Phillip J. Gentile and Hunter B. Bra-shier appeal from their convictions, after a jury trial in the Southern District, for participation in a conspiracy to sell, pledge, and distribute unauthorized and fraudulently issued securities in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 77q(a), 77x and 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 2314. Gentile was also convicted on five other counts which charged fraud in the distribution of the securities. 1 Appellants urge reversal of their convictions on numerous claims which suggest that error pervaded each stage of their prosecution from the indictment to the district judge’s charge to the jury. We find no error and accordingly affirm the convictions.
The conspiracy involved an intricate scheme by which blank stock certificates *464 were wrongfully and improperly completed and disposed of between 1970 and 1973 by Leonard Reiseh, the president of Fidelity Registrar and Transfer Co., to whose care the certificates of various companies had been entrusted. Reiseh issued several of the unauthorized certificates in his own name and either sold them on the over-the-counter market or pledged them to banks as collateral for loans. Other loans were obtained by co-conspirators, including Gentile, through the hypothecation of wrongfully completed certificates issued in their names. 2 The proceeds of these loans were divided among one or more of the co-conspirators and Reiseh. Reiseh also completed stock certificates in Gentile’s name that were apparently sold by Gentile through brokerage accounts.
In September 1973 the plan for distribution was altered after agents of the Securities and Exchange Commission searched the offices of Fidelity in New Jersey and seized shareholder ledgers and other implements of the scheme. Gentile and a co-conspirator, Manuel Posy, determined that the safest course to follow would be to distribute their remaining securities on the West Coast and abroad. Throughout the latter months of 1973, Gentile conferred with other members of the conspiracy concerning the best means of disposing of the securities. In December of that year appellant Brashier arranged a meeting in California between Gentile and Roch-lin, a stockbroker with the Beverly Hills office of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, who had offered, at Brashier’s request, to sell some stock that Gentile had pledged as collateral for a bank loan. Approximately one month after these sales were completed Gentile was informed by Rochlin that the securities were not transferable. Although he had promised to do so, Gentile never provided documents confirming his purchase of all but one of the securities.
Brashier also introduced Gentile to Carl Hermanson, an employee of Brashier’s firm on the West Coast Commodities Option Exchange, who had expressed a willingness to facilitate the sale of over-the-counter securities for Gentile through a third party’s account. Her-manson found a willing conduit, Howell, who would sell the securities through his parents’ account at Shields & Co., and Hermanson delivered to Howell unauthorized certificates issued in Posy’s name and a letter, purportedly signed by Posy, sanctioning the sale. When Shields & Co. requested an additional notarized authorization, a person purporting to be Posy brought such a letter to Juanita Amoroso, a notary public in California who had previously notarized a similar form authorizing sale of stock in Posy’s name. Upon receipt of this authorization, the brokerage house accepted the sales order. About a month later, these certificates were also discovered to be defective. When confronted by the party who had sold the stock, Brashier denied having any knowledge of its defective nature and denied even knowing who Hermanson was.
In October 1974, when Brashier was interviewed by an Assistant United States Attorney and an agent of the Securities and Exchange Commission, he made numerous false exculpatory statements concerning his relations with the parties in the two transactions with Rochlin and Hermanson.
Neither Gentile nor Brashier testified at trial. Brashier’s only witness, his fiancee, testified as to his activities during December and January. Gentile introduced evidence to show that he was in Fresno, California, at the time when he had allegedly appeared before Amoroso in Los Angeles.
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence as to Brashier.
Appellant Brashier contends that the evidence against him was insufficient to allow the jury to conclude that he was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See
United States v. Frank,
494 F.2d
*465
145, 153 (2d Cir.), cert. denied,
II. Single or Multiple Conspiracy.
Brashier also claims that he was not a member of the conspiracy charged in the indictment. He contends that the evidence demonstrated that the individuals who had conspired to sell and pledge unauthorized securities terminated their plan shortly after S.E.C. agents searched Fidelity’s offices and found instrumen-talities of the conspiracy. Since he was not involved in any dealings with the conspirators at this point — shortly after September 21, 1973 — Brashier argues that his later assistance to Gentile could not make him a member of the conspiracy. 4 We disagree.
There was abundant evidence from which the jury could have found that the conspiracy began in 1970 and continued through the latter part of 1973 when Brashier assisted Gentile in disposing of certificates. That there was a variance in the places and means of disposition and some of those participating did not necessarily create a different conspiracy. Brashier’s ignorance of the identity or scope of activities of other conspirators would not exonerate him from inclusion in the conspiracy charged in the indictment. See
United States v. Wyler,
Brashier relies primarily upon the testimony of his co-defendant Posy to support his argument that the conspiracy charged in the indictment terminated long before Brashier’s involvement with the sale of Gentile’s securities. He maintains that Posy left the country shortly after September 21, met Gentile in Israel in November and at that time they agreed to abandon their efforts at distribution. Posy later returned to the United States to give Gentile the stock that was ultimately sold, presumably without Posy’s knowledge or consent, through Shields & Co. Posy then left the country a second time.
Posy’s testimony, however, was more equivocal. His recognition that the scheme had been discovered led him to agree with Gentile in Israel that it would be disastrous to dispose of additional stock “at this time.” Posy’s willingness to surrender to the authorities and thereby terminate his role in the conspiracy was similarly ambiguous. In response to questions from Gentile’s attorney, Posy testified that he returned the stock he held to Gentile “to hold the stock until such time that it could be given back to Mr. Reisch
or
turned over to the authorities.” (emphasis added). Posy further testified that he returned to the United States not “to come clean,” as suggested by Gentile’s attorney, but “to wait and see what was going to happen.” Thus it is clear that there was evidence to sustain the government’s contention that the conspiracy had not terminated. See
United States v. Cirillo,
III. The Pledge of Securities as a Sale.
Gentile argues that the pledge of securities to a bank does not constitute an offer or sale within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, § 17(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), 5 and that therefore he was improperly convicted on those counts of the indictment that charged he violated the securities laws by pledging fraudulently issued securities. We find support contrary to this proposition in the wording, purpose, and judicial construction of the statute and therefore reject Gentile’s argument. ,
The term “sale” is defined in the Securities Act of 1933, § 2(3), 15 U.S.C. § 77b(3) to include “every contract of sale or disposition of a security or interest in a security, for value.” There is no requirement that title pass to constitute a “sale” within the meaning of the statute. Indeed, to read “sale” so restrictively would render superfluous the latter two disjunctive phrases in the statutory definition. Since Gentile obviously obtained value in the form of bank loans for his pledge of stock, his actions fall within the strict construction that we apply to criminal statutes. See
United States v. Del Toro,
*467
This result is implicit in our decision in
S.E.C. v. Guild Films Co.,
While it was noted in the
Guild Films
case that the Securities Act of 1933 was primarily intended to protect investors,
IV. The Identification of Gentile by Amoroso.
During the trial, the government called Juanita Amoroso as a witness to testify that a party purporting to be Manuel Posy had requested her to notarize the letters authorizing the sale of the stock that was routed through Shields & Co. Amoroso was apparently not scheduled to make any in-court identification of Gentile as the person who had appeared before her some 17 months prior to trial. In fact, she had been unable to pick Gentile’s picture out of a photographic display shown to her by the Assistant United States Attorney one week before trial.
While waiting to testify, Amoroso was seated on a bench outside the courtroom. During a recess, Gentile and six to ten other men left the courtroom and entered the hallway in which Amoroso was seated and Gentile then introduced himself to another individual. Amoroso claimed that at this point she recognized Gentile as someone she had previously met. She did not immediately associate him with the person for whom she had notarized the documents. She later tes *468 tified that she had not heard Gentile introduce himself to any other party.
The Assistant United States Attorney informed Gentile’s attorney that Amoro-so had recognized Gentile and would make an in-court identification. The trial judge heard a motion to suppress in his chambers, and, after examining Amo-roso, he found that the circumstances surrounding the out-of-court identification were not so suggestive and that Amoroso’s identification was not so uncertain 7 that her testimony should be excluded.
While the attorneys were arguing the suppression motion in the judge’s chambers, Gentile spoke to Amoroso and, in an apparent attempt to shake her testimony, advised her that he had proof of his whereabouts on the day in question. The conversation, however, had the opposite effect; Amoroso stated that hearing Gentile’s voice reaffirmed her belief that he might have been Posy’s impersonator.
Amoroso’s testimony before the jury reflected her previous uncertainty. She admitted that she could not be sure that Gentile was the impersonator and that she might have seen him on other occasions.
Gentile now argues that Amoroso’s in-court identification should have been suppressed because the out-of-court identification was made outside the presence of defense counsel and in unnecessarily suggestive circumstances. We find no error in the admission of the identification. There is no claim that the out-of-court confrontation was in any way anticipated or arranged by the government. Therefore the dangers of improper influence that prompted the requirement in
United States v. Wade,
While it is obviously preferable to seclude witnesses such as Amoroso until they are called to the stand, all witnesses who testified prior to Amoroso had also been seated outside the courtroom and Gentile had not objected to this procedure.
Although the trial judge had previously indicated that he would give a cautionary instruction regarding the precarious nature of eyewitness identification, his failure to do so does not constitute reversible error. While we have emphasized the desirability of giving a properly drafted cautionary instruction on the fallibility of eyewitness identification when requested, see
United States v. Evans,
In any event, any error in the admission of Amoroso’s testimony was harmless. See
United States v. Madison,
V. The Charge.
Gentile argues that the district judge’s charge to the jury on the need to find that a defendant had knowledge of the unlawful purpose of the conspiracy in order to convict the defendant on the conspiracy charge was fatally imbalanced because it did not contain a statement that if the jury nevertheless found that the defendant actually believed that the securities involved in the scheme were not fraudulently issued, they should acquit him. The judge charged:
In determining whether a defendant acted knowingly and willfully you may consider whether the defendant deliberately closed his eyes to what otherwise would have been obvious to him, and that is a consideration of some significance in this case.
Our concern in the cases in which we have discussed the need for a balanced charge has been that the language of the charge, by implying that something less than knowledge will be sufficient to convict, may effectively lower the government’s burden of persuasion. See
United States v. Brawer,
Reading the charge to the jury as a whole, as we must,
United States v. Bright,
Although the trial judge gave no specific language in his charge on knowing participation in the conspiracy, he drew special attention to the conspiracy count of the indictment while including it in his general discussion of knowledge with respect to the substantive counts. This discussion contained a thorough and balanced instruction with respect to what *470 the government was required to prove regarding each defendant’s state of mind in order to secure a conviction. The relevant sections of the charge will suffice to demonstrate its adequacy:
I am now about to define for (sic), ladies and gentlemen, the words “knowingly” and “willfully,” and should I not have defined them earlier — I don’t think I did with respect to conspiracy — they apply to every crime charged here.
The word “knowingly” means to act purposely and deliberately. The term “willfully” means to act intentionally or with a bad purpose and to do something that the law forbids.
In other words, to convict a defendant on any count, you must find that the defendant purposely did the acts with which he is charged and did not act carelessly or negligently or through inadvertent error or mistake or something of that nature. # * * * * :}!
However misleading or deceptive a plan may be, its execution does not constitute a crime if the plan was devised in good faith.
Honesty and good faith on the part of a defendant is always a defense to the charge in these counts or any counts. An honest belief in the truth of the representations made by a defendant is a defense, however inaccurate the statements may turn out to be.
The charge adequately advised the jury that each defendant had to have actual knowledge that he was participating in a crime before he could be convicted of that crime. Our conclusion is supported by the fact that the trial judge scrupulously avoided use of the technical and confusing phrase “reckless disregard,” which caused both judge and jury difficulty in United States v. Bright, supra. While no particular word or words determine the adequacy of the charge, here the instruction relating to knowledge was given in terms of the more concrete expression “deliberate disregard,” which implies that knowledge could be inferred if the jury found that the defendant was aware of the risk that his conduct was illegal but proceeded nonetheless.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Gentile received a sentence of thirty-six months’ imprisonment, all but four months of which was suspended, and fines totaling $5,000. Brashier received a suspended sentence and a three-year probationary term.
. Of the other indicted co-conspirators, four entered pleas of guilty to one or more counts and one was found guilty after trial but has not entered an appeal.
. There was evidence that Brashier had previously managed a hedge fund, had repeatedly purchased and sold securities on his own behalf through other nominee accounts at several different brokers, and had operated a “financial services business” which assisted in the mailing of a prospectus concerning a new issue of stock by a company controlled by Gentile.
. The government responds that “(b)y its verdict, the jury . . . rejected Brashier’s contention that his acts constituted a separate conspiracy from the one charged in the indictment . . .” Government Brief at 13. This reply is unsatisfactory, however, for the very gravamen of Brashier’s complaint is that the variance between the single conspiracy charged and the multiple conspiracies that were proven unduly prejudiced the jury against him. See
Kotteakos v. United States,
. That section provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person in the offer or sale of any securities by the use of any means or instruments of transportation or communications in interstate commerce or by the use of the mails, directly or indirectly—
(1) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, or
(2) to obtain money or property by means of any untrue statement of a material fact or any omission to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, or
(3) to engage in any transaction, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon the purchaser.
.
McClure
was a 10b-5 case in which stock was pledged in consideration for the bank’s renewal of a loan to a corporation, the proceeds of which had been converted from the corporation’s use. McClure argued that her pledge of stock, which became worthless when the bank foreclosed on the corporation’s property, was a “sale” protected by the anti-fraud provisions of the Securities Exchange Act. The Fifth Circuit found that “a pledge of securities can constitute a ‘sale’ in some cases,” but that “mere acceptance of a stock pledge as collateral in a privately negotiated transaction between borrower and lender does not, of itself, bring within the scope of the federal securities acts a transaction otherwise outside their purview.”
. The trial judge determined that Amoroso’s uncertainty was relevant to her credibility rather than to her competency to testify.
