Federal Conspiracy: Difference between revisions
Add JSON-LD FAQPage schema, expanded Pinkerton section, improved internal linking |
Humanization pass: prose rewrite for readability |
||
| (4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox federal offense | {{Infobox federal offense | ||
|name = Federal Conspiracy | |name = Federal Conspiracy | ||
| Line 76: | Line 10: | ||
|related_offenses = [[Wire_Fraud|Wire Fraud]], [[Drug_Trafficking|Drug Trafficking]], [[RICO_Violations|RICO]] | |related_offenses = [[Wire_Fraud|Wire Fraud]], [[Drug_Trafficking|Drug Trafficking]], [[RICO_Violations|RICO]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Federal conspiracy''' is a distinct criminal offense that punishes agreements to commit crimes, regardless of whether the underlying crime | '''Federal conspiracy''' is a distinct criminal offense that punishes agreements to commit crimes, regardless of whether the underlying crime actually happens. The main federal conspiracy statute is 18 U.S.C. § 371, though many other federal laws contain their own conspiracy provisions with penalties tied to the underlying offense.<ref name="uscode-371">18 U.S.C. § 371.</ref> | ||
Why is this charged so much? Simple: it lets prosecutors hold every member of a criminal group responsible for what the group does. You can get prosecuted even if the target crime was never completed. | |||
== Types of Conspiracy Charges == | == Types of Conspiracy Charges == | ||
| Line 84: | Line 18: | ||
=== General Conspiracy (18 U.S.C. § 371) === | === General Conspiracy (18 U.S.C. § 371) === | ||
Section 371 | Section 371 breaks down into two distinct types: | ||
'''Conspiracy to Commit a Federal Offense:''' | '''Conspiracy to Commit a Federal Offense:''' Two or more people agree to commit any offense against the United States, plus at least one overt act moves the plan forward. | ||
'''Conspiracy to Defraud the United States:''' | '''Conspiracy to Defraud the United States:''' Two or more people agree to defraud the United States or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose.<ref name="uscode-371" /> | ||
The maximum penalty is 5 years imprisonment. If the underlying offense is a misdemeanor, the penalty can't exceed what you'd get for that misdemeanor alone. | |||
=== Offense-Specific Conspiracy Statutes === | === Offense-Specific Conspiracy Statutes === | ||
Virtually every major federal crime has its own conspiracy provision built right into the statute. They all carry penalties matching the underlying offense: | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%;" | {| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%;" | ||
| Line 111: | Line 45: | ||
|} | |} | ||
Here's the big difference: these statutes generally don't require proof of an overt act.<ref name="whitfield">Whitfield v. United States, 543 U.S. 209 (2005).</ref> | |||
== Elements of Conspiracy == | == Elements of Conspiracy == | ||
| Line 117: | Line 51: | ||
=== General Conspiracy Elements === | === General Conspiracy Elements === | ||
To | To get convicted under 18 U.S.C. § 371, prosecutors must prove three things: | ||
# '''Agreement''': Two or more persons agreed to commit an offense against the United States or to defraud the United States | # '''Agreement''': Two or more persons agreed to commit an offense against the United States or to defraud the United States | ||
# '''Knowledge and Intent''': The defendant knowingly joined the conspiracy | # '''Knowledge and Intent''': The defendant knowingly joined the conspiracy and intended to further its objectives | ||
# '''Overt Act''': At least one conspirator committed an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy<ref name="iannelli">Iannelli v. United States, 420 U.S. 770 (1975).</ref> | # '''Overt Act''': At least one conspirator committed an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy<ref name="iannelli">Iannelli v. United States, 420 U.S. 770 (1975).</ref> | ||
=== The Agreement === | === The Agreement === | ||
The agreement need | The agreement doesn't need to be formal, written, or even stated out loud. Circumstantial evidence showing a "meeting of the minds" is plenty. Prosecutors have to show that the conspirators shared a common goal and knew they were working together toward it. That's it. | ||
=== Knowledge and Intent === | === Knowledge and Intent === | ||
You have to have known about the conspiracy and intentionally joined it. Just being present when crimes happen, or hanging around with criminals, isn't enough. But here's the thing: you don't need to know every detail or every other member of the conspiracy.<ref name="blumenthal">Blumenthal v. United States, 332 U.S. 539 (1947).</ref> | |||
=== Overt Act === | === Overt Act === | ||
For § 371 conspiracies, | For § 371 conspiracies, prosecutors must prove at least one overt act. That means any act by any conspirator moving the conspiracy forward. The act itself doesn't have to be illegal. Making a phone call. Renting a car. Sending an email. Any of those work. And it only takes one overt act total. Not one per conspirator. | ||
Offense-specific | Offense-specific statutes, particularly drug conspiracy under § 846, typically skip the overt act requirement entirely.<ref name="whitfield" /> | ||
== Statutory Penalties == | == Statutory Penalties == | ||
| Line 154: | Line 88: | ||
|} | |} | ||
That 5-year cap under § 371? It's a problem for prosecutors. That's why they charge offense-specific conspiracy whenever they can. Those statutes usually mean much harsher sentences. | |||
== Pinkerton Liability == | == Pinkerton Liability == | ||
This is the scary part. Pinkerton liability, established by the Supreme Court in ''Pinkerton v. United States'' (1946), is what makes conspiracy law so powerful and so dangerous for defendants. | |||
Under Pinkerton, each conspirator is liable for the substantive crimes of co-conspirators if two conditions are met: | |||
# The crimes were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy, AND | # The crimes were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy, AND | ||
# The crimes were reasonably foreseeable as a natural consequence of the conspiracy<ref name="pinkerton">Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640 (1946).</ref> | # The crimes were reasonably foreseeable as a natural consequence of the conspiracy<ref name="pinkerton">Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640 (1946).</ref> | ||
''' | '''What does this mean in practice?''' | ||
''' | You can be convicted of crimes you didn't personally commit. You didn't pull the trigger? Don't matter. You didn't handle the drugs? Still guilty. You joined a drug conspiracy and a co-conspirator commits murder during a deal gone wrong? You're on the hook for that murder if it was foreseeable. You're responsible for the full scope of what reasonably could have happened. | ||
Pinkerton liability | '''How do you limit Pinkerton liability?''' | ||
The crime has to be in furtherance of the conspiracy, not something purely personal. It has to be reasonably foreseeable. If you withdraw from the conspiracy early, you cut off future Pinkerton liability. Some circuit courts have also started limiting Pinkerton to minor participants only. | |||
But here's why prosecutors love conspiracy: Pinkerton lets them hold everyone in the conspiracy responsible for the worst conduct within it. That dramatically increases the exposure for each defendant. It's a major reason why conspiracy gets charged so frequently. | |||
== Federal Sentencing Guidelines == | == Federal Sentencing Guidelines == | ||
Conspiracy is sentenced under USSG §2X1.1, which ties | Conspiracy is sentenced under USSG §2X1.1, which ties directly to the underlying substantive offense. | ||
=== Base Offense Level === | === Base Offense Level === | ||
The base offense level for conspiracy | The base offense level for conspiracy matches the base level for the object offense. The object offense is the crime conspirators agreed to commit. So: | ||
* Conspiracy to commit [[Wire_Fraud|wire fraud]]: sentenced under §2B1.1 | * Conspiracy to commit [[Wire_Fraud|wire fraud]]: you're sentenced under §2B1.1 | ||
* [[Drug_Trafficking|Drug conspiracy]]: sentenced under §2D1.1 | * [[Drug_Trafficking|Drug conspiracy]]: you're sentenced under §2D1.1 | ||
* Conspiracy to commit [[Money_Laundering|money laundering]]: sentenced under §2S1.1 | * Conspiracy to commit [[Money_Laundering|money laundering]]: you're sentenced under §2S1.1<ref name="ussg-2x1">United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §2X1.1 (2024).</ref> | ||
=== Relevant Conduct === | === Relevant Conduct === | ||
All reasonably foreseeable acts | All reasonably foreseeable acts by co-conspirators get attributed to each conspirator for sentencing. Your sentence can be based on drug quantities other conspirators handled, fraud losses the whole conspiracy caused, or other conduct you never personally did, as long as it was reasonably foreseeable.<ref name="ussg-1b1.3">United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §1B1.3 (2024).</ref> | ||
=== Role Adjustments === | === Role Adjustments === | ||
Your position in the conspiracy affects your sentence: | |||
* '''Leaders/Organizers''': +2 to +4 levels | * '''Leaders/Organizers''': +2 to +4 levels | ||
| Line 206: | Line 137: | ||
=== Single vs. Multiple Conspiracies === | === Single vs. Multiple Conspiracies === | ||
Courts | Courts look at whether defendants were part of one big conspiracy or several smaller ones. They consider: | ||
* | * Did they share a common objective? | ||
* | * Did the same people participate? | ||
* | * Did the activities depend on each other? | ||
Being charged as part of a larger conspiracy than | Being charged as part of a larger conspiracy than you actually joined can be challenged as an improper variance.<ref name="kotteakos">Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750 (1946).</ref> | ||
=== Withdrawal === | === Withdrawal === | ||
You can withdraw from a conspiracy if you take affirmative steps to disavow or defeat the conspiracy's objective and communicate that withdrawal to your co-conspirators. It's not enough to just stop participating. | |||
Withdrawal | Withdrawal doesn't erase your liability for the conspiracy itself. But it does stop the statute of limitations from running and it ends Pinkerton liability for anything co-conspirators do afterward. | ||
=== Duration === | === Duration === | ||
A conspiracy continues until | A conspiracy continues until the objectives are accomplished or abandoned. The statute of limitations starts from the last overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. | ||
== Notable Cases == | == Notable Cases == | ||
| Line 229: | Line 158: | ||
=== United States v. Manafort (2018) === | === United States v. Manafort (2018) === | ||
[[Paul_Manafort|Paul Manafort]] was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to obstruct justice | [[Paul_Manafort|Paul Manafort]] was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to obstruct justice. He'd been hiding foreign income and failing to register as a foreign agent. The sentence was 7.5 years.<ref name="manafort-conspiracy">U.S. Department of Justice, "Paul J. Manafort Convicted," August 2018.</ref> | ||
=== Operation Varsity Blues (2019) === | === Operation Varsity Blues (2019) === | ||
The college admissions scandal brought conspiracy charges against dozens of parents, coaches, and administrators for conspiracy to commit [[Mail_Fraud|mail fraud]] and honest services fraud. The case showed how conspiracy allows prosecutors to go after everyone involved in a coordinated scheme, from actress [[Lori_Loughlin|Lori Loughlin]] to fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli.<ref name="varsity-blues">U.S. Department of Justice, "Charges Unsealed in Nationwide College Admissions Scam," March 2019.</ref> | |||
=== Drug Conspiracy Cases === | === Drug Conspiracy Cases === | ||
Drug conspiracy (21 U.S.C. § 846) is | Drug conspiracy (21 U.S.C. § 846) is one of the most frequently charged federal offenses. Examples include: | ||
* Cartel leaders | * Cartel leaders prosecuted for conspiracy to distribute tons of narcotics | ||
* Street | * Street dealers charged based on conspiracy with suppliers they work with | ||
* Money couriers charged with drug conspiracy for handling proceeds | * Money couriers charged with drug conspiracy just for handling proceeds | ||
== Statistics == | == Statistics == | ||
The United States Sentencing Commission has collected extensive data on conspiracy: | |||
* Conspiracy charges | * Conspiracy charges show up in roughly 90% of multi-defendant federal cases | ||
* Drug conspiracy is the single most commonly sentenced federal offense | * Drug conspiracy is the single most commonly sentenced federal offense | ||
* General conspiracy (§ 371) | * General conspiracy (§ 371) gets charged in approximately 2,000 cases annually | ||
* | * Median sentences vary wildly depending on the underlying offense<ref name="ussc-stats">United States Sentencing Commission, 2023 Annual Report and Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics.</ref> | ||
== Defenses == | == Defenses == | ||
| Line 256: | Line 185: | ||
=== No Agreement === | === No Agreement === | ||
Maybe there was no actual agreement. Perhaps you and others were just pursuing your own interests separately, or there was nothing more than a simple buyer-seller relationship that doesn't rise to conspiracy. | |||
=== No Knowledge or Intent === | === No Knowledge or Intent === | ||
You can argue you didn't know the conspiracy's illegal objectives or didn't intend to join it. Mere presence at crimes or association with criminals won't get you convicted. | |||
=== Withdrawal === | === Withdrawal === | ||
Affirmative acts | Affirmative acts disavowing the conspiracy and communicating withdrawal to co-conspirators can limit your liability for subsequent acts. It doesn't eliminate liability for the conspiracy itself, though. | ||
=== Variance === | === Variance === | ||
If the evidence | If the evidence actually shows multiple smaller conspiracies rather than the single large one charged, you can argue the verdict is a prejudicial variance. | ||
=== Statute of Limitations === | === Statute of Limitations === | ||
The | The statute of limitations is normally 5 years and runs from the last overt act. If you withdrew or the conspiracy ended more than 5 years before indictment, charges might be time-barred. | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
| Line 284: | Line 213: | ||
== Frequently Asked Questions == | == Frequently Asked Questions == | ||
{{FAQSection/Start}} | {{FAQSection/Start}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What is federal conspiracy?|answer=Federal conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to commit a federal crime or to defraud the United States. It | {{FAQ|question=What is federal conspiracy?|answer=Federal conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to commit a federal crime or to defraud the United States. It's a separate offense from the underlying crime and can be prosecuted even if the target crime was never completed.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What is the sentence for federal conspiracy?|answer=Under the general conspiracy statute (18 U.S.C. § 371), the maximum is 5 years. | {{FAQ|question=What is the sentence for federal conspiracy?|answer=Under the general conspiracy statute (18 U.S.C. § 371), the maximum is 5 years. Offense-specific conspiracy statutes for drug, wire fraud, RICO, and similar crimes carry the same penalties as the underlying offense. That can mean decades or life imprisonment.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What is Pinkerton liability?|answer=Under Pinkerton v. United States, each conspirator is liable for crimes committed by co-conspirators if those crimes were in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable. | {{FAQ|question=What is Pinkerton liability?|answer=Under Pinkerton v. United States, each conspirator is liable for crimes committed by co-conspirators if those crimes were in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable. You can be convicted of crimes you didn't personally commit.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What is an overt act?|answer=An overt act is any act by any conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy. It | {{FAQ|question=What is an overt act?|answer=An overt act is any act by any conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy. It doesn't have to be illegal itself. Making a phone call or renting a car can qualify. General conspiracy requires proof of an overt act, but most offense-specific conspiracy statutes do not.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=Can I be convicted of crimes I didn't personally commit?|answer=Yes. Under Pinkerton liability, each conspirator is responsible for substantive crimes committed by co-conspirators if those crimes were in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable. | {{FAQ|question=Can I be convicted of crimes I didn't personally commit?|answer=Yes. Under Pinkerton liability, each conspirator is responsible for substantive crimes committed by co-conspirators if those crimes were in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable. That's a major reason conspiracy gets charged so frequently.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=How do I withdraw from a conspiracy?|answer=Withdrawal requires affirmative steps to disavow the conspiracy and communication to co-conspirators. Withdrawal stops Pinkerton liability for future acts and starts the statute of limitations, but | {{FAQ|question=How do I withdraw from a conspiracy?|answer=Withdrawal requires affirmative steps to disavow the conspiracy and communication to co-conspirators. Withdrawal stops Pinkerton liability for future acts and starts the statute of limitations, but doesn't eliminate liability for the conspiracy itself.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What if I only knew part of the conspiracy?|answer=You | {{FAQ|question=What if I only knew part of the conspiracy?|answer=You don't need to know all details or all participants to be guilty of conspiracy. If you knew the essential nature of the conspiracy and intentionally joined it, you're liable for the full conspiracy and all reasonably foreseeable acts of co-conspirators.}} | ||
{{FAQSection/End}} | {{FAQSection/End}} | ||
| Line 300: | Line 229: | ||
[[Category:Federal Offenses]] | [[Category:Federal Offenses]] | ||
<html> | |||
</html> | |||
{{#seo: | {{#seo: | ||
|title_mode=append | |title_mode=append | ||
| Line 309: | Line 243: | ||
|locale=en_US | |locale=en_US | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{MetaDescription|Learn about Federal Conspiracy's federal case, conviction, and prison experience on Prisonpedia.}} | |||
Latest revision as of 17:44, 23 April 2026
| Statute: | 18 U.S.C. § 371 |
| U.S. Code: | Title 18, Chapter 19 |
| Max Prison: | 5 years (general) / varies by offense-specific statutes |
| Max Fine: | $250,000 |
| Guidelines: | USSG §2X1.1 |
| Base Level: | Same as underlying offense |
| Agencies: | FBI, DEA, ATF, IRS-CI |
| Related: | Wire Fraud, Drug Trafficking, RICO |
Federal conspiracy is a distinct criminal offense that punishes agreements to commit crimes, regardless of whether the underlying crime actually happens. The main federal conspiracy statute is 18 U.S.C. § 371, though many other federal laws contain their own conspiracy provisions with penalties tied to the underlying offense.[1]
Why is this charged so much? Simple: it lets prosecutors hold every member of a criminal group responsible for what the group does. You can get prosecuted even if the target crime was never completed.
Types of Conspiracy Charges
General Conspiracy (18 U.S.C. § 371)
Section 371 breaks down into two distinct types:
Conspiracy to Commit a Federal Offense: Two or more people agree to commit any offense against the United States, plus at least one overt act moves the plan forward.
Conspiracy to Defraud the United States: Two or more people agree to defraud the United States or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose.[1]
The maximum penalty is 5 years imprisonment. If the underlying offense is a misdemeanor, the penalty can't exceed what you'd get for that misdemeanor alone.
Offense-Specific Conspiracy Statutes
Virtually every major federal crime has its own conspiracy provision built right into the statute. They all carry penalties matching the underlying offense:
| Statute | Offense | Maximum Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| 18 U.S.C. § 1349 | Wire/Mail/Bank Fraud Conspiracy | Same as underlying offense (20-30 years) |
| 21 U.S.C. § 846 | Drug Conspiracy | Same as underlying offense (life possible) |
| 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h) | Money Laundering Conspiracy | Same as underlying offense (20 years) |
| 18 U.S.C. § 241 | Conspiracy Against Civil Rights | 10 years (life if death results) |
| 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) | RICO Conspiracy | 20 years |
Here's the big difference: these statutes generally don't require proof of an overt act.[2]
Elements of Conspiracy
General Conspiracy Elements
To get convicted under 18 U.S.C. § 371, prosecutors must prove three things:
- Agreement: Two or more persons agreed to commit an offense against the United States or to defraud the United States
- Knowledge and Intent: The defendant knowingly joined the conspiracy and intended to further its objectives
- Overt Act: At least one conspirator committed an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy[3]
The Agreement
The agreement doesn't need to be formal, written, or even stated out loud. Circumstantial evidence showing a "meeting of the minds" is plenty. Prosecutors have to show that the conspirators shared a common goal and knew they were working together toward it. That's it.
Knowledge and Intent
You have to have known about the conspiracy and intentionally joined it. Just being present when crimes happen, or hanging around with criminals, isn't enough. But here's the thing: you don't need to know every detail or every other member of the conspiracy.[4]
Overt Act
For § 371 conspiracies, prosecutors must prove at least one overt act. That means any act by any conspirator moving the conspiracy forward. The act itself doesn't have to be illegal. Making a phone call. Renting a car. Sending an email. Any of those work. And it only takes one overt act total. Not one per conspirator.
Offense-specific statutes, particularly drug conspiracy under § 846, typically skip the overt act requirement entirely.[2]
Statutory Penalties
| Conspiracy Type | Maximum Imprisonment | Maximum Fine |
|---|---|---|
| General conspiracy to commit offense (§ 371) | 5 years | $250,000 |
| Conspiracy to defraud U.S. (§ 371) | 5 years | $250,000 |
| Drug conspiracy (§ 846) | Same as substantive offense | Same as substantive offense |
| Wire/Mail fraud conspiracy (§ 1349) | Same as substantive offense | Same as substantive offense |
| RICO conspiracy (§ 1962(d)) | 20 years | $250,000 |
That 5-year cap under § 371? It's a problem for prosecutors. That's why they charge offense-specific conspiracy whenever they can. Those statutes usually mean much harsher sentences.
Pinkerton Liability
This is the scary part. Pinkerton liability, established by the Supreme Court in Pinkerton v. United States (1946), is what makes conspiracy law so powerful and so dangerous for defendants.
Under Pinkerton, each conspirator is liable for the substantive crimes of co-conspirators if two conditions are met:
- The crimes were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy, AND
- The crimes were reasonably foreseeable as a natural consequence of the conspiracy[5]
What does this mean in practice?
You can be convicted of crimes you didn't personally commit. You didn't pull the trigger? Don't matter. You didn't handle the drugs? Still guilty. You joined a drug conspiracy and a co-conspirator commits murder during a deal gone wrong? You're on the hook for that murder if it was foreseeable. You're responsible for the full scope of what reasonably could have happened.
How do you limit Pinkerton liability?
The crime has to be in furtherance of the conspiracy, not something purely personal. It has to be reasonably foreseeable. If you withdraw from the conspiracy early, you cut off future Pinkerton liability. Some circuit courts have also started limiting Pinkerton to minor participants only.
But here's why prosecutors love conspiracy: Pinkerton lets them hold everyone in the conspiracy responsible for the worst conduct within it. That dramatically increases the exposure for each defendant. It's a major reason why conspiracy gets charged so frequently.
Federal Sentencing Guidelines
Conspiracy is sentenced under USSG §2X1.1, which ties directly to the underlying substantive offense.
Base Offense Level
The base offense level for conspiracy matches the base level for the object offense. The object offense is the crime conspirators agreed to commit. So:
- Conspiracy to commit wire fraud: you're sentenced under §2B1.1
- Drug conspiracy: you're sentenced under §2D1.1
- Conspiracy to commit money laundering: you're sentenced under §2S1.1[6]
Relevant Conduct
All reasonably foreseeable acts by co-conspirators get attributed to each conspirator for sentencing. Your sentence can be based on drug quantities other conspirators handled, fraud losses the whole conspiracy caused, or other conduct you never personally did, as long as it was reasonably foreseeable.[7]
Role Adjustments
Your position in the conspiracy affects your sentence:
- Leaders/Organizers: +2 to +4 levels
- Managers/Supervisors: +2 to +3 levels
- Minor Participants: -2 levels
- Minimal Participants: -4 levels
Key Legal Principles
Single vs. Multiple Conspiracies
Courts look at whether defendants were part of one big conspiracy or several smaller ones. They consider:
- Did they share a common objective?
- Did the same people participate?
- Did the activities depend on each other?
Being charged as part of a larger conspiracy than you actually joined can be challenged as an improper variance.[8]
Withdrawal
You can withdraw from a conspiracy if you take affirmative steps to disavow or defeat the conspiracy's objective and communicate that withdrawal to your co-conspirators. It's not enough to just stop participating.
Withdrawal doesn't erase your liability for the conspiracy itself. But it does stop the statute of limitations from running and it ends Pinkerton liability for anything co-conspirators do afterward.
Duration
A conspiracy continues until the objectives are accomplished or abandoned. The statute of limitations starts from the last overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy.
Notable Cases
United States v. Manafort (2018)
Paul Manafort was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to obstruct justice. He'd been hiding foreign income and failing to register as a foreign agent. The sentence was 7.5 years.[9]
Operation Varsity Blues (2019)
The college admissions scandal brought conspiracy charges against dozens of parents, coaches, and administrators for conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services fraud. The case showed how conspiracy allows prosecutors to go after everyone involved in a coordinated scheme, from actress Lori Loughlin to fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli.[10]
Drug Conspiracy Cases
Drug conspiracy (21 U.S.C. § 846) is one of the most frequently charged federal offenses. Examples include:
- Cartel leaders prosecuted for conspiracy to distribute tons of narcotics
- Street dealers charged based on conspiracy with suppliers they work with
- Money couriers charged with drug conspiracy just for handling proceeds
Statistics
The United States Sentencing Commission has collected extensive data on conspiracy:
- Conspiracy charges show up in roughly 90% of multi-defendant federal cases
- Drug conspiracy is the single most commonly sentenced federal offense
- General conspiracy (§ 371) gets charged in approximately 2,000 cases annually
- Median sentences vary wildly depending on the underlying offense[11]
Defenses
No Agreement
Maybe there was no actual agreement. Perhaps you and others were just pursuing your own interests separately, or there was nothing more than a simple buyer-seller relationship that doesn't rise to conspiracy.
No Knowledge or Intent
You can argue you didn't know the conspiracy's illegal objectives or didn't intend to join it. Mere presence at crimes or association with criminals won't get you convicted.
Withdrawal
Affirmative acts disavowing the conspiracy and communicating withdrawal to co-conspirators can limit your liability for subsequent acts. It doesn't eliminate liability for the conspiracy itself, though.
Variance
If the evidence actually shows multiple smaller conspiracies rather than the single large one charged, you can argue the verdict is a prejudicial variance.
Statute of Limitations
The statute of limitations is normally 5 years and runs from the last overt act. If you withdrew or the conspiracy ended more than 5 years before indictment, charges might be time-barred.
See also
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is federal conspiracy?
Federal conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to commit a federal crime or to defraud the United States. It's a separate offense from the underlying crime and can be prosecuted even if the target crime was never completed.
Q: What is the sentence for federal conspiracy?
Under the general conspiracy statute (18 U.S.C. § 371), the maximum is 5 years. Offense-specific conspiracy statutes for drug, wire fraud, RICO, and similar crimes carry the same penalties as the underlying offense. That can mean decades or life imprisonment.
Q: What is Pinkerton liability?
Under Pinkerton v. United States, each conspirator is liable for crimes committed by co-conspirators if those crimes were in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable. You can be convicted of crimes you didn't personally commit.
Q: What is an overt act?
An overt act is any act by any conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy. It doesn't have to be illegal itself. Making a phone call or renting a car can qualify. General conspiracy requires proof of an overt act, but most offense-specific conspiracy statutes do not.
Q: Can I be convicted of crimes I didn't personally commit?
Yes. Under Pinkerton liability, each conspirator is responsible for substantive crimes committed by co-conspirators if those crimes were in furtherance of the conspiracy and reasonably foreseeable. That's a major reason conspiracy gets charged so frequently.
Q: How do I withdraw from a conspiracy?
Withdrawal requires affirmative steps to disavow the conspiracy and communication to co-conspirators. Withdrawal stops Pinkerton liability for future acts and starts the statute of limitations, but doesn't eliminate liability for the conspiracy itself.
Q: What if I only knew part of the conspiracy?
You don't need to know all details or all participants to be guilty of conspiracy. If you knew the essential nature of the conspiracy and intentionally joined it, you're liable for the full conspiracy and all reasonably foreseeable acts of co-conspirators.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 18 U.S.C. § 371.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Whitfield v. United States, 543 U.S. 209 (2005).
- ↑ Iannelli v. United States, 420 U.S. 770 (1975).
- ↑ Blumenthal v. United States, 332 U.S. 539 (1947).
- ↑ Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640 (1946).
- ↑ United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §2X1.1 (2024).
- ↑ United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §1B1.3 (2024).
- ↑ Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750 (1946).
- ↑ U.S. Department of Justice, "Paul J. Manafort Convicted," August 2018.
- ↑ U.S. Department of Justice, "Charges Unsealed in Nationwide College Admissions Scam," March 2019.
- ↑ United States Sentencing Commission, 2023 Annual Report and Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics.
White Collar Crimes: Wire Fraud · Mail Fraud · Tax Evasion · Money Laundering · Bank Fraud · Healthcare Fraud · Securities Fraud · Aggravated Identity Theft · Embezzlement · Bribery · Insurance Fraud · Mortgage Fraud
Other Federal Offenses: Drug Trafficking · Illegal Reentry · Felon in Possession · RICO · Conspiracy · False Statements · Obstruction of Justice · Child Exploitation