Charles Landwer, Jr. pleaded guilty to mail fraud,
see
18 U.S.C. § 1341, and at sentencing received a two-level increase under U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(9)(C) for using “sophisticated means” to perpetrate his scheme. On appeal he challenges that increase and argues that we should narrow our interpretation of the guideline based on
Begay v. United States,
For seven years, Landwer carried out a fraud that bilked at least 17 victims out of more than $2 million. Acting on his own and through two financial companies, he scammed his victims — usually elderly or financially distressed — by posing alternatively as a lawyer, licensed real-estate agent, or certified public accountant; ingratiating himself; and then offering to invest their money or help them escape debt or foreclosure. He convinced some victims to transfer property to him by quitclaim deed or to place property into a land trust for which he (through forged documents) designated himself the beneficiary. With others, he perpetrated a financial scam: he stole their investment funds, liquidated them, and channeled the proceeds to earlier clients as purported interest payments on their investments.
Landwer carefully masked his fraud. Along with passing off fake checks and real-estate records, he sent his clients letters from fictitious employees, reassuring them that their investments were safe. He also curried favor with respected community members — receiving referrals from a high-ranking bank official, and being accompanied by a state appellate judge at meetings with people whom he defrauded. And when state officials began investigating his operation as part of a state criminal case against him, he forged documents to cover up his transactions.
At sentencing Landwer objected to the upward adjustment for sophisticated means recommended by the presentence report. He argued that there “wasn’t much behind the lies” he told, as he never created any fake diploma or law license, and he downplayed his forgeries as easily made. The government, however, highlighted the prolonged duration of the fraud (seven years), Landwer’s misrepresentation to victims about the security of their investments, his use of complex real-estate instruments, his deception of authorities through phony documents, and his association with community leaders to induce his victims’ trust.
The district court rejected Landwer’s arguments, applied the adjustment, and sentenced him to a within-guidelines sentence of 115 months. Landwer’s individual schemes may have been simple, the court acknowledged, but his fraud as a whole *771 was “significantly more elaborate than usual.” The court ticked off Landwer’s use of “forged documents, fictitious checks, fictitious correspondence, forged real estate documents, and ... real estate instruments such as a land trust and a quitclaim deed” for his elaborate scheme that “robbed from Peter to pay Paul.” The court also noted that he used many of these same documents to mislead not only public officials such as the County Recorder of Deeds, but also prosecutors, investigators, and the state-court judge presiding over his state criminal proceeding.
On appeal Landwer argues that the district court erred in finding that his fraud involved sophisticated means because it was too simple and dissimilar to the examples listed in the guidelines to qualify for the adjustment. The guidelines define sophisticated means as “especially complex or especially intricate offense conduct pertaining to the execution or concealment of an offense,” and provide two examples: (1) a telemarketing scheme that is split across two jurisdictions to avoid detection; or (2) a fraud that hides assets or transactions using fictitious entities, corporate shells, or offshore financial accounts. U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, cmt. n.8(B). This definition, Landwer insists, applies only to schemes more elaborate than his fraud, which he describes as “almost comically simple.”
Landwer’s conduct, however, falls within our interpretation of sophisticated means. Application of the adjustment “is proper when the conduct shows a greater level of planning or concealment than a typical fraud of its kind.”
United States v. Knox,
Landwer next urges us to narrow our interpretation of sophisticated means by applying the method of statutory construction applied by the Supreme Court in Be-gay. He reads Begay to hold that when a defined term of a statute or guideline is accompanied by a list of examples, those examples should serve as a limitation on the definition. The sophisticated-means adjustment, he says, should similarly apply only to fraud having the same essential characteristics as the listed examples, which he describes as the “use of resources not easily available or commonly used in business transactions” or efforts to evade detection that give victims “little or no way of tracing the fraudulent conduct.”
But
Begay
does not fundamentally change our analysis. As relevant here,
Begay
applied the settled principle “that a statutory list of examples of conduct that violates the statute can be a clue to the
*772
statute’s intended scope.”
United States v. Taylor,
Finally, Landwer contends that the district court inappropriately double-counted his criminal activity when it applied the sophisticated-means adjustment on top of increasing his offense level for stealing more than $1 million, U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(l)(I), and for affecting more than 10 victims,
id.
§ 2B1.1(b)(2)(A). But the court did not rely on the loss amount or the number of victims in applying the adjustment; it focused instead on Landwer’s deliberate steps to conceal his fraud. Moreover, these guideline provisions serve different purposes. The increase for using sophisticated means deters elaborate efforts to avoid detection, while the increases for the loss amount and number of victims punish defendants for the magnitude of harm caused by their fraud.
See United States v. Diekemper,
Affirmed.
