United States v. Maggie Boler ( 2024 )


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  • USCA4 Appeal: 23-4352     Doc: 46         Filed: 08/23/2024   Pg: 1 of 51
    PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 23-4352
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    MAGGIE ANNE BOLER,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at
    Columbia. Terry L. Wooten, Senior District Judge. (3:22-cr-00073-TLW-1)
    Argued: May 9, 2024                                         Decided: August 23, 2024
    Before THACKER, QUATTLEBAUM, and BENJAMIN, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Thacker wrote the opinion in which Judge Benjamin
    joined. Judge Quattlebaum wrote a dissenting opinion.
    ARGUED: Jeremy A. Thompson, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER,
    Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellant. Tommie DeWayne Pearson, OFFICE OF THE
    UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF:
    Adair F. Boroughs, United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellee.
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    THACKER, Circuit Judge:
    Maggie Boler (“Appellant”) was convicted of six counts of presenting false claims
    against the United States by submitting false tax returns to the Internal Revenue Service
    (“IRS”), and one count of making a false statement on her fraudulent Paycheck Protection
    Program 1 (“PPP”) loan application. Appellant submitted six tax returns to the IRS but only
    received refunds on four of those returns. As a result of her convictions, Appellant was
    sentenced to 30 months of imprisonment.
    The sole issue in this appeal is whether Appellant’s United States Sentencing
    Guidelines (“Guidelines”) sentencing range can rely on the entire financial harm Appellant
    intended to cause, even though she never received the funds from the two tax returns denied
    by the IRS.
    We conclude that the complete extent of Appellant’s intended financial harm can
    be utilized in determining her Guidelines sentencing range. Thus, we affirm because the
    district court correctly incorporated Appellant’s full intended loss amount into the
    sentencing calculation.
    1
    In 2020, Congress passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security
    (“CARES”) Act, 
    Pub. L. 116-136, § 1102
    , 
    134 Stat. 285
    , 286 (2020). Section 1102 of the
    CARES Act created the Paycheck Protection Program to grant forgivable loans to small
    business owners for certain expenses. 
    Id.
    2
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    I.
    A.
    Appellant was prosecuted for her involvement in a fraudulent tax scheme. Part of
    her scheme was filing fraudulent tax returns to the IRS, claiming larger refund amounts
    than she and others were entitled to. Appellant used fictitious interest income and
    fabricated federal income tax withholdings to claim these large tax refunds. For the 2016
    tax year, Appellant submitted six fraudulent tax returns on behalf of herself and others,
    falsely claiming a total of $159,389 in tax refunds. The IRS denied two of the fraudulent
    tax returns but paid the other four tax refunds, which totaled $116,106.
    In 2021, Appellant applied for a PPP loan. In her PPP loan application, Appellant
    stated that her business, named “Maggie A Boler,” had an average monthly payroll of
    $9,500 for one employee -- herself. In her application, Appellant requested $20,833 based
    on this information. This information was false. There was no evidence supporting the
    existence of any business in Appellant’s name.              Namely, there were no “business
    expenses,” “required withholdings for a business such as payments to Social Security,” or
    any “tax payments.” J.A. 93. 2 And the IRS could not locate “any payroll payments to
    [Appellant] for $9,500 a month.” 
    Id.
     at 92–93. As a result of her fraudulent PPP loan
    application, Appellant received $20,833 to which she was not entitled.
    2
    Citations to the “J.A.” refer to the Joint Appendix filed by the parties in this appeal.
    3
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    B.
    In 2022, Appellant was indicted on six counts of presenting false claims against the
    United States in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 287
     and one count of making a false statement
    via the PPP loan application in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1014
    . Appellant proceeded to trial
    and was found guilty on all counts.
    Prior to sentencing, the United States Probation Office (the “Probation Office”)
    prepared Appellant’s Presentence Investigation Report (“PSR”). In the PSR, the Probation
    Office calculated the loss associated with Appellant’s fraudulent scheme in order to
    determine the recommended sentencing enhancements pursuant to Guidelines
    § 2B1.1(b)(1).    In doing so, the Probation Office relied on the commentary to
    section 2B1.1, which defines “loss” as the “greater of actual loss or intended loss.”
    Guidelines § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A). The commentary further defines “[a]ctual loss” as the
    “reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm that resulted from the offense,” whereas
    “[i]ntended loss” is defined as “the pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to
    inflict,” including any “intended pecuniary harm that would have been impossible or
    unlikely to occur.” Id. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A)(i)–(ii).
    Based on the commentary, the Probation Office calculated Appellant’s intended loss
    amount as $180,222. This amount combined all six fraudulent tax return refunds Appellant
    submitted to the IRS, which amounted to $159,389, plus the $20,833 PPP loan. Although
    the IRS did not pay two of the claimed refunds, the Probation Office nevertheless counted
    all six tax returns toward Appellant’s sentencing enhancements pursuant to Guidelines
    § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A)(ii). That is because all six tax returns, plus the PPP loan amount,
    4
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    represented the full amount of harm Appellant intended to cause. On the other hand, the
    actual loss Appellant caused equaled the total refunds she received from the IRS
    ($116,106) plus her PPP loan amount ($20,833) for a total of $136,939. Because the
    commentary requires the sentencing court to apply the higher of a defendant’s actual or
    intended loss, the Probation Office relied on the intended loss amount of $180,222. As a
    result, the Probation Office recommended a ten-level sentencing enhancement because the
    loss amount exceeded $150,000 but was not more than $250,000.              See Guidelines
    § 2B1.1(b)(1)(F).
    Appellant objected to the calculated loss amount contained in the PSR, arguing that
    the loss calculation should not include the two tax returns rejected by the IRS. The
    Probation Office rejected Appellant’s contention and maintained the recommended ten-
    level enhancement in the PSR.
    At the sentencing hearing, Appellant articulated her objection to the calculated loss
    amount. Appellant relied on Kisor v. Wilkie, 
    588 U.S. 558
     (2019), which requires a court
    to determine that a regulation is genuinely ambiguous before deferring to an agency’s
    interpretation of its own regulation -- in this case, the Guidelines’ commentary. Appellant
    argued that the ordinary meaning of “loss” as written in Guidelines § 2B1.1 is not
    ambiguous. She contended that “loss” encompasses the actual amount lost by the victim
    and not any intended loss. Therefore, in her view, the unambiguous meaning of “loss”
    only included actual loss and the commentary could not expand the plain text. Thus,
    Appellant argued that the two tax returns rejected by the IRS could not be included in the
    loss calculation.
    5
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    The district court overruled Appellant’s objection. The district court held that “loss”
    as written in section 2B1.1 does not “draw any distinction between” actual and intended
    loss. J.A. 282. While the district court did not explicitly state that the term “loss” is
    ambiguous, it did observe that nothing in the text of the Guideline “says [that] loss can’t
    be both” actual and intended. Id. Thus, in the district court’s view, the commentary’s
    definitions of “loss” simply provides “an explanation of the types of loss that you can have,
    and both would be appropriate to determine what the guideline range would be.” Id. at
    283. Based on a total offense level of 19, which included the ten-level enhancement for
    the loss calculation, and a criminal history category of I, the district court calculated
    Appellant’s Guidelines sentencing range to be 30–37 months of imprisonment. The district
    court imposed a sentence of 30 months of imprisonment.
    This timely appeal followed.
    II.
    We review de novo the district court’s legal interpretation of the term “loss.” United
    States v. Miller, 
    316 F.3d 495
    , 498 (4th Cir. 2003). But “to the extent that the determination
    of the amount of loss is a factual matter, we review only for clear error.” United States v.
    West, 
    2 F.3d 66
    , 71 (4th Cir.1993) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    III.
    A.
    The Guidelines set forth certain increases to a defendant’s offense level depending
    on the amount of “loss” related to the fraud committed. See Guidelines § 2B1.1(b)(1). The
    relevant Guideline, section 2B1.1, directs a sentencing court to increase the offense level
    6
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    pursuant to the Guidelines where “the loss exceeded $6,500.” Id. Section 2B1.1 does not
    define what constitutes “loss” for purposes of calculating the applicable sentencing
    enhancement. But the Guidelines’ commentary to section 2B1.1 lists several definitions
    of loss and instructs the sentencing court as to how to calculate the appropriate loss amount.
    See id. cmt. 3(A). The Guidelines’ commentary defines “[a]ctual loss” as the “reasonably
    foreseeable pecuniary harm that resulted from the offense.” Id. cmt. 3(A)(i). And it defines
    “[i]ntended loss” as “the pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to inflict,”
    including “intended pecuniary harm that would have been impossible or unlikely to occur.”
    Id. cmt. 3(A)(ii). The commentary instructs the sentencing court to apply the loss that is
    “the greater of actual loss or intended loss.” Id. cmt. 3(A).
    When deciding whether to defer to the Guidelines’ commentary, we apply the
    framework set forth in Kisor v. Wilkie, 
    588 U.S. 558
     (2019). See United States v. You, 
    74 F.4th 378
    , 397 (6th Cir. 2023). Prior to Kisor, our analysis of the Guidelines’ commentary
    was guided by the standard outlined in Stinson v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 36
     (1993). In
    Stinson, the Supreme Court “held that the commentary deserves the same deference that
    courts give agencies’ interpretations of their own rules” -- commonly known as Seminole
    Rock/Auer deference. 3 United States v. Campbell, 
    22 F.4th 438
    , 444 (4th Cir. 2022) (citing
    508 U.S. at 44–45). Based on Stinson, we were to defer to the commentary unless its
    interpretation is “plainly erroneous or inconsistent” with the plain language of the
    Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co., 
    325 U.S. 410
    , 414 (1945); Auer v. Robbins,
    3
    
    519 U.S. 452
    , 461 (1997).
    7
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    Guideline. Id. at 45; see also id. at 45–47 (discussing Stinson, Seminole Rock/Auer
    deference, and the “line of cases governing this type of deference”). 4
    But Stinson’s analysis was altered by Kisor. As we noted in United States v.
    Campbell, “Kisor limited when courts will afford Seminole Rock/Auer deference” to an
    agency’s interpretation of its own regulations, and in turn, to the commentary to the
    Guidelines. 22 F.4th at 445 (citing 
    588 U.S. 558
    ).
    Pursuant to Kisor’s directive, “Auer deference ‘can arise only if a regulation is
    genuinely ambiguous.’” Romero v. Barr, 
    937 F.3d 282
    , 291 (4th Cir. 2019) (quoting 588
    U.S. at 573). And a regulation can only be deemed “genuinely ambiguous” if uncertainty
    exists “even after a court has resorted to all the standard tools of interpretation,” including
    consideration of the “text, structure, history, and purpose of a regulation.” Kisor, 588 U.S.
    at 573, 575. “If uncertainty does not exist, there is no plausible reason for deference. The
    regulation then just means what it means—and the court must give it effect, as the court
    would any law.” Id. at 574–75.
    Thus, concluding whether a rule is “genuinely ambiguous” is step one of the
    analysis. See Kisor, 588 U.S. at 573. Once a regulation is determined to be genuinely
    ambiguous, “the agency’s reading must still fall ‘within the bounds of reasonable
    4
    The Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 
    144 S. Ct. 2244 (2024)
    , calls into question the viability of Auer deference. In Loper Bright, the
    Court rejected the long-standing notion that “ambiguities” in statutory language act as
    “implicit delegations to agencies.” 
    Id. at 2265
    . Since Loper Bright dealt specifically with
    ambiguities in statutory directives to agencies and did not address the issue of agency
    interpretations of their own regulations, we will apply the Supreme Court’s recent guidance
    in Kisor to address the issue before us today.
    8
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    interpretation’” in order to be accorded deference. 
    Id. at 559
     (quoting Arlington v. FCC,
    
    569 U.S. 290
    , 296 (2013)). In other words, the agency’s interpretation of its regulation
    “must come within the zone of ambiguity” created by the ambiguous text of the regulation.
    Id. at 576.
    Still, Kisor warns that “not every reasonable agency reading of a genuinely
    ambiguous rule should receive Auer deference.” Kisor, 588 U.S. at 576. We must also
    “make an independent inquiry into whether the character and context of the agency
    interpretation entitles it to controlling weight.” Id. This inquiry ensures that courts defer
    only to those agency readings “that Congress would have wanted [them] to.” See id.
    While there is no “exhaustive test” to determine whether the character of an
    agency’s interpretation is entitled to Auer deference, the Supreme Court has “laid out some
    especially important markers.” Kisor, 588 U.S. at 576–77. First, the interpretation must
    be the “official position” of the agency. Id. at 577 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    “Next, the agency’s interpretation must in some way implicate its substantive expertise.”
    Id. at 579. “Finally, an agency’s reading of a rule must reflect its ‘fair and considered
    judgment.’” Id. (quoting Auer, 
    519 U.S. at 462
    ).
    B.
    The issue we confront in this case is whether the term “loss” in Guidelines § 2B1.1
    is genuinely ambiguous, and if it is, whether we should defer to the Guidelines’
    commentary to ascertain its meaning.
    9
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    1.
    At step one of the Kisor analysis, we must determine whether a genuine ambiguity
    exists in section 2B1.1’s use of the term “loss.” If the term is ambiguous, we then consider
    the commentary. Appellant, relying on what she views as the ordinary meaning of loss as
    well as the canons of statutory interpretation, argues that the term “loss” is not ambiguous
    and, therefore, the district court erred by deferring to the commentary’s definitions of
    “loss.” In response, the Government argues that “loss” can mean several different things,
    particularly in light of the context and history of the Guidelines. Thus, the Government
    contends that in the face of a genuine ambiguity, the district court properly deferred to the
    commentary.
    a.
    We begin with the ordinary meaning of the term “loss.” See United States v. Haas,
    
    986 F.3d 467
    , 480 (4th Cir. 2021) (“[W]e construe terms in the Sentencing Guidelines
    according to their ordinary meaning.”).
    Appellant argues that after considering the ordinary meaning of the term “loss,” it
    is not genuinely ambiguous. Appellant relies on dictionary definitions to argue that “loss”
    can only mean the “tangible, actual loss” suffered, for instance, “where [a] victim actually
    lost money.” Appellant’s Opening Br. at 14. Appellant also points to a dictionary
    definition of loss as “the disappearance or diminution of value” to support that “loss” can
    only encompass “measurable actual loss.”          
    Id.
     at 13–14 (citing Loss, Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)). And Appellant argues that where “loss” plainly means actual
    10
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    loss, the commentary’s definition of “intended loss” inappropriately expands the plain text
    of the Guidelines to include harm that did not occur.
    In response, the Government asserts that the term “loss” is “not as limited as
    [Appellant] would claim.” United States Resp. Br. at 14. The Government points out that
    “loss” has a “myriad” of different definitions. 
    Id.
     For instance, the Government cites the
    Merriam-Webster Dictionary, which alone has “seven distinct definitions of ‘loss,’ with
    those definitions often having multiple sub-definitions.”          
    Id.
       And the Government
    disagrees with Appellant’s contention that the definitions of “loss” exclusively refer to
    measurable actual loss. Instead, the Government points out that “loss” also includes
    intangible harm such as the “absence of a physical capability,” “the harm or privation
    resulting from losing or being separated from someone or something,” or a “failure to gain,
    win, obtain, or utilize” a goal. 
    Id.
     (quoting Loss, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/loss [https://perma.cc/J6HK-YEYJ]).
    As noted by the Government, dictionary definitions do not reveal any single
    definition of the term “loss.”       For example, the 1993 edition of Webster’s New
    International Dictionary defines “loss” as any of the following:
    (a)    the act or fact of losing;
    (b)    a person or thing or an amount that is lost;
    (c)    the act or fact of failing to gain, win, obtain, or utilize;
    (d)    [a] decrease in amount, magnitude, or degree;
    (e)    the state or fact of being destroyed or placed beyond recovery; and
    11
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    (f)    the amount of an insured’s financial detriment due to the occurrence of a
    stipulated contingent event.
    Webster’s New International Dictionary 1338 (1993); see also United States v. Banks, 
    55 F.4th 246
    , 257–58 (3d Cir. 2022) (discussing the same). In attempting to collect dictionary
    definitions of “loss,” the Sixth Circuit opined:
    One dictionary defines the word to mean, among other things,
    the “amount of something lost” or the “harm or suffering
    caused by losing or being lost.” American Heritage Dictionary
    of the English Language 1063 (3d ed. 1992). Another says it
    can mean “the damage, trouble, disadvantage, [or]
    deprivation . . . caused by losing something” or “the person,
    thing, or amount lost.” Webster’s New World College
    Dictionary 799 (3d ed. 1996). A third defines it as “the being
    deprived of, or the failure to keep (a possession, appurtenance,
    right, quality, faculty, or the like),” the “[d]iminution of one’s
    possessions or advantages,” or the “detriment or disadvantage
    involved in being deprived of something[.]” 9 Oxford English
    Dictionary 37 (2d ed. 1989).
    United States v. Riccardi, 
    989 F.3d 476
    , 486 (6th Cir. 2021) (alterations in original). These
    multiple and varied definitions alone demonstrate that “loss” could mean a number of
    different things depending on the dictionary of one’s choice. Thus, there is “no single right
    answer” to the meaning of “loss” based on its plain reading. See Kisor, 588 U.S. at 575;
    see also You, 74 F.4th at 397 (“[T]he term ‘loss’ in § 2B1.1 has no one definition and can
    mean different things in different contexts.” (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted)); United States v. Rainford, -- F.4th --, 
    2024 WL 3628082
     at *7 (2d Cir. Aug. 2,
    2024) (same).
    12
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    b.
    Nor do the various cannons of statutory interpretation render the term “loss” as
    written in section 2B1.1 any less ambiguous. 5 When interpreting a regulation, we do not
    read its language “in isolation.” Lynch v. Jackson, 
    853 F.3d 116
    , 121 (4th Cir. 2017).
    Rather “the words . . . must be read in their context and with a view to their place in the
    overall [regulatory] scheme.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted). In interpreting a
    regulation’s plain language, we look to “the specific context in which the language is used,
    and the broader context of the” regulation as a whole. Hurlburt v. Black, 
    925 F.3d 154
    ,
    158 (4th Cir. 2019) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Appellant argues that the context of section 2B1.1 unambiguously limits “loss” to
    actual loss. Appellant first emphasizes that because loss must have “exceeded” $6,500 in
    order for an enhancement to apply, “loss” cannot include harm that was not actually
    inflicted. See Guidelines § 2B1.1(b)(1). Appellant asserts that “[b]y using the verb
    5
    We pause to address the use of corpus linguistics in the dissent’s analysis. While
    the dissent views corpus linguistics as simply “another tool for interpreting the meaning of
    words in a statute (or other text),” it is not so benign. Post at 27. Indeed, legal corpus
    linguistics can be quite a flawed tool; a controversial tool at best. See Anya Bernstein,
    What Counts as Data?, 
    86 Brook. L. Rev. 435
     (2021); Anya Bernstein, Legal Corpus
    Linguistics and the Half-Empirical Attitude, 
    106 Cornell L. Rev. 1397
     (2021) (hereinafter
    Bernstein, Legal Corpus Linguistics); Mark W. Smith & Dan M. Peterson, Big Data Comes
    for Textualism, 
    70 Drake L. Rev. 387
     (2021); John S. Heretic, Against Corpus Linguistics,
    108 The Geo. L.J. Online 51. The bottom line is that context matters and legal corpus
    linguistics largely “ignores the crucial contexts in which legal language is produced,
    interpreted, and deployed.” Berstein, Legal Corpus Linguistics, at 1397. A survey of
    novels, magazines, newspapers, popular television shows and movies is no match for legal
    analysis of the text, structure, purpose and history of the actual regulation we are
    considering.
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    ‘exceed’ in its past tense in conjunction with a value, [section] 2B1.1(b)(1) anticipates the
    enhancement applying where the victim actually lost money.” Appellant’s Opening Br. at
    14. And Appellant avers that “[a] defendant’s intent has nothing to do with measuring
    whether loss exceeded $6,500.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In response, the Government asserts that there is no need to delve into the guesswork
    urged by Appellant in order to discern the context of section 2B1.1 because the United
    States Sentencing Commission (“Commission”) has already provided ample context for
    “loss” in Guidelines § 1B1.3 -- the relevant conduct Guideline. In section 1B1.3, the
    Commission directs a sentencing court to consider not only the actual harm caused by a
    defendant but also “all harm that was the object of such acts and omissions.” Guidelines
    § 1B1.3(a)(3) (emphasis supplied). In the Government’s view, this broad interpretation of
    “harm” expands the definition of “loss” within section 2B1.1 without resort to the
    commentary. In other words, “loss” is ambiguous where it can mean different types of
    harm, including actual or intended harm.
    We agree with the Government’s view that the context of section 1B1.3 applies to
    our interpretation of “loss” as written in section 2B1.1. The relevant conduct Guideline
    directs courts as to how to consider “harm” in the context of specific offense characteristics
    “[u]nless otherwise specified.” Guidelines § 1B1.3(a). In this instance, section 2B1.1 does
    not explicitly limit “loss” to actual or intended loss.        Therefore, the language of
    section 1B1.3 provides a starting point for interpreting the section 2B1.1 enhancements.
    When read together, Guidelines sections 1B1.3 and 2B1.1 support the understanding that
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    “loss” must encompass both the actual harm and the harm that was the object of Appellant’s
    scheme.
    Where, as here, the Commission has provided an expansive context for interpreting
    “harm” and the text of the Guideline at issue does not specify the type of “harm,” “loss”
    cannot be as limited as Appellant contends. That is true especially where it would
    undermine the Commission’s directive. See Kisor, 588 U.S. at 590–91 (directing the court
    to carefully consider not only the text but also the history and purpose of a regulation when
    assessing whether ambiguity exists). Indeed, section 1B1.3 lends more ambiguity to the
    meaning of “loss” because it can encompass more than the actual harm caused by a
    defendant.
    c.
    Appellant further argues that “loss” should be limited to “actual loss” where the
    Commission omitted any reference to intended harm. In Appellant’s view, the decision to
    omit explicit language including “intended loss” from section 2B1.1 was intentional where
    similar language is present in other sections of the Guidelines.
    In support, Appellant cites the tax evasion Guideline, where the Commission defines
    tax loss to include “the total amount of loss that was the object of the offense (i.e., the loss
    that would have resulted had the offense been successfully completed).” Guidelines
    § 2T1.1(c)(1). To support her argument, Appellant attempts to liken this case to the facts
    and Guideline at issue in United States v. Campbell, 
    22 F.4th 438
    . In Campbell, we held
    that where Guidelines section 4B1.2 defined “controlled substance offense[s]” to the
    exclusion of any attempt crimes, the commentary could not expand the plain text of the
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    Guidelines to include inchoate crimes. 
    Id. at 445
    . We reasoned that common sense and
    the canon of expressio unius dictated that “a definition which declares what a term means
    excludes any meaning that is not stated.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    But the present case differs from Campbell because section 2B1.1 does not define
    “loss” and does not suggest that intended loss should be excluded from its definition. And,
    as previously discussed, the relevant conduct that Guideline § 1B1.3 directs the sentencing
    court to consider is more than just the tangible harm -- it includes unrealized but intended
    loss.
    Further, contrary to the dissent’s contention, our reading of section 2T1.1(c)(1) in
    comparison to section 1B1.3(a) does not render the language of other Guidelines sections
    “superfluous.” See Post at 11. Reference to Guidelines § 2T1.1(c)(1) is not a useful
    comparator. It simply does not apply here.
    Section 1B1.3(a) instructs sentencing courts as to how to interpret “harm” as used
    throughout the Guidelines when the definition of harm is not “otherwise specified.”
    Guidelines § 1B1.3(a) (emphasis supplied). The fact that other sections, such as Guidelines
    § 2T1.1(c)(1), specify that the harm at issue in that particular section also includes intended
    loss does not make our interpretation of section 1B1.3 inappropriate in this case. That is
    because here, the Guideline at issue does not define the type of harm the court should
    consider. Indeed, section 1B1.3 does not apply to the tax section cited by both the
    Appellant and the dissent because there, unlike here, the type of harm the court must
    consider is clearly defined in the text of that Guideline. Thus, courts can apply the language
    of sections 2T1.1 and 1B1.3 simultaneously without negating any instruction by the
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    Commission. However, if we were to adopt the dissent’s reasoning, we would, in turn,
    read out the language of section 1B1.3 that instructs courts to consider both actual and
    intended harm, unless otherwise specified.
    In sum, the structure of the Guidelines supports the conclusion that the meaning of
    “loss” is broad enough to encompass intended loss. 6 And, at minimum, the dissent’s
    comparison of sections 1B1.3(a) and 2T1.1(c)(1) creates more confusion as to the meaning
    of the term “loss” in section 2B1.1, supporting our holding that “loss” is genuinely
    ambiguous.
    d.
    The purpose of the Guidelines further cuts against Appellant’s narrow reading of
    “loss.” In promulgating the Guidelines, the Commission set out to “establish sentencing
    policies and practices for the Federal criminal justice system that . . . avoid[] unwarranted
    sentencing disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty
    of similar criminal conduct.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 991
    (b)(1)(B). The Commission relies on the
    intended loss amount to further this goal where it encompasses both “the seriousness of the
    offense and the defendant’s relative culpability.” Guidelines § 2B1.1 cmt. (background);
    see id. App. C Supp. at 104–05 (Amend. 792) (noting “the Commission’s continued belief
    6
    In fact, the Sentencing Commission has recently promulgated amendments to the
    Guidelines that will resolve this issue going forward. The amendments will incorporate
    the intended loss commentary, Guidelines § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A), into the Guidelines’ text. 
    89 Fed. Reg. 36,853
    , 36,855–36,857 (May 3, 2024) (effective Nov. 1, 2024, absent contrary
    action by Congress). Thus, the text of the Guideline itself will define “loss” as the greater
    of the actual loss or intended loss.
    17
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    that intended loss is an important factor” because it focuses “specifically on the defendant’s
    culpability”).
    Were we to accept Appellant’s limited reading of “loss,” it could result in sentencing
    disparities for defendants with similar culpability. And this is contrary to the Guidelines’
    purpose. For instance, if sentencing courts only considered “actual loss” when deciding
    the specific offense characteristics, defendants with equal culpability for the same criminal
    acts would receive longer sentences merely because, for one reason or another, one
    succeeded in carrying out their fraudulent scheme while the other did not. See United
    States v. You, 
    74 F.4th 378
    , 398 (6th Cir. 2023) (noting potential sentencing disparities if
    “loss” were to be so limited).
    Because no single meaning of “loss” is evident from the plain text of section 2B1.1,
    even after employing the traditional tools of interpretation, we conclude that a genuine
    ambiguity exists.
    2.
    Given that ambiguity exists as to the Guidelines’ definition of “loss,” we next
    consider whether the commentary’s definition of “loss” falls within the “zone of
    ambiguity” such that it should be given deference. Kisor, 588 U.S. at 576; You, 74 F.4th
    at 398. In doing so, we ask whether the commentary falls “within the bounds of reasonable
    interpretation” by the relevant agency; here, the Commission. Id. (internal quotation marks
    omitted). If it does, we independently inquire as to whether the commentary’s “character
    and context” entitles it to “controlling weight.” Id. To make this assessment, we consider
    whether the commentary is the Commission’s “official position,” “implicate[s] its
    18
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    substantive expertise” in some way, and reflects the “fair and considered judgment” of the
    Commission such that it is not simply a “convenient litigating position.” Kisor, 588 U.S.
    at 577–79 (citations omitted).
    The character and context of the commentary entitle it to controlling weight. The
    commentary’s definitions of loss are the Commission’s “official position.” Kisor, 588 U.S.
    at 577. In 2001, the Commission amended the Guidelines to consolidate the theft and fraud
    sections into section 2B1.1 (the “2001 Amendment”). Office of Gen. Counsel, U.S. Sent’g
    Comm’n, Loss Calculations Under § 2B1.1(b)(1), at 1 (2020).                Also known as the
    “Economic Crime Package,” the 2001 Amendment was “the outcome of Commission
    review of economic crime issues over a number of years.” Office of Educ. & Sent’g
    Practice, Amendments to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines: Highlights of Key Points [of
    the 2001 Amendment] 1 (2001).           As a part of the Economic Crime Package, the
    Commission “modified the definition of loss [in the commentary] such that it would be
    based on reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm and would include intended loss.” Loss
    Calculations Under § 2B1.1(b)(1), at 1. Thus, the inclusion of intended loss in the
    Economic Crime Package has been the longstanding position of the Commission. 7 And
    7
    The dissent ignores these sources, wherein, for example, the Office of General
    Counsel to the Commission clearly states that the Commission intended to retain the use
    of intended loss in the application of Guidelines § 2B1.1 when consolidating the theft and
    fraud Guidelines under the 2001 Amendment. While the dissent argues that the “intended
    loss” language previously contained in section 2F1.1 was intentionally removed by the
    2001 Amendment, these sources indicate otherwise. Indeed, the Commission’s Office of
    Education and Sentencing Practices highlights this point -- “[t]he revised definition of loss
    retains the rule that loss is the greater of actual and intended loss.” Highlights of Key Points
    [of the 2001 Amendment] 1 (emphasis supplied).
    19
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    the use of “intended loss” in the commentary was the result of the well-reasoned decision
    making by the Commission.
    Moreover, the commentary reflects the “substantive expertise” of the Commission
    and its “fair and considered judgment.” Kisor, 588 U.S. at 577, 579. Each year, the
    Commission “collects a vast amount of federal sentencing data” and “also reviews and
    refines the [G]uidelines in light of decisions from courts of appeals, sentencing-related
    research, congressional action, and input from the criminal justice community.” U.S.
    Sent’g                Comm’n,                 About               Us                (2023),
    https://www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/about/overview/2023_About-Us-Trifold.pdf
    [https://perma.cc/2ZUW-N62T]. Indeed, the Commission conducts ample research on
    section 2B1.1 crimes and includes its findings on its website. See U.S. Sent’g Comm’n,
    Quick Facts: Theft, Property Destruction, and Fraud Offenses (2023).
    In sum, because the commentary defines loss within the “zone of ambiguity” created
    by Guidelines § 2B1.1 and because the “character and context” of the commentary support
    that it is deserving of “controlling weight,” see Kisor, 588 U.S. at 576, the district court
    properly deferred to the commentary to determine the appropriate loss amount in
    Appellant’s case.
    C.
    In conclusion, because a genuine ambiguity exists as to the meaning of “loss” in
    Guidelines § 2B1.1 and the character of the commentary supports that it is deserving of
    deference, we affirm the district court’s application of the commentary and its reliance on
    20
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    Appellant’s full intended loss amount to calculate her Guidelines sentencing range pursuant
    to section 2B1.1.
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
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    QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Sometimes lawyers and judges overcomplicate things. This is one of those
    occasions. Today, the majority holds that the meaning of the word “loss” in U.S.S.G.
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) is ambiguous, such that we should defer to the Guideline commentary’s
    definition of the word that encompasses intended losses. The majority thus concludes that
    harm a wrongdoer intended to cause but did not achieve is nevertheless a loss. I see no way
    to read the word “loss,” as used in § 2B1.1(b)(1), that way. “Loss” is not ambiguous.
    “Loss” means actual loss, not intended loss. Because the Guideline commentary’s
    interpretation of “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) to include intended loss is both inconsistent with
    and a plainly erroneous reading of the Guideline, no deference to the commentary is
    warranted. And because the district court applied a § 2B1.1(b)(1) enhancement based on
    intended loss instead of actual loss, I would vacate the sentence and remand for
    resentencing with instructions to the district court to calculate Boler’s Guidelines range
    without considering intended loss for purposes of a § 2B1.1(b)(1) enhancement. I
    respectfully dissent.
    I.
    This appeal presents a simple question: does the word “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1)
    include tax refunds that Boler intended but failed to fraudulently obtain, or is it limited to
    the actual funds she fraudulently obtained from the government? The answer is also simple.
    “Loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) means only actual, not intended, loss.
    22
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    A. Ordinary Meaning of the Text
    We begin with the text of § 2B1.1(b)(1). See United States v. Skinner, 
    70 F.4th 219
    ,
    230 (4th Cir. 2023) (recognizing that “[c]ourts interpret the Sentencing Guidelines
    according to the ordinary rules of statutory construction” (internal quotations omitted));
    Barnhart v. Sigmon Coal Co., 
    534 U.S. 438
    , 450 (2002) (“As in all statutory construction
    cases, we begin with the language of the statute.”). Section 2B1.1(b)(1) instructs courts to
    apply a sentencing enhancement “[i]f the loss exceeded $6,500,” followed by a table of
    enhancements corresponding to incrementally increasing loss amounts. U.S.S.G.
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) (emphasis added). The Guideline itself does not define “loss.” Even so, the
    ordinary meaning of the term is clear. “Loss” refers to actual losses, not purely intended
    ones. 1
    Like the parties, the majority frames the interpretation of “loss” as seeking its
    1
    ordinary meaning. Maj. Op. at 10-11. But “[s]ometimes context indicates that a technical
    meaning applies. Every field of serious endeavor develops its own nomenclature—
    sometimes referred to as terms of art.” ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING
    LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 73 (2012) (emphasis in original). There is an
    unsettled question of whether the Guidelines’ primary audience is ordinary citizens, whose
    criminal sentences are affected by them, or lawyers and judges, who use and apply them.
    See United States v. Seefried, 
    639 F. Supp. 3d 8
    , 14 (D.D.C. 2022). Following the lead of
    the parties and the majority, I have evaluated “loss” in terms of its ordinary meaning. But
    even if “loss” is a legal term of art when used in the Guidelines, I get to the same result.
    Around the time the Guidelines first used “loss,” Black’s Law Dictionary defined over 30
    types of loss, including “capital loss,” “economic loss” and “passive loss.” See BLACK’S
    LAW DICTIONARY (6th ed. 1990). None of the defined types of loss refer to purely intended
    loss; they represent a broad variety of actual losses. Even “unrealized loss,” which might
    sound like it refers to a purely intended loss, does not cover intended losses when one looks
    to the definition of the term. See 
    id.
     (defining “unrealized loss” as a “loss that has not yet
    materialized” (emphasis added)). So, regardless of whether “loss” is a legal term of art, it
    means only actual loss.
    23
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    To illustrate, imagine Jonathan overhears Julia telling her friends that she keeps
    $1,000 in cash in her closet for emergencies. Jonathan then breaks into Julia’s home,
    intending to steal the $1,000 that he believes, based on what he overheard, Julia keeps in a
    closet. If Jonathan indeed finds $1,000 and flees with it, and the police ask Julia the amount
    of her loss, she will say $1,000. But what if while trying to gather up the $1,000, the sound
    of a security alarm startles Jonathon into fleeing with only $500, leaving the other $500
    behind? If asked the amount of her loss, Julia would not say $1,000 just because Jonathan
    may have intended to steal that amount. She would say that her loss was the amount
    Jonathan actually stole.
    1. Dictionaries
    Dictionaries confirm this understanding. In 1987, when the Guidelines were enacted
    and first used “loss” in the context of sentencing enhancements for economic offenses, see
    U.S.S.G. §§ 2B1.1(b)(1), 2F1.1 (1987), Merriam-Webster defined “loss” as “the act of
    losing; that which is lost; defeat; diminution; bereavement; harm; waste by escape or
    leakage; [or] number of casualties suffered in war.” Loss, WEBSTER’S DICTIONARY (1987).
    Similarly, Collins Dictionary defined “loss” to include “bereavement, deprivation,
    disappearance, failure, forfeiture, losing, misfortune, mislaying, privation, squandering,
    [or] waste,” as well as “cost, damage, defeat, destruction, detriment, disadvantage, harm,
    hurt, impairment, injury, [or] ruin.” Loss, THE NEW COLLINS DICTIONARY AND
    THESAURUS IN ONE (1987). All these definitions involve actual loss. None involve purely
    intended loss.
    24
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    As the majority recognizes, the definitions of “loss” include a wide variety of
    categories. Maj. Op. at 11–12. I agree that “loss” is a broad term. But breadth does not
    equal ambiguity. To explain, consider “vehicle.” Cambridge Dictionary defines “vehicle”
    as “a machine, usually with wheels and an engine, used for transporting people or goods,
    especially on land.” 2 Under that definition, cars, trucks, vans and buses are vehicles. Other
    dictionaries’ definitions of “vehicle” are not limited to land. For example, Merriam-
    Webster defines “vehicle” as “a means of carrying or transporting something.” 3 So, under
    that definition, “vehicle” may include planes, helicopters and boats. But the word is not
    ambiguous just because there are many different types of vehicles.
    Even though the government insists “loss” is ambiguous, all the definitions that it—
    and the majority—cite are consistent. Each involves an event or state of being that has
    actually happened. Whether economic, physical or emotional, each definition concerns an
    actual, realized loss. None suggest that “loss” includes harm that was intended but never
    realized.
    Resisting that conclusion, the government contends that three of the modern 4
    dictionary definitions it cites cover intended loss. These three definitions are (1) “the partial
    2
    Vehicle, CAMBRIDGE DICTIONARY, https://dictionary.cambridge.org/diction
    ary/english/vehicle [https://perma.cc/F6V26DZZ] (last visited July 1, 2024).
    3
    Vehicle, MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/vehi
    cle [https://perma.cc/W7X9-3XHE] (last visited July 1, 2024).
    4
    The government relies on modern definitions of “loss.” However, our point of
    focus is the meaning of the term when it was first used in the Guidelines for sentencing
    enhancements for economic offenses. See United States v. Hill, 
    963 F.3d 528
    , 532 (6th Cir.
    (Continued)
    25
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    or complete deterioration or absence of a physical capability or function”; (2) “the harm or
    privation resulting from losing or being separated from someone or something”; and (3) “a
    failure to gain, win, obtain, or utilize.” Resp. Br. at 14 (quoting Loss, MERRIAM-WEBSTER
    (2023)). The government argues that the “absence of a physical capability,” such as the
    loss of the ability to play a sport, is not an actual, measurable loss. 
    Id.
     And it contends that
    “the harm or privation resulting from losing or being separated from someone or
    something” is “a reflection of an unmeasurable, emotional reaction.” 
    Id.
     As for the “failure
    to gain, win, obtain, or utilize,” the government insists that such a loss “would clearly be
    reflected by the IRS’s inability to gain or obtain proper tax revenue.” 
    Id.
    I fail to see how those arguments help the government. The first two examples the
    government offers involve intangible losses. But intangible losses are still actual losses.
    Take, for instance, the “absence of a physical capability.” An accident that results in
    injuries that render a person unable to walk would fall under that definition. The inability
    to walk is an actual loss, as it actually impairs the person’s physical capabilities. Such an
    impairment may decrease the person’s quality of life. While that type of loss is intangible
    and difficult to measure with a monetary value, juries value such intangible losses all the
    time. The intangibility of such a loss does not make it any less real. It may be true that
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) concerns only tangible losses. But even so, the issue we confront is not
    2020) (“And we look to dictionaries that defined the relevant words when the Sentencing
    Commission initially used them in 1987.”). This is the same way we interpret statutes.
    See Niz-Chavez v. Garland, 
    593 U.S. 155
    , 160 (2021); Wis. Cent. Ltd. v. United States, 
    585 U.S. 274
    , 284 (2018); Sandifer v. U.S. Steel Corp., 
    571 U.S. 220
    , 227–28 (2014). As
    explained above, “loss” was used in that context in the 1987 Guidelines. Still, we consider
    the government’s modern definitions for argument’s sake.
    26
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    whether “loss” includes intangible losses. Our question is whether “loss” includes purely
    intended losses. None of the definitions cited by the government encompass such losses.
    At first blush, the government’s third example—“a failure to gain, win, obtain, or
    utilize”—sounds the most like an intended loss. But the government’s use of this definition
    views the failure to gain from the vantagepoint of the perpetrator. In contrast, the
    Guidelines view “loss” from the perspective of the victim. So, the government fails to show
    how this definition encompasses purely intended loss in the context of the Guidelines.
    Last, the government offered a hypothetical at oral argument in an attempt to show
    that “loss” encompasses intended losses. The government asked us to imagine that an
    investor purchased $1,000 in stock, and the stock immediately decreased in value to $800.
    The government asserted that the investor might describe his stock purchase as a $200 loss
    even if he had not yet sold the stock and realized that loss. But there are at least two
    problems with this example. First, at the time the stock decreased in value to $800, the
    investor would have an actual loss. At that moment, the value of his stock portfolio
    decreased. Second, the investor did not intend any loss. So, the government’s hypothetical
    does not help resolve the question here—whether “loss” includes harm that a wrongdoer
    sought to inflict but did not achieve.
    2. Corpus Linguistics
    a.
    Corpus linguistics—another tool for interpreting the meaning of words in a statute
    (or other text)—confirms “loss” is not ambiguous. “Corpus linguistics is the study of
    language (linguistics) through systematic analysis of data derived from large databases of
    27
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    naturally occurring language (corpora, the plural of corpus, a body of language).” Thomas
    R. Lee & James C. Phillips, Data-Driven Originalism, 167 U. PA. L. REV. 261, 289 (2019).
    In layman’s terms, corpus linguistics clarifies a term’s meaning by studying the term’s use
    across specified time periods and origins. “The uses can then be reviewed one by one, in
    their context, to determine” the term’s meaning. United States v. Rice, 
    36 F.4th 578
    , 583
    n.6 (4th Cir. 2022). When the uses are reviewed as a whole, “a broad picture of how a word
    or phrase was customarily used and understood during a specific time period can emerge.”
    
    Id.
    To conduct a corpus linguistics analysis of “loss,” I consulted one of the online
    databases of naturally occurring language, the Corpus of Historical American English
    (“COHA”). 5 COHA contains over 475 million words of text derived from fiction, popular
    magazines, newspapers, academic texts, and TV and movie subtitles from the 1820s to the
    2010s. See Corpus of Historical American English, https://www.english-corpora.org/coha/
    [https://perma.cc/HK78-6N95] (last visited July 1, 2024).
    I began by searching the term “loss” in COHA. I limited my search results to uses
    of the term between 1984 and 1990, the years surrounding the 1987 enactment of the
    5
    Another valuable database is the Corpus of Contemporary American English
    (“COCA”). Encompassing sources of contemporary English originating between 1990 and
    2019, COCA “contains over one billion words of text . . . from eight genres: spoken, fiction,
    popular magazines, newspapers, academic texts, TV and movie subtitles, blogs, and other
    web pages.” Corpus of Contemporary American English, https://www.english-
    corpora.org/coca/ [https://perma.cc/9JQP-9M42] (last visited Ju1y 1, 2024). But because
    the Guidelines’ first use of “loss” in the context of sentencing enhancements for economic
    offenses predates this database’s sources, I did not use COCA here.
    28
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    Guidelines, which used “loss” in the context of sentencing enhancements for economic
    offenses. See U.S.S.G. §§ 2B1.1(b)(1), 2F1.1 (1987). I obtained 1,434 hits for uses of
    “loss” during this time period. I then utilized COHA’s random sample function to pull 100
    hits from that total. 6 I reviewed each of the 100 randomly selected hits and found that every
    instance of “loss” referred to an actual loss.
    For example, the random sample included sixteen hits of newspaper or magazine
    sources using “loss” when reporting decreases relating to entities’ revenues. Another
    twelve hits consisted of newspaper, magazine, fiction or television sources using “loss” in
    the context of a diminution in a physiological or psychological function, such as memory
    loss, or the removal of a body part, such as the loss of an ear. Ten hits represented
    newspaper, magazine, fiction, academic texts or television sources using “loss” as a
    synonym for death. And nine hits represented newspaper or magazine sources referring to
    “loss” when reporting the outcome of a given sporting event between two teams. Other hits
    within the sample consisted of sources using “loss” when referring to an emotional state,
    such as feeling at a loss, or when referring to deprivations or decreases in a variety of other
    contexts, such as animals’ loss of habitat or a driver’s loss of license. But none of the hits
    referred to intended but unrealized loss. 7
    This confirms what we knew at the start. If ordinary speakers of the English
    language say “loss,” they mean something that actually occurred. Given its plain and
    6
    COHA allows a user to retrieve a random sample of 100, 200, 500 or 1,000 results.
    7
    The random sample I retrieved from COHA is attached to this opinion as an
    appendix. See Dissent Appendix.
    29
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    ordinary meaning, “loss” as used in § 2B1.1(b)(1) means only actual loss. That is how
    dictionaries use the term, and that is how people in the real world have used the term, as
    confirmed by a corpus linguistics analysis. No matter how you slice it, the ordinary
    meaning of “loss” does not encompass intended loss.
    b.
    Without challenging any specifics of my analysis, the majority dismisses corpus
    linguistics generally. It resists my statement that corpus linguistics is another tool for
    interpreting words and phrases, asserting that corpus linguistics “is not so benign.” Maj.
    Op. at 13 n.5. It adds that corpus linguistics “can be quite a flawed tool; a controversial
    tool at best.” Id. And it argues that “corpus linguistics largely ‘ignores the crucial contexts
    in which legal language is produced, interpreted, and deployed.’” Id. (quoting Anya
    Bernstein, Legal Corpus Linguistics and the Half-Empirical Attitude, 106 CORNELL L.
    REV. 1397, 1397 (2021)). Last, the majority concludes that “[a] survey of novels,
    magazines, newspapers, popular television shows and movies is no match for legal analysis
    of the text, structure, purpose and history of the actual regulation we are considering.” Id.
    I recognize that not all academics and jurists have embraced corpus linguistics as an
    analytical tool. And I welcome debate on the topic, as healthy and respectful discussion
    about important ideas elevates our legal analysis. In that spirit, I respond with a few points.
    First, it seems hard to dispute that corpus linguistics is gaining traction as an
    interpretive tool. Corpus linguistics finds support in opinions written by former Supreme
    30
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    Court Justice Breyer and current Justices Thomas and Barrett. 8 Also, a number of state and
    federal courts around the country, including this court, have utilized corpus linguistics
    when discerning the meaning of disputed terms. 9
    But admittedly, popularity does not equate to efficacy. See Stinnie v. Holcomb, 
    77 F.4th 200
    , 230 (4th Cir. 2023) (Quattlebaum, J., dissenting) (noting that “as we learned as
    children, just because others are doing something, that does not make it right.”), cert.
    granted sub nom. Lackey v. Stinnie, 
    144 S. Ct. 1390 (2024)
    . So, as to the majority’s specific
    critique about context, corpus linguistics does not ignore context; it embraces it. In fact,
    corpus linguistics, which surveys the various ways speakers and writers actually used the
    word or phrase at issue, provides real world examples that reveal how context can inform
    meaning. Assume a word or phrase has different meanings depending on the context. A
    corpus linguistics search should identify the different contexts in which the word or phrase
    8
    See Muscarello v. United States, 
    524 U.S. 125
    , 129–30 (1998); N.Y. State Rifle &
    Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. Bruen, 
    597 U.S. 1
    , 109–10 (2022) (Breyer, J., dissenting); Carpenter
    v. United States, 
    585 U.S. 296
    , 347 & n.4 (2018) (Thomas, J., dissenting); Moore v. United
    States, 
    144 S. Ct. 1680
    , 1701 (2024) (Barrett, J., dissenting).
    9
    See, e.g., Rice, 36 F.4th at 583 n.6 (using corpus linguistics to determine the
    meaning of “strangulation”); Waetzig v. Halliburton Energy Servs., Inc., 
    82 F.4th 918
    , 927
    n.12 (10th Cir. 2023) (“final proceeding”); Fulkerson v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    36 F.4th 678
    , 682–83 (6th Cir. 2022) (“reckless driving”); United States v. Seefried, 
    639 F. Supp. 3d 8
    , 13–16 (D.D.C. 2022) (“administration of justice”); Matthews v. Indus. Comm’n
    of Ariz., 
    520 P.3d 168
    , 175–77 (Ariz. 2022) (“injury by accident”); In re Estate of Heater,
    
    498 P.3d 883
    , 890–91 (Utah 2021) (“natural parent”); State v. Misch, 
    256 A.3d 519
    , 529–
    30 (Vt. 2021) (“bear arms”); Wilson v. Safelite Grp., Inc., 
    930 F.3d 429
    , 439–45 (6th Cir.
    2019) (Thapar, J., concurring in part and in the judgment) (“results in” and “extending to”);
    Richards v. Cox, 
    450 P.3d 1074
    , 1079–81 (Utah 2019) (“employment in”); People v.
    Harris, 
    885 N.W.2d 832
    , 839 (Mich. 2016) (“information”).
    31
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    is used. That should help a court compare the context of the statute, regulation or contract
    at issue with the different contexts identified in the corpus linguistics search.
    Professors Lee 10 and Mouritsen have made this same point:
    [C]orpus analysis does not take place in an acontextual vacuum. A corpus-
    based approach to ordinary meaning, as noted, does not simply evaluate
    which of two competing uses is the most common. Instead, the corpus allows
    us to examine the use of a word or phrase in a particular syntactic, semantic,
    or pragmatic context, in the speech or writing of a particular speech
    community or register, and at a particular point in time…. we are often able
    to find not only common ways to describe common real-world occurrences,
    but also the most common ways in which highly particularized and highly
    contextualized occurrences are described in a given speech community at a
    given point in time. If there are cases where it is natural to use a particular
    expression, but the circumstances do not arise often [cite] (internal citations
    omitted), an appropriately designed corpus search (performed in a
    sufficiently robust corpus) will help us identify these instances and make
    informed, evidence-based judgment about them.
    Thomas R. Lee & Stephen C. Mouritsen, Judging Ordinary Meaning, 127 YALE L.J. 788,
    874–75 (2018) (internal citations omitted). So understood, corpus linguistics does not
    ignore context; it is an additional tool to examine it.
    To illustrate, take this case. I have provided the context for hits I found in my search
    of “loss.” If in certain contexts “loss” includes “intended loss,” one would expect that to
    show up in the way ordinary writers and speakers used the word. Here, however, out of the
    100 randomly selected examples, none used “loss” to refer to “intended loss.” That
    convinces me that if a writer or speaker means intended loss, they pair “loss” with
    10
    Professor Lee served on the Utah Supreme Court from 2010 to 2022.
    32
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    “intended,” “anticipated,” “expected” or some similar adjective. And since § 2B1.1(b) did
    not do that, “loss” means “actual loss.”
    The majority states that “[a] survey of novels, magazines, newspapers, popular
    television shows and movies is no match for legal analysis of the text, structure, purpose
    and history of the actual regulation we are considering.” Maj. Op. at 13 n.5. But corpus
    linguistics is not a rival to text, structure, purpose or history. In fact, I considered those
    factors—in addition to the regulatory context—in my opinion. Instead, corpus linguistics
    compliments those considerations, much like dictionaries. The majority’s criticisms of
    corpus linguistics could equally be lodged at dictionaries. Yet no one bats an eye at
    considering dictionaries to assist in interpreting language. In fact, the majority does so in
    its opinion. If our goal is to discern the ordinary public meaning of a word or phrase—as
    we all seem to agree it is—examining the ways the public actually used the words and
    phrases under consideration is worth a look.
    B. Kisor
    Perhaps recognizing the weakness of its position on ordinary meaning, the
    government contends that we should not confine our interpretation of loss to the plain
    meaning of the term. It argues that Kisor v. Wilkie, 
    588 U.S. 558
     (2022) instructs courts to
    “carefully consider the text, structure, history, and purpose of a regulation, in all the ways
    it would if it had no agency to fall back on.” 
    Id. at 575
     (cleaned up). Considering the
    structure and purpose of § 2B1.1(b)(1) and the Guidelines as a whole, the government says
    “loss” is ambiguous. To the extent that Kisor applies (see infra Part I.C), I disagree.
    33
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    In Kisor, the Supreme Court explained that “the possibility of deference can arise
    only if a regulation is genuinely ambiguous.” 588 U.S. at 573 (emphasis added). A
    regulation is genuinely ambiguous only if uncertainty exists “even after a court has resorted
    to all the standard tools of interpretation.” Id. (emphasis added). “If uncertainty does not
    exist” as to the meaning of a regulation, “there is no plausible reason for deference” to an
    agency’s interpretation of it. Id. at 574–75. “The regulation then just means what it means,”
    and a court of law must give it effect. Id. That is what we have here. The meaning of the
    word “loss” is clear, as confirmed by the application of standard tools of interpretation.
    “Loss” means actual losses, not intended ones. Yet, the government asks us to scour the
    Guidelines to create an ambiguity that does not exist.
    Considering the structure, purpose and history of the Guidelines in addition to the
    plain text, there is no genuine ambiguity as to the meaning of “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1). For
    instance, with respect to the structure of the Guidelines, the government contends that
    § 1B1.3—the Guideline that defines relevant conduct for all offenses—supports finding
    “loss” as used in § 2B1.1(b)(1) to be ambiguous. “Unless otherwise specified,” § 1B1.3
    directs courts to determine a defendant’s base offense level based on, among other things,
    “all harm that resulted from the acts and omissions . . . and all harm that was the object of
    such acts and omissions.” U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(3). Because “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) is the
    “harm” for this criminal conduct, the government insists that § 1B1.3 directs that we
    consider both the “harm that resulted from” the criminal acts (actual loss) and “all harm
    that was the object” of the criminal acts (intended loss). Id.
    34
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    But a look at other portions of the Guidelines undermines this position. Consider
    § 2T1.1, the Guideline for determining the base offense level for tax evasion. Section
    2T1.1(c)(1) itself defines “tax loss” as “the total amount of loss that was the object of the
    offense (i.e., the loss that would have resulted had the offense been successfully
    completed).” If § 1B1.3’s directive to consider the harm that was the object of an offense
    when determining base offense levels is understood to expand the meaning of “loss” in the
    Guidelines governing base offense levels, § 2T1.1(c)(1)’s definition of “tax loss” would be
    superfluous. There would be no need to define “tax loss” to include the loss that was the
    object of the offense because, if the government was right, § 1B1.3 would already require
    the consideration of that sum, unless otherwise specified. I would not interpret the
    Guidelines in a way that renders portions superfluous. See United States v. Haas, 
    986 F.3d 467
    , 479 (4th Cir. 2021) (applying canon against superfluity when interpreting Guidelines
    provision). So, in my view, § 1B1.3’s directive regarding the consideration of harm does
    not expand the meaning of “loss” as used in § 2B1.1(b)(1). 11
    11
    The majority reasons that § 1B1.3(a)’s “[u]nless otherwise specified” language
    leads to a different conclusion. According to the majority, § 1B1.3(a) instructs sentencing
    courts as to how to interpret “harm” as used throughout the Guidelines when the definition
    of harm is not “otherwise specified.” So, § 2T1.1(c)(1)’s definition of “tax loss” as “the
    total amount of loss that was the object of the offense” is simply an example of an otherwise
    specified situation. Thus, there is no superfluity. But “otherwise” suggests different. And
    § 2T1.1(c)(1)’s definition of “tax loss” is not different from the government’s reading of
    § 1B1.3(a); it is the essentially same and, in my view, would not be needed—and thus is
    rendered superfluous—if the government’s reading of § 1B1.3(a) supports its
    interpretation of § 2B1.1(b)(1).
    35
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    As for the purpose of the Guidelines, the majority is correct that the Sentencing
    Commission promulgated the Guidelines to “avoid[] unwarranted sentencing disparities
    among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar criminal
    conduct.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 991
    (b)(1)(B). But I disagree with the majority’s view that limiting
    “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) to actual losses would result in unwarranted sentencing disparities.
    Maj. Op. at 18. In the majority’s view, “defendants with equal culpability for the same
    criminal acts would receive longer sentences merely because, for one reason or another,
    one succeeded in carrying out their fraudulent scheme while the other did not.” Maj. Op.
    at 18. Such sentencing disparities for basic economic offenses, however, are not
    unwarranted. Consider two individuals who each intend to obtain $1,000,000 in fraudulent
    bank transfers. One individual successfully obtains $1,000,000, while the other individual
    only obtains $1,000. Despite their identical intentions, they did not cause identical financial
    injuries. Both are guilty of committing the same substantive offense, but applying different
    sentencing enhancements under § 2B1.1(b)(1) based on the actual losses they caused does
    not result in an unwarranted sentencing disparity. Quite the opposite; the differing financial
    injuries is what warrants the application of different sentencing enhancements.
    Also, the Sentencing Commission created the Guidelines to “provide certainty and
    fairness in meeting the purposes of sentencing.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 991
    (b)(1)(B). Basing the
    application of § 2B1.1(b)(1) enhancements on intended losses—but only if greater than
    actual losses—promotes neither certainty nor fairness. With respect to certainty, a
    defendant is left to wonder how a court will calculate his subjective intended loss. As for
    fairness, few would find it fair to apply the same loss enhancement to two individuals who
    36
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    caused vastly different financial injuries. So, like the structure of the Guidelines, the
    purpose of the Guidelines supports reading “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) to mean actual loss.
    Finally, the Guidelines’ history supports this reading, as well. When the Guidelines
    were first enacted in 1987, the application of § 2B1.1(b)(1)’s loss enhancement was limited
    to offenses of “Larceny, Embezzlement, and Other Forms of Theft.” U.S.S.G.
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) (1987). Under this initial version of § 2B1.1(b)(1), “[i]f the value of the
    property taken exceeded $100,” a court was to increase a defendant’s offense level based
    on the amount of “Loss.” Id. Separately, the 1987 version of § 2F1.1(b)(1) provided the
    loss enhancement for offenses involving “Fraud and Deceit.” U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(1)
    (1987). Contrary to § 2B1.1(b)(1), § 2F1.1(b)(1) explicitly instructed courts to apply
    sentencing enhancements for offenses involving fraud and deceit “[i]f the estimated,
    probable or intended loss exceeded $2,000.” Id. (emphasis added).
    In 2001, the Sentencing Commission amended the Guidelines, deleting § 2F1.1
    entirely and amending § 2B1.1 to encompass basic economic offenses beyond larceny,
    embezzlement and other forms of theft. See U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 (2001). As such,
    § 2B1.1(b)(1)’s loss enhancement applied to what § 2F1.1(b)(1)’s loss enhancement once
    covered—offenses involving fraud and deceit. See id. Yet, in deleting § 2F1.1(b)(1) and
    amending § 2B1.1(b)(1), the Sentencing Commission did not include any “intended loss”
    language in § 2B1.1(b)(1). Instead, the amended version of § 2B1.1(b)(1) instructed courts,
    “[i]f the loss exceeded $5,000, increase the offense as follows . . . .” U.S.S.G.
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) (2001). Aside from increases in the monetary amount, this wording has lived
    on in subsequent versions of the Guidelines. Indeed, as previously noted, it is the language
    37
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    of the version at issue in this case and the present version. See U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1)
    (2021) and id. (2023).
    Since-deleted § 2F1.1(b)(1) demonstrates that the Sentencing Commission has
    previously specified in the text of a Guideline when “loss” encompasses intended loss. The
    Sentencing Commission’s use of “intended loss” in § 2F1.1(b)(1) and only “loss” in
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) in early versions of the Guidelines should be presumed intentional. Cf.
    Russello v. United States, 
    464 U.S. 16
    , 23 (1983) (explaining that when “Congress includes
    particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same
    Act, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate
    inclusion or exclusion.” (internal quotations omitted)). Even after deleting § 2F1.1(b)(1)
    and expanding § 2B1.1(b)(1) to cover what § 2F1.1(b)(1) once did, the Sentencing
    Commission never amended the text of § 2B1.1(b)(1) to instruct courts to consider
    intended losses. This history of the Guidelines therefore also supports reading “loss” in
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) to encompass only actual losses.
    C. Campbell and Moses
    Last, we need not wade into the question of whether United States v. Campbell,
    
    22 F.4th 438
     (4th Cir. 2022) and United States v. Moses, 
    23 F.4th 347
     (4th Cir. 2022)
    conflict with respect to how Kisor and Stinson v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 36
     (1993) apply
    to Guideline interpretation. That is because under either Kisor or Stinson, the
    commentary’s interpretation of loss is not entitled to deference. Because “loss” as used in
    § 2B1.1(b)(1) is not genuinely ambiguous, Kisor would preclude deference to the
    commentary’s interpretation of the term. See 588 U.S. at 573 (holding that “the possibility
    38
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    of deference can arise only if a regulation is genuinely ambiguous”). And because the
    commentary’s interpretation of “loss” to include intended loss is “plainly erroneous or
    inconsistent with” § 2B1.1(b)(1)’s use of the term, Stinson would likewise preclude
    deference. 
    508 U.S. at 45
    ; see also 
    id. at 38
     (holding that commentary “that interprets or
    explains a guideline is authoritative unless it violates the Constitution or a federal statute,
    or is inconsistent with, or a plainly erroneous reading of, that guideline”). So, regardless of
    whether Stinson or Kisor governs our analysis, “loss” in § 2B1.1(b)(1) still means what it
    is commonly understood to mean—actual loss. It does not include losses a wrongdoer
    intended, but failed, to cause.
    Of course, the Sentencing Commission has every right to define “loss” to include
    intended losses, notwithstanding the way the word is commonly understood. But it has only
    defined the term to include intended loss in the commentary to § 2B1.1(b)(1). Unless and
    until it does so in § 2B1.1(b)(1) itself, we should not defer to the commentary’s definition.
    The term “loss” as used in § 2B1.1(b)(1) unambiguously means actual losses. It does not
    include purely intended losses.
    II.
    For the foregoing reasons, I would vacate Boler’s sentence and remand for
    resentencing. I respectfully dissent.
    39
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    Dissent Appendix
    Year      Source Type and         Excerpt of Concordance Line
    Source
    1    1986      Magazine:               . . . replace what diuretics caused to be lost, but
    Saturday Evening Post   only recently have researchers considered
    (May/June)              magnesium loss to be a problem.” Patients with
    low serum magnesium, regardless of the . . .
    2    1988      Fiction:                . . . you. And I’m tired of being used…(at
    Mystic Pizza movie      a loss) like a sex machine. BILL has had it. He
    script                  gently pushes her . . .
    3    1986      Magazine:               . . . of up to $100 for speeding at 65 mph, with
    Newsweek (“Does         penalty points toward a loss of license and a
    Speed Kill?” by Larry   notice to insurers that can cost money at
    Martz)                  renewal time . . .
    4    1986      Newspaper:               . . . financial statements every year since 1981.
    Wall Street Journal     For 1985, Raymark posted a net loss of $18.2
    (Apr. 11)               million on sales of $112.4 million. The
    company, previously . . .
    5    1986      Fiction:                 . . . So how bad was your damage?” “She may
    Red Storm Rising by     be a total loss, sir. It was a Victor. We took one
    Tom Clancy              hit in the bow . . .
    6    1985      Fiction:                 . . . unto victory, he lay down that night still
    Depths of Glory by      aching. Nor was it the loss of his ear that
    Irving Stone            caused this aching. It was the Wee Widow
    Mouse. . . .
    7    1990      Newspaper:              . . . year has been a tougher grind. He has lost
    USA Today (Dec. 26)     20 pounds. After the loss to BYU, he would
    wake up in cold sweats. He maintains he is . . .
    8    1985      Magazine:               . . . action that labor leaders said would further
    U.S. News and World     weaken their power. But business took
    Report (“Supreme        a loss when the Court declared them subject to
    Court Shows             civil lawsuits accusing them of conspiring to
    Independent Streak”     violate . . .
    by Ted Guest)
    40
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    9    1989      Fiction:               . . . Madoc noticed. “But Wilhelm was a
    Trouble in the Brassessuperb French-horn player and I regret his loss,
    by Alisa Craig        not at all for myself but for the world of music,
    you understand . . .
    10   1986      Fiction:               . . . every art and know the Ways of all
    Wielding a Red Sword professions; to distinguish between gain
    by Piers Anthony      and loss, develop intuitive judgment,
    perceiving what could not be seen; to pay
    attention even to . .
    11   1990      Magazine:             . . . of the Berlin Wall was due not to strategic
    Time (Mar. 9)         planning, but to a sudden loss of nerve. A
    single ambiguous sentence uttered at a press
    conference, a mere . . .
    12   1988      Fiction:              . . . couldn’t get at him any other way, and they
    Catspaw by Joan D.    figured, no big loss if he found out the truth and
    Vinge                 killed a few freaks….” She blinked . . .
    13   1988      Fiction:              . . . her agony and Kris’ (still rawly part of her),
    Arrow’s Fall by       all her loss, all her hatred, and hurled them into
    Mercedes Lackey       his unprotected mind in a blinding instant . . .
    14   1989      Magazine:             . . . are forged by the hammers of international
    National Geographic   economics. The 1983 oil-price collapse brought
    (Jan.)                the loss of 28 percent of government revenues.
    Suharto slashed the budget, instituted sweeping
    tax . . .
    15   1987      Nonfiction/Academic: . . . the West Coast firm if there were no more
    The Fall of the Bell  System. By comparison, the loss of the vertical
    System by Peter Temin elements, Bell Labs and Western Electric,
    with Louis Galambos would cripple AT in . . .
    16   1984      Nonfiction/Academic: . . . self-reflexivity? apparently over and done
    The Invented Reality: with for Beckett personally? is correlated to
    How Do We Know        the loss, which had long since taken place in
    What We Believe We    other disciplines, of the belief that . . .
    Know? by Paul
    Watzlawick (Editor)
    17   1987      Magazine:              . . . U.S. and Britain might rejoin the agency,
    Time (Oct. 5)         whose programs have been crippled by
    the loss of Washington’s $48 million annual
    41
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    contribution. But that possibility seemed more
    remote . . .
    18   1989      Fiction:                . . . of these welds, the way he polished this
    The Minotaur by         forging with acid to minimize heat loss. Look
    Stephen Coonts          here! See how he built this to maximize cooling
    and shorten the . . .
    19   1989      Magazine:               . . . lords of Irian Jaya. We are losing our own
    National Geographic     province.” The first loss is the land. For 30
    (Jan.)                  miles along the corkscrew road from tiny
    Sentani Airport . . .
    20   1990      Magazine:               . . . tack can be disastrous. Not only do drug
    Black Enterprise        abusers cost the company money in loss of
    (July)                  productivity and increased medical benefits, but
    many may be endangering the lives of . . .
    21   1989      TV Series:              . . . been born in ‘53 and lived in the future.
    Quantum Leap            Then this whole memory loss thing is another
    one of their hoaxes. I’m afraid so. Well, . . .
    22   1984      Fiction:                . . . unless it had to do with that peculiar
    Alien Cargo by          attitude of resignation about his imagined loss
    Theodore Sturgeon       of command. “What the hell?” I wanted to
    know. . . .
    23   1990      Newspaper:              . . . clinch wild card with two victories, plus
    USA Today (Dec. 20)     one loss by Cincinnati, or Pittsburgh loss to
    Cleveland, or two losses by Kansas City, based
    on win against Houston . . .
    24   1985      Nonfiction/Academic:    . . . again in quite the same way. Opportunities
    The Sense of Sight by   can be irretrievably lost and then their loss is
    John Berger             like a death. When the Russian tanks entered
    Prague in August 1968 Ernst . . .
    25   1987      Newspaper:              . . . true true) e stan jus lokka dis. Wen one a
    Christian Science       oona fin you loss sheep, oona fa make merry.
    Monitor (“New Bible     Same feshion, all dem wa een Hebn . . .
    Translation; Keeping
    Ancestral Language
    Alive” by Trip
    DuBard (Mar. 16))
    42
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    26   1988      Fiction:                  . . . if he’d had to wait for an ambulance he
    Crown of Stars by         might well have died from loss of blood. I can
    James Tiptree, Jr.        assure you, Mr. George, that this sort of . . .
    27   1986      Nonfiction/Academic:      . . . hard to raise in sufficient amounts in
    Economics in Plain        periods of strain at home over
    English by Leonard        unemployment, loss of export markets, and
    Silk                      resentment toward growing imports, problems
    that were all intensified . . .
    28   1988      Nonfiction/Academic:      . . . Well, it’s a start, you’re no longer at a loss.
    The Electronic            Did you take a look at Datanet? Some of Len’s
    Sweatshop: How            clients follow . . .
    Computers are
    Transforming the
    Office of the Future
    into the Factory of the
    Past by Barbara
    Garson
    29   1989      Newspaper:                . . . a seven-run fifth inning and Minnesota won
    New York Times            its fifth consecutive game. Seattle’s loss was its
    (Aug. 28)                 11th in a row. // The Mariners are one defeat
    short of their . . .
    30   1988      Fiction:                  . . . to be wrong. Had to be. Zoya knew she
    “E” is for Evidence       would not survive another loss. She just
    by Sue Grafton            couldn’t face it. “I’ll do everything I can . . .
    31   1989      Magazine:                 . . . House Republicans and renegade
    Time (Oct. 9)             Democrats jumped at a short-term boost in
    revenues against a long-term loss. The
    giveaway fractured the foundation of the
    landmark 1986 tax-reform law. The drain . . .
    32   1989      Nonfiction/Academic:      . . . farmers left cattle overnight in unprotected
    The Endangered            pastures frequented by wolves. The total
    Animal Kingdom: The       average annual loss of livestock to wolves in
    Struggle to Save          Minnesota is about five head of cattle and a
    America’s Wildlife by     dozen . . .
    Roger L. Disilvestro
    33   1985      Nonfiction/Academic:      . . . Defending China was under threat. A
    missed opportunity that went wrong (the loss of
    43
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    Defending China by      a window for taking Taiwan), was not as bad as
    Gerald Segal            the necessity . . .
    34   1984      Newspaper:              . . . In the year-earlier second quarter, European
    Wall Street Journal     American earned $10.2 million. The loss also
    (July 11)               caused the six parent banks to add $80 million
    in capital to European American . . .
    35   1990      Newspaper:              . . . Kansas City Bears have clinched division
    USA Today (Dec. 20)     title, based on overall record; one more loss
    (home vs. Tampa Bay, home vs. Kansas City)
    or a . . .
    36   1990      Magazine:               . . . Most of the consequences of sanctions were
    History Today (Sept.)   unintended. While privileged whites suffered
    a loss of perhaps ten Rhodesian dollars per
    capita per annum, most of the hardships
    were . . .
    37   1986      Magazine:               . . . and movies are evil. It’s not true. Writing is
    Newsweek                writing.” Loss of control: Still, for most
    (“Broadway Goes to      playwrights there is one big drawback in
    the Movies” by David    movie . . .
    Ansen)
    38   1986      Newspaper:              . . . sweeping sales incentives, GM’s costs
    Wall Street Journal     caused it to post a third-period operating loss.
    (Jan. 10)               Ford and Chrysler had operating profits despite
    offering similar incentives. The current
    round . . .
    39   1990      Newspaper:              . . . be in the hunt for another title. Sullivan
    USA Today (Dec. 26)     again, recalling the 29-20 loss to Notre Dame:
    “I thought the chance for No. 1 was dead, . . .
    40   1985      TV Series:              . . . How terribly painful it must be. There’s
    Dallas                  no... No explaining the loss of a child. I’m not
    looking for explanations. The only thing
    that . . .
    41   1985      Newspaper:              . . . unprofitable for the past 2 1/2 years. In
    Wall Street Journal     1984, it had an operating loss of $73.1 million;
    (Oct. 11)               in this year’s first half it had an . . .
    42   1984      Magazine:               . . . Parkinson’s disease and often respond to
    anti-Parkinson’s disease medication. The
    44
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    Saturday Evening Post symptoms include loss of coordination, slurred,
    (Sept.)               “cog wheel” speech, a shuffling gait and . . .
    43   1986      Magazine:                . . . manuscript -- burned again! What they
    Time (Oct. 13).          confiscated on the train was the fourth loss.
    There were others to come. So don’t be
    surprised that I call . . .
    44   1988      Newspaper:               . . . poll of voters. They said their support was
    New York Times           undiminished by Mr. Jackson’s loss last week
    (Apr. 27)                in New York to Mr. Dukakis or by the large
    lead that pollsters . . .
    45   1990      Magazine:                . . . B-2 would mean the demise of its builder,
    Time (Aug. 6)            the Northrop Corp., and the loss of at least
    12,000 jobs. . . .
    46   1989      Fiction:                 . . . children; she can’t give up her shame that it
    The Other Side by        was through her this loss came about. Every
    Mary Gordon              year, the girls come for August and life is
    different . . .
    47   1984      Fiction:                 . . . were quick to take advantage of their sacred
    The Sicilian by Mario    liberties. They would all regret the loss of
    Puzo                     Mussolini, the Maresciallo thought grimly.
    Compared with the Friends of the Friends . . .
    48   1989      Newspaper:               . . . not participate in the 1989 price and income
    Chicago Tribune          support programs will have to absorb a loss of
    (Aug. 15)                half of their normal production before they
    receive any payment. Soybean producers
    must . . .
    49   1986      Newspaper:               . . . didn’t do as well as I expected. They had a
    Wall Street Journal      higher-than-expected loan loss provision, and
    (Apr. 11)                non-interest expenses rose 12%.” Chemical
    New York had a gain . . .
    50   1990      Magazine:                . . . estrogen levels taper off quite slowly after
    Newsweek (Aug. 6)        menopause. Their bodies partially compensate
    for the loss by converting the male hormone
    androgen (present in all women) to
    estrogen. . . .
    45
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    51   1986      Newspaper:            . . . seal the seam where the two bottom
    Chicago Tribune (Feb. sections of the booster were joined. A loss of
    15)                   elasticity from the cold could have allowed hot
    rocket exhaust gases to escape through . . .
    52   1987      Fiction:              . . . he heard himself shouting, “let’s not lose
    Confessions of Johnny any more!” The loss of the horses meant the
    Ringo by Geoffrey     loss of their only apparent means of escape.
    Aggeler               Even . . .
    53   1984      Magazine:             . . . truly devastating disorder that costs our
    Saturday Evening Post country about $10,000,000,000 in terms of
    (Sept.)               medical care and loss of productivity. Since the
    disease is characterized by premature morbidity
    and mortality, covers . . .
    54   1990      Magazine:              . . . Or, they maintain, given the subtle
    Wilderness (Summer) interactions among species, the loss of even one
    apparently insignificant species may have
    unexpected (and disastrous) ramifications
    that . . .
    55   1989      Magazine:             . . . make up the last two sections of Human
    The Nation (Dec. 11)  Wishes, he traces pleasures and their loss? in
    love, in family life, in the living world? with
    intelligence . . .
    56   1986      Fiction:              . . . to Ben Yehuda Street until the world has
    Shattered Silk by     opportunity to weep with us over the loss of
    Barbara Michaels      Arab lives.” “What do you mean, your
    excellence?” . . .
    57   1985      Newspaper:            . . . Phoenix’s Alvan Adams goes up for two
    Chicago Tribune       points in the Suns’ 108-101 loss to Atlanta
    (Nov. 15)             Wednesday night. . . .
    58   1984      Magazine:             . . . Under Social Security regulations, workers
    Time (Sept. 10)       with serious injuries, like the loss of two limbs,
    seldom have difficulty proving that they are
    entitled to disability payments . . .
    59   1989      Newspaper:            . . . first week of next month, the company said.
    Wall Street Journal   Despite the charge and expected loss for the
    (Oct. 11)             quarter, the company’s preliminary fourth-
    quarter report struck a positive note . . .
    46
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    60   1986      Fiction:                 . . . I see misfortune, sorrow in your past.”
    Bartholomew Fair         “Oh.” “Loss, death of children.” “Only one of
    Murders by Leonard       my children lived,” . . .
    Turney
    61   1987      Magazine:                 . . . That is what Cendra Lynn, a psychologist
    The Nation (Oct. 31)     who specializes in grief and loss, wrote in the
    reunion’s “yearbook” a word processor that
    took . . .
    62   1984      Nonfiction/Academic:     . . . diet in a meal form rather than pelletized.
    Farm Animals by          The reasons for differences in weight loss and
    Michael W. Fox           shrinkage between those fed meal or pellets is
    not known. . . .
    63   1988      Fiction:                 . . . Right. She got home in August, minus
    “E” is for Evidence      Julian, which is no big loss. He was a dud if I
    by Sue Grafton           ever saw one. A real bore. . . .
    64   1986      TV Series:               . . . have such a beautiful face to look at, the
    The A-Team               evening would be a total loss. (croupier
    speaking FRENCH) Monsieur Jourdan wins
    again. What took you? Murdock’s . . .
    65   1985      Fiction:                 . . . threaten him half as much as the danger
    Texas by James A.        which hung over the Macnabs: the loss of their
    Michener                 entire investment. What you do, Templeton, is
    what we’ve . . .
    66   1987      Nonfiction/Academic:     . . . essence of engineering rationality a
    The Civilized            recognition of its proper limits. | Risk and the
    Engineer by Samuel       Loss of Challenger No discussion of
    C. Florman               engineering and risk would be complete
    without reference to one . . .
    67   1987      Fiction:                 . . . it almost shone. “I did not mean to be the
    Out of Phaze by Piers    agent of your loss of woman.” Loss of woman?
    Anthony                  That must refer to the way Mach . . .
    68   1989      Fiction:                 . . . white inner surface of her wrist, that made
    The Joy Luck Club by     her seem distracted, at a loss. Her hair was still
    Amy Tan                  fairly long but she had done something to it that
    ...
    47
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    69   1987      Newspaper:                 . . . its problems with Cessna. A company
    Wall Street Journal      spokesman said the write-off will result in a
    (Jan. 9)                 loss for the fourth quarter. In the 1985 fourth
    quarter, General Dynamics had net . . .
    70   1985      Nonfiction/Academic:     . . . hosts. Halfdan, they knew, was slain, and
    German Myths and         that the gods had loss of power because that
    Legends by Donald A.     Idun had been taken away. Icy arrows were
    MacKenzie                shot over . . .
    71   1988      Newspaper:               . . . executive recruiters. . . . A Carnegie Mellon
    Wall Street Journal      University researcher says that depressed-
    (Oct. 11)                worker loss estimates of up to $13 billion a
    year in lost workdays ignore lower on-the-job
    productivity . . .
    72   1987      Magazine:                . . . More important, for reasons that are not yet
    Time (Feb. 23)           known, menopause speeds up bone loss.
    Osteoporosis is the excessive form of this
    natural process. An extreme consequence . . .
    73   1990      Newspaper:               . . . can claim third wild card with two victories
    USA Today (Dec. 21)      plus two losses by Dallas and one loss each by
    Green Bay and Tampa Bay. Minnesota would
    win tiebreaker with Saints, . . .
    74   1990      Magazine:                . . . As it turns out, the chance of recovering
    Washington Monthly       even some of the loss is less than one in four. In
    (Nov.)                   NYSE arbitrations, customers win 50 percent . .
    .
    75   1986      Newspaper:               . . . Americans work on such projects out of a
    Wall Street Journal      sense of civic duty. While the loss of a key
    (July 11)                person can be inconvenient, not even the most
    zealous antiwar advocates . . .
    76   1989      Fiction:                 . . . so they aren’t popular with other couples.
    The Other Side by        Dan will never get over the loss of his children;
    Mary Gordon              she can’t give up her shame that it was
    through . . .
    77   1987      Movie:                     . . . a veterans hospital he contracted spinal
    Suspect                  meningitis, became deaf and suffered a
    traumatic speech loss. We will show that Carl
    48
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    Anderson lived in a world where $9.00 could
    mean . . .
    78   1990      Magazine:               . . . could be stifled by rigid rules and assaulted
    U.S. News and World     by rebellious taxpayers. Businesses fear the
    Report (Oct. 29)        loss of competitiveness against foreign
    companies that do not have to clean up their
    wastes or . . .
    79   1987      Newspaper:              . . . retreated into their own world, content in
    New York Times          their isolation, but concerned about its loss of
    (June 28)               vitality. // Nevertheless, while traditionalists
    dreamed of the past, those seemingly
    disparate . . .
    80   1990      Magazine:               . . . heading of retinitis pigmentosa. These
    Science News (Sept.     range from barely perceptible (and frequently
    15)                     undiagnosed) loss of vision to potentially
    deadly syndromes with symptoms such as
    blindness, deafness and mental . . .
    81   1987      Magazine:               . . . for the foundation and walls, that the $191
    U.S. News and World     million structure may be a total loss and need to
    Report (“How to         be destroyed. Any hope that the new embassy
    Protect U.S.            was not completely . . .
    Embassies” by
    William L. Chaze)
    82   1985      Magazine:            . . . to be making a move toward its first Pac-10
    Sports Illustrated   title, but a 14-13 nonconference loss to
    (Oct. 7)             Colorado has left the Wildcats up a tree. The
    Buffaloes threw just four . . .
    83   1985      Fiction:             . . . fifteen minutes or so earlier. In addition,
    Wishsong of Shannara partly to make up for the loss in technical
    by Terry Brooks      assistance that the departure of the troops
    would entail, more technicians and . . .
    84   1984      Magazine:            . . . the people was in the people’s hands. This
    Harper’s BAZAAR      was considerably more than a loss of the party
    (July)               potentates’ power. It was a dire menace to the
    entire . . .
    49
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    85   1984      Fiction:               . . . find out. He is part of us.” Gosten was upset
    The Grey Beginning     about the loss of his son. “I can not imagine
    by Barbara Michaels    him just jumping off a cliff! . . .
    86   1985      Nonfiction/Academic:   . . . and flew forth towards the dominion of
    German Myths and       Thjasse-Volund in the bird-guise of Freyja.
    Legends by Donald A.   The loss of ldun had dread effect in Midgard as
    MacKenzie              in Asgard. Cold winds blew from . . .
    87   1989      Newspaper:             . . . strikes were blamed for a drop in London
    New York Times         box-office receipts. Trying to combat that loss,
    (Aug. 28)              box-office personnel in at least one theater
    were told to lie when asked if . . .
    88   1985      TV Series:             . . . marred by an extraordinary event. Security
    Misfits of Science     officers and plant officials are still at a loss to
    explain the security breach by three people
    believed to be in their eighties who . . .
    89   1990      Magazine:              . . . year in a row; premium and interest income
    Time (Aug. 27)         of $3 billion will cut the loss to $2 billion,
    leaving a total of $11 billion in the fund.
    Although . . .
    90   1986      Newspaper:             . . . His political leanings were the most
    Christian Science      controversial aspect of his life and resulted in
    Monitor (June 13)      the loss of at least one commission - a mural at
    Rockefeller Center in which he had . . .
    91   1987      Nonfiction/Academic: . . . nuclear power and aid to third world
    Information            countries has had highly undesirable and
    Technologies and       unpredicted consequences: loss of soil
    Basic Learning by The nutrients, pollution of water tables, radiation
    Center for Educational from nuclear accidents, and . . .
    Research and
    Innovation
    92   1988      Magazine:              . . . The initial diagnosis was “alopecia areata”
    Good Housekeeping      or “just a small hair loss.” But at some point? I
    (Apr.)                 honestly can’t remember when? It . . .
    93   1985      Newspaper:             . . . The party selling the 800,000 shares at the
    Wall Street Journal    lower price realized a loss of $322,000. That’s
    (Oct. 11)              the same amount as the dividend payment . . .
    50
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    94    1986     Magazine:                 . . . grains. // Johnson’s imaginative creation of
    Sports Illustrated        habitat stands out in a region where loss of
    (June 30)                 habitat has been the custom. In Jersey City, a
    colony of 100 . . .
    95    1985     Movie:                    . . . don’t bounce the ball. When it came to
    Fletch                    basketball, Gail was a loss. But we had our own
    version of one-on-one . . . and she thought I
    was . . .
    96    1985     Nonfiction/Academic:      . . . of the PLA were more involved in political
    Defending China by        control tasks and were disturbed at the loss of
    Gerald Segal              their political influence in a purely professional
    military. In the late 1950s Peng . . .
    97    1984     Fiction:                  . . . shirt sleeve and said indignantly, “My
    The Grey Beginning        shirt’s torn.” “Small loss,” I said, eyeing the
    by Barbara Michaels       faded garment. Out of the corner of . . .
    98    1989     Magazine:                 . . . babies. He explains, “The mind can be so
    Good Housekeeping         shell-shocked by the first loss that there is a
    (Apr.)                    need to work through the grief by recreating the
    experience. . . .
    99    1984     Newspaper:                . . . NEW YORK -- European American
    Wall Street Journal       Bancorp posted a $137.7 million loss in the
    (Jul. 11)                 second quarter, among the largest quarterly
    losses ever for a U.S. bank . . .
    100   1990     Newspaper:                . . . off bus vs. Steelers, still smarting from
    USA Today (Nov. 23)       lashing at Cincinnati. Steelers consider loss to
    Bengals a minor hiccup in drive to the playoffs
    after 1-3 start. Steelers . . .
    51
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 23-4352

Filed Date: 8/23/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/25/2024