Fern appeals his jury conviction for violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001 1 by making a materially false statement to an Internal Revenue Service Tax Auditor. 2 He asserts that § 1001 is inapplicable within the parameters of this case; that it was error for the Court to hold that his statement was material; that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction; and that Fern was never identified as the person who made the false statement. We disagree and affirm.
When the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the Government,
Glasser v. United States,
Fern was a practicing accountant. On April 19,1974 he and an investment partner executed an agreement to provide the New Testament Baptist Church with $125,000 in gifts. On April 25,1974 Fern and his partner purchased property from Dade Christian School, a sister organization of the church. On that date $50,000 was paid to the church.
In late December 1974, Fern asked his client Brumer if he would make a $25,000 *1272 contribution to the church which would be tax deductible. He told Brumer that the money would be used to pay off pledges to the church in place of a mortgage, and that the money would be paid off at the time of the sale of the property. Brumer made out his check to the church for $25,000 and gave it to Fern, who delivered it to the church. The church treated the check as a contribution, and cancelled the $75,000 indebtedness of Fern in exchange for the Brumer check.
In January 1975, Brumer decided not to claim his $25,000 payment as a charitable deduction and asked Fern for reрayment. On Fern’s partnership tax return the $25,-000 was listed as a liability. When Fern sold the property he had acquired from the church on April 1, 1975, Fern gave Brumer a check for $25,000, which included a notation that it was for repayment of a loan.
In March 1975 (before the repayment of $25,000 from Fern to Brumer), Fern suggested that Brumer take the $25,000 as a charitable deduction. Brumer told Fern that he did not want to take it as a tax deduction and that it was not to be claimed on his 1974 tax return.
In the spring of 1976, the Internal Revenue notified Brumer that it would audit his 1974 return, having challenged deductions claimed by Brumer for air conditioning repair and a part of his daughter’s wedding expense. Fern, attended the audit interview on May 17, 1976 with Tax Auditor Wilson. After Wilson indicated that she would disallow the challеnged deductions, Fern stated that Brumer had found a deduction that he had not claimed on his tax return and that he, Fern, would like to submit it to her. He said that it was a contribution, and handed Wilson a copy of a cancelled check made out to the New Testament Baptist Church in the amount of $25,-000. Wilson examined the check, marked it into her worksheet, checked a rough сopy of Brumer’s 1975 return given to her by Fern to ascertain whether the payment had been claimed for that year, and then told Fern she would accept it as a charitable contribution.
After this interview Wilson telephoned and wrote Fern requesting further verification of the contribution. By mail she received a copy of a letter from the church to Brumer thanking him for the $25,000 gift and a letter directly from the church erroneously indicating that no contribution had been received from Brumer.
As a result of the conflicting letters from the church, Internal Revenue Service Auditor Eddins called Fern and asked if there was a contribution made by Brumer. Fern told him there was a contribution made to the church but that Brumer was uncertain whether or not he would take credit for it. Later Fern told Eddins that after discussing the matter further with Brumer they had decided not to claim a deduction. However, such a conversation between Fern and Brumer had not taken place after the audit.
Fern first urges that he could not be prosecuted under § 1001 because the application of the statute in this case would reach a patently absurd result. In any event, it is argued, the Government should be required to proceed under the more specific, tax-related misdemeanor statute, 26 U.S.C. § 7207. We find no merit to these contentions.
Fern’s absurdity-result argument rests upon
Sorrells v. United States,
Lifting this sentence out of context, Fern argues that to apply § 1001 here creates the absurd result of swallowing up the perjury statute contrary to Congressional intent. 3 We disagree.
*1273 Sorrells was careful to point out that “the case lies outside of the purview of the Act” and that “its general words should not be construed to demand a proceeding . .. abhorent to the sense of justice.”
Quite unlike
Sorrells
the opposite is true here. The purpose of § 1001 is clearly to protect the Government from fraud and deceit. The reach of the statute covers all materially fаlse statements, including non-monetary fraud, made to any branch of the Government.
United States v. Bramblett,
that is capable of affecting or influencing the exercise of a government function. United States v. Goldfine,538 F.2d 815 , 820 (9 Cir.1976); United States v. McGough,510 F.2d 598 , 602 (5 Cir.1975). That, as here, the government is not actually influenced by the statement is immaterial. Goldfine,538 F.2d at 820-21 . Accord, [U nited States v.] Beer, 518 F.2d [168,] at 172 [ (5 Cir.1975) ] (dictum). The potential effect on the Government need not involve pecuniary loss. United States v. Gilliland,312 U.S. 86 , 93,61 S.Ct. 518 ,85 L.Ed. 598 (1941); United States v. Krause,507 F.2d 113 , 117 (5 Cir.1975). The false statement must simply have the capacity to impair or pervert the functioning of a governmental agency.
Clearly, the Internal Revenue Service is a “department or agency” of the United States.
See United States v.
Bea
con Brass Co.,
Fern made an affirmative, unsolicited, false statement which caused a tax auditor to initially conclude that an additional charitable deduction was due the taxpayer. If it was material, the statute applies for “[p]erversion of a governmental body’s function is the hallmark of a § 1001 offense.”
United States v. Lambert,
Relying on
United States v. Beer,
*1274 “Many statutes in the Criminal Code overlap, and the Government may elect the provision under which it wishes to proceed. Erlich v. United States,238 F.2d 481 at 485 (5 Cir.1976). Although we recently indicated a preference for prosecution under specific false statements statutes, we declined to reverse the conviction on grounds that 18 U.S.C. § 1001 had been chosen for prosecution.”
The Supreme Court has long recognized
that when an act violates more than one criminal statute, the Government may prosecute under either so long as it does not discriminate against any сlass of defendants .... Whether to prosecute and what charge to file or bring before a grand jury are decisions that generally rest in the prosecutor’s discretion....
There is no appreciable difference between the discretion a prosecutor exercises when deciding whether to charge under one of the statutes with different elements аnd the discretion he exercises when choosing one of two statutes with identical elements.
United States v. Batchelder,
Fern’s argument is categorically foreclosed by the Ninth Circuit in
United States v. Schmoker,
Fern next questions the materiality of the statements made by him to Wilson. He argues that the court was misled by the Government in describing the audit procedure because no claim was made in the manner required by the Internal Revenue Service regulations
6
, and consequently the statement made by Fern, that his client Brumer had made a charitable contribution, was not material since there was nothing to investigate. Materiality is a question of law,
United States v. Krause,
We start with the premise that “[a] material false statement under this rule is one that is capable of affecting or influencing the exercise of a government function... The statement must have been made with an intent to deceive, a design to induce belief in the falsity or to mislead, but § 1001 does not require an intent to de- ■ fraud — that is, the intent to deprive someone of sоmething by means of deceit.” United States v. Lichenstein, supra, at 1277-1278.
Fern’s contention that his statements could not have been material because all claims for refunds must be in writing misses the point. Statements such as that given by Fern to Wilson falsely stating that his taxpayer had found a deduction that he had not claimed, i.e., a charitable contribution of $25,000, and that he would like to submit it, led Wilson to add it to her worksheet as an item opened by the Service. She was prepared to execute a report including the charitable deduction, which
*1275
would have resulted in an offer of an agreement regarding Brumer’s tax liability
7
until her supervisor required her to obtain further verification. Clearly this was a material false statement which perverted the agency’s function, and the fact that it did not actually influence the Government is immaterial.
United States v. Johnson,
Fern next asserts error in the court’s holding that there was sufficient proof of a violation of § 1001 to submit the case to the jury. Relying on
United States v. Poutre,
Fern would have us take twelve sentences of Wilson’s testimony and construct a reading of them to mean that rather than making an actual claim to the Internal Revenue Service, Fern was only speculating out loud as to what he might do, and in effect told Wilson that he could claim a deduction if he wished. We are unwilling to isolate a statement from context and give it a meaning entirely different from that which it has when the entire evidence is considered. We need not iterate the evidence we have previously related. Suffice it to say that it established that the audit was open for both the Service and Brumer; that Wilson examined a copy of the check to the church and asked Fern for the rough return for 1975. She told Fern that she thought the deduction was acceptable and she added it to her worksheet as an item approved by the Service.
Moreover, while nо corroboration is necessary to sustain a conviction for making a false statement under § 1001,
Gevinson v. United States,
In
Ehrlichman
the Court applied the “literal truth test” enunciated in
Bronston v. United States,
In
Clifford,
the Court referring to
Bronston,
found that in the absence of a transсript of what was said Clifford was in the same untenable position as was Ehrlichman in trying to argue that his statements were literally true because “. . . there was no basis, other than pure speculation upon which a reasonable juror could determine what question was asked and what response was given.”
In
Bronston
the Court held that non-responsive, misleading answers, which were nevertheless literally true, could not support a perjury conviction.
Finally, Fern contends that since Wilson never identified Fern as the person who made the false statements, Fern’s motion for a judgment of acquittal should have been granted. This argument gives us little pause. Courtroom identification is not necessary when the evidence is sufficient to permit the inference that the defendant on trial is the person whо made the statements in question.
Delegal v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 1001 provides in pertinent part:
Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States knowingly and willfully ... makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations ... shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
. Count 2 of the Indictment returned against Fern charged him with submitting a document which falsely stated that a $25,000 payment made by his client Brumer was a charitable contribution. The jury deadlocked on Count 2 and a mistrial was declared.
. Fern also relies on
Friedman v. United States,
. 26 U.S.C. § 7207 provides:
Any person who willfully delivers or discloses to the Secretary or his delegate any list, return, account, statement, or other document, known by him to be fraudulent or to be false as to any material matter, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than one year, or both...
. We are not called upon to determine whether 26 U.S.C. § 7207 applies to oral statements or only to written statements. Fern argues it, even though he concedes that there is no case law to support the application of that section to an oral statement. We adopt Fern’s argument for the purposes of discussiоn only.
. Fern cites 26 C.F.R. § 301.6402-2 (1982) which sets forth the procedure for filing claims for refunds and which requires, among other things, that the claim must set forth in detail the ground upon which the credit is claimed, contain supporting evidence, and be verified by a written declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury.
. If a taxpayer agrees to a written proposed assessment prepared by a tax auditor, 26 C.F.R. § 601.105(b)(4) (1982), it operates as a formal claim for a refund.
Bauer v. United States,
. The Court also premised its holding in Ehrlichman on the exculpatory “no” answer doctrine which applies a limiting principle to § 1001 to prevent its broad language from being used to prosecute a person who answers an exculpatory “no” when he is asked by the F.B.I. if he had committed a crime, since Congress did not intend to add a felony conviction to compel potential defendants to confess guilt to governmental investigators. This doctrine is inapplicable to this case.
