Gary Pansier, a tax protester, did not pay his taxes for many years. When federal, state, and local revenue agents attempted to collect his delinquent taxes, Pansier responded by requesting personal information from the individual agents and filing false forms with the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), claiming that the individual revenue agents had been involved in large cash transactions on his behalf. He also attempted to satisfy his various tax debts with phony sight drafts, a type of financial instrument, which appeared to be drawn on a Treasury Direct account and issued under the authority of United States Department of Treasury. For his behavior, Pansier was convicted of obstructing the administration of the IRS, filing false IRS forms, and passing phony financial instruments with the intent to defraud.
On appeal, Pansier raises a number of challenges to his convictions, but we are not persuaded by any of them. Because we conclude that the district court was permitted to exclude at least thirty days to resolve multiple pretrial motions, the delays in Pansier’s trial did not violate the Speedy Trial Act. The language of Count One of the indictment reveals that the count was not duplicitous and charged Pansier only with obstructing the due administration of the IRS under the omnibus clause of 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a). We further conclude that it is not an element of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1), a perjury statute, that the false document passed was required to be filed by statute or regulation. Therefore, Counts Two through Nine of the indictment alleged all the necessary elements of the offense. And finally, the district court properly considered both the qualifications and the reliability of the government’s expert witness and did not err *729 in the admission of his testimony. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Pansier and his wife refused to pay income and property taxes for many years. As a result, the IRS, the Wisconsin Department of Revenue, and the Treasurer’s Office of Marinette County each sent the Pansiers notice of their tax delinquencies. Pansier responded to these notices by returning them to the relevant taxing authority stamped with the words “accepted for value and exempt from levy.” He also attached an IRS W-9 form, requesting personal information, including social security numbers and dates of birth, from the individual employees and state officials attempting collections. In each instance, when he received no response from the individual employee, Pansier filed a “Form 8300,” an IRS form used to report cash payments over $10,000 received in one transaction or two or more related transactions, see 26 U.S.C. § 60501. On each form, he falsely reported that the individual employee had made a cash payment on his behalf and had refused to provide a social security number or date of birth. Pansier also checked the “amends prior report” box as well as the “suspicious transaction” box, which is used to note that the individual is withholding information or attempting to prevent the form from being filed. See IRS Form 8300, http://www.irs. gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8300.pdf.
Among those individuals named by Pansier in the false Form 8300’s were two employees of the Wisconsin Department of Revenue; the Treasurer of Marinette County, Wisconsin; the Secretary of Revenue for the State of Wisconsin; Judge William M. Atkinson of the Brown County, Wisconsin Circuit Court; and an IRS revenue officer assigned to Pansier’s case. After receiving the false forms, the IRS entered each one into its database and sent notices to the individuals, requesting that they provide the missing information and informing them of potential penalties if they failed to respond. Once the IRS investigated further, it discovered that the forms were false and removed all the entries from its database.
Next, in an attempt to dodge his tax bills, Pansier submitted as payment for taxes he owed to the IRS, the Wisconsin Department of Revenue, and Marinette County, phony financial instruments, which appeared to be sight drafts issued under the authority of the United States Department of Treasury. Sight drafts are financial instruments that are payable at the bearer’s demand or on presentment to the drawer. Black’s Law Dictionary 530 (8th ed.2004). The sight drafts included a purported Treasury Direct routing number, listed Pansier’s social security number as the Treasury Direct account number, and directed the recipient to seek payment from Pansier’s Treasury Direct account. But Pansier did not have a Treasury Direct account, which is only an investment account that is administered by the United States Treasury Department’s Bureau of Public Debt and cannot be used to pay third parties. See Treasury Direct, htt p:// www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/myaccount/ myaccount.htm# TreasuryDirect. When the IRS received these phony sight drafts, it initially credited Pansier’s account and attempted to present them for payment at several banks where they were dishonored.
In November 2005, a grand jury returned a 31-count indictment against Pansier, charging him with one count of obstructing the due administration of the IRS, see 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a); eight counts of filing under penalty of perjury false IRS Form 8300’s, see 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1); and twenty-two counts of fraudulently passing *730 fictitious financial instruments, appearing to be issued under the authority of the United States, see 18 U.S.C. § 514(a)(2). Pansier made his initial appearance at an arraignment on January 27, 2006. Because Pansier argues that his trial was impermissibly delayed in violation of the Speedy Trial Act, we provide a detailed description of the procedural history of the case and the relevant dates following his initial appearance.
Pansier initially opted to proceed pro se and filed numerous pretrial motions, some of which were incomprehensible or irrelevant, while others, including multiple motions to dismiss the indictment, discovery motions, and a motion for a bill of particulars, arguably presented substantive issues. The government filed a motion for handwriting exemplars and one motion in limine. Judge William Griesbach ruled on many of these motions and denied Pansier’s various motions to dismiss.
At the final pretrial conference, Judge Griesbach disclosed that one of the government’s witnesses, Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge William Atkinson, is his former colleague and a friend. Nevertheless, at that time, Judge Griesbach concluded that he could remain impartial, and neither party objected. Pansier waived his right to a jury, and the ease proceeded to trial.
In August 2006, Judge Griesbach found Pansier guilty of Counts One through Nine but reserved his ruling on the remaining counts pending the parties’ post-trial briefs. Several weeks later, however, Judge Griesbach issued an order in which he again informed the parties of his relationship with Judge Atkinson, and this time he invited them to move for his disqualification based on the possibility of an appearance of impropriety. Pansier accepted this invitation, and, consequently, in an order dated October 10, 2006, Judge Griesbach recused himself and vacated all his previous orders and findings in the case.
The case was reassigned to Judge Charles N. Clevert, Jr. Neither party filed anything until two months later when, on December 13, 2006, Pansier sought a clarification and modification of his conditions of release. On December 26, the government moved to revoke Pansier’s bond. The district court set a hearing date for the motion. In the meantime, Pansier moved to dismiss the charges based on an alleged violation of the Speedy Trial Act. On January 26, 2007, the court revoked Pansier’s bond and denied his Speedy Trial Act motion, finding that the numerous pretrial motions that had been filed before Judge Griesbach’s recusal had been revived and were still pending. As a result, the court determined that the speedy trial clock was tolled. On February 9 Pansier filed the first in another series of pro se motions, and on February 22, the district court ruled on nine motions that had been filed before Judge Griesbach’s recusal, as well as three motions that had been filed after the recusal, and ordered briefing on four outstanding motions, two of which had been filed before Judge Griesbach.
In March 2007, Pansier retained an attorney and, through counsel, filed four motions: (1) a motion to dismiss Count One of the indictment as duplicitous; (2) a motion to dismiss Counts Two through Nine of the indictment for failure to allege all the necessary elements of the crime; (3) a motion to dismiss the indictment based on preindictment delay; and (4) a renewed motion to dismiss for violation of the Speedy Trial Act. The court denied each of these motions.
The case again proceeded to trial, this time before a jury. The government argued that Pansier had obstructed the due administration of the IRS by submitting the false Form 8300’s, knowing that by *731 checking the “amends prior report” and “suspicious transaction” boxes, the IRS would be sent on a wild goose chase, investigating the fictional transactions and, after discovering that no transactions had occurred, would be required to remove the false information in the IRS database. He further obstructed the administration of the IRS, the government argued, by submitting the fictitious sight drafts as payment for his federal taxes, knowing that, even if the drafts were not accepted as legitimate, the IRS would expend resources in attempting to process the drafts for payment. Counts Two through Nine reflected eight individual Form 8300’s filed with the IRS, which, the government contended, Pansier signed under penalty of perjury, despite his knowledge that they were false as to a material matter, the very transaction reported. Finally, the government dismissed Counts Ten and Twenty-Seven but proceeded on the remaining counts, which all related to individual sight drafts that Pansier submitted, as the government contended, knowing them to be fictitious and appearing to be drawn under the authority of the United States, with intent to defraud the various taxing authorities.
In support of these counts, the government presented the testimony of fourteen witnesses, including a number of individuals whom Pansier had named in the Form 8300’s, several individuals who had received and attempted to process the fictitious sight drafts, and William Kerr, a bank examiner with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency whom the court qualified as an expert witness over Pansier’s objection. Kerr testified that the sight drafts submitted by Pansier were worthless financial instruments purportedly drawn upon a Treasury Direct account at the Treasury Department.
The jury found Pansier guilty of Counts One through Nine, Eighteen through Twenty-Six, and Twenty-Eight through Thirty, but acquitted him of Counts Eleven through Seventeen. The jury was hung on Count Thirty-One, and, as a result, the government dismissed the count. The district court sentenced Pansier to twenty-four months’ imprisonment for each count, with the terms to run concurrently. This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. There was no Speedy Trial Act violation.
Pansier first argues that the district court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the case under the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3161. The Speedy Trial Act provides that no more than seventy days may pass between a defendant’s initial appearance in court and the commencement of trial. 18 U.S.C. § 3161(c)(1);
United States v. Harris,
Indeed, Pansier’s second trial commenced more than seventy days after Judge Griesbach’s recusal order. In calculating the speedy trial clock, however, the Act specifically excludes the time from the filing of any pretrial motion until the hearing on that motion, 18 U.S.C. § 3161(h)(1)(D)
1
;
Henderson v. United
*732
States,
The district court concluded that the Speedy Trial Act had not been violated because Judge Griesbach’s recusal order, vacating all of his previous orders, including the convictions on Counts One through Nine, reset the speedy trial clock under 18 U.S.C. § 3161(e). The recusal order also revived all pretrial motions on which Judge Griesbach had ruled, and, the court explained, approximately thirteen motions were revived at the time of his recusal. So, additional time was excluded until the resolution of those motions, and, the court calculated, no more than fifty-nine days elapsed from the speedy trial clock before the case went to trial.
We review the district court’s denial of Pansier’s speedy trial motion de novo.
United States v. Farmer,
Pansier reads
Crooks
too broadly. In that case, the Ninth Circuit stated that the district court’s order setting the case for retrial, and “not the dismissal of the jury, constituted the action occasioning the new trial.”
Crooks,
Pansier also takes issue with the district court’s exclusion of thirty days under § 3161(h)(1)(H) because, he contends, there is no evidence that the various pro se motions that were revived following recusal were actually “under advisement” in the two months following Judge Griesbach’s recusal. He further argues that those motions were simply “nonsensical discovery motions” that were obviously meritless. Therefore, Pansier asserts that no time should be excluded for the multiple pretrial motions that were pending immediately after the order of recusal.
Although Pansier is correct that the docket reveals no activity immediately following Judge Griesbach’s recusal, we are not persuaded that § 3161(h)(1)(H) requires the close factual inquiry that Pansier suggests to determine whether a motion was under advisement. Pansier relies on language in
United States v. Johnson,
In calculating the speedy trial clock, starting on October 11, 2006 until trial, the periods of time from December 26 through January 27 and February 8 until the trial began on June 18, 2007, were properly excluded under the Act, as Pansier concedes. That leaves eighty-nine days in dispute, from October 11 through December 25, 2006 and January 28 through February 8, 2007, during which the parties’ multiple pretrial motions remained pending.
We do not measure reasonable promptness by a mathematically precise standard,
Pedroza,
B. Count One is not duplicitous.
Next Pansier challenges his conviction for obstructing the due administration of the IRS, contending that Count One of the indictment is duplicitous. An indictment is duplicitous if it charges two or more offenses in a single count.
United States v. Starks,
The statute at issue in Count One, 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a), states that an individual may be prosecuted if he or she:
[C]orruptly or by force or threats of force (including any threatening letter or communication) endeavors to intimidate or impede any officer or employee of the United States acting in an official capacity under this title, or in any other way corruptly or by force or threats of force (including any threatening letter or communication) obstructs or impedes, or endeavors to obstruct or impede, the due administration of this title.
This provision contains two distinct clauses, which each describe a separate offense.
United States v. Lovern,
Here, Count One of the indictment returned by the grand jury alleges that Pansier “corruptly endeavored to obstruct and impede the due administration” of IRS laws by filing with the IRS “false Forms 8300, and fictitious financial instruments referred to as Sight Drafts. The defendant thereby used the IRS as a tool of retaliation against public employees for the lawful performance of their official duties. He filed the fictitious financial instruments in order to satisfy federal tax, interest and penalties due and owing as assessed against either himself and/or his wife.” The count consists of six paragraphs, three of which describe the false Form 8300’s that Pansier filed and state that “[i]n retaliation,” Pansier reported on the forms that federal and state employees had made payments on his behalf, causing the IRS to process the forms and send notices to the *735 employees. In the final paragraph the count alleges that “[i]n a further effort to obstruct and impede the due administration of the Internal Revenue laws” Pansier “filed with the IRS Sight Drafts as purported payment.” Before trial, however, the district court struck from Count One all allegations of retaliation as a motive for the false forms, and the jury received the revised indictment absent any references to retaliation.
Pansier argues that the references in the original indictment to retaliation against public officials charge him with violating the first clause of 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a), while the references to the fictitious sight drafts charge him with violating the omnibus clause of that statute. And alternatively, Pansier argues, the indictment was constructively amended when the district court struck the references to retaliation from Count One but later permitted the government to present evidence that he retaliated against various public employees.
Pansier’s reliance on the indictment’s references to retaliation is misplaced. The language of Count One tracks the statutory language of the omnibus clause of 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a) and states that his actions in filing the Form 8300’s
and
the fictitious sight drafts were intended to obstruct the due administration of the code. There is no allegation that the Form 8300’s were intended to intimidate or impede individual federal tax officers, a required element of the statute’s first clause,
see Kassouf,
Moreover, even if we were to assume that the indictment is duplicitous, Pansier fails to identify any prejudice that this may have caused him.
See Starks,
Nor was there a constructive amendment of the indictment. “Constructive amendment of an indictment occurs where the permissible bases for conviction are broadened beyond those presented to the grand jury.”
United States v. Blanchard,
An indictment must state all the elements of the crime charged.
United States v. Moore,
C. Counts Two through Nine were sufficiently charged.
*736
ment, Pansier argues that Counts Two through Nine, which alleged that he willfully made and subscribed false statements on the Form 8300’s in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1), were defectively charged. Section 7206(1) is violated when a person “[w]illfully makes and subscribes any return, statement, or other document, which contains or is verified by a written declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury, and which he does not believe to be true and correct as to every material matter.” 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). Pansier argues that the government failed to allege in the indictment or prove at trial what he contends is an element of the crime: that IRS code or regulation requires the Form 8300’s to be filed. Without this element, Pansier argues, the government cannot show that the information contained in the Form 8300 was false as to a “material matter.” In support of this contention, he relies on
United States v. Levy,
We are not persuaded by this argument. Section 7206(1) is a perjury statute,
United States v. Scholl,
Moreover, the Sixth Circuit has more recently considered and rejected this same argument in a similar case.
See United States v. Anderson,
The indictment here charged that Pansier “willfully made and subscribed false Forms 8300, ‘Report of Cash Payments over $10,000 Received in a Trade or Business,’ each of which contained a written declaration that it was signed under the penalties of perjury and none of which the defendant believed to be true and correct as to every material matter.” The indictment, then, stated all the necessary elements of a charge under § 7206(1).
See Anderson,
D. The district court correctly applied Daubert and allowed the expert testimony.
Finally, Pansier challenges the admissibility of William Kerr’s expert testimony, arguing that the district court did not properly consider the reliability of Kerr’s testimony as required by
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
The admissibility of expert testimony is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and the framework established by the Supreme Court in
Daubert. Winters v. Fru-Con Inc.,
Here, Kerr’s testimony established his qualifications as an expert in legitimate and fictitious financial instruments and banking. The district court responded to Pansier’s objections as to the reliability of Kerr’s opinions by directing the government to lay a foundation as to Kerr’s analysis of the specific documents involved and only allowed Kerr’s expert testimony after he specifically testified about his methods for ensuring the reliability of his analyses. The court, therefore, adequately performed the Daubert analysis.
Moreover, the fact that Kerr’s testimony touched upon the Uniform Commercial Code and Treasury Direct accounts as a part of his overall analysis of the fictitious financial instruments did not render the testimony inadmissible. The district court properly permitted the testimony within the context of Kerr’s analysis of the financial instruments and his expertise in banking. Likewise, any possible inconsistency with another witness’s testimony about the numbers used to identify a Treasury Direct account does not mean that Kerr’s testimony was unreliable. Although his testimony was that a Treasury Direct account is identified by the account-holder’s social security number, while Ayers’s testimony was that the accounts are identified with a unique account number but can be retrieved with a social security number, it was up to the jury to determine the import of any discrepancy as a factual matter.
See Chapman v. Maytag Corp.,
Finally, an expert may testify about an ultimate issue to be decided by the jury but must refrain from giving “an opinion or inference as to whether the defendant did or did not have the mental state or condition constituting an element of the crime charged or of a defense thereto.” Fed.R.Evid. 704;
see United States v. Chube II,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Speedy Trial Act was amended effective October 13, 2008. See Pub.L. 110-406, § 13 (2008), 122 Stat. 4291. That amendment eliminated two provisions under 18 U.S.C. *732 § 3161(h)(1) and redesignated two provisions relevant to this appeal without substantive change: the provision that previously appeared at § 3161(h)(1)(F) is now found at § 3161(h)(1)(D), and the provision that previously appeared at § 3161 (h)(1)(J) is now found at § 3161(h)(1)(H). We refer to the relevant provisions as amended.
. We note that the Supreme Court recently granted certiorari in
United States v. Bloate,
