Francisco Mena v. Loretta Lynch ( 2016 )


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  •                                PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 15-1009
    FRANCISCO ALBERTO MENA,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    LORETTA E. LYNCH, Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration
    Appeals.
    Argued:   January 27, 2016                  Decided:   April 27, 2016
    Before WILKINSON, SHEDD, and AGEE, Circuit Judges.
    Petition for Review granted by published opinion.   Judge Shedd
    wrote the opinion in which Judge Agee joined.   Judge Wilkinson
    wrote a dissenting opinion.
    ARGUED:   David  Kendall   Roberts,  O'MELVENY  &   MYERS  LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Petitioner.   Benjamin Mark Moss, UNITED
    STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    ON BRIEF: Joyce R. Branda, Acting Assistant Attorney General,
    Civil Division, Douglas E. Ginsburg, Assistant Director, Office
    of Immigration Litigation, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
    Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    SHEDD, Circuit Judge:
    Francisco    Mena     petitions       for   review       of     the   Board    of
    Immigration      Appeals’    (“BIA”)        decision      finding       him   to     be
    ineligible for cancellation of removal under the Immigration and
    Nationality Act (“INA”) because he is an aggravated felon. For
    the following reasons, we grant the petition.
    I
    Mena is a native and citizen of the Dominican Republic who
    was   admitted    to   the    United    States       as    a    lawful      permanent
    resident.   An    immigration   judge       (“IJ”)     ordered      Mena’s    removal
    based on his two convictions of crimes involving moral turpitude
    not arising out of the same criminal scheme. See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1227
    (a)(2)(A)(ii). Mena did not appeal the removal order to the
    BIA, and he does not contest it in his petition for review.
    During     his   immigration      proceedings,           Mena    applied      for
    cancellation of removal, a form of discretionary relief that is
    available to certain aliens who have not been convicted of an
    “aggravated felony.” See 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(a)(3). For purposes of
    the INA, an aggravated felony is, among other things, a “theft
    offense (including receipt of stolen property) . . . for which
    the term of imprisonment [is] at least one year.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(43)(G).
    2
    Mena has a prior conviction for violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 659
    ,
    which    creates    four   offenses,       each       set      forth    in       a     separate
    paragraph.     Pertinent        here,   the      first         paragraph         of     §    659
    proscribes    the     illegal     taking       by    embezzlement           or       theft   of
    certain     property     that    has    moved        in     interstate       or        foreign
    commerce. The second paragraph proscribes the purchase, receipt,
    or possession of such property “knowing the same to have been
    embezzled    or     stolen.”     Mena    was        convicted        under       the    second
    paragraph and was sentenced to a 60-month imprisonment term.
    The IJ concluded that Mena is an aggravated felon based on
    his finding that the § 659 conviction falls within the scope of
    §   1101(a)(43)(G).        Accordingly,         the       IJ    pretermitted             Mena’s
    cancellation of removal application. Thereafter, in a single-
    member panel decision, the BIA dismissed Mena’s appeal of the
    IJ’s order. 1 As we discuss below, the BIA primarily based its
    decision on its view that § 1101(a)(43)(G) contains two separate
    types of offenses that qualify as an INA “aggravated felony”: a
    “theft    offense,”      which    is    the     base      offense      listed          in    the
    statutory section, and “receipt of stolen property,” which is
    contained    in    the   parenthetical         appended         to    the    term       “theft
    offense.”
    1Consistentwith the BIA’s analysis, the parties agree that
    § 659 is divisible and that Mena was convicted under the second
    paragraph.
    3
    II
    Because the BIA issued its own opinion without adopting the
    IJ’s   reasoning,          we    review   only    the     BIA   decision.       Hernandez-
    Avalos v. Lynch, 
    784 F.3d 944
    , 948 (4th Cir. 2015). We review de
    novo     the    BIA’s       determination         that    an    offense        is   an    INA
    aggravated felony, Omargharib v. Holder, 
    775 F.3d 192
    , 196 (4th
    Cir.    2014),       affording       “appropriate        deference”       to    the      BIA’s
    statutory interpretation of the INA, Espinal-Andrades v. Holder,
    
    777 F.3d 163
    , 166 (4th Cir. 2015).
    A.
    When     the     Government        alleges        that   a    prior      conviction
    qualifies      as     an    INA    aggravated      felony,      we    must     employ     the
    “categorical        approach”       to    determine       whether     the      offense     is
    comparable to an offense listed in the INA. Omargharib, 775 F.3d
    at 196. “Under that approach, we consider only the elements of
    the statute of conviction rather than the defendant’s conduct
    underlying the offense.” Id. The prior conviction constitutes an
    aggravated felony if it has the same elements as the generic INA
    crime. Id. However, if the statute of conviction “sweeps more
    broadly” and criminalizes more conduct than the generic federal
    crime,    the       prior       conviction   cannot       count      as   an    aggravated
    felony. Id. This is so even if the defendant actually committed
    the offense in its generic form. Id.
    4
    Because we examine what the prior conviction necessarily
    involved, not the facts underlying the case, we must presume
    that    the      prior     conviction       rested     upon    nothing      more        than   the
    least of the acts criminalized and then determine whether even
    those       acts    are    encompassed        by     the    generic    federal          offense.
    Moncrieffe v. Holder, 
    133 S.Ct. 1678
    , 1684 (2013). Our focus on
    the minimum conduct criminalized by the statute of conviction is
    not    an    invitation       to    apply    “legal        imagination”       to    the    prior
    offense; rather, there must be “a realistic probability” that
    the government would apply its statute to conduct that falls
    outside the generic definition of a crime. 
    Id. at 1684-85
    .
    B.
    Applying the categorical approach, we addressed the meaning
    of    the    §     1101(a)(43)(G)        term      “theft     offense”      in     Soliman      v.
    Gonzales, 
    419 F.3d 276
     (4th Cir. 2005). In that case, the BIA
    held    that       the    alien’s    Virginia        credit    card    fraud        conviction
    constituted an INA theft offense and, therefore an aggravated
    felony, based on its determination that a conviction for fraud
    may     also       constitute       “theft”     for        purposes    of     the       INA.    We
    disagreed. We first noted that the “plain text of § 1101(a)(43)
    shows that Congress specifically distinguished fraud from theft,
    and     that       it     meant    for    the        two    offenses     to        be    treated
    5
    differently.” Id. at 282. 2 We then observed that “[w]hen a theft
    offense has occurred, property has been obtained from its owner
    ‘without       consent;’”     but     “in     a    fraud   scheme,     the     owner   has
    voluntarily          ‘surrendered’           his    property,        because     of     an
    ‘intentional perversion of truth,’ or otherwise ‘act[ed] upon’ a
    false representation to his injury.” Id. We thus explained that
    the “key and controlling distinction between these two crimes is
    . . . the ‘consent’ element — theft occurs without consent,
    while        fraud   occurs    with     consent       that   has     been     unlawfully
    obtained.” Id. Accordingly, we held that “a taking of property
    ‘without consent’ is an essential element” of a § 1101(a)(43)(G)
    theft    offense.      Id.    at    283. 3    Consequently,     we    found     that   the
    alien’s credit card fraud offense was not an INA “theft offense”
    – i.e., an “aggravated felony.”
    We     reiterated     this     holding       in    Omargharib.        There,   we
    considered whether the BIA properly concluded that the alien’s
    2In
    addition to the § 1101(a)(43)(G) “theft offense,” an
    offense that “involves fraud or deceit in which the loss to the
    victim or victims exceeds $10,000” is also an aggravated felony.
    See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(43)(M)(i).
    3Consistent
    with Soliman, the BIA now defines “theft
    offense” for purposes of § 1101(a)(43)(G) as “the taking of, or
    exercise of control over, property without consent whenever
    there is criminal intent to deprive the owner of the rights and
    benefits of ownership, even if such deprivation is less than
    total or permanent.” In re Garcia-Madruga, 
    24 I. & N. Dec. 436
    ,
    440-41 (BIA 2008) (emphasis added).
    6
    Virginia larceny conviction was an INA theft offense. Finding
    that the BIA erred, we explained that “Virginia law treats fraud
    and theft as the same for larceny purposes, but the INA treats
    them     differently.         As    such,    Virginia          larceny        ‘sweeps     more
    broadly’     than    the      INA’s    theft      offense.”           775     F.3d   at    197
    (citation omitted). We therefore held that a Virginia larceny
    conviction       “does     not      constitute      an     aggravated          felony     for
    purposes of the INA under the categorical approach.” Id.
    C.
    Mena’s challenge to the BIA’s decision is primarily based
    on our holding in Soliman. Mena argues that a person can be
    convicted under the second paragraph of § 659 for receipt of
    embezzled property, and the crime of embezzlement necessarily
    involves     a    taking       of    property       with       the     owner’s       consent.
    Therefore,       according     to    Mena,    because          “a    taking    of    property
    ‘without consent’ is an essential element” of a § 1101(a)(43)(G)
    theft offense, Soliman, 
    419 F.3d at 283
    , a conviction under the
    second    paragraph      of    § 659    is    not    a     §    1101(a)(43)(G)          “theft
    offense” under the categorical approach.
    The BIA rightly did not dispute this interpretation of the
    second paragraph of § 659 or the crime of embezzlement, see J.A.
    5, because the second paragraph of § 659 plainly criminalizes
    the receipt of certain embezzled property. Moreover, in what we
    have described as the “the classic definition,” United States v.
    
    7 Smith, 373
     F.3d 561, 565 (4th Cir. 2004), the Supreme Court long
    ago explained that embezzlement “is the fraudulent appropriation
    of property by a person to whom such property has been intrusted
    [sic],   or   into   whose   hands   it   has    lawfully   come,”   Moore     v.
    United States, 
    160 U.S. 268
    , 269 (1895); see also United States
    v. Stockton, 
    788 F.2d 210
    , 216 (4th Cir. 1986) (explaining that
    the crime of embezzlement requires that “the embezzled property
    must have been in the lawful possession of the defendant at the
    time of its appropriation”). This classic definition applies to
    the term as it is used in § 659. See, e.g., United States v.
    Waronek, 
    582 F.2d 1158
    , 1161 (7th Cir. 1978) (explaining in the
    context of a § 659 embezzlement conviction that although larceny
    “involves an unlawful trespass to the possessory interest of the
    owner in the property,” where “the taker has been entrusted with
    possession of the property, the taking is more aptly described
    as embezzlement”); see generally Boone v. United States, 
    235 F.2d 939
    , 941 (4th Cir. 1956) (explaining that the § 659 “crime
    of   receiving   include[s]    a   receipt      of   property   founded   on   an
    antecedent capture of it through fraud and deception”).
    Despite its acceptance of Mena’s characterization of § 659
    and the crime of embezzlement, the BIA applied the categorical
    approach and concluded that Mena’s conviction under the second
    paragraph of § 659 categorically falls within § 1101(a)(43)(G).
    The key to the BIA’s decision is its view that § 1101(a)(43)(G)
    8
    creates two “‘distinct and separate offenses’” – “theft offense”
    (the    base    offense)    and    “receipt    of   stolen    property”    (the
    appended parenthetical offense) – which have “different generic
    definitions composed of different elements.” J.A. 6 (quoting In
    re Cardiel-Guerrero, 
    25 I. & N. Dec. 12
    , 14 (BIA 2014)). As the
    BIA explained, this case involves “receipt of stolen property,”
    a term it has interpreted “to include the category of offenses
    involving knowing receipt, possession, or retention of property
    from its rightful owner,” J.A. 5 (citing In re Bahta, 
    22 I. & N. Dec. 1381
    , 1391 (BIA 2000)). Given the purported distinction
    between the two § 1101(a)(43)(G) offenses, the BIA reasoned that
    it “need not establish the elements of a ‘theft’ offense to
    demonstrate that a conviction for ‘receipt of stolen property’
    qualifies as an aggravated felony” under § 1101(a)(43)(G). J.A.
    6. For this reason, the BIA found our holding in Soliman – that
    a “theft offense” requires a nonconsensual taking of property
    from its owner - to be inapplicable.
    The BIA supported its decision by pointing to its prior
    opinion in Cardiel-Guerrero, where it observed that receipt of
    extorted       property    falls   within     the   generic   definition    of
    “receipt of stolen property” under § 1101(a)(43)(G). The BIA
    noted that in Cardiel-Guerrero, it “reasoned that although the
    owner may have ‘consented in some aberrant sense’ during the
    initial taking, ‘it can hardly be argued that the victim of
    9
    extortion has also consented to having his property ‘fenced,’
    concealed, or otherwise withheld from him against his will by
    third parties.’” J.A. 6 (quoting Cardiel-Guerrero, 25 I. & N.
    Dec. at 23-24). Analogizing extortion with embezzlement, the BIA
    explained that “although the initial taking under the second
    paragraph of 
    18 U.S.C. § 659
     may have involved embezzlement or
    fraud, [Mena] cannot argue that an owner also consented to a
    third party buying or possessing his or her embezzled property.”
    J.A. 6.
    Additionally, the BIA stated that “a survey of State theft
    statutes supports [its] view that receipt of embezzled property
    is   included   in   the   generic   definition   of   a   ‘theft   offense
    (including receipt of stolen property)’” under § 1101(a)(43)(G).
    J.A. 6. The BIA noted that when § 1101(a)(43)(G) was added to
    the INA, most states had adopted the Model Penal Code’s approach
    of consolidating the various common law offenses of larceny,
    embezzlement and false pretenses, receiving stolen property, and
    extortion into a unitary “theft” offense. J.A. 6. The BIA also
    found support for its holding in the fact that § 659 requires
    proof that the defendant received the property knowing that it
    was embezzled or stolen, and with the intent to deprive the
    owner of the rights or benefits of the property. J.A. 6.
    D.
    10
    Common   sense    suggests     that     knowingly      receiving     either
    stolen or embezzled property – i.e., the offense set forth in
    the second paragraph of § 659 - is a form of theft. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Johnson, 
    612 F.2d 843
    , 846 (4th Cir. 1979)
    (noting that the purpose of § 659 “is to protect goods moving in
    interstate commerce from theft”). However, we are not writing on
    a clean slate, and we may not simply rest our decision on some
    concept of common sense. Instead, we are obliged to apply the
    categorical approach, and in doing so we are guided by circuit
    precedent. Applying the categorical approach, we believe that
    Soliman, combined with a straightforward reading of §§ 659 and
    1101(a)(43)(G), dictates the result in Mena’s favor.
    As noted, Soliman establishes that “a taking of property
    ‘without consent’ is an essential element” of a § 1101(a)(43)(G)
    “theft   offense.”    
    419 F.3d at 283
    .   Moreover,    the   text    of   §
    1101(a)(43)(G) provides that the term “theft offense” includes
    the crime of “receipt of stolen property.” 4 The straightforward
    4The  pertinent text of § 1101(a)(43)(G) actually reads:
    “theft offense (including receipt of stolen property).” The key
    word in this provision is “including,” which most naturally
    means that the term that follows is a part of the term that
    precedes “including.” See, e.g., P.C. Pfeiffer Co. v. Ford, 
    444 U.S. 69
    , 77 n.7 (1979) (holding that the use of the word
    “including” in the definitional provision of the federal statute
    being reviewed there indicates an element that is “part of the
    larger group” and rejecting the argument that “including” means
    “and” or “as well as”); see also Universal Maritime Serv. Corp.
    (Continued)
    11
    conclusion that follows is that a receipt crime – being an INA
    “theft offense” – requires a taking of property without consent.
    By definition, embezzlement, like the closely related crime
    of     fraud, 5   involves       property         that     came     into     the   initial
    wrongdoer’s hands with the owner’s consent. This is an immutable
    fact     regardless       of     whether      the        property      is    subsequently
    transferred to, and received by, a third party. Accordingly, a
    conviction for receipt of embezzled property under § 659 does
    not require proof that the owner did not consent to the taking
    of the property. Lacking the “without consent” element, receipt
    of embezzled property under § 659 does not fall within the §
    1101(a)(43)(G) theft offense definition. Consequently, the crime
    set forth in the second paragraph of § 659 “sweeps more broadly”
    than the generic § 1101(a)(43)(G) theft offense, and it is not
    an INA aggravated felony under the categorical approach.
    In     reaching    this    decision,         we    accept       the   government’s
    unremarkable observation – premised on the BNA’s prior Bahta
    decision      -   that    the   parenthetical        clause       of     § 1101(a)(43)(G)
    v. Wright,        
    155 F.3d 311
    ,   319    n.10       (4th     Cir.    1998)    (similar
    holding).
    5The
    Supreme Court has explained that “the word ‘embezzled’
    itself implies fraudulent conduct on the part of the person
    receiving the money,” and “it is impossible for a person to
    embezzle the money of another without committing a fraud upon
    him.” Grin v. Shine, 
    187 U.S. 181
    , 189 (1902).
    12
    clarifies that the term “theft” is not limited to require proof
    that   the    offender     was     involved         in   the   actual    taking         of     the
    property. However, that observation simply does not support the
    BIA’s conclusion that the “without consent” element of a “theft
    offense”      is    inapplicable         to     a    “receipt         offense.”         Section
    1101(a)(43)(G) plainly applies to both “taking” and “receiving”
    offenses. Nonetheless, as we have explained, a “receipt offense”
    is one type of “theft offense” for purposes of the INA, and
    Soliman      establishes     that        a    necessary        element       of     a    “theft
    offense” is a taking from the owner without consent.
    We also find the BIA’s analogy between embezzlement and
    extortion     misplaced.      In    Cardiel-Guerrero,             the   BIA       noted       that
    although     “consent”      of     the       property     owner    is    an       element      of
    extortion,        “the   concept     of       ‘consent’        used     in    the       law     of
    extortion     is    highly       unconventional          and    does     not      connote       a
    voluntary or elective conferral of property.” 25 I. & N. Dec. at
    20. Indeed, as the Second Circuit has observed, the “consent”
    element      in    an    extortion       case       presents      the    victim         with    a
    “Hobson’s choice” and “is the razor’s edge that distinguishes
    extortion from robbery.” United States v. Zhou, 
    428 F.3d 361
    ,
    371 (2nd Cir. 2005). This type of “consent” stands in marked
    contrast to the lawful consent underlying an embezzlement crime.
    See generally Tredwell v. United States, 
    266 F. 350
    , 352 (4th
    Cir. 1920) (explaining that “[w]here one comes lawfully into the
    13
    possession of property, and afterwards and while it is in his
    possession forms and carries out the purpose of appropriating it
    to   his    own   use,       the    crime     thus     committed       is      the    crime    of
    embezzlement;          but    if,      at    the     time     of     getting         possession
    lawfully, the one to whom property is intrusted [sic] has the
    intention of appropriating it to his own use, the crime thus
    committed is the crime of larceny”).
    Additionally, we find the BIA’s reliance on its survey of
    State      statutes     and     the       Model     Penal    Code    to     be    unavailing.
    Although the BIA pointed to the States’ “trend” to consolidate
    various common law offenses into a unitary “theft” offense, that
    trend involves, among other things, certain fraud offenses. Of
    course,      we   implicitly          rejected        that    trend       in     Soliman      and
    Omargharib        by         holding        that      fraud         offenses         are      not
    § 1101(a)(43)(G) “theft offenses.”
    Finally, we note the anomalous result that the BIA decision
    would      create. 6    Under       the     BIA’s    reasoning,       an       alien    who    is
    6Dependingon the circumstances of a given case, we accord
    various levels of deference to the BIA’s interpretation of the
    INA. Here, the parties disagree regarding the applicable level
    of deference we should apply. Our decision is based on the plain
    language of § 1101(a)(43)(G), as interpreted by Soliman, so we
    owe no deference to the BIA’s statutory interpretation. See
    Espinal-Andrades, 777 F.3d at 166-67. However, even if the
    statute is ambiguous, “[w]e need not wade into the debate over
    the proper degree of deference, for it makes no difference in
    this case.” Oxygene v. Lynch, 
    813 F.3d 541
    , 548 n.3 (4th Cir.
    2016).
    14
    convicted under § 659 for embezzling up to $10,000 of property
    would   not    be    an     aggravated         felon     under    §    1101(a)(43),       yet
    another alien who is convicted under § 659 (and sentenced to a
    year of imprisonment) for knowingly receiving a fraction of the
    embezzled property would be. This result “makes scant sense” and
    cannot stand. Mellouli v. Lynch, 
    135 S.Ct. 1980
    , 1989 (2015)
    (rejecting BIA interpretation of the INA that treated “minor
    paraphernalia possession offenses . . . more harshly than drug
    possession     and      distribution       offenses”);          see    also    Castillo    v.
    Holder, 
    776 F.3d 262
    , 270 n.6 (4th Cir. 2015) (in rejecting the
    BIA’s decision that the Virginia crime of unauthorized use of a
    vehicle       is     categorically             a       “theft    offense”        under      §
    1101(a)(43)(G), we noted that “under the BIA’s decision . . . an
    anomalous and unreasonable result would occur if a conviction of
    the   ‘lesser’      crime    of    unauthorized          use    formed    the    basis    for
    removability under [§ 1101(a)(43)(G)], while the greater crime
    of larceny would not”).
    III
    In   short,       based     on    our    application        of     the    categorical
    approach, we hold that a conviction under the second paragraph
    of § 659 is not a “theft offense (including receipt of stolen
    property)” under § 1101(a)(43)(G). The BIA therefore erred in
    finding Mena to be an aggravated felon who is ineligible for
    cancellation       of   removal        under       §   1229b(a)(3).      Accordingly,      we
    15
    grant the petition for review and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion. 7
    PETITION FOR REVIEW GRANTED
    7Our determination that Mena’s § 659 conviction is not
    categorically an INA aggravated felony does not alter the basic
    nature of his offense. Mena may not have committed an INA “theft
    offense” as a technical matter, but he did commit an offense
    involving his knowing receipt of illegally obtained property.
    The government apparently feels strongly that Mena should not
    receive cancellation of removal relief, asserting that if (as we
    are ordering) the case is remanded, the BIA should be free to
    consider whether Mena is ineligible for cancellation of removal
    on another basis. Brief for Respondent, at 44. Mena disputes
    this assertion, but we decline to enter the fray. We note,
    however, that regardless of whether Mena is ultimately deemed to
    be eligible for cancellation of removal, the Attorney General’s
    decision whether to grant cancellation relief is discretionary
    and generally not subject to judicial review. See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1252
    (a)(2)(B)(i).
    We do not know if the issue of discretionary relief will
    eventually be considered in this case, and we express no opinion
    about that. However, as a general observation, it seems that a
    great deal of the effort and resources expended in appeals of
    cases of this type could potentially be preserved if the IJ or
    BIA proceeded beyond the eligibility determination and ruled
    alternatively on the discretionary cancellation decision. See,
    e.g., Ennis v. Att’y Gen. of the U.S., 
    617 Fed. Appx. 161
    , 163-
    64 (3rd Cir. 2015) (“We . . . note that we would not reach the
    aggravated felony issue even if Ennis had exhausted it because
    the IJ denied cancellation of removal on the independently
    dispositive ground that cancellation was not warranted in the
    exercise of discretion. . . . [W]e generally lack jurisdiction
    to review the discretionary denial of cancellation in any
    event.”).
    16
    WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Embezzlement is a theft. Ask the person seated next to you.
    He or she will tell you that it is.
    The     majority    says     not.    Come     again?     The      majority       says
    embezzlement is not a form of theft.
    It is from that proposition that I respectfully dissent.
    * * *
    The     Immigration       and   Nationality      Act     declares         that    any
    “theft offense (including receipt of stolen property) . . . for
    which the term of imprisonment is at least one year” is an
    aggravated     felony.     
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(43)(G).           This       broad,
    generic language embraces a variety of offenses, and the plain
    meaning of “theft” makes clear that Mena’s conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 659
     is a theft offense.
    The   majority      believes     that     embezzlement       is     not    a     theft
    because the owner of the funds voluntarily entrusts them to the
    embezzler. That totally ignores the fact that the whole purpose
    of the entrustment is for an honest stewardship of the funds.
    The betrayal of that purpose through embezzlement is purely and
    simply theft.
    Theft    is   defined     as    “[b]roadly,     any    act     or   instance       of
    stealing, including larceny, burglary, embezzlement, and false
    pretenses.”     Theft,     Black’s       Law     Dictionary    (10th       ed.        2014)
    (emphasis added). In common parlance, theft means “the action or
    17
    crime of stealing.” Concise Oxford English Dictionary 1494 (11th
    ed.    2004).    At    the    core       of    these       definitions       is    a     singular
    concept:       theft    happens         when    property         is    taken      without       any
    semblance of consent.
    The parenthetical “(including receipt of stolen property)”
    reinforces § 1101(a)(43)(G)’s broad meaning. “Stolen property”
    means “goods acquired by,” among other means, “theft.” Stolen
    Property,       Black’s      Law        Dictionary          (10th      ed.    2014).      Stolen
    property thus includes property taken through any of the common-
    law    means    that     make      up    theft.      This     is      consistent       with     the
    definition       of    the    verb       “steal”:          “[t]o    take     (something)         by
    larceny, embezzlement, or false pretenses.” Steal, Black’s Law
    Dictionary       (10th       ed.     2014)       (emphasis          added).       “Including,”
    furthermore, means “‘contain[ing]’ or ‘compris[ing] [] part of a
    whole.’” Chickasaw           Nation       v.    United       States,     
    534 U.S. 84
    ,    89
    (2001)    (citing      Webster’s         Ninth       New    Collegiate       Dictionary         609
    (1985)). Its use in conjunction with parentheses “emphasizes the
    fact     that    that     which         is     within       is     meant     simply       to     be
    illustrative . . . a circumstance underscored by the lack of any
    suggestion that Congress intended the illustrative list to be
    complete.” 
    Id. at 89
    . Far from narrowing the meaning of “theft
    offense,” the parenthetical thus suggests that offenses similar
    to    “receipt    of    stolen      property”         (i.e.,        receipt    of      embezzled
    property) are covered by the statute.
    18
    This plain meaning of theft is underscored by the fact that
    the INA uses the term “theft offense” in a generic sense. Its
    meaning therefore “roughly correspond[s] to the definitions” of
    theft found “in a majority of the States’ criminal codes.” See
    Taylor v. United States, 
    495 U.S. 575
    , 589 (1990). Those codes,
    meanwhile, had by the time of § 1101(a)(43)(G)’s 1994 enactment
    largely adopted the Model Penal Code’s policy of consolidating
    various     common     law    offenses,            including        larceny,     extortion,
    blackmail, and embezzlement, into unitary theft offenses. J.A.
    6, citing In re Cardiel-Guerrero, 
    25 I. & N. Dec. 12
    , 21 (BIA
    2009);    see     also       Model       Penal      Code       §    223.1(1)      (“Conduct
    denominated       theft      in      this     Article          constitutes       a   single
    offense.”). A generic definition of theft accordingly includes
    embezzlement.
    The majority explicitly abjures common sense, i.e. plain
    meaning, in its approach to this problem. Maj. Op. at 11. But
    the   categorical        approach        is   supposed         to    “serve[]    practical
    purposes.” Moncrieffe v. Holder, 
    133 S. Ct. 1678
    , 1690 (2013).
    Common    sense   (or     plain      meaning,       or     practicality),       as   we   all
    seemingly    acknowledge,          would      lead       us   to    reject     petitioner’s
    position.     Petitioner          Mena      was     convicted        under     the   second
    paragraph    of   
    18 U.S.C. § 659
    ,        which      criminalizes      receipt    of
    stolen or embezzled property. He argues that he nonetheless has
    not committed a theft offense. But it is wrong to think that
    19
    § 659’s coverage of receipt of embezzled property somehow takes
    it beyond the realm of theft.
    Like        theft,     embezzlement         is      also       stealing.           And
    “distinctions        between”      different      types   of     stealing        “serve    no
    useful purpose in the criminal law but are useless handicaps
    from the standpoint of the administration of criminal justice.”
    Rollin M. Perkins & Ronald Boyce, Criminal Law, 389-90 (3d ed.
    1982).      Like    a   victim     of    traditional       larceny,        a    victim    of
    embezzlement does not “consent” to the loss of his property. Nor
    does    a     victim    of    embezzlement,       like    a     victim     of        larceny,
    “consent” to the involvement of a third party when his property
    is transferred. Both victims consider their property stolen.
    Petitioner       rejects     this     view,      relying       on   our        earlier
    decision in Soliman v. Gonzales. In that case, we held that an
    INA “theft offense” must involve a taking without consent. 
    419 F.3d 276
    , 283 (4th Cir. 2005). But even if it were not already
    silly    to    suggest      that   one   “consents”       to    the   embezzlement        of
    one’s property, see Pet’r’s Br. at 18, Soliman had no occasion
    to consider the problem before us now. The predicate offense in
    Soliman was credit card fraud. 
    419 F.3d at 278
    . The court thus
    did not consider how to evaluate receipt offenses under the INA.
    And     the    plain     meaning        of   “(including        receipt         of    stolen
    property),”        
    11 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(43)(G),           requires        that   Mena’s
    conviction be treated as a theft offense.
    20
    The majority views this as an unfair result. It contends
    that embezzlement (as opposed to receipt of embezzled property)
    is not itself an aggravated felony unless the amount embezzled
    exceeds $10,000. Maj. Op. at 14-15. Making receipt of embezzled
    property an aggravated felony would thus risk, in the majority’s
    view, treating the lesser criminal more harshly than the greater
    one. But this reasoning assumes that the original embezzler is
    not also guilty of a theft offense – an incorrect assumption.
    And even if the majority’s understanding were correct, several
    considerations          limit    its    relevance.      First,    fairness       in   the
    treatment of the family of embezzlers is more properly addressed
    during    their    individual          sentencings.     Second,      § 1101(a)(43)(G)
    contains a safeguard. The term of imprisonment for any predicate
    theft offense must be “at least one year.” Mena, for example,
    was sentenced to sixty months of incarceration. Minor receipt of
    embezzled property offenses thus still avoid aggravated-felony
    status.    Finally,       if     the    point    of    the   categorical      approach,
    properly adopted by the majority, is to compare the elements of
    predicate      against     generic       INA    offenses,     then     the   majority’s
    concerns are not only misplaced but irrelevant. The capacious
    terms     of   § 1101(a)(43)(G)           embrace      Mena’s     
    18 U.S.C. § 659
    conviction,       and    we     are    obliged    to    respect   that       legislative
    choice.
    21
    This case is much less complicated than the majority makes
    it. To repeat: embezzlement is a theft. Just ask the person two
    rows down.
    22