Alfredo Eduardo Polo Padrón appeals from his conviction and 24-month sentence on one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1341, and four counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. A jury convicted Padrón of the mail fraud based on his involvement with a personal injury clinic which obtained money from insurance companies by submitting false claims via United States mail. On appeal, Padrón argues that the Government’s conduct in investigating him amounted to entrapment. He also challenges three evidentiary rulings the district court made during his trial. Finally, he appeals from his sentence on grounds that the district court erred in the loss calculation and that the district court lacked statutory authority to impose a forfeiture money judgment against him. After careful review and consideration of the briefs and oral argument of counsel, we affirm Padron’s conviction and sentence.
I. FACTS
Padrón was working as a janitor for the Tampa Housing Authority when he met co-defendant, and later girlfriend, Elizabeth Caruso in 1996. 1 Caruso met Michael Sperounes, a government informant in this case, while she was working in a personal injury clinic. Caruso testified at trial that she suspected that patients were being paid and that false insurance claims were being filed at both of the personal injury clinics where she worked in the late 1990s. Sperounes was an attorney who represented clients from one of the clinics in pursuing their personal injury claims, and he was involved in many aspects of the insurance fraud industry.
In December 1998, the FBI launched an investigation of insurance fraud involving staged and nonexistent accidents called operation “Misplaced Trust”. Sperounes became a cooperating witness in 1998 after he received a grand jury subpoena for records from his law practice. With his help, the FBI created Trident Venture Group in November 1999 to infiltrate the staged accident insurance fraud network. Trident was an undercover business which posed as an advance funding company, a company which would advance money to individuals who expect to receive insurance settlements on bodily injury claims in exchange for the right to collect a greater amount of money upon settlement. Sper-ounes and FBI Special Agent Gricel Sass were responsible for running Trident, and they were responsible for initiating contact with people in the personal injury clinic business.
Caruso decided to open her own personal injury clinic in December 1999 or January 2000, and she discussed her plan with Padrón. Caruso and Padrón each invested $10,000 to open the new clinic, called the Tampa Bay Personal Injury Clinic (“TBPIC”). Caruso was TBPIC’s president, and Padrón served as its treasurer and secretary.
In March 2000, Sperounes and Special Agent Sass met with Caruso and told her about Trident’s advance funding business, but they did not tell her that it was illegal at that time. 2 Caruso subsequently told *1159 Padrón about Trident and suggested that they work together. Sperounes and Sass began visiting TBPIC on a regular basis and developed strong personal relationships with Caruso and Padrón. Through a series of meetings in April 2000, Trident provided advance funding for Cathy Castillo, a woman that Caruso and Padrón retained to act as a staged accident victim. Trident advanced Castillo $500, Padrón instructed her where to tell the insurance investigator she was sitting at the time of the accident, and TBPIC later billed Castillo’s insurance company for her treatment.
In early June 2001, co-defendant Emmanuel Mellon visited TBPIC and told Caruso and Padrón that he had been referred to them by Trident, and that he wanted to send “patients” to TBPIC. Sperounes met with Caruso and Padrón to vouch for Mellon and confirmed that Trident had funded staged accidents for Mellon before. Caruso and Padrón then agreed to work with Mellon, and Mellon eventually referred the patients who participated in the June 7 and 12, 2001 accidents that are the basis of Padron’s indictment. 3
In October 2001, the FBI ended the undercover investigation. Later that year, Caruso and Padrón parted ways because of personal and business problems, and Padrón bought Caruso’s interest in TBPIC.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Padrón was indicted for mail fraud and went to trial with three co-defendants. He raised an entrapment defense and twice moved for a judgment of acquittal based on the argument that the Government had engaged in outrageous conduct and failed to present evidence of predisposition. The district court denied both motions, but did give the jury an entrapment instruction. The jury found Padrón guilty of all counts.
After the trial, the district court entered a preliminary order of forfeiture which contained a money judgment in the amount of $89,120.19. Padrón filed a renewed motion for a judgment of acquittal based on entrapment, and filed for a new trial based on several allegedly erroneous evidentiary rulings. The court denied both motions and sentenced Padrón to twenty-four months in prison on each count, to be served concurrently. The court also ordered Padrón to pay $88,241.97 in restitution, and included the $89,120.19 forfeiture money judgment in the sentence. This appeal followed.
III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
Several standards of review apply to this appeal. First, “[w]hen an entrapment defense is rejected by the jury, [our] review is limited to ... whether the evidence was sufficient for a reasonable jury to conclude that the defendant was predisposed to take part in the illicit transaction.”
United States v. Brown,
IV. DISCUSSION
Padrón first argues that the district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal based on his entrapment defense. “A successful entrapment defense requires two elements: 1) government inducement of the crime, and 2) lack of predisposition on the part of the defendant.”
Brown,
Our review of the record demonstrates that the district court did not err in concluding that Padrón did not meet his burden of providing sufficient evidence of inducement to support a judgment of acquittal. Although Padrón contends that he was unfamiliar with, and unaware of, the practice of staging accidents and submitting fraudulent insurance claims when he and Caruso began operating TBPIC, Padron has provided no evidence that he experienced any degree of coercion to commit the fraud, and as we have held, the “mere suggestion of a crime or initiation of contact is not enough” to prove inducement. See id.
The Government, in contrast, has provided ample evidence supporting a jury finding that Padrón was predisposed to commit fraud. Caruso provided the most damaging evidence by testifying at trial that she and Padrón had “always discussed” paying for patients before they even opened the clinic; they discussed potential patients based on people she knew from the clinic where she worked before opening TBPIC and people he knew from the Tampa Housing Authority; they staged their first accident before they met with anyone from Trident; they had intended to engage in unlawful activity prior to meeting Sperounes and Agent Sass; and that they were “trying not to get caught.” This testimony is more than sufficient evidence to support a reasonable jury’s finding that Padrón was predisposed to commit insurance fraud. Therefore, the district court did not err in denying Pa-dron’s motion for a judgment of acquittal.
Padrón next argues that the district court erred by admitting 1) evidence concerning Castillo’s uncharged staged accident on April 7, 2000; 2) demand letters from attorneys concerning bodily injury claims submitted to insurance companies on behalf of Padron’s patients; and 3) police reports concerning the charged staged accidents on June 7 and 12, 2001. Each of Padron’s arguments fail. First, the evidence related to Castillo’s staged accident on April 7, 2000, was properly admitted under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) to show motive, plan, and intent. Though there was a minor error on the 404(b) notice which listed the accident as occurring on April 4 rather than April 7, Padrón was provided with the necessary pretrial discovery and had sufficient notice that the Government intended to use this evidence at trial. Moreover, any prejudicial effect of admitting evidence related to the April 7 accident was cured by the district court’s limiting instructions. Second, though we agree with Padrón that the attorney letters were wrongly admitted, *1161 Padrón has not demonstrated that he was prejudiced by this error. 4 Padroris con-clusory statement that this evidence indicated to the jury that any purported conspiracy was larger and more complicated than necessary is insufficient to show prejudice. Third, the district court did not err in admitting the police reports that Mellon submitted to Trident to secure the advance funding for the accidents on June 7 and 12, 2001. 5 The police reports were not hearsay because they were admitted to demonstrate that a co-conspirator was seeking to secure advance funding, not for the truth of the matter asserted within the police reports. The district court committed no reversible error in admitting the three challenged categories of evidence.
Padrón also contends that this case should be remanded for resentencing because the district court improperly calculated the loss amount. In the case of jointly undertaken criminal activity, a defendant is held accountable for all criminal acts which are: (a) “in furtherance of the jointly undertaken criminal activity;” and (b) reasonably foreseeable in connection with that criminal activity. U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1);
see also id.,
cmt. 2. In sentencing Padrón, we cannot say that the district court clearly erred in holding him accountable for the full intended loss amount because it was reasonably foreseeable that, as a result of the staged accidents underlying his conspiracy charge, the “patients” would seek treatment at other clinics and demand letters would be submitted by personal injury attorneys. We also find no error in the district court’s conclusion that Padrón should be held liable for the full amount TBPIC billed to the insurance companies, irrespective of deductibles and policy limits.
See United States v. Grant,
Finally, Padrón argues that the district court lacked statutory authority to enter a forfeiture money judgment in this case. This Circuit has not yet considered whether 28 U.S.C. § 2461(c) authorizes criminal forfeiture of specified property in general mail fraud cases, but numerous other courts, including several of our sister circuits, have held that it does.
See, e.g., United States v. Misla-Aldarondo,
Congress enacted 28 U.S.C. § 2461(c), effective August 23, 2000, to make criminal forfeiture available in every case that the criminal forfeiture statute
*1162
does not reach but for which civil forfeiture is legally authorized.
United States v. Edelkind,
Padrón argues that because the forfeiture statutes applicable in this case do not contain provisions expressly authorizing the entry of forfeiture of money judgments, the district court exceeded his statutory authority. It is clear, however, that 28 U.S.C. § 2461(c) authorizes the government to seek forfeiture of specified property “in accordance with the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure” and it is equally clear that the federal rules explicitly contemplate the entry of money judgments in criminal forfeiture cases. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 32.2. Therefore, the district court did not err in entering a forfeiture money judgment against Padrón.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Caruso pled guilty to the counts in this indictment on June 7, 2006.
. The FBI did not initially tell clinic owners that their business was illegal, though they usually disclosed this within the first few meetings.
. The patients from the June 7 and June 12, 2001, accidents all initially sought treatment at TBPIC, though the ones from the June 7 accident later sought treatment at another clinic as well.
. Padrón argues that the Government did not prove that Padrón or any of his co-conspirators had actually hired the attorneys who wrote the demand letters. The Government argues that they were relevant to show that Padrón was aware that lawyers were used to settle fraudulent bodily injury claims and that the intended loss included bodily injury claims submitted by the lawyers. We agree with Padrón that the attorney letters were not relevant to the mail fraud charge and should have been excluded. However, we find that any error was harmless. Moreover, we reject Padron's argument that the admission of the attorney letters violates his Sixth Amendment rights under
Crawford v. Washington,
. Trident would not advance funding to bodily injury claimants unless a copy of the police report of the incident was submitted to them. Thus, Mellon submitted the police reports regarding the June 7 and June 12, 2001 accidents to Trident.
. Padrón also argues that because civil forfeiture procedures are against specific property
in rem,
money judgments are not available in the civil forfeiture context. This argument misses the point because 28 U.S.C. § 2461(c) makes criminal remedies available in the civil context, and Padrón concedes that criminal forfeiture proceedings are
in personam. See United States v. Conner,
