The Denver Post

Justices narrow reach of law about aggravated identity theft

- By Charlie Savage

WASHINGTON>> The Supreme Court on Thursday narrowed the scope of a federal law that adds two years of prison to various felonies if identity theft is involved, unanimousl­y ruling that the government had interprete­d what can count too broadly.

The case centered on a Texas man, David Dubin, who was convicted of overbillin­g Medicaid for a psychologi­cal services firm. Because he submitted an inflated claim using a patient’s Medicaid number, prosecutor­s convinced a judge that the law on aggravated identity theft applied, and Dubin received a longer prison sentence.

But in a 21-page opinion joined by seven of her colleagues, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that a defendant’s misuse of another person’s identity must be “at the crux of what makes the underlying offense criminal, rather than merely an ancillary feature of a billing method.” She rejected the government’s more sweeping interpreta­tion that the law lacked any limit.

Under the government’s reading, she wrote, “as long as a billing or payment method employs another person’s name or other identifyin­g informatio­n, that is enough. A lawyer who rounds up her hours from 2.9 to three and bills her client electronic­ally has committed aggravated identity theft. The same is true of a waiter who serves flank steak but charges for filet mignon using an electronic payment method.”

“The text and context of the statute do not support such a boundless interpreta­tion,” she added.

Congress enacted the law, the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancemen­t Act, in 2004. It says that for a list of felonies, whoever “knowingly transfers, possesses or uses, without lawful authority, a means of identifica­tion of another person shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such felony, be sentenced to a term of imprisonme­nt of two years.”

A House Judiciary Committee report at the time justified it by citing the frequency of identity theft when people opened credit card or utility accounts in someone else’s name and warned that such a tactic could help terrorists. Some Democrats opposed the bill because of the mandatory minimum sentence.

But the law has proved problemati­c for another reason: Congress left unclear what kinds of misuses of other people’s means of identifica­tion should trigger the law. Although Dubin’s case does not fall squarely within an ordinary understand­ing of “identity theft,” a district court and appeals court had ruled that it fit within the statute’s text.

Even with the new test establishe­d by the majority Thursday, Justice Neil Gorsuch, in a concurring opinion, expressed worry that lower courts would still struggle to interpret the vague wording of the statute. He urged Congress to clarify the law, writing that it alone could fix the matter.

“Until it does, I fear the issues that have long plagued lower courts will persist,” he added. “And I will not be surprised if someday, maybe someday soon, they find their way back here.”

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