Affirmed by published opinion. Judge CHAMBERS wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON and Judge MICHAEL joined.
OPINION
I.
FACTS
Mohammad Sarihifard (“Petitioner”) was convicted after a jury trial in the Eastern District of Virginia of perjury before a grand jury in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1623(a) and making false statements to a government agency in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. The trial judge sentenced Petitioner to twenty-one months in prison pursuant to the federal sentencing guidelines.
The charges against Petitioner initially stem from a conversation with federal agents where Petitioner provided the agents with inaccurate information. The federal agents were conducting an investigation into alleged *305 money laundering and drug trafficking at Eagle Motors. Eagle Motors was a small used car dealership in Arlington, Virginia, owned by Ali Galadari (“Galadari”). Gala-dari was a target of the government’s investigation. From 1994 to 1995, Petitioner, a close friend of Galadari, worked' as a used car salesman for Eagle Motors. Petitioner apparently was nоt the primary target of the government’s investigation. However, the agents were seeking information concerning Petitioner’s purchase and resale of a new 1995 Nissan Pathfinder. According to the government, the 1995 Pathfinder was purchased in Petitioner’s name and sold two weeks later. The government agents theorized that the Pathfinder represented the profits of a drug transaction and that Petitioner was simply a “straw” owner of the vehicle. In January 1996, Petitioner told the government agents that he purchased the Pathfinder for his own use and that he sold it to another buyer named Deborah Mills two weeks later for a profit of $1000.00. After Petitioner relayed his version of events, the agents called Petitioner a “liar.” However, Petitioner adhered to his story. Petitioner told the same story to a grand jury later that month. Prior to his testimony before the grand jury, the United States Attorney apprized Petitioner of his rights under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. After Petitioner testified before the grand jury, the United States Attorney informed the grand jury that Petitioner had not provided truthful testimony. The United States Attorney instructed the grand jury to disregard Petitioner’s testimony for the purposes of examining the possible illegal activity at Eagle Motors.
During the following months, the government intensified its investigation of Eagle Motors. In February 1996, Jockery Jones (“Jones”), a suspect in the money laundering scheme, testified under a grant of immunity that he was the actual purchaser of the Nissan Pathfinder. Later that month, Galadari entered into a plea agreement with the government where he agreed to cooperate with government agents. In July. 1996, Galadari testified before the grand jury. Galadari told the grand jury that Petitioner was merely a straw owner of the vehicle. On July 17, 1996, Mahmoud Moshrefi (“Moshre-fi”), Petitioner’s roommate and a salesperson at Eagle Motors, also entered into a plea agreement with the government. Moshrefi testified before the grаnd jury that the sale of the Pathfinder was consummated in furtherance of a money laundering scheme and that Petitioner fulfilled a pivotal role in the scheme by acting as the straw owner of the vehicle. After Jones and the Eagle Motors’ employees testified, the grand jury indicted Petitioner. He was charged with perjury before a grand jury and making false statements to government agents.
Petitioner’s trial on the grand jury perjury and false statements charges commenced in Octоber 1996. At trial, Moshrefi and Jones testified for the United States (“Respondent”). The two witnesses told the jury that Jones was the actual purchaser of the Nissan Pathfinder. They described a scheme where Eagle Motors’ employees needed to account for $31,500 in cash so they asked Petitioner if he would agree to have his name listed as the purchaser of the Nissan. Petitioner agreed and received $1000.00 in cash as payment for his minor role in the scheme. In addition, Deborah Mills testified that Petitioner never sold her a Nissan Pathfinder, that she never purchased a Nissan Pathfinder and that she never even visited Eagle' Motors. Moshrefi and Galadari also testified that Petitioner never purchased, borrowed, possessed or drove the Pathfinder that was actually sold to Jones. The transcript of Petitioner’s January 1996 testimony before 'the grand jury was introduced into evidence. On October 29, 1996, Petitioner was convicted of the charges as contained in the indictment.
Oh January 17, 1997, Petitioner asked the trial judge to unseal information that had not been provided to the' defense during the trial. Petitioner asserted that the sealed information contained potentially exculpatory information that Respondent failed to make available to the defense in violation of the principles announced in
Brady v. Maryland,
II.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Petitioner presents four issues. First, Petitioner argues that his false statements before the grand jury were not material because the grand jury was told to disregard them and, therefore, they did not influence the substance of the grand jury’s decision. Second, Petitioner argues that the government knew that he was going to provide false testimony before the grand jury; yet, the government “coaxed” him into testifying. Petitioner insists that such an act constitutes perjury entrapment. Third, Petitioner asserts that the trial judge erred when she instructed the jury that it had to agree unanimously on only one instance of perjury and one instance of false statements in order to find Petitiоner guilty of the crimes charged in the indictment. Finally, Petitioner accuses the government of failing to release exculpatory evidence, which he claims he could have utilized at his trial. In regard to the exculpatory evidence, Petitioner contends that the remaining information should be unsealed because it involves the criminal activity of two of the testifying witnesses. Petitioner argues that there is no reason to keep this information under seal because the government has concluded its investigation.
A. MATERIALITY
Perjury involves the false testimony under oath regarding a material matter where the witness has a willful intent to deceive the fact finder.
See United States v. Stotts,
A defendant is guilty of grand jury perjury when the government proves: (1) that the defendant gave false testimony to the grand jury under oath; (2) that the testimony was false; (3) that the false testimony was given knowingly; and (4) that the subject matter of the testimony wаs material to the grand jury’s investigation.
United States v. Friedhaber,
A person is guilty of making false statements to a government agency when the government proves: (1) that the defendant made a false statement to a governmental agency or concealed a fact from it or used a false document knowing it to be false; (2) the defendant acted knowingly or willfully; and (3) the false statement or concealed fact or false document was material to a matter within the jurisdiction of the agency.
United States v. Arch Trading Co.,
An essential element in both grand jury perjury and the crime of making false statements is materiality.
See United States v. Gaudin,
It is well established law in this Circuit that a finding of materiality is not dependant upon whether the fact finder was actually influenced by a defendant’s false statements.
See Friedhaber,
Petitioner argues that his statements were not material because the United States Attorney recognized instantly that Petitioner’s testimony was false. Accordingly, Petitioner asserts that his statements never had the capacity to influence the grand jury’s decision. Petitioner’s assertion creates a perverse incentive.
Adopting Petitioner’s rationale might allow witnesses who lie under oath to escape prosecution if their statements before a grand jury are obviously false. This rationale protects witnesses who fabricate testimony that a grand jury will recоgnize instantly as false. An argument for the creation of such an incentive not only misconstrues the scope of materiality, it strains logic.
Materiality is not dependent upon the believability of a false statement. Rather, a statement is material if it is capable of influencing a function within the grand jury’s jurisdiction.
See Brown v. United States,
The instant case is a paradigmatic example of how a discarded false statement still may alter the outcome of a grand jury proceeding. When Petitioner testified, the grand jury was investigating' an alleged money laundering and drug trafficking conspiracy involving Eagle Motors’ employees. Petitioner had direct knowledge concerning a facet of the conspiracy. Petitioner’s false testimony jeopardized *308 the accuracy of the grand jury’s determinations and delayed the indictment of the Eagle Motors’ conspirators. Despite the grand jury’s decision not to rely on Petitioner’s testimony, the false statements did affect the outcome of the proceedings. *
Of course, Petitioner could have exercised his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. The Court acknowledges that Petitioner's decision not to answer the grand jury’s questions also might have delayed the proceedings and deprived the grand jury of valuable information. However, in such a case, Petitioner would have been acting pursuant to a constitutionally vested right. Petitioner had no right to provide false testimony under oath. It is a stalwart principle of American jurisprudence that testifying witnesses have two permissible choices. They can provide truthful testimony or they can invoke the protections of the Fifth Amendment.
See Bryson v. United States,
B. PERJURY ENTRAPMENT
Entrapment occurs when (1) the government induces a person to commit a crime and (2) the person induced had no predisposition to engage in the criminal act.
Mathews v. United States,
Perjury entrapment occurs when a government agent coaxеs a defendant to testify under oath for the sole purpose of eliciting perjury.
See United States v. Shuck,
Entrapment is an affirmative defense.
United States v. Blevins,
C. ALLEGED BRADY VIOLATIONS: WITHHOLDING EXCULPATORY EVIDENCE
Prosecutorial withholding of exculpatory evidence violates due process irrespective of whether the government did or did not act in good faith.
Brady v. Maryland,
Petitioner in the instant action argues that the government failed to disclose the United States Attorney’s statements regarding Petitioner’s false testimony. Specifically, shortly after Petitioner testified in the grand jury proceeding, the United States Attorney told the members of the grand jury to disregard Petitioner’s testimony because it was false. Petitioner argues that withholding this information prevented him from presenting his materiality and perjury entrapment defenses to a jury. The threshold question for this Court on appeal is not whether Petitioner was prevented from presenting his materiality and perjury entrapment defenses to the jury; rather, the proper question is whether the government withheld evidence that probably would have affected the outcome of Petitioner’s trial. The Court, however, already has found that Petitioner’s materiality and perjury entrapment arguments are meritless. Accordingly, evidence supporting those theories cannot be material. Failure to meet the materiality prong of the Moore test precludes this Court from finding a Brady violation.
Petitioner also claims that the government withheld exculpatory evidence by failing to unseal an affidavit containing the names of confidential informants who accused certain Eagle Motors’ employees of engaging in criminal activity. Because many of the Eagle Motors’ employees named in the affidavit also testified against Petitioner at trial, Petitioner alleges that the affidavit was essential for proper impeachment of the witnesses’ credibility. The decision to seal and unseal evidence is committed to the' sound discretion of the trial judge.
See Baltimore Sun Co. v. Goetz,
D. PROPRIETY OF THE JURY INSTRUCTIONS
Conviction of an offense requires a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt
*310
as to each and every element of the offense charged in the indictment.
See Sullivan v. Louisiana,
Petitioner in this action alleges that the jury charge violated his Sixth Amendment rights by not requiring a unanimous finding of guilt as to each instance of conduct alleged in the indictment. The indictment charged Petitioner with one count of perjury and one count of making false statements to a government agency. Contained within the one count of perjury were multiple instances where the defendant supposedly committed perjury before the grand jury. Contained within the one count of false statements were multiple instances where the defendant supposedly supplied materially false statements to agents of the federal government. In her charge to the jury, the trial judge listed the elements of perjury and false statements. She instructed the members of the jury that in order to convict the defendant of perjury, they must unanimously find that the government proved each and every element of the crime of perjury beyond a reasonable doubt. She followed an identical procedure for the charge of making false statements. However, the trial judge also instructed the jury that it did not have to agree unanimously as to each and every instance of false conduct contained in the indictment. Rather, she charged that the jury needed only to find unanimously that the government proved one instance of conduct to adjudge Petitioner guilty of perjury. She presented identical language regarding the false statements charge. Petitioner contends that this instruction derogated his Sixth Amendment right to hаve the jury unanimously find him guilty of each and every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Petitioner’s assertion confuses elements of an offense with instances of conduct. A jury is required to find that the government proved every element of each separate offense beyond a reasonable doubt before adjudging a person guilty of an offense.
Id.
A jury is not necessarily required to agree unanimously on every instance of conduct chаrged in an indictment.
United States v. Tipton,
III.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The capacity of Petitioner's statements to impede an essential function of the grand jury was argued by Respondent at trial and included within the trial judge’s final charge to the jury.
