Fred De La Mata, Manuel A. Calas, Oscar Castilla and Enrique Fernandez (“appellants”) appeal their criminal convictions and sentences for bank fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344, conspiracy to defraud the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, misapplication of bank funds, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 656, making false statements to a federally insured financial institution, in violation of 18 U.S.C. *1279 § 1014, money laundering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956, making or causing to be made false entries, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1005, and engaging and conspiring to engage in a pattern of racketeering activities in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) and(d). Appellants contend that the ex post facto clause barred their prosecution, that the indictment and jury instructions were fatally defective, that there was insufficient evidence to support their convictions and that the discovery of new evidence mandated the grant of a new trial. We find that appellants’ convictions on two counts of bank fraud violated the ex post facto clause, but affirm their convictions and sentences in all other respects.
I. Background
The charges arose out of several transactions involving the Republic National Bank (“RNB” or “the Bank”), a nationally chartered financial institution headquartered in Dade County, Florida. We summarize the facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict.
De La Mata, Calas, and Castilla (hereinafter the “bank insiders”) were employed by RNB prior to 1988 until they resigned in the fall of 1988. De La Mata served as RNB’s Deputy President until 1985, thereafter as President and Chief Operating Officer, and at all times a member of the Board of Directors. Calas served as the RNB’s Senior Vice President until July 1988, and thereafter as Executive Vice President. Castilla was Senior Vice President during the entire period. In addition, De La Mata, Calas and Castilla were all members of RNB’s Loan Committee. Fernandez was a local real estate speculator, ostensibly unconnected with RNB.
A. The Bank Branch Transactions 1. The Westlands branch
In May 1983, Calas retained attorney Anthony Silva to act as “trustee” in the purchase of certain real property located in Hialeah, Florida (hereinafter the “West-lands”). Calas, through Silva, obtained a contract to purchase the tract for $325,000, and provided Silva with the money for the initial deposit. Calas also directed Silva to form a corporation called Hialeah Properties, Inc., for the purpose of acquiring the Westlands property. The corporation’s shares were initially issued in the name of Daniel Blanco, but that stock issuance was later voided and the shares were divided among De La Mata (50%), Calas (25%), and Castilla (25%). Calas approached Daniel Blanco to head the corporation, which Blanco understood to be a “ceremonial” position since he would not have a financial or operational stake in the corporation. The purpose of his job, according to Blanco, was to act as owner of the property in order to conceal Calas’ involvement from RNB.
After procuring the purchase contract, Calas proposed to Luis Botifoll, Chairman of the Board of RNB, that RNB acquire the Westlands site for use as a branch banking facility. Calas did not disclose the bank insiders’ financial interest in the property. Silva testified that he also discussed the proposal with Botifoll, fully aware that he was not to reveal the identities of the true parties in interest. Thereafter, Calas arranged for Botifoll to meet Blanco, the purported owner of the West-lands site, whereupon the two, on behalf of RNB and the “trust,” negotiated a 30 year lease with an option to purchase the site. The rent commenced at $6500 per month, and escalated each year according to the cost of living. A government expert witness testified at trial that RNB had paid $362,000 above the fair market rental value as of the date of indictment.
On July 21, 1982, RNB’s Board of Directors approved the lease Botifoll had *1280 negotiated. De La Mata participated in the vote, and concealed the bank insiders’ personal interest in the transaction. In this way, De La Mata also caused RNB to fail to disclose, in the bank’s application to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (“OCC”) to open a branch facility, the involvement of bank officers in the transaction.
2. The Little Havana branch
In September 1983, Fernandez obtained a purchase contract for $700,000 for a site in Little Havana consisting of a bank building (two ground leases) and its adjoining parking lot (fee simple lot). Fernandez obtained the purchase contract in the name of the Fernandez Land Trust, an entity initially created for the benefit of Fernandez but later secretly amended to include the bank insiders as named beneficiaries accordingly: De La Mata 37-1/2%, Calas 18-3/4%, Castilla 18-3/4% and Fernandez 25%. Calas provided a substantial portion of the $70,000 that Fernandez tendered as a down payment.
Thereafter, De La Mata proposed that RNB acquire the Little Havana site for use as a branch facility, and introduced Fernandez to Botifoll as the property’s owner. At an October 1983 meeting of the RNB Directors, De La Mata participated in discussions to acquire the Little Havana branch building, and initiated the motion to apply to the OCC for a license to open the branch. Ultimately, RNB agreed to lease the Little Havana site for three years at an annual rate of $156,000, and to pay $100,000 per year to maintain an option to purchase the building.
In December 1983, the RNB Loan Committee approved a $700,000 loan to the Fernandez Land Trust, thus, completely underwriting the purchase of the Little Havana property. De La Mata, Calas and Castilla all voted to approve the loan to the Fernandez Land Trust while concealing their interest therein. In effect, the bank insiders caused RNB to misrepresent to the OCC in its branch opening application that no bank employees were involved in the transaction.
In August 1984, RNB needed additional parking for the Little Havana site. De La Mata proposed that RNB acquire, for an additional $150,000, the adjacent parking lot, the purchase of which RNB had unknowingly financed through the $700,000 loan to the Fernandez Land Trust. At the RNB Board meeting on August 22, 1984, De La Mata concealed his interest in the subject property and voted to approve the acquisition.
At the conclusion of the three year lease, on December 24,1986, RNB purchased the Little Havana site from the Fernandez Land Trust for $1,000,000, including the option payments. The uncontested appraised value of the property, including the parking lot, was $291,000, resulting in approximately $850,000 loss to RNB.
3. The International Private Banking branch
In March 1984, Calas, Castilla and Fernandez retained attorney William Shockett to represent them in the purchase of property on LeJeune Road, near Miami International Airport. Shockett, as “trustee,” entered into a contract to purchase the site for $700,000. Calas and Castilla provided the $70,000 down payment. At some point, De La Mata proposed to bank officials that RNB acquire the property for use as its International Private Banking (“IPB”) branch, and arranged for a meeting between Botifoll and Fernandez, who purported to be the site’s owner. Although Shockett advised his clients on the necessity of disclosure, Fernandez concealed the identities of his co-venturers from Botifoll.
*1281 Appellants, through a Florida corporation entitled “Real Estate Partners,” applied to RNB for a loan to finance the purchase of the IPB site. When Shockett learned that RNB might not only lease, but also finance and lease back the property from its own officers, Shockett again warned of the conflict of interest and again was reassured that the Bank knew everything. Yet, the financial statement submitted in support of Real Estate Partners’ loan application to RNB blatantly misrepresented Fernandez to be the sole shareholder of the corporation. It is undisputed that the shares of Real Estate Partners were divided among De La Mata (37— 1/2%), Calas (18-3/4%), Castilla (18-3/4%) and Fernandez (25%).
On June 27, 1984, the RNB Board voted to pursue this site as a branch location. De La Mata participated in the discussion and cast an affirmative vote without disclosing his, or Calas’ and Castilla’s ownership interest in the property. After some negotiation, RNB entered into an agreement dated August 3, 1984, to lease the IPB site from Real Estate Partners for $165,000 per year with an option to purchase the property and premises after eight years. The evidence at trial showed that RNB paid $510,000 in excess of the fair market rental value during the first seven years of the lease.
On August 9, 1984, RNB’s Loan Committee approved two loans, one to Real Estate Partners in the amount of $560,000 and one to Fernandez in the amount of $190,000, the proceeds of which were used to acquire the IPB property. De La Mata, Calas and Castilla all voted to approve the requested loans, without disclosing that they were the recipients. As a result of the bank insiders’ deception, RNB filed an OCC bank branch application which failed to disclose the interest of its own officers in the site’s acquisition.
On or about April 1, 1985, Real Estate Partners applied to RNB for another loan, in the amount of $180,000, for the construction of additional floor space at the IPB branch site. Calas prepared the paperwork for the loan, and the loan was issued without presentation to, or approval by, the Loan Committee.
Around May of 1987, Real Estate Partners pledged the IPB site and rents due under the pending lease with RNB to Ocean Bank as collateral for a loan in the amount of $1,000,000. Real Estate Partners satisfied its $700,000 debt obligation to RNB, and distributed the remaining proceeds to the appellants.
4. The Orange Bowl branch
In March 1985, Fernandez again retained Shockett to draft a contract, this time for the acquisition of property located near the Orange Bowl in Miami (hereinafter “Orange Bowl” site). Shockett obtained a contract to purchase the property for $300,000 in the name of “Fernandez as trustee.” On June 19, 1985, prior to closing, Fernandez assigned the purchase contract to Real Estate Partners.
Acting through Fernandez, Real Estate Partners applied to RNB for financing, again misrepresenting Fernandez as the sole corporate shareholder. In addition, the loan application introduced as evidence at trial revealed that Real Estate Partners received a pre-approved loan on De La Mata’s authorization. The loan," in the amount of $250,000, was disbursed to Real Estate Partners on June 19, 1985. The Loan Committee subsequently ratified the loan on June 27, 1985, with De La Mata, Calas and Castilla all voting in favor thereof.
At a meeting of the RNB Executive Committee 1 on September 24, 1985, De La *1282 Mata proposed that RNB acquire the Orange Bowl site for use as a branch facility. De La Mata revealed that he had already negotiated tentative terms with Fernandez, the purported owner of the property, for the construction of a bank building and a five year lease with option to purchase the property and premises. De La Mata did not disclose to the other directors that the bank insiders owned the Orange Bowl property. Thereafter, Calas took charge of overseeing construction costs and negotiating lease terms.
In the spring of 1986, Real Estate Partners applied to RNB for two loans, the proceeds of which would be used for the construction of the Orange Bowl bank building. In support of this application, Real Estate Partners again submitted a financial statement falsely stating that Fernandez owned 100% of the corporation’s stock. The Loan Committee approved the loans at its meeting of June 19, 1986. De La Mata, Calas and Castilla each voted to extend credit without disclosing their personal financial interest in Real Estate Partners.
RNB ultimately decided to purchase rather than lease the Orange Bowl property. 2 Fernandez offered the site and its newly constructed building for $1.15 million, but following negotiations, RNB agreed to purchase the site for $960,000. Given that Real Estate Partners had spent $300,000 to purchase the land, and $277,000 to construct the building (based on cancelled checks from Real Estate Partners’ bank account with RNB), plus some incidental costs, appellants realized approximately $380,000 profit on the deal in one year. The Executive Committee approved the purchase price on June 23, 1986, at which time De La Mata cast an affirmative vote while concealing the insiders’ conflict of interest.
B. Foreclosed Real Estate (“OREO” properties) 3
In early 1986, RNB foreclosed on some property that collateralized a defaulted loan. The evidence showed that Calas had been the loan officer oh the account, and approximately $200,000 was due on the balance. Appellants created “Great Group Investments” (hereinafter “Great Group”), a Florida corporation, and distributed the shares to De La Mata’s family (37-1/2%), Calas (18-3/4%), Castilla (18-3/4%) and Fernandez (25%). Acting as the corporation’s owner, Fernandez made an offer to purchase the OREO properties from RNB for $130,000. It had been appraised at $207,000. On February 14, 1986, the committee responsible for reviewing all defaulted loans and approving sales of OREO properties approved the sale to Great Group. De La Mata, a member of this committee, voted in favor of the transaction without disclosing his personal interest in Great Group.
When Great Group applied to RNB for a $100,000 loan to finance the purchase, it *1283 submitted a financial statement falsely-representing Fernandez as the sole shareholder of Great Group. The RNB Loan Committee considered and approved the loan on June 5, 1986. In customary fashion, De La Mata affirmatively voted in favor of the application while concealing the ownership interest of the bank insiders in Great Group. Over the course of the following year, Great Group sold the OREO properties for $340,000, thereby realizing a profit of $210,000. RNB lost $81,000 on the properties.
In October 1986, Calas and Castilla informed attorney Shockett that RNB held two defaulted notes secured by real property whose appraised value greatly exceeded the remaining balances due on the loans. At the direction of Calas and Cas-tilla, Shockett formed a corporation named “CSEC,” and divided the ownership between Castilla’s niece, Myra Espinóla and her husband (together 75%) and Shockett (25%). Castilla helped Shockett purchase the defaulted notes by arranging for an unsecured loan in the amount of $100,000 through RNB. Shockett thereafter sold the real estate that served as collateral for these loans at a substantial profit, largely for the benefit of Calas and Castilla.
C. Unrelated Real Estate Ventures
In September 1983, De La Mata approached his friend and RNB client, Jorge Sama, and identified a vacant lot owned by the EWL Corporation as a potential site for the operation of a gasoline distributorship. Sarria owned and operated gasoline service stations in the Miami-Dade area, and testified that he and De La Mata had a long-standing agreement to invest jointly in a service station when the opportunity arose. The evidence showed that Calas had apparently learned of the opportunity as EWL’s account officer at RNB.
De La Mata, Calas and Sarria thereafter entered into an understanding whereby Sarria would receive RNB’s financial backing to acquire the lot and construct a retail service station in exchange for De La Mata’s and Calas’s undisclosed interest therein. Sarria obtained a contract for the purchase of the property in the name of “Sarria and assigns,” and assigned the purchase contract to Sarocco, Inc. prior to closing on December 19, 1983. At trial, Sarria testified that Sarocco, Inc. was incorporated on December 9, 1983, and the shares were divided among Sarria (50%), De La Mata (25%) and Calas (25%).
At its December 1983 meeting, the RNB Loan Committee approved a loan to “Sar-ria and assigns” in the amount of $425,000 for the acquisition and construction of a gas station. De La Mata initiated the motion to approve the loan, and both De La Mata and Calas voted in favor thereof, without disclosing their financial interest in the venture. Several years later, in November 1986, De La Mata and Calas voted to approve the extension of the loan to $550,000, again without making any disclosure of their personal interest.
In December 1986, De La Mata, through his family members, invested in a real estate development venture named “Estate Land Development.” Thereafter, De La Mata facilitated a $313,000 loan to that entity, and formally voted to grant the loan at a meeting of the RNB Loan Committee, without disclosing the fact of his family’s 25% interest therein.
II. Procedural History
On April 14, 1992, a federal grand jury sitting in the Southern District of Florida returned an indictment charging De La Mata, Calas, Castilla, Fernandez and corporate co-defendants, Real Estate Partners, Inc. and Hialeah Properties, Inc., on seventy-eight counts arising out of three *1284 separate conspiracies, namely the bank branch transactions, the OREO properties, and the corporate loans. Each count incorporated by reference certain “general allegations” set forth at the beginning of the indictment which described the bank insiders’ disclosure obligations under federal banking statutes and regulations, internal bank procedures, and the common law.
Appellants filed numerous pretrial motions to dismiss the indictment arguing, inter alia, that the bank fraud and money laundering counts failed to state offenses, 4 that the bank fraud and money laundering charges violated the ex post facto clause, and that the bank fraud counts were multi-plicitous and were barred by the applicable statute of limitations. In addition, De La Mata moved to dismiss charges of making false entries, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1005, and of conspiring to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, on the grounds that appellants did not, as a matter of law, have the legal duties alleged by the government. Calas and Castilla moved to strike as surplusage and to exclude from evidence proof of civil and regulatory disclosure requirements on the grounds that it was improper for the government to rely on a civil violation to prove a criminal act.
The district court, Honorable K. Michael Moore presiding, conducted pretrial hearings regarding the motions on October 13 and 14, 1992. Except for the multiplicity challenge, which the court took under advisement, the district judge denied the defense motions.
Trial commenced on October 15, 1992. The government demonstrated that appellants engaged in a pattern of deception by repeatedly and willfully concealing the bank insiders’ personal financial interest in various entities in order to induce RNB to enter into transactions remunerative to the appellants. The government introduced expert and bank witnesses who established the disclosure requirements imposed by federal regulations, as well as RNB’s own internal rules prohibiting self-dealing without disclosure and abstention. The government proved appellants’ ownership interests in the various entities through uncontroverted documentary evidence, and appellants’ intent to deceive the Bank though their own attorneys and “front” men like Blanco. 5
In defense, appellants sought to prove that they lacked intent to financially harm the bank. The bank insiders contended that they did not know they were required to disclose their involvement and to refrain from voting in the proposed transactions because RNB did not have a written code of conduct until 1988. In addition, appellants asserted that, because all material financial terms were disclosed, the failure to disclose the bank insiders’ interest did not expose the Bank to a risk of loss that it did not knowingly accept. 6 Arguing that only economic injury was cognizable under *1285 the bank fraud statutes, appellants requested an instruction informing the jury that “risk of loss” was an essential element of the crimes of bank fraud and misapplication.
The district court denied the defendants’ motions for the aforementioned requested jury instructions. However, by order dated December 16, 1992, the district court ruled that certain bank fraud counts were multiplicitous and required the government to elect which bank fraud charges it wanted the jury to consider. As a result of the court striking various counts, the case went to the jury on fifty-nine counts.
The jury returned verdicts adjudging De La Mata and Fernandez guilty as charged. The jury also found Calas and Castilla guilty on all counts, save the substantive offenses arising from the CSEC transaction. The parties entered into stipulations regarding the forfeiture counts. 7
On April 23, 1993, the district court sentenced the appellants, over objection, under the money laundering guidelines. De La Mata, Calas, Castilla and Fernandez were sentenced to terms of imprisonment of 121, 109, 97 and 97 months, respectively, to be followed in each case by a three year term of supervised release. The district court ordered restitution against De La Mata, Calas and Castilla, jointly and severally in the amount of $1,786,194, and against Fernandez in the amount of $1,424,000. In order to strengthen the possibility of restitution, the district court did not impose fines. The district court granted bond, pending appeal, 8 and appellants timely filed notices of appeal. 9
III. Discussion
Appellants contend (1) that application of the newly enacted ten year statute of limitations for financial institution offenses, and their prosecution for the bank frauds charged in counts 2, 3 and 6 violated the ex post facto clause; (2) that the indictment failed to state offenses and was constructively amended at trial; (3) that the jury instructions failed to charge that risk of loss is an essential element of the crimes of bank fraud and misapplication; (4) that Fernandez was incorrectly sentenced under the money laundering guidelines; (5) that the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions of Castilla; and (6) that the district court erred in denying appellants’ motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence.
A. Ex Post Facto
We review
de novo
whether appellants’ prosecution contravened the
ex post facto
clause of the U.S. Constitution.
United States v. Muench,
*1286 1. Application of Section 3293
Effective August 9, 1989, Congress extended the statute of limitations for “financial institution offenses” (including 18 U.S.C. §§ 656, 1005, 1014 and 1344) from five to ten years. See 18 U.S.C. § 3293. Moreover, Congress expressly made the prolonged limitations period applicable to all such offenses which had been committed but as to which the former five year limitations period had not yet run. See Pub.L. No. 101-73, § 961(0(3), 103 Stat. 501 (1989). Thus, offenses committed on or before August 9, 1984, would be barred by the five-year statute of limitations while offenses committed after August 9, 1984, would be governed by the new ten-year limitations period.
Appellants concede that the alleged offenses were subject to prosecution at the time § 3293 was enacted, however they assert that extending the limitations period violated the ex post facto clause because it deprived them of an affirmative defense which they could otherwise have interposed. In other words, appellants maintain that all but three of the substantive financial institution offenses allegedly occurred on or before April 13, 1987, when the five-year limitations period was in effect, and would have been time-barred on the date of indictment, April 14, 1992. This argument misperceives the law.
The
ex post facto
clause prohibits the enactment of statutes which: (1) punish as a crime an act previously committed which was innocent when done: (2) make more burdensome the punishment for a crime, after its commission; or (3) deprive one charged with a crime of any defense available according to law at the time when the act was committed.
Collins v. Youngblood,
Moreover, the law is well-settled that extending a limitation period before a given prosecution is barred does not violate the ex
post facto
clause.
See United States v. Grimes,
*1287 2. Prosecution for Bank Fraud
Appellants contend that counts 2, 3 and 6 infringe the ex post facto clause because they are premised on lease agreements validly executed prior to the enactment of the bank fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1344, on October 12, 1984. Thus, they argue that any fraud that occurred in connection with the bank branch transactions was completed upon the execution and delivery of the lease agreements on November 3, 1983, August 21, 1984, and August 3, 1984, respectively. The government responds that bank fraud is a continuing offense such that the schemes charged in counts 2, 3 and 6 merely commenced with the signing of the leases and continued as long as the leases were in effect because they posed a continuing risk of injury to the bank. Moreover, the government contends that a single bank fraud may be executed numerous times, and that each of the bank frauds charged in counts 2, 3 and 6 was “executed” after the statute was passed.
First, we must determine what constitutes the offense of bank fraud. Under 18 U.S.C. § 1344, a person is guilty of bank fraud if he “knowingly executes, or attempts to execute, a scheme or artifice ... to defraud a federally chartered or insured financial institution.... ” 18 U.S.C. § 1344 (1985). The unit of the offense created by § 1344 is each execution or attempted execution of the scheme to defraud, not each act in furtherance thereof.
See United States v. Molinaro,
Yet, the government is correct that a single scheme can be executed a number of times, and a defendant may be charged in separate counts for each “execution” of the scheme to defraud.
See United States v. Sirang,
The question, then, is what constitutes an “execution” of the scheme. In
Sirang,
we distinguished check-kiting cases, in which each check increases the risk faced by the financial institution, from component acts in “a scheme to obtain a certain amount of funds or to obtain financing for a particular transaction])]”
Id.
at 596
(quoting United States v. Barnhart,
Ultimately, the decision of whether a particular transaction is an “execution” of the scheme or merely a component of the scheme will depend on several factors including the ultimate goal of the scheme, the nature of the scheme, the benefits intended, the interdependence of the acts, and the number of parties involved.
Longfellow,
Returning to the case at bar, the government contends that bank fraud is a continuing offense. A continuing offense is one which is not complete upon the first act, but instead continues to be perpetrated over time.
United States v. Gilbert,
The government asserts that the bank frauds continued until appellants were indicted in 1992 because appellants continued to collect lease payments from RNB and because the purchase options relating to the IPB and Westlands branches remained pending. In other words, the fraud continued as long as the leases did, because that was the means by which the appellants were enriched. Taken to its logical conclusion, the collection of rents on a lease obtained by fraud, for a term of 99 years, would toll the statute of limitations for 99 years. We think this goes too far. The law is clear that the bank fraud statute imposes punishment for each “execution” of the scheme to defraud, and not each act in furtherance.
See Longfellow,
In this regard, the government misplaces reliance on
Duncan
and
Longfellow. Duncan,
as discussed above, involved a scheme strikingly similar to the one at bar, in which bank insiders induced the bank to finance the purchase of certain property which they then leased, and ultimately sold to the bank.
See Duncan,
In
Longfellow,
the court loosely refers to the scheme as continuing in rejecting the defendant’s argument that the scheme was barred by the statute of limitations.
14
See Longfellow,
Next, we must consider whether counts 2, 3 and 6 properly charged posfr-1984 conduct that “executed” the bank fraud schemes.
16
As to count 2, we find that the sale of the Little Havana groundleases constituted a separate execution of the scheme to defraud RNB. Even though the purchase option derives from a lease predating the bank fraud statute, appellants had an obligation to disclose their ownership interest in the property at the time RNB exercised the option, in December 1986. The failure to do so in connection with the sale constituted a separate financial risk to the bank.
See, e.g., Longfellow,
We do not believe that counts 3 and 6 charged executions of the appellants’ scheme to defraud RNB. Although the appellants continued to receive lease payments on the Westlands and -IPB branches, the fraud was completed when appellants fraudulently obtained the leases with the intent at that time to collect future rent.
See United States v. Gregg,
Our conclusion is further reinforced by the fact that two of the money laundering counts (counts 5 and 10) charge those transactions that allegedly executed the bank frauds set forth in counts 3 and 6, as transactions involving proceeds of “specified unlawful activity.” For example, count 5 charged that appellants knowingly engaged in a transaction involving the proceeds of unlawful activity, i.e., bank fraud, with the intent to conceal the nature, source and ownership of such proceeds. The transaction involving illicit proceeds was identified as the disbursement of rent made by RNB under the Westlands lease to De La Mata, Calas and Castilla on October 19, 1990. The same disbursement of rent could not complete the offense of bank fraud and constitute the offense of money laundering.
See United States v. Christo, III,
Appellants maintain, without further explanation, that we must reverse their convictions for money laundering because those charges were “predicated upon the time-barred bank fraud[.]” First, we need only address counts 4 and 5 because they are the only money laundering charges predicated solely upon the bank fraud alleged in count 3, which we have reversed.
18
Second, we clarify our holding that 18 U.S.C. § 1344 could not be retroactively applied to prosecute appellants’ scheme to defraud RNB in connection with the West-lands and IPB branches without infringing the
ex post facto
clause. This is because appellants did not have fair notice that they could be prosecuted for bank fraud when those leases were executed.
See Weaver v. Graham,
That statute makes it illegal to knowingly enter into a financial transac
*1292
tion involving the proceeds of a “specified unlawful activity” with the intent to conceal or disguise the nature, location, source, ownership, or control of those proceeds.
United States v. Miller,
Similarly, although appellants could not be prosecuted for bank fraud
ex post facto,
it does not necessarily follow that they cannot be convicted for the laundering of proceeds obtained after the enactment of the bank fraud statute. We hold that these proceeds derived from “specified unlawful activity” i.e., bank fraud, because the Bank occupied the leased premises during a period after federal law prohibited schemes, like the one at bar, aimed at defrauding financial institutions. Appellants’ prosecution for this conduct does not implicate the due process or
ex post facto
clauses because appellants were on clear notice that federal law prohibited their scheme yet they failed to take any remedial action. It is well settled that Congress may pass new laws which require us to alter our conduct or risk prosecution.
See Samuels v. McCurdy,
Finally, appellants contend that the use of bank fraud as RICO predicates violated the ex post facto clause because bank fraud was not a predicate act until August 1989. See Pub.L. No. 101-73, § 968. Assuming, without deciding, that the predicate acts of bank fraud were based on pre-1989 con *1293 duct, the jury found, by special verdict, that appellants’ committed over 30 acts of racketeering. Only 6 of these were based on bank fraud. Thus, we sustain appellants’ convictions on counts 58 and 59 for racketeering and racketeering conspiracy.
B. The Sufficiency of the Indictment and Proof at Trial
Appellants contend that the indictment should have been dismissed, 20 because every count therein (the bank fraud, misapplication, false statements, and hence, the RICO and money laundering counts) was based upon non-existent or mis-stated disclosure duties, and thus, the indictment failed to state offenses as a matter of law. We find it noteworthy that appellants moved pretrial to strike from the indictment and to exclude from evidence, as superfluous and prejudicial, any reference to civil banking laws and regulations requiring disclosure of insider transactions. 21 Now appellants assert that their convictions can only be sustained if they had the disclosure duties attributed to them by the federal banking statutes and regulations described in the indictment.
Appellants provide no support for the proposition that a scheme to defraud a financial institution must be predicated upon an affirmative duty to disclose.
See, e.g., United States v. Colton,
1. Fiduciary Duties
First, appellants were not customers dealing at arm’s length with RNB, nor were they mere salaried employees of the bank. De La Mata, Calas and Castilla were director and senior officers of RNB, and as such, owed a fiduciary duty to the bank and its depositors.
See F.D.I.C. v. Gonzalez-Gorrondona,
Appellants assail the indictment’s allegations of a duty to guide the bank to decisions “most favorable” to it, arguing that the banking regulations only require that insider transactions be conducted on the “same terms” as those applicable to others. However, we believe that the common law fiduciary duty is distinct and separate from appellants’ duties under the banking regulations, which we take up below. Accordingly, we hold that appellants had a fiduciary duty to inform the Board of Di
*1294
rectors of their interests in the transactions they conducted with RNB, and to avoid participating in any bank transactions that affected them personally.
See United States v. Henderson,
2. RNB’s Internal Rules and Policies
RNB’s own internal rules prohibited self-dealing without disclosure and abstention in order to protect the bank’s depositors from financial mismanagement.
See United States v. Clark,
3. Federal Banking Laws and Regulations
In 1978, Congress amended the Federal Reserve Act in response to an alarming string of bank failures, in part due to insider abuses.
See United States v. McCright,
a. Extensions of Credit
Under 12 U.S.C. § 375(a), the Federal Reserve was authorized to prescribe rules concerning extensions of credit to bank insiders. See 12 U.S.C. § 375(a)(10). Pursuant to that mandate, 12 C.F.R. § 215.4, or “Regulation 0” as it is better known, prohibits the extension of credit to a bank insider, or his related entities, when the total indebtedness of such party exceeds $500,000 unless: (i) the loan is approved in advance by a majority of the entire board of directors; and (ii) the interested party abstains from participating directly or indirectly in the voting. The very first loan which appellants fraudulently obtained from RNB amounted to $700,000 (to finance the purchase of the Little Havana site), and their outstanding balance with RNB never fell below the threshold amount.
Regulation O set forth additional reporting requirements. Section 215.7 required the bank to maintain records of loans extended to executive officers and their related interests, and for this purpose, required executive officers to annually identify their “related interests.” See 12 C.F.R. § 215.7. Section 215.9 required the bank to report all insider loans to federal regulators on an annual basis. See 12 C.F.R. § 215.9. In this way, the *1295 bank insiders’ deception, particularly De La Mata’s failure to disclose Ms business interests in RNB’s annual questionnaire, caused RNB to violate numerous federal reporting regulations.
b. Purchases and sales of property
Under 12 U.S.C. § 375, purchases and sales of property between the bank and its directors are permitted: (1) when such transaction is made in the regular course of business upon terms not less favorable to the bank than those offered to others; or (2) when the transaction is authorized by a majority of the board of directors not interested therein. See 12 U.S.C. § 375. Moreover, the statute provided authority for the reporting of such conflicted transactions to federal banMng regulators. See id. The evidence at trial showed that the term “in the regular course of business” is commonly understood to mean through a public market. Appellants do not contend that the purchases of OREO property or the lease/sale of branch sites to RNB were conducted on an open market. Rather, they assert that disclosure was not required because these purchases and sales were conducted on fair and reasonable terms. This argument misses the point.
The appropriateness of these transactions was not for the bank insiders to unilaterally determine. The statute dictates that that determination could only be made by disinterested directors. We also find the duty to disclose plain on the face of the statute, and thus, reject appellants’ contention that there was no violation unless and until the FRB promulgated appropriate disclosure forms and regulations. Thus, the indictment correctly alleged that appellants were obligated to gain the approval of a disinterested majority of RNB directors prior to engaging in these transactions.
c. Bank Branch Transactions
In order to open new branches, national banks must obtain the prior approval of the OCC, which is granted plenary power over such requests. See 12 U.S.C. § 36(e). During the time period in issue, the OCC required banks to state whether the new branch property was to be leased or purchased from an officer or director, 23 • and reserved the right to deny such applications if the terms of the site were more favorable to the insiders than would be available in a comparable transaction with unrelated parties. See 12 C.F.R. § 5.30(c)(2)(iii). Once again, appellants do not contest the disclosure requirements, but contend that the commercial reasonableness of the bank branch transactions precluded the OCC from denying them. We reject appellants’ argument for the reasons set forth above. Accordingly, we conclude that the indictment sufficiently and accurately alleged appellants’ duty to disclose and abstain from self-interested transactions, and thus, stated offenses as a matter of law.
De La Mata makes the related argument that he could not be charged with making false entries in annual OCC disclosure forms, RNB questionnaires, and representation letters to RNB’s outside auditors because there was no statutory or regulatory duty to disclose the information sought therein. 24 Appellant, however, misconstrues the law.
*1296
The prohibition of false entries is in broad and comprehensive terms.
25
Mr. Justice Cardozo, in describing 12 U.S.C. § 592, a forerunner of the modern bank fraud statutes, defined false entries to include “any entry on the books of the bank which is intentionally made to represent what is not true or does not exist, with the intent to deceive it’s officers or to defraud the association.”
United States v. Darby,
The forms at issue here are annual disclosure forms to the OCC, annual representation letters to RNB’s outside auditors, and RNB’s annual questionnaire of executive officers and directors. Irrespective of whether these specific forms or the information requested therein was authorized or required by law, the reports were made in the regular course of the business of the Bank and pertained to the Bank’s financial position. Accordingly, we conclude that the indictment stated offenses of making false entries.
See e.g., United States v. McCright,
4. Constructive amendment and the doctrine of corporate opportunity
Appellants make two final arguments related to the indictment. First, they contend that the government constructively amended
26
the indictment by abandoning the theory presented to the grand jury, i.e., that appellants’ crimes were based on violations of federal banking laws and regulations, and proving instead that the fraud was based upon the breach of the common law doctrine of “corporate opportunity.” However, we have already established that the indictment asserted three sources of duty, including appellants’ fidu
*1297
ciary duties. Since the appropriation of a corporate opportunity constitutes breach of a fiduciary’s duties,
see Cohen v. Hattaway,
Finally, appellants assert that the government’s amended theory of prosecution was flawed because the Florida Legislature abrogated the common law doctrine of corporate opportunity. We disagree.
It is a cardinal principle that an officer or director of a corporation will not be permitted to make out of his official position an undisclosed profit adverse to the corporation’s interests and because of their fiduciary character will not be permitted to acquire for their own advantage interests adverse or antagonistic to the corporation.
See Independent Optical Co. v. Elmore,
The business judgment rule protects disinterested directors. Disinterested directors neither appear- on both sides of a transaction nor expect to derive any personal benefit from it in the sense of self-dealing — as opposed to a benefit which devolves upon the corporation or all stockholders generally.
Id. (quotation omitted); see also Aronson v. Lems,
C. Jury Instructions
Appellants next contend that risk of loss is an essential element of bank fraud and misapplication, and the district court’s failure to instruct the jury on this alleged element mandates reversal of their convictions for violation of both §§ 1344 and 656. We review the district court’s refusal to give appellants’ proposed instructions for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Cunningham, 194 F.3d *1298 1186, 1199 (11th Cir.1999). The district court’s refusal to give the requested instruction is reversible error only if (1) the instruction is substantially correct, (2) the instruction was not addressed in the charge actually given, and (3) the failure to give the requested instruction seriously impaired the defendant’s ability to present an effective defense. See id. at 1200.
1. Bank fraud
Although incapable of precise definition, the term “scheme to defraud” includes “any pattern or cause of action, including false and fraudulent pretenses and misrepresentations, intended to deceive others in order to obtain something of value, such as money, from the institution to be deceived.”
United States v. Goldblatt,
This is an issue of first impression in this Circuit. The Ninth Circuit has observed that the “Courts of Appeals that have adopted a ‘risk of loss’ analysis have not made clear whether its proof is necessary or merely sufficient to show intent.”
United States v. Wolfswinkel,
In this case, we need not decide whether exposing RNB to a risk of loss was necessary to show appellant’s intent. If it is necessary, the government offered sufficient evidence at trial to prove that the appellants’ scheme exposed the Bank to potential and actual harm. First, the evidence at trial established that appellants embezzled millions of dollars from RNB. Second, appellants’ scheme exposed RNB to potential governmental sanction for the circumvention of regulatory requirements.
Accord United States v. Parekh,
*1299 Appellants contend that the scheme did not subject RNB to a risk of loss that it did not knowingly assume because all the financial terms were disclosed and approved by the Board. In addition, appellants assert that the loans were made at ordinary rates of interest, that the loans were secured either with a mortgage or with RNB’s lease payments, and that RNB knew how much profit was involved in these transactions (because RNB knew the purchase prices). The only fact that RNB did not know was that its own officers shared in the profits. This, however, is a clever way of saying that RNB did not know how good a deal it could have gotten. De La Mata, Calas and Castilla had a clear duty, under the federal banking regulations, to disclose self-interest in transactions vis-a-vis the bank. They also had a fiduciary duty to abstain from profiting out of their official positions and from acquiring for them own advantage interests adverse to the bank. In other words, appellants’ scheme deprived RNB of the right to conduct these transactions on the same terms as its own faithless officers. Common sense dictates that RNB suffered a loss, albeit maybe not a bottom line deficit. Accordingly, we hold that the failure to give a “risk of loss” instruction did not seriously impair appellants’ ability to present their defense. 29
We view appellants’ argument concerning risk of loss synonymous with a challenge to the district court’s instruction on intent, and thus do not address the intent instruction separately. 30
2. Misapplication
To establish the offense of misapplication of bank funds pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 656 the government must prove: (1) that the accused was an officer, director, agent or employee of a bank; (2) that the bank was in some way connected with a national or federally insured bank; (3) that the accused willfully misapplied the monies or funds of the bank; and (4) that the accused acted with intent to injure or defraud the bank.
United States v. Morales,
Appellants contend that they could not be convicted of misapplication absent a jury finding that the extensions of credit charged in counts 7-9, 18-20 and 28 exposed RNB to a risk of loss.
See United States v. Clark,
In this case, the record is clear that, in addition to the violation of federal regulations, appellants violated internal bank rules aimed at protecting RNB’s assets; they intentionally provided false information to acquire loans. Moreover, they induced RNB to extend the loans, and thus, took financial advantage of a confidential relationship.
Accord. United States v. Bates,
Finally, Castilla argues that the district court improperly denied his proposed instruction on good faith and advice of counsel, while at the same time giving such an instruction on behalf of Fernandez. The failure to give a proposed charge constitutes reversible error only if it has adequate legal and factual underpinnings.
United States v. Terebecki,
D. Evidentiary Rulings
Fernandez contends that the district court’s rulings sustaining hearsay objections deprived him of the fundamental right to testify in his own defense. Fernandez claims that he attempted to recount conversations he had with various bank officials in order to show that the bank knew about his co-defendants’ interest. He maintains that the statements were not offered for their truth, but for the effect on his state of mind and thus were relevant to show that he lacked the requisite criminal intent.
The district court has broad discretion in ascertaining admissibility of hearsay evidence, which we will not disturb absent abuse of discretion.
United
*1301
States v. NationsBank of Fla. N.A.,
E. Sufficiency of the evidence
Castilla contends that the evidence does not support any of his 37 counts of conviction. We review the sufficiency of the evidence
de novo,
viewing the evidence and all reasonable inferences and credibility choices made in the government’s favor.
See United States v. Calderon,
Essentially, Castilla assails the government’s proof of his intent to defraud RNB. He asserts that the evidence failed to establish that he knowingly and voluntarily agreed to defraud the Bank, or that he committed any acts designed to facilitate the alleged scheme. The evidence refutes this contention.'
First, Castilla held a 25% stake, the equivalent of Calas’, in the various front companies appellants formed to conceal the bank insiders’ interest. This included Hialeah Properties, the Fernandez Land Trust, Real Estate Partners, Great Group and CSEC. Second, Castilla’s interest in these entities was not an act of charity, as he would have us find, but compensation for his active role in promoting the affairs of the enterprise. As a member of RNB’s Loan Committee, Castilla voted to extend loans to these entities, while concealing the insiders’ conflict of interest, on at least nine occasions. Castilla arranged for CSEC, an entity nominally owned by Cas-tilla’s family and Shockett, to receive an unsecured loan for the purchase of OREO property from RNB. Castilla, along with Calas, received a substantial portion of the profit on the resale. Moreover, the jury could have concluded that Castilla recruited Fernandez as the insiders’ front man since Fernandez had been Castilla’s banking customer and friend for many years. In fact, Castilla provided Fernandez with the initial deposit for the Little Havana site. Castilla also provided part of the down payment on the IPB branch. The evidence showed that Calas and Castilla retained Shockett to represent them in the IPB transaction because Castilla’s niece was Shockett’s secretary. Castilla falsely told Shockett that he had disclosed his conflict of interest to RNB, further evincing Castilla’s criminal intent. Finally, illicit proceeds from the various transactions were continuously deposited into a joint account that Castilla maintained with Ca-las, yet Castilla never questioned or repudiated his share of the profits. Although Castilla contends that he did not know the source or the fact of such deposits, the *1302 evidence showed that an account at a small savings and loan was opened for the sole purpose of concealing his share of the profits. 32 Thus, we find sufficient evidence that Castilla actively participated in virtually every aspect of the scheme with the intent to defraud RNB.
F. Sentencing
Fernandez asserts that the district court should have computed his offense level under the more lenient fraud guidelines because the money laundering was a minor, incidental part of the appellants’ scheme, and thus, outside the “heartland” of the money laundering guideline. We review the district court’s application of the Sentencing Guidelines under a
de novo
standard, but review its findings of fact only for clear error.
See United States v. Harness,
Appellants were convicted of bank fraud, money laundering, false statements, false entries and misapplication of bank funds. The district court assigned all counts of conviction to a single group pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3D1.2(d) (requiring grouping when the offense level is determined on the basis of the total amount of harm or loss, or if the offense behavior is ongoing or continuous in nature and the offense guideline is written to cover such behavior). The grouping is not challenged on appeal. Having grouped the offenses, the district court applied the guideline that produced the highest offense level as instructed by U.S.S.G. § 3D1.3(b). With respect to Fernandez, the bank fraud counts carried an offense level of 24, U.S.S.G. § 2Fl.l(a), while the money laundering counts carried a level of 28, U.S.S.G. § 2Sl.l(a)(l). Thus, the district judge sentenced Fernandez to 97 months, at the lowest end of the laundering guideline range of 97-121 months.
Fernandez relies on
United States v. Smith,
In any event, we conclude that the money laundering at bar was integral to appellants’ scheme.
See Smith,
Fernandez also claims that the district court erred in denying his request for a downward departure because this was an extraordinary case involving deals favorable to the bank and approved by bank officials. We review the district court’s discretionary refusal to depart downward only if the district court erroneously believed it did not have the statutory authority to do so.
See United States v. Sanchez-Valencia,
Finally, Fernandez contends that the district court erred in enhancing his sentence for obstruction of justice, and in denying him the opportunity to be heard prior to its ruling. Fernandez concedes that the government’s response to Fernandez’s Pre-Sentence Report put him on notice that the government was seeking application of the obstruction enhancement over five weeks before the sentencing hearing commenced. However, he argues that he was not given an adequate opportunity to respond because the government did not identify specific instances of perjured testimony.
After reviewing the record and sentencing hearing transcripts, we find no merit in this position. First, Fernandez failed to file any response or objection to the government’s initial request for enhancement. At the sentencing hearing, on April 21, 1993, the government supplemented its earlier written submission by enumerating specific examples of Fernandez’s perjury. The following day, the government filed with the court, and served on defense counsel, an additional written memorandum further refining the government’s position. Defense counsel again elected not to file any response.
When the sentencing hearing was renewed on April 23,1993, the court concluded that Fernandez had perjured himself on at least four occasions when he testified that bank officials approached him and persuaded him to use the various properties as branch sites instead of developing shopping centers as he had planned. The district court found that this testimony was not credible and moreover, was specifically contradicted by the testimony of Dr. Botifoll and Mr. Isaías, who both stated that Fernadez solicited them. We give due deference to the district court’s opportunity to determine credibility,
see
18 U.S.C. § 3742(e), and thus, cannot conclude that the enhancement for obstruction of justice was clearly erroneous.
See United States v. Simmons,
G. Motion for New Trial
Alas, appellants’ attack with respect to every aspect of their prosecution would not *1304 be complete without an argument that newly discovered evidence mandates a. new trial. They contend that the district court erred in summarily denying their motion for new trial and/or vacatur of the restitution order 33 in light of the terms of the “Settlement Agreement” entered into between the government and RNB in January, 1994. That understanding, among other things, resolved RNB’s corporate liability in connection with a pending investigation of narcotics money laundering activities that occurred at the Bank during the insiders’ tenure. The Settlement Agreement also provided that RNB would purchase the IPB and Westlands sites at the conclusion of the respective leases, at a price to be determined by an independent appraiser, subject to a credit for excessive rents, which rent the government would continue to collect, per the forfeiture order. The IPB lease expired, and appellants allege that the government’s resulting failure to remit the excessive rents, in addition to the sale of the property to a third party for $1.4 million, far greater than that established at trial, constitute new evidence that the bank branch leases were fair. Moreover, appellants’ assert that the post-trial execution of the Settlement Agreement reveals RNB’s previously undisclosed motive to curry favor with the government, by suppressing the true value of the bank branch sites.
After reviewing the parties’ briefs, the Settlement Agreement, and all other relevant parts of the record, we find no abuse of discretion. First, the IPB transaction constituted one part of the appellants’ intricate fraud, and only one of several components of the district court’s restitution calculation. Second, the rental overcharges incorporated into the restitution order and those dealt with in the Settlement Agreement are separate and distinct. The restitution order required appellants to restore to RNB only the excessive rent payments which the Bank actually made during the 1984-1992 period. The Settlement Agreement, on the other hand, deals with the rent paid after January 1, 1994. Thus, the Settlement Agreement did not affect the amount of restitution.
Moreover, assuming that risk of economic loss is an element of bank fraud, the increased value of the IPB site does not constitute new evidence entitling appellants to a new trial on all charges, or even the invalidation of the restitution order. The only valuation which was relevant at trial was the property’s objective fair market value in 1984. This figure is based on publicly reported sales of comparable property at the same time, and is not discredited by a price commanded in 2000. Moreover, even if we were to find, which we do not, that an increase in market value would constitute evidence that the rents were not excessive, the appreciation would also increase the value of the opportunity usurped by the bank insiders. In other words, although the rental payments might be viewed as less exorbitant, the illicit profit anticipated by appellants on the resale would be substantially increased. Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s judgment that this evidence did not entitle appellants’ to a new trial and/or vacatur of the restitution order.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we reverse appellants’ convictions on counts 3 *1305 and 6, and sustain their convictions on all other counts. Because of the grouping prescribed by the sentencing guidelines, we find that the reversal of counts 3 and 6 does not alter in any way the sentences imposed.
REVERSED in part and AFFIRMED in part.
Notes
. Established by the Board of Directors, the Executive Committee was composed of Board *1282 members and was authorized to make operational and management decisions arising between monthly Board meetings. The Executive Committee was composed, at this time, of Mr. Isaias, RNB's majority shareholder, Dr. Botifoll, Mr. Sastre, Mr. Gonzalez-Bianco, and Mr. De La Mata.
. The evidence showed that the Bank's decision to buy rather than lease the Orange Bowl site was in large part based on the desire to complete and cease further business with Fernandez. Mr. Isaias testified that it had become a hassle to continually obtain Board approval for the rising costs of construction claimed by Fernandez.
. OREO stands for “other real estate property” signifying property that the Bank had acquired trying to collect loans as distinguished from property used in the Bank’s operations.
. Appellants challenged the acts which the indictment alleged as "executing” the bank frauds, and argued that the indictment failed to charge money laundering offenses separate and distinct from the bank fraud offenses.
. Perez testified that he did not know that the bank insiders were involved in the transaction. Silva testified that his ethical and legal duties as an attorney precluded him from disclosing the identity of his client. Shockett believed that it was the bank insiders’ responsibility to disclose their interest.
.Appellants conceded earning substantial profits on the transactions, but countered that RNB had also benefitted. Appellants contended that the loans had been repaid with interest, that the OREO transactions allowed RNB to remove defaulted loans from the books, and that the bank branches had operated successfully.
. The parties stipulated to the entry of an Order requiring appellants to transfer their two remaining branch leases to the United States, and permitting the government to hold other property as security on the money judgment portion of the forfeiture.
. The district court ruled that appellants had raised an issue which presented a substantial question of law within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 3143(b)(2): Whether the court erred in denying an instruction that risk of loss constitutes an element of bank fraud and misapplication of bank funds. See Memorandum Order and Opinion dated July 22, 1993.
.Appellants initial direct appeal was dismissed in February 1994, when appellants moved for a new trial on the basis that Judge Moore had been under investigation in the Eastern District of New York during appellants' trial. The district court, Hon. William O’Kelley sitting by designation, granted the motion for new trial, however, this Court reinstated the judgment and verdict.
See United States
v.
Cerceda,
. Appellants would have us find that
Grimes
was wrongly decided, and that 72 years of uniform jurisprudence has been overruled
sub silentio
by
Lynce v. Mathis,
.
Lemons
involved a loan fraud scheme in which a bank officer caused his savings and loan institution to fund a large loan in excess of the purchase price and authorized an assignment fee from the loan funds, from which the defendant was to receive a portion for his personal benefit.
See Lemons,
. An indictment is multiplicitous if it charges the same offense in more than one count.
See Sirang,
. In
Molinaro,
the Ninth Circuit found each transfer of property to be a separate execution in a scheme where straw buyers purchased property to make a savings and loan look profitable and to conceal the real purchaser.
See Molinaro,
. The court stated that "the scheme continued until the Credit Union was taken out of Longfellow's hands in March 1986.”
Longfellow,
. We distinguish
United States v. Parodies,
. The indictment charged the following acts and dates of execution:
count 2 12-24-86 Sale of the Little Havana groundleases to RNB through Fernandez Land Trust for $ 1 million
count 3 10-19-90 Disbursement of accumulated rental payments received by Hialeah Properties from RNB under Westlands lease to De La Mata, Calas and Castilla
count 6 6-11-87 Receipt of $1 million loan from Ocean Bank collateralized by IPB property and conditional assignment of lease payments due Real Estate Partners from RNB
count 17 7-30-86 Sale of Orange Bowl to RNB, and contract to construct bank branch building.
. At oral argument, counsel for the government offered the following hypothetical: Suppose an individual submits a false loan application to induce a bank to extend credit, but the individual has not received the funds yet. Government counsel posited that the fraud was executed upon the making of false statements. This supports our conclusion that the bank branch schemes were executed upon the signing of the lease and loan agreements which materially misrepresented the bank insiders' financial interest.
. Counts 10-16 alleged transactions involving proceeds derived from the misapplication of bank funds, charged in counts 7-9, in addition to the bank fraud charged in count 6.
. The two provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 1956 under which appellants were charged provide:
(a)(1) Whoever, knowing that the property involved in a financial transaction represents the proceeds of some form of illegal 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
(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;....
18 U.S.C. § 1956.
. In the district court, appellants moved to dismiss the charges of making false entries for failure to slate offenses. Appellants invite us to find that the district court erred in ruling that the accuracy of the alleged duties constituted a factual question. However, our review of the record reveals that the district court found that the challenged counts properly stated offenses. We agree.
. The district court denied the motion to strike and/or exclude evidence that civil regulations required disclosure of insider transactions on the grounds that such evidence was probative of the appellants' knowledge and intent.
.A corporate opportunity is a business opportunity in which the corporation has a valid and significant corporate purpose.
See Cohen v. Hattaway,
. If the new branch property was leased or purchased from a bank insider, the OCC required the bank to provide an independent appraisal or survey of comparable purchases/leases in the market area and to attach a resolution of the Board of Directors approving the transaction with the officer or director abstaining from the vote. See Comptroller of the Currency, Comptroller’s Manual for Corporate Activities, Vol. 2, Jan. 1992, at 47-54.
. Counts 44-47 charged De La Mata with failing to disclose to the OCC (1) every busi *1296 ness interest he, his spouse, or child had an interest in during the preceding year; and (2) every reportable transaction he, his spouse, child, or any of their related business interests had with the bank in the preceding year. Counts 50-53 alleged that De La Mata falsely stated in annual letters to RNB's outside auditors that all "related party transactions” had been disclosed. Counts 54-57 charged De La Mata with falsely representing, in RNB’s annual questionnaire of executive officers and directors, that he did not own, directly or indirectly, more than 25% of any business, and that his loans obtained, directly or indirectly, from RNB did not exceed $100,000.
. At the time of De La Mata’s acts, 18 U.S.C. § 1005 read in pertinent part:
Whoever makes any false entry in any book, report, or statement of such bank . .. with intent to injure or defraud such bank or any other company, body politic or corporate, or any individual person, or to deceive any officer of such bank, or the Comptroller of the Currency, or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or any agent or examiner appointed to examine the affairs of such bank, or the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System—
Shall be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1005 (1988).
. Under the law in this circuit, "an amendment occurs when the essential elements of the offense contained in the indictment are altered to broaden the possible bases of conviction beyond what is contained in the indictment.”
United States v. Keller,
. That statute, entitled "Liability of directors" reads, in pertinent part:
(3) A director is deemed not to have derived an improper personal benefit from any transaction if the transaction ... [is] not prohibited by state or federal law or regulation and,
(c) The transaction was fair and reasonable to the corporation at the time it was authorized by the board, a committee, or the shareholders, notwithstanding that a director received a personal benefit.
F.S. § 607.0831.
. On November 18, 1988, Congress enacted 18 U.S.C. § 1346 stating that for purposes of Title 18, "the term 'scheme or artifice to defraud' includes a scheme to deprive another of the intangible right to honest services.” 18 U.S.C. § 1346. Section 1346 does not apply here because the alleged bank fraud took place before its effective date.
. Appellants cite
United States v. deVegter,
. The district court charged that intent to defraud means "to act knowingly and with specific intent to deceive someone, ordinarily for the purpose of causing some financial loss to another, or bringing about some financial gain to one's self.”
. We also find that the appellants’ requested jury instruction regarding the statute of limitations applicable to the fraud and misapplication charges (18 U.S.C. §§ 656 and 1344) was correctly rejected by the district court as lacking the necessary evidentiary foundation. Aside from counts 3 and 6, see infra, there was no conflicting evidence presented at trial that the challenged offenses were committed prior to August 9, 1984. We find no merit, and thus, do not address appellants' remaining arguments with respect to the jury instructions.
. The evidence showed that a joint account in the name of Calas and Castilla was opened at Metropolitan Bank on October 10, 1984, with an initial deposit of $55,125. That same day, the proceeds from the sale of the Little Havana parking lot were disbursed from Fernandez’ account in the form of two checks drawn in the amount of $55,125 each. The second check was deposited into De La Mata's account at the Metropolitan, an account that was also opened on October 10, 1984, with that initial deposit.
. On April 23, 1993, the district court entered an Order of Restitution, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3663, in favor of RNB against appellants in the amount of $1,786,194. That sum represented illicit profits earned on the OREO purchases and on the sale of the Little Havana and Orange Bowl branches, and rent paid in excess of the fair market rental value on the Westlands and IPB leases as of October 1992.
