United States v. Mei, Shou Z.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2003
Docket01-2559
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Mei, Shou Z. (United States v. Mei, Shou Z.) 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. Mei, Shou Z., (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

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

No. 01-2559 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v.

SHOU Z. MEI, Defendant-Appellant. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 00 CR 128-1—Ronald A. Guzman, Judge. ____________ ARGUED SEPTEMBER 18, 2002—DECIDED JANUARY 9, 2003 ____________

Before BAUER, MANION, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Shou Mei pleaded guilty to six felonies stemming from his role in a conspiracy to com- mit fraud using counterfeit credit cards, and now chal- lenges the calculation of the financial loss used to deter- mine his sentences. Although he conceded stealing nearly $600,000, the district court determined that Mei intended to cause a loss of more than $1.9 million. Most of the cred- it cards involved in the conspiracy were never recovered, so the district court estimated Mei’s intended loss by multiplying the average maximum credit limit of the re- covered cards with known credit limits by the total num- ber of cards used during the conspiracy. Mei contends that the method used by the district court to calculate 2 No. 01-2559

the loss was not reasonably reliable, and that the ac- tual financial losses he caused more reasonably reflect the harm. We affirm. The story begins in early 1999, just after Mei was re- leased from federal custody in Ohio after serving time for attempted credit card fraud (his second credit card fraud-related federal conviction, it turns out). Under pres- sure to make good on his gambling debts, Mei returned to Chicago to raise cash. His fund-raising scheme involved having accomplices place “skimmers,” portable data stor- age devices that capture information from the magnetic strip on the back of a credit card, in Chinese restaurants, where corrupt cashiers and servers would swipe the cards of unsuspecting diners. Mei downloaded the information from the skimmers onto a computer that he used to pro- duce counterfeit credit cards and matching identifica- tion. On May 17, 1999, Mei gave four cards bearing the name “Xin Chan” to an accomplice, Lau Ming, who tried to use the cards at a Marshall Field’s department store in Calumet City, Illinois. The cards did not work and were confiscated. Mei gave four more “Xin Chan” cards to another accomplice (and a future government informant) known only as “Person A,” who attempted the same fraud at the same store. Again the cards did not work and were confiscated. Mei continued to produce cards, how- ever. Ming, along with another future government infor- mant known as “Person D,” successfully purchased $231 in cigarettes from a Wal-Mart in Bloomingdale, Illinois. Ming and Person D then attempted to buy a $400 camera at a nearby K-Mart, but the cards were rejected and con- fiscated. Later, Ming and Person D obtained over $800 in cigarettes from a Highland, Indiana, Cigarette Dis- count Outlet using cards bearing the name “Jin Lang.” Between April and June 1999, Ming eventually charged over $50,000 with cards supplied by Mei. No. 01-2559 3

On June 15, 1999, Mei hosted a meeting of Ming, Person D, and accomplices Chris Huang, Zhou Li, and Nom Tin Chan. There, Mei introduced a profit-sharing arrange- ment by which he would distribute to each of them coun- terfeit credit cards and matching identification, and in turn each would use the cards to obtain cash or goods that Mei could trade for cash on the illegal market. Any per- son able to obtain $12,000 or more would share in the pro- fits of the scheme. In addition, Mei urged the crew to place his skimmers in restaurants, and offered to pay $20 for each stolen credit card number. At the same time, Mei was trafficking counterfeit cards to persons operating in Ohio. One of his Ohio contacts, a government informant known as “Person C,” bought 30 cards and matching identification from Mei in Chicago, returned to Ohio, and made approximately $12,000 in bo- gus purchases. Mei then delivered 30 more cards to Per- son C in Ohio, who charged another $12,000. On another occasion, Person C and another informant known as “Person B” met Mei outside of a McDonald’s restaurant in Highland, Indiana, where they gave Mei $16,300 for 20 cards and matching identification. Through the end of 1999, Mei sold Persons B and C approximately 130 cards along with several matching driver’s licenses and at least two skimmers for about $40,000. And by November 1999, Person B had obtained over $33,000 with the cards, in part by taking out cash advances at Indiana riverboat casinos. The scheme continued into the following year. In early February, Mei arranged to deliver 20 cards and matching identification to Person A. Then, on February 19, 2000, Mei and Chris Huang ordered $30,000 in computer equipment from Urban Computer in Chicago, telling the salesperson that they were starting an internet business. They arranged to pay for and pick up the equipment the next day. Mei, Ming, Huang, Zhou Li, Nom Tin Chan, and Person A met at Mei’s home the next morning. Mei distributed 20 cards 4 No. 01-2559

each to Ming, Li, Chan, and Person A, and at noon they boarded vans and proceeded to Urban Computer. Mei remained in one of the vans, but directed Huang to negoti- ate the remainder of the sale. Although many of the 80 cards did not work, Ming, Li, Chan, and Person A produced card after card until they found some that did work. Eventually, Ming charged $11,550, Li charged $8,550, and Person A charged $10,050. As they loaded up the vans and prepared to do additional “shopping,” federal agents, tipped off by Person A, intervened and arrested everyone. Mei was indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit cred- it card fraud, trafficking in one or more credit cards, possessing fifteen or more counterfeit credit cards, plus three counts of aiding and abetting the use of counter- feit credit cards. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 1029(a)(1), (a)(3), (b)(1). Huang, Ming, Li, and Chan were named in the same indictment as co-conspirators. Persons B and C later told the government that the object of the scheme was simply to steal as much as possible by using each card up to its credit limit or until it no longer functioned. Mei eventually pleaded guilty to the indictment with- out a plea agreement with the government. Sentences for fraud crimes are based in part on the amount of financial loss, and at Mei’s sentencing the government urged the district court to set the loss at $1,918,172.27, which it argued was a reasonable estimate of the sum of the maxi- mum credit limits of all of the counterfeit credit cards used during the conspiracy. The government had to estimate the total amount of credit placed at risk in this case be- cause most of the cards involved in the conspiracy were never recovered, and also because some of the issuing fi- nancial institutions did not cooperate with investigators. To determine the average maximum credit limits of all of the cards, the government first separated the cards with known credit limits into three categories based on when or where the cards were used or seized. The first category No. 01-2559 5

included all cards with known credit limits used or seized in May or June 1999; the second included cards with known credit limits seized in Ohio; and the third included those with known credit limits used or seized on February 20, 2000. The government excluded from its calculation two cards with unusually high credit limits of over $157,000 and $75,000. The government then multiplied the average maximum credit limits of the cards with known limits in each category—$12,066.67, $6,942.86, and $12,864.64, respectively—by the total number of cards known to have been used for each category—25, 160, and 34, respec- tively—and added the results for a total of $1,918,172.27.

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