OPINION OF THE COURT
This case presents two questions: First, in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Salinas v. United States,
I.
In this putative class action brought in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the Plaintiffs allege that Defendant, John G. Berg (“Berg”), acting through corporate entities, misled them into purchasing homes which they could not afford by fraudulently asserting that their homes would be entitled to various tax abate-ments and mortgage credit certificates. 1 *535 The Plaintiffs further allege that the Defendant title insurance and lending companies 2 (“Appellants”) conspired with Berg to defraud the Plaintiffs and realize the maximum profits from the sales and related title insurance and financings. Specifically, they allege that the Appellants conspired to further Berg’s fraudulent enterprise by allowing Berg to assume many of their normal functions during settlements, recording false information on HUD--1 Settlement Statements, contacting prospective home buyers and encouraging them to make the purchases, communicating and negotiating with Berg rather than directly with the Plaintiffs, failing to make Truth-In-Lending Law disclosures, and granting mortgages for which they knew the Plaintiffs were unqualified. Accordingly, the Complaint asserts claims against the Appellants for participation in a RICO conspiracy with Berg in violation 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d).
The District Court first denied the Appellants’ motion to dismiss these claims by its Memorandum Opinion of April 10, 2000, rejecting the Appellants’ argument that the claims failed as a matter of law because the Appellants’ conduct was not alleged to violate section 1962(c).
3
The District Court looked to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Salinas v. United States,
Shortly thereafter, on April 26, 2000, the District Court requested briefing from the parties on the import of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Beck v. Prupis,
The District Court certified its decisions for immediate appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) on July 7, 2000 and we granted the Appellants’ Petition on September 26, 2000.
II.
18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.
18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) provides: “It shall be unlawful to conspire to violate [§ 1962(c) ].”
As the District Court observed, the starting point for our analysis is the Supreme Court’s decision in
Reves v. Ernst & Young,
This language in Antar was unnecessary to our holding, as our Opinion in this conspiracy withdrawal case concluded, in effect, that the defendant met either standard. 7 In addition, the majority of our sister Courts of Appeals presented with the same question have not applied the “operation or management” test set forth in Reves to a RICO conspiracy. They have instead concluded that “Reves addressed only the extent of conduct or participation necessary to violate a substantive provision of the statute; the holding in that case did not address the principles of conspiracy law undergirding § 1962(d).” 8
*537
The question then is whether the language of
Antar
is dispositive, requiring dismissal of the conspiracy counts or whether, as the District Court concluded, it was vitiated by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Salinas.
In
Salinas,
the defendant was charged with criminal violations of both section 1962(c) and section 1962(d) but convicted on the conspiracy charge alone. The Supreme Court resolved a conflict among the Courts of Appeals, finding — as had the majority of our sister Courts of Appeals — that a RICO conspiracy defendant need not himself commit or agree to commit predicate acts. In upholding the result in the
Salinas
case, the Supreme Court found that a violation of section 1962(c) was not a prerequisite to a violation of section 1962(d). Rather, the Court found that for purposes of conspiracy it “suffices that [defendant] adopt the goal of furthering or facilitating the criminal endeavor.”
Thus, as the District Court observed, Salinas makes “clear that § 1962(c) liability is not a prerequisite to § 1962(d) liability.” April 10, 2000 Mem. Op. at 7. The plain implication of the standard set forth in Salinas is that one who opts into or participates in a conspiracy is hable for the acts of his co-conspirators which violate section 1962(c) even if the defendant did not personally agree to do, or to conspire with respect to, any particular element. 11 The Appellants’ assertions *538 to the contrary notwithstanding, the Supreme Court did not confíne its discussion in Salinas to the element of predicate acts, in which event it might be “harmonized” with Antar’s discussion of requirements as to levels of participation; rather, the Court expressed its analysis in broad terms, defining an interpretation of conspiracy liability directly at odds with Defendants’ reading of Antar 12 We therefore hold that any reading of Antar suggesting a stricter standard of liability under section 1962(d) is inconsistent with the broad application of general conspiracy law set forth in Salinas. In accord with the general principles of criminal conspiracy law, a defendant may be held liable for conspirar cy to violate section 1962(c) if he knowingly agrees to facilitate a scheme which includes the operation or management of a RICO enterprise.
III.
As noted above,
Beck
involved a CEO whose employment was terminated when he discovered that certain of his company’s officers and directors were engaged in racketeering. In rejecting the theory that this injury — one “caused by an overt act that [was] not an act of racketeering or otherwise wrongful under RICO” — was “sufficient to give rise to a cause of action under § 1964(c) for a violation of § 1962(d)”, the Supreme Court expressly refuted the assertion that this interpretation rendered the conspiracy statute “mere surplus age.”
Furthermore, although the Appellants assert that
Beck
restricts
Salinas
to criminal cases, the only mention of
Salinas
appears at footnote 6, in which the Supreme Court recites that “[w]e have turned to the common law of criminal conspiracy to define what constitutes a violation of § 1962(d)”.
The holding of
Beck
is that an injury sufficient to support a civil action under section 1964(e) must arise out of wrongful conduct proscribed by the substantive provisions of section 1962 (i.e., in the context of a section 1962(c) violation, the injury must arise out of the predicate acts).
14
As the District Court correctly concluded, the Plaintiffs’ claims in this case stem from injury directly attributable to Berg’s racketeering; they are the direct victims of substantive RICO violations.
15
Thus the Appellants remain subject to liability under the reasoning enunciated by the Supreme Court in
Beck. See
July 7, 2000 Mem. Op. at 6 (noting that “civil conspiracy often is not considered a separate cause of action, but rather a ‘mechanism for subjecting co-conspirators to liability when one of their member committed a tortious act’ ”) (quoting
Beck,
IV.
For the reasons set forth above, we will affirm the Orders of the District Court.
Notes
. Plaintiffs allege that in furtherance of his scheme, Berg used misleading mailings and *535 radio and television advertisements. His fraudulent enterprise allegedly encompassed at least nine residential developments in Philadelphia from 1994 to 1997.
. The additional defendants are Columbia National, Inc.; First Town Mortgage Corporation; Countrywide Credit Industries, Inc.; Fidelity National Financial; and Fidelity National Title Insurance Company of Pennsylvania.
. The Plaintiffs do not allege that the Appellants committed any of the predicate acts or operated or managed, or agreed personally to operate or manage, the enterprise. Rather, the Plaintiffs only allege that the Appellants agreed with Berg to the violation of section 1962(c) and took certain overt acts in furtherance of that agreement. See April 10, 2000 Mem. Op. at 6.
. April 10, 2000 Mem. Op. at 7 (citing
Salinas,
. The decision in Beck was handed down that very day.
. Mr. Beck, the CEO of an insurance company, was terminated after discovering that certain of the company's directors and officers were engaged in racketeering. The Supreme Court rejected his theory that § 1964(c) provided a cause of action because his injury—
*536
termination of employment — was done in furtherance of the criminal conspiracy.
See
.
See
.
United States v. Quintanilla,
Reves is not a conspiracy decision; its holding focuses solely on what is required to violate § 1962(c) as a principle in the first degree. Reves says nothing about the scope of § 1962(d). The issue in Antar, however, was how to read § 1962(d), not how to read Reves- Reading § 1962(d) was a question to be answered by reading [it] against the background of general conspiracy jurisprudence, as modified, if at all, by the text of RICO.... Antar s dicta that limits the scope of conspiracy under RICO making RICO conspiracy jurisprudence more narrow than general conspiracy jurisprudence ... cannot be squared with basic techniques of statutory interpretation, much less with the purpose of RICO, which sought to broaden, not narrow the law, its plain text, its liberal construction clause, or well-established RICO jurisprudence and the developing post -Reves RICO conspiracy jurisprudence in other circuits.
.A conspirator must intend to further an endeavor which, if completed, would satisfy all of the elements of a substantive criminal offense, but it suffices that he adopt the goal of furthering or facilitating the criminal endeavor. He may do so in any number of ways short of agreeing to undertake all of the acts necessary for the crime's completion. One can be a conspirator by agreeing to facilitate only some of the acts leading to the substantive offense.
. See id. at 64 ("If conspirators have a plan which calls for some conspirators to perpetrate the crime and others to provide support, the supporters are as guilty as the perpetrators ... so long as they share a common purpose, conspirators are liable for the acts of their co-conspirators.").
. The Appellants’ principal response to the prospect of conspiracy liability in accordance with Salinas is that this definition of conspiracy would impose liability on those who "merely provide services”. This phrase masks the fact that liability will arise only from services which were purposefully and knowingly directed at facilitating a criminal pattern of racketeering activity. If the Appellants' repeated characterization of themselves as innocent service providers is not belied by the evidence, they will incur no liability under section 1962(d).
. The Appellants rely heavily on the Seventh Circuit’s recent decision in
Brouwer v. Raffensparger,
We also note that, at least in the -present context, application of the separate framework proposed in
Brouwer
would not alter the result. At bottom, the Court in
Brouwer
held that a conspirator must simply agree to "knowingly facilitate the activities of the operators or managers to whom subsection (c) applies.”
. Although the Appellants attempt to characterize Beck as circumscribing liability, the decision actually limits the class of plaintiffs whose injuries are cognizable; it does not in any way limit the class of defendants who are liable. Beck is simply a lack of standing case.
. This holding addressed a split in the Courts of Appeals as to whether an employee discharged for discovering, or blowing the whistle on, a RICO scheme could bring suit under section 1962(d). The Courts of Appeals had consistently held that there was no direct liability under section 1962(c) because the injury suffered was not a result of the predicate acts underlying the RICO violation, but were divided as to liability under section 1962(d).
.
See System Management Inc. v. Loiselle,
