United States v. Horacio Munar

419 F. App'x 600
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 2011
Docket07-4508
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 419 F. App'x 600 (United States v. Horacio Munar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Horacio Munar, 419 F. App'x 600 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Horacio Munar appeals his convictions of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, aiding and abetting bank fraud, and conspiracy to commit money laundering, as well as his 300-month sentence. We AFFIRM the convictions, VACATE the imposition of a six-level multiple-victim enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 2Bl.l(b)(2)(c), and REMAND for resen-tencing.

I

A grand jury returned a nine-count superseding indictment charging Munar with one count of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1344; seven counts of aiding and abetting bank fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1344 and 2; and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h). After a 14-day trial and the district court’s denial of Munar’s motion for a judgment of acquittal brought at the conclusion of the Government’s case, a jury found Munar guilty of all counts.

The district court sentenced Munar to 300 months of imprisonment, i.e., concurrent terms of 60 months for conspiracy to commit bank fraud (count 1), 300 months for aiding and abetting bank fraud (counts 2 through 8), and 240 months for conspiracy to commit money laundering (count 9), 1 and to three years of supervised release, and ordered restitution of $1,683,018.85.

*602 A

The Government’s theory of the case was that Munar, who has dual United States and Argentinian citizenship, and other co-conspirators, perpetrated a large-scale international bank-fraud scheme by fraudulently obtaining checks drawn on United States bank accounts that had been mailed to (but not received by) third-party payees, many of whom lived in Argentina, and presenting them for payment. Through the internet, Munar found “operators” throughout the United States who were willing to accept or clear third-party checks. These operators deposited the third-party checks, which bore forged endorsements, into United States accounts they had opened for this purpose at FDIC-insured financial institutions. The operators then disbursed funds to Munar from these accounts by wire transfers to accounts Munar controlled, or by obtaining global currency cards, as Munar directed. The operators received a cut of the checks’ values. Munar used aliases with the operators, including Oscar Flores, Samuel Berger, Daniel Diaz, and Gustavo Morelli.

B

Several operators testified at trial, including Daniel Barnicle from the Cleveland, Ohio area, who had met “Oscar” in 2002 through the internet message board of a website named something like offsho-rebankingindex.com. Barnicle testified that Oscar had posted on that website’s message board that he was seeking persons to accept or clear third-party checks. Barni-cle testified that he generally communicated with Oscar by e-mail, but spoke to him numerous times by phone as well, and met him in person twice, once in Las Vegas in 2008 and a second time in Westlake, Ohio, in 2005. Barnicle identified Munar at trial as “Oscar.”

Barnicle testified that during the three to four years he participated in this scheme, he received approximately 20 to 30 batches of checks from Oscar, always delivered by either DHL or Federal Express, never by the United States Postal Service. Upon receiving the checks, he would affix his endorsement under the forged endorsement, deposit the checks, access the funds once the checks cleared, and transmit the funds to Oscar, most often by sending him global currency cards.

Over time, a number of the banks Barni-cle used notified him that some of the checks’ endorsements were forgeries. Eventually, the banks closed or froze a number of the accounts, and Barnicle began to use different banks. Barnicle met Oscar in person in Las Vegas in 2003, and Oscar assured him that there was nothing illegal about the business and that it was to be expected that a number of checks would be returned by the banks. At this meeting, the two agreed that Barnicle’s commission would increase from 10 to 17% of the checks’ values.

FBI Agent Smith testified that he began investigating Barnicle in July 2003. The investigation revealed that Barnicle deposited third-party checks intended for payees in Argentina, a number of which were returned. Smith searched FBI databases for similar activity, and found multiple suspicious-activity reports describing similar activity in other areas of the United States.

Pursuant to a search-warrant, the FBI searched Barnicle’s residence on October 28, 2004, and confiscated documents related to the check-cashing scheme, 2 seized *603 computers, files and software, and arrested Barnicle. Barnicle agreed to cooperate with the FBI, gave passwords to his email accounts, and consented to the FBI reviewing his email.

Barnicle called Agent Smith on June 14, 2005, advising that Oscar was in Westlake, Ohio, and that Barnicle and Oscar were meeting at a restaurant. The FBI arrested both men as they left the restaurant. Several envelopes and checks found in Barnicle’s possession bore Munar’s fingerprints.

Barnicle was the only Government witness to identify Munar by sight at trial. However, several other operators, Gordon Cranston and Thomas Parish (who knew Munar as Daniel Diaz and Samuel Berger, respectively), testified that they had spoken by phone with Diaz/Berger 4 to 5 times, and 3 to 6 times, respectively. Cranston identified Diaz/Munar’s voice from FBI tapes of conversations between Barnicle and Munar. Parish testified that he believed Munar’s taped voice to be that of Berger. Both men testified that they got involved in the scheme after receiving emails from a man who said he was from Argentina, seeking to have them deposit third-party checks, which the man sent them by DHL or Federal Express.

Paulo Nogueira testified at trial that he was born in Brazil, is a United States citizen, and that in 2003 he owned a travel agency in San Francisco. Nogueira testified that in August 2003 he opened several bank accounts under the name Jose Silva, an alias he uses, and Mario Mazzei, a man from Brazil. Nogueira testified that Jamie Silva, a long-time client of his in California, introduced him to a man named Juarez, and that Silva told Nogueira that he (Silva) exchanged checks that came from Brazil for Juarez. Silva asked Nogueira to start doing the same, and Nogueira began receiving checks via DHL or Federal Express. Nogueira received a commission. He also kept records of the checks from Juarez, which he gave to the FBI. No-gueira testified that Juarez told him during phone calls that he (Juarez) was in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil.

Jaime Silva testified that Juarez told him that Juarez had to make payments to Ricardo Lombardi, and that he (Silva) had sent Lombardi money by Western Union.

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419 F. App'x 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-horacio-munar-ca6-2011.