SCOTUS Questions the Government's Absurdly Broad Definition of 'Aggravated Identity Theft'
According to the Justice Department's reading of the law, the crime need not involve impersonation or even fraud.

Back in 2004, Congress decided to tackle the problem of "identity theft." It was responding to much-publicized cases in which criminals obtained credit cards in other people's names, sticking them with the resulting bills and hurting their credit ratings. But instead of focusing on that paradigmatic situation and crimes of a similar nature, Congress passed the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act, which prescribed a two-year mandatory minimum sentence for "aggravated identity theft." The law's definition of that crime is so broad that it can be read to cover myriad minor offenses that are nothing like identity theft as it is generally understood.
Naturally, the federal government favors a sweeping interpretation of the statute, which gives prosecutors more power to coerce guilty pleas. Under the Justice Department's reading, defendants who otherwise might pay fines and/or receive probation for low-level fraud can instead go to prison for two years. But during oral arguments this week in Dubin v. United States, a wide range of justices pushed back against that interpretation, noting that it produces absurd results.
The case involves David Dubin, who worked for a business that performs psychological testing of Texas teenagers living in emergency shelters. Dubin was accused of submitting a fraudulent Medicaid claim for a client who was tested by a licensed psychological associate in April 2013. According to the government, the claim misrepresented the services in three ways: It said the testing had been done by a licensed psychologist, which increased the reimbursement by $101; it said the testing happened in May rather than April; and it rounded up the time required for the evaluation from two-and-a-half hours to three hours.
A jury convicted Dubin of health care fraud under 18 USC 1347, which can be punished by a fine and/or up to 10 years in prison. Based on the same conduct, the jury also convicted him of aggravated identity theft under 18 USC 1028A, triggering the two-year mandatory minimum. Although the trial court said "this doesn't seem to be an aggravated identity theft case," it concluded that 5th Circuit precedent required judges to pretend otherwise.
On appeal, the gist of Dubin's argument was straightforward: I did not commit identity theft, so how can I be guilty of identity theft? The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit gave its answer last March.
The law says a defendant is guilty of aggravated identity theft when he "knowingly transfers, possesses, or uses, without lawful authority, a means of identification of another person…during and in relation to" one of many predicate offenses, including health care fraud. As the 5th Circuit saw it, Dubin used "a means of identification of another person"—the client's name and Medicaid ID number—when he submitted the disputed claim. And although he was generally authorized to use that information when he submitted Medicaid claims, the appeals court said, he did not have "lawful authority" to use it in connection with a fraudulent claim.
As Dubin's lawyers note in their Supreme Court briefs, that understanding of the law, which they call "the epitome of overcriminalization," conflicts with narrower interpretations adopted by several other federal appeals courts. When Justice Department lawyer Vivek Suri tried to defend the government's interpretation this week, it was rough going.
Justice Neil Gorsuch wondered how the government's definition of aggravated identity theft would apply to credit card charges in a restaurant. "If the government's theory is correct," he said, "and every time I order salmon at a restaurant I'm told it's fresh, but it's frozen, and my credit card is run for fresh salmon, that's identity theft." He might have added that no such charge would be possible if he paid for the salmon in cash, even though the injury would be exactly the same.
According to the government's reading of the law, Gorsuch noted, all sorts of allegedly improper charges could be treated as aggravated identity theft, "whether it's in a restaurant billing scenario, a health care billing scenario, or lawyers who round their hours up." He got some laughs by adding, "I'm sure nobody in this audience has ever done that."
Justice Clarence Thomas also grilled Suri about the implications of his argument. "Let's say the only allegation here involved the rounding up from 2.5 hours to three hours," he said. "Would that be sufficient to violate this provision?"
Yes, Suri said, although "I appreciate that that may seem an unattractive result." Thomas replied that "'unattractive' is an understatement." Gorsuch added that "you've given up the ghost" by arguing that "every time anyone overbills for anything, that triggers this statute."
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson likewise seemed troubled by the government's position. "It's like every fraud in the world," she told Suri. "And you just admitted in response to Justice Thomas that it could be a teeny, teeny fraud."
To illustrate the "absurdities" implied by the government's position, Justice Sonia Sotomayor imagined a parent who "lists their child as a dependent" on a tax return and "lies about child care services." Under the government's "broad definition," she said, that would count as aggravated identity theft, "because they use the child's name to commit a fraud on the government."
Sotomayor said "the vagueness" of the statute—a due process issue—"is a problem." She noted that it is hard to get a handle on the government's definition of the crime "because every time you point to something that seems absurd, they come up with a limiting rule." She worried that "the issue of vagueness permeates this statute" and mentioned the rule of lenity, which favors a narrow reading of ambiguous criminal laws.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh made a similar point. "The elements in the statute are vague," he told Suri. "Why doesn't the title"—i.e., "aggravated identity theft"—"give us a helpful clue about how broadly to read those somewhat elastic terms?"
As University of California, Berkeley law professor Orin Kerr notes, the statute is even more of a mess than the justices' comments suggested. "Congress did a lousy job describing the fraud-based felonies that can act as a predicate offense," he writes. "Instead of saying the predicate offense had to be a fraud crime, Congress looked to various parts of Title 18 and included large swaths of the code that seemed to have some kind of connection to fraud. When you look at the predicate felonies in subsection (c), there are 11 different areas of Title 18 that are included as predicates. Some of those sections are about fraud. But some aren't. Some were just codified near sections about fraud."
The referenced sections, for example, include the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), which makes unauthorized access to someone's computer a federal crime, whether or not it facilitates a financial fraud. "Any felony violation of the CFAA is a felony predicate for aggravated identity theft," Kerr notes, "whether it has to do with fraud or not."
The interaction between these two laws can result in stark sentencing disparities with no rational basis. "If you hack into someone's account by exploiting a security flaw," Kerr says, "that's just a standard CFAA offense and you'll probably get probation unless a lot of dollar loss occurred." But if you use a password, which is "a means of identification of another person," that would be aggravated identity theft as the Justice Department defines it, meaning you will go to prison for two years.
This is hardly the only case in which Congress has defined crimes in a counterintuitive way. The 2022 Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, for example, makes "trafficking in firearms" a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison and defines the offense broadly enough to encompass gun purchases by "prohibited persons." Just as Dubin was found guilty of aggravated identity theft without actually stealing anyone's identity, a cannabis consumer who buys a gun is guilty of trafficking in firearms even though he never trafficked in firearms. That's in addition to preexisting felony provisions covering the same conduct.
Congress deliberately made gun purchases by prohibited persons even more illegal. But it accidentally defined aggravated identity theft so broadly that the law could be used to impose a two-year sentence on people guilty of penny-ante crimes that do not involve identity theft and may not even involve fraud. Now the Supreme Court has to make sense out of that muddle, which would not be necessary if legislators knew what they were doing to begin with.
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And still as pointless as usual. On the other hand, I shall start my list of every damn time some merchant has tried to charge me more than the price on the shelf or in the ad or they sold me an 8 oz filet and it was really only 7.8 oz.
Back to Ayn, “The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren’t enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws.”
A few years ago, someone wrote a book titled something like 3 felonies a day. It essentially argued that merely being in the US, you were most likely committing 3 federal felonies. I actually read a book titled "How to Become a Federal Criminal". The 1 sentence summary is "You already are".
There is a method to the madness. One could construct a long (and boring) post listing examples and hypotheticals, but the short story is the government seeks more power – almost just one more “cupful” of power granted to the government will allow utopia to arrive. In criminal law, if it is so cloudy and as interwoven with other statutes as the branches of a live oak tree, that the average citizen cannot know what law(s) he is breaking (and even criminal attorneys can get blindsided). This facilitates the government’s power to take one act and charge the defendant with 10 or 20 felonies, and thereafter generously offer to accept accept a plea of guilty to one offense with a recommended sentence of a $100 fine and 8 hours of community service or offer the defendant the option of going to trial and facing 20 years of penalties in series if found guilty.
Some, perhaps a lot, (almost all?) of this could be stopped if after a plea offer is made to the defendant it must be filed with the judge handling the case, with the law requiring that if the plea is not accepted and the defendant goes to trial, he is only to be prosecuted for the offense the prosecutor offered to let him plea to, the other charged counts to be dismissed “with prejudice”. After all, the plea offer indicates the prosecutor wasn’t really serious about those other “offenses” anyway, using them only as dishonorable and dishonest lever, or more appropriately, hammer, on the defendant.
Between such a change, and the "judicious" use of jury nullification in cases where a prosecutor is far out over his skis on charges and potential penalties, our system of "justus" could be greatly improved. And regardless of a judge's instructions or charge, any citizen sitting on a jury who does not make use of the many sources of information a about potential penalties that a guilty verdict may entail is, IMHO, that juror is generally a worthless and lazy SOB.
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There should be more accountability for the companies giving out credit with minimal verification of identity.
There should be more accountability for legislators drafting incoherent and logically inconsistent laws.
By the way, there is 100% accountability for companies giving out credit with inadequate verification of identity - they get stuck with the costs of all the fraud. Identity theft victims do have to put some effort into helping to prove the fraud but once it's demonstrated, the victims are not on the hook for the fraudulent charges, the banks (and to a lesser degree, the merchants) are. And despite all the fear-mongering back in 2004, ID theft victims weren't on the hook then either.
Congratulations on continuing your unblemished record of being completely wrong about absolutely every fucking thing you retarded cunt.
"All you have to do is spend 10 years and $200,000 in legal costs raking back your stolen identity and then you don't even have to pay for the fraud that was committed because of someone else's lax standards! Be grateful you lousy prole!"
God I hope the next Mexican tranny hooker you fuck in Tijuana has AIDS.
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Accountability to whom exactly and what makes those people the ones who should be in charge of private businesses? The downside to credit without verification is risk of loss and ultimately, bankruptcy. [Unless of course it's a large bank that owns politicians that will bail them out.]
Why? It's their money.
Are you a communist?
"But it accidentally defined aggravated identity theft so broadly that the law could be used to impose a two-year sentence on people guilty of penny-ante crimes that do not involve identity theft and may not even involve fraud."
If you believe that was accidental, you probably believe the laptop wasn't Hunters.
And for you to believe congress did it on purpose, you'd have to assume they're competent.
all the healthcare fraud going on this very minute & they get this Dubin guy for one offense?
I skipped the article. Can I still say "I am Spartacus" without running afoul of the law?
Yes, provided you don't give Spartacus's address out.
I dunno. As I recall, thousands of the captives were nailed to crosses lining the Appian way all the way to Rome.
And the 5th Circuit did its thang...
The principle seems to be making everything illegal and let the bureaucrats choose who to charge. I feel like we've seen this before.
Libertarians for identity theft!
Can I presume the reason for this stance has something to do with ballot harvesting and "assistance"? Because there's not really any other angle that ties back to your paydaddy.
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So this Dubin person submitted a fraudulent claim and you think he should get off scot-free? For shame!
Oh, wait, he didn't get off scot-free, he was charged with submitting a fraudulent claim. But he was also charged with identity theft? If what you're doing is already a crime, what does the identity theft charge add to it? Not a goddamn thing but make it really, really extra super-duper illegal? Yeah, that's bullshit. The legislators who passed this statute ought to be charged with identity theft for impersonating rational human beings.
One of the many ?blessings? of National Socialist (syn;Nazi) healthcare programs.
Sullum is uniquely qualified for this article, as he is a libritarian in the broadest, not even close to a libritarian, sence
Well if you can have hate crimes and thought crimes why not 'Aggravated Identity Theft'? Say murder, it is a crime and comes with a punishment expressed in our laws. Does your motivation for killing someone really make a difference? Is one more dead and the other less dead?
Yet another reason to abolish the FBI and dismantle the Justice Department.