Frederick Roland appeals from a judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Abraham D. Sofaer, Judge) convicting him, after a jury trial, of 21 counts of paying unlawful gratuities to an agent of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 201(f) (1982). The indictment also contained counts charging bribery, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 201(b) (1982); the jury was unable to agree on verdicts on the bribery counts. The appeal primarily concerns the trial court’s supplemental instruction on the jury’s consideration of lesser included offenses. For reasons that follow, we affirm.
Since the sufficiency of the evidence is not challenged on appeal, the facts may be summarily stated. The evidence overwhelmingly established that Roland, an attorney at the time of the offenses, eagerly participated in a scheme to pay money to I.N.S. agents who were cooperating with the Government. Over the course of 10 months, Roland paid approximately $43,000 to the agents to obtain alien registration documents for his clients. Though obviously sensitive to the risk of apprehension (“none of us is wired right?”) and expressing concern about “[t]hat Abscam case,” Roland was tape-recorded on 65 occasions discussing and making his illegal payments and eagerly planning for more of them. Not surprisingly, the jury rejected his preposterous defense that the payments were part of what he thought was a lawful fee-sharing arrangement. Among the numerous items of evidence refuting this claim was an episode at which Roland showed the agents a newspaper article concerning a lawyer who was paying bribes to I.N.S. agents and arranging fictitious marriages in order to secure “green cards” for his clients; as Roland told the agents whom he was paying, “It’s exactly what we’re doing.” He also told the agents to deny receiving any payments from him if anyone ever asked any questions.
I.
The lesser included offense issue arises in the aftermath of this Court’s decision in
United States v. Tsanas,
In Roland’s case, for each payment to an I.N.S. agent, the indictment charged in separate counts both a bribery offense' under section 201(b) and an unlawful gratuity offense under section 201(f). Though the issue concerning the jury charge therefore does not arise under the lesser includ-. ed offense provision of Rule 31(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, as it did in
Tsanas,
we see no reason to distinguish
Tsanas
on that ground. The defendant’s choice concerning the jury’s consideration of a lesser included offense should not depend upon whether that offense is available for consideration because of Rule 31(c) or because it has been set out in a separate count in the indictment.
1
In either event, however, the less serious offense may be treated as a lesser
included
offense only if both criteria set forth in
Sansone v. United States,
The claim arises under the following circumstances. Prior to the jury charge, Roland made no request for an instruction concerning the conditions under which the jury should proceed to consider the gratuity offense. In the initial charge, Judge Sofaer instructed the jury that, if it found the defendant guilty of bribery with re *1325 spect to any alleged payment, it should proceed no further with respect to such payment. He then added, “If you find, however, that the government has not sustained its burden of proof on a given bribery count, ... you must then consider whether the defendant violated the unlawful gratuity provision of the statute.” This language did not in terms tell the jury to proceed to the gratuity count only if it had first unanimously agreed to return a not guilty verdict on the bribery count, but it was surely closer to the “acquittal first” approach than to the “hung jury” approach. Since the defendant had not requested either approach, we cannot be certain that the trial judge was consciously endeavoring to select between the approaches. In any event, as frequently happens, the jury specifically focused on the point that had previously been left obscure. After four days of deliberation the jury sent a note asking, “Do we consider unlawful gratuity charges only if we reach a not guilty verdict on bribery or do we consider unlawful gratuity if we cannot reach an unanimous verdict on a bribery count?” (Emphasis in original).
Judge Sofaer advised counsel that he proposed to tell the jury that it should consider the gratuity charge if it either finds the defendant not guilty of bribery or is unable to agree on a verdict as to bribery. At that point, defense counsel for the first time requested that the jury be told to consider the gratuity offense only if it reached a not guilty verdict on the bribery offense. Significantly, counsel made no claim that Judge Sofaer’s proposed response would alter any guidance concerning the proper approach to the lesser included offense that had previously been given in the initial instructions. It appears that counsel for both sides and the District Judge were focusing on the Tsanas issue for the first time. Judge Sofaer rejected defense counsel’s request and instructed the jury to consider the gratuity charges if it acquitted or was in disagreement on the bribery charges.
Since
Tsanas
clearly states that neither instruction is “wrong as a matter of law,”
The District Judge’s rejection of counsel’s requested supplemental instruction was not error in the absence of either a timely request before deliberations for an explicit “acquittal first” instruction or the inclusion in the initial charge of language that unmistakably confined the jury to the “acquittal first” approach. In the circumstances of this case, Roland’s request, first *1326 made on the fourth day of the deliberations and after some disagreement among the jurors was reported, was untimely.
II.
Roland’s remaining claims are less substantial. In the fashion of recent appeals from convictions for crimes that agents afforded opportunities to commit, Roland urges us to declare the agents’ conduct to be a denial of due process, having failed to secure from the jury an acquittal on the ground of entrapment. The facts of this case do not even approach what may be those “extreme cases ... where the government conduct was so outrageous as to violate due process.”
United States v. Williams, 705
F.2d 603, 619 (2d Cir.),
cert. denied,
— U.S. —,
Appellant next contends that the District Judge erred in ruling at the conclusion of the prosecution’s case that there was insufficient evidence of entrapment to create an issue for the jury. Judge Sofaer concluded that, even if there was some evidence of inducement, the uncontradicted evidence of predisposition at that point in the trial was such that no rational jury could find entrapment.
See United States v. Mayo, 705
F.2d 62, 68 (2d Cir.1983);
United States v. Licursi,
It is a familiar rule that “[ojnce a defendant offers evidence after the denial of a motion for acquittal at the close of the Government’s case in chief, ... the defendant waives any claim as to the sufficiency of the Government’s case considered alone.”
United States v. Pui Kan Lam,
Roland next levels two insubstantial attacks upon the entrapment instructions. First, he contends that it was error to permit the jury to infer predisposition from his series of illegal payments, some of which occurred several months after the initial payment. Subsequent conduct, including criminal conduct, has frequently been, held admissible to prove predisposition,
United States v. Silvestri,
Finally, Roland challenges the sentence of two years’ imprisonment and fines totalling $40,000. He contends that the sentence was impermissibly based on the District Judge’s views that Roland was guilty of bribery, despite the jury’s inability to reach a verdict on the bribery counts, and that Roland’s trial testimony had been false. Though a sentencing judge is entitled to rely on his assessment of a defendant’s truthfulness,
United States v. Grayson,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
. "There is no doubt as to the prosecutor’s power to obtain an indictment which contains a separate count for each lesser-included offense." 8A Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 31.03[3][c] at 31-24 (1984).
