UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Jamie Gene THOMPSON, aka Jamie P. Thompson, aka Jamie G. Thompson, aka Payton Thompson, Defendant-Appellant.*
Docket No. 14-2631-cr.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Decided: July 13, 2015.
793 F.3d 273
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge
Argued: April 14, 2015.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the BIA’s decision and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Barclay T. Johnson, Research & Writing Attorney (Steven L. Barth, Assistant Federal Public Defender, on the brief), for Michael L. Desautels, Federal Public Defender, District of Vermont, Burlington, VT, for Defendant-Appellant Jamie Gene Thompson.
Gregory L. Waples, Assistant United States Attorney (Paul J. Van de Graaf, Assistant United States Attorney, on the brief), for Tristram J. Coffin, United States Attorney for the District of Vermont, Burlington, VT.
Before: CABRANES, LYNCH, and DRONEY, Circuit Judges.
GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge:
Because the MVRA limits a defendant’s restitution amount to the actual losses suffered by his victims, and because third-party providers of compensation do not qualify as “victims” whose losses may expand the defendant’s restitution liability, the district court erred in ordering Thompson to pay more in restitution than the victims’ actual losses. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s restitution order and remand for recalculation.
BACKGROUND
I. The Fraud
Jamie Gene Thompson has an extensive criminal record that includes at least twelve convictions for fraud- and theft-related crimes. In 2008, Thompson began to work as a home-care attendant for Liddell and Albert Eardensohn, whom he had known for some time through his past services caring for Liddell’s father. Although the Eardensohns knew of Thompson’s criminal history, they welcomed him into their home, entrusting him with their financial records and eventually moving him into the house as a live-in caretaker.
In October 2012, after Thompson flew to California on what he claimed was a family visit, Liddell discovered numerous discrepancies in the Eardensohns’ financial records. She retained an attorney to help investigate the inconsistencies and recoup any missing funds. The investigation ultimately revealed that Thompson had misappropriated tens of thousands of dollars from the Eardensohns. That fraudulent activity included unauthorized withdrawals from the Eardensohns’ investment account at Wells Fargo, unauthorized checks cashed against their checking account at TD Bank, and fraudulent charges on their Citibank credit card.
After the fraud was discovered, Thompson wrote the Eardensohns a series of letters confessing and apologizing for his crimes. In one letter, he promised to send $30,000 to cover his withdrawals from the Wells Fargo investment account, begging Liddell not to “press charges against [him]” because he was “doing everything to make this wrong a right to you.” Thompson subsequently sent a check for $30,000, as well as a second check for $400 “towards the [credit card] charges [he] made.” Both checks were deposited into a restitution account in the Eardensohns’ names.
The Eardensohns’ attorney subsequently convinced Wells Fargo to reimburse roughly three-fourths of Thompson’s unauthorized withdrawals from the Eardensohns’ investment account. Citibank also forgave the full amount of Thompson’s unauthorized charges on the Eardensohns’ credit card.
II. Procedural History
On October 13, 2013, Thompson pleaded guilty to a one-count indictment charging him with access device fraud in violation of
At the sentencing hearing, the parties calculated the total amount of Thompson’s thefts at $65,143.47, comprising $46,308.47 stolen from the Eardensohns’ Wells Fargo investment account, $1,815.50 cashed from their TD Bank checking account, $9,516.50 charged to their Citibank card, and $7,503 in compensable attorneys’ fees. Because Wells Fargo and Citibank had reimbursed the Eardensohns for some of those losses, and because in such circumstances a de-
The parties also agreed that Thompson’s repayments of $30,400 to the Eardensohns should be offset against his restitution obligation. However, they disagreed about how to apply that $30,400. Thompson argued that it should be subtracted from his total restitution amount, leaving him with an outstanding obligation of $34,743.47, to be distributed as appropriate among the Eardensohns and the banks. To the extent that the $30,400 he had paid the Eardensohns and the amounts that the banks had repaid to them exceeded their losses, and left the banks under-compensated, Thompson proposed that the Eardensohns be instructed to remit to the banks any excess monies received from Thompson.
By contrast, the government urged that the $30,400, which had been sent directly to the Eardensohns, could be used only to satisfy Thompson’s remaining obligation to the Eardensohns, not his debts to either of the banks. By that calculation, Thompson would need to make no further payments to the Eardensohns, whose losses of $21,859, had been fully satisfied by Thompson’s check payments, but would still have to pay Wells Fargo and Citibank $43,284.47 in restitution.
The district court (J. Garvan Murtha, Judge) adopted the government’s position. Judge Murtha did not dispute that crediting the full $30,400 against Thompson’s $21,859 debt to the Eardensohns would effectively leave them with $8,541 more than they had initially lost. Nevertheless, he concluded that this outcome would not constitute an unfair “windfall” because Thompson had sent the money to the Eardensohns “voluntarily,” making those funds the Eardensohns’ property to dispose of as they wished. J. App’x at 63. Judge Murtha also suggested that any additional benefit accruing to the Eardensohns was not inequitable under the circumstances, since they had “experienced not only monetary expenses but ... also ... had to suffer through the process of trying to undo everything that Mr. Thompson did to them.” Id.
Judge Murtha thus ordered Thompson to pay a total of $65,143.47 in restitution, with $21,859 for the Eardensohns, $33,767.97 for Wells Fargo, and $9,516.50 for Citibank, with the further addendum that Thomson’s debt of $21,859 to the Eardensohns was deemed satisfied in full by his earlier payments. That order left Thompson owing an additional $43,284.47 to Wells Fargo and Citibank, which, combined with his $30,400 in check payments to the Eardensohns, would result in Thompson having to pay $8,541 more than he originally stole.1
Thompson appeals, arguing, inter alia, that the district court improperly treated the banks as “victims” pursuant to the governing restitution statute and thus erred by failing to offset the restitution due to the banks by the amount Thompson had repaid to the Eardensohns.
DISCUSSION
We generally review a district court’s order of restitution “for abuse of
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (“MVRA”),
Section 3663A, the substantive component, provides that a district court “sentencing a defendant convicted of an offense described in subsection (c) ... shall order ... that the defendant make restitution to the victim of the offense.”
In addition to defining the category of reimbursable victims, § 3663A provides a formula for calculating a defendant’s restitution amount. See
As to procedure, the MVRA provides that any restitution orders imposed under the Act must “be issued and enforced in accordance with section 3664.”
Section 3664 thus merely sets out procedures to be followed, including in circumstances where, as here, a victim receives reimbursement for his or her losses from a third party prior to entry of a restitution order. First,
As both the language and structure of the MVRA suggest, the third-party providers of compensation discussed in § 3664 are not equivalent to “victims” under the Act. Although the MVRA defines the category of “victims” eligible to receive restitution in the substantive provisions of § 3663A, see
Because third-party providers of compensation are not themselves “victims” for the purposes of the MVRA, any losses suffered by those parties in the course of compensating a victim cannot increase a district court’s calculation of the defendant’s restitution obligations under
Accordingly, we have recognized that any restitution paid by a defendant to a third party insurer cannot exceed the amount the defendant could lawfully be ordered to pay the original victim. In United States v. Golomb, a district court ordered a defendant convicted of transporting stolen checks to pay his victim $80,909 in restitution, but failed to consider that the victim’s bank was likely already in the process of compensating its loss. See id. at 791-92. In light of the victim’s imminent reimbursement from a third-party source, we held that the district court’s “restitution order should be modified to provide that if the [victim] has been compensated in full or in part by [the] Bank, then Golomb shall pay [the] Bank the amount [the bank] paid the [victim] (not to exceed $80,909).”4 Id. at 792 (emphasis added); see also Frazier, 651 F.3d at 906 (“[T]o the extent [the third parties] are found to have provided compensation for the [victim’s] losses ..., this amount does not increase the total amount of the restitution order.”); Shepard, 269 F.3d at 887 (“Although ... the [provider of compensation under
In this case, Thompson defrauded the Eardensohns of $65,143.47. He subsequently returned $30,400 of their lost property. Under the plain text of
The government protests that deducting Thompson’s $30,400 repayment from his remaining obligations to Wells Fargo and Citibank will have the anomalous effect of forcing the Eardensohns to use their own funds to repay the banks—a scenario that both deprives the Eardensohns financially and violates § 3664’s provision that “[n]o victim shall be required to participate in any phase of a restitution order.”
To the extent that crediting the full value of Thompson’s $30,400 payments to the Eardensohns against his restitution amount might at some point result in the Eardensohns’ having to repay Citibank or Wells Fargo some portion of their prior reimbursements, that possibility does not unfairly force the Eardensohns to compensate the banks from their “own” property. It simply corrects for the banks’ initial overpayment of the Eardensohns in light of new information about the status of their missing funds. Nor does that possibility violate
In short, because a defendant’s restitution liability under the MVRA is capped at the actual loss incurred by his victims, and because third-party providers of compensation do not qualify as “victims” whose losses can expand that restitution amount,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is VACATED and the case is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings.
GERARD E. LYNCH
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
