Riсhard Daniel Freeman, Robert Temp, and Alaine Carter Temp appeal their convictions in a jury trial for mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 2, and for interstate ■ transportation of fraudulently taken property, id. §§ 2314 and 2. They raise numerous challenges to the indictment, evidentiary rulings, the jury instructions, other trial events, and the cumulative effect of these alleged errors. We affirm.
*1116 I. THE FRAUDULENT SCHEME
Freeman and Mr. Temp entered an agreement in 1970 with Walter Wilson Carter, Jr., who also was indicted, but testified for the government. Freeman and Temp would locate and deal with California investors, primarily physicians and other professional persons, through Temp’s business, Diversified Monetary Systems, Inc. (DMS). Carter would obtain and operate the oil and gas properties through his partially owned corporation, Independence Drilling Corp. (IDC). DMS induced the investors to enter purchase acquisition contracts with IDC for oil property leases, workover contracts, and remedial work on the wells. DMS, itself, entered financial management contracts with the investors for a substantial annual fee. DMS sent the purchase amounts and workover charges to Carter, who acquired the leases and arranged for necessary remedial work.
Because Carter’s operations lost money, Temp and Freeman formed Continental Pacific Corp. (CPC) in 1972, with Temp as president. CPC took over all production operations and investor records by contract with IDC. Mrs. Temp 1 established and ran the CPC office in Texas; she approved all correspondence, read all incoming mail, and reviewed the accounting books. Mr. Temp moved from California to Texas in 1973 to oversee the field work with Carter and to take part in running CPC and IDC.
IDC owned around 100 lеases on oil and gas property at a time. The appealed convictions arise from the sale to investors of seven leases that Carter, IDC, and CPC never owned, although Carter had negotiated to buy them. Between July 1971 and December 1974 Freeman and, in a few cases, Mr. Temp sold those seven leases for a total of $767,447.99 to about forty-five investors. Mrs. Temp knew of these sales and prepared the paperwork accompanying the leases sent to the investors. In connection with the nonowned leases appellants also chаrged investors workover fees of $814,610.00 purportedly to maximize the petroleum production, and sent completion letters to the investors even though appellants did not expend that money on those particular properties. Mrs. Temp directed preparation of the completion letters. In fact, IDC and CPC commingled all the investors’ funds in the general operating fund and apparently arbitrarily fixed net production returns to approximate the investors’ payments on loans incurred in buying the leases. Appellants sent the investors production reports on the seven nonowned wells, although some did not produce oil or gas and none of the product accrued to the investors’ benefit.
The superseding indictment charged Freeman, Mr. Temp, Mrs. Temp, and Carter with sixteen counts of mail fraud and twelve counts of interstate transportation of fraudulently taken property. After a five-week trial, the jury convicted all three appellants of eight counts of mail fraud and seven counts of interstate transportation; it also convicted Mr. Temp and Mrs. Temp of one other count of mail fraud and one of interstate transportation. The mail fraud convictions were based on transmission through the mail of production memoranda and another document about the nonowned properties from IDC to four investors in 1974 and 1975. The interstate transportation convictions were based on transfer of checks for interests in the nonowned properties from four investors to IDC in 1973 and 1974. 2
II. THE INDICTMENT
Appellants argue that the indictment did not charge an offense and that it lacked the necessary specificity. They did not raise these objections in the court below. Their contentiоn that the indictment did not charge an offense may still be raised, Fed. R.Crim.P. 12(b)(2), but it is without merit. The indictment charged that appellants *1117 made false, fraudulent, and misleading statements that IDC owned or operated several nonowned leases and would spend the workover charges on those specific lease interests to produce income for the investors, and it alleged that appellants sold those nonowned leases to the investors and failed to apply the workover charges to those properties. The indictment also listed particular mailings tо those investors and check transfers across state lines from those investors. In assessing the sufficiency of the indictment, we reprint appellants’ own summary of the first count of the indictment in the margin 3 and refer to it in the remainder of this section.
The essential elements of an indictment for mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, are “(1) a scheme to defraud (2) which involves a use of the mails (3) for the purpose of executing the scheme.”
United States v. Kent,
The essential elements of an indictment for interstate . transportation of fraudulently taken checks (or similar property), 18 U.S.C. § 2314 (paragraphs 1 and 2), are (1) interstate transportation of a stolen, converted, or fraudulently taken check of at least $5,000 value (2) with fraudulent intеnt.
See United States v. Driscoll,
Appellants’ contention that the indictment lacked the specificity required by the sixth amеndment was waived by their failure to object before trial.
United States v. Varner,
Appellants also charge that all twelve jurors may not have found proof of any particular fraudulent scheme, see
Unit
*1119
ed States v. Gipson,
Freeman, Mr. Temp, and Mrs. Temp also argue that “this court cannot say that the offense proved was the offense charged,” and that the trial court “amended the indictment and permitted conviction of conspiracy that was not charged.” The argument fails, however, because the indictment charged appellants with selling non-owned leases and collecting workover amounts for them, a charge that was supported by proof at trial, and the convictions were based on counts detailing the implementation of that scheme. Also, as in
United States v. Baldarrama,
III. EVIDENTIARY RULINGS
Appellants argue that admission of certain testimony of Cliff Miller, the former president of CPC, violated the attorney-client privilege. See Fed.R.Evid. 501. Citing pages 1801-1810 of the transcript, appellants assert that Miller testified that Stephen Nye, the attorney for Mr. Temp, CPC, DMC, and IDC instructed him during January 1974, when he was president of CPC, to hide some of IDC’s corporate records in a warehouse before the SEC enforced a subpoena in its investigation of CPC and IDC. The transcript reveals, however, that the jury had retired from thе courtroom and that the testimony specifically cited by appellants was not given in the jury’s presence. After the jury returned to the courtroom, Miller affirmed that he had met with Carter, Mr. Temp, and Nye in January 1974 and testified generally that an upcoming Securities and Exchange Commission investigation had been discussed. He named Mr. Temp as the person who had given him his orders. When asked whether Mr. Temp had given him any instructions as to any corporate records, he replied,
Yes, we went to Independence Drilling Corporation and removed two boxes of tax recоrds from I.D.C. and removed them, Bob Temp and I removed them to an office, I mean a garage, rather, about four or five or six blocks from the office that we had for a motorcycle shop.
In his testimony before the jury, Miller revealed no confidential communications. Miller’s statement that he and Mr. Temp moved boxes of corporate records is the revelation of an act in which he participated, not of a confidential disclosure. “An attorney’s involvement in, or recommenda
*1120
tion of, a transaction does not place a cloak of secrecy around all the incidents of such a transaction.”
In re Fischel,
Appellants also challenge the district judge’s rulings in admitting coconspirator declarations, testimony about securities law violations, impressions of witnesses, and letters from investors. They disagree with exclusion of some intent evidence and some diary pages.
Freeman, Mr. Temp, and Mrs. Temp argue that the court improperly admitted hearsay statements of each appellate against the others before their membership in a conspiracy was established by independent evidence. This circuit’s decision in
United States v. James,
Appellants contend that the trial court should not have admitted their former attorney’s testimony about a desist and refrain order from the California corporations commissioner prohibiting them from selling leases without qualifying under state law and about the attorney’s correspondence with the California commissioner. The attorney sought to show appellants’ good faith in selling leases by testifying that they qualified the investment packages under the California securities law. The prosecution attempted on cross-examination to controvert their good faith by showing that appellants actually consulted that attorney only after they received a desist and refrain order from the California commissioner against their sales of unqualified securities.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). Appellants objected to use of the California order and correspondence to lead into testimony about an Oklahoma action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission and a consent decree that ensued.
See United States v. Cook,
Freeman, Mr. Temp, and Mrs. Temp contend that admission of the testimony of three former employees of CPC and IDC violated the restriction on opinion evidence. Two witnesses testified about their “impression” and “understanding” of appellants’ relationship to each other and to the different companies, and the third gave his opinion about whether a consultant actually had run tests on an oil well. Federal Rule of Evidence 701 limits lay testimony to “those opinions or inferences which are (a) rationally based on the perception of the witness and (b) helpful to a clear understanding of his testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.” Fed.R.Evid; 701. The challenged testimony falls within that exception; and the district judge did not abuse his discretion in admitting it.
See, e. g., United States v. Mandujano,
*1121
Appellants suggest that three letters written by investors or their attorneys were hearsay, unauthenticated, or irrelevant. The first letter was prepared and sent to Carter by the attorney of a DMS investor, Dr. Maurice Fox, from information supplied to him by Fox after meeting with Carter and Mr. Temp. It was sufficiently authenticated by Fox’s testimony.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 901. It was properly admitted as showing the existence of investor complaints and, because Mrs. Temp screened Carter’s mail, as weakening appellants’ defense of ignorance and good faith. The second letter was sent from Fox to Carter in January 1976. It was relevant because it was written in response to a complеtion letter of October 1975 that fell within the scope of the indictment. The final letter was purportedly written by an investor, who did not testify, in response to an IDC letter, and was used to cross-examine Mr. Temp concerning his defense of good faith.
See generally, e. g., United States v. Bibbs,
Appellants challenge exclusion of their proffered evidence of intent. (1) They sought to introduce a book on oil property investments given to investors. The court excluded the book as irrelevant when the investor who testified that he was given the book also stated that he had told Freeman that he would not have time to read it. The court erred in refusing to admit the book because presenting copies to investors was relevant to good faith, but the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 103(a). Freeman and Mr. Temp both testified that they gave copies to each investor, so the “essence of desired evidence [was] before the jury,” and “any harm in the original exclusion was eliminated.”
See United States v. Sanfilippo,
They also object to exclusion of pages from the business diary kept by Carter and regularly sent to Mrs. Temp. The district court concluded that the diary pages were unauthenticated because appellants refused to call Carter for that purpose even though he was available. The diary pages, however, were sufficiently authenticated by Mrs. Temp.
See United States v. White,
IV. TRIAL EVENTS
Appellants contend that the district court failed to recognize a conflict of interest that denied them the effective assistance of counsel. The district judge inquired extensively during their arraignment into possible conflicts of interest from joint representation, and appellants knowingly and intelligently executed written waivers of objection to any conflict.
See United States v. Garcia,
Appellants argue that the trial judge improperly commented on the credibility of two witnesses. After appellants’ counsel had asked Carter numerous questions about commingling of funds that Carter had admitted, the judge said, “I think he is clear, counsel. There’s no use in pushing that further. He has made it clear.” When another witness used a chart for complex figures, the judge said that the chart was not evidence, “but just . . , a summary of the explanations that the witness gave you as best he could compile those figures based upon the documents that have been introduced into evidence.” Neither comment reflected in any wаy on the credibility of those witnesses.
Appellants suggest that the government’s closing argument placed before the jury damaging facts that were not in evidence, were never established in the trial, and prejudicially bore on intent.
See Edwards v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
V. JURY INSTRUCTIONS
Appellants argue that the jury instructions referring to “conspiracy” were erroneous. They proposed a charge on co-conspirator declarations, and used the word “conspiracy” throughout. The district judge discussed the requested instruction at a bench conference and said, “I want to alert both counsel, you both used the word conspiracy in your requested charges. You both used that term interchangeably, this scheme as used in the statute, and if so, that’s agreeable with the Court.” The judge then added the phrase “or scheme” after each reference to conspiracy and gave copies of his Apollo instructions to both counsel. The final instructions were as follows:
With respect to the conspiracy or scheme as alleged in the indictment you should first determine, from all of the testimony and evidence in the case, whether or not the conspiracy or scheme existed as charged. If you conclude that a conspiracy or scheme did exist as alleged, you should next determine whether the particular defendant under consideration willfully became a member of such conspiracy or scheme.
In determining whether a defendant was a member of an alleged conspiracy or scheme, however, the jury should consider only that evidence, if any, pertaining to his own acts and statements.
*1123 On the other hand, if and when it does apрear, if it should so appear, beyond a reasonable doubt from the evidence in the case that a conspiracy or scheme did exist as charged, and that the defendant under consideration was one of its members, then the statements and acts knowingly made and done, during the conspiracy or scheme and in furtherance of its objects, by any other proven member of the conspiracy or scheme, may be considered as evidence against the defendant under consideration even though he or she was not present to hear the statements made or see the acts done.
Appellants objected at the bench conference to some testimony offered to establish a prima facie case of conspiracy, and requested a “running objection to all of this matter,” but the district court denied that request. They failed to object further at the conference and said that they had no objection to the jury instructions; - therefore, we will not reverse on that issue in the absence of plain error.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 30. Defendants need not be charged with a substantive conspiracy count to justify use of one defendant’s statements made in furtherance of the “scheme or artifice to defraud” against the other defendants. Co-conspirator declarations may be attributed as evidence to other conspirators, once the existence of the conspiracy has been established under
Apollo
or
James,
regardless of whether the underlying offenses being proved include conspiracy.
See United States v. Amrep Corp.,
Freeman, Mr. Temp, and Mrs. Temp also contend that the jury instructions on intent were erroneous. In its instructions the court stated in relevant part,
Intent ordinarily may not be proved directly, because there is no way of fathoming or scrutinizing the operations of the humаn mind. However, it is reasonable to infer that a person ordinarily intends the natural and probable consequences of his or her knowing acts. The jury may draw the inference that a defendant intended all of the consequences which one standing in like circumstances and possessing like knowledge should reasonably have expected to result in any intentional act or conscious omission.
(Emphasis added.) Appellants argue that a reasonable juror would have understood the italicized language as requiring the juror to draw the inference of intent, at lеast unless appellants proved the contrary. They did not object, and can only obtain reversal on appeal based on the jury instruction if it contained plain error, Fed.R.Crim.P. 30, when reviewed as a whole rather than in single isolated sentences,
United States v. Roberts,
VI. CUMULATIVE EFFECT
Appellants assert that the cumulative effect of the errors discussed and other aspects of the trial denied them a fair trial.
See, e. g., United States
v.
Labarbera,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Alaine Carter Temp actually was Alalne Carter until 1976, when she married Mr. Temp, but is referred to for uniformity’s sake as Mrs. Temp.
. One interstate transportation count involved oil property that was owned. Freeman was not convicted on that count.
. A typical mail fraud count is count two, which realleges the allegations of count one, and charges that
On or about May 21, 1973, in the Western District of Texas, Defendants WALTER WILSON CARTER, JR.
ROBERT TEMP
RICHARD DANIEL FREEMAN
and
ALAINE CARTER TEMP
aided and abetted by each other for the purpose of executing the aforesaid scheme and artifice to defraud, and to obtain money by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises, and attempting to do so, wilfully and knowingly caused to be placed in an authorized depository for mail matter, an envelope addressed to Mr. Phil Milano, 939 Detroit Avenue, Concord, California 94520, which еnvelope contained a seven-page oil and gas lease production report issued by Independence Drilling Corporation for the month of March, said envelope and contents to be sent and delivered by the United States Postal Service, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 2 and 1341.
, A typical interstate transportation count is count one, which charges that
On or about December 10, 1973, in the Western District of Texas, Defendants WALTER WILSON CARTER, JR„
ROBERT TEMP,
RICHARD DANIEL FREEMAN,
AND
ALAINE CARTER TEMP
aided and abetted by each other for the purpose of executing the aforesaid schemе and artifice to defraud and to obtain money by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises, and attempting to do so, wilfully and knowingly caused to be transported in interstate commerce from the State of California to San Antonio, Texas, a check dated December 5, 1973, drawn on the account of Carl A. Ball, Jr., at the Security Pacific National Bank, made payable to Independence Drilling Corp., in the amount of $36,000, knowing the same to have been taken by fraud, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 2 and 2314.
. We do not consider whether appellants affirmatively waived any objection to the instruction by proposing a substantially similar charge.
