Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-15-01661/USCOURTS-ca6-15-01661-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Emad Khalil Karaein
Appellant
United States of America
Appellee

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

File Name: 16a0497n.06

Case Nos. 15-1661/1849

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

EMAD KHALIL KARAEIN; JAWAD 

KHALIL-AMHAD KARAEIN,

Defendants-Appellants.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED 

STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR 

THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF 

MICHIGAN

OPINION

BEFORE: GIBBONS, GRIFFIN, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge. Appellants Emad Karaein (“E. 

Karaein”) and Jawad Karaein (“J. Karaein”) are brothers who operated a grocery store that

illegally profited by allowing its patrons to redeem food stamp and Woman, Infants, and 

Children (“WIC”) benefits for ineligible items. Eventually, the scheme caught up with the

Karaein brothers when a grand jury returned a four-count indictment against them for

(1) conspiracy to defraud the United States, (2) food stamp fraud, (3) WIC fraud, and (4) making 

a false statement to a representative of the United States. The Karaein brothers pleaded guilty to 

committing WIC fraud, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1760(g), and the district court sentenced E.

Karaein to thirty-four months of imprisonment and ordered him to pay $1,271,983 in restitution

and J. Karaein to thirty months of imprisonment and ordered him to pay $1,294,078 in 

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restitution. Although they entered into a plea agreement, the brothers appealed, contending that 

the district court erred in two of its factual findings for sentencing purposes. Both brothers 

dispute the district court’s decision to calculate the total amount of the loss from 2001, as 

opposed to 2006. Additionally, J. Karaein takes issue with the district court’s finding that he was 

an owner, as opposed to an employee, of the grocery store. For the reasons set forth below, we 

AFFIRM the judgment of the district court. 

I.

The Karaein brothers operated Middle Eastern Market (“MEM”), a neighborhood grocery 

store in Grand Rapids, Michigan. MEM opened in 2001 and was quickly authorized to accept 

food stamp benefits on May 3, 2001. In December 2001, MEM was also authorized to accept 

WIC benefits. 

Sometime in January 2009, the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) 

began investigating MEM to ascertain whether it was illegally allowing its customers to 

exchange WIC and food stamp benefits for ineligible items, such as smoking products and cash. 

USDA investigators engaged in a series of undercover transactions that confirmed their 

suspicions. Based on those transactions, a search warrant was issued for the store on June 23, 

2010. Investigators located records confirming the fraud during the search. Law enforcement 

officers also interviewed E. Karaein while executing the search warrant. E. Karaein signed a

statement in which he admitted that beginning in late 2007 he allowed customers to “exchange 

their benefits for cash, tobacco pipes, tobacco, phone cards, and other non-food items.” (Page ID

# 464.) 

The Karaein brothers pleaded guilty to committing WIC fraud, in violation of 42 U.S.C. 

§ 1760(g). With respect to E. Karaein, the probation officer prepared a Presentence Investigation 

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Report (“PIR”), which identified him as the leader of the conspiracy. (Page ID # 438.) In the

PIR, the loss attributed to E. Karaein totaled $1,272,013.88. (Page ID # 438.) The loss 

attributed to J. Karaein totaled $1,294,108.88. (Page ID # 771.) 

In calculating the loss attributable to both brothers from the fraud at MEM, the PIR 

utilized the post-search warrant method. (Page ID # 539.) Under the post-search warrant 

method, the average of the amount of redemptions in the months following the search warrant is 

presumed to represent the amount of legitimate redemptions for the entire fraudulent period in 

question. (Page ID # 539.) The average monthly redemption figure is subtracted from the total 

redemptions per month in which the fraud occurred. (Page ID # 539.) The PIR concluded that,

based on the evidence in the case, the fraud started in May 2001. (Page ID # 484.) Both 

brothers filed a Sentencing Memorandum objecting to the PIR’s calculated amount of loss. 

Specifically, they objected to the fraud period beginning in May 2001 and argued that it should 

instead begin in 2006. The government filed a Sentencing Memorandum supporting the PIR 

calculation in both cases. 

On June 2, 2015, the district court held a sentencing hearing where E. Karaein reiterated 

his contention that the fraud calculation should begin in 2006. USDA agent Travis Deters 

(“Agent Deters”) testified for the government as to why the fraud calculation should begin in 

May 2001. (Page ID # 678.) Specifically, he cited the fact that approximately five months after 

MEM was authorized to accept food stamps, the USDA hotline received a tip alleging that MEM 

was allowing its customers to purchase ineligible items with their food stamp benefits. (Page ID 

# 680.) He also mentioned that during the application process, a store site survey was performed 

and that during the survey empty coolers were observed at MEM, which suggested that MEM 

lacked inventory. (Page ID # 680.) The lack of inventory was particularly troubling because 

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Karaein previously represented that he expected MEM to have annual sales of $350,000.00 per 

year. (Page ID # 681.) The district judge also questioned Agent Deters as to how he justified 

beginning the fraud period in May 2001. In response, Agent Deters referenced ledgers that were 

confiscated during the search of MEM to support his opinion that May 2001 was when the fraud 

began. (Page ID # 704.) Once transcribed, the ledgers were interpreted to reveal that Karaein 

took money to Jordan or to Amman Jordan as far back as 2003. This was suspect because, as 

Agent Deters opined, Karaein did not have the reported income to deliver money to anyone if he

was not participating in the illegal scheme. (Page ID # 705.) 

Ultimately, the district court decided that the fraud began in 2001. (Page ID # 710.) To 

arrive at that conclusion, the district court relied on the totality of the circumstances, but it 

specifically referenced Agent Deters’ testimony and an exhibit1that compared MEM’s monthly

redemptions from May 2001–June 2010 to the average redemption of Alger International 

Market2from February 2011–August 2011. (Page ID # 709–10.) The district court sentenced E. 

Karaein to a below-guidelines sentence of thirty-four months of incarceration to be followed by 

two years of supervised release and ordered him to pay $1,271,983.00 in restitution. (Page ID # 

718–19.) 

At J. Karaein’s sentencing hearing, since his argument regarding the start date of the 

fraud calculation would have been identical to that of his brother, both parties and the district 

court agreed to allow J. Karaein to adopt the same proof and that the issue would be fully 

preserved on appeal. (Page ID # 936.) However, J. Karaein contested the PIR’s 

recommendation that he be found to have an ownership interest in the store. Whether he had an 

ownership interest in MEM was important because that finding would determine whether he was 

 

1

See Page ID # 534.

2 Karaein sold MEM in November 2010. The new owner renamed the store Alger International Market.

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obligated to report MEM’s financial information on his personal application for federal 

subsistence benefits. If J. Karaein had an ownership interest, he defrauded the government by 

not reporting MEM’s bank account as an asset and source of funds for his family which 

consequently would raise the fraud amount attributable to him. 

To support its contention that J. Karaein was a part-owner of MEM the government relied 

upon the testimony of Agent Deters. (Page ID # 938.) Agent Deters testified that, when he 

asked E. Karaein was he the sole owner of MEM, E. Karaein responded that “he was a 50/50 

owner with his brother, Jawad.” (Page ID # 939.) Agent Deters also stated that J. Karaein was 

listed as a vice president on MEM’s food stamp reauthorization application, the form submitted 

to the Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Growth, which is the document filed for 

corporate entities, and MEM’s WIC application. (Page ID ## 939–40; 41–42.) Moreover, on a 

store visit, a USDA investigator referred to J. Karaein as a co-owner in his notes. (Page ID # 

940.) Agent Deters opined that the USDA investigator’s notes reflected that J. Karaein was a coowner because investigators typically write down what they are told. (Page ID # 941.) Lastly, 

Agent Deters stated that J. Karaein was one of three signatories on MEM’s bank account. (Page 

ID # 942.) The district court concluded that the government had established that J. Karaein was 

an owner and comported himself as an owner of the business and sentenced him to serve thirty 

months of imprisonment followed by two years of supervised release and ordered him to pay 

$1,294.078 in restitution. (Page ID ## 954, 955, 962.)

II.

A.

On appeal, the Karaein brothers reassert their position that the district court erred in 

determining that the fraud commenced in May 2001. Specifically, they contend that there were 

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insufficient facts to support “using the 2001 through February 2006 period.” (E. Karaein 

Appellant Br. 11.; J. Karaein Appellant Br. 4.) For the reasons that follow, we disagree and hold 

that the district court did not err in deciding, for sentencing purposes, that the fraud began in 

May 2001.

B.

At the outset, we note that the Karaein brothers are not challenging the district court’s 

decision to use the post-search warrant method in calculating their sentences. (See E. Karein 

Appellant Br. 10; J. Karaein Appellant Br. 5.) Rather, the sole issue on appeal is the district 

court’s factual finding that the fraudulent scheme was initiated in May 2001. We review the 

findings of fact underlying the district court’s loss calculation using a clearly erroneous standard. 

United States v. White, 492 F.3d 380, 414 (6th Cir. 2007). “A finding that the calculations were 

clearly erroneous will follow only if this Court ‘on the entire evidence is left with the definite 

and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Ware, 

282 F.3d 902, 907 (6th Cir. 2002)).

Under the United States Sentencing Guidelines, the district court “need only make a 

reasonable estimate of the loss.” U.S.S.G. 2B1.1. cmt. 3(C). We give deference to the district 

court’s finding because “[t]he sentencing judge is in a unique positon to assess the evidence and 

estimate the loss based upon that evidence.” Id. In estimating the loss, the district court’s 

finding must be based on “available information” and may consider “revenues generated by 

similar operations.” Id. Upon review, we take no issue with the manner in which the district 

court concluded that the fraudulent scheme began in May 2001, as it was based on all the 

available and relevant information. (See Page ID # 709.) 

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Both Karaein brothers attempts to “explain away” the evidence relied upon by the district 

court. However, their explanations do not help their cause because the district court was free to 

accept or reject their spin on the available evidence. The Karaein brothers contend that Agent 

Deters’ testimony should have no influential value because the anonymous 2001 tip that Agent 

Deters testified about was investigated and the case was closed with no finding of fraud. (E. 

Karaein Appellant Br. 21.; J. Karaein Appellant Br. 6.) However, the tip was reported to the 

Food and Nutrition Services’ administrative arm, which is not responsible for criminal 

investigations. Moreover, even though at that time the fraud was not discovered, the fact that the

Karaein brothers were subsequently convicted of the same conduct complained about in the 2001 

tip is relevant, and the district court was well within its rights to take that into consideration.

With respect to Agent Deters’ testimony regarding the empty coolers at MEM in 2001 

during the spot check, the Karaein brothers contend that MEM was certified to accept food stamp 

and WIC benefits after that inspection; thus, the empty coolers could not be “indicative of 

fraud.” (Page ID # 22.) As with his argument regarding the investigation, the Karaein brothers 

argue that we should accept their explanation. As stated above, we are foreclosed from 

accepting that invitation. See U.S.S.G. 2B1.1. cmt. 3(C). Although the district court did not 

expressly state how influential Agent Deters’ testimony was regarding the empty coolers, it did 

not err in considering it in determining that the fraudulent scheme started in May 2001, as it 

leads to the conclusion that fraud was taking place. 

Notwithstanding his argument regarding Agent Deters’ testimony, E. Karaein principally

contends that the exhibit comparing the difference in redemptions received by MEM from May 

2001 through June 2010 to that of the average redemption received by Alger International 

Market should not be viewed as probative in determining the initiation date for fraud calculation 

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purposes.3 (See Page ID # 534–36.) With regard to this chart, the district judge stated, “the 

differences are so stark . . . [that] I am convinced that the calculation starting in 2001 is 

justified.” (Page ID # 710.) As with the other evidence, the district court did not err in 

considering the exhibit, and as a matter of fact, the applicable Sentencing Guidelines expressly 

authorize it to consider “revenues by similar operations.” U.S.S.G. 2B1.1. cmt. 3(C).

E. Karaein’s arguments to the contrary are unavailing. He argues that it was 

inappropriate to compare MEM to Alger International Market because “there was no evidence in 

the record about the type of business it was, or how it operated, other than it was in the same 

location.” (E. Karaein Appellant Br. 24.) The fact that Alger International Market was in the 

same exact location but owned by a different individual provided the district court with a 

sufficient basis to use the exhibit, as it was at minimum a “similar operation.” See U.S.S.G. 

2B1.1. cmt. 3(C). 

In the end, taking into account Agent Deters’ testimony as well as the exhibit illustrating

the stark contrast in the amount of redemptions MEM collected each month to that of the average 

monthly redemption collection of Alger International Market, we do not have a “definite and 

firm conviction that a mistake has been committed” in deciding that the fraud in this case began 

in May 2001. Ware, 282 F.3d at 907. 

III.

On appeal, J. Karaein also reasserts his argument that the district court erred in finding 

that he had an ownership interest in MEM. (J. Karaein Appellant Br. 8.) As that was a factual 

finding by the district court, we also review the district court’s determination for clear error. 

White, 492 F.3d at 414.

 

3

J. Karaein’s brief does not set forth this argument.

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Upon review, we hold that the district court did not err in determining that J. Karaein was 

a part-owner on MEM. The district court finding was based on an abundance of evidence. For 

instance, Agent Deters testified that J. Karaein was a signatory on MEM’s bank account and that 

his brother and co-defendant, E. Karaein also told him that J. Karaein owned fifty percent of the 

store.

J. Karaein’s counter arguments are unavailing. Specifically, he contends that a “vicepresident, is not necessarily an owner” and points us to documents supporting his contention that 

he was only an employee. (J. Karaein Appellant Br. 9.) Moreover, while admitting that he was a 

signatory on MEM’s bank account, J. Karaein argues that the account was an asset of the 

business and not available to him for personal use. (J. Karaein Appellant Br. 10.) But, as stated 

ad nauseam above, our role is to make sure that the district court’s conclusion was not clearly 

erroneous, not to re-weigh the evidence. Accordingly, we cannot adopt J. Karaein’s 

characterization of the evidence.

IV.

For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.

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GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting.

I respectfully dissent from the majority’s implicit conclusion that the meager evidence 

adduced at Emad Karaein’s sentencing hearing established by a preponderance of the evidence 

that defendants’ fraud began in 2001. Thus, I would vacate defendants’ sentences and remand 

for resentencing. 

Emad and Jawad Karaein pleaded guilty to defrauding the government by allowing 

customers at Middle Eastern Market to exchange Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) benefits 

for ineligible items. At the sentencing hearing,1the burden was on the government to establish 

by a preponderance of the evidence that the fraudulent scheme began in 2001, as opposed to 

2006. United States v. Jones, 641 F.3d 706, 712 (6th Cir. 2011). In my view, having failed to 

produce sufficient evidence, the government did not satisfy its burden, and, accordingly, the 

district court clearly erred in calculating the amount of loss beginning in 2001. 

Defendants’ principal argument is simple: an empty fish cooler, an uncorroborated 

hotline tip, and Emad Karaein’s so-called “unexplained wealth” are insufficient to establish that 

the fraud dates back to 2001. Defendants do not deny that they defrauded the government. 

Instead, they contest the government’s claim that the fraud began in 2001, rather than 2006, as 

alleged in the indictment. This sentencing issue is particularly important to defendants because 

using 2001 as the starting date, instead of 2006, significantly increases the amount-of-loss 

calculation, affecting their terms of imprisonment and restitution. 

We review the district court’s factual findings as to the amount of loss for clear error. Id. 

(citing United States v. Warshak, 631 F.3d 266, 328 (6th Cir. 2010)). “An error with respect to 

 

1 The parties argued this issue at Emad Karaein’s sentencing hearing. At Jawad Karaein’s later sentencing 

hearing, the parties adopted the evidence and objections presented at Emad Karaein’s sentencing hearing.

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the loss calculation is a procedural infirmity that typically requires remand.” Id. (internal 

quotation marks omitted). 

First, the government makes much of an empty fish cooler observed during an inspection. 

This was the requisite USDA site inspection that Middle Eastern Market passed in the process of 

obtaining authorization to accept food stamps and WIC benefits. At 9:05 a.m. on April 28, 2001, 

a USDA inspector visited the store. The inspector recorded his observations on a USDA form: 

he checked “yes” to the presence of a deli, with “[p]rices posted for meats/cheeses sold by 

weight,” wrote “store clean and organized,” and checked “[p]rices [marked] on individual 

items.” At the bottom of the form, under the heading “store conditions,” the inspector checked 

just one box, “empty coolers.” He did not check any of the following boxes: empty shelves, 

broken coolers, moldy coolers, dusty cans/packages, faded/missing labels, poor lighting, foul 

odors, dirty/unsanitary, ice crystals on frozen foods, expired/outdated foods. Nor did he check 

the “other” box or write anything in the corresponding blank space. In the comments section, he 

noted, “Fish cooler not used in morning.” In other words, as explained by USDA Agent Travis 

Deters at defendants’ sentencing hearing, it appears that the inspector observed an empty cooler, 

inquired as to why it was empty, and learned that it was a fish cooler that was not used at 9:05 in 

the morning. Shortly thereafter, the USDA authorized the store to accept food stamps and WIC 

benefits. That the store had a fish cooler that was not used in the mornings does not appear to 

have raised any red flags for the USDA. 

Second, at sentencing, the government relied upon an anonymous hotline tip as evidence 

that defendants were engaged in WIC fraud in the fall of 2001. On September 4, 2001, an 

anonymous caller contacted a USDA hotline to report that the store had allowed “hot foods” and 

“pre-paid phone cards to be sold for food stamp benefits.” No further information was provided. 

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This was approximately five months after the store was authorized to accept food stamp benefits. 

The USDA investigated. An inspector visited the store on September 10, 2001, and “did [an] 

inventory and brief interview” with Emad Karaein. The inspector returned on October 18, 2001, 

and “completed [an] interview in depth.” Ultimately, the inspector concluded that the hotline 

“complaint [was] from [a] competitor” of the store. The inspector noted that the store would be 

monitored but no further action would be taken at that time. 

Finally, at sentencing, the government argued that Emad Karaein’s “unexplained wealth” 

somehow corroborated that he had defrauded the government in 2001. The basis of the 

government’s argument was that Emad Karaein took out a mortgage of approximately $142,000 

when he bought the store but paid it off quickly, perhaps two to three months later. But this 

“unexplained wealth” is of limited probative value as it relates to whether defendants allowed 

customers to illegally exchange ineligible items for food stamps or WIC benefits in 2001.2 First, 

this evidence was presented as to Emad Karaein, not Jawad Karaein.3 (This means the only 

evidence against Jawad Karaein is a single, empty fish cooler and an uncorroborated anonymous 

tip dismissed by the USDA.) Second, Agent Deters did not offer any details. For instance, he 

did not explain how the mortgage was paid off or when it was paid (other than approximating it 

was two to three months later). He could not confirm or deny whether Emad Karaein paid off 

the mortgage with the help of a loan from his brother, Mustafa. Third, and more importantly, 

using the timeline presented by Agent Deters, the mortgage pay-off probably occurred before the 

store was authorized to accept food stamps or WIC benefits. Finally, even assuming that the 

pay-off occurred after the store was authorized to accept benefits, a closer look at the record 

 

2 Emad Karaein does not challenge the portion of the loss amount related to his personal use of benefits for 

his family ($113,617). 

3

It appears from the limited evidence put on the record with respect to Emad Karaein’s “unexplained 

wealth” that Emad Karaein, not Jawad Karaein, was the only person on the mortgage. 

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reveals that the store redeemed only negligible amounts in 2001 (e.g., $170.99 in May 2001, 

$618.27 in July 2001, $489.48 in August 2001, and $48.08 in September 2001). In other words, 

even assuming that Emad Karaein paid his mortgage in cash without a loan from his brother after

the store was authorized to accept food stamps or WIC benefits, the government’s theory that 

these amounts enabled Emad Karaein to pay off a $142,000 loan is untenable.5 

Resting on this evidence, the government argued to the district court that it should 

calculate the amount of loss from 2001 to 2010, as opposed to 2006 to 2010. Based on “the 

totality of the circumstances,” and Attachment D to the government’s sentencing memorandum, 

the district court ruled that calculating the amount of loss beginning in 2001 was “justified.” 

However, Attachment D was a spreadsheet comparing by month Middle Eastern Market’s 

benefits redemptions from May 2001 to June 2010 with the store’s post-search warrant monthly 

redemption average ($5,799.31) under new management in 2011. In the final column, 

Attachment D estimates each month’s fraud by subtracting the post-search warrant redemption 

average ($5,799.31) from Middle Eastern Market’s monthly redemptions. Thus, the spreadsheet 

is a rough estimate of fraud for each month that Middle Eastern Market redeemed food stamps or 

WIC benefits, not proof that fraudulent redemptions began at a certain time. When the district 

court mentioned Attachment D as justification for calculating the amount of loss from 2001, the 

government asked for clarification, referring to Attachment D as “just [] a back stop and a 

second check on [the evidence presented by the government] . . . .” The district court clarified: 

“Right, for me it is part of the totality of the circumstances which convinces [me] that going back 

to 2001 is supported; that Agent Deters’s calculation based on 2001 is supported by the totality 

 

5 Agent Deters also briefly mentioned, without detail, that Emad Karaein sent or took cash to someone in 

the country of Jordan in 2003. For the same reasons, this argument carries no weight with respect to store-related 

fraud. As to Emad Karaein’s personal use of benefits ($113,617), as noted above, he does not challenge that portion 

of the amount of loss on appeal.

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of the evidence available.” But Attachment D is not probative of whether the fraud began in 

2001 or 2006. Neither the government nor Agent Deters suggested that Attachment D provided 

a basis from which to decide the fraudulent activity started in 2001. It was not offered for that 

purpose. It is merely a comparison by month of the store’s benefits redemptions with a 2011 

post-search warrant average for purposes of totaling the amount of loss. Accordingly, the district 

court’s reliance on it to prove that defendants engaged in fraud in 2001 was misplaced. 

Furthermore, that the defendants do not challenge on appeal the post-search warrant method for 

calculating loss does not change the fact that Attachment D is not probative of whether 

defendants engaged in fraud between 2001 and 2005. 

What remains is an explicably empty fish cooler, an uncorroborated hotline tip that the 

government investigated and dismissed as made by a “competitor,” and―in the case of only one 

of the defendants―Emad Karaein’s mortgage pay-off that occurred before the store was 

authorized to accept benefits or shortly thereafter. This evidence falls conspicuously short of 

establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that defendants had engaged in fraud starting in 

2001. 

At sentencing, a court “may not attribute a loss to a defendant based on mere 

speculation.” United States v. Comer, 93 F.3d 1271, 1285 (6th Cir. 1996). Ultimately, I am left 

with the “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed,” id. (quoting United 

States v. Moreno, 933 F.2d 362, 374 (6th Cir. 1991)). I would vacate defendants’ sentences and 

remand for resentencing.

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