Mitchel Fuchs brokered subprime mortgages by enticing lenders with falsified loan applications and phony documentation. He was convicted after a jury trial of mail and wire fraud. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343. After applying a number of sentencing guidelines adjustments, including a two-level increase for abuse of a position of trust, see U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3, the district court calculated Fuchs’s imprisonment range at 100 to 125 months. The court went above that range and imposed a total of 144 months’ imprisonment. We conclude that the court erred in applying the abuse-of-trust increase under § 3B1.3. Accordingly, we vacate the sentence and remand for resentencing.
I. Background
Fuchs used an alias to land a job with Mortgage Solutions, a broker in Rockford, Illinois, that helped its clients finance residential real-estate transactions. Most of the loans Fuchs brokered were denominated as “subprime” because the borrower’s credit rating was so poor that only a lender specializing in high-risk loans was willing to provide a mortgage.
See Hoffman v. Grossinger Motor Corp.,
What the lenders did not know is that many of the borrowers were poor risks even for subprime loans. Fuchs and his two codefendants hid this fact by doctoring the loan applications with, for example, inflated incomes or phony employers, and often they altered credit reports or fabricated W-2s to corroborate the lies in the loan applications. Most times the lenders relied on the information from Fuchs without verification, but sometimes a lender contacted a listed employer or obtained a credit report independently. If a lender did try calling a bogus employer, the phone number Fuchs supplied on the loan application would lead back to him or his fiancée. When the FBI got wind of the scheme and raided Mortgage Solutions in *932 June 2004, Fuchs simply took another name and found another job with Leader Mortgage, a different broker where he continued the fraud unabated. Investigators eventually connected him to at least 14 fraudulent loans; many of those predictably went into foreclosure. These lenders lost about $184,000.
In preparation for sentencing, the government proposed an increase under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.8 on the ground that Fuchs held and abused a position of trust with respect to the lenders. That section of the guidelines provides for a two-step increase in offense level if the defendant “abused a position of public or private trust ... in a manner that significantly facilitated the commission or concealment of the offense.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1;
see also United States v. Podhorn,
The government objected to the probation officer’s conclusion and highlighted evidence from trial that it said showed the lenders had relied upon Fuchs to a significant degree. Employees of the defrauded lenders testified that their financial institutions lacked brick-and-mortar offices and transacted business only through brokers and never met the borrowers. The lenders did not employ loan officers and instead relied upon brokers to evaluate and process loan applications. The relationship between lender and broker was typically embodied in an agreement that the broker was required to sign before obtaining authorization to promote the lender’s products. These written agreements required the broker to verify a borrower’s income, employment, and source of down payment, although the example submitted at sentencing specifically disclaims an agency relationship. The borrower’s representations in a loan application often (though not always) went unverified. Thus, the government argued, an increase under § 3B1.3 for abuse of trust was warranted.
The district court sided with the government. The court held that Fuchs’s position as a broker had facilitated the fraudulent scheme and allowed its concealment, and that the lenders had relied on Fuchs to provide them with accurate information. The court discounted the fact that Fuchs was unlicensed and that the lenders occasionally verified the information he provided; these verification procedures, the court noted, were thwarted because Fuchs placed his contact information on the fraudulent documents. Last, the district court relied on
United States v. Wright,
The district court also concluded that Fuchs had abused a position of trust with respect to borrowers who were placed at risk of defaulting, further impairing their credit when they obtained financing for which they did not qualify. The government had not sought the adjustment on this basis. Before trial the government *933 had conceded that the borrowers were not victims and acknowledged that the borrowers arguably knew or should have known that Fuchs was submitting fraudulent documents on their behalf.
II. Discussion
The sole issue on appeal is whether the § 3B1.3 enhancement for abuse of a position of trust was properly applied. Fuchs argues that he did not occupy a position of trust with respect to the lenders and thus it was error to assess the two-level increase. According to Fuchs, the record establishes only an arm’s-length, commercial relationship between him and the lenders. We review the district court’s interpretation of § 3B1.3 de novo and its underlying factual findings for clear error.
Thomas,
The relationship between Fuchs and the lenders would be unimportant if, as the district court found, he also abused a position of trust with respect to the
borrowers. See United States v. Fiorito,
No. 07-CR-0212(1) (PJS/JSM),
As a fiduciary Fuchs occupied a position of trust with respect to legitimate borrowers, and so the upward adjustment might on the surface seem appropriate.
See United States v. Mabrook,
But the government has waived Fuchs’s waiver by declining to defend the district court’s application of § 3B1.3 on this alternative ground.
See United States v. Archambault,
This brings us back to Fuchs’s relationship with the lenders, and on that question we agree with him that the government did not establish anything more than an ordinary, commercial relationship, which we and other circuits have said isn’t enough to warrant an upward adjustment under § 3B1.3.
See, e.g., Andrews,
In reaching this conclusion, we do not rely on Fuchs’s assertion that as a matter of law, he could not have been in a position of trust because he did not have the authority to access or control the lenders’ assets. Fuchs reads several of our cases to stand for the proposition that § 3B1.3 applies
only
if the defendant is given control over valuables. It is true that control over assets is a significant factor in many cases.
See, e.g., United States v. Peterson-Knox,
Conversely, a defendant’s ability to access or control the victim’s valuables does not always trigger an increase under § 3B1.3.
See Dorsey,
We have explained that § 3B1.3 “encourages trust by making trust less risky to the trusting, and trust is an efficient substitute for continuous surveillance.”
United States v. Deal,
tim’s abdication of his own duties.
See United States v. Ollison,
In Fuchs’s situation the information before the district court was unremarkable. His fraud convictions do not themselves justify the application of § 3B1.3. He did take advantage of the lenders, but their reliance (or for that matter, his success) was not an element necessary to convict him of mail or wire fraud.
Bridge v. Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co.,
The government and the district court rely on opinions from the Fifth and Eighth Circuits upholding the application of § 3B1.3 to mortgage brokers who defrauded their lenders.
United States v. Septon,
Neither
Wright
nor
Septon
identifies any factor apart from the general “structure” of the commercial relationship between mortgage broker and lender to justify applying § 3B1.3. The workings of the mortgage industry
may
cultivate a heightened degree of trust between mortgage brokers and lenders in a particular case, e.g., where the same broker deals repeatedly with the same lenders, but neither
Wright
nor
Septon
discusses whether the defendants in those cases
actually
enjoyed this special trust. The Fifth Circuit recognized that the question was a “close call,”
Wright,
Again, we have cautioned against drawing bright lines defining where a position of trust begins or ends,
see Andrews,
*937
The limited evidence here fails to show that Fuchs (or the companies he worked for) occupied a special relationship of trust with any lender. To support the adjustment, the government argues that the lenders are not “typical banks” with branch offices. These lending institutions, the government explains, are not the kind where a borrower can “walk in off the street and just talk to one of their loan officers and get a loan.” The government also points to the testimony from employees of the lenders who said that their loan products were offered only through brokers and that the brokers effectively functioned as loan officers by meeting with borrowers, obtaining necessary information, verifying income and employment, and submitting the completed application to the lender for review. We and other circuits have upheld a district court’s application of § 3B1.3 to loan officers who misapplied funds and concealed their behavior.
See United States v. Humphrey,
But this testimony and the rest of the government’s argument rests on generalities. During the sentencing proceeding, the government did not establish that the lenders in this case had a relationship of trust with Fuchs in particular. That is, the government introduced no evidence explaining the nature of the relationship between Fuchs or his employers and the victim lenders. In fact, the government did not even disclose the actual written agreements the lenders had with these brokers. What the evidence does tell us is that the victim lenders sometimes verified Fuchs’s work but more often than not they didn’t. On this record, an inference that the lenders operated this way based on their trust in Fuchs is no stronger than the inference that they simply failed to do their own due diligence. All we can do is speculate because aside from the general evidence of the industry of which Fuchs was a part — in which there is a statutory agency relationship between Fuchs and the borrowers, 205 III. Comp. Stat. 635/5-7 — there is nothing pointing to a special relationship of trust outside of the ordinary arm’s-length, commercial relationship between him and the lenders.
Accordingly, we Vacate the sentence and Remand for resentencing without the § 3B1.3 adjustment.
Notes
. This opinion has been circulated to all active judges under Circuit Rule 40(e); none asked to hear this case en banc.
