Lead Opinion
Defendant-Appellant Jon Dale Adams was convicted on two counts of filing false income tax returns in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). He appeals his conviction, contending that he is entitled to acquittal because the government improperly charged him with one count and, in any event, that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict. In the alternative, Adams claims that the district court abused its discretion in denying him a new trial. We vacate Adams’s conviction as to one count, affirm his conviction as to the other count, and remand for re-sentencing.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Adams is the former owner of Secrets Cabaret strip club and Stardust Oasis bar in Jackson, Mississippi. He filed a federal income tax return for 1999 (the “1999 Form 1040”) that failed accurately to reflect at least $450,000, being proceeds of the sale of the strip club in October 1999. Adams signed the inaccurate return and mailed it to the IRS in June 2000. Then, in early 2001, Adams hired accountant and former IRS agent Perry Smith in what Adams’s counsel describes as an effort to
Under penalties of perjury, I declare that I have filed an original return and that I have examined this amended return, including accompanying schedules and statements, and to the best of my knowledge and belief, this amended return is true, correct, and complete.
IRS Form 1040X instructs taxpayers to “[ajttaeh only the supporting forms and schedules for the items changed.” In this case, the supporting form was Adams’s Form 4797, which he properly appended to the Form 1040X. In addition, however, Adams also included an unsigned copy of his 1999 Form 1040 together with a copy of his 1999 “Schedule C” — “Profit or Loss From Business” — that had been originally submitted with, and was considered part of, the 1999 Form 1040. The parties agree, and IRS instructions and Treasury regulations confirm, that Adams was under no obligation to submit the 1999 Form 1040 and Schedule C with the Form 1040X. In fact, he was affirmatively instructed not to do so.
In August 2001, again with Smith’s assistance, Adams completed, signed, and mailed his 2000 Form 1040 tax return (the “2000 Form 1040”). On that return, he reported gross receipts of $400,423.
In 2002, the IRS assigned Agent Jerry Porter to investigate whether Adams had violated tax statutes in reporting his 1999 and 2000 income. On February 22, 2007, a grand jury indicted Adams, charging him with two counts of filing false income tax returns in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). This offense is distinct from tax evasion, which “requires proof of an intention to evade or defeat a tax, whereas § 7206(1) penalizes the filing of a false return even though the falsity would not produce tax consequences.”
Count I of the indictment relates to the Form 1040X. It specifically alleges that Adams did not believe the amended return was true “in that the ... Form 1040X reported gross receipts on Line 1 of Schedule C of the 1999 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return Form 1040 attached thereto as $227,415.21, whereas, as he then and there well knew and believed, he had gross receipts substantially in excess of the amounts reported.... ” The government contends that Adams had continued to understate his 1999 income by omitting $277,551.46 in gross receipts from the Form 1040X.
Count II of the indictment relates to the 2000 Form 1040. It specifically alleges that on this return Adams had “reported gross receipts on Line 1 of Schedule C as $400,423.00, whereas, as he then and there well knew and believed, he had gross receipts in excess of the amounts reported....”
A jury convicted Adams on both counts. He subsequently filed a Rule 29 motion for judgment of acquittal, or in the alternative, for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33. The district court denied the motion and this timely appeal followed.
A. Standards of Review
We review de novo the district court’s denial of a post-trial motion for judgment of acquittal.
B. Applicable Law
We cannot emphasize too strongly the framework for considering this case: It is not a criminal tax evasion case;
C. Motion for Acquittal: Count I— False Form 1040X
1. Relationship of the Form 1040X to the 1999 Schedule C
An amended tax return, Form 1040X, can give rise to liability for filing a false tax return in the same manner as can any other tax return.
The crime charged in Count I, however, was submitting a false Form 1040X, specifically the Form 1040X to correct Adams’s return for the 1999 tax year. Moreover, the indictment based this charge only on the falsity of Adams’s 1999 Schedule C, a document that IRS instructions and Treasury regulations indicate Adams need not have and should not have submitted with the Form 1040X.
The jurat on the Form 1040X states that Adams swears that he “examined this amended return, including accompanying schedules and statements, and to the best of my knowledge and belief, this amended return [no mention of schedules or statements] is true, correct, and complete.”
We reject the overly expansive reading that the government would have us give to the jurat. Taking the government’s theory to its logical conclusion would result in amending taxpayers incurring liability virtually every time they include a copy of an original tax return with their amended returns. After all, by the time a taxpayer files a Form 1040X, he already knows that his original return is erroneous. Indeed, that is the very reason for filing the amended return. Still, for completeness, taxpayers frequently attach copies of the originals to the amended returns.
Having determined that by signing the jurat of the Form 1040X, Adams did not expose himself to potential liability for false statements contained in the 1999 Schedule C, we next assess the sufficiency of the indictment.
2. Sufficiency of the Indictment
The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure require that the indictment be “a plain, concise and definite written statement of the essential facts constituting the offense charged.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 7(c)(1). The indictment is sufficient if it alleges every element of the crime charged and in such a way as to enable the accused to prepare his defense and to allow the accused to invoke the double jeopardy clause in any subsequent proceeding. When reviewing the indictment, we must keep in mind that the law does not compel a ritual of words and that an indictment’s validity depends on practical, not technical, considerations. And the starting place for any determination of whether the charged conduct is proscribed by a criminal statute is a reading of the language of the charging instrument and the statute itself27
An indictment that describes the offense by tracking the relevant statute’s unambiguous language is generally sufficient; yet, “that general description ‘must be accompanied with such a statement of the facts and circumstances as will inform the accused of the specific offense, coming under the general description, with which he is charged.’ ”
In this case, we interpret Adams’s challenge as asserting that the indictment fails to allege an offense under 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) because it alleges a falsity in a document that cannot serve as the basis for filing a false Form 1040X itself. We agree with Adams: Here, the devil is in the details. The government specifically alleged a falsity only on the 1999 Schedule C, and when the government sets forth “only one particular kind of falsity,” it has the burden of convicting on solely that
Yet, this determination does not end our inquiry. If an indictment fails to allege an element, we review the failure for harmless error, provided that, as here, the defendant properly raised the issue at the district court.
After careful review, we cannot say that it appears beyond a reasonable doubt that the indictment’s error did not contribute to Adams’s conviction on Count I. The indictment, on its face, sends the clear message that Adams need only mount a defense against the accusation that he falsely “reported gross receipts on Line 1 of Schedule C of the 1999 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return Form 1040 attached thereto as $227,415.21.” Instead, the government apparently meant to accuse Adams of submitting an amended tax return that, in combination with his previous 1999 Form 1040 and accompanying Schedule C, under-reported gross income by continuing to refrain from reporting substantial gross receipts derived from his businesses in 1999. In an indictment sufficient to pursue that theory, the government could have made the straight-forward allegation that Line 1, Column C of the Form 1040X, “adjusted gross income,” was false because it failed to account for— omitted — significant taxable 1999 receipts.
We conclude that the jury convicted Adams on an erroneous indictment, and we cannot say that the error was harmless. Thus, the conviction on Count I must be vacated.
Under the dissent’s approach, we would have asked if, when viewing the evidence and drawing all inferences in the light most favorable to the verdict, the record contained evidence on which a reasonable jury could have determined that Adams swore the 1999 Schedule C was “true correct, and complete.” Our analysis demonstrates that Adams could not have sworn to the truth of the 1999 Schedule C as a matter of law. For this reason, the district court should never have asked a jury to consider the issue; no reasonable jury could have convicted Adams on Count I.
The dissent, in contrast, would hold that there is sufficient evidence to support Adams’s conviction on Count I because he swore that the Form 1040X was complete when in fact it was not because the Form 1040X, combined with the attached copy of the 1999 Form 1040 and accompanying Schedule C, did not represent a full accounting of Adams’s 1999 income. Yet, the dissent either ignores or loses sight of the fact that the government has never charged Adams with failing to submit a complete return. The government instead charged that Adams made a specific false statement on line 1 of the Schedule C. The government’s election to charge Adams in this manner forecloses our making a post-hoc determination that there is sufficient evidence that Adams’s return simply was not complete. If we were to do that, we would affirm a conviction based on how the government wishes it had charged Adams, not on how it did charge him. We cannot be so quick to give the government this break, and we reiterate that when the government alleges “only one particular kind of falsity,” it must convict solely on that falsity.
D. Motion for Acquittal: Count II— False 2000 Form 1040
1. Government’s Burden
' The government did not present direct proof that Adams’s 2000 gross receipts were greater than the $400,423 that he reported. Instead, the government employed an indirect method of proof — one known as the “bank deposits and cash expenditures method.”
Under this method, all deposits to the taxpayer’s bank and similar accounts in a single year are added together to determine the gross deposits. An effort is made to identify amounts deposited that are non-taxable, such as gifts, transfers of money between accounts, repayment of loans and cash that the taxpayer had in his possession prior to that year that was deposited in a bank during that year. This process is called “purification.” It results in a figure called net taxable bank deposits.
The government agent then adds the amount of expenditures made in cash, for example, ... cash [a] doctor received from fees, did not deposit, but gave to his wife to buy groceries. The total of*645 this amount and net taxable bank deposits is deemed to equal gross income.39
The government then compares this gross income figure to the income that the taxpayer reported. “In asking the jury to rely on this analysis, as a basis for deciding that the taxpayer willfully understated] his true income, the government necessarily relies on circumstantial evidence.”
In these cases, courts require the government to meet well-established criteria — in addition to the indirect calculation of gross receipts — without which it fails, as a matter of law, to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Specifically, a court should not allow a case to reach a jury unless the government establishes “with reasonable certainty” two components designed to ensure that the expenditures and deposits represent taxable income for the year in question.
The “government must prove a full and adequate investigation” that “establishes] a guarantee of essential accuracy in the circumstantial proof at trial as an element of the government’s burden of proving
2. Gross Receipts
We are satisfied that the government provided the jury with sufficient evidence that in 2000 Adams received gross receipts greater than the $400,423 that he reported. Agent Porter testified how his investigation yielded gross receipts of $466,436, and the government introduced the relevant supporting data into evidence. Although on appeal Adams denies having had year-2000 receipts of $466,436, he does not directly attack the government’s calculations, concentrating instead on the sufficiency of cash-on-hand and source-of-receipts evidence.
a. Cash on Hand
The government’s calculations were based on the assumption that Adams had no cash on hand at the beginning of 2000. Given the government’s $466,436 calculation, if Adams had at least $66,013 cash on hand on January 1, 2000, the government would be unable to bear its burden because the unreported deposits could have come from cash on hand rather than from year-2000 receipts. The government advances that it investigated as much as it reasonably could and thus met its duty, particularly given that Adams was in control of key facts. For example, the government learned from Adams that he maintained a safe deposit box which could have contained currency. Accordingly, Agent Porter verified the box’s existence and looked at records that reflected the frequency of Adams’s visits to the box. Yet, these actions did not provide direct evidence of cash on hand; Agent Porter had no way of knowing what was actually inside the box. When a defendant provides some facts that corroborate a “hoarding” claim, the government cannot sit idle and rely “solely upon a natural disinclination to believe that large sums of money are ever cached away.”
The government set forth at least a dozen factors supporting the conclusion that Adams had no cash on hand. Tracing Adams’s financial history from 1996, each factor tended to show that he had no cash on hand in January 2000. For example, in a 1996 bankruptcy petition, he claimed to have only $128.32 in cash; and when Adams updated that figure in 1999, he did not claim any additional cash on hand. Further, Adams filed a motion in the bankruptcy court in 1999 stating that he had no money to obtain counsel in a pending lawsuit.
Adams responds that although these and other factors may be sufficient to establish no cash on hand for the average taxpayer, he is not the average taxpayer because he had just sold Secrets Cabaret for $450,000, and thus was wealthy. Adams asserts that “[h]is actions in bankruptcy court and his dealings with his lawyer cannot make him poor when the numbers show him to be rich.”
Agent Porter’s investigation was adequate. He took detailed steps, beginning with Adams’s 1996 tax returns, to reconstruct Adams’s cash-flow for the several years leading up to the tax year covered by his 2000 tax return; and the agent followed relevant leads to the extent possible. On the discrete facts of this case, these actions meet the reasonable-certainty standard for submitting evidence to a jury and provide sufficient support for a finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, of no cash on hand. For Adams’s theory to prevail, the jury would have to ignore his bankruptcy filings, previous tax filings, and other evidence that pointed to his having no cash on hand. The jury was under no obligation to do so.
b. Likely Taxable Source/Negating Non-Taxable Sources
Adams insists the government stipulated that lawful activity at the Stardust Oasis was the sole source of his 2000 gross receipts, so that the government had the burden of establishing the Stardust Oasis as the likely source of unreported receipts. Unable to point to an actual stipulation, Adams directs us to (1) the district court’s decision to prohibit the government from introducing testimony regarding receipts
Agent Porter testified that he investigated and found no non-taxable income sources. This investigation included searching for non-taxable sources such as loans, gifts, and inheritances. Agent Porter reviewed Adams’s check registers, deposit slips, and other bank documents for any indication of non-taxable receipts, and he found none. Moreover, Adams provided Agent Porter with no non-taxable leads that he neglected to pursue. Adams fails to explain with particularity how Agent Porter’s non-taxable source investigation was deficient; and once it conducts a thorough investigation, the government need not “negate all possible non-income sources of the deposits, particularly where the source of the income is uniquely within the knowledge of the taxpayer.”
Given this conclusion, the government was under no obligation to demonstrate an adequate investigation into likely income sources. Proving both (1) lack of nontaxable income and (2) lack of cash on hand is sufficient to establish that gross receipts for the year in question were taxable.
E. Motion for New Trial
Adams asserts that the trial court committed reversible error in making rulings of two categories: (1) denial of a mistrial after Agent Porter testified as to Adams’s mental state, and (2) evidentiary rulings regarding Agent Porter’s investigation report.
A trial court may grant a Rule 33 motion for new trial “if the interest of justice so requires.”
1. Rule 704(b): Testifying as to Mental State
Federal Rule of Evidence 704(b) states:
No expert witness testifying with respect to the mental state or condition of a defendant in a criminal case may state an opinion or inference as to whether the defendant did or did not have the mental state or condition constituting an element of the crime charged or of a defense thereto. Such ultimate issues are matters for the trier of fact alone.
Soon after Agent Porter took the stand as an expert witness, the following exchange took place:
Q: And after you completed your investigation of the defendant, did you come to a conclusion?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: What was that conclusion?
A: After completing the investigation, I concluded that the defendant, under penalties of perjury, willfully filed a 1999 Form 1040X and a 2000 Form 1040, knowing that it was false in that the — it was false as to a material matter.
Defense counsel immediately objected pursuant to Rule 704(b) and requested a mistrial, insisting that “willfully” is an ultimate issue for the jury. The trial court sustained the objection but denied the motion for mistrial, offering the following curative instruction:
[Y]ou heard testimony from the witness generally stating that he had concluded that the defendant acted willfully in filing a false claim. The rules do not permit an expert witness to give an opinion about what ... a criminal’s mental state is. So I’m going to strike that portion of his testimony from the record. I’m going to instruct you not to consider that opinion. Okay? I’m instructing you that you cannot consider the expert’s opinion as to what he thinks Mr. Adams’ mental state is.
Adams contends that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to grant a mistrial on this ground. The government responds that Agent Porter’s statement was at most “borderline,” and that even if the testimony were inappropriate, the court’s instruction sufficiently cured the issue.
Agent Porter’s statement violated Rule 704(b), but the trial court’s curative instruction adequately remedied the error.
2. Evidentiary Rulings on Agent Porter’s Report
Adams urges that the district court’s rulings on Agent Porter’s investigation report warrant a new trial. Adams claims that the court erred by (1) refusing to permit defense counsel, on cross-examination, to elicit testimony from Agent Porter that Adams had told him several things beneficial to his case, and (2) failing to require the government to produce the entire report at trial as Jencks Act material. The district court did not abuse its discretion in making these rulings.
a. Cross-Examination of Agent Porter
Agent Porter’s report recounts various statements that Adams made during two interviews in 2002. At trial, defense counsel wanted to ask Agent Porter about Adams’s statements that (1) he did not operate Secrets Cabaret or the Stardust Oasis in 2000; (2) $400,000 deposited in 2000 represented proceeds generated by the club in previous tax years; and (3) he kept a large amount of cash- — -totaling at least $200,000 — in a safe deposit box and in a safe at his home. The district court granted the government’s motion in limine on this issue, and restricted defense counsel to establishing that Adams told Agent Porter that he had cash on hand at the beginning of 2000.
Adams submits three theories why he should have been able to elicit these hearsay statements. First, Adams contends that without this information, the jury had no way of assessing whether the government satisfied its burden of conducting a full investigation of all leads.
Second, Adams asserts that under Federal Rule of Evidence 705, he has the right to cross-examine an expert on any information, even hearsay information, that the expert used to reach his opinion. Under this rule, an expert witness may rely on reports that would be inadmissible as evidence, but, on cross-examination, the expert may be required to disclose the facts or data underlying his opinion.
Third, Adams contends that the “rule of completeness” requires admission' of the expert’s entire report. The Federal Rule of Evidence addressing completeness, Rule 106, does not apply to a witness’s testimony at trial.
We take this opportunity to re-emphasize that “ ‘trial judges retain wide latitude’ to limit reasonably a criminal defendant’s right to cross-examine a witness ‘based on concerns about, among other things, harassment, prejudice, confusion of the issues, the witnesses] safety, or inter
b. Jencks Act
“The Jencks Act requires that the government provide the defendant with witness statements that relate to the subject matter-on which the witness has testified.”
After an in camera review of the report, the district court required the government to produce a redacted version.
We have previously approved of a district court’s decision to redact an agent’s report. In United States v. Medel, also a tax case, we determined that an agent’s report could be Jencks material but that the district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering production of only a portion of the report.
III. CONCLUSION
We vacate Adams’s conviction on Count I. We affirm Adams’s conviction on Count II, but remand for re-sentencing on that count as the sole count of conviction.
VACATED in part; AFFIRMED in part; and REMANDED.
Notes
Pursuant to 5th Cir. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5th Cir. R. 47.5.4.
. United States v. Citron,
. Unlike in Count I, the Schedule C referred to in Count II was filed as a required part of the lax return in question, not as a part of a prior return.
. United. States v. Bellew,
. United States v. Ragsdale,
. Although the parties frame their appellate arguments in words of "sufficiency of the evidence,” Adams asserts that the government is prohibited from pursuing the charges as stated in Count I of the indictment, i.e., that the indictment was insufficient. Although the dissent disagrees and would rule that Adams waived this argument, we are satisfied that Adams raised it adequately to preserve it. His opening brief focuses on the "argument that the Schedule C to the unsigned original return is not covered by the statement in the 1040X jurat that 'this amended return is true.’ " As we explain below, this is the argument that forms the basis of our sufficiency-of-the-indictment holding today. The dissent also cautions that we “simply do not know how the Government might have responded to a claim that the indictment was insufficient." Although this appears to be the type of concern that justifies our waiver doctrine, see, e.g., Edwards v. Johnson,
We will perform a sufficiency-of-the-evidence review only when we first determine that conviction on Count I is possible as a matter of law. Whatever Adams labels his challenge, it is illogical to fast-forward to sufficiency of the evidence if in fact no amount of evidence would be sufficient to convict Adams on Count I. It should be uncontroversial that an indictment sufficient to convict a defendant is a condition precedent to the government's entitlement to offer sufficient evidence at trial to support a conviction.
. United States v. Fuchs,
The dissent also notes that Adams technically moved to dismiss based on a statute-of-limitations defense rather than the insufficiency of the indictment. Although this is so, we disagree with the dissent to the extent that it would rely on a "hyper-technical reading” to deprive Adams of our de novo review of this issue. See generally, United States v. Uni Oil, Inc.,
. United States v. Ratcliff,
. United States v. Robertson,
. See 26 U.S.C. § 7201.
. See id. § 7203.
. See United States v. Marashi,
. United States v. Loe,
. United States v. Fontenot,
. United States v. Clayton,
. United States v. Taylor,
. Id.) see United States v. Damon,
. See 26 U.S.C. § 6531(5) (establishing six-year limitations period for violations of section 7206(1)). In contrast, the government had until February 27, 2007 to bring charges as to the Form 1040X; Adams was indicted five days prior to this deadline.
. See Damon,
. See IRS Form 1040X ("Attach only the supporting forms and schedules for the items changed.”); see also 26 U.S.C. § 6011(a) (indicating that taxpayers shall make returns "according to the forms and regulations prescribed by the Secretary”).
. IRS Form 1040X (emphasis added). Of course, the government could have brought charges alleging that an entry on the Form 1040X itself was incomplete. See, e.g., Indictment ¶¶ 10, 12, United States v. Clayton, No. 06-cr-0069,
. See Damon,
. Conceptually, we view Adams’s attachment of the 1999 Schedule C as analogous to a taxpayer’s attaching a letter of good-character or any other extraneous document to his tax return. They are simply not integral to the amended tax return. This does not mean that unrequested documents can never be integral to an amended tax return. For example, it is not difficult to envision a taxpayer including a letter with his tax return explaining particular items in the return. The inquiry into whether such a letter would be integral is fact-specific. But, when, as here, the taxpayer simply attaches a copy of an old filing as a ''courtesy,” the copy is not integral to the new filing as a matter of law,
. We recognize that the issue of materiality of a false statement is one committed to the jury's peculiar competence. United States v. Gaudin,
. The government could have avoided its current predicament by either (1) indicting Adams for filing a false Form 1040X based on a false statement on the Form 1040X itself (or on an attached document that was integral to the Form 1040X), or (2) acting within the statute of limitations to indict him for filing a false 1999 Form 1040 based on falsities in the 1999 Schedule C.
. The IRS represents to this court that forty percent of taxpayers include unsigned copies of their original returns when they file amended returns.
.The government responds that its theory does not prove too much, assuring us that the government would never prosecute a taxpayer for the specific original falsity that he accurately amended, only for falsities that remain uncorrected and that render the amended return itself materially false. We have no reason to doubt the government on this point, but its reasoning fails to convince us that our interpretation of the jurat’s ambit is too narrow. The mere fact that the government promises not to prosecute absurdities does not alter the illogical meaning that it would have us give the jurat — that of swearing to the truthfulness of the copy of the admittedly fallacious original return attached as an exhibit to the amended return.
We note that the IRS has the authority to draft a new version of its jurat if it wishes to make clear to taxpayers that they can be held criminally liable for false statements in any document they submit to the IRS. Such a revised jurat would send a clear message to taxpayers and accountants that they must be cautious when submitting accompanying documents, including those enclosed as a "courtesy.”
. United States v. Ratcliff,
. United States v. Quinn,
. United States v. Chambers,
. United States v. Dentler,
. Robinson,
. Id. at 287 (citations omitted).
. We are aware that it is alternatively possible to view this as a constructive amendment case. "[A] constructive amendment of the indictment occurs when the jury is permitted to convict the defendant upon a factual basis that effectively modifies an essential element of the offense charged. In such cases, reversal is automatic, because the defendant may have been convicted on a ground not charged in the indictment.” Adams,
. If we had reached this issue, we would, on appeal ”focus[] solely on the question whether, on the basis of the evidence that would have been available to the grand jury, any rational grand jury presented with a proper indictment would have charged that [Adams] committed the offense in question.” Robinson,
. Even if our standard of review on this issue were plain error, it would be arguable that the district court plainly erred, viz, (1) the court erred; (2) the error was clear under existing law, and (3) the error affects Adams’s substantial rights. See United States v. Salinas,
. Whenever an indictment or information charging a felony is dismissed for any reason after the period prescribed by the applicable statute of limitations has expired, a new indictment may be returned in the appropriate jurisdiction within six calendar months of the date of the dismissal of the indictment or information, or, in the event of an appeal, within 60 days of the date the dismissal of the indictment or information becomes final....
18 U.S.C. § 3288. "[W]here an original indictment is brought within the limitations period, but is dismissed for failure to allege the exact elements of the crime or some other technicality, the savings clause merely allows the government to do what it had a right to do in the first place." United States v. Shipsey,
. Chambers,
. See United States v. Boulet,
. Id. In a tax evasion case, the government next reduces gross income by applicable deductions and exemptions to arrive at "corrected taxable income.” Id. This step is unnecessary in prosecutions under section 7206(1). See United States v. Lassiter,
. Boulet,
. Boulet,
. Id. at 1169-70.
. United States v. Hiett,
.Boulet,
. Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
. Id. at 1172-73; see Hiett,
. Boulet,
. United States v. Bethea,
. In Holland v. United States, the Supreme Court had occasion to evaluate a hoarding defense.
. Our point of inquiry is not whether Adams was wealthy but rather whether he had cash on hand.
. Boulet,
. See United States v. Conaway,
. Adams relies on the Second Circuit's opinion in United States v. Grasso for the proposition that once the government recognizes a suggested taxable income source — here, the Stardust Oasis — -it must verify that the taxpayer in fact under-reported the income from that source. See
Here, in contrast, Adams did not keep organized business records, and he filed a sworn statement (which he now disavows) that he derived significant income in 2000 as a bar owner. Proving that the Stardust Oasis was the likely source of Adams's unreported income would have been far more difficult than proving the income source in Grasso. As the government adequately established lack of a non-taxable income source, the government's investigation into the bar’s income-generating capacity, an investigation that the record does not reveal as particularly deficient, does not cause us to question whether the government failed to establish an element of its case.
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 33(a).
. United States v. O’Keefe,
. In United States v. Dotson, we concluded that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by permitting testimony that a defendant’s conduct was "indicative, and based on my experience shows to me, that he willfully and intentionally increased his income knowing full well that he had not reported the taxes due thereon.”
. United States v. Reliford,
. See United States v. Gutierrez-Farias,
. See Grasso,
. Polythane Sys., Inc. v. Marina Ventures Int’l, Ltd.,
. Polythane Sys.,
. Id.
. See Fed.R.Evid. 703 (indicating that disclosure of otherwise inadmissible facts or data is subject to the court’s weighing whether "the probative value in assisting the jury to evaluate the expert’s opinion substantially outweighs their prejudicial effect”); see also United States v. A & S Council Oil Co.,
. United States v. Garcia,
. Cf. id. at 354 (discussing, but neither adopting nor rejecting, the Eleventh Circuit's “tantamount” standard in which Rule 106 applies if the agent's statement was tantamount to introducing the written statement).
. Id. at 356.
. Michigan v. Lucas,
. United States v. Hodgkiss,
. United States v. Beasley,
. After trial, defense counsel received the entire report.
.
. Id.
. For example, the district court deleted a portion of the report that says “ADAMS stated that the unreported gross receipts may have come from cash he had earned from Secret[ ]s Cabaret or Stardust in prior years.” Adams contends that this statement would have al
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
Although I concur with the majority’s holding affirming Adams’ conviction on the second count relating to the 2000 Form 1040, I respectfully dissent from the holding vacating his conviction on the first count relating to the Form 1040X. Because Adams has not raised a sufficiency of the indictment claim, and because the evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s verdict on this count, I would affirm the jury’s conviction as to the Form 1040X.
The majority admits that Adams frames his appeal in terms of “sufficiency of the evidence,” yet makes the significant leap to construe his argument as challenging the sufficiency of the indictment on Count I. One searches in vain to find a sufficiency of the indictment claim in Adams’ briefing. Rather, Adams is clearly challenging the district court’s denial of his Rule 29 motion for judgment of acquittal. His argument on Count I is framed in terms of his entitlement to an acquittal based on the fact that a “reasonable legal argument” existed that the jurat on the 1040X did not include the 1999 Schedule C. In other words, Adams is arguing that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of making a false statement on his amended tax return because he did not swear to the truth of the Schedule C. He does not argue that the indictment was insufficient as to that claim. Importantly, the Government only responded to the actual claim that Adams made regarding the insufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction; we simply do not know how the Government might have responded to a claim that the indictment was insufficient. Since Adams has not properly challenged the sufficiency of the indictment in his opening brief, this argument is waived. See, e.g., Edwards v. Johnson,
Therefore, rather than reviewing the sufficiency of the indictment de novo, we
To support a conviction for filing a false tax return under 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1), evidence must be sufficient to show that: (1) the defendant wilfully made and subscribed to a materially false tax return; (2) the return contained a written declaration that it was made under penalties of perjury; and (3) the defendant did not believe that the return was true as to every material matter. See United States v. Loe,
Accordingly, I concur with the majority’s holdings in Part II.A, B, D, and E, but respectfully dissent from Part II.C.
. Moreover, even if we could properly construe Adams' challenge to the district court's denial of his motion for acquittal as a challenge to the sufficiency of the indictment, this claim would have to be reviewed for plain error. See United States v. Fuchs,
