The plaintiffs appeal from the entry of summary judgment for the defendants' on claims asserting violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq. (2000) (“RICO”). We affirm.
I.
The plaintiffs commenced this suit as a putative class action, purporting to represent, among others, providers of medical products and services covered under policies issued or administered by the defendants, as well as the subscribers to those policies. ‘The defendants include a number of insurance companies and similar businesses, such as claims administrators, who allegedly joined together with a number of others in a RICO “enterprise.” 18 U.S.C. *4 § 1961(4). The enterprise has allegedly engaged in efforts to “acquire control” of, “capitalize,” and “convert” the assets of Triple-S, Inc., a now-defunct insurance company which, the plaintiffs say, had restricted the use of those assets to charitable purposes. 1
The complaint asserted twelve numbered counts, each setting out a separate RICO violation in the form of a different scheme. In relevant part, these alleged schemes have enriched the enterprise by overcharging subscribers and underpaying providers for medical products and services that were covered under insurance policies issued by the defendant insurers. To carry out these schemes, the defendants have allegedly made a number of mailings in violation of the mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and transmissions in violation of the wire fraud statute, id. § 1343. One of the schemes has also allegedly relied on extortion in violation of the Hobbs Act. Id. § 1951(b)(2). The plaintiffs characterize these crimes as the “pattern of racketeering activity” underlying their RICO claims. See id. § 1961(1).
In response to the complaint, the defendants moved to dismiss, arguing, inter alia, that the plaintiffs had failed to plead mail and wire fraud with the requisite particularity. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). The plaintiffs rejoined that, insofar as their claims relied on transmissions from the defendants to the plaintiffs, they had sufficiently pleaded them. In support of this point, the plaintiffs submitted an appendix explaining that “through their communications with the plaintiffs [sic] classes the defendants failed to disclose, misrepresented and covered up” the alleged overcharges and underpayments. The plaintiffs stated that the communications thus “misled them to believe that” they were paying the correct charge or receiving the correct payment. ■
The district court denied the motion to dismiss in part, ruling that the plaintiffs had adequately pleaded “communications that fraudulently induced Plaintiff subscribers and providers to accept lower reimbursements and higher charges.” 2 Nevertheless, the district court ordered the plaintiffs to amend part of their complaint to identify certain of those communications in accordance with Rule 9(b). The plaintiffs then filed an amended complaint asserting only those four counts that had survived the motion to dismiss. Three of these counts alleged that the defendants made mailings and wire transmittals “[f]or the purpose of executing and concealing” various “artifices,” consisting of claim practices that have resulted in the overpayment of deductibles by subscribers or the underpayment of providers for their services to the subscribers. 3 The fourth *5 count alleged that the defendants violated the Hobbs Act by threatening the providers with economic injury in the form of exclusion from the network of insurance plans administered by the defendants, audits of the providers’ accounts, withholding of payments, and denial of patient referrals.
Subsequent to the amended complaint, the district court approved the parties’ joint proposed scheduling order. The order provided that fact discovery would consist of two phases of roughly four months each, with the first to conclude before the plaintiffs filed their motion for class certification, and the second to commence after briefing on that motion had been completed. The order noted, however, that
class certification discovery will in part overlap with merits discovery in that plaintiffs may request general or “template” documents in addition to documents referring to the named plaintiffs and take [Fed.R.Civ.P.] 30(b)(6) depositions of the [defendant] corporations to ascertain their claims procedures ... and similar factual issues without discovery as to damages and similar merit-intensive discovery.
While the order provided a deadline for the filing of dispositive motions, it also noted that the “[p]arties may file disposi-tive motions earlier, if they understand that the issue(s) are ripe.”
After several months of discovery, including the depositions of the named plaintiffs and Triple S (by way of several Rule 30(b)(6) designates) and the exchange of voluminous written discovery, the plaintiffs moved for class certification. The defendants opposed the motion on the grounds that, inter alia, the plaintiffs lacked standing to maintain the claims set forth in the amended complaint which, apart from being fatal to class certification in its own right, also meant that the plaintiffs could not satisfy the “typicality” and “adequacy” requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 23. The defendants argued that, according to the plaintiffs’ own deposition testimony, they had suffered no harm from the alleged racketeering activity, viz., the violations of the mail and wire fraud statutes and the Hobbs Act. In particular, the defendants noted that the plaintiffs could not say how the communications they received from the defendants concealed their alleged schemes.
In response, the district court issued an order directing the plaintiffs to show cause within ten working days why summary judgment should not enter against them based on the deficiencies in proof identified by the defendants.- While the court acknowledged “that an objection to class certification is not the proper vehicle through which to attack standing,” it reasoned that the “Defendants’ arguments and the corresponding facts are so compelling that ... it would be a poor use of judicial resources to proceed with class certification ... without first establishing whether this case is even remotely viable.”
Before reaching this conclusion, the court analyzed the plaintiffs’ deposition testimony in detail, finding that it did not support their allegations of mail and wire fraud or extortion. The district court determined, for example, that none of the physicians serving as plaintiffs was “able to identify a single incident of fraudulent concealment” in the correspondence they received from the defendants. Yet the court recognized the possibility that the plaintiffs’ “testimony as to whether or not their injuries were incurred through the transmission of ‘fraudulent’ communications or the infliction of ‘extortion’ relies on ... incomplete understanding of various terms of art.” Accordingly, the show cause order would “give Plaintiffs a last *6 opportunity to present a crystal clear picture of how their allegations are factually supported.” The court also preemptively rejected any argument that the incomplete state of discovery would prevent the plaintiffs from doing so, because their claims relied “on fraudulent communications that were delivered to [them] and on acts of extortion that were inflicted directly upon them.”
Despite this admonishment, the plaintiffs rejoined that the district court would “create reversible error” by entering summary judgment before they had the opportunity to complete the discovery allowed by the scheduling order. The plaintiffs did not, however, ask for an extension of time to respond to the order to show cause. Instead, they submitted nearly three hundred pages of evidentiary materials, including the declarations of twelve plaintiffs and two expert witnesses and a number of exhibits. Each of the plaintiffs attested to receiving documents from at least one of the defendants, but stated:
It is impossible for a layman or a Plaintiff or class representative to articulate the specifics of the seheme/fraud solely from the documents received from the Defendants because of the concealed nature of their fraud. Therefore, I rely on the experts hired for this case to explain how the Defendant’s [sic ] practices form a RICO scheme.
Each of the plaintiffs claimed that, for the same reason, he or she could not “articulate the specifies [sic] damages suffered from the scheme/fraud” and relied on the experts to explain that as well. 4
The plaintiffs’ experts, for their part, verified that “[a] lay person to the insurance industry cannot understand the underlying ... seheme/fraud because of its complexity, and the substantial time and resources which would have to be expended to understand the scheme.” While the experts provided some examples of each of the defendants’ claim practices cited in the amended complaint, their explanations of how those “schemes” were fraudulent were decidedly less comprehensive., The experts attested that each individual provider ,
has no way of knowing of the specifics of the scheme due to the overwhelming amount [sic ] of documents the ... pro-yider receives from Triple-S on a monthly basis and because important information regarding the scheme is omitted from those documents. The time and resources needed to go through the documents would be overwhelming and a substantial hardship. Additionally, the documents received by the ... provider, while not fraudulent on their face, are used in furtherance of the scheme for Triple-S to obtain an economic benefit that it does not rightfully deserve.
The experts gave a similar account of the alleged scheme to defraud the subscribers, explaining that they “would have no way of knowing of [it] since part of this is reflected in the documents received by the [providers] of which the subscriber does not get copies.” 5
Based on these materials, the district court determined that the plaintiffs were advancing a new theory of mail and wire fraud: while they had asserted in response to the motion to dismiss that the transmissions from the defendants to the plaintiffs “misled them to believe that” they were paying the correct charge or receiving the correct payment, they were now arguing *7 that those transmissions were “not fraudulent on their face.” But the district court concluded that, under either theory, the plaintiffs could not survive summary judgment.
Treating the plaintiffs’ new theory—that the defendants’ transmissions violated the mail and wire fraud statutes because they failed to disclose the entirety of their schemes—as a proposed amendment to their complaint, the district court ruled that the plaintiffs had not alleged the underlying schemes with the particularity demanded by Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). The court further ruled that the plaintiffs were not entitled to further discovery before satisfying this pleading requirement. The district court also agreed with the defendants that the plaintiffs’ original theory of mail and wire fraud and their claim of extortion had been fatally undermined by their deposition testimony. Accordingly, the court entered summary judgment for the defendants.
II.
The plaintiffs challenge the district court’s decision on procedural and substantive grounds. First, they argue that the district court erred in entering summary judgment sua sponte before the plaintiffs had an opportunity to engage in discovery as to the merits of their claims. . Second, the plaintiffs argue that even the limited evidence they were able to marshal at the time the court ordered summary judgment was sufficient to demonstrate genuine issues
of
material fact. We review these questions de novo.
See, e.g., John G. Alden, Inc. of Mass. v. John G. Alden Ins. Agency of Fla., Inc.,
A.
A district court can enter summary judgment even though none of the parties asks for it.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The plaintiffs argue that the district court’s course of action satisfied neither of these criteria, insisting that a district court cannot order summary judgment sua sponte unless and until discovery has been completed. But we have never adopted such a hard and fast rule. To the contrary, we have determined that a district court properly considered summary judgment on its own initiative once “discovery had proceeded to the point where the parties understood the material facts” at issue.
Penobscot Indian Nation v. Key Bank of Me.,
These decisions comport with the rule that sua sponte summary judgment must wait until “the parties have enjoyed a reasonable opportunity”—not necessarily the full duration of the discovery period—“to glean the material facts.”
6
Cf. Aetna Cas. Sur. Co. v. P & B Autobody,
Our conclusion follows largely from the fact that the district court decided to consider sua sponte summary judgment against the plaintiffs based on what they said at their own depositions. After reviewing that testimony in detail, the court made the preliminary determination that the defendants’ interactions with the plaintiffs did not amount to violations of the mail or wire fraud statutes or the Hobbs Act. The court then stuck by that determination after reviewing the plaintiffs’ testimony a second time during its evaluation of their response to the show cause order. In this context, discovery obtained from the defendants could not have altered the outcome which, in the district court’s view, was ordained by the plaintiffs’ own deposition testimony.
7
See Morales v. A.C. Orssleff's EFTF,
Furthermore, by the time the plaintiffs were called upon to answer the show cause order, the discovery period had been running for nearly twelve months) during 'this time, the plaintiffs had taken the depositions of a number of Triple S employees pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6) and procured voluminous documents and other written discovery responses. This discovery enabled the parties to file comprehensive briefing, together with numerous eviden-tiary materials, on the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification. To support the motion, in fact, the plaintiffs asserted that the Rule 30(b)(6) “depositions established myriad examples of the uniformity and standardization of Defendants’ practices that apply across the classes, namely in terms of pricing, standard communications, and automated systems that cover up the frauds the Plaintiffs allege or make them nearly impossible to detect.” By even the plaintiffs’ contemporaneous account, then, dis
*9
covery wás “sufficiently advanced that the parties ha[d] enjoyed a reasonable opportunity to glean the material facts” under consideration by the district court,
Berko-vitz,
The plaintiffs, however, maintain that they were not given the chance required by the first
Berkovitz
prong—nor, for that matter, the notice required by the second prong—because the district court entered summary judgment sua sponte before they could take the “merits discovery” permitted by the scheduling order. Seizing on our statement in
Berkovitz
that “[w]hen a court charts a procedural route, lawyers and litigants are entitled to rely on it,”
Moreover, the scheduling order specifically contemplated both that “class certification discovery [would] in part overlap with merits discovery” and that the parties could file dispositive motions prior to the deadline for doing so, “if they understood] that the issue(s) [were] ripe.” So the plaintiffs could not reasonably have believed, based on the order, that they would under no circumstances have to oppose summary judgment prior to the completion of merits discovery. And, when the district court gave them ten working days to do so by issuing the order to show cause, the plaintiffs did not seek an extension of time to respond. Under these circumstances, the plaintiffs had “appropriate notice and a chance to present [their] evidence on the essential elements of the claim[s]” that the district court found insufficient in entering summary judgment.
8
Berkovitz,
B.
The plaintiffs also question the substance of the summary judgment order. Summary judgment can enter “against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the ultimate burden of proof at trial.”
Celotex,
Mail or wire fraud requires proof of (1) a scheme to defraud based on false pretenses; (2) the defendant’s knowing and willing participation in the scheme with the specific intent to defraud; and (3) the use of interstate mail or wire commu
*10
nications in furtherance of the scheme.
See, e.g., United States v. Cheal,
Taking the plaintiffs at their word that they did not shift theories in response to the show cause order,
9
we nevertheless believe that the district court properly entered summary judgment on the mail and wire fraud-based claims. A defendant’s failure to disclose information, without more, cannot make out a violation of the mail and wire fraud statutes.
See, e.g., Am. United Life Ins. Co. v. Martinez,
We considered the issue in
Bonilla v. Volvo Car Corp.,
*11 For present purposes, however, we need not attempt to delineate the “shadowy area” where a failure to disclose, accompanied by the necessary intent, might transmogrify into a “scheme to defraud” under the mail and wire fraud statutes. Though the district court rejected the plaintiffs’ fraud-by-nondisclosure theory on the ground that they had not alleged it with particularity, the plaintiffs make no effort to explain how their theory even states a claim predicated on mail and wire fraud. They do not say whether the defendants have a duty to disclose “the actual manner in which the payment requests were processed” or, if so, what the source of that duty is; they do not say whether the defendants “fail[ed] to disclose” or “concealed]” this information with the intent to deceive the plaintiffs. Instead, they proceed on the assumption that nondisclosure alone can support mail and wire fraud claims. As we have discussed, that is not the law, in this circuit or elsewhere.
To excuse this shortcoming, the plaintiffs argue that they cannot explain how the defendants’ actions amount to a “scheme to defraud” without further discovery, because “[t]he schematics of the fraudulent conduct are, as in many RICO enterprises, within the control of the Defendants.” We agree with the district court that this argument is “paradigmatically antithetical to Rule 9(b)’s requirement.” As we have held, “the rule does not permit a complainant to file suit first, and subsequently to search for a cause of action.”
Hayduk v. Lanna,
The plaintiffs did, as they emphasize, submit declarations from two expert witnesses “to explain how the Defendant’s [sic ] practices form a RICO scheme,” but, as the district court concluded, those declarations fall short of that objective. Each declaration provides examples of the defendants’ various claim practices challenged by the amended complaint, followed by the conclusion that the defendants send the plaintiffs documents “in furtherance of the scheme for Triple-S to obtain an economic benefit that it does not rightfully deserve.” 11 The declarations do not explain, however, how any of these “schemes” equates with a “scheme to defraud” under the mail and wire fraud statutes—other than the statement that each individual plaintiff “would have no way of knowing of [the] scheme” and, again, sim- *12 pie nondisclosure does not mail or wire fraud make.
As the district court reasoned, the expert declarations (or even certain snippets of the plaintiffs’ own deposition testimony) might have buttressed a theory that the defendants’ claim practices violated the express or implied terms of their contracts with the plaintiffs, but “breach of contract itself [does not] constitute a scheme to defraud. Rather, the scheme must be intended to
deceive
another, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, promises, or other deceptive conduct.”
McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc. v. Heritage Travel, Inc.,
The plaintiffs also challenge the district court’s entry of summary judgment on their claim premised on extortion in violation of the Hobbs Act. The Act outlaws extortion or attempted extortion affecting interstate commerce,
see, e.g., United States v. Capozzi,
By way of recapitulation, the plaintiffs complained of extortion in the form of threats of exclusion from the network of insurance plans administered by the defendants, audits of the providers’ accounts with the defendants, withholding of pay- *13 merits, and denial of patient referrals. But the district court, in deciding to issue the order to show cause, noted that most of the plaintiffs could not testify to receiving such threats and, even among those who could, none could claim that they rose to the level of “wrongful economic fear” prohibited by the Hobbs Act. When the plaintiffs’ response failed to convince the district court otherwise, it entered summary judgment against them on the extortion-based claim.
On appeal, the plaintiffs do not rely on the testimony of those among them who recounted having actually been threatened.
13
We need not consider, then, whether the district court was correct in classifying those threats as mere “lawful hard bargaining” rather than “wrongful economic fear” actionable as extortion.
George Lussier Enters.,
To succeed on their RICO claim based on the alleged Hobbs Act violations, however, the plaintiffs must show not only that extortion occurred, but that “they suffered a direct injury as a result of [it].”
George Lussier Enters.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the defendants.
So ordered.
Notes
. With the exception of MC-21 Corporation, the defendant entities are subsidiaries of defendant Triple-S Management Corporation ("Triple S”), a holding company created when Triple-S, Inc. was reorganized. MC-21, for its part, is under contract with the defendant insurers to serve as the exclusive manager of the prescription drug benefits they provide; the plaintiffs allege that the other members of the enterprise "have a proprietary economic interest in MC-21, either directly, or indirectly."
. The district court granted the motion as to other counts of the complaint on a number of grounds, including failure to plead them with particularity. The plaintiffs have not appealed from any aspect of the district court’s ruling on the motion to dismiss.
.The amended complaint also alleged, as additional predicate acts underlying one of these counts, violations of the anti-kickback provisions of the Medicare Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b(b) (Supp.2006). The plaintiffs, however, did not rely on this theory at summary judgment, and have not done so here. Accordingly, we do not consider it.
. The quoted language appears in identical form in each of the plaintiffs' declarations, including the typographical errors.
. The substantive portions of each expert’s declaration were identical to those of the other's.
. Leyva v. On The Beach, Inc.,
. As we discuss in Part B, infra, the district court was correct that the plaintiffs’ deposition testimony failed to support their claims.
. Again,
Leyva
does not help the plaintiffs: there, we found the notice inadequate for sua sponte summary judgment in favor of individual defendants where the district court had previously announced that it would consider summary judgment against the corporate defendants only.
. We therefore do not consider what the district court treated as the plaintiffs' "original'' theory—that the communications from the defendants were facially “misleading.”
. We expressed a similar view of the federal bank fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (2000), in
United States v. Moran,
. The plaintiffs argue that, if the district court had properly drawn all justifiable inferences from the evidence in their favor as required by the summary judgment standard,
see Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
. The plaintiffs question the district court’s ruling that they had not pleaded fraud with particularity after it had ruled to the contrary in denying, in part, the defendants’ motion to dismiss. But, absent "a particularly egregious abuse of discretion,” district courts are free to reconsider their interlocutory orders.
Harlow v. Children’s Hosp.,
. Nor do the plaintiffs make more than the most ephemeral reference to their claim that the defendants threatened economic harm through means besides audits, such as exclusion from the network or loss of patient referrals. Accordingly, while some of the plaintiffs stated in their declarations that they were forced to make unfavorable deals with the defendants to avoid these consequences, we do not consider any claim based on that aspect of the defendants' conduct.
See, e.g., Casillas-Diaz
v.
Palau,
. The plaintiffs do refer to the testimony of one of the physicians among them, arguing that the district court erroneously concluded that she was never threatened with an audit when she had stated in her deposition only that she had never been audited. In fact, the plaintiffs argue, this physician had been threatened with an audit, as she attested in her subsequent declaration. The declaration does not, however, state that the physician ever gave up any rights as a result of the claimed threat and therefore does not cure the deficiency in the plaintiffs’ extortion-based claim.
