Naeil Hussein and his girlfriend, Lisa Bazian, operated what appeared to be convenience stores on the south side of Chicago. In fact they were little more than fronts where the couple rang up phony sales for food-stamp recipients looking to exchange their benefits for discounted amounts of cash. When federal investigators discovered the fraudulent scheme at one location, the pair simply obtained governmеnt authorization to accept food stamps at a different address where they continued their operation. Through a surrogate Hussein opened a third store and even attempted to qualify an ineligible restaurant. Hussein eventually pleaded guilty to eight counts of wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1343, and was sentenced to a total of 60 months’ imprisonment and ordered to pay almost $1.7 million in restitution. On appeal he challenges the amount of loss and a 4-level lеadership adjustment used in calculating his offense level, as well as the reasonableness of his prison term. We affirm the judgment.
I.
Hussein and Bazian launched their scam at The Spot Food Mart (“Spot Mart”), a store that Bazian had acquired in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago. In 2003 Bazian applied to the United States Department of Agriculture on behalf of Spot Mart to participate in the federal Food Stamp Program. The program supplies low-income persons with debit cards, known in Illinois as LINK cards, that can be used to purchase food.
1
The USDA approved Spot Mart’s application but not before making Bazian send proof that she was not connected to the store’s prior owner, who had accepted food stamps but later
About three months later Hussein applied to the Food Stamp Program on behalf of a second Englewood store, Halsted Food Mart (“Halsted”). Despite his role as manager at Spot Mart, the USDA approved the application. Again using an informant, the USDA developed evidence that the new location, like the old, was nothing more than a front for swapping benefits for cash. Once more authorization to participate in the program was revoked, but not before the Halsted scam had run for more than two years and at its height brought in over $100,000 a month in benefits.
In addition, shortly before federal agents executed a search warrant at Halsted, one of Hussein and Bazian’s employees, Dwight Fleming, applied to the program on behalf of a third Englewood loсation, Route 69 Palace. Fleming represented on the application that he owned Route 69 but later admitted that Hussein, the true owner, had paid him to claim ownership. The USDA developed evidence that Hussein and Bazian were trading cash for benefits at Route 69, though not before the pair had run their scam there for more than seven months. Hussein also applied to the Food Stamp Program on behalf of a fourth Englewood business, Spot Chicken Fish & Pizza (“Spot Chicken”), but the USDA rejected that application, presumably because benefits generally cannot be used at restaurants. See 7 C.F.R. § 278.1(b)(l)(iv). Still, for reasons that are unclear from the record, food-stamp recipients were able to trade their benefits for cash at Spot Chicken. In total, Hussein and Bazian ran their fraud for more than four years.
According to bank records for Spot Mart and Halsted, the two locations brought in a total of $1,859,939 in LINK benefits. The government calculated that, during roughly that same time period, Hussein and Bazian wrote checks for food inventory totaling $164,660 from the accounts where LINK funds were deposited. Route 69 took in $128,198 in LINK benefits, and checks for food totaling $49,043 were drawn on the account where those benefits were deposited during the time the store had a LINK scanner. According to the government, Spot Chicken brought in another $228,497 in LINK receipts despite having no authorization to accept LINK cards.
Following Hussein’s guilty plea, the probation officer recommended in the presentence report that the district court assess the loss from the fraud as $1,695,250 and apply a 16-level increase.
See
U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(I). The probation officer reached this figure by subtracting the checks Hussein and Bazian wrote for food inventory at Spot Mart and Halsted from the amount of LINK redemptions at those locations. The probatiоn officer’s total inexplicably ignores the LINK receipts at Route 69 and Spot Chicken, but still Hussein objected that
The parties also disagreed at sentencing about what adjustment to apply for Hussein’s role in the offense. The probation officer recommended a 4-level increase, see U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a), after concluding that Hussein had been “an organizer or leader of a criminal activity that involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive.” The probation officer reasoned that the scheme “involved at least three participants and was otherwise extensive (in that benefits were exchanged for cash with several other individuals/participants).” Hussein urged the district court to apply instead a 2-level adjustment. Id. § 3Bl.l(c). Defense counsel said nothing about the number of people involved in the fraud and contended that the scheme had been a “basic fraud” that was not extensive. The prosecutor countered that the number of persons involved could not possibly have been less than five because, in the government’s view, every LINK cardholder who illegally traded benefits for cash was a “participant” in the scheme. The prosecutor also asserted that the scheme had been extensive. The district court adopted the probation officer’s recommendation. The judge counted as participants Hussein, Bazian, and Fleming but did not comment on the government’s contention that the sellers of LINK benefits also were participants. Rather, while not officially labeling the many LINK traders as participants, the court easily defined the scheme as extensive. She found it significant that Hussein had run his scam from multiple locations, supervised employees at his stores, and traded cash for benefits with “dozens, probably hundreds, of customers.”
Based on a total offense level of 24 and a criminal history category of I, Hussein faced a guidelines imprisonment range of 51 to 63 months. The government argued for a sentence within the guidelines. Pointing to the dearth of grocery stores in Englewood, the prosecutor criticized Hussein for offering the community nothing mоre than “pop, chips, candy, and cash” and speculated that some of his clients used the cash they got from him to buy drugs. Hussein’s lawyer countered that the government had presented no evidence
The district court sentenced Hussein to 60 mоnths. The judge emphasized Hussein’s decision to continue the fraud after the search at Spot Mart and his bilking of a taxpayer-funded program. The court also found significant the breadth of the scheme and the options Hussein had available to him as a property owner and businessman. Echoing the government’s theme about the lack of grocery stores in Englewood, the court commented:
[T]hese individuals who are entitled to be nourished just like I am really dоn’t have much of an option here. I recognize that that’s not directly relevant to the fraud that’s been charged, but ... the fraud relies on a program that is made available to enable poor people to eat. And in that sense, I think the fact that Mr. Hussein was essentially providing them with nothing but chips and pop is relevant.
The judge did not embrace the prosecutor’s speculation about drug use, however, and clarified the court’s understanding that thе prosecutor’s remarks had been “aimed at the harm that this particular crime imposes on the community as opposed to a suggestion about Mr. Hussein’s knowing culpability.” The court acknowledged Hussein’s medical condition but concluded that he would receive adequate treatment in prison and made no mention of his other arguments in mitigation.
II.
On appeal Hussein first argues that the district court erred in imposing the 16-level increase under § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(I) for a loss of more than $1 million because, Hussein insists, the court ignored “legitimate profit margin” in assessing what portion of the food-stamp benefits were obtained fraudulently. Hussein repeats his assertion made in the district court, again without citing to any evidence in the record, that the actual loss was about $900,000, which would have limited the increase to 14 levels under subsection (b)(1)(H).
The proper method to calculate loss from food-stamp fraud is to subtract legitimate food-stamp sales from total food-stamp redemptions.
United States v. Ali,
Hussein is correct to the extent he contends that the district court’s loss analysis was incomplete. Merchants mark up the price of the inventory they sell, and by subtracting only the cost of the food from the LINK receipts, the court made no attempt to accurately account for gross profit on legitimate sales. But for several reasons this misstep had no practical effect on the choice between subsections (b)(l)(I) and (b)(1)(H). First, the district court’s loss calculation ignores more than $350,000 in LINK receipts at Route 69 and Spot Chicken, even though the fraud at those two locations was relevant conduct beсause it was “part of the same course of conduct or common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction.”
See
U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a)(2);
United States v. Barnhart,
Hussein next contends that the district court erroneously assessed a 4-level increase under § 3Bl.l(a). Hussein does not dispute that he was an organizer or leader of the scam. But he insists that the court should have added only 2 levels under § 3Bl.l(c) because, he maintains, the scheme was not “otherwise extensive” and did not involve five or more particiрants. For purposes of § 3B1.1, a participant must be “criminally responsible for the commission of the offense, but need not have been convicted.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1 emt. n. 1. The government insists, as it did at sentencing, that anyone who sold food-stamp benefits to Hussein or Bazian was actively involved in their scam and thus a “participant” for purposes of § 3B1.1.
This reasoning seems sensible, though the government could have strengthened its point by introducing evidence — which we presume it possesses—
Hussein last asserts that his overall prison sentence is unreasonable. In his view, the district court unfairly penalized him for selling junk food instead of nutritious items and was unduly harsh because of concern that some of his patrons exchanged benefits for cash to buy drugs. He also adds that the court ignored his arguments in mitigation.
Hussein’s within-range sentence is presumed reasonable,
Rita v. United States,
The sentencing court did, as Hussein asserts, criticize him for operating stores “where people wеre provided essentially nothing but calories.” But this criticism must be read in context.
See United States v. Nance,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Congress has since renamed the program the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. See Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008, Pub.L. No. 110-246, § 4001(b), 122 Stаt. 1651, 1853 (2008).
. In a snippet of his discussion about the guidelines loss, Hussein asserts that the district court’s incomplete methodology also adversely influenced its calculation of restitution. The court used the probation officer's loss calculation to impose a restitution award of $1,695,250. The amount of restitution does not always correspond to guidelines loss because the rules for calculating each differ,
see United States v. Middlebrook,
. The facts of this case cast an unfortunate shadow on the government's ability to ferret out fraudulent applications from merchants seeking approval to accept food-stamp benefits, and an even longer shadow on the government's willingness to combat fraud aggressively after its discovery. Presently there are over 45 million people receiving food stamps — an increase of almost 70% since October 2007.
See
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Monthly Data,
available at
http://www.fns.usda.gov/pd/34SNAPmonthly. htm (last visited Nov. 10, 2Oil). For fiscal year 2010, the program cost over $68 billion.
See
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Participation and Costs,
available at
http://www.fns.usda.gov/pd/SNAPsummary. htm (last visited Nov. 10, 2011). Most of the illegal trafficking occurs in small stores with limited food supplies, which the USDA approves “so that low-income participants in areas with few supermarkets have access to food.” Government Accountability Office, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program: Payment Errors and Trafficking Have Declined, But Challenges Remain 11, 13 (2010),
available at
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/dl0956t. pdf (last visited Nov. 10, 2011). Perhaps because of the relatively low volume of goods sold in these stores, or perhaps because of a lack of inspectors, the agency inspects smaller stores only about once every five years unless there is some indication of a problem.
See id.
at 13. While it is repugnant that people like Hussein have exploited this vulnerable system over the years, as distressing is the fact that, for every Hussein who operates such a scheme, there may be hundreds of beneficiaries (LINK cardholders) who cоmmit their own criminal act by exchanging their food-stamp benefits for quick cash.
See
7 U.S.C. § 2024(b). We can only hope that with the very large expansion of this program there is
