Kevin Scott was convicted of bank fraud, of fraudulently using another person’s Social Security number, and of transacting in money obtained through crime (“money laundering” in the broad, which is also the statutory, sense). He was sentenced to 120 months in prison and ordered to pay more than $1.3 million in restitution to the victims of his crimes. He appeals on a number of grounds, four of which, all relating to the sentence, have sufficient substance to warrant discussion. The first is that he received an illegal sentence because the judge thought the sentencing guidelines were mandatory, yet
United States v. Booker,
— U.S. -,
As the government points out, it is unlikely that the judge in this case would have given the defendant a lower sentence had she not felt herself bound by the guidelines. She raised the guidelines range one level, from 87-108 months to 97-121 months, by granting an upward departure, and then sentenced the defendant near the top of the elevated range. But as we pointed out in
Paladino,
a sentencing decision by a judge who thinks herself bound by the guidelines will be, if the judge is conscientious, a sentence relative to the guidelines. The judge will compare the defendant with the average offender in the different guideline ranges, without necessarily agreeing that the ranges are correct. Also, with the guidelines merely advisory the judge can take into account mitigating factors that the guidelines ignored, provided that in doing so she is acting “reasonably.”
United States v. Booker, supra,
But we must decide the other sentencing issues raised by Scott. The Sentencing Reform Act requires resentencing when the challenged sentence was “imposed as a result of an incorrect application of the sentencing guidelines.” 18 U.S.C. § 3742(f)(1). This provision survived
Booker.
See
Pending the disposition of the criminal charges against him, Scott (after a failed suicide attempt) was ordered to reside in a community confinement facility. He was authorized to leave the facility only to consult his lawyer or obtain medical treatment. He repeatedly abused the terms of the leave privilege by falsely claiming that he had an appointment with a psychiatrist, instead using his “medical” leaves not to seek medical treatment but rather to visit his girlfriend and for other purely personal reasons—even to conduct business with another resident of the confinement facility. He also bribed two of the facility’s employees to allow him to protract his leaves. For this misconduct while a pretrial detainee Scott was both denied a sentencing discount for acceptance of responsibility and also given a sentence enhancement for obstruction of justice. He challenges the obstruction enhancement.
Had his pretrial antics complicated the prosecution of the fraud charges, he would indeed have been guilty of obstructing justice; but there is no indication of that. The judge said that Scott’s antics “got in the way with [she meant ‘of] the proper administration of justice in the course of this case,” but what she seems to have meant is that Scott was flouting the court’s authority by violating the conditions under which he was being detained. That he
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was. But he was not, by doing so, making it more costly or otherwise more difficult for the government to prosecute its case against -him successfully, as in
United States v. Maccado,
He further objects to the fact that his sentence for money laundering was increased because he abused a position of trust. He did abuse a position of trust— he concedes that — but he committed it in the course of his fraudulent' schemes to obtain the money that he later laundered, rather than in the course of laundering the money. The relevant guideline provision kicks up the sentence if the defendant abused a position of trust “in a manner that significantly facilitated the commission or concealment of the offense.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3. Scott did that. To commit the offense of money laundering, he had to commit a crime that would give him money to launder; the abuse of trust facilitated his commission of that crime.
United States v. Young,
United States v. Cruz,
Scott also contends that he should not have been required to pay restitution of some $600,000 for audit expenses incurred by the two employers whom he defrauded. After his crimes were discovered, the employers, in an effort to determine how much he had stolen from them, conducted elaborate but not, so-far as appears, extravagant audits of their books. The applicable statute, the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3663A, requires the sentencing court, “in the case of an offense resulting in damage to or loss or destruction of property of a victim of the offense,” to order the defendant to return the property to the owner or, if that is infeasible, to pay the owner (the victim) an amount equal to the loss of value of the property. Id., § 3663A(b)(l).
This measure of relief is less generous than common law damages, since it does not extend to consequences beyond the diminution of the value of the property stolen or damaged,
United States v. Seward,
Focusing on the difference between the damage to the victim’s property and other losses that the victim might sustain creates a more precise line between criminal restitution and common law damages than the more common distinction suggested in the cases between “direct” and “consequential” damages. E.g.,
United States v. George,
Not that the distinction between direct and consequential damages is wholly unrelated to the distinction between criminal restitution and common law damages. If
A
tortiously damages B’s factory, the cost of repairing the factory is direct damages; B’s loss of business while the factory is shut down awaiting repairs is consequential damages. E.g.,
Cooper Power Systems, Inc. v. Union Carbide Chemicals & Plastics Co., Inc.,
The audit fees are on the damage-to-property side of the line. It is true that most (though not all) cases classify attorneys’ fees incurred by a crime victim, which might appear to be the same kind of expense as audit fees, as “consequential damages” that are therefore ineligible for criminal restitution.
United States v. Seward, supra,
To summarize, the conviction and the award of restitution are affirmed, but the judgment is vacated and the case remanded for resentencing.
