Fraud

Federal Wire Fraud Charges: 18 U.S.C. § 1343

Todd Spodek, Managing Partner

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You sent an email last week. Maybe it was to a business partner, a potential investor, or a contractor you were negotiating with. That email didn’t contain anything fraudulent – it just said “sounds good, let’s proceed with the arrangement we discussed.” A completely true statement about your intentions at that moment.

That email is now a potential federal felony carrying twenty years in prison.

Welcome to Federal Lawyers. Our goal is to explain what federal prosecutors actually do with 18 U.S.C. § 1343 – the wire fraud statute that has become the single most commonly charged white collar crime in America. Every phone call you’ve made, every text message you’ve sent, every email in your inbox – each one creates potential federal jurisdiction if connected to ANY alleged deception. The wire communication itself doesn’t need to be false. It just needs to “further” a scheme that prosecutors decide was fraudulent.

Here’s what nobody explains about wire fraud charges. The statute was written in 1952 to prosecute telegraph and radio fraud. Seventy-three years later, it captures your iPhone. Federal prosecutors call it their “Swiss Army knife” – the charge they reach for when they can’t prove anything more specific. Legal scholars note that wire fraud is used “to salvage a modest, but dubious, victory” when investigations prove unfruitful. This is the fallback charge that still carries twenty years per count.

Every Email You’ve Ever Sent Is A Potential Federal Count

Think about your sent folder. How many emails have you sent in the last year? Five hundred? Two thousand? Ten thousand?

Every single one of those emails created potential federal jurisdiction. If prosecutors can connect ANY of them to ANY alleged scheme to deceive, each email becomes a seperate count of wire fraud. Each count carries twenty years. Do the math on your inbox.

Heres the thing that catches most people off guard. The wire communication dosent need to be fraudulent itself. The DOJ’s own Justice Manual spells out the elements: voluntarily participated in a scheme to defraud, intent to deceive, reasonably forseeable that interstate wire communications would be used, and wire communications were in fact used.

Notice whats missing? Theres no requirement that the wire communication contain any false statement. Theres no requirement that the email or phone call itself was misleading. The prosecutors only need to show that the communication “furthered” the scheme – meaning it moved things forward in any way.

An email saying “lets schedule a meeting to discuss next steps” furthers a scheme. A text saying “got it, sounds good” furthers a scheme. A phone call confirming delivery dates furthers a scheme. The content of the wire is basicly irrelevant. Its the connection to the alleged fraud that creates the federal crime.

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Every email you’ve ever sent about any business deal that later went sideways is potentially a federal wire fraud count carrying twenty years in prison.

This is why experienced federal defense attorneys like our lead attorney tell clients to assume the worst about there electronic communications. Your not looking at whether individual emails were false. Your looking at whether the overall business relationship could be characterized as deceptive – and then counting how many emails touched that relationship.

The 1952 Telegraph Statute That Became The Prosecutor’s Favorite Weapon

Wire fraud was written when Morse code was cutting-edge technology. The original statute was designed to protect against fraud conducted “by means of wire, radio, or television in interstate or foreign commerce.” Legislators in 1952 were thinking about telegraph operators and radio broadcasts.

They werent thinking about smartphones. They werent thinking about email. They definately werent thinking about text messages, Slack channels, Venmo transfers, or cryptocurrency transactions. But all of those communications fall under the exact same statute.

Todd Spodek
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Todd Spodek

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Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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Heres the irony that most people miss. Wire fraud has become the most commonly charged federal white collar crime not because its the best tool for the job – but because its the broadest. When prosecutors cant prove specific securities violations, bank fraud statutes, or healthcare fraud requirements, they reach for wire fraud. It captures almost everything.

Legal scholars have noted that federal prosecutors treat 18 U.S.C. 1343 as a fallback “when investigations prove unfruitful.” Thats not my characterization – thats academic research into prosecutorial patterns. The statute prosecutors use most frequently is the one they turn to when they cant prove anything else.

And the courts have allowed this expansion. The same language that covered telegraph fraud in 1952 now covers every electronic communication you make. Courts have consistantly interpreted “wire communications” to include any electronic transmission that crosses state lines – which means basicly every email you send, since internet traffic routes through servers in multiple states.

The result is a statute with staggering scope. Federal judges themselves have described wire fraud as covering a “staggeringly broad swath of behavior.” When judges use words like “staggering” to describe a criminal statute’s reach, you should pay attention.

You Don’t Have To Steal Anything: Why Intent Alone Gets 20 Years

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Todd Spodek
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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