OPINION OF THE COURT
I. INTRODUCTION
This mаtter comes on before this court on an appeal by the Government from an order entered November 30, 1999, dismissing an indictment of the defendant, Joseph Dees, charging him with unauthorized use of access devices to obtain money, goods, and services aggregating more than $1,000 in value in a one-year period, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1029(a)(2) (“section 1029(a)(2)”). The district court dismissed the indictment on Dees’s motion as it agreed with him that the statute of limitations barred the prosecution. The district court had jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3231 and we have jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3731.
See
18 U.S.C. § 3282. We exercise plenary review on this appeal.
See United States v. Stewart,
The indictment charged that from March 24, 1994, through on or about July 29, 1994, Dees used access devices, i.e., credit cards, “to obtain money, goods, and services aggregating more than $1,000 in value, within a one-year period; said offense affecting interstate commerce.” The Government proposes to prove three purchases in support of the charge:' (1) an automobilе purchase of $6,368.20 on March 24, 1994; (2) a chair purchase of $2,000 on March 25, 1994; and (3) a cellular telephone purchase of $100 on July 29, 1994.
In moving to dismiss the indictment on statute of limitations grounds Dees pointеd out that section 1029(a)(2) provides:
whoever ... knowingly and with intent to defraud traffics in or uses one or more unauthorized access devices during any one-year period, and by such conduct obtains anything of value aggregating $1,000 or more during that period ... shall, if the offense affects interstate or foreign commerce, be punished....
Dees’ argued that inasmuch as the grand jury returned the indictment on July 22, 1999, 18 U.S.C. § 3282, which states that, except as otherwise provided by law or in a capital offense, an indictment must be found “within five years next after such offense shall have been committed,” barred the рrosecution. He contended that the first two purchases constituted offenses in themselves completed more than five years before the indictment was returned, as these purchasеs each exceeded the $1,000 threshold in section 1029(a)(2). Accordingly, there could have been a separate indictment for each of those purchases. Thus, he contended that their prosecution in the three-purchase indictment was barred. In his view, it therefore followed that the indictment had to be dismissed because his final use of a credit card did not enable him to obtаin a thing equaling $1,000 or more in value.
The district court granted the motion on the theory that the original two purchases were not within the five-year period before the return of the indictment. It thus held that “the only fraudulent act that is timely for purposes of this statute of limitations occurred on July 29, 1999, and this use does not satisfy the statutory minimum of $1,000.” The court did not suggest that its result might have been different if the first two purchases in themselves did not result in Dees obtaining something aggregating $1,000 or more in value.
II. DISCUSSION
We will reverse for the following reasons. Section 1029(a)(2) provides that the offense constitutes the use of the ac
We, of course, recognize that a distinction for statute of limitation purposes could be made between the situation here and that in which the first two purchases were for less than $1,000 in the aggregate, in which event only with the third purchase could the $1,000 threshold be met. In that circumstance, surely the offense cоuld not be complete until the third purchase was made, and thus if the third purchase was within five years of the indictment, the indictment on any theory would be timely. But this distinction from the circumstances here does not matter because as we have emphasized already, Congress has defined the offense as obtaining “anything of value aggregating $1,000 or more during” any one-year period. Congress, howеver, did not provide that any particular transaction within the one-year period had to be of any particular amount. Nor did it provide that if a transaction in itself exceeded the $1,000 threshold, the transaction could not be aggregated with later transactions so as to constitute a single offense. We, of course, will not write such an exception to the plain languagе of section 1029(a)(2) into the law. Therefore, we conclude that inasmuch as the offense is defined as activity “during any one-year period,” the offense is complete as to any onе-year period when there is or are unauthorized uses of access devices, and the aggregated value of things obtained through the use of those access devices within the one-yеar period ending on its last day equaled or exceeded $1,000. Thus, at that time the offense will be completed for that period and the statute of limitations will start to run.
See Toussie,
While we reach our conclusion on the basis of the clear language of section 1029(a)(2), we point out that our result is certainly not unfair to Dees. As we have made clear, it could not be argued successfully that if thе $1,000 threshold would have been met only by inclusion of the third purchase that this action would be barred. Indeed, in his brief Dees in effect agrees with the point as he in part relies on the fact that the first two purchases constituted complete offenses in themselves.
We also point out that in
Toussie,
It also is important to recognize that our result does not mean that a defendant must guard against being prosecuted for stale transactions. After all, inasmuch as the one-year period will close with the last transaction charged, the elements of the offense cannot include transactions more than one year prior to the last transaction charged in the indictment, and that trаnsaction must be within five years of the return of the indictment. 1
In reaching our result, we have not overlooked our opinion in
United States v. Turcks,
We recognize that the parties in their briefs discuss whether a violаtion of section 1029(a)(2) constitutes a “continuing offense.” We, however, decide this case without the use of such a label which in view of the plain language of section 1029(a)(2) can add nothing tо our analysis. Moreover, we recognize that section 1029(a)(2) is not a statute contemplating an indeterminate time period for the commission of the offense as is true in a conspiracy case which is the “classic example of a continuing offense.”
See United States v. Yashar,
Finally, we observe that we are not concerned here with a situation in which the Government attempts to use a single transaction to establish that a defendant committed more than one section 1029(а)(2) offense. It will be time enough to address that situation in the unlikely event that it ever arises. Moreover, we are not passing on any substantive issues that Dees has raised. Rather, we hold only the district cоurt should not have dismissed the case on the ground that the statute of limitations barred the prosecution.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the order entered November 30,1999, dismissing the indictment will be reversed and the matter will be remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Thus, this case does not involve the possibility of stale prosecutions the court identified in
United States v. Yashar,
