, appellant fled. He was arrested in Toledo. When agents searched appellant's residence, they found documentary evidence linking him to the shopping scheme and a list of thirteen hundred credit card account numbers issued by banks around the world.
Appellant eventually pled guilty to a five count bill of information. That bill of information charged: one count of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity (Ohio's little RICO1 statute, R.C.
Ultimately, the court sentenced appellant to a six year term of imprisonment for the state RICO violation and concurrent lesser sentences for the other counts.2 Pursuant to R.C.
Appellant now appeals this sentence, setting forth the following single assignment of error:
"The trial court erred when it abused its discretion in sentencing Defendant/Appellant when it imposed a sentence that was excessive in light of the facts on the record in this case, the sentence included a prison term which was in the mid-range of the guidelines even though Defendant/Appellant is a first-time offender, the sentence was imposed for multiple offenses arising from a single scheme or plan, and the court did not follow the requirements of ORC sec.
2929.14 (B) or (C) in imposing its sentence."
By leave of this court, briefs amicus curiae in favor of affirmance have been submitted by the Attorney General of Ohio and the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association. *726
As we noted in State v. Cooks (1997),
" * * * R.C.
2929.11 defines the overarching policy considerations underlying felony sentencing in this state. The statute specifically states that,"`the overriding purposes of felony sentencing are to protect the public from future crime by the offender and others and to punish the offender. * * *
"`A sentencing imposed for a felony shall be reasonably calculated to achieve the two overriding purposes of felony sentencing * * * commensurate with and not demeaning to the seriousness of the offender's conduct * * *.'
"R.C.
The principal offense of which appellant was convicted, R.C.
A sentencing court must exercise its discretion after considering the R.C.
In this matter, appellant, as a first offender, has never before been sentenced to imprisonment. Nevertheless, the sentencing court found that the imposition of the shortest prison term would demean the seriousness of the offense and not adequately protect the public from further offenses. On appellant's *727 motion for reconsideration, the court responded with a ten page entry, detailing the statutory factors considered and the conclusion reached.
Appellant devotes a considerable amount of his argument to an unfulfilled plea agreement wherein the state agreed to recommend a minimum sentence if appellant would cooperate in the investigation and prove his truthfulness by "passing" a polygraph examination. Appellant insists that, although several of his test answers were scored "inconclusive," he substantially complied with the agreement and should receive its benefits.
The trial court held a hearing on this specific issue. An experienced Secret Service polygrapher testified that "inconclusive" results on relevant questions undermine the reliability of the entire test. Therefore, according to the agent, "passing" a polygraph is generally considered scoring "non-deceptive" on all relevant questions. On this evidence, we conclude that it was not unreasonable for the court to refuse to enforce the agreement.
With respect to the sentence of imprisonment itself, the court clearly considered and weighed all the statutory considerations. It concluded that to mete out a minimum sentence to a participant so near the center of an international credit card fraud syndicate would demean the seriousness of the offense. Given the massive scope of this criminal conspiracy, we cannot say that this conclusion was arbitrary, unconscionable, or even unreasonable.
In greater contest is the court's decision to levy a $5.1 million statutory fine against appellant. It is to this issue that appellant writes at length and it is the focus of both briefs amicus curiae.
Appellant maintains that for Ohio to premise his fine on the entire $1.7 million attributable to the whole enterprise, in effect, punishes him for harm caused in "* * * Wisconsin, Indiana, or any of the other states * * * affected by the criminal conduct." Appellant suggests that in the likelihood that these other states prosecute him that it is probable that he will receive multiple punishment for the same crime.
This is a matter of first impression in Ohio.
R.C.
"2) Notwithstanding the financial sanctions authorized by section
2929.18 3 of the Revised Code, the court may do all of the following with respect to any person who derives pecuniary value or causes property damage, personal injury *728 other than pain and suffering, or other loss through or by the violation of this section:"(a) In lieu of the fine authorized by that section, impose a fine not exceeding the greater of three times the gross value gained or three times the gross loss caused and order the clerk of the court to pay the fine into the corrupt activity investigation and prosecution fund created in section
2923.35 of the Revised Code;"(b) In addition to the fine described in division (B)(2)(a) of this section and the financial sanctions authorized by section
2929.18 of the Revised Code, order the person to pay court costs;"(c) In addition to the fine described in division (B)(2)(a) of this section and the financial sanctions authorized by section
2929.18 of the Revised Code, order the person to pay to the state, municipal, or county law enforcement agencies that handled the investigation and prosecution the costs of investigation and prosecution that are reasonably incurred."The court shall hold a hearing to determine the amount of fine, court costs, and other costs to be imposed under this division." R.C.
2923.32 (B)(2).
Initially, we note that R.C.
There is nothing in the language of R.C.
Consequently, we reject appellant's assertion that the court should not have considered the effects of his criminal activity outside Ohio. Accordingly, appellant's sole assignment of error is not well-taken.
Upon consideration whereof, the judgment of the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed. Costs to appellant.
Mark L. Pietrykowski, J., George M. Glasser, J., JUDGES CONCUR._____________________ SHERCK, J.
Judge George M. Glasser, retired, sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio.