After a jury convicted Baldhir Sood of one count of computer
fraud, in violation of Kansas Statutes § 21–3755 and one count of
attempted theft, in violation of Kansas Statutes §§ 21–3301 and 21–3701, he
appealed. State v. Sood, __ P.3d __, 2012 WL 3055856 (Kansas Court of Appeals
2012). We will get to the issue he
raised on appeal in a moment, after we review the facts that led to his
prosecution and conviction.
In 2009, the Security Division of the Kansas Lottery
conducted a sting operation to test the integrity of the lottery to “`ensure every
player ha[d] a fair chance of being paid if they [had] a winning ticket.’” State
v. Sood, supra. State v. Sood, supra. As part of the sting, the Lottery
made counterfeit scratch off tickets (sting tickets) for its Scrabble game;
when scanned, a sting ticket “would appear to have a prize value of $25,000.” State
v. Sood, supra.
The Lottery then sent undercover Lottery enforcement agents,
“dressed in street clothes,” to stores around the state. State v. Sood, supra. They would enter the store with a sting
ticket and an authentic nonwinning ticket and “present both tickets to the
clerk to see if either ticket was a winning ticket.” State
v. Sood, supra. The agent would “try
to appear distracted to give the clerk the opportunity to check the tickets
without the agent seeing the results.” State v. Sood, supra.
Once a clerk took
the tickets, he/she would “enter a three-digit code printed on the ticket” and
scan its “bar code at the lottery terminal to determine” if it was a
winner. State v. Sood, supra. Generally, when a clerk scanned a winning
ticket, the terminal would display one of two messages. State v. Sood, supra. If the value was less than $600, it “would
display `winner’ and show the prize amount, which could be paid by the store
clerk immediately.” State v. Sood, supra.
If the prize value was $600 or more, “the terminal display
would display `Claim at Lottery.’” State
v. Sood, supra. It would also “play either You're in the Money or Beethoven's Fifth Symphony if”
the ticket was a winner. State v. Sood,
supra. When a losing ticket was scanned, the terminal “merely displayed, `Sorry
not a winner.’” State v. Sood, supra. If
the clerk told the agent the sting ticket was a winner, “he took the ticket
back and left the store.” State v. Sood,
supra. But if the agent was told the
sting ticket was not a winner, he/she would
`. . . if it was said in a manner that it was
clear, I would say, Thank you, and walk out of the store. If it was said in a
manner that was a little bit ambiguous, I would ask, Are you sure it's not a
winner, or Is it not a winner, or Neither ticket's a winner? And then I would
leave once being told that the ticket was not a winning ticket.’
State v. Sood, supra.
On July 29, 2009, Agent Schliffke went to a Shell gas station in Johnson
County to conduct the sting operation. State
v. Sood, supra. Baldhir and his wife Jiwan Jyoti Sood owned this gas
station. State v. Sood, supra.
Baldhir was working as the clerk when Schliffke entered the store. State v. Sood, supra. Schliffke bought a
bottle of water and gave Baldhir “the sting ticket and an authentic losing
ticket.” State v. Sood, supra.
Baldhir scanned them and told Schliffke he did not have a winning
ticket. State v. Sood, supra.
“Schliffke asked, `Neither one?’” and Baldhir said neither was a winner. State v. Sood, supra. “Neither You're
in the Money or Beethoven's Fifth Symphony played when” he
scanned the tickets. State v. Sood, supra.
Schliffke left the tickets with Baldhir and left the store. State
v. Sood, supra
The next day, Jiwan called Lottery headquarters and “asked about the
value of the sting ticket.” State v. Sood, supra. The call was
directed to Schliffke, and after he “confirmed” that Jiwan had the sting
ticket, he asked if the ticket was hers. State
v. Sood, supra. She said it was. State
v. Sood, supra. Schliffke asked how
much she thought it was worth, “and she stated $25,000.” State
v. Sood, supra.
On August 12, Jiwan went to the Lottery headquarters to fill
out a claim form for the sting ticket. State v. Sood, supra. After she filled
out the paperwork, Schliffke asked her about it. State v. Sood, supra. At first, Jiwan said Baldhir bought “the sting
ticket 2 weeks ago” and she had scratched it. State v. Sood, supra.
After Schliffke “confronted Jiwan, she . . . said Baldhir
gave her the sting ticket, which he thought was a winning ticket.” State v. Sood, supra. Jiwan said he “scanned
several tickets without getting a read-out message from the terminal.” State
v. Sood, supra. Baldhir “asked a customer what this meant, and the customer
told him the sting ticket was a winning ticket and suggested he call the
Lottery office.” State v. Sood, supra.
Based on this, Baldhir was charged with computer fraud and
attempted theft, as noted above. State v. Sood, supra. At trial, Baldhir testified that after
Schliffke asked him to check the two tickets, he scanned them at the terminal
but “because no music played” when he scanned them, he believed neither “was a
winner” and “threw them in the trash without looking at the terminal display.” State v. Sood, supra.
About 10 minutes later, one of the
Soods' regular customers came into the store with some lottery tickets to
check. Baldhir told [him] he thought the terminal was not working properly, but
let the customer check his tickets at the terminal anyway.
The customer also checked the tickets from the trash. After the customer checked the sting ticket, he gave [it] to Baldhir, who wrote a note on the ticket saying that it was a winning ticket. Baldhir then put the sting ticket, along with the note, in the cash drawer.
The customer also checked the tickets from the trash. After the customer checked the sting ticket, he gave [it] to Baldhir, who wrote a note on the ticket saying that it was a winning ticket. Baldhir then put the sting ticket, along with the note, in the cash drawer.
State v. Sood, supra. Regina Moore, another of the Soods’ regular
customers, testified and corroborated Baldhir’s account of the events
above. State v. Sood, supra.
After the prosecution and defense had both rested, the court
held a conference on jury instructions; Baldhir asked the jury be instructed on
mistake of fact as a defense. State v. Sood, supra. The judge refused,
Baldhir was convicted and sentenced to 8 months in prison and 18 months
probation. State v. Sood, supra. On appeal, Baldhir argued that the judge
erred in not giving the instruction. State v. Sood, supra.
The Court of Appeals began its analysis of his argument by
noting that the prosecution claimed Baldhir was not entitled to the instruction
because the Kansas computer fraud crime “is not a specific intent crime.” State v. Sood, supra. Baldhir argued
that it is. State v. Sood, supra. As
Wikipedia explains, specific intent is essentially an essential element of the
intent requirement in criminal law.
The Court of Appeals noted, first, that the Kansas computer
fraud statute defines the offense as “`using a computer, . . . computer network
or any other property for the purpose of . . . executing a scheme . . . with
the intent to defraud or for the purpose of obtaining money, property,
services or any other thing of value by means of false or fraudulent pretense
or representation’”. State v. Sood, supra (quoting Kansas
Statutes § 21-3755(b)(1)(B) (emphasis in the original). It also explained that Kansas courts have found statutes which define a crime by using “the phrase `with intent to’” as
requiring specific intent. State v. Sood, supra.
The court explained that the computer fraud statute under
which Baldhir was convicted
prohibits two distinct types of conduct
using a computer: (1) to defraud or (2) to obtain money, property, services or
any other thing of value by means of false or fraudulent pretense or
representation. . . . [T]he State charged Baldhir only under the second
prong of this statute. Both prongs of this statute require a specific intent
element.
To illustrate, both require the
devising or executing of a scheme or artifice with intent (1) to defraud or (2)
to obtain money, property, services or any other thing of value by means of
false or fraudulent pretense or representation. If the scheme or artifice is
reasonably calculated to deceive a person of ordinary intelligence, the
devising or execution of that scheme or artifice is relevant to show that the
defendant has acted with the intent to defraud.
State v. Sood, supra.
The Court of Appeals also noted that without a court
instructing the jury on the
specific intent element -- that the
defendant devised or executed a scheme or artifice with the intent (1) to
defraud or (2) to obtain money, property, services or any other thing of value
by means of false or fraudulent pretense or representation -- the defendant
could be convicted of computer fraud without any intent on the defendant's part
to deceive or cheat someone.
State v. Sood, supra. It also explained that, as Wikipedia’s entry
on specific intent notes, attempt crimes, like the attempted theft crime with
which Baldhir was charged, are also specific intent crimes. State
v. Sood, supra.
The court then took up the issue of whether it was
reversible error for the judge not to
give Baldhir’s instruction on mistake of fact. State v. Sood, supra. It noted, first, that a defendant is entitled
on an instruction related to his theory of defense if evidence presented at
trial supports the theory, and the instruction.
State v. Sood, supra. The
prosecution argued that the evidence did not support the giving of a mistake of
fact instruction, so the court reviewed the evidence. State
v. Sood, supra.
As noted above, Baldhir said he believed the sting ticket
was not a winning ticket because no music played when he scanned it, a
statement Schliffke, who testified for the prosecution, corroborated. State
v. Sood, supra. The court noted that
this, “coupled with Baldhir's failure to check the terminal message, supports [his]
assertion that he did not know the sting ticket was a winning ticket when he
scanned it.” State v. Sood, supra.
Baldhir also argued that the prosecution’s evidence failed
to show the terminal was working properly when he scanned the tickets. State
v. Sood, supra. At trial, Schliffke
testified that after he gave Baldhir
the tickets, he turned his back to the register. . . . [and] did not see
whether `Claim at Lottery’ was displayed on the terminal when Baldhir scanned
the tickets. . . Baldhir relies on a 42–page report, marked as Exhibit A, that
was admitted into evidence at trial. [It] showed all of the transactions from
July 29, 2009, that occurred on the lottery terminal in Baldhir's store.
Baldhir notes that the following error codes occurred on the terminal
throughout the day:
`[A]n
error code reading “# SYND_BAD_EXTERN_RECID” occurred at 3:22:46, the first
entry of the day. . . .That same error code appeared four more times at 5:15,
fifteen times between 17:06:18 and 18:16:47, and five times at 19:04:06. An
error code reading “# BADRE” occurred 39 times throughout the day, both before and
after [Baldhir] scanned Schliffke's tickets. An error code reading “179”
occurred ten times from 17:09:08 to 17:14:07.’
State v. Sood, supra.
The court found that because the report showed the terminal
had “numerous errors” during the day, one can infer that it was not working
properly when Baldhir scanned the tickets, which meant he would not have known
the sting ticket was a winning ticket when he scanned it. State
v. Sood, supra. The court also found that these facts supported Baldhir’s argument that the trial judge should have
given a mistake of fact instruction to the jury because the evidence was
sufficient to justify a “rational factfinder” in accepting Baldhir’s theory of
defense, i.e., that it was all a mistake and he neither intended to commit
computer fraud nor theft. State v. Sood, supra.
The Court of Appeals therefore reversed Baldhir’s
convictions on both charged and remanded the case for a new trial on both. State
v. Sood, supra.
This news story provides a little more information on the
sting, which resulted in five store clerks being charged with trying “steal
winnings from the Kansas Lottery.”
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