Appellant, David Bushrod, was convicted of impersonating a federal officer in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 912. We affirm.
Facts
On January 24, 1984, David Bushrod called Thomas Pink, the President of Lightning Bolts, Inc., and identified himself as David Pierce, an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) auditor. Pierce told Pink that he was auditing National Supply Co. and that his audit showed that Lightning Bolts, Inc. owed National Supply money. When Pink objected to the bill, Bushrod, who identified himself as Pierce, told Pink that he could force National Supply to accept a settlement offer.
Pink was suspicious of the call. He, therefore, telephoned the Los Angeles office of the IRS and found that there was no IRS employee named David Pierce. A short time later, an IRS agent went to Lightning Bolts' offices to interview Pink, and he was present when Pink received a telephone call from National Supply. The IRS agent recorded the conversation between Pink and Pierce in which they agreed to settle the debt of $479.02 for $229.02. Pink suggested that the IRS agent, who was posing as a Lightning Bolts’ employee, deliver the payment.
The IRS agent attempted to meet with Pierce, but he was unsuccessful. On February 8, 1984, the IRS agent and another IRS employee visited the offices of National Supply, and they identified themselves as IRS agents. They learned that David Pierce was actually David Bushrod, a debt collector for National Supply. Bushrod admitted to the agents that he had represented himself as an IRS auditor to Pink and that he had never been employed by the IRS.
Bushrod was indicted on two counts of wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1343, and one count of impersonating a federal officer on February 1, 1984, 18 U.S.C. § 912. The court found Bushrod not guilty on the wire fraud counts but guilty on the impersonation count. The court found that Bushrod intended to cause Pink to take a course of action that he would not otherwise have pursued except for Bushrod’s false representation that he was an IRS agent. The court found that there was no “doubt that he [Bushrod] was in effect trying to demand money from Lightning Bolt[s].” The court also found that at the time of the second telephone call, Pink did not believe that Bushrod was an IRS agent.
On appeal Bushrod contends that 1) his belief that he was collecting a valid debt is a defense to the charge of impersonating a federal officer; 2) Pink did not believe nor was he affected by the impersonation; and 3) he did not demand money in his “pretended character.”
Discussion
1) Claim of Right Defense
18 U.S.C. § 912 provides:
Whoever [1] falsely assumes or pretends to be an officer or employee acting under authority of the United States or any *1053 department, agency or officer thereof, and acts as such, or [2] in such pretended character demands or obtains any money, paper, document, or thing of value, shall be fined ... or imprisoned ... or both. 1
Bushrod was convicted of the second of these offenses [2], for impersonating an IRS auditor and demanding money in such pretended character.
Before the 1948 revision of the penal code, the offense of falsely impersonating a federal officer specifically required proof of an intent to defraud.
See
18 U.S.C. § 76 (1940). When Congress revised the code, this language was dropped. Bushrod argues that Congress intended to retain some of the common law aspects of fraud in the statute despite the deletion of the specific intent to defraud language. He contends that Congress amended the statute fully aware of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
United States v. Lepowitch,
Bushrod argues that because claim of right is a defense to common law fraud, it is also a defense to those aspects of common law fraud incorporated in 18 U.S.C. § 912. Specifically, he argues that if he believed that Lightning Bolts, Inc. owed the debt and would have had to pay anyway, he could not have intended to cause them to “pursue a course of conduct [they] would not have pursued but for [his] deceitful conduct.”
There is no merit to Bushrod’s argument. Most circuits have held that an intent to defraud is not a separate element of 18 U.S.C. § 912.
See United States v. Mitman,
The court in
United States v. Wilkes
found that an intent to defraud, as defined in
Lepowitch,
is present whenever one demands or receives money or a thing of value in “pretended character” acting under the authority of the United States.
Wilkes,
Bushrod also contends that for him to have violated section 912, Pink must have believed the misrepresentation. Bushrod relies on
Haid v. United States,
Haid
was decided before the 1948 amendment to the statute when “intent to defraud” was still a separate element. The analysis in
Haid
rests on this intent to defraud, and it is no longer controlling. Furthermore, the result in
Haid
conflicts with those cases which focus on the defendant’s action, not on the victim’s state of mind.
See, e.g., Lepowitch,
Section 912 has been often construed to include attempted as well as completed behavior. In
United States v. Guthrie,
Bushrod’s contention that the word “demand” in the statute requires threatening conduct and that he did not make his demand in “pretended character” because he could have made the same request as a private auditor has no merit. There is nothing in the statute or case law which supports such a restrictive reading.
The judgment of conviction is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We insert two bracketed numbers to identify the two separate offenses created by the statute.
See, i.e., United States v. Rosser,
