OPINION OF THE COURT
Gilberto Martinez, the appellee, was convicted under the mail fraud statute for his participation in a scheme to fraudulently obtain for a co-conspirator a medical license from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. After serving his sentence, Martinez filed a writ of error coram nobis, seeking to vacate his conviction on the ground that the Commonwealth was not deprived of property within the meaning of the statute. The district court granted the writ, from which the government appeals. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
Facts and Procedural History
Martinez does not deny that he assisted Brian Murach, who is not a party to this appeal, to fraudulently obtain from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania a license for Murach to practice medicine. Murach, who was a medical student in Mexico, paid Pedro de Mesones to arrange his admission to the Universidad Centro de Estudios Tec-nológicos (CETEC), a private medical school in the Dominican Republic, based in part on courses Murach purportedly took at *711 a Mexican medical school, and to assist Murach in obtaining a fraudulent medical degree from CETEC, based on forged documents falsely indicating that Murach had completed the 72-week clinical rotation required for graduation. Murach received his degree from CETEC in June 1983.
Martinez participated in this scheme by obtaining forged transcripts representing that Murach had attended the Universidad Valle Del Bravo in Reynosa, Mexico for four semesters when, in fact, Murach had never attended that University and had attended a different institution, Universidad del Noreste School of Medicine, for only two semesters. Martinez sent the fraudulent transcripts through the United States mails to de Mesones sometime in August 1983, and Murach subsequently included these transcripts in his application for a permanent license to practice medicine in the Commonwealth.
Murach was then accepted into a family practice residency program at the Delaware County Memorial Hospital in Pennsylvania after passing the examination for the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, which is given to all graduates of authorized foreign medical schools seeking to practice in the United States. After completing his one-year residency, Murach passed the Federation Licensing Examination (FLEX), and obtained a permanent license to practice medicine in the Commonwealth.
On July 12, 1984, a federal grand jury returned an indictment against Martinez and Murach. Murach was charged with seven counts of mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341 and one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371. Martinez was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371. The indictment specifically charged Martinez with the overt act of “sen[ding] through the United States Mail an envelope containing original transcripts from Valle de [sic] Bravo in Brian Murach’s name to Pedro Mesones.” App. at 33-34. The indictment charged that the substantive offense underlying the conspiracy was
a scheme and artifice to defraud the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and its citizens by obtaining a license to practice medicine in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, State Board of Medical Education and Licensure, the defendant well-knowing that said representations were false and fraudulent when made.
App. at 19.
Following a jury trial, Martinez and Mu-rach were convicted on December 17, 1984 of all counts charged in the indictment. Martinez’ post-trial motion for a new trial was denied, and he was sentenced on June 25, 1985 to two years’ probation and 400 hours, later reduced to 200 hours, of community service. This court affirmed Martinez’ conviction.
On June 24, 1987, the United States Supreme Court decided
McNally v. United States,
The district court granted Martinez’ writ of error
coram nobis
on July 24, 1989. The court first noted, following settled precedent in this circuit, that
McNally
should be applied retroactively. It next posed the question of whether “Martinez’s conviction [was] inextricably linked to a scheme to defraud a victim of money,” and concluded, relying on
United States v. Kato,
The government filed this timely appeal.
1
Our standard of review is plenary, as we must determine whether fraudulently obtaining a medical license from the state falls within the purview of the mail fraud statute.
See Chrysler Credit Corp. v. First Nat'l Bank and Trust Co.,
III.
Discussion
The mail fraud statute proscribes, inter alia, conduct “devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises.” 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (1988).
The government presented its case on the theory, clearly pled in the indictment, that Martinez’ participation in the scheme to defraud the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and its citizens of a medical license violates the mail fraud statute. The government contends that this theory is permissible because a license is “property” within the meaning of that statute. Martinez, on the other hand, argues that although an issued license might be property in the hands of the licensee, an unissued license in the hands of the Commonwealth is not property for purposes of McNally. He argues that because the state was not deprived of property within the meaning of the mail fraud statute, his conviction cannot stand.
The issue in
McNally
was a different one. McNally and a former Kentucky official were convicted of mail fraud for their participation in a scheme with the Chairman of the Kentucky Democratic Committee to purchase a workmen’s compensation policy for the Commonwealth of Kentucky through an insurance agent in return for the payment of a portion of its commissions to the defendants or their designees. The theory of the prosecution was that the “self-dealing patronage scheme defrauded the citizens and government of Kentucky of certain ‘intangible rights,’ such as the right to have the Commonwealth’s affairs conducted honestly.”
The scope of the
McNally
decision was soon clarified in
Carpenter v. United States,
The
Carpenter
decision guides our analysis. We begin by noting the well-accepted proposition that licensees have a protected property interest and therefore cannot be deprived of a license absent due process of the law.
See Mackey v. Montrym,
In
Carpenter,
the Court found it significant that traditional property law recognizes the right of a corporation to enjoin the unauthorized use of confidential information.
Martinez argues that there was no loss of money or property by the state. This argument depends on the questionable statutory construction that someone who fraudulently acquires property that has great value once acquired, has not violated the mail fraud statute if the item acquired had no, or negligible, value in the hands of the victim. Nothing in the statutory language supports that theory. The statute, which proscribes “obtaining money or property,” is broad enough to cover a scheme to defraud a victim of something that takes on value only in the hands of the acquirer as well as a scheme to defraud a victim of property valuable to the victim but valueless to the acquirer.
Martinez points to the language in
McNally
that “the original impetus behind the mail fraud statute was to protect the people from schemes to deprive them of their money or property.”
Indeed, in
Carpenter,
the release to defendants of the Wall Street Journal’s confidential information of the schedule and contents of the columns “did not interfere with the Journal’s use of the information ... and [did not] deprive the Journal of the first public use of it.”
Carpenter,
Even if we construe the statute as requiring the deprivation of property from the victim, we find unpersuasive the theory Martinez espouses that a medical license is without value to the state before it is issued, obtaining property status only when it is in the hands of the licensee. We see nothing in the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on the mail fraud statute that requires or supports this theory of incipient or embryonic property.
Martinez cites to cases dealing with other types of licenses as authority for the proposition that a government license is not property in the hands of the government for purposes of a mail fraud conviction.
*714
For example, in
United States v. Murphy,
In
United States v. Dadanian,
The district courts that have considered whether schemes to defraud the government of licenses or similar entitlements constitute mail fraud have reached varying results.
Compare United States v. Granberry,
We see no reason to make the esoteric distinction between an unissued and issued license which underlies the
Murphy, Kato
and
Dadanian
opinions.
See Berg,
In
Carpenter,
the Journal did not lose any “thing” — what it lost was the intangible right to keep to itself its information and the exclusive right to use it when and how it pleased. Similarly, in this case, what the Commonwealth (and derivatively its people) lost was the right to keep its medical licenses to itself and to bestow them on persons who had fairly earned them. The deprivations, although different
*715
in character, are in each instance “of something of value,”
see
Carpenter,
Finally, we note that in 1988, Congress amended the mail fraud act to provide that “the term ‘scheme or artifice to defraud’ includes a scheme or artifice to defraud another of the intangible right of honest services.” Pub.L. No. 100-690, § 7603,102 Stat. 4508 (1988) (codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. § 1346 (1988)). This amendment was enacted to “restore[] the mail fraud provision to where that provision was before the McNally decision.” 134 Cong.Rec. Hll,251 (daily ed. Oct. 21, 1988) (remarks of Representative Conyers). Although not determinative of the issue before us, it is relevant in that Congress made clear that the mail fraud statute was meant to be viewed broadly. We accord this view significant weight given the “sparse legislative history” underlying the act.
McNally,
In summary, the government’s interest here is not simply that of a regulator, but rather that of the dispenser of valuable property in which the licensee has constitutionally protected property interests and which the government may enjoin upon misuse. We do not believe that Congress, in enacting the mail fraud statute, intended its reach to be dependent on artificial constructs and fleeting distinctions. Rather, the statute should be read as broadly protecting property interests, and we believe such a purpose is served in protecting the Commonwealth’s interests as the holder of valuable medical licenses from fraudulent conduct depriving it of such property. 4
IV.
The Jury Charge
Martinez also contends that even if we were to hold that a medical license is property in the hands of the state, his original conviction should be overturned because he was tried, indicted and convicted solely on an “intangible rights” theory.
The jury charge included the intangible rights theory. The court stated:
The object of the scheme need not be money or any form of tangible property. A scheme to defraud the citizens of a governmental unit or deprive public officials of information material to a decision which they are required to make in their official capacity also comes within the meaning of scheme or artifice to defraud as used in the mail fraud statute.
App. at 49-50.
Assuming
arguendo
that this portion of the charge was impermissible under
McNally,
we have repeatedly held that the mere presence of intangible rights theory language in an indictment or jury charge does not in and of itself require the overturning of a previous conviction. Rather, the decisive factor in these circumstances is whether “the scheme or artifice had the inevitable result of effecting monetary or property losses to the employer or to the state.”
United States v. Asher,
Similarly, we sustained a conviction in
United States v. Piccolo,
Martinez argues this case is governed by
United States v. Zauber,
In this case, the only fraud charged in the indictment related to the scheme of Martinez and Murach to fraudulently obtain the license to practice medicine from the Commonwealth, and this charge was clearly supported by the evidence introduced at trial. Because we have already determined that the property interests of the Commonwealth were, of necessity, implicated by the fraudulent licensing scheme, the scheme “had the inevitable result of effecting” a property loss to the Commonwealth.
Asher,
V.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the order of the district court granting Martinez’ writ for error coram nobis.
Notes
. The government does not appeal the district court’s holding that Martinez did not waive his right to challenge the intangible rights theory underlying his original conviction, and we therefore need not consider this issue.
. The dissent in
Kato
argued that the paper on which the licenses were issued is property within the meaning of the mail fraud act.
Kato,
. This case is thus unlike that decided in
United States v. Evans,
. In light of our conclusion, we need not consider whether evidence that Murach received a tangible benefit by use of the fraudulent medical degree to obtain a residency at a Pennsylvania hospital satisfies the property element of the crime of mail fraud.
See United States v. Allard,
