PER CURIAM:
Appellant Sargis Tadevosyan ("Appellant") was convicted of one count of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1349 and one count of aiding and abetting aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1028A and 2(a). The district court denied Appellant's pretrial motion to suppress photographs that were seized despite being outside the scope of a search warrant. The district court also denied Appellant's motion for a minimal role reduction and sentenced him to forty-eight months' imprisonment as to count one and twenty-four months' imprisonment as to count two, to run consecutively.
Appellant raises five issues on appeal. First, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on the merits. Second, he contends that the district court erred when instructing the jury as to the "specific intent" element of the conspiracy offense. Third, he argues that the district court incorrectly denied his motion to suppress the seized photographs. Fourth, he alleges that the district court erred in not applying the minimal role offense level reduction at sentencing. Finally, he claims that the government violated the
In 2010, codefendants Igor Shevchuk and Arsen Bedzhanyan, both Russian nationals, were living in New York City on student visas.
In December of 2010, Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk traveled with Garik to West Virginia. Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk used false identification cards and business papers, supplied by Garik, to open a number of bank accounts in and around Charleston, West Virginia. At one bank—the United Bank in Dunbar, West Virginia—Shevchuk used the name Klim Baykov, along with Klim Baykov's Social Security Number, to open an account for KB Support Group, Inc.
In the spring of 2011, Garik told Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk that they had to return to West Virginia to fix a problem with the wire transfer capability of the United Bank account. Garik informed Bedzhanyan that he would be unable to travel with them, and instead Garik's friend would transport them.
Garik's friend turned out to be Appellant. He picked up Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk sometime in the evening on May 5, or early on May 6, 2011, for the drive from New York to West Virginia. Appellant brought with him the United Bank card as well as the false identification card that Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk had previously used to open the United Bank account. Bedzhanyan testified at trial that when they got into the car, Appellant "made sure we kn[e]w about what we're going there for and everything had been explained to us," and knew that Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk were going to the bank to sign paperwork. J.A. 776.
As they drove through Maryland, a state trooper stopped Appellant for speeding. Before the trooper approached the car, Appellant handed Bedzhanyan the false identification card and the bank card and told him to hide them by pushing them into the gap between the window and the car door. Because Appellant spoke limited English, he instructed Bedzhanyan to tell the trooper that the men were traveling to West Virginia to buy a car.
Once in Dunbar, Appellant had difficulty retrieving the cards from the door frame. Eventually, using a set of tools purchased from a car supply store, he was able to recover them. While Appellant worked, his cell phone rang continuously; Garik was attempting to reach Appellant because Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk were late for their meeting at the bank. Garik then called Shevchuk and told him to give Appellant the phone. As Appellant spoke with Garik, Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk observed him looking at a set of keys.
Appellant then drove Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk to the bank and gave Bedzhanyan the cards and a cell phone, instructing the pair to meet him at a nearby McDonald's restaurant when they were finished. After completing their business at the bank, Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk walked to McDonald's, where Appellant picked them up and told them that he needed to make a few stops, including a stop to pick up mail. Appellant first stopped at a car dealership, where law enforcement agents, who had been monitoring Appellant's movements, arrested all three men.
Law enforcement agents obtained search warrants for seven locations, including the six false-front offices in West Virginia, and the car Appellant had been driving. The agents had previously spotted a car owned by Ara Ohanyan at one of the false fronts and had obtained a copy of Ohanyan's driver's license photograph. The agents had also reviewed a surveillance tape depicting an unnamed individual who rented one of the false-front offices.
When they searched Appellant's car, agents found nine folders in the pocket behind the driver's seat. The folders contained photographs, including pictures of Appellant with Ohanyan and the unnamed individual. In the driver's side door, agents found a set of keys labeled with the false front addresses. When the agents searched the false fronts, they found mail littering the floor and desks of the offices.
After being charged in a two-count indictment, Appellant moved to suppress the photographs recovered from the car. The district court denied the motion as to all photographs depicting Appellant with Ohanyan or the unnamed individual, concluding that although the photographs were outside the scope of the warrant, they were properly seized because they were in "plain view."
During the charge conference, Appellant objected to the district court's jury instruction regarding specific intent, arguing that it "treats it all as a general conspiracy instead of [a] conspiracy to commit a violation of the health care statute or the wire fraud statute." J.A. 619. The district court overruled the objection. After deliberations, the jury found Appellant guilty of both counts. Appellant filed written motions for a judgment of acquittal and for a new trial, both of which the district court denied.
Prior to sentencing, counsel for Appellant informed the government that he had evidence suggesting that codefendant Shevchuk
At sentencing, Appellant argued that this information should have been provided to the defense under
Appellant also asked the court to apply the § 3B1.2(a) Sentencing Guidelines minimal role reduction, arguing that his only involvement in the scheme was to drive two individuals to West Virginia. The court denied Appellant's request and sentenced him to forty-eight months' imprisonment as to count one and twenty-four months' imprisonment as to count two, to run consecutively. This appeal followed.
We first consider whether the district court erred in denying Appellant's motion for judgment of acquittal, an issue we review de novo.
Regarding the conspiracy charge, Appellant argues that the government failed to offer any witness to demonstrate that he was aware that the objects of the conspiracy were healthcare and wire fraud, and therefore failed to prove the requisite mens rea. As to the charge for aiding and abetting aggravated identity theft, Appellant contends that the government failed to show that "Klim Baykov" was an actual person and that Appellant
The government responds that there was substantial evidence that Appellant agreed to be a part of the conspiracy and understood the nature of the scheme, and also argues that it presented sufficient evidence to demonstrate that Klim Baykov was a real person. In response to Appellant's contention that it failed to present evidence to show that Appellant knew that Klim Baykov was a real person, the government submits that Appellant did not make this argument before the district court, and therefore waived it on appeal.
To convict Appellant of conspiracy to commit healthcare or wire fraud, the government had to prove that: (1) two or more persons in some way or manner came to a mutual understanding to try to accomplish a common and unlawful plan to commit healthcare or wire fraud, and (2) Appellant willfully became a member of that conspiracy.
To begin with, Appellant sought assurances from Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk that they understood why they were traveling to West Virginia, namely to facilitate same-day wire transfers out of the United Bank account. Appellant also had with him the false identification card and the bank card that Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk had not seen since they were in Garik's possession, which the pair then used during their meeting with the bank. When stopped by a Maryland state trooper, Appellant instructed Bedzhanyan to hide the cards and to lie about the purpose of their trip to West Virginia. Law enforcement officers found keys to the false-front offices in the driver's door of the car Appellant was driving. Finally, Appellant stated that he needed to pick up mail in West Virginia, and officers found mail littering the false-front offices.
Appellant's focus on the lack of direct evidence regarding his knowledge ignores the ability of the jury to make inferences from other evidence. Both direct and circumstantial evidence may sustain a conviction,
We reach a similar conclusion as to the second count alleging that Appellant aided and abetted aggravated identify theft. Specifically, we are satisfied that the victim of the offense, Klim Baykov, was an actual person. Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk testified that Garik told them that they were opening accounts under the names of real people who had left the country. In addition, the United Bank account was successfully opened using Klim Baykov's Social Security Number. Finally, the government presented a certificate from the Social Security Administration indicating that the Social Security Number associated with Klim Baykov on the bank account actually did belong to a person named Klim Baykov. Together, these facts constitute substantial evidence supporting the jury's finding that Klim Baykov was a real person.
We next consider Appellant's argument that the district court erred in its instructions to the jury as to Appellant's specific intent to commit either healthcare fraud or wire fraud. We review de novo a claim that the district court misstated the law in a jury instruction.
Appellant argues that the instruction given by the court was too general in that it only required the government to prove that Appellant agreed to commit
The instruction to which Appellant objected reads:
J.A. 608. Earlier in the jury instructions, the court stated that the government was required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
J.A. 590. The district court recited these elements again later in the instructions. J.A. 614-15. The court also instructed the jury that "[t]o act willfully in a conspiracy means to act voluntarily and intentionally, and with specific intent to do something the law forbids." J.A. 594.
We conclude that the jury instructions, read as a whole, correctly state the law, including the government's burden of proof. The instruction to which Appellant objects defines specific intent, and thus necessarily contains more general language than the separate recitation of the elements of conspiracy to commit wire and healthcare fraud. The district court's instructions as to the elements of the crime, by contrast, are nearly identical to the language that Appellant suggests is correct.
Appellant's related assertion that the government must prove that he knew he was violating a specific statute is based on a case decided by a sister circuit analyzing a completely different statute.
We next turn to Appellant's assertion that the district court erred in failing to suppress the photographs seized by law enforcement officers from the car Appellant drove to West Virginia. When considering a district court's denial of a motion to suppress, we review the court's factual findings for clear error and legal conclusions de novo.
The district court declined to suppress some of the photographs seized by the agents—specifically those showing Appellant with Ohanyan and the unnamed individual who rented one of the false-front offices—finding that they were in "plain view." Appellant contends that the photographs should not have been seized because they were not incriminating, citing to an officer's testimony at trial that the photographs were not "criminal."
The plain view doctrine applies in "the situation in which the police have a warrant to search a given area for specified objects, and in the course of the search come across some other article of incriminating character."
We agree with the district court that the incriminating character of the photographs was immediately apparent based on the officers' knowledge about the other individuals depicted in them and their connections to the fraud scheme. Before conducting the search, law enforcement agents reviewed photographs of Ohanyan, whose car was spotted at one of the false-front offices, and of an unnamed individual, who rented one of the offices. The agents immediately identified these two individuals in the photographs with Appellant. Because the photographs showed Appellant associating with people connected to the false-front providers, the district court correctly determined that the photographs were incriminating, as they tended to link Appellant with the crimes alleged in the indictment.
It is true, as Appellant contends, that a law enforcement agent testified that there was nothing "criminal" about the photographs at issue. J.A. 204. But it is not clear to us what the agent meant by his testimony, nor does it matter. Rather, the relevant question is whether the photos were incriminating, in the sense that the agents had probable cause to believe that they were evidence of criminal activity.
We next turn to Appellant's argument that the court erred in refusing to apply the minimal role reduction to his offense level at sentencing. Under § 3B1.2 of the Sentencing Guidelines, a district court must reduce the defendant's offense level if it finds that he played a minimal or minor role in the offense. A defendant is entitled to a four-level adjustment if his or her role was minimal,
In determining whether the reduction is appropriate, the "critical inquiry is . . . not just whether the defendant has done fewer `bad acts' than his co-defendants, but whether the defendant's conduct is material or essential to committing the offense."
Appellant contends that the totality of the circumstances, including his lack of involvement prior to driving Bedzhanyan and Shevchuk to West Virginia, the fact that he did not discuss the plan with them during the drive, and the fact that Appellant did not himself set up any bank accounts, indicates that he was the least culpable of those involved in the scheme.
We have already summarized the facts of record supporting Appellant's convictions. Those same facts we think show clearly that Appellant's participation was both material and essential to committing the offenses. We therefore affirm the district court's decision not to apply the minimal role reduction at sentencing.
Finally, we consider Appellant's contention that the government's failure to provide certain evidence to the defense violated the
With few exceptions, the jurisdiction of circuit courts is limited to reviewing appeals from all final decisions of district courts. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Appellant contends that this requirement is satisfied here because the district court "effectively denied" his oral motion for a new trial. Appellant's Reply Br. at 1.
We disagree. The record shows that the court instructed Appellant to file a motion for new trial; nothing resembling a denial of an oral motion occurred. J.A. 911. Appellant, however, never filed a motion, which in turn means that the district court never considered the claim. Accordingly, we lack jurisdiction to review the issue.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.