United States v. Viju Mathew , 916 F.3d 510 ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •     Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839     Page: 1   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    No. 17-10863              United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    February 21, 2019
    Lyle W. Cayce
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                                         Clerk
    Plaintiff–Appellee,
    versus
    VIJU MATHEW,
    Defendant–Appellant.
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    Before SMITH, DUNCAN, and ENGELHARDT, Circuit Judges.
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    Viju Mathew pleaded guilty of knowingly possessing, with the intent to
    use unlawfully or transfer unlawfully, five or more authentication features
    (health insurance claim numbers) issued by or under the authority of the
    United States, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1028
    (a)(3), (b)(2)(B), and (c)(1). The
    district court sentenced Mathew to thirty months’ imprisonment and
    $277,957.89 in restitution payable to Medicare. He appeals the sentence,
    Case: 17-10863      Document: 00514843839      Page: 2   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    challenging the assessment of restitution and the calculation of the loss
    amount. We vacate and remand for resentencing.
    I.
    Mathew worked at Parkland Health and Hospital System (“Parkland”)
    as a registration specialist, where his duties required him to access confidential
    patient information. He also owned a business called Dallas Home Health
    Care, Inc. (“DHH”). Mathew stole confidential patient information from Park-
    land and gave it to DHH employees to call the individuals and solicit them as
    patients. Mathew did not make the calls himself but instructed three of his
    employees to use the information to solicit prospective patients for DHH.
    Based on information from a former DHH employee, authorities obtained
    a search warrant for DHH’s office and determined DHH to be in the possession
    of approximately 1,300 Parkland patients’ identifying information, including
    their health insurance claim numbers (“HICNs”). The government charged
    Mathew with “[o]n or about September 23, 2011,” “knowingly possess[ing] with
    intent to use unlawfully or transfer unlawfully five or more authentication fea-
    tures, to wit, [HICNs], and the authentication features were or appeared to
    have been issued by or under the authority of the United States.” See 
    18 U.S.C. § 1028
    (a)(3), (b)(2)(B), (c)(1) (2012).
    Mathew pleaded guilty per a factual resume, without a plea agreement,
    and admitted that “he knowingly removed from Parkland confidential informa-
    tion, and intended to use the information to gain an economic benefit by con-
    tacting prospective patients by telephone that might need home health ser-
    vices.” The government did not sign the factual resume because it disagreed
    with Mathew’s contention that the phone calls did not successfully solicit any
    patients for DHH.
    2
    Case: 17-10863      Document: 00514843839   Page: 3      Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    The following exchange occurred at rearraignment:
    THE COURT:               I’ll call upon the Assistant United States
    Attorney to state the potential penalties
    for and consequences of pleading guilty.
    MR. PORTUGAL:            Your Honor, the maximum penalties the
    Court can impose include: . . . [r]estitution
    to victims or to the community which may
    be mandatory under the law and which
    Mr. Mathew agrees may include restitu-
    tion arising from all relevant conduct, not
    limited to that arising from the offense of
    conviction alone.
    THE COURT:               Mr. Mathew, do you understand that if
    you plead guilty to Count One, you are
    subject to all those consequences and pen-
    alties just explained to you, sir?
    MATHEW:                  Yes, ma’am.
    THE COURT:               Do you have any questions about anything
    at all we’ve covered up to this point?
    MATHEW:                  No, not at this time.
    Mathew then pleaded guilty.
    In preparing the presentence investigation report (“PSR”), investigators
    determined that of the approximately 1300 Parkland patients whose informa-
    tion DHH possessed illegally, sixteen received home health services from DHH,
    and “Medicare paid DHH a total of $311,445.57 relative to” the sixteen
    patients.   The probation officer determined that the $311,445.57 was the
    “actual loss” and used that amount to enhance Mathew’s offense level under
    U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1)(G) and to assess restitution under 18 U.S.C. § 3663A
    and U.S.S.G. § 5E1.1.
    Mathew objected to the PSR’s calculation of the loss amount, claiming
    that “the loss amount was zero.” He also asserted that there were no victims
    of his conduct because “all patients were properly referred by Parkland
    3
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839     Page: 4   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    Hospital,” “the stolen list of patients from Parkland was . . . never used,” and
    DHH never secured any patients “from the use of the Parkland Hospital list.”
    In response, the government contended that “anything that [DHH] billed to
    Medicare . . . for beneficiaries whose identifiers Mathew stole is counted as
    loss.” Because Mathew had admitted to stealing Parkland patient information
    to gain an economic benefit through his business DHH, the amounts that DHH
    “billed for those beneficiaries is tainted by that criminality and is properly
    included as loss.” Furthermore, there were victims of Mathew’s crime because
    Mathew unlawfully transferred the patients’ information to DHH.
    The probation officer rejected Mathew’s objections and accepted the gov-
    ernment’s positions. She adopted the government’s theory of loss, affirming
    the $311,445.57 loss amount, and determined that sixteen of the 1300 Park-
    land patients whose information DHH possessed were properly classified as
    victims because Mathew used their information “without permission to solicit
    and recruit [them] to receive home health care from his company and he billed
    Medicare for these services.”
    Mathew filed supplemental objections to the PSR, asserting that he
    “must be credited with the fair market value of legitimate services provided in
    calculating the loss amount.” First, he stated that the prosecution had main-
    tained that only five of the sixteen identified victims did not qualify for home
    health services, but had not extended that contention to the other eleven vic-
    tims. Second, those eleven victims “undisputedly qualified for home healthcare
    services,” DHH provided “legitimate services” to them, and Medicare “would
    have paid for those services absent Mathew’s compromising their identities.”
    Consequently, Mathew was entitled to credit for the fair market value of those
    services in both the loss and restitution calculations. He also contended that
    the total actual loss amount was $105,369.86, or the amount paid by Medicare
    4
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839     Page: 5   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    for the five patients the government asserted were not qualified for home
    health services.
    The government responded, asserting that Mathew had failed to meet
    his burden of establishing that he was entitled to a credit against the
    $311,445.57 loss because he failed to show that DHH provided legitimate ser-
    vices to the sixteen victims and that Medicare would have paid for the services
    provided but for Mathew’s fraud. The government continued to claim that
    because any services DHH provided “to the victims of his identity theft were
    tainted by his criminal conduct from day-one, the entire amounts associated
    with those [sixteen victims] should be included in the loss amount.”
    The probation officer again rejected Mathew’s supplemental objections
    and did not alter the loss amount. She determined that Mathew was not enti-
    tled to a credit against the loss because “the services provided by DHH [to]
    patients were not legitimate” and “the patients were not homebound and did
    not require skilled nursing services.”
    II.
    The district court held a four-day sentencing hearing. The parties pre-
    sented evidence focusing on the sixteen DHH patients whose Medicare bills
    the government asserted should be used to calculate actual loss for purposes of
    sentencing and restitution. Mathew asserted that those patients had qualified
    for home health care and received legitimate services, so he was entitled to a
    credit against the $311,445.57.     Conversely, the prosecution claimed that
    Mathew’s identity theft caused the entirety of Medicare’s loss because Medi-
    care would not have paid any of the sixteen patients’ claims had it known that
    Mathew had compromised their identities. Furthermore, fifteen of the sixteen
    did not qualify for Medicare-covered home health care or did not receive
    Medicare-reimbursable services.
    5
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839    Page: 6   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    The district court determined that Mathew’s taking of the sixteen
    patients’ information from Parkland “wrongfully constitut[ed] identity theft”
    and that Mathew had failed to satisfy his burden to establish that he was
    entitled to a credit for legitimate services that Medicare would have paid for
    but for his fraud. To determine the total restitution, the court reduced the
    $311,445.57 loss amount by $33,487.68, the sum Medicare had paid for two
    patients’ care, because the government had inadvertently produced their rec-
    ords to Mathew late. Thus, the court found that the net amount of loss was
    $277,957.89; the court used that amount to apply a twelve-level enhancement
    to the base offense level per U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1)(G); it calculated Mathew’s
    guideline range to be 30−37 months and sentenced him to 30 months’
    imprisonment.
    The court also ordered Mathew to pay $277,957.89 in restitution to Medi-
    care for all the care DHH had rendered to fourteen of the sixteen Parkland
    patients. Mathew objected to the imposition of restitution because his offense
    “did not include a scheme to defraud,” so “any restitution award would exceed
    the scope of the conviction.”
    On appeal, Mathew challenges the district court’s assessment of restitu-
    tion and its calculation of the loss amount. First, he contends, the court im-
    properly assessed restitution because the award included amounts for conduct
    beyond the offense of conviction and for conduct that occurred before the tem-
    poral scope of the indictment. Second, the court improperly calculated the loss
    amount because Mathew introduced evidence that Medicare received value for
    the services DHH provided to the sixteen patients, and, thus, he was entitled
    to a credit, and because “[t]he district court’s finding that fraud was endemic
    as to the [sixteen] patients at issue and resulted from Mr. Mathew’s possession
    of the authentication features was based on insufficient evidence.”
    6
    Case: 17-10863     Document: 00514843839      Page: 7    Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    III.
    “We review a restitution order’s legality de novo and its amount for abuse
    of discretion.” United States v. Villalobos, 
    879 F.3d 169
    , 171 (5th Cir. 2018).
    “[W]e review the district court’s application of the guidelines de novo and its
    findings of fact at sentencing for clear error.” United States v. Klein, 
    543 F.3d 206
    , 213 (5th Cir. 2008). The finding regarding the amount of loss is a factual
    finding that we review for clear error. 
    Id. at 214
    . “There is no clear error if
    the district court’s finding is plausible in light of the record as a whole.” United
    States v. Harris, 
    597 F.3d 242
    , 250 (5th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). We
    review “de novo how the court calculated the loss, because that is an applica-
    tion of the guidelines, which is a question of law.” Klein, 
    543 F.3d at 214
    .
    IV.
    Mathew asserts that the restitution order was unlawful because it in-
    cluded amounts for Medicare payments that preceded the temporal scope of
    his offense of conviction. We agree.
    The Mandatory Victim Restitution Act (“MVRA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3663A,
    “limits restitution to the actual loss directly and proximately caused by the
    defendant’s offense of conviction. An award of restitution cannot compensate
    a victim for losses caused by conduct not charged in the indictment or specified
    in a guilty plea.” United States v. Sharma, 
    703 F.3d 318
    , 323 (5th Cir. 2012).
    Therefore, “when the subject offense involves a scheme, conspiracy, or pattern
    of criminal activity,” United States v. Hughey, 
    147 F.3d 423
    , 437 (5th Cir.
    1998), that is, “where [the] fraudulent scheme is an element of the conviction,”
    United States v. Maturin, 
    488 F.3d 657
    , 661 (5th Cir. 2007) (emphasis and
    citation omitted), “restitution may be awarded to any person who is directly
    harmed by the defendant’s course of criminal conduct,” Hughey, 
    147 F.3d 7
    Case: 17-10863      Document: 00514843839      Page: 8    Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    at 437. 1 But “[w]hen the count of conviction does not require proof of a scheme,
    conspiracy, or pattern, . . . the defendant is only responsible to pay restitution
    for the conduct underlying the offense for which he has been convicted.”
    Maturin, 
    488 F.3d at 661
     (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). In
    that event, restitution cannot include “losses caused by conduct that falls
    outside the temporal scope of the acts of conviction.” Sharma, 703 F.3d at 323.
    The district court must support “every dollar” of a restitution order with record
    evidence. Id.
    Mathew’s offense does not involve a scheme, conspiracy, or pattern. The
    indictment charged him with violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 1028
    (a)(3), (b)(2)(B), and
    (c)(1), which make it a crime “knowingly [to] possess[] with intent to use un-
    lawfully or transfer unlawfully five or more . . . authentication features
    . . . issued by or under the authority of the United States.” The statute does
    not include a fraudulent scheme as an element of the offense, either in its plain
    language or as a judicial interpretation. Moreover, the charge in Mathew’s
    indictment, his factual resume’s description of the elements of the offense, and
    the government’s description of the elements of the offense at his rearraign-
    ment proceeding all mirror the language of the statute and thus do not state
    that Mathew’s offense of conviction included a fraudulent scheme as an
    element of his offense.
    Mathew also did not agree to enlarge the scope of restitution beyond the
    offense of conviction to include relevant conduct. Though “when a defendant
    pleads guilty to fraud, the scope of the requisite scheme to defraud, for resti-
    tution purposes, is defined by the mutual understanding of the parties rather
    1Though the Hughey court was interpreting the Victim and Witness Protection Act,
    
    18 U.S.C. § 3663
    , Hughey’s reasoning “also applies to cases arising under the MVRA.”
    Maturin, 
    488 F.3d at
    661 n.2.
    8
    Case: 17-10863      Document: 00514843839         Page: 9    Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    than the strict letter of the charging document,” United States v. Adams,
    
    363 F.3d 363
    , 364 (5th Cir. 2004), there was no mutual understanding between
    Mathew and the prosecution. There is no plea agreement broadening the crim-
    inal offense to encompass conduct not stated in the indictment. In the factual
    resume that accompanied his guilty plea, Mathew admitted only that he
    (1) “used his position to obtain confidential patient information, including
    [HICNs] that were issued by and under the authority of the United States,”
    (2) “intended to use the information to gain an economic benefit by contacting
    prospective patients by telephone that might need home health services,” and
    (3) knowingly possessed the HICNs “on or about September 23, 2011,” with the
    intent to use them unlawfully.
    Neither does Mathew’s rearraignment evince an agreement between him
    and the government to enlarge the scope of restitution. During the rearraign-
    ment, the prosecutors explained that the maximum penalties included restitu-
    tion, which “may include restitution arising from all relevant conduct, not lim-
    ited to that arising from the offense of conviction alone.” Mathew stated that
    he understood that he was subject to that penalty if he pleaded guilty, and then
    proceeded to plead guilty. That “relevant conduct,” however, was never defined
    by a mutual understanding between Mathew and the prosecution, and we will
    not speculate as to what it could have been. 2 Thus, Mathew’s statements at
    rearraignment cannot serve as the justification for broadening restitution to
    include conduct not contained in the indictment or factual resume.
    2 See United States v. Shelton, 694 F. App’x 220, 224–25 (5th Cir. 2017) (per curiam)
    (explaining that “[a]bsent evidence of a mutual understanding as to the scope of the con-
    spiracy,” we will not look beyond the charging document); United States v. Ashford,
    337 F. App’x 404, 405 (5th Cir. 2009) (per curiam) (“Because there is no written plea agree-
    ment in this case and no plea terms are contained in the record, we must look to the actions
    alleged in the charging document, rather than speculating upon the mutual understanding
    of the parties, to determine the scope of [the defendant’s] fraudulent scheme.”); Adams,
    
    363 F.3d at
    366–68.
    9
    Case: 17-10863     Document: 00514843839     Page: 10   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    Accordingly, because Mathew’s offense of conviction does not involve a
    scheme, conspiracy, or pattern of criminal activity, and because he did not
    agree to enlarge the scope of restitution to include conduct not included in his
    indictment and factual resume, the MVRA required the district court to limit
    restitution to the actual loss directly and proximately caused by Mathew’s
    offense of conviction. The restitution order, therefore, is lawful under the
    MVRA only if Medicare’s losses were directly and proximately caused by
    Mathew’s knowing possession of the HICNs, on or about September 23, 2011,
    with the intent to use them unlawfully or transfer them unlawfully.
    Two cases are instructive: United States v. Hayes, 
    32 F.3d 171
     (5th Cir.
    1994), and United States v. Mancillas, 
    172 F.3d 341
     (5th Cir. 1999) (per cur-
    iam). In Hayes, the defendant pleaded guilty of possession of stolen mail,
    namely, three credit cards, on or about a certain date. The district court
    ordered him to pay restitution to the credit card companies for charges he had
    made in the months preceding that date. We vacated, explaining that the
    defendant “pleaded guilty to an indictment charging him with mere possession
    on one day, not with conduct or a scheme that resulted in losses to any victims.”
    Hayes, 
    32 F.3d at 172
    . The companies’ losses arose from the unauthorized
    charges made using the cards, “which [the defendant] was not charged with
    and not convicted of.” 
    Id.
     at 172−73. Thus, because “restitution under the
    [MVRA] is limited to losses caused by the specific conduct that is the basis of
    the offense of conviction,” and because “[t]he credit card companies’ losses were
    not caused by the conduct for which [the defendant] was convicted[,] . . . the
    restitution . . . [was] not authorized under [the MVRA].” 
    Id.
    In Mancillas, the defendant pleaded guilty of “knowingly possessing
    counterfeited securities” and “knowingly possessing implements designed to
    make counterfeited securities with the intent that they be so used.” Mancillas,
    10
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839      Page: 11   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    
    172 F.3d at 341
    . The district court ordered the defendant to pay restitution to
    five different check-cashing entities to whom he had passed fraudulent checks.
    
    Id.
     at 341–42. We vacated the restitution, determining that the defendant’s
    “possession of the implements with the intent to use them in the future can in
    no way be said to directly and proximately have caused a previous harm, speci-
    fically, the harm to the check-cashing companies.” 
    Id. at 343
    . The restitution
    was therefore unlawful under the MVRA because it included losses not result-
    ing from the conduct underlying the offense for which the defendant was con-
    victed. Passing a fraudulent check before the date alleged in the indictment
    could not form the basis for the restitution award. 
    Id.
    Hayes and Mancillas thus counsel that, because the MVRA limits resti-
    tution to the actual loss directly and proximately caused by the offense of con-
    viction, absent a mutual understanding between the parties to enlarge the
    scope of the relevant conduct, losses that occurred before the conduct contained
    within the offense of conviction cannot lawfully be included in a restitution
    order. The restitution component of Mathew’s sentence included amounts for
    Medicare payments for claims DHH submitted both before and after Septem-
    ber 23, 2011, the date specified in the indictment for when Mathew knowingly
    possessed, with the intent to use unlawfully or transfer unlawfully, the HICNs.
    Therefore, the restitution order included amounts for losses that were not dir-
    ectly or proximately caused by the conduct of which Mathew was convicted,
    namely, knowingly possessing, on September 23, 2011, HICNs with the intent
    to unlawfully use or unlawfully transfer them.       It follows that under the
    MVRA, the court erred in including Medicare’s losses incurred before then.
    V.
    Mathew contends that the restitution order was unlawful because it
    exceeded the losses directly and proximately caused by the conduct underlying
    11
    Case: 17-10863     Document: 00514843839      Page: 12   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    the offense of conviction. Conversely, the government maintains that the con-
    duct underlying the offense of conviction both directly and proximately caused
    Medicare’s losses.   It directly caused Medicare’s losses because “[b]ut-for
    Mathew’s possession of the stolen names and Medicare numbers, none of the
    16 individuals would have become patients of [DHH] and Medicare would not
    have paid any of the claims submitted on their behalves.” Furthermore, it
    proximately caused Medicare’s losses because “[t]here can be no more reasona-
    bly foreseeable consequence of possessing stolen identities with the intent to
    gain an economic advantage than actually gaining an economic advantage by
    improperly using those identities as Mathew did.”
    The government reaches the correct result: The conduct underlying
    Mathew’s offense of conviction directly and proximately caused Medicare’s
    losses. Thus, restitution was lawful under the MVRA.
    Before analyzing direct and proximate causation between Mathew’s
    offense of conviction and Medicare’s losses, we precisely define to what each
    term refers. Mathew was convicted of, on or about September 23, 2011, know-
    ingly possessing with the intent to use unlawfully or transfer unlawfully five
    or more HICNs that were issued by or under the authority of the United States.
    Medicare’s losses consisted of the amounts it paid for claims DHH submitted
    on or after September 23, 2011, for care rendered to the sixteen Parkland
    patients whose information Mathew stole from Parkland.
    First, Mathew’s offense of conviction directly caused Medicare’s losses.
    “A person is directly harmed by the commission of a[n] . . . offense where that
    offense is a but-for cause of the harm.” In re Fisher, 
    640 F.3d 645
    , 648 (5th Cir.
    2011). Without Mathew’s knowingly possessing with the intent to use un-
    lawfully or transfer unlawfully the sixteen patients’ HICNs, DHH would not
    have been able to submit payment claims, and Medicare would not have
    12
    Case: 17-10863       Document: 00514843839        Page: 13    Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    suffered losses related to those patients’ care. 3 Thus, but-for Mathew’s offense
    of conviction, Medicare would not have suffered losses.
    Second, the offense of conviction proximately caused Medicare’s losses.
    “A person is proximately harmed when the harm is a reasonably foreseeable
    consequence of the criminal conduct.” 
    Id.
     Mathew knowingly possessed the
    sixteen patients’ HICNs with the intent to use them unlawfully or transfer
    them unlawfully. He further admitted, in the factual resume accompanying
    his guilty plea, that he “intended to use the information to gain an economic
    benefit.” It is reasonably foreseeable that Medicare would suffer losses in the
    form of paying claims for the sixteen Parkland patients as a result of Mathew’s
    knowingly possessing their HICNs with the intent to use those HICNs unlaw-
    fully (to gain an economic benefit). After all, the very purpose of a health
    insurance claim number is to identify an individual as a Medicare beneficiary,
    so it is unsurprising that Mathew would fraudulently use them for that pur-
    pose.       Therefore, because Medicare’s losses were a reasonably foreseeable
    consequence of Mathew’s offense of conviction, that offense of conviction proxi-
    mately caused those losses.
    This court has addressed direct and proximate causation in the context
    of a restitution order. In United States v. Espinoza, 
    677 F.3d 730
     (5th Cir.
    2012), the defendant pleaded guilty of being a felon in possession of a firearm.
    
    Id. at 731
    . The district court ordered the defendant to pay restitution to a
    pawn shop to which he had sold stolen firearms that he unlawfully possessed.
    3If Mathew lawfully possessed the patients’ information on September 23, 2011, then
    any legitimate claims submitted by him using that information would have been lawful and
    would not have caused Medicare loss. The district court, however, determined that the six-
    teen Parkland patients became DHH patients “only because of the theft o[f] their identities
    from Parkland.” Therefore, Mathew’s possession of the patients’ information was tainted
    from the time he stole it from Parkland, and the fact that those patients became DHH
    patients did not make Mathew’s possession lawful.
    13
    Case: 17-10863       Document: 00514843839        Page: 14     Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    
    Id.
     We vacated the sentence, in part because the defendant’s possession of the
    firearms, without more, was not a but-for cause of the pawn shop’s harm. 
    Id.
    at 733–34. There was nothing inherent in the unlawful possession that would
    make one foresee the financial harm to the pawn shop. 
    Id.
    Espinoza is distinguishable because the defendant was convicted of mere
    possession with no additional element of an intent to use or transfer. Con-
    versely, Mathew was convicted of knowing possession of the patients’ HICNs
    with the intent unlawfully to use or transfer them. Thus, Espinoza’s holding
    regarding mere possession does not foreclose the conclusion that Mathew’s
    knowingly possessing with the intent unlawfully to use or transfer the HICNs
    directly and proximately caused Medicare’s losses. It follows that the restitu-
    tion component of Mathew’s sentence was lawful under the MVRA. 4
    VI.
    Mathew asserts that the government failed to meet its burden of estab-
    lishing Medicare’s loss amount because the prosecution’s evidence was insuffi-
    cient. The government points to its witness at sentencing, who showed that
    Medicare would not have paid the claims DHH submitted for the sixteen
    Parkland patients had it known that Mathew had compromised their identi-
    ties. Mathew’s claim is unavailing. The government satisfied its burden to
    establish Medicare’s loss amount by proffering evidence demonstrating that
    Medicare paid claims DHH submitted for the sixteen Parkland patients and
    would not have done so had it known that Mathew had compromised their
    identities. The government established an actual loss to Medicare.
    Under U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(b)(1), “[t]he amount of loss resulting from [a]
    4 Though imposition of restitution was lawful, as explained in part IV, the district
    court on remand must limit the restitution amount to Medicare’s actual losses incurred on or
    after September 23, 2011.
    14
    Case: 17-10863     Document: 00514843839       Page: 15    Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    fraud offense is a specific offense characteristic that increases the base offense
    level.” United States v. Isiwele, 
    635 F.3d 196
    , 202 (5th Cir. 2011). “Generally,
    it is the government’s burden to show by a preponderance of the evidence the
    amount of loss attributable to fraudulent conduct.” United States v. Nelson,
    
    732 F.3d 504
    , 521 (5th Cir. 2013). The district court “need only make a rea-
    sonable estimate of the loss,” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(C), based on available
    information, United States v. Jones, 
    475 F.3d 701
    , 705 (5th Cir. 2007). Fur-
    thermore, given the district court’s “unique position to assess the evidence and
    estimate the loss” amount, its “loss determination is entitled to appropriate
    deference.”   U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(C); see also United States v. Hebron,
    
    684 F.3d 554
    , 560 (5th Cir. 2012).
    The loss resulting from an offense is “the greater of actual loss or
    intended loss.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A). An “actual loss” is “the reasonably
    foreseeable pecuniary harm that resulted from the offense.” Id. § 2B1.1 cmt.
    3(A)(i). “Reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm,” in turn, is “pecuniary harm
    that the defendant knew or, under the circumstances, reasonably should have
    known, was a potential result of the offense.” Id. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A)(iv). An
    “intended loss” is “the pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to
    inflict.” Id. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A)(ii). Whether the loss is actual or intended, the
    court must reduce that loss by “the fair market value of the property returned
    and the services rendered . . . to the victim before the offense was detected.”
    Id. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(E)(i).
    The government sought to establish that Medicare suffered an actual
    loss. Therefore, to have met its burden to demonstrate that actual loss, the
    prosecution must have shown that Medicare suffered pecuniary harm 5 that
    5Pecuniary harm is “harm that is monetary or that otherwise is readily measurable
    in money.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(A)(iii).
    15
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839      Page: 16   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    Mathew knew or, under the circumstances, reasonably should have known was
    a potential result of his knowingly possessing with the intent to use unlawfully
    or transfer unlawfully the sixteen Parkland patients’ HICNs. The government
    satisfied that burden.
    First, the government established that Medicare suffered pecuniary
    harm. It proffered evidence that Medicare paid claims that DHH submitted
    for the sixteen patients, thereby suffering a monetary loss.
    Second, the government proved that Mathew knew, or under the circum-
    stances reasonably should have known, that Medicare’s pecuniary harm was a
    potential result of his knowingly possessing with the intent to use unlawfully
    or transfer unlawfully the sixteen patients’ HICNs. The government proffered
    evidence that Medicare would not have paid the claims of the sixteen patients
    had it known that Mathew had compromised their identities. That evidence
    showed that Medicare’s loss was a potential result of Mathew’s offense of con-
    viction. Mathew’s knowingly possessing with the intent to use unlawfully or
    transfer unlawfully the patients’ HICNs meant that their identities were com-
    promised, and, therefore, that Medicare would not have paid for claims DHH
    submitted to Medicare for those patients if Medicare had known of the
    compromise.
    The evidence also showed that Mathew reasonably should have known,
    under the circumstances, that Medicare’s harm was a potential result of his
    offense of conviction. Again, Medicare would not have paid for the sixteen
    patients’ claims had it known that Mathew had compromised their identities,
    and Mathew reasonably should have known that his intent to use unlawfully
    or transfer unlawfully the patients’ HICNs could cause Medicare to pay for
    claims it otherwise would not have. Mathew reasonably should have known
    that his unlawfully knowingly possessing with the intent to use unlawfully or
    16
    Case: 17-10863     Document: 00514843839      Page: 17    Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    transfer unlawfully the HICNs, whose purpose is to identify an individual as
    a legitimate Medicare beneficiary, could cause pecuniary harm to Medicare,
    the issuer of those HICNs.
    The government therefore established an actual loss to Medicare. It pre-
    sented evidence to demonstrate each facet of an actual loss, so restitution in
    that amount (less the actual losses incurred before September 23, 2011) is
    appropriate under the MVRA.
    VII.
    Mathew claims that the district court’s findings regarding Medicare’s
    actual loss amount were erroneous because he was entitled to an offset for pro-
    viding legitimate services. He asserts that he presented evidence establishing
    that DHH provided legitimate services to the sixteen Parkland patients and
    that Medicare received value for those services. Conversely, the government
    maintains that Mathew was not entitled to an offset because he failed to dem-
    onstrate both that DHH “provided legitimate services to the 16 patients at
    issue” and “that Medicare would have paid for those services ‘but for’ Mathew’s
    fraud.” Mathew’s contention is unpersuasive. Because the district court’s find-
    ing is plausible in light of the record as a whole, it did not clearly err in denying
    Mathew an offset against the actual loss amount for providing legitimate
    services.
    In the context of health care fraud, a defendant, to be entitled to an offset
    against an actual loss amount for purposes of restitution, must establish
    (1) “that the services [he provided to Medicare beneficiaries] were legitimate”
    and (2) “that Medicare would have paid for those services but for his fraud.”
    United States v. Mahmood, 
    820 F.3d 177
    , 194 (5th Cir. 2016). The defendant
    has the burden of proof to establish each of these factors. 
    Id.
     If he satisfies
    17
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839      Page: 18   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    that burden, the government can rebut with additional evidence. See 
    id.
     Con-
    sequently, to have satisfied the Mahmood two-factor test, Mathew must have
    presented unrebutted evidence demonstrating (1) that DHH provided legiti-
    mate services to the sixteen Parkland patients and (2) that Medicare would
    have paid for those services but for Mathew’s fraud. Mathew fails at the first
    factor.
    Mathew presented medical documents, patient interviews, and witness
    testimony to establish that DHH provided services to the sixteen patients, that
    doctors had referred them for home health care, and that the patients were
    homebound. For example, the transcript of one patient interview stated that
    DHH provided “home health services.” Other documents showed that some
    patients, at some point, had received home health care referrals from physi-
    cians who were not under suspicion for health care fraud.
    The government presented evidence that discredited Mathew’s claims
    and significantly weakened his attempt to satisfy his burden of proving that
    DHH had provided legitimate services to the sixteen patients. The government
    explained that the claims DHH submitted for fifteen of the sixteen were fraud-
    ulent as a result of a combination of (1) those patients’ not being eligible for
    Medicare-covered home health care, (2) their not receiving Medicare-covered
    services as billed, (3) home health care’s not being initiated by a physician,
    and/or (4) DHH’s exaggerating the patient’s health problems to increase the
    amount that Medicare would pay for that patient’s care. For example, for one
    patient, DHH did not provide her skilled nursing services covered by Medicare
    but merely checked her vital signs. Another patient rode the bus to some of
    her doctor appointments, strongly indicating that she was not homebound. For
    each of Mathew’s points regarding legitimate services, the prosecution method-
    ically proffered evidence for each of the fifteen patients at issue that undercuts
    18
    Case: 17-10863    Document: 00514843839      Page: 19   Date Filed: 02/21/2019
    No. 17-10863
    Mathew’s contentions and supports the opposite.
    With both Mathew’s and the government’s evidence before it, the district
    court found that Mathew had not met his burden to demonstrate that DHH
    provided legitimate services to the sixteen Parkland patients, and, therefore,
    that he was not entitled to an offset against the actual loss amount for purposes
    of restitution. Mathew could not satisfy the first factor of Mahmood. Because
    the court’s finding is plausible in light of the record as a whole, especially con-
    sidering the detailed evidence the government presented regarding the ille-
    gitimacy of the services DHH rendered to the sixteen patients, the court did
    not clearly err in denying an offset against the actual loss amount for restitu-
    tion purposes.
    The judgment of sentence is VACATED and REMANDED for resentenc-
    ing. We make no suggestion as to what decisions the district court should make
    on remand.
    19