Defendant-appellant David Michael Leja appeals from his conviction for health care fraud, mail fraud, and obstruction of justice in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. He contends that his Sixth Amendment constitutional right to a jury trial was violated because his purported waiver of his right to a jury trial was legally insufficient. While the jury waiver should have included Leja’s signature, we have carefully examined the record and are satisfied that Leja waived his right to a jury trial and that his waiver was.knowing, voluntary, and intelligent.
Background and Facts
On July 15, 2004, a grand jury indicted Leja in a 57-count superceding indictment with 46 counts of mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341; nine counts of making material false statements in connection with the payment of health care benefits, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1035; one count of obstructing justice, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1043; and one count of witness tampering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1). Leja’s attorney purported to waive a jury trial on his behalf (the validity of that waiver is the issue on appeal here), and, after a three-week bench trial, Leja was convicted on December 15, 2004 of 40 counts of mail fraud, nine counts of making false statements, and obstruction of justice. The court found Leja not guilty of witness tampering. On May 5, 2005, the court, departing downward from a Guideline Sentencing Range of 41 to 51 months, sentenced Leja to 30 months’ imprisonment to be followed by three years’ supervised release, a $15,000 fine, and a $5,000 special assessment. Leja filed a timely appeal, and in that appeal he now argues that he never adequately waived his right to a jury trial.
Prior to his bench trial, Leja and the government, on September 10, 2004, filed a document entitled a Joint Notice Re: Jury Waiver, informing the district court that the parties had agreed to waive a jury and have the case heard by the court. The waiver was filed electronically and contained the electronic signatures of both the attorney for the government and Leja’s counsel, who had authorized the government to include her electronic signature on the waiver on behalf of Leja.
*89 The above waiver was submitted approximately seven weeks after the district court had discussed with Leja’s counsel, in Leja’s presence, the possibility that Leja might wish to waive a jury. The discussion took place on July 16, 2004, at a hearing the court held on Leja’s motion to continue the trial date so that he could secure expert testimony regarding the loss stemming from his alleged fraud. Leja and the court both took the position that the government had to prove the loss amounts associated with any specific offense enhancement beyond a reasonable doubt. During the hearing, the court spoke of the complexities of the parties’ competing theories of financial loss and the possible difficulties the parties might have in educating a potentially unsophisticated jury on those matters. In light of the complexities, the court suggested that the parties consider whether they wanted to waive the jury. In suggesting this approach, the court emphasized that it was not pressuring either party to waive a jury and noted that it was reluctant to take on the role of rendering the verdict:
I have two questions — one question and one suggestion. The question is how long is it going to take to put the evidence on in this case and put the defense on in this case? What was the estimate?
And, two, have you thought of waiving jury in this case? Is there any consideration of waiving jury in this case because of course I’m going to do everything I can to instruct the jury properly. But I can tell you of the fourteen people, the twelve jurors and two alternates, that will be sitting on that jury, we’ll be lucky to have two people who have any college. That’s my expectation with regard to the jury. Or we’ll probably be lucky to have two people who graduated from a four-year college, maybe one, and maybe we will have two or three people who have associate’s degrees or RNs or something of that nature.
So you guys are going to have your hands full trying to educate the jury about the concept that we have been discussing for the last half hour or 40 minutes. And I’m not interested- — I’m not pushing anybody. I’m not interested in having to take responsibility for this case, but I’m just wondering whether this might not be the sort of case that would be tried from both sides’ points of view a lot more comfortably to the court rather than a jury.
I don’t even know if it is proper for me to suggest that and I certainly don’t want to appear in any way to be pressuring anybody. I love juries. I like jury trials. That’s what I do all day. It saves me having to deal with the moral pressure of actually having to make the call in a situation where somebody’s liberty might be at stake. So that’s not something that I have a huge appetite to take on where it’s not necessary, but I think that that’s something you might really want to consider in a case that’s so technical.
Towards the end of the hearing, the court reiterated its request that the parties consider the possibility of jury waiver:
I’m going to urge both of you — I hope I’m not committing reversible error by even doing this, but I guess I will say it seems to me that this is a situation where you at least should give careful ' consideration to the possibility of waiving jury and trying the case to the court. I’ll let you each think about that and talk to each other about it and see if there’s something you will be willing to do, and there we are.
* * *
In any event, so I would urge you to think about that. I don’t have any rel *90 ish for it because it does make my work harder but I think it’s something to consider.
The court then told the parties that the case would be heard by a jury absent some action by the parties:
... we’re going to start the trial on October 18. But unless there’s a thermonuclear attack targeted at Springfield specifically, we will be picking the jury on October 18 and that’s when we will get started.
At the conclusion of the July 16, 2004 hearing, the district court ordered the parties to report on whether they wished to try the case without a jury, stating:
Let me put it this way. I don’t want to appear to be pressuring either the defendant or the government. To the extent that you wish to waive jury, you will tell me so by September 10.
As noted, Leja was present in the courtroom throughout the above hearing. On July 22, 2004, the court issued an order, in which it required the parties to “report to the court, in writing, by September 10, 2004, as to whether they will be waiving jury in this highly complex case.” On September 10, 2004, the parties filed the written waiver document Leja now challenges.
During a hearing on September 30, 2004, the court confirmed on the record the filing of the parties’ September 10 written jury waiver:
THE COURT: The case has been considerably simplified, at least I think, by agreement of both parties to waive jury in this case. Do I have that correct?
MS. QUIGLEY: Yes
[Defense counsel]
THE COURT: Both of you are nodding.
MS. GOODWIN: Yes.
[Prosecution]
Leja was again present in the courtroom during this exchange and offered no objection.
On October 18, 2004, the beginning of the trial, the district court, at the request of the government, again inquired of defense counsel whether Leja intended to waive jury:
MS. GOODWIN: Just one more housekeeping matter. I had filed on behalf of the defendant and myself that waiver of jury. I filed it electronically. It was not actually signed by defense counsel, and the defendant himself has not signed anything waiving his right to a jury. I thought it might be appropriate to put on the record here that there is a waiver of jury certainly from the government’s perspective but also from the defendant.
THE COURT: Well, let me make that clear on the record so that there isn’t any confusion on that point at all. We’re here without jury following a waiver by both sides of jury trial. You’ve just confirmed that Ms. Goodwin from the government’s point of view. Ms. Quigley, do you also confirm that?
MS. QUIGLEY: Yes, your Honor.
THE COURT: And you’ve discussed that with Mr. Leja and he agrees with that?
MS. QUIGLEY: Yes, he does.
THE COURT: For the record, Mr. Leja is here and is not indicating any disagreement. ...
The trial proceeded without a jury and lasted about three weeks. The evidence at trial established that Leja had engineered a complex and sophisticated fraud followed by an elaborate cover-up and scheme to obstruct justice. Leja graduated from Boston College. He was a licensed insurance and securities broker with a great *91 deal of experience in insurance and other fields. He used his expertise to deceive clients, other brokers, and insurance companies bidding on his business. When the scheme began to unravel, Leja gave false explanations and fabricated documents in order to deflect blame from himself.
Leja testified in his own defense at trial. The court found his explanation to “lack credibility entirely on practically every crucial point of evidence.” At trial, Leja denied sending out the forged documents, but, the court noted, the cover letters associated with those documents often referred to conversations with Leja or invited a response, making the defendant’s testimony “almost ridiculous and certainly incredible.” Similarly, the court found that the defendant’s testimony that he was absent from the office during critical time periods was “simply not believable [and] wholly unsupported by the record.”
Testimony in the case concluded on November 4, 2004. The court then gave the parties three weeks to submit written closing arguments to be followed by oral argument in December, 2004. At the conclusion of oral argument, the court convicted Leja, finding, among other things, that he “carried out his scheme to defraud with extraordinarily elaborate planning and resourcefulness.”
On February 9, 2005, Leja filed a motion for a new trial, claiming, among other things, that his jury waiver was invalid because he had not personally signed it and the court had not conducted an in-depth colloquy with him on the subject. On March 4, 2005, the district court denied the motion, finding that Leja’s jury waiver was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. As a basis for its ruling, the district court noted that Leja was “intelligent and articulate” and that he was present throughout his trial and was “clearly attentive and engaged.” The district court also noted that “counsel referred to the defendant’s own notes taken during trial as support for her arguments and conferred with him virtually every time before completing direct or cross examination of a witness.”
The district court recalled having a clear memory of turning to Leja at the start of the trial on October 18, 2004 and confirming with him that he did not disagree with his attorney’s representation that he had decided to waive jury after discussing the matter with counsel. The court noted that although Leja did not provide an audible reply, his “facial expression confirmed [his] assent to his lawyer’s representation” and that “the court received no reaction by the defendant that would have indicated his disagreement or lack of understanding regarding the waiver.” The court also noted that at no time during the trial did Leja express “the slightest discomfort or hesitation in proceeding without a jury.” Although it recognized that “the receipt of a written waiver signed by the defendant himself is obviously the better practice,” the district court observed that “no other conclusion can be drawn but that the defendant had a full opportunity to confer with his counsel, did in fact confer, and made a knowing, intelligent, and affirmative decision to waive his right to a jury trial.”
Discussion
On appeal, Leja argues that his jury waiver was not valid because, he claims, the law requires both that he personally sign the waiver and that the district court ask him questions concerning his understanding of his jury trial right and the ramifications of his waiver. The government argues that the case law has no such stringent requirements and that a reversal is not warranted where the record establishes that the defendant’s waiver was *92 knowing, voluntary, and intelligent, which the government argues it was here.
A. Standard of Review
We review the denial of a motion for a new trial for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Gonzalez-Gonzalez,
B. Procedural Default
As a preliminary matter, the government argues that the defendant procedurally defaulted on his Sixth Amendment claim by not raising it prior to the commencement of trial and thus that this court should review the denial of the motion for new trial for harmless error. The government claims that where Leja gave his (admittedly nonverbal) assent to the jury waiver, he was not entitled subsequently to raise the issue because he had himself invited the error.
See United States v. Page,
C.The Waiver
A criminal defendant has the fundamental right to a jury trial under the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution.
Duncan v. Louisiana,
*93 Leja argues that the waiver is invalid because he did not personally sign it (instead, Leja’s counsel’s electronic signature was attached to the waiver document by government counsel, with the former’s authorization). Leja observes that the Bench Book for U.S. District Court Judges states that a written waiver of jury trial must be signed by the defendant. Federal Judicial Center, Fourth Edition, with March 2000 revisions (1996). Though the Bench Book merely provides guidance for district judges and is not legally binding, the district court here wrote that “[wjhile [Rule 23(a)] is silent as to whether the written waiver must be signed by the defendant personally, the receipt of a written waiver signed by the defendant himself is obviously the better practice, and one which the court will not overlook in the future. For purposes of this motion the court will assume that its failure to obtain a written waiver personally signed by the defendant constituted a violation of the strict requirements of Rule 23” (emphasis in original). We agree entirely with the district court that, where otherwise possible, the correct practice is to secure a written waiver signed personally by the defendant. The district court should have seen that that practice was followed here. The question remains, however, whether the failure to observe that practice, in the circumstances of this case, amounted to a violation of the Sixth Amendment or otherwise to reversible error. We find that it does not.
The government argues that Leja’s waiver of the jury was made knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently despite the absence of a personally signed waiver. The First Circuit has not previously addressed this issue directly. The Ninth and Tenth Circuits have stated that oral waivers of jury trial can be valid, provided there are circumstances ascertainable from the record demonstrating that the waiver was made knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently.
See United States v. Saadya,
Leja argues that the record lacks any evidence that he .knowingly waived his right to a jury trial and focuses part of his argument on the fact that, besides the lack of his signature, there was no colloquy between the court and the defendant regarding the waiver. This court has held that Rule 23(a) makes “no reference ... to oral inquiries.”
Sys. Architects,
*94
son,
In the instant case, we believe that the record reflects that Leja’s waiver was knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently given. Leja is a college graduate and involved himself actively in his defense. He was present during the hearing on July 16, 2004 when the district court’s comments made it clear that a trial by jury would take, place unless the parties entered a waiver, that waiver was a serious decision to be considered carefully, that it was up to the parties whether to waive or to demand a jury, that the court was not pressuring the parties to waive the jury and indeed that the court did not enjoy the idea of rendering the verdict itself. The court told the parties that it would pick the jury on October 18 unless they filed a waiver. The waiver document, bearing Leja’s counsel’s authorized electronic signature, was filed on September 10. The court confirmed the filing of the waiver in Leja’s presence on September 30. 1 Leja was again present in court on October 18, when, at the start of his trial, the court reiterated on the record the parties’ intention to waive a jury, and his lawyer confirmed in open court that the parties had waived a jury and that she had discussed the matter with Leja and he had agreed to the waiver. Leja not only did not then object, but, according to the district court, *95 Leja demonstrated his agreement with these confirmations through his facial expressions. Through his presence during the discussions of waiver, his conduct, including facial expression indicating his agreement with the waiver, his education, and his active participation in his own defense, Leja demonstrated that the waiver of jury trial, executed and reiterated in his presence by his counsel, was knowing, voluntary, and intelligent.
The government emphasizes the parallels between the instant case and that of Page, in which the Fifth Circuit upheld a jury waiver where (1) the defendant’s counsel told the trial court, in a chambers conference out of the defendant’s presence, that he and his client waived a jury; (2) after the chambers conference, the trial court said in the defendant’s presence that he understood the defendant wished to waive jury, and defense counsel, but not the defendant, responded affirmatively; (3) the defendant did not object or express any surprise when the district court accepted the waiver; and (4) the defendant was “a learned, articulate man suffering neither language nor perceptive difficulty.” Leja emphasizes that two crucial distinctions between his case and Page are that in Page, defendant’s counsel raised the issue of jury waiver, whereas here, the court raised it, and that in Page, defense counsel told the court that he had conferred with his client at length and made a “considered, tactical decision” to waive a jury. The Fifth Circuit focused on the fact that it could rely on an attorney’s representations about attorney-client conversations, not that the record should reveal the existence of in-depth discussions. Here, Leja’s counsel represented that Leja wanted a bench trial, and Leja’s conduct reflected no objection and, in fact, according to the district court, demonstrated his assent through his facial expression.
Leja relies on the Tenth Circuit’s
Robertson
decision, in which the court found a jury waiver invalid when the record was silent regarding the defendant’s knowing, voluntary, and intelligent waiver of a jury trial and “no discussion was ever held in the presence of [the defendant] regarding her decision to waive the right to trial by jury.”
As a supplemental argument on the waiver issue, Leja argues that the district court improperly urged him to waive his right to a jury, relying on
United States v. Collamore,
There is no doubt, of course, as the district court itself correctly stated later, that the procedure of the offer and acceptance of jury waiver could and should have been handled differently. Defendant’s signing of the written waiver was a pro forma step that should have taken place so as to ensure and reinforce the voluntariness of the waiver. And where this did not occur, had the court in open court spoken directly to the defendant himself on the record, rather than just with counsel, this would have reinforced the judge’s subsequent observations that the defendant had assented to his counsel’s waiver of a jury trial. But in all the circumstances noted above, we are satisfied that defendant knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waived his right to a jury trial and that the errors committed do not warrant reversal of the conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. While the district court specifically stated in its memorandum and order that Leja was present during the September 30 pretrial hearing, Leja argues that nothing in the transcript confirms his presence in the courtroom; the court is not shown in the transcript to have spoken to Leja, nor is his presence otherwise noted therein. However, we review the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party when reviewing, as here, a motion for a new trial.
Stuart v. United States,
