This consolidated appeal presents four issues before this court. Both appellants, Thomas and James Nguyen, argue that (1) the district court erred in issuing a deliberate ignorance instruction; (2) the district court erred in failing to instruct the jury as to the legal duties of title company closing agents and the legal definition of closing transactions; and (3) there is insufficient evidence to establish the element of specific intent for their convictions. Thomas Nguyen additionally argues that *617 (4) the district court abused its discretion by failing to sever his joint trial with his twin brother James Nguyen.
We AFFIRM the district court judgment, because sufficient evidence establishes Thomas and James Nguyen’s deliberate ignorance and continued facilitation of an ongoing bank fraud and money laundering conspiracy. The denial of the defendants’ proposed instruction regarding legal duties of closing agents did not impact their defense and is not reversible error. Finally, Thomas Nguyen presents insufficient support for his argument that a severed trial was necessary.
I.
Twin brothers James and Thomas Nguyen worked at the American Title Company. They acted as the notary, escrow, and closing agents for several real estate transactions initiated by Frank Mei and his family in their residential real estate mortgage scheme. The Mei family and their associates have already been subject to numerous prosecutions in the district court for the Southern District of Texas resulting in several trials and guilty pleas. Details of the Meis’ complicated residential scheme are found in
United States v. Mon-crief,
Basically, the Meis would create two simultaneous real estate transactions on a single property. First, through a “straw borrower,” the Meis would apply for a loan on the straw borrower’s behalf to ostensibly finance the sham purchase of a home the Meis “owned” according to their doctored title documents. In other words, the Meis would “sell” a house they did not actually own to their hired straw borrower, so the Meis would be able to obtain a home financing loan without owning the actual house. Using cooperating appraisers, the home would be appraised at a value much greater than the actual value, thereby raising the loan amount. In order to obtain the inflated loans, the Meis would provide the lender false inflated house appraisals, false title commitments, and false information on the straw borrower’s loan application to boost the borrower’s creditworthiness.
With the inflated loan funds in hand, the Meis would then use those funds to purchase the house at its actual lower value. They used the proceeds from their fraudulent loan transaction to finance their purchase. They then kept the difference between the loan amount based on a false inflated house value and the actual purchase amount. The first transaction involving the sham sale and falsified application for the inflated loan is referred to as the “loan transaction.” The second transaction involving the use of loan proceeds to actually purchase the home is referred to as the “cash transaction.”
The Nguyens had a circumscribed, but significant, role in this scheme. They acted as escrow, or closing, agents for numerous Mei cash and loan transactions. As their closing agents, they participated in several aspects of the Meis’ scheme. The Nguyens would notarize, fill out, and submit forms to the loan companies regarding the sham sale. They notarized the straw borrowers’ false affidavits stating the borrowers’ intent to occupy the house as their primary residence. These statements enhanced the straw borrowers’ loan applications. They filled out cashier check numbers on forms indicating that a down payment was provided even though they never saw the actual check nor inquired about the actual check before the loan transaction forms were submitted. They also signed and certified the validity of the HUD-1 or settlement statement, which described how the funds were allocated showing the borrower, seller, purchase price, loan amount, and down pay *618 ment. A HUD-1 statement was prepared for both the cash and loan transactions. After the submission of these forms to the loan company and after receiving the loans, the Nguyens would then release the loan amounts to the Meis, usually on the same day. The Meis’ associates would then run to a local bank with the loan funds and use those funds to cut the down payment cashier’s check described in the loan application and a check for the real purchase of the home. The Nguyens would then submit these checks to complete the transactions. This process was repeated numerous times within a short time period, often with several repeat straw borrowers.
The Nguyens were charged and convicted by a jury on nineteen counts. Count One pertained to participation, in an unlawful conspiracy in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1956(h). Counts Two through Four pertained to bank fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1344. Counts Five through Nine pertained to engagement in various monetary transactions with criminally-derived property in- violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1957(a). Counts Ten Through Nineteen pertained to money laundering in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1956(a)(l)(A)(I). James Nguyen was sentenced to 97 months’ imprisonment, and Thomas Nguyen was sentenced to 63 months’ imprisonment. Thomas was ordered to pay $1,092,473.22 in restitution and James was ordered to pay $1,152,473.22 in restitution.
n.
Appellants’ first contention is that the district court erred by using a “deliberate ignorance” instruction. A deliberate ignorance instruction is designed “to inform the jury that it may consider evidence of the defendant’s charade of ignorance as circumstantial proof of guilty knowledge.”
United States v. Lara-Velasquez,
*619 The deliberate ignorance charge given to the jury in this case was as follows:
The word “knowingly,” as that term is used from time to time in these instructions means that the act was done voluntarily and intentionally, not because of mistake or accident. You may find that a defendant had knowledge of a fact if you find that the government has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant deliberately closed his eyes to what would otherwise have been obvious to him. Such knowledge on the part of the defendant cannot be established by demonstrating that the defendant was negligent, careless, or foolish. Knowledge can be inferred if the government’s proof shows beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant deliberately blinded himself to the existence of a fact. But if the proof shows that a defendant actually believed that the transactions were legitimate sales and mortgage loans, then you must acquit the defendant.
Both appellants raise two objections to this deliberate ignorance charge: (1) whether there was a factual basis for using a deliberate ignorance charge and (2) whether the insertion of the underlined last sentence into the jury instruction improperly shifted the burden of proof onto the defendants. 2
1. The Factual Basis For A Deliberate Ignorance Instruction Exists
While a “deliberate ignorance” instruction should rarely be given,
Thread-gill,
As the appellants challenged the use of the deliberate ignorance standard below, we now review the decision to use the deliberate ignorance instruction under an abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Fuchs,
A. “The subjective awareness of a high probability of the existence of illegal conduct”
“[T]he first prong permits a deliberate ignorance instruction only when the Government presents facts that support an inference that the particular defendant
subjectively
knew his act to be illegal and not when the Government presents facts that tend to support an inference that a reasonable person would have known the act to be illegal.”
Lara-Velasquez,
The Government presented sufficient evidence of appellants’ suspicious behavior to infer subjective knowledge. The Nguyens facilitated a pattern of real estate transactions involving repeat buyers within a short period of time. They witnessed and notarized repeat buyers suspiciously signing documents saying they were planning to purchase a home for their primary residence within a short period of time. The Nguyens notarized, certified, and helped submit the settlement agreements for these transactions.
While the factual pattern justifying a deliberate ignorance instruction is fairly case-specific, the Nguyens’ activities can be arguably analogized to the defendant in
United States v. Freeman,
While participation in a
single
suspicious transaction described above may arguably be insufficient to warrant a deliberate ignorance instruction, the routine and repeated pattern of suspicious transactions in this ease is sufficiently suspicious to infer the Nguyens’ subjective awareness of illegal activity.
Compare Reveles,
In light of their continued participation in this suspicious conduct, 4 we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s inference of a subjective awareness of illegal activity suitable for a deliberate ignorance instruction.
B. “Purposeful contrivance to avoid learning of the illegal conduct.”
If “[t]he circumstances in this case were so overwhelmingly suspicious that the defendants’ failure to conduct further inspection or inquiry suggests a conscious effort to avoid incriminating knowledge,”
United States v. Daniel,
Testimony established that both Nguyens requested photocopies or numbers of down payment cashier’s checks to send to the lenders, but
never
requested to examine the actual checks themselves in
*622
these multiple repeat transactions. The repeated failure to inquire is sufficient basis for an inference that they suspected or actually knew, but avoided further knowledge, about the non-existence of the down payment checks before loans were disbursed. The Nguyens never inquired about the relationship between the loans and the down payment. Not asking questions can be considered a purposeful contrivance to avoid guilty knowledge.
See Daniel,
If the facts only included a single suspicious incident, the failure to inquire could arguably be considered mere negligence, and would thus be unsuitable for a “deliberate ignorance” instruction.
Cf Larar-Velasquez,
2. The additional last sentence in the charge
The Nguyens also argue that the last sentence in the charge impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to the defendants. This court approved an' almost identical instruction in at least two prior cases.
See Saucedo-Munoz,
“An error in a jury instruction is subject to harmless error review.”
United States v. Ibarra-Zelaya,
Under a harmless error standard, the differences here appear inconsequential and harmless. The minor difference does not on its face plausibly show nor does the appellant provide any argument as to how this difference may implicate a reversible error. A charge very similar to the charge given in this case was approved in Saucedo-Munoz, and, therefore, there is no reversible error here.
III.
The appellants also challenge the trial court’s decision to deny the appellants’ proposed jury instructions concerning the legal definition of closing agents and the closing transactions.
The appellees assert that the appellants abandoned their objections to the trial court’s denial of the appellants’ proposed instructions. See In re Wynne, 207 Fed. Appx. 472, 475-76 (5th Cir.2006) (describing standards for abandonment) (unpublished). The evidence in the record is not clear, and we need not decide this issue, since the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying their proposed instructions as we explain below.
This court reviews a district court’s refusal to include a defendant’s proposed jury instruction in the charge under an abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Rochester,
The issue in this case is whether the proposed charge concerns an important point in the trial so that a failure to instruct with these proposed instructions seriously impaired a particular defense. The appellants argue that these legal definitions help establish the Nguyens’ belief that they proceeded in their duties in compliance with what the law requires and in executing duties in compliance with the law they had no basis to suspect the underlying transactions as illegal. In
United States v. Chaney,
we rejected a similar argument, because this “good faith”-type defense was adequately covered by the usual pattern “knowingly” instruction.
“[E]ven if the jury instructions were erroneous, we will not reverse if we determine, based on the entire record, that the challenged instruction could not have affected the outcome of the case.”
Johnson v. Sawyer,
IV.
The appellants also question the sufficiency of evidence for the “specific intent” element in the counts relating to bank fraud, money laundering, and conspiracy. Challenges to sufficiency of the evidence are reviewed by examining whether, in the light most favorable to the verdict, a rational jury could have found the essential elements of the offense established beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Solis,
The evidence for a finding of specific intent can overlap with the evidence establishing the defendant’s knowledge that they were acting illegally, i.e. the Nguyens’ knowledge that they were facilitating a conspiracy to defraud lenders, that they were defrauding banks through their actions, and that they were facilitating the use of proceeds from illegal activity. The specific intent element of the offense is a slightly more culpable state of mind compared to the knowledge element.
United States v. Bailey,
Sufficient evidence, in the light most favorable to the verdict, supports the jury’s finding of specific intent for each these counts.
V.
Appellant Thomas Nguyen contends the district court erred in denying his motion to sever his trial. Since he objected to the denial of his motion below, we review for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Clay,
The mere fact that twins are jointly prosecuted is not sufficient to render a trial unfair per se.
United States v. Williams,
According to the appellant, Thomas Nguyen, he was unable to call his co-defendant at trial because of Fifth Amendment protections; if the trial was severed, Thomas Nguyen would have been able to compel his co-defendant’s testimony under the Sixth Amendment. Under these circumstances, severance might be granted to protect the Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process, which is considered a special trial right.
United States v. Barnett,
VI.
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the distinct court’s judgment.
Notes
. The Fifth Circuit has approved the deliberate ignorance instruction in cases involving the offenses in this case: conspiracy, see
United States v. Soto-Silva,
. The rest of the charge accords with the Fifth Circuit Pattern Jury Instruction: Criminal § 1.37 (2001) and precedent.
See United States v. Brown,
. James Long, Frank Mei's cousin and a co-conspirator, testified that up to five transactions per straw borrower had to be accomplished as quickly as possible so as to complete transactions before they show up on the straw borrowers’ credit report.
. While the evidence for both defendants is sufficient to warrant a "deliberate ignorance”instruction, the evidence in James Nguyen’s case is stronger. The Nguyens’ secretary recounted a suspicious incident involving James Nguyen. James Nguyen became quite angry when a FIUD-1 settlement statement for the cash transaction was accidently sent first to a lender. From this incident, one could infer that James Nguyen was aware that the timing of the cash and loan transactions contravened usual closings procedures and the HUD-1 settlement statement, if sent at the wrong time, would contain information that may raise suspicions about improper or illegal activities.
