Alexander Bortnovsky and Leonid Braz appeal from their judgments of conviction entered on September 15, 1988 for conspiracy to conduct the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering in violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) (count one); participation in the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering in violation of § 1962(c) of RICO (count two); and mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (count nine). The defendants challenge the conduct of the government during trial, the admissibility of certain evidence, the legal sufficiency of the convictions arising under the mail fraud statute and RICO, and the legality of their sentences. The decision below is affirmed in all respects but one: the case is remanded for the limited purpose of correcting the sentences.
I. BACKGROUND
In the summer of 1988, defendants Bort-novsky and Braz were tried for conspiracy to participate and actual participation in the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering (“the RICO counts”) and for a single count of mail fraud.
1
Prior to trial, count three, charging the defendants with conspiracy to defraud the federal government by filing false claims with the Federal Emergency Management Administration (“FEMA”), and counts four through eight, each of which involved an allegation of mail fraud, were dismissed as barred by the statute of limitations.
United States v. Bortnovsky,
In connection with their ownership of two clothing stores, Braz and Bortnovsky were alleged to have engaged in a number of schemes to defraud the agencies that insured their businesses; these schemes constituted the RICO predicate acts. In answer to special interrogatories, the jury found both defendants to have participated in the arson of one of their stores on August 25, 1981 (predicate act one) and mail fraud for the subsequent filing with the New York Property Insurance Underwriters Association (“NYPIUA”) of a claim for over $100,000 for losses resulting from the fire (predicate act two). In addition, the jury found the government to have proven Braz’s participation in yet another predicate act, namely mail fraud for filing a claim with the Federal Crime Insurance Program (“FCIP”) for coats alleged to have been stolen during a burglary of one of the stores (predicate act three). Neither Braz nor Bortnovsky were found to have engaged in a scheme to stage burglaries of their stores and thereafter file fictitious claims (predicate act four).
Braz’s post-trial motion for a new trial, based on the court’s exclusion of a document supporting Braz’s contention that he had received the coats whose alleged theft was the basis of his FCIP claim, was denied. Bortnovsky and Braz were respectively sentenced to concurrent terms of six and eight years’ imprisonment on all counts; each also was sentenced to two years of probation following release from custody and ordered to pay $5,225 in restitution.
On appeal, the defendants contend that: 1) the government knowingly introduced and relied on perjured testimony, 2) the court improperly excluded from evidence *33 an exculpatory report, 2 3) the government’s proof was insufficient as a matter of law to establish that the defendants had committed mail fraud, 4) the government failed to prove a pattern of racketeering necessary for the RICO counts, and 5) the sentences were invalid as a matter of law in several respects, some of which the government concedes.
II. DISCUSSION
A. GOVERNMENT’S USE OF PERJURED TESTIMONY
At trial, the government elicited the opinion of Fire Marshal George W. Powell that the fire of August 25, 1981, the basis of predicate act one, had been intentionally set. He testified that he reached this conclusion because he smelled gasoline on the clothes of Angel Guzman, who died in the fire and whose remains were found during the excavation. The defendants maintain that this testimony was false, that the government knew it to be such, and that, accordingly, the conviction must be reversed and a new trial granted. They premise their argument that Powell’s testimony was “palpably false” on his failure to state in reports of his investigation of the fire or in earlier testimony that he had smelled gasoline on Guzman's clothing. This argument lacks merit.
Powell’s earlier silence provides an insufficient basis upon which to find that the later testimony was false. At most, Powell’s testimony differed from, but did not contradict, what he said earlier. However, even if this testimony had conflicted directly with that given previously, the difference alone would not constitute perjury.
Presentation of a witness who recants or contradicts his prior testimony is not to be confused with ... perjury. It was for the jury to decide whether or not to credit the witness.
United States v. Holladay,
Moreover, even if Powell’s prior silence were to establish that his testimony was perjured, the defendants could not prevail because there is no evidence that the government knew or should have known the testimony to be false.
4
United States v. Holladay,
B. EXCLUSION OF EXHIBIT G
The indictment alleged as the third predicate act that Braz’s insurance claim of February, 1980 for the theft of sheepskin coats from the store was fraudulent because the coats were not delivered until September, 1980. In response to evidence introduced by the government in support of its argument, Braz sought to introduce defendant’s exhibit G, the report of the insurance adjuster. The report stated in relevant part: “We questioned a Mr. David Belsky of the firm Darner Sheepskin Fashions [the supplier] who advised that the goods were delivered to the assured on January 19, 1980, but to date they had not been paid for by the assured.” The district court held that the document was not admissible under either Fed.R.Evid. 803(6) as a business record, Fed.R.Evid. 803(8) as a public record, or Fed.R.Evid. 803(24) or 804(b)(5), which provide generally for admission of documents not covered by other exceptions “but having equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.” We conclude that this exclusion was not, as Braz argues, an abuse of discretion.
5
See United States v. Salvador,
Although Braz speaks of the entire document, the real issue is the admissibility not of exhibit G itself, but of the statement of Belsky it contains. Therefore, to prevail on his argument, Braz must establish not only that the report falls within an exception to the hearsay rule, but also that Bel-sky’s statement is covered by such an exception. Braz has failed to do the latter.
Although the adjuster’s report might otherwise qualify as a business record within the meaning of Rule 803(6), Belsky’s statement does not satisfy the rule’s requirements because there was no showing that he had a duty to report the information he was quoted as having given.
See United States v. Meyers,
The admissibility of Belsky’s statement within the exception for reports of public agencies or the catch-all exceptions depends on its “trustworthiness.” Judge Mu-kasey did not abuse his discretion when ruling that there was insufficient evidence *35 of the statement’s reliability to provide the requisite circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness. 6 Not only did Belsky have no duty to report the date on which the goods were delivered, there was no evidence that, as an accountant, he would have had personal knowledge of the date on which the coats were delivered. In addition, the statement was supported only by the testimony of Braz and contradicted by the evidence of the government.
Finally, the post-trial decision denying Braz’s motion for a new trial because of the exclusion of the statement or a hearing as to the document’s reliability was not reversible error. In support of that motion, Braz submitted the results of a polygraph examination that supported his testimony that the coats were delivered before the robbery. In response the government submitted an affidavit of Belsky dated August 8, 1988 in which he stated that he did not recall making the statement at issue nor did he think it likely that he made such a statement because, as an outside accountant, he “was usually not in a position to know when merchandise was delivered by [the supplier].”
The district court properly held that Bel-sky’s affidavit indicated that the statement in exhibit G lacked the reliability to be admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule, because Belsky did not have personal knowledge of the facts reported. Moreover, Judge Mukasey’s ruling that the polygraph results did not raise a question as to the propriety of that determination or necessitate a hearing was proper. This court, although not directly addressing the question, has intimated that the results of polygraph tests are inadmissible.
See Republic Nat’l Bank of New York v. Eastern Airlines,
Finally, the exclusion of Belsky’s statement, even if error was harmless. The fraudulent claim for the losses sustained during the burglary underlay only one of the three predicate acts in which the jury found Braz participated.
C. MAIL FRAUD
The defendants’ convictions for mail fraud as well as for participation in a RICO enterprise were premised on a letter of May 23, 1983 to Bortnovsky from Kenneth Sapperstein of Sapperstein, Hochberg & Haberman, 7 the adjusting firm retained by DGSM Clothing, Inc. (“DGSM”) 8 to assist in evaluating its claim for damage incurred in the fire of August 25, 1981. 9 In the *36 letter, Sapperstein advised Bortnovsky that he understood no conclusion had been reached on the fire claim of August 26, 1981 and wrote:
As a formality I wish to advise you that the insurance policy contract mandates certain necessary steps which must be completed prior to two years from the date of the loss. If these steps and any others your attorney may deem necessary are not taken before this time, you will lose all rights. This refers especially to having your attorney file suit before the two year period.
To establish that this mailing violated 18 U.S.C. § 1341,
10
the mail fraud statute, the government must prove: 1) that the defendants “caused” the mailing, namely that they must have acted “with knowledge that the use of the mails will follow in the ordinary course of business, or where such use can reasonably be foreseen, even though not actually intended,”
Pereira v. United States,
Defendants contend that the government’s proof satisfied neither of these elements and that accordingly the convictions for counts two and nine must be reversed. 11 Specifically, defendants contend that they cannot be found to have “caused” the mailing because it was sent by a third party — the agent of the defendants no less — and not foreseeable. Moreover, Braz argues that, because he neither initiated nor received any of the correspondence concerning the claim, he cannot be found to have “caused” the mailing. Finally, both defendants contend that the letter was not incident to an essential part of the scheme, because it concerned a civil suit rather than the insurance claim. As discussed below, only the argument as to the foreseeability of the mailing gives us pause; however, even that argument is unpersuasive in light of the expansive reading given § 1341 by the courts.
1. Causation
First, it is not significant for purposes of the mail fraud statute that a third-party, rather than the defendant, wrote and sent the letter at issue, providing, as we find below was true in this case, the defendants could reasonably have foreseen that the third-party would use the mail in the ordinary course of business as a result of defendants’ act.
See United States v. Draiman,
Second, defendants’ argument that the May 23rd letter falls outside the reach of the statute because it was mailed by defendants’ agent to a defendant is not persuasive. The question is whether the defendant reasonably foresaw that the mails would be used, not by whom or to whom the mailing was made, as is evident by the cases holding that correspondence between many combinations of senders and receivers constitutes mail fraud.
12
For example, the courts have found the following to be within the reach of § 1341: mailings from the victim of the fraud to the defendant,
United States v. Toney,
Third, Braz’s conviction for mail fraud is not invalid even though he neither initiated nor received the May 23rd letter nor committed any act related to the scheme after the fire. Braz was alleged and found to have conspired with Bortnov-sky to defraud the NYPIUA of over $100,-000 through submissions of the claim for fire damage. Accordingly, he can be charged with and convicted for mailings, like the letter of May 23, 1983, that further the scheme, despite his lack of direct involvement.
14
See United States v. Dick,
Fourth, it is true that the May 23rd letter was sent nearly two years after the insurance claim was filed and eighteen months after the last correspondence between the adjusters. However, this alone does not make the mailing too remote to be reasonably foreseeable. Not only have mailings made after a similar passage of time been held to have been caused by the defendant,
United States v. Elkin,
The defendants’ fifth and final challenge to the finding that they “caused” the May 23rd mailing gives us pause: The defen
*38
dants argue that the May 23rd letter was not part of the ordinary claims process and thus not “reasonably foreseeable.”
United States v. Muni,
The courts, when construing the mail fraud statute in the context of schemes to defraud an insurance company, have consistently held that defendants “caused” mailings that are part of the ordinary claims process.
See, e.g., United States v. Castile,
It is true that, unlike the mailings involved in these cases and the four mailings between the insurance adjusters seeking information relating to the claim that were proven as part of predicate act four, the May 23rd letter does not seek information, clarification, or testimony necessary for the insurance processing. However, it is not so qualitatively different as not to be reasonably foreseeable as part of the claim processing. First, one could reasonably foresee, upon filing an insurance claim, that an adjuster would periodically, as Sap-perstein did in the May 23rd letter, apprise the claimant of the status of the claim and of any further, necessary action. Moreover, it is particularly reasonable to anticipate that such a mailing might result from the claim, where, as was true in this case, the adjuster was paid a percentage of the sum for which the case ultimately settled. In addition, Sapperstein’s testimony that he followed normal practice when writing the letter of May 23rd and that he has written several such letters lends some support to the argument that the mailing was reasonably foreseeable.
Finally, the defendants have not argued persuasively that this mailing was less foreseeable than others held to be reasonably foreseeable. In
Draiman,
for example, the court held that the defendant had caused the mailings of his proof of loss by the lawyer for the insurance company to the two client insurance companies and their accountant. Although the defendant in
Draiman
might have foreseen that the attorney would mail his proof of loss, it is unlikely that he anticipated counsel would mail the proof of loss to three individuals, resulting in three counts of mail fraud. Similarly, in this case, while Bortnovsky and Braz may very well not have anticipated that the adjuster would send the particular letter at issue, they undoubtedly could expect that the mails would be used to further and monitor their claim.
Cf. Draiman,
In reaching this conclusion, we are not unaware of the strong arguments to the contrary, particularly the distinctions that can be made between the letter of May 23rd and others more clearly integral to the claims process. Nonetheless, the element of causation of § 1341 has been so liberally
*39
construed as to suggest that it requires only that the use of the mail itself, rather than a particular mailing, be reasonably foreseeable.
15
For example, when rejecting the defendant’s challenge to his mail fraud convictions in
United States v. Bucey,
A defendant need not actually intend, agree to or even know of a specific mailing to “cause” mail to be sent as long as he or she “does an act with knowledge that the use of mails will follow in the ordinary course of business, or where such can reasonably be foreseen.”
(quoting
Pereira v. United States,
[I]t is well settled that one “causes” the use of the mails when he does some act in which it is reasonably foreseeable that the mails will be used. Because [the defendant] was in the insurance business, it cannot seriously be contended that he was unaware that the mail would probably be used in processing a claim.
Id.
at 405.
Cf. United States v. Fermin Castillo,
Moreover, it is of some significance that Congress has not, in light of the expansive reading of § 1341 by the courts, acted to narrow its scope. In fact, to the extent that Congress has amended the mail fraud statute in the recent past, it has done so to ensure a broader construction than that of the Supreme Court. Section 1346, adopted in 1988, ensures that mail fraud encompasses “scheme[s] ... to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services” and thereby overrules
McNally v. United States,
In sum, in light of the reasonable foreseeability of the letter of May 23rd, the courts’ liberal construction of § 1341’s causation requirement, and Congress’ failure to act in any way other than to expand the scope of the mail fraud statute, we conclude that the defendants “caused” the mailing of the letter of May 23rd.
2. Furtherance of the Scheme
Despite defendants’ argument to the contrary, there is no serious question that the letter of May 23rd was “incident to an essential part of the scheme” to recover from NYPIUA the losses caused by the fire. The letter alerted Bortnovsky that his claim had not yet been settled and of the need to act promptly to preserve his right under the terms of the policy to recover the sum sought through a civil cause of action. It was thus incidental to the scheme to recover the insurance benefit *40 payments, because it advised the defendants of another route by which they might recover the funds from the NYPIUA, the normal claims processing having proven unsuccessful.
In this respect, the mailing is virtually indistinguishable from one of the mailings found to satisfy § 1341’s “in furtherance” requirement in
United States v. Draiman,
Moreover, mailings, such as the letter of May 23rd, sent as part of the business of processing a claim or transaction have generally been held to be “incident to an essential part of the scheme.” Most recently, in
Schmuck v. United States,
— U.S. -,
The letter of May 23rd is distinguishable from those in
United States v. Dick,
Moreover, it is also distinguishable from the mailing in
United States v. Tackett,
Finally, the letter of May 23rd was not likely to spark or enhance the probability of detection and thus fall outside the scope of § 1341 as was true of the items mailed in
United States v. Maze,
D. RICO
At the time of argument, the Court of Appeals, sitting en banc, had heard but not yet decided two
cases
—Beauford
v. Helmsley,
The argument, although respectable at the time it was made, no longer has force in light of the recent en banc decisions. In
Indelicato,
this court held that continuity and relatedness were, contrary to
Ianniel-lo
and its progeny, “essentially characteristics of activity rather than of enterprise.”
E. SENTENCING
Bortnovsky and Braz claim that their terms of imprisonment for mail fraud, probation, and restitution do not conform with *42 the terms of applicable statutes. Braz also contends that the district court abused its discretion when it imposed a longer sentence on him after this trial than after the first.
The government concedes that Bortnov-sky and Braz’s sentences for mail fraud exceeded the term permitted by law. In addition, the probationary term for both defendants does not conform to 18 U.S.C. § 3651 (repealed effective Nov. 1, 1986), which requires that, where a probationary term follows incarceration, the term of incarceration may not exceed six months. Accordingly, the case is remanded to the district court to correct the terms of the sentences for mail fraud and to review the periods of probation,
The defendants, each of whom was ordered to pay restitution of $5,225, a sum representing half the amount Braz claimed as losses sustained in the burglary of February 1, 1980, also contend that the sentence of restitution is invalid because the Victim and Witness Protection Act (“the Act”) pursuant to which it was imposed, 18 U.S.C. §§ 3663-64, applies only to crimes committed after January 1, 1983. The government answers that, because the defendants’ conviction for participation in a RICO enterprise included an act occurring after January 1, 1983, the defendants can be sentenced to pay restitution for any of the acts underlying the RICO conviction. This court has not previously addressed the question and the circuits which have are divided.
At least three circuits have held that restitution may be ordered only for acts committed after January 1, 1983.
United States v. Corn,
[W]hile a scheme to defraud furthered by separate mailings may properly be viewed as one unitary offense, the losses which resulted therefrom must be separately identified as those which occurred before and those which occurred after January 1, 1983 for purposes of restitution under the ... Act.
Martin,
Three other circuits have reached the opposite conclusion, finding that restitution may be ordered for any act committed as part of a conspiracy if at least one offense occurred after the Act’s effective date.
United States v. Angelica,
We are persuaded by the decisions in Angelica, Purther, and Barnette. The Act provides for restitution as a part of sentencing for an offense. In this case, the offenses for which the defendants were sentenced include conspiracy to conduct the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering and actual participation in a racketeering enterprise. Because the conspiracy and enterprise extended into 1983, any loss sustained as a result of one of the predicate acts underlying the RICO offenses seems to us to fall within the scope of the Act. A contrary ruling would improperly treat the predicate acts, rather than the RICO counts, as the offenses for which the defendants were being sentenced.
*43 The defendants also challenge the order of restitution on the ground that no findings of fact were made at sentencing in support of the award of restitution. Defendants contend that there was no showing that they caused FCIP damage of $10,-450: “That Braz may have submitted an invoice to show $10,450 worth of sheepskin coats were in his store on February 1, 1980 does not mean that he claimed all of those goods were stolen.” 17 However, we find that the government’s proof that the federal government paid the defendants’ claim is sufficient proof of the loss. Moreover, as the government notes, there is a serious question whether the defendants, by raising this argument for the first time on appeal, have waived it.
Finally, Braz’s argument that the trial court abused its discretion by lengthening his sentence (from that given after the first trial) based on its finding of perjury, but without a hearing, is not persuasive in light of
United States v. Grayson,
We do not agree with Braz’s argument that a district court’s consideration at sentencing of perjury committed during trial requires the same due process protection as does consideration of a disputed item in a presentence report. A presentence report, unlike evidence introduced at trial, often includes hearsay as to which the defendant may have the right to demand a hearing.
United States v. Romano,
In sum, the case is remanded for the limited purpose of correcting the defendants’ sentences for mail fraud and the terms of probation. In all other respects, the decision below is affirmed.
Notes
. This is not the first time that Bortnovsky and Braz were tried on these charges. Their earlier convictions for these three counts, as well as for conspiracy to defraud the United States by filing fraudulent claims with the Federal Emergency Management Administration and five additional mail fraud counts, were reversed because the district court’s denial of the defendants’ motion for a bill of particulars was held to be an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Bortnovsky,
. Only Braz made this argument; Bortnovsky was not alleged to have participated in the scheme to which this was relevant.
. Defendants suggest that Powell’s testimony was concocted to contradict that of their expert at the earlier trial, who opined that the fire had a natural cause. At that trial, the government relied on the testimony of one of the defendants’ former employees to establish that the fire had been intentionally set.
.The alleged misconduct in this case is not "of [such] an extraordinary' nature within the meaning of
Sanders v. Sullivan,
. Braz also argues in passing that the exclusion was error because exhibit G was an admission of a party opponent. This argument does not merit discussion, because there is no basis upon which to conclude that Belsky was a party opponent.
.
United States v. Southland Corp.,
. The mailing of this letter is the only act alleged to have occurred within the five year statute of limitations for participation in a RICO enterprise.
. The defendants were part owners of DGSM Clothing, Inc., which had acquired the defendants’ second store.
. This letter was one of five proved at trial as evidence of defendants’ scheme to defraud the NYPIUA (predicate act two): three of the four other letters were sent by the adjusting firm hired by NYPIUA to the Sapperstein Arm requesting information on the claim, seeking information about the store’s inventory, and ad *36 vising it that they would be contacted by an accounting firm; the remaining letter was sent by the Sapperstein firm in response to the request of NYPIUA’s adjuster for information.
. Section 1341 provides in relevant part: Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises ... for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice or attempting to do so, places in any post office or authorized depository for mail matter, any matter or thing whatever to be sent or delivered by the Postal Service, ... or knowingly causes to be delivered by mail according to the direction thereon ... any such matter or thing, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
. Defendants incorrectly argue that count one must also be reversed if the conviction for mail fraud is reversed. The statute of limitations for conspiracy to participate in a RICO enterprise is measured not from the time of the last predicate act, as is true with allegations of participation in a racketeering enterprise, but from the time "the objectives of the conspiracy have been accomplished or abandoned.”
Bankers Trust Co. v. Rhoades,
. Neither party has cited and we have not found any case involving a mailing from an agent of a defendant to that defendant.
. By affirming the mail fraud conviction, the Court in Schmuck implicitly found this mailing to be reasonably foreseeable.
.In light of this holding, it is not necessary to address in the RICO section of this opinion Braz’s argument that the statute of limitations bars his RICO convictions because he did not participate in any way in the mailing of the May 23rd letter.
. As was true in
Muni,
. Although this point has not been briefed, there can be little doubt that the pattern of racketeering proven in this case satisfies the standards of
Indelicato.
The court in
Indelicato
emphasized that the pattern of racketeering necessary to sustain a RICO conviction could be established with proof of similarities between the predicate acts, with respect to the victim, methodology or goal, among others, and some threat of continuing activity.
. Brief of Defendant-Appellant Leonid Braz at 35 (Nov. 16, 1988).
