The defendant pleaded guilty to mail fraud and related offenses and was sentenced to 38 months in prison. Both sides appeal. The government claims that the judge should have raised Lauer’s offense level by four levels because he defraudеd a financial institution; Lauer claims that the judge should have found that the loss from the fraud did not exceed $20 million and should therefore have set the offense level one level down. We take up the defendant’s appeal first.
Lauer was the employee benefits manager of the Chicago Housing Authority. In this position he administered the CHA’s employee pension fund. He fell in with some con men who ran a Ponzi scheme. See
SEC v. Lauer,
The federal sеntencing guidelines vary the sentencing range for fraud depending on the amount of loss. U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b). Loss is defined as either the actual or the intended loss — whichever is greater. § 2F1.1, Application Note 7;
United States v. Saunders,
Even if actual and intended losses could not be added in a case such as this, Lauer’s appeal would fail. He says he didn’t intend the loss of the entire $19.9 million, and there is a sense in which this is true. But it is the same sense in which the author of a Ponzi scheme might not intend that any of his investors lose anything — might intend that the scheme continue until the end of the world, in which event there would be no losers. Likewise an embezzler might not intend to impose a loss on his employer, might instead intend to use the money to gamble and win and thus be able to replace every penny he had taken. Suppose that he is caught before he has a chance to gamble
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with any of the money, and every cent is recovered. He is nevertheless an embezzler to the full extent of the amount he took, no matter how golden his intentions or happy the consequences.
United States v. Holiusa,
We may put it this way: the amount of the intended loss, for purposes of sentencing, is the amount that the defendant placed at risk by misapprоpriating money or other property. That amount measures the gravity of his crime; that he may have hoped or even expected a miracle that would deliver his intended victim from harm is both impossible to verify and peripheral to the danger that the crime poses to the community. Maybe if he returns part of the money or property to the victim before the crime is detected (not after,
United States v. Saunders, supra,
Focusing on the amount of money that the defendant has put at risk helps us to locate the present ease in relation to cases involving the fraudulent procurement of loans and contracts. In those cases the loss is the part of the loan that the dеfendant does not intend to repay, or the value of the part of the contractual performance that he intends to omit, rather than the entire loan or entire contract price. U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1, Application Note 7(b);
United States v. Downs,
We turn to the government’s apрeal. In section 2507(a) of the Crime Control Act of 1990, Pub.L. 101-647, 104 Stat. 4789, 4862, Congress directed the Sentencing Commission to enhance the punishment for certain offenses “affecting a financial institution (as defined in section 20 of title 18, United States Code) ... if the defendant dеrives more than $1,000,000 in gross receipts from the offense.” Section 20 defines “financial institution” to mean any of nine different types of institution, mainly banks of one sort or another, but not pension funds. Upon the passage of this Act the Sentencing Commission amended the fraud guideline to provide for enhancement if the offense “affected a financial institution and the defendant derived more than $1,000,000 in gross receipts from the offense.” U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b)(6)(B). The quoted language is taken from the statute and there is no definition of “financial institution” in the guideline itself. But Application Note 14 defines the term to mean not only the institutions enumerated in 18 U.S.C. § 20 but also a host of other institutions, including insurance companies, mutual funds, broker-dealers — and “union or employee pension fund[s].” Abоut this expansion of the meaning of the term “financial institution” beyond the meaning it bears in *769 the Crime Control Act, the Sentencing Commission said only, in the “Background” portion of the commentary to U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1, that “subsection (b)(6)(B) implements the instruction to the Commission in Sectiоn 2507 [of the Act].”
This won’t do to build a rational bridge from the statutory definition of financial institution to pension funds. Congress did not instruct the Commission to jack up the offense level for defrauding pension funds. It instructed the Commission to jack up the offense level for a set of financial institutions that does not include pension funds by any possible stretch of the imagination. There is no way to uphold Application Note 14 as an interpretation of the statute. But that is not the end of the analysis, and this for two interrelatеd reasons. The first is that the Sentencing Commission has the power and the duty not only to interpret specific provisions of federal statutes regulating criminal punishment, such as section 2507 of the Crime Control Act of 1990, but also to establish, in its discretion excеpt insofar as that discretion is cut down by statutes fixing minimum and maximum penalties, standards designed to promote uniform and rational federal sentencing. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 991(b), 994(a), (f);
Mistretta v. United States,
Section 2507, for example, read in conjunction with 18 U.S.C. § 20, might support an inference that particular kinds of financial institution are particularly vulnerable to fraud and so require more protection than the existing sentencing guidelines provide. And it might be that whatever it was about these institutions that created this enhanced vulnerability was also а feature of union and employee pension funds. Then, treating the statute not as directing, expressly or by interpretation, enhanced punishment of people who defraud pension funds, but rather as a source of insight helpful to the Commission in thе exercise of its discretionary standard-making functions with regard to offenses lying outside the1 scope of the statute, the Commission might prescribe enhanced punishment for such defrauding.
Yet the only explanation that the Commission gave for dramatiсally expanding (by means of the application note) the meaning of “financial institution” in the Crime Control Act is the inaccurate sentence that we quoted from the background commentary on implementing Congress’s instruction — which Application Note 14 plainly does not do. If the Commission misread section 2507, overlooking the fact that the term “financial institution” in that section is limited to those institutions listed in 18 U.S.C. § 20 and so does not include pension funds, then Application Note 14 is not a statement of enfоrcement policy within the Commission’s discretion but merely an incompetent statutory interpretation, and as such it would not provide a reasoned basis for enhancing Lauer’s punishment. See
United States v. Kennedy,
But there is (to come to our second point) more to the government’s appeal — another statutе. The Crime Control Act was actually Congress’s second directive to the Sentencing Commission to punish crimes against financial institutions more heavily than the same crimes when directed at other victims. In section 961(m) of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), Pub.L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183, 501, Congress had directed the *770 Commission to promulgate guidelines to punish with increased severity crimes that “substantially jeopardize[ ] the safety and soundness of a federally insured financial institution” (emphasis added), and the Commission had done so. U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(b)(6)(A). "Thаt was when Application Note 14 first appeared in the guidelines commentary; it defines “financial institution” in the FIRREA guideline (§ 2F1.1(b)(6)(A)) identically to the definition in the corresponding guideline under the Crime Control Act. As a gloss on the FIRREA guideline, however, the application note, with its broad definition of “financial institution,” goes far beyond the statutory domain. FIRREA is narrowly and specifically limited to federally insured institutions; the application note is not. The Sentencing Commission could not have been under any illusion that it was “intеrpreting” the statute — and in fact the background commentary says that in defining “financial institution” the guideline “implements, in a broader form, the instruction to the Commission in Section 961(m)” of FIRREA (emphasis added). The Commission thus knew it was legislating. So when a year later, in the Crime Control Act, the Cоmmission adopted the identical definition of financial institution, it doubtless thought that it was, as before, legislating a broader prohibition than Congress’s, though it did not repeat “in a broader form” and instead used a form of words indicative of interpretation rаther than legislation. Since the government sought the enhancement of Lauer’s sentence under FIRREA as an alternative to the Crime Control Act (and the enhancement is the same under either statute), the question whether the guideline applicаble to the Crime Control Act rests on a misreading of that Act turns out to be immaterial. The government was entitled to enhancement under the (identical) FIRREA guideline. The judgment must therefore be vacated and the case returned to the district court for resen-tencing in conformity with this opinion.
Vacated and Remanded, with Directions.
