United States v. Singh

222 F.3d 6, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 18200, 2000 WL 1022381
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2000
Docket99-2096
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 222 F.3d 6 (United States v. Singh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First 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. Singh, 222 F.3d 6, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 18200, 2000 WL 1022381 (1st Cir. 2000).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

A jury found defendant-appellant Par-amjit Singh guilty of (a) making a false statement to a government agency (in an application for a Social Security card), and (b) possessing a counterfeit immigration document. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 1001(a)(2), 1546(a). Singh appeals. We affirm.

I.

Background

We elucidate the relevant facts in the light most favorable to the government, consistent with record support. See United States v. Houlihan, 92 F.3d 1271, 1277 (1st Cir.1996); United States v. Spinney, 65 F.3d 231, 233 (1st Cir.1995).

On March 24, 1998, the appellant, a nineteen-year-old citizen of India, entered the United States on a tourist visa. This visa bore an Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) B2 classification and authorized the appellant to remain in the United States for six months as a visitor for pleasure, but forbade him to work. Shortly before landing in the United States, the appellant received an INS arrival/departure form (known as an 1-94 form) that likewise reflected a B2 classification.

The appellant stayed for a time with relatives in Delaware. On September 17, he went to the Wilmington branch office of the Social Security Administration (accompanied by an aunt), signed an application indicating that he was a “Legal Alien Not Allowed to Work,” and procured a Social Security card that, consistent with his visa and his B2 classification, prohibited him from gainful employment. He apparently used this Social Security card to obtain driver’s licenses.

The appellant overstayed his allotted six months and remained illegally in the United States after his visa expired. On March 11, 1999, he repaired to the Globe Agency in Brooklyn, New York, paid that firm $300, and left his passport. Eight days later, he returned. A representative of the agency handed over his passport, a counterfeit 1-94 form, and a completed application for a Social Security card that linked the appellant to an unfamiliar mailing address in Nashua, New Hampshire. The 1-94 form showed a bogus Q1 classifi *9 cation 1 and a fictitious visa expiration date of September 1999. To make matters worse, it falsely described the appellant as a legal aben permitted to work.

The appellant then entered a van sup-pbed by the Globe Agency and was transported, along with several other aliens, to a Social Security branch office in New Hampshire. Upon arrival, he signed the pre-prepared application (which, among other things, indicated that he was a “Legal Alien Allowed to Work”), presented the phony documents to Amy Gauvreau (a clerk at the local Social Security office), and sought the issuance of a work-permitting Social Security card. The scheme backfired, however, because Gauvreau became suspicious and called INS agents to the scene. INS agent Kevin Clouthier arrested the appellant after a brief interrogation in which the appellant conversed in comprehensible English.

Although the appellant did not testify at trial, the defense presented evidence designed to show that the appellant lacked guilty knowledge. This evidence included testimony by the appellant’s aunt that she spoke in the Punjabi tongue when communicating with him because of his poor command of English, and that she had assisted him in obtaining his first Social Security card because he lacked proficiency in English. In a similar vein, the defense adduced testimony from a psychologist to the effect that the appellant had a “borderline to low average” ability to understand documents written in English. Finally, the defense noted that the fake 1-94 form had been tucked into the appellant’s passport, and intimated that the Globe Agency had inserted it there without his knowledge.

Asserting that the evidence as a whole failed to estabhsh guilty knowledge, the appellant moved for a judgment of acquittal. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 29(a). The district court denied the motion, and the jury returned guilty verdicts on both counts. The district court subsequently imposed a six-month home-confinement sentence, levied a $250 special assessment, and placed the appellant on probation for two years. This appeal followed.

II.

Discussion

The appellant advances two assignments of error. First, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. Second, he protests the district court’s decision to instruct the jury on willful blindness. We consider these points sequentially.

A.

Sufficiency of the Evidence

The appellant maintains that his motion for judgment of acquittal should have been granted because the evidence failed to estabhsh his guilty knowledge. We review the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal de novo. See United States v. Staula, 80 F.3d 596, 604 (1st Cir.1996). Where, as here, such a motion is premised on a claim of evidentiary insufficiency, it will necessarily fail if the proof, viewed in the manner most congenial to the government’s theory of the case, allows a rational jury to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See id. Such a finding may, of course, be predicated in whole or in part on circumstantial evidence. See Spinney, 65 F.3d at 234.

We start with the appellant’s argument as it pertains to the counterfeit 1-94 form and the consequent violation of section 1546(a). 2 While there is no direct *10 evidence that the appellant knew that the Globe Agency had supplied him with an apocryphal document, the circumstances strongly suggest that he went there for that very purpose. This inference is bolstered by the appellant’s colloquy with Agent Clouthier which, although oriented more toward discovering the genesis of the ersatz form than the state of the appellant’s knowledge, nonetheless supports an inference that the fraudulent nature of the documentation came as no surprise to the appellant.

We need not tarry. The jury had before it the appellant’s admission (to Clouthier) that he purchased the counterfeit 1-94 form and presented it in New Hampshire. The receipt for it was found on the appellant’s person. Moreover, the jury had before it evidence of a furtive course of conduct (e.g., the appellant’s payment of a substantial fee and his travel to a place with which he had no apparent connection to apply for a card that was readily available elsewhere) and evidence that the document flatly contradicted the limitations contained in the appellant’s visa. On this record, inferring the appellant’s guilty knowledge from the available circumstantial evidence fell well within the scope of the jury’s authority to evaluate the proof and determine its impact. See, e.g., Staula, 80 F.3d at 604; Spinney,

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Bluebook (online)
222 F.3d 6, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 18200, 2000 WL 1022381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-singh-ca1-2000.