Appellant Jennifer Gatling (“Gatling”) and appellant Cheryl Walker (‘Walker”) were each convicted of conspiracy to commit bribery in regard to the illegal issuance of section 8 subsidies through the Section 8 Division of the District of Columbia’s Department of Public and Assisted Housing (“DPAH”). Walker was also convicted of one count of making false statements while Gatling was also convicted of four counts of bribery. Appellants raise various challenges to their convictions here, arguing in the main that there was insufficient evidence to support their conspiracy convictions. We find that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find appellants guilty of engaging in a single conspiracy to commit bribery, and that appellants’ other challenges, with one exception, are without merit or ultimately unavailing. We therefore affirm all but one of their convictions and Walker’s sentence.
I. Background
Section 8 is a federal housing assistance program administered through local public housing authorities. Under the section 8 *1516 program, qualified applicants can obtain subsidies in the form of vouchers or certificates to help cover their rent. 1 From 1988 through 1992, section 8 subsidies were distributed in the District of Columbia by the Section 8 Division of DPAH. Walker began working at DPAH in 1989 as Chief of the Section 8 Division, and became Acting Administrator of the Subsidized Housing Administration at DPAH in 1992. From 1989 to 1993, Gatling was a Housing Specialist in the Section 8 Division. Both Walker and Gatling were suspended from their positions at DPAH in 1993.
Under federal and D.C. regulations in effect from 1989 to 1993, section 8 subsidies were only available to D.C. residents who met certain income requirements and were on a wait list for subsidies. The wait list was necessary because only a limited number of subsidies were given to DPAH and other local housing authorities each year, and the demand for section 8 subsidies far outstripped the supply of available subsidies. The wait list was divided into several categories based on different need criteria, such as “homeless and living in a D.C. shelter” or “living in a unit unfit for habitation,” and within each category applicants were listed by the date and time of their application. The regulations established preferences among these need categories and required that subsidies be offered first to applicants in the highest need category. Only when everyone in this category had received a subsidy could subsidies be offered to individuals in the next highest need category, and so on. Within each category, subsidies were to be offered to applicants in accordance with their position on the wait list. The regulations also provided that 10 percent of the subsidies could be allocated to lower preference need categories even if individuals in higher preference categories had not received subsidies. Individuals were required to apply in person for section 8 subsidies unless they were elderly or disabled, and applicants often remained on the wait list for several years before they obtained subsidies.
The federal government and D.C. police began investigating allegations that section 8 subsidies were being improperly issued through DPAH in January 1993. Walker and Gatling were transferred to another department, the Office of Emergency Preparedness, in February 1993 and were arrested in April 1994. On September 9, 1994, a grand jury charged Walker and Gatling with conspiring to accept bribes in return for section 8 subsidies. Walker and Gatling were also charged with several counts of accepting bribes, mail fraud, and making false statements. Trial began on November 29, 1994, and lasted more than six weeks.
At trial, the government claimed that in exchange for bribes Walker and Gatling gave section 8 subsidies to individuals who were not eligible to receive them because they were not D.C. residents and were not on the wait list, or, if they were on the wait list, were-not next in line in the appropriate need category. The government offered evidence indicating that several Chicago residents had applied for and received section 8 subsidies through DPAH by mail, using false D.C. addresses, and then transferred the subsidies to Chicago. A critical witness for the government regarding subsidies received by Chicago residents was Anthony Bufford (“Bufford”), who pled guilty to attempted bribery. Bufford, who knew Walker’s sister, testified that he contacted Walker about arranging a section 8 subsidy for his former wife, Veronica Bufford. He stated that Walker told him to contact Walker’s assistant, Gatling, to get help on filling out the section 8 application, even though Walker knew that Veronica Bufford was a Chicago resident. Veronica Bufford testified that Gatling assisted her in submitting a section 8 application which falsely claimed that Veronica Bufford lived and worked in D.C. Bufford also reported that he told Walker he would “make it worth her while,” that he offered Walker $1,000 after Walker had said she would arrange for Veronica Bufford to receive a subsidy, and that he sent Walker $1,000 when the section 8 voucher arrived in the mail. Transcript (“Tr.”) at 313. A copy *1517 of Veronica Bufford’s section 8 voucher, dated June 28, 1991, was introduced into evidence.
Bufford further testified that he later contacted Walker about arranging a section 8 subsidy for Camilla Perkins-Henry (“Perkins-Henry”), the widow of a friend of Buf-ford’s. According to Bufford, he told Walker that Perkins-Henry was a Chicago resident and Walker stated that she “would do basically what she had done” for Veronica Buf-ford. Tr. at 324. Bufford also stated that he offered to make the same payment of $1,000, that Walker suggested he make the check out to Gatling because Gatling needed the money, and that Perkins-Henry was referred to Gatling for help in filling out the application. Perkins-Henry testified that she spoke to Gatling in regard to her section 8 application and gave Bufford a check for $1,000 made out to Gatling. The government introduced a copy of Perkins-Henry 5 s section 8 voucher, dated March 9, 1992, and a copy of a canceled check for $1,000 she made out to Gatling, dated March 20,1992, that had been deposited to Gatling’s account.
The government also offered substantial evidence on section 8 subsidies that were issued to D.C. residents in exchange for money. The evidence consisted mainly of testimony from individuals who had obtained subsidies in this fashion from September 1991 through April 1992. According to these witnesses, they had heard through either Darnell Jackson (“Jackson”) or Rodney Knight (“Knight”) that section 8 subsidies were available for $500, and that once they had the $500 in cash, either Jackson or Knight, or both, drove them to DPAH. Several of these witnesses also testified that Jackson told them what documents to bring, such as their children’s birth certificates, and instructed them to carry the money in an envelope. At DPAH, Gatling took the applicants back to her office and filled out the necessary paperwork. The section 8 subsidies were usually provided at the same meeting, after the paperwork was completed and the applicants had given Gatling the $500. Most witnesses testified that they put the envelope containing $500 on Gatling’s desk and that Gatling put the envelope in a desk drawer. One witness testified that she gave the $500 to Jackson and thought she saw Jackson slip the money to Gatling when he hugged her goodbye. There was also evidence that the individuals who testified to receiving section 8 subsidies in this fashion either were not on the section 8 wait list at the time or, if they were on the list, were not next in line for subsidies.
Jackson, who was charged with conspiracy to accept bribes and with aiding and abetting the acceptance of a bribe, did not testify at trial. Knight, who pled guilty to attempted bribery, did testify and his testimony corroborated that of the D.C. residents who had obtained section 8 subsidies with Gatling’s help. Knight stated that Jackson was a friend of Gatling’s and that on several occasions he heard Jackson tell recipients that Gatling was “splitting the money” with Walker. Tr. at 1827-28, 1844. According to Knight, Jackson made this statement “to convince whoever was getting a Section 8 voucher that it was all good.” Tr. at 1844. Knight’s niece Judy Johnson, one of the witnesses who paid Gatling for a section 8 subsidy, testified that she asked Jackson how Gatling could arrange the subsidies and he responded that Walker, “her supervisory was in doing it with her.” Tr. at 2404. Judy Johnson also testified that Gatling spoke with Walker about whether Johnson’s section 8 certificate should be for a two or three bedroom apartment, and Cynthia Knight, who paid Gatling for a section 8 certificate for her handicapped sister, testified that Walker helped Gatling photocopy the documents that Knight had brought. The government also introduced evidence that Walker had deposited over $6,000 to her children’s savings accounts between July 1991 and October 1992.
The defense’s evidence consisted primarily of Walker’s testimony, in which she acknowledged arranging section 8 subsidies for Veronica Bufford and Perkins-Henry but denied receiving any money in exchange. She stated that she believed she was authorized to provide section 8 subsidies to non-D.C. residents and to individuals not on the wait list in allocating the 10 percent of subsidies that did not go automatically to individuals in the highest preference need category. She also *1518 claimed that the money in her children’s accounts came from relatives. In its rebuttal, the government offered expert testimony by a new witness, Linda Pistelli (“Pistelli”), to the effect that Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) regulations only exempted this 10 percent of section 8 subsidies from the requirement that these subsidies go first to individuals in higher preference categories, and not from the further requirements that individuals had to be on the section 8 wait list to receive subsidies and that subsidies had to be offered to individuals in order of their position on the list.
At the close of the government’s case Walker made a motion for judgment of acquittal on the conspiracy and substantive bribery counts. The court first denied the motion, but later granted it in regard to the substantive bribery counts involving D.C. residents when the motion was renewed at the close of all evidence. On January 18, 1995, the jury convicted Walker of conspiracy to accept bribes and on one of the false statements counts. The jury acquitted Walker on all the other counts, except for one mail fraud count on which they were unable to reach a verdict. Gatling was convicted of conspiracy to accept bribes and four counts of accepting a bribe, and acquitted on all other counts. On May 30, 1995, Gatling received a 40 month jail sentence and on June 6,1995, Walker received a 41 month jail sentence. In calculating Walker’s sentence, the district court adjusted Walker’s base offense level upward by 8 levels because she was a high-level official.
II. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Appellants raise three challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence introduced at trial. Gatling argues that there was insufficient evidence of any agreement between herself and Walker, Jackson or anyone else to support her conviction for conspiracy. Walker, for her part, argues that the evidence introduced at trial varied from the indictment because it established multiple conspiracies rather than the single conspiracy charged and that she was prejudiced by this variance. Walker also claims that the evidence failed to prove that she accepted a bribe rather than a gratuity. In analyzing a claim of insufficient evidence to support a conviction, including a claim that the evidence demonstrated multiple conspiracies rather than a single conspiracy, “[o]ur review is confined to the question “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond reasonable doubt.’”
United States v. Washington,
A. Evidence of an Agreement
In order to convict a defendant of conspiracy under 18 U.S.C. § 371, a jury must find that the defendant entered into an agreement with at least one other person to commit a specific offense, in this case bribery against the United States, as well as that the defendant knowingly participated in the conspiracy with the intent to commit the offense and that at least one overt act was committed in furtherance of the conspiracy.
United States v. Wynn,
Gatling’s claim of insufficient evidence is without merit, as there was clearly an *1519 adequate basis for the jury to find that an agreement to commit bribery existed between Gatling and either/or both Walker and Jackson. Jackson’s statement that Walker and Gatling were splitting the bribe money provided by D.C. residents provided direct evidence of an agreement between Gatling and Walker. 2 In addition, Bufford stated that Walker referred him to Gatling to obtain help in filling out voucher applications and Veronica Bufford and Perkins-Henry testified that Gatling provided the help when they applied for their section 8 subsidies by mail. Given the testimony from various DPAH officials and Pistelli indicating that Chicago residents could not qualify for D.C. section 8 vouchers under HUD and DPAH regulations and that individuals had to apply for section 8 subsidies in person, the jury could well have found that Gatling would not have provided this assistance as part of her normal duties. In addition, Bufford testified that Walker told him to send the $1,000 to Gatling, and Perldns-Henry’s canceled check made out to Gatling was introduced into evidence. This evidence provided a more than ample basis for the jury to infer the requisite agreement between Gatling and Walker.
There was even more compelling evidence of an agreement between Gatling and Jackson. Many witnesses testified that Jackson told them they could get subsidies for $500, instructed them on what documents to bring and how to carry the money, and brought them to Gatling who provided them with subsidies in exchange for the $500 payment. One witness testified that she gave her $500 to Jackson, who then put the money in Gatling’s pocket. The jury could legitimately have inferred an agreement to commit bribery between Gatling and Jackson from the fact that Jackson spread the word that section 8 subsidies were for sale and repeatedly brought individuals seeking subsidies to Gatling.
B. Single v. Multiple Conspiracy
The indictment charged Walker and Gatling with engaging in a single conspiracy to commit bribes which covered the issuance of subsidies to ineligible residents in both Chicago and D.C. Walker contends that the evidence at trial established at most the existence of two conspiracies, one involving Chicago residents and the other involving D.C. residents. If Walker’s claim were correct, then there would have been a variance between the indictment and the evidence offered at trial. Such a variance can be grounds for reversal if it substantially prejudices the defendant, as, for example, if the jury were “substantially likely to transfer evidence from one conspiracy to a defendant involved in another.”
United States v. Tarantino,
The government argues that this court should review the relationship between the evidence and the single conspiracy charge only for plain error, since Walker did not explicitly argue below that the evidence was only sufficient to prove multiple conspiracies.
Anderson,
In determining whether the evidence supports a finding of a single conspiracy or instead only demonstrates multiple conspiracies, we look at whether the defendants “shared a common goal,” any “interdependence between the alleged participants,” and “any overlap among alleged participants,” such as the presence of core participants linked to all the defendants.
United States v. Graham,
In addition, there were significant overlaps between the timing and participants in the Chicago and D.C. schemes. Both occurred during the same period; the Chicago subsidies were provided in June 1991 and March 1992, while the D.C. subsidies were provided on ten occasions between September 1991 and April 1992.
Cf. Childress,
Walker argues that the district court erred in admitting evidence of Jackson’s statements against Walker because the statements constituted inadmissible hearsay. Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(E) provides that an out-of-court statement by a co-conspirator during and in furtherance of a conspiracy is not hearsay, and therefore evidence of such a statement is admissible to prove the truth of any matter asserted therein. In order to admit a statement under Rule 801(d)(2)(E), the district court must find by a preponderance of the evidence that the person making the statement was a co-conspirator and that the statement was made during and in furtherance of the conspiracy.
Bourjaily v. United States,
Here, the clear error standard should be applied. Although the record reveals that objections to the admission of testimony on Jackson’s statements were made by Jackson and Gatling and not by Walker, the trial court judge did not require that defendants individually raise objections in this case. At oral argument, the government urged this court to hold that we will review an objection only for plain error if the defendant did not personally raise the objection below, even if the objection was raised by another defendant. Such a hard and fast rule could significantly complicate multidefendant trials, and we decline to adopt it. Trial court judges have discretion to determine whether each defendant must individually object or whether objections raised by one defendant will count as having been raised for all similarly situated defendants. Where a judge does not indicate what her policy will be in express terms during a trial, we will consider objections raised by one defendant to be preserved for other defendants if an examination of the record suggests that this was the approach taken by the judge in practice. 3
The district court did not clearly err in admitting Jackson’s statement against Walker because there was independent evidence indicating Walker and Jackson were co-eon-spirators. This independent evidence takes two forms. First, there was some evidence, albeit weak, suggesting Walker’s participation in the issuance of subsidies to D.C. residents, namely that she made significant unexplained deposits to her children’s accounts during the period and that she assisted Gatling with some details of two illegal D.C. subsidies. Second, as discussed above, the common purpose and timing of the Chicago and D.C. schemes and the participation of Gatling in both provide grounds for concluding that the two schemes were one single conspiracy. There is also substantial independent evidence indicating that both Walker and Jackson were participants in this single conspiracy, namely Bufford’s testimony that Walker agreed to provide section 8 subsidies to Veronica Bufford and Perkins-Henry and the testimony from numerous D.C. residents that Jackson told them how they could buy section 8 subsidies and brought them to DPAH. This case is therefore distinguishable from
Beckham,
where the only independent evidence of a conspiracy was the fact that the defendant was a close friend of the declarant and was sitting near her when she spoke.
Beckham,
*1522
It is true that the Chicago and D.C. schemes were not interdependent in the way that the separate groups involved in many drug “chain” conspiracies are, where each group is dependent on the actions of other groups for the venture as a whole to succeed.
See Childress,
In sum, we find that this evidence of the common purpose, participants, timing and interdependence of the Chicago and D.C. schemes more than sufficient for a reasonable juror to conclude that a single conspiracy existed.
C. Evidence of Accepting Bribes or Accepting Gratuities
Finally, there was also sufficient evidence for the jury to find that Walker conspired to accept bribes rather than gratuities. Bribery is defined as occurring when “a public official ... corruptly demands, seeks, receives, accepts, or agrees to receive or accept anything of value personally or for another person ... in return for: (A) being influenced in the performance of any official act.” 18 U.S.C. § 201 (1994). This court has held that “[p]ayments to a public official for acts that would have been performed in any event ... are probably illegal gratuities rather than bribes” and that bribery implies a
quid pro quo. United States v. Campbell,
The evidence of bribery is weakest in regard to the Chicago vouchers. Bufford testified that when he spoke to Walker about obtaining a section 8 subsidy for his former wife Walker did not solicit payment. He also indicated that she agreed to provide the subsidy before he offered her $1,000. The fact that Walker was offered the bribe after she agreed to provide the section 8 subsidy does not, however, in itself preclude a finding that Walker was providing the voucher in exchange for money. Timing is not determinative of whether a payment constitutes a bribe or a gratuity, since “[t]he statute proscribes offers and promises of bribes as well as the giving of bribes, and it is only logical that in certain situations the bribe will not actually be conveyed until the act is done.”
Campbell,
In sum, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence of an agreement, of a single conspiracy, and of bribery to support appellants’ bribery conspiracy convictions.
III. MISCELLANEOUS CHALLENGES
Walker raises several additional challenges to the conduct of the trial and her sentence, none of which requires extensive discussion. These challenges can be grouped into four categories: evidentiary issues; prosecutorial misconduct in summation; jury instructions; and sentence enhancement.
A Evidentiary Issues
Walker raises two challenges to the evidence introduced at trial in addition to her argument, discussed above, that Jackson’s statements constituted inadmissible hearsay. She argues that the district court erred in allowing the government to put on a new expert witness during rebuttal and in allowing testimony regarding prior consistent statements of other witnesses when no charge of recent fabrication or improper motive had been made. Neither argument is successful.
Pistelli’s expert testimony was clearly appropriate rebuttal evidence; Walker had testified that her discretionary control over 10 percent of the subsidies authorized her to provide subsidies to Chicago residents and Pistelli’s testimony went directly to refuting this claim.
United States v. Carter,
On a few occasions, the trial court allowed witnesses to testify regarding prior statements made to them by other non-party witnesses. For example, one of the government investigators testified about statements made to her by a D.C. resident who had illegally obtained a section 8 subsidy. Tr. at 120-21, 125-26. The court ruled that this testimony was admissible because the individuals who made the statements
*1524
were also witnesses at the trial and because the statements were being offered to provide background. The court’s first justification for allowing the statements is mistaken; testimony regarding out-of-court statements offered for their truth can still constitute inadmissible hearsay even if the declarant is also a witness at trial.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(1) (prior statement of a witness is not hearsay only if prior statement is inconsistent with witness’ testimony at trial, consistent with the witness’ testimony and offered to rebut charge of recent fabrication or improper motive, or represents a statement of identification). Consequently, such statements can be admitted only if they fall under one of the' exclusions or exceptions to the hearsay rule. But any error that the court made in this regard was at most harmless. The district court’s second justification for admitting the statements, that they were offered simply to provide background for the rest of the witnesses’ testimony, is valid; for instance, the D.C. resident’s statements recounted by the investigator were offered not for their truth but simply to explain the investigator’s actions and set the context of the investigation. Even if on some of the other occasions the court mistakenly allowed in evidence of witnesses’ prior consistent statements to prove their truth, their effect could only be harmlessly cumulative in light of the substantial evidence of Walker’s and Gatling’s guilt properly admitted at trial.
Clarke,
B. Prosecution’s Comments in Summation
A conviction will be reversed for improper comments by the prosecutor only if the statements substantially prejudiced the defendant. In determining whether substantial prejudice has occurred, the court looks to the closeness of the case, the centrality of the issue affected by the error, and the steps taken to mitigate the error.
Childress,
C. Jury Instruction Challenges
Walker argues that the court erred by not providing a jury instruction informing the jury that it could not convict the defendants on the single conspiracy charge if it found that the evidence demonstrated multiple conspiracies rather than a single conspiracy. As an initial matter, we note that our determination that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding of a single conspiracy does not obviate the need to decide whether a multiple conspiracy instruction should have been given, “for if record evidence supports the existence of multiple conspiracies, the district court should have so instructed the jury” upon request.
Graham,
The trial court did not commit plain error in not issuing a multiple conspiracy instruction.
As
discussed above, the evidence clearly connected Walker to both the Chicago and D.C. conspiracies and supported the single conspiracy charge. Walker maintains that the evidence also suggested multiple conspiracies. We need not determine if Walker’s claim is correct, because we find that the evidence of a single conspiracy and of Walker’s involvement in it was substantial, and therefore the lack of a multiple conspiracy instruction cannot be said to have affected the outcome below or to call the fairness of the trial into question.
See United States v. Debango,
Walker also maintains that the district court erred in the instruction it gave the jury on Walker’s false statements charge. The court instructed the jury that it need only determine that Walker knowingly and willfully made or used a false document or writing containing the false statements, and held that the two other elements of false statements offense, that the false statement must be material and relate to a matter within the jurisdiction of the United States, were questions of law for the court to decide. Tr. at 3010-11, 3342-43;
see also
18 U.S.C. § 1001. In
United States v. Gaudin,
- U.S. -,
D. Sentence Enhancement
Walker’s final challenge is that the district
court erred in
enhancing her sentence on the grounds that she was a high-level official. The Sentencing Guidelines assign a base offense level of 10 to bribery offenses, and provide that this base offense level should be increased by 8 levels “[i]f the offense involved a payment for the purpose of influencing ... any official holding a high-level of decision-making or sensitive position.” U.S.S.G. § 2Cl.l(b)(2)(B). The dis-
*1526
triet court’s determination that Walker was a high-level official is an application of the Sentencing Guidelines to the facts to which we give “due deference” on review.
United States v. Kim,
Giving due deference, we find that the district court’s determination that Walker was a high-level official was not error. As Chief of the Section 8 Division, Walker supervised a 23-person staff, ran the section 8 program and had authority over substantial amounts of money in housing subsidies. While regulations may have curtailed Walker’s ability to issue section 8 subsidies as she chose, she had the power to issue subsidies without the need for further authorization or review. Her position made her the top official within the Section 8 Division and lowered the possibility that the section 8 subsidies she had illegally issued would be uncovered. The application note to section 2C1.1 indicates that the key inquiry in determining its applicability is the “level of responsibility” the official exercises and explicitly lists “agency administrators” as the type of official to whom the guideline applies, a status Walker certainly held as Chief of the Section 8 Division. Application Note 1, U.S.S.G. § 2C1.1 (1995).
6
Other courts have found government employees occupying positions of power and responsibility similar to Walker’s to be high-level officials.
United States v. Matzkin,
In sum, Walker’s challenges to the court’s evidentiary rulings, the prosecutor’s statements in summation, the failure to give a jury instruction on multiple conspiracies and her sentence enhancement are not successful. We vacate only Walker’s conviction for making a false statement under 18 U.S.C. § 1001.
Conclusion
We hold that there was sufficient evidence to sustain Walker’s and Gatling’s convictions for engaging in a single conspiracy to commit bribery, and affirm these convictions and Walker’s sentence. We also reject Walker’s additional challenges, except that we vacate her conviction for making false statements under 18 U.S.C. § 1001.
So ordered.
Notes
. Section 8 vouchers and certificates are substantially similar and differ primarily in the method used to calculate the amount of subsidy an applicant will receive. As used here, "section 8 subsidies” refers to both vouchers and certificates.
. The admissibility of this statement is discussed below.
. A closer question is whether the specific objection Walker raises here, that Jackson's statements were not admissible against Walker because there was no independent evidence of a conspiracy between Walker and Jackson, was raised by any defendant below. If not, we would review the district court’s decision to admit the evidence for plain error instead of clear error.
See United States v. Olano,
. Walker maintains that harmless error review should apply, because there were discussions between counsel and the court on whether the evidence demonstrated a single conspiracy or multiple conspiracies and it would have been futile for Walker to ask for a multiple conspiracy instruction once the court denied Walker’s motion for a judgment of acquittal on the single conspiracy charge. However, whether there is sufficient evidence to allow the single conspiracy charge to go to the juiy is a different question from whether a multiple conspiracy instruction should also be given, and if anything the fact that the court granted Walker’s motion for judgment of acquittal on the substantive bribery charges relating to the D.C. residents’ subsidies should have encouraged Walker to ask for a multiple conspiracy instruction.
. Walker also objects to the fact that the court included overt acts relating to the D.C. scheme in its instruction on the conspiracy count. Since there was evidence linking Walker to the D.C. scheme, the inclusion of the D.C. overt acts was not error.
. It is also noteworthy that Walker became Acting Administrator of the Subsidized Housing Administration, in addition to Chief of the Section 8 Division, at some point in 1992. Since the record does not clearly indicate whether she was Acting Administrator at the time of the bribery conspiracy, however, we do not rely on this fact in determining that section 2C1.1 applies.
