This appeal pits casinos against racetracks in our circuit’s latest encounter with the Blagojevich corruption scandal in Illinois. In 2008, John Johnston, a horse racetrack executive, promised a $100,000 campaign contribution to then-Governor Rod Blagojevich in exchange for his signature on a bill to tax the largest casinos in Illinois for the direct benefit of the Illinois horseracing industry. After Blagojevich’s corruption came to light, the casinos sued the racetracks, alleging a conspiracy to-violate the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., and state-law claims for civil conspiracy and unjust enrichment. A jury awarded the casinos $25,940,000 in damages, which was trebled under RICO to $77,820,000. The racetracks argue on appeal that plaintiffs failed to prove a RICO conspiracy, that the district court erred by allowing plaintiffs to add the state-law claims, and that other asserted errors warrant a new trial.
We affirm the district court in all respects except one: the jury did not have legally sufficient evidence to support a verdict finding a conspiracy to engage in a “pattern” of racketeering activity, as required for liability on a RICO conspiracy theory. The casinos are still entitled to the $25,940,000 in damages on the state-law claims, but not to have those damages trebled under RICO.
We first review the factual and procedural background of this case. Second, we examine the sufficiency of the evidence of an illegal agreement and a pattern of racketeering activity. Third, we address the late amendment to the complaint to add the state-law claims. Finally, we examine several claims of trial error.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
After Illinois legalized riverboat casino gambling in the early 1990s, see 230 ILCS 10/3, the Illinois horseracing industry wanted to make up for the business it claimed to have lost as a result. It turned to state government for help. In 2006, Illinois enacted H.B. 1918, which we refer to as the 2006 Act. It required the four largest casinos in the state (casinos earning more than $2 million in adjusted gross receipts in 2004) to pay three percent of their daily adjusted gross receipts into a trust fund for the benefit of the horserac-ing industry. 2006 Ill. Legis. Serv. P.A. 94- *821 804 (H.B. 1918). The 2006 Act contained a “sunset” provision to expire at the end of May 2008.
This appeal focuses on the racetracks’ effort to renew the law in what we call the 2008 Act. The Johnston family owns several businesses, including shares in the racetrack defendants Maywood Park Trotting Association, Inc. and Balmoral Racing Club, Inc. John Johnston was an executive at the two defendant racetracks and one of the beneficiaries of the family trust that partially owned the tracks. In May 2007, Johnston hired Alonzo Monk as a lobbyist for the racetracks. Monk had been a longtime aide to Governor Rod Blagojevich and had served as Blagojevich’s chief of staff and campaign manager before starting his own lobbying and consulting business.
Monk worked to renew the 2006 Act’s horseracing subsidy that was to sunset. The casinos allege that this effort involved a quid pro quo agreement between Blago-jevich and Johnston to trade a $100,000 campaign contribution for the governor’s signature on the 2008 bill. The primary evidence at issue in this appeal is a series of meetings and phone calls among Johnston, Monk, and Blagojevich. The federal government recorded many of the calls and conversations during a broader criminal investigation of Blagojevich. We lay out the details below in our discussion of the sufficiency of evidence. In broad terms, in April 2008, Johnston met with Blagojevich at the governor’s campaign fundraising office. The two discussed the expiration of the 2006 Act. At the end of the meeting Blagojevich brought up Johnston’s support for his campaign. There is no evidence that Johnston agreed to make a contribution at that time, and no payment was made then. That meeting did not succeed in securing the 2006 Act’s renewal. At the end of May 2008, the 2006 Act expired.
In August or September 2008, Johnston agreed to make a $100,000 contribution to Blagojevich’s campaign, but he did not pay immediately. A number of conversations followed involving Monk, Johnston, Governor Blagojevich, and his brother Rob.
On November 20, 2008, the legislature passed the 2008 Act, which was presented to Governor Blagojevich on November 24 for his signature. The governor did not sign immediately, but there followed a number of conversations among Blagoje-vich, Monk, and Johnston. As we explain below, on December 3, 2008, according to Monk’s testimony, the quid pro quo agreement was pinned down and Johnston committed to make the contribution in return for the governor’s signature.
Blagojevich was arrested on December 9. On December 15, while on pretrial release and before he was impeached and removed from office,- he signed the 2008 Act. Johnston never made the promised contribution. Monk pled guilty to conspiring with Blagojevich to solicit a bribe from Johnston. Johnston received immunity from prosecution and testified before a grand jury and at Blagojevich’s criminal trials.
The casinos subject to the tax sued Johnston, Balmoral, Maywood, and other defendants no longer involved in the case (for convenience we refer to defendant-appellants as “the racetracks”). The casinos alleged that the racetracks had violated 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) by conspiring to violate RICO. In 2013, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the racetracks, concluding that the casinos had not offered evidence sufficient to show that the racetracks’ alleged bribes proximately caused the casinos’ losses pursuant to the 2006 and 2008 tax legislation.
Empress Casino Joliet Corp. v. Blagojevich,
No. 09 C 3585,
We affirmed summary judgment regarding the 2006 Act but reversed regarding the 2008 Act.
Empress Casino Joliet Corp. v. Johnston,
After we reversed summary judgment on the 2008 Act, the district court allowed plaintiffs to amend their complaint, over defendants’ objections, to add state-law claims for civil conspiracy and unjust enrichment. The court also denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment focusing on the RICO pattern requirement. 2
The jury found for the casinos on all counts and awarded them $25,940,000 in damages, which was trebled under RICO’s civil damages provision to $77,820,000. See 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). This appeal followed, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the RICO count and the district court’s grant of leave to amend the complaint, and arguing that various alleged errors warrant a new trial. 3
II. Sufficiency of the Evidence
The racetracks appeal the district court’s denial of their Rule 50(b) renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law. They argue that the evidence presented at trial cannot support several aspects of the verdict that they engaged in a racketeering conspiracy in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). We review
de novo
the denial of a Rule 50(b) motion.
Lawson v. Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
The statute defines RICO conspiracy by reference to a direct RICO violation. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). A direct RICO violation under § 1962(c) requires “(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.”
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
A RICO conspiracy requires proof “that (1) the defendants] agreed to maintain an interest in or control of an enterprise or to participate in the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity, and (2) the defendants] further agreed that someone would commit at least two predicate acts to accomplish these goals.”
Empress Casino III,
The racetracks argue that a rational jury could not have found from the evidence presented at trial: (1) that they agreed to facilitate a RICO enterprise; (2) that the racetracks made a quid pro quo agreement with Blagojevich; (3) that the racetracks agreed that someone would commit two RICO predicate acts; or (4) that the agreed-on scheme would form a pattern of racketeering activity. We address these challenges in turn. The first issue was waived by failure to raise it in the Rule 50 motion. The evidence supports a finding of a qitid pro quo agreement that extended to at least two predicate acts of racketeering, but that evidence does not support a finding of an agreement to engage in a pattern of racketeering activity.
A. Facilitating a RICO Enterprise
The racetracks did not properly preserve for appeal their argument that the evidence did not support a finding that the racetracks agreed to facilitate the Blagojevich racketeering enterprise. To preserve a sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge for appeal in a civil case, a party must move for judgment as a matter of law under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a) and renew that motion under Rule 50(b) after the jury’s verdict.
Ortiz v. Jordan,
To avoid the Rule 50 problem, the racetracks suggest that we review instead whether the district court erred in denying their supplemental motion for summary judgment. But denial of summary judgment is an interlocutory matter subsumed by a final judgment. Once a jury has rendered its verdict, “the full record developed in court supersedes the record existing at the time of the summary-judgment motion.”
Ortiz,
The racetracks argue that, even after the jury has rendered its verdict, we should review the denial of summary judgment as to purely legal issues. See
Lawson,
B. Quid Pro Quo Agreement
We proceed to the racetracks’ properly preserved challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s findings of a quid pro quo agreement encompassing at least two predicate acts as part of a pattern of racketeering activity.
The racetracks’ liability in this case depends on evidence sufficient to enable a jury to find that there was a
quid pro quo
agreement. An agreement forms the core of liability for RICO conspiracy under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). See
Salinas,
The parties presented sufficient evidence at trial to allow a rational jury to find a quid pro quo agreement between Johnston and Blagojevich. First, ample evidence shows that Monk and Blagojevich communicated to Johnston that Blagoje-vich would trade his signature on the 2008 Act for a campaign contribution. Second, the jury could conclude that Johnston agreed to this arrangement on behalf of the racetracks.
The casinos argue that Blagojevich first delivered the message that he was looking for a bribe in an April 2008 meeting. In that meeting, Johnston met with Blagoje-vich at the governor’s campaign fundrais-ing office. Among other things, the two discussed the expiration of the 2006 Act. At the end of the meeting, Blagojevich told Johnston that he appreciated Johnston’s past support and hoped he would continue his support in the .future. Johnston testified that he did not respond to the comment because he and his father had already decided not to contribute to Blagojevich in 2008. Johnston agreed that he understood that “what Mr. Blagojevich was looking for in that meeting was a contribution.”
We need not decide whether the evidence of that meeting alone provided sufficient evidence to infer an illegal agreement. Soliciting a campaign contribution, even from a constituent pushing an agenda, is legal and “in a very real sense is unavoidable so long as election campaigns are financed by private contributions or expenditures.”
McCormick v. United States,
Later events provide more evidence from which the jury could have found that Johnston agreed to exchange the campaign contribution for the governor’s signature sometime in August or September 2008. Sometime in that period, Blagojevich called Johnston. Johnston testified that he received the only phone call he ever received from Blagojevich in August, and he denied that Blagojevich asked him for a $100,000 contribution in that call. But Monk testified that in September 2008, Governor Blagojevich called Johnston and secured a commitment for a $100,000 campaign contribution. A Blagojevich campaign list on September 12, 2008 indicated that Blagojevich expected a $100,000 contribution from Johnston in October. And Monk testified that he had “five or six” conversations with Johnston about the “timing” of Johnston paying the contribution during October and November 2008.
Monk’s several calls with Robert and Rod Blagojevich in November 2008 reassuring them that Johnston’s contribution would be forthcoming provide additional evidence that Johnston had agreed to make the contribution in an unlawful exchange for Blagojevich’s support for the 2008 Act. For example, on November 13, 2008, Robert Blagojevich called Monk, who reported that Johnston had said to him to “tell the big guy I’m good for it.” Monk reported telling Johnston to “get it to us as soon as you can.” Monk also tied the contribution to the 2008 Act, at least obliquely, in the conversation with Robert Blagojevich. He said that he wanted to talk to the governor about the timing of the contribution “because there’s absolutely no connection between the two but there is a legislative issue down here that ... I don’t want to get in the way ... of....” Monk testified that the “legislative issue” was the 2008 Act. Still, this evidence was from Monk, not from Johnston.
But when we add in the evidence of events after the legislature passed the 2008 Act, the jury had a solid basis for inferring that Johnston had agreed to a quid pro quo scheme. On November 24, 2008, the same day the bill was presented to Blagojevich for his signature, Johnston responded to an email chain reporting that the governor would likely sign the 2008 Act before mid-December. He wrote to his internal lobbying team: “This is getting goofier. We are going to have to put a stronger bit in his mouth!?!” Although Johnston testified to the contrary, the jury was entitled to disbelieve him and infer that the “stronger bit” referred to the campaign contribution.
Further evidence of an illegal quid pro quo agreement came from the events of December 3, 2008, when Monk and Rod Blagojevich met at a Blagojevich campaign office. Government tapes captured Monk and Blagojevich discussing what to tell Johnston about the timing of the bill signing relative to Johnston’s contribution. Monk said: “I wanna go to him without crossing the line and say, give us the f***in’ money. ... give us the money and one has nothing to do with the other ... but give us the f***in’ money. Because they’re losin’, they’re losing 9,000 a day.... For every day it’s not signed.” Monk planned to tell Johnston that he was concerned that Johnston would “get skittish” about the campaign contribution if Blagojevich signed the bill. Monk agreed in his testimony that he understood from that conversation that “Governor Blagoje-vich was exchanging the signing of the [2008 Act] quickly for that campaign contribution.” Monk then called Johnston and arranged to go see him immediately.
*826 Monk initially met with Johnston and Johnston’s father, Billy. The three discussed the 2008 Act and the racetracks’ eagerness for Blagojevieh to sign it. There was no talk of a campaign contribution at that point. After the meeting, Monk asked Johnston to walk him out to the parking lot. On their way out, Monk told Johnston that the governor “has a concern that if he signs the racing legislation, you might not be forthcoming with a contribution.” Johnston’s account of this encounter shows him as innocent. He testified that he did not react kindly to the suggestion. He said he “flew off the handle a little bit,” and told Monk that “your suggestion of a contribution at this time is wrong and inappropriate,” due to the apparent tie between the contribution and signing the bill.
But Monk’s very different account of Johnston’s reaction provides ample evidence from which a jury could find that Johnston had agreed to the quid pro quo arrangement. Later that day, Monk called Blagojevieh to report the result of the meeting with Johnston. Monk reported that Johnston said he would make the contribution within two weeks. Monk also relayed that Johnston had offered to put off part of the contribution into the next quarter in response to Monk voicing concerns that Johnston might get “skittish” if Blagojevieh signed the bill. Monk declined that offer. At trial, Monk testified that what he had told Blagojevieh about the conversation with Johnston was accurate. Monk’s testimony about the December 3 conversation with Johnston gave the jury sufficient evidence that Blagojevieh had proposed a quid pro quo exchange and that Johnston had agreed to it.
The racetracks point out correctly that Monk and Johnston both testified that there was no “agreement.” For example, Monk testified about the December 3 meeting: “I thought he was going to make a donation. I don’t think we had an agreement.” But it is easy to read this disclaimer as a merely semantic argument by experienced operatives who know that an agreement is a crime. Monk agreed in his testimony that the “message” he intended to deliver on December 3 was “that once the hundred thousand dollar contribution was made, the 2008 Racing Act would be signed.” That is a quid pro quo agreement. Johnston also confirmed in his testimony that he knew “Mr. Blagojevieh was looking for a contribution before the bill would be signed.” And Monk testified that Johnston had reassured him that he would make the contribution.
Monk and Johnston did not have to use the word “agreement” in their testimony to allow a jury to find a
quid pro quo
agreement. The jury was entitled to put two and two together. See
United States v. Blagojevich,
*827 C. Two Predicate Acts
The racetracks next challenge the sufficiency of evidence that they agreed to the commission of two RICO predicate acts. Liability for a § 1962(c) RICO conspiracy requires an agreement that someone conduct an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), (d);
Salinas v. United States,
A rational jury could find that Johnston committed or agreed to the commission of several RICO predicate acts. Johnston’s agreement to bribe Blagojevich would count. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 1951(b)(2), 1961(1); 720 ILCS 5/33-1; see
Evans v. United States,
“Honest services” wire fraud is also a RICO predicate. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343, 1346, 1961(1)(B). Each use of the wires, such as a cellphone call, to arrange the bribe would count, as long as Johnston agreed to it or it was foreseeable in carrying out his agreement. See
Skilling v. United States,
Each use of the wires can be an individual count of wire fraud and an individual RICO predicate for the purpose of establishing two predicate acts. See, e.g.,
Midwest Grinding Co. v. Spitz,
D. Pattern of Racketeering Activity
The casinos run into trouble, however, in showing that the parties agreed to predicate acts forming a pattern of racketeering activity. RICO provides that a “pattern of racketeering activity requires at least two acts of racketeering activity,” 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5), but ease law shows that two predicate acts are not always sufficient.
H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
Continuity is “centrally a temporal concept.”
Id.
at 242,
The Supreme Court has divided continuity into two analytical types: “ ‘Continuity’ is both a closed- and open-ended concept, referring either to a closed period of repeated conduct, or to past conduct that by its nature projects into the future with a threat of repetition.”
H.J. Inc.,
1. Closed-End Continuity
The racetracks’ scheme does not exhibit closed-end continuity, and the casinos admit that they did not rely at trial on a closed-end argument. Closed-end continuity is satisfied by “a series of related predicates extending over a substantial period of time.”
H.J. Inc.,
2. Open-Ended Continuity
The casinos rely instead on a theory of open-ended continuity and the
“threat
of continuity.”
H.J. Inc.,
The evidence here does not demonstrate a threat of repetition. This case is about one
quid, pro quo
agreement to exchange one campaign contribution for Blagoje-vich’s signature on one bill. Once Blagoje-vich signed the bill, the scheme was over. After we affirmed summary judgment on claims regarding the 2006 Act, the evidence of bribery in this trial related only to the 2008 Act. See
Empress Casino III,
We have repeatedly held that schemes fail to satisfy open-ended continuity where they have a “natural ending point.” In
Roger Whitmore’s Automotive Services, Inc. v. Lake County,
we affirmed summary judgment for defendants on RICO claims alleging that the Lake County Sheriff had cut a towing company’s assigned towing area because the owner had supported the sheriff's opponent in an election.
We have applied this logic in other cases involving similarly limited criminal schemes. See, e.g.,
Gamboa v. Velez,
In
Roeder v. Alpha Industries, Inc.,
the First Circuit applied this reasoning to affirm a district court’s Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of a similar RICO claim involving a one-time bribe.
In contrast, schemes exhibiting open-ended continuity are not “inherently terminable.” See
Heinrich v. Waiting Angels Adoption Services, Inc.,
Applying the reasoning from these cases to the Blagojevich-Monk-Johnston bribery agreement in 2008, a reasonable jury could not have found a scheme with open-ended continuity. No specific threat of repetition existed. Once the bill was signed, the scheme was at its natural end point, at least on the evidence presented at trial. The tax payments under the 2008 Act, of course, continued for a limited time after the bill’s signing, but that is not enough to support open-ended continuity. See
Vicom, Inc.,
The casinos argue that they satisfied the continuity requirement based on the possibility that the racetracks would again employ bribery when the 2008 Act was scheduled to sunset in 2011. In denying the racetracks’ Rule 50(b) motion, the district court adopted this theory, noting that the jury could have found a threat of repetition from evidence that “the 2008 Act included a sunset provision, and Johnston and other members of the horse racing industry considered what would happen when the Act expired in 2011 ... along with the testimony that Blagojevich regularly traded state action for campaign contributions.... ” Such suspicions are understandable but are too close to speculative to support a finding of continuity. There would be a gubernatorial election in 2010. No one in 2008 could know who would be governor in 2011, much less whether illegal tactics would be needed or even welcome in securing reenactment in 2011.
The evidence regarding the racetracks’ consideration of the 2008 Act’s sunset provision does not show any plans to use illegal means to secure renewal. The racetracks rely on a September 2008 email exchange. The email exchange shows the racetracks planning to have the 2008 Act run for a longer period so that they could get a replacement act passed before the 2008 Act expired. Those emails are about the minutiae of drafting the 2008 Act, not a criminal scheme for getting a future bill enacted. The email chain opened with this message: “Draft of extension bill amendment. We will need to change page 5, line 10 to reflect repeal effective 3 years after effective date of law.” The reply email said: “We should just make it the end of 2011 so we don’t have the possibility of it falling through the cracks. Similar to what happened when [the 2006 Act] expired on May 24th and we were still trying to get the extension passed at the end of May. In 2011 the veto session could end up being later than three years after the effective date. Then again, that would be a nice problem to have to worry about.” That message was forwarded with a message reading: “See Jack’s comments below, with which I agree. Jack are you having [redacted] review the findings to add anything in finding 5? [When we hear] from you we will have Andrea redraft to fix this expiration problem.” Jack replied: “Yes. I need to give him a call to discuss.”
In their closing argument, the casinos told the jury that these emails showed that “this pattern is going to happen again, and it would have but for” the government arresting and prosecuting Blagojevich. We are not convinced this is a reasonable reading of this email chain. The emails reflect the racetracks’ awareness that new legislation would be needed in the future *831 and their intent to pursue it. But that is all the emails show. There is no indication that the racetracks considered how to get the later act through the legislature or how to get the governor to sign it, let alone that they were planning or even contemplating another bribe to an as-yet-unknowable governor .or legislators.
The evidence certainly shows that Bla-gojevich’s regular way of conducting business involved bribery. And Johnston knew about the criminal investigation into Blago-jevich by late 2007. But Blagojevich is not the defendant here. The question is the scope of what Johnston and the racetracks agreed to. Monk and Johnston both testified that Johnston was not aware of the various other Blagojevich schemes mentioned at trial. Johnston and the racetracks’ liability for RICO conspiracy cannot be based on “mere association with an enterprise.”
Brouwer v. Raffensperger, Hughes & Co.,
This case contrasts with
H.J. Inc.,
for example, where plaintiffs alleged a six-year scheme where defendants “with some frequency” bribed public utility commissioners to approve unreasonable rates.
It is, of course, possible that the racetracks might have tried to use bribery again in 2011, if Blagojevich had not been removed from office and had run successfully for a third term. That speculative possibility is not enough to support the jury finding of a conspiracy to engage in a RICO pattern of racketeering activity. Rather, the evidence shows a scheme with a “natural ending point.” Blagojevich signed the 2008 Act into law. There is insufficient evidence to support a jury finding of a pattern of racketeering activity, so we reverse the district court’s denial of the racetracks’ Rule 50(b) renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law on this issue.
III. Leave to Amend
We next address the racetracks’ claim that the district court abused its discretion by allowing the casinos to add state-law claims for civil conspiracy and unjust enrichment to their complaint after we affirmed summary judgment regarding the 2006 Act but let claims regarding the 2008 Act move forward. Leave to amend pleadings is left to the sound discretion of the district court.
McCoy v. Iberdrola Renewables, Inc.,
We find no abuse of discretion here. The amendment was a prompt response to the altered landscape of the case after we affirmed summary judgment on the 2006 Act claims but allowed the 2008 Act claims to go forward. We'issued our ruling on summary judgment on August 15, 2014, in which we signaled there might well be a problem in showing a pattern based on only the 2008 Act.
Empress Casino III,
We regularly affirm district courts’ decisions to deny unduly delayed requests to amend pleadings. See, e.g.,
McCoy,
With a late motion for leave to amend, the “underlying concern is the prejudice to the defendant rather than simple passage of time.”
McCoy,
The racetracks argue that the additional claims unfairly prejudiced, them because they were unable to conduct sufficient discovery on a potential unclean hands defense to the unjust enrichment claim. We are not persuaded. The district court enforced many of the racetracks’ document and deposition requests related to the casinos’ lobbying on the 2006 and 2008 Acts. For example, the court enforced the racetracks’ motion to compel production of documents “evincing any communications” between the casinos and legislators or the governor “relating to the Racing Acts.” The court also required production of “documents sufficient to show all contributions made to Mr. Blagojevich or to members of or candidates for the Illinois General Assembly between 2005 and 2008.” The court *833 also enforced a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice regarding all “communications between [Plaintiff] and any member of the Illinois General Assembly regarding ... the 2006 and 2008 Racing Acts.... ” Although the court did not enforce every discovery request .the racetracks made, they still conducted substantial discovery into the casinos’ political activities. The racetracks have not demonstrated unfair prejudice here such that we could conclude that the district court abused its discretion in granting leave to amend. 6
IV. Claims of Trial Error
The racetracks also appeal the denial of their Rule 59 motion for a new trial based on several alleged trial errors. We review the denial of a Rule 59 motion for a new trial for an abuse of discretion.
Davis v. Wisconsin Dep’t of Corrections,
A. Evidence of 2002-2007 Campaign Contributions
The racetracks argue that the district court erred by admitting evidence of their contributions to Rod Blagojevich from 2002 to 2007 and also erred by not instructing the jury that those contributions were legal. We review the district court’s decision to admit the evidence of the 2002 to 2007 contributions to Blagojevich for abuse of discretion.
Geitz v. Lindsey,
The district court’s ruling on the racetracks’ motion in limine admitted evidence of the 2002 to 2007 contributions because the evidence “tends to support the notion that [Johnston] would have agreed to make a significant contribution in 2008 and that Blagojevich and his agents would have sought a significant contribution from Johnston at that time.” The evidence at trial confirmed the district court’s theory of relevance. In one recorded telephone conversation, Monk reported that Johnston said he was not worried about the promised contribution because he had “a history of giving these amounts.... ” The history of contributions also gave context to Blagojevich’s statement at the April 2008 meeting that he appreciated Johnston’s past support and would appreciate more.
The district court did not abuse its discretion by declining to exclude the contributions as “propensity” evidence under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b)(1). It is hard to see why the casinos would be using
*834
the racetracks’ past
legal
contributions to Blagojevich to prove the racetracks’ “propensity to behave in a certain way,” as Rule 404(b)(1) prohibits. See
United States v. Gomez,
The evidence of the contributions also was not so unfairly prejudicial in linking the racetracks to Blagojevich that the evidence should have been kept out under Federal Rule of Evidence 403. Plenty of other evidence linked Johnston and Blagojevich, some of it in much more damning fashion. And evidence of the earlier contributions was not entirely harmful to the racetracks: on the stand, Johnston himself brought up his contribution to Blagojevich from 2002 and 2006 in response to questions about media reports in 2008 that an unnamed racetrack executive had promised Blagojevich a $100,000 contribution for the governor’s signature on legislation. The district court also gave a proper limiting instruction, which would have mitigated any risk of unfair prejudice. Absent indications to the contrary, we presume that juries heed limiting instructions.
United States v. Mallett,
We also disagree with the racetracks that the district court erred by refusing to instruct the jury that the 2002 to 2007 contributions were legal and not bribes. The judge actually instructed the jury: ‘You have heard evidence that the defendants made campaign contributions to Friends of Blagojevich in the years 2002 through 2007. It is common for citizens and corporations to donate to political campaigns, and there is nothing illegal about this practice.” This instruction was a little weaker than the instruction the court was originally planning to give, which would have said that the 2002 to 2007 contributions “were legal campaign contributions.” We are confident, though, that the jury would not have been confused about the legality of the 2002 to 2007 contributions. The district court did not abuse its discretion in wording the instruction as it did. 7
B. The Fifth Amendment and the Adverse Inference Instruction
The government’s letter offering Johnston immunity from prosecution in exchange for information on Blagojevich said: “Your attorney has represented that such information may tend to incriminate you.” The judge instructed the jury: “In a civil case like this one, you may infer that Mr. Johnston had information that would have incriminated him. You are not required to draw this inference.” The racetracks argue that the district court erred by giving this instruction. They point out that Johnston testified before the grand jury and in the Blagojevich trials, albeit subject to immunity, and assert that he answered every question in this case. 8
*835
“We review a district court’s choice of jury instruction de novo when the underlying assignment of error implicates a question of law ...; however, general attacks on jury instructions are reviewed for an abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Macedo,
The district court did not abuse its discretion in giving the adverse inference instruction, which was legally accurate and permissible. The Fifth Amendment allows adverse inference instructions against parties in civil actions.
Baxter v. Palmigiano,
Reversing course and testifying after invoking the Fifth Amendment privilege does not remove the relevance of a witness’s prior silence as one piece of evidence a jury may consider. See
Harris v. City of Chicago,
*836 C. Exclusion of Victim, Impact Letter
The racetracks offered as evidence a victim impact letter the U.S. government sent to Johnston in connection with Blagojevich’s criminal case. The form letter told Johnston that the “judge is interested in knowing the impact this crime has had on you and your family,” and solicited a Victim Impact Statement.
The district court excluded the letter because the “only conceivable purpose” for admitting it would have been to show that the government viewed Johnston as a victim. We find no abuse of discretion. The district court was correct that the letter, if offered to prove that Johnston was a victim rather than a participant, is hearsay, and it had minimal probative value. Using the letter to prove that Johnston was a victim would be using an out-of-court statement for the truth of the matter asserted.
The fact that the government included Johnston, perhaps just to ensure it did not leave anyone out, in its efforts to comply with the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3771, also offers no evidence of probative value. Imagine an effort to get around the hearsay problem by calling a prosecutor to testify in the civil case. The racetracks’ lawyers would have asked her whether she believed Johnston was a victim or a participant. Her answer would have been an opinion, and it would have been based on a set of information different from what the civil jury would hear. Any fair response to an opinion in either direction would quickly devolve into an argumentative examination that would almost certainly generate more heat than light. This would not have been a useful contribution to the trial. In contrast, Johnston’s immunity letter was both specific to Johnston and relevant to his actions, as discussed above.
D. Damages Argument
Finally, the racetracks tried to argue in closing that Illinois’s “60-day” rule mitigated the damages caused by their planned bribery of Blagojevieh. Under the Illinois Constitution, Art. 4 § 9(b), a bill passed by the General Assembly that the governor does not veto becomes law 60 days after it is presented to the governor. The racetracks wanted to argue that they should be liable, at most, for the taxes levied in the days between the day Blago-jevich signed the 2008 Act and the day the bill would have become law anyway under the 60-day rule. The judge sustained the casinos’ objection because the argument was contrary to the jury instructions. ■
The district judge did not abuse his discretion in not allowing a closing argument contrary to the jury instructions. “Broad discretion is reposed in the trial court to control closing arguments and its discretion in this area will not be overturned absent a showing of clear abuse.”
United States v. Sands,
The district court was on solid ground here because .the racetracks never mentioned using the 60-day rule in relation to *837 damages in the argument surrounding the 60-day rule’s admissibility. Before trial, the racetracks argued that the 60-day rule was relevant to whether the casinos had carried their burden of showing proximate cause. When that argument did not work, they argued it was relevant to their lack of motivation to bribe Blagojevieh. They never mentioned damages. The district court’s ruling on the motions in limine admitted evidence of the 60-day rule on a “motive theory of relevance,” and on the condition that the racetracks make an offer of proof that they were aware of the rule at the relevant time.
The racetracks now deny that their appellate argument is a challenge to the district court’s jury instruction on proximate cause. They assert that their argument related only to damages stemming from Blagojevich’s signature of the 2008 Act, not whether the racetracks’ actions caused Blagojevieh to sign the 2008 Act. The racetracks argue that the casinos’ injury is easily divisible so that the damages argument does not contradict our previous rejection of the 60-day rule as a bar to proving proximate causation, which the district court cited in its ruling on the motions
in limine.
See
Empress Casino III,
Perhaps these might have been good arguments to make to the district court before trial or while hammering out jury instructions. As the district court pointed out, though, “at no point did defendants suggest that even if the Court accepted the plaintiffs’ proposed proximate cause definition as to liability, a different instruction was warranted for damages.” The district court did not abuse its discretion in disallowing at closing a surprise use of evidence that contradicted the jury instructions.
To sum up, we affirm the decisions and judgment of the district court in all respects except one: the jury did not have a legally sufficient basis in the evidence to allow them to find that there was a pattern of racketeering activity. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of the Rule 59 motion for a new trial, REVERSE the district court’s denial of the racetracks’ Rule 50(b) renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law as to the RICO count, and REMAND this case for entry of a modified judgment consistent with this opinion. The plaintiff casinos remain entitled to the $25,940,000 in damages for the state-law claims, but they are not entitled to have those damages trebled under RICO.
Notes
. See also
Empress Casino Joliet Corp. v. Blagojevich,
. The district judge took a prudent approach by denying summary judgment and allowing the pattern issue to go to the jury. The issue is fairly debatable, and because Judge Kennelly handled the issue so deftly, we need not order a new trial.
. The jury also awarded a total of $4 million in punitive damages against Johnston personally, $1 million for each of four plaintiffs. Johnston dismissed his appeal voluntarily after settling with plaintiffs.
. In any event, we are satisfied that there was no independent merit to the racetracks’ facilitation argument, based on the evidence of the quid pro quo agreement to bribe Blagojevich.
. To whatever extent the racetracks seek a new trial on the theory that the manifest weight of the evidence was that there was no
quid pro quo
agreement, we reject that request for the reasons stated in this section. See
Whitehead v. Bond,
. The racetracks argue on appeal that leave to amend unfairly prejudiced them because it ■ introduced the possibility of punitive damages into the case. The racetracks did not make this argument to the district court, so it is forfeited. Even if it were not forfeited, it is unconvincing. First, this was a civil RICO case in which the defendants already faced the threat of treble damages under 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). Also, the racetracks cite cases affirming denials of leave to amend to add punitive damage claims. See
Knapp v. Whitaker,
. To the extent the casinos also complain about evidence of Johnston’s contributions to former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar, the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the racetracks had opened the door to that evidence by attempting to minimize their contributions to Blagojevich.
. In this trial, Johnston first testified that he had told the government what he knew before receiving immunity from prosecution. As *835 Johnston's lawyers admitted the next morning, that was incorrect. First Johnston received his immunity letter. Only then did he answer the government's questions. Johnston's lawyers agreed that he would correct this misstatement in his later testimony. Yet on redirect examination by the casinos' lawyer, Johnston still stuck to his false story from the previous day. Finally, after still more questioning, Johnston admitted that he had signed the immunity letter before answering questions. This sequence could not have reflected well on Johnston's credibility with the jury.
. The racetracks point to the Ninth Circuit's statement in
Doe ex rel. Rudy-Glanzer v. Glan-zer,
