Charles P. Hausmann pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud. A jury convicted Scott J. Rise of the same offense. Each defendant appeals from the district court’s denial of his pretrial motion for dismissal of the indictment. Rise also challenges the district court’s jury instructions and Hausmann appeals from his sentence based on his challenge to the district court’s calculation of the loss amount attributable to the fraud. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the decisions of the district court and, consequently, Hausmann’s sentence and Rise’s conviction.
BACKGROUND
Hausmann, a Milwaukee, Wisconsin, personal injury lawyer, referred certain of his clients to Rise, a chiropractor, for chiropractic services paid from insurance settlement proceeds, in return for which Rise made corresponding payments, equal to twenty percent of the fees he collected for those services, to third-party recipients at Hausmann’s direction. Recipients included (i) individuals who had provided miscellaneous personal services to Hausmann or his relatives, (ii) a marketing firm providing services at Hausmann’s direction, (iii) business entities (or their agents) in which Hausmann held some interest, and (iv) charities that Hausmann supported. 1 Between October 1999 and June 2001, these payments totaled $77,062.87. Hausmann did not disclose this kickback arrangement to his clients, ordinarily victims of automobile accidents. The typical client signed a retainer agreement providing that, in exchange for the services of Hausmann’s law firm, Hausmann-McNally, S.C., he or she would pay the firm one third of “whatever total sum is collected.” The standard agreement also provided as follows:
The client further authorizes his attorney to pay medical and other bills incurred as a result of this accident directly to the doctors and hospitals. It is farther understood and agreed that said money to pay these bills shall come from the client’s portion of the settlement.
(Emphasis in original).
In January 2002, Hausmann and Rise were indicted on charges of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. 2 Both defendants moved for pretrial dismissal of the indictment, which they argued failed to allege a criminal offense or the essential elements thereof. The motions were heard by a magis *955 trate judge, upon whose recommendation the district court denied them. Hausmann then entered a conditional plea of guilty on the conspiracy charge, preserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion to dismiss.
A jury convicted Rise of the conspiracy charge. At Rise’s trial, his former employee testified that Rise used the term “kickback” to describe the payments. Rise filed unavailing motions for a judgment of acquittal and for arrest of judgment. The district court sentenced Haus-mann and Rise each to sixty1day terms of imprisonment (stayed pending the disposition of this appeal) and twelve-month terms of supervised release, and ordered them to pay restitution in the joint and several amount of $77,062.87.
This appeal ensued.
ANALYSIS
I. Sufficiency of the Indictment and Evidence of Rise’s Guilt
Appellants challenge the sufficiency of the indictment, asserting that it fails adequately to allege the elements of the underlying mail and wire fraud offense. Rise further argues that the government failed to prove the aforementioned elements and that, consequently, the district court improperly denied his motion for judgment of acquittal pursuant to Rule 29 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
We review de novo both the sufficiency of a criminal indictment,
see, e.g., United States v. Irorere,
Rise’s appeal from the denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal is duplicative of Appellants’ challenge to the sufficiency of the indictment. Both theories allege that the government failed to allege or prove, respectively, the following purported elements of the mail and wire fraud offenses underlying the conspiracy charge: (i) actual or foreseeable harm to Haus-mann’s clients; (ii) Hausmann’s fiduciary duty in excess of that memorialized in the retainer agreements; (iii) that Hausmann’s conflict of interest adversely affected his clients; (iv) intent to defraud; (v) the materiality of the nondisclosure to clients of the scheme; and (vi) the scheme’s interstate jurisdictional nexus.
Where “two or more persons conspire ... to commit any offense” under Title XVIII of the United States Code “one or more of such persons [who commit] any act to effect the object of the conspiracy” may be held criminally liable therefor under 18 U.S.C. § 371. It is a violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1543, and 1346 to use the United States Postal Service, a private interstate courier, or an interstate wire communications service in order to implement a “scheme or artifice
*956
to defraud [by depriving] another of the intangible right of honest services.” 18 U.S.C. § 1346. Despite our doubts as to the applicability of these “intangible-rights theory” provisions of the mail and wire fraud statutes to cases of breach of fiduciary duty with nothing more, this Court has suggested that liability under this theory may nonetheless result where a defendant misuses his fiduciary relationship (or information acquired therefrom) for personal gain.
See United States v. Bloom,
Here, the indictment clearly and correctly stated the fiduciary relationship between Hausmann and his clients:
During the time period of the scheme, Hausmann-McNally, S.C., including defendant Hausmann and other agents and employees under his direction, owed a fiduciary duty to the clients of the law firm, ... [including] the obligation of Haussman-McNally to disclose to the client any financial interest that the law firm may have involving the representation; to advise the client in a conflict-free manner; ... to negotiate in the best interest of the elient[; and] to provide accurate and complete information to the clients regarding the financial terms of personal injury case settlements, as well as the amount of compensation taken by the lawyers involved in the case.
(Emphasis added). Furthermore, at Rise’s trial, the government presented the testimony of Hausmann’s law partner, John McNally, describing the clients’ dependence upon legal representation by the firm in order to settle their claims, as well as testimony from several clients describing Hausmann’s written representations regarding their settlements and the firm’s compensation and the reliance they placed thereupon.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court Rules of Professional Conduct for Attorneys provide that “[a] lawyer may not allow related business interests to affect representation, for example, by referring clients to an enterprise in which the lawyer has an undisclosed interest.” Comment to Wis. Sup. Ct. R. 20:1.7(b). Thus, the indictment’s statement that “[t]he kickback arrangement was concealed from the clients of Hausmann-McNally in violation of the fiduciary duty described above” clearly alleges Hausmann’s misuse of the fiduciary relationship. Testimony of clients that were unaware of the kickback scheme served as evidence at Rise’s trial of the misuse of the fiduciary relationship.
The indictment also clearly alleged, and the government demonstrated at Rise’s trial, that Hausmann gained over $70,000 in kickback payments made to third parties for his personal benefit or entities in which he had some interest, including, for example, “at least $2000 in landscaping improvements performed at Hausmann’s personal residence,” and that such concealed payments deprived clients of the intangible right of honest services. At trial, for example, the government produced evidence that Rise signed a check in the amount of $1000 as a direct payment for such landscaping work.
*957 Appellants contend that Rise’s third-party payments were not kickbacks, but rather constituted the legitimate spending of income derived from use of fees to which Rise was legally entitled. They maintain that Hausmann’s clients had no right to the settlement funds paid to Rise nor, consequently, to the allocation of twenty percent of those funds to expenditures designated by Hausmann. In this sense, reason Appellants, no harm resulted to Hausmann’s clients, who were deprived of nothing to which they were entitled. This reasoning ignores the reality that Hausmann deprived his clients of their right to know the truth about his compensation: In addition to one third of any settlement proceeds he negotiated on their behalf, every dollar of Rise’s effective twenty percent fee discount went to Haus-mann’s benefit. Insofar as Hausmann misrepresented this compensation, that discount should have inured to the benefit of his clients. It is of no consequence, despite Appellants’ arguments to the contrary, that Rise’s fees (absent his discount) were competitive, or that clients received the same net benefit as they would have absent the kickback scheme. The scheme itself converted Hausmann’s representations to his clients into misrepresentations, and Hausmann illegally profited at the expense of his clients, who were entitled to his honest services as well as their contractually bargained-for portion of Rise’s discount.
Appellants also contend that the indictment did not properly allege their use of the interstate mails or wire communications systems in furtherance of the kickback scheme. However, the indictment plainly states that Appellants,
and others acting on their behalf, for the purpose of executing and attempting to execute a scheme to defraud: (a) did cause and intend to cause matter to be delivered by the United States Postal Service and commercial interstate carrier according to the directions thereon ...; and (b) did cause or intend to cause sounds to be transmitted in interstate commerce by means of wire communications .... The matter included: (a) solicitations and communications from Hausmann-McNally to clients; (b) communications between Hausmann-McNally lawyers and [Rise’s clinic] regarding billings; and (c) communications between Hausmann and certain recipients of the kickback checks. The interstate wire communications included telephone calls, facsimiles and emails between Hausmann and certain recipients of the kickback checks; and telephone calls from Hausmann to others regarding the flow of kickback payments.
The indictment thus sufficiently alleges the interstate element of Appellants’ conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud.
Finally, Rise challenges his culpability based on his lack of awareness that Hausmann was defrauding his clients. However, the knowing payer of an illegal kickback is criminally liable for conspiracy to commit mail or wire fraud to the same extent as the recipient of such a payment.
See, e.g., United States v. Alexander,
For all of these reasons, the indictment sufficiently alleges the elements of the mail and wire fraud offenses underlying the conspiracy charge against Appellants: that Hausmann used the required interstate means in order to misuse his fiduciary relationship for his gain and at his *958 clients’ expense. Furthermore, we find that a rational jury could have found Rise guilty based upon the evidence produced at his trial.
II. Constitutionality of the Application of the Mail and Wire Fraud States to Appellants’ Conduct
Appellants further challenge the constitutionality of the application of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, and 1346 as void for vagueness and based on principles of federalism. The constitutionality of a federal statute is an issue of law subject to de novo review.
“Vagueness may invalidate a criminal law for either of two independent reasons. First, it may fail to provide the kind of ordinary notice that will enable ordinary people to understand what conduct it prohibits; second, it may authorize and even encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
City of Chicago v. Morales,
Appellants further contend that the indictment violates principles of federalism because it “overreaches” the scope of the federal criminal law by criminalizing conduct which is regulated by state law. Unlike the cases that Appellants cite for this proposition, such as
Handakas,
III. Jury Instructions
As an alternative basis for appealing his conviction, Rise claims that the district court failed to instruct the jury that, in order to convict him, it must find that (i) Rise reasonably contemplated harm to Hausmann’s clients and (ii) the scheme was intended not only as a gain to Hausmann, but also a doss to his clients. Here, Rise alleges an error of law in the jury instructions, which we review de novo.
The district court instructed the jury, in relevant part, as follows:
To find that there existed a scheme to deprive one or more clients of the Haus-mann-McNally law firm of his or her right to the honest services of that firm you must find beyond a reasonable doubt, first, that a fiduciary relationship existed between one or more of the clients of the Hausmann-McNally firm. Second, that Scott Rise and Charles Hausmann knowingly engaged in a scheme to deprive one or more clients of the Hausmann-McNally law firm of the right to honest services of the Haus-mann-McNally law firm as charged in Count 1. And, third, that through such scheme, Charles Hausmann misused his fiduciary relationship with one or more clients of the Hausmann-McNally law firm for personal gain.
This instruction adequately and accurately communicates the elements of Rise’s offense. There is no requirement under the law as articulated in Bloom and reiterated today that a co-conspirator to a wire and mail fraud scheme contemplate actual or foreseeable harm to the victim. Also, though the law does not require the court to instruct a jury that the scheme is intended to cause a loss to the victims as well as a gain to the offender, the loss element is implicit in the district court’s references both to a deprivation of one or more clients’ right to honest services — a type of loss in and of itself — and to Haus-mann’s gain. As discussed above, once Rise opted to discount his fees for chiropractic services, Hausmann’s clients shared Rise’s economic loss-a corollary to their entitlement to a portion of Haus-mann’s gain. Finding no error in the district court’s instruction of the jury that convicted him, we reject Rise’s jury instruction claim.
IV. Loss Amount
Lastly, Hausmann challenges the district court’s calculation of the amount of loss caused to the victims of Appellants’ scheme. Specifically, he argues that the court erred in refusing to reduce the value of the loss by the amount of “valuable free services” and fee reductions that Haus-mann-McNally provided to clients. He asserts that these services and reductions totaled $238,993.66, a figure exceeding the district court’s calculated loss amount of $77,062.87, based upon the aggregate value *960 of the kickbacks, and insists, therefore, that his clients received a net benefit as a result of his representation.
The United States Sentencing Guidelines provide that any amount of loss “shall be reduced by the money returned, and the fair market value of the property returned and the services rendered by the defendant or other persons acting jointly with the defendant, to the victim before the offense was detected.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, Application Note 2(A)(i). Hausmann correctly notes that this Circuit has adopted a “credit against loss” approach to the calculation of fraud victim loss amounts for sentencing guideline purposes.
See, e.g., United States v. Jackson,
Affirmed.
Notes
. For example, Rise paid (i) a total of $31,692.00 to a marketing firm with whom Hausmann, but not Rise, contracted to market the services of lawyers and chiropractors as part of a planned "Accident Care Network”; (ii) at least $2000, nominally to a charity, but effectively as consideration for landscaping work performed at Hausmann’s residence; (iii) a total of $14,900 to a full-time handyman who provided services at Hausmann’s direction to Hausmann's firm, Rise’s practice, Hausmann personally, a business jointly owned by Hausmann and his law partner in their individual capacities, and Hausmann's sister; and (iv) $850 to a company that refinished the wood floors of a contract employee involved in Hausmann’s marketing project.
. Hausmann was additionally charged with causing securities (kickback payment checks written by Rise) to be transferred in interstate commerce in connection with the fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2314 & 2, but this count was dismissed pursuant to a plea agreement.
. Bloom was decided in July 1998, more than one year prior to the alleged commencement of the kickback scheme.
. This authority is established in the Postal Power of Article I, Section 8, Clause 7 of the Constitution.
See also United States v. Elliott,
. Although this allegation related to a charge that was dismissed pursuant to Hausmann's plea agreement, evidence that checks were mailed out of state was presented at Rise’s trial.
