Court Opinion

ID: 4362969
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-01-30 15:00:27.329337+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:48:48.639803
License: Public Domain

Case: 16-17654    Date Filed: 01/30/2019    Page: 1 of 32

                                                                          [PUBLISH]

                IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                         FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                           ________________________

                                 No. 16-17654
                           ________________________

                    D.C. Docket No. 1:15-cr-00012-MP-GRJ-1

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                                 Plaintiff - Appellee,

                                       versus

MATTHEW G. MUNKSGARD,

                                                             Defendant - Appellant.

                           ________________________

                   Appeal from the United States District Court
                       for the Northern District of Florida
                         ________________________

                                 (January 30, 2019)

Before TJOFLAT, MARCUS, and NEWSOM, Circuit Judges.

NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:

      This criminal appeal presents both a surprisingly close question of

evidentiary sufficiency—so close, in fact, that it has prompted a dissent—and an

interesting statutory-interpretation issue. As to the former, federal law criminalizes
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the act of knowingly making a false statement in order to obtain a loan from a bank

that is insured by the FDIC. 18 U.S.C. § 1014. Matthew Munksgard admits to

knowingly making false statements in order to obtain bank loans—indeed, four

times over. Even so, he contends, the government failed to show beyond a

reasonable doubt, as it had to, that the institution he swindled was FDIC-insured.

This case presents the (irritatingly familiar) question whether the government

presented sufficient evidence to prove that pesky jurisdictional prerequisite. The

proof of FDIC insurance here—as in other cases in which we have rapped the

government’s knuckles—was hardly overwhelming. And given the ease with

which insurance coverage could have been demonstrated—certificate, contract,

cancelled check, etc.—inexplicably so. Having said that, “overwhelming” isn’t the

standard, and when we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the

government, as we must, see United States v. Frank, 599 F.3d 1221, 1233 (11th

Cir. 2010), we conclude—albeit reluctantly—that the proof was adequate to

demonstrate Munksgard’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. But let this be a

warning to federal prosecutors: You are (as the author’s mother used to say)

cruisin’ for a bruisin’. Don’t apologize—do better.

      Now, the statutory-interpretation issue: Federal law makes it a crime for any

person to “use[], without lawful authority, a means of identification of another

person.” 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(1). The jury here found that Munksgard violated

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this statute when, in an effort to obtain financing to support his land-surveying

business, he forged another person’s name to a surveying contract that he

submitted to a bank in support of his loan application. The question before us is

whether Munksgard’s conduct qualifies as a prohibited “use[]” within the meaning

of § 1028A(a)(1). Munksgard insists that we should cabin the meaning of “use[]”

to crimes in which the accused attempted to impersonate, or act “on behalf of,”

someone else. We disagree. Plain meaning, statutory context, and existing

precedent all show that Munksgard “use[d]” his victim’s means of identification

when he employed that person’s signature to obtain the loan and thereby converted

the signature to his own service.

                                          I

      Matthew Munksgard began banking with Drummond Community Bank in

the late 1990s. Drummond is a relatively small bank; at the time of trial, it

operated in only a few counties in west central Florida. Munksgard obtained his

first drawdown line of credit from Drummond in 2010 to fund his work as a land

surveyor. After repaying that loan without incident, in 2012 Munksgard obtained

two more drawdown lines. He also repaid those loans, albeit once from a different

source of funds than he had indicated in his loan application.

      That’s when the real trouble started. The next year, Munksgard applied for

yet another line of credit from Drummond, this time supported by a surveying

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contract with a company called Cal-Maine Foods. That contract showed the

signature of Cal-Maine employee Kyle Morris. Munksgard now admits that the

contract was fraudulent and that he signed Morris’s name to it without Morris’s

knowledge or permission.

      Munksgard obtained three more lines of credit from Drummond over the

next two years. He supported a 2013 credit application with a contract with

Maxwell Plum Creek signed, on Plum Creek’s behalf, by an “S. Riggins.” Plum

Creek had no knowledge of the contract, and “S. Riggins” didn’t exist.

Munksgard’s third and fourth credit applications, both in 2014, followed a similar

pattern. To support them, Munksgard submitted contracts with St. Johns River

Water Management and Triple Bell Farms. Both contracts were fraudulent, and

both were signed by fictional employees—“Ross Rawlings” for St. Johns River

and “Jason Hanold” for Triple Bell.

      Three years and four unpaid loans in, Drummond started asking questions

and ultimately contacted the FBI. A grand jury later indicted Munksgard on four

counts of knowingly making a false statement in order to obtain a loan from an

FDIC-insured bank, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1014, and one count of aggravated

identity theft for his placement of Kyle Morris’s signature on the Cal-Maine Foods

contract, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1028A.

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      At trial, the government presented three pieces of evidence to prove that

Drummond was FDIC-insured when Munksgard submitted the fraudulent

materials: (1) a certification indicating that the bank’s deposits were insured when

it was initially chartered in 1990; (2) testimony from a veteran bank employee,

David Claussen, that Drummond was currently (i.e., in 2016) FDIC-insured; and

(3) Claussen’s further testimony that the bank isn’t required to “renew[]” its FDIC

certificate “every so often.”

      The jury convicted Munksgard on all five counts. The district court

sentenced Munksgard to six months in prison for the fraudulent credit applications

and to a consecutive 24 months for aggravated identity theft.

                                          II

      We begin with Munksgard’s bank-fraud conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 1014.

Section 1014 prescribes stiff penalties for anyone who “knowingly makes any false

statement . . . for the purpose of influencing in any way the action of any institution

the accounts of which are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.”

18 U.S.C. § 1014. For purposes of appeal, all agree that Munksgard (1) knowingly

(2) made false statements (3) in order to obtain financing from Drummond

Community Bank. That gets the government three-quarters of the way home.

Munksgard contends, though, that the government didn’t quite finish the job—in

particular, he says, it failed to present sufficient evidence to prove beyond a

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reasonable doubt that Drummond was FDIC-insured at the time he submitted the

fraudulent loan applications.

      We’ve seen this play before—part comedy, part tragedy. For reasons that

leave us mystified, in cases involving federally insured banks—bank robbery, bank

fraud, etc.—the government continues to stub its toe in seeking to prove the

seemingly straightforward, but nonetheless jurisdictionally “indispensable,”

element of FDIC insurance. See United States v. Platenburg, 657 F.2d 797, 799

(5th Cir. Unit A Oct. 1981). In our Circuit alone, the problem stretches back more

than half a century. For the good of all involved, we’ll pick up the story in 1978,

when we (then part of the old Fifth) considered a bank-robbery case in which the

government had presented evidence indicating that the institution at issue had been

insured (1) ten years before the crime and (2) at the time of the trial. Citing our

own precedent, as well cases from the Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Circuits

confronting the same question, we observed that “a jury can reasonably infer that

an institution was federally insured on the date of a robbery if it is presented with

evidence showing that the institution was insured both prior to that date and

recently thereafter.” United States v. Fitzpatrick, 581 F.2d 1221, 1223 (5th Cir.

1978) (citations omitted). We hastened to add, however—the proverbial shot

across the bow—that “the government obviously could have done a much better

job of proving the bank’s insured status at the date of the crime.” Id.

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      Two years later, in what would later be described as the “nadir of the

acceptable level of proof,” Platenburg, 657 F.2d at 800, we found—“[j]ust

barely”—that a reasonable jury could conclude that the target bank was insured at

the time of the offense based on evidence that it had FDIC insurance five years

earlier. United States v. Maner, 611 F.2d 107, 110–112 (5th Cir. 1980). We

deemed it “at least arguable” that the jury could indulge “the universal

presumption . . . that all banks are federally insured”—and further “that a

reasonable jury could infer beyond a reasonable doubt that proof of the condition

of insurance before the robbery, absent evidence to the contrary, suggests the

continuation of that insurance.” Id. at 110.

      Once again—this time more vigorously—we expressed our annoyance. We

emphasized our “difficulty comprehending why the Government repeatedly fails to

prove this element more carefully since the Government’s burden is so simple and

straightforward,” and we warned that “the Government had tread[ed] perilously

close to reversal in th[at] case, and may soon find itself crossing the line from

sufficiency to insufficiency.” Id. at 112. Underscoring what we described as a

“plague infecting United States Attorneys throughout the land,” our opinion

included a 760-word “digest” of cases in which appellate courts had considered

whether the government had failed to shoulder its proof-of-insurance burden.

More generously, we even offered suggestions for how the government could

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prove this “simple but indispensable fact”—a certificate of FDIC coverage

spanning the date of the crime, an insurance contract, a cancelled check, etc. Id. at

112 n.2.

      Our warnings went unheeded. In Platenburg, the government presented

only a certificate of FDIC insurance that predated the offense by seven years—

nothing more. Enough had finally become enough: “The day ha[d] come; the line

from sufficiency to insufficiency ha[d] been crossed.” 657 F.2d at 799.

      So then, what of this case? Notwithstanding our sympathy for our dissenting

colleague’s exasperation, we don’t think the line has been crossed here. The

government’s evidence of insurance, while not overwhelming, was sufficient to

prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Drummond Community Bank was FDIC-

insured. In one of the first cases to address the FDIC-insurance issue, we quoted

Professor Wigmore for the following logico-evidentiary propositions: first,

“[w]hen the existence of an object, condition, quality, or tendency at a given time

is in issue, the prior existence of it is in human experience some indication of its

probable persistence or continuance at a later period”; and second, “[s]imilar

considerations affect the use of subsequent existence as evidence of existence at

the time in issue.” Cook v. United States, 320 F.2d 258, 259 (5th Cir. 1963)

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(citations omitted).1 Thus, at least in some circumstances, evidence of either

“prior” or “subsequent” insurance, even standing alone, can be adequate proof of

coverage at the time of the offense. 2 Needless to say, we much prefer both—and

contemporaneous evidence is even better. 3

1
  The Dissent objects to our citation to Cook on the ground that the court there was reviewing
only for plain error, whereas here we review Munksgard’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence argument
de novo. See Dissenting Op. at 21–25. There are two problems. First, in its effort prove that
“[t]he standard of review answers the question” and conclusively distinguishes Cook, id. at 6, the
Dissent strains to make Cook say something it doesn’t. In particular, the Dissent insists that the
Cook court “was looking outside the judicial proceedings”—that is, to Wigmore’s commonsense
propositions that prior and subsequent existence imply current existence—“because it was
required to do so under plain error review,” and in particular under “[t]he fourth factor,” which
asks whether the alleged error “seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of
judicial proceedings.” Dissenting Op. at 23 (quoting United States v. Hernandez, 906 F.3d 1367,
1370 (11th Cir. 2018)) (emphasis added by the Dissent). In fact, though, the Cook court
emphasized the third plain-error factor—whether the alleged error affected “substantial rights,”
Cook, 320 F.2d at 260—so the hinge on which the Dissent’s distinction of Cook swings turns out
not to work. Second, and in any event, we mustn’t forget while our sufficiency review here is de
novo, it remains the case that Munksgard’s conviction “must be upheld unless the jury could not
have found the defendant guilty under any reasonable construction of the evidence.” United
States v. Frank, 599 F.3d 1221, 1233 (11th Cir. 2010) (quoting United States v. Chastain, 198
F.3d 1338, 1351 (11th Cir. 1999)). It seems to us hardly controversial that a jury could
reasonably consider what we have called Wigmore’s “logico-evidentiary propositions”—
coverage before + coverage after = coverage in between—in determining whether Drummond
was insured when Munksgard swindled it.
2
  The Dissent concedes as much—see Dissenting Op. at 25–26 (approving of the propositions’
application in Woolworth Co. v. Seckinger, 125 F.2d 97 (5th Cir. 1942))—but asserts that
applying Wigmore’s propositions “makes little sense in a case like this,” where the relevant
condition may change over a brief period of time. Dissenting Op. at 26–27. Fair enough:
hypothetically, a bank could lose its insured status at midnight tonight, noon tomorrow, or as we
write this sentence. But as a “nearly universal” matter, banks don’t. Cook, 320 F.2d at 259.
Munksgard bore the burden on appeal to demonstrate that it was unreasonable for a jury
presented with evidence of Drummond’s prior and subsequent insurance to conclude that
Drummond was insured during the period in between. We have difficulty understanding how a
jury determination that squares with common experience is unreasonable.
3
 A little Google sleuthing presumably would have revealed that Drummond’s FDIC insurance
was (as it appears to be now) “Active.” See Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., BankFind (data as of Dec.
5, 2018).

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       In any event, given our precedent, what the government presented here was

good enough. First, the government introduced a certificate of FDIC insurance

issued when Drummond Community Bank was initially chartered in 1990—

evidence (in Wigmore’s terms) of “prior existence.” Second, David Claussen,

Drummond’s Senior Vice President and Chief Underwriter, testified that the bank

was insured at the time of trial in 2016—“subsequent existence.” Finally, when

asked whether Drummond’s FDIC certificate is renewed “every so often,”

Claussen—who had spent 25 years at the small bank, and was therefore likely to be

familiar with its administration and operations—testified that it isn’t. We think it

clear that a reasonable jury could conclude that his testimony provides additional

evidence—beyond mere prior and subsequent existence—that Drummond was

insured in 2013 and 2014, when Munksgard submitted the fraudulent contracts.

                                             * * *

       Considering all of the evidence, the government proved beyond a reasonable

doubt that Drummond Community Bank was insured by the FDIC both before and

after Munksgard’s offenses and that it didn’t need to renew its insurance in the

interim. Coupled with the “universal presumption . . . that all banks are federally

insured,” Maner, 611 F.2d at 110 4—and viewing the proof in the light most

4
  To be clear, neither we nor the Maner court are taking official notice of a disputed fact so much
as acknowledging the state of the world—an exercise that is necessarily part of any review of the
reasonableness of a jury’s decision. See Dissenting Op. at 29–30.

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favorable to the government—we conclude that a reasonable juror could find that

Drummond was insured by the FDIC on the dates of Munksgard’s offenses.

                                          III

      Now, to Munksgard’s conviction for aggravated identity theft under 18

U.S.C. § 1028A, which was based on his signing Kyle Morris’s name to the

fraudulent contract with Cal-Maine Foods. Section 1028A(a)(1) provides:

“Whoever, during and in relation to any felony violation enumerated in subsection

(c), 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 2 years.”

      As with the fraud counts, all but one of the elements required to convict

Munksgard under § 1028A are straightforward. First, § 1028A(a)(1)’s “during and

in relation to” clause covers Munksgard’s § 1014 offense. Among other crimes

enumerated in “subsection (c)” of § 1028A is “any provision contained in this

chapter [47] (relating to fraud and false statements) . . . .” 18 U.S.C. §

1028A(c)(4). Chapter 47, in turn, “contain[s]” § 1014, which forbids “knowingly

mak[ing] any false statement” for the purpose (as relevant here) of obtaining

financing from an FDIC-insured bank. Second, Munksgard does not dispute that

he “knowingly” signed Morris’s name to the contract. Third, § 1028 defines

“means of identification” as “any name or number that may be used, alone or in

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conjunction with any other information, to identify a specific individual, including

any—name . . . .” 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(d)(7)(A). So, it seems clear to us, “/s/ Kyle

Morris” counts as a “means of identification.” Finally, Munksgard admits that he

signed Morris’s name “without lawful authority.” 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(1).

      That leaves the verb. The government also had to prove, as pertinent here,

that Munksgard “use[d]” Morris’s identity. Citing United States v. Berroa, 856
F.3d 141 (1st Cir. 2017), and United States v. Miller, 734 F.3d 530 (6th Cir. 2013),

Munksgard insists that the term “use[]”in § 1028A “require[s] that the defendant

attempt to pass him or herself off as another person or purport to take some other

action on another person’s behalf.” Berroa, 856 F.3d at 156. Munksgard says that

because he only signed Morris’s name, and didn’t try to impersonate Morris or

otherwise act on his behalf, he didn’t “use[]” Morris’s identification.

      We aren’t persuaded. Rather, we find ourselves in agreement with the Sixth

Circuit’s recent (post-Miller) decision in United States v. Michael, which held that

a pharmacist had “used” a doctor’s and patient’s “means of identification”—even

though he impersonated neither—when he included the doctor’s National Provider

Identifier and the patient’s name and birthdate on a fraudulent insurance claim.

882 F.3d 624, 628 (6th Cir. 2018). Like the Michael court, we begin with the

ordinary meaning of the term “use”—and, in particular, how standard English-

language dictionaries define the verb “use” when employed in conjunction with a

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particular object, as in to “use[] . . . a means of identification.” In Webster’s

Second, for instance, to “use” an object is “[t]o convert [it] to one’s service; to

avail oneself of [it]; to employ [it]; as, to use a plow, a chair, a book.” Webster’s

Second New International Dictionary 2806 (1944). Webster’s Third likewise

defines “use” vis-à-vis an object to mean “to put [it] into action or service”—e.g.,

“whether he would ever [use] the tie she had given him.” Webster’s Third New

International Dictionary 2523 (2002). In Oxford, more of the same: “take, hold, or

deploy (something) as a means of accomplishing or achieving something; employ;

[as in] she used her key to open the front door.” Oxford Dictionary of English

1958 (3d ed. 2010). And as proof that “use” does not bear some idiosyncratic

connotation in the legal context, we note that Black’s too defines the verb form to

mean “[t]o employ for the accomplishment of some purpose” or “to avail oneself

of.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1776 (10th ed. 2014). On plain meaning alone,

therefore, it seems clear to us that Munksgard “use[d]” a means of identification in

that he “employed” Morris’s name in order to procure a bank loan, and thereby

“convert[ed]” Morris’s name “to [his] service.”5

5
  As employed in § 1028A, the term “use” no doubt covers impersonations, but impersonations
do not exhaust the term’s meaning. Just as the Supreme Court in Smith v. United States, 508
U.S. 223 (1993), rejected the argument that combining “use” with “firearm” meant that the
statute criminalized only using qua shooting, so here “us[ing] a means of identification” needn’t
refer exclusively to impersonations. See Michael, 882 F.3d at 627 (rejecting similar argument).

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      Statutory context confirms this plain-meaning interpretation of the term

“use[]”—at least as it pertains to a “means of identification.” For starters,

§ 1028A(a)(1) criminalizes the knowing and unauthorized use of a means of

identification “during and in relation to” certain enumerated felonies—one of

which, again, is knowingly making a false statement to an FDIC-insured bank

under 18 U.S.C. § 1014. As the Sixth Circuit explained in Michael, this “during

and in relation to” language connotes causation: “The salient point,” the court said,

“is whether the defendant used the means of identification to further or facilitate

the . . . fraud.” 882 F.3d at 628. Just as “[f]orging a doctor’s signature to bolster”

insurance claims “facilitated the health care fraud” in that case, so too forging

Morris’s name to bolster a loan application facilitated the bank fraud in this one.

Id. at 629.

      Ranging beyond the term’s immediate surroundings, our reading finds

additional support in § 1028A(c)’s statutory cross references—the various “uses”

of means of identification that the prohibition covers. Along with § 1014’s “fraud

and false statements” ((c)(4)), § 1028A also reaches, to take only the first five,

“theft or public money, property or rewards” ((c)(1)), “false personation of

citizenship” ((c)(2)), “false statements in connection with the acquisition of a

firearm” ((c)(3)), and “mail, bank, and wire fraud” ((c)(5)). While these references

may not foreclose an impersonation-based “on behalf of” reading, they also don’t

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preclude—and on balance, we think they support—an interpretation of “use[]” that

more broadly forbids one from “employ[ing]” or “convert[ing] to [his] service”

another’s name.

       Lastly, we note that what precedent there is further reinforces our plain-

language reading. Although this Court has not yet opined (in a published opinion)

on the meaning of “use[]” in § 1028A,6 we have found the word “use” in other

criminal statutes to entail employing or converting an object to one’s service. See,

e.g., United States v. Montano, 398 F.3d 1276, 1284–85 (11th Cir. 2005)

(observing that a defendant “use[s] or carrie[s] a firearm” within the meaning of 18

U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A) when he “employ[s] the guns, avail[s] himself of the guns,

derive[s] service from the guns, or receive[s] any other benefit from the guns”).

The Supreme Court and our sister circuits have done the same. See, e.g., United

States v. Castleman, 572 U.S. 157, 170–71 (2014) (holding that under 18 U.S.C. §

922(g)(9) “the word ‘use’ conveys the idea that the thing used . . . has been made

the user’s instrument”) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)); Konop v.

Hawaiian Airlines, Inc., 302 F.3d 868, 880 (9th Cir. 2002) (defining “use” in 18

U.S.C. § 2701(c)(2) to mean “to put into action or service, avail oneself of,

6
  We note, however, that our reading comports with that in United States v. Lewis, 443 Fed.
App’x 493, 495–96 (11th Cir. 2011) (“As the signature of an individual’s name specifically
identifies that individual, we conclude that forging another’s signature constitutes the use of a
‘means of identification.’”).

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employ”); United States v. Ramsey, 237 F.3d 853, 859 (7th Cir. 2001) (interpreting

“use or attempted to use” in U.S.S.G. § 3B1.4 “fairly broadly” in accordance with

the definition in the Sixth Edition of Black’s—“to avail oneself of; to employ; to

utilize; to carry out a purpose or action by means of; to put into action or service,

especially to attain an end”).

      There is one loose end—well two, really. Aside from his general contention

that “us[ing] a means of identification” necessarily entails impersonation,

Munksgard offers a pair of more specific reasons why we shouldn’t deem his

action to be a covered “use” of Morris’s name. We find neither compelling. First,

Munksgard asserts that he “signed Morris’s name to the surveying contract but did

not take anything from Morris nor did he obligate Morris to do anything.” But

harm to the identity’s true owner isn’t an element of § 1028A(a)(1); accordingly,

Munksgard’s argument—even if true—provides him no defense. Second,

Munksgard contends that “the use of Morris’s name was incidental to the offense”

because (he says) it didn’t influence Drummond Community Bank’s decision to

provide financing. But again, Munksgard’s position presupposes an element—

something like reliance—that § 1028A(a)(1) doesn’t require.

                                       * * *

      In sum, we conclude that the plain meaning of the term “use,” particularly

when understood in statutory context and in the light of relevant precedent,

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demonstrates that Munksgard unlawfully “use[d]” Kyle Morris’s name within the

meaning of § 1028A(a)(1).

                                        IV

      For the foregoing reasons, we hold (1) that the jury here could find beyond a

reasonable doubt that Drummond Community Bank was FDIC-insured at the time

of Munksgard’s offenses, as required by 18 U.S.C. § 1014, and (2) that when

Munksgard signed Kyle Morris’s name to the fraudulent surveying contract he

submitted in support of his loan application, he “use[d]” Morris’s “means of

identification” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 1028A(a)(1). Accordingly, we

affirm Munksgard’s convictions and sentences.

      AFFIRMED

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TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

       To convict Matthew Munksgard of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1014, the

government had to prove that Drummond Community Bank (the “Bank”) was

FDIC-insured when Munksgard committed the offense in 2013 and 2014.

Although proving that fact should be “simple and straightforward,” United States

v. Maner, 611 F.2d 107, 112 (5th Cir. 1980), 1 the government consistently has

trouble with it. Add this case to the list. Here, there was no direct evidence that

the Bank was insured in either 2013 or 2014—no documentary evidence, witness

testimony, or otherwise.

       Instead, the government presented three pieces of circumstantial evidence.

First, it introduced a certificate that shows the Bank’s deposits were insured in

1990, twenty-three years before the crime. Next, it presented testimony from a

Bank employee who said that the Bank was currently FDIC-insured (in 2016), a

couple years after the crime. And finally, the government presented testimony

from the same Bank employee who said the Bank isn’t required to renew its FDIC

certificate “every so often.” Majority Op. at 5. That’s it.

       The majority holds that this evidence is “good enough” to allow a reasonable

jury to find—beyond a reasonable doubt—that the Bank was FDIC-insured in 2013

1
 In Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1207 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), this Court
adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit handed down by the close
of business on September 30, 1981.
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and 2014. Majority Op. at 9. But the majority is not writing on a blank slate. It

relies on our precedent, stretching back to the former Fifth Circuit, to draw the line

between what’s sufficient and what’s not. Majority Op. at 9 (“In any event, given

our precedent, what the government presented here was good enough.” (emphasis

added)). Because I believe the majority misreads this precedent, and in doing so,

violates Munksgard’s constitutional rights, I respectfully dissent.

      I divide my discussion into four parts. First, I explain that no binding

precedent in this Circuit compels the conclusion the majority reaches. Second,

putting the issue of binding precedent aside, I show that the majority’s analysis,

and its reliance on an evidentiary inference, is unpersuasive. Third, I point out that

the Bank employee’s testimony about renewal is not additional evidence of insured

status. Fourth, I highlight that a misreading of Cook v. United States, 320 F.2d 258

(5th Cir. 1963), has caused courts, including the majority, to apply an

unconstitutional presumption of insured status in these cases.

                                          I.

      The majority correctly points out that the problem in this case—whether the

government presented enough evidence to allow a reasonable jury to find beyond a

reasonable doubt that a bank was FDIC-insured at the time of the crime—stretches

back more than half a century, in this Circuit alone. Despite this long history, the

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majority dives into our precedent with United States v. Fitzpatrick, 581 F.2d 1221

(5th Cir. 1978) (per curiam).

      Tellingly, the majority begins its discussion of our precedent by quoting

dicta. The majority writes that in Fitzpatrick this Court “observed that ‘a jury can

reasonably infer that an institution was federally insured on the date of a robbery if

it is presented with evidence showing that the institution was insured both prior to

that date and recently thereafter.’” Majority Op. at 6 (quoting Fitzpatrick, 581
F.2d at 1223). As the majority concedes, that statement is nothing more than an

observation, and an unpersuasive one at that.

      In Fitzpatrick, the defendant was charged with robbing a bank that was

FDIC-insured. 581 F.2d at 1222. The District Court did not instruct the jury that

the government must prove the bank’s deposits were FDIC-insured; the District

Court mistakenly instructed the jury using a different jurisdictional hook. See id. at

1223. On appeal, the Court considered whether that instructional mistake was

reversible error and held that it was. Id. Before reaching its holding, the Court

said that “a jury can reasonably infer that an institution was federally insured on

the date of a robbery if it is presented with evidence showing that the institution

was insured both prior to that date and recently thereafter.” Id. But this statement

is pure dictum; it is unnecessary to the Court’s holding that the conviction must be

reversed. See In re BFW Liquidation, LLC, 899 F.3d 1178, 1186 (11th Cir. 2018)

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(“If a statement is ‘not necessary to the result the Court reached in the case,’ then

that statement is dictum.” (quoting United States v. Hunter, 172 F.3d 1307, 1310

(11th Cir. 1999) (Ed Carnes, J., concurring))). The Court made clear that the

statement is dictum because it noted the government proved guilt beyond a

reasonable doubt (which means the government proved insured status), but it still

reversed the conviction. See Fitzpatrick, 581 F.2d at 1223–24. As dictum, the

statement “is not binding on anyone for any purpose.” BFW Liquidation, 899 F.3d

at 1186 (quoting Edwards v. Prime, Inc., 602 F.3d 1276, 1298 (11th Cir. 2010)).

      If any case in this Circuit actually held what the Court said in Fitzpatrick,

the majority surely would have started there. But no case holds that a jury may

infer insured status based on prior and subsequent status.

      Backtracking a bit, the parties agree that the Circuit’s law on this problem

begins with Cook v. United States, 320 F.2d 258 (5th Cir. 1963). Indeed, the

majority eventually cites Cook and mimics its analysis. But Cook helps the

majority no more than Fitzpatrick.

      In Cook, the defendant was convicted of robbing an FDIC-insured bank.
320 F.2d at 259. To prove that the bank was insured at the time of the robbery, the

government called the bank’s vice president. Id. The vice president testified that

the bank’s deposits were covered by the FDIC. Id. That’s it; the vice president

said nothing about whether the bank was insured when it was robbed. Importantly,

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the defendant never objected, never filed a motion for judgment of acquittal, and

never filed a motion for a new trial. Id. Thus, on appeal, the Court reviewed—

under the plain error standard—whether the government presented enough

evidence to prove that the bank was FDIC-insured when it was robbed. Id.

      To answer the evidentiary question, the Court relied on what it called an

evidentiary “rule” (really, though, the rule is just a logical inference): “When the

existence of an object, condition, quality, or tendency at a given time is in issue,

the prior existence of it is in human experience some indication of its probable

persistence or continuance at a later period.” See id. (quoting 2 John H. Wigmore,

Wigmore on Evidence 413, § 437). Similarly, evidence of “subsequent existence”

can be some indication of earlier existence. See id. I call this Wigmore’s

inference.

      Applying Wigmore’s inference, if a bank was FDIC-insured at some point

before the crime was committed, it’s more likely that the bank was also FDIC-

insured later, when the crime was committed. Id. Similarly, if a bank was FDIC-

insured at some point after the crime was committed, it’s more likely that the bank

was also FDIC-insured earlier, when the crime was committed. Id.

      Below, I explain why this type of inference is inappropriate to prove FDIC-

insured status. But first, I explain exactly how the Court in Cook used this

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inference—which depended heavily on the plain error standard of review—

because Cook’s use of it is fatal to the majority’s analysis.

       The Court in Cook did not apply Wigmore’s inference in a vacuum; it

applied the inference in the context of plain error review. The Court explained

“that the common knowledge of the nearly universal prevalence of the banks of the

United States having their deposits insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance

Corporation permits, if it does no[t] require, an inference under the rule stated by

Wigmore that the [relevant] bank was insured at the time it was [robbed].” Id. at

259–60. But why was the Court looking outside the judicial proceedings to the

“nearly universal prevalence” of FDIC-insured banks? After all, the bank’s

insured status at the time of the crime is a fact that must always be found—beyond

a reasonable doubt—by the jury. And, of course, the jury can’t rely on “nearly

universal prevalence” to make the inference that Cook endorsed. There’s nothing

in the jury instructions about that.

       The standard of review answers the question: the Court was looking outside

the judicial proceedings because it was required to do so under plain error review. 2

2
  This might not be obvious at first glance because the Court in Cook did not list the four factors
of plain error review. I focus my discussion on the fourth factor. Under the first three factors of
plain error review, a party must show “(1) the district court erred; (2) the error was plain; and (3)
the error affected the party’s substantial rights.” United States v. Hernandez, 906 F.3d 1367,
1370 (11th Cir. 2018) (citing United States v. Rodriguez, 398 F.3d 1291, 1298 (11th Cir. 2005)).
The majority understandably argues that Cook was analyzing the third factor of plain error
review, not the fourth. See Majority Op. at 9 n.1. Indeed, the Court in Cook did say that the

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The fourth factor of plain error review asks whether the error—here, insufficient

evidence on a jury-found fact in a criminal case—“seriously affected the fairness,

integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” United States v.

Hernandez, 906 F.3d 1367, 1370 (11th Cir. 2018) (emphasis added) (quoting

Rodriguez, 398 F.3d at 1298). The purpose of the fourth element is to analyze

whether a “reasonable citizen would[] bear a rightly diminished view of the

judicial process and its integrity if” the court refused to correct the alleged error.

See Rosales-Mireles v. United States, 138 S. Ct. 1897, 1908 (2018) (quoting

United States v. Sabillon-Umana, 772 F.3d 1328, 1333 (10th Cir. 2014)). It’s

about institutional legitimacy.

       Here’s the upshot. The court in Cook highlighted the “universal prevalence”

of insured status to show why, assuming the District Court erred, the error would

not affect the integrity of the judiciary. The error was not egregious—and a

reasonable citizen wouldn’t think any less of the judiciary—because the “universal

criminal defendant “ha[d] not been deprived of any substantial right.” 320 F.2d at 260.
Although the Court used the substantial-right language, it couldn’t have been applying the third
factor. Here’s why. The third factor assumes the lower court made an error and basically asks
whether the error was prejudicial. See Hernandez, 906 F.3d at 1371 (noting that reviewing
courts analyzing the third factor ask whether there is “a reasonable probability that the outcome
would have been different if the district court” had not erred). An error like the one alleged in
Cook—allowing a conviction to stand even though there wasn’t enough evidence to prove an
element of the crime—always satisfies the third factor. It’s always prejudicial. If the
government doesn’t prove every element beyond a reasonable doubt, the defendant must be
acquitted. So, again, I say the Court in Cook was really applying the fourth factor. It used the
universal prevalence of insured status to explain why the general public would not lose sleep
knowing that the judiciary allowed this mistake to slide by uncorrected. Because odds are,
according to the Court, the bank was insured at the time of the crime.
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prevalence” of insured status was “common knowledge” among reasonable

citizens. That is, even if the government’s evidence of insured status was a little

thin, the error was not the type of egregious error that would cause reasonable

citizens to question the judiciary’s ability to do its job.

      Simply put, Cook does not stand for the proposition that evidence of prior

insured status and evidence of later insured status is enough to uphold a criminal

conviction when a criminal defendant appeals the denial of his motion for

acquittal. Nor does it say there is no error when the government uses evidence of

prior and later insured status to prove insured status at some point in the middle.

Cook stands for the proposition that, in some circumstances, a conviction based on

evidence of prior insured status and later insured status need not be overturned on

plain error review.

      When Cook is read in its proper context, it clearly cannot support the weight

the majority gives it. Indeed, the majority uses Cook as the bedrock of its analysis.

It uses Cook, which relied on Wigmore’s inference, to support its conclusion that

prior insured status plus later insured status reasonably equals insured status at

some point in the middle.

      Although Cook provides no precedential support for the majority’s analysis,

its use of Wigmore’s inference could still provide a persuasive analytical

framework. A quick analysis of the inference shows it does not.

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                                             II.

          As additional support for Wigmore’s inference, the Court in Cook cited F.W.

Woolworth Co. v. Seckinger, 125 F.2d 97 (5th Cir. 1942). Cook, 320 F.2d at 259.

Woolworth, which also applied Wigmore’s inference, shows why the inference is

inappropriate to prove FDIC-insured status.

          The plaintiff in Woolworth fell while shopping at the defendant’s store. 125
F.2d at 97. She sued, alleging the store’s defective condition—the result of “wear

and decay”—caused her fall. Id. at 97, 98. At trial, a witness who had seen the

floor testified about its condition. Id. at 97–98. But the witness saw the floor

forty-five days after the accident. Id. Thus, one of the issues on appeal was

whether this witness’s testimony was admissible. Id. at 97.

          The Court, applying Wigmore’s inference,3 concluded that testimony about

the floor’s condition forty-five days after the accident was “evidential of its earlier

condition.” Id. at 98. The Court noted that “[w]here the condition is of such

character that a brief lapse of time would not affect it materially, the subsequent

existence of the condition may give rise to an inference that it previously existed.”

Id. (emphasis added). With nothing but ordinary wear and tear to change the

floor’s condition, the Court concluded that the floor’s condition would not

materially change in forty-five days. See id.

3
    See id. at 98 n.2.
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       Wigmore’s inference, though sensical in a civil case like Woolworth, makes

little sense here. The condition at issue in Woolworth was the defective condition

of the floor. The defective floor was not something that would materially change

in a short period of time because (1) it became defective over a long period of time,

due to ordinary wear and tear, and (2) the only thing that could change the

defective condition was more wear and tear, which takes a lot of time. By contrast,

the condition at issue here is the Bank’s insured status, and insured status can

materially change in a short period of time. See United States v. Stuart-Caballero,

686 F.2d 890, 893 (11th Cir. 1982) (“Continued FDIC insurance coverage,

however, depends on periodic payment of premiums.”) For example, insured

status could change at least four times a year, every time a premium payment is

due. 4 So, from 1990 to 2013, there were around ninety-two chances for the Bank’s

insured status to change. And from 2014 to 2016, there were eight more chances.

The point is that evidence of prior and later insured status has little probative value

because there were tons of chances for the Bank to lose its insured status.5

4
  See 12 C.F.R. § 308.120(a)(3) (listing an insured institution’s violation of “an applicable law,
rule, regulation, order, [or] condition” as one ground for involuntarily terminating insured
status); id. § 327.3 (requiring insured institutions to pay quarterly assessments). See also Doolin
Sec. Sav. Bank, F.S.B. v. F.D.I.C., 53 F.3d 1395, 1408 (4th Cir. 1995) (“conclud[ing] that the
FDIC has the authority to instigate a termination of insurance proceeding when an institution
violates applicable law and withholds portions of its insurance assessments”).
5
  I do not mean to suggest that evidence of prior and later insured status is completely irrelevant.
I readily agree with Wigmore’s inference that prior and later evidence is “some indication” of
insured status between the two dates. See Cook, 320 F.2d at 259 (quoting 2 Wigmore, supra, at

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       Because Wigmore’s inference makes little sense in a case like this, Cook

fails to provide a persuasive analytical framework for the majority to use.

Although the majority’s analysis leans heavily on Cook, it doesn’t rely exclusively

on Cook.

                                             III.

       In addition to showing “prior existence” and “subsequent existence” of

FDIC-insured status, the majority also relies on the Bank employee’s testimony

that the Bank isn’t required to renew its FDIC certificate “every so often.” A

reasonable jury, according to the majority, “could conclude that [t]his testimony

provides additional evidence—beyond mere prior and subsequent existence—that

[the Bank] was insured in 2013 and 2014.” Majority Op. at 9.

       Two quick points. First, the Bank’s employee did not say that the FDIC

certificate is never renewed. In response to the question “[d]o you know whether

or not this certificate is renewed,” he answered “[i]t’s not.” Second, the employee

said nothing about whether the FDIC insurance itself must be renewed. The FDIC

certificate only shows that the Bank got FDIC-insured status in 1990. It doesn’t

show whether the Bank has done everything it needs to do to keep insured status,

such as pay its premiums. This is surely why the government had a conviction

413, § 437). But just how indicative are the two pieces of evidence? We don’t know. At
bottom, “some indication” of insured status is not enough to prove the Bank was FDIC-insured
beyond a reasonable doubt.
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vacated in a case where it presented only a certificate of FDIC insurance that was

dated seven years before the offense. See United States v. Platenburg, 657 F.2d
797, 800 (5th Cir. 1981).6

       Thus, I do not see how the Bank employee’s testimony makes it more likely

that the Bank was FDIC-insured in 2013 and 2014.

       At this point, I’ve covered all of the majority’s analysis that relates to

evidence introduced at trial. Finally, I address the presumption—a presumption

the majority applied against a criminal defendant.

                                             IV.

       According to the majority, “Coupled with the ‘universal presumption . . .

that all banks are federally insured’—and viewing the proof in the light most

favorable to the government—we conclude that a reasonable juror could find that

[the Bank] was insured by the FDIC on the dates of Munksgard’s offenses.”

Majority Op. at 10 (first alteration in original) (internal citation omitted) (quoting

Maner, 611 F.2d at 110). This “universal presumption” is wrong on three fronts.

       First, the presumption is wrong as a matter of precedent. The universal

presumption language comes from this Court’s decision in Maner. 611 F.2d at

6
 Platenburg came down a day too late to qualify as binding precedent under Bonner. See
Bonner, 661 F.2d at 1207. But it relied exclusively on cases that are binding on this Court.
Thus, Platenburg is persuasive authority, and the majority—which included Platenburg when
canvassing our precedent—seems to agree.
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110. But Maner clearly misread Cook when it used the language. Compare id.

(“[I]t is at least arguable that the universal presumption employed in the Cook case

that all banks are federally insured could be applied here.”), with Cook, 320 F.2d at

259–60 (noting the “common knowledge of the nearly universal prevalence” of

FDIC-insured banks). The Court in Cook noted the universal prevalence of

insured status—it said nothing about a universal presumption. The majority never

acknowledges this misreading.

      As I explained above, the Court in Cook used the universal prevalence

language in the context of plain error review, which required the Court to look

outside the judicial proceedings. Really, the Court in Cook took judicial notice of

the universal prevalence. But that isn’t problematic because the fourth factor of

plain error review requires courts to consider facts outside the proceedings.

Similarly, the Court in Maner effectively took judicial notice of the universal

presumption that banks are FDIC-insured. But this is hugely problematic because

the Court in Maner did not apply plain error review; it was considering a denied

motion for judgment of acquittal on the theory that the government didn’t prove

insured status. 611 F.2d at 108. And even if Cook had taken judicial notice of this

fact when reviewing a denied motion for judgment of acquittal, the Court in Maner

could not borrow that finding from Cook and treat it as conclusive. See Grayson v.

Warden, Comm’r, Ala. DOC, 869 F.3d 1204, 1224–25 (11th Cir. 2017). The Court

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in Maner took judicial notice of a disputed fact, clearly violating Rule 201 of the

Federal Rules of Evidence. See Fed. R. Evid. 201(b) (noting “[t]he court may

judicially notice a fact that is not subject to reasonable dispute”). The majority’s

analysis highlights the danger in relying on a later case’s after-the-fact

interpretation of an earlier one.

      Second, the jury could not have applied this universal presumption because

they weren’t instructed on it. The jury was instructed that its “decision must be

based only on the evidence presented during the trial,” and it was instructed that

the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the Bank’s deposits

were FDIC-insured. Thus, the universal presumption—which was injected into

our case law because Maner misread Cook—should not be part of the sufficiency

of the evidence analysis. This is an unremarkable conclusion because, if the

majority’s statement of the law were correct, the government would be relieved of

its duty to prove every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. That

would violate the Constitution. See Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 477,

120 S. Ct. 2348, 2356 (2000) (“[A] criminal defendant [is entitled] to ‘a jury

determination that [he] is guilty of every element of the crime with which he is

charged, beyond a reasonable doubt.’” (third alteration in original) (quoting

United States v. Gaudin, 515 U.S. 506, 510, 115 S. Ct. 2310, 2313 (1995))). And

even if the presumption didn’t violate the Constitution, it would require criminal

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defendants to prove a negative, and all of the evidence would be in the

government’s possession.

      Third, even if the Constitution permitted this kind of common law

presumption in a criminal case, the government doesn’t need it. A presumption

that some condition exists might be relevant when a district court is deciding

whether evidence is admissible. But courts never apply a presumption to help a

party satisfy its burden of proof—and, in turn, force the opposing party to present

contrary evidence—when the party with the burden of proof already has in its

possession all the evidence it needs. In fact, when a party has relevant evidence in

his control and doesn’t produce it, the failure to produce it can in some cases

“give[] rise to an inference that the evidence is unfavorable to him.” See Callahan

v. Schultz, 783 F.2d 1543, 1545 (11th Cir. 1986) (per curiam) (quoting Int’l Union

(UAW) v. NLRB, 459 F.2d 1329, 1336 (D.C. Cir. 1972)). I am unaware of any area

of the law that recognizes a presumption to help the party that already has the

evidence it needs.

                                    *      *     *

      The majority goes to great lengths to bail the government out. Nothing in

our precedent compels this, and the Constitution doesn’t allow it. Because I would

vacate the conviction, I respectfully dissent.

                                          32