United States v. Daniel Mendoza, AKA Daniela Mendoza

262 F.3d 957, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 9185, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19146, 2001 WL 965021
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2001
Docket00-10276
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 262 F.3d 957 (United States v. Daniel Mendoza, AKA Daniela Mendoza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. Daniel Mendoza, AKA Daniela Mendoza, 262 F.3d 957, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 9185, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19146, 2001 WL 965021 (9th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

Daniel Mendoza was convicted of conspiracy, 1 sale of false immigration documents, 2 and impersonating a United States official. 3 He appeals the two-level vulnerable victim enhancement made to his sentence pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b).

Facts

Mendoza won asylum in this country on the ground that he faced persecution in Nicaragua on account of being a pre-oper-ative transsexual. 4 His asylum was rescinded following felony convictions for burglary and grand theft in 1993. He was scheduled to be deported in 1994 but was allowed to remain in the United States when he agreed to act as an informant for the Immigration and Naturalization Services. He also worked as an informant for the Drug Enforcement Agency and the San Francisco police.

In this case, Mendoza, presenting himself as Daniela Mendoza, posed as an employee of the INS and sold false employment documents to illegal ahens. In April 1998, INS raided a workplace, and several illegal ahens who worked there fled into the street and into an adjacent freeway, fearful of being arrested and deported. They avoided apprehension but were fired. Two of the illegal ahens and later a third, approached Mendoza’s coconspirator, Sandra Vasquez, after a supervisor had told them that Vasquez could help arrange papers for them. Vasquez and Mendoza told the ahens that they would help them get “working papers” in exchange for $1,000 each. Mendoza said he worked for the INS as “bait” and knew how to do this.

*959 Mendoza and Vasquez took two of the aliens across the street from the federal building where the INS had its office to get their pictures taken at a photography shop. Then they assisted the aliens with preparing fingerprints, money orders, and filling out applications for the aliens’ signatures. The papers were applications for asylum, not for any kind of “working papers,” but the aliens could not read English and did not know this. Mendoza and Vasquez brought the aliens into the building to exchange the applications and money for “working papers.” They paid Vasquez in the women’s bathroom in the federal building. The third alien filled out the application and paid Mendoza for the false papers in the alien’s home.

The district court imposed a two level upward adjustment on the ground that the victims were especially vulnerable. 5 The judge stated that because he had tried the case, he was relying on his personal observations of the witnesses, as well as the presentence report. Mendoza had been convicted of many thefts, which increased the practical impact of his two level enhancement in this case.

Defense counsel argued that the adjustment could not be imposed under United States v. Castellanos, 6 reading that case as barring adjustments based on treating all persons of a particular targeted ethnicity as vulnerable. The district judge distinguished Castellanos: “This is a different case, in my view, because the vulnerability is not that they are Hispanic; the vulnerability is that they are illegal. They are people who are here under a cloud and therefore they are — they know they must do something.... They are afraid. They are particularly vulnerable because they are here illegally.” The judge recalled “one victim who testified who seemed particularly vulnerable, not very sophisticated at all, very frightened by what was going to happen to her and her family if she had to leave.”

Analysis

The guideline at issue, U.S.S.G. § 3Al.l(b), provides:

(1) If the defendant knew or should have known that a victim of the offense was a vulnerable victim, increase by 2 levels.
(2) If ... the offense involved a large number of vulnerable victims, increase the offense level determined under subdivision (1) by 2 additional levels. 7

An application note defines “vulnerable victim” as a person unusually vulnerable to the offense because of “age, or physical or mental condition, or who is otherwise particularly susceptible to the criminal conduct.” 8 It explains that the subsection at issue

applies to offenses involving an unusually vulnerable victim in which the defendant knows or should have known of the victim’s unusual vulnerability. The adjustment would apply, for example, in a fraud case in which the defendant marketed an ineffective cancer cure or in a robbery in which the defendant selected a handicapped victim. But it would not apply in a case in which the defendant sold fraudulent securities by mail to the general public and one of the victims happened to be senile. Similarly, for example, a bank teller is not an unusually vulnerable victim solely by virtue of the teller’s position in a bank. 9

*960 Appellant argues that the district court abused its discretion because the vulnerable victim enhancement cannot be based on characteristics shared by a class of persons.

The contention is plainly mistaken. The application note itself defines groups of vulnerable victims by class characteristics, such as people who are unusually vulnerable because of age or physical or mental condition. 10 The example of a proper application in the note, marketing an ineffective cancer cure, 11 treats the class of people with cancer as vulnerable.

Appellant argues that we have ruled out class-based vulnerability in United States v. Castellanos. 12 That misreads the case. In Castellanos, we held that the adjustment could not be applied to Hispanics as vulnerable victims, because the pyramid scheme at issue addressed “ethnic pride” and “cultural affinity.” 13 We specifically noted that the adjustment “may be supported by the more generalized finding that the members of a targeted group share a particular susceptibility,” 14 which is to say, that the vulnerability may apply to a class of victims. The holding was that Hispanics were not “vulnerable victims” for the particular crime in the particular circumstances. 15 The guideline adjustment, we held, is directed toward those “in need of greater societal protection,” so that when they are victimized, their special vulnerability “render[s] the defendant’s conduct more criminally depraved.” 16

The case at bar is like United States v. Matsumaru, 17 not

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262 F.3d 957, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 9185, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 19146, 2001 WL 965021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-daniel-mendoza-aka-daniela-mendoza-ca9-2001.