United States v. Naseem Y. Sirbel

427 F.3d 1155, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 24020, 2005 WL 2993838
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 2005
Docket05-1276
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 427 F.3d 1155 (United States v. Naseem Y. Sirbel) 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. Naseem Y. Sirbel, 427 F.3d 1155, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 24020, 2005 WL 2993838 (8th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

HANSEN, Circuit Judge.

Naseem Y. Sirbel appeals his conviction on two counts of using the social security number of another. See 42 U.S.C. § 408(a)(7)(B). After a three-day trial, a jury convicted Sirbel on three counts of fraudulently using the social security number of another to obtain a South Dakota driver’s license and identification card and to open accounts at two banks. After his conviction, the district court 1 granted Sir-bel’s motion for acquittal on the charge related to obtaining the driver’s license and identification card, but denied his motion for acquittal regarding the bank accounts. Sirbel appeals the denial of his motion for acquittal on these two counts. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

Naseem Sirbel (Sirbel) and his brother Mohammed Sirbel (Mohammed) entered the United States from Jordan on March 12, 2004. Sirbel was born in Jordan in 1975 and entered the United States on a tourist visa. Mohammed is a United States citizen, having been born here when the Sirbel family lived in the United States in the early 1980s while their father, You-sef, attended graduate school. The Sirbel brothers traveled to Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where their sister lived. Both brothers had with them social security cards that Sirbel stated he had found in his deceased father’s papers. The cards were two of the four that Sirbel said he had found, the other two being issued in the name of his father and mother. Sirbel stated that none of the four had been signed, that they all still had the stubs attached to them, and that he had not looked at or compared the numbers on them prior to coming to the United States.

On March 16, 2004, four days after arriving, Sirbel went to the local Social Security Administration office in Sioux Falls and spoke with John Huntington. Sirbel told Huntington he needed a social security card and number so that he could obtain a driver’s license and open a bank account. Huntington reviewed the documents that Sirbel provided, his passport and visa, and told Sirbel that as a visitor he was not entitled to a social security number. Huntington also told Sirbel that he did not believe a number was necessary to open a bank account or obtain a driver’s license. Huntington testified at the trial that Sirbel was asking to be issued a number, and that Sirbel did not provide a social security card or number to him on that day.

Later that day, Sirbel applied for a South Dakota identification card. When asked for his social security number on the application, Sirbel provided the number _-_5782 2 and signed the form, indicating that all the information he provided was true. Sirbel then gave the application, along with his passport, visa, international driver’s license, and a social security card, to Todd Knudson, a driver’s license examiner. When he began to verify the information, Knudson was notified by the Social Security Administration database that the name and date of birth provided by Sirbel did not match the information associated *1157 with the social security number. The name of the person it was issued to did not appear on Knudson’s screen, only the fact that the name and number did not match. Knudson then asked Sirbel about the card, and Sirbel stated that it belonged to his father. When Knudson informed Sirbel he was retaining the social security card because it had not been issued to Sirbel, Sirbel objected and ultimately the local police were contacted. Shortly after their arrival the card was returned to Sirbel, who again applied for an identification card, based on the same application he had earlier filled out. Sirbel was issued a South Dakota identification card.

Sirbel had arrived in the United States with $20,000 in cash and wanted to open a bank account in Sioux Falls. On March 17, 2004, Sirbel and Mohammed went to the downtown Sioux Falls branch of Great Western Bank and attempted to open a bank account. Sirbel provided the South Dakota identification card he had obtained the day before and the same social security card. He told the bank officer that the social security card was not valid and that law enforcement did not like him to use it. He also stated that his name was just misspelled on the card but that it was his own number. Sirbel was told that a valid social security number was needed to open an account and that he would not be able to do so because the card was invalid. However, Mohammed was able to open an account and the $20,000 was deposited into the account he opened. Sirbel later became a joint account holder with Mohammed on this account.

On March 18, 2004, Sirbel again went to the Social Security Administration office, this time speaking with Vicky Hanf. Sirbel told Hanf that he and Mohammed were concerned that their social security cards appeared “fake” and that they wanted new cards issued. Hanf first reviewed Mohammed’s card. She entered the number on the card into the NUMIDENT database, which contains identifying information attached to the number. The information provided by Mohammed matched the information in the database and he was approved for processing for a new card. Sirbel then gave the card he possessed to Hanf. When she entered the number on the card into NUMIDENT, the information did not match what Sirbel had provided regarding his name, date of birth, parents’ names and other related information. Hanf was also concerned about inconsistencies in the card as to its physical characteristics. She requested that Sirbel provide his immigration and other documents to her. Sirbel replied that he did not have them with him and would bring them in the next day. He then left, but Hanf retained the social security card.

Sirbel returned to the office the next day and provided Hanf his passport, visa, and South Dakota identification card. Hanf informed Sirbel she could not issue a number to him because he was a tourist. As she was entering the social security number he provided her into the system, Sirbel informed her that his father’s name would come up as the person it was registered to, but that it was in fact his number and the Social Security Administration had made the mistake. Hanf replied that this kind of error was impossible and that she was going to retain the card because it was not valid. Sirbel continued to tell Hanf he needed a social security number, but Hanf told him that because he was not eligible to work in the country, he could not be issued a number. She further told him that he did not need a number to open a bank account or obtain a driver’s license. The situation had raised some concerns for Hanf though, and she later spoke to Special Agent Jim Collingwood of the Social Security Office of Inspector General about Sirbel and the invalid card.

*1158 On April 12, 2004, Sirbel applied for a checking account at a Sioux Falls branch of U.S. Bank. As part of the application process, Sirbel again provided the social security number that he had used previously. This number was used to check the financial history of the applicant, and when the bank manager did so, he unknowingly accessed the information for Sirbel’s deceased father, Yousef. Relying on that information and finding no negative financial reports, the bank opened an account with Sirbel.

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Bluebook (online)
427 F.3d 1155, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 24020, 2005 WL 2993838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-naseem-y-sirbel-ca8-2005.