This case arose out of the government’s prosecution of an elaborate financial scam, perpetrated in large part by the four defendants whose cases we consider on the government’s petition for rehearing. In our original opinion,
United States v. Polichemi,
I
We review briefly the general facts relating to the financial frauds at issue here; to the extent that additional details are relevant to particular claims, we mention them there. Polichemi, Neal, Olson, Padilla, and others were the creators of a scheme to market so-called “prime bank instruments” to unsuspecting victim-investors. In fact, the instruments were phony *703 from top to bottom. Nonetheless, the defendants talked a good game, and they described their “prime bank instruments” as multi-million dollar letters of credit that had been issued by the top 50 to 100 banks in the world. They offered these instruments to investors, telling them that they could purchase the paper at a discount and then resell it to other institutions at face value. The difference in price represented the profit to be earned. The trades, sadly, were fictional; there was no market for the trading of these (or any other) letters of credit, and nothing capable of generating profits ever occurred. None of the “investors” earned a cent, but the defendants for a time were living off the fat of the land. Polichemi, for example, wound up in a $6.2 million home in Florida as a result of the scheme; Olson bought a $4.4 million villa nearby; and Neal’s luxury of choice was speed boats (he bought eight).
Between 1991 and 1994, the “prime bank instruments” yielded more than $15 million for the defendants. Their largest patsy was the Chicago Housing Authority, which (with the cooperation of the dishonest former director of employee benefits, one John Lauer, who also landed in prison for his part in the arrangement) turned over more than $13 million of its pension funds to the defendants. In all, some 30 investors were victimized. The defendants passed the monies they received through various bank accounts, used some to pay off prior investors and old debts, and spent the rest on themselves.
Each person had a particular role to play. Polichemi was the president of “Co-pol,” a company that supposedly traded in the “prime bank instruments.” He held himself out to be one of a handful of people in the world with a license to trade that kind of financial instrument. Neal was president of Konex Holding and Konex Marketing, companies that marketed Co-pol’s “product” through a network of salespeople. Olson served as an attorney for both Copol and Polichemi, in addition to being a participant in many of the deals. Last, Padilla was Copol’s “stateside banker.” He served as a reference for the other defendants and reassured potential investors that Copol was a sound and successful company.
II
In this section of the opinion, we discuss the many issues relating to the trial and convictions of the four defendants. Some points pertain to all of-them, while others are individual in nature.
A. Juror Disqualification
We begin with the point that we are overruling as a result of Martinez-Salazar. During the jury selection process, prospective juror Lorena Nape came up as a potential member of the final jury. As a result of questioning, the parties learned that she was a 15-year employee of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois — precisely the same office from which the prosecuting attorneys came. Based on her affiliation with the prosecutor’s office, the defendants moved to strike her for cause. Even though Nape, in response to questions, stated that she could be fair and impartial, the defendants took the position that at a minimum she was excludable on the ground of implied bias. The district court denied their motion, and they then used one of their peremptory challenges to remove her from the jury.
Two different questions are presented by this scenario: the first is whether Nape should have been excluded for cause, and the second is whether an error in that ruling deprives the defendants of any rule-based or constitutional right, if the jury that actually sat was an impartial one. We first address the question whether the district court erred in refusing to strike Nape, because if its ruling was correct, we would have no need to address the Martinez-Salazar issue.
In spite of the government’s arguments to the contrary in its petition for
*704
rehearing, we continue to be of the view that the implied bias doctrine applies in the particular circumstances of this case, and that it required the disqualification of prospective juror Nape. If she had sat on the final jury, this appeal would be quite different, and we note that
Martinez-Salazar
rejected the contention that “a defendant is obliged to use a peremptory challenge to cure the judge’s error.”
The concept of implied bias is well-established in the law. Many of the rules that require excusing a juror for cause are based on implied bias, rather than actual bias. For example, a court must excuse a juror for cause if the juror is related to one of the parties in the case, or if the juror has even a tiny financial interest in the case. See,
e.g., United States v. Annigoni,
In its decision in
United States v. Haynes,
Why is it that the most distant relative of a party cannot serve upon his jury? Certainly the single circumstance of relationship, taken in itself, unconnected with its consequences, would furnish no objection. The real reason of the rule is, that the law suspects the relative of partiality; suspects his mind to be under a bias, which will prevent his fairly hearing and fairly deciding on the testimony which may be offered to him. The end to be obtained is an impartial jury; to secure this end, a man is prohibited from serving on it whose connexion with a party is such as to induce a suspicion of partiality.
We agree with the United States that government employment alone is not, and should not be, enough to trigger the rule under which an employee is disqualified from serving as a juror in a case involving her employer. But one need not adopt such a broad rule to find a problem in this case. Here, Nape was a long-time employee of the very U.S. Attorney’s Office that was conducting the prosecution.
The Supreme Court had no such problem before it in
United States v. Wood,
A 15-year employee inside the prosecutor’s office is in a materially different position. We note as well that nothing in 28 U.S.C. § 1866(c) mandates the sitting of biased jurors; that statute simply forbids disqualification of individuals or classes of individuals on other grounds. Although the case is not before us, we freely acknowledge that a proceeding brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission in Chicago, or by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (to the extent it was not using U.S. Attorney’s office personnel) would not present the problem we have here.
We reaffirm our conclusion, therefore, that the district court should have excused Nape when the defendants moved to strike her for cause. Nevertheless, just as in
United States v. Patterson,
Polichemi points out in his brief responding to the government’s petition for rehearing that there is a factual difference between Martinez-Salazar’s case and his own that might have been important, which Justice Souter highlighted in his concurring opinion. Martinez-Salazar and his co-defendant exhausted all of their peremptory challenges, but they failed to request any more (as they were entitled to do under Fed.R.Crim.P. 24(b)), and at the close of jury selection Martinez-Salazar’s lawyer affirmatively told the district judge that he had no objections to the final list of jurors to be seated.
Martinez-Salazar,
Perhaps a majority of the Supreme Court will some day accept the distinction between curative and non-curative uses of peremptory challenges offered by Justice Souter, but in our view it did not do so in Martinez-Salazar. Just as in that case, the defendants here opted to use one of their peremptories to strike a juror who *706 should have been eliminated for cause. That was a choice they were free to make, but the fact that it had its basis in an error by the district court does not amount to a violation under either Rule 24(b) or the Due Process Clause. We thus reject this argument for reversal, made by all four defendants, and move on to the remainder of their challenges to their convictions.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence: Single Scheme
The jury convicted Polichemi, Neal, and Padilla of engaging in a single wire fraud scheme, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343, and it convicted Polichemi and Neal of participating in a single money laundering conspiracy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956 and 371. (It acquitted Olson on these charges.) The defendants argue that their convictions should be overturned because there was a prejudicial variance between the indictment and the proof offered at trial. The indictment charged a single scheme or conspiracy, but, they claim, the evidence showed multiple schemes. See
Kotteakos,
The defendants concede that the government produced enough evidence to allow the jury to find that there was a single scheme or conspiracy with respect to the CHA, and that separately it produced enough evidence to show a scheme or conspiracy with respect to the so-called Truckstop and Deanthorpe transactions (referring to two of the overt acts charged). They urge, however, that those transactions were distinct from one another, and that each was distinct from other deals (i.e. the Sovran, Glavinovitch, Reynolds, and Medema transactions). The same people did not participate in each “subscheme,” for example. Neal did not even meet Polichemi and Padilla until 1992. The results of the earlier transactions were not used in later schemes or mentioned to later investors, and the transactions differed in their factual details.
We have held more than once that “[a] conspiracy variance claim amounts to a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s finding that each defendant was a member of the
same
conspiracy.”
United States v.
Townsend,
C. Sufficiency of the Evidence: Money Laundering
At issue here are convictions under three different money laundering provisions: 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1)(A)© (knowingly conducting a financial transaction involving the proceeds of specified unlawful activity “with the intent to promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity”); 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(2)(B)© (transporting or transferring funds from within the United States to a place outside the country, knowing that the funds represent the pro
*707
ceeds of unlawful activity and knowing that the transportation is designed to conceal source, ownership, etc.); and 18 U.S.C. § 1957 (engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity). In reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence challenge, this court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and will reverse only if there is no evidence from which the jury could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
E.g., United States v. Brown,
Before addressing the particular claims here, we note that the government has conceded that Count 18 of the indictment, under which both Polichemi and Neal were convicted, and which dealt with a wire transfer of $850,000, was legally insufficient. Count 18 charged that an April 26, 1993 wire transfer in that amount from an account at Oak Trust Bank to an account held by one of the participants in a New Jersey bank was part of the fraud scheme. The government concedes in its brief, page 68 n. 10, that this transfer did not involve “proceeds” of the scheme, as this court has defined the term for purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 1956. See
United States v. Mankarious,
Polichemi and Neal were convicted under Counts 17 and 19 of money laundering in violation of § 1956(a)(l)(A)(i). In order to prove that violation, the government had to show (among other things) that they conducted the financial transaction knowing that it involved the proceeds of “specified unlawful activity” and “with the intent to promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity.” The evidence supporting these counts shows that Poli-chemi and Neal transferred CHA funds (obtained as a result of specified unlawful activity — the fraud) to Ray Starkey, a potential investor with whom they were working on a deal, and to the CHA’s John Lauer, as payment to him for “future administrative fees” (ie. to make sure that the unlawful activity could continue). A reasonable jury could conclude, as this one did, that these transfers met the statutory requirements.
The same two defendants, Poliche-mi and Neal, were also convicted of money laundering under Counts 20-22, which charged violations of § 1956(a)(2)(B)(i). As noted above, that statute prohibits moving illegal funds out of the country, knowing that the transportation will help disguise the money. The evidence showed that Polichemi and Neal transferred CHA funds from the United States to a Copol bank account in Switzerland, and then from the Swiss bank to Olson and Lauer’s accounts back in the United States. The government also introduced evidence that transactions are difficult to investigate once funds are moved through foreign bank accounts, and that Polichemi and Neal lied to Lauer about the whereabouts of the CHA funds (once again showing that there is no honor among thieves). Even though the transfers were made in the Copol name, a reasonable jury could have concluded that the two schemers intended to disguise their source.
Although both Polichemi and Olson were convicted of money laundering under § 1957 (Counts 23-26), only Olson is appealing his conviction on those counts. The evidence against him showed that there were two payments of $25,000 each by Copol into Olson’s bank account, and one $25,000 payment by Olson to Edward Bergmann (a business associate to whom Olson owed money). Olson (the lawyer, recall) argues that the Copol payments were simply for legal services, and that the government failed to prove that Olson knew the monies were the proceeds from the illegal scheme.
*708
Olson makes a superficially persuasive argument when he points out that the jury acquitted him on all charges pertaining to the scheme to defraud and conspiracy to launder money, and it convicted him only on three substantive counts of money laundering. Nevertheless, even if these were inconsistent verdicts, that is not enough for us to conclude that the jury lacked sufficient evidence to support the counts on which it did convict. See
United States v. Powell,
D. Olson: Adequacy of Money Laundering Jury Instructions
Olson is the only defendant who has attacked the district court’s instructions on the money laundering counts under which he was convicted (Counts 24, 25, and 26, all of which charged violations of § 1957). Olson alleges that those instructions erroneously told the jury that the government did not need to show that Olson knew the funds transferred to him were criminally derived. He also complains that the court should not have given an “ostrich” instruction with respect to him.
As a preliminary matter, we note an odd dispute over the standard of review that applies here. The government argues that it should be for abuse of discretion, citing
United States v. Neville,
Olson is probably right, but he has lost little as a practical matter, because we see no problem with the instructions under, either standard of review. The jury was told that the government must show that “the defendant knew that the money involved in the financial transaction represented proceeds from some form, though not necessarily which form, of activity which constitutes a felony offense under state or federal law.” While there may have been smoother ways of phrasing this, we think it was enough to convey the key idea to the jurors that knowledge that the funds were criminally derived was an element of the offense. Similarly, given the fact that Olson defended himself by claiming lack of guilty knowledge, and the fact that the government had rebutted this defense with evidence of Olson’s long-standing participation in Copol and had suggested that at best he was deliberately indifferent, the district court appropriately gave an ostrich instruction. See
United States v. Graffia,
E. Olson: Admission of Evidence— Bergmann and Merchants’ National Bank Transactions
Olson is also the only person raising this point. In 1990, Edward Bergmann gave Olson $100,000 to invest through a trading account that Olson had established at Merchants’ National Bank. Olson’s proposed investments for Bergmann were similar to the “prime bank instruments” that formed the basis of the indictment. Shortly thereafter, Merchants’ Bank closed Olson’s *709 account, when it found itself unable to complete several transactions he had orchestrated. In 1993, Olson repaid Berg-mann his investment money using CHA funds and a check drawn on a Copol bank account. That repayment formed the basis for Count 23 of the indictment, a money laundering charge on which Olson was acquitted. Olson later (in 1994) paid $25,000 to Bergmann; this payment gave rise to Count 26, on which Olson was convicted.
The government wanted to admit evidence about the 1990 Merchants’ Bank/Bergmann episode under Fed. R.Evid. 404(b), as relevant to Olson’s knowledge and intent concerning the investment fraud. The district court ruled that it could admit evidence of Olson’s dealings with Bergmann only insofar as it related to the 1994 transaction charged in the indictment. Nevertheless, at trial Bergmann testified for the government both about his 1990 investment with Olson and the 1993 and 1994 repayments. Olson was permitted to testify that the Berg-mann investment was associated with an account he had at the bank for purposes of trading capital market instruments, and that the bank decided to discontinue trading with that account, but the court did not permit him to answer when asked if the bank attempted to conduct any trades.
These kinds of decisions about where to draw the line in the admission or exclusion of evidence are matters for the district court’s discretion. See
United States v. Poole,
F. Neal: Admission of Evidence on Prior Fraud Conviction
Over defense objections, the district court allowed the government to introduce evidence of Neal’s 1980 guilty plea in a Virginia federal court to charges of investor fraud and aiding and abetting in the preparation of false tax returns pertaining to fraudulent investments. It is not clear from the transcript whether the court found the evidence admissible under Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) or directly admissible as “intricately related” to the acts charged in the indictment. See
United States v. Spaeni,
In the end, the theory does not matter, because we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision either way. The court did not allow evidence of the conviction itself to be introduced; it allowed only evidence of the underlying conduct. It explained that the Virginia fraud was intricately related to the charged conduct because Neal had lied to Lauer (of the CHA) about the nature of the earlier conviction and Lauer relied on these lies in deciding to invest the CHA funds. The defendants also misrepresented Neal’s past “successes” in the materials they gave prospective investors. The evidence is also weak support for Neal’s intent to defraud, see Rule 404(b), even though the Virginia conduct occurred more than 10 years prior to the charged conduct and thus (without the intricate relation to the later activity) is at the outer edges of the requirement for Rule 404(b) that the prior crime be close enough in time to be relevant. See,
e.g., United States v. Kreiser,
G. Padilla: Sufficiency of Evidence for Perjury Conviction
Padilla was convicted of three counts of perjury arising from statements he made to SEC investigators during a 1994 deposition. “To sustain a perjury conviction, the government must prove that, while under oath, the defendant knowingly made a statement that was both false and material.”
United States v. Gulley,
There was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s conclusions about truth and materiality on each of the three counts. For example, on Count 27 Padilla was asked why he left Nationsbank, and he replied that it was because he did not want to move to Richmond, Virginia, after Nations-bank merged with C&S Sovran. That was a lie. Sovran fired Padilla when it discovered his involvement with a fraudulent discounted letter of credit transaction. He also lied about where he went after he left Nationsbank, telling the SEC investigator that it was to Starbank, when it really was to Copol. Furthermore, these lies were material to the SEC, which was trying to find out who had worked for Copol and whether Padilla had engaged in any of the discounted letter of credit transactions.
Without recounting the evidence here for Counts 28 and 29, it is enough to say that we have reviewed the record and are satisfied that the jury’s verdict was supported for these two counts as well. Were we to accept Padilla’s view, the SEC investigators would literally have needed to know ahead of time the answer to each question they asked in order to be specific enough. That is not the law, nor is his somewhat odd idea that if his answers were not material to questions designed to elicit material information, that element has not been shown.
H. Polichemi: Juror Coercion
After the jury reported that it had reached a verdict, the district court polled the jurors to ensure that the verdict was unanimous. During the polling, juror Thomasina Jackson said that she did “not totally” agree with the verdict. The court immediately reminded the jurors that the verdict had to be unanimous and it instructed them to return for further deliberation. Not long thereafter, the jury returned again with a unanimous verdict. When polled again, juror Jackson answered “yes” when asked if the jury’s final verdict was her own verdict.
Polichemi argues that the district court should have conducted a separate inquiry of Jackson to make sure she had not been coerced into the verdict. As evidence that she might not have freely assented to the verdict, he points to the facts that the jury delivered its first verdict at 4:30 p.m. on a Friday afternoon, that the jurors were probably eager to finish up before the weekend, that one juror had a vacation scheduled to begin five days later, and that the trial had lasted weeks longer than the jurors had originally been advised. Poli-chemi did not raise these objections at trial, however, and thus we would overturn the district court’s decision not to conduct a separate interrogation only if plain error were present. None of the factors to which Polichemi points, however, suggest that the result of the trial was fundamentally unfair or that the judge should have *711 disregarded Jackson’s affirmation that the final verdict was indeed her own.
I. Polichemi: Mistrial Based on Exhibit Sent to Jmy
During its examination of fraud victim Sylvia Field, the government introduced Exhibit 77, which was a letter to Olson from Field in which Field demanded the return of the money she had invested with Copol. At the request of defense counsel, the district court ruled that the following two sentences had to be redacted from the letter: “The Securities and Exchange Commission agent visited me and said Copol has been served with a suit against it for fraud. I was horrified by their revelations.” Unfortunately, when the exhibit books were prepared for the jury’s use, an unredacted copy of that letter was used and thus, for a time, the jury had the complete letter with it in the jury room.
Two days after the jury began deliberating, the prosecutors discovered the error. They immediately notified defense counsel and the court, and defense counsel moved for a mistrial. The court denied the motion, observing that the two sentences were “trivial in relation to the evidence in this case.” At the same time, the court ordered that the unredacted copies should be removed and replaced with the redacted copies, which was done. We see no reversible error in this course of events. The district court was in the best position to assess whether any prejudice was likely from that slip, and as the court pointed out, there was ample evidence properly before the jury that revealed the existence of the SEC’s fraud investigation. Additionally, there is no evidence indicating that the use of the wrong version of Exhibit 77 was anything but inadvertent.
J. Polichemi: Double Jeopardy
The last conviction issue any of these defendants raises is Polichemi’s complaint that the prosecution against him was barred under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Constitution by two earlier actions: (1)a 1994 civil action that the SEC brought against the defendants in federal court in Chicago, and (2) a 1996 civil action that the CHA brought against the defendants in a Florida state court. This is a frivolous argument that requires little discussion. The Double Jeopardy Clause is not implicated at all, because both prior actions were civil proceedings. See
Hudson v. United States,
Ill
Individually, the four defendants have also challenged the sentences they received on varying grounds. Those sentences were as follows:
(1) Polichemi received a term of 210 months on each of counts 17 through 22, a term of 60 months on each of counts 1 through 16, and a term of 120 months on each of counts 23 and 24, all to be served concurrently, along with a term of supervised release of two years and a $10,000,000 restitution order;
(2) Neal received a term of 235 months on each of counts 18, 19, 21, and 22, and a term of 60 months on each of counts 1-13, 16, 31, 32, and 33, all to run concurrently with one another, a two-year supervised release term, and the same $10,000,000 restitution order;
(3) Olson was sentenced to concurrent 120 month terms on counts 24 and 25, and also a consecutive one month sentence on count 26, a two-year term of supervised release, $10,000,000 in resti *712 tution, and an order by the court directing the Clerk of the Court to send a copy of the judgment of conviction to the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Committee and to the Executive Committee of the Northern District of Illinois; and
(4) Padilla was sentenced to a term of 78 months, which consisted of concurrent 60 month terms on each of counts 1-13, 18 months each on counts 27, 28, and 29, which were concurrent with one another but consecutive to the 60-month terms, two years’ supervised release, and $10,000,000 in restitution.
We take their sentencing claims in the order in which we have listed them.
A.Polichemi
Polichemi raises three arguments in an effort to reduce his sentence: (1) the court should have given him the downward departure for a minor or minimal participant provided by U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2; (2) the court erred in its calculation of the total amount of money lost because of the scheme; and (3) the court should have found him eligible for the safety valve provided in U.S.S.G. § 5C1.2. We find no merit in any of these points.
Polichemi initially argued that because the district court found that the total amount attributable to the money laundering conspiracy was between $10 and $20 million, the court should have imposed a nine-level increase over the base rather than ten. See U.S.S.G. § 281.1(b). But, as the government points out, that is what the court did. In his reply brief, he has also tried to argue that the evidence was insufficient to support the $10-20 million figure, but (a) he has waived that point, and (b) the evidence supports that range quite handily.
As for his claim that he should have received the minor participant adjustment offered by U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2, we find no clear error in the district court’s handling of the matter. It is in fact quite impossible to think of Polichemi, the president of Copol and purported master trader of prime bank instruments, as “substantially less culpable than the average participant” in the scheme. See
United States v. Stephenson,
B. Neal
Neal argues only that the district court should not have increased his sentence under U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(b), which calls for an increase of three levels for someone who was a “manager or supervisor” of a criminal activity that involved five or more persons. Our review is once again for clear error, and we find none. To qualify for the increase, the district court had to find that Neal had control over at least one participant in the criminal activity.
United States v. Fones,
C. Olson
Four sentencing issues appear in Olson’s separate brief: (1) the relevant conduct determination that more than $10 million was involved, when Olson himself was convicted only on three counts involving a total of $75,000; (2) the two-level enhancement he received under U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1 for obstruction of justice (by committing perjury); (3) the decision to increase his offense level by two for his leadership role, under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1; and (4) the decision to hold him responsible for the full $10 million in restitution.
*713
Olson plainly considers it unfair that he should be held responsible, under the relevant conduct provisions, for money laundering and fraud covered in the counts on which he was acquitted. But that fact did not prevent the district court from making its own assessment of the proper sentence, see
United States v. Watts,
Under the provisions that relate to money laundering, relevant conduct includes all acts or omissions, including jointly undertaken criminal endeavors, “that were part of the same course of conduct or common scheme or plan as the offense of conviction.” U.S.S.G. § lB1.3(a)(2). This is the part of the relevant conduct guideline that applies to money laundering, because money laundering is an offense for which § 3D 1.2(d) requires grouping of multiple counts; indeed, § 3D1.2(d) specifically refers to §§ 2S1.1 and 2S1.2, which are the guidelines for money laundering offenses under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956 and 1957. (Olson is incorrect when he asserts that § lB1.3(a)(l)(B) governs here, under which we would restrict our consideration to activities that occurred “during the commission of the offense of conviction,” or in preparation for that offense or to avoid detection or responsibility for that offense. Compare
United States v. Gabel,
The question boils down to whether the district court found that Olson participated in the CHA transaction underlying his money laundering conviction, and if so, whether that finding was supported by a preponderance of the evidence. Our review once again is for clear error only. The district court certainly made the necessary finding, and our review of the record and the court’s comments indicates that there was an adequate evidentiary basis for it.
Olson’s next argument is that he should not have received two extra levels under the aggravating role enhancement provided in § 3B1.1 for an “organizer, leader, manager, or supervisor.” To qualify, the defendant must have been the organizer, leader, etc., of one or more of the participants. U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1, application note 2. The district court found that Olson had control over at least one participant in the criminal activity. See id. application note 4. In response to defense counsel’s question about whom exactly Olson was supposed to have controlled, the court named Padilla, Lauer, Oesterman, and Russey. The judge also commented that “[wjithout Mr. Olson, I think Mr. Polichemi, with all due deference, wouldn’t be able to write a letter.”
Like many of the other sentencing issues we have examined, this one involves factual findings that we review for clear error. Even if we took the position that a lawyer typically does not control his client, and thus that the judge may have been mistaken, to think that Olson was pulling the strings for Polichemi, and even if Olson, as he argues, never even met or corresponded with Russey, Oesterman, or Lauer, as the government argued in the alternative, the two-level increase Olson actually received (instead of the four-level increase that would have been possible under § 3Bl.l(a)) can also be upheld on the basis that Olson “used a special skill, in a manner that significantly facilitated the commission or concealment of the offense.” U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3. Although the district court did not address this specifically in its findings, we think the record is quite clear that Olson did use his skills as a lawyer to facilitate the commission of the offense. See id. application note 3. We therefore find no reversible error with respect to the two-level enhancement.
*714 The district court increased Olson’s offense level by two, relying on U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1, upon finding that Olson perjured himself when he “testified to the validity of the prime bank instruments.” As Padilla argued with respect to his conviction on perjury, Olson asserts here that his statements were neither false nor material. He claims that he testified only that he believed the prime bank instruments to be valid, not that they were valid. But this statement takes his testimony out of context. Olson testified at length about the mechanics of such instruments, and overall made it clear that he was portraying them as legitimate investment vehicles. Furthermore, this perjury was material to the offense of conviction — laundering the proceeds of an illegal investment scheme. We find no clear error in the district court’s decision to adjust Olson’s sentence accordingly.
Last, Olson complains that the district court erred in holding him jointly and severally liable for the $10 million restitution payment designed to go to the victims of this group. The government concedes that restitution cannot be ordered that relates to conduct for which the defendant has been acquitted. See
United States v. Kane,
D. Padilla
Padilla argues that the district court should not have sentenced him to consecutive terms on his fraud and perjury convictions, when the perjury conduct was used to support an upward adjustment for obstruction of justice in the offense level and the court should have grouped the perjury conviction with the fraud conviction. See U.S.S.G. § 3D1.5 and illustration # 3. The government responds that Padilla did not raise this objection during sentencing and thus our review can only be for plain error.
Padilla did not address the waiver point in his reply brief, and so we agree that plain error is the governing standard. In any event, the district court did not err. The wire fraud counts under which Padilla was convicted carry a five-year statutory maximum. See 18 U.S.C. § 1343. Padilla’s sentencing range as computed by the guidelines, however, was 78 to 97 months. In circumstances in which the guidelines range exceeds the highest statutory maximum in a multiple-count conviction, the guidelines instruct that “the sentence imposed on one or more of the other counts shall run consecutively, but only to the extent necessary to produce a combined sentence equal to the total punishment. In all other respects, sentences on all counts shall run concurrently, except to the extent otherwise required by law.” U.S.S.G. § 5G1.2(d). That is exactly what the district court did. It accepted the 60-month maximum on the wire fraud counts, and imposed an 18-month consecutive sentence on the other counts, which was just enough to reach the bottom of the guideline range that applied to Padilla. This is just what § 5G1.2(d) orders, and it could thus hardly be called error.
*715 IV
To summarize, we re-confirm our holding in Part IV of
United States v. Polichemi,
