United States v. Cuong Cau Dang

Decision Date09 August 2013
Docket NumberCase No.: 13-CR-486-EJD (PSG)
PartiesUNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, v. CUONG CAU DANG, Defendant.
CourtU.S. District Court — Northern District of California
ORDER DENYING GOVERNMENT'S
MOTION TO DETAIN DEFENDANT

On August 7, 2013, the court heard arguments regarding the government's motion to detain Defendant Cuong Cao Dang ("Dang"). Dang was represented by Michael Vu; the United States was represented by Assistant United States Attorney David Calloway.

After considering the arguments and proffers presented by both parties, as well as the report and recommendation of Pretrial Services, the court denied the government's motion and set conditions under which Dang may be released. Among the conditions set was a $2,500,000 bond to be secured by three of Dang's properties, all in San Jose, whose collective equity was estimated by Pretrial Services to equal the full bond amount: 3016 Beckley Drive, 1063 Woodminster Drive, and 3036 Kettman Way. Dang was prohibited from traveling outside the Northern District of California. After noting that Dang's passport was seized by the government upon his arrest, thecourt further ordered Dang not to apply for any passports or travel documents. The court included two sureties on the bond: Dang's father Phung Dang and his wife Ly Le, the mother of his four minor children. Dang further was put on "house arrest" subject to electronic monitoring, with permission to leave his home only for medical, dental, religious or legal appointments.

The government requested that the court refrain from issuing the release order to permit it the opportunity to seek revocation by the district judge pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3145(b). The court granted the request. So that the district judge may have the benefit of the undersigned's reasoning in conducting its review, the court provides that reasoning below.

I. BACKGROUND

Dang is charged with violating 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (conspiracy to commit mail fraud), 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (mail fraud), 18 U.S.C. § 1957 (monetary transactions using criminally derived property), 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(C) and 28 U.S.C. § 2461(c) (forfeiture of criminally derived proceeds), and 18 U.S.C. § 982(a)(1) (money laundering forfeiture).

Prior to his arrest, the government contacted Dang as part of its investigation and ultimately executed a search warrant of Dang's home.

Several months later, following his arrest, Dang made his initial appearance on July 26, 2013 before the United States Magistrate Judge Howard R. Lloyd. At the initial appearance, the government moved for detention on two grounds: risk of flight and undue danger to the community. In light of a request from defense counsel for a scheduling accommodation, Judge Lloyd scheduled the hearing on the motion before the undersigned.

II. LEGAL STANDARDS

The Eighth Amendment to our Constitution provides that "[e]xcessive bail shall not required." In furtherance of this constitutional mandate, the government bears the burden of proving that a defendant poses a risk of flight and/or a danger to the community that cannot bemitigated through the imposition of conditions of release. In proving undue risk of flight, the government must show by a preponderance of the evidence that no condition or combinations of conditions will reasonably assure the defendant's appearance.1 In contrast, the government bears the burden of showing that the defendant poses a undue danger to the community by clear and convincing evidence.2 If the government does not meet its burden, the court's duty is to fashion appropriate conditions that permit the defendant to remain out of custody during the preparation of his or her defense, while safeguarding against flight or danger to the community.

"Federal law has traditionally provided that a person arrested for a noncapital offense shall be admitted to bail.3 Only in rare circumstances should release be denied.4 Doubts regarding the propriety of release should be resolved in favor of the defendant.5 A person facing trial generally must be released if some "condition, or combination of conditions ... [can] reasonably assure the appearance of the person as required and the safety of any other person and the community."6 This is a mandate, not an option, and in non-capital cases, pretrial release should be denied "[o]nly in rare circumstances."7 An important consequence of all this is that close cases should result inrelease: "[t]o give effect to the principle that doubts regarding the propriety of release be resolved in favor of the defendant, the court is to rule against detention in close cases."8

Bail hearings generally proceed by proffer, and the rules of evidence do not apply.9

In evaluating whether pretrial release is appropriate, a court must consider (1) the nature and circumstances of the offense, (2) the weight of the evidence, (3) the history and characteristics of the person (including his character, physical and mental condition, family ties, employment, financial resources, length of residence in the community, community ties, past conduct, history relating to drug and alcohol abuse, criminal history, or record concerning appearance at court proceedings), and (4) the nature and seriousness of the danger to any person or the community posed by the person's release.10

III. ANALYSIS
A. The Nature and Circumstances of the Offense

According to the indictment, beginning no later than 2006, while doing business as Network Genesis, Dang ran a scheme to defraud Cisco Systems ("Cisco"). The scheme is alleged to have involved Dang buying counterfeit or stolen Cisco merchandise from Cisco employees and reselling that merchandise after altering the external serial numbers to make the merchandise more difficult to trace. Dang is alleged to have provided "test sheets" to his customers that corresponded to the altered serial number on the part he was selling rather than the true internal serial number forthat part. Dang is further alleged to have directed his customers to send payments for the merchandise to "nominees" who then funneled the payments back to Dang.

The statutory maximum period of imprisonment on the charges is 20 years, confirming that Dang is charged with a serious crime. But the government has not offered any preliminary calculation of Dang's sentencing guidelines range. While such a guideline calculation of course is not binding on the parties or the court in any sentencing, such information nevertheless would give the court and Dang a clearer sense of the plausible term he may serve - and a better sense of his risk of flight. In any event, Congress requires consideration of more than just the potential sentence of the charged offense; other elements clearly must inform the offense's "nature and circumstances." Here, Dang's alleged offense involved a particular scheme to defraud a single victim. That scheme is alleged to have involved specific relationships with the victim's employees and a specific laundering scheme to mask the trail of payments. The government has not shown that Dang has the means or the opportunity to repeat this particular crime, and so the court has no grounds from which to assume that upon release Dang could unleash such a scheme against Cisco a second time or against another victim entirely.

This factor weighs against detention and in favor of release on restrictive conditions.

B. Weight Of The Evidence

The weight of the evidence of Dang's scheme, and the profits he made thereby, is substantive. The grand jury heard evidence of at least eight specific transactions involving five specific individuals and two withdrawals from Network Genesis' account at Wells Fargo Bank. By returning an indictment, a grand jury establishes probable cause that Dang committed the schemeas charged. It is fair to conclude that Dang might have a heightened motivation to flee if the government's evidence is relatively strong.11

This factor weighs in favor of detention, but the weight of the evidence is the least important factor.12

C. The History and Characteristics of the Defendant

Dang was born in Vietnam in 1979 and immigrated to the United States as a child. He is a United States citizen. After graduating from Wilcox High School in San Jose in 1988, he has worked at a variety of companies all in this division, including Cisco, Solectron, and Network Genesis. Most recently, he has been self-employed as the owner of the Dang Investments in San Jose.

Among the assets of the Dang Investments are three properties in San Jose: 3016 Beckley Drive, 1063 Woodminster Drive, and 3036 Kettman Way. All three properties are paid off and have equity collectively worth $2,500,000. The Beckly Drive and Kettman Way properties are the subject of the forfeiture allegations included in the indictment.

Dang's criminal history includes various drug and burglary convictions, but none since over twenty years ago, in 1991. Even considering those convictions from earlier in Dang's life, the government proffers no evidence that Dang even once failed to appear.

Beyond mere speculation, Dang has not been shown to have access to significant foreign resources. His identified bank account has a few thousand dollars, and all other identified assets are either illiquid or indicted and subject to lis pendens filings.

Dang does not suffer from any history of mental health conditions and has never received any mental health treatment. His only substance abuse treatment was over twenty years ago, in 1991.

Dang did not resist arrest.13 No firearms or illicit substances were found on Dang upon his arrest. He is not a validated gang member.

There is no evidence that Dang reverted to his alleged illicit conduct after law enforcement searched his house. Nor is there any evidence that after the search of his house Dang did anything to flee the jurisdiction. Based on this, the language of the statute indicates that the court may not presume that Dang's past activities make him a clear, prospective...

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