A jury found Kermit Kingsley Hall, a/k/a King Hall, guilty of one count of mail fraud and two counts of wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343, respectively. The district court 2 sentenced Hall to 59 months imprisonment. Hall appeals his convictions and sentence, arguing the district court (1) committed an evidentiary error at his trial, and (2) miscalculated his advisory Unitеd States Sentencing Guidelines (U.S.S.G. or Guidelines) range. We affirm.
1. BACKGROUND
A. Hall’s Fraudulent Scheme Originates in Texas
In February 2003, Hall asked his real estate agent, Heidi Jenkins, to register two trusts, the Kingsley Trust and the Axiom Trust, in Texas. Jenkins registered the two trusts on the same date, at the same courthouse, and with the same business address. Jenkins also opened a bank account for the Axiom Trust at Hall’s rеquest. Hall hired Jenkins to serve as the Axiom Trust’s trustee, and Jenkins had authority to sign for deposits and withdrawals on the bank account.
Hall began soliciting investors for the Axiom Trust, which Hall falsely trumpeted as a large repository for real estate assets. Hall invited potential investors to purchase $75,000 units of beneficial interеst in the Axiom Trust. Hall reasoned that, if Warren Buffett was “charging $75,000 per share for his stock, [Hall] could offer [shares for] that amount.” Hall told prospective investors the face value of the Axiom Trust’s shares was guaranteed and the shares would earn high rates of inter *541 est. Hall bragged no one had ever lost money investing with him.
In the coming years, Hall repeatedly misrepresented himself to potential investors as a wealthy and highly successful real estate investor. Hall bragged he knew Jack Nicklaus and investment bankers at Bear Stearns. 3 Hall claimed or implied he built or negotiated to help buy or build golf courses, churches, the New York Jets’ nеw stadium, the Bellagio Casino in Las Vegas, and properties all along the Hurricane Katrina-ravaged Gulf Coast. Hall also boasted about his experience as a former CIA assassin.
Hall convinced J.B., T.J., and others to invest in the Axiom Trust. 4 J.B. traded Hall a 10,080 square foot chateau for twenty-seven shares. J.B. was eager to sell the home because his eldest son had recently died and it was painful for his family to continue to live there. T.J. gave Hall $65,000 in exchange for one share. T.J. was trying to help find investors to help him build a church, and Hall told T.J. he would be willing to build the church if T.J. helped Hall “free up funds” to send to someone in France.
Hall frittered away all of the Axiom Trust’s assets. He purchased fancy cars and golf lessons, hired personal attorneys, and lived a grand lifestyle. Hall lavished gifts on his wife, son, and girlfriend.
T.J. asked Hall many times to return his money. Hall repeatedly rebuffed T.J.’s efforts over the course of four years. In 2006, Hall finally admitted to T.J. that the Axiom Trust “had gone away” but sаid Hall “would be able to transfer [T.J.’s] investment in some way that [T.J.] would get paid [as much as $125,000] through [the] Kingsley Trust.” Hall referred T.J. to the Kingsley Trust’s website, which T.J. later viewed.
B. Hall Moves His Scheme to Missouri
In January 2006, Hall met Joseph Cooper, a certified public accountant in the St. Louis, Missouri, area. Hall touted the Kingsley Trust to Cooper, representing the assets of thе Kingsley Trust would be invested with a reputable firm in Chicago and insured by Bear Stearns for eventual investment in the currency exchange market. With the promise of a $800,000 annual salary, Hall hired Cooper to serve as the Kingsley Trust’s accountant and later as trustee.
At Hall’s direction, Cooper and David Jarman, a local financial advisor whom Hall had appointed as a trustee of the Kingsley Trust, opened bank accounts in the St. Louis area for the Kingsley Trust. Cooper and Jarman became the accounts’ signatories, but Hall controlled the funds.
Hall hired Jarman to develop a website for the Kingsley Trust. Hall drafted and controlled thе website’s content, and Jar-man focused on the website’s layout. The Kingsley Trust’s website promoted, “[Guaranteed deposits that post annual rates twice the norm” and “Kingsley Trust erases the guesswork with ‘principal guarantee.’ ” The website contained a form onto which visitors could submit their contact information to leаrn more about investing in the Kingsley Trust.
C. O. invested in the Kingsley Trust after Hall promised to help build a church. Hall represented himself to C.O. as a wealthy investor in golf courses and alerted C.O. to the Kingsley Trust’s website. C.O. found the website, entered his contact information, and began to correspond with Cooper *542 about investing in the Kingsley Trust. In relianсe upon a series of false and fraudulent misrepresentations Cooper made to C.O. at Hall’s behest, C.O. wired $250,000 to the Kingsley Trust in two separate installments in December 2006.
S.E., J.K., and I.M. also invested in the Kingsley Trust. S.E., an unemployed truck driver, invested $10,000. J.K., a retired schoolteacher and one of Jarman’s clients, invested $10,000. I.M., a recеnt widow and a client of one of Jarman’s associates, invested $75,000. Jarman’s associate recommended the Kingsley Trust to I.M. after she spoke with Hall, viewed the Kingsley Trust’s website, and came to believe all investments were “guaranteed.”
As with the Axiom Trust, Hall misappropriated the Kingsley Trust’s assets instead of investing them. Cooрer directly helped Hall perpetuate the fraud, but Jarman did not. When Jarman discovered Hall was not investing the Kingsley Trust’s assets, Jarman alerted J.K., I.M., and Jarman’s associate.
With Jarman’s help, J.K. asked Hall to return her investment, as permitted under the terms of her share in the Kingsley Trust. Cooper then sent J.K. a letter stating he would return her money in 80 days. However, J.K’s funds were not returned until shortly before trial.
C. The Fallout
Jarman contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and an investigation ensued. During an interview with an FBI agent, Hall denied any wrongdoing and blamed Cooper.
In November 2007, a grand jury returned a three-count indictment against Hall. 5 Count I charged Hall with mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 2, for sending J.K. the lulling letter. Counts II and III charged Hall with wire fraud, each in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2, for inducing C.O. to transfer $250,000 into the Kingsley Trust’s bank accounts. Hall pled not guilty.
The FBI agent re-interviewed Hall. Hall admitted he used false promises and guarantees to solicit investment in the Kingsley Trust. Hall said he spent the Kingsley Trust’s assets instead of investing thеm. Hall also admitted similar conduct with respect to the Axiom Trust, although he suggested some of the Axiom Trust’s assets were invested in “Húmate.” 6
In October 2008, after a four-day trial, a jury found Hall guilty as charged. At sentencing, the district court calculated Hall’s Guidelines range to be 57 to 71 months imprisonment, based in part on a two-level enhаncement for mass marketing under § 2B 1.1(b)(2)(A). The district court sentenced Hall to 59 months imprisonment and ordered him to pay over $525,000 in restitution to C.O., S.E., and others.
II. DISCUSSION
Hall argues the district court erred in (1) admitting evidence regarding the Axiom Trust at trial; and (2) in calculating Hall’s Guidelines range, assessing a two-level upward adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 (b)(2)(A)(ii) because the offense “was committed through mass-marketing.”
*543 A. Axiom Trust Evidence
The district court permitted the government to introduce evidence of Hall’s involvement in the Axiom Trust notwithstanding the fact that the charged crimes only concerned the Kingsley Trust. The district court held Hall’s actions with respect to the two trusts were inextricably intertwined, and thus evidence of thе Axiom Trust was intrinsic to the allegations in the indictment. 7
Hall maintains the Axiom and Kingsley Trusts were not inextricably intertwined. Hall emphasizes the Axiom and Kingsley Trusts were separated in time, place, and parties. Hall stresses (1) “activity in Axiom Trust ended in early 2004 and activity in the Kingsley Trust beg[a]n in May 2006”; (2) the Axiom Trust was located in Texas, and the Kingsley Trust was located in Missouri; (3) the Axiom and Kingsley Trusts had different victims; and (4) Cooper was not involved in the Axiom Trust.
“We have consistently held ‘crimes or acts which are “inextricably intertwined” with the charged crime are not extrinsic and Rule 404(b) does not apply.’ ”
United States v. Clarke,
The Axiom and Kingsley Trusts were inextricably intertwined, and evidence of the Axiom Trust was intrinsic to the indictment.
See Clarke,
Failure to introduce evidence of the Axiom Trust might have created a gap in the jury’s understanding. The Axiom Trust evidence explained why the Kingsley Trust lay dormant from 2003 to 2006, and why Hall moved the Kingsley Trust’s operations to Missouri in 2006. In short, once Hall had deceived enough investors in Tex
*544
as with the Axiom Trust, Hall inferentially needed to rename the scheme and move to another location. Cf.
United States v. McGuire,
Any hypotheticаl error in admitting evidence of the Axiom Trust would be harmless. The evidence against Hall was overwhelming: (1) Hall admitted his conduct to an FBI agent after he was indicted; (2) it is undisputed Hall spent some of his investors’ funds to sustain his lavish lifestyle; and (3) there is no evidence Hall invested any of the Kingsley Trust’s funds. Cf.
United States v. Jongewaard,
B. Mass-Marketing Enhancement
In calculating Hall’s Guidelines range, the district court assessed a two-level enhancement under U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 (b)(2)(A)(ii) because, by means of the Kingsley Trust’s website, Hall “committed [his fraud] through mass-mаrketing.” The commentary to the Guidelines defines “mass-marketing” to include fraudulent schemes “conducted through solicitation by ... the Internet ... to induce a large number of persons to ... invest for financial profit.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, cmt. n. 4(A). We review the district court’s legal construction of the mass-marketing enhancement de novo but review its underlying factual findings for clear error.
See United States v. Williams,
Hall argues the district court erred in applying the mass-marketing enhancement because his victims would have “invested” in the Kingsley Trust notwithstanding its website. Hall maintains he did not commit any fraud through mass marketing because it was his force of personality and connections with a trusted local accountant, financial advisors, and others — not the Kingsley Trust’s website — that convinced his victims to part with their money. Hall also proposes the record contains little evidence his victims visited the website.
Even if we assume the Kingsley Trust’s website did not convince any of Hall’s victims to invest and was not widely
*545
viewed, the district court nonetheless did not err in applying the mass-mаrketing enhancement. In amending § 2B1.1, the United States Sentencing Commission stated it intends the mass-marketing enhancement “to apply in cases in which mass-marketing has been used to target a large number of persons, regardless of the number of persons who have sustained an actual loss or injury.” U.S.S.G. app. C, amend. 617 (Supp.2003). The fact that few people fell into Hall’s virtual trap has little relevance for amended § 2B1.1 so long as Hall attempted to use the Kingsley Trust’s website to solicit funds from a large number of persons.
Cf. United States v. Heckel,
We reiterate “mere use of a website is not sufficient to trigger” a mass-marketing enhancement.
See United States v. Hanny,
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable E. Richard Webber, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. Law enforcement officers arrested Hall before the Bear Steams financial collapse.
. We refer to Hall’s victims by initials to respect their privacy.
. Cooper was charged in all three counts of the indictment. Cooper pled guilty to Count I pursuant to a plea agreement and testified at Hall’s trial. Shortly thereafter, the district court sentenced Cooper to “time served.”
. Hall stated Húmate is “basically dinosaur dung, for lack of a better term, that's used for fertilizer or for taking the smell out of cat litter.”
. In the alternative, the district court considered the Axiom Trust evidencе also was admissible under Fed.R.Evid. 404(b).
Cf. United States v. Dugan,
. The Axiom Trust evidence was relevant under Fed.R.Evid. 401, and that relevance was not substantially outweighed by any unfair prejudicial effect.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 403.
Cf. United States v. Sudeen,
. The district court applied the enhancement despite Hall's oral protestations at his sentencing hearing that the Kingsley Trust’s website was "[n]ever released” and was "not operating.” The district court did not clearly err in rejecting Hall’s unsworn assertions, because (1) T.J., C.O., and Jarman’s associate viewed the website after Hall told them about it; (2) T.J. and C.O. completed a form on the website to obtain more information about the Kingsley Trust; and (3) C.O. accessed the website and subsequently invested in the Kingsley Trust.
. We note § 2D. 1(b)(6) and § 2Bl.l(b)(2)(A)(ii) are not identical. Section 2D 1.1 (b)(6) requires "mass-marketing by means of an interactive computer service." (emphasis added). We do not decide whether the Kingsley Trust’s website constituted "interactive” mass-marketing.
