Rаymond Valenti, as he himself admits, was a good carpenter but a bad record-keeper. He kept no records of expenses, deductions or income from his carpentry business. He did not have a bank account and he dealt exclusively in cash. Beginning as early as 1970, Valenti also failed to pay his federal income taxes. After several years of assisting him in preparing late returns and negotiating settlements for unpaid taxes, the IRS lost its patience and went after Valenti with criminal charges. A jury convicted Va *329 lenti of most of the charges, and he now appeals those convictions and several aspects of his sentence. The government cross-appeals the district court’s decision to vacate the jury’s verdict and enter judgment of acquittal on one count.
I. Facts
Between 1988 and 1993, the tax years at issue in this case, Valenti worked as a carpentry subcontractor on the construction of new hоuses in the Rockford, Illinois area. Valenti made a point of structuring his finances so as to keep the IRS ignorant of much of his income. He used cash for everything from paying his employees to paying for expensive gambling vacations to Las Vegas. When he received checks as payment for a job, he cashed them at the banks on which they were drawn. Sometimes his friend Eugene Ray, a general contractor for whom Valenti worked, cashed checks for Valenti. Ray would also deposit Valenti’s checks into his account and then withdraw the money in cash for Valenti.
Valenti’s reason for not having a bank account and using only cash was not just an eccentric aversion to banks. The IRS was his reason, and he went to great lengths to keep his financial information from the IRS. In 1987, Valenti was cashing a cheek for $10,100.00 when he learned of the new federal requirement for filling out a Currency Transaction Report (CTR) for cash transactions exceeding ten thousand dollars. The next time Valenti was issued a check for more than ten thousand dollars, the company issuing the check at his request voided it and instead issued three separate cheeks, each for less than ten thousand dollars. Valenti cashed two checks one day and the third check the next day, thus avoiding filling out a CTR, which the IRS would have received. Valenti used similar methods to avoid the CTR in later transactions.
Naturally, Valenti pаid his employees in cash. He also did not keep records of then-pay or withhold income taxes from it. He did not send W-2 or 1099 forms to his employees or to the IRS. Valenti told one employee that because he was not withholding taxes, the effect was that the worker made three dollars more per hour. He also gave them additional compensation in the form of meals, paid for in cash. Valenti indicated to his employees that they should not worry about paying income taxes because their wages were not being “claimed.” Consequently, most of them did not report the wages they received from Valenti, and several of them did not file tax returns while they worked for Valenti. Valenti felt no responsibility for any tax problems his employees might face as a consequence, however; Valenti stated at trial that they were obligated to pay their own taxes and should have filed their returns.
Valenti took in and handed out cash without keeping any records of where the money came from or where it was going. Every five to seven years, the IRS would locate him and initiate the process of collecting back taxes and levying on his home. With the help of accountants and attorneys, the IRS, being unusually patient, would help Valenti piece together his income and expenses. In 1979, the IRS recovered $31,772.56 in back taxes from Valenti in exchange for a release of a levy on his home.
Not only did Valenti structure his transactions to keep the IRS from discovering his income, but he bragged to others about not paying taxes. He would laugh and say he could always find a loophole to get around the IRS. This bravado did not mean he was entirely confident, however. After Valenti learned the IRS was investigating him for criminal tax evasion charges, he told employee James Childress that if Childress talked to the IRS, he (Childress) would disappear. When Kenneth DeVlieger, аnother of Valenti’s employees and his son-in-law, received a summons to testify about Valenti before the IRS, Valenti told him that he could assert his Fifth Amendment privilege, because DeVleiger had not reported the income he received from Valenti. DeVlieger took this statement to be both advice and a warning; Valenti had told him in the past how a person had tried to turn Valenti in and had gotten into tax trouble while Valenti did not. Valenti told DeVlieger that after he testifiеd, Valenti would be waiting for him outside the IRS office. Valenti also approached Ada *330 Ricker, his ex-wife, from whom he had had a bitter divorce and whom he had not seen in years. He told her that he belonged to the Mafia. Valenti poked Ricker in the chest and warned her that if she talked to the IRS, she would be in trouble, too, because the investigation was going back to the years when they were married.
In spite of Valenti’s attempts to scare potential witnesses, the government succeeded in indicting him for tax evasion. The superseding indictment charged Valenti with four counts of income tax evasion for tax years 1988 through 1991, six counts of failure to file income tax returns for tax years 1988 through 1993, one count of endeavoring to obstruct and impede the due administration of income tax laws, and one count of intimidation of a witness. The government dropped the intimidation of a witness count, and a jury convicted Valenti on the remaining eleven counts. Before sentencing, however, the district court vacated the jury’s verdict on Count 11 (endeavoring to obstruct or impede the due administration of income tax laws) and entered a judgment of acquittal. The court, having found that Valenti attempted to perjure himself and obstruct justice, then sentenced Valenti to concurrent terms of 26 months’ imprisonment on the tax evasion counts, followed by 3 years of supervised release, and concurrent terms оf 12 months’ imprisonment on the failure to file counts, followed by 1 year of supervised release for each count.
On appeal, Valenti claims the evidence was insufficient to convict him. He also appeals the court’s use of his earlier relevant conduct in calculating his sentence and its refusal when calculating the total tax loss to credit his evidence estimating deductions and exemptions. The government appeals the district court’s dеcision to vacate the jury’s verdict and enter judgment of acquittal on Count 11. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court on the sufficiency of the evidence and sentencing issues, and reverse and remand for sentencing on Count 11.
II.
We begin with the government’s cross-appeal. Count 11 specifically alleged that Valenti “corruptly endeavored to obstruct and impede the due administration of Title 26, United States Code, by causing and attempting to cause others not to talk to or cooperate with Internal Revenue Service employees in the tax-related investigations of defendant....”
The statute on which Count 11 was based states:
(a) Corrupt or forcible interference.— Whoever corruptly 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 corruрtly 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, shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined not more than $5,000, or imprisoned not more than 3 years, or both, except that if the offense is committed only by threats of force, the person convicted thereof shall be fined not more than $3,000, or imprisoned not more than 1 year, or both. The term “threats of force,” as used in this subsection, means threats of bodily harm to the officer or employee of the United States or to a member of his family.
26 U.S.C. § 7212(a) (emphasis added). Count 11 charged Valenti only with “corruptly” obstructing or impeding, and not with obstructing or impeding “by force or threats of force,” as the statute also allows. At trial, the government presented evidence of Valenti’s conversations with Childress, DeVheger and Ricker, in which he tried to dissuade them from сooperating with the IRS, to prove Valenti’s guilt on Count 11. During deliberations, the jury sent the district court a question, which stated:
Would you please come and explain and clarify Title 26, Section 7212. We are unclear as to whether it means to include just the physical threats that Mr. Valenti was accused of or could also include other ways of impediment in Count 11.
*331
After consulting with the attorneys, the district court, relying on
United States v. Popkin,
Corruptly as set forth in the statute is used for the purpose of forbidding thоse acts done with the intent to secure an unlawful benefit either for oneself or for another.
Not long after receiving this instruction, the jury returned verdicts of guilty on all eleven counts.
Valenti filed a Motion to Reconsider and to Dismiss Count 11, arguing that the response to the jury question during deliberations constituted a constructive judicial amendment of the indictment which prejudiced him because it amounted to more than a mere variance between the charge and thе proof. The court granted this motion. It held that “corruptly” could not include within its definition “by force or threats of force,” because those were other methods of committing the offense, set forth in the statute disjunctively. In the district court’s view, the government did not prove what it alleged in the indictment because it focused its proof on Valenti’s alleged threats, instead of on any “corrupt” actions.
We review the district court’s construction of the relevant statute
de novo. United States v. Montoya,
After examining the indictment and the evidence presented to prove Count 11, we conclude that the district court, though not without some reasons, was nevertheless incorrect in holding that the evidence proved something different than what the indictment alleged. Count 11 charged that Valenti violated § 7212(a) by “causing and attempting to cause others not to talk to or cooperate with” the IRS, and that he did this “corruptly.” The government conclusively proved that Valenti’s actions were designed to cause his ex-emрloyees and ex-wife not to talk to or cooperate with the IRS. There are no details in the indictment to which the proof did not conform.
See United States v. Willoughby,
Valenti spoke to Childress, DeVlieger and Ricker all with the specific purpose of convincing them not to cooрerate with the IRS. This attempt to silence witnesses clearly satisfies the definition of “corruptly.” Valenti did it intending to secure an unlawful benefit for himself, that is, he attempted to silence them for no other reason than to obstruct the IRS investigation. He also used threats of force to accomplish this goal; for example, he told Childress that if Childress testified about Valenti, Childress would disappear, and he told Ricker that he was in the Mafia, implying that she might suffer retaliation if she testified. But Valenti also used more subtle methods to convince these witnesses not to testify. He insinuated that if they testified, they might also get into trouble with the IRS, but as he had no power directly to make them targets of an IRS investigation, these were empty “threats of force” at best. His conversations with DeVlieger did not involve direct threats of force, either. Knowing that DeVlieger had not reported the income he received from Valenti, he told DeVleiger to plead thе Fifth and that he would be waiting outside after DeVlieger testified. But though Valenti had told DeVlieger in the past that another person who tried to turn him in had gotten into trouble, he did not repeat that story when he talked to DeVlieger about his summons, nor did he *332 imply that he would harm DeVlieger if DeVlieger testified. He may have counted on DeVlieger’s remembering the story, but his suggestion that DeVlieger take the Fifth was, on its face, just that — a suggestion which, if taken, would have benefited Valenti by keeping important information from the IRS. It was not a threat of force.
That Valenti tried to secure an unlawful benefit for himself partly through the use of threats does not diminish the fact that his actions were also corrupt within the definition given by the court. “Corruptly” refers to the mental state with which the actions are performed,
see United States v. Hanson,
III.
A.
We turn now to Valenti’s appeals. First, Valenti claims the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to supрort his convictions for tax evasion and failure to file tax returns. When evaluating a sufficiency of the evidence claim, we must determine “whether after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson,
‘Willfulness” is defined for the purposes of the crimes of tax evasion and the failure to file tax returns as “a voluntary, intentional violation of a known legаl duty.”
Cheek v. United States,
Valenti does not dispute that the law imposed a duty on him or that he knew of this duty. He had filed tax returns in the past and he had an accountant to assist him in preparing his taxes. Valenti also had many dealings with the IRS, which for many years attempted to collect Valenti’s unpaid taxes without filing criminal charges. Vаlenti claims, however, that none of the evidence proved that he voluntarily and intentionally violated his duty to pay taxes. He claims that by coming every few years to settle his tax debt but never bringing him current on his taxes, the IRS actually misled him into thinking that he did not have to file his tax returns. He came to believe, he states, that this was the IRS’ procedure for “people like him,” and that he did not have to file his tax returns himself because in a few years the IRS would be back to “settle uр.” The jury rejected this argument, as do we. There is evidence directly contradicting Valenti’s portrayal of himself as an unwitting innocent who naively trusted the IRS to take care of him. At the top of the list is certainly Valenti’s habit of bragging to others about not paying taxes and always finding a loophole to get around the IRS. Furthermore, the evidence also revealed that Valenti did not open a bank account specifically because he did not want to pаy taxes. He also deliberately structured his financial transactions to avoid *333 filling out CTR forms, which would have alerted the IRS to unreported income. We hold there was clearly sufficient evidence of Valenti’s willfulness.
Valenti next claims that the evidence was insufficient to prove he acted affirmatively in evading tax.' A key part of proving tax evasion is demonstrating that the defendant committed an affirmative act constituting an evasion or an attempted evasion of tax.
Sansone v. United States,
First, the government clearly established Valenti’s penchant for using cash. He paid for everything in cash. As we hаve already stated, part of the reason he used cash all the time was that he did not have a bank account, and he didn’t have a bank account because he wanted to conceal his financial condition. He directed his friend, Eugene Ray, to deposit Valenti’s cheeks into Ray’s bank account and then withdraw the money in cash and give it to Valenti. When done with the intent to evade, the extensive use of cash can be an affirmative act, evеn though the use of cash alone is far from being criminal.
See id.; United States v. Holovachka,
B.
Next, Valenti argues that the district court erred when it calculаted the total tax loss for which Valenti was responsible, because it refused to give weight to Valenti’s testimony that he was entitled to certain deductions and exemptions from income during tax years 1988 to 1993. We review a district court’s factual findings under the Sentencing Guidelines for clear error,
United States v. Jackson,
In cases involving tax evasion and failure to file tax returns, thе sentencing court may use the government’s evidence of the total tax loss to determine a defendant’s base offense level. U.S.S.G. § 2Tl.l(a)(l). For tax years 1988 through 1991, the years for which Valenti was convicted of tax evasion, the district court used the tax loss amounts that the government proved at trial. For tax years 1986,1987,1992 and 1993, however, the court used U.S.S.G. § 2T1.1(c)(2) to measure the tax loss at twenty percent of Valenti’s gross income. The total tax loss came to $103,210, resulting in a base оffense level of 14.
Valenti claims the court’s use of § 2Tl.l(e)(2) was in error; he argues this was not the most accurate way of determining total tax loss, and that instead, the court should have credited his testimony and exhibits which demonstrated certain business and personal deductions. He claims the government measured his annual gross income *334 for the years 1988 through 1993 at over $600,000 without giving him any credit for legitimate business expenses such as the purchase of tools, scaffolding, gasoline, ladders, etc. Using the exhibits he presented demonstrating these expenses, he asserts, would have offered a more reasonable and credible way of estimating his gross income for those tax years.
The district court, however, rejected Valenti’s testimony as speculative and incredible, and noted that by contrast, the government had tried to accurately measure his expenses. The court also noted that Valenti likely got off easy under the government’s mеthod because additional unreported income probably existed. Because the district court was in the best position to judge Valenti’s credibility, and because a fact-finder’s choice between two permissible options cannot be clearly erroneous,
United States v. Yusuff,
C.
Finally, Valenti claims that at sentencing, the district court violated his right to due process when it considered his gross income for tax years 1986 and 1987 as relevant conduct. Because those tax years fell outside the statute of limitations, the government could not prosecute him for his failure to pay those taxes, and Valenti claims the court should not have included that income when it computed his sentence. We review statutory interpretations of the Sentencing Guidelines
de novo. Carmack,
It is well established that in determining a defendant’s sentence a court may consider а broad range of information, including uncharged crimes, crimes where charges have been dismissed, and crimes for which the defendant has been acquitted.
See United States v. Ritsema,
This court has recently joined six other circuits in holding that the statute of limitations does not limit what actions a court may consider as relevant conduct when sentencing a defendant.
Matthews,
IV.
In conclusion, we affirm Valenti’s conviction and sentence for Counts 1 through 10 for his egregious tax conduct, but we reverse the district court’s judgment of acquittal on Count 11. We therefore remand Count 11 for reinstatement of the jury’s verdict of conviction and for sentencing.
Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded.
