UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appellee, v. PAUL M. DAUGERDAS, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 14-2437-cr
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
Decided September 21, 2016
ARGUED: OCTOBER 22, 2015
DECIDED: SEPTEMBER 21, 2016
No. 14-2437-cr
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appellee,
v.
PAUL M. DAUGERDAS, Defendant-Appellant.1
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.
No. 09 Cr. 00581 – William H. Pauley III, Judge.
Before: KEARSE, WALKER, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges.
Defendant Paul M. Daugerdas appeals from a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District
STANLEY J. OKULA, JR., Assistant United States Attorney (Brian A. Jacobs, Assistant United States Attorney; Nanette L. Davis, Special Assistant United States Attorney, on the brief), for Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, for Appellee.
JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Circuit Judge:
Defendant Paul M. Daugerdas appeals from a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Pauley, J.) following a jury trial convicting him of (1) one count of conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) in violation of
BACKGROUND
The evidence taken in the light most favorable to the government showed the following.
Paul M. Daugerdas was a Certified Public Accountant (“CPA”) and tax attorney at Arthur Andersen through August of 1994; the law firm Altheimer & Gray from the end of 1994 through 1998; and the Chicago office of the law firm Jenkens & Gilchrist (“J&G”) from 1999 through April 2004. Throughout his career, Daugerdas developed, sold, and implemented a variety of tax-reduction strategies for wealthy clients: the so-called Short Sale Shelter, Short Option Shelter, Swaps Shelter, and HOMER Shelter. Besides Daugerdas’s employers, two other entities had significant involvement in this undertaking. The accounting firm BDO Seidman (“BDO”) referred its clients to J&G and helped to sell the shelters, and the investment bank Deutsche Bank Alex. Brown (“DB”) assisted J&G in the design of the shelters, held informational meetings with clients, and implemented the transactions that composed the shelters.
I. The Development and Sale of the Tax Shelters
Daugerdas designed and sold the shelters beginning in the early 1990s when he was a partner at Arthur Andersen. Although the transactions underlying the shelters changed over time, the facts surrounding their marketing and implementation varied little. Daugerdas designed the Short Sale Shelter, which created losses through the short sale of U.S. Treasury securities followed by transfers between a partnership, a limited liability company, and an S-corporation. In 1999, because Daugerdas and other J&G attorneys were concerned that pending legislation would render the Short Sale Shelter ineffective, they developed the Short Option Shelter as a substitute. This shelter generated losses through the sale of a digital currency option instead of through the short sale of Treasury securities but was otherwise similar to the Short Sale Shelter.
In August of 2000, the IRS announced that transactions like the Short Sale and Short Option Shelter would no longer provide the favorable tax treatment that J&G sought for its clients. To replace these two shelters, Daugerdas and his colleagues developed the Swaps Shelter, which simply replaced the digital currency option with a swap transaction. At approximately the same time as he was developing the Swaps Shelter, Daugerdas also worked on developing and implementing the HOMER Shelter. The structure of
As an essential part of the marketing of all the tax shelters, Daugerdas and his colleagues issued “more-likely-than-not” opinion letters to clients who purchased the shelters. Such letters state that “under current U.S. federal income tax law it is more likely than not that” the transactions comprising the shelters are legal and will have the effect sought by the clients. They protect clients from the IRS’s imposition of a financial penalty in the event that the IRS does not permit the losses generated by the shelter to reduce the client’s tax liability. Paralegals or attorneys who worked for Daugerdas generated these letters and Daugerdas often reviewed and signed them himself. The letters stated that the clients had knowledge of the particular transactions underlying the shelter and that the clients were entering into the shelter for non-tax business reasons. Multiple clients testified that they never made representations of knowledge to Daugerdas or his associates and that, in any event, these representations were false because the clients knew little or nothing about the underlying transactions and entered into the shelters only to reduce their tax liability.
Because Daugerdas and his colleagues designed the transactions with a focus on their tax consequences rather than their profitability, they generally did not generate meaningful returns.
II. The Backdating of Shelter Transactions
As part of the implementation of the Swaps and Short Option Shelters, Daugerdas either directly or through his team at J&G participated in the correction and backdating of certain transactions that had originally been incorrectly implemented on behalf of
In 2001, to obtain ordinary losses, business partners Coleman and Blair consulted with Daugerdas and decided to enter into the Swaps Shelter. In December 2001, DB broker David Parse’s assistant, Carrie Yackee, received authorization from J&G to complete the purchase and sale of Cisco shares as part of the shelter. In February 2002, J&G attorneys realized that this transaction had generated capital losses rather than ordinary losses. To correct this error, J&G faxed to Parse an undated letter asking him to reverse the Cisco sale, along with letters dated December 24 and 28, 2001, directing him to implement transactions that would have the effect of generating the ordinary losses requested by Coleman and Blair. Yackee received these faxes, and ensured that DB carried out the instructions they requested. She eventually returned to J&G the account statements containing the backdated transactions. These statements were used in the preparation of Coleman and Blair’s 2001 tax returns.
J&G attorneys and DB employees engaged in a similar course of conduct to correct mistakes that were made in the implementation of the Short Option Shelter for the Aronoff family. This incident is not at issue in this appeal.
III. Daugerdas’s Personal Use of Tax Shelters
Daugerdas also used tax shelters to reduce his personal tax liability. From 1993 to 1998, Daugerdas received more than $26 million in income. He personally used the Short Sale Shelter yearly
IV. Procedural History
In 2009, Daugerdas, Parse, and others involved in the design, marketing, and implementation of the shelters were indicted for conspiracy, tax evasion, obstructing the IRS, and mail fraud. Daugerdas was convicted on all of the counts with which he was charged. The results for the other defendants were mixed. On June 4, 2012, the district court granted a new trial based on juror misconduct as to all defendants except Parse, who, the district court found, had waived his right to raise the objection. After this court reversed the district court’s determination as to Parse, United States v. Parse, 789 F.3d 83 (2d Cir. 2015), Parse negotiated a deferred prosecution agreement with the government.
On July 1, 2013, the government filed a new indictment, containing charges similar to those in the prior indictment, against Daugerdas and a co-defendant who was later acquitted on all counts. The indictment charged Daugerdas with: (1) one count of conspiracy to defraud the IRS in violation of
In May 2014, the district court sentenced Daugerdas to 180 months’ imprisonment, three years’ supervised release, $164,737,500 in forfeiture, and $371,006,397 in restitution.
DISCUSSION
Daugerdas presents the following issues for our review: (I) whether the evidence was sufficient to support his convictions; (II) whether the district court’s supplemental instruction on the Annual Accounting Rule misled the jury; (III) whether the indictment was constructively amended; (IV) whether the accumulation of errors at trial violated his due process right to a fair trial; (V) whether the indictment was duplicitous; (VI) whether his sentence was procedurally and substantively reasonable; and (VII) whether the government proved the requisite nexus between his crimes and the property sought in forfeiture.
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
We review de novo a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a criminal conviction by “view[ing] the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, drawing all inferences in the government’s favor and deferring to the jury’s assessments of the witnesses’ credibility.” United States v. Pierce, 785 F.3d 832, 837-38 (2d Cir. 2015) (internal quotation marks omitted). “We will sustain the jury’s verdict if any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. at 838 (emphasis and internal quotation marks omitted).
A. The Evidence Supporting Daugerdas’s Mens Rea
Daugerdas first argues that the government failed to prove that he had the necessary mens rea to be guilty of tax evasion, mail fraud, and obstruction of the IRS. The convictions on these counts turned upon the misrepresentations in the tax returns of (1) Coleman and Blair; and (2) Toporek.
Daugerdas’s conviction on these counts will stand only if the evidence was sufficient to enable a rational jury to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Daugerdas knew that the tax returns of Coleman and Blair and Toporek misrepresented their tax liability in some way. See United States v. Regan, 937 F.2d 823, 827 (2d Cir.) amended, 946 F.2d 188 (2d Cir. 1991) (stating that the crime of tax evasion requires the “voluntary, intentional violation of a known
Daugerdas attacks the sufficiency of the government’s proof that he knowingly developed and sold shelters that violated the so-called economic substance rule. Under this rule, “sham transactions that [cannot] with reason be said to have purpose, substance, or utility apart from their anticipated tax consequences” cannot form the basis of legitimate tax losses under the Internal Revenue Code. Bank of N.Y. Mellon Corp. v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 801 F.3d 104, 113 (2d Cir. 2015) (internal quotation marks omitted).
For a jury to conclude that Daugerdas had the necessary mens rea to commit tax evasion, mail fraud, and obstruction of the IRS on the basis of violations of the economic substance rule, they would have to find both that he knew the rule and knew that the transactions lacked economic substance. See Parse, 789 F.3d at 121. Our inquiry into whether a transaction lacks economic substance
1. Knowledge of the Economic Substance Rule
In Parse, we found the following facts sufficient to support a conclusion that Parse knew the economic substance rule: (1) he was an experienced CPA with a master’s degree in business administration; and (2) in connection with his personal use of a similar tax shelter, he received an opinion letter describing the economic substance rule in detail. 789 F.3d at 122. As in Parse, on the facts of this case, a rational jury was entitled to conclude that Daugerdas was well-acquainted with the economic substance rule based on evidence that he was an experienced CPA and tax lawyer who explained the economic substance requirement to his clients.
2. The Economic Substance of the Swaps Shelter
a. Coleman’s, Blair’s, and Toporek’s Objectively Reasonable Expectation of Profit
In arguing that the government failed to prove that he knew that Coleman and Blair and Toporek did not have an objectively reasonable expectation of making a profit from the Swaps Shelter, Daugerdas relies on the legal ambiguity surrounding the question of whether the tax advisory fees associated with each shelter should be factored into the analysis. Daugerdas argues that, because it is not clear whether or not the fees should be included in the calculation, he had a good-faith belief that the fees should not be considered. The lack of economic substance is only apparent, he argues, if the costs associated with the tax advisory fees are included in the calculation.
This argument ignores the fact that, even if the tax advisory fees were not included in the analysis, the chance of any Swaps Shelter “investor” earning a profit was still extremely low. The government’s expert testified that Coleman and Blair had a 1% chance and Toporek a 3% chance of earning a profit even before the inclusion of the fees. In the end, only two of the approximately 60 clients who invested in the Swaps Shelter made a profit, and one of these earned a profit of just one dollar.
Moreover, Daugerdas was aware that the possibility of success was low. He acknowledged to Coleman that the transaction
b. Coleman’s, Blair’s, and Toporek’s Subjective Non-Tax Business Purpose in Entering the Transaction
The evidence of the low likelihood of Coleman, Blair, and Toporek profiting from the Swaps Shelter provided circumstantial support for inferences that they did not have a subjective non-tax business purpose in entering the transaction, and that Daugerdas knew it.
The latter inference is also supported by Coleman’s testimony about his conversations with Daugerdas. Coleman testified at trial that Daugerdas advised him to “focus” on “making the investment for profit purposes” if he were to be audited by the IRS. Tr. 5847. Coleman viewed this advice as an effort to have him “stretch the truth” about why he was entering into the shelter. Id. at 5904. This advice was also relevant to the question of whether Daugerdas knew that Toporek did not have a subjective non-tax business purpose in entering the transaction. If Daugerdas could infer, based on the low
A rational jury could thus have concluded that Daugerdas (1) was familiar with the economic substance rule and (2) knew that the transactions lacked economic substance because he knew that (a) Coleman and Blair and Toporek had no objectively reasonable expectation of making a profit from the Swaps Shelter and (b) they did not have a subjective non-tax business purpose in entering the transaction. Therefore, the evidence was sufficient for a jury to find that Daugerdas was guilty of tax evasion, mail fraud, and obstruction of the IRS.
B. The Evidence Supporting Daugerdas’s Convictions of Conspiracy and Mail Fraud
Daugerdas next argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions for conspiracy to defraud the IRS and the same mail fraud count previously discussed because (1) there was no evidence that he participated in the scheme involving illegal backdating; (2) the government failed to prove that the mail fraud affected a financial institution; and (3) the indictment did not allege that the mail fraud affected a financial institution. Each of these contentions is meritless.
1. Evidence of Daugerdas’s Participation in Backdating
The record belies Daugerdas’s argument that there was no evidence that he participated in the scheme involving illegal backdating. Erwin Mayer, a lawyer who worked with Daugerdas for several years, testified that he had discussed backdating with Daugerdas on multiple occasions and that the discussions concerned “fixes that [he does] for their client situations” and ways to “potentially justify[]” backdating the transactions. Tr. 2339-40.
Further, Yackee testified extensively about her communications with J&G employees regarding backdated transactions effected on behalf of Coleman and Blair, Toporek, and the Aronoff family. Although Yackee did not specifically name Daugerdas as a participant in these communications, she stated that he was “the head of that team of people” at J&G with whom she communicated regarding the backdating. Id. at 4031-32.
Finally, Quedenfeld, who prepared tax returns for Toporek that reflected the backdated transaction, also provided testimony describing Daugerdas’s direct involvement in the backdating. She told the jury that she had first prepared returns for Toporek based on the opinion letter, drafted and sent by J&C, that contained the original, incorrect transaction. She sent these returns to Daugerdas, and then received a revised opinion letter signed by Daugerdas that included the backdated transaction and a request to return the
A rational jury could have concluded from the testimony of Mayer, Yackee, and Quedenfeld that Daugerdas participated in the scheme involving illegal backdating by directing his subordinates to effect backdated trades. His argument on this point is therefore without merit.
2. Stipulation that the Mail Fraud Affected a Financial Institution
We easily reject Daugerdas’s argument that the government failed to prove that the mail fraud affected a financial institution. Without this element, the mail fraud charged would be barred by the five-year statute of limitations.
3. Indictment’s failure to allege that the mail fraud affected a financial institution
Daugerdas claims error because the indictment did not allege that the mail fraud affected a financial institution. Daugerdas did not raise this claim until after trial, and therefore this challenge is subject to plain error review. United States v. Nkansah, 699 F.3d 743, 752 (2d Cir. 2012), abrogated on other grounds by United States v. Bouchard, No. 14-4156-CR, 2016 WL 363259 (2d Cir. July 7, 2016). To obtain a reversal on this basis, Daugerdas “must show (1) there is an error (2) the error is clear or obvious . . .; (3) the error affected [his] substantial rights . . . ; and (4) the error seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id. at 751 (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted).
Any error could not have affected Daugerdas’s substantial rights, because his stipulation that Deutsche Bank “was a financial institution that was . . . affected by the [shelters]” put him on notice of this element of mail fraud. See United States v. Doe, 297 F.3d 76, 88 n.12 (2d Cir. 2002) (stating that a defendant’s substantial rights are not affected where information is missing from an indictment if the defendant otherwise had notice of the missing information). Therefore, he cannot establish plain error.
II. Constructive Amendment of the Indictment
Daugerdas argues that the prosecution’s rebuttal summation and the court’s supplemental instructions constructively amended the indictment to include a theory of criminal liability based on his violation of the Annual Accounting Rule by including backdated transactions in tax returns that were submitted to the IRS. This rule requires that the tax consequences of a transaction generally be assessed in the returns of the year in which the transaction took place. See United States v. Skelly Oil Co., 394 U.S. 678, 684 (1969).
We review de novo the question of whether an indictment was constructively amended. Pierce, 785 F.3d at 844. A constructive amendment is a per se violation of the Fifth Amendment, but “significant flexibility in proof” is constitutionally permissible, as long as the indictment provides notice to the defendant “of the core of criminality to be proven at trial.” United States v. D‘Amelio, 683 F.3d 412, 417 (2d Cir. 2012) (emphasis and internal quotation marks omitted). Because the “core of criminality . . . involves the essence of a crime, in general terms,” and excludes “the particulars of how a defendant effected the crime,” id. at 418 (internal quotation marks omitted), there is no constructive amendment when the proof at trial does no more than supply the particulars.
The indictment in this case was not constructively amended. Daugerdas’s claim that the government ignored backdating as a
Daugerdas correctly notes that, in its opening argument, the prosecution described backdating as evidence that the shelters lacked economic substance. Much of the trial testimony also focused on the economic substance theory of liability. However, presenting backdating as an alternate theory of liability on some of the counts did not change “the essence of the crime, in general terms,” which remained throughout a massive tax fraud orchestrated by Daugerdas. The incidents of backdating and corresponding violations of the Annual Accounting Rule were simply “particulars of how [Daugerdas] effected the crime,” and the government’s reliance on this theory of liability did not amount to a constructive amendment of the indictment. Id. at 417-18.
III. Duplicitous Indictment
Daugerdas argues that Count Thirteen, which alleges obstruction of the IRS, was duplicitous because it involves two separate schemes: one based on the use of tax shelters by clients and the other based on Daugerdas’s personal use of the shelters.
We review properly preserved challenges to an indictment de novo. See United States v. Vilar, 729 F.3d 62, 79 (2d Cir. 2013). As we explained in United States v. Aracri, 968 F.2d 1512, 1518 (2d Cir. 1992), an indictment is duplicitous if it includes multiple crimes in one count, but not if it includes in that count multiple ways of committing a single offense.
Under the Aracri standard, Count Thirteen is not duplicitous. It alleges a single crime: obstruction of the IRS. It then alleges that this crime was committed in many different ways. The fact that the various methods of committing a single offense can be divided into two separate categories—those that relate to Daugerdas’s work on behalf of his clients and those that relate to Daugerdas’s personal use of the shelters—does not create duplicity. Cf. id. (“[I]t is well established that the allegation in a single count of a conspiracy to commit several crimes is not duplicitous, for the conspiracy is the crime and that is one, however diverse its objects.” (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted)).
IV. Violation of Due Process
Daugerdas argues that (A) the admission of evidence of a non-party’s guilty plea to a tax evasion charge; (B) the government’s improper summation arguments; and (C) the government’s inconsistent positions at summation and sentencing created a trial so riddled with errors that his due process right to a fair trial was violated.
A. The Admission of John Ivsan’s Guilty Plea
Daugerdas first objects to the admission of the fact of John Ivsan’s guilty plea. Ivsan was a tax attorney and part of a group of advisors who were unaffiliated with Daugerdas but who consulted with Larry Morgan, a Daugerdas client and cooperating witness, about his decision to participate in the Short Sale Shelter. On cross-examination, Daugerdas elicited from Morgan that Ivsan was one of the advisors who concluded that the shelter was legal. Over Daugerdas’s objection, the district court allowed the government to introduce, pursuant to
We review the district court’s ruling for abuse of discretion, United States v. Taubman, 297 F.3d 161, 164 (2d Cir. 2002) (per curiam), which requires us to ask if the ruling was “arbitrary and irrational,” United States v. Mercado, 573 F.3d 138, 141 (2d Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Assuming that the statements that Daugerdas elicited from Morgan about Ivsan’s opinion on the Short Sale Shelter constituted hearsay within the meaning of
B. Errors in the Prosecution’s Summation
Daugerdas argues that the prosecutor’s summation was so prejudicial that he must receive a new trial.
We review de novo a claim that a prosecutor’s summation unfairly prejudiced a defendant. See United States v. Bubar, 567 F.2d 192, 199-200 (2d Cir. 1977). But such a claim presents a significant hurdle for Daugerdas. “The prosecution and the defense are generally entitled to wide latitude during closing arguments, so long as they do not misstate the evidence.” United States v. Tocco, 135 F.3d 116, 130 (2d Cir. 1998). “An improper summation will only warrant a new trial when the challenged statements are shown to have caused substantial prejudice to the defendant; rarely will an improper summation meet the requisite level of prejudice.” United States v. Mapp, 170 F.3d 328, 337 (2d Cir. 1999) (citation omitted).
1. Commentary on Daugerdas’s Failure to Produce Evidence
Daugerdas identifies two examples of what he believes to be impermissible statements in the prosecution’s summation concerning his failure to present evidence: (1) a statement that the defense had not introduced any evidence that anyone had convinced the IRS that the shelter transactions were legitimate; and (2) a
The district court sustained the defense objection to the first line of argument and not to the second. Because we are required to look at the entire argument in context, see United States v. Caracappa, 614 F.3d 30, 41 (2d Cir. 2010), we consider both arguments and conclude that both were permissible. Although the government cannot comment on a defendant’s failure to testify, it is permissible to draw the jury’s attention to the fact that a defendant did not call witnesses to contradict the government’s case or support his own theory of what happened. United States v. McDermott, 918 F.2d 319, 327 (2d Cir. 1990). A prosecutor’s commentary about a defendant’s lack of evidence becomes prejudicial only if the jury would “naturally and necessarily interpret the Government’s summation as a comment on the defendant’s failure to testify” or if the evidence that the defendant has not produced was exclusively in his control. Id.
Here, although the missing evidence is relevant to Daugerdas’s subjective belief in the legality of the shelters, it is not evidence that is only in his control, nor would the jury otherwise interpret the prosecutor’s statements as comments on Daugerdas’s failure to testify. A witness who had successfully defended one of
2. Commentary on the Law
Daugerdas next points to the prosecutor’s comments twice during summation that the jurors would learn from the district court that Daugerdas’s legal views about the calculation of profit under the economic substance doctrine were incorrect. These statements were not an improper comment on the law because Daugerdas’s subjective view of the law was a fact that was at issue in the case. The government was required to prove that Daugerdas did not have a good faith belief that the shelters at issue were legal. See supra Section I.A in Discussion. Therefore the state of the law at the time of the transactions as it bore on Daugerdas’s state of mind was relevant to the government’s case and was an appropriate subject for the prosecution’s comment.
C. Inconsistent Theories at Trial and at Sentencing
Daugerdas relies on Bradshaw v. Stumpf, 545 U.S. 175 (2005), to argue that the government’s separate theories at summation and sentencing violated his right to due process. Bradshaw suggested that the prosecutor’s inconsistent theories in two separate prosecutions that each of two defendants had pulled the trigger in a murder had not “affect[ed] the knowing, voluntary, and intelligent nature” of one defendant’s guilty plea, but that the inconsistency could have affected the defendant’s sentence. Id. at 187. This argument fails here because the government did not rely on inconsistent theories. Instead, the government at trial advanced multiple theories that could have supported conviction, but then focused on one of these theories at sentencing. In any event, given the factual differences between these two cases, Bradshaw is inapposite. It therefore bears no relationship to the purported inconsistency in this case.
In sum, Daugerdas points to no error or combination of errors, in the prosecution’s summation or elsewhere, that were so prejudicial as to warrant a new trial.
V. Supplemental Instruction
Daugerdas argues that the district court committed prejudicial error in giving a supplemental instruction about the Annual Accounting Rule.
During his full charge to the jury, Judge Pauley informed the jurors that “the income tax laws . . . are administered on the basis of an annual accounting system, which prohibits the reopening of a prior year’s tax return to take account of events occurring in later years.” J.A. 250. Neither party disputes that this is an accurate statement of the law.
During deliberations, the jury sent a note to the judge that referred back to that portion of the instructions and then asked: “What is defined as ‘a prior year’s tax return’? Does this specifically mean a tax return that has already been filed?” Tr. 7758. Judge
The next day, the jury asked Judge Pauley: “Is there a law or rule within the internal revenue laws that can be considered contradictory to the annual accounting rules cited in the supplemental charge . . . ?” Id. at 7791. Judge Pauley responded:
[T]he answer to that question is that the law I gave you concerning the annual accounting rule [in the original charge] and in my supplemental instruction is the law that should govern your deliberations. The application of this law depends on the particular facts of each case. In some instances you have heard about as-of reporting. And it may be proper under the internal revenue laws, if the transaction reported on the as-of date actually occurred on that date. On the other hand, it would violate the internal revenue laws to report a transaction that occurred in a subsequent year as occurring during the prior year.
Id. at 7791-92.
We can resolve Daugerdas’s first two arguments—that the district court erroneously implied that the Rule was absolute and that the district court refused to instruct the jury that the good faith defense applies to this rule—by an examination of the supplemental
The context in which Judge Pauley gave the supplemental instruction also made it unnecessary for him to reiterate his instruction on the good faith defense. In his charge before the jury retired to deliberate, he stated that “good faith is a complete defense to each of the charges in the indictment” and elaborated on what good faith could mean in this context. J.A. 544-544.1. In light of this explication of the good faith defense, there was no need for him to reiterate it. This is particularly so because he was not tying this guidance to any particular charge, but rather was providing information about a background principle of law that applied broadly to all of the charges.
Daugerdas’s third and fourth objections to the supplemental instructions are equally meritless. His argument that the
Daugerdas’s final argument, that the district court should have confined the supplemental instruction to the conspiracy charge, relies on the incorrect premise that the indictment limited the backdating allegations to the conspiracy charge. This is belied by the text of the indictment, which, as discussed above, describes backdating repeatedly as one of the fraudulent schemes that facilitated the tax shelters and one of the methods by which the conspiracy was carried out and incorporates the backdating into the obstruction and mail fraud counts. Because the jury could have used the backdating to convict on counts other than the conspiracy,
VI. Reasonableness of the Sentence
We review challenges to a sentence under a “reasonableness” standard, which is “a particularly deferential form of abuse-of-discretion review.” United States v. Broxmeyer, 699 F.3d 265, 278 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted). A sentence must be both procedurally and substantively reasonable. Id. We address each requirement in turn.
A sentence is procedurally unreasonable if the district court “fails to calculate the Guidelines range . . . , makes a mistake in its Guidelines calculation, . . . treats the Guidelines as mandatory . . . [,] does not consider the § 3553(a) factors, . . . rests its sentence on a clearly erroneous finding of fact . . . [,] fails adequately to explain its chosen sentence, [or fails to] include an explanation for any deviation from the Guidelines range.” United States v. Cavera, 550 F.3d 180, 190 (2d Cir. 2008) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted). When we review for substantive reasonableness, “we will set aside a district court’s . . . determination only in exceptional cases where the trial court’s decision cannot be located within the range of permissible decisions.” United States v. Rigas, 583 F.3d 108, 122 (2d Cir. 2009) (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted).
A. Procedural Reasonableness
Daugerdas argues that the district court procedurally erred by ignoring the interviews his attorneys had conducted with two members of the jury after the end of the trial, in which the jurors said that they believed he was guilty only of the backdating of transactions, not of the entirety of the fraud charged in the indictment. Because this information was relevant to the district court’s determination of the length of Daugerdas’s sentence, Daugerdas alleges, it committed procedural error by failing to consider it.
Daugerdas fails to identify a procedural error that we have recognized, see Cavera, 550 F.3d at 190, and, furthermore, he misrepresents the record. Judge Pauley did not ignore this information; he acknowledged that the interviews existed but determined that they did not justify the imposition of a shorter sentence. Because the district court’s conclusion was reasonable, Daugerdas’s procedural challenge fails.
B. Substantive Reasonableness
Daugerdas argues that his sentence was substantively unreasonable because it was based primarily on conduct for which he was acquitted—his participation in a massive $400 million tax fraud. It is well-established that a district judge can take into account acquitted conduct in determining a sentence. See United States v. Gomez, 580 F.3d 94, 105 (2d Cir. 2009).
VII. Errors in Forfeiture Order
Daugerdas argues that the forfeiture order was flawed because the government did not trace the fees paid by clients into the J&G bank account from which Daugerdas was paid by J&G. Instead, he argues, the government established only that (1) J&G deposited Daugerdas’s compensation into an account controlled by Daugerdas; and (2) Daugerdas transferred funds from this account to the accounts sought to be forfeited. To obtain forfeiture of these funds, according to Daugerdas, the government was also required to establish the origin of the fees deposited into the J&G bank account and separate the fees paid as a result of the fraudulent conduct from the remainder.
We review a district judge’s legal conclusions regarding forfeiture de novo and his factual determinations for clear error. United States v. Sabhnani, 599 F.3d 215, 261 (2d Cir. 2010). For a criminal forfeiture order to pass muster, the government must establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, the “requisite nexus between the property and the offense.”
The district court correctly concluded that the money sought to be forfeited had been obtained through Daugerdas’s mail fraud. The J&G account from which Daugerdas was paid held only the funds received by the Chicago office. See Docket Entry 558 Ex. 6 § 2b. The trial evidence established that the entirety of the tax-shelter fee income received by J&G’s Chicago office—the pool of money from which Daugerdas was paid—was generated by Daugerdas’s criminal acts. See Docket Entry 839 p. 11-12. Based on this evidence, the district court did not clearly err in concluding that the funds located in Daugerdas’s various accounts were the proceeds of his frauds.
We have considered Daugerdas’s remaining arguments and find them to be without merit. We take this opportunity to express our appreciation for the commendable way that Judge Pauley handled this litigation.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
