Case Information
*1 Before DAVIS, OWEN, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM: [*]
Appellant James Ellis Ashford challenges the district court’s restitution order imposed after he pled guilty to one count of a three count indictment charging him with theft of government funds and a scheme to defraud the United States via mail fraud. Finding no error, we AFFIRM the district court’s restitution order.
Ashford was indicted for filing fraudulent claims for disaster relief with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (“FEMA”) after Hurricane Katrina. Count 1 charged him with knowingly stealing more than $1,000 in federal funds by claiming disaster assistance to which he was not entitled between September 14, 2005, and March 31, 2006. Counts 2 and 3 alleged a scheme to defraud the federal government from on or about September 15, 2005, through December 10, 2005, via two instances of mail fraud. On the morning of a scheduled trial, [1]
Ashford pled guilty to Count 2 of the indictment without a plea agreement.
At sentencing, the district court ordered that Ashford pay $11,573.11 in restitution, which included the value of the two FEMA checks and an additional $7,215.11 in hotel bills that FEMA improperly paid for Ashford’s post-Katrina housing. The hotel bills were not mentioned in the indictment, and they relate to housing expenses from October 2005 through February 2006 – dates exceeding in part the time alleged in Count 2 of the indictment. Ashford claims that the restitution order should be limited to the $4,358 specifically mentioned in the indictment, because some of the hotel expenses were incurred outside the time frame alleged in Count 2.
The legality of a restitution order is reviewed de novo.
United States v.
Adams
,
Ashford was charged with, and pled guilty to, devising and executing “a scheme and artifice to defraud the United States and for obtaining money and property by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises[.]” To accomplish this crime, Ashford was specifically accused of (1) filing a claim for $4,358 in emergency benefits from FEMA; (2) falsely stating that his primary residence was damaged by a hurricane; and (3) committing two instances of mail fraud corresponding to the checks he improperly obtained. We conclude that the conduct that resulted in the receipt of $7,215.11 in hotel payments falls within the temporal scope of this count of conviction.
Ashford is correct that some of the hotel payments reimbursed expenses
incurred outside the time frame set forth in Count 2 of the indictment; however,
our analysis is not dependent upon the dates Ashford received the benefit of his
fraudulent conduct. We consider instead whether the hotel scheme itself was
part of the same course of wrongdoing as the acts of conviction and arose out of
the false statement regarding damage to his primary residence.
See Wright
, 496
F.3d at 382;
see also United States v. Cothran
,
Notes
[*] Pursuant to 5 TH C IR . R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5 TH C IR . R. 47.5.4.
[1] The indictment stated that the “exact dates [are] uncertain.”
