Frank Luca (“Luca”) appeals his sentence imposed after he pleaded guilty to seventeen counts of mail fraud, interstate transport of stolen property and securities fraud in connection with a Ponzi scheme he ran. Luca contends that the district court erred in imposing three enhancements to his sentence. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We vacate Luca’s sentence and remand for re-sentencing.
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews de novo the district court’s interpretation and application of the sentencing guidelines.
See United States v. Shrestha,
II. DISCUSSION
Luca challenges a two-level enhancement based on United States Sentencing Guidelines (“U.S.S.G.”) § 3C1.1, 2 applied as a result of the district court’s conclusion that Luca had obstructed or impeded the investigation of his crimes; a four-level enhancement based on the district court’s conclusion that Luca was an organizer or leader of a criminal enterprise that was “otherwise extensive” under U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a); and a two-level enhancement based on the district court’s conclusion that Luca’s victims were “vulnerable victims” under U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b). 3 We affirm the obstruction of justice enhancement but conclude that the record does not contain sufficient evidence to uphold the “leader or organizer” or “vulnerable victim” enhancements.
*1022 A. U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1
Section 3C1.1 of the sentencing guidelines provides for a two-level enhancement “[i]f the defendant willfully obstructed or impeded, or attempted to obstruct or impede, the administration of justice during the investigation, prosecution, or sentencing of the instant offense....” The commentary to § 3C1.1 indicates that the enhancement is warranted for “providing a materially false statement to a law enforcement officer that significantly obstructed or impeded the official investigation or prosecution of the instant offense.” See U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 n. 3(g). Luca challenges the obstruction enhancement on two grounds. First, he argues that even if the judge found that Luca submitted false or misleading documents during a state investigation, such activities should not support the obstruction of justice enhancement. He additionally attacks the sufficiency of the district court’s findings. We reject both arguments.
While the commentary to § 3C1.1 does not explicitly include false statements made to state administrative agencies within its examples of obstructive conduct, the examples set forth are not exhaustive. See id n. 3. “Obstructive conduct can vary widely in nature, degree of planning, and seriousness.... [Comparison of the examples set forth in Application Notes 3 and 4 should assist the court in determining whether application of this adjustment is warranted in a particular case.” Id. n. 2.
The district court determined that Luca had intentionally submitted false prospectuses in response to an investigative subpoena issued by the Arizona Securities Division of the Arizona Corporations Commission (“ACC”). The court concluded that “based on the documents given to the Arizona Corporations Commission, which were in fact false documents ... it was [Luca’s] intent to divert the Arizona Corporation Commission from beginning its preliminary investigation, and it allowed for additional investors to be procured during this time.”
For the obstruction of justice enhancement to apply, the district court must find that the defendant willfully provided a materially false statement to law enforcement officers that actually obstructed or impeded the official investigation or prosecution of the instant federal offense.
See
U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1
&
n. 3(g).
See also United States v. Solano-Godines,
Luca’s argument that an implicit distinction exists between obstruction of state and federal law enforcement officials misapprehends the focus of the obstruction enhancement, which addresses the effect of the obstructive conduct rather than the level of law enforcement that was obstructed. For example, the guideline’s commentary indicates that some obstructive conduct, such as providing a false name or identification at arrest or making false un-sworn statements to law enforcement officials, should not ordinarily result in an enhancement. Where “such conduct actually resulted in significant hindrance to the investigation or prosecution,” however, the *1023 severity of the obstruction justifies a sentence enhancement. Compare U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 n. 4(a) and (b), with id. n. 3(g). Under the obstruction guideline’s commentary, it is immaterial which law enforcement agency was obstructed. So long as the defendant provided information that was materially false, with a willful intent to obstruct or attempt to obstruct the discovery of his or her scheme, and which had the effect of significantly impeding the investigation, the obstruction enhancement is appropriate.
Willfully providing material false statements to federal law enforcement officials undisputedly justifies the obstruction enhancement where actual obstruction occurs.
See, e.g., United States v. McNally,
Certain types of crimes, for example securities crimes and violations of environmental laws, are commonly investigated jointly by state and federal agencies. Others, such as some drug offenses, are investigated initially by local or state law enforcement officials, and only later do federal officials join the investigation. In either circumstance, efforts made to obstruct a local or state investigation may also obstruct the federal investigation. To limit the. application of the obstruction of justice -enhancement .to circumstances where the defendant directed his or her obstructive conduct to federal law enforcement officials would interfere with the guideline’s goal of punishing more severely those whose actions “significantly obstruct or impede the official investigation” of the federal crime.
The Supreme Court has interpreted § 3C1.1 as requiring sentencing courts to “review the evidence and make independent'findings necessary to establish a willful impediment to, or obstruction of, justice, or an attempt to do the same.”
See United States v. Dunnigan,
B. U.S.S.G. § 331.1(a)
The district court enhanced Luca’s offense level by four levels after determining that U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a) applied because Luca’s fraud was “otherwise extensive.” The guideline provides:
*1024 Based on the defendant’s role in the offense, increase the offense level as follows:
(a) If the defendant was an organizer or leader of a criminal activity that involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive, increase by four levels.
See
U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a). The commentary to this enhancement provides that “[t]o qualify for an enhancement under this section, the defendant must have been an organizer, [or] leader ... of one or more participants.”
See id
n. 2.
Accord United States v. Anderson,
The court explicitly concluded that it did not need to identify any “participants” whom Luca oversaw or managed. Luca argues that the opinion in
Anderson,
When the district court sentenced Luca, it based the § 3Bl.l(a) enhancement on Luca’s leadership role in an “otherwise extensive” criminal activity:
[B]y the overwhelming evidence — not by preponderance, but by the overwhelming nature of the evidence — before me, including factual basis at the change of plea, this fraud was extensive, and it involved a whole host of entities and people, wittingly and unwittingly, to keep this thing rolling for the period of time that it did.
While noting that “there is probable cause to believe that others helped Luca perpetrate some of these frauds that would qualify them as participants,” the district court elected not to identify any other participant. The court suggested that it would need to hold an evidentiary hearing in order to identify any additional participants. “[T]hose people haven’t been charged and I don’t know who they are.” The district court’s decision to impose the enhancement without identifying another participant constituted legal error.
U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a) cannot apply unless the district court identifies a participant over whom the defendant exercised managerial or organizational control.
See Anderson,
C. U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b)
Luca argues that the district court erred in enhancing his sentence by two points pursuant to the vulnerable victim provision of U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b). The vulnerable victim enhancement provides: “[i]f the defendant knew or should have known that a victim of the offense was unusually vulnerable due to age, physical or mental condition, or that a victim was otherwise particularly susceptible to the criminal conduct, increase by 2 levels.” U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b). The district court, principally relying on the P.S.R., concluded that “many of the victims” were vulnerable based on their ages and their membership in the church in which Luca held a leadership position. Luca argues that the court’s conclusion regarding his victims’ church affiliation could not give rise to a *1025 finding of vulnerability and that there was insufficient evidence in the record to support the enhancement based on his victims’ ages. 4
A trial judge considering an enhancement on this basis must make essentially two determinations. First, the judge must determine whether one or more of the victims belong to a class that is particularly vulnerable to the criminal activity in question, and second, is there one or more specific individual victims whom the defendant knew or should have known were unusually vulnerable by virtue of membership in the class identified. Thus the trial judge must first validate a class of individuals as unusually vulnerable and then identify one or more individuals whom the defendant knew or should have known were members of the class and victims of the offense. Here, the two guideline bases for enhancement — age and church membership — require slightly different analy-ses.
The commission has already determined that age on either end of a person’s life qualifies as a protected class; thus in order to impose the vulnerable victim enhancement where a known victim was very young or very old, the trial judge need only identify the victim and find, based upon evidence in the record, that the individual was in fact unusually vulnerable because of youth or advanced age.
5
In
*1026
contrast, where the government relies upon a classification not spelled out in the guidelines — such as membership in a particular religious group — to show that a particular victim was “otherwise particularly susceptible,” the class must first be validated and only then can the trial court determine whether in the particular case an identified victim’s membership in the class rendered him or her unusually vulnerable. Here, it is necessary to remand the case to permit the trial court to reconsider the vulnerable victim enhancement in light of this court’s decisions in
Castellanos,
This court has explained its determination of vulnerability as follows:
Section 3A1.1 will apply to increase the offense level where (1) a victim was either (a) unusually vulnerable due to age, physical or mental condition, or (b) otherwise particularly susceptible to the criminal conduct, and (2) the defendant knew or should have known of such vulnerability or susceptibility.
See United States v. Randall,
The vulnerable victim enhancement is not appropriate based on Luca’s victims’ ages because the trial court did not identify in his findings of fact specific individuals whose ages rendered them particularly vulnerable. The government is correct that a finding by the district court that a specific victim was unusually vulnerable due to age is enough to support a § 3Al.l(b) enhancement. As the
Castellanos
court noted, age “may per se render a victim worthy of the special protection” of U.S.S.G. § 3A1.1.
See
We also find insufficient evidence to support the district court’s finding that Luca’s victims’ church membership made them “otherwise particularly susceptible to the criminal conduct.”
See Randall,
members of the Eagle’s Nest Christian Assembly were convinced of the propriety of investing with Luca, in part, by and through Luca’s prominent position and leadership role in the church. The direct and implied representations Luca was a “man of God” effectively lowered the guard of church members to the fraud.
In response to Luca’s objection to the P.S.R., the probation officer noted that “in some Pentecostal Christian Protestant churches, the importance and role of spiritual gifts, which would include prophetic utterances directly from God, are magnified and they are often relied on to assess situations and make decisions.” We conclude that these findings were insufficient to support the enhancement.
*1027
We have enunciated two means of determining whether a defendant’s victim is “otherwise particularly susceptible” for purposes of the vulnerable victim enhancement. In
Peters,
we directed the district courts to analyze “the characteristics of the defendant’s victim, the victim’s reaction to the criminal conduct, ... the circumstances surrounding the criminal act [and] whether the defendant could reasonably have anticipated the victim’s reaction.”
See
There is evidence that Luca’s leadership position in the church caused some victims to trust him. A number of Luca’s victims commented during allocution that Luca manipulated their faith to gain access to their money. For example, one victim testified that “the church out there where we went, where Mr. Luca went, endorsed him highly, the pastor did. I trusted the pastor, and thus, we trusted Mr. Luca.” Another victim described how Luca prayed with her just before he showed her fraudulent layouts for his purported developments. The P.S.R. quoted a letter written by a former member of the church:
Luca was constantly being praised from the pulpit as an “anointed Christian businessman,” with visiting prophets prophesying about his future successes and blessings from God. His later legal problems were called demonic attacks by these same people ... Normally I could spot someone like Luca a mile away, but believing the EN [Eagle’s Nest] active promotion of him, I turned off my internal alarms ... Luca skillfully manipulated my faith in God to his advantage, looking me in the eye while praying to God to bless the investment, all the while stealing my life savings ... To summarize, Luca is an expert at using people’s faith in God as a means of getting to their savings, reaching through their souls to pick their pockets, taking not only their savings but also their faith.
Moreover, Luca clearly used his victims’ faith to target investors. A brochure printed by the church invited parishioners to invest with Luca, announcing that “[i]n almost every case, our plan will be able to at least match or out perform your current yields, and at the same time earn dividends for our church and its future. These funds will become the backbone of our plan to build the church campus and retire all debt within five years.” In soliciting parishioners’ investments, Luca announced:
We can take ... individuals who have whether its [sic] $2 hundred dollars [sic] in a savings account or $2 hundred thousand dollars [sic] in mutual funds, and we can allow you to retain the principal, but you use that interest ... to help build God’s kingdom, and also receiving the same rate that you’re receiving currently from the bank.... I consider it a real honor and a privilege to be able to be an elder of this church and to be able to take part ... in a vision that ... will allow us ... to quadruple in size ... and when we finally get this facility, were [sic] gonna be able to minister to so much [sic] more people....
However, the district court did not point to any facts that made the victims less able to defend themselves than a typical victim. *1028 Regardless of whether we employ the Peters or Castellanos analysis, we cannot conclude that the district court addressed thus court’s concern that Luca’s victims be “particularly susceptible” to the fraud.
In
Castellanos,
the defendant formed a company that targeted Spanish-speaking customers for investments and billed itself as a “proudly Hispanic company.” The company turned out to be fraudulent. The district court made no specific findings as to the susceptibility of any of the individual victims, but enhanced the sentence because the defendant “targeted Spanish-speakers, many of whom may have placed trust in the defendant because he was one of their own.”
See
[njothing in the record supports a finding that the Spanish-speaking population of Southern California as a whole shares some unique susceptibility to fraud that warrants the law’s protection, or that makes Castellanos’ crime especially reprehensible. Nor is there any showing that the entire Hispanic population of Southern California shares any such susceptibility.
See id. at 112.
We recognized that criminals typically direct their activities toward those who are more likely to succumb to the scheme and indicated that the district court must consider more than the fact that a defendant would likely succeed in defrauding his or her targeted victim.
See id.
at 111. We noted that an affinity scam might support the enhancement where a finding was made that victims possessed specific vulnerabilities, but refused to find an entire ethnicity vulnerable because of their shared language or cultural heritage.
See id.
By looking to whether the victims are in greater need of social protection, the analysis set forth in
Castellanos
directs the trial court to focus on which of the victims’ traits makes the defendant’s criminal activity more depraved.
See id.
The analysis distinguishes the average victim, who may be “more likely to fall victim to the scheme,”
see id.,
from the victim who is “otherwise particularly susceptible,”
see
U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b). While the
Peters
factors allow the sentencing court to consider a broader range of factors than does the analysis described in
Castellanos,
the focus must still remain on which characteristics made the victims especially liable to fall for the scheme.
See Peters,
The district court here did not make any findings regarding Luca’s victims susceptibility to his scam. At the sentencing hearing the district court concluded that Luca’s victims were vulnerable as “a result of their association with Mr. Luca through church affiliated activities, where he was ... a church official who was elected to be in charge of finances.” The court later indicated that it applied the vulnerable victim enhancement because Luca “use[d] religious connections to aid in the perpetuation of the scheme....” On remand the district court should evaluate the record in the light of Castellanos and Peters and make specific fact findings regarding the vulnerability of Luca’s victims. 7
Luca’s sentence is VACATED and REMANDED for resentencing consistent with this decision.
Notes
. Luca was sentenced on January 5, 1998. The applicable Guidelines are those in effect on the date the defendant was sentenced. Thus, the November 1, 1997 Guidelines apply to this case.
. The government contends that Luca did not preserve for appeal either the vulnerable victim or obstruction of justice enhancements. If he did not, this court would review the district court's application of those enhancements for clear error.
See United States v. Koff,
. We reject Luca’s argument that application of the 1997 edition of the sentencing guidelines violates the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution.
See
U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 3 ("No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.”). A district court should apply the version of the sentencing guidelines in effect on the date the defendant is sentenced, unless the application of such guidelines would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause, in which event the court should apply the guidelines in effect on the date of the offense.
See
U.S.S.G. § lBl.ll(a) and (b)(1). Luca's fraud occurred during a time when the commentary to the vulnerable victim guideline contained an explicit requirement that the "adjustment applies to offenses where an unusually vulnerable victim is made a target of criminal activity by the defendant.”
See
U.S.S.G. § 3A1.1 n. 1 (1994). Some circuits interpreted the language of application note 1 to the 1994 guideline as imposing a requirement that the defendant select his or her victim based on the victim’s vulnerability.
See, e.g., United States v. Callaway,
Some circuits that imposed a targeting requirement prior to the guideline’s amendment have found ex post facto violations where district courts applied the post-amendment guideline to pre-amendment conduct.
See, e.g., United States v. Cain,
. We reject the argument that a person of advanced age or extreme youth is by that fact alone “unusually vulnerable” without regard to her or his individual characteristics. Rather, we understand the dicta in
United States v. Castellanos,
. To the extent that Castellanos mandates a more narrow analysis than that required by Peters, the cases appear inconsistent. However, since both modes of analysis focus primarily on the victim and the district court here failed to explain why membership in the church made Luca’s victims more susceptible, we need not resolve that apparent inconsistency.
. We note the possible availability of other enhancements that could relate to Luca’s activities. See, e.g., U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3 (“If the defendant abused a position of public or private trust ... in a manner that significantly facilitated the commission or concealment of the offense, increase by 2 levels.”). At oral argument both the government and Luca indicated that the abuse of trust enhancement more closely addresses Luca's exploitation of his relationship with the church and its minister. The trial judge, however, was correct to conclude that there is overlap between the obstruction and abuse of trust enhancements and both should not be applied.
