Russell E. Spitler and Duane Carpenter, defendant-appellants, appeal from judgments of conviction entered upon a guilty verdict of extortion and aiding and abetting extortion in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1951 and 2, 1 conspiracy to commit extortion in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951, and mail fraud and aiding and abetting mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 2. Seeking reversal of their convictions, defendants claim the district court erred in denying their motions for severance and for judgments of acquittal. Additionally, Spit-ler claims error in the district court’s failure to give a requested jury instruction. Rejecting defendants’ contentions, we affirm the judgments of the district court.
Background
Carpenter is the former Chief of the Metals Unit of the Maryland State Highway Administration, and Spitler is the Vice President of Transeastern Inspection, Inc. (“TEI”), which provided quality-assurance inspections for the Metals Unit on highway projects between 1979 and 1983. During this period, Carpenter demanded and received from TEI employees various items of value, including semi-automatic rifles, untraceable handguns, and jewelry. In many instances, Spitler authorized TEI employees to accede to Carpenter’s demands and purchase the items with TEI funds. On some occasions, however, Spitler expressed hostility toward Carpenter’s demands and advised TEI employees not to comply, or to delay complying, with the demands.
Spitler complied with Carpenter’s demands both before and after July of 1980, when TEI as low bidder was awarded the contract to provide quality-assurance inspection services on steel tunnel sections for the Interstate Highway 95 Fort McHen-ry-Baltimore Harbor Tunnel extension, a ninety-percent federally funded project. Among Carpenter’s responsibilities was to *1270 verify and approve for payment invoices submitted by TEI, which billed the State of Maryland on an hourly basis. TEI’s contract placed no limit on the number of hours that it could bill for inspection services. As a result, Carpenter agreed with Spitler — who until sometime in 1981 received from TEI a three percent commission on TEI’s Maryland billings — to approve inflated invoices reflecting time not actually worked by TEI employees. The invoices also reflected unnecessary overtime charges. TEI had mailed the fraudulent invoices to Carpenter, who approved them in each instance. On one occasion, Carpenter threatened to cut TEI’s hours, but never carried out the threat.
After a federal audit of the tunnel project had started in 1982, Spitler and TEI employee Ronald Dunn feared the auditors would find records reflecting time that Dunn had charged to Maryland when he had been in Texas, so they burned Dunn’s records in the fireplace of their condominium. Moreover, following the auditors’ final report indicating excessive quality-assurance billings, Carpenter was relieved of his invoice approval authority and the amount of TEI billings significantly declined.
Carpenter was convicted of four counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1951 for having extorted from TEI, through the wrongful use of the fear of economic injury and under color of official right, an Uzi semiautomatic weapon and accessories, an untraceable .357 Magnum revolver and ammunition, a lady’s diamond ring, and a one-hundred-ounce silver bar. Spitler was convicted under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 1951 on three counts for having aided and abetted the extortion of the Uzi, the .357 Magnum, and the ring, all of which were extorted after defendants had commenced overbill-ing the State. Additionally, each defendant was convicted of one count of conspiracy to commit extortion from August 1979 through February 1983 in violation of section 1951 and of nine counts of mail fraud and aiding and abetting mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 2.
Severance
Claiming mutually antagonistic and irreconcilable defenses, defendants initially assert error in the district court’s denial of their motions for separate trials under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 14. At a hearing on the severance motions, Spitler’s counsel indicated that Spitler definitely would testify at trial, and counsel proffered the following testimony of Spitler:
He will say ... that during the years that he was the general manager of TEI, the years that are covered by this indictment, that he never offered, he never approached Mr. Carpenter and offered him anything. That it was Mr. Carpenter who came to Mr. Spitler through Mr. Spitler’s employees with his hand out saying give me this, give me that. And that Mr. Carpenter had a reputation for doing that in business. Mr. Spitler, this will be Mr. Spitler’s testimony that knowing that reputation, Mr. Spitler approved the payments of certain things to Mr. Carpenter because he did [not] want the job to be interfered with.
Neither Carpenter nor his counsel appeared at the hearing on the severance motions. Carpenter relied on his written motion in which he, like Spitler, claimed prejudice from antagonistic, irreconcilable defenses. In his motion, however, Carpenter made no proffer other than an “assertion of innocence” to which he would feel coerced to testify if Spitler would take the stand.
At trial, defendants chose to call no witnesses and to present no evidence. Instead, defense counsel presented arguments of a largely consistent defense. In his opening statement, Carpenter’s counsel claimed that the items furnished to Carpenter were gifts for services that Carpenter had performed for TEI. Likewise, in his opening remarks, Spitler’s counsel indicated that although Carpenter had asked for the items, Spitler agreed to provide the items because “Carpenter was owed something for what he did” and because Spitler wanted no trouble on the job. In closing argument, moreover, counsel for Spitler declared that the items provided to Carpenter *1271 were compensation for Carpenter’s consulting services to TEI on non-Maryland jobs and that “the evidence doesn’t show extortion. The evidence shows no extortion at all____” Further, cross-examination by Spitler’s counsel promoted the defense that Carpenter was entitled to the articles for consulting work and that such items were treated openly. Through cross-examination and argument, Spitler also sought to minimize Carpenter’s involvement in the tunnel project in an apparent effort to show that Carpenter would have been more actively involved with the project had the defendants entered a scheme to defraud.
Despite the consistency of their arguments, both defense counsel reiterated their severance motions by seeking a mistrial based on allegedly antagonistic remarks in the opening statements. Spitler’s lawyer also made a similar motion the second day of trial, claiming prejudice from a government witness’ direct testimony that Carpenter had sought untraceable firearms. The district court denied each request for severance and mistrial.
On appeal, defendants’ essentially raise three arguments in support of their claim that the district court erroneously denied severance. First, Spitler and Carpenter contend they made a sufficient pretrial showing of irreconcilable defenses because “[t]he potential for prejudice was clear pri- or to trial when Defendants initially moved for severance.” Defendants also contend that severance was required because in the opening statement and closing argument, Spitler’s counsel made some reference to Spitler having been an unwilling victim of extortion. Such occasional assertions of an extortion, contend defendants, inculpated Carpenter and reflected mutually antagonistic, irreconcilable defenses. Lastly, defendants implicitly claim that the potential for undue prejudice from irreconcilable defenses precluded them from presenting evidence and, as a result, deprived them a fair trial. As discussed below, we consider defendants’ arguments unmeritorious.
Primarily due to “the need for efficiency in judicial administration,”
United States v. Shuford,
The facts of the instant case, set out above, indicate no abuse of discretion by the district court. Although the defendants claim they made a sufficient pretrial showing of the requisite degree of potential prejudice from a joint trial, their presentations to the district court were far from adequate, displaying neither irreconcilable differences nor “that the jury will unjustifiably infer that this conflict alone demonstrates that both are guilty.”
Becker,
Spitler’s pretrial presentation was stronger than that of Carpenter, but similarly inadequate. Close examination of Spitler’s testimony, as proffered by counsel, reveals that on the whole, it was a vague, abbreviated statement which in no way demonstrated irreconcilability of defendants’ defenses or that from such conflict alone the jury would unjustifiably return guilty verdicts.
See Becker, supra; Ehrlichman, supra; Haldeman, supra.
Spitler’s proffered testimony, although indicating that Carpenter came “with his hand out saying give me this, give me that,” did not show that Carpenter was unentitled to the items. Neither Spitler’s
*1273
proffer nor Carpenter’s “assertion of innocence” foreclosed the possibility, which both defendants later argued at trial, that the payments were compensation for extra services that Carpenter allegedly had provided to TEI. Accordingly, as presented to the district court prior to trial, “[t]here would have been no logical inconsistency in the jury’s acceptance of the defenses presented by both defendants.”
United States v. Wright,
To be sure, Spitler’s proffered testimony — that Carpenter had requested each item — likely would have been somewhat prejudicial to Carpenter, but such an attempt to cast blame on Carpenter would not require severance.
2
Becker, supra; Ehrlichman, supra.
Spitler, moreover, failed to demonstrate, either in the district court or on appeal, prejudice to himself from Carpenter’s defense. Indeed, at the pretrial severance hearing, Spitler only argued that his testimony would be prejudicial to Carpenter. Carpenter, however, apparently did not share Spitler’s concern because neither Carpenter nor his counsel appeared at the hearing. In sum, defendants failed to present any actual substantiation for their allegations that the requisite degree of prejudice existed.
E.g., Wilson,
Defendants’ weak presentations to the district court, therefore, indicated neither irreconcilable defenses nor that the jury would unjustifiably convict defendants solely from such conflict; thus, we cannot conclude that the district judge abused his discretion in denying the pretrial severance motions. Id.; Becker, supra; Haldeman, supra.
Despite having properly assessed defendants’ inadequate pretrial showings, the district court had a continuing duty at all stages of the trial to grant severance if the requisite degree of prejudice appeared.
Schaffer v. United States,
Implicitly arguing they were denied a fair trial because the potential for undue prejudice from irreconcilable defenses “forced both defendants into foregoing the right to take the stand,” defendants contend that “[e]ach attorney made the judgment that his client’s interests ... required that he not present a defense rather than take an action which would ensure his client’s conviction as a result of mutual fingerpointing.” Defendants’ job, however, was to make substantial proffers to the district judge prior to trial so that the judge could make a meaningful assessment of potential prejudice, if any, from the purported irreconcilable defenses. Defendants’ failure to make such a strong showing in the district court, absent any significant indication on appeal that the requisite degree of prejudice in fact occurred at trial, precludes us from concluding the defendants suffered an unfair trial from their decision to present no evidence.
See United States v. Potamitis,
For all the foregoing reasons, the district court did not abuse its discretion by declining to grant defendants’ motions for severance and mistrial.
Carpenter’s Extortion Conviction
Carpenter argues that under the interpretation of the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951,
3
as expressed in
United States v. O’Grady,
[i]t is enough that the benefactor transfers something of significant value to the public official with the expectation that the public official will extend to him some benefit or refrain from some harmful action, and that the public official *1275 accepts the thing of significant value knowing that it is being transferred to him because of his office.
Paschall,
When viewed in the light most favorable to the government, the record contains substantial evidence,
Glasser v. United States,
Aiding And Abetting Extortion And Conspiracy To Commit Extortion
Spitler, relying on
United States v. Nelson,
Our analysis of the propriety of Spitler’s position begins with
Gebardi v. United States,
we perceive in the failure of the Mann Act to condemn the woman’s participation in those transportations which are effected with her mere consent, evidence of an affirmative legislative policy to leave her acquiescence unpunished. We think it a necessary implication of that policy that when the Mann Act and *1276 conspiracy statute came to be construed together, as they necessarily would be, the same participation which the former contemplates as an inseparable incident of all cases in which the woman is a voluntary agent at all, but does not punish, was not automatically to be made punishable under the latter.
Id.
at 123,
In accordance with the Gebardi principle of statutory construction, therefore,
[i]t seems clear that the victim of a crime should not be held as an accomplice in [or a conspirator to] its perpetration, even though his conduct in a sense may have assisted in the commission of the crime and the elements of complicity [or conspiracy] may technically exist. The businessman who yields to the extortion of a racketeer, the parent who pays ransom to the kidnapper, may be unwise or may even be thought immoral; to view them as involved in the commission of the crime confounds the policy embodied in the prohibition; it is laid down, wholly or in part, for their protection.
Model Penal Code § 2.06, Comment (1985).
See also
W. Lafave & A. Scott,
Criminal Law
521 (1972). Consistent with this notion, the Hobbs Act, like the Mann Act construed in
Gebardi,
may be interpreted as not intended to punish the “victim” of the crime. The legislative history of the Hobbs Act, moreover, indicates that Congress intended to punish “those persons who have been impeding interstate commerce and levying tribute from free-born Americans engaged in interstate commerce.” H.Rep. No. 238, 79th Cong. 2d Sess. 1946),
reprinted in
1946 U.S.Code Cong.Serv. 1360, 1370. Such legislative history and the statute’s prescription of punishment solely for the extortioner indicates that Congress may not have intended to criminalize the acquiescence of extortion victims.
Gebardi, supra. See also Nelson,
When an individual protected by such legislation exhibits conduct more active than mere acquiescence, however, he or she may depart the realm of a victim and may unquestionably be subject to conviction for aiding and abetting and conspiracy. We derive such conclusion again from
Gebardi,
wherein the Court, relying on
United States v. Holte,
*1277
The degree of activity necessary for a purported victim of extortion to be a “perpetrator of it,”
United States v. Zeuli,
In resolving the instant case, we need not paint with a broad brush and declare a bright line at which a payor’s conduct constitutes sufficient activity beyond the mere acquiescence of a victim so as to subject him to prosecution as an aider and abettor or a conspirator.
6
Rather, our foregoing discussion of case law leads us to the undeniable conclusion that under the facts of this case, Spitler cannot properly be deemed a mere victim of Carpenter’s extortionate demands. During the year prior to entering the mail fraud scheme, Carpenter demanded and received from TEI items of value. With knowledge of such early “shakedowns” and of Carpenter’s “reputation for doing that in business,”
7
Spitler obtained Carpenter’s agreement to approve the fraudulent invoices. In view of Spitler’s knowledge of Carpenter’s manner of conducting business, it is inconceivable for Spitler to have entered the mail fraud scheme without expecting Carpenter subsequently to demand additional items in return for Carpenter’s consistent approval of TEI’s overbillings. By entering the mail fraud scheme, therefore, Spitler created a symbiotic relationship with Carpenter through which Spitler and TEI, in exchange for subsequent payments to Carpenter, would receive substantial financial benefits from Carpenter’s approval of TEI’s false invoices.
8
Carpenter’s future extortionate demands consequently were an inextricable part and premise of the mail fraud scheme whereby the payment of items demanded by Carpenter provided the necessary lubrication to effectuate the fraudulent operation.
9
Spitler’s involvement in the mail fraud scheme thus constituted a “far more active role ... in
addition
to the mere payment of money,”
Johnson,
Spitler also alleges error in the district court’s failure to give a jury instruction concerning the aiding and abetting extortion counts. In the proposed instruction, Spitler asked the district court to charge the jurors that if they found Spitler to have acted as an agent of TEI when he furnished items to Carpenter, then they must find that Spitler was a victim of extortion, insulated from accomplice liability.
12
In light of our foregoing discussion of the propriety of Spitler’s conviction for aiding and abetting, we conclude the district court committed no error by declining to recite the requested instruction because under the facts of this case, Spitler, as a non-victim, was amenable to conviction as an aider and abettor of extortion despite having acted as the agent of TEI.
See Zeuli,
Mail Fraud
Defendants argue that the government presented evidence insufficient to support their convictions on the mail fraud counts. However, “[t]o obtain a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 1341, the prosecution must prove two essential elements — (1) the existence of a scheme to defraud, and (2) the mailing of a letter, etc., for the purpose of executing the scheme.”
United States v. Murr,
Conclusion
For the reasons enumerated herein, we affirm the judgments of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although the government indicted both defendants for extortion and aiding and abetting extortion in Counts One, Two and Four, the government concedes that under the circumstances of this case, defendant Spitler could only have been found guilty of aiding and abetting extortion.
. Furthermore, as discussed
infra,
the independent evidence of Carpenter’s guilt was so strong that any conflict in defenses cannot be said to have resulted in his conviction.
See United States v. Ferguson,
. The Hobbs Act provides, in part:
(a) Whoever in any way or degree obstructs, delays, or affects commerce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce, by robbery or extortion or attempts or conspires so to do, or commits or threatens physical violence to any person or property in furtherance of a plan or purpose to do anything in violation of this section shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than twenty years, or both.
(b) As used in this section—
(2) The term "extortion" means the obtaining of property from another, with his consent, induced by wrongful use of actual or threatened force, violence, or fear, or under color of official right.
18 U.S.C. § 1951.
. Now 18 U.S.C. § 2421 (as amended).
. The Court recognized the "Wharton Rule," but as in
Holte,
The Court in
Holte
and
Gebardi,
in noting that the woman could have been held a conspirator had she not been a victim, "adopted a narrow construction of the [Wharton] Rule that focuses on the statutory requirements of the substantive offense,"
Iannelli,
Furthermore, Spitler, as a non-victim, and Carpenter properly may have been convicted for having conspired with others to effectuate the extortion. The evidence adduced at trial was sufficient to trigger the "third-party exception” which renders the Wharton Rule inapplicable when "the conspiracy involves more persons than are required for commission of the substantive offense."
Iannelli,
. To declare a rule of general applicability might criminalize under the Hobbs Act conduct which, for example, may constitute "active solicitation and procurement,”
see Nelson,
. Joint Appendix 88.
. Spitler was receiving a commission of three percent of TEI's Maryland billings when he entered the mail fraud scheme. Furthermore, Spitler apparently recognized that it was in his interest to authorize the payments to Carpenter, as evidence indicated, inter alia, that Spitler had said that he “owned” Carpenter and had Carpenter "in my pocket.”
. Indeed, the indictment charged that "[i]t was further part of the scheme and artifice to defraud that Spitler, on behalf of TEI, would and did provide Carpenter with items of value, including weapons and jewelry."
. The indictment charged that Spitler and Carpenter "did willfully, knowingly, and unlawfully obstruct, delay, affect commerce and did cause, aid, abet, counsel, command, induce and procure said obstruction, delay and effect [sic] with respect to such commerce by extortion____”
. See footnote 5 and the accompanying text.
. Specifically, Spitler sought the following instruction:
If you find that those things of value allegedly extorted from TEI were in fact extorted from Spitler as the agent, officer and employee of TEI, then you must find that Spitler as the victim of an extortion, did not act knowingly and willingly and therefore lacks the specific intent required for conviction either as principal or as an aider and abettor in violation of the Hobbs Act.
