Frank Baumgardner appeals from Ms convictions for makmg a material false statement to the Social Security Admimstration (SSA) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001 and for fraudulently concealing Ms receipt of workers’ compensation benefits in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 408(a)(4). He argues that the section 1001 conviction cannot stand because under the recent Supreme Court decision,
United States v. Gaudin,
— U.S. -,
I. BACKGROUND
After sustaining serious injuries from a work-related fall, Baumgardner applied for disability benefits from the SSA in 1978. The SSA demed Baumgardner’s application both imtially and on appeal, but an Admimstrative Law Judge reversed the demal and awarded him benefits m August 1979. Until 1994, Baumgardner and his dependents received monthly disability payments, rangmg from $600 to $1,393, totaling over $200,000.
In Ms benefits application, Baumgardner agreed to notify the SSA if Ms medical condition improved, if he returned to work, or if he applied for or received benefits under any workers’ compensation law. The occurrence of any one Of these events could have affected Ms eligibility status. The SSA informed Baumgardner many times of Ms duty to report changes in Ms work status and the possible consequences of failing to do so.
Despite these instructions, Baumgardner did not report that from September 1981 until February 1985, he received nearly $76,-342 m workers’ compensation benefits and $26,835 in medical payments for injuries that resulted from a trucMng accident. Although *1307 the SSA knew that Baumgardner had worked as a truck driver for nearly five months in 1979, it was not informed that he received workers’ compensation benefits or the medical payments.
In addition, Baumgardner failed to report that he began to repair, clean, and sell new and used Rainbow vacuums out of his home. Baumgardner did not report any self-employment income to the SSA until it contacted him in April 1992. Even when confronted by the SSA, Baumgardner maintained that his work with vacuums was merely a hobby, from which he did not derive any income. Specifically, in response to questions on a SSA work activity report completed by Baumgardner in 1992, he stated that there were no months from January 1979 until April 1992 in which he had made more than $75 or worked more than fifteen hours.
Baumgardner’s responses on the work activity report sparked a two-year investigation of Baumgardner’s self-employment, which culminated in the underlying two-count indictment. The government charged Baumgardner with making a false statement to a government agency in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001 for reporting that there were no months in which he earned more than $75.00 or worked more than fifteen hours. He was also charged with concealing the receipt of workers’ compensation benefits with the fraudulent intent to secure payment in a greater amount than was due him in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 408(a)(4). After a jury trial, he was convicted of both offenses. He was sentenced to twenty-three months imprisonment and three years supervised release. He was also ordered to pay over $200,000 in restitution.
At the time of Baumgardner’s trial, the Eighth Circuit — and every other circuit but the Ninth — considered materiality under section 1001 to be a question of law for the district court.
United States v. Johnson,
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Baumgardner challenges both the district court’s failure to instruct the jury *1308 on the element of materiality and the sufficiency of the evidence to support either conviction.
A. Gaudin Error
As the Supreme Court instructed in
United States v. Gaudin,
the district court’s decision to remove the issue of materiality from the jury violated Baumgardner’s Sixth Amendment right to have a jury determine guilt beyond a reasonable doubt of every element of the crime charged.
See Gaudin,
— U.S. at -,
Because the district court’s failure to submit the question of materiality to the jury deviates from the Supreme Court’s decision in
Gaudin,
the first prong of the
Olano
standard is met. We next consider whether this error is “plain.” In this case, the question turns on whether we look to the law at the time of the trial or on appeal. At trial, the district court’s decision was in accord with our circuit’s firmly established law— materiality in a section 1001 case was a matter of law decided by the court.
Johnson,
The Olano Court explicitly acknowledged, but left unanswered, this precise situation:
We need not consider the special case where the error was unclear at the time of trial but becomes clear on appeal because the applicable law has been clarified. At a minimum, the Court of Appeals cannot correct an error pursuant to Rule 52(b) unless the error is clear under current law.
Olano,
With the benefit of the varied analyses provided by our sister circuits, we now hold that the plain error prong of the
Olano
standard should be determined in accordance with the law at the time of appeal. This
approach is
consistent with the practical considerations of judicial proceedings. Given this court’s holding in
Johnson,
an objection at trial would have been pointless. The more stringent prerequisites imposed by Rule 52(b), as compared to Rule 52(a), are designed to encourage a defendant to raise objections during the proceeding where they might be corrected, rather than strategically to withhold an objection as a basis of appeal.
*1309
See Viola,
Having determined that the district court’s decision constituted plain error, we must now address whether it affected Baumgardner’s substantial rights. Generally this prong of the Rule 52(b) analysis requires a showing that the error was prejudicial — that it affects ed the outcome of the trial.
Olano,
Our circuit has recently held that
Gaudin
errors are trial errors subject to harmless error review.
Raether,
Although we acknowledge that an affeeting-substantial-rights inquiry is governed by a harmless error analysis,
see Raether,
Finally, we will exercise our authority to correct the error only if it “seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
Olano,
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Baumgardner also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support both offenses. Because we have vacated the section 1001 conviction, we need only address his arguments with respect to his conviction under 42 U.S.C. § 408(a)(4).
In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we determine whether any rational juror could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt, considering the evidence taken in a light most favorable to the verdict.
United States v. Broyles,
(1) the defendant had knowledge of an event affecting his right to receive or to continue to receive payments;
*1311 (2) the defendant knowingly concealed or failed to disclose this event to the Social Security Administration; and
(3) the defendant concealed or failed to disclose this event with the intent to fraudulently secure payment of Social Security disability benefits in an amount greater than was due him or when no payment to him was authorized.
United States v. Phillips,
Baumgardner argues that the government did not prove that he failed to report his receipt of the workers’ compensation benefits to the SSA. At trial, he testified that he had reported the benefits to the SSA in a phone conversation with SSA claims representative, Carolyn Hoard, during which they discussed his employment as a truck driver. (Trial Tr. at 357). Hoard, however, testified that Baumgardner did not mention the workers’ compensation benefits and that, if he had, she would have so indicated on her report of contact with him. (Trial Tr. at 112). This issue required the jury to assess the relative credibility of the two witnesses. Because the jury had reason to discredit Baumgardner’s testimony on this point, we do not upset its finding.
See United States v. Schindler,
Baumgardner also argues that the government did not prove that he knowingly concealed the receipt of workers’ compensation benefits with the fraudulent intent to receive disability benefits to which he was not entitled. He claims that even if he did not tell SSA personnel, he thought the SSA knew of the workers’ compensation benefits, thereby relieving him of his reporting obligations. Testimony at trial, including a detailing of Baumgardner’s numerous bank accounts and his statements to his daughters regarding his need to keep his money spread out, provided a sufficient basis from which the jury could have reasonably inferred that Baumgardner’s omission was intentional and that he knew the workers’ compensation benefits could affect his disability benefits. Therefore, we conclude that the evidence on this count was sufficient to support the conviction.
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we vacate Baumgardner’s section 1001 conviction and remand to the district court for a new trial. Additionally, we affirm Baumgardner’s conviction under 42 U.S.C. § 408(a)(4) and remand to the district court for resentencing and a new computation of restitution for that count.
Notes
. At trial, however, there seemed to be a question as to the definition of materiality and what evidence would support that element of the offense. In response to one of defense counsel’s objections to the jury instructions, the court stated: "To tell you the truth, I would hate to give you a definition of materiality right now, and I don’t think it is an element, so I don’t know why we have it." (Trial Tr. at 590-91). The government then informed the court that Eighth Circuit law “recommends" that it make a finding of materiality on the record before the case is submitted to the jury, to which the court responded:
The statements in the evidence alleged to be fraudulent or alleged not to have been made that should have been made I find to be material, whatever that is. No, seriously, I think there isn’t really an issue here of materiality. The issues are pretty well defined by the way the case has been presented, which is well presented.
(Trial Tr. at 591). In addition, in the presentation of its case, the government argued that the amount of disability payments Baumgardner received during the relevant time period not only went to his motive or intent in making the false statement but to the issue of materiality. (Trial Tr. at 346). Essentially, the government argued that because the SSA continued to make disability payments to Baumgardner, the false statement was material. Such a position does not reflect the definition of materiality recognized by the Supreme Court. For a statement to be material under section 1001, it must have the natural tendency to influence, or capability of influencing, a governmental agency's decision or performance of an agency function. Gaudin, - U.S. at -,
. We note that the Second Circuit reverses the burden-shifting of Rule 52(b) when an intervening decision alters a settled law.
United States v. Viola,
. The only evidence at trial that supported a finding of the materiality of Baumgardner’s false statement was the testimony of SSA employees that explained the significance of the question on the work activity report. As explained at trial, $75 or fifteen hours per month is the guideline for determining whether someone has used a trial work period month. (Trial Tr. at 78, 114). See 42 U.S.C. §§ 422(c), 423(e)(1); 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1592a, 404.1594 (governing trial work period assessments). The government did not introduce evidence to explain specifically how or the extent to which an accurate answer on the work activity report would have affected Baumgardner's disability payments.
.The district court's finding of materiality was similarly weak. In deciding the matter, the court indicated that it was not aware of the recognized definition of materiality or what evidence would support such a finding. See infra note 1.
.
Gaudin
errors are readily distinguishable from faulty jury instruction cases. In such cases, the appellate court can review the instructions as a whole to determine whether another instruction cured the faulty instruction. For example, in
United States v. Williams,
. The court, in this case, removed any references to materiality from the instructions on section 1001 because it determined that they would confuse the jury. (Trial Tr. at 591). The only mention of materiality was in the indictment, which standing alone is insufficient to cure the court’s defect.
