United States v. Matthew Keirans

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2026
Docket25-1339
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Matthew Keirans (United States v. Matthew Keirans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Matthew Keirans, (8th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 25-1339 ___________________________

United States of America

Plaintiff - Appellee

v.

Matthew David Keirans, also known as William Donald Woods, also known as William D. Woods

Defendant - Appellant ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa - Eastern ____________

Submitted: March 16, 2026 Filed: April 23, 2026 ____________

Before COLLOTON, Chief Judge, GRUENDER and KOBES, Circuit Judges. ____________

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

By all appearances, a man who went by the name William Woods had turned his life around. Three decades ago, he was homeless and worked at a hotdog cart. But then the man got married and had a child. He opened up bank accounts, received credit lines, and started working at a hospital, where he became “the key administrator of critical systems” and earned more than $100,000 per year. There was just one problem: Although William Woods is a real person, the man is not that person.

Instead, the man’s name is Matthew Keirans. Keirans met the real Woods in the late 1980s; Woods was Keirans’s coworker at the hotdog cart. From then on, Keirans used Woods’s identity in virtually every aspect of his life. Keirans obtained employment, insurance, a social security card, driver’s licenses, titles, loans, and credit using Woods’s identity. Keirans paid taxes under Woods’s identity. When Keirans stole a car, authorities issued an arrest warrant in Woods’s name, and when Keirans stole another car, authorities arrested and booked him under Woods’s name. Although Keirans got married, his wife did not know his real name, and their child bore Woods’s surname. Keirans obtained his job at the hospital by using fictitious identification documents, all in Woods’s name. While employed at the hospital, Keirans continued obtaining credit union loans, using Woods’s actual social security number and date of birth. And then Woods intervened.

In August 2019, Woods, then homeless and transient, entered a bank branch in California and informed the assistant branch manager that someone, using his identity, had obtained lines of credit and accumulated a large amount of debt. Woods provided his social security card, whose number matched the social security number associated with Keirans’s fraudulent accounts at that bank. However, upon reviewing the accounts’ information, the assistant branch manager noted that the address associated with the account was not a California address, but a Wisconsin address—Keirans’s address. And when the assistant branch manager asked Woods several security questions, he was unable to answer them correctly. Concerned, the assistant branch manager called the telephone number associated with the fraudulent accounts. Keirans answered.

Keirans instructed that no one in California should have access to the bank accounts. After Keirans correctly answered the assistant branch manager’s security questions, the assistant branch manager called the police. Police officers spoke with Keirans over the phone, who told them that he did not give anyone in California -2- access to his bank accounts. Keirans then faxed the officers copies of a social security card, driver’s license, and birth certificate—all stating that his name was William Woods. And so it was Woods—not Keirans—who the police arrested for identity theft.

Keirans told the police that he “wishe[d] to prosecute” Woods for “using his identity.” The police therefore forwarded the case to the county prosecutor’s office, which charged Woods with felony crimes of identity theft and false impersonation. Throughout the ensuing state court criminal proceedings, Woods insisted that his name was “William Woods” not “Matthew Keirans.” After Woods’s public defender and an evaluating physician expressed concerns about his competency, the state court determined that Woods was not mentally competent to stand trial and ordered that he be placed in a mental hospital and receive psychotropic medication. In March 2021, Woods was convicted of the felony charges. The state court sentenced Woods to time served and ordered that Woods “use only [his] true name, ‘Matthew Keirans.’” In total, Woods spent 428 days in jail and 147 days in a mental hospital.

After his release, Woods continued fighting to reclaim his identity. Keirans, meanwhile, continued insisting to law enforcement that he was “William Woods” and that Woods was “Matthew Keirans.” In January 2023, Woods contacted the hospital where Keirans worked, informing its security department that Keirans had stolen his identity. A hospital employee referred Woods’s complaint to the local law enforcement, which assigned an experienced detective to investigate the complaint.

Gradually, the detective unraveled Keirans’s deception. Using DNA evidence, the detective proved conclusively that Woods, not Keirans, is the true “William Woods.” In July 2023, the detective confronted Keirans with this evidence. At that point, Keirans admitted that he had used Woods’s identity for several decades, produced false documents, and lied to law enforcement.

-3- Keirans pleaded guilty to making a false statement to a National Credit Union Administration insured institution, see 18 U.S.C. § 1014, and aggravated identity theft, see 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(1). The district court 1 calculated an advisory sentencing guidelines range of 12 to 18 months’ imprisonment, followed by a mandatory term of 24 months’ imprisonment, see id. After considering all the 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors, the district court varied upwards and imposed a sentence of 144 months’ imprisonment, along with fines, restitution, and special conditions of supervised release.

When explaining its sentence, the district court emphasized the “unique, unusual, and egregious” nature of Keirans’s offenses. Keirans, the district court explained, had used Woods’s identity to evade prosecution for his car thefts. Keirans then “intentionally sought the prosecution and incarceration of” Woods, “manipulat[ing] the criminal justice system to prosecute an innocent man.” This aspect of Keirans’s offense, the district court concluded, “is reflected nowhere in the guidelines whatsoever.” The district court continued, “[t]he fact that the defendant lied repeatedly to law enforcement officers” is also not “fully reflected in the guidelines.” And, the district court noted, Keirans “still seems to have not recognized what he’s done to an individual or apologized directly to that individual.”

The district court then outlined the special conditions of supervised release. The district court noted that, as indicated by the presentence investigation report and an affidavit submitted by Keirans’s wife (“the affidavit”), Keirans had reported a history of attempted suicide. Thus, the district court ordered Keirans to “participate in a mental health evaluation” and “complete any recommended treatment program.” Further, noting that Keirans had a history of substance abuse, the district court ordered that Keirans must “participate in a substance abuse evaluation” and “complete any recommended treatment program.”

1 The Honorable C.J. Williams, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Iowa. -4- Keirans filed this appeal, arguing that the district court (1) imposed a substantively unreasonable term of imprisonment, and (2) improperly based the special conditions of supervised release on his conduct from long ago. We affirm.

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United States v. Matthew Keirans, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-matthew-keirans-ca8-2026.