This case is before the court on appeal for the second time. The defendant, Michael Hebeka, was originally charged and convicted under a three-count indictment with food-stamp fraud.
See United States v. Hebeka,
*281 The government now appeals, contending that conviction under both Counts 1 and 3 is constitutionally permissible and, moreover, that the district court should have sentenced the defendant under the sentencing guidelines. We conclude that the district court was correct in setting aside the conviction under Count 3 of the indictment, but that the ease must be remanded for resentencing under the sentencing guidelines.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
By this time, the facts in this case are well-documented and no longer open to dispute. In 1984, Hebeka owned a grocery store in Toledo that was licensed to accept government food stamps. That year, he was convicted of food-stamp fraud and barred for life from participating in the program. Nevertheless, in April 1985, Hebeka made a sham sale of the market to one Dennis Alfred, specifically to allow Hebeka to circumvent his banishment from the federal food-stamp program. At Hebeka’s request, Alfred submitted a false application to obtain a new license so that the market could continue to accept food stamps. The application failed to disclose that Hebeka was the store’s constructive owner and its manager, in violation of the program’s regulations. From April 1985 until May 1991, Hebeka redeemed $7.2 million in food stamps through the store, while selling only $3.9 million worth of food. Of the $7.2 million, $3.45 million of the food stamps had been purchased for cash.
In 1991, Hebeka was indicted for two violations of the Food Stamp Act, 7 U.S.C. § 2024(c), and one violation of the fraudulent claims statute, 18 U.S.C. § 287. Count 1 charged Hebeka with redemption of $7.2 million worth of food stamps to the Department of Agriculture. Count 2 charged that between January 1986 and May 1991, Hebeka presented the Department of Agriculture with $3.45 million worth of food stamps that had been purchased for cash. Count 3 charged that between April 1985 and May 1991, Hebeka made false claims to the Department of Agriculture by presenting $7.2 million worth of food stamps for redemption to the Department of Agriculture.
Hebeka was convicted on all three counts after a jury trial in January 1992: The district court sentenced him to concurrent five-year sentences on the first two counts and to a consecutive five-year sentence on Count 3. At sentencing, the defendant objected to the use of the sentencing guidelines, on the ground that they could not be applied to conduct occurring before the effective date of the Sentencing Reform Act, November 1, 1989. Finding that the offenses for which the defendant had been convicted were not “continuing offenses,” the district court held that the sentencing guidelines did not apply, even though the misconduct “straddled” the effective date of the Sentencing Reform Act.
Hebeka I,
Hebeka appealed his conviction, arguing that Counts 1 and 2 were multiplicitous. We agreed, holding that the two counts should merge, because they “overlap in respect to the amount of food stamps presented illegally.”
Hebeka II,
On remand, the district court not only vacated the defendant’s conviction on Count 2, as directed by this court on appeal, but also vacated the conviction on Count 3, finding that the false claims conviction was for the “same offense” under the Double Jeopardy Clause- as the remaining conviction for food stamp fraud. The district judge ruled that “[t]he statutory elements of both § 2024(c) and § 287 are identical. In fact, both statutes seek to protect the same victims and the same interest — the property of the United States government.” The district court also ruled that the government had waived its argument concerning the applicability of the sentencing guidelines to Hebe-ka’s conviction and sentenced the defendant under pre-guidelines provisions to five years incarceration.
The government now appeals both the district court’s decision to vacate Count 3 and *282 its failure to sentence the defendant under the sentencing guidelines.
THE DOUBLE JEOPARDY ISSUE
The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution grants individuals protection from being “subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” The Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits multiple punishments for the same criminal offense.
North Carolina v. Pearce,
As we noted in
Hebeka I,
because of refinements of
Blockburger
in recent Supreme Court decisions, the test applies “only after other techniques of statutory construction have proved to be inconclusive. The first step is for the court to inquire Vhether Congress intended to punish each statutory violation separately.’”
Pandelli v. United States,
Section 2024(c) of the Food Stamp Act provides that “[wjhoever presents, or causes to be presented, coupons for payment or redemption of the value of $100 or more, knowing the same to have been received, transferred, or used in any manner in violation of the provisions of this chapter or the regulations issued pursuant to this chapter, shall be guilty of a felony.” Section 287 provides that “[w]hoever makes or presents to any person or officer in the civil, military, or naval service of the United States, or to any department or agency thereof, any claim upon or against the United States, or any department or agency thereof, knowing such claim to be false, fictitious, or fraudulent, shall be imprisoned not more than five years.”
The government argues that each of these provisions requires proof of an element that the other does not, thus making them separate offenses for purposes of the Double Jeopardy Clause. The argument goes something like this: The Food Stamp Act addresses the presentation of fraudulent claims made as the result of violations of the Act or the regulations promulgated under the Act, which the general fraud statute obviously does not, while the fraudulent claims statute requires the presentation of a fraudulent claim to an agency of the government, an element missing from the Food Stamp Act. Fraudulent food stamp coupons, for example, could be presented to a bank for redemption, rather than to a federal agency, and a violation of § 2024(c) would nevertheless result.
As the defendant points out, however, § 287 does not require that the person committing the fraud submit the claim directly to the government. He cites
United States v. Murph,
We note, further, that the Supreme Court has also addressed the issue of liability attaching for fraudulent claims made through intermediaries, in the process of analyzing R.S. § 5438, the statutory precursor to the current § 287.
United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess,
Other circuits have subsequently discussed the applicability of the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Hess
to § 287.
See United States v. Blecker,
Similarly, this court has found that § 287 liability can attach when health care providers submit false Medicare/Medicaid claims to private insurance carriers, which in turn submit them to a government agency.
See United States v. Campbell,
Other circuits have likewise held that the actual presentation of a claim to a government agency is not necessary to satisfy § 287. The Second Circuit, for example, found that conviction is still proper when a defendant has “caused Blue Cross and Travelers to file the claims with HEW.”
United States v. Precision Medical Laboratories, Inc.,
In a case dealing with welfare fraud similar to Hebeka's food stamp fraud, the Fifth Circuit rejected a similar defense involving the presentation of false claims to a state government agency, which, in turn sought reimbursement from the federal government. See United States v. Beasley,
The Fourth Circuit reached a similar conclusion in Blec/cer, noting that "the government alleged in its indictment of Icarus and Blecker that the defendants submitted invoices for fees based on false resumes to the Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) knowing that CSC, in turn, would present the claims to the General Services Administration (GSA) for payment."
From these cases, it is abundantly clear that proof of the presentation of a false claim directly to a government agency is not necessary to convict under § 287. It follows from this analysis that § 287 does not require proof of a fact that is not required by § 2024(c) and that conviction under both sections, at least under the facts of this case and given the allegations contained in the indictment returned against Hebeka, violates the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The district court did not err in setting aside Count 3 of the indictment.
THE SENTENCING ISSUE
Waiver. We deal first with the defendant's argument that the government has waived the issue of sentencing under the guidelines by voluntarily withdrawing its cross-appeal at an earlier stage of the proceedings. The government takes the position that it could not present two entirely contrary arguments on the initial appeal-that in order to salvage convictions under both Counts 1 and 2, the government had to argue on appeal that the convictions under § 2024(c) were multiple separate offenses, and not a continuing offense. The government argues that in Hebeka I, this court ruled, in effect, that the offense was a continuing one, for purposes of determining multiplicity. Only then, the government insists, could it reas6nably change direction and pursue the argument that the sentencing guidelines apply because the offense straddles the effective date of the guidelines. We find this argument persuasive.
Moreover, the "law of the case" doctrine has little applicabifity in the sentencing arena. As we have previously noted, "there appears to be no prohibition in the guidelines, or in the case law interpreting the guidelines, keeping a district court judge from revisiting the entire sentencing procedure unless restricted by the remand order." United States v. Duso,
Application of the Guidelines.
The defendant argues that Count 1, the only remaining charge against him, does not establish the existence of an offense that is continuing in nature but rather alleges individual offenses over a period of time. He thus contends that pre-guidelines sentencing is appropriate. In response, the government points to our determination in
Hebeka I
that the defendant was engaged in “a single pattern of fraud,”
Hebeka II,
We agree. In our prior opinion, we noted that requiring the government to indict defendants for similar offenses in a single count was to protect them from the “danger of inappropriate multiple punishments for a single criminal episode.”
Hebeka II,
We conclude that the sentencing issue is controlled by our opinion in
United States v. Buckner,
It follows that the sentence in this case should have been calculated under the sentencing guidelines. We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s judgment to the extent that it sets aside the defendant’s conviction under Count 3 of the indictment, but we VACATE the sentencing order and REMAND for resentencing in conformity with this opinion.
