OPINION OF THE COURT
Carl B. Benson’s appeal from a judgment of sentence following his conviction for Mail Fraud and Securities Fraud presents the question, of first impression in this court, whether in prosecutions for violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 2 and 15 U.S.C. §§ 77q(a) and 77x it is proper to charge that the specific intent to deceive may be found from a material misstatement of fact made with reckless disregard of the facts. We affirm.
The court instructed that reckless indifference is the equivalent of intentional misrepresentation “because you may not recklessly represent something as true which is not true even if you don’t know it if the fact you don’t know it is due to reckless conduct on your part.” The instruction continued:
a fraudulent intent is necessary to sustain the charge of a scheme to defraud. An untrue statement or representation which is in fact false only amounts to fraud if the defendant making it either knew the statement to be false and he made it, made the statement with the intent to defraud, or, as I have said, these things were due to recklessness on his part.
The court also carefully distinguished between conduct which is reckless and conduct which is merely negligent.
Benson objected to the reference to recklessness, contending that its inclusion had the effect of reducing the specific intent required for proof of mail fraud or securities fraud. The district court rejected that contention, and we do so also.
In McLean v. Alexander,
See United States v. Farris,
Benson also contends that the court erred in charging that “[n]o amount of honest belief that the enterprise would ultimately make money can justify baseless, false or reckless misrepresentations or promises.” Such an instruction was approved in United States v. Habel,
The judgment appealed from will be affirmed.
