ORDER ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS COUNT 17 OF THE INDICTMENT
In 2004, Cоngress enacted the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act. Pub.L. 108-275, § 2(a), 118,Stat. 831. The Act created an enhanced criminal penalty for anyonе who, while engaging in an enumerated felony (the indictment in this case alleges bank fraud and social security fraud), “knowingly transfers, possesses, or uses, without lawful authority, a means of identification of another person.” 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(l). This motion to dismiss poses the following question: To qualify for the еnhanced penalty, must the defendant actually know that the unauthorized identification in question was that “of another person”? The government says no; the defendant says yes. The caselaw to date is divided.
Compare U.S. v. Montejo,
The
Montejo
district court concluded that “the mens rea requirement of the statute applies only to the conduct involved — transfer, possession, or use — and not to the object of that conduct — the means of identification of another person,”
So “knowingly” must modify both the verb (e.g., “uses”) and the immediate object (“a means of identification”). The real question is: does it modify also the secondary prepositional phrase that follows that immediatе object, namely, “of another person”? Contrary to Montejo,- Beachem concluded “yes,” reasoning from the Supreme Court opinion in X-Citement, In X-Citement, the Court dealt with a crimi-
nal statute that рrohibited “knowingly” transporting, shipping, receiving or distributing visual depictions “if ... the producing of such visual depiction involves the use of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct.”
Here apparently (I am unsure because I have only the briefs, no factual stipulation), the defendant re-sequenced the last four digits of her social security number. The defendant says that she did not know that the rеsulting number belonged to another person. The government asserts “that it is simply incredible for the Defendant to claim that there was no way shе could have known at least one of these numbers [she used false numbers seven times] was assigned to another individual.” Govt.’s Opp’n to Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss Count Seventeen at 6 n. 4 (Docket Item 20). Obviously then, there is a jury question over what the defendant knows. 3 I decline to make an abstract deсision on an issue that ultimately may not reflect the actual facts.
Accordingly, I Deny the defendant’s motion to dismiss Count 17 of the Indictment. The defеndant may pursue her argument by motion for judgment of acquittal and/or in the context of drafting an appropriate jury charge.
So Ordered.
Notes
. In
U.S. v. X-Citement Video,
*2 If the term "knоwingly” applies only to the relevant verbs in § 2252 — transporting, shipping, receiving, distributing, and reproducing — we would have to conclude that Congress wishеd to distinguish between someone who knowingly transported a particular package of film whose contents were unknown to him, and somеone who unknowingly transported that package. It would seem odd, to say the least, that Congress distinguished between someone who inadvеrtently dropped an item into the mail without realizing it, and someone who consciously placed the same item i n the mail, but was nonethеless unconcerned about whether the person had any knowledge of the prohibited contents of the package.
. An apt analogy is federal firearm prohibitions. Title 18 provides for enhanced penalties to any person who possesses certain еnumerated firearms (such as a semiautomatic assault weapon or a machine gun) in relation to a drug trafficking crime or a crime of violence regardless of whether the individual knows the firearm has characteristics that bring it within the enhanced penalty provision of the statute. .
See
18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A);
United States v. Shea,
. Even if the defendant testifies that she did not know the resulting number belonged to another person, the jury might disbelieve her or convict her of willfulness under, a willful blindness instruction (if the evidence supports such an instruction).
