Robert J. Ringer appeals his 18 U.S.C. § 1001 conviction for making false statements to federal officers. At trial, Ringer moved for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that venue was improper in the Southern District of Indiana. The district court denied this motion, finding that venue was proper. In this direct appeal, Ringer argues that he did not waive his right to claim improper venue and appeals the district court’s order denying his motion for acquittal. For the reasons given below, we affirm the district court and uphold Ringer’s conviction.
I. BACKGROUND
Ringer was arrested for accepting delivery of approximately 295 pounds of marijuana and indicted on a charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana. He agreed to plead guilty and provide drug trafficking information about other individuals in exchange for a government motion requesting a lesser sentence. During several debriefing sessions with the government, Ringer informed law enforcement agents of the drug trafficking activities of three friends. A federal agent followed up on Ringer’s information and confirmed these initial statements. Ringer pled guilty as charged and was sentenced to 46 months’ imprisonment, 14 *790 months less than the 60-month mandatory minimum sentence.
While preparing to indict Ringer’s friends, federal agents traveled to the federal prison in Manchester, Kentucky, where Ringer was serving his sentence, to reconfirm the information Ringer provided earlier. Instead of confirmation, Ringer recanted his previous statements and disavowed any knowledge of his friends’ drug trafficking activities. He also said that he would testify to whatever the agents wished, nullifying his value as a government witness. Without his crucial testimony, the government had to drop the grand jury proceedings against Ringer’s friends.
Ringer was then indicted in the Southern District of Indiana with making a false statement to federal officers. During his trial, Ringer filed a motion for acquittal due to improper venue at the close of the government’s case. He argued that the government proved that he made false statements in the Eastern District of Kentucky but not in the Southern District of Indiana. The district court denied Ringer’s motion and he was found guilty by a jury.
II. ANALYSIS
Ringer appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal due to improper venue, which we review de novo.
See United States v. Blassingame,
A. Waiver
The government argues that Ringer waived his venue challenge because he did not object until the conclusion of the government’s case. A claim of improper venue is waived if the issue is apparent on the face of the indictment and an objection is not made before the close of the government’s case.
See United States v. Brandon,
Ringer’s indictment charged that “in the Southern District of Indiana, and elsewhere,” he “did knowingly and willfully make a false, fraudulent, and fictitious material statement and representation ... in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1001.” According to Ringer, the indictment’s open-ended geographic scope gave no hint of a venue problem and the government’s failure to present statements made in the Southern District of Indiana was not apparent before the government put forward its case. Therefore he claims that he was not put on notice through the indictment of a possible venue problem. We agree and find that he did not waive his right to challenge venue because after the government rested, he properly objected in his motion for acquittal.
See John,
B. Improper Venue
Ringer argues that according to the general venue rule, venue is only proper in the Eastern District of Kentucky because that is where the false statements were uttered, and therefore, where they were “begun, continued, or completed,” in the words of 18 U.S.C. § 3237(a), the venue
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statute.
See United States v. Cabrales,
Ringer was charged with making false statements in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001, which requires proof that he (1) made a statement; (2) that was false; (3) that was material; (4) that was made knowingly and willingly; and (5) that concerned a matter within the jurisdiction of a federal department or agency.
See United States v. Hoover,
In this case, Ringer made false statements while incarcerated in a federal prison in Manchester, Kentucky. He claims that the false statements began, continued, and were completed in the Eastern District of Kentucky. Therefore, according to § 3237, venue is only proper in Kentucky, even though the statements affected proceedings in Indiana. Ringer further argues that the continuing offense theory 1 does not apply to his situation because the acts comprising the alleged crime began, continued, and were completed only in the Eastern District of Kentucky. Although we agree that when Ringer made false statements, he never left Kentucky, it does not follow that what transpired in Indiana is irrelevant for venue purposes.
The district court relied on
United States v. Frederick,
As described above, one of the elements of an 18 U.S.C. § 1001 offense is materiality of the statement. As with all
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other elements, materiality must be proven to a jury beyond reasonable doubt.
See United States v. Gaudin,
The Southern District of Indiana’s strong link to Ringer’s conduct makes it relevant to determining venue, not as an explicit geographic element, as in
Frederick,
but as a place where events took place that were necessary to establish materiality. Venue is only improper “if the only acts that occurred in that district do not provide evidence of the elements of the charged crime.”
Ochoa,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district court is Affiemed.
Notes
. Venue for continuing offenses is proper in any of the districts where part of the crime was committed.
See United States v. Tingle,
. If Ringer had decided to welsh on his agreement with the government' via mail, this case would be much more clear-cut, since it is well-established that false statement prosecutions can be brought in the district where a letter containing the false statement is received,
see, e.g., Cabrales,
. The importance of the Southern District of Indiana in establishing materiality also distinguishes Ringer's situation from that in
Cab-rales,
a money laundering case where the transactions were made in Florida, while the attempted prosecution was conducted in Missouri, where the funds originated. In
Cab-rales,
the conduct in Missouri took place before the money laundering began, and relying on the continuing offense theory, the Supreme Court determined that the offense was not "begun, continued, or completed," in the language of 18 U.S.C. § 3237(a).
