United States v. Mustafa Mohamed Salama

974 F.2d 520, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 20719, 1992 WL 211489
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 3, 1992
Docket91-5200
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 974 F.2d 520 (United States v. Mustafa Mohamed Salama) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth 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. Mustafa Mohamed Salama, 974 F.2d 520, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 20719, 1992 WL 211489 (4th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM:

Mustafa Mohamed Salama pled guilty under a plea agreement to one count of counterfeiting currency in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 474. The district court sentenced him to 27 months imprisonment and a fine of $25,000.

Appealing his sentence, Salama contends principally that the district court’s findings that the criminal activity involved five participants and that Salama was “an organizer or leader” were tainted by the sentencing judge’s views of Salama’s alien status in this country and of the Sentencing Guidelines. Salama also contends that the amount of the fine is not justified by the record.

After carefully reviewing Salama’s well-presented arguments and the record, we affirm.

*521 I

Salama was a member of a group that agreed to produce counterfeit United States currency in a small row house on East Lombard Street in Baltimore. Pursuing that effort, which extended from March to July 1991, Salama obtained money by wire from Saudi Arabia to purchase $15,-000 worth of printing equipment and supplies, leased the house on East Lombard Street, and participated in preparing photographs and plates depicting United States currency. He worked with Richard Gore, an experienced counterfeiter, who was teaching Salama the counterfeiting process. Salama brought three other friends into the group, Mohamed Aly Mohamed, Mohamed Sedky Mohamed, and Estelle Wienecke.

When the first arrangements were made by Salama to purchase printing equipment and supplies, the United States Secret Service was alerted and it obtained a warrant authorizing the surreptitious installation of video cameras inside the Lombard Street row house where the printing equipment had been installed. For the next six weeks, investigating agents observed Salama at the premises virtually every day and usually joined by one or more of his co-defendants, but not Estelle Wienecke. Richard Gore was at the location approximately half the time and at least one of the other two co-defendants was present about 20% of the time. Salama retained the keys for the premises, opening them in the morning and closing them at night, and he controlled the negatives and plates that were being produced under the tutelage of Gore. Estelle Wienecke, who was a former employee of Salama, assisted only in procuring green ink (matching the color of the serial numbers on United States currency) and in contributing $3,000 in funds to the enterprise.

On July 1, 1991, the grand jury indicted Salama, Gore, Mohamed Aly Mohamed, and Mohamed Sedky Mohamed in six counts, and it indicted Wienecke in one conspiracy count. * In accordance with a plea agreement, Salama pled guilty to one count and was sentenced to 27 months imprisonment and fined $25,000. In sentencing Salama, the district court enhanced his offense level by four levels under U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a), finding that Salama was an organizer or leader of a criminal activity consisting of five or more participants.

II

Salama contends that the district court based its findings that Salama was an organizer or leader of a criminal activity involving five persons on “the thinnest of evidence” and that the court’s consideration of Salama’s alien status (he is an Egyptian citizen) and the judge’s personal view that the Sentencing Guidelines established a punishment that was inadequate for the offense prompted the court improperly to find against him on these issues, leading to a four-step offense level adjustment. See U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a). As the result, Sala-ma’s sentence was increased by 12 months. Salama contends that Gore, who was the only member of the group who knew how to counterfeit currency, was in reality the leader and that Wienecke was not part of the enterprise.

During sentencing the district judge stated:

These are people who designedly try to steal from our country in a way that probably works, that is probably very, very effective in order to enrich themselves, and I find that Mr. Salama was the main organizer.
He was the money man. He was the person who put it together.
He was a guest in this country and I presume he got a lot out of this country, as we all do, and many of us or most of us get a lot from this country and put a lot back into it, so I find it was a deliberate attempt to steal from this country in *522 a way that is really stealing from all of us.
(Emphasis added.) Commenting on the Sentencing Guidelines, the court stated:

I guess there is a lot of things that trouble me about the Guidelines. One thing about the Guidelines is when you see a situation like this, in which I find, myself shocked that the Guideline level is as low as it is.

This is a major crime.

(Emphasis added.)

Salama relies on the decisions in United States v. Borrero-Isaza, 887 F.2d 1349 (9th Cir.1989) (remanding the case for resen-tencing because the court believed that the district court “partially based the sentence on Borrero’s national origin”), and United States v. Gomez, 797 F.2d 417 (7th Cir.1986) (stating that it “obviously would be unconstitutional” for a defendant to be sentenced more harshly on the basis of nationality or alien status), to contend that alien-age is an improper consideration in sentencing, and on our decision in United States v. Bakker, 925 F.2d 728 (4th Cir.1991) (remanding the case for resentencing because the district judge stated that the defendant “had no thought whatever about his victims and those of us who do have a religion are ridiculed as being saps from money-grubbing preachers or priests”), to contend that the personal views of the sentencing judge have no proper role in sentencing.

The government notes that substantial evidence supports the district court’s findings in this case and contends that any comment by the court did not motivate the court in passing sentence. The court sentenced Salama at the middle of the sentencing range given by the Sentencing Guidelines. Moreover, the district court sentenced Salama’s co-defendant, also an Egyptian citizen, to six months in a halfway house, departing downward over the government’s objection.

When the record as a whole is considered, we agree that any impropriety of the district court’s remarks did not infect the sentence. The district court was particularly affected by the diligence and hard work with which Salama pursued the counterfeiting enterprise, as was clearly depicted by the videotapes. While co-defendant Gore was the most experienced counterfeiter in the group and was attempting to teach Salama and the others how to counterfeit currency, there can be little doubt that Salama was an organizer and leader.

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Bluebook (online)
974 F.2d 520, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 20719, 1992 WL 211489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mustafa-mohamed-salama-ca4-1992.