This case requires us to determine whether the district court, before trial, improperly dismissed one count of a multi-count indictment concerning the alleged immigration of an unlawful alien into the United States. The count at issue charges Abdul Qayyum, Chris Marie Warren, Ha-roon Rashid, Saima Saima, and Irfan Kam-ran (“the Defendants”) with conspiracy to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. The indictment alleges the conspiracy’s purpose was that “an otherwise inadmissible alien ... fraudulently and unlawfully would enter and remain in the United States.” The Defendants filed a motion to dismiss the § 371 conspiracy count. The district court granted the motion, concluding that the statute of limitations barred prosecution. The government now appeals dismissal of the count. We exercise jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3731 and reverse the pre-trial dismissal of the count.
I. BACKGROUND
The Third Superceding Indictment charges the Defendants with (1) conspiracy to defraud the government by obstructing the regulation and control of the immigration of aliens into the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count One); (2) making false statements to a government agent, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001 (Counts Two through Six, charging the Defendants separately); and (3) conspiracy to harbor an illegal alien, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(l)(A)(v)(D and (a)(l)(B)(i) (Count Eight). The indictment, returned on December 16, 2003, also charges Sajjad Nasser and Imran Khan with the conspiracy counts (Counts One and Eight) and charges Mr. Nasser with making a false statement (Count Seven). Mr. Nasser and Mr. Khan, however, did not move to dismiss Count One with the Defendants and are not parties to this appeal.
Only Count One of the Third Superced-ing Indictment is at issue here. The grand jury charges in Count One that from on or about March 4,1996, until on or about March 21, 2003, the Defendants, Mr. Nasser, and Mr. Khan knowingly conspired “to defraud the United States by obstructing, interfering, impairing, impeding and defeating, through fraudulent and dishonest means, the legitimate functioning of the government, that is, the regulation and control of immigration of aliens into the United States.” Aplt’s App. at 187 ¶ 1. Count One further specifies that “[i]t was the purpose and object of the conspiracy that IMRAN KHAN, an otherwise inadmissible alien, with the assistance of [the Defendants and Mr. Nasser], fraudulently and unlawfully would enter and remain in the United States.” Id. ¶ 2.
*1217 Count One further charges the manner and means of the § 371 conspiracy:
a. At various time[s] between on or about March 4, 1996, and on or about August 19, 1997, through fraudulent and deceptive means, including but not limited to the filing of false immigration documents, one or more of the defendants arranged for the entry of IMRAN KHAN, an illegal alien, into the United States.
b. At various times between on or about August 19, 1997, and on or about March 21, 2003, one or more of the defendants provided IMRAN KHAN with housing and other forms of support in order to continue his unlawful presence in the United States.
c. At various times on or about August 19, 1997, and on or about March 21, 2003, one or more of the defendants concealed from and/or falsely represented the true status of IMRAN KHAN in the United States in order to continue his unlawful presence in the United States.
Id. at 187-88 ¶ 3.
The count goes on to allege nine overt acts in furtherance of the § 371 conspiracy: (1) on or about March 4, 1996, Mr. Qayyum filed an immigrant visa petition falsely representing that Mr. Khan was his “child,” knowing the information to be false; (2) on or about March 4, 1996, Ms. Warren filed an affidavit of support falsely representing that Mr. Khan was her stepson, knowing the information to be false; and (3) on or about August 19, 1997, Mr. Khan unlawfully entered the United States. Id. at 188 ¶4. The indictment further charges that between December 2002 and March 2003, (4) Mr. Qayyum, (5) Ms. Saima, (6) Mr. Kamran, (7) Ms. Warren, (8) Mr. Rashid, and (9) Mr. Nasser individually and falsely stated to a federal agent that Mr. Khan was the biological son of Mr. Qayyum, when each knew the information to be false. Id. at 188-89 ¶ 4. The government maintains that Mr. Khan is the nephew — not the biological son — of Mr. Qayyum.
The Defendants moved to dismiss Count One as time barred by the five-year statute of limitations under 18 U.S.C. § 3282(a). The district court granted the Defendants’ motion in an oral ruling:
As elucidated in the overt acts alleged, the fraud charged was fraud allegedly committed to secure Imran Khan’s entry into the United States. Once he was admitted to the United States on August the 19th, 1997, his status from an alien applicant, if you will, changed to one, I will assume, fraudulently obtained as being a legal alien immigrant, but there’s nothing else to be done to secure the immigration into the United States. Once the fraud was complete by securing his entry into the United States, the crime was complete. That is more than five years from the completion of the offense, and the motion will be granted as to Count 1. Count 1 will be dismissed.
Aplt’s App. at 322. The court later issued a written order reiterating that it had dismissed Count One “[f]or the reasons stated on the record during the November 2, 2004 hearing.” Id. at 254 (Order, dated Nov. 4, 2004).
II. DISCUSSION
Count One charges Defendants with a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, which is the federal general conspiracy statute prohibiting conspiracies “to defraud the United States ... in any manner or for any purpose.” To prosecute the Defendants under § 371, the government must prove “(1) an agreement; (2) to break the law; (3) an overt act; (4) the purpose of which is to further the object of the conspiracy; and (5) that the defendant en
*1218
tered the conspiracy willfully.”
United States v. Davis,
“To satisfy the statute of limitations, the prosecution must show that the conspiracy continued to exist five years prior to the indictment ... and that ‘at least one overt act in furtherance of the conspiratorial agreement was performed within that period.’ ”
United States v. Hauck,
“We review de novo the district court’s legal conclusion concerning the scope of the conspiracy,”
United States v. Hitt,
Before we can determine whether the statute of limitations bars prosecution, we must first understand the scope of the § 371 conspiracy alleged in Count One. “To determine the scope of the alleged conspiratorial agreement, the court is bound by the language of the indictment.”
Hitt,
The Supreme Court analyzed the statute of limitations in a conspiracy prosecution in
Grünewald.
There, three petitioners fraudulently obtained “no prosecution” rulings from the Bureau of Internal Revenue for two businesses’ tax evasion cases.
In
Gruneivald,
the applicable three-year statute of limitations barred prosecution unless (1) the conspiracy still existed on October 25, 1951, and (2) the petitioners performed an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy after that date.
Id.
at 396,
“[T]he crucial question in determining whether the statute of limitations has run is the scope of the conspiratorial agreement, for it is that which determines both the duration of the conspiracy, and whether the act relied on as an overt act may properly be regarded as in furtherance of the conspiracy.”
Id.
at 397,
Here, the government maintains that the grand jury has alleged a continuing conspiracy, and the 2002-03 overt acts charged in Count One support the conspiracy’s objective that Mr. Khan fraudulently “remain in the United States.” According to the Defendants, Count One’s charging paragraph limits the scope of the conspiracy to Mr. Khan’s fraudulent entry into the United States. They contend that the overt acts alleged within the five-year limitations period are merely “false denials of the original criminal act under questioning by law enforcement.” Aple. Qayyum’s Br. at 13. The Defendants maintain that while Count One vaguely alleges that they supported and concealed Mr. Khan to maintain his status in the United States, the indictment does not charge any specific acts to support these allegations. See Aplt’s App. at 187 ¶ 3(b).
Assuming (as we must) at this stage of the proceedings that the indictment’s allegations are true,
see Reitmeyer,
The plain language of Count One convinces us that the grand jury charged a continuing conspiracy in which “the successful accomplishment of the crime necessitates concealment.”
Grunewald,
Count One is therefore distinguished from the decisions cited by Defendants, where courts concluded that a conspiracy terminated following the completion of the
only
objective alleged in the indictment. Defendants first rely on
United States v. Davis,
Count One is also unlike the charged conspiracy in
United States v. Roshko,
The charged conspiracies in Davis and Roshko are narrower than Count One. *1221 Neither Davis nor Roshko charged a continuing conspiracy, and those agreements terminated, upon the completion of their sole objectives, outside of the relevant statute of limitations. In contrast, Count One alleges that the Defendants conspired to help Mr. Khan enter and remain in the United States, and the count charges overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy (such as the false statements) within the five-year limitations period.
In sum, the district court improperly dismissed Count One in light of the plain language describing the conspiracy’s scope and our responsibility at this stage of the proceedings to take the count’s allegations as true. On remand, a factfinder must determine after hearing the evidence whether the alleged false statements from 2002 and 2003 were (1) only acts of concealment after accomplishing the Defendants’ sole objective to bring Mr. Khan into the United States, or (2) were part of an ongoing conspiracy in which the “plot contemplate[d] bringing to pass a continuous result that will not continue without the continuous co-operation of the conspirators to keep it up.”
Kissel,
On remand, the government can only obtain a conviction by proving that the Defendants’ conspiracy existed on May 22, 1998 and originally included an agreement to help Mr. Khan “remain in the United States.”
See Grunewald,
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s dismissal of Count One.
