United States v. Aracelis Paredes

87 F.3d 921, 44 Fed. R. Serv. 1408, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 15830, 1996 WL 363411
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1996
Docket94-3913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 87 F.3d 921 (United States v. Aracelis Paredes) 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. Aracelis Paredes, 87 F.3d 921, 44 Fed. R. Serv. 1408, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 15830, 1996 WL 363411 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

A jury convicted Aracelis Paredes of several crimes arising out of her impersonation of an FBI agent. She appeals her convictions on the ground that the district court erred in admitting under Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) evidence of two prior crimes where she impersonated a police officer. She appeals her sentence on the ground that the district court erred in making an upward departure. We affirm.

I

Paredes came up with an idea to make money by impersonating an FBI agent. She would locate a “lame” (defined by Paredes as “an older person who dresses kind of funny”) leaving a store. Paredes would identify herself to the person as an FBI agent. Paredes would then tell the person that they had used counterfeit money in the store and that the FBI believed that the teller at the person’s bank was passing the “funny” money. Paredes would instruct the person to retrieve a significant sum of money from their bank account (close to the total balance), and then she would make off with the money.

In early 1994, Paredes recruited Sherron Green to help her perpetrate the scheme. She showed Green various props, including an FBI wanted flyer, a badge, and a “Special Agent” identification card in the name of “Mary Woods” bearing Paredes’s photograph and fingerprint. Paredes told Green that she had successfully run the scheme before to the tidy profit of $2,000. They tried the scheme once, but it failed because Green had *923 not yet mastered her role as Paredes’s partner, “FBI agent Cynthia Johnson.” Their second attempt turned out to be them last.

On April 7, 1994, Paredes and Green were parked in a Chicago-area mall when they noticed an elderly woman who Paredes said looked like “a good one.” Their would be victim was Bernice Strzalka, a seventy-nine-year-old widow. They followed Mrs. Strzalka from the mall to her apartment, and when she pulled up to her apartment Paredes jumped out of the car and identified herself as an FBI agent. Green followed, likewise identifying herself as an FBI agent. They requested that Mrs. Strzalka let them question her inside her apartment. She assented, and they told her about them counterfeiting suspicions and that Mrs. Strzalka would have to surrender the money she had on her person, $44, so that it could be tested. They found out that Mrs. Strzalka’s savings account contained $752. Because it was too late in the day to go to the bank, Paredes and Green left, telling Mrs. Strzalka they would be in touch with her that evening. It was at this point that Augustus Tabor, Green’s husband, entered the con.

Tabor called Mrs. Strzalka at her apartment, and after identifying himself as “Captain Dan” of the FBI, he told her that the crime lab had confirmed her money was counterfeit. The next morning, Tabor again called Mrs. Strzalka and told her to go to the bank and withdraw $700 from her account. He said a plain-clothes police officer would watch the transaction.

The fact that the FBI wanted almost all the money in her account raised Mrs. Strzalka’s suspicions. She contacted the Chicago police department, and several officers accompanied her to the bank. She withdrew the requested funds and returned to her apartment to wait, along with two police officers, for the “FBI agents.”

Paredes, Green, and Tabor drove to Mrs. Strzalka’s apartment. Paredes told Green and Tabor to go to the apartment and get the money. Chicago police officers arrested Green and Tabor after they entered Mrs. Strzalka’s apartment, identified themselves as FBI agents, and requested the money. Paredes was arrested in her car in the parking lot. In her possession was the “Special Agent” identification card, a badge, and a pair of handcuffs. She told a police officer, “I just did three years in the state of Michigan for the same thing.”

This was not the first instance where Paredes had attempted to con elderly women by impersonating a law enforcement official. In November 1989, she approached an elderly woman at the woman’s home, identified herself as a police officer, and requested that the woman help her in a counterfeit investigation. Paredes asked the woman to withdraw money from her checking account, and Paredes made off with the money. In December 1989, Paredes approached an elderly woman after following her home from a grocery store. Paredes told the woman that she was a police officer, that the woman was passing counterfeit money, and that Paredes was conducting an investigation into counterfeiting. However, Paredes was unsuccessful in getting the woman’s money. Paredes pleaded guilty to a charge of larceny by trick for the November con and a charge of extortion for the December attempted con. She served three years in prison, completing her sentence on January 4, 1993, and her parole expired on March 3,1994.

The grand jury indicted Paredes on five counts. Count one charged Paredes with conspiring, along with Green and Tabor, to falsely impersonate an FBI agent in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. Count two charged Paredes with demanding money while falsely impersonating an FBI agent in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 912. Count three charged Paredes with detaining and searching the property of another while falsely impersonating an FBI agent in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 913. Counts four and five charged Paredes with aiding and abetting Green and Tabor while they attempted to obtain money and to detain and search the person and property of another while posing as FBI agents in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 912, 913. Green and Tabor were also indicted, and they entered guilty pleas. Paredes pleaded not guilty.

Prior to trial, the government filed a motion seeking admission of the two prior convictions under Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) to prove *924 Paredes’s intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, and identity. The district court granted the motion. During the trial, an FBI agent read aloud portions of the transcripts of the two guilty pleas. Immediately preceding that testimony, the district court provided a limiting instruction to the jury. After hearing the evidence, which included testimony from both Green and Mrs. Strzalka, the jury convicted Paredes on all five counts of the indictment.

The government filed a motion requesting that the district court depart upward from the applicable guideline range. The district court granted the motion after finding that Paredes’s criminal history category significantly underrepresented the likelihood of her committing future crimes. In support of that finding, the district court found that Paredes was a habitual criminal not effectively deterred by incarceration and that she had committed almost the identical crime two prior times and prison had not deterred her from committing it again.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F.3d 921, 44 Fed. R. Serv. 1408, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 15830, 1996 WL 363411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-aracelis-paredes-ca7-1996.