Appellant was convicted by a jury of violating 18 U.S.C. § 641 1 by unlawfully attempting to convert a stolen Illinois Public Aid Warrant in the amount of $586.76. Approximately 50% of the money in the account on which the warrant was drawn was granted to the state by the federal government under 42 U.S.C. § 603 (Aid to Needy Families). Appellant complains, however, that the warrant was not “money, or a thing of value of the United States” within the meaning of § 641.
The facts underlying appellant’s conviction are not in dispute. The warrant was mailed by the Illinois Warrant Distribution Center on September 5, 1978, and was payable to Earline Cook as her Aid to Families with Dependent Children (ADC) monthly allotment. Cook was away from her home when the warrant arrived, and it was taken from her mailbox without her knowledge or permission by Edna Handy, Cook’s cousin, who was living at the same address. Handy informed appellant of the warrant’s arrival. Both later traveled with a third individual to St. Louis, Missouri, to attempt to cash the warrant at a currency exchange. They were unsuccessful, however, due to their lack of sufficient identification, and were detained at the currency exchange while postal inspectors were summoned. They later voluntarily gave a statement to inspectors essentially relating the above information.
The Illinois ADC program is part of the federal effort, codified in Title 42 of the Social Security Act. The federal participation is initiated by the state’s submission of a “state plan” which relates, among other things, an estimation of the state requirements for federal ADC funds and assurances that the state program will comply with all applicable federal regulations. The federal government reviews the plan and federal payments are made only after the plan is found to be compatible with federal guidelines. In Illinois, the federal payments amount to 50% of the total payments made to individuals under the state program.
Each fiscal quarter after the initiation of the program, the state submits various re *160 ports to the federal government which include details of past payments with documentary support and estimations of future needs. These reports must be reviewed and approved by the federal government before further funds are provided to the state. Upon the state’s receipt of the federal money, it is placed in the Federal Public Trust Fund and is later transferred with the state money to the Illinois General Revenue Account from which the warrants to the individual recipients are drawn. The state is required to carry out a continuing quality control program and the federal government maintains a continuous observation of the state system including quarterly reviews and annual audits by the General Accounting Office and HEW and the state reports mentioned previously. Should discrepancies in these reports or misuse of funds be discovered, the federal government has the ultimate sanction of demanding the return of the allotted money. This sanction is usually accomplished by allowing the state to repay the money in installments through appropriate reductions in future federal grants to the state. See 45 C.F.R. §§ 200, 201.66(b)(4).
I
As previously stated, appellant’s primary contention is that the Illinois ADC warrant he attempted to cash was not “money or a thing of value of the United States.” There are a number of recent federal cases addressing this question in similar circumstances. In
United States v. Collins,
United States v. Evans,
This court also has had opportunity to define the appropriate considerations regarding this issue. In
United States v. Pavloski,
In
United States v. Maxwell,
One of the most recent cases to consider this issue is
United States v. Smith,
A review of the pertinent statute, 42 U.S.C. § 603, and regulations, 45 C.F.R. § 200
et seq.,
in the present case similarly reveals substantial and sufficient federal supervision and control over the funds granted by the federal government to the state ADC program. As previously stated, this supervision includes quarterly federal reviews and annual audits and state reports with the ultimate sanction for discrepancies in the reports or misuse of the funds being reclamation of the money by the federal government. The fact that this reclamation is normally or even always enforced on an installment basis by reductions in future allotments does not, we believe, remove the funds allotted from the protection provided by § 641. The installment method seems simply the most convenient means to accomplish the reclamation and we find, similarly to the Court’s statement in
United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess,
Nor do we believe that the fact that the bank and not the federal government would ultimately be responsible for the funds paid, had the appellant been successful in cashing the warrant, is sufficient to remove this warrant from federal protection. This technical analysis utilized in
Collins, supra,
has been rejected in most federal cases,
see Rowen, supra, Maxwell, supra, Pavloski, supra, United States v. Daley,
II
Appellant next objects, relying once again upon
Collins, supra,
that the trial court erred in not instructing the jury that
*162
the federal government must suffer some actual property loss for the defendant to be found guilty of violating § 641. Whether or not we would agree with
Collins
that a loss to the government is a requirement under § 641 when a defendant is charged, as was the case in
Collins,
with
converting
federal property to his own use, it is clear that holding has no relevance to this issue. Here, the appellant was charged only with the retention of federal property
with the intent to
convert it to his own use. We believe that in these circumstances the district judge properly instructed the jury on the necessary elements for conviction by reading the relevant portion of § 641 as set forth previously in the margin. Furthermore, even were an actual property loss to the government a requirement in this case, we believe a sufficient loss was suffered from the appellant’s temporary retention and exercise of control over the warrant representing federal government money. The fact that the appellant was unsuccessful in actually cashing the warrant does not, of course, immunize him from liability under this paragraph of § 641.
Pavloski, supra; United States v. Lee,
Ill
Appellant lastly complains
3
that the trial court’s sentence of appellant to ten years in prison was excessive. It is well established, of course, that this court will not infringe upon the trial court’s discretion in sentencing absent a clear showing of gross abuse of that discretion.
United States v. Willard,
In the present case, the ten year sentence, although the maximum, is within the limits of § 641. This is the third time the defendant has been convicted of similar crimes and the trial court properly reviewed and rejected the appellant’s potential consideration under the Youthful Offenders Act. In these circumstances, we refuse to disturb the trial court’s discretion. The judgment of the district court therefore is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 641 provides in relevant part: ****** Whoever receives, conceals, or retains [any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the United States] with intent to convert it to his own use or gain, knowing it to have been embezzled, stolen, purloined or converted— Shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both
. Appellant also relies upon
United States v. Mason,
. The appellant’s remaining contentions regarding prejudice of the jury, conspiracy of the government, and similar arguments are entirely unsupported in the record and therefore are specifically rejected as unpersuasive.
