United States v. Al Shahin, Hayfa

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 2007
Docket05-2573
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Al Shahin, Hayfa (United States v. Al Shahin, Hayfa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Al Shahin, Hayfa, (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

Nos. 05-2573 & 05-2589 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

HAYFA KHTHER AL-SHAHIN AND RIYADH L. AL-SHAHIN, Defendants-Appellants. ____________ Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 03 CR 567—John F. Grady, Judge. ____________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 8, 2006—DECIDED JANUARY 25, 2007 ____________

Before EASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and CUDAHY and MANION, Circuit Judges. MANION, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted Riyadh Al- Shahin and his wife Hayfa Al-Shahin of mail fraud stem- ming from their involvement in a scheme to collect money from an insurance company for a fraudulent automobile accident. The Al-Shahins appeal, claiming that the dis- trict court erred in admitting certain testimony at trial, in refusing to give two jury instructions, and in failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing regarding extrajudicial juror communications. They also contest an enhancement 2 Nos. 05-2573 & 05-2589

to their sentences for the amount of loss. We affirm their convictions and sentences.

I. To combat staged accidents and automobile insurance fraud, the Federal Bureau of Investigation initiated an undercover operation known as “Soft Tissue.” The name derives from soft tissue injuries, which are musculoskeletal injuries that do not necessarily present objective symp- toms for diagnosis, unlike bruising or broken bones. Since the symptoms consist primarily of a subjective component (such as complaints of pain) they are easier to fake, and hence favored when making fraudulent claims. Operation Soft Tissue investigated fraudulent car ac- cidents in which conspirators staged accidents and then profited by making claims for damage to the cars and inflated medical bills for individuals, including some individuals who may not have even been in the cars dur- ing the collision. In conducting the investigation, the FBI established a law office for agent James Whitmer, a licensed Illinois attorney. With permission from the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission, an agency of the Illinois Supreme Court, Whitmer posed as attorney “James Kent,” whose mission was to find and represent clients in set- tling fraudulent accident claims with various insurance companies. Assisting the investigation and posing as the office manager was cooperating witness David Youhanna. Youhanna had participated in staging accidents for al- most a decade and, after a hiatus from his involvement, agreed to cooperate with the government in the investiga- tion. To ensure that the claims processed through the Nos. 05-2573 & 05-2589 3

office were fraudulent, agent Whitmer never advertised, relying instead on Youhanna’s recruitment of fraudulent cases and word-of-mouth. Whitmer also insisted on see- ing the insurance policy for the at-fault vehicle before the accident occurred for further evidence that the accident was staged. The incidents surrounding the particular accident at issue began on July 7, 1997, when two organizers of staged accidents (known as “chasers,” since they orig- inally chased ambulances to hospitals to recruit claims), Karnick Karamian and Raul Mejia, brought agent Whit- mer an American Family Insurance policy belonging to Robert David and proposed to stage an accident on the policy. Those chasers, however, were displaced by a different chaser, Tidy Oshana, who arranged an accident on Robert’s policy. The accident occurred in the late night hours of July 13, 1997 or the early morning hours of July 14, 1997, which was a Sunday to Monday. Notably, the majority of staged accidents occur at this time of the week, because there are fewer potential witnesses and because it is easier to coordinate the participants in the scheme. In this particular accident, Robert, with his father Michael David as a passenger, allegedly missed a stop sign and collided with a vehicle driven by Mrs. Al-Shahin with her husband and daughter as passengers. There were no witnesses to the accident. The Al-Shahins went to the hospital, where they made a police report. Robert, ac- companied by his father, made a similar police report at a police station that night. Michael, Robert’s father, later testified at trial that he had been involved in a number of staged accidents. Since he had participated as an at-fault driver in previous staged 4 Nos. 05-2573 & 05-2589

accidents, this accident had to be staged in his son’s name to avoid raising suspicions with the insurance companies. Michael testified that on the night of the accident, he actually drove his son’s car to a restaurant where he gave the keys to Oshana, who in turn gave them to an unknown party. After an hour, the car returned to the restaurant with damage to the front, consistent with a collision from running a stop sign. Robert, the purported driver, also testified at trial that he was never involved in a collision on the night of the accident. Instead, Robert recalled his father returning home that night with the damaged car. His father directed Robert to make a police report and accompanied him to the police station where Robert recited details provided by his father, including the fact that Robert drove the car, missed a stop sign, and collided with the Al-Shahins. A few days after the accident, Youhanna, the office manager, encountered Tidy Oshana at a medical center where Youhanna had gone to investigate doctors willing to cooperate with fraudulent claims. Oshana stated that he had a case with three individuals, a husband, a wife, and a daughter, that he would be willing to refer to Youhanna and Whitmer. The family wanted money “up- front” and the insurance involved was a policy from American Family. A few days later, Oshana and another chaser, Johnson Bavella, accompanied the Al-Shahins and their daughter to Whitmer’s office, the same office where Whitmer had approved, prior to the accident, Robert David’s American Family insurance policy on which the Al-Shahins now sought to make a claim. The Al- Shahins then met with Youhanna, signed attorney-client agreements, released their medical records, and executed promissory notes for an advance from the attorney. Nos. 05-2573 & 05-2589 5

Whitmer issued checks to the Al-Shahins, providing them with money up-front for their claims. Whitmer then pursued settlement of their claims. He obtained their medical records from the emergency room and the clinic where the Al-Shahins received therapy. The Al-Shahins received therapy approximately three or four times each. The Al-Shahins, however, following instruc- tions, signed in on a blank clinic form twenty-one times each. The medical center then billed for substantially more therapy than they each received, but Whitmer negotiated with the center to pay only half of the charges. Whitmer then mailed a demand letter to the insurance company on behalf of the Al-Shahins. The insurance company subsequently mailed settlement checks to Whitmer for the Al-Shahins on June 4, 1998. The checks for personal injuries totaled $17,250. The Al-Shahins signed releases, which Whitmer then mailed back to the insurance company on their behalf on June 16, 1998. A grand jury indicted both Hayfa and Riyadh Al-Shahin for two counts of mail fraud for the mailing of the settle- ment checks and the releases. 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341-42. The Al-Shahins pleaded not guilty and, at trial, argued that they were involved in a real accident and that their part of the collision was not staged. Instead, they claimed to have been at the wrong intersection at the wrong time. The jury found otherwise and convicted each on both counts.

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United States v. Al Shahin, Hayfa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-al-shahin-hayfa-ca7-2007.