A jury found defendant-appellant Nasser Ntege Sebaggala guilty of two counts of making false statements on United *62 States Customs forms, four counts of bank fraud, and two counts of transporting altered securities. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 1001, 1344, 2314. The district court imposed a fifteen-month incarcerative term and ordered the appellant to pay both a $10,000 fine and $44,000 in restitution. The appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on two counts, as well as various evidentiary rulings. Discerning no error, we affirm the judgment below.
I. BACKGROUND
We recount the facts in the light most flattering to the government’s theory of the case, consistent with record support.
See United States v. Singh,
The appellant is a Ugandan national, mayor of the capítol city of Kampala, proprietor of a successful currency exchange bureau in Uganda, and a frequent visitor to this country. On September 29, 1997, he opened an account at a Waltham, Massachusetts, branch of a Boston bank. Over the next few months, he caused four fraudulently altered third-party checks to be deposited in the account. Prior to deposit, each check had been negotiated at a South African financial institution and stolen during subsequent processing within the banking system. The Boston bank eventually discovered that these checks were bogus. Before the bank came to that realization, however, the appellant had withdrawn, transferred, or otherwise siphoned off substantial sums for personal use, campaign expenses, and the like.
In the midst of these shenanigans, the appellant went to Great Britain. He reentered the United States at Logan International Airport, Boston, Massachusetts, on January 1, 1998, carrying approximately $108,000 worth of travelers’ checks (more than half of which had been reported lost or stolen). He nonetheless presented customs officials with a completed customs form (Form 6059B) in which he declared that he was not carrying currency or monetary instruments in excess of $10,000. When questioned about this declaration, he orally reaffirmed that he had less than $10,000 in currency or monetary instruments in his possession. A customs inspector then asked the appellant how much he was carrying, and the appellant replied that he had $4,000 in travelers’ cheeks.
Apparently dissatisfied with this response, customs officials escorted the appellant to an interview room. When questioned anew, the appellant began to waffle. He admitted carrying $40,000 and completed a new form (Form 4790) containing that information. A subsequent consensual search of his luggage revealed the full extent of the travelers’ checks in his possession. Customs officials seized the bulk of the travelers’ checks and permitted the appellant to go about his business.
These events prompted a federal grand jury to indict the appellant on two counts of making false statements, four counts of bank fraud, and two counts of illegally transporting altered securities in foreign commerce. Following a month-long trial, a jury found him guilty on all counts. This appeal ensyed.
II. ANALYSIS
This appeal encompasses four principal assignments of error. First, the appellant contends that the district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal, Fed.R.Crim.P. 29, on the false statement counts. Second, he assigns error to the court’s exclusion of proffered expert testimony. Third, he maintains that the court erred in allowing rebuttal evidence. Fourth, he posits that the court irretrievably prejudiced him by permitting the introduction of an unduly large number of *63 the seized travelers’ cheeks. We address these asseverations sequentially.
A. The Rule 29 Motion.
Because the appellant’s arguments about the sufficiency of the evidence on the first and second “false statement” counts differ from each other, we treat the two counts separately. As to both counts, however, we review the district court’s denial of the motion for judgment of acquittal de novo.
Singh,
1.
The First False Statement (“Less Than $10,000”).
In order to convict a defendant of making a false statement under 18 U.S.C. § 1001, the prosecution must prove that the defendant, in a matter within the jurisdiction of the United States government, knowingly made a material statement to the government, which was false.
United States v. Notarantonio,
This argument is unpersuasive: the customs form on which the appellant made his initial declaration referred specifically to travelers’ checks and made crystal clear that they were reportable monetary instruments. What is more, the government adduced evidence that the appellant had answered other questions on the customs form accurately; and that, on a prior visit to the United States, he had responded to an inquiry about “how much” he was carrying by alluding to the amount of travelers’ checks in his possession. Then, too, the government adduced circumstantial evidence which strongly indicated that the first false statement was not the result of a misunderstanding: on this record, a rational jury surely could have inferred that the appellant prevaricated in order to conceal his possession of a large cache of stolen and altered travelers’ checks. 1 To cinch matters, the government presented proof sufficient to ground a reasonable inference that the appellant had the facility not only to understand the inquiry contained on the form but also to appreciate the definitions incorporated therein. This evidence revealed that the appellant had earned both a general certificate of education and a business administration diploma from British educational institutions; that he had reviewed and discussed English language materials with George Colvin, an American diplomat, and Ted Raster, an American serving as Uganda’s honorary consul; and that various persons (including the customs inspectors with whom he dealt) found him able to communicate in English without difficulty.
We see little point in rehearsing the minutiae of the government’s proof. It suffices to say that, on this record, a finding of scienter was clearly supportable.
See Singh,
The appellant has a fallback position: he points out that he admitted, the second time around, to carrying over $10,000 in currency equivalents. He treats this second declaration as “amending” the first and, analogizing to cases involving perjury,
e.g., United States v. Scivola,
The analogy is not apt. Although an individual sometimes can avoid a perjury prosecution by recanting a prior false statement, that result flows from a specific statutory provision applicable only to perjury cases.
2
The statute under which the appellant was charged and convicted is devoid of any comparable safe harbor; it simply provides for criminal consequences if a person “knowingly and willfully makes any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation” in a matter within the government’s jurisdiction. 18 U.S.C. § 1001. The appellant cites no authority that would support transplanting the provisions of section 1623(d) into the unreceptive soil of section 1001. For our part, we see no basis for writing into section 1001 a recantation defense that Congress chose to omit. After all, “[cjourts may not create their own limitations on legislation, no matter how alluring the policy arguments for doing so.”
Brogan v. United States,
We hasten to add that the appellant’s argument would fail even if the criteria found in 18 U.S.C. § 1623(d) were imported into prosecutions brought under 18 U.S.C. § 1001. In order effectively to recant a prior perjurious statement, the de-clarant must make an outright retraction and repudiation.
See Scivola,
2.
The Second False Statement (“$40,000”).
The appellant asserts that as long as he reported possession of over $10,000 in currency or currency equivalents, any inaccuracy in the total amount reported was immaterial (and, thus, his second false statement was not violative of 18 U.S.C. § 1001). Although the appellant’s underlying premise is correct—materiality is an element of a section 1001 offense,
United States v. Arcadipane,
*65
The controlling legal principle is well-settled. The test of materiality is whether the false statement in question had a natural tendency to influence, or was capable of influencing, a governmental function.
Id.; Notarantonio,
The evidence presented at trial was sufficient to support a reasonable inference that the appellant’s second false statement—his claim that he possessed $40,000 in travelers’ checks—was material. The second false statement was inscribed on a form that specifically required a declaration of the total amount of currency or monetary instruments being transported. The form explained quite plainly that a failure to disclose the correct amount would subject the declarant to criminal or civil penalties. Testimony at the trial indicated that the amount reported by a person entering the country bears directly upon customs officials’ decisions about what further action (if any) should be taken (e.g., whether to seize the currency or currency equivalents in the declarant’s possession, whether to investigate the matter further, etc.). Given this testimony, it seems self-evident that an underreporting of some $68,000, comprising more than 150% of the amount falsely reported, had the potential to influence customs officials’ actions.
See, e.g., United States v. Yuzary,
B. The Proffered Expert Testimony.
The appellant next assigns error to the district court’s refusal to allow a proffered expert witness, Dr. Aloysius Lu-gira, to testify on the linguistic and cultural traits of the Baganda tribe (to which the appellant belongs). The appellant argues that this testimony, if admitted, would have aided the jury in assessing his ability to understand the forms that he signed (and, therefore, his culpability vel non on the two false statement counts).
Federal Rule of Evidence 702 provides in relevant part that “[i]f scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise,” as long as certain conditions are satisfied. When the issue is whether expert testimony will (or will not) materially assist a jury within the intendment of this rule, trial courts enjoy considerable latitude in deciding whether to admit or exclude it.
See United States v. Ladd,
The trial judge has a hands-on familiarity with the nuances of the case—nuances which may not survive transplantation into a' cold appellate record. *66 Thus, the district court’s assessment of what will or will not assist the jury is entitled to considerable deference in the Rule 702 milieu.
United States v. Hoffman,
We review the district court’s rulings on the admission or exclusion of expert testimony for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Montas,
To the extent that the proffered testimony concerned Bagandan cultural tribal traits and customs (including affability), the connection between it and the issues in the case seems tenuous at best. To the extent that the proffered testimony concerned tribal forms of nonverbal communication, the appellant employed none in this instance (and, thus, the testimony seems totally irrelevant). Finally, to the extent that the proffered testimony concerned linguistic aptitude, it was simply unnecessary.
One of the criteria for the admission of expert testimony under Rule 702 is whether a lay person can be expected to decide the issue intelligently without an expert’s help.
See United States v. Salimonu,
C. The Rebuttal Evidence.
The appellant next complains that the district court erroneously permitted the government to call rebuttal witnesses regarding his proficiency in the English language. This complaint need not occupy us for long. Appellate courts traditionally afford trial courts a wide berth in respect to regulating the scope of rebuttal testimony.
See Geders v. United States,
In his case in chief, the appellant presented several witnesses, some of them Ugandan nationals, who testified that he had difficulty speaking and understanding English. To counter this evidence, the government sought to present rebuttal witnesses who had found the appellant proficient in reading and speaking English. We think that it was permissible for the district court to allow the government to proceed in this fashion. It is a bedrock principle that “[r]ebuttal evidence may be introduced to explain, repel, contradict or disprove an adversary’s proof,”
United States v. Laboy,
D. Rule 403.
The appellant’s final argument posits that the district court denied him a *67 fair trial on the bank fraud and transportation of altered securities counts by allowing the government to introduce, over objection, the mass of travelers’ checks seized at the airport. The appellant claims that this blizzard of stolen and altered paper amounted to “bad act overkill” which overshadowed the real issues in the case and compromised the fairness of the trial.
We set the stage. The appellant filed two pretrial motions: a motion in limine to exclude anticipated government evidence and a motion for relief from prejudicial joinder. By these motions, he sought either to bar introduction of the seized travelers’ checks or to sever the false statement charges from the remainder of the indictment. The district court denied both motions. It found that the stolen and altered travelers’ checks had distinct probative value in regard to the false statement counts because they provided a likely motive for attempting to deceive the customs officials. It also found that the travelers’ checks were relevant as to the other charges and that the danger of unfair prejudice did not substantially outweigh their probative value.
The checks were admitted en masse at trial. The appellant now challenges the district court’s denial of his motion in li-mine and simultaneously challenges the denial of his post-trial motion for a new trial (which raised essentially the same point). He does not, however, appeal from the denial of the motion for severance.
A two-pronged framework implementing Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) governs the admissibility of “bad act” evidence.
3
First, the proffered evidence must not merely show a defendant’s reprehensible character or predisposition towards knavery, but, rather, must possess some special relevance to a disputed issue in the case.
Udemba v. Nicoli,
We review the trial judge’s decision to admit or exclude Rule 404(b) evidence for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Guyon,
By the same token, the seized travelers’ checks also were probative of scienter in respect to the bank fraud and transportation of altered securities counts. The majority of the travelers’ checks in the appellant’s possession displayed a large rubber stamp that concealed an underlying bank processing stamp. This same model stamp was used to modify three of the four checks involved in the bank fraud counts. Two of these same checks — which were boosted, respectively, from 99<t to $89,000, and from $2,340.43 to $99,000 — formed the basis for the transportation counts. Moreover, a significant number of the travelers’ checks were stolen from a single financial institution, Standard Bank of South Africa, as were three of the checks involved in the bank fraud counts. Again, the transportation counts were founded on two of these same checks. In short, the similarities shared by the travelers’ checks and the third-party checks that formed the basis of the other charges sufficed to show the requisite special relevance.
See, e.g., United States v. Bice-Bey,
The challenged evidence also passes the second screen. We have observed before that “[o]nly rarely — and in extraordinarily compelling circumstances — will we, from the vista of a cold appellate record, reverse a district court’s on-the-spot judgment concerning the relative weighing of probative value and unfair effect.”
Freeman v. Package Mach. Co.,
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. To the extent that the appellant advances other arguments, they are insubstantial and do not require comment. It suffices to say that the appellant was fairly tried and justly convicted. The judgment below must, therefore, be Affirmed.
Notes
. This conclusion is buttressed by the fact that even after customs officials informed him orally that travelers’ checks had to be reported, the appellant gave a second false statement as to the total amount of travelers' checks in his possession.
. The perjury statute provides in pertinent part:
Where, in the same continuous court or grand jury proceeding in which a declaration is made, the person making the declaration admits such declaration to be false, such admission shall bar prosecution under this section if, at the time the admission is made, the declaration has not substantially affected the proceeding, or it has not become manifest that such falsity has been or will be exposed.
18 U.S.C. § 1623(d).
. The rule provides:
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.
Fed.R.Evid. 404(b).
. The latter rule provides:
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
Fed.R.Evid. 403.
