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United States v. Nolen, 05-40859 (2007)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit Number: 05-40859 Visitors: 34
Filed: Jul. 25, 2007
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit F I L E D REVISED JULY 25, 2007 December 12, 2006 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III Clerk No. 05-40859 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus ROBERT E. NOLEN, Defendant-Appellant. - Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas - Before JOLLY, DAVIS, and WIENER, Circuit Judges. WIENER, Circuit Judge: Defendant-Appellant Robert E. Nolen, a persistent “tax p
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                                                           United States Court of Appeals
                                                                    Fifth Circuit
                                                                 F I L E D
                         REVISED JULY 25, 2007
                                                                December 12, 2006
              IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT                  Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                                                     Clerk


                             No. 05-40859



UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                    Plaintiff-Appellee,

versus

ROBERT E. NOLEN,

                                                    Defendant-Appellant.

                       --------------------
          Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Eastern District of Texas
                       --------------------

Before JOLLY, DAVIS, and WIENER, Circuit Judges.

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

     Defendant-Appellant     Robert   E.   Nolen,   a   persistent     “tax

protester,” was convicted on three counts of willfully attempting

to evade the federal income tax in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201.

On appeal, he contends that (1) the district court violated his

Sixth Amendment rights when it revoked the pro hac vice admission

of his retained counsel, (2) the evidence at trial was insufficient

to establish the charged offense, because no tax obligation had

been formally assessed, (3) the district court committed plain

error by failing to require the jury to find an affirmative act

other than willful failure to file returns and by failing to
require the jury to find exactly the same affirmative act of

evasion that was charged in the indictment, and (4) the district

court erred by ordering restitution in a case arising under Title

26 of the United States Code.

     We conclude that (1) the district court erred in failing to

demonstrate that it conducted the proper balancing of Nolen’s Sixth

Amendment rights (if it did so) when it revoked the pro hac vice

admission of his counsel, making appellate review of that order

impossible, (2) the trial evidence was sufficient to establish the

charged offense, (3) the district court’s jury instructions did not

constitute plain error, and (4) the restitution order was improper.

                     I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

     In 1992, Robert E. Nolen, a dentist practicing in Flower

Mound, Texas, decided that he should no longer be subject to

federal income taxation.   Nolen filed an affidavit with the Clerk

of Tarrant County, Texas declaring that although “tax is imposed

upon the citizens and residents subject to the jurisdiction of the

United States,” he was a “‘nonresident’ to the residency and

‘alien’ to the citizenship of the 14th Amendment.”     Despite his

accountant’s warning that failure to pay federal income taxes “was

illegal,” Nolen remained resolute.     He filed his last federal

income tax return in October 1992 for the 1991 tax year.

     Non-cash receipts from Nolen’s dental practice were deposited

into a business account from which all business expenses were paid.



                                 2
In contrast, Nolen instructed his office manager to give him all of

the cash receipts, which averaged $1,000 per month.                In December

1993,    Nolen   and   his    wife   created    an   entity     called   Genesis

Enterprises, an unincorporated business organization “domiciled in

the sovereign Republic of Texas.”            According to Nolen, the purpose

of Genesis was to protect his assets from malpractice litigation.

Nolen opened two new accounts, one in the name of               “PJ Consultants

DBA Genesis Enterprises ABBA” (“the Genesis account”), and one in

the name of “PJ Consultants DBA Max Man Holding Company” (“the Max

Man account”).1

     Nolen instructed his office manager to transfer funds from the

business   account     to    the   Genesis    account,   from    which   Nolen’s

personal expenses were paid.         Nolen failed to report as income, or

pay tax on, the dental practice receipts that were used to pay his

personal expenses.      He also falsely coded the transfers of money

from the business account to the Genesis account as “professional

fees.”    Nolen gave his office manager authority to sign checks on

the Genesis and Max Man accounts and began paying her an additional

$1,000 per month (later increased to $1,800 per month).                  Neither

Genesis nor Max Man filed tax returns.




     1
       The Max Man account held funds transferred from the
business account for maintenance of the building in which Nolen
practiced dentistry, which he owned. Those funds are not at
issue in this case.


                                        3
     In October 1995, the IRS notified Nolen that it was aware of

his failure to file returns for the past three years and requested

that he meet with agents and produce his financial records.         Nolen

did not attend that meeting and later disregarded a second such

request.   Eventually, the IRS served Nolen with an administrative

summons, ordering   him   to   appear   and   produce   records.    Nolen

disregarded that summons as well.

     In June 1996, Nolen converted his dental practice from a

corporation to a sole proprietorship, changed its name, and opened

a new business bank account.    Thereafter, the practice did not file

tax returns.    Nolen then altered the name of the Genesis bank

account and removed his and his wife’s names from it.        Nolen still

controlled the checkbook, however, by using a signature stamp

created for one of the account signatories.

     In December 1996, the district court issued an order requiring

Nolen to appear and show cause why he should not be ordered to

comply with the IRS administrative summons. Nolen failed to appear

at that hearing and was finally detained by U.S. Marshals.         He then

filed a petition to quash the summons, stating that he was not a

citizen or resident of the United States.           The district court

enforced the summons and ordered Nolen to appear before the IRS and

produce the requested records.     He appeared at that hearing, but

refused to produce any records.

     In September and November 1997, the IRS sent Nolen delinquency

notices, demanding that he file tax returns and pay unpaid taxes.

                                   4
Thereafter, Nolen moved the Genesis account to a different bank and

listed his office manager as the sole account holder. He continued

to transfer funds from the dental practice’s business account to

the Genesis account and to use funds from the Genesis account to

pay his personal expenses.       In September 1998, the IRS sent Nolen

notices of deficiency for tax years 1992, 1993, and 1994.              After

that, Nolen removed his name as a signatory on the business bank

account, but continued to own and control the funds in that

account.

     At some point in 1997, Nolen began consulting with various

attorneys   and   accountants,    seeking   their   advice   as   to    what

strategies he should employ to “resolve” his IRS issues.           On the

advice of his attorneys, Nolen began to pursue a series of document

requests and related civil lawsuits against the IRS. Between March

1999 and April 2002, while this frustration-litigation strategy was

playing out, Nolen made a series of $500 payments to the IRS, as a

“bond” against determination of tax liability.          In July 2003, a

grand jury sitting in the Eastern District of Texas returned a

three-count indictment charging Nolen with willfully attempting to

evade federal income taxes for the years 1997, 1998, and 1999.

     Nolen retained a California attorney, Roger Agajanian, and the

district court granted Agajanian’s motion for admission pro hac

vice. In September 2003, the government filed a motion for inquiry

into whether Nolen was receiving the effective assistance of

counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment.      The government alleged

                                     5
that a legal assistant, Lawrence Maxwell, had been conducting all

or part of Nolen’s defense in Agajanian’s name but without his

control.   The magistrate judge conducted a hearing and expressed

concern about Maxwell’s conduct and whether Nolen was receiving the

effective assistance of counsel.          The magistrate judge also stated

that he took offense at some of the language in Nolen’s pretrial

motions challenging federal jurisdiction.            The magistrate judge

then appointed an experienced criminal defense attorney from the

Eastern District of Texas, Gerald Cobb, to serve as Agajanian’s co-

counsel. The magistrate judge entered an order directing Agajanian

to cooperate with Cobb or face removal from the case.

     Nolen moved the district court to review the magistrate

judge’s order, and the district court initially affirmed the order,

but later granted Nolen’s motion for reconsideration and terminated

Cobb’s appointment as co-counsel.            Agajanian then refiled some

pleadings that Maxwell had authored previously, together with a new

motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that the United

States   does   not   exist   in   any    capacity   to   bring   a   criminal

prosecution.     The government then moved for a hearing to require

Agajanian to show cause why his pro hac vice admission should not

be revoked.     The district court scheduled a show-cause hearing for

December 2003.     At that hearing, Nolen advised the court that his

defense was based on Maxwell’s research and advice, and that he did

not want Agajanian as his attorney if Maxwell could not assist in

his defense.      The court scheduled another hearing for January

                                      6
2004, at which time Nolen was to advise the court of the identity

of his new attorney if he still wanted Agajanian to withdraw.

Ultimately,    Agajanian   filed   a   motion   to   withdraw,   which   the

district court granted.

     Nolen subsequently retained attorney John Green, who entered

an appearance in March 2004.       Green, who was admitted to practice

in other federal courts in Texas but not in the Eastern District,

was admitted pro hac vice.    He then filed a motion for continuance

that contained a footnote in which he alleged that the magistrate

judge’s asserted reason for appointing Cobb as co-counsel was

false:

     Magistrate Bush claimed [that ensuring that Nolen
     received effective assistance of counsel] was his basis
     for appointing Gerald Cobb as court-appointed counsel.
     Though we know now that was NOT the basis for the
     appointment (or it would not have been done the way it
     was done and later REVERSED by the trial court after
     multiple requests for de novo review and motions to
     reconsider —— a huge waste of defense resources and
     time), a GRANT of this continuance and the 180 days
     sought by the defendant to properly prepare for trial
     would go a long way toward correcting the amazing number
     of inequities that have already occurred in this case.2

At a hearing on several motions in April 2004, Green ratified his

accusations about the magistrate judge’s reasons for appointing

Cobb.    In an order entered later that month, the district court

granted a four-month continuance.          In that order, the court noted




     2
         Emphasis in original.

                                       7
that it had taken under advisement defense counsel’s statements

about the magistrate judge’s honesty.

      In May 2004, the district court, sua sponte, ordered Green to

show cause why his pro hac vice admission should not be revoked for

violating the district court’s Local Rule AT-2, which incorporates

the   Texas    Disciplinary      Rules       of       Conduct.       The    court    was

particularly concerned that Green’s comments about the magistrate

judge violated Rule 8.02 of the Texas Disciplinary Rules (“Rule

8.02"), which states, in pertinent part, that “[a] lawyer shall not

make a statement that the lawyer knows to be false or with reckless

disregard as to its truth or falsity concerning the qualifications

or integrity of a judge.”3        The district court conducted the show-

cause hearing in June 2004 and subsequently entered an order

revoking Green’s pro hac vice admission and barring him from

practice in the Eastern District of Texas for five years.                            The

district court determined that Green violated Rule 8.02 because (1)

his accusation that the magistrate judge falsely stated his reasons

for   appointing       Cobb   constituted         a    statement     concerning      the

integrity     of   a   judge,   and   (2)     that       statement    was    at     least

“recklessly false” because Green had no basis on which to question

the integrity of the magistrate judge.

      Nolen sought review of the district court’s order in this

court and did not begin searching for a new lawyer until his

      3
       Rule 8.02 adopts the exact language of Rule 8.2 of the ABA
Model Rules of Professional Conduct,

                                         8
interlocutory appeal was denied in October 2004.                    Finally, in

November 2004, only three days before trial, yet a third attorney,

Justin Low,       entered   his   appearance   as   Nolen’s    counsel.       The

district court denied Low’s motion for a continuance, and Nolen was

tried as scheduled.

       At trial, an IRS agent testified that Nolen owed income tax of

$66,095 for 1997, $74,138 for 1998, and $60,338 for 1999.                 The jury

found Nolen guilty of willfully attempting to evade federal income

taxes      for   those   years,   and   he   was   sentenced   to    37    months

imprisonment and three years supervised release.                 He also was

ordered to pay a $60,000 fine and $435,275 in restitution to the

IRS.

                                  II.   ANALYSIS

A.     Revocation of Green’s Pro Hac Vice Status

       Nolen contends that the district court erred in three respects

when it revoked Green’s pro hac vice admission:           (1) by placing the

burden of proof on Green to show that he had not violated Rule

8.02; (2) by interpreting Rule 8.02 to reach Green’s conduct in

this case; and (3) by failing to balance the need to enforce Rule

8.02 against Nolen’s Sixth Amendment right to the counsel of his

choice.4


       4
       We cannot help but notice the irony of Nolen’s invoking
the United States Constitution while insisting that he is not a
citizen or resident of the United States but of the “Republic of
Texas,” and rejecting the authority of the United States to
charge and try him criminally.

                                         9
      1.     Standard of Review

      Courts enjoy broad discretion to determine who may practice

before them and to regulate the conduct of those who do.                    Our

inquiry, then, must focus on whether the trial court’s revocation

of   Green’s      pro   hac   vice   admission   constituted   an   abuse   of

discretion.5        In making that inquiry, we review the district

court’s findings of fact for clear error and its application of the

relevant rules of attorney conduct de novo.6

      2.     Merits

             a.     Procedure for Disciplinary Action

      In the Eastern District of Texas, the procedure for court-

initiated disciplinary action is as follows:

           When it is shown to a judge of this court that an
      attorney has engaged in conduct which [sic] might warrant
      disciplinary action, the judge receiving the information
      shall bring the matter to the attention of the full court
      as to whether disciplinary proceedings should be held.
      If the court determines that further disciplinary
      proceedings are necessary, the court will notify the
      lawyer of the charges and give the lawyer opportunity to
      show good cause why he or she should not be suspended or
      disbarred. Upon the charged lawyer’s response to the
      order to show cause, and after a hearing if requested or
      upon expiration of the time prescribed for a response if
      no response is made, the court shall enter an appropriate
      order.7




      5
          United States v. Dinitz, 
538 F.2d 1214
, 1219 (5th Cir.
1976).
      6
          United States v. Snyder, 
707 F.2d 139
, 144 (5th Cir.
1983).
      7
          E.D. Tex. R. AT-2(d)(2)(A).

                                        10
In    this   case,    the   district      judge     faithfully    followed       the

appropriate procedure.        Having taken notice of Green’s possible

violation of Rule 8.02, the district judge brought it to the

attention of the full court, which concurred in the decision to

conduct disciplinary proceedings.           Green was then notified that he

was facing a possible sanction, and a hearing was set to afford him

the   opportunity      to   show   good     cause    why   he    should    not    be

disciplined.




             b.   Burden of Proof

      Nolen contends that the district judge erroneously interpreted

either Rule 8.02, or the “show cause” procedure itself, as placing

the burden on Green to prove the truth of his allegedly unethical

assertions about the magistrate judge.              Nolen bases his contention

on an exchange between Green and the district judge at the show

cause hearing.       Green asserted that he did not have the burden of

proving that his statements about the magistrate judge were true,

to which the district judge responded, “In this case, you do,

because you’ve made a statement about the integrity of a judge.”

The judge further stated, “You cannot make a statement, a reckless

statement, about the integrity of the Court, questioning its

motives and impugning the Court’s integrity, unless you have rock-

solid proof that the Court acted with improper motives.”                  Finally,

the district judge asserted that when an attorney alleges that a

                                       11
judge uttered “an untruth -- then, really, you’ve got to show why

you think such a statement . . . is true.”

     We have long recognized that, in court-initiated disciplinary

proceedings, “show cause orders do not in fact shift the burden to

the attorney, rather such proceedings merely provide the attorney

with his constitutionally guaranteed opportunity to confront the

government’s evidence and rebut the same.”8   In Sealed Appellant 1,

we clarified that “the burden of proof remained at all times with

the United States Attorney.”9   Once evidence of unethical conduct

has been presented, however, the burden shifts to the attorney

facing discipline, who must be given an opportunity to rebut or

disprove that evidence.   Only after weighing all the evidence may

the district court decide whether a sanction is warranted.

     Here it was the district judge and not the government who

initiated disciplinary action after presenting his concern about

Green’s statements to the full district court.   At the time of the

show-cause hearing, the district judge had already determined that

Green’s statements regarding the magistrate judge impugned the

integrity of the court.   The only purpose for holding the show-

cause hearing was to determine whether Green’s statements were

knowingly false or made with reckless disregard for the truth.   On

this point, the district judge took the position that (1) any

     8
       Sealed Appellant 1 v. Sealed Appellee 1, 
211 F.3d 252
, 255
(5th Cir. 2000).
     9
         
Id. 12 accusation
that a judge lied about his reasons for a ruling would

be regarded as presumptively false or made with reckless disregard

for the truth, and (2) to avoid being disciplined, an attorney who

makes such a statement must be able to provide evidence sufficient

to justify his good-faith belief in the truth of those assertions.

Accordingly, Green could avoid discipline only by producing some

affirmative evidence to support his contention that the magistrate

judge had lied about his reasons for appointing co-counsel to

assist Nolen’s original attorney.

     We find no fault with the district judge’s position on this

issue.    He did not shift to Green the burden of proving his non-

violation of Rule 8.02 in the first instance, but required only

that Green rebut the presumptively sufficient evidence of his

unethical conduct already before the court.10

     10
       It is noteworthy that the district judge employed the
same procedure in this case as was followed in a court-initiated
lawyer discipline case Nolen himself cites, albeit for a
different proposition. In that case,
               The district court also concluded that
          Kidd [in his pleadings] had violated Rule
          8.2(a) of the Rules of Professional Conduct
          of the Louisiana State Bar Association,
          pertaining to remarks about a judge that are
          false or made with a reckless disregard as to
          their truth or falsity. The court set a
          hearing for Kidd to show cause why he should
          not be sanctioned for his conduct.
               At the hearing on the order to show
          cause, the district court instructed Kidd to
          explain or give examples in the record to
          support his allegations of judicial bias.

United States v. Brown, 
72 F.3d 25
, 27-28 (5th Cir.
1995)(construing the scope of Louisiana’s identical version of

                                 13
     c.   Factual Basis

     Nolen also contends that there is no factual basis for the

district court’s conclusion that Green’s statements were false or

made with reckless disregard for the truth.    Nolen suggests that

some of the comments made by the magistrate judge on the record

justified Green’s good-faith belief that the magistrate judge

decided to appoint co-counsel for Nolen’s original attorney because

of a desire to control the litigation and not out of concern that

Nolen receive effective assistance of counsel, as stated in the

ruling.   Specifically, Nolen points to several references by the

magistrate judge to the spurious or frivolous nature of motions

filed on Nolen’s behalf.

     The district judge found that the comments by the magistrate

judge referenced by Green did not provide a sufficient basis for

Green’s good-faith belief in the truth of his statements impugning

the magistrate judge’s integrity. We will not disturb the district

judge’s finding on this matter now.      The magistrate judge was

obviously frustrated by some of the pleadings filed by Agajanian,

Nolen’s original attorney; but, when viewed in the context of the

entirety of the proceedings before him, the magistrate judge’s

comments are far from compelling indicia of any mendacity in his

stated reasons for appointing co-counsel.     Accordingly, we hold



the same ethical rule).

                                14
that the district judge’s determination that Green’s statements (1)

impugned the magistrate judge’s integrity, and (2) were either

knowingly false or made with reckless disregard for the truth, was

not clearly erroneous.

            d.   Legal Basis

                 i.   Scope of Rule 8.02

     Nolen also contends that no legal basis exists for the district

court’s ruling revoking Green’s pro hac vice status.      Specifically,

Nolen argues that Rule 8.02, if properly construed and applied, does

not reach the conduct for which Green was sanctioned.       Nolen cites

United States v. Brown11 for the proposition that Green’s statements

about the magistrate judge are not the kind that Rule 8.02 is

designed to address. Brown involved an appeal by a defense attorney

who was suspended and fined by the district court for stating, in

a motion for a new trial, that the district judge had permitted the

jury to perceive that he favored the prosecution’s case.12             We

reversed the district court’s sanction order, holding that “Rule

8.2's restriction on reckless statements regarding members of the

judiciary does not apply to a lawyers in[-]court comments concerning

the judge’s actual performance during the conduct of the trial,” but

rather “solely proscribes false or reckless statements questioning

judicial    qualifications   or   integrity   (usually   allegations   of

     11
       
72 F.3d 25
(5th Cir. 1995)(construing Louisiana’s
identical version of Rule 8.02).
     12
          
Id. at 27
                                   15
dishonesty or corruption).”13        We also noted that “[n]othing in [the

ABA commentary accompanying the rule] intimates that the rule is to

be applied . . . to a lawyer’s criticism of a judge’s handling of

a trial in which the lawyer was involved made in papers filed with

that same court in the same proceeding.”14             Even though we did

recognize in Brown that “such comments could arise in the trial

context,” we cautioned trial courts to “be careful to distinguish

frivolous motions on the appearance of partiality from attacks on

the character of the court.”15

     Nolen argues that “this Court in Brown did not mean to

include,    within     ‘dishonesty    or    corruption,’   an   accusation   of

disingenuity in a court’s legal analysis.”                 Perhaps not, but

Nolen’s characterization of Green’s statements as “an accusation of

disingenuity in a court’s legal analysis” is crucially misleading.

Green did not ascribe mendacity to the magistrate judge’s “legal

analysis;” he plainly accused him of giving false reasons for his

ruling based on that analysis.         We cannot read Brown so broadly as

to foreclose the possibility that such obvious allegations of

judicial dishonesty may constitute a violation of Rule 8.02.

     Furthermore, even though Green, like the attorney in Brown,

included his accusations in a motion filed in the same action in



     13
          
Id. at 28-29.
     14
          
Id. at 29.
     15
          
Id. 16 which
the alleged judicial misconduct occurred, we made clear in

Brown that it is the nature of the statements made and not the

context in which an attorney makes them, that determines whether

Rule 8.02 applies.16        Allegations that a judge has mishandled a

trial are beyond the reach of Rule 8.02, but allegations of

judicial “dishonesty” are not.17           In this case, Green’s statements

undoubtedly impugned the honesty of the magistrate judge.                Green’s

motion stated that the magistrate judge gave false reasons for his

ruling, and Green ratified that position at the show-cause hearing

when he accused the magistrate judge of having acted “for impure

motives” and claimed that to have proven that the magistrate judge

had “lied.”     The import of these accusations is compounded by the

fact that they involve the magistrate judge’s official reasons for

a ruling, and therefore, directly implicate the “integrity” of the

district court.        Green’s conduct here cannot be equated with the

allegations     of     perceived   partiality       at   issue   in    Brown.

Accordingly, we find no error in the district court’s determination

that Green’s statements in this case came within the purview of

Rule 8.02 —— and violated it.

                  ii.    Rule 8.02 as Basis for Revocation of Pro Hac
                         Vice Status

     Nolen      also    insists    that,     even   if   Green’s      statements

constituted a violation of Rule 8.02, that violation did not

     16
          
Id. 17 Id.
                                      17
warrant revocation of his pro hac vice status.   We noted above that

district courts have wide discretion to redress ethical violations

committed by attorneys admitted to practice before them.18   Having

found no error in the district court’s determination that Green’s

statements in this case violated Rule 8.02, we review the district

court’s chosen sanction for an abuse of discretion.19

     In In Re Evans, we set forth the standard for denying an

attorney pro hac vice admission to practice before a district

court:

     An applicant for admission pro hac vice who is a member
     in good standing of a state bar may not be denied the
     privilege to appear except “on a showing that in any
     legal matter, whether before the particular district
     court or in another jurisdiction, he has been guilty of
     unethical conduct of such a nature as to justify
     disbarment of a lawyer admitted generally to the bar of
     the court.”20

In United States v. Dinitz, however, we recognized that fewer

limitations should be placed on the inherent authority of the

district court to revoke an attorney’s pro hac vice status once

that attorney has been admitted to practice before the court.21   In



     18
          
Dinitz, 538 F.2d at 1219
.
     19
          
Brown, 72 F.3d at 28
.
     20
       
524 F.2d 1004
, 1007 (5th Cir. 1975)(quoting Sanders v.
Russell, 
401 F.2d 241
, 247-48 (5th Cir. 1968).
     
21 538 F.2d at 1223-24
(holding that once an attorney is
admitted and trial proceedings have begun, “considerations are
quite different” and “[t]he interests of justice demand that a
judge have a measure of discretion” to regulate attorney
conduct).

                                  18
Schlumberger Tech. v. Wiley, the Eleventh Circuit noted that

revocation cases generally fall into one of two categories: (1)

those     involving   attorney   conduct   that    challenges    the   court’s

authority or threatens disruption of court proceedings, and (2)

those involving allegedly unethical attorney conduct that does not

threaten    the   orderly   administration    of    justice.22     This   case

indisputably belongs in the second category.             In that class of

revocation cases, “the court may not simply rely on a general

inherent power to admit and suspend attorneys,” but “must clearly

identify a specific Rule of Professional Conduct which [sic] is

applicable to the relevant jurisdiction and must conclude that the

attorney violated that rule.”23

     We agree with the Eleventh Circuit that once a district court

has admitted an attorney to practice before it pro hac vice, it may

revoke that attorney’s admission if, after following the proper

disciplinary procedure, it concludes that the attorney violated a

clearly identifiable ethical rule.         Inasmuch as that is what the

district court did in this case, we are satisfied that it did not

abuse its discretion.       Our inquiry, however, cannot end here.

             e.   Sixth Amendment Balancing

     We have long recognized that, in criminal prosecutions, “the

Sixth Amendment requires the courts to respect a defendant’s own


     22
          
113 F.3d 1553
, 1561 (11th Cir. 1997).
     23
          
Id. 19 particular
choice of counsel.”24          And even though a “defendant’s

right to counsel is not absolute and must yield to the higher

interest of the effective administration of the courts,”25 we have

held that “acts which [sic] appear to violate the ABA Code or other

accepted standards of legal ethics do not confer upon the trial

court unfettered discretion to disqualify the attorney selected by

the party.”26    An attorney representing a defendant in criminal

proceedings may be disqualified for violating an applicable ethical

rule only if, “in light of the interests underlying the standards

of ethics, the social need for ethical practice outweighs the

party’s right to counsel of his choice.”27             Conducting such a

balancing is thus a prerequisite to disqualifying counsel of

defendant’s choice, and explicating the process on the record is a

prerequisite to appellate review.

     In this case, the record contains nothing to indicate that the

district court gave any consideration to Nolen’s Sixth Amendment

rights when     it   sanctioned   Green    by   terminating   his   right   to




     24
          
Dinitz, 538 F.2d at 1219
.
     25
       United States v. Kitchin, 
592 F.2d 900
, 903 (5th Cir.
1979); 
Snyder, 707 F.2d at 145
n.5 (“[I]n some cases, the public
interest in maintaining the integrity of the judicial process may
outweigh the right of the defendant to counsel of his choice.”).
     26
          Kitchin, 592 at 903.
     27
       
Id. at 903
(citing Woods v. Covington County Bank, 
537 F.2d 804
, 810, 813 (5th Cir. 1976)).

                                    20
practice.     At the show cause hearing, the district court simply

stated that:

     [W]hen you state in writing in a publicly-filed document
     that a judge was not telling the truth when he stated on
     the record his reason for taking some action, . . . then
     in my opinion, you have attacked the integrity of that
     judge and you have crossed the line between respectful
     disagreement and a violation of Rule 8.02 of the Texas
     Disciplinary Rules of Conduct.       This court has an
     obligation to uphold the integrity of the judiciary and
     the principles of civility and professionalism set forth
     in the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Conduct as well as
     Local Rule AT-3.

This court finds that you have violated Rule 8.02 . . . . Your pro
hac vice admission is revoked in this case[,] and you are barred
from admission to practice in this court for a period of five
years, effective immediately.28

     We do not mean to suggest that, in making its ruling, the

district court was not mindful of Nolen’s constitutional rights, or

may not     have   balanced   those   rights   against   the   interests   of

maintaining respect for the judicial system. We mean only that the

court’s written and oral orders fail to mention Nolen’s Sixth

Amendment rights at all, much less as a factor that the court

considered in determining the appropriate sanction for Green’s

conduct.    In the absence of any indication that the district court

balanced Nolen’s Sixth Amendment rights against the interests

underlying the rules governing attorney conduct, we have no choice

but to conclude that the district court abused its discretion.29

     28
          The court’s written order is essentially identical.
     29
       Even though it is likely unnecessary, we reiterate the
observation we made in United States v. Walker:


                                      21
Accordingly, we have no choice but to suspend our determination

whether revoking Green’s pro hac vice status constituted reversible

error and remand the matter for reconsideration by the district

court, specifically for it to conduct and verbalize the necessary

balancing analysis.

B.   Sufficiency of the Evidence

     1.   Standard of Review

     In addition to his Sixth Amendment claim, Nolen asserts that

the evidence presented against him was insufficient to support his

conviction for tax evasion.    As Nolen did not move for a judgment

of acquittal on this ground, we review his claim of insufficient




          “[A]buse of discretion” is a phrase which
          sounds worse than it really is. All it need
          mean is that, when judicial action is taken
          in a discretionary matter, such action cannot
          be set aside by a reviewing court unless it
          has a definite and firm conviction that the
          court below committed a clear error of
          judgment in the conclusion it reached upon a
          weighing of the relevant factors.” In re
          Josephson, 
218 F.2d 174
, 182 (1st Cir.1954).
          The term “does not imply intentional wrong or
          bad faith, or misconduct, nor any reflection
          on the judge.” Black's Law Dictionary (5th
          ed. 1979) at 10. The capable district judge
          fairly and competently tried this difficult
          and doubtless often vexing case. Upon a
          weighing of the relevant factors, we simply
          have the definite and firm conviction that,
          in this one particular, []he clearly erred.

772 F.2d 1172
, 1176, n.9 (5th Cir. 1985).


                                 22
evidence only     to   determine     whether   the   “record    is   devoid    of

evidence pointing to guilt.”30




     2.     Merits

     Nolen was convicted of violating 26 U.S.C. § 7201, which

criminalizes “willfully attempting in any manner to evade or defeat

any tax imposed by this title or the payment thereof.”31                      The

Supreme Court has held that § 7201 “includes the offense of

willfully attempting to evade or defeat the assessment of a tax as

well as the offense of willfully attempting to evade or defeat the

payment of a tax.”32     “The elements of both offenses are the same:

(1) willfulness, (2) existence of a tax deficiency; and (3) an

affirmative act constituting an evasion or attempted evasion of the

tax.”33    Nolen contends that, at the government’s request, the

district court       charged   the   jury   solely   on   the   second   theory

encompassed by § 7201, i.e., evasion of payment of tax.

     The district court told the jury that “Title 26, United States

Code, section 7201, makes it a crime for anyone willfully to


     30
       United States v. Herrera, 
313 F.3d 882
, 885 (5th Cir.
2002) (en banc).
     31
          26 U.S.C. § 7201 (emphasis added).
     32
       Sansone v. United States, 
380 U.S. 343
, 354 (1965)
(emphasis in original).
     33
       United States v. Hogan, 
861 F.2d 312
, 315 (1st Cir. 1988)
(quoting 
Sansone, 380 U.S. at 351
).

                                      23
attempt to evade or defeat the payment of federal income tax.”

Nolen contends that, by using only the term payment in its summary

explanation of § 7201, the district court “permanently narrowed the

possible basis of conviction, and thus of affirmance” to only one

of the two kinds of evasion recognized by the Court in Sansone,

namely the evasion of payment of income tax.        He suggests further

that a formal assessment is a necessary element of that offense,

and that the absence of such an assessment renders the trial record

“devoid of evidence pointing to guilt” for that offense, requiring

in turn that we reverse his convictions, even under our narrow

standard of review.        This syllogism is clever but flawed and

therefore unavailing.

     We   reject    Nolen’s   contention   that   the   district   court’s

instruction narrowed the basis of conviction to only an “evasion of

payment” of taxes.       To accept that argument we would have to

disregard (1) the indictment, (2) the case as actually tried by the

government, and (3) the entire remainder of the jury charge, all of

which demonstrate beyond cavil that Nolen was tried for the general

offense of tax evasion, which occurs when one evades either the

assessment or the payment of taxes owed.

           a.      The indictment

     Nolen was indicted for “willfully attempt[ing] to evade and

defeat the income tax due and owing by him . . . by failing to make

an income tax return . . . by failing to pay to the Internal

Revenue Service said income tax, and by concealing his income.”         We

                                    24
made clear in United States v. Masat, that when, as here, an

indictment closely tracks the wording of § 7201, there is “one

crime” charged, “the evasion of taxes,” and that crime occurs when

either the assessment or the payment of taxes owed is evaded.34

Nolen     does   not   dispute   that,    as   written,   the   scope   of   this

indictment is not limited to the specific offense of “evasion of

payment.”

     b.      The government’s proof at trial

     The trial record makes clear that the government offered

evidence that Nolen (1) earned taxable income, (2) owed substantial

income tax, (3) knew that he was required to file an income tax

return, (4) wilfully failed to file an income tax return, (5)

failed to pay any income taxes, and (6) willfully attempted to

evade the tax he owed.       We are satisfied that, at least as far as

the government’s conduct of the prosecution during trial, this case

was not limited to the specific offense of “evasion of payment” of

taxes.     Rather, it was prosecuted and tried, as stated in the

indictment, as a full-blown “tax evasion” case, encompassing both

the evasion of assessment and the evasion of payment of taxes.               The

government’s presentation of its case at trial also raises serious

doubts about Nolen’s assertion that the jury instruction suggested

     34
       
896 F.2d 88
, 91 (5th Cir. 1990)(“The charge in the
indictment directly tracked the wording of § 7201. The ‘two
crimes’ of which Masat contends he was charged come from one
statute, indeed, from one sentence. In truth, there is one crime,
the evasion of taxes . . . .”).


                                         25
to the district court by the prosecution limited its case to only

an “evasion of payment” case, rendering meaningless most of the

evidence the government offered at trial.

            c. The jury instruction

     The district court began the substantive portion of its jury

instruction as follows:

          Title 26, United States Code, section 7201, makes it
     a crime for anyone willfully to attempt to evade or
     defeat payment35 of federal income taxes. . . .

          For you to find the defendant guilty of this crime,
     you must be convinced that the government has proved each
     of the following beyond a reasonable doubt:

          First, that the defendant received gross income of
     $12,200 or more . . .

          Second, that the defendant failed to file an income-
     tax return . . .

          Third, that the defendant knew he was required to
     file a return;

          Fourth, that the defendant’s failure to file was
     willful;

            Fifth, that the defendant owed substantial income
     tax;

          Sixth, that the defendant failed to pay the
     substantial income tax owed to the Internal Revenue
     Service; and

          Seventh, that the defendant willfully attempted to
     evade or defeat such tax.

     . . . .

          The word “attempt” contemplates that the defendant
     had knowledge and understanding that . . . he had income

     35
          Emphasis added.

                                 26
     which was taxable and which he was required by law to
     report, but he nevertheless attempted to evade the tax .
     . . on that income by willfully concealing income which
     he knew he had during that year.

Nolen isolates the first sentence of this instruction to support

his contention that the district court limited the jury’s basis of

conviction under §7201 to only whether the government had proven

that Nolen attempted to evade “payment” of taxes.            As discussed

above, however, the law is clear that §7201 criminalizes evasion of

either assessment or payment of taxes,36 and we do not read the

district court’s use of “payment” in its explanation of § 7201 to

indicate    any   intent   to   narrow   the   scope   of   the   statute’s

application in this case.       Neither do we see the district court’s

word choice as constructing any such limitation as a matter of law.

Moreover, by instructing the jury to consider whether Nolen had

“failed to file an income tax return” or “knew that he was required

to file a return,” and by clarifying that “concealing income” could

amount to “evasion,” the district court left no doubt that § 7201

extended to any and all efforts Nolen may have made to avoid

assessment as well as payment of income tax.

     Finally, even if we were to characterize Nolen’s conviction as

a one for “evasion of payment” of taxes only, we would not be

constrained to reverse for lack of a formal administrative tax

assessment. Without unnecessarily straying down a road we need not

travel, we observe that the entirety of the caselaw on this issue

     36
          
Sansone, 380 U.S. at 354
.

                                    27
provides less than compelling support for Nolen’s position. As the

Third Circuit recently recognized in a case argued by Nolen’s

appellate counsel, “the weight of authority favors [the] view that

an assessment is not required to prove attempted evasion of payment

under § 7201."37   The converse is indisputably true.   In any event,

we certainly need not deign to settle the matter for this Circuit

on the basis of the facts presented here, and we reiterate our

rejection of Nolen’s attempt to position his case solely within the

rare and factually distinct “evasion of payment” subset of § 7201

prosecutions.

C.   Jury Instructions

     On appeal, Nolen asserts that the district court’s jury

instructions constituted plain error in two respects.     One is the

absence of a requirement to find an affirmative act of evasion; the

second is constructive amendment of the indictment.

     1.   Affirmative Act of Evasion

     Nolen first asserts that the district court committed plain

error by failing to instruct the jury that it must find an

affirmative act of evasion beyond any willful omission of duty

(willful failure to file a return or pay taxes).   As Nolen did not




     37
       United States v. Farnsworth, 
456 F.3d 394
, 403 (3d Cir.
2006)(addressing the same argument and authorities Nolen offers
in this case)(emphasis added).

                                 28
timely object to the jury instructions, we review any possible

misstatement of the elements of tax evasion for plain error.38

      The mere failure to pay a tax voluntarily when due, even if

willful, does not establish a criminal attempt to evade.                         “The

difference between the [felony of attempted evasion of payment and

the   misdemeanor    of    willful    failure      to   pay]   is   found   in   the

affirmative action implied from the term ‘attempt,’ as used in the

felony.”39      “That     is,   a   felony   tax   evasion     requires     willful

commission,     whereas     the     misdemeanor     merely     requires     willful

omission.”40 The government must prove “a willful attempt to defeat

and evade” involuntary or forced payment, by means of “conduct, the

likely effect of which would be to mislead or conceal,” as long as

“the tax-evasion motive plays any part in such conduct.”41                       “[A]

defendant is entitled to a charge which [sic] will point out the

necessity for such an inference of willful attempt to defeat or

evade tax from some proof in the case other than that necessary to

make out the misdemeanors.”42

      Nolen complains that the court did not explicitly instruct the

jury that the concealment required for tax evasion could not be

      38
           Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b).
      39
           Spies v. United States, 
317 U.S. 492
, 498-99 (1943).
      40
       United States v. Doyle, 
956 F.2d 73
, 75 (5th Cir. 1992)
(emphasis in original).
      41
           
Spies, 317 U.S. at 499
.
      42
           
Id. at 500.
                                        29
established merely by showing that Nolen had willfully failed to

file a required return or to pay taxes owed; there had to be an

additional, affirmative act of concealment.                 He contends that the

district court should have specified that the “concealing” to which

it referred was the same type of concealment alleged in the

indictment (concealing income by placing funds that constituted his

income into misleadingly labeled bank accounts).                      As the court

failed to do so, he            argues, the jury might have thought that

concealment of income through a mere failure to file or pay was a

sufficient basis for conviction.              Nolen relies primarily on United

States v. Masat,43 and United States v. Nelson,44 two cases in which

we   reversed       tax    evasion    convictions     because   of    flawed   jury

instructions.        We see both as distinguishable.

      In Masat, the district court gave the jury a two-element

charge, instructing that, to convict, the jury had to find that (1)

“a substantial additional tax was due and owing,” and (2) the

defendant “knowingly and willfully attempted to evade or defeat

such tax.”45         The jury then requested more specific guidance

regarding        whether   a   failure   to    file   tax   returns   alone    could

constitute tax evasion.46            We judged the court’s responses to these



      43
           
896 F.2d 88
(5th Cir. 1990).
      44
           
791 F.2d 336
(5th Cir. 1986).
      
45 896 F.2d at 98
n.4
      46
           
Id. 30 queries
to be flawed, because they “did not specify what was

required in addition to failure to file, and left the impression

that failure to file plus willfulness would be sufficient [to

convict for tax evasion].”47

     In Nelson, the district court instructed the jury that, “the

affirmative act, as far as concealing is concerned, is that he

filed no tax return at all.”48    We reversed the conviction because

that instruction would “allow the jury to convict the defendant

without finding ‘some willful commission in addition to the willful

omissions’ proscribed by the misdemeanor statute of failing to file

a return.”49

     According to Nolen, this precedent requires that, if the

alleged evasive act is concealment, the trial court must instruct

the jury that the mere failure to file or pay is insufficient to

establish this element.      He contends further that the court must

specify that, to convict, the jury must find the same form of

concealment charged in the indictment, (here disguising income by

placing it in deceptive bank accounts, etc.).     Nolen acknowledges

that, in this case, the district court properly defined “attempt”

as “willfully concealing income,” but insists that it erred by

failing to inform the jury that such concealment could not be



     47
          
Id. at 99.
     
48 791 F.2d at 337
.
     49
          
Id. at 338.
                                   31
established simply by showing that Nolen did not file or pay taxes.

     The government counters that the jury instructions, when

viewed as a whole, as they must be,50 adequately informed the jury

that a mere failure to act affirmatively was not an “attempt” and

would not permit the jury to convict Nolen based solely on his

failures to file returns or pay tax.   Unlike what occurred in Masat

or Nelson, the district court here gave the jury a seven-element

charge on tax evasion and a separate instruction on the lesser

included misdemeanor offense of willfully failing to file a return.

The lesser-offense charge instructed the jury as follows:

          For you to find the defendant guilty of failure to
     file a tax return . . . the government must prove beyond
     a reasonable doubt that the defendant did everything we
     discussed before [elements of tax evasion] except that it
     did not prove that the defendant owed substantial income
     tax or willfully attempted to evade or defeat such tax.51


In this charge, the government argues, the court made clear that a

willful failure to file a return or pay taxes ——       without some

additional affirmative effort “to evade or defeat” the tax —— would

be insufficient to support a conviction for felony tax evasion. We

agree.




     50
       See United States v. Price, 
877 F.2d 334
, 338 (5th Cir.
1989)(“Specific instructions may not be judged in artificial
isolation, but must be viewed in the context of the overall
charge, and the charge's correctness is measured not by isolated
passages but in light of the charge as a whole.”).
     51
          Emphasis added.

                                32
     The district court’s instructions made clear that, to convict

Nolen of tax evasion, the jury had to find that the government

proved all seven elements of tax evasion, including both the

failure to file a tax return and an   attempt to evade or defeat the

federal income tax by willfully concealing income.     The district

court also made clear that, if the jury did not find willful

concealment, it could convict Nolen only on the lesser offense of

willfully failing to file an income tax return.    We are satisfied

that the district court’s instructions effectively communicated to

the jury that a mere failure to file could not satisfy the willful

concealment element of the felony tax evasion offense.

     2.   Material Variance

     Nolen also maintains that the jury instructions constructively

amended the indictment to reach acts of concealment other than the

one alleged, and that this constituted plain error. The indictment

charged that Nolen “willfully attempted to evade and defeat the

income tax due and owing by him ... by failing to make an income

tax return [when due] ..., by failing to pay ... said income tax,

and by concealing his income by placing funds, which constituted

his income, in bank accounts that appeared to be controlled by a

third party, but which bank accounts were, in fact, controlled by

defendant.” Nolen insists that, as the indictment alleged only one

affirmative act of concealment, viz., the use of the third-party

bank accounts, the instructions did not limit to evidence of

Nolen’s use of such bank accounts the kind of “concealing” that the

                                33
jury could find to support a conviction.                  He notes that the

government presented testimony from his office manager that Nolen

had instructed her to give all cash receipts directly to him rather

than depositing them.      He contends that the jury might have based

its determination of the concealment element of tax evasion on

this secreting of cash income rather than on the bogus deposits to

third-party bank accounts, the only method of concealment alleged

in the indictment.

     The government responds that, although the instructions did

not expressly limit the jury’s consideration to willful concealment

of income accomplished by the placing of funds into third-party

bank accounts, as alleged in the indictment, neither did they

expressly   instruct     the   jury   that   it   could    convict   based   on

different acts of concealment.          The government further advances

that the reference to the cash receipts was brief, was only made in

passing, was not the focus of the government’s case, and was not

prejudicial   in   the     overall    context     of   the    extensive      and

overwhelming evidence and argument regarding the bank accounts. We

agree.

     Nolen’s office manager testified at trial for just under an

hour.    The allegedly prejudicial exchange lasted less than a

minute, while the prosecutor was questioning her regarding Nolen’s

business bank account, specifically whether all of the receipts

from Nolen’s dental practice were transferred to that account. The

office manager indicated that they were, and the government sought

                                      34
to clarify that Nolen actually had instructed the office manager to

give any cash receipts directly to him.        The office manager

confirmed this and also established that such cash receipts totaled

approximately $1,000 per month.      At that point, the government

returned to its line of questioning about the third-party bank

account scheme employed by Nolen to conceal his income.

     Even if we assume arguendo that the district court did err in

failing to caution the jury to consider only the evidence of

concealment involving bank accounts, we would remain convinced

that, given the extended and overwhelming evidence presented by the

government regarding the bank account scheme, the brief clarifying

testimony of Nolen’s office manager about cash receipts was in no

way prejudicial and certainly does not provide a basis for reversal

of Nolen’s conviction under the plain error standard.

D.   Restitution

     The district court imposed a $60,000 fine and also ordered

restitution as a separate term of Nolen’s sentence, under 18 U.S.C.

§ 3663.   Nolen does not object to the fine, but contends that

restitution is not authorized by that statute. Nolen did not raise

this objection at sentencing, but because he is claiming that this

element of his sentence is illegal, we review it de novo.52




     52
       See United States v. Del Barrio, 
427 F.3d 280
, 282 & nn.
3-4 (5th Cir. 2005)(citations omitted)(recognizing that an
illegal sentence always constitutes plain error).

                                35
      Restitution is not allowed under § 3663 as part of the

sentence in a federal tax evasion case.53         Restitution to the IRS

may be imposed as a condition of supervised release under § 3583,

but only if “the specified sum of taxes . . . has [] been

acknowledged, conclusively established in the criminal proceeding,

or finally determined in civil proceedings.”54       As the exact amount

of taxes owed by Nolen was not conclusively established at trial,

restitution was inappropriate under § 3583 as well.          In addition,

the   district   court’s   order   that   Nolen   “comply   with   any   IRS

requirements to pay delinquent taxes and penalties according to the

schedule of payments that the IRS imposes” should serve the same

purpose as restitution.       Accordingly, we reverse the district

court’s order of restitution and remand for resentencing consistent

with this opinion.

                            III.   CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons we hold that (1) the evidence

adduced at trial was sufficient to establish the charged offense,

      53
       United States v. Stout, 
32 F.3d 901
, 905 (5th Cir.
1994)(“the restitution statute permits such separate orders only
when the defendant’s offense is an offense under either Title 18
or Title 49"). Even if restitution were authorized under § 3663,
it would be limited to only the “loss” associated with the counts
of conviction. United States v. Campbell, 
106 F.3d 64
, 69-70
(5th Cir. 1997)(“relevant conduct” provisions of guidelines are
inapplicable to determination of amount of restitution). Based
on the years of conviction, the tax loss computed at trial was
$223,509, but the district court imposed restitution for Nolen’s
unpaid taxes going back to 1992 ($453,275).
      54
           United States v. Touchet, 
658 F.2d 1074
, 1076 (5th Cir.
1981).

                                    36
(2) the district court did not commit plain error by failing to

require the jury to find an affirmative act other than willful

failure to file tax returns or to require the jury to find

precisely the same affirmative act of evasion as the one charged in

the   indictment,   (3)   the   district   court   erred   by   imposing

restitution as part of Nolen’s sentence, and (4) the district court

erred in failing to demonstrate on the record that, in revoking the

pro hac vice admission of Nolen’s retained counsel, it first

balanced the Sixth Amendment rights of the defendant against the

societal need for ethical practice and respect for the judicial

system and the judges and courts thereof.     But for our inability to

review this issue absent an explication of balancing by the trial

court, we would affirm Nolen’s conviction. Inasmuch as this hiatus

prevents our either affirming or reversing Nolen’s conviction until

we can review his Sixth Amendment challenge, we remand to the

district court for the limited purpose of its conducting the

necessary balancing test between Nolen’s right to counsel of his

choice and the public interest in maintaining the integrity of and

respect for the judicial process.

      If, on remand, the district court should determine that

Nolen’s Sixth Amendment right outweighed the court’s interest in

maintaining the standards of ethics of lawyers practicing before it

and thus the integrity of the judicial system, the court shall

vacate Nolen’s conviction and grant him a new trial.        But, if the

court determines that the need to revoke the right of Nolen’s

                                   37
counsel to practice before it was the proper and least intrusive

sanction required to maintain the integrity of the justice system

and that it outweighed Nolen’s right to be represented by this

particular lawyer, requiring Nolen to retain yet another attorney

of   his   choosing,   the   conviction   will   stand   affirmed   and   the

district court shall resentence Nolen, albeit without assessing

restitution.

      As our remand to the district court is thus a limited and

conditional one, this panel retains appellate cognizance over the

case for our further review following that court’s rulings on

remand —— unless the district court should grant Nolen a new trial,

in which case his conviction and sentence shall be vacated, ipso

facto.     Absent such vacatur and grant of a new trial, however, the

case shall be returned to this panel for further consideration of

the Sixth Amendment issue post-balancing, as well as the new

sentence imposed.

CONVICTION CONDITIONALLY AFFIRMED SUBJECT TO LIMITED REMAND;
SENTENCE VACATED AND REMANDED FOR RE-SENTENCING, DEPENDING ON THE
RESULTS OF THE DISTRICT COURT’S BALANCING EXERCISE.




                                    38

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