Victoria Biks and Marjorie Venturella pled guilty to one count of mail fraud and agreed to pay a criminal forfeiture money judgment and restitution. They now claim that the forfeiture amount should have been limited to the amount of the mailing in the count of conviction, and that anything higher was tantamount to an illegal sentence. After reviewing the record, we find no error in the forfeiture calculation. The mail fraud count that the defendants were convicted of also alleged a broader scheme to defraud numerous government agencies of hundreds of thousands of dollars in benefits. As a result, the forfeiture is not limited to the amount of the particular mailing but extends to the entire scheme. Biks also argues, separately, that she should not have to pay the full restitution amount because the loss figures stated in the Presentence Report (“PSR”) were inaccurate, and that restitution should be offset by the amount of the forfeiture to avoid a potential double recovery and double jeopardy. We reject Biks’s challenges to the loss figures used in calculating restitution because she withdrew her objections to the PSR during sentencing and waived her right to raise those same challenges on appeal. Finally, we find nothing amiss in imposing forfeiture and restitution because restitution is not a criminal penalty that implicates double jeopardy, and Biks has not alleged that the victims in this case are also the recipients of the forfeiture, so there is no possibility of double recovery. Therefore, we affirm Biks’s and Venturella’s sentences.
I. BACKGROUND
On August 22, 1980, Victoria Biks gave birth to Paul Venturella, during which he sustained a number of injuries. Paul suffered from permanent brain damage, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, lesion of facial nerves, loss of motor power, and loss of sensory perception all because, the defendants allege, the doctor used forceps to extract him at birth. The injuries left Paul completely disabled and unable to function without full-time care. As a result, Paul’s family filed a medical negligence suit, which the parties settled for $1,237,000.
The Circuit Court of Cook County, Probate Division, had appointed Harris Trust and Savings Bank as guardian of Paul’s estate, and the proceeds from the settlement were deposited with the bank into a trust fund with instructions to disburse $2,500 a month for Paul’s care and maintenance. The court also instructed the bank to distribute: $100,000 to Joseph and Marjorie Venturella (Paul’s maternal grandparents), and $50,000 to Victoria Biks, Paul’s mother, to compensate them for services related to Paul’s care; $50,000 to Biks for expenses made on Paul’s behalf; and $20,000 to Biks to purchase a bed and van for Paul (based on 1983 prices).
The government alleged that Biks and her mother committed mail fraud by obtaining government benefits for Paul’s care, without disclosing that Paul’s trust fund had already disbursed funds for the same purpose. Biks and Venturella applied for various federal and state social security benefits, including: Supplemental Security Income (“SSI”) from the Social Security Administration (“SSA”), a federal cash assistance program for disabled persons, among others, that was only available to those with assets worth less than $2,000; Wisconsin Supplemental Security Income, which had similar requirements to the federal program; and Medicaid. They obtained these benefits by falsely representing that Paul was indigent, hiding the fact that Paul had a sizable estate in Illinois as a result of his $1,237,000 settlement.
A grand jury returned an indictment against the defendants on September 14, *1016 2006, charging them with 30 counts of mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. Biks was charged with two additional counts of social security fraud, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1383(a)(3), and Venturella with one count. The indictment also included a forfeiture charge against both defendants for two mail fraud schemes: $114,313 for counts 1-26, and $301,491 for counts 27-30. The defendants entered into a plea agreement, and pled guilty to Count One, which stated that they received a SSI check for $477.90 from the Social Security Administration that was mailed to Biks “for the purpose of executing [the mail fraud] scheme.” The rest of the counts, to which the defendants did not plead, listed similar mailings, all for the purpose of executing the scheme as well. The defendants also agreed to a criminal forfeiture judgment of $114,313, and to pay restitution with the amount to be agreed upon by the parties or determined by the court.
Before sentencing, however, Biks and Venturella objected to the fraud loss and restitution calculations in the Presentence Report (“PSR”), citing mathematical errors and a lack of evidentiary support for the computations. The probation office issued a PSR Addendum which corrected the mathematical errors, and the government filed a sentencing memorandum with fifteen exhibits providing additional evidentiary support for the loss calculations. Both defendants withdrew their objections. The district court sentenced Biks and Venturella to twenty-four months’ imprisonment, but stayed Venturella’s term of incarceration until Biks was released from custody. The court also ordered the defendants to pay $391,740 in restitution jointly and severally, and issued a criminal forfeiture money judgment of $114,313 against each defendant. Biks and Venturella both appeal the court’s forfeiture calculation, and Biks also appeals the restitution order.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Forfeiture Calculation
The government''sought forfeiture under 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(c) and 28 U.S.C. § 2461(c). Section 2461 “authorizes criminal forfeiture of the proceeds of any offense for which there is no specific statutory basis for criminal forfeiture as long as civil forfeiture is permitted [for that offense].”
United States v. Silvious,
Athough the defendants recognize that they agreed to pay $114,313 in forfeiture in their plea agreements, they now claim that the penalty is excessive. The defendants argue that a criminal forfeiture must be limited to the amount associated with the count of conviction. They both pled guilty to Count One, which, according to the defendants, only alleged fraud for the mailing of a check for $477.90 from the Social Security Administration. As a result, the defendants believe that the district court erred by imposing forfeiture for a larger amount, and that it is tantamount to an illegal sentence which we can correct on appeal despite the terms of the plea agreement.
See United States v. Gibson,
From the structure of the indictment, it is clear that Counts One through Twenty-Six each allege a mail fraud scheme. The indictment begins with the heading “Counts 1-26,” and the subheading “Background.” It then sets out, in numbered paragraphs, the factual background and general allegations of the entire scheme, starting from the date of Paul’s birth, up to the Sawyer County Guardianship proceedings. Following the factual background and general allegations, the indictment provides a chart that specifies the mailings corresponding with each count, which the defendants made “for the purpose of executing” the fraudulent scheme. In other words, each count, from one through twenty-six, alleges that the defendants obtained over $267,000 from their scheme to defraud various government agencies, and each mailing was a separate act in furtherance of that scheme. The government need not prove each instance of mail fraud in order to demonstrate that the defendants participated in a fraudulent scheme; rather, “the mailings need only be ‘incident to an essential part of the scheme’ or a ‘step in [the] plot.’ ”
United States v. Mooney,
Furthermore, contrary to the defendants’ claims, forfeiture is not limited solely to the amounts alleged in the count(s) of conviction. 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(C) authorizes forfeiture for “[a]ny property, real or personal, which constitutes or is derived from proceeds traceable to” the commission of certain specified offenses, including mail fraud. 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(2)(A) defines “proceeds” as “property of any kind obtained directly or indirectly, as the result of the commission of the offense giving rise to forfeiture, and any property traceable thereto, and is not limited to the net gain or profit realized from the offense.” The plain language of the section 981(a)(1)(C) along with the expansive definition of “proceeds” indicates that the statute contemplates the forfeiture of property other than the amounts alleged in the count(s) of conviction.
We have also interpreted other statutes authorizing forfeiture to include the total amount gained by the crime or criminal scheme, even for counts on which the defendant was acquitted.
See United States v. Genova,
The defendants cite
United States v. Garda-Guizar,
B. Restitution Calculation
Defendant Biks argues separately that the restitution calculation is inaccurate due to a number of inconsistencies in the evidence. Biks points to discrepancies between the total unauthorized payments calculated in the PSR and the calculations in the PSR Addendum. For example, the PSR states that the amount of SSI paid out was $110,918, but the addendum lists this amount as $100,918; and the amount of state SSI subject to restitution was $13,395 in the PSR but only $12,825 in the addendum. Biks also claims that the PSR contains additional conflicting information about the number of unauthorized monthly payments for Ensure that Venturella received, and over-estimated the total loss by $136 (approximately one month’s payment).
The government contends that Biks has waived this argument and we agree. Waiver is the intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right, and forfeiture is the failure to make a timely assertion of a right.
United States v. Irby,
Notwithstanding what may have been Biks’s strategy to obtain an acceptance of responsibility reduction, we have recognized that the withdrawal of an objection generally results in a waiver of that argument on appeal.
See, e.g., United States v. Cunningham,
C. Imposing Restitution and Forfeiture
Biks next argues that imposing restitution and forfeiture for the same crime is an improper double payment, which constitutes double jeopardy. But she did not raise this argument before the district court so we review her sentence for plain error.
Gibson,
Ruff
presented a unique situation where restitution, which normally goes to the victim, was payable to a law enforcement agency.
Ruff,
As we noted in
Emerson,
“forfeiture seeks to punish a defendant for his ill-gotten gains by transferring those gains ... to the United States Department of Justice [“DOJ”],”
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we Affirm the defendants’ sentences.
