Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-13-05122/USCOURTS-ca6-13-05122-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Idris Ibrahim Fahra
Appellee
Andrew Kayachith
Appellee
United States of America
Appellant
Yassin Abdirahman Yusuf
Appellee

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

File Name: 16a0121n.06

Nos. 13-5122, 13-6391, 13-6422

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES of AMERICA,

 Plaintiff-Appellant,

 v.

IDRIS FAHRA, et al., 

 Defendants-Appellees.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT 

COURT FOR THE MIDDLE

DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE

Before: BATCHELDER and WHITE, Circuit Judges; and COX, District Judge.

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. In this, one of two companion opinions 

from this panel in separate appeals from a much larger criminal prosecution, the government 

challenges the district court’s grants of acquittal to three defendants whom the jury had 

convicted. The government contends that the district court erred by finding a material variance 

between the charges in the indictment and the proof at trial—specifically, that the prosecution 

had charged a single conspiracy but presented evidence at trial that proved, at best, multiple 

conspiracies. Thus, in this appeal, the question is whether a reasonable juror could find a single, 

overall conspiracy when the evidence produced at trial is viewed in the government’s favor.

For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the district court’s grants of acquittal to 

defendants Idris Fahra, Andrew Kayachith, and Yassin Yusef. 

I. Background

The federal prosecutor in Nashville, Tennessee, obtained a grand jury indictment in the 

 

 The Honorable Sean F. Cox, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by 

designation.

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United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, charging each of 30 defendants

with one or more of 20 different federal offenses, relating to the alleged operation of a largescale sex trafficking ring, spanning nine cities in four states over ten years, from January 2000 

until July 2010. All but one of these 30 defendants were Somali immigrants or refugees 

(Andrew Kayachith, a.k.a. “AK,” is Asian-American) and all but one were male (Fadmo 

Mohmed Farah, a.k.a. “Barney,” is a Somali female). While all but a few of these defendants 

were members of Somali gangs,1as of 2010, many of these defendants were boys aged 17 to 21 

years old, attending school and living with their parents. Also, most of these defendants lived in 

or around Minneapolis, Minnesota, and that is where this case started. 

Heather Weyker was a St. Paul, Minnesota, police officer and member of an FBI Task 

Force on sex trafficking. In November 2008, Officer Weyker went to the Minneapolis-area 

home of a Somali refugee-immigrant family and sought to speak with the ninth-grade daughter, 

referred to throughout this case as “Jane Doe 2.” Although a Somali immigrant, Jane Doe 2 was 

an Americanized teenager, by all accounts beautiful and buxom (which had garnered her the 

nickname “Double D” two years earlier, when she was in the seventh grade), living in an ultraconservative, African, Muslim household. Jane Doe 2 was also a habitual runaway who had a 

history with the police and had been incarcerated briefly in juvenile detention several months 

earlier. And it has since been established, as many in the Somali community knew at the time, 

that Jane Doe 2 was older than her then-asserted age of 15 (the age based on her mother’s false 

claim that she was born in September 1994). While Jane Doe 2’s actual age remains in dispute, 

 

1 This case involves two Somali gangs: Somali Mafia and Somali Outlaws. But these are actually two parts 

of the same gang, differentiated by age, the Somali Mafia comprising adults and the Somali Outlaws minors (i.e., 

younger than age 18). Of the three appellees here, Kayachith was not a gang member at all (he was not even 

Somali), Yusef was a Somali Outlaw, and it appears that Fahra was likely a Somali Outlaw. Other than the 

distinction based on age and exhaustive accusations of gang membership, based almost exclusively on witness 

testimony that gang members “claimed it” or flashed gang signs, the prosecution produced no information about 

either of these gangs, i.e., gang initiation and culture, organization or structure, criminal activity, etc.

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the FBI has declared her proffered birth certificate a forgery and substantial evidence has shown 

that she is at least five months older and likely as much as four years older than her claimed age. 

Also, DNA evidence and later testimony revealed that their claimed family structure was a lie,

concocted to facilitate their immigration. Whereas they had presented themselves as a mother 

with three biological children (an older daughter, a middle son, and Jane Doe 2, the youngest) 

living with an unrelated step-father, the adults were actually the biological parents of the two 

girls, while the boy was unrelated and actually much younger than the age they attributed to him. 

When Officer Weyker sought to speak with Jane Doe 2 in November 2008, the parents 

objected, so Weyker met Jane Doe 2 surreptitiously at her school. Over the next several months, 

their secret meetings led to over 30 recorded interviews and thousands of pages of notes, 

transcripts, and other documents. These meetings also produced a story in which Jane Doe 2 was 

not a troubled runaway or juvenile delinquent, but was instead an innocent child taken in by a 

Somali gang who used her for sex, either as a prostitute or for free sex with the gang members. 

At this point, certain aspects of this story and investigation warrant attention. First, despite 

countless opportunities, Jane Doe 2 had never told this story before—not to her parents, her 

sister, or any friends; not to any police officer during the many times she was apprehended as a 

runaway; not upon her incarceration at juvenile detention or during her counseling there. The 

district court opined that Officer Weyker likely exaggerated or fabricated important aspects of 

this story, noting (among other inconsistencies) that Weyker’s final reports frequently referred to 

sex for money while that assertion was conspicuously absent from her handwritten notes, 

appearing only once in all of those rough notes. And Jane Doe 2 herself furthered the district 

court’s suspicion when she testified on cross examination that Weyker had misstated facts in the 

reports, adding to and omitting things from her statements. Elsewhere, the district court caught 

Weyker lying to the grand jury and, later, lying during a detention hearing, and scolded her for it 

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on the record. The defense has since pointed out that Weyker also lied on an application to get 

Jane Doe 2’s family some $3,000 from the Tennessee victim’s compensation fund, by claiming 

“abduction” (Jane Doe 2 flatly denied an abduction) and endorsing the validity of the forged 

birth certificate. Finally, it is curious that even though Officer Weyker (the lead agent), Jane 

Doe 2 (the principal victim-witness), and all but a few of the 30 defendants reside in Minnesota, 

and an overwhelming portion of the events at issue occurred in Minnesota, the federal prosecutor 

in Minnesota did not prosecute this case in Minnesota. 

Instead, the federal prosecutor in Nashville, Tennessee, prosecuted this case in the 

Middle District of Tennessee because, in April 2009, Jane Doe 2 accompanied five boys (all 

charged in the indictment and two tried as defendants here) on a car trip to Nashville, without 

informing her parents, who eventually reported her missing. When the Minneapolis/St. Paul 

police tracked her cell phone to Nashville, Officer Weyker involved the FBI and turned this 

latest “runaway” into a presumed kidnapping. The FBI relayed the cellphone location to the 

Nashville Police who located the group and arrested Jane Doe 2 as a juvenile delinquent and a 

runaway, and questioned her separately from the boys. Initially, she told the police that one of 

the Somali boys, Hollywood (with them on the trip and charged in the indictment, but not tried in 

this case), was her boyfriend; that she had come with them on the trip willingly; and that she had 

sex with several people over the preceding few days because she was upset with Hollywood for

ignoring her. She also wrote out and signed a statement saying the same. She did not mention 

any prostitution or sex trafficking. But when the Nashville Police put her on the telephone with 

Officer Weyker, she changed her story to include acts of prostitution and sex trafficking.

The Nashville Police had also arrested the five boys, for contributing to the delinquency 

of a minor. Because none could afford bail, they waited in jail and made several telephone calls, 

recordings of which were introduced at trial as evidence to connect many of the 30 defendants 

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criminally. More importantly, when Officer Weyker and the FBI task force got involved, and 

Jane Doe 2 started talking about sex and prostitution, the Nashville federal prosecutor was able 

to put her story together with certain other witnesses, most notably Jane Doe 5, a Nashville 

resident, and then charged these five boys (and 25 others) with felony sex trafficking.

II. Trial and Jury Verdict

The indictment charged 30 defendants under a single sex trafficking conspiracy, spanning 

four states over ten years. In discovery, the prosecution named hundreds of witnesses and 

disclosed over 35,000 pages of documents and 175 hours of recorded conversations (and added 

another 6,000 pages and 14 hours of phone calls after trial had begun). Following numerous pretrial motions and rulings, including severance of several defendants and multiple continuances, 

the parties selected a jury in March 2012 for trial of the first nine defendants on four charges:

Count 1: Conspiracy to commit sex trafficking of victims under the age of 18 

(or under the age of 14), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1591(a)(1).

Count 2: Conspiracy to benefit financially from a venture to sex traffic victims 

under the age of 18 (or 14), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1591(a)(2).

Count 12: Sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2, a minor under the age of 14, in violation 

of 18 U.S.C. § 1591(a).

Count 13: Attempting to sex traffic Jane Doe 2, a minor under the age of 14, in 

violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1594(a).

The nine defendants tried in this first trial were:

#3 Ahmad Abnulnasir Ahmad, “Fabulous”

#6 Musse Ahmed Ali, “Fat Boy” 

#8 Fadmo Mohmed Farah, “Barney” (female)

#9 Idris Ibrahim Fahra, “Chi Town”

#12 Fatah Haji Hashi, “Jerry” 

#15 Dahir Nor Ibrahim, “Dahir Lucky”

#17 Andrew Kayachith, “AK” (Asian-American, not Somali) 

#29 Yassin Abdirahman Yusuf, “Junior” 

#30 Mohamed Ahmed Amalle, “DK”

Each defendant had individual counsel defending against the individualized charges within the 

overall sex trafficking conspiracy charge. Thus the defense was as complex as the prosecution, 

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and the court anticipated a lengthy and costly trial. For just this first trial, the prosecution had 

named over 200 intended witnesses and proposed that trial would last over three months. 

Instead, the trial lasted just three weeks. The prosecution’s case in chief lasted 10 days 

and included 49 witnesses, though only six offered substantive, material testimony. The

prosecution’s principal witnesses were Jane Doe 2 and Jane Doe 5, two alleged victims of the 

purported sex trafficking operation. The other four significant material witnesses had known 

Jane Doe 2 and were present for some part of her story, though two of them actually denied that

any sex trafficking had occurred and the other two could only speculate. 

Before continuing, we acknowledge that we are proceeding, as we must, on the story the 

prosecution presented at trial, despite our acute concern, based on our painstaking review of the 

record, that this story of sex trafficking and prostitution may be fictitious and the prosecution’s 

two primary witnesses, Jane Doe 2 and Jane Doe 5, unworthy of belief. We are, of course, 

limited to only the witness testimony and evidence introduced at trial—and that on a paper 

transcript—but we also note the district court’s expression of similar concerns. These witnesses 

repeatedly contradicted, disavowed, and refuted their own testimony, while other portions of 

their testimony defied belief or were rendered implausible by indisputable contradictory

evidence. Given that all nine defendants were acquitted of all charges (six by the jury and three 

by the court), we merely recognize that we start our analysis from what is likely a fictitious story.

Jane Doe 2 testified for five days and provided most of the prosecution’s evidence. She 

claimed that certain Somali boys began “sex trafficking” her in November 2006, when she was 

in the seventh grade.2 At their first meeting, four boys drove her to a public park in a green 

minivan, where she gave them oral sex because they told her she was attractive and they were in 

 

2

Jane Doe 2 testified at length about a number of different people, mostly Somali boys and men. Some 

were defendants in this trial, others were named in the indictment but were not defendants in this trial, and still 

others were not named in the indictment. There was also significant confusion regarding names and nicknames.

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a gang. There was no force, threat, or offer of money payment. Afterward, they drove her to 

defendant Fahra’s apartment, where she had vaginal sex with a Somali boy. Again, there was no 

force, threat, or offer of money. But the boys told her that, from then on, gang members would 

have sex with her without charge and would make money by charging others for sex with her. 

They drove her to another apartment where she had sex with two men while certain Somali boys 

collected money. She said that this happened again on several occasions, typically Fridays about 

once per month, until May 2007. A Somali boy would call her, tell her they had a “mission” for 

her (i.e., prostitution), and take her to an apartment where men would have sex with her for 

money. Sometimes she would spend the night and the next day with the Somali boys.

Next, she testified about a specific event in May 2007, when the police had arrested her 

as a runaway after finding her in a car with five Somali boys during a routine traffic stop in 

Rochester, Minnesota (about a 90 minute drive from her home). At the time, she told the police 

that they had gone to Rochester to rob a Somali liquor store and that she had even held the gun 

they had with them. But at trial she testified that after she did “missions” on Friday night at 

Fahra’s apartment and slept there that night, on Saturday night they drove her to Rochester to 

prostitute her. She also claimed that, on the way, they stopped at a gas station and tried to sell 

her as a permanent “sex slave,” but did not complete the sale. The traffic stop and arrest 

prevented any sex trafficking, and ultimately led her parents to place her in juvenile detention. 

After that night, she did not have any contact with those boys for almost two years, until 2009.

Finally, she testified about a specific event in April 2009, which began on a Friday 

evening in Minneapolis and ended on a Tuesday morning in Nashville. By then, she was in the 

ninth grade and dating Hollywood (named in the indictment, but not a defendant in this trial), 

who was 18 or 19 years old and a Somali Outlaw gang member. On Friday, April 24, 2009, 

Hollywood and two other boys picked her up after school, along with her friend Saida Haji, and 

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they went to an apartment where she had sex with Hollywood, who then told her to have sex 

with the other boys and left. She had sex with the others, including defendant Kayachith (the 

Asian-American boy), willingly and under no threat or compulsion. Saida Haji did not have sex 

with anyone. When Hollywood returned, they all left in Kayachith’s car and, after they dropped 

off Saida, Jane Doe 2 stayed with them to attend an African Night Party at the University of 

Minnesota. From the party they went to a hotel room where she again had sex with Hollywood. 

The other boys also slept in that same hotel room, but without any further sex.

She testified that the following morning (Saturday), the boys were planning a trip to 

Nashville and decided to prostitute her to raise money for the trip. She, Hollywood, and two 

others (including Kayachith) picked up defendant Yusuf and they drove to alleys around the city 

where she had sex with at least 10 different men for money, each time in the car. Later, she went 

with Yusuf and two others to get alcohol and marijuana. She had sex with all three of them and 

spent the night at a house where she slept with Yusuf and had sex with him again. The next 

morning (Sunday, April 26), she and five boys (including defendants Kayachith and Yusuf) 

again drove to alleys for her to have sex for money, until she protested and they stopped. 

Late that evening, Jane Doe 2 and five boys, including Hollywood, Kayachith, and 

Yusuf, left for Nashville. They drove all night and arrived in Nashville late Monday. They all 

shared one hotel room, but she declined to have sex with any of them, explaining that she was 

not feeling well. Meanwhile, her parents had reported her missing, the Minneapolis police had 

tracked her cell phone to Nashville, and Officer Weyker had involved the FBI. On Tuesday 

morning (April 28, 2009), the Nashville police arrested them outside a Somali restaurant. When 

questioned, she told the Nashville Police that she had sex with several people during the 

preceding few days because she was upset with her boyfriend, Hollywood, for ignoring her. She 

also said they had come to Nashville to steal car parts to repair a car. She made no mention of 

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any alleys, money, or prostitution. She also wrote out and signed a two-page written statement 

to the same effect. At trial, she authenticated both the recorded conversation with the Nashville 

Police and the written statement. She also authenticated a recorded telephone conversation she 

had that evening with Officer Weyker, during which she changed her version of events to claim 

that her sex acts over the past few days had been prostitution and sex trafficking. 

In short, Jane Doe 2 testified that the purpose of the Nashville trip was sex trafficking, so 

that the boys could prostitute her in Nashville. But she also testified that no one forced her to 

have sex, threatened her, coerced her, or paid her, and, further, that she had declined sex several 

times and there were never any adverse consequences or ramifications for her doing so. 

The prosecution’s other material witness was Jane Doe 5. According to all of the 

evidence, Jane Doe 5 is not connected to Jane Doe 2 in any way: they never met, they were never 

at the same location, and their stories do not intersect. Jane Doe 2 could not identify Jane Doe 5 

nor did she accuse any of the defendants that Jane Doe 5 accused; the only defendant Jane Doe 5 

identified whom Jane Doe 2 also identified was Liban Omar, a.k.a. “Sunderra” (named in the 

indictment but not a defendant in this case), whom Jane Doe 2 seen only once, briefly, when he 

had been sleeping on a motel bed. Jane Doe 5 identified a picture of Jane Doe 2 (as “Double D”) 

and testified that she recognized Hollywood and Yusuf (though she did not know their names) 

from a picture she had seen of them in a car with Double D. The prosecution did not pursue this.

Jane Doe 5 identified eight defendants by name and accused six of sex trafficking crimes, 

including three brothers who were friends with Hollywood: Abdifatah, Liban, and Mohamed 

Omar. Jane Doe 5 did not identify Fahra, Kayachith, or Yusuf, the appellants before us here, or 

corroborate any of Jane Doe 2’s testimony about them or any of those events. 

Jane Doe 5’s own testimony is the sole evidence of her part in the alleged sex trafficking 

conspiracy. But Jane Doe 5 has been diagnosed as insane and was off of her medication at trial. 

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She did not know what day or month it was, she misidentified or could not identify many 

defendants, she contradicted herself repeatedly (on major issues, such as whether or not she had 

sex for money), and she argued with counsel over the smallest of details. But taking her 

testimony in the light most favorable to the prosecution, as we must, the gist of her story is that, 

sometime between 2003 and 2006, while she was living in an apartment with Barney (the female 

Somali defendant), some men came there and she had sex with them because she liked them, but 

unbeknownst to her, Barney collected money for that. Also, when she lived in Minnesota, circa 

2000, Barney’s husband Faleebo once provided her a place to sleep in exchange for sex; and 

Faleebo and another defendant, Dahir Lucky, offered to move her from Minnesota to Nashville 

and give her a better life if she would have sex with men, but she declined. Finally, the Omar 

brothers, at different times, wanted her to have sex with men so that they could collect money for 

it, but she declined. She also testified that they probably had other girls for sale. 

The prosecution also introduced recorded telephone calls that certain defendants made 

while jailed in Nashville.3 These calls are the only evidence connecting the “Jane Doe 2” 

defendants and the “Jane Doe 5” defendants; these calls, therefore, are the only evidence to 

prove the prosecution’s theory of a single, all-encompassing conspiracy. Simply put, Jane Doe 2 

testified about sex trafficking by certain defendants, including Hollywood; Jane Doe 5 testified 

about sex trafficking by certain other defendants, including Sunderra (Liban Omar). The 

prosecution presented these telephone calls between Hollywood and Sunderra to connect these 

two defendants and, accordingly, connect the two groups into a single conspiracy. 

In the first call, between Hollywood in jail and Sunderra and British (Abdifatah Omar) on 

the outside, Sunderra explained that the charge was contributing to the delinquency of a minor, 

namely, Jane Doe 2, and relayed to Hollywood that Jane Doe 2 had told the police that 

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Hollywood was her boyfriend, that all of the others had sex with her, and that her parents wanted 

to press criminal charges. Hollywood expressed dismay or disbelief, and urged them to “go talk 

to the family . . . just tell them that we are just giving her a ride, man.” They agreed that British 

knew Jane Doe 2’s older sister and could talk to the family, but insisted to Hollywood that he 

should get a lawyer. Hollywood repeated the need to deter the family from pressing charges. 

In a second call between Hollywood (in jail) and Sunderra (out), Sunderra advised 

Hollywood to have his father talk with Jane Doe 2’s family, but Hollywood was no longer 

concerned about her family. They established that no one had talked with Jane Doe 2’s family, 

but felt she was not believable so they would stick to a story that Hollywood did not bring her to 

Tennessee and wasn’t with those who brought her, instead claiming he took a Greyhound bus. 

In a third call between Hollywood (in jail) and Sunderra (out), they discussed the police 

seizures of bedding from certain defendants, rumors that Jane Doe 2 was pregnant, and further 

rumors that she was in Minneapolis boasting that she was responsible for locking them all up. 

This last rumor was confirmed in the next call, in which Sunderra and Hollywood discussed that 

Jane Doe 2 was in Minneapolis and had called two other defendants’ parents to curse them and 

boast: “I locked up your son.” They did not discuss any obstruction or witness tampering.

The prosecution’s theory was that all of the defendants were engaged in one interrelated 

conspiracy to sex traffic Jane Doe 2 and Jane Doe 5. The proof of this single conspiracy, the 

prosecution contended, was the evidence that Hollywood had coordinated with Sunderra and 

British (both accused by Jane Doe 5 of some degree of sex trafficking) to contact Jane Doe 2’s 

family to urge them to drop the charges against him.

At the close of the prosecution’s case, the nine defense attorneys moved for acquittal of 

their respective defendants, but the court deferred decision on those motions. Each then 

 

3 Because the calls were spoken in Somalian, an interpreter read transcribed versions into the record.

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presented a defense (introduced evidence, questioned witnesses, and made arguments), but none 

of the defendants testified. Eventually, the attorneys made their closing arguments and the court 

instructed the jury. Because Congress had changed part of § 1591’s scienter requirement in 

December 2008 (from “knowingly” to “reckless disregard”), the court instructed on ten (10) 

separate charges, including the aiding and abetting possibilities for each count:

Count 1 Conspiracy to sex traffic children, before Dec. 2008 (knowingly);

conspiracy to sex traffic children, after Dec. 2008 (reckless disregard);

aiding and abetting conspiracy to sex traffic children.

Count 2 Conspiracy to benefit financially from a venture to sex traffic children, 

before Dec. 2008 (knowingly);

conspiracy to benefit financially from a venture to sex traffic children, 

after Dec. 2008 (reckless disregard);

aiding and abetting conspiracy to benefit financially from a venture to 

sex traffic children.

Count 12 Sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2, a minor child; 

aiding and abetting sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2, a minor child.

Count 13 Attempting to sex traffic Jane Doe 2, a minor child;

aiding and abetting attempting to sex traffic Jane Doe 2, a child.

The jury deliberated for five days and reached a verdict on Friday, May 4, 2012, 

acquitting six defendants of all charges and convicting three of some of the charges. The jury 

convicted Idris Fahra of aiding and abetting a conspiracy to sex traffic children and aiding and 

abetting the actual sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2, a minor child. The evidence against Fahra was 

Jane Doe 2’s testimony that other defendants brought her to his apartment between November 

2006 and May 2007 to prostitute her there. The jury acquitted three defendants whom Jane Doe 

2 had accused of participating in those same activities. Three others were not tried in this case. 

Defense evidence revealed that Fahra, a college student, had moved to Nebraska in June 2007. 

Neither Jane Doe 2 nor any other witness or evidence implicated Fahra in the May 2007 

Rochester trip, the April 2009 Nashville trip, or any other events described in this case. 

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The jury convicted Andrew Kayachith (the Asian-American) of conspiracy to sex traffic 

children after December 2008, specifically Jane Doe 2 during the April 2009 weekend of the 

Nashville trip. The evidence against Kayachith was Jane Doe 2’s testimony and photos of her 

backpack and school clothes the police discovered in his car. According to Jane Doe 2’s 

testimony, she first encountered Kayachith on Friday, April 24, 2009, at a house with some of 

the Somali boys. She performed oral sex on him, at Hollywood’s instruction, but did not have 

any type of sex with him again after that. He drove them in his car, first from the house to a 

store where she purchased clothes for the Africa Night Party, then to the party, and afterward to 

the motel. He was part of the group that took her to alleys the next day, to prostitute her to raise 

money for the trip to Nashville, and he was on the trip to Nashville, but they did not take his car. 

The jury acquitted two other defendants whom Jane Doe 2 had accused of participating in those 

same activities. Others were not tried in this case. Neither Jane Doe 2 nor any other witness or 

evidence implicated Kayachith in the activities at the apartments between November 2006 and 

May 2007, the May 2007 Rochester trip, or any other events alleged in this case.

The jury convicted Yassin Yusuf of conspiracy to sex traffic children after December 

2008, specifically Jane Doe 2 during the April 2009 weekend of the Nashville trip. The evidence 

against Yusuf was Jane Doe 2’s testimony. She testified that Yusuf was not present on Friday, 

April 24, 2009 (i.e., at the house, the African Night Party, or the motel afterwards), but on 

Saturday morning, she, Hollywood, and three others picked up Yusuf and they drove to alleys 

where she had sex with men, in the car, for money. Later, she went with Yusuf and two others to 

get alcohol and marijuana and she had sex with them. After that, she and Yusuf spent the night 

together and, the next morning, he was again part of the group that took her to alleys to prostitute 

her to raise money for the trip to Nashville. He went on the trip to Nashville. The jury acquitted 

two other defendants whom Jane Doe 2 had accused of participating in those same activities. 

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Others were not tried in this case. While Yusuf had known Jane Doe 2 during the events in 2006 

and 2007, he was himself a minor at that time and not charged with those activities.

The verdict as a whole indicates that the jury apparently rejected all of the charges 

supported by Jane Doe 5’s testimony, any conspiracy to benefit financially from a venture to sex 

traffic (i.e., Count 2), and the charges based on the May 2007 Rochester trip. The jury appears to 

have found two specific crimes. First, Fahra aided and abetted sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2 and 

a conspiracy to do so in 2006 and 2007, but did not actually sex traffic her (Count 12), attempt to 

sex traffic her (Count 13), or even aid or abet a venture to benefit financially from sex trafficking 

her (Count 2). And, second, Kayachith and Yusuf conspired to sex traffic Jane Doe 2 in April 

2009, but did not actually sex traffic her (Count 12), attempt to sex traffic her (Count 13), or 

even aid or abet sex trafficking (Count 12), attempted sex trafficking (Count 13), or a venture to 

benefit financially from sex trafficking her (Count 2). Given the limited scope of these 

convictions, and the acquittals on all other charges and of the other six defendants, one could

reasonably infer that the jury did not find a single, all-encompassing conspiracy, but instead 

found two distinct conspiracies: a conspiracy to traffic Jane Doe 2 in 2006-2007, involving Fahra 

and others not tried here, but not the three defendants acquitted here of these same accusations; 

and a conspiracy to traffic Jane Doe 2 in April 2009, involving Kayachith, Yusuf, and possibly 

others not tried here, but not the two defendants acquitted here of these accusations.

III. Post-Trial Acquittal

Following their convictions, Kayachith and Yusuf renewed their Rule 29 motions for 

acquittal, which they had raised during trial and on which the court had deferred decision. They 

raised multiple bases, including the claim of an improper variance between the charges in the 

indictment and the proof at trial. Specifically, they argued that the prosecution had charged a 

single conspiracy but presented evidence at trial that proved, at best, multiple conspiracies. 

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The district court agreed and held that the material variance required it to set aside the 

convictions. The court reasoned that the jury, in acquitting all defendants on Count 2, had 

rejected the existence of a “venture.” The court also noted that the prosecution had produced no 

evidence connecting Fahra, Kayachith, or Yusuf to Jane Doe 5 in any way. The prosecution had 

relied on the three Omar brothers as the connection between Jane Doe 5 and Jane Doe 2, in that 

Jane Doe 5 testified about them whereas Hollywood, while incarcerated, asked them to intervene 

with Jane Doe 2’s family on his behalf. But the court found no evidence that any of the Omar 

brothers actually contacted Jane Doe 2’s family and held that this would not serve as a sufficient 

connection between the two groups. Furthermore, the court concluded that it did not appear the 

jury believed Jane Doe 5 at all, suggesting that there was no second (Jane-Doe-5-centric) sex 

trafficking conspiracy. Ultimately, the court found no proof that the defendants were all acting 

in furtherance of a common goal or that there was any significant interdependence among them, 

and concluded that there was no evidence of a single conspiracy. 

The government appealed this grant of acquittal (Sixth Circuit Case No. 13-5122). 

Meanwhile, Fahra had moved to join Kayachith’s and Yusuf’s motion for acquittal. At an 

ensuing hearing, the district court noted that the government’s notice of appeal deprived it of 

jurisdiction, with certain exceptions. One such exception was Fahra’s motion for acquittal, 

which the court granted on the same bases that it had granted Kayachith’s and Yusef’s. Finally, 

the court, without addressing it specifically, also granted Fahra’s motion for acquittal on his 

conviction for aiding and abetting the actual sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2, which was not a 

conspiracy charge and therefore not subject to the material variance issue. The government 

appealed (No. 13-6391) and when the district court memorialized that same judgment in a 

written order, the government filed an appeal of that order as well (No. 13-6422). 

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IV. Analysis

We have jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1291. This appeal concerns the district 

court’s grant of Rule 29 acquittals based on its finding a material variance between the single 

conspiracy alleged in the indictment and the evidence of multiple conspiracies presented at trial. 

Because the district court granted the acquittals after the jury had rendered guilty verdicts, if the 

government were to prevail on appeal, the district court would merely reinstate the jury’s guilty 

verdicts and the defendants would not be tried twice. Consequently, double jeopardy does not 

bar this appeal. See United States v. Jones, 580 F.2d 219, 221 n.3 (6th Cir. 1978). 

A.

Considering the evidence produced at trial in the light most favorable to the prosecution 

and the guilty verdicts, the district court held that the prosecution had proven only that “different 

and unconnected groups of persons act[ed] with different females at different times in different 

cities and states,” but had presented no “evidence of an ‘enduring arrangement’ []or the 

‘significant interdependence’ of the members of the alleged conspiracy.” In short, the court held 

that this was not a single conspiracy as charged in the indictment, but was at best proof of 

multiple conspiracies. The government disagrees.

When the district court finds a variance at trial from the indictment, we review that 

decision de novo. United States v. Hughes, 505 F.3d 578, 587 (6th Cir. 2007). “A variance 

occurs when the charging terms of the indictment are unchanged, but the evidence at trial proves 

facts materially different from those alleged in the indictment.” Id. Specifically, when the

indictment alleges a single conspiracy but the evidence at trial shows multiple conspiracies, the 

variance between the indictment and the proof, if it is prejudicial, is reversible error. Id. 

One way that proof of multiple conspiracies can cause prejudice is from the “spillover” 

effect of a large number of improperly joined co-defendants, in which the jury “mistakenly 

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believes there is a union of interest and criminal intent[,] and an agreement to coordinate activity, 

[such that] the harm to the public [] appear[s] to be greater and the participants more culpable.” 

United States v. Swafford, 512 F.3d 833, 843 (6th Cir. 2008). That is the situation here.

The government argues that the district court misconstrued the evidence and insists that 

the proof at trial did not vary from the indictment, that the evidence proved a single conspiracy, 

and that the district court made four mistakes in its finding multiple conspiracies: two legal 

errors in its interpretation and application of 18 U.S.C. § 1591; a factual error in finding that the 

jury disbelieved Jane Doe 5’s testimony; and a logical deduction error in concluding that the 

acquittal of all defendants on the Count 2 “venture” charge was proof of multiple conspiracies. 

While each of these arguments has or could have some merit standing alone, we find that, in this 

larger analysis, they merely distract from the central question and are ultimately unpersuasive.

We turn first to the two alleged legal errors, which we analyze fully in our companion 

opinion, see United States v. Afyare, No. 13-5924. Even if we accept, arguendo, the 

government’s view of § 1591, we cannot find that the prosecution proved a single, unified 

conspiracy. The government argues that the district court misinterpreted § 1591(a)(1) by 

applying it only to children whereas it actually applies also to adults if the trafficking is done by 

force, fraud, or coercion. But the prosecution alleged sex trafficking of children in the 

indictment; there was no allegation of any trafficking of an adult at all, let alone by force, fraud, 

or coercion, nor did the prosecution present evidence at trial of force, fraud, or coercion. The 

government’s interpretation of the statute would produce no additional convictions. More 

importantly, it would not connect the otherwise unrelated groups into a single conspiracy. 

Similarly, the government argues that the district court misinterpreted § 1591(a)(2) by 

limiting a “venture” to a “sex trafficking venture” whereas, in its view, “venture” actually means 

any “association” of people for any purpose. But this misses the point. The court did not grant 

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acquittal because the prosecution failed to prove any association. The prosecution produced 

evidence that might demonstrate at least two, and perhaps more, separate and unrelated criminal 

sex trafficking conspiracies, but did not produce evidence to connect those unrelated 

conspiracies (and conspirators) into a single, unified conspiracy. Consequently, the proof at trial 

differed materially from the charge in the indictment. Evidence that the defendants were 

cooperatively engaged in some other, non-sex-trafficking venture would not change that result. 

As for the government’s claim that the district court erred by disbelieving Jane Doe 5, we 

find it hard to fathom how the jury would have believed her in any way. But the government 

argues that the jury could have believed Jane Doe 5 but acquitted the defendants on the basis that 

she was an adult and the court had instructed them to convict only if she were a child. Even if 

this unlikely scenario is true, however, it merely refutes one basis the court relied on to reject the 

existence of a single conspiracy; it does nothing to prove a single conspiracy. And in any event, 

the indictment charged only conspiracy to traffic and trafficking of children, not adults.

The district court similarly relied on a logical deduction that the jury had convicted 

separate defendants of separate and unrelated events, but acquitted all nine defendants of all the 

Count 2 “venture” charges, because it found no venture, but only multiple, unrelated 

conspiracies. The government argues that “[i]nconsistent verdicts provide no basis for reversal 

and court’s [sic] are precluded from reviewing a conviction on this ground.” Apt. Br. at 60. This 

is correct such as it is. See United States v. Gaitan-Acevedo, 148 F.3d 577, 586 (6th Cir. 1998). 

Recall also that this judgment was a deferred decision on the Rule 29 motion the defendants had 

made during trial, and the jury’s decision is therefore of no concern or consequence. But again, 

this was merely one of several reasons for the court’s finding that the prosecution had failed to

prove a single conspiracy and, as the defense replies, these results (i.e., 52 acquittals out of 56 

possibilities, with no convictions for any substantive act, any attempt at a substantive act, or any 

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“venture”) at least suggest the overall weakness of the prosecution’s case when considering 

prejudice.

Moreover, because our review here is de novo, see Hughes, 505 F.3d at 587, we need not 

nitpick the district court’s findings or reasoning. Rather, we must consider the evidence 

produced at trial, viewing it in the light most favorable to the prosecution (i.e., the guilty

verdicts), and determine whether the prosecution proved a single conspiracy as alleged in the 

indictment or whether, instead, its proof was a material and prejudicial variance from the 

indictment, warranting acquittal. We conclude from our careful review of the trial transcript and 

record that, if the prosecution proved any sex trafficking at all (and we have serious doubts that it 

did), then at best it proved two separate, unrelated, and dissimilar sex-trafficking conspiracies, 

involving different defendants, albeit with the same alleged victim, namely Jane Doe 2. 

The first of these two “conspiracies” occurred from November 2006 to May 2007, when 

several Somali boys in Minnesota (some, but not all, members of the Somali Outlaws gang) 

enticed Jane Doe 2 into having sex with them for their own enjoyment, and with others for a 

relatively small amount of cash. Jane Doe 2 testified that a Somali boy would call her, tell her 

they had a “mission” for her (i.e., prostitution), and take her to an apartment where she would 

have sex for money. This typically occurred on Fridays, about once per month. She testified 

that the typical rate for a “mission” was $50 to $60, and she would do several in an evening, 

though she would also often have sex without charge, with gang members or their friends.4 

 

4 To put this in perspective, again accepting Jane Doe 2’s testimony as true, five to ten missions in a night, 

at $50 to $60 each, would be $250 to $600 for the conspirators. Jane Doe 2 named at least eight conspirators in this 

venture; three of whom were defendants here (including Fahra, but not Kayachith or Yusef), while three others were 

indicted and two others were not. Jane Doe 2 offered no insight as to how the conspirators split the money, but she 

explained that one or more would pick her up (either at her school or at home) and drive her the 35 minutes to 

Fahra’s apartment, or longer if to another apartment, and that she would often spend the night or the weekend there. 

Presumably, someone would pay to feed her during this time. And, from her testimony, it appears that they 

frequently took her shopping. All this is to say that the evidence presented did not depict this as an especially 

profitable operation. In short, this looks less like an organized venture than a crime of opportunity, involving these 

criminally ambitious young men and this gullible (or, more likely, reckless or rebellious) young woman.

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The second “conspiracy” was two years later, during a single long weekend in April 

2009, when a few different boys in Minnesota enticed Jane Doe 2 into having sex with them for 

their own enjoyment, and with others to raise money for a trip to Nashville. Jane Doe 2 testified 

that several of these boys had sex with her on Friday, without charge, and then decided on 

Saturday to raise money by charging others for her sexual services. The similarities between this 

sex-trafficking venture and the previous one, described above, are that both sets of conspirators 

were mostly Somali boys and both charged about the same rate of $50 or $60 for her services. 

Almost two years of inactivity separate the two events and there was no evidence of an 

interrelationship among the participants in the two events. While most of these purported 

conspirators were members of the same Somali Outlaws gang, they were different boys from 

before. And the manner and means of the trafficking were different: rather than taking Jane Doe 

2 to an apartment, they drove her around to alleys where she had sex in the car. Also, based on 

her testimony, the sole purpose of this venture was to raise money for the car trip to Nashville. 

Finally, and perhaps most tellingly, to the extent that Jane Doe 5’s testimony proved 

anything (and, again, we have serious doubts that it did), it proved that several Somalis attempted 

to or did prey upon her vulnerability: a Somali woman in Nashville preyed on her mental 

instability by secretly collecting money from the men who had sex with her; each of the three 

Omar brothers sought to prey upon her similarly; as did two different Somali men in Minnesota. 

She did not testify or even suggest that any of these people acted in concert (conspiracy) with 

each other or with the boys who were prostituting Jane Doe 2 in Minnesota. She did not describe 

any overlap of conspiracies, interrelationship of ventures, or identity of operations or plans. 

Based on our careful review of the record, we find as the district court did, that the 

evidence produced at trial, even viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution (and the 

guilty verdicts), proved only that different and unconnected groups acted with different females 

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at different times in different cities and states. The prosecution did not prove a single, unified 

conspiracy as it had charged in the indictment, but proved at best multiple separate conspiracies.

Moreover, we find that extensive evidence presented about these multiple conspiracies, 

and the large number of improperly joined co-defendants, likely misled the jury into assuming a 

union of criminal intent, an agreement to cooperate, and an increased degree of culpability, 

thereby causing significant prejudice to these defendants. See Swafford, 512 F.3d at 843.

Consequently, the variance between the charges in the indictment and the evidence produced at 

trial is reversible error and the acquittals are warranted. See Hughes, 505 F.3d at 587. 

B.

The district court granted Fahra’s acquittal on the same basis as it had Kayachith’s and 

Yusef’s (i.e., the material variance between the single-conspiracy indictment and the multipleconspiracy evidence at trial). But the jury had also convicted Fahra of aiding and abetting the 

actual sex trafficking of Jane Doe 2, and the court’s basis for that acquittal was less clear. On 

appeal, the government argues that the material-variance finding does not support an acquittal for 

aiding and abetting of actual sex trafficking, because that is not a conspiracy charge. 

The government cites two out-of-circuit cases in which an acquittal on the conspiracy 

charge did not require acquittal on the substantive count: United States v. Jackson, 696 F.2d 578, 

588 (8th Cir. 1982) (stating that “in some cases where a prejudicial variance necessitates reversal 

of a defendant’s conspiracy conviction, the evidence of the defendant’s guilt on the substantive 

charges may be so strong that the substantive convictions must be affirmed”), and United States 

v. Variano, 550 F.2d 1330, 1330 (2d Cir. 1976) (holding that “dismissal of the conspiracy count 

. . . had no collateral estoppel effect whatsoever on the remaining substantive count of the 

indictment”). The defense responds that neither of these cases prohibits the district court from 

acquitting on a substantive charge because the prosecution failed to prove the alleged conspiracy, 

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but instead hold only that the district court is not required to dismiss the substantive count under 

such circumstances. We agree with this reading of these (non-controlling) cases. 

The defense cites Barnard v. United States, 342 F.2d 309, 313 (9th Cir. 1965), in which 

the Ninth Circuit reversed the conviction of a single defendant on a substantive charge because 

the prosecution had used “its theory that there was one over-all conspiracy” in an effort to 

involve that defendant, indeed “all of the defendants,” in the substantive charge, to the prejudice 

of that defendant. The defense argues that the same happened here: the prosecution’s attempt to 

involve all 30 defendants in the sex trafficking conspiracy charges allowed the introduction of 

substantial evidence unrelated to Fahra, such as all the evidence about the Rochester trip, the 

Nashville weekend and trip, and all of the Jane Doe 5 interactions. Because this severely 

prejudiced Fahra, who was only ever implicated in the events or “conspiracy” at his apartment 

from November 2006 to May 2007, the defense argues, the prosecution’s failed attempt at 

proving one massive conspiracy undermines Fahra’s conviction on the substantive charge. 

The defense also argues that the absence of an overriding conspiracy affects venue, in 

that venue must be appropriate for each of the individual conspiracies. Since the conspiracy 

involving Fahra occurred entirely in Minnesota, and it is undisputed that Fahra was not involved 

in any of the events in Nashville, the finding of multiple different conspiracies makes Tennessee 

an improper venue for Fahra’s prosecution, and reversal of his conviction is therefore warranted. 

See United States v. Williams, 274 F.3d 1079, 1083 (6th Cir. 2001) (reversing a conviction due to 

improper venue); see also United States v. Crozier, 259 F.3d 503, 519 (6th Cir. 2001) (“Venue is 

proper in the state or district where the offense was committed.”); U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 3 

(“Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed.”); Fed. R. 

Crim. P. 18 (“[T]he prosecution shall be had in a district in which the offense was committed.”). 

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We agree with both of Fahra’s arguments and conclude that, one way or the other, this 

acquittal was appropriate. The government has not persuaded us otherwise.

V. Conclusion

For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgments of acquittal.

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HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge, joined by SEAN F. COX, District Judge, 

concurring. 

I agree that the government’s proof at trial varied materially and prejudicially from the 

indictment because the government presented proof of multiple separate conspiracies rather than 

a single overarching conspiracy, which likely substantially influenced the outcome of the trial. 

Thus, the district court did not err in granting the motions for acquittal on the conspiracy count. 

As to Fahra’s conviction of aiding and abetting sex trafficking, the government concedes that if 

there was no single overarching conspiracy, venue was improper as to Fahra, who had no 

connection to the Nashville trip, and his acquittal on Count 12 should also be affirmed. 

Accordingly, I agree that the judgments of acquittal should be affirmed.1

 

1

The government does not argue that a new trial, rather than acquittal, was the appropriate remedy. 

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