Venue in a criminal case is not an arcane technicality. It involves “matters that touch closely the fair administration of criminal justice and public confidence in it.”
United States v. Johnson,
I. BACKGROUND
The facts relevant to the issue before us are, for all intents and purposes, undisputed. By statute, the Secretary of State has the authority to “grant and issue passports.” 22 U.S.C. § 211a. The administration of this function is delegable to “passport agents.” 22 C.F.R. § 51.1. Thus, passports may be obtained from the Secretary’s “designated subordinates.” 69A Am. Jur.2d Passports § 23. That classification includes duly designated postal employees, who have delegated authority to accept applications and administer oaths in connection therewith. See 22 C.F.R. § 51.21(b)(4) (noting that a “postal employ *163 ee designated by the postmaster at a post office which has been selected to accept passport applications” is so authorized).
On March 26, 2001, defendant-appellant Angel Edmundo Salinas, a native of Ecuador, appeared in person at a post office located in Brooklyn, New York. The' State Department had denominated that post office as a passport application intake station. Once there, Salinas met with a duly designated postal employee and applied for a United States passport.
To make a tedious tale tolerably terse, Salinas completed the usual paperwork, produced a bogus New Jersey birth certificate as “proof’ of United States citizenship, and paid the stipulated fee. He swore before the postal employee to the truth of the information he had entered on the form (including the false statement that he was a native of New Jersey).
Following the ordinary course, the post office forwarded Salinas’s application to a bank in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Employees of the bank, working under a contractual arrangement with the government, entered basic biographical data derived from the application into the State Department’s computer system and deposited Salinas’s check into a State Department account. The bank then routed the application to a national passport center (the Center) in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. 1 On April '12, 2001, a Portsmouth-based passport specialist sniffed out the fraud and an investigation ensued.
On November 7, 2002, a grand jury sitting in the District of New Hampshire handed up a three-count indictment charging Salinas with passport fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1542, making false statements in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001, and making a false claim of citizenship in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 911. Salinas moved to dismiss the indictment for lack of venue. The district court examined the indictment en gros and denied the motion. As to the passport fraud count, the court apparently concluded-we say "apparently" because the court disposed of the motion summari-iy, cross-referencing an~ earlier unpublished opinion-that venue would lie both in the district in which the application was made and in the district to which it was transferred for review.
In due season, the parties negotiated a plea agreement under which Salinas pleaded guilty to the passport fraud count while reserving his right to challenge the venue determination. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(a)(2). In exchange for this conditional plea, the government agreed to drop the other charges. The district court sentenced Salinas on the count of conviction (imposing a $500 fine and one year of probation) and dismissed the remaining two counts. This appeal ensued.
II. ANALYSIS
The government initiates criminal prosecutions and, thus, has first crack at selecting the venue. When that choice is challenged, the government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that venue is proper as to each individual count.
United States v. Pace,
When a defendant in a criminal case appeals from a venue determination, we review the trial court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error.
United States v. Scott,
It is common ground that a criminal defendant has a right to be tried in an appropriate venue. The importance of this right is emphasized by the fact that it is mentioned not once, but twice, in the text of the Constitution.
See
U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2, cl. 3 (“The Trial of all Crimes ... shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed ....”);
id.
amend. VI (requiring trial of a criminal case “by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed”). Congress has further entrenched these norms by an explicit directive that limits a criminal prosecution to “a district in which the offense was committed.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 18. This rule “echoes the constitutional commands.”
United States v. Cabrales,
The Supreme Court has formulated a set of guidelines for determining criminal venue. If the statute under which the defendant is charged contains a specific venue provision, that provision must be honored (assuming, of course, that it satisfies the constitutional minima). See Travis v. United States,
A
Against an unpainted backdrop-this is, as we have said, an issue of first impres-
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sion in the federal appellate courts — we turn to the text of the statute of conviction. In relevant part, the passport fraud statute forbids a person from “willfully and knowingly mak[ing] any false statement in an application for passport with intent to induce or secure the issuance of a passport under the authority of the United States, either for his own use or the use of another, contrary to the laws regulating the issuance of passports or the rules prescribed pursuant to such laws.” 18 U.S.C. § 1542. The statute contains no explicit venue provision. Thus, we must assay the substantive definition of the crime in an effort to ascertain its nature and essential conduct elements.
See Rodriguez-Moreno,
Here, the plain language of the relevant portion of the statute
2
makes pellucid that a violation requires only two things: (i) the making of a false statement, (ii) with the intent to secure the issuance of a passport.
See
18 U.S.C. § 1542;
see also United States v. White,
Were we to stop here, prosecution would be appropriate in the Eastern District of New York (where the criminal conduct began and where the crime was completed) but not in New Hampshire. Based on traditional principles of statutory interpretation, there is simply no justification for laying venue in a location other than the one district in which all the criminal conduct occurred. Any other result seems inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s directive that criminal statutes must be construed, and venue determinations made, in light of the safeguards that the Constitution imposes.
See Johnson,
B
In an attempt to justify its choice of venue here, the government tries to characterize passport fraud as a continuing offense. This endeavor draws its essence from 18 U.S.C. § 3237(a), which provides that, in certain classes of offenses, venue may be “prosecuted in any district in which [the] offense was begun, continued, or completed.” However, the applicability of the continuation language is limited to offenses “begun in one district and completed in another.”
Id.
Accordingly, the government cannot take refuge in the continuing offense venue provision without answering the logically antecedent question of whether passport fraud can be consid-éred a continuing offense (on these facts, a crime begun in New York and completed in New Hampshire).
See Cabrales,
524
*166
U.S. at 7,
In an effort to carry this burden, the government asseverates that the crime of passport fraud is not complete until the false statement is actually communicated to a person who has authority to approve the passport application. We find this unconvincing. There is nothing in the statute of conviction that suggests that completion of the crime is in any way contingent upon the receipt of an allegedly false application at a processing center as opposed to receipt by the State Department’s authorized agent at a post office intake station. Section 1542 proscribes only one act: the making of a statement. Although communication of the statement may be powerful evidence of the intent element of the crime, the statute is devoid of any flat requirement that the statement be conveyed or communicated to an ultimate decisionmaker. This matters because courts must look at the essential conduct elements of the offense in order to ascertain the adequacy of venue.
See Rodriguez-Moreno,
The government tries to blunt the force of this reasoning in a myriad of ways. None of its theories is adequate to the task. First, the government argues that the crime of passport fraud falls within the penumbra of the “rule” that venue under false claim and false statement statutes is proper both where the falsehood is made and where it is received. This attempt to sidestep the plain language of 18 U.S.C. § 1542 fails because the supposed “rule”— that false claim and false statement statutes are always susceptible to multiple venues — is not a hard-and-fast rule at all. Although some decisions discuss the underlying principle in carelessly broad terms, those comments are best understood as reflecting the idea that when a statute criminalizes the making
and
presentment of false claims or statements, venue is proper either where the proffer is made or where it is received.
See, e.g., United States v. Leahy,
In a modest variation on this theme, the government argues by analogy to other false statement and false claim statutes that passport fraud should be deemed a continuing offense. The problem with this argument is that the purported analogies are not apt.
The government’s most loudly bruited analogy is to 18 U.S.C. § 1001, which criminalizes the making of any “materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement” as to a matter within the jurisdiction of the federal sovereign. It is true that courts
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consistently treat section 1001 crimes as continuing offenses, but that taxonomy is dictated by the terms of the statute. Section 1001 explicitly criminalizes only those false statements that are material.
See id.
When materiality is a critical component of the statutory definition, it makes perfect sense to consider the crime as continuing into the district in which the effects of the false statement are felt.
See, e.g., United States v. Ringer,
The passport fraud statute is a horse of a different hue. That statute does not contain any materiality requirement. Moreover, courts have refused to read a materiality requirement into it.
See, e.g., United States v. Hart,
The government’s proffered analogy to 20 U.S.C. § 1097 is similarly flawed. That statute criminalizes false statements that actually lead to the obtaining of federally guaranteed funds. The consummation requirement of section 1097, like the materiality requirement of section 1001, explains why courts regularly have deemed offenses thereunder continuing.
See, e.g., United States v. Redfearn,
So too 18 U.S.C. § 287, which punishes whoever “makes or presents to any person or officer ... or to any department or agency ... any claim upon or against the United States, or any department or agency thereof.” The case law teaches that, under this statute, venue lies “in either the judicial district where the fraudulent claims were prepared or mailed, or where the claims were presented.”
United States v. Massa,
The government next seeks to bolster its conclusion that section 1542 establishes a continuing offense by embracing the decision in
United States v. Angotti,
The Ninth Circuit held that venue was proper in the Central District of California because that was “where the communication reached the audience whom it was intended to influence.”
Angotti
is of dubious precedential value even in the circuit of its birth.
See United States v. Marsh,
The government’s final argument on this point is that delivery to an intermediary (here, the post office intake station) does not complete the offense. We dismiss this argument out of hand. For one thing, the post office is not a mere third-party intermediary (if it were, the result here might be different). The postal employee with whom Salinas dealt was the Secretary of State’s duly designated agent. See 22 C.F.R. §§ 51.1, 51.21(b). For another thing, we already have determined that reaching a particular audience is not a component of a section 1542 violation; although it may be strong evidence of intent, it is not an element of the offense.
C
The government has one last arrow in its quiver. It contends that a crime can be both complete and continuing for purposes of venue analysis. As a theoretical matter, that proposition is true.
See, e.g., United States v. Cores,
The government posits that even though the crime of passport fraud may be complete when a false application is submitted, it is a continuing offense because the defendant’s intent to procure a passport through fraudulent means does not achieve a point of culmination until the application reaches a person who has the authority to issue the passport. Accepting this view of passport fraud as a crime that continues even after completion would, in our judgment, require a significant (and unwarranted) expansion of the law of venue. We explain briefly.
As said, 18 U.S.C. § 1542 creates a classic point-in-time offense: at the moment that an applicant makes a false statement with the intent to procure a passport, the crime is complete.
See O’Bryant,
To cinch matters, Congress has not provided any hint that it intended venue in such a situation to extend beyond the place of the false statement. That Congress knew how to expand the scope of venue through the substantive definition of the crime cannot be gainsaid.
See, e.g.,
18 U.S.C. § 287 (criminalizing the making or presentment of false information);
id.
§ 1001 (criminalizing false statements that are material). In view of this knowledge, Congress’s silence takes on an added significance.
See, e.g., Central Bank of Denver v. First Interstate Bank of Denver,
We add, moreover, that the Supreme Court has forged a connection between venue and conduct elements.
See, e.g., Rodriguez-Moreno,
D
The upshot is that the plain language of 18 U.S.C. § 1542 makes passport fraud a point-in-time offense, which can be prosecuted at the place of the false statement but not at some different place where the government, unbeknownst to the defendant, has opted to process the application. This determination devolves from our construction of the statute and evinces our unwillingness to torture the statutory text in an effort to expand the list of permissible sites of prosecution. Congress is, of course, free (within -constitutional limits) to alter this situation by amending section 1542 and changing the substantive definition of the crime.
Cf. Brennan,
III. CONCLUSION
Over time, one of the primary concerns motivating the limitation of venue has been the danger of allowing the government to choose its forum free from any external constraints.
See, e.g., Travis,
364 U.S. at
*170
634,
We need go no further. For the reasons discussed above, we reverse the district court’s venue determination, vacate Salinas’s conviction, and remand with instructions to dismiss the indictment without prejudice for lack of venue.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The State Department has established passport centers in various parts of the country. The government represents that most passport applications made in the northeastern states are processed in Portsmouth. It concedes, however, that some are sent to other centers depending on considerations such as case load and backlog. By like token, the Center has occasionally processed passport applications made as far away as California. The record contains no evidence of any set procedure for determining the processing site to which any given application will be forwarded.
. The statute also contains various proscriptions relating to the use of passports secured by false statements. Those "use” proscriptions are not before us, and nothing in this opinion should be construed as a holding regarding venue vis-á-vis such charges.
. Indeed, the government acknowledged at oral argument in this court that it would consider a violation of section 1542 ripe for prosecution prior to the processing of a passport application (i.e., when the oath was sworn" at the post office). Salinas could have been prosecuted for passport fraud from that time forward (and, so, the crime was complete then and there).
See O’Bryant,
