Denise Sue Christy stole cash from the vault of the bank where she worked as a teller. She was charged, convicted, and sentenced for various federal crimes. She now appeals.
On May 21, 2014, CNB auditors conducted a surprise audit of the Burlington, Kansas Central National Bank ("CNB" or "Bank") vault. The vault was missing $764,000. When they began to suspect Ms. Christy, she forged documents to purport that she had sent the missing cash to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City ("FRB"). A grand jury indicted her on one count of bank embezzlement, six counts of making false bank entries, six counts of failing to report income on her taxes, and 10 counts of money laundering. After a six-day trial, a jury found Ms. Christy guilty of all charges except four money laundering counts.
*820 On appeal, Ms. Christy argues that (1) cumulative prosecutorial misconduct violated her due process rights, (2) the evidence was insufficient for her money laundering convictions, and (3) the jury instructions improperly omitted a "materiality" element for the false-bank-entry charges. 1
Exercising jurisdiction under
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual History
1. Burlington CNB's Vault Management
In 2014, Elaine Gifford was the retail operations supervisor of Burlington CNB. She supervised bank teller Ms. Christy and vault teller Raylene Thorne, Ms. Christy's sister-in-law.
Ms. Gifford, Ms. Christy, and Ms. Thorne all had access to the Bank's vault. Ms. Gifford did not "keep much track of what was in the vault," ROA, Vol. III at 673, and Ms. Thorne often handed off her *821 vault duties to Ms. Christy. Ms. Gifford relied on Ms. Christy to count the cash. When Ms. Gifford needed to record the amount of cash in the vault, she simply wrote down the numbers that Ms. Christy gave her.
Approximately every other week, CNB Burlington transferred money to the FRB. When the vault had too much cash, 2 the Burlington branch sent cash, also known as "sold cash," to the FRB, which held the cash in an account for the branch. The FRB sent cash back to the Bank upon request. A company named Garda transported the cash to and from the FRB.
Burlington CNB tracked its cash transfers in various ways:
(1) The Bank created cash-out tickets that recorded when money came out of the vault, including transfers to the FRB and smaller transfers to teller stations within the Bank. These tickets contained an unalterable "proof strip" recording the date they were printed.
(2) The Bank entered the cash-out transactions into an electronic system called "Vertex," which produced a report that showed the amount of cash in the vault at any given time.
(3) When the Bank sent cash to the FRB, it created a debit ticket memorializing the transaction.
(4) For each sale to the FRB, the Bank created two currency deposit tickets that itemized the denominations it sold to the FRB. One ticket went to Garda and the other stayed with the Bank.
(5) When Garda employees picked up the cash, they used a handheld machine to print out a receipt that both a Burlington CNB employee and the Garda employee signed. The receipt contained a time/date stamp that recorded the precise second the receipt was printed.
(6) Lisa Nabus, a senior accountant at Junction City CNB, balanced Burlington CNB's FRB ledger by comparing the Bank's deposits to a daily statement from the FRB.
2. The May 21, 2014 Surprise Audit
Leading up to May 21, 2014, Ms. Nabus noticed the following discrepancies between CNB Burlington's Vertex records and the FRB's daily statements:
(1) December 17, 2013-Ms. Christy prepared a cash-out ticket representing that the branch had sold $401,000 to the FRB when in fact it had sold only $104,000.
(2) January 14, 2014-Ms. Christy prepared a cash-out ticket representing that the branch had sold $400,000 to the FRB when in fact it had never sold the money.
(3) February 25, 2014-Ms. Christy prepared a cash-out ticket representing that the branch had sold $562,000 to the FRB when in fact it had never sold the money.
(4) March 18, 2014-Ms. Christy prepared a cash-out ticket representing that the branch had sold $270,000, $225,000, and $225,000 when in fact it had never sold any of these amounts.
(5) April 22, 2014-Ms. Christy prepared a cash-out ticket representing that the branch had sold $401,000 to the FRB when in fact the branch had sold only $101,000.
*822 Although Ms. Christy adjusted the Vertex record to correct the discrepancies, 3 Ms. Nabus grew concerned about the errors and reported her concerns to Vicky Farres, a CNB auditor.
In response, Ms. Farres conducted a surprise audit of Burlington CNB on May 21, 2014. According to the Bank's Vertex report, the vault should have contained $883,320 in cash on that day. But the audit revealed that the vault held $119,320-$764,000 short.
Ms. Farres reported that Ms. Christy was exceedingly nervous and behaved unusually during the audit. When Ms. Farres started the audit, Ms. Christy delayed the counting process multiple times. Ms. Farres needed to prompt her to begin counting. During the counting, Ms. Farres noticed that Ms. Christy did not replace straps on the stacks of hundred-dollar bills after counting them. Ms. Christy also put the stacks outside Ms. Farres's sight where she could re-count the same stack. At one point, Ms. Christy claimed that $100,000 fell into a crack between the wall and a cabinet. When Ms. Farres and her colleagues examined the crack with a flashlight and a yardstick, they found only dust.
Ms. Farres asked Ms. Christy what had happened to the missing cash. Ms. Christy at first paused and then responded that she had sold it to the FRB. Ms. Farres then asked for the Garda receipts documenting the transactions. Ms. Christy answered that Garda never provided them to her.
The next day, however, Ms. Christy sent Garda receipts to Ms. Gifford for $90,000, $100,000, and $670,000. Ms. Christy stated she had found the receipts in a drawer. Only the $90,000 receipt was reflected in the FRB's records. It was also the only original receipt located during the audit and the ensuing investigation. The other two were copies. Separate from the receipt, the $90,000 cash-out ticket had a "proof strip" showing the sale was made on May 20, 2014, and the $90,000 transaction was recorded on the Vertex report. The Garda receipt for $90,000 bore a legible bag number, which Garda used to track the precise delivery bag that carried the cash.
The documentation of the purported $100,000 and $670,000 sales to the FRB differed from the $90,000 sale. First, in contrast to the $90,000 original receipt, the Bank never found original receipts for the $100,000 and $670,000 transfers. Second, the date stamps for all three receipts matched exactly, showing that the same machine printed all three receipts at the exact same second-May 20, 2014, at 13:35:08. Adam Lewis, the Garda employee who picked up and delivered the money, testified that printing three receipts with precisely the same date stamp would be "completely impossible." ROA, Vol. III at 926. Third, when a transparency of the $90,000 receipt was placed over the copy of the $100,000 receipt, the signatures matched exactly.
4
Fourth, the bag numbers on the two copied receipts were illegible, and surveillance footage showed Mr. Lewis leaving the branch on May 20, 2014, with only one bag. Finally, although the date stamp on the Garda receipts for the purported $100,000 and $670,000 sales was May 20, 2014, the Bank's cash-out tickets
*823
bore a "proof strip" showing that the tickets were created on May 21, 2014, the day of the audit.
3. The Government Investigation
The FBI and IRS coordinated the investigation. Two agents from an FBI task force questioned Ms. Christy about the missing money. During the interview, the agents asked Ms. Christy if she would be willing to take a polygraph. Ms. Christy responded that she wanted to think about it. Neither Ms. Christy nor the FBI raised the issue of the polygraph again. Throughout the interview, Ms. Christy denied any wrongdoing.
IRS Special Agent Joseph Schmidt examined Ms. Christy's bank accounts and those of several of her family members. He reviewed Ms. Christy's tax returns (filed jointly with her husband, Chris Christy) from 2008 to 2014. Agent Schmidt found a significant disparity between the bank accounts and the tax returns. The Christys' reported income was about $30,000 to $64,000 per year. Their expenditures, which included cash payments on the Christys' home loans, amounted to $400,000 that was unaccounted for in tax filings. Based on these calculations, Agent Schmidt concluded the Christys had failed to report income on their tax returns.
B. Procedural History
A grand jury indicted Ms. Christy, charging her with one count of bank embezzlement, in violation of
The district court sentenced Ms. Christy to (1) 51 months in prison for the embezzlement and false bank entries (Counts 1-7), followed by three years of supervised release; (2) 36 months for filing false tax returns (Counts 8-13), followed by one year of supervised release; and (3) 51 months for money laundering (Counts 18-23), followed by three years of supervised release. The court ordered Ms. Christy's sentences to run concurrently. It also ordered $857,708 in restitution. Ms. Christy timely appealed.
We will add factual and procedural background as it becomes relevant.
II. DISCUSSION
Ms. Christy argues that (A) cumulative prosecutorial misconduct violated her due process rights, (B) the evidence was insufficient for her money laundering convictions, and (C) a materiality element was improperly omitted from the false-bank-entry jury instructions.
A. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Ms. Christy asserts that the prosecutor committed 12 acts of prosecutorial misconduct based on comments made during trial. She groups the comments into three "themes," alleging that the prosecutor (1) commented on Ms. Christy's exercising her right to trial, (2) depicted witness Elaine Gifford as credible and sympathetic, and (3) implied witness Raylene Thorne colluded with defense counsel. The following discussion describes the pertinent legal background and standard of review and analyzes the prosecutor's comments. Although we find or assume that some of the cоmments were improper, we conclude that Ms. Christy has not shown they affected her substantive rights. She must do *824 so to show cumulative error on plain error review, and therefore the comments do not provide a ground to reverse.
1. Legal Background
The following describes (1) the relevant prosecutorial misconduct law, (2) the standards of review for appellate challenges to prosecutor statements made at trial, and (3) the cumulative error framework.
a. Prosecutorial misconduct
Prosecutorial misconduct can cause constitutional error in two ways.
Underwood v. Royal
,
The test for whether a defendant's trial was fundamentally unfair based on a prosecutor's comments proceeds in two steps: (1) the court first decides whether the prosecutor's comments were improper, and (2) if so, it examines their likely effect on the jury's verdict.
See
United States v. Currie
,
i. Step one-propriety of the prosecutor's comments
Courts have struggled to determine when a prosecutor's statements are improper.
See, e.g.
,
Runnels v. Hess
,
Any alleged improper comments must be examined in context.
Young
,
Courts may consult codes of professional responsibility in assessing a prosecutor's statements.
Young
,
Notwithstanding these guideposts, "[t]he line separating acceptable from improper advocacy is not easily drawn."
Young
,
ii. Step two-effect on jury's verdict
When a court determines or assumes the prosecutor made an improper comment, it then assesses whether the comment affected the jury's verdict.
See
id="p826" href="#p826" data-label="826" data-citation-index="1" class="page-label">*826
To make the prejudice dеtermination, courts "consider the trial as a whole, including the curative acts of the district court, the extent of the misconduct, and the role of the misconduct within the case."
United States v. Gabaldon
,
The prevalence and degree of improper statements in a trial can affect the prejudice analysis.
See
Berger
,
b. Standards of review
When a defendant seeks appellate relief for improper prosecutor comments made at trial, the standard of review that we apply to the foregoing two-step test depends on whether the defendant objected at trial and how the court responded.
Anaya
,
(1) The defendant objects and the court overrules the objection-de novo review.
(2) The defendant objects, the district court takes curative action, and the defendant objects to the adequacy of the curative action or asks for a mistrial-abuse of discretion review.
(3) The defendant objects, the district court sustains the objection, and the defendant fails to object to the adequacy of the curative action-plain error review.
(4) The defendant does not object at trial but raises the issue on appeal-plain error review.
Under de novo review, we "first decide whether the conduct was improper and then, if so, whether the
Government
has demonstrated that error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt."
c. Cumulative error
Ms. Christy's aggregate effect challenge implicates this circuit's law on the proper approach to cumulative error review. We consider cumulative error only if the appellant has shown at least two errors that were hаrmless.
United States v. Rivera
,
But before a court can make that determination, it must distinguish between alleged errors that were preserved for appeal and those that were not. As for at least two preserved errors, we consider whether the government can show they together were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See
United States v. Rogers
,
* * * *
With these principles in mind, we address the propriety of each of the prosecutor's comments, grouping them under Ms. Christy's three "themes" of alleged misconduct. We then analyze whether Ms. Christy has shown whether the comments we have determined or assumed to be improper cumulatively "infect[ed] the trial with unfairness" and denied her the right to a fair trial.
Anaya
,
2. Analysis
a. Cumulative error: analytical framework
Ms. Christy argues that the cumulative effect of the prosecutor's 12 comments violated her due process right to a fair trial. She contends that each comment was improper, but she does not claim that any one comment, standing alone, was enough to reverse her conviction. It follows that, even if improper, each comment alone would have been non-prejudicial and not reversible error. Rather than seek reversal based on any single comment, Ms. Christy argues that the comments together created a "crescendoing" or "cumulative" effect that infected the trial as a whole. Aplt. Br. at 17, 20.
To enable us to do the cumulative error analysis, we must first determine whether any of the alleged wrongful comments was improper. And to do this, we must use the proper standard of review, which we outlined
*828
for different circumstances in
Anaya
and summarized above. This exercise consumes the majority of our analysis below. We address each of the prosecutor's comments not only to assess which ones may have been improper but also to aid our later analysis in which we weigh impropriety against the strength of the prosecution's case.
See
Darden v. Wainwright,
We proceed as follows. First, we examine each of the 12 statements under the proper standard of review to determine which ones were improper. Only improper comments qualify for the cumulative error analysis. Second, we determine whether the improper comments preserved for appellate review together caused cumulative harmful error. Third, assuming the preserved comments were not cumulatively harmful, we add in the unpreserved improper comments to determine whether Ms. Christy has shown the preserved and unpreserved wrongful comments influenced the jury's verdict.
b. Propriety of the prosecutor's comments
For each of Ms. Christy's three categories of alleged improper comments, we provide a chart that lists each comment, whether Ms. Christy objected to the comment at trial, the court's response to each objection, and the applicable standard of review.
i. Comments on Ms. Christy's exercising her rights
Ms. Christy alleges that the prosecutor improperly commented on her decision to exercise her constitutional rights in the following five instances:
*829Government Comments on Ms. Christy Exercising her Rights Statement Objection/ Standard of Result Review Comment 1 Opening: No Plain error So at the end of this case and the presentation of evidence, we're going to ask you to do something that she is unwilling to do and that is to make her accountable for her criminal conduct. She wants to get away with this scot-free .... ROA, Vol. III at 248. Comment 2 Closing (Rebuttal): No Plain error So she was offered an opportunity to make an explanation. She was offered an opportunity to take a polygraph. She didn't avail herself of ever attempting to contact a representative of the United States after that. ROA, Vol. III at 1089. Comment 3 Closing (Rebuttal): No Plain error The evidence in its entirety should lead you to the conclusion that she should be held accountable for conduct which she is unwilling to accept. ROA, Vol. III at 1089. Comment 4 Closing (Rebuttal): De novo *830I enjoy where we hаve a case where someone has Yes/ confessed to the offense. It's-it's an Overruled acknowledgment of their wrongdoing. But short of that, when somebody is denying it, I would prefer a ridiculous story. And that's what we've heard in argument and in cross-examination of our witnesses. ROA, Vol. III at 1089-90. Comment 5 Closing (Rebuttal): No Plain error So I believe when you review all the evidence, you will find that there is evidence beyond a reasonable doubt to hold the defendant accountable for each and every count of the indictment, to return a verdict of that, and to make her accept responsibility for that verdict even though she won't do it voluntarily. Thank you, folks. ROA, Vol. III at 1090.
We review Comments 1, 2, 3 and 5 for plain error to determine whether they were "plainly improper." We review Comment 4 de novo to determine whether it was improper.
1) Additional legal background
The Sixth Amendment provides that "the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial." U.S. Const. amend. VI. The Fifth Amendment provides that "[n]o person shall be ... deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." U.S. Const. amend. V. Together they guarantee the defendant's right to a fair trial.
See
Strickland v. Washington
,
We assess whether a comment references a defendant's failure to testify by asking "whether the language used was manifestly intended or was of such character that the jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on the failure of the accused to testify."
Knowles
,
2) Analysis
Ms. Christy argues that these five statements were improper because they criticized *831 her for exercising her constitutional rights. Her brief invokes the Fifth Amendment and Griffin 's prohibition on comment about the defendant's silence, and it cites the Sixth Amendment regarding the defendant's right to a trial. Aplt. Br. at 21. 9
Comment 2 abоut the offer to take a polygraph was not about Ms. Christy's failure to testify at trial or her exercise of the right to trial. It was made in response to the following part of Ms. Christy's counsel's closing argument: "Remember [Ms. Christy's] interview? And [the FBI agents] said, oh, we'll get a polygraph. Why don't you take a polygraph? That will sort all of this out. They didn't do that. They didn't ever come back and talk to her again. They didn't reach out to her attorneys." ROA, Vol. III at 1077. In suggesting that the agents' investigation was incomplete, Ms. Christy's counsel invited the prosecution to explain the lack of follow up. To "right the scale," the prosecutor responded that Ms. Christy herself could have invited a second interview.
See
Young
,
The prosecutor's other four statements-Comments 1, 3, 4, and 5-did not comment about Ms. Christy's failure to testify. They also did not expressly comment on Ms. Christy's exercising her right to a trial. These statements, broadly interpreted, could be understood as an implied comment on Ms. Christy's decision to go to trial rather than plead guilty, though none of them stated this specifically.
We review Comments 1, 3, and 5 to consider whether they were "plainly improper." Comment 1, the prosecutor's opening statement about Ms. Christy's unwillingness to be accountable, could be read to state the obvious-that she had not pled guilty. But it also could be taken as criticism of her decision to put the government to its burden of proving her guilty, which was her right under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
See generally
Sullivan v. Louisiana
,
Unlike a comment on a defendant's failure to testify, which suggests the defendant lacks a truthful defense,
see
Griffin
,
*832
As for Comment 4, which we review de novo for its propriety, the prosecutor's statement that he enjoys when someone has confessed was not relevant but not improper. His statement that he prefers a "ridiculous story" when someone has denied guilt seems to be a fair advocacy comment on the defendant's evidence. The comment as a whole, like the other comments, do not expressly criticize Ms. Christy for going to trial, but even if Comment 4 could be read as implying so, it would not be enough, along with other comments in the cumulative error analysis below, to show prejudice.
ii. Comments depicting Elaine Gifford as credible and sympathetic
As noted above, Ms. Gifford was Ms. Christy's supervisor at the Bank. She was terminated after the Bank discovered Ms. Christy's embezzlement. Ms. Christy argues that the prosecutor improperly depicted Ms. Gifford as credible and sympathetic in the following five instances:
Government Comments Depicting Ms. Gifford as Credible and Sympathetic Statement Objection/ Standard of Result Review Comment 6 Opening: No Plain error And it is now time to become serious because it's a very serious matter. It's serious to the victims of the crime. The main victim is Central National Bank, but there was a lot of collateral damage caused by the defendant, Denise Sue Christy, over there . . . Elaine Gifford is one of the collateral damage [sic] caused by the defendant, Denise Sue Christy. ROA, Vol. III at 235, 238. Comment 7 Direct Examination of Ms. Gifford: No Plain error *833Ms. Gifford: Correct. I relied on Denise. I trusted her. And I trusted all my girls down there to do the right thing. You know, you put them in charge of something, you relied on them to do the correct-you know, we're like family, you know. We were just a group that enjoyed each other and thought we all would do what was right. AUSA: Found out that wasn't correct? Ms. Gifford: Correct. AUSA: It's okay. You-you lost your job over this, didn't you? Ms. Gifford: I did. And I'm paying for it. ROA, Vol. III at 706-07. Comment 8 Direct Examination of Ms. Gifford: Yes/ De novo Overruled Ms. Gifford: I relied on Denise to balance the vault every day to make sure, you know, it balanced. Between her and Raylene. You know, when-when you-when you work for someone-with someone for 15 years, you know, you're kind of family and you trust them and they should, you know- Defense Counsel: Objection, Judge. I'm sorry, it's nonresponsive. The Court: Yeah, I think it's-I think we wandered into an area. Why don't you put a question to the witness. AUSA: So you're telling us, I think, that you were relying upon her faith and honesty? Ms. Gifford: Yes. AUSA: And did you find out after May the 21st of 2014, the date of the surprise examination, that she had betrаyed your faith- Defense Counsel: Objection. Improper opinion. The Court: Overruled. Defense Counsel: Objection. Leading. The Court: Overruled. *834ROA, Vol. III at 780-81. Comment 9 Closing: No Plain error AUSA: And finally, I want to single out Elaine Gifford. She may have come across kind of short with you, but she was one of the collateral damage [sic] I mentioned in opening statement. This defendant, cunning and malevolent as she is, is willing to throw anybody under the bus if she can get away with her crime. ROA, Vol. III at 1042. Comment 10 Closing: Yes/ Plain error Sustained AUSA: And what she said was what I told you in opening statement. That with all the rules and regulations No curative and so forth that the bank has in place to try to make sure measures these things don't happen, it boils down fundamentally to taken or the honesty of the people executing those procedures. requested Elaine Gifford said they were like family there. And she was probably the most sincere witness I've ever seen- Defense Counsel: Objection. Vouching. The Court: Sustained. AUSA: She broke down on the stand and she told you the truth. She relied upon the honesty and integrity of her employees, and they did not come up to her standards. ROA, Vol. III at 1042-43.
We review Comment 8 de novo and review Comments 6, 7, 9, and 10 for plain error.
iii. Additional legal background
Courts frown on attorneys commenting on the sincerity and truthfulness of a witness.
Swafford
,
iv. Analysis
The parties agree that Comment 10-the prosecutor's statement that Ms. Gifford was "probably the most sincere witness the prosecutor had ever seen"-was improper vouching.
See
Aplee. Br. at 30 (conceding that Comment 10 was improper). We agree, too. Prosecutors may not personally vouch for the credibility or truthfulness of a witness.
Swafford
,
*835
The other comments are less concerning. Not only did the defense fail to object to Comments 6, 7, and 9, it also did not object to Ms. Gifford's testimony that she was fired because of Ms. Christy's embezzlement. Ms. Gifford's testimony informed the jury about the Bank's management structure, her supervisory responsibilities, her deficient supervision of Ms. Christy, and the consequences of Ms. Christy's embezzlement. The proseсutor's comments in opening statement, direct examination, and closing argument were consistent with the prosecution's task of providing a narrative of what happened. The Supreme Court has recognized "the offering party's need for evidentiary richness and narrative integrity in presenting a case," "not only to support conclusions but to sustain the willingness of jurors to draw the inferences, whatever they may be, necessary to reach an honest verdict."
Old Chief v. United States
,
As to Comment 8, we agree with the district court's overruling of the defense's objection. The prosecutor's questions about Ms. Gifford's trust or faith in Ms. Christy were relevant to the circumstances surrounding the embezzlement and were not improper.
We must weigh, however, the prosecutor's plainly improper vouching statement-Comment 10-against the weight of the evidence to determine whether Ms. Christy has shown that this comment, along with the prosecutor's other comment we assume to be improper, prejudiced the jury. As we discuss below, Ms. Christy has not met her burden.
c. Comments suggesting Raylene Thorne colluded with defense counsel
As noted above, Ms. Thorne was Ms. Christy's sister-in-law and co-worker at the Bank. Ms. Christy argues that the prosecutor improperly suggested that Ms. Thorne colluded with defense counsel in the following two instances:
Government Comments Implying Ms. Thorne Colluded with Defense Counsel Statement Objection/ Standard of Result Review Comment 11 Redirect Examination of Ms. Thorne: Yes/ Plain error Sustained AUSA: Did you meet with [defense counsel] prior to your testimony today?
*836Ms. Thorne: Who? AUSA: The gentleman here, Mitch? Ms. Thorne: Did I talk to him? AUSA: Yes. Ms. Thorne: Yes, I have talked to him. AUSA: Okay. Ms. Thorne: Yes. AUSA: In preparation for your testimony? Ms. Thorne: He's gone over the same things that you have gone over. AUSA: Okay. Ms. Thorne: Yes. He asked me why I would have signed certain tickets. AUSA: You have to answer my questions, okay? Ms. Thorne: Okay. AUSA: When you met with him, how many occasions was it? Ms. Thorne: Actually to sit down and talk to him, probably two. AUSA: For how long? Ms. Thorne: I would say anywhere from 30 minutes to maybe an hour. AUSA: Because you seem to be kind of rehearsed, your questions- Defense Counsel: Objection, Judge. The Court: Sustained. It's argumentative. ROA, Vol. III at 892-93. Comment 12 Closing (Rebuttal): AUSA: [1] We called Raylene [Thorne] to the stand [1] No Plain Error because she told us during the interview what we'd present as far as evidence was concerned. Raylene Thorne, I remind you, is the sister-in-law of the defendant. She *837confirmed what Elaine told you was the practice in respect to filling out the Vertex reports. And that was both she, Elaine, and Raylene relied upon calculator tapes that were presented to her by the defendant, Denise Christy. That's what they relied on. This audit was supposedly done, Elaine is sitting at a desk. She's not even looking into this. And Elaine is simply putting down in the audit report what Denise Christy is telling her are the denominations in that vault. [2] Now, she did have some interesting testimony [2] No Plain error on cross examination, which we had never heard before, and that was that she counted the vault. Never told us that during the interview. I would have presented that as evidence because that's my job, to provide any exculpatory information I'm aware of. [3] And it was [3] Yes/ De novo clear that she had been preparеd by the defense for rapid-fire Overruled responses. Question. Boom. Question. Boom. Question. Boom. I didn't know that she had met with the defense. But she had. For hours. But, you know, when you have that kind of rapid-fire questioning and response, you make mistakes kind of like you do when you're fabricating documents- Defense Counsel: Objection. Impugning the defense. The Court: I didn't hear the objection. Defense Counsel: Impugning the defense, Judge. The Court: Let me talk to you. Sidebar, please. Defense Counsel: Judge, the argument is that the defense has somehow concocted some kind of defense by coordinating the witnesses and doing this-some kind of rapid-fire question and response. That impugns upon defense counsel, that they have done something wrong. That's an improper argument. The Court: Mr. Hathaway. AUSA: That's not an improper argument if they're being-being prepared. And I'm just going to go into the next phase of it, which is that she testified to something that was false and that is that she testified she counted the vault on two occasions when her sister-in-law was on vacation. It turns out that Raylene was on vacation with her sister-in-law. *838Defense Counsel: Judge, I'm not objecting to whether or not the prosecutor wants to present evidence. I'm objecting to the manner in which he did this and to impugning the defense. Is [sic] improper argument. AUSA: They impugned the government at every turn. The Court: I'm going to overrule the objection. I do think there has been an attack on the investigation. I think this is fair comment. I think fabrication-calling it fabricating is a verb that concerns me some. AUSA: Well, I was referring to the documentation that were the tickets, that she fabricated those. The Court: I don't think that's-my concern is that's not what you said. I'm overruling the objection. But I do-I do request that you steer clear of fabrication by counsel because I don't think that is what you intend to say and I think it's close to what you're saying. ROA, Vol. III at 1083-86.
We review Comment 11 for plain error. Comment 12 has three parts-(1) a reminder that Ms. Thorne was Ms. Christy's sister-in-law and of Ms. Thorne's role in preparing the audit report, (2) a statement that the prosecutor heard for the first time on cross-examination that Ms. Thorne "counted the vault" and how the prosecutor would have disclosed that information had he known about it earlier, and (3) a statement about the defense's preparation of Ms. Thorne for her testimony. Defense counsel objected only to the third part, and his objection was overruled. So we apply plain error review to determine whether the first two parts of Comment 12 were plainly improper statements and de novo review to decide whether the third was improper.
i. Additional legal background
"Attacks on defense counsel can at times constitutе prosecutorial misconduct."
Wilson
,
ii. Analysis
In its redirect examination of Ms. Thorne, which included Comment 11, the prosecution inquired about her meeting with defense counsel to go over her testimony. The questioning was mostly unobjectionable, commonplace impeachment. Toward the end, however, rather than ask a question, the prosecutor said, "Because you seem to be kind of rehearsed, your questions-." ROA, Vol. III at 893.
In asking Ms. Thorne about her meetings with defense counsel, the prosecutor may instead have inquired whether they rehearsed her testimony. But the prosecutor chose to express his own opinion that the in-court testimony "seem[ed] ... rehearsed."
Although the prosecutor's statement was objectionable, whether it was "plainly improper" in the context here need not be determined. Because even if it were, Ms. Christy has not shown, as we discuss below, that the cumulative effect of the prosecutor's challenged statements influenced the jury verdict in the face of the incriminating evidence presented against her.
Comment 12 in the Government's rebuttal closing argument was more benign. First, the statement properly recounted that Ms. Thorne is Ms. Christy's sister-in-law and Ms. Thorne's role in preparing the audit report.
See
Thornburg
,
The prosecutor's third statement in Comment 12 was that "[Ms. Thorne] had been prepared by the defense for rapid-fire responses" and that "yоu make mistakes kind of like you do when you're fabricating documents." ROA, Vol III at 1084. Defense counsel objected that this was "[i]mpugning the defense."
* * * *
To recap our step one review, Comments 2, 6, 7, 9, and the first part of Comment 12 were not plainly improper. 10 Comment 8 was not improper. Comments 1, 3, 4, and 5 may have impliedly criticized Ms. Christy's choice to go to trial; Comment 11 stated rather than asked whether Ms. Thorne's testimony had been rehearsed; the second part of Comment 12 about Ms. Thorne's cross-examination included off-record comment; and the third part of Comment 12 about defense counsel's preparation of Ms. Thorne to testify was, as the district court said, at least borderline improper. As to these comments, we do not need to decide whether 1, 3, 5, 11, and the second part of 12 were plainly improper under plain error review or whether 4 and the third part of 12 were improper under de novo review. We will assume that they were, but when combined with Comment 10, which was plainly improper, they did not, as the ensuing analysis shows, influence the jury's verdict.
As we turn to the cumulative error analysis, the following chart summarizes where we are after our step one discussion. Only the comments with check marks in the last three columns qualify for cumulative error review.
*840Comment Not Not Plainly Assume Assume Plainly Improper Improper Improper Plainly Improper Improper 1 ? 2 ? 3 ? 4 ? 5 ? 6 ? 7 ? 8 ? 9 ? 10 ? 11 ? 12[1] ? 12[2] ? 12[3] ?
3. Cumulative Effect of Improper Comments on Ms. Christy's Substantial Rights
Under our cumulative error analysis, we first examine the preserved errors and determine their effect on the jury's verdict.
Rogers
,
Accordingly, we move to the second step of cumulative error analysis and consider whether the effect of the preserved-error comments, together "with the unpreserved errors, are sufficient to overcome the hurdles necessary to establish plain error."
Rogers
,
First , and most important, the inculpatory evidence against Ms. Christy was overwhelming.
*841 The Government proved that Ms. Christy had deposited more than $400,000 in her personal accounts over a six-year period and that she failed to report the deposits on her tax returns from 2008 through 2014. 11 Ms. Christy argues her deposits "did not add up to anywhere near [the missing] [$764,000]." Aplt. Br. at 38. But she offers no explanation for the dramatic difference between her sizeable cash deposits and her reported income.
The jury also heard testimony from Ms. Farres about Ms. Christy's nervousness during the audit and her suspicious conduct in the vault. For example, she caught Ms. Christy trying to recount stacks of hundred-dollar bills and investigated Ms. Christy's bluff that $100,000 had fallen into a crack near the vault. Moreover, the jury heard Ms. Gifford explain that the day after the audit, Ms. Christy "found" two deposit receipts showing that she had transferred the missing cash to the FRB. See ROA, Vol. III at 698-703. But the "receipts" (1) were copies, (2) bore the exact same signatures and time stamps as another original receipt, (3) did not contain a legible bag number, and (4) corresponded to cash-out tickets bearing unalterable "proof strips" declaring they were printed on May 21, 2014, the day of the audit. In short, the evidence showed that the receipts had been fabricated-copied from an original receipt and reflecting false deposits. The false deposits were just two in a string of fraudulent "sales" that Ms. Christy made (and which Ms. Nabus caught and flagged).
In addition, both Ms. Gifford's and Ms. Thorne's testimony established that Ms. Christy was responsible for the daily operations of the vault. Although Ms. Gifford was the branch manager and Ms. Thorne was nominally the vault teller, Ms. Christy conducted routine аudits and sent money to the FRB on a biweekly basis, providing her the opportunity to prepare false bank entries and embezzle the cash. Moreover, to the extent the defense tried to pin blame on Ms. Thorne and Ms. Gifford, the jury had a full opportunity to judge their credibility. In short, the evidence was more than sufficient for the jury to convict Ms. Christy of embezzling the Bank's money, submitting false entries to the bank, and falsely reporting her income on her tax filings. 12
Second
, the district court instructed the jurors to disregard the prosecutor's comments. It told the jurors that (1) it is their duty to follow and apply the law as provided to them by the district court (Instruction 1); (2) they are the judges of the facts (Preliminary Instructions); (3) statements and arguments of lawyers are not evidence (Preliminary Instructions and Instruction 7); (4) the government has the burden of proving the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt (Instruction 4); and (5) the defendant had no burden to prove her innocence or produce any evidence at all (Instruction 8). Absent evidence to the contrary, the jury is presumed to have followed those instructions.
Erickson
,
Of the 12 comments that Ms. Christy challenges, the prosecutor made one of *842 them in his opening statement and eight in closing argument. The jury heard the preliminary instructions immediately before opening statements and heard the remaining instructions immediately before closing arguments. Thus, when the prosecutor made the allegedly inappropriate comments, the court's instructions were fresh in the jurors' minds. Ms. Christy has given us no reason to doubt that they followed those instructions.
Third
, although not dispositive, the jury acquitted Ms. Christy of four money laundering charges, which undercuts an argument that the jury could not follow instructions or "fairly judge the evidence."
Bland v. Sirmons
,
Fourth
, the six-day trial produced approximately 1,000 pages of transcribed testimony from 14 witnesses. Although not "isolated," the prosecutor's comments represented a small portion of what was presented to the jury.
See
Donnelly
,
In sum, though we do not condone several of the prosecutor's comments, Ms. Christy has not shown they collectively affected her substantial rights. We deny her request to reverse her convictions based on prosecutorial misconduct.
B. Money Laundering: Sufficiency of the Evidence
Ms. Christy challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for her money laundering convictions, specificаlly on the mens rea element of intent. After providing additional procedural and legal background, we review the record and conclude there was insufficient evidence of intent for a reasonable jury to find Ms. Christy guilty of money laundering beyond a reasonable doubt.
1. Additional Procedural Background
The jury found Ms. Christy not guilty of the four money laundering counts based on loan payments the Christys made before 2014 (Counts 14-17). The cash payments underlying Ms. Christy's six money laundering convictions (Counts 18-23) were made on two loans in the Christys' names at the Farmers State Bank in Aliceville, Kansas.
Count 18 charged Ms. Christy with money laundering for making a $1,000 payment on March 17, 2014 on Loan 7521, a home loan that originated in 2011 and called for a minimum monthly payment of $600. With one exception, a payment of $1,848 that was not charged in the indictment, every one of the Christys' payments on Loan 7521 in 2013 and 2014 was $1,000. Counts 19-23 concerned cash payments on Loan 7962, a refinancing agreement for the Christys' home loan. 13 Ms. Christy was convicted based on five cash payments on this loan made between March 17, 2014 and May 12, 2014, ranging from $834.49 to $3,200 and averaging approximately $2,167.
Ms. Christy filed a motion for acquittal on the money laundering counts at the close of the Government's case, arguing there was insufficient evidence to show that her loan payments were made with embezzled funds. She did not argue that there was insufficient evidence of specific intent. She renewed her motion at the end of trial. The district court denied the motion, stating,
A reasonable jury could infer from the circumstantial evidence presented at trial that the cash used to make these loan *843 payments came from funds that Ms. Christy had embezzled from the vault at CNB and that Ms. Christy conducted the financial transactions with the intent to file a false income tax return in violation of26 U.S.C. § 7206 (1).
ROA, Vol. I at 337.
2. Standard of Review
In general, we review de novo whether there was sufficient evidence to support a defendant's convictions,
United States v. Cota-Meza
,
We will reverse a conviction for insufficient evidence only when no reasonable jury could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
See
Anaya
,
Because Ms. Christy failed to raise her mens rea argument in her Rule 29 motion, we review the sufficiency issue for plain error.
To establish plain error, [the appellant] must demonstrate the district court (1) committed error, (2) the error was plain, and (3) the plain error affected her substantial rights. If these factors are met, we may exercise discretion to correct the error if (4) it seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.
United States v. Story
,
As we have noted before, "[O]ur review for plain error in this context differs little from our de novo review of a properly preserved sufficiency claim" because "a conviction in the absence of sufficient evidence will almost always satisfy all four plain-error requirements."
United States v. Gallegos
,
3. Legal Background
a. The money laundering statute and the elements of the offense
Broadly defined, money laundering is "[t]he act of transferring illegally obtained money through legitimate people or accounts so that its original source cannot be traced."
Regalado Cuellar v. United States
,
*844 § 1956. Laundering of monetary instruments
(a)(1) Whoever, knowing that the property involved in a financial transaction represents the proceeds of some form of unlawful activity, conducts or attempts to conduct such a financial transaction which in fact involves the proceeds of specified unlawful activity-
(A)(i) with the intent to promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity; or
(ii) with intent to engage in conduct constituting a violation of section 7201 or 7206 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 ; or
(B) knowing that the transaction is designed in whole or in part-
(i) to conceal or disguise the nature, the location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the proceeds of specified unlawful activity; or
(ii) to avoid a transaction reporting requirement under State or Federal law, shall be sentenced to a fine ... or imprisonment for not more than twenty years, or both.
At the trial, the district court instructed the jury that to find Ms. Christy guilty of tax-based money laundering under § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), it
must be convinced that the government has proved each of the following beyond a reasonable doubt:
FIRST: Denise Christy conducted a financial transaction;
SECOND: Denise Christy knew that the property involved in the financial transaction represented the proceeds of some form of unlawful activity;
THIRD: The financial transaction involved the proceeds of bank embezzlement as set forth in Count 1; and
FOURTH: Denise Christy conducted the financial transaction with the intent to engage in conduct constituting a violation of section 7201 or 7206 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
ROA, Vol. I at 108. 16 On appeal, Ms. Christy does not contest that the Government proved she paid loans with money that she knew she had embezzled from the Bank-the first three elements. She contests whether the Government proved the fourth element, specifically whether she made the loan payments "with the intent" to violate the tax laws. In short, she argues the evidence at trial was insufficient to prove intent. We next address the intent required to violate § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii).
b. Mens rea under the statute
The mens rea for 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) is purpose or specific intent. This is clear from the following discussion of the difference between general and specific intent, the text of § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), case law
*845
from our circuit, and other circuits' interpretation of the tax-based money laundering statute. The Government therefore needed to show that Ms. Christy made the charged loan payments with the purpose of furthering the false statements on her 2014 income tax returns.
See
United States v. Bailey
,
i. Mens rea, § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), and general and specific intent
A criminal conviction generally requires proof not only of a criminal act but also a guilty mind, or "mens rea."
Torres v. Lynch
, --- U.S. ----,
The criminal act under § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) is "to conduct [ ] a financial transaction which in fact involves the proceeds of specified unlawful activity." The financial transactions in this case were Ms. Christy's loan payments. The statute requires proof of two types of mens rea. First, under § 1956(a)(1), the defendant must "know[ ] that the property involved in a financial transaction represents the рroceeds of some form of unlawful activity." Ms. Christy does not contest that the Government proved this knowledge element. Second, under § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), the defendant must have conducted the financial transaction "with the intent to engage in conduct constituting a violation of section ... 7206 of the Internal Revenue Code." Ms. Christy contends the prosecution did not prove this intent element.
The common law has distinguished "general intent" and "specific intent" crimes.
Bailey
,
Federal criminal law and the Model Penal Code have gradually moved away from this terminology, replacing it with a mens rea "hierarchy," "commonly identified, in descending order of culpability, as [1] purpose, [2] knowledge, [3] recklessness, and [4] negligence."
Bailey
,
*846 ii. Text
The language of § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) -"with intent to engage in conduct constituting a violation" of the tax laws-is phrased in specific intent terms.
See
Carter v. United States
,
Thе words "with intent to engage in conduct constituting a violation" of § 7206 do not call for proof that the financial transaction was just "done voluntarily and intentionally."
Blair
,
The language surrounding § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) provides even further support.
See
Leocal v. Ashcroft
,
The intent required in (A)(ii) is even more specific than the intent in (A)(i) because it itemizes particular statutory provisions. Although the case law interpreting (A)(ii) is sparse, cases interpreting (A)(i) hold that it is a specific intent provision.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Carcione
,
iii. Tenth Circuit case law on money laundering and intent
This circuit has not addressed the tax-based money laundering provision in § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii). But cases interpreting § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i) help to show why "intent" in § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) should be read to require proof of "specific intent" or "purpose." 20
In
United States v. Sanders
, this court addressed the sufficiency of the evidence for a money laundering conviction under § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i), which prohibits transactions "designed ... to conceal" the nature, location, ownership, or source of the ill-gotten funds.
In
Caldwell,
we also overturned the defendant's money laundering conviction under § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i) for insufficient evidence.
Id.
at 1223. There, the defendant distributed the proceeds of her wire-fraud scheme by writing checks to herself and her husband.
Id.
at 1221-22. To prove money laundering, we held that the government
*848
was required to produce evidence of intent to conceal. Using ill-gotten gains for routine financial transactions does not suffice.
Id.
at 1223 ;
see
Sanders
,
On another occasion, in the context of § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i), we explained:
Whenever a drug dealer uses his profits to acquire any asset-whether a house, a car, a horse, or a television-a jury could reasonably suspect that on some level he is motivated by a desire to convert his cash into a more legitimate form. The requirement that the transaction be "designed" to conceal, however, requires more than a trivial motivation to conceal.
Garcia-Emanuel
,
The need to prove purposeful intent to establish tax-based money laundering dovetails with the Tenth Circuit's well-established principle that "money laundering" is not "money spending."
See
Caldwell
,
iv.
Out-of-circuit case law interpreting
The First, Fifth, and Eleventh Circuits have upheld convictions under § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) when the defendants conducted their "financial transactions" with the purpose or specific intent of furthering their tax fraud.
See
United States v. Zanghi
,
In
Zanghi
, the defendant engaged in securities fraud through an " S" Corporation to generate income.
Characterizing the [checks] as loan repayments allowed Zanghi to argue to [his company's] accountant that [the funds used for the checks] were originally deposited in [the company's] account as the proceeds of loans, not as the proceeds of the illegal sale of preferred shares in [the company] (which they in fact were)."
The First Circuit affirmed Mr. Zanghi's money laundering convictions.
The First Circuit disagreed with this argument, correcting the district court's legal conclusion and explaining that "
exclusive
intent to evade taxes is not required."
In
Crader
, the defendants ran a non-profit organization funded by federal grants.
In
Suba
,
the Eleventh Circuit considered a 133-count indictment that included multiple types of money laundering.
In each of these cases, the defendants used corporate entities to mischaracterize or conceal their financial transactions using ill-gotten gains. The transactions furthered the defendants' tax fraud by hiding the true source of the funds. In other words, the financial transactions had the *850 purpose of furthering or facilitating the underlying tax crime.
* * * *
In summary, based on the law defining specific and general intent, the text of § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), the Tenth Circuit cases establishing that money laundering is not money spending, and the out-of-circuit decisions requiring purpose or specific intent to violate § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), the Government needed to рrove that Ms. Christy made her loan payments with the specific intent to violate the tax laws.
4. Analysis
The Government failed to produce sufficient evidence to establish that Ms. Christy made her loan payments with the purpose of enabling her to file false tax returns. The Government "does not contest that § 1956 is generally not a 'money spending statute.' " Aplee. Br. at 41 (quoting
Caldwell
,
a. Loan payments not evidence of specific intent
The Government's first argument fails because the evidence does not show that Ms. Christy's loan payments were made to enable her to file false tax returns.
Zanghi
explained that concealing the nature of the transaction may suffice to establish contemporaneous "intent to engage in conduct constituting [willful tax evasion, i.e.,] a violation of section 7201."
Similarly, in
Crader
, "[t]he defendants aided the ultimate beneficiaries of the third-party checks in evading income taxes by issuing the checks in a third party's name, rather than in the name of the actual recipient, and by characterizing the payments as rent or reimbursements, rather than as salary or other income."
*851 No comparable concealment or purpose appears in this case. 24 Ms. Christy's $1,000 payment on Loan 7521 (Count 18) was the exact same amount as 20 of the 21 payments she made in 2013 and 2014. As for Loan 7962, the Government did not introduce the loan documents into evidence, so there is no evidence that Ms. Christy's payments were irregular relative to the terms of the loan and her prior payments. The amounts of Ms. Christy's payments varied, but they still fell within a $2,400 range, and none deviated from the average payment by more than $1,200. Nothing about the frequency or size of the payments suggests Ms. Christy was attempting to conceal the source of her income.
Based on the foregoing, the Christys' loan payments were neither unusual nor suspicious. The embezzled funds could just have easily been spent on groceries,
see
United States v. Dobbs
,
The Government has not shown that Ms. Christy's intent to make the loan payments rested on anything other than her contractual obligation to make them.
See
United States v. McGahee
,
b. False tax return not evidence of specific intent
The Government is left with its second argument-that Ms. Christy "clearly had no intent to report the substantial increase in her income as a result of her embezzlement from CNB, as evidenced by her failure to report the proceeds from her embezzlement as income." Aplee. Br. at 40.
27
In denying Ms. Christy's motion for acquittal, the district court similarly relied on Ms. Christy's "intent to file a false income tax return in violation of
The Government relies on
Zanghi
's declaration that "[e]vidence that a taxpayer filed returns knowing that he should have reported more income than he did is sufficient to support a finding of willful intent to defeat and evade taxes."
Ms. Christy's failure to report income on her tax filings does not show that she made the loan payments with the purpose of evading taxes. It shows she evaded taxes. Congress made Ms. Christy's failure to report income on tax returns a separate crime under
*853
We decline to adopt such a sweeping interpretation. Instead, as we have done under other subsections of § 1956, we "reject the government's argument that the money laundering statute should be interpreted to broadly encompass all transactions, however ordinary on their face, which involve the proceeds of unlawful activity."
Sanders
,
* * * *
The Government has produced insufficient evidence that a purpose for Ms. Christy's making the loan payments was to file false tax documents or to hide income from the IRS. Nothing about the loan payments concealed the source of the funds. She embezzled funds, filed false returns, and knowingly used embezzled funds to pay loans. But because the Government failed to produce adequate specific intent evidence, the loan payments were money spending, not money laundering. Accordingly, we reverse Ms. Christy's money laundering convictions. 29
C. False Bank Entries-Jury Instruction
Ms. Christy challenges her false bank entry convictions, arguing that the district court erred in failing to include a "materiality" element in its instruction to the jury. But even assuming
1. Legal Background
Federal law provides that "[w]hoever makes any false entry in any book, report, or statement of [a federally insured] bank ... with intent to injure or defraud such bank ... or to deceive any officer of such bank" is guilty of making a false bank entry.
The statute does not expressly state a materiality requirement.
See
Materiality is an objective inquiry.
See
TSC Indus. v. Northway, Inc.
,
(1) What statement was made?
(2) What decision was the decision maker considering?
*854 (3) Was the statement capable of influencing the relevant decision?
United States v. Williams
,
2. Additional Background
Ms. Christy's false bank entry convictions concerned her six false "sales" of cash from CNB Burlington to the FRB. She filled out and signed "cash-out" tickets that misrepresented the amount of money CNB Burlington had sent to the FRB. Her false sales to the FRB contained discrepancies of:
• $297,000 (Count 2)
• $400,000 (Count 3)
• $562,000 (Count 4)
• $270,000, $225,000, and $225,000 (collectively, Count 5)
• $300,000 (Count 6)
• $680,000 (Count 7)
Ms. Nabus discovered Ms. Christy's errors and prompted her to correct them, which she eventually did.
At trial, Ms. Christy objected to the jury instruction on the false bank entry charges, arguing that it should have included a requirement that "the [false bank] entry was material." ROA, Vol. I at 52. She did not provide a suggested definition of "material." The district court overruled the objection and instructed the jury that it must find four elements to convict Ms. Christy of violating
(1) CNB was a federally insured bank.
(2) Ms. Christy made a false entry in a book, record, or statement of CNB.
(3) Ms. Christy knew the entry was false when she made it.
(4) Ms. Christy made the false entry with the intent to deceive an officer of CNB.
3. Standard of Review
"[W]e review the jury instructions de novo and view them in the context of the entire trial to determine if they accurately state the governing law and provide the jury with an accurate understanding of the relevant legal standards and factual issues in the case."
United States v. Kalu
,
When a jury instruction erroneously omits an element of the offense, the government must prove harmless error by showing "beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the verdiсt obtained."
Neder
,
4. Analysis
Neither the Supreme Court nor this court has addressed whether the false bank entry statute,
Ms. Christy's false bank entries were plainly material. They reported sales to the FRB containing discrepancies of between $297,000
31
and $680,000, and she signed the tickets and attempted to incorporate these discrepancies into the Bank's records. On the day of the audit, the vault should have contained $883,320. Mr. Snook testified that the vault's records showed it contained between $750,000 and $1,000,000 in the months leading up to the audit. Thus, even the smallest of the discrepancies ($297,000) in Ms. Christy's entries constituted more than 25 percent of the branch's total reported cash reserves-hardly immaterial. These facts are uncontroverted. Ms. Christy does not point to any countervailing evidence suggesting her false entries were immaterial.
See
Neder
,
Burlington CNB reasonably relied on these statements to maintain its records and manage cash reserves. Although Ms. Nabus promptly caught Ms. Christy's errors, as in
Williams
, Ms. Christy's "misrepresentations were capable of influencing the bank's decision[s]."
The verdict was "supported by overwhelming evidence."
See
Neder
,
III. CONCLUSION
In sum, we (1) reject Ms. Christy's prosecutorial misconduct challenge because she has not shown the prosecutor's comments influenced the jury's verdict; (2) reverse Ms. Christy's money laundering convictions because the Government did not produce sufficient evidence of the intent to file a false tax return; and (3) affirm Ms. Christy's false-bank-entry convictions because, even assuming materiality is an implied element of
O'BRIEN, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part.
I agree with the Majority's opinion in all respects but two.
First, it says reversing the money laundering counts (incorrectly, in my view 1 )
*856 excuses any need to address an issue warranting decision. The issue is whether the district judge erred in failing "to address [Christy] personally" regarding allocution. (Majority Op. at 820 n.1 (quotations marks omitted) ). The trial judge adequately addressed and advised her, and we should say so.
The issue was fully briefed and argued. I disagree with Christy's assumption of error and even more so with her undifferentiated reading of
United States v. Bustamante-Conchas
,
Second, the government produced sufficient evidence to convict Christy of tax-based money laundering. Her repeated use of illicitly obtained funds to pay down her loans and her repeated failure to report those funds as income on her tax returns demonstrate one of her purposes (intent), if not the principle one, was to violate the tax laws.
See
United States v. Zanghi
,
A. Allocution
The common law recognized a defendant's right to allocute at sentencing. That right required "the defendant [to] be personally
*857
afforded the opportunity to speak before imposition of sentence."
Green v. United States
,
At the beginning of the sentencing hearing, the judge personally and directly addressed Christy:
You do have a right-under the rule that governs this hearing, you have a right to make a statement. You are not required to make a statement, but you do have that right. And later in the hearing, I'll call on you to hear any statement you choose to make. Make sense to you?
(R. Vol. 3 at 977.) She indicated she understood. As promised, later in the hearing the judge returned to Christy's right to make a statement: "So now, Mr. Biebighauser [defense counsel], I turn to the question of an allocution statement. Does Ms. Christy wish to make a statement in the nature of allocution at this time?" ( Id . at 1012 (emphasis added).) Significantly, the question to counsel was not, "Do you have something more to offer?" Instead, and clearly, it was, "Does your client want to make a statement?" The attorney responded, "No, Judge." ( Id .) In light of that abundantly clear answer, the judge concluded, "All right. Then the record should show that she has waived that opportunity ." ( Id . (emphasis added).) Neither Christy nor her attorney uttered a word of protest. The judge was right; the waiver was complete.
I can envision only two possible claims of error. Perhaps, with Christy at his side, defense counsel flagrantly lied to the judge, something we ought be loath to presume, especially on a sparse record. Perhaps it was a miscommunication between Christy and counsel. In either event, Christy's remedy, if any, should be grounded in post-conviction review under
*858 sometimes they really matter and are easily obtained. If her lawyer accurately relayed her answer ("I do not want to make a statement") to the judge, she waived a known right. An intricate dance to the rhythm of Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(i)(4)(A)(ii) is unnecessary, entertaining as it may be.
But even ignoring her waiver, Christy's failure to object at sentencing entitles her only to plain error review.
Bustamante-Conchas
,
For an error to be plain, it must be "clear [or obvious] at the time of the appeal."
United States v. Smith
,
Stare decisis, a venerable tenet of the common law, has been carefully woven into American jurisprudence. Rightfully so; it serves important purposes. Among others, it is egalitarian-the law, once announced, does not change, case by case. It also makes the law predictable-reliance on stable law enables people and legal entities to comfortably plan their affairs. It is efficient-eliminating the need to repeatedly offer a detailed explanation for a proposition earlier laid to rest. But, if not carefully applied, it can pervert otherwise admirable ends. In the words of Justice Cardozo: "Judges march at times to pitiless conclusions under the prod of a remorseless logic which is supposed to leave them no alternative. They deplore the sacrificial rite. They perform it, none the less, with averted gaze, convinced as they plunge the knife that they obey the bidding of their office." Benjamin N. Cardozo, The Growth of the Law 66 (1924).
Relief from stifling regularity lies in another tenet of the common law, also carefully woven into American jurisprudence. In applying precedent, judges may, sometimes must, distinguish the case at bar from an earlier one, which, at least seemingly, announces a hard and fast rule. Doing so restricts like treatment to genuinely like matters. That lesson is a worthy one, well-illustrated by cases in another context (qualified immunity) decrying similarities
*859
drawn at a high level of generality.
See, e.g.
,
Kisela v. Hughes
, --- U.S. ----,
In summary and practice, the threads of stare decisis are appropriately entangled with the opposing, but no less imposing, threads of exception. When applied together in a principled way, they are the warp and the woof of a legal tapestry and together they ameliorate the risk of unintended consequences.
In
Bustamante-Conchas
, neither before nor after announcing a tentative sentence did the judge " 'address the defendant personally in order to permit [him] to speak or present any information to mitigate the sentence.' "
Here, Christy could have, had she chosen to do so, "personally engage[d]" with the judge, presenting "mitigating circumstances" and "personal characteristics" which would have "enable[d] [him] to craft an individualized sentence" and "avoid[ed] the appearance of ... assembly-line justice." Id . at 1136 (quotation marks omitted) (noting the important ends served by allowing a defendant to personally address the sentencing court). With full knowledge of her right to allocute, she, in the presence of and through her attorney, simply declined to do so.
That the judge posed the question of allocution to defense counsel, rather than Christy, is of no moment when placed in context. " Rule 32 provides a defendant with two rights: 'to make a statement in his own behalf, and to present any information in mitigation of punishment.' "
Id
. at 1135 (quoting
Green
,
In
Bustamante-Conchas
, we decided a defendant need not proffer a proposed allocution statement in order to satisfy the fourth prong of plain error review.
We should treat this issue for what it is-a contrived "gotcha" moment-raised for the first time on appeal and being milked for leverage. If counsel was ineffective, resulting in a waiver of his client's rights, the remedy lies with a
B. Money Laundering
In Counts 18-23, Christy was charged and convicted of tax-based money laundering,
But Christy was also indicted with six counts (Counts 8-13) of declaring false tax returns for tax years 2009-2014 in violation of § 7206 of the Internal Revenue Code. With regard to those counts, the jury was instructed § 7206"makеs it a crime for anyone willfully to make a false material statement on an income tax return." ( Id . at 204, 206, 208, 210, 212, 214.) The false statement in this case was underreporting her income by failing to include her embezzled funds as income. Melding these instructions with those relating to the money laundering counts, the jury was told not to convict Christy of money laundering, unless it found, beyond a reasonable doubt, the loan payments were made with funds she knew to be proceeds from her bank embezzlement and with the intent not to report those funds as income on her tax returns.
Unlike in the district court, Christy does not here dispute the sufficiency of the evidence demonstrating the loan payments to have been made with funds she knew were embezzled. She now contends only that the evidence was insufficient to show the loan payments were made with the intent to avoid reporting the embezzled funds as income on her 2015 tax return. The Majority agrees, saying the government's evidence failed to show Christy made the loan payments with any intent other than to satisfy her contractual obligation to make them. It relies in large part on the neither unusual nor suspicious (in size or frequency) nature of the loan payments and the absence of any overtly conspicuous attempt by Christy to disguise or conceal the payments. In the end, the Majority concludes the government's evidence proved no more than the payments were made with illicit funds, which is "money spending" not "money laundering." I see it differently.
As stated above, in addition to the money laundering counts, Christy was charged with six counts of declaring false tax returns for tax years 2009-2014. These counts were based on her failure to report over $400,000 in embezzled funds as income on those returns. In support of these counts, the government presented the testimony of an IRS agent who examined her bank accounts as well as her tax returns during that time period. The examination revealed Christy and her husband having made over $400,000 in unexplained cash deposits to their bank accounts, including to their loan accounts , all of which they failed to report as income on their 2009-2014 tax returns. The jury convicted Christy on these counts. As a result, the jury had before it evidence that at the time she made the loan payments which formed the basis for Counts 18-23 (March-May 2014), she had four times before (2009-2012) made similar payments with funds she failed to report as income. Not only that, at about the same time she made the March-May 2014 loan payments, she filed her 2013 return, which also failed to report the funds used to pay down her loans as income. Her systematic and repeated conduct permits a reasonable inference that her purpose in making the March-May 2014 loan payments was to make use of embezzled funds without revealing their source and the accompanying purpose of not reporting the funds as income on her 2014 tax return (which would have necessarily aroused suspicion about her embezzlement), i.e., to file a false tax return.
*862
The Majority myopically discounts this evidence, saying Christy's failure to report the loan payments as income on her 2014 tax return does not show she made them with the purpose of evading taxes. Were it to find otherwise, it says, then every cash payment with ill-gotten funds amounts to money laundering, provided the defendant also fails to report those funds when filing a tax return the next year. Not so. It is the intent to violate the tax laws which differentiates simply making a cash payment with illicit funds (money spending) with money laundering. Admittedly, a
single
failure to report as income illicit funds used in making cash payments might not sufficiently show that a payment made with those funds was done with an intent to evade taxes. However,
multiple
failures to report, as income, illicit funds so used supports a reasonable inference that such a current payment was motivated by, or at least included, an intent to avoid reporting those funds as income. "Past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior."
United States v. Estrada-Lozano
,
In a similar vein, the Majority concludes we cannot rely on Christy's having made the loan payments around the time when she filed her 2013 tax return because such reliance would constitute "speculation and conjecture" and the "piling [of] inference upon inference" which is not enough to support a conviction.
United States v. Rufai
,
The Majority also makes much of the fact that Christy's deposits were "open and notorious" and exposed her illicit income stream. (Majority's Op. at 851.) I beg to differ.
Each of the loan payments in Counts 18-23 (as well as the other payments not charged in the indictment) were made in cash , which is difficult to trace and allowed her to obscure the source of the funds.
*863
Those cash payments eventually caught up to her, but they served a clearly intended purpose for several years (and probably would have continued to do so had her embezzlement not been discovered). Concealment and other suspicious activity might well serve as proof of an intent to violate the tax laws, but their absence, at least in this case, does not demonstrate lack of criminal intent. Rather it reveals a successful scheme to make the transactions look as "normal" as possible. Moreover, nothing in the
tax-based money laundering provision
,
The jury was presented with abundant evidence and was correctly instructed on the law. I see no practical reason to narrow our focus to evidence related to a particular count without acknowledging and accounting for established patterns of behavior. I am satisfied that the jury did precisely what it was called upon to do: evaluate all of the evidence and permissible inferences as a whole in arriving at a verdict, count by count. I would affirm.
Notes
Ms. Christy also argues the district court plainly erred when it failed to address her "personally in order to permit her to speak or present any information to mitigate the sentence." Aplt. Br. at 52 (brackets omitted) (quoting Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(i)(4)(A)(ii) );
see
United States v. Bustamante-Conchas
,
The dissent thinks resentencing is unnecessary,
The first factor is "the nature and the circumstances of the offense," § 3553(a)(1), and the second is "the need for the sentence imposed to reflect the seriousness of the offense," § 3553(a)(2)(A). The absence of six money laundering convictions may affect the sentencing court's view of those factors. Even if it does not, the evaluation of those factors lies within "the traditional exercise of discretion by a sentencing court."
Koon v. United States
,
The dissent cites no case in which we have instructed a district court to vacate multiple convictions and then declined to order resentencing. In
United States v. Michel
,
In sum, remand for resentencing adheres to our appellate role in the sentencing process.
See
Koon
,
Shortly before the audit, Steve Snook, the senior retail branch administrator for CNB, was concerned that the Burlington branch was holding too much cash-between $750,000 and $1,000,000-in its vault. ROA, Vol. III at 313-16. He instructed the Bank to "keep [its] reserves at or around 500,000 at the most," except when it needed additional money. Id. at 317.
Ms. Nabus testified that it took Ms. Christy a long time to resolve the problems and that Ms. Christy sometimes did not properly correct the discrepancies on her first try. On occasion, Ms. Nabus needed to tell Ms. Christy multiple times to take remedial action.
Ms. Christy and Mr. Lewis both signed the Garda pick-up receipt.
These violations often occur outside of trial, such as during discovery,
see
Brady v. Maryland
,
As described below, Ms. Christy argues the prosecutor improperly criticized her choice to proceed to trial, but she does not argue that these comments denied her right to trial.
At trial, the district court may sua sponte determine that a prosecutor's comment was improper and prejudicial,
see
Anaya
,
As with step one in assessing prosecutorial misconduct, courts have struggled with step two. This court, for example, once declared itself "in equipoise as to how the jury must have necessarily taken [the prosecutor's] statement."
United States v. Rahseparian
,
Ms. Christy does not cite any cases in which this circuit has held that a comment on a defendant's decision to proceed to trial violated the due process right to a fair trial.
See
Aplt. Br. at 21. She discusses one recent decision from the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals that stated, "The prosecutor's commentary on Appellant's decision to exercise his right to trial, rather than plead guilty, is nothing short of alarming."
Barnes v. State
,
Comment 2 was dubiously relevant and likely excludable had there been an objection, but it was not plainly improper.
The indictment did not charge Ms. Christy for filing a false 2014 return, though there was evidence that she failed to report income for that year as well.
Please note this analysis applies to Ms. Christy's convictions for embezzlement, false bank entries, and false tax reports. It does not apply to her money laundering convictions. Because we reverse those convictions in the next section of this opinion based on insufficiency of the evidence, we consider the prosecutorial misconduct issue only in relation to the remaining convictions.
It appears the Loan 7962 origination documents were never admitted into evidence.
The Government states that we should review de novo whether there was sufficient evidence to support Ms. Christy's money laundering convictions. It does not argue for plain error review. Aplee. Br. at 36.
Only § 7206 is at issue here. It penalizes any person who "[w]illfully makes and subscribes any return, statement, or other document, which contains or is verified by a written declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury, and which he does not believe to be true and correct as to every material matter."
The jury instruction tracked the statute, which includes both § 7201 and § 7206. The indictment charged Ms. Christy only with violations of § 7206, and the jury was not instructed on the elements of § 7201. The Government proceedеd on the money laundering charges based on § 7206 only. In denying Ms. Christy's motion for acquittal on the money laundering charges, the district court relied on "the intent to file a false income tax return in violation of
As noted above, although Ms. Christy was not charged based on her 2014 tax return, Agent Schmidt testified that the Christys failed to report income on that return.
In addition, the Fifth Circuit has recognized (A)(i)'s "stringent" and "rigorous" mens rea requirement and has applied it to other subsections of the money laundering statute.
See
United States v. Trejo
,
The legislative history also supports a "specific intent" mens rea. The Senate Report on the Money Laundering Crimes Act of 1986 explained that tax-based money laundering "requires that the transaction be conducted with the intent to facilitate tax evasion." S. Rep. 99-433 at 11 (1986) (emphasis added).
Rather than conflate tax-based and concealment-based money laundering cases, as the dissent alleges, Dissent Op. at 856-57, we note the absence of the former in Tenth Circuit case law and draw lessons from the latter.
See, e.g.
,
United States v. Corchado-Peralta
,
In
Zanghi
, the court "note[d] that § 1956 is relatively new and has been infrequently applied. There is little precedent elucidating its application."
Zanghi
,
Zanghi
recognized that evidence of concealment can be used to prove intent under § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii) as well as § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i). At least one other court has agreed and applied "the same [mens rea for tax-based money laundering] as for concealment money laundering," requiring the government to "prove that the purpose of the transaction, and not merely the effect, was to violate
Although we agree that evidence of concealment may be used to establish the intent element of tax-based money laundering, the term "conceal" is not used in § 1956(a)(1)(A)(ii), as it is in § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i). Our discussion of "concealment" responds to the Government's argument that it proved intent with evidence of Ms. Christy's concealment. Aplee. Br. at 37-42 (using the word "conceal" or "concealment" 14 times).
The Government argues that, to make her deposits more traceable, Ms. Christy could have deposited the cash into her own account and then transferred it to her loan servicer. See Aplee. Br. at 41-42. But, as Ms. Christy notes, "had [she] moved the cash deposits through more than one account, the government would argue that the very multiplicity of transactions indicated a design to conceal." Aplt. Reply Br. at 13.
At trial, Mr. Schmidt testified that if Ms. Christy had spent the embezzled money on "groceries, diapers, anything, that becomes money laundering." ROA, Vol. III at 501. The prosecutor also asked Mr. Schmidt, "[I]f I sell drugs and I've got 10,000 and I buy a new car, spending that money is money laundering?"
The dissent argues that Ms. Christy's cash payments made her transactions "difficult to trace" and allowed her "to obscure the source of the funds." Dissent Op. at 862. But the Aliceville Bank recorded every one of the Christys' transactions. As a result, the Government was able to obtain a full record of her deposits and introduce it at trial-apparently, the cash payments were "[easy] to trace."
As noted above, the loan payments occurred between March 17, 2014, and May 12, 2014. To the extent the Government's argument may stem from Ms. Christy's filing her 2014 return on March 12, 2015, it points to no evidence that the loan payments were made to facilitate filing a false return or that her mental state 10 months after the loan payments were made would tell the jury anything about her subjective thoughts when she paid the loans, much less establish specific intent.
To the extent the Government may wish to rely on Ms. Christy's loan payments happening at around the time when she filed her 2013 tax return, the jury would have to infer she was thinking about her taxes when she paid the loans, and then would have to infer from that inference that she paid the loans so that she could file a false return the next year. But this would be based on speculation and the "piling [of] inference upon inference" that fails to establish sufficiency.
Rufai
,
We further note that the Government has not explicitly made these arguments.
The dissent argues that "it is the
repeated
making of loan payments with illicit funds and the
repeated
failure to report those funds as income on her tax returns from which the jury could have reasonably inferred (as it did) that she made the subject loan payments with illicit funds so as not to have to report those funds as income." Dissent Op. at 862 (emphasis in original). This argument fails to explain why the loan payments are any different from repeated car payments, repeated grocery store trips, repeated electric bill payments, or any other repeated payment that we would otherwise consider "money spending."
See
Garcia-Emanuel
,
A sufficiency of the evidence challenge requires a court to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to prove what the law requires to constitute an offense. Drawing from Tenth Circuit and out-of-circuit cases, we have carefully spelled out what the law requires to prove the specific intent element of tax-based money laundering. The dissent cites no authority for its money laundering analysis and does not even mention the term "specific intent"-the mens rea the Government was required to prove.
In
Neder
, the Supreme Court held that the bank fraud statute,
The smallest single false entry was $225,000, but that entry was combined with two others in Count Five, for a total of $720,000. But whether we consider $225,000 or $297,000 to be Ms. Christy's smallest discrepancy, our materiality analysis is the same.
The Majority concludes a remand for resentencing is warranted based on its reversal of the money laundering counts (Counts 18-23). While I disagree with the reversal (my second point), it does not require a resentencing hearing. A simple amendment to the judgment voiding the money laundering counts would suffice, leaving the allocution issue viable.
Christy's advisory sentencing guideline range was calculated based exclusively on the bank embezzlement count which, as a result of grouping under USSG § 3D1.2, comment. (n.6), resulted in an advisory guideline range of 46 to 57 months imprisonment on all counts except the declaring false tax returns counts, which carried a statutory maximum sentence of 36 months,
see
Theoretically, on resentencing the judge could vary downward from the advisory guideline range because the money laundering counts are no longer part of the equation. But my review of the record reveals Christy's sentence-both the guideline range and the ultimate sentence-to rest on the embezzlement/false bank entries counts, with the other counts as mere tag-alongs. A variance might, in theory, be conceivable, but it appears highly improbable in the penetrating light of reality.
Moreover, should another opportunity to allocute be appropriate at re-sentencing I have every confidence that the district judge would be accommodating. Other than justifying a refusal to decide the allocution issue, I see no reason for us to insist upon a second opportunity to allocute or even mention it.
The rule explains, in clear language, why addressing the defendant is necessary: "in order to" permit the defendant to speak or present information in mitigation. "In order to" could also be phrased as "so that." See https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/in% 20order% 20to. Either way the language requires a one-on-one exchange between the judge and the defendant and then it explains why a personal communication is necessary-so the defendant may allocute, if she wishes. I am at a loss to divine some coded message requiring anything more. The judge met the call-he explained the purpose of allocution to Christy, one on one, in words she could, and did, understand. He later afforded her the opportunity to do so.
It would be better for the judge to speak directly to the defendant throughout the exchange, rather than relying on counsel. But it is beyond our ken to impose best practices; our office is only to insure the minimum requirements of the rule are met.
While, on its own, "an allocution error does not provide grounds for habeas relief,"
Bustamante-Conchas
,
Although the government conceded the first three prongs of plain error review were satisfied, "[w]e possess the discretion to reject what is, in effect, a stipulation on a question of law by the government."
Bustamante-Conchas
,
Christy suggests an allocution query directed at counsel is insufficient. In addition to
Green
and
Bustamante-Conchas
, she relies on
United States v. Adams
,
The Third Circuit concluded the judge's allocution query was insufficient because "the Supreme Court has held that [an allocution] query, directed towards counsel, does not satisfy the requirement that the district court personally address the defendant himself."
Id
. at 279. In support, the
Adams
court cited
Green
.
Id
. But, in
Green
, the sentencing court merely asked, "Did you want to say something?" and it was unclear from the record whether the question was directed to defendant or counsel.
