CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER, District Judge.
Earlier this year, a jury convicted Defendant Shan Shi of conspiring to misappropriate trade secrets from Trelleborg Offshore US ("Trelleborg"), a Houston-based manufacturer of composite foam products used in offshore drilling operations. Dr. Shi is now awaiting sentencing. Prior to the sentencing, the Court is required to calculate Dr. Shi's advisory Sentencing Guidelines range. To do so, it must first set the appropriate offense level. Because the offense involved theft, that in turn requires the Court to determine the financial loss associated with Dr. Shi's conduct. The parties dispute this loss amount. The defense puts it at zero, arguing that there is no evidence that Trelleborg suffered an actual loss or that Dr. Shi ever intended it to. The Government pegs the loss at some $3 million. While it concedes there is limited proof of actual loss, the Government argues principally that Dr. Shi's documented plans to take market share from Trelleborg and other competitors evidence his intent to cause a loss of that amount. The difference matters. A loss finding of zero would leave Dr. Shi at base offense level 6 and result in an advisory sentencing range of 0 to 6 months imprisonment (assuming no other enhancements apply and Dr. Shi has no prior criminal history); a loss finding of $3 million, by contrast, would add 16 offense levels and lead to a recommended sentencing range of 41 to 51 months under the same assumptions.
The parties have briefed the dispute and presented oral arguments on November 12, 2019. For the reasons summarized below, the Court accepts the Government's "market share" approach to calculating the intended loss amount but estimates the amount at the lower figure of $1,050,000. The Court will use that figure in determining Dr. Shi's advisory Guidelines range.
Section 2B1.1(a) of the Sentencing Guidelines establishes the base offense level for theft-related offenses, including theft of trade secrets. The loss table at U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1), in turn, increases the base level depending on the amount of loss suffered by the victim of the theft. The Government bears the burden of producing facts that support the imposition of a sentencing enhancement by a preponderance of the evidence.
"Loss" is defined as "the greater of actual loss or intended loss." U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, app. n.3(A). The Government here does not contend that Trelleborg suffered any actual financial loss, so the Court will only consider intended loss. "`Intended loss' (I) means the pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to inflict; and (II) includes intended pecuniary harm that would have been impossible or unlikely to occur (e.g., as in a government sting operation, or an insurance fraud in which the claim exceeded the insured value)."
In assessing the amount of loss, the "court need only make a reasonable estimate."
The Court begins with the mens rea requirement. In 2015, the Sentencing Commission changed the definition of "intended loss" to mean "the pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to inflict." In making this amendment, the Commission adopted the interpretation of "intended loss" articulated in
The Tenth Circuit took pains, however, to explain that "[o]f course," in analyzing the defendant's mens rea the district court "is free . . . to make reasonable inferences about the defendant's mental state from the available facts."
Applying the Guidelines' intended-loss definition here, the Court finds that the Government has carried its burden of proving that one of Dr. Shi's purposes in conspiring to misappropriate Trelleborg's trade secrets was to cause a financial loss to it and other manufacturers of deep-sea buoyancy products. The evidence of Dr. Shi's plans to pilfer Trelleborg's proprietary design data and testing procedures is more fully outlined in the Court's Memorandum Opinion denying his Motion for Judgment of Acquittal, also issued today. As relevant here, in 2014 Dr. Shi created a company, CBM International ("CBMI"), to produce "syntactic foam" and related products for the deep-sea drilling industry. He staffed the company with former Trelleborg employees who still had access to Trelleborg's proprietary manufacturing data. Those employees proceeded to acquire and use that data—specifically, data related to glass "macrospheres" contained in the foam—to help CBMI (and its Chinese parent company, CBMF) develop its syntactic-foam manufacturing capabilities. The jury found that Dr. Shi had conspired in the misappropriation.
As CBMI was getting off the ground, it created a business plan explaining the market opportunity that it saw in deep-sea buoyancy products. The plan stated that the company's goal was to become "the fifth company in the world that can provide [a] wide range and qualified buoyancy products for [the] offshore oil & gas industry." Gov. Ex. 176 at 30825. CBMI believed it could penetrate the existing market—which was confined to Trelleborg and three other international companies—by creating higher-quality products at lower prices.
As the Government argues, it naturally follows from Dr. Shi's stated goal of taking sales from the existing competitors in the market that CBMI's gain would come at their expense. Because a factfinder may infer a defendant's intent from the natural and probable consequences of his actions, the Court concludes that Dr. Shi intended to harm his would-be competitors by taking sales and market share from them.
Resisting this conclusion, Dr. Shi argues that the Government must produce direct evidence (presumably in the form of a smoking-gun email or the like) indicating that Dr. Shi intended to cause harm to Trelleborg or, at least, evidence that CBMI specifically targeted Trelleborg customers. While such evidence would strengthen the government's case, it is not required for the Court to find, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Dr. Shi intended to cause pecuniary harm to Trelleborg. As discussed above, a court is permitted to make reasonable inferences based on the defendant's conduct in order to assess mens rea.
Dr. Shi also argues that he lacked the intent to purposefully inflict pecuniary harm on Trelleborg because his goal was to grow the overall market for deep sea buoyancy products, which he suggests could have been accomplished without harming Trelleborg. Dr. Shi's argument is belied by the record, which, as discussed above, clearly shows that he set out to acquire market share by "replacing" sales to China by the existing companies and "breaking the[ir] monopoly"—not by seeking out new, unserved customers. Gov. Ex. 4 at 35006-07.
In a similar vein, Dr. Shi argues that he lacked the requisite intent because he actually sought to partner with Trelleborg. As evidence of this supposed partnership, Dr. Shi points to discussions with Trelleborg that began in August 2015 about potentially selling macrospheres to Trelleborg. This argument fails for at least two reasons. First, that Trelleborg may have been interested at some point in buying macrospheres from CBMI does not negate Dr. Shi's stated intent to take sales away from the existing competitors in the buoyancy products markets generally. Moreover, the rest of the record evidence does not bear out Dr. Shi's contention that CBMI only sought to partner with Trelleborg. Indeed, after the discussions between the two companies began, CBMI continued to market products developed using Trelleborg's proprietary data.
With mens rea established, the Court next considers the appropriate method of estimating the loss amount. Taking into account all the evidence available, the Court concludes that a reasonable measurement of the loss amount is the lost profits that Trelleborg would have suffered had CBMI achieved its stated goal of penetrating the market for deep-sea buoyancy products for the oil and gas drilling industry. CBMI projected that it would generate $3 million dollars of profit by its fifth year of operations and that Trelleborg possessed 35% of the market. Given the absence of evidence showing that CBMI sought to target Trelleborg customers specifically, the Court intuits that CBMI's projected profits would be proportionally distributed across the four manufacturers. Therefore, since Trelleborg possessed 35% of the market, it is reasonable to assume that it would have suffered a loss in profits in the amount of 35% of the $3 million, or $1,050,000. Gov. Ex. 176 at 30833-35.
Before concluding, the Court addresses two other arguments advanced by Dr. Shi. First, he contends that his loss amount (to the extent it is found to be greater than zero) should be capped by the lower figures agreed to in the plea agreements of his co-conspirators.
This argument misses the mark. As discussed above, determining intended loss requires assessing a defendant's subjective state of mind. It should come as no surprise, then, that one defendant might intend to cause a different loss than another. That is especially so here, where Dr. Shi was the president of CBMI and set its strategic goals, while Sam Ogoe was merely employed to create the macrospheres that CBMI needed in order to produce syntactic foam for its planned products, and Uka Uche and Johnny Randall were lower-level Trelleborg employees.
Next, Dr. Shi argues that the Court may not use the Government's "market share" valuation method because the Guidelines do not permit the Court to use a defendant's intended gain as a proxy for the intended loss to the victim. This too fails. The Guidelines broadly permit a court to look at the "the available information . . . as appropriate and practicable under the circumstances," including the "fair market value of the property unlawfully taken." U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1), app. n.3(C). Here, Dr. Shi's expected profit from the stolen Trelleborg technology is a reasonable (albeit imprecise) measure of the fair market value of that property.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will apply the loss amount of $1,050,000 for purposes of calculating Dr. Shi's base offense level under § 2B1.1(b) of the Sentencing Guidelines manual.