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|related_offenses = [[Wire Fraud|Wire Fraud]], [[Bank Fraud|Bank Fraud]], [[False Statements|False Statements]]
|related_offenses = [[Wire Fraud|Wire Fraud]], [[Bank Fraud|Bank Fraud]], [[False Statements|False Statements]]
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'''Aggravated identity theft''' is a federal crime under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A that imposes a mandatory minimum consecutive sentence for using another person's means of identification during and in relation to certain enumerated felony offenses. Unlike most federal crimes where judges have sentencing discretion, aggravated identity theft requires a mandatory 2-year sentence that must run consecutive to any other term of imprisonment.<ref name="uscode-1028a">18 U.S.C. § 1028A.</ref>
'''Aggravated identity theft''' is a serious federal crime codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1028A. It punishes anyone who uses another person's identification while committing certain enumerated federal felonies. Here's what makes it distinct: the judge has no choice in sentencing. A mandatory 2-year prison term kicks in, and it runs separately from whatever sentence the defendant gets for the underlying crime.


The statute was enacted as part of the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004, reflecting Congress's concern about the growing problem of identity theft and its role in facilitating other crimes. The mandatory consecutive sentence substantially increases punishment for defendants who steal identities to commit fraud, immigration violations, or other federal offenses.<ref name="id-theft-act">Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-275.</ref>
Congress passed the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004 because identity theft was exploding and fueling countless other crimes.<ref name="id-theft-act">Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-275.</ref> The new law reflected serious concern about criminals stacking stolen identities with fraud schemes to multiply their gains and their victims' harm. That mandatory consecutive approach transformed how federal sentencing works for these cases.<ref name="uscode-1028a">18 U.S.C. § 1028A.</ref>


== Elements of the Offense ==
== Elements of the Offense ==


To convict under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A, the government must prove:
Prosecutors must prove all four of these elements beyond reasonable doubt:


# '''Means of Identification''': The defendant knowingly transferred, possessed, or used a means of identification of another person
# '''Means of Identification''': The defendant knowingly transferred, possessed, or used a means of identification belonging to another person
# '''Without Lawful Authority''': The defendant acted without lawful authority
# '''Without Lawful Authority''': No legitimate right existed to use it
# '''During and In Relation To''': The use occurred during and in relation to an enumerated felony offense
# '''During and In Relation To''': The use occurred during and in relation to an enumerated felony offense
# '''Knowledge''': The defendant knew that the means of identification belonged to another actual person<ref name="flores-figueroa">Flores-Figueroa v. United States, 556 U.S. 646 (2009).</ref>
# '''Knowledge''': The defendant knew the identification belonged to an actual person<ref name="flores-figueroa">Flores-Figueroa v. United States, 556 U.S. 646 (2009).</ref>


=== Means of Identification ===
=== Means of Identification ===


"Means of identification" is defined broadly in 18 U.S.C. § 1028(d)(7) to include:
The statute casts a wide net. Under 18 U.S.C. § 1028(d)(7), "means of identification" includes:


* Name
* Name
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* Alien registration number
* Alien registration number
* Government-issued identification number
* Government-issued identification number
* Unique biometric data (fingerprints, voice print, retina image)
* Unique biometric data: fingerprints, voice prints, retina images
* Unique electronic identification number or address (routing code)
* Unique electronic identification numbers or addresses, including routing codes
* Telecommunication identifying information or access device
* Telecommunication identifying information or access devices


=== Knowledge Requirement ===
=== Knowledge Requirement ===


In ''Flores-Figueroa v. United States'' (2009), the Supreme Court held that the government must prove the defendant knew the means of identification belonged to another actual person. Using a fabricated identity that happens to match a real person's information—without knowing the identity belongs to a real person—does not satisfy the knowledge requirement.<ref name="flores-figueroa" />
This element matters. In ''Flores-Figueroa v. United States'' (2009), the Supreme Court clarified that prosecutors must show the defendant knew the identity belonged to a real, actual person. Imagine someone creates a fake Social Security number by accident and it happens to match someone real. That's not aggravated identity theft if the defendant genuinely didn't know any real person held that number.<ref name="flores-figueroa" /> Circumstantial proof counts though. If you pulled data from an identity theft database, that suggests knowledge of real victims.


=== Enumerated Predicate Offenses ===
=== Enumerated Predicate Offenses ===


Aggravated identity theft applies when the identity theft occurs "during and in relation to" certain enumerated felonies, including:
Aggravated identity theft only applies to a specific list of federal crimes. The identity theft must occur "during and in relation to" one of these offenses:


'''Fraud and Related Crimes:'''
'''Fraud and Related Crimes:'''
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|}
|}


'''Key Penalty Provisions:'''
The law is strict here. These aren't guidelines. They're requirements with real teeth:


* The 2-year (or 5-year) sentence must run consecutive to any sentence for the underlying predicate offense
* That 2-year or 5-year sentence runs consecutively, meaning after any other sentence, not during it
* The sentence cannot be served concurrently with any other sentence
* No concurrent service. No reduction for good behavior calculation purposes that might apply elsewhere.
* Courts cannot impose probation; imprisonment is mandatory
* Probation isn't an option. Prison time is mandatory.
* Each use of a different person's identification can constitute a separate count<ref name="uscode-1028a" />
* Each identity stolen can become a separate count, stacking sentences.<ref name="uscode-1028a" />


== Federal Sentencing Guidelines ==
== Federal Sentencing Guidelines ==


Aggravated identity theft is governed by USSG §2B1.6, which simply directs that the mandatory 2-year consecutive sentence required by statute be imposed. Unlike other offenses, there are no enhancements or adjustments—the sentence is fixed by law.
USSG §2B1.6 addresses these cases. There's nothing complicated here because the statute leaves nothing to the judge. The guideline simply says: impose the 2-year mandatory consecutive sentence required by law. No enhancements. No adjustments. The law wrote the sentence in stone.


=== Relationship to Underlying Offense ===
=== Relationship to Underlying Offense ===


The predicate offense (e.g., wire fraud, bank fraud) is sentenced separately under its own guideline. The aggravated identity theft sentence is then added consecutively. For example:
Here's how it works in practice. The underlying predicate offense gets sentenced under its own guideline. That comes first. Then the aggravated identity theft sentence tacks on. Let's work through an example:


* If a defendant is convicted of wire fraud with a guideline range of 24-30 months, plus aggravated identity theft
Say someone's convicted of wire fraud with a guideline range of 24 to 30 months. They're also convicted of aggravated identity theft. The judge might sentence them to 27 months for wire fraud. Then they add 24 consecutive months for the identity theft. Total: 51 months minimum.<ref name="ussg-2b1.6">United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §2B1.6 (2024).</ref>
* The defendant would serve the wire fraud sentence (say, 27 months) plus 24 months consecutive for the identity theft
* Total minimum sentence: 51 months<ref name="ussg-2b1.6">United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §2B1.6 (2024).</ref>


=== Multiple Counts ===
=== Multiple Counts ===


When a defendant is convicted of multiple counts of aggravated identity theft, the guidelines address whether sentences run concurrently or consecutively:
Courts face questions about stacking when multiple identity theft counts exist:


* Multiple counts involving the same victim on the same occasion: may run concurrently
* Same victim, same occasion: may run concurrently with each other
* Multiple counts involving different victims or different occasions: typically run consecutively
* Different victims or different occasions: typically run consecutively
* Courts have discretion on stacking beyond the first count<ref name="ussg-2b1.6" />
* Judges retain discretion on whether counts beyond the first run together or separately<ref name="ussg-2b1.6" />


== Common Scenarios ==
== Common Scenarios ==
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=== Financial Fraud ===
=== Financial Fraud ===


Using stolen Social Security numbers, names, and dates of birth to:
Thieves steal Social Security numbers, names, and birth dates then:


* Open fraudulent credit card accounts
* Open credit card accounts in victims' names
* Obtain fraudulent loans
* Apply for loans and get cash
* File false tax returns for refunds
* File false tax returns claiming refunds
* Access existing bank accounts
* Drain existing bank accounts


=== Government Benefits Fraud ===
=== Government Benefits Fraud ===


Using stolen identities to fraudulently obtain:
Stolen identities become tools for obtaining:


* Unemployment benefits
* Unemployment benefits
* Social Security benefits
* Social Security checks
* Medicare or Medicaid benefits
* Medicare or Medicaid funds
* PPP loans and COVID relief payments
* PPP loans and COVID relief money


=== Immigration-Related Identity Theft ===
=== Immigration-Related Identity Theft ===


Using another person's identity documents to:
Foreign nationals use another person's documents to:


* Work in the United States without authorization
* Work without authorization
* Obtain driver's licenses or state identification
* Get driver's licenses or state IDs
* Reenter the country after deportation
* Reenter the country after deportation


=== Tax Refund Fraud ===
=== Tax Refund Fraud ===


Filing fraudulent tax returns using stolen identities to obtain refunds. This scheme typically involves using stolen Social Security numbers to file returns before the legitimate taxpayer.
This scheme is simple but effective. Criminals file fake tax returns using stolen Social Security numbers, getting refunds before the real taxpayers even know what happened.


== Notable Cases ==
== Notable Cases ==
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=== PPP and COVID Relief Fraud ===
=== PPP and COVID Relief Fraud ===


Thousands of defendants have been charged with aggravated identity theft in connection with COVID-19 relief fraud, including:
The COVID-19 pandemic opened a massive door for these crimes. Thousands faced charges:


* Using stolen identities to file fraudulent PPP loan applications
* Stolen identities on fraudulent PPP applications
* Filing unemployment claims using other people's identities
* Unemployment claims filed under other people's names
* Obtaining multiple relief payments using stolen information
* Multiple relief payments taken using one person's stolen information


=== Data Breach Cases ===
=== Data Breach Cases ===


Major data breaches have led to prosecutions where stolen personal information was used for fraud:
Major breaches created opportunities that criminals quickly exploited:


* Defendants who purchased stolen data on the dark web and used it for fraud
* Defendants buying stolen data on dark web markets then using it
* Hackers who exploited data breaches for financial gain
* Hackers monetizing data after exploiting systems
* Networks that specialized in monetizing stolen identity data
* Specialized networks devoted to turning stolen data into cash


=== Tax Fraud Rings ===
=== Tax Fraud Rings ===


Organized groups that:
Organized groups operated differently. They'd:


* Stole identities from healthcare facilities, employers, and other sources
* Steal identities from hospitals, workplaces, and other institutions
* Filed thousands of fraudulent tax returns
* File thousands of fraudulent returns
* Received refunds on prepaid debit cards
* Collect refunds deposited on prepaid cards


== Statistics ==
== Statistics ==


According to federal data:
Government data tells an interesting story:


* Aggravated identity theft is charged in approximately 2,000-3,000 federal cases annually
* Between 2,000 and 3,000 federal cases annually involve aggravated identity theft charges
* The offense is commonly charged alongside wire fraud, bank fraud, and access device fraud
* It's nearly always charged with wire fraud, bank fraud, or access device fraud
* The mandatory consecutive sentence significantly increases total sentences in fraud cases
* The mandatory consecutive requirement dramatically increases total sentences
* Immigration-related cases involving identity documents are a major category
* Immigration cases involving stolen documents form a major category
* COVID-19 relief fraud led to a substantial increase in aggravated identity theft prosecutions<ref name="ussc-stats">United States Sentencing Commission, 2023 Annual Report and Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics.</ref>
* COVID-19 relief fraud exploded the number of these prosecutions significantly<ref name="ussc-stats">United States Sentencing Commission, 2023 Annual Report and Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics.</ref>


== Defenses ==
== Defenses ==
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=== No Knowledge of Real Person ===
=== No Knowledge of Real Person ===


Following ''Flores-Figueroa'', the government must prove the defendant knew the identity belonged to an actual person. If the defendant believed they were using a fabricated identity, conviction is improper. However, circumstantial evidence of knowledge (such as obtaining the information from identity theft databases) may establish this element.
''Flores-Figueroa'' created an opening here. The government must prove you knew an actual person owned that identity. If you genuinely believed you'd invented or found a fake number, conviction fails. That said, circumstantial evidence works against defendants. Getting information from identity theft databases suggests you knew real victims existed.


=== No Use "During and In Relation To" ===
=== No Use "During and In Relation To" ===


The identity theft must occur "during and in relation to" a predicate felony. If the identity theft was separate from or merely incidental to the charged offense, this element may be lacking.
The identity theft must genuinely occur as part of the predicate crime. If it happened separately or was only incidental to something else, this element crumbles. The connection matters.


=== No Predicate Felony ===
=== No Predicate Felony ===


Aggravated identity theft requires commission of an enumerated predicate offense. If the defendant is acquitted of or the charges do not include an enumerated offense, aggravated identity theft cannot stand.
Without conviction of an enumerated offense, aggravated identity theft doesn't apply. If you're acquitted of the underlying crime or those charges never appear in the indictment, the identity theft count falls apart too.


=== Lawful Authority ===
=== Lawful Authority ===


The defendant may argue they had lawful authority to use the identification, such as having permission from the owner or acting in an official capacity.
You might argue you had permission. Maybe the owner gave you permission. Maybe you held official authority. These are fact questions for the jury.


== Impact on Plea Negotiations ==
== Impact on Plea Negotiations ==


The mandatory consecutive sentence makes aggravated identity theft a powerful tool in plea negotiations:
That mandatory 2-year add-on changes how cases settle dramatically:


* Prosecutors may offer to dismiss identity theft counts in exchange for guilty pleas to underlying fraud charges
* Prosecutors leverage it heavily. Dismissing identity theft counts suddenly looks good to defendants.
* The 2-year mandatory minimum creates significant leverage
* The guaranteed additional time creates real pressure.
* Defendants facing multiple counts of identity theft may face decades of additional time
* Someone facing five identity theft counts faces ten additional years minimum.
* The certainty of additional prison time often encourages plea agreements
* Certainty shifts thinking. Many defendants accept deals to avoid the guaranteed stacking.<ref name="uscode-1028a" />


== Related Offenses ==
== Related Offenses ==
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=== Identity Theft (18 U.S.C. § 1028) ===
=== Identity Theft (18 U.S.C. § 1028) ===


The base identity theft statute covers broader conduct without the mandatory consecutive requirement. Penalties range from 5-30 years depending on the specific subsection.
This is the parent statute. It covers identity theft without the mandatory minimum requirement. Sentences range from 5 to 30 years depending on which subsection applies.


=== Access Device Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1029) ===
=== Access Device Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1029) ===


Covers fraud involving credit cards, account numbers, and electronic access devices. Often charged alongside identity theft.
Credit cards, account numbers, and electronic access devices all fit here. Usually charged alongside identity theft counts.


=== Computer Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1030) ===
=== Computer Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1030) ===


Covers unauthorized access to computers, often used to obtain identity information for fraud.
Unauthorized computer access often supplies the stolen identity data. These charges frequently appear together.


== See also ==
== See also ==
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== Frequently Asked Questions ==
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=What is aggravated identity theft?|answer=Aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A is using another person's identity to commit certain federal crimes. It carries a mandatory 2-year prison sentence that must run consecutive to (after) any sentence for the underlying crime, with no possibility of probation.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is aggravated identity theft?|answer=Aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A means using someone else's identification to commit certain federal crimes. It comes with a mandatory 2-year prison sentence that runs consecutive to, or after, any sentence for the underlying crime, with no possibility of probation.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is the sentence for aggravated identity theft?|answer=Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory 2-year prison sentence (5 years if terrorism-related). This sentence must run consecutive to any other sentence—meaning it adds exactly 2 years to the total time served, and the judge has no discretion to reduce it.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is the sentence for aggravated identity theft?|answer=Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory 2-year prison sentence (5 years if terrorism-related). This sentence must run consecutive to any other sentence. You're looking at exactly 2 years added to your total time, and judges can't reduce it or suspend it.}}
{{FAQ|question=Can a judge reduce the 2-year sentence?|answer=No. The 2-year sentence is mandatory and cannot be reduced by the judge. It must run consecutive to other sentences and cannot be served as probation. This is one of the few truly mandatory minimum sentences in federal law with no judicial discretion.}}
{{FAQ|question=Can a judge reduce the 2-year sentence?|answer=No. The 2-year sentence is truly mandatory. Judges can't shorten it. It must run consecutive to other sentences and can't be served as probation. This represents one of the few genuinely mandatory minimum sentences in federal law where judges have zero discretion.}}
{{FAQ|question=What crimes can trigger aggravated identity theft?|answer=Aggravated identity theft applies when identity theft occurs "during and in relation to" certain enumerated felonies, including wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud, healthcare fraud, immigration document fraud, tax fraud, and access device fraud, among others.}}
{{FAQ|question=What crimes can trigger aggravated identity theft?|answer=Aggravated identity theft applies when identity theft occurs "during and in relation to" certain enumerated felonies. Wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud, healthcare fraud, immigration document fraud, tax fraud, and access device fraud all qualify, among others.}}
{{FAQ|question=Do I have to know the identity belongs to a real person?|answer=Yes. The Supreme Court ruled in Flores-Figueroa v. United States (2009) that the government must prove you knew the identity belonged to an actual person. Using a made-up identity that happens to match a real person's information is not aggravated identity theft if you didn't know it was real.}}
{{FAQ|question=Do I have to know the identity belongs to a real person?|answer=Yes. Flores-Figueroa v. United States (2009) established that prosecutors must prove you knew the identity belonged to an actual person. Using a made-up identity that happens to match a real person's information doesn't count if you didn't know it was real.}}
{{FAQ|question=Can I be charged with multiple counts of aggravated identity theft?|answer=Yes. Each use of a different person's identity can be a separate count, potentially adding 2 years for each count. Courts have some discretion on whether multiple counts run concurrently or consecutively after the first count.}}
{{FAQ|question=Can I be charged with multiple counts of aggravated identity theft?|answer=Yes. Each identity stolen can be a separate count, potentially adding 2 years for each one. Courts have some discretion on whether multiple counts run together or separately after the first count.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}
{{FAQSection/End}}



Revision as of 16:48, 23 April 2026

Aggravated Identity Theft
Statute:18 U.S.C. § 1028A
U.S. Code:Title 18, Chapter 47
Max Prison:2 years mandatory consecutive (5 years for terrorism)
Max Fine:$250,000
Guidelines:USSG §2B1.6
Base Level:N/A (mandatory consecutive)
Agencies:FBI, USSS, FTC, SSA-OIG
Related:Wire Fraud, Bank Fraud, False Statements

Aggravated identity theft is a serious federal crime codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1028A. It punishes anyone who uses another person's identification while committing certain enumerated federal felonies. Here's what makes it distinct: the judge has no choice in sentencing. A mandatory 2-year prison term kicks in, and it runs separately from whatever sentence the defendant gets for the underlying crime.

Congress passed the Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004 because identity theft was exploding and fueling countless other crimes.[1] The new law reflected serious concern about criminals stacking stolen identities with fraud schemes to multiply their gains and their victims' harm. That mandatory consecutive approach transformed how federal sentencing works for these cases.[2]

Elements of the Offense

Prosecutors must prove all four of these elements beyond reasonable doubt:

  1. Means of Identification: The defendant knowingly transferred, possessed, or used a means of identification belonging to another person
  2. Without Lawful Authority: No legitimate right existed to use it
  3. During and In Relation To: The use occurred during and in relation to an enumerated felony offense
  4. Knowledge: The defendant knew the identification belonged to an actual person[3]

Means of Identification

The statute casts a wide net. Under 18 U.S.C. § 1028(d)(7), "means of identification" includes:

  • Name
  • Social Security number
  • Date of birth
  • Driver's license number
  • Passport number
  • Alien registration number
  • Government-issued identification number
  • Unique biometric data: fingerprints, voice prints, retina images
  • Unique electronic identification numbers or addresses, including routing codes
  • Telecommunication identifying information or access devices

Knowledge Requirement

This element matters. In Flores-Figueroa v. United States (2009), the Supreme Court clarified that prosecutors must show the defendant knew the identity belonged to a real, actual person. Imagine someone creates a fake Social Security number by accident and it happens to match someone real. That's not aggravated identity theft if the defendant genuinely didn't know any real person held that number.[3] Circumstantial proof counts though. If you pulled data from an identity theft database, that suggests knowledge of real victims.

Enumerated Predicate Offenses

Aggravated identity theft only applies to a specific list of federal crimes. The identity theft must occur "during and in relation to" one of these offenses:

Fraud and Related Crimes:

  • Mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341)
  • Wire fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343)
  • Bank fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1344)
  • Healthcare fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1347)
  • Access device fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1029)
  • Computer fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1030)

Immigration Offenses:

  • Illegal reentry (8 U.S.C. § 1326)
  • Document fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1546)
  • Social Security fraud (42 U.S.C. § 408)

Other Offenses:

  • Theft of public money (18 U.S.C. § 641)
  • False statements (18 U.S.C. § 1001)
  • Passport fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1542)
  • Nationality fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1015)[2]

Statutory Penalties

Category Mandatory Minimum Maximum Fine Consecutive Requirement
Standard aggravated identity theft 2 years $250,000 Must run consecutive
Terrorism-related identity theft 5 years $250,000 Must run consecutive

The law is strict here. These aren't guidelines. They're requirements with real teeth:

  • That 2-year or 5-year sentence runs consecutively, meaning after any other sentence, not during it
  • No concurrent service. No reduction for good behavior calculation purposes that might apply elsewhere.
  • Probation isn't an option. Prison time is mandatory.
  • Each identity stolen can become a separate count, stacking sentences.[2]

Federal Sentencing Guidelines

USSG §2B1.6 addresses these cases. There's nothing complicated here because the statute leaves nothing to the judge. The guideline simply says: impose the 2-year mandatory consecutive sentence required by law. No enhancements. No adjustments. The law wrote the sentence in stone.

Relationship to Underlying Offense

Here's how it works in practice. The underlying predicate offense gets sentenced under its own guideline. That comes first. Then the aggravated identity theft sentence tacks on. Let's work through an example:

Say someone's convicted of wire fraud with a guideline range of 24 to 30 months. They're also convicted of aggravated identity theft. The judge might sentence them to 27 months for wire fraud. Then they add 24 consecutive months for the identity theft. Total: 51 months minimum.[4]

Multiple Counts

Courts face questions about stacking when multiple identity theft counts exist:

  • Same victim, same occasion: may run concurrently with each other
  • Different victims or different occasions: typically run consecutively
  • Judges retain discretion on whether counts beyond the first run together or separately[4]

Common Scenarios

Financial Fraud

Thieves steal Social Security numbers, names, and birth dates then:

  • Open credit card accounts in victims' names
  • Apply for loans and get cash
  • File false tax returns claiming refunds
  • Drain existing bank accounts

Government Benefits Fraud

Stolen identities become tools for obtaining:

  • Unemployment benefits
  • Social Security checks
  • Medicare or Medicaid funds
  • PPP loans and COVID relief money

Foreign nationals use another person's documents to:

  • Work without authorization
  • Get driver's licenses or state IDs
  • Reenter the country after deportation

Tax Refund Fraud

This scheme is simple but effective. Criminals file fake tax returns using stolen Social Security numbers, getting refunds before the real taxpayers even know what happened.

Notable Cases

PPP and COVID Relief Fraud

The COVID-19 pandemic opened a massive door for these crimes. Thousands faced charges:

  • Stolen identities on fraudulent PPP applications
  • Unemployment claims filed under other people's names
  • Multiple relief payments taken using one person's stolen information

Data Breach Cases

Major breaches created opportunities that criminals quickly exploited:

  • Defendants buying stolen data on dark web markets then using it
  • Hackers monetizing data after exploiting systems
  • Specialized networks devoted to turning stolen data into cash

Tax Fraud Rings

Organized groups operated differently. They'd:

  • Steal identities from hospitals, workplaces, and other institutions
  • File thousands of fraudulent returns
  • Collect refunds deposited on prepaid cards

Statistics

Government data tells an interesting story:

  • Between 2,000 and 3,000 federal cases annually involve aggravated identity theft charges
  • It's nearly always charged with wire fraud, bank fraud, or access device fraud
  • The mandatory consecutive requirement dramatically increases total sentences
  • Immigration cases involving stolen documents form a major category
  • COVID-19 relief fraud exploded the number of these prosecutions significantly[5]

Defenses

No Knowledge of Real Person

Flores-Figueroa created an opening here. The government must prove you knew an actual person owned that identity. If you genuinely believed you'd invented or found a fake number, conviction fails. That said, circumstantial evidence works against defendants. Getting information from identity theft databases suggests you knew real victims existed.

No Use "During and In Relation To"

The identity theft must genuinely occur as part of the predicate crime. If it happened separately or was only incidental to something else, this element crumbles. The connection matters.

No Predicate Felony

Without conviction of an enumerated offense, aggravated identity theft doesn't apply. If you're acquitted of the underlying crime or those charges never appear in the indictment, the identity theft count falls apart too.

Lawful Authority

You might argue you had permission. Maybe the owner gave you permission. Maybe you held official authority. These are fact questions for the jury.

Impact on Plea Negotiations

That mandatory 2-year add-on changes how cases settle dramatically:

  • Prosecutors leverage it heavily. Dismissing identity theft counts suddenly looks good to defendants.
  • The guaranteed additional time creates real pressure.
  • Someone facing five identity theft counts faces ten additional years minimum.
  • Certainty shifts thinking. Many defendants accept deals to avoid the guaranteed stacking.[2]

Identity Theft (18 U.S.C. § 1028)

This is the parent statute. It covers identity theft without the mandatory minimum requirement. Sentences range from 5 to 30 years depending on which subsection applies.

Access Device Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1029)

Credit cards, account numbers, and electronic access devices all fit here. Usually charged alongside identity theft counts.

Computer Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1030)

Unauthorized computer access often supplies the stolen identity data. These charges frequently appear together.

See also

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is aggravated identity theft?

Aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A means using someone else's identification to commit certain federal crimes. It comes with a mandatory 2-year prison sentence that runs consecutive to, or after, any sentence for the underlying crime, with no possibility of probation.


Q: What is the sentence for aggravated identity theft?

Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory 2-year prison sentence (5 years if terrorism-related). This sentence must run consecutive to any other sentence. You're looking at exactly 2 years added to your total time, and judges can't reduce it or suspend it.


Q: Can a judge reduce the 2-year sentence?

No. The 2-year sentence is truly mandatory. Judges can't shorten it. It must run consecutive to other sentences and can't be served as probation. This represents one of the few genuinely mandatory minimum sentences in federal law where judges have zero discretion.


Q: What crimes can trigger aggravated identity theft?

Aggravated identity theft applies when identity theft occurs "during and in relation to" certain enumerated felonies. Wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud, healthcare fraud, immigration document fraud, tax fraud, and access device fraud all qualify, among others.


Q: Do I have to know the identity belongs to a real person?

Yes. Flores-Figueroa v. United States (2009) established that prosecutors must prove you knew the identity belonged to an actual person. Using a made-up identity that happens to match a real person's information doesn't count if you didn't know it was real.


Q: Can I be charged with multiple counts of aggravated identity theft?

Yes. Each identity stolen can be a separate count, potentially adding 2 years for each one. Courts have some discretion on whether multiple counts run together or separately after the first count.


References

  1. Identity Theft Penalty Enhancement Act of 2004, Pub. L. 108-275.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 18 U.S.C. § 1028A.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Flores-Figueroa v. United States, 556 U.S. 646 (2009).
  4. 4.0 4.1 United States Sentencing Commission, USSG §2B1.6 (2024).
  5. United States Sentencing Commission, 2023 Annual Report and Sourcebook of Federal Sentencing Statistics.