The appellant, Francis B. Kendall, was convicted following a jury trial on three counts of violating the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (1976). The first count alleged a conspiracy to obstruct interstate commerce *128 by extortion. Counts 2 and 3 alleged extor-tions on March 2, 1979, and March 7, 1979, from the Indiana Surety Agents Association (ISAA). The principal issue on appeal is whether the trial court committed prejudicial error when it admitted evidence concerning conversations among members of the ISAA pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. 1
Kendall raises three additional issues on appeal. First, he contends that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion for a bill of particulars identifying the known but unnamed co-conspirators. Second, the appellant contends that the evidence demonstrated the possibility of multiple conspiracies and that the judge below committed prejudicial error by not instructing the jury accordingly. Finally, Kendall maintains that the trial court committed prejudicial error in denying his motions for severance.
I. Facts
The ISAA was an organization of bail bondsmen in the State of Indiana. Its principal purpose was to lobby for legislation favorable to the bail bond industry. In late 1978, the ISAA. was concerned about the possible enactment of legislation allowing a defendant to post ten percent of the amount of his bond with the court rather than requiring him to secure a corporate surety bond for the full amount of the bail. The pertinent legislаtion was embodied in Senate Bill 155, Senate Bill 256, and House Bill 1490, then pending before the First Regular Session of the 101st Indiana General Assembly.
Following the recommendation of an ISAA member, the ISAA president, Bruce Harris, got in touch with Francis Kendall in early 1979. Kendall subsequently indicated that his corporation, Capitol Business Systems (Capitol), would be willing to act as a “legislative director” for the ISAA for a fee of $12,000, payable at $1,000 per month. Capitol was to gather information useful in lobbying against the pending legislation. Kendall said that he was very close to the legislature. He introduced Harris to his business associate, John Cline. Cline was to handle the ISAA account because Kendall planned to be out of town for much of the legislative session. Harris pаid Cline a $1,000 retainer in early February, 1979, although he declined to sign a written contract. Cline made various contacts on behalf of the ISAA after February 6, 1979. The contacts, which included several conversations with Martin K. Edwards, President Pro Tempore of the Indiana Senate, were noted in Capitol’s files, to which Kendall had access.
House Bill 1490 passed the House on January 31, 1979. 2 Cline testified that on March 1, 1979, Edwards phoned him and detailed a payment schedule “to get [House Bill 1490] handled.” Edwards wanted $3,000 immediately, $5,000 when the bill came out of committee, $4,000 when it reached the Senate floor, and $15,000 when it went to the House.
Cline made contact with Harris. Various members of the ISAA delivered checks to Harris. On March 2, 1979, Cline delivered to Edwards the $3,000 that had been collected by Harris. On March 5, 1979, the officers of the ISAA met and agreed to raise funds and to make contributions themselves for the purpose of paying Edwards. This meeting was tape-recorded by Harris.
*129 The bill came out of committee on March 6, 1979. It had been amended to require any cash deposit for bail to be equal to the full amount of the bail. On March 7, 1979, Cline delivered to Edwards the $5,000 that Harris had raised. Edwards returned $2,000 to Cline and, within the next two or three days, Cline delivered half of the $2,000 to Kendall. Cline told Kendall “how much was there and what it was for and where it came from.”
On March 16, 1979, House Bill 1490 was amended so as to delete the amendment added in committee that was supported by the ISAA. The bill passed the Senate in its original form.
On March 26, 1979, officers of the ISAA met with Kendall and Cline at thе offices of Capitol. The discussion included: (1)
whether Capitol should be employed pursuant to a $1,000 per month contract to help with future legislative efforts; (2) whether $5,000 should be paid to Edwards to secure the appointment of a favorable study commission on bail bonding which might recommend legislation to the next session of the legislature; and (3) a general discussion of the money already paid to Edwards. The members decided not to sign the contract nor to make other payments.
Cline’s next contact with Harris was on May 10, 1979, to discuss appointments to the study commission; however, the ISAA did not take any further action.
The original indictment charged Kendall and Cline each with three counts of violating the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (1976). Edwards was charged on thе same three counts as well as four additional counts. 3
Kendall filed a motion for a bill of particulars, seeking disclosure, inter alia, of the names of conspirators known to the grand jury but unnamed in the indictment. He also filed a motion for relief from prejudicial joinder. The Government responded to both motions on September 3, 1980. In response to the motion for a bill of particulars, the Government detailed materials which had been made available to the defendants pursuant to rule 16 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The tape recording and transcript of the March 5, 1979 meeting were among the materials provided, the latter totalling over three hundred pages.
On October 13, 1980, the trial court denied the request for а bill of particulars. Kendall’s motion for reconsideration was similarly denied on October 30, 1980. On October 16, 1980, the court granted the Government’s motion to dismiss all counts of the indictment as to Cline with prejudice. The court thereupon found Kendall’s motion for severance to be moot.
The Grand Jury returned a superseding indictment on November 6, 1980. Six of the seven counts contained in the first indictment were repeated; 4 additionally, Edwards was charged with three counts of violating 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1) (1976). Kendall’s alternative motion for severance as to these three counts was granted the next day; however, his renewed motion to sever entirely his trial from that of Edwards was denied.
II. Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E)
Appellant Kendall contends that the trial court committed prejudicial error in admitting as substantive evidence of the conspiracy testimony about conversations among ISAA members. In particular, Kendall challenges the admission of a tape recording of the March 5, 1979 meeting, testimony by Delbert First concerning statements made by his brother, Robert First, and testimony by Harris as to a conversation he had with Cline on May 10, 1979. The appellant argues that it was legally impossible for the ISAA members to be co-conspirators under the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951 *130 (1976), and therefore it was error for the court to admit the testimony pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. Additionally, Kendall argues that testimony by Delbert First did not concern statements made in furtherance of the conspiracy and that the May 10, 1979 conversation between Cline аnd Harris occurred after the conspiracy had ended.
A. Legal Impossibility
The appellant reasons as follows: (1) the ISAA was the victim of the conspiracy; 5 (2) the intent and purpose of the-Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (1976), is to protect the victims of extortion regardless of whether they are “willing” victims; (3) because the ISAA was victim to the extortion, its members could not have been charged as Hobbs Act co-conspirators; and (4) therefore, conversations among ISAA members should not have been admitted as substantive evidence pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 801(dX2)(E).
Kendall relies for support on cases decided under statutes other than the Hobbs Act which have held that the victim of the crime charged cannot be deemed a co-conspirator under the pertinent statute.
See United States v. Nasser,
We need not decide, however, whether the ISAA members and directors might have been charged with a Hobbs Act violation. This court has previously held that “conspiracy” as an evidentiary concept, embodied in rule 801(d)(2)(E), and “conspiracy” as a concept of substantive criminal law are not coterminous.
United States v. Gil,
In
Gil,
defendants Villegas and Gil werе charged with distribution of heroin. Neither was charged with conspiracy. At trial, the district court judge found that the Government had established by a preponderance of independent evidence that a conspiracy existed, that Gil was a member of the conspiracy, and that various statements by Villegas were made during the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy. After thus properly applying the standard articulated by this court in
United States v. Santiago,
Villegas was acquitted of the narcotics charge because he proved entrapment by the Government. A successful entrapment defense negates the existence of crime because the required mental stаte is absent when the criminal act is committed at the instigation of the Government.
Hampton v. United States,
*131
After discussing the distinction between the substantive crime of conspiracy and rule 801(d)(2)(E), this court noted that Villegas’ acquittal might “have some effect on whether Gil, Villegas’ ‘partner in crime,’ could be tried for the substantive crime of conspiracy, but it has no relevance to the rationale behind Rule 801(d)(2)(E).”
Gil establishes that the appellate court need not overturn a conviction arguably based in part on evidence introduced pursuant to the joint venture exception even if, at the time of appeal, it appears that any substantive charge of conspiracy might be a legal impossibility. In the instant case, appellant Kendall argues that it would be legally impossible to charge the ISAA directors, whose conversations were admitted pursuant to the co-conspirator exception, with conspiracy under the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (1976). In light of Gil, we are convinced that, even if such a substantive conspiracy charge were a legal impossibility, the trial court’s reliance on rule 801(d)(2)(E) does not necessarily require us to overturn the сonviction.
Several well-established judicial rules delineating the limits of the joint venture exception, besides the holding in
Gil,
are pertinent to the admissibility of the challenged declarations. An out-of-court statement is admissible pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E) if the judge finds by a preponderance of the evidence “that the declarant and defendant were members of a conspiracy at the time the hearsay statement was made, and that the statement was in furtherance of the conspiracy.”
United States v. Santiago,
In the case at bar, the trial judge made the findings required by Santiago and Me dina-Herrera and only then admitted the challenged testimony pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E). Even if the appellant’s theory that a Hobbs Act victim cannot be a co-conspirator as to his own extortion is correct, it does not appear from the record that the court below relied on such a theory. In fact, the appellant in his reply brief stated that the trial judge thought that the ISAA executive committee members who testified might be chargeable with a conspiracy to extort money from the ISAA membership as a whole. 7 The Government had strenuously argued that the conspiracy to extort included a conspiracy to bribe. At the time the trial court relied on thе co-conspirator exception, therefore, it was far from certain that no conspiracy involving the testifying ISAA members could legally exist. The requirements of Santiago and Medina-Herrera were therefore met and this case is consistent with Gil.
*132
We find strong support for the theory advanced by the Government at trial for admissibility of the testimony.
United States v. Hathaway,
Some of Graham’s testimony was received pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E).
Appellant Kendall states in his brief that “the court specifically charged the jury that Graham’s interstate travel and use of the mails would sustain a conviction under the Travel Act. The Hathaway case does not support the proposition that a payer may be regarded as a Hobbs Act co-conspirator for evidentiary purposes.” Kendall’s observation as to the jury charge is correct. Further, nothing in Hathaway suggests that Graham would have been charged, but for the grant of immunity, with a Hobbs Act violation. Whether he could be deemed a Hobbs Act co-conspirator, however, is irrelеvant to the evidentiary question. Because Graham was a co-conspirator for evidentia-ry purposes under the Travel Act, his testimony was admissible against the defendants regardless of whether it constituted proof of the Hobbs Act or Travel Act violations.
In the case at bar, various ISAA members might have been charged with use of interstate transportation in aid of racketeering, 18 U.S.C. § 1961 (1976) (ITAR), or under the Travel Act, id. § 1952 (1976). They were not charged because they were granted immunity, 8 just as Graham was in Hathaway. Hathaway is distinguishable from the instant case only in that Kendall was not charged under either section 1952 or section 1961 whereas Baptista and Hathaway were charged pursuant to the Travel Act as well as the Hobbs Act. This distinction is significant only if it compels the conclusion that dеfendant Kendall had legally insufficient notice that his alleged participation in a bribery scheme, along with ISAA members, would lead to the admissibility of out-of-court declarations by the surety agents pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E).
Bribery and extortion under the Hobbs Act are not mutually exclusive.
9
In this case, the alleged conspiracy to bribe was clearly “intertwined” with the extortion conspiracy charged,
see United States v. Lyles,
Kendall had legally sufficient notice that his participation in a bribery scheme with ISAA members might lеad to the introduction of evidence concerning conversations among ISAA members pursuant to the joint venture exception. The fact that ISAA members might not be chargeable under the Hobbs Act is irrelevant. The *133 trial judge properly made the findings required by Santiago and Medina-Herrera and he did not err in admitting the testimony.
B. “In Furtherance of” the Conspiracy
Rule 801(d)(2)(E) requires that the declaration be made in furtherance of the conspiracy. The appellant contends that when Robert First told his brother, Delbert First, what had transpired at the March 5, 1979, and March 26, 1979, ISAA meetings, he was not furthering the conspiracy. The appellant characterizes the conversations between the brothers as “mere narrative” and likens the instant case to
United States v. Eubanks,
Eubanks involved a narcotics conspiracy. Gonzales, who was deceased at the time of trial, was a key member of that cоnspiracy. Gloria Baca, who had been Gonzales’ common law wife, testified, and her testimony was admitted pursuant to the joint venture exception. The court found that the declarations made by Gonzales to Baca were nothing more “than conversations between conspirators that did nothing to advance the aims of the alleged conspiracy.” Id. at 521. The court detailed some of the declarations compelling this conclusion. The statements pertained to events that had already occurred, such as that other conspirators had been unable to pick up heroin, and narrative as to what Gonzales himself planned to do. Id. at 520. There was no indication that Gonzales’ actions were shaped by his talks with Baca. Similarly, there was no indication that Baca acted on behalf of the conspiracy as a result of these conversations.
In the case at bar, Delbert First and Robert First were in business together; therefore, they shared more than familial ties. After Robert told Delbert about the March 5, 1979, meeting, they actively solicited a donation for the legislative fund. Because this joint solicitation effort followed closely Robert’s discussion of the meeting with his brother, that declaration can be viewed as being in furtherance of the conspiracy. It is readily distinguishable from the situation in Eubanks, in which Gonzales’ conversations with Baca apparently prompted no action on her part nor any action by Gonzales that he had not already planned to take.
The Government cites no specific actions by either Delbert or Robert following the March 26,1979, meeting that were arguably prompted by their discussion. Because the brothers had previously engaged in joint action furthering the goals of the conspiracy, however, there was a reasonable basis for the trial judge’s conclusion that the evidence was admissible pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E).
See United States v. Inendino,
We conclude that the trial judge properly admitted Delbert First’s testimony pursuant to the joint venture exception. We note additionally that, even if the judge below had admitted the evidence pertaining to the March 26, 1979, meeting without sufficient basis, Kendall was not prejudiced. Leslie, Lee, and Patchett all testified at trial concerning Kendall’s involvement in that meeting. All three recalled discussion in Kendall’s presence as to how the $9,000 previously raised had been spent, the possibility of further payments to secure favorable membership on the proposed legislative study commission, and Kendall’s remarks concerning his influence with the Senate.
The appellant also contends that his right tc confrontation was abrogated by admission of Delbert First’s testimony because he could not cross-examine Robert First. This court has previously held that extrajudicial statements properly admissible under rule 801(d)(2)(E) do not violate a defendant’s sixth amendment rights.
United States v. Papia,
C. “During the Course of” the Conspiracy
Kendall contends that Harris’ testimony regarding a conversation with Cline *134 on May 10, 1979, was improperly admitted. He argues that the conspiracy alleged in the indictment had as its aim the securing of favorable action on specified bills during the Spring, 1979, legislative session. According to the appellant, the conspiracy necessarily ended on March 16, 1979, when the Senate passed House Bill 1490 without the amendment favored by the ISAA. Because the conspiracy ended before the May 10, 1979, conversation, testimony regarding the telephone call did not meet the requirement of rule 801(d)(2)(E) that the declaration be in furtherance of the conspiracy.
As discussed in more detail in Section IV, infra, we find that the judge below did not err in finding a single conspiracy that ended only when the ISAA refused to take any further action following the May 10, 1979, telephone call. This call therefore was made in order to further the conspiracy and the evidence was properly admitted pursuant to the joint venture exception.
III. Bill of Particulars
The appellant argues the trial judge abused his discretion in denying Kendall’s motion for a bill of particulars identifying the known but unnamed co-conspirators. Kendall’s reasoning is as follows. The indictment charged a conspiracy to extort, naming ISAA members as victims. There was no conspiracy to bribe charged in the indictment. Because it was a legal impossibility for the ISAA members to be co-conspirators as to the section 1951 charge, Kendall had no way of knowing the identity of these unnamed co-conspirators. Further, the appellant had no notice of the Government’s legal theory through discovery pursuant to rule 16 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure because the Government actively misled Kendall into thinking that testimony concerning conversations among ISAA members was intended only to show the victim’s state of mind. Kendall urges that the trial court’s abuse of discretion is obvious from a statement made by the judge below during trial that “the court can only assume that those individuals [the defendants] are well acquainted with all their associates and all the persons who participated in the conspiratorial undertaking.” According to the appellant, this assumption is improper because it is inconsistent with the presumption of innocеnce.
It is well established that a motion for a bill of particulars lies within the discretion of the trial court.
United States v. Barrett,
In Roya, this court found that an indictment setting forth the elements of each offense charged, the time and place of the defendant’s conduct that violated that offense, and citation to the statute or statutes violated satisfied the requirement. Id. Kendall does not complain that the indictment in the instant case failed to meet these criteria. His argument is essentially that he was prejudiced because he did not know the evidentiary theory on which the Government would rely. Kendall’s reference to the district judge’s statement, upon denial of his motion, suggests that we should find an abuse of discretion if the judge relied in part on an impermissible reason for his denial, even if the defendant was not prejudiced thereby.
*135 We do not find this theory consistent with Roya but, in any event, we do not construe the remarks of the judge below as abrogating the presumption of innocence. We therefore must consider whether a defendant is precluded from adequately preparing for trial when he is not aware that the testimony of certain witnesses will likely be admitted pursuant to rule 801(d)(2)(E).
It is established that “a defendant is not entitled to know all the
evidence
the government intends to produce, but only the
theory
of the government’s case.”
United States v. Giese,
We are not persuaded that a defendant who has
no
right to know the details of the evidence to be introduced by the Government does have a right to know for what purpose the Government will seek to have it admitted. The defendant’s constitutional right is to know the offense with which he is charged, not to know the details of how it will be proved.
United States v. Freeman,
In this case, Kendall not only knew of the evidence on which the Government intended to rely. He also knew that the Government anticipated introducing evidence pursuant to the joint venture exception. The brief submitted by the Government prior to trial included a discussion of the relevant law pertaining to rule 801(d)(2)(E) and included reference to the Hathaway case which we have found persuasive in our disposition of the appellant’s argument in Section II, supra. It is true that the Government’s brief discusses the state of mind exception at greater length and more directly in relation to the admissibility of the conversations among ISAA members, whereas the discussion of rule 801(d)(2)(E) is somewhat more abstract. We find, however, that the brief as a whole, together with the evidentiary materials made available to Kendall and the indictment itself, more than satisfy the requirements of Roya.
We find therefore that the judge below acted well within his discretion in denying Kendall’s motion for a bill of particulars.
IV. Instruction Regarding Multiple Conspiracies
Appellant Kendall also maintains that the district judge erred by refusing to instruct the jury as to the possibility of multiple conspiracies. The defendant argues that the charged conspiracy related only to efforts to influence the passage of bills before the legislature prior to March 16, 1979. When House Bill 1490 was passed by the Senate, without the amendment favored by the ISAA, on March 16, 1979, the charged conspiracy was terminated. The March 26, 1979, meeting was not therefore part of the conspiracy. Kendall contends that this later meeting might have been found to constitute a distinct conspiracy. The evidence linking Kendall to the March 26, 1979, meeting was allegedly stronger than that linking him to the earlier extortion conspiracy. If two separate conspiracies existed, the jury might have found him guilty of the later but not the earlier one. He was therefore prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury regarding multiple conspiracies.
*136
If the possibility of multiple conspiracies exists, the trial judge must so instruct the jury.
See United States
v.
Varelli,
In Varelli, for instance, the defendants had been convicted of a single conspiracy to hijack interstate shipments of merchandise. The evidence had shown one hijacking of Polaroid film and three hijackings of silver. Each transaction occurred on a different date. A panel of this court held that there was insufficient evidence from which a jury could find a single conspiracy, id. at 744, stating:
While some of the parties who took part in the Polaroid hijacking were also involvеd in the silver hijackings, this alone is insufficient to support a finding of one overall continuous conspiracy. The conspirators in the Polaroid hijacking did not contemplate a series of hijackings in which all would partake. Rather, the Polaroid hijackings represented a single transaction with a single purpose. The fact that the object in both the Polaroid hijacking and silver hijackings were similar is insufficient to constitute an overall common conspiracy.
Id.
(citation omitted).
See Kotteakos v. United States,
Contrary to the appellant’s interpretation, the Superseding Indictment was not clearly limited to the time during which the 101st General Assembly was considering Senate Bills 155 and 256 and House Bill 1490. Paragraph 13, Count I, of the indictment alleges a conspiracy “[f]rom on or about January 15, 1979, tо the date of this Indictment.” The purpose of the ISAA was broader than the scope of those particular bills; the association sought throughout its existence to effect favorable bail bond legislation. The March 26, 1979, meeting demonstrated that the defendants were continuing their efforts to further the overall scheme of obtaining favorable legislation. The temporary set-back to the conspiracy, caused by the passage of House Bill 1490 on March 16, 1979, without the amendment favored by ISAA, did not signal an end to the conspiracy. The discussion at the March 26, 1979, meeting concerning the $9,000 previously paid to Edwards furthers the conclusion that this was one continuing conspiracy.
Considering the evidence in a light most favorable to thе Government,
Glasser v. United States,
*137
As this court has previously noted, “in nearly every conspiracy case the claim is made that а variance exists because multiple conspiracies were shown,”
United States v. Abraham,
V. Severance
Kendall argues that the trial court erred in denying his motions for severance. The appellant claims specifically that he was prejudiced by the admission of impeachment evidence against Edwards and by admission of the recording of a telephone conversation between Edwards and Cline that took place on May 12, 1980. Before and during presentation of the impeachment evidence, the court instructed the jury that the testimony was not to be regarded in weighing the evidence against Kendall. Similarly, when the recording of the Cline/Edwards conversation was admitted, the court explicitly told the jury to disregard the conversation in relation to Kendall. At the close of the case, the judge again instructed the jury, stating:
In this connection, you should keep in mind the cautionary instructions which the court has from time to time given you throughout the course of the trial regarding the application of evidence to one defendant and not the other.
Kendall claims that the interim instructions were insufficient to prevent prejudice against him. He further argues that, even if the interim instructions were adequate, the instructions at the close of the case were deficient because they failed to alert the jury specifically to what evidence was admitted only against Edwards.
The decision as to whether a motion for severance should be granted lies within the discretion of the trial judge.
Opper v. United States,
Severance need only be granted if the moving party demonstrates that a “fair trial cannot be had without severance, not merely that a separate trial offers a better chance for acquittal.”
United States v. Holleman,
Appellant’s arguments for severance are readily distinguishable from those that led the Second Circuit to conclude that severance should have been granted in
United States v. Kelly,
It is established that a disparity of incriminating evidence is not in itself sufficient to establish prejudice,
United States v. Hedman,
The
Kelly
court noted that an alternative method of guarding against prejudice is to give interim limiting instructions, coupled with “positive and clear instructions at the close of the case,”
We find that the interim instructions were quite explicit. We are not willing to speculate that the jurors ignorеd these clear instructions.
See Opper v. United States,
In light of our conclusions that the trial judge did not err in relying on rule 801(d)(2)(E), in denying the defendant’s motion for a bill of particulars, in refusing to instruct the jury as to the possibility of multiple conspiracies, or in denying Kendall’s motions for severance, the conviction of Francis B. Kendall is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E) provides:
(d) Statements which are not hearsay. A statement is not hearsay if—
(2) Admission by party-opponent. The statement is offered against a party and is ... (E) a statement by a co-conspirator of a party during the course and in furtherance of conspiracy.
Except for its designation of co-conspirators’ statements as “not hearsay,” the rule codifies the common law co-conspirator exception to the hearsay rule. United States v. Gil,604 F.2d 546 , 548 (7th Cir. 1979).
. Senate Bills 155 and 256 had been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Although the bills were heard by a subcommittee, the committee chairman declined to give the bills a hearing in the full committee.
. The four additional counts against Edwards charged violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1623, 1505, & 1503.
. Count 7 of the original indictment, chаrging Edwards with attempting to obstruct an investigation by the F.B.I. in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1505 (1976), had been dismissed by the court on October 13, 1980, on motion of the defendant Edwards.
. The indictment named as victims of the conspiracy the ISAA, its officers, members and agents.
.
E. g., United States v. Freeman,
. Our review of the transcript leads us to conclude that insufficient evidence as to the required state of mind of the ISAA non-committee members exists to support this theory. That finding is not, however, dispositive because the ISAA committee members could have been charged with a.conspiracy to bribe, see infra.
. At least three ISAA members who testified, Harris, Lee, and Leslie, were granted immunity by the Government.
.
E. g., United States v. Rabbit,
. In his brief the appellant cites decisions, e.
g., United States v. Hubbard,
.
United States v. Hedman,
