The defendant pleaded guilty (with a reservation of one issue, whether the statute of limitations had run) to violating the federal mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, by operating a Ponzi scheme. He was sentenced to 30 months in prison and ordered to pay $674,325.84 in restitution to his victims.
Bach pretended to sell lucrative interests in oil and gas leases — in one case promising the investor a guaranteed monthly payment of $934 for every $25,000 invested. The scheme ended in December 1992, but Bach was not indicted until June 1996. The statute of limitations for mail fraud is five years. 18 U.S.C. § 3282. Only two mailings alleged to be in furtherance of the scheme to defraud, and therefore punishable under the mail fraud statute, were made within five years before the indictment was filed. Bach contends that they were not in furtherance of the scheme to defraud. One was a check for $934, purporting to represent a portion of revenues from one of the oil and gas leases, that he mailed to one of the victims of the scheme. Another was a report, purportedly of income and expenses relating to another lease, that Bach mailed to another victim, one who believed that he had bought an interest in that lease. Enclosed along with the report was a letter advising him that because of the financial results shown in the report, the amount of operating expenses deducted from his income had been increased.
Both mailings Were made in 1991, by which time, as Bach points out, his victims were smelling a rat and beginning to seek legal counsel. With the scheme unraveling, he argues, the mailings could not have been in furtherance of it. But when asked at argument what the purpose of the mailings could have been, if not to lull the recipients into thinking that maybe they would get the promised returns from their investments after all, his lawyer was at a loss. It is true that the mailings were not intended to elicit additional money from the recipients — but was that all there was to the scheme? The critical question is what the scheme was.
Schmuck v. United States,
It is true that language in some cases suggests a disposition to deem any and every effort to cover up a scheme to defraud a part of the original scheme. See, e.g., United States v. Brocksmith, supra,
Let us move on to the sentence. Bach invites us to overrule United States
*523
v. Newman,
Bach also complains that the judge refused to allow him to present at the sentencing hearing certain exhibits which he had been led to understand would be allowed. The judge did act abruptly, but we cannot find the harm to Bach. The exhibits were of computations of the amount of loss that Bach had inflicted on his victims. The computations were based on his argument that some of the losses were not attributable to him, such as losses resulting from solicitations to investors that were made by people working with him, notably an Indiana veterinarian who fell so completely for Bach’s line that he gave up his practice, moved to New Orleans (the center of Bach’s operations), and in all blessed innocence recruited additional investors for Bach’s programs. Once Bach’s argument for excluding the losses suffered by investors recruited by the vet, and for other exclusions, was properly rejected, his exhibits became irrelevant. And they
were
properly rejected. Relevant conduct within the meaning of the sentencing guidelines includes conduct by the defendant’s agents, U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1)(A);
United States v. Levinson,
No other issues need be discussed. The judgment is
AFFIRMED.
