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United States v. Richards, 98-20441 (2000)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit Number: 98-20441 Visitors: 55
Filed: Feb. 23, 2000
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT No. 98-20441 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, VERSUS AL RICHARDS, KURT LATRASSE, AND ROGER BRAUGH, Defendants-Appellants. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas February 9, 2000 Before KING, Chief Judge, and STEWART, Circuit Judge, and ROSENTHAL, District Judge.1 Defendants appeal their convictions for their involvement in a purported investment scheme that took large sums of money from the
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                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                       FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT



                           No. 98-20441



                     UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                                 Plaintiff-Appellee,

                              VERSUS


          AL RICHARDS, KURT LATRASSE, AND ROGER BRAUGH,


                                               Defendants-Appellants.




          Appeal from the United States District Court
               for the Southern District of Texas
                         February 9, 2000


Before KING, Chief Judge, and STEWART, Circuit Judge, and
ROSENTHAL, District Judge.1
     Defendants appeal their convictions for their involvement in

a purported investment scheme that took large sums of money from

the investors and returned them little or nothing.     The investors

believed that their money went to purchase letters of credit, which

defendants were to   “roll,” or repeatedly sell and repurchase, to

European banks.   The indictment alleged that the defendants took




      1
              District Judge of the Southern District of Texas,
sitting by designation.

                                1
the money from the investors, but purchased no letters of credit

and instead kept the money for themselves.

            Al Richards appeals his convictions for conspiracy to

commit wire and mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371;

interstate transportation of stolen property, in violation of 18

U.S.C. § 2314; and wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343.

Richards also appeals the district court’s order that he pay

restitution in the amount of $487,000.                  Roger Braugh and Kurt

Latrasse appeal their convictions for conspiracy to commit wire

fraud and mail fraud; interstate transportation of stolen property;

wire fraud; and mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341.

Braugh also appeals the district court’s order that he pay $504,500

in restitution.      Finding ample evidence in the record to support

the convictions and no basis for reversal, we affirm.

I.   BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

     The superseding indictment charged all three defendants with

conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud (count 1), interstate

transportation of stolen property (count 2); and wire fraud (count

3). The indictment charged Braugh and Latrasse with two additional

counts of wire fraud (counts 4 and 5) and one count of mail fraud

(count 6).    The jury convicted Richards on all three counts and

convicted Braugh and Latrasse on all six counts.

     At    trial,    the   government       presented    evidence   as   to   how

defendants induced participants to “invest” in the so-called roll

program.    Potential investors were told that their money would be

pooled with that of other investors and used to buy letters of

credit.      The    letters   of   credit     would     be   “rolled”    —   sold,

                                        2
repurchased,    and    resold   —   to       European   banks   frequently        and

repeatedly.     Each “roll” would generate a large profit to be

distributed among the investors, in proportion to their investment.

The investors were told that their funds would be safe at all

times, held either in an account at a nationally-known brokerage

firm or invested with a “prime” or “top 50" international bank.

Investors were also told that they would receive at least the

return of their initial investment, with interest, and would likely

make substantial profit. In fact, the defendants took the invested

funds for their own use, bought no letters of credit, and, except

for a small payment to one participant, returned no money to the

investors.

     Three     investors    testified.           Bert    Hayes,     an    Arkansas

businessman, was introduced to the program by Al Richards in a

telephone call.       Richards outlined an investment opportunity, but

refused   to     discuss     the    details        until    Hayes        signed    a

noncircumvention, nondisclosure agreement.              After Hayes signed the

agreement, Richards suggested they meet in Dallas to discuss the

potential investment.      Hayes agreed.

     At the Dallas meeting, Richards told Hayes that in the “roll

program,” the investors’ funds would be pooled to buy a $10 million

letter of credit from a “top 50 prime bank.” The letter of credit

would be “rolled” to different European banks. The investors would

earn interest with each “roll.”                Richards told Hayes that the

interest on the “rolls” would generate ten weekly payments of

$50,000 each on a $ 250,000 investment.             Richards told Hayes that

his money would be kept in an interest-bearing account at the

                                         3
Shearson Lehman Brothers brokerage firm until used to buy the

letter of credit. Richards assured Hayes that he would control the

money until all the other funds necessary for the roll program were

raised. If the roll program could not purchase a letter of credit,

Richards would return Hayes’s original investment, with ten percent

interest.

     Richards explained that he would not personally be involved in

purchasing and selling the letters of credit.      His “contacts,”

identified as Roger Braugh and Al Sellars, would handle the roll

program transactions.

     Hayes signed a written contract in August 1991.   The contract

identified Hayes and Gold Cloud Development Corporation as the

parties to a “joint business proposition.” The contract was signed

by Hayes and by “Roger S. Braugh by Al Richards” as the chairperson

of Gold Cloud Development.

     The contract provided that Hayes would deposit his investment

funds in a designated brokerage firm account on September 5, 1991.

On the Monday following that date, Gold Cloud Development would

purchase a “One Year Zero Interest Coupon Standby Letter of Credit

with a $10,000,000.00 USD face value.”     Gold Cloud Development

would “orchestrate the sale of the Standby Letter of Credit in the

European or Japanese secondary markets based on an already existing

contractual arrangement . . . .” Gold Cloud Development would wire

Hayes his share of the profits from that sale, expected to be

$50,000, to a bank Hayes would designate.      “The original $ 10

Million USD principal would be reinvested on Monday each week for

the purchase of a new Standby Letter of Credit to repeat the same

                                4
weekly chain of events, for a period of no less than ten (10)

transactions.”

     On September 6, 1991, Hayes sent a $ 250,000 check to a

designated Shearson Lehman Brothers account for investment in the

Gold Cloud Development roll program.          On the same day, Richards

signed and sent Hayes a “Business Proposal on Funding Commitment.”

This document set out Al Richards’ plan to use GEI Associates, a

company Richards owned and ran, to raise $10 million to buy the

first letter of credit. The business proposal provided that if GEI

Associates could not raise the money necessary to buy the first

letter   of   credit,    Hayes   would   receive   his   money   back,   with

interest.

     When Hayes sent in his $250,000 check, he told Richards he

wanted to meet the individuals who would be handling the roll

transactions.     Richards arranged a meeting with Hayes and Roger

Braugh and Al Sellars a few weeks later.           At that meeting, Hayes

asked Al Sellars if the investment was safe.         Sellars, noting that

Hayes was wearing a Mason pin, told Hayes that he was also a Mason

and that the investment was “as safe as the Rock of Gibraltar.”

Sellars asked Braugh to “roll” the investment at least twice in the

next week so that Hayes could see how the program worked.

     After that meeting, Hayes understood Braugh to be in control

of the roll program transactions. Hayes expected to be paid within

a few weeks for the first roll transaction, set to occur the

following week.     Several weeks passed with no payments.               Hayes

began to question both Richards and Braugh about the program and

about his money.        In December 1991, Richard told Hayes that the

                                     5
initial arrangement was not working and proposed a different

arrangement. Richards proposed to change the payment plan from ten

weekly payments of $50,000 each to 42 weekly payments of $ 20,000

each.   Hayes agreed and signed a revised contract.       “Roger S.

Braugh by Al Richards” signed as the chairperson of Gold Cloud

Development.

     Early in 1992, Braugh introduced Hayes to Kurt Latrasse.

Braugh identified Latrasse as an expert in the roll program.

Latrasse told Hayes that his money was invested in England and

“doing very well.”    In June 1992, Latrasse advised Hayes to cancel

his contract with Richards and GEI Associates so that Hayes could

deal directly with Braugh and Latrasse and avoid paying commissions

to Richards.   Hayes followed Latrasse’s advice and, by letter to

Richards dated June 12, 1992, canceled the contract with Richards

and GEI Associates.

     In August 1992, Hayes complained to Braugh that he still had

not received any payments from his investment.     Braugh expressed

surprise and explained that he had sent Richards several checks

intended for distribution to Hayes.   Braugh sent Hayes photocopies

of seven canceled checks, totaling $50,000, signed by Braugh and

made out to Richards.    The notation “Bert Hayes payment” appeared

on the memorandum line of each check. Hayes telephoned Richards to

ask why he had not sent Hayes the $50,000.       Richards expressed

surprise; he insisted that the checks were his own commissions, not

Hayes’s investment returns.    Richards accused Braugh of lying to

Hayes. During this time, Braugh sent Hayes a $15,000 check so that



                                  6
Hayes could pay the interest due on the loan he had taken out to

fund his $ 250,000 investment in the roll program.

     In September 1992, Hayes sent a fax message to Latrasse asking

for an accounting and a status report on the investment.     Hayes

received no response.    A few weeks later, Hayes sent Latrasse a

second fax, again asking for an accounting.    On October 5, 1992,

Latrasse sent a fax, announcing that Gold Cloud Development had

been able to purchase “the commitments” for the roll program in

late November 1991.   Latrasse continued:

          Now, as to the future, we believe we will be
          able to return the original investment plus a
          reasonable return to you within this month.
          We would propose at that time to invest the
          net proceeds (after principal and interest on
          your loan has been satisfied) in a master
          collateral commitment. . . . [I]nasmuch as you
          have been patient as Job with us, we would
          like to include you as an equal participant in
          whatever profits are generated.

The month passed; Hayes received no money.

     Hayes sent several more fax messages to Latrasse over the next

few months, to no avail.   By May 1993, neither Latrasse nor Braugh

was returning Hayes’s telephone calls or faxed messages.     Hayes

heard nothing further about the program until 1996, when the FBI

contacted him.   Hayes lost $235,000.

     Gail Schwinger, another investor, also testified at trial.

Schwinger met Richards in November 1991 through her partners in an

investment company.     After Schwinger and her partners signed a

noncircumvention, nondisclosure agreement, Richards revealed the

mechanics of the roll program.    Richards gave Schwinger much the

same explanation he had given Hayes, with one variation.   Richards


                                 7
told Schwinger that an investment of $250,000 could earn up to

$40,000 per week for 42 weeks, not the $50,000 per week for ten

weeks he initially described to Hayes.

     In    December    1991,   Schwinger       and   her   partners    met   with

Richards,    Braugh,    and    Sellars    in    Houston.      When    Schwinger

questioned whether her money would be safe, Braugh assured her that

her money would never leave the banks and would be very safe.

Schwinger agreed to invest $ 250,000 and, on December 11, 1991,

signed a contract with Gold Cloud Development. “Roger Braugh by Al

Richards” signed the contract as the chairperson of Gold Cloud

Development.    The contract stated that the letters of credit would

be rolled 42 times; Schwinger would receive $40,000 for each roll.

The contract provided that if Gold Cloud Development could not buy

a letter of credit, Schwinger would receive her full investment

back with interest. Schwinger sent a $250,000 check for deposit in

the designated Shearson Lehman Brothers account on the same day she

signed the contract.

     After the expected date for the first payment passed, one of

Schwinger’s partners began asking Richards questions about the

investment.    In January 1992, Schwinger asked Braugh for a status

report.     Braugh told her that the program had been delayed.                 In

February 1992, Braugh told Schwinger that Kurt Latrasse had taken

over the    roll   program.      In   later     conversations,    Braugh     gave

Schwinger different excuses for the lack of payments.                In separate

conversations, he told her that Latrasse was in the hospital with

gallstones;    that Latrasse’s wife was in the hospital for dental

surgery; and that Latrasse might have cancer. According to Braugh,

                                      8
these problems prevented Latrasse from traveling to Europe to

correct problems with the roll program.

     Schwinger also spoke to Richards and Braugh several times in

February and March of 1992.           Each time, Schwinger received excuses

or promises that quickly proved false. In March 1992, Braugh tried

to persuade Schwinger to invest in another roll program. Schwinger

agreed to attend a meeting in April 1992 to discuss the proposed

investment with Braugh, Al Sellars, and a man named Harold Sellers,

identified as Al Sellars’ attorney.             Schwinger had no intention of

participating in another program, but agreed to the meeting so she

could    ask    questions     about   her     original    $250,000   investment.

Schwinger received no answers at the meeting.

     After the March 1992 meeting, Schwinger hired an attorney, who

sent a letter to Richards, Braugh, and Latrasse demanding an

accounting.       On May 28, 1992, Latrasse called Schwinger and told

her that he was upset that she had hired a lawyer.                 The next day,

Schwinger sent a fax to Latrasse, again asking for an accounting.

Latrasse agreed. On June 11, 1992, Schwinger sent Latrasse another

fax asking when she would receive the promised accounting.                       On

June 19, Latrasse responded by offering another excuse for the

delays    and     promising    prompt       payment:     “The   commitments     for

collateral and funding have now been conformed and are working

properly.       We anticipate distribution of accumulated earnings to

commence by or on – by or before June 30th.”

               June   30,   1992   came     without    either    payment   or    an

accounting.       On that date, one of Schwinger’s partners wrote to

Latrasse, Braugh, and Sellars, stating that he planned to contact

                                          9
federal   and   state   authorities   about   the    investment   program.

Latrasse left two messages on Schwinger’s           answering machine on

July 1, 1992.    In the first message, Latrasse told Schwinger that

there had been movement on the account and proposed a meeting to

discuss the investment.      In the second message, Latrasse said he

had received the “threatening” letter from Schwinger’s partner and

proposed a meeting before attorneys became involved.               One of

Schwinger’s partners did arrange a meeting with Latrasse and

Schwinger. Latrasse did not appear. Schwinger never recovered any

of her investment.

     Brandon Blackwelder was the third investor to testify at

trial. Blackwelder met Roger Braugh in 1993. Braugh described his

career field as “international finance” and asked if Blackwelder

would be interested in investing in a “deal” in Europe.             Braugh

told Blackwelder that the investment was secret and available only

to “blue-bloods” and “high-ranking officials.”          Braugh described

the investment as a “roll-over program” consisting of purchases and

sales of prime bank instruments in Europe.          Blackwelder agreed to

invest $12,500.

     On May 12, 1993, Braugh went to Blackwelder’s office to

collect the money.      While there, Braugh telephoned Kurt Latrasse.

Using a speaker phone,     Braugh asked Latrasse to allow Blackwelder

to invest only $12,500 instead of what Braugh described as the

minimum amount of $25,000.       Latrasse responded that Blackwelder

could invest the lower amount if Blackwelder would agree to recruit

other investors for the program.



                                   10
     Blackwelder and Braugh signed a contract titled the “SAI

Opportunity Account Agreement” that same day.     Braugh signed the

contract on behalf of “SAI & Associates.”     The contract provided

that SAI & Associates would “guarantee that the capital account

shall be returned at the end of ninety (90) days from the date of

execution of this Agreement.”   The initial term of 90 days would be

deemed renewed absent a written notice of nonrenewal by either

party. Braugh also signed a instrument styled an “Unsecured Note,”

in which he promised to pay Blackwelder, within the 90-day initial

term, the principal amount with interest at a twenty percent annual

rate.

     Blackwelder spoke to Braugh or Latrasse several times after he

made the investment.   On June 26, 1993, Blackwelder hand-delivered

Braugh a letter stating that Blackwelder did not wish to renew the

contract after the initial 90-day term. Blackwelder explained that

he needed the money for a down payment on a new house.   After this

meeting, Blackwelder was unable to reach Braugh for weeks.     When

Blackwelder finally talked to Braugh, Braugh provided excuses, but

no money.

     In July 1993, Braugh called Blackwelder.      Braugh explained

that if he could travel to Europe, he could expedite the roll

program transactions, but he needed $5,000 to $10,000 to make the

trip. Braugh asked Blackwelder to lend him the money. Blackwelder

agreed to lend Braugh $5,000, but asked Braugh to give him a post-

dated repayment check as security.    On July 8, 1993, Blackwelder

gave Braugh two checks for $2,500 each.     In return, Braugh gave

Blackwelder a check in the amount of $5,000, post-dated July 16,

                                 11
1993. Braugh cashed the checks from Blackwelder, but did not use

the money to pay for a trip to Europe.

     On July 16, 1993, Blackwelder told Braugh that he planned to

cash the repayment check.   Braugh told Blackwelder that he had not

yet deposited money in the account on which the check was drawn.

Blackwelder nonetheless presented the check for payment, which,

predictably, bounced.   Blackwelder tried unsuccessfully to recover

his money from Braugh.      On   November 22, 1993, Braugh wrote

Blackwelder a letter stating that he would repay Blackwelder’s

$5,000 loan with cash or a cashier’s check.    Blackwelder received

no repayment.

     Blackwelder also spoke with Latrasse several times about his

investment.   Latrasse repeatedly told Blackwelder that there would

be action on his investment “any day.”    In February 1994, Latrasse

sent Blackwelder a fax stating that Latrasse had designated a

disinterested third party to deliver Blackwelder a check returning

his investment. Blackwelder never received the check. He lost his

$12,500 investment and the $5,000 loan.

     Kathryn Brewer, a financial analyst with the FBI, examined

numerous bank and brokerage account records to trace the funds

Hayes, Schwinger, and Blackwelder invested.      She testified that

most of the money was distributed among bank accounts of the three

defendants. The remaining funds were disbursed to various entities

unrelated to any investment program.

     Hayes’s $250,000 check was initially deposited into a Shearson

Lehman Brothers account in Braugh’s name on September 6, 1991. All

but approximately $1,000 of this money was transferred out of that

                                 12
account within one month of the deposit.     From September 11, 1991

and ending to October 4, 1991, $182,500 was wire-transferred from

Braugh’s Shearson Lehman Brothers account to an account in Braugh’s

name at the Bank of Corpus Christi.    A $100,000 check to Al Sellars

was drawn on Braugh’s Bank of Corpus Christi account on September

11, 1991. From September 11, 1991 to September 27, 1991, a total of

$24,000 was wire-transferred from Braugh’s Bank of Corpus Christi

account to an account at the same bank in the name of Lone Star

Exploration.2 On October 3, 1991, $25,000 was transferred directly

from Braugh’s Shearson Lehman Brothers account to the Lone Star

Exploration bank account.   Nearly all the $49,000 deposited in the

Lone Star Exploration account was disbursed to various entities

unrelated to any roll program.3

     Brewer testified that a $32,000 cashier’s check made payable

to Al Sellars was purchased on September 20, 1991 with money from

Braugh’s Bank of Corpus Christi account.    The check was ultimately

redeposited into Braugh’s Shearson Lehman Brothers account. Brewer

testified that two wire transfers — a September 17, 1991 transfer

in the amount of $7,500 and a September 25, 1991 transfer in the




    2
          The signature card for the Lone Star Exploration account
disclosed that the account was opened on September 11, 1991, five
days after Hayes delivered his check. Braugh and a man named Jerry
Fritzler were the only authorized signatories. The signature card
identified Braugh as the chairman of Lone Star Exploration and
Fritzler as the president.
        3
            The bank records showed that checks made payable to
Watson Pipe, Inc.; Clark Oil Tools; Halliburton Services; Pride
Petroleum; Cellular One; and Southwestern Bell were drawn on the
Lone Star Exploration account.

                                  13
amount of $5,000 — were made from Braugh’s Bank of Corpus Christi

account to an account in the name of Kurt Latrasse in California.

     Schwinger deposited her $250,000 check into the Shearson

Lehman Brothers account in the name of Gold Cloud Development on

December 12, 1991.    Brewer testified that, on December 13, 1991,

two checks made payable to Roger Braugh, totaling $50,000, were

drawn on the Gold Cloud Development account. By January 3, 1992,

$198,500 was transferred from the Gold Cloud Development account to

Roger Braugh’s Shearson Lehman Brothers account. Seven checks made

payable to either Al Richards or GEI Associates, totaling $50,000,

were later drawn on Braugh’s Shearson Lehman Brothers account; two

checks made payable to Kurt Latrasse, totaling $59,500, were drawn

on this same account in late December 1991.   Three wire transfers

totaling $46,000 were made to Roger Braugh’s account at the Bank of

Corpus Christi in December 1991. The records from Braugh’s Bank of

Corpus Christi account also showed transfers totaling $22,000 to

the Lone Star Exploration account at that bank in December 1991;

the remaining money was disbursed to entities unrelated to any roll

program.

     Blackwelder wrote a $12,500 check payable to SAI & Associates

on May 12, 1993.   The check was deposited into the account of SAI

& Associates at the Bank of America on the same day.   On that same

date, a $5,000 check made payable to Kurt Latrasse was drawn on the

SAI & Associates account and $2,500 was transferred from the SAI &

Associates account to an account in the name of Roger Braugh at the

Bank of America.     Another $1,400 was transferred from the SAI &

Associates account to Braugh’s account on May 24, 1993.   The money

                                 14
transferred to Braugh’s personal account was in turn disbursed to

various entities unrelated to any investment program.             Brewer’s

analysis showed that Braugh paid various expenses with the $5,000

Blackwelder loaned him, writing checks to, among other entities,

General Motors Acceptance Corporation and Wal-Mart. Braugh did not

use the money to pay for a trip to Europe, as he had promised

Blackwelder.

      On January 20, 1998, a jury convicted Richards, Braugh, and

Latrasse on all counts.        On May 14, 1998, the district court

sentenced each defendant to thirty-three months of imprisonment

followed by three years of supervised release.           The district court

ordered Richards to pay $487,000 in restitution and ordered Braugh

and Latrasse each $504,500 in restitution.              The district court

entered judgment on May 19, 1998.        Defendants timely appealed.

II.   THE CHALLENGE TO THE INDICTMENT

      Braugh   argues   for   the   first   time   on    appeal   that   the

superseding indictment did not meet constitutional standards.            He

relies on the recent decision of United States v. Neder, 
527 U.S. 1
, 
119 S. Ct. 1827
(1999), holding that the “materiality of

falsehood is an element of the federal mail fraud [and] wire fraud

. . . statutes.”    
Id. at 1841.
    Braugh contends that because the

indictment did not specifically allege that the misrepresentations

he made were material, it failed to allege an essential element of

wire fraud and mail fraud.

      “To be sufficient, an indictment must allege every element of

the crime charged.”     United States v. Fitzgerald, 
89 F.3d 218
, 221

(5th Cir. 1996).   A challenge to the sufficiency of the indictment

                                    15
is reviewed de novo.        See United States v. Cabrera-Teran, 
168 F.3d 141
, 143 (5th Cir. 1999).             “An indictment’s failure to charge an

offense is a jurisdictional defect.”              
Id. Because the
sufficiency

of an indictment is a prerequisite to jurisdiction, a “defendant[]

at any time may raise an objection based on failure to charge an

offense.”     
Id. However, when
a challenge to the sufficiency of the

indictment is made for the first time on appeal, “a court should

read    the   indictment     with      ‘maximum     liberality’    and    find    it

sufficient ‘unless it is so defective that by any reasonable

construction,       it   fails   to    charge   the     offense   for    which   the

defendant is convicted.’” United States v. Lankford, 
196 F.3d 563
,

569 (5th Cir. 1999)(quoting Fitzgerald, 
89 F.3d 218
, 221 (5th Cir.

1996)). “Maximum liberality” is the appropriate standard of review

when, as here, “the appellant does not assert prejudice, that is,

[when the appellant] had notice of the crime of which he stood

accused.”     
Fitzgerald, 89 F.3d at 221
; see also 
Lankford, 196 F.3d at 569
.

       In determining the sufficiency of the indictment, “[t]he law

does not compel a ritual of words.”               United States v. Wilson, 
884 F.2d 174
, 179 (5th Cir. 1989)(quoting United States v. Purvis, 
580 F.2d 853
, 857–858 (5th Cir. 1978).            “The test of the validity of an

indictment is ‘not whether the indictment could have been framed in

a more satisfactory manner, but whether it conforms to minimal

constitutional standards.’” Wilson, 884 F.2d at 179(quoting United

States v. Webb, 
747 F.2d 278
, 284 (5th Cir. 1984)).

       In Neder, the Court defined “materiality of falsehood” in a

footnote:

                                         16
     The Restatement instructs that a matter is material if:
     “(a) a reasonable man would attach importance to its
     existence or nonexistence in determining his choice of
     action in the transaction in question; or
     (b) the maker of the representation knows or has reason
     to know that its recipient regards or is likely to regard
     the matter as important in determining his choice of
     action, although a reasonable man would not so regard
     it.”

Neder, 119 S. Ct. at 1840
n. 5(quoting Restatement (Second) of

Torts § 538 (1976)).4     This court applies this definition to

determine whether, by any reasonable construction, the superseding

indictment   charged    Braugh   with   making   materially      false

representations.

     In United States v. McCough, 
510 F.2d 598
(5th Cir. 1975),

this court considered a similar challenge to an indictment.        In

that case, the indictment charged a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001,

which prohibits the making of false statements to a department or

agency of the United States.     The indictment in McCough alleged

that a utility cooperative had submitted false financial statements

to a federal agency in a loan application.   The defendants argued

that the indictment insufficiently alleged the materiality of the

falsehoods under section 1001.    The court stated that “[i]f the

facts alleged in the indictment warrant an inference that the false

    4
          The definition of materiality quoted above refers to the
statements themselves, not whether the recipients of the statements
actually relied on them. Although allegations of actual reliance
appear to allege materiality, the standards are different.        A
recipient might actually rely on a false representation, but the
representation might not be one to which “a reasonable man would
attach importance . . . in determining his choice of action,” or
one that “the maker of the representation knows or has reason to
know that its recipient regards or is likely to regard the matter
as important in determining his choice of action, although a
reasonable man would not so regard it.” Neder, 119 S. Ct at 1840
n. 5.

                                 17
statement is material, the indictment is not fatally insufficient

for its failure to allege materiality in haec verba.”               
Id. at 602;
see also United States v. Fern, 
155 F.3d 1318
, 1324 (11th Cir.

1998); United States v. Pommerening, 
500 F.2d 92
, 98 (10th Cir.

1974); United States v. Olin Corp., 
465 F. Supp. 1120
, 1131–32

(W.D.N.Y. 1979).

     The McCough indictment alleged that the financial statements

substantially misstated the value of the cooperative’s assets and

described   specific   entries    in   the   financial      statements    that

contained misrepresentations.      The court held that the indictment

sufficiently   alleged    the   materiality    of    the    false    financial

statements because it alleged specific misstatements that were

significant and “could conceivably have the capacity to influence

the [agency’s] function in overseeing the status of the security of

a large public investment.”      
Id. at 603.
     The    superseding   indictment    in    this   case    alleged     false

representations of specific facts that also “warrant an inference

that the false statement[s] [were] material.”              
Id. at 602.
    The

indictment detailed the specific false representations and promises

defendants allegedly made to “induce the Investors to deliver to

the Defendants cashier’s check and checks.” Paragraph Six of Count

One of the indictment alleged:

     ROGER S. BRAUGH, AL RICHARDS, and KURT LATRASSE would and
     did represent falsely to certain individuals, including
     but not limited to Bert Hayes, Gail Schwinger, and
     Brandon Blackwelder (the “Investors”), that they had
     contacts with European banks and lenders and that the
     Investors would receive a substantial return on an
     investment involving transactions between banks within a
     matter of weeks or months.


                                   18
Paragraph Ten of Count One of the indictment alleged:

     ROGER S. BRAUGH, AL RICHARDS, and KURT LATRASSE would and
     did continue to send and receive communications . . . to
     and from the Investors, even after the Investors had
     delivered their money to the defendants, for the purpose
     of lulling the Investors into a false sense of security
     by assurances that the promised services would be, or
     were being, performed, and that the investment was a
     worthwhile    one,   and   that   they    would   receive
     distributions, or return of it, at some future date; for
     the purpose of postponing inquiries, complaints, or legal
     action by the Investors, and lessening the suspect
     appearance of the fraudulent transactions; and, for the
     purpose of giving excuses for non-performance, thereby
     allowing additional investments or loans to be sought
     from the Investors.

Paragraph 13 of Count One of the indictment listed twenty-eight

overt acts, including specific communications with the investors

describing the details of the investment program and later assuring

the investors that the program was making money as promised.     The

allegations in Paragraphs Six,   Ten, and Thirteen of Count 1 are

incorporated by reference in all other counts of the indictment.

     The indictment in this case does not test constitutional

limits in light of Neder.      Read as a whole, the superseding

indictment alleges specific facts that easily support an inference

that the defendants made material misrepresentations and false

promises.   In particular, the allegations that the defendants

misrepresented that the investment program existed, was free from

risk of loss, and would generate large profits support an inference

of materiality.   A “reasonable man would attach importance” to

assurances that the investments would take place as described and

would return at least the invested funds, plus interest, within a

short time, in determining whether to invest.   The allegations in



                                 19
the indictment are sufficient to charge the offenses of mail fraud,

wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud.

III. THE CHALLENGE TO THE DENIAL OF BRAUGH’S MOTION TO SEVER

     Braugh argues that the district court improperly denied his

motion to sever because the evidence presented at trial was so

complicated that the jury had difficulty considering the evidence

against each defendant separately.         Braugh also argues that the

defendants presented antagonistic defenses.

     The district court’s denial of a motion to sever is reviewed

for an abuse of discretion.     See United States v. Pena-Rodriguez,

110 F.3d 1120
, 1128 (5th Cir. 1997).         Rule 8(b) of the Federal

Rules of Criminal Procedure provides in relevant part: “Two or more

defendants may be charged in the same indictment . . . if they are

alleged to have participated . . . in the same series of acts or

transactions constituting an offense or offenses.”            Generally,

“persons indicted together should be tried together, especially in

conspiracy cases . . . .”     United States v. Posada-Rios, 
158 F.3d 832
, 863 (1998), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 119 S. Ct 1280 (1999),

cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 119 S. Ct 1487 (1999), and cert.

denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 1792
(1999) (quoting United States

v. Pofahl, 
990 F.2d 1456
, 1483 (5th Cir. 1993)).

     Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure authorizes

the trial court to grant a severance based on a showing of

prejudice.   To   demonstrate   that   a   district   court   abused   its

discretion in denying a motion to sever, the defendant “must show

that: (1) the joint trial prejudiced him to such an extent that the

district court could not provide adequate protection; and (2) the

                                  20
prejudice    outweighed      the     government’s        interest   in    economy    of

judicial administration.”            United States v. McCord, 
33 F.3d 1434
,

1452 (5th Cir. 1994)(quoting United States v. DeVarona, 
872 F.2d 114
, 120–21 (5th Cir. 1989)).

     This trial lasted two weeks and involved three defendants.

This court has upheld a district court’s decision to deny severance

in cases involving many more defendants, more evidence, greater

complexity, and longer trials. See, e.g., 
Posada-Rios, 158 F.3d at 863
–65(upholding district court’s denial of a motion to sever in a

conspiracy case tried for six months against 12 defendants); United

States v. Ellender, 
947 F.2d 748
, 753–755 (5th Cir. 1991)(upholding

district court’s denial of a motion to sever in a conspiracy case

tried for three months against 23 defendants, with 73 witnesses).

     A general description of the complexity of a trial is not

sufficient    to     show    the     “specific      and    compelling      prejudice”

necessary for reversal of a district court’s denial of a motion to

sever.   United States v. 
McCord, 33 F.3d at 1452
; cf. 
Posada-Rios, 158 F.3d at 863
.            Instead, an appellant must “isolate events

occurring    in    the   course     of   the     joint    trial   and    then   .   . .

demonstrate       that   such      events    caused      substantial      prejudice.”

Posada-Rios, 158 F.3d at 863
(quoting Ellender, 
947 F.2d 748
, 755

(5th Cir. 1991)).        Braugh has not identified specific events that

caused prejudice and require reversal.

     Braugh’s argument that the jury’s conviction of all defendants

on all counts shows that it did not separately consider the

evidence as to each defendant is unavailing.                        This court has

stated that “acquittals as to some defendants on some counts

                                            21
support an inference that the jury sorted through the evidence and

considered each defendant and each count separately.” 
Posada-Rios, 158 F.3d at 864
(quoting 
Ellender, 947 F.2d at 755
).     It does not

necessarily follow, however, that conviction of all defendants on

all counts shows that the jury failed separately to weigh the

evidence as to each defendant.

     “Appropriate   cautionary    instructions   can   decrease    the

possibility that the jury will improperly transfer proof of guilt

from one defendant to another.” 
Ellender, 947 F.2d at 755
(quoting

United States v. Hogan, 
763 F.2d 697
, 705 (5th Cir. 1985)).       “The

pernicious effect of cumulation . . . is best avoided by precise

instructions to the jury on the admissibility and proper uses of

the evidence introduced by the Government.”       United States v.

Morrow, 
537 F.2d 120
, 136 (5th Cir. 1976).   In this case, the trial

court gave careful instructions during the trial about the limited

purpose for which it admitted some of the evidence.        The court

included the limiting instructions in the final instructions to the

jury.   In the trial instructions, the court also admonished the

jury as follows:

     A separate crime is charged against one or more of the
     defendants in each count of the indictment. Each count,
     and the evidence pertaining to it, should be considered
     separately. Also, the case of each defendant should be
     considered separately and individually. The fact that
     you may find one or more of the defendants guilty or not
     guilty of any of the crimes charged should not control
     your verdict as to any other crime or any other
     defendant. You must give separate consideration to the
     evidence as to each defendant.

Similar instructions have been held sufficient to eliminate the

possibility of undue prejudice.   See 
Posada-Rios, 158 F.3d at 864
;


                                  22
United States v. Faulkner, 
17 F.3d 745
, 759 (5th. Cir 1994).             “The

remedy of severance is justified only if the prejudice flowing from

a joint trial is clearly beyond the curative powers of a cautionary

instruction.”    
Morrow, 537 F.2d at 136
.      Braugh offers no specific

basis   for   concluding   that   the    district   court’s   repeated   and

meticulous    instructions    failed     to   avoid   legally   cognizable

prejudice.

     Braugh also argues that the district court should have severed

his trial because Richards presented an antagonistic defense.

Braugh points to three instances of purported antagonism.           First,

Richards’ attorney stressed in opening statements that Bert Hayes’s

money was deposited into an account that Braugh, not Richards,

controlled.     Second, Richards’ attorney argued that the checks

Braugh wrote to Richards with the notation “Bert Hayes payment” on

the memorandum line were to pay Richards’ commissions, and that

Braugh lied when he told Hayes that the checks were for him.

Richards’ attorney argued that Braugh wrote “Bert Hayes payment” on

the cashed and canceled checks after the fact.          Braugh’s attorney

contended that Braugh sent the money to Richards in order to pay

Hayes. Third, during his cross-examination of Schwinger, Richards’

attorney asked questions about events that occurred after Richards’

involvement had ended, including actions Braugh took to make

Schwinger continue believing that the roll program was legitimate.

Braugh argues that these trial tactics were intended to blame

Braugh and portray Richards’ involvement as innocent.

     “[S]everance is not automatically required merely because co-

defendants present mutually antagonistic defenses.”           United States

                                    23
v. Castillo, 
77 F.3d 1480
, 1491 (5th Cir. 1996); see also United

States v. Matthews, 
178 F.3d 295
, 298 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, ___

U.S. ___, 
120 S. Ct. 359
(1999).       The decision is committed to the

discretion of the trial court and will be reversed only if the

defendant shows “specific and compelling prejudice” the joint trial

caused his defense.       This court has held that when defendants

present   antagonistic    defenses,    “instructions      to   consider    the

evidence as to each defendant separately and individually, and not

to consider comments made by counsel as substantive evidence

sufficed ‘to cure any prejudice caused when co-defendants accuse

each other of the crime.’”     United States v. Mann, 
161 F.3d 840
,

863 (5th Cir. 1998)(quoting United States v. Stouffer, 
986 F.2d 916
, 924 (5th Cir. 1993)), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 1766
(1999).      The district court gave both these instructions in

this case.

     In addition to the curative instructions, a close examination

of Richards’ and Braugh’s defenses shows that they fall short of

mutual antagonism. Defenses are antagonistic if they are “mutually

exclusive    or   irreconcilable,     that    is,   if   the   core   of   one

defendant’s defense is contradicted by that of a codefendant.”

United States v. Rojas-Martinez, 
968 F.2d 415
, 419 (5th Cir. 1992);

see also United States v. Moser, 
123 F.3d 813
, 829 (5th Cir. 1997).

Richards presented his belief that the roll program was legitimate

as the core of his defense.     The core of Braugh’s defense was that

Al Sellars   masterminded the “roll program” and Braugh believed it

to be legitimate.     The two defenses are not mutually antagonistic;

the jury could have believed both.           Specifically, the jury could

                                    24
have found that Braugh wrote “Bert Hayes payment” on the canceled

checks after Richards cashed them, as Richards’ attorney argued,

and that Braugh believed the investment program was legitimate, as

Braugh’s attorney argued.           The evidence as to Braugh’s continued

involvement     with       Schwinger’s         investment     after      Richards’

participation      ended    similarly     did   not   conflict    with   Braugh’s

defense that he believed the investment program to be legitimate.

       Richards and Braugh did not present mutually antagonistic

defenses, so as to require severance. The district court carefully

instructed the jury separately to consider the evidence admitted

against each defendant.           Braugh has not demonstrated the “specific

and compelling prejudice” necessary for reversal based on the

district court’s denial of his motion to sever.

IV.    THE CHALLENGES TO THE ADMISSION OF EVIDENCE

       A.   THE RULE 403 OBJECTION

       Richards argues that the district court abused its discretion

in admitting Braugh’s testimony that he brought a dispute he had

with    Richards    to     the    attention     of    the   federal   and   state

prosecutor’s    offices      in    Fort   Worth   and   Dallas,   respectively.

Richards contends that the district court should have excluded the

testimony under Rule 403 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, on the

ground that “its probative value is substantially outweighed by the

danger of unfair prejudice.”

       Braugh testified without objection that Richards asked him for

$30,000 in January 1992. Braugh sent Richards three $10,000 checks.

Braugh testified that Richards agreed not to cash those checks, but



                                          25
merely to show them to anxious creditors to provide assurance.

Instead, Richards cashed the checks, against Braugh’s instructions.

     Richards did object to Braugh’s testimony the following day,

when Braugh told the jury that he reported his dispute with

Richards over the three $10,000 checks to the local offices of the

district attorney and the United States Attorney.       The reports did

not result in criminal charges against Richards.       Braugh testified

that he knew that by making the complaint, he was bringing his

relationship with Richards to the attention of law enforcement

agencies.

     The district court carefully limited Braugh’s testimony about

his dispute with Richards and carefully instructed the jury as to

how they could consider the limited testimony admitted.       The court

did not permit Braugh to present the details of his disagreement

with Richards over the checks. Instead, the court limited Braugh’s

testimony to the fact that he had a dispute with Richards, which he

later reported.    The   court   included   Braugh’s   letters   to   the

prosecutors detailing the dispute as part of the record, but did

not admit the letters at the trial.5   The district court found that

the testimony had narrow, but significant, probative value.           The

    5
           In the letters, Braugh reported a dispute with Richards
and another man named Ron Cravens.       According to Braugh, the
dispute arose after Richards endorsed the checks to Cravens so that
Cravens could cash the checks. However, the checks were postdated.
Cravens contacted Braugh and threatened to sue for the amount of
the checks.    Braugh placed a stop payment order on the checks.
When Cravens attempted to cash the checks, the bank returned them
unpaid.   Cravens continued to threaten Braugh with suit on the
checks.    Braugh ultimately wrote letters to law enforcement
agencies to report the dispute, claiming that Richards and Cravens
were “working together in an attempt to extort th[e] money from me
by threatening me with prosecution.”

                                  26
fact that Braugh reported the dispute to law enforcement tended to

support his contention that he did not believe that he and Richards

were parties    to   an   unlawful   conspiracy.    The   district   court

reasoned that Braugh would be unlikely to take any action that

could lead to law enforcement investigating his relationship with

Richards if he believed that their relationship was criminal.

     The district court gave the jury the following instructions

about Braugh’s limited testimony:

     Let me explain to the jury what’s happening. I’m going
     to let Mr. Braugh testify about this matter, this dispute
     that he had with Mr. Richards. The nature of the dispute
     is not really that relevant in this case, and you are not
     going to be asked to decide whether Mr. Richards was
     right in this dispute or Mr. Braugh was right in this
     dispute, I’m letting the fact that Mr. Braugh brought the
     dispute to the attention of law enforcement agencies be
     admitted into evidence because you may decide that it’s
     relevant to Mr. Braugh’s state of mind, in that, if Mr.
     Braugh believed that his dealings with Mr. Richards that
     we have been hearing in this case were illegal. He may
     not have wanted law enforcement officials to learn of his
     dealings with Mr. Richards. So that’s the only reason I
     am letting this come into evidence. The exact dispute,
     who’s right and wrong in the dispute, is not relevant.
     Only the fact that Mr. Braugh’s state of mind was such
     that he was willing to bring the nature of the dispute to
     law enforcement officials in 1992.

     Richards   argues    that   Braugh’s   testimony   lacked   probative

value.   Because “the dispute was totally unrelated to the charged

offenses,” Braugh would not have been concerned that his complaint

would trigger an investigation into his relationship with Richards,

and the fact of the report did not tend to show that Braugh viewed

his relationship with Richards as lawful.          Richards also argues

that the evidence of Braugh’s reports of his dispute with Richards

was cumulative of other evidence showing that Braugh and Richards

had a “falling out.” Richards asserts that the probative value was

                                     27
minimal and the prejudicial effect significant, given the facial

similarity between Braugh’s accusations and the conduct alleged in

the indictment.

      This court reviews the district court’s ruling for an abuse of

discretion.     See Old Chief v. United States, 
519 U.S. 172
, 174 n.

1 (1997); United States v. Ismoila, 
100 F.3d 380
, 391 (5th Cir.

1996). “The exclusion of evidence under Rule 403 should occur only

sparingly.”     United States v. Pace, 
10 F.3d 1106
, 1115 (5th Cir.

1993).    The “major function [of Rule 403] is limited to excluding

matter of scant or cumulative probative force, dragged in the by

the heels     for the sake of its prejudicial effect.”                
Id. at 1116(quoting
United States v, McRae, 
593 F.2d 700
, 707 (5th Cir.

1979)).

      Contrary to Richards’ argument, the evidence admitted did have

the   probative      value   defined    in   the   trial   judge’s   limiting

instructions.     The district court did not admit Braugh’s testimony

for the purpose of establishing that his report about Richards to

law enforcement agencies was true or to show that he and Richards

had a dispute.       The court instead admitted the fact of Braugh’s

reports of a dispute with Richards as evidence bearing only on

Braugh’s contention that he did not believe that he and Richards

were parties to a criminal conspiracy.             As the government notes,

both Braugh’s and Richards’ attorneys discussed the testimony in

their closing arguments, demonstrating its probative value.

      Nor was Braugh’s testimony so prejudicial as to make its

admission,    with     the   district    court’s    limiting   instructions,

improper. When Braugh testified that Richards attempted to cash the

                                        28
checks despite his agreement with Braugh not to do so, Richards did

not object.6     Richards did not object until the following day, when

Braugh testified that he reported the disagreement over the checks

to   law   enforcement   agencies.        The   district   court’s   detailed

limiting instruction carefully defined the purpose for which the


      6
            “Under the plain error standard, forfeited errors are
subject to review only where they are ‘obvious,’ ‘clear,’ or
‘readily apparent,’ and they affect the defendants substantial
rights.” United States v. Richardson, 
168 F.3d 836
, 839 n. 9 (5th
Cir.)(quoting United States v. Calverley, 
37 F.3d 160
, 162 (5th
Cir. 1994)(en banc), abrogated in part by Johnson v. United States,
520 U.S. 461
(1997)), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 1589
(1999). “Even then, we will not exercise our discretion to correct
the forfeited errors unless they ‘seriously affect the fairness,
integrity, or public reputation of the judicial proceeding.’”
Richardson, 168 F.3d at 839
n. 9 (quoting 
Calverley, 37 F.3d at 164
).   Braugh testified as follows about Richards’ cashing the
checks:

            Q:    . . . [W]hat did Al Richards say he
                  needed money for?
            A:    That he had some expenses and some
                  obligations that were due and he needed
                  that money, or, he needed a check from –
                  a check or a series of checks from me to
                  hold as good faith against those debts.
            Q:    . . . [W]hat was your understanding Al
                  Richards was going to do with the money
                  if you sent him the funds?
            A:    Well, I understood at the time that he
                  was going to hold these checks.
                  ....
            Q:    ... [D]id you learn whether or not
                  ultimately or at some later date whether
                  or not these checks had in fact been
                  cashed?
            A:    I did learn later on they had been
                  cashed.

Even if we were to assume that this testimony was “clearly”
inadmissible under Rule 403, as Richards urges on appeal, Richards
has not shown plain error.       He has not shown that the error
affected his substantial rights — that is, “affect[ed] the outcome
of the proceeding” — much less that the error “seriously affect[ed]
the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of [the] judicial
proceeding[].” 
Calverley, 37 F.3d at 164
.

                                     29
jury could consider the testimony and mitigated the potential for

undue prejudice.        See United States v. Bailey, 
111 F.3d 1229
, 1234

(5th Cir. 1997).

      In light of the court’s strict limits on Braugh’s testimony

and     instructions     limiting      the    jury’s      consideration       of   the

testimony,    the    district    court       did    not   err    in   admitting    this

evidence.

      B.    THE RULE 404(B) AND HEARSAY CHALLENGES

      In rebuttal, and over objections, the government called a

witness named Mark McMillan to testify about investments he made

through Braugh and Latrasse in 1987 and 1988. These objections are

reasserted on appeal.

      McMillan testified that he met Braugh in late 1987.                       Braugh

was   working    from    an   office    in    the    church      to   which   McMillan

belonged, trying to help the financially troubled church raise

money. Braugh proposed an investment to McMillan to help solve the

church’s financial problems.           Braugh explained that he “had some

kind of bank letter of credit, foreign bank letter of credit deal

going    where   some     bank   was     going      to    loan    him   $10    million

imminently.”      Braugh told McMillan that $15,000 would make “the

deal” work.         Braugh promised that if               McMillan invested the

$15,000, Braugh would receive $10 million from the European bank;

would loan $800,000 to the church; would return $15,000 to McMillan

within a few days; and would pay McMillan an additional $15,000.

McMillan gave Braugh the $15,000.             Neither McMillan nor the church

received any money from Braugh.



                                         30
     McMillan next saw Braugh several months later, at the offices

of Butler Industries.      McMillan was there to see the company

president, a close personal friend.     Braugh was using an office at

the company, working to raise money for the financially-troubled

business.    Braugh   proposed    another    investment     opportunity   to

McMillan. Braugh explained that he had succeeded in securing a $10

million loan from a European bank.          The money had been wired and

placed in a holding account, but Braugh needed $25,000 to release

the funds.   Braugh promised that if McMillan invested the $25,000,

Braugh would pay him $50,000 before the close of the same business

day; would pay the $30,000 owed from the first investment; would

loan money to Butler Industries; and would loan the church the

money he had promised earlier.

     Braugh told McMillan that the transactions would take place

through a company called Gold Cloud Development.7 If the $10

million was not paid as expected, Gold Cloud Development would

invest McMillan’s money in a movie through a company called San

Francisco Productions. Braugh told McMillan that Kurt Latrasse was

in charge of both the loan from the European bank and the movie

deal and that Braugh was acting at Latrasse’s direction.

     McMillan testified that, despite suspicions, he decided to

give Braugh the $25,000.       On April 14, 1988, McMillan had his

office   manager   draft   a     document     to   record    the   promised

transactions.   In this document, Braugh and Latrasse, referred to

     7
           Roger Braugh testified that the Gold Cloud Development
Corporation referred to in connection with this transaction was not
the same Gold Cloud Development Corporation that was involved in
the roll program, of which he was the chairman.

                                   31
as “Borrower,” promised to pay McMillan $50,000 from: (1) “proceeds

received    on   the   Roger   Braugh/Gold      Cloud     Development      Project

(expected loan of $10,000,000.00)”; (2) “proceeds received on the

San    Francisco       Productions         Project      (expected     loan       of

$10,000,000.00)”; or (3) “other sources as deemed necessary by

Borrower.”   McMillan’s staff also drafted a personal guarantee for

signature by Braugh and Latrasse individually.                  McMillan told

Braugh that he would pay the $25,000 only after Braugh and Latrasse

signed the documents.

      McMillan    testified    that   he    spoke    by   telephone   to    a   man

identified as Kurt Latrasse after the documents had been faxed to

Latrasse:

            A:    . . . . [W]e got him on the telephone in
                  his motel room.
            Q:    Who is the “we,” who got him on the
                  telephone?
            A:    Me and Roger Braugh and Robert Cohen, the
                  president of Butler Industries.
            Q:    And who is the “him” that you got on the
                  phone?
            A:    Kurt Latrasse.
            Q:    And what makes you think you had Kurt
                  Latrasse on the telephone?
            A:    He said he was Kurt Latrasse.        They
                  dialed the hotel -- I mean, I was told
                  that they were calling Kurt Latrasse.
                  The man got on the phone, said he was
                  Kurt Latrasse. He got the documents. He
                  said he read the documents. He said he
                  was signing them. He said he could not
                  get them notarize [sic] because his
                  secretary was gone to lunch or his notary
                  was gone to lunch, and he signed it,
                  supposedly, they faxed it back to me. I
                  looked at it, I verified the signature,
                  then I paid the money.

Later that day, Roger Braugh faxed McMillan the “loan document,”

signed “Kurt Latrasse” and “Roger S. Braugh,” and the personal


                                      32
guarantee, signed “Roger S. Braugh.”             On the fax cover sheet,

Braugh wrote: “Kurt’s personal guarantee will be here tomorrow

because the notary left before we sent the last document to him.”

     McMillan did not see Braugh again after that day. He received

none of his money back and neither the church nor Butler Industries

received a loan.       McMillan filed no complaint and made no attempt

to recover the money.

            1.    Braugh’s Challenges to McMillan’s Testimony

     Braugh argues that the admission of McMillan’s testimony

violated Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence because the

transactions McMillan described were remote in time from, and

dissimilar to, the transactions charged in the indictment.                 Braugh

also argues that, even if the evidence was relevant, its marginal

probative    value     was   substantially     outweighed      by    the   highly

prejudicial impact.

     In     response,    the   government     argues    that      the   McMillan

transactions     had    substantial   similarities     to   the     transactions

charged in the indictment, making the evidence highly probative of

Braugh’s intent.       Braugh put his intent squarely in issue, making

McMillan’s testimony important rebuttal evidence.                   The district

court instructed the jury that they were to consider the testimony

only on the issue of intent.

     The district court’s decision to admit Rule 404(b) evidence is

reviewed for abuse of discretion.          See United States v. Chavez, 
119 F.3d 342
, 346 (5th Cir. 1997).               This review is “necessarily

heightened” in criminal cases.        United States v. Gonzalez, 
76 F.3d 1339
, 1347 (5th Cir. 1996)(quoting United States v. Anderson, 933

                                      
33 F.2d 1261
, 1268 (5th Cir. 1991)).            The probative value of the

evidence, the need for the evidence by the government on the issue

of intent, and the court’s limiting instructions are all considered

in determining if the court properly admitted the testimony under

Rule 404(b).8

     A trial court must apply the test set out in United States v.

Beechum, 
582 F.2d 898
, 911 (5th Cir. 1978)(en banc), in determining

whether to admit extrinsic evidence under Rule 404(b).              Careful

application of the Beechum test protects defendants from unfair

prejudice   in   the   admission    of    extrinsic   act   evidence.   See

Anderson, 933 F.2d at 1268
.        The first step of the Beechum test is

to determine that the extrinsic offense evidence is relevant to an

issue other than the defendant’s character.           The second step is to

determine whether the evidence satisfies Rule 403.             See 
Beechum, 582 F.2d at 911
.

     The relevance of extrinsic act evidence “is a function of its

similarity to the offense charged.”           
Id. When the
evidence is

admitted to show the defendant’s intent to commit the offense

charged, “the relevancy of the extrinsic offense derives from the

defendant’s indulging himself in the same state of mind in the

perpetration of both the extrinsic and charged offenses.”               
Id. 8 Rule
404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides:

     Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not
     admissible to prove the character of a person in order to
     show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be
     admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive,
     opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge,
     identity, or absence of mistake or accident.


                                     34
“The reasoning is that because the defendant had unlawful intent in

the extrinsic offense, it is less likely that he had lawful intent

in the present offense.”      
Id. An extrinsic
offense is relevant to

the issue of intent only if “an offense was in fact committed and

the defendant in fact committed it.”         
Id. at 912.
  The proponent of

the evidence need not establish these facts by a preponderance of

the evidence; rather, “the evidence in the case must be sufficient

to permit a jury, acting reasonably, to find the preliminary facts

by a preponderance of the evidence.”            
Anderson, 933 F.2d at 1269
.

“Once it is determined that the extrinsic offense requires the same

intent as the charged offense and that the jury could find that the

defendant committed the extrinsic offense, the evidence satisfies

the first step under rule 404(b).”          
Beechum, 582 F.2d at 913
.

     As to Braugh, McMillan’s testimony satisfies the first part of

the Beechum test.    McMillan’s testimony, if believed, would permit

a reasonable jury to find by a preponderance of the evidence that

Braugh committed fraud in both of the McMillan transactions,

involving   the   same     intent   as    the   offenses   charged   in   the

indictment.

     In performing the second part of the Beechum test,“the task

for the court . . . calls for a commonsense assessment of all the

circumstances surrounding the extrinsic offense.”             
Id. Several factors
affect the probative value of the evidence, including “the

extent to which the defendant’s unlawful intent is established by

other evidence, the overall similarity of the extrinsic and charged

offenses, and the amount of time that separates the extrinsic and

charged offenses.”       
Chavez, 119 F.3d at 346-47
.

                                     35
     McMillan’s testimony was highly probative as to Braugh’s

intent.    “The mere entry of a not guilty plea in a conspiracy case

raises     the    issue   of   intent          sufficiently      to    justify     the

admissibility of extrinsic offense evidence.”                    United States v.

Broussard, 
80 F.3d 1025
, 1039 (5th Cir. 1996).                In this case, the

core of Braugh’s defense was that he lacked the intent to defraud.

Braugh testified, and his attorney argued, that Braugh believed the

“roll program” was a legitimate investment.               The government had no

direct evidence of Braugh’s fraudulent intent.

     Braugh’s      arguments   as    to    the     dissimilarity       between     the

McMillan transactions and those described in the indictment are

without merit.     Braugh twice induced McMillan to give him money by

describing investments that would result in a European bank paying

$10 million to Braugh, yielding McMillan a substantial return in a

very short time with no risk of losing his money.                 The first of the

two transactions involved a letter of credit.                 The “roll program”

transactions involved promises that the investors’ payments would

enable Braugh and the other defendants to obtain a $10 million

letter of credit from a foreign bank, which would return the

investors’ money, plus interest and large profits, in a very short

time.     Braugh told McMillan that Latrasse was in charge of the

investments proposed in the second transaction, just as he would

later tell the “roll program” victims that Latrasse was the expert

in that investment plan.            The three to five years between the

McMillan transactions and the later charged offenses does not so

diminish    the   probative    value      of    the   evidence    as   to   make    it

inadmissible.      Cf. United States v. Hernandez-Guevara, 
162 F.3d 36
863, 872–73 (5th Cir. 1998)(affirming district court’s admission of

an 18-year-old conviction under Rule 404(b) to show intent), cert.

denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 1375
(1999); 
Chavez, 119 F.3d at 346-47
(affirming district court’s admission of a 15-year-old prior

conviction under Rule 404(b) to show intent).

      The district court instructed the jury on the limited purpose

for which McMillan’s testimony could be considered:

      You are going to hear evidence that you may conclude is
      similar to the acts of Defendants Braugh and Latrasse
      that are charged in the indictment but that occurred on
      different occasions than those alleged in the indictment.
      You must not consider any of the evidence that you are
      about to hear in deciding if Mr. Braugh or Mr. Latrasse
      committed the acts charged in the indictment. However,
      you may consider the evidence for other very limited
      purposes. If you find beyond a reasonable doubt from the
      evidence you have heard up to now that Mr. Braugh or Mr.
      Latrasse committed the acts charged against them in the
      indictment, then you may consider the evidence that you
      are about to hear to determine whether Mr. Braugh or Mr.
      Latrasse had the state of mind or intent necessary to
      commit the crimes charged against them in the indictment.
      That is the only purpose for which you may consider the
      evidence that you are about to hear.

The   district   court   repeated   this    admonition   in   his   final

instructions to the jury.     “[T]he danger of unfair prejudice was

minimized by the district court’s careful instructions to the

jury.”   
Gonzalez, 76 F.3d at 1348
.        The high degree of probative

value of McMillan’s testimony, balanced against the danger of

unfair prejudice the testimony raised, in light of the limiting

instructions, leads to the conclusion that the district court acted

well within its discretion in admitting the testimony over Braugh’s

Rule 404(b) objection.




                                    37
            Braugh’s argument that McMillan’s testimony was improper

“guilt-by-association” evidence is similarly without merit.9                     “It

is well established . . . that the government may not attempt to

prove       a   defendant’s     guilt   by      showing   that    [the   defendant]

associates with ‘unsavory characters.’”               United States v. Polasek,

162 F.3d 878
, 884 (5th Cir. 1998).                McMillan’s testimony did not

suffer from this defect.           McMillan testified about Braugh’s acts

and statements in inducing McMillan to make the two “investments.”

The testimony focused on Braugh’s own conduct.                   It did not merely

show    that         Braugh   associated     with    Latrasse.       See   
id. at 885(distinguishing
between evidence showing extrinsic wrongdoing on

defendant’s part, which might be admissible to show knowledge or

intent under Rule 404(b), and evidence showing the defendant

associated with people who were later convicted of an offense

similar to the charged offense, which would be inadmissible guilt-

by-association evidence).           The district court did not err on this

basis in admitting McMillan’s testimony.

                2.     Latrasse’s Challenges to McMillan’s Testimony

       Latrasse challenges McMillan’s testimony as inadmissible, both

because it failed the Rule 404(b) criteria and because parts of

McMillan’s testimony were hearsay as to Latrasse.


        9
            Braugh concedes that he did not object to McMillan’s
testimony specifically on the ground that it was “guilt-by-
association” evidence.    However, he argues that, based on the
record, his Rule 404(b) objection suffices to preserve this
argument on appeal. Of course, if Braugh did not timely object to
McMillan’s testimony on this ground, the plain error standard would
apply.   See 
Polasek, 162 F.3d at 883-84
.        We conclude that
McMillan’s testimony was not inadmissible “guilt-by-association”
evidence even under the abuse of discretion standard.

                                           38
      Latrasse challenges the sufficiency of the evidence showing

that “an offense was in fact committed and the defendant in fact

committed it.”       
Beechum, 582 F.2d at 913
.               Specifically, Latrasse

argues that McMillan’s testimony was insufficient to show that

Latrasse      was   involved    with       Braugh       in   the     second     McMillan

transaction. To determine whether there was sufficient evidence to

satisfy the first part of the Beechum test, Latrasse’s hearsay

objection must first be addressed. The statements Latrasse objects

to   would,    if   admissible,      form       part    of   the     evidence   showing

Latrasse’s involvement.

      Latrasse objected under Rule 802 to McMillan’s testimony that

Braugh     described      Latrasse    as     the       person   in    charge     of   the

investment, who was giving Braugh direction.                       The district court

admitted      McMillan’s     testimony          against      Latrasse       under     Rule

801(d)(2)(D), which defines statements of an agent or employee of

the defendant as non-hearsay.               Latrasse challenges the district

court’s ruling.10

      An out-of-court statement of a declarant is not hearsay if

“[t]he statement is offered against a party and is . . . a

statement     by    the   party’s    agent      or     employee,     made   during    the

existence of the relationship.”                 FED. R. EVID. 801(d)(2)(D).           The

proponent of the evidence must prove the preliminary facts that

bring the statement within Rule 801(d)(2)(D), by a preponderance of


      10
            Braugh’s out-of-court statements about Latrasse were
only arguably offered for the truth of the matters asserted in
them. However, because the government did not make this argument
at trial or on appeal, we do not rest our resolution of the issue
on this ground.

                                           39
the evidence.      See United States v. Bourjaily, 
483 U.S. 171
, 174

(1987).   The statement itself may be considered in making this

determination.     See 
id. However, “[t]he
contents of the statement

. . . are not alone sufficient to establish . . . the agency or

employment     relationship    and    scope      thereof   under    subdivision

(D) . . . .”      FED. R. EVID. 801(d)(2).

      McMillan testified that Braugh told him “over and over and

over that Kurt Latrasse was the man in charge” of the Gold Cloud

Development and San Francisco Productions investments.                 McMillan

also testified that Braugh said “he was basically acting as an

agent for Kurt Latrasse.”            These statements provided the only

evidence of Latrasse’s role as principal and Braugh’s as agent in

the second transaction Braugh proposed to McMillan.                 Neither the

loan document bearing Latrasse’s signature nor the circumstances

under which Latrasse signed it provide proof that Braugh was acting

as   Latrasse’s    agent.     In   light    of    the   lack   of   evidence   to

corroborate Braugh’s out-of-court statements that he was acting as

an agent for Latrasse, Rule 801(d)(2)(D) cannot serve as the basis

for the admission of these statements against Latrasse.

      However, even if McMillan’s testimony should not have been

admitted against Latrasse under Rule 801(d)(2)(D), other grounds

for admission remove any harmful error.                 See United States v.

Lopez, 
979 F.2d 1024
, 1033 (5th Cir. 1992).              The government urges

that the testimony was admissible under Rule 801(d)(2)(E), which

takes an out-of-court statement outside the hearsay rule if the

statement “is offered against a party and is . . . a statement by

a coconspirator of a party during the course and in furtherance of

                                       40
the   conspiracy.”       FED. R. EVID.      801(d)(2)(E).             Although   the

indictment did not allege an earlier conspiracy in connection with

the McMillan transactions, “the conspiracy that forms the basis for

admitting      coconspirators’     statements       need     not   be    the     same

conspiracy for which the defendant is indicted.”                United States v.

Arce, 
997 F.2d 1123
, 1128 (5th Cir. 1993).

      Before    admitting    evidence      under     Rule     801(d)(2)(E),       the

proponent must “establish by a preponderance of the evidence that

the declarant and the defendant were involved in a conspiracy and

that the statements were made during and in furtherance of the

conspiracy.”       United States v. Broussard, 
80 F.3d 1025
, 1038 (5th

Cir. 1996); see also 
Bourjaily, 483 U.S. at 175-76
.                     Under Rule

104(a) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, a court “is not bound by

the rules of evidence except those with respect to privileges” in

determining the existence of preliminary facts to support the

admission of evidence.       See also 
Bourjaily, 483 U.S. at 178
.                 The

out-of-court statement itself may be considered in determining the

existence of the conspiracy and other preliminary facts.                     See 
id. at 177–81;
FED. R. EVID. 801(d)(2).                However, the out-of-court

statement alone is not sufficient to support its own admission.

See FED. R. EVID. 801(d)(2).

      Braugh made the statements as part of his efforts to induce

McMillan to give him money a second time.                   There is sufficient

evidence to show that Braugh and Latrasse conspired in this effort

to defraud McMillan.         The trial record included the following

evidence    that    Braugh   and   Latrasse        were     parties     to   such   a

conspiracy:

                                      41
      •      McMillan testified that Braugh told him “over and
             over again that Latrasse was in charge” of the Gold
             Cloud Development transaction and the San Francisco
             Production movie deal.

      •      McMillan testified that Braugh said that “he was
             basically acting as an agent for Kurt Latrasse.”

      C      After McMillan refused to give Braugh any money
             unless Latrasse signed a loan document and personal
             guarantee drafted by McMillan’s staff, those
             documents were faxed to Latrasse.

      •      Braugh and McMillan telephoned the hotel where
             Latrasse was staying. They were connected to a man
             who identified himself as Kurt Latrasse. That man
             stated that he had received the documents that
             McMillan’s staff drafted and was signing them.

      C      Braugh faxed McMillan the loan document bearing a
             signature purporting to be that of Kurt Latrasse.

      •      The signature of Kurt Latrasse was very similar to
             Latrasse’s signature on other documents previously
             admitted as evidence in the trial.

      This   evidence    shows   the    predicate     facts   making   Braugh’s

statements about Latrasse admissible under Rule 801(d)(2)(e).               The

record discloses sufficient evidence to show by a preponderance of

the   evidence   that    Latrasse      and   Braugh   conspired   to    defraud

McMillan.     Braugh’s out-of-court statements in furtherance of the

conspiracy were admissible under Rule 801(d)(2)(E) of the Federal

Rules of Evidence.

      In light of this determination, we return to the first part of

the Beechum test to consider whether McMillan’s testimony was

admissible     against   Latrasse      under   Rule    404(b).     Under    the

circumstances presented in this case, there was sufficient evidence

to permit a rational jury to find that Latrasse committed an

offense involving fraud for the purpose of the Beechum analysis.



                                       42
     McMillan’s testimony also satisfies Rule 403, the second part

of the Beechum test.           Latrasse placed his intent at issue by

testifying that he believed the “roll program” was legitimate. The

evidence of the second McMillan transaction was probative rebuttal

evidence, particularly given the similarity between Latrasse’s role

in the extrinsic offense and his role in the charged offenses.

     Braugh described Latrasse to McMillan as the person in charge

of the proposed investments; later, Latrasse was presented to the

roll program investors as the expert in such transactions.             In both

schemes, when an investor expressed concern or doubt, Latrasse was

called   in    to    provide   reassurance.       McMillan’s   testimony   was

probative on the issue of Latrasse’s intent.              The district court

gave a careful limiting instruction to the jury, minimizing the

prejudicial impact of McMillan’s testimony. See 
Gonzalez, 76 F.3d at 1348
.       Balancing the probative value against the danger of

unfair prejudice in light of the limiting instruction, the district

court    did   not    abuse    its   discretion    in   admitting   McMillan’s

testimony against Latrasse over his Rule 404(b) objection.

     Moreover, even if McMillan’s testimony was inadmissible, the

error was, on this record, harmless. See United States v. Cornett,

195 F.3d 776
, 784 (5th Cir. 1999).               The erroneous admission of

McMillan’s      testimony      would   require     reversal    of   Latrasse’s

conviction only if the evidence had a “substantial impact” on the

verdict. See United States v. Dickey, 
102 F.3d 157
, 163 (5th Cir.

1996); United States v. El-Zoubi, 
993 F.2d 442
, 446 (5th Cir.

1993).     The trial record discloses ample evidence of Latrasse’s

guilt. The evidence shows that Latrasse repeatedly provided Hayes,

                                        43
Schwinger, and Blackwelder assurances as to the legitimacy and

profitability of the roll program long after he knew that the money

had not been invested as promised and was not producing the

promised   returns.      The   record    shows   that   Latrasse     gave   the

investors detailed and varying explanations, promises, and excuses

long after the investors’ money had already been disbursed to the

defendants, including Latrasse.           In the context of the ample

evidence of Latrasse’s criminal intent in the record, McMillan’s

testimony did not have a “substantial impact” on the jury verdict

so as to require reversal.

V.   THE CHALLENGE TO THE JURY INSTRUCTIONS

     All three defendants argue that the district court erred in

rejecting the defendants’ proposed jury instruction as to the

relationship   between    breach   of     fiduciary     duty   and   criminal

liability.

     John Shockey testified as the government’s expert witness on

international banking practices and financial fraud. During cross-

examination, Braugh’s attorney asked Shockey whether “people in the

phony money world” ever used “people in the legitimate money world”

to promote fraudulent investment schemes. In response, Shockey

testified:

     Well, while that could happen, we would hope that proper
     due diligence would be done. And if the parties involved
     hold themselves out as knowledgeable and experienced
     financial advisors, they have a fiduciary responsibility
     to their clients to conduct due diligence to protect the
     interests of their clients.




                                    44
Latrasse’s   attorney   later   asked   Shockey    several    questions   to

clarify that “due diligence” and “fiduciary responsibility” were

terms from civil, not criminal, law.

     Latrasse timely requested the trial court to include the

following language in the court’s jury instructions: “Neither a

failure to exercise due diligence nor a breach of fiduciary duty in

and of themselves rise to the level of specific intent to defraud.

Before you may find a Defendant guilty of fraud, you must find

beyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendant had the specific

intent to defraud.”     The other defendants joined in the request.

The district court did not give the instruction.

     A   district   court’s   refusal   to   provide   a    requested   jury

instruction is reviewed for abuse of discretion.           United States v.

Jobe, 
101 F.3d 1046
, 1059 (5th Cir. 1996).        Such a refusal requires

reversal only if the requested instruction (1) was a substantially

correct statement of the law, (2) was not substantially covered in

the charge as a whole, and (3) concerned an important point in the

trial such that the failure to instruct the jury on the issue

seriously impaired the defendant’s ability to present a given

defense. See United States v. Webster, 
162 F.3d 308
, 322 (5th Cir.

1998), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
120 S. Ct. 83
(1999); 
Jobe, 101 F.3d at 1059
.

     The district court instructed the jury, in relevant part, as

follows:

     The word “knowingly,” as that term has been used from
     time to time in these instructions, means that the act
     was done voluntarily and intentionally, not because of
     mistake or accident.


                                   45
     Good faith is a complete defense to the charges in the
     indictment, since good faith on the part of the defendant
     is inconsistent with intent to defraud, which is an
     essential part of the charges. The burden of proof is
     not on a defendant to prove his good faith, since a
     defendant has no burden to prove anything.            The
     government must establish beyond a reasonable doubt that
     the defendants acted with specific intent to defraud as
     charged in the indictment.

     One who expresses an opinion honestly held by him, or a
     belief honestly entertained by him, is not chargeable
     with fraudulent intent even though his opinion is
     erroneous or his belief is mistaken; and, similarly,
     evidence which establishes only that a person made a
     mistake in judgment or an error in management, or was
     careless, does not establish fraudulent intent.

     On the other hand, an honest belief on the part of the
     defendant that a particular business venture was sound
     and would ultimately succeed would not, in and of itself,
     constitute “good faith” as used in these instructions if,
     in carrying out that venture, the defendants knowingly
     made false or fraudulent representations to other with
     the intent to deceive them.

     The district court also instructed the jury on the level of

intent required for conviction on each of the offenses charged in

the indictment.   As to the conspiracy charge, the district court

instructed the jury as follows:

          For you to find a defendant guilty of conspiracy,
     you must be convinced that the government has
     proved . . . beyond a reasonable doubt . . . [t]hat the
     defendant knew the unlawful purpose of the agreement and
     joined in it willfully, that is, with the intent to
     further the unlawful purpose . . . .
          One may become a member of a conspiracy without
     knowing all the details of the unlawful scheme or the
     identities of all the other alleged conspirators. If a
     defendant understands the unlawful nature of the plan or
     scheme and knowingly and intentionally joins in that plan
     or scheme on one occasion, that is sufficient to convict
     him of conspiracy . . . .




                                  46
The district court also instructed the jury on the Pinkerton

doctrine of accomplice liability.11

       As to the interstate transportation of stolen property charge,

the district court instructed the jury that “to find the defendant

guilty of this crime, you must be convinced that the government has

proved . . . beyond a reasonable doubt [that] the defendant devised

a scheme to defraud one or more persons of at least $5,000.”           The

district court instructed the jury on the elements of mail fraud

and wire fraud, in relevant part, as follows:

            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 knowingly created a scheme
       to defraud, that is a scheme to obtain money, funds, or
       credits from another by means of false pretenses,
       representations and promises substantially as alleged in
       this Indictment;
            Second: That the defendant acted with the specific
       intent to commit fraud . . . .

The district court’s instructions to the jury, considered as a

whole, substantially covered the defendants’ requested instruction.

Defendants fully presented their theory of defense, their belief

that the roll program was a legitimate investment.         In his closing

argument, Latrasse’s attorney argued that a breach of fiduciary

duty   does   not   necessarily   give   rise   to   criminal   liability.

“[C]ounsel was not circumscribed in his argument to the jury” on

       11
             Under Pinkerton v. United States, 
328 U.S. 640
, 666
(1946), “[a] party to a continuing conspiracy may be responsible
for a substantive offense committed by a coconspirator pursuant to
and in furtherance of the conspiracy, even if that party does not
participate in the substantive offense or have any knowledge of
it.” United States v. Castillo, 
179 F.3d 321
, 324 n. 4 (5th Cir.
1999)(quoting United States v. Elwood, 
993 F.2d 1146
, 1151 (5th
Cir. 1993)) (alterations in original), cert. granted, ___ U.S. ___,
2000 WL 21143
(2000).

                                   47
the theory of defense.      United States v. Storm, 
36 F.3d 1289
, 1295

(5th Cir. 1994). The district court’s charge adequately instructed

the jury that they could not convict any defendant unless the

government proved, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant

had the specific intent to defraud.         See United States v. Giraldi,

86 F.3d 1368
, 1376 (5th Cir. 1996) (affirming district court’s

denial of a requested instruction on good faith because the charge

detailed specific intent and defined “willfully” and “knowingly”).

The defendants were not entitled to more specific instructions on

the distinctions between the civil terms “due diligence” and

“fiduciary responsibility” on the one hand, and criminal liability

on the other.

      The district court’s refusal to give the defendants’ requested

instruction was not error.

VI.   THE CHALLENGES TO THE SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

      All defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting some or all of their convictions.           In assessing these

challenges, “[t]his court must view the evidence in the light most

favorable to the jury verdict and affirm if a rational trier of

fact could find that the government proved all essential elements

beyond a reasonable doubt.”         Giraldi, 
86 F.3d 1368
, 1372 (5th Cir.

1996).      We consider “the countervailing evidence as well as the

evidence that supports the verdict.”          United States v. Brown, 
186 F.3d 661
, 664 (5th Cir. 1999)(quoting 
Giraldi, 86 F.3d at 1272
).

      “It    is   not   necessary    that   the   evidence   exclude   every

reasonable hypothesis of innocence or be wholly inconsistent with

every conclusion except that of guilt provided a reasonable trier

                                      48
of fact could find that the evidence establishes guilt beyond a

reasonable doubt.”      United States v. Bell, 
678 F.2d 547
, 549 (5th

Cir. Unit B 1982); see United States v. Soape, 
169 F.3d 257
, 264

(5th Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 2353
(1999).

The jury is free to choose among reasonable constructions of the

evidence.    See United States v. Ortega Reyna, 
148 F.3d 540
, 543

(5th Cir. 1998).    If, however, “the evidence, viewed in the light

most favorable to the government, gives equal or nearly equal

circumstantial support to a theory of guilt and a theory of

innocence, the conviction should be reversed.       United States v.

Pennington, 
20 F.3d 593
, 597 (5th Cir. 1994); see Ortega 
Reyna, 148 F.3d at 543
.     “When the evidence is essentially in balance, a

reasonable jury must necessarily entertain a reasonable doubt.”

Ortega 
Reyna, 148 F.3d at 543
.

     A.     Richards

     Richards argues that the evidence was insufficient to support

his conviction for inducing a person to travel in interstate

commerce in furtherance of a scheme to defraud and his conviction

for wire fraud.        He does not challenge the sufficiency of the

evidence supporting his conspiracy conviction.

            1.   Interstate Transportation

     18 U.S.C. § 2314 “requires proof of two elements to support a

conviction: (1) that the defendant devised a scheme intending to

defraud victim of money or property of a minimum value of $

5,000,and (2) that as a result of this scheme, a victim was induced

to travel in interstate commerce.”      United States v. Myerson, 18



                                   
49 F.3d 153
, 164 (2d Cir. 1994); see also United States v. Biggs, 
761 F.2d 184
, 187 (4th Cir. 1985).12

       Richards does not challenge the proof that he induced Bert

Hayes to travel from Arkansas to Texas to meet with Richards and

deliver a $250,000 check.         Richards’ argument is narrow.         He

asserts that the evidence was insufficient to permit a reasonable

jury to find that he induced Hayes to cross state lines with the

specific intent to defraud Hayes. See United States v. Snelling,

862 F.2d 150
(8th Cir. 1988) (holding that it is an essential

element of the interstate transportation offense under section 2314

that the defendant had the intent to defraud at the time the victim

crossed state lines as a result of the defendant’s inducement).

       The record, viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict,

contains evidence sufficient to support Richards’ conviction on

count 2.      Richards promoted the roll program to Hayes, promising

that    the   money   invested   would   be   safe   and   would   generate

substantial returns.     The roll program described to Hayes did not

exist.      John Shockey, the government’s expert on international

banking practices and financial fraud, testified that no such

investment existed in the legitimate financial world.

       12
              Section 2314 provides in relevant part:

       Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme
       or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or
       property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
       representations, or promises, . . . induces any person .
       . . to travel in, or be transported in interstate . . .
       commerce in the execution or concealment of a scheme or
       artifice to defraud that person . . . of money or
       property of $ 5,000 or more . . . [s]hall be fined under
       this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or
       both.

                                    50
     A reasonable jury could conclude that Richards knew the roll

program was not legitimate when he induced Hayes to travel to Texas

with his $250,000 check.    Richards pitched an investment program

that did not exist in the legitimate financial world. He continued

his participation in the scheme, soliciting additional investors

and later lulling them into continuing to believe that the program

existed and was working long after he knew that at least some of

the money had gone to the promoters rather than to the investors

and that they investors had not received any of the money promised

them. The evidence that Richards continued to solicit and reassure

investors after he knew that the program had failed to perform as

he had promised supports the inference that Richards knew the

program was a fraud from the outset, when he induced Hayes to

invest in the program and to cross state lines to deliver his

check.

          2.   Wire fraud

     “In order to establish wire fraud [under 18 U.S.C. § 1343],

the Government must prove that a defendant knowingly participated

in a scheme to defraud, that interstate wire communications were

used to further the scheme, and that the defendants intended that

some harm result from the fraud.”     United States v. Powers, 
168 F.3d 741
, 746 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
120 S. Ct. 360
(1999); see also United States v. St. Gelais, 
952 F.2d 90
, 95

(5th Cir. 1992).   “An intent to defraud for the purpose of personal

gain satisfies the ‘harm’ requirement of the wire fraud statute.”

Powers, 168 F.3d at 746
; St. 
Gelais, 952 F.2d at 95
.    A use of the

interstate wire facilities is in furtherance of a scheme to defraud

                                 51
if it is “incident to an essential part of the scheme.”       Schmuck v.

United States, 
489 U.S. 705
, 710–11 (1989) (citations omitted); see

also Powers, 
168 F.3d 741
, 747 (5th Cir. 1999).         A defendant need

not personally have made the communication on which the wire fraud

count is based, nor have directed that it be made.          “The test to

determine whether a defendant caused [interstate wire facilities]

to be used is whether the use was reasonably foreseeable.”        United

States v. Massey, 
827 F.2d 995
, 1002 (5th Cir. 1987)(interpreting

the mail fraud statute).13       For a defendant to be convicted of wire

fraud, it is sufficient that the defendant could reasonably have

foreseen the use of the wires; the interstate nature of the wire

communication need not have been reasonably foreseeable.             See

United States v. Lindemann, 
85 F.3d 1232
, 1241 (7th Cir. 1996);

United States v. Blackmon, 
839 F.2d 900
(2d Cir. 1988); cf. United

States v. Kelly, 
569 F.2d 928
, 934 (5th Cir. 1978)(holding that the

interstate transportation offense, 18 U.S.C. § 2314, included no

level of mens rea as to the interstate nexus because the interstate

nexus        requirement   was   merely   “the   linchpin   for   federal

jurisdiction”); United States v. Darby, 
37 F.3d 1059
, 1067 (4th

Cir. 1994)(holding the same under 18 U.S.C. § 875, which prohibits

the transmission of a threatening communication in interstate

commerce).

     Richards asserts that the use of the wires charged in count 3

of the indictment was not reasonably foreseeable.             This count

        13
            Because the language of the mail fraud and wire fraud
statutes are so similar, cases construing one are applicable to the
other. See United States v. Herron, 
825 F.2d 50
, 54 n. 5 (5th Cir.
1987); United States v. Bentz, 
21 F.3d 37
, 40 (3d Cir. 1994).

                                     52
charges the September 17, 1991 wire transfer of $7,500 from Texas

to Kurt Latrasse in California.    The record evidence supports the

conclusion that the wire transfer to Latrasse was a distribution of

proceeds from the roll program scheme.    Richards reasonably could

have foreseen that a distribution of the investors’ funds to the

defendant promoters might be made by use of wire transfers.     The

evidence was sufficient to support Richards’ conviction on count 3.

     B.   Braugh

     Braugh challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting

his conspiracy, interstate transportation, wire fraud, and mail

fraud convictions.   We uphold the convictions on all six counts.

          1.     Conspiracy

     Braugh was convicted of conspiracy to commit mail and wire

fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371.   “To establish a violation of [section

371], the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt (1) that

two or more people agreed to pursue an unlawful objective, (2) that

the defendant voluntarily agreed to join in the conspiracy, and (3)

that one or more members of the conspiracy committed an overt act

to further the objectives of the conspiracy.”      United States v.

Soape, 
169 F.3d 257
, 264 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___,

119 S. Ct. 2353
(1999).

     “To be guilty of conspiracy to commit mail [and wire] fraud,

[the defendant] must have had the requisite intent to commit mail

[and wire] fraud.”    United States v. Sneed, 
63 F.3d 381
, 385 (5th

Cir. 1995).    Neither “[m]ail fraud [nor wire fraud], however, has

[a] specific intent requirement regarding use of the mails [or wire

facilities].”   
Id. (quoting United
States v. Massey, 
827 F.2d 995
,

                                  53
1002 (5th Cir. 1987)).           “The test to determine whether a defendant

caused the mails [or interstate wire facilities] to be used is

whether the use was reasonably foreseeable. The defendant need not

intend to cause the mails [or wire facilities] to be used.”                          
Sneed, 63 F.3d at 385
   (quoting     
Massey, 827 F.2d at 1002
).          “The

government’s       burden,      therefore,      is    to    demonstrate         beyond    a

reasonable doubt that [the alleged conspirators] agreed to engage

in a scheme to defraud in which they contemplated that the [wire

facilities] would likely be used.”               
Sneed, 63 F.3d at 385
(quoting

Massey, 827 F.2d at 1002
).

       Braugh contends that the evidence was not sufficient to permit

a reasonable jury to conclude that he was a party to a conspiracy

to commit wire fraud and mail fraud.                     At most, he claims, the

evidence      shows      that   the   defendants     participated          in    a   failed

business together, not that they agreed to commit a crime.                           Braugh

points out that he was not present when either Schwinger or Hayes

signed contracts to invest in the roll program.

       The lack of direct evidence of agreement to commit a crime

does    not    require     reversal.       Each      element      of   a   section      371

conspiracy may be inferred from circumstantial evidence.                                See

United States v. Faulkner, 
17 F.3d 745
, 768 (5th Cir. 1994).

Concert of action can indicate an agreement.                   See United States v.

Lopez, 
979 F.2d 1024
, 1029 (5th Cir. 1992). The record contains

ample    circumstantial         evidence   to     support      Braugh’s         conspiracy

conviction.        Braugh and others induced Hayes, Schwinger, and

Blackwelder to part with their money and in lulling them into

continued belief that their money was safely invested.                           The bank

                                           54
records showed     that   nearly    all   Hayes’s   money   was   moved   from

Braugh’s Shearson Lehman account within one month of deposit and

transferred to accounts in the defendants’ names at different

banks, including Braugh’s accounts.          Most of the money Schwinger

invested was also     transferred from a Shearson Lehman account to

accounts held by Richards, Braugh, and Latrasse, within a short

time.

     The   evidence   showed   the    defendants’    coordinated    acts   to

implement their fraudulent scheme, including the use of the mails

and wire facilities to distribute the proceeds of the fraud and to

lull the investors as they grew anxious about their money.                 In

light of the other evidence in the record, the jury was free to

disbelieve Braugh’s self-serving testimony that he thought the

“roll program” was a legitimate investment.           See United States v.

Brown, 
186 F.3d 661
, 667 (5th Cir. 1999); United States v. Ruiz,

860 F.2d 615
, 619 (5th Cir. 1988).        The evidence was sufficient to

permit a reasonable jury to find that Braugh conspired to commit

wire and mail fraud.

           2.     Interstate Transportation

     Braugh argues that there is no evidence that he, rather than

Richards, induced Hayes to travel from Arkansas to Texas with the

$250,000 check.    The interstate transportation element “is merely

the linchpin for federal jurisdiction and bears no relationship, in

terms of culpability, to the underlying criminal acts which are the

objects of [section] 2314.”        United States v. Kelly, 
569 F.2d 928
,

934 (5th Cir. 1978) (quoting United States v. Ludwig, 
523 F.2d 705
,

707 (8th Cir. 1975)).      The government need not prove that Braugh

                                     55
knew that Hayes would travel in interstate commerce.              See 
Kelly, 569 F.2d at 934
.     Indeed, the government need not show that Braugh

directly caused Hayes to travel across state lines.               See 
id. at 934–35.
  It is enough if Braugh “was a motivating force in the

transportation.”     
Id. at 935
(quoting Thogmartin v. United States,

313 F.2d 589
(8th Cir. 1963)).

     In   Kelly,    this   court   upheld    a   section   2314   interstate

transportation     conviction   over    a   sufficiency    of   the   evidence

challenge.   The defendant had devised a scheme to sell shares in a

nonexistent mutual fund.           He sold shares in the fund to an

individual, who in turn transferred them to a third party. As part

of the transaction, the immediate and secondary purchasers met in

the Bahamas.     This travel provided the interstate transportation

element of the original seller’s section 2314 conviction.                  The

court held that the original seller was a “motivating force” in the

ultimate buyer’s interstate travel, despite the fact that it was

the original buyer who induced the ultimate buyer to make the trip.

     In this case, although Richards persuaded Hayes to cross state

lines to deliver his roll program check, Braugh’s involvement in

the roll program made him a “motivating force” in Hayes’s travel.

The evidence sufficed to permit a reasonable jury to find that

Braugh violated section 2314.

           3.      Wire Fraud

     Braugh was convicted of three counts of wire fraud under 18

U.S.C. § 1343.     His limited claim on appeal is that because there

was insufficient evidence to show that he knowingly participated in

a scheme to defraud, there was also insufficient evidence to

                                       56
support his wire fraud convictions.     The same record evidence that

led to the rejection of Braugh’s sufficiency of the evidence

challenge to his conspiracy conviction also leads this court to

reject Braugh’s challenge to the wire fraud convictions.

          4.     Mail Fraud

     Count 6 of the indictment charged Braugh with mail fraud under

18 U.S.C. § 1341, based on Braugh’s November 22, 1993 letter to

Blackwelder, promising to send a cashier’s check to repay the

$5,000 “loan.”   Braugh argues that there was insufficient evidence

to show that he participated in a scheme to defraud.    The argument

is without merit.

     C.   Latrasse

     Latrasse challenges his conviction on all counts on the basis

of insufficiency of the evidence.     Latrasse argues that because he

did not talk to any investors until after they had made their

investments, he did not induce anyone to part with their money.

Latrasse also asserts that he believed the roll program to be

legitimate.

          1.     Conspiracy

     The record presented sufficient evidence to permit a rational

jury to find Latrasse guilty of conspiracy to commit wire and mail

fraud. The fact that Latrasse did not speak to the investors until

after they had parted with their funds does not preclude his

membership in the conspiracy.   Ample evidence showed that Latrasse

worked to induce the participants to continue believing that the

roll program existed and that their money was safe.         Latrasse

lulled the investors when they protested the lack of the promised

                                 57
payments.   Latrasse’s   lulling   efforts   furthered   the   fraudulent

scheme.   Cf. United States v. Allen, 
76 F.3d 1348
, 1363 (5th Cir.

1996)(holding that actions designed to avoid detection after the

defendants had control over the money produced by the fraud were in

furtherance of the fraud under the mail fraud statute);         cf. also

United States v. Perry, 
152 F.3d 900
, 904 (8th Cir. 1998)(holding

that mailings designed to lull the victims into a false sense of

security and hide a fraudulent scheme are considered an overt act

in furtherance of a conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire

fraud), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 1088
(1999).

     The evidence was also sufficient for the jury to disbelieve

Latrasse’s self-serving testimony and conclude that Latrasse knew

the investment program was not legitimate.          Latrasse knew the

investors were not receiving the payments as promised when he

repeatedly assured them that their money was safely invested and

earning returns.    He knew that money received from two investors

had been quickly transferred from the initial deposits in the

Shearson Lehman investment accounts to the defendants, including

Latrasse.    There was ample circumstantial evidence showing that

Latrasse knew the roll program was fraudulent when he assured the

investors of its legitimacy. There was also clear evidence showing

that the use of the mails and wire facilities in furtherance of the

fraud was reasonably foreseeable.       Latrasse’s challenge to his

conviction on count 1 fails.

            2.   Interstate transportation

     A party to a conspiracy may be held criminally responsible for

a substantive offense committed by a coconspirator in furtherance

                                   58
of the conspiracy if the offense was reasonably foreseeable and was

committed during that party’s membership in the conspiracy.           See

United States v. Castillo, 
179 F.3d 321
, 324 n. 4 (5th Cir.

1999)(describing the Pinkerton doctrine), cert. granted, ___ U.S.

___, 
2000 WL 21143
(2000); United States v. Dean, 
59 F.3d 1479
,

1490 n. 20 (5th Cir. 1995)(holding that the offense must have been

reasonably   foreseeable   for   the   defendant   to   face   accomplice

liability under the Pinkerton doctrine); United States v. Basey,

816 F.2d 980
, 998–99 (5th Cir. 1987).       We have already found the

evidence sufficient to show that Latrasse conspired to commit mail

and wire fraud and that Richards and Braugh induced Hayes to travel

in interstate commerce with the intent to defraud.

     The question as to Latrasse’s conviction on count 2 is the

sufficiency of the evidence to show that Latrasse was a member of

the conspiracy when Richards induced Hayes to cross state lines on

September 5, 1991 to participate in the roll program.            Latrasse

points out that he did not begin communicating with the roll

program investors until early 1992. However, the record also shows

that Latrasse received a $7,500 wire transfer from Braugh’s Bank of

Corpus Christi account on September 11, 1991 and a $5,000 transfer

on September 17, 1991.     Brewer testified that Latrasse received

money from Hayes’s deposit, only days after Hayes wrote his check.

A reasonable jury could conclude that Latrasse was a member of the

conspiracy when Hayes crossed state lines to deliver the check.

There is no basis to reverse Latrasse’s conviction on count 2.




                                  59
            3.     Wire fraud

       Latrasse challenges his convictions on the three counts of

wire   fraud.      The   first   of    these       counts   involved    the   $7,500

September 11, 1991 wire transfer from Braugh’s Bank of Corpus

Christi account in Texas to Latrasse in California.                    The evidence

was sufficient to permit a rational jury to conclude that this

transfer was a distribution of proceeds from the fraudulent scheme,

in   furtherance    of   that    scheme      and    reasonably      foreseeable    to

Latrasse.

       The second count, Count 4, involved a fax from Latrasse in

California to Schwinger in Texas on June 19, 1992.                     In the fax,

Latrasse promised a distribution of funds to Schwinger and her

partners on or before June 30, 1992.                  The evidence was clearly

sufficient for a reasonable jury to find that Latrasse sent this

fax to further the fraudulent scheme by lulling Schwinger into

continuing to believe that her money was safely invested, as

promised.   See United States v. Allen, 
76 F.3d 1348
, 1363 (5th Cir.

1996)(holding that “actions taken to avoid detection, or to lull

the fraud victim into complacency” are in furtherance of the fraud

for the purpose of the wire fraud statute); see also United States

v. Maze, 
414 U.S. 395
, 402–03 (1974).               The evidence was sufficient

to support Latrasse’s conviction on count 4.

       The third wire fraud offense, alleged in count 5 of the

superseding indictment, involved a February 2, 1994 fax that

Latrasse sent from California to Blackwelder in Texas. In the fax,

Latrasse    promised     to   send    Blackwelder      a    check    returning    his

investment.      Again, the evidence was sufficient to support a

                                        60
finding that Latrasse sent this fax to lull Blackwelder into

continuing to believe the investment was legitimate.           There was

sufficient evidence to permit a rational jury to convict Latrasse

on count 5 of the indictment.

            4.   Mail fraud

     The mail fraud offense alleged in count 6 of the superseding

indictment arose from a November 22, 1993 letter Braugh sent to

Blackwelder by mail.        In the letter, Braugh promised to send

Blackwelder a cashier’s check repaying the July 8, 1993 $5,000

“loan.”

     The evidence show that in the weeks leading up to the loan,

Blackwelder had asked Braugh several times when he would receive

the promised payments from the roll program.          Braugh repeatedly

assured Blackwelder that he would receive the money soon, giving

such excuses as “it’s going to happen in a day, it’s going to

happen in two days, it’s going to happen in a week, there’s a

problem, a little problem, it’s going to be good in a day.”

Blackwelder continued to press.          As part of Braugh’s efforts to

lull Blackwelder into believing the roll program was legitimate,

Braugh explained that there were problems in Europe that needed

attention and asked for a $5,000 loan so that Braugh could travel

to Europe and “help expedite the transaction.”

     Blackwelder tried to recover his money from Braugh.              In a

telephone    conversation     on   November   19,   1993,   Braugh     told

Blackwelder that the unpaid loan “was the only mistake he made in

executing his little ordeal here.” Three days later, Braugh sent

Blackwelder the letter that forms the basis for count 6.             In the

                                    61
letter, Braugh promised to give Blackwelder a cashier’s check to

repay the loan within one week.

      After the November 22, 1993 letter, Blackwelder did not see or

speak to Braugh for approximately six months.                    However, Latrasse

continued to call Blackwelder to assure him that payment on his

roll program      investment   was    imminent.           On    February     2,   1994,

Latrasse sent Blackwelder a fax, telling Blackwelder that Latrasse

had designated a “disinterested third party to deliver the check

for the pay-out” on Blackwelder’s investment.                   The fax continued:

      It is regrettable that this project took longer than
      programmed and that this led to the hard feelings between
      you and Roger.    Hope that we can quickly resolve the
      remaining business between yourself and SAI [Associates]
      and Roger’s personal obligation to you.

      A reasonable jury could conclude that Braugh’s November 22,

1993 letter to Blackwelder was in furtherance of the scheme to

defraud. Braugh solicited the loan from Blackwelder in the context

of reassuring Blackwelder about the roll program.                      Braugh told

Blackwelder that the $5,000 loan would help him make a trip to

Europe to fix problems with the roll program and “expedite the

transaction.”     Three days before he sent Blackwelder the November

22,   1993   letter   promising      to    repay    the    $5,000,     Braugh     told

Blackwelder that failing to repay the $5,000 was “the only mistake

he made” in connection with the roll program.                    The November 22,

1993 letter was another instance of lulling, another assurance that

money promised would be paid soon.              In his February 2, 1994 fax to

Blackwelder, Latrasse, seeking to reassure Blackwelder about the

roll program generally, stated: “I hope that we can quickly resolve

the   remaining    business    between         yourself   and    SAI   and    Roger’s

                                          62
personal obligation to you.”          Braugh obtained the $5,000 “loan”

through his involvement in the roll program.              Latrasse was clearly

aware that Braugh had done so.         Braugh’s and Latrasse’s statements

and   written    communications       evidence     their     recognition     that

assurances about the $5,000 transaction were part of keeping

Blackwelder     satisfied   about     the   status   of     the   roll   program.

Braugh’s lulling letter “was incident to an essential part” of the

roll program scheme, which Latrasse could reasonably have foreseen.

      The evidence was sufficient to support Latrasse’s conviction

on count 6.

VII. THE RESTITUTION ORDER

      Richards and Braugh argue that the district court erred in

applying the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (MVRA) in setting

the amount of restitution.          They contend that the Ex Post Facto

Clause of the United States Constitution precludes the application

of the MVRA to conduct occurring before April 24, 1996, the

effective   date    of   the   Act.         The   conduct    underlying     their

convictions occurred well before then.            Defendants did not       object

to the orders of restitution at trial.                 Plain error applies.

United States v. Cihak, 
137 F.3d 252
, 264 n. 7 (5th Cir.), cert.

denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 118
(1998), and cert. denied, ___

U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 203
(1998).

      The MVRA amended the Victim Witness Protection Act (“VWPA”),

18 U.S.C. §§ 3663–3664.        Before the amendments to the VWPA, the

statute required a court to consider a defendant’s ability to pay

in setting the amount of a restitution order.                 As amended, the

statute provides that “the court shall order restitution to each

                                       63
victim in the full amount of each victim’s losses as determined by

the court and without consideration of the economic circumstances

of the defendant.” 18 U.S.C. § 3664(f)(1)(A). Richards and Braugh

contend that the MVRA, by forbidding the trial court to consider a

defendant’s ability to pay in setting the amount of restitution,

causes an increase in the punishment a defendant faces for a given

offense.   They argue that “retroactive” application of the Act to

conduct occurring before its effective date violates the Ex Post

Facto Clause.

     The      MVRA   provides   that      it    “shall,    to     the     extent

constitutionally      permissible,     be      effective   for         sentencing

proceedings in cases in which the defendant is convicted on or

after the date of enactment of this Act.”            See 18 U.S.C. § 2248

(statutory notes). If application of the MVRA to a given defendant

would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause, the district court must

apply the pre-amendment VWPA in determining restitution.

     A law violates the Ex Post Facto Clause if (1) it “appl[ies]

to   events     occurring   before     its     enactment,”       and     (2)    it

“disadvantage[s] the offender affected by it by altering the

definition of criminal conduct or increasing the punishment for his

crime.”    Lynce v. Mathis, 
519 U.S. 433
, 441 (1997)(quoting Weaver

v. Graham, 
450 U.S. 24
, 30 (1981)).            Although this court has not

yet addressed the issue, several federal circuit courts have

considered whether application of the MVRA to conduct occurring

before its enactment would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause.                   The

majority of these courts have held that retroactive application of

the MVRA would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause.                Compare United

                                     64
States v. Siegel, 
153 F.3d 1256
, 1260 (11th Cir. 1998)(holding that

it would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause to apply the MVRA to a

person whose criminal conduct occurred prior to its passage);

United States v. Edwards, 
162 F.3d 87
, 89–90 (3d Cir. 1998)(same);

United States v. Baggett, 
125 F.3d 1319
, 1321–1322 (9th Cir.

1997)(same); United States v. Thompson, 
113 F.3d 13
, 15 n. 1 (2d

Cir. 1997)(same);       United States v. Rezaq, 
134 F.3d 1121
, 1141 n.

13 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
119 S. Ct. 90
(1998);

and United States v. Williams, 
128 F.3d 1239
, 1241 (8th Cir.

1997)(holding that an order of restitution under the MVRA is

punishment under the Ex Post Facto Clause and suggesting that

retroactive application of the Act would violate that clause); with

United   States    v.     Nichols,   
169 F.3d 1255
,   1278–80   (10th

Cir.)(holding that retroactive application of the MVRA did not

violate the Ex Post Facto Clause), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 
120 S. Ct. 336
(1999); United States v. Newman, 
144 F.3d 531
, 537 (7th

Cir. 1998)(same).

     The circuits approving retroactive application of the MVRA,

the minority approach, have reasoned that restitution orders under

the Act are not punishment for the purpose of Ex Post Facto Clause

analysis.     This circuit’s precedent does not provide a basis to

adopt this reasoning.        This circuit has held that restitution

imposed under the VWPA is punishment for the purpose of the Ex Post

Facto Clause.     See United States v. Rose, 
153 F.3d 208
, 211 n. 1

(5th Cir. 1998); United States v. Corn, 
836 F.2d 889
, 895–96 (5th

Cir. 1988).     By requiring the court to order restitution in the

full amount of loss, without considering the defendant’s ability to

                                     65
pay, the MVRA increases the severity of the punishment a defendant

faces as compared to the pre-amendment VWRA.              See 
Siegel, 153 F.3d at 1260
; see also Lindsey v. Washington, 
301 U.S. 397
(1937).

Retroactive application of the MVRA to Richards and Braugh would

violate the Ex Post Facto Clause.

     However,      Braugh    and   Richards      have    not    shown    that    the

challenged   orders     of    restitution        resulted      from     retroactive

application of the MVRA.       Nothing in the record suggests that the

district   court    applied    the   MVRA   in    this   case.        During    each

defendant’s sentencing, the district court adopted the presentence

report, which included specific findings about that defendant’s

ability to pay.     Under the plain error standard of review, we have

held such adoption to be sufficient evidence that the district

court did consider a defendant’s financial resources in ordering

restitution under the pre-amendment VWPA.                See United States v.

Greer, 
137 F.3d 247
, 252 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___,

118 S. Ct. 2305
(1998).        We find no plain error in the district

court’s orders of restitution.

VIII.      CONCLUSION
     For the reasons assigned, the convictions and sentences of

defendants Richards, Braugh, and Latrasse are AFFIRMED.




                                      66

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