Background
A jury found defendant Dae Whan Kim guilty of bringing seven illegal aliens into the United States for financial gain in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(2)(B)® and 18 U.S.C. § 2; of failing to bring aliens to an
Chang Ho Son, a native of Korea, was living in Canada when, in response to a Korean newspaper advertisement, he agreed to pay an individual named Kang $10,000 to smuggle him and his family into the United States. Kang, the apparent leader of the smuggling operation, did not work alone. He had recruited Jung Hyun Kim and Tal Chung Kim to help him in the endeavor. Kang introduced Jung Hyun Kim to defendant who then drove Jung Hyun Kim from Vancouver to Montreal where both men met Chang Ho Son and his family and two other groups of Koreans who had also paid Kang to smuggle them into the United States.
On the evening of September 25, 2003, Tal Chung Kim drove defendant and the group of aliens from Montreal to the United States border where they exited the van. Defendant then proceeded to lead the group on foot across a field toward Jung Hyun Kim who was waiting for them in another van on the other side of the border. During this march, which lasted between thirty minutes and one hour, defendant unsuccessfully attempted to talk to Jung Hyun Kim through a two-way radio that apparently did not work. He also instructed the group to stay quiet and to follow him. After the group had finally found Jung Hyun Kim and entered his van, defendant began walking back toward the border. At this point, the United States Border Patrol, which had been tipped off about the group’s activities that night, arrested defendant as well as Jung Hyun Kim and the Koreans in the van.
Discussion
“It is well settled that a defendant seeking to overturn a conviction based upon insufficiency of the evidence bears a heavy burden.”
United States v. Martinez,
Regardless of whether the facts could support that theory, there is little question that a rational trier of fact could find beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant brought aliens into the United States. Kang, the apparent leader of the smuggling operation, introduced defendant to another one of Kang’s recruited smugglers, Jung Hyun Kim. Defendant then drove Jung Hyun Kim from Vancouver to Montreal to meet the aliens at the Montreal airport. He guided the aliens over the border, told them to stay quiet and to follow him, and attempted to communicate with the other smugglers on his walkie-talkie. Then, after leaving the aliens at a van on the United States side of the border, defendant turned around and proceeded to walk back toward Canada. In light of these facts, we conclude that the evidence is more than sufficient to support the jury’s finding that defendant smuggled aliens into the United States.
Defendant also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to the jury’s finding that defendant participated in the smuggling operation for the purpose of commercial advantage or financial gain. The severity of criminal liability under § 1324(a)(2) is heightened if the smuggling offense is done “for the purpose of com-ipercial advantage or private financial gain.” 8 U.S.C.. § 1324(a)(2)(B)(ii). As one of our sister circuits has pointed out, the statute does not require evidence of an “actual payment or even an agreement to pay” but merely requires that the defendant acted “for the purpose of financial gain.”
United States v. Angwin,
Defendant claims that the government failed to adduce any evidence that defendant received, was promised or indeed asked for any money or anything else of value for his part in the operation. The government, however, presented evidence that the other individuals involved in the smuggling operation either had received or expected to receive some sort of financial gain. Chang Ho Son testified that he paid Kang $2,000 and owed him- another $8,000 for smuggling Chang’s family into the United States. Jung -Hyun Kim testified that, in return for his participation in the smuggling operation, Kang promised to show him where he could buy lobsters* at a reasonable price in Nova Scotia. Tal Chung Kim, who drove defendant and the group of aliens to the border, expected to receive approximately $2,500. In light of the fact that all of the other participants in the smuggling operation were, or at least expected to be, compensated for their labors, a rational jury could certainly infer
In a similar case, the Ninth Circuit held that it was reasonable for a jury to find that the defendant smuggled aliens for financial gain in violation of § 1324(a)(2)(B)(ii).
United States v. Yo-shida,
Yoshida lends a confirming voice to our reasoning here. As in Yoshida, the evidence establishes that the aliens paid the smuggling operation and that defendant was a member of the operation. In fact, the evidence that defendant acted for the purpose of private financial gain is even stronger here because it establishes that each one of the defendant’s co-conspirators — and not simply some unidentifiable individual allegedly connected to the defendant — expected to obtain financial gain
for his part in the smuggling operation. Because defendant has not overcome the “heavy burden” of showing that the evidence was insufficient for the jury to find that he brought aliens into the United States for the purpose of financial gain, we affirm the judgment of the district court. 2
Conclusion
The district court’s judgment of conviction dated March 22, 2005 is hereby Affirmed.
Notes
. In a related context, we have explained that the meaning of the terms "commercial advantage” and “financial gain,” even if not provided for by statute, is “hardly arcane.”
United States v. Myung Ho Kim,
. Because we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to demonstrate that defendant had the purpose of obtaining financial gain for
himself,
we need not address a potentially forceful, alternative argument, which the government does not raise, that the statute requires only that defendant act for the purpose of
some person's
financial gain.
See United States v. Schemenauer,
