Kenneth Dachman was indicted by a grand jury on eleven counts of wire fraud for stealing funds elderly individuals had invested in his three sleep-related illness^ treatment companies. He pleaded guilty to all eleven counts and, at sentencing, the district court denied him credit for acceptance of responsibility and sentenced him to 120 months’ incarceration. On appeal, Dachman argues that the district court erred in calculating the loss amount, by denying him credit for acceptance of responsibility, and by imposing an “objectively unreasonable” 120-month term of imprisonment in light of his severe infirmities. We affirm.
I. Factual Background
Beginning in June 2008, and continuing until September 2010, Dachman promoted and participated in a scheme to defraud investors. He operated three sleep-related illness-treatment companies and sold shares of these companies to the public. Through his offer and sale of these shares, Dachman raised over $4 million from fifty-one investors.
From the outset, Dachman engaged in a pattern of deception. Between July 2008
But Dachman’s false representations did not begin and end with 'his deceptions about the status of investments in his sleep-related illness-treatment businesses. The falsehoods also pervaded his personal narrative, which was vital to securing — and retaining — investors. Dachman represented to prospective investors that he personally guaranteed the repayment of their principal, but iri reality he did not have the assets to do so. He represented to potential and actual investors that he was a successful businessman and researcher when his seven' bankruptcies obviously proved otherwise: And he falsely represented to prospective investors and investors that he had obtained a Ph.D. from Northwestern University when in reality he had never even attended that institution.
Unsurprisingly, due to Dachman’s deceptions and theft, his companies did not have sufficient revenue to pay the necessary returns to investors. Nor did he have the financial ability to personally guarantee the investors’ principal, contrary to his prior representations. Consequently, the investors brought suit against Dachman and secured judgment in the amount of $2.5 million. Duff v. Dachman, No. 10-cv-06162 (N.D.Ill., July 11, 2011). Records reflected that Dachman spent the stolen funds on a tattoo parlor; family vacations and cruises to Italy, Nevada, Florida and Alaska; a new Land Rover; rare books; and to fund personal stock trading and gambling.
On July 26, 2011, subsequent to this civil judgment, a federal grand jury returned an eleven-count indictment charging Dachman with wire fraud. On July 31, 2012, he attempted to enter a plea of nolo' contendere. On October 3, 2012, Dachman withdrew his plea and pleaded guilty to all eleven counts of the indictment. Along with his plea, he submitted a plea declaration whereby he admitted that he was “guilty of taking approximately $700,000 dollars in bonuses and fees above reasonable salary”; that.he was “guilty of making personal guarantees or,returns on investments without sufficient means to support them”; and that he was “guilty of failing to make clear' to investors [his] educational and graduate credentials.” The district court accepted the guilty plea and, set the matter for sentencing.
On January 17, 2013, the district court held a sentencing hearing where, among other things, it heard testimony from three victims of Dachman’s fraud. At this hearing, Dachman raised objections to the RSR’s calculation of the guidelines on loss and acceptance of responsibility. With respect to loss, Dachman argued that the correct calculation of the loss amount should be $700,000 — the amount by which he personally bénefitted — which would result in a 14-level increase under the guidelines. The government maintained that the proper calculation of the loss amount was approximately $4 million, which would result in an 18-level guideline increase. The government argued that this number was appropriate because the pool of funds the victims lost by investing with Dachman was $4 million.
The district court found that the appropriate loss amount under Guideline § 2Bl.l(b) was the approximately $4 mil
The district court then heard argument from the parties about the appropriate sentence under the factors set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). Dachman’s primary argument in mitigation was that the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) was insufficiently equipped to handle his medical conditions. Dachman’s medical conditions include morbid obesity, diabetes, hyperténsion, hyper-lipidemia, severe gout, colon cancer, and coronary artery disease. At sentencing, Dachman’s counsel stated: “[0]ne of the conditions the Court should consider is the necessity for medical treatment.” Dach-man’s counsel argued that he required specialists to address his medical issues on a “regular basis” and presented the testimony of his brother, Dr. Carey Dachman, at sentencing. The focus of Dr. Dachman’s testimony was that the BOP only provided physician assistants and that they were ill-equipped to- treat Dachman. Dachman’s counsel expressed his belief that the BOP could not provide adequate life-sustaining treatment. “The very easy, economic and insurance reason is that malpractice insurance will not cover a specialist doctor going into an inmate population to treat an inmate. That the best Mr. Dachman in prison can expect is to be seen by physician assistants and. the occasional visit from a general internist[.]”
The government countered that the BOP could provide adequate medical care for Dachman. The government had submitted Dachman’s publicly-filed medical records to the BOP, and provided the district court with a letter from Dr. Paul Harvey dated October 24, 2012, attached to the PSR, that outlined Dachman’s medical issues and affirmed that the BOP had facilities that could provide the necessary medical treatment for defendant.
In announcing its sentence, the district court stated: “I think this was a very damaging offense for individuals[.]” The district court noted that the offense “occurred after what appears to be many, many years of deceptive conduct, one conviction for deceptive practices; a civil litigation strategy that, to my mind, speaks a guilty mind.” Further considering his history and. circumstances, the district court recognized that Dachman had evaded the law and punishment for his behavior for many years. The district court found Dachman needed deterrence and he did not have respect for the law, stating: “There are instances which indicate that he does not respect the law, does not abide by the law, looks around for ways to avoid the law. Perhaps the most unfortunate thing is that he didn’t pay a greater penalty for his prior business practiees[.]”
In addressing Dachman’s primary argument in mitigation, the district court determined that there were BOP medical facilities that had the ability to care for him, and thus rejected his position that he couldn’t be sent to prison. The district court stated: “I recognize his medical issues, and in this case, I will not order his surrender to custody until a reasonable arrangement has been made for his incar
The district court then announced its sentence and sentenced Dachman to 120 months’ imprisonment, which was within his sentencing guideline range of 108 to 135 months’ imprisonment. The district court scheduled a status hearing to allow Dachman to recommend a BOP facility for his incarceration.
After the sentencing hearing, the parties appeared a final time before the district court. The government presented further information from Dr. Harvey about the BOP facilities available to treat Dachman. And Dachman submitted a letter claiming that no BOP facility could care for him and so he would not be taking the court up on its invitation to submit a recommendation.
On June 13, 2013, the district court entered the judgment and commitment, which identified all the terms of its sentence that it had announced on January 17, 2013. On July 3, 2013, Dachman asked the district court to stay his surrender date and supplied more medical information. The government filed a response objecting to the stay and submitted additional information that the BOP was ready to care for Dachman.
The district court denied Dachman’s motion to stay the surrender date. Dachman then filed a motion for bond pending appeal and the government filed its response. The district court held a hearing on the matter, considered the information from both parties, and heard testimony from Dachman’s BOP treating physician, Dr. Derrick Phillips, telephonically from But-ner, North Carolina. After considering the information presented, the district court denied Dachman’s motion for bond pending appeal. This appeal followed.
II. Discussion
On appeal, Dachman argues that the district court erred (1) in calculating the loss amount, (2) by denying him credit for acceptance of responsibility, and (3) by imposing an “objectively unreasonable” 120-month term of imprisonment in light of his severe infirmities.
Dachman first argues that the district court incorrectly calculated his guidelines range in this case because the district court failed to credit him with $2,175,953.34 in operational expenditures incurred by his business entities. Dach-man argues that if the district court had given him credit for operational expenditures, “[tjhis adjusted loss figure would have yielded a 16-point upward adjustment pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(I) (loss of more than $1 million), rather than the 18-point upward adjustment that was made on the basis of the $4,037,020.54 loss figure pursuant to § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(J) (loss of more than $2.5 million).” The government asserts that this argument is forfeited because it was not presented to the district court. In Dachman’s sentencing memorandum, he argued that the loss calculation in this case should be $772,784, which he identified as his gain or the amount that he claims he benefitted. Dachman goes on to argue that the enhancement should be 14 levels for this loss amount. Dachman’s counsel repeated this argument to the district court at the sentencing hearing stating: “we believe that the correct calculations of the loss should be what Mr. Dachman erroneously put into his pocket, which we believe is in the area of $700,000.” Counsel asked the district court to find that the loss calculation was
The record clearly shows that Dachman invited the district court to construe the loss as Dachman’s gain in the amount of $772,784 — an amount that advises a 14-level enhancement. But on appeal, Dach-man abandons this argument.
A forfeited issue is reviewed for plain error. United States v. Richardson,
In this case, the public harm is the loss suffered by fifty-one investors totaling $4 million. Dachman argues that Swanson holds that “loss cannot include the value of services a defendant legitimately performed for the victims' of his fraud.” Appellant Br. 21 (quoting Swanson,
Next, Dachman argues that he is entitled to a two-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. Application Note to Guideline § 3E1.1 states that “A defendant who enters a guilty plea is not entitled to an adjustment under this section as a matter of right.” On the contrary, whether a
The evidence was more than sufficient to support the district court’s conclusion that Dachman did not qualify for a two-level acceptance of responsibility reduction. Dachman’s affirmative representations in both his written statement submitted to the district court prior to sentencing and his allocution to the district court at sentencing demonstrated that he failed to accept responsibility for his fraudulent conduct. In his written statement, he made numerous couched admissions of guilt. For example, he indicated that he “never intended to defraud or harm anyone.” He also claimed the “absolute right” to set his own “salary” and that he took “fees” in “advance” based on purported Medicare reimbursements he expected to receive in the future. At sentencing, the district court observed that he had stated the “absolute minimum” that qualified him to proceed with a guilty plea. The district court acknowledged that “he did do enough for the guilty plea, but acceptance of responsibility requires something broader than that. He accepts responsibility that he is the one responsible for the failure; he does not, in my view, fully accept responsibility for the damage he did, for his base motives in doing it[.]”
Dachman’s couched admission of guilt continued through sentencing, where he stated “[tjhere are so many facts and details that have not been adjudicated because I chose to plead guilty. I did so at the advice of physicians. Based upon what was said in here, I think perhaps I made a mistake.” Dachman also claimed he was not the one who asked investors for money, that the business was a success, and that his partner, Scott A. Wolf, was the individual responsible for raising money and communicating with investors. The district court considered these statements and stated:
... I’ve heard it many times in fraud cases that somebody said, “I didn’t sell the land, I didn’t pitch the investment.” In some cases, its absolutely true, so what you look to is the person who took the money, and that, in this case, was this defendant. I don’t accept the idea that this was an accident, a misjudgment. I think it was greed.
Given these facts, the district court’s decision to withhold the two-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility is well-supported by our precedent.
Dachman’s final argument is that his within-guidelines 120-month sentence should be vacated because it is objectively unreasonable in light of his severe infirmities. “We review a district court’s sentencing determination both for procedural soundness and for substantive reasonableness.” United States v. Patrick,
A. Dachman’s challenge to the procedural soundness of his 120-month sentence
‘We review the procedural challenge de novo.” United States v. Brown,
Dachman’s principal argument in mitigation at his sentencing hearing was that he should be given home confinement rather than incarceration because the BOP is unable to care for him due to his morbid obesity (the PSR filed indicates that he weighs 440 pounds); severe uncontrolled kidney disease; history of kidney cancer with one kidney removed and the other barely functional; partially uncontrolled diabetes; gout and arthritis; neu-ropathy; aggressive heart-disease with history of stenting; hypertension; history of metastatic colon cancér; and diabetic retinopathy with risk of blindness. Dach-man argues that the district court failed to consider this argument in mitigation when it imposed his sentence.
“The court is required to consider aggravating and mitigating factors under 18 U.S.C. 3553(a) before imposing a sentence." United States v. Vizcarra,
The thrust of Dachman’s argument is that the district court’s findings were not specific enough. But we do not require a district court to make specific findings concerning the § 3553(a) factors so long as it is clear he considered them and we are able to review the sentence, which it did and we are. United States v. Collins,
B. Dachman’s challenge to the substantive reasonableness of his 120-month sentence
Finally, it appears that Dachman also raises a substantive reasonableness argument. “Our review of the substantive reasonableness of the sentence is more deferential; we look only for an abuse of discretion.” Brown,
III. Conclusion
The district court calculated the loss at $4,000,000, and that finding was not plain error. Rather, it represented the amount investors lost due to Dachman’s fraud. The district court also did not abuse its discretion in denying Dachman a two-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility, given Dachman’s statements minimizing his responsibility and placing blame on others. Finally, the district court’s within-guidelines sentence of 120 months was both procedurally and substantively sound. The district court considered the § 3553(a) factors, including Dachman’s arguments based on his numerous health issues. For these reasons, we AFFIRM Dachman’s 120-month sentence.
Notes
. Appellant Br. 9 n. 5 ("This Brief will not argue, as defense counsel did at sentencing, that loss should be measured by the amount of the defendant’s gain.”). Dachman likely abandons this argument because Application Note 3(B) to Guideline § 2B1.1 states that gain to a defendant shall be used only when loss cannot be reasonably determined (as it can and has been in this case).
. The government also argues that Dach-man’s initial attempt to plead nolo contende-re — a theory that by its own terms involves no admission of facts or acceptance of responsibility — precludes him from receiving a sen-fencing reduction for acceptance of responsibility. We need not consider this question, though, because the other facts were more than sufficient to justify the district court's denial of acceptance of responsibility.
. As a preliminary matter, we note that Dachman's evidentiary support for this mitigation argument includes, in part, medical evidence introduced in the district court after his sentence was imposed. Appellant Br. 35-40; Reply Br. 20-23. At the' conclusion of Dachman’s sentencing hearing the district court stated: "I will expect to see counsel in about two weeks time to report to me on the status of the surrender to serve the sentence that’s been imposed.” Sent. Tr. 53 (emphasis added). But as the government points out, most of the record that Dachman cites regarding his various medical issues are matters that were brought before the district court post-sentencing and were not part of the sentencing record. Gov’t Br.'37. Dach-man’s concession on this point is qualified (“[t]he government is half correct”), but he candidly concedes that the district court could not have considered this material prior to sentencing. Reply Br. 20 ("Certain information set forth in Mr. Dachman's opening brief on the topic of the substantively reasonable sentence was, indeed, unknown to the District, Court at the time the sentence was pronounced.”). On appeal, we only consider evidence that was properly and timely introduced before the district court. Consequently, we confine our review of the procedural soundness of Dachman’s sentence to the record and the arguments he advanced in the district court through the conclusion of his January 17, 2013 sentencing hearing.
. The record indicates that throughout at least some period of the duration of Dach-man's theft he received monthly disability income of $1,450.00. See Supplemental Report filed by the Office of the Chief Probation Officer at 2 (filed January 15, 2013). So while Dachman was stealing from investors he was simultaneously representing to the government (falsely, based on Dachman's own description of his activities in the "Explanation of Events Leading to the Indictment” he filed in this case) that he was unable to work.
