This case arises out of the alleged illegal activities of St. Michael’s Credit Union and one of its employees, Janice Sacharczyk. St. Michael’s was convicted of failing to file Currency Transaction Reports with the Internal Revenue Service on thirty-nine occasions during the period from September, 1983 to September, 1984 in violation of the Currency Transactions Reporting Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313 & 5322(b). Sacharczyk was convicted of knowingly and willfully aiding and abetting St. Michael’s failure to file. These omissions formed the basis for additional convictions of both defendants for concealing, by trick, scheme and device, material facts from the IRS under 18 U.S. C. § 1001. Defendants appeal their convictions citing numerous errors.
I. STATUTORY FRAMEWORK
As this case involves the interpretation of an intricate statute, a brief overview of the legislation is necessary to understand the issues presented.
The Currency Transactions Reporting Act, also known as the Bank Secrecy Act, 31 U.S.C. § 5313 provides:
When a domestic financial institution is involved in a transaction for the payment, receipt, or transfer of United States coins or currency (or other monetary instruments the Secretary of the Treasury prescribes), in an amount, denomination, or amount and denomination, or under circumstances the Secretary prescribes by regulation, the institution and any other participant in the transaction the Secretary may prescribe shall file a report on the transaction at the time and in the way the Secretary prescribes.
The Act’s implementing regulations flesh out this statutory language. The regulations in effect during the indictment period mandated that: “Each financial institution *582 ... shall file a report of each deposit, withdrawal, exchange of currency or other payment or transfer, by, through, or to such financial institution, which involves a transaction in currency of more than $10,-000...31 C.F.R. § 103.22(a). A “transaction in currency” was defined as “[a] transaction involving the physical transfer of currency from one person to another.” 31 C.F.R. 103.21. Reports of these transactions must be made on Internal Revenue Service Form 4789, known commonly as a Currency Transaction Report (CTR). A failure to file a CTR may be prosecuted as a felony when the omission occurs “while [the defendant is] violating another law of the United States, or as part of a pattern of illegal activity involving transactions of more than $100,000 in a 12-month period....” 31 U.S.C. § 5322(b).
By forcing financial institutions to keep such records, Congress hoped to maximize the information available to federal regulatory and criminal investigators. The overall goal of the statute was to interdict the laundering of illegally obtained and untaxed monies in legitimate financial institutions.
See generally, California Bankers Ass’n v. Schultz,
II. FACTS
We review the facts in the light most favorable to the government.
See Jackson v. Virginia,
St. Michael’s was a small financial institution that catered to the people who lived in and around Lynn, Massachusetts. A great deal of its operation was devoted to serving the needs of the ethnic Polish community in Lynn. The organization and management of St. Michael’s was, by all accounts, unprofessional and deficient. Due in part to this mismanagement, it was taken over by Massachusetts Share Insurance Corporation in September, 1984.
Janice Sacharczyk was employed at the credit union and served as its bookkeeper, computer operator, clerk, and treasurer. On December 13, 1983, she resigned her position as treasurer but continued to work at the credit union until September 6, 1984, despite bearing a child in the spring of 1984. Her main responsibility at the credit union was “to prove” its books to ensure that all of the money that went in or out was accounted for in the records. She also ran the computers and accessed information contained therein for others. Occasionally, she approved checks and obtained more money for tellers who had used up their initial allotment of cash.
For eight weeks between September and November 1983, St. Michael’s was audited by John DiPerna, the Banking Examiner for the Credit Union Division of the Banking Commission of Massachusetts. DiPer-na testified at trial that the audit was to “evaluate the assets and ascertain that all the liabilities in the institution[ ] are shown on the balance sheet” and to ensure the institution’s compliance with state and federal laws and regulations.
During the audit, a member of DiPerna’s staff discovered that on two occasions, St. Michael’s had failed to file CTRs with the IRS. Although the law requiring the filing of CTRs had been passed in the 1970’s, it was only in 1982 or 1983 that DiPerna was instructed by the federal government to enforce the law’s provisions against state institutions. DiPerna met with Sacharczyk to discuss the CTRs. He told her that CTRs must be filled out and filed with the IRS whenever there are withdrawals or deposits of currency exceeding $10,000. DiPerna testified that “it was evident that they [defendants] were unaware of the law.” As was his custom at the time, DiPerna told Sacharczyk that if St. Michael’s filed the CTRs for the two transactions, he would not report the omissions as violations. He also gave Sacharczyk an outdated and incomplete copy of the regulations that govern CTRs. Omitted from the regulations were the sections that dealt with civil and criminal penalties for the failure to file. DiPerna left the credit un *583 ion telling “them to start keeping track of currency transactions over $10,000.”
In February, 1984, DiPerna returned to St. Michael’s for a “bring-up exam.” At that time, Sacharczyk showed him xerox copies (showing only the fronts) of the CTRs he had told her to file with the IRS (the French and Perry CTRs). She stated that they had been sent to the IRS and, therefore, DiPerna did not mention them in his audit report. These CTR forms detailed both the reasons for requiring CTRs and the civil and criminal penalties for failing to file.
Contrary to the averment of Sacharczyk that the CTRs were sent to the IRS, Yvonne Covington, the IRS official in charge of keeping records on CTR filings, testified that no CTRs were filed by St. Michael’s between September 1983 and October 1984. Covington acknowledged that records for that period had only recently been moved from Ogden, Utah to Detroit, Michigan, but asserted that “to our knowledge all documents were received....”
In September, 1984, agents of the IRS’ Financial Task Force began an investigation of St. Michael’s. Special Agent DeAn-gelis questioned Sacharczyk concerning her knowledge of CTRs. She stated that DiPerna had discussed them with her and that she had filed CTRs for the two currency transactions that DiPerna had brought to her attention. She then searched the basement and produced xeroxed copies of the CTRs she claimed to have sent to the IRS. Sacharczyk told the agents that St. Michael’s had no official policy regarding CTRs. When the agents asked her whether there was a CTR compliance officer at St. Michael’s, she responded “no.” When asked whose responsibility it would be to file CTRs, she stated that either the Manager, Barbara Szczawinski, or herself would be responsible.
The Task Force investigation of St. Michael’s uncovered a number of $10,000 transactions for which no CTRs had been filed. These formed the basis for the indictment in this case. The indictment charged Sacharczyk and Barbara Szczawin-ski with knowingly and willfully aiding and abetting St. Michael’s failure to file CTRs in violation of 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313, 5322(b) & 18 U.S.C. § 2(b), and of aiding and abetting St. Michael’s concealment by trick, scheme or device of material facts from the IRS in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1001 & 2(b). A conspiracy count was also part of the indictment. All three defendants were tried together. The jury found Szczawinski not guilty on all charges. Sacharczyk and St. Michael’s were convicted on thirty-nine counts of felonious failure to file CTRS and on one count of concealing material facts from the IRS. Sacharczyk was acquitted on the conspiracy count. She received a one-year suspended sentence with probation and a $1,000 fine. St. Michael’s was fined $10,000. Defendants moved for acquittal or in the alternative for a new trial under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29. The motion was denied. Sacharczyk and St. Michael’s duly filed their notice of appeal.
The district court found that St. Michael’s could be bound only by the actions, conduct and statements of Sacharczyk (and Szczawinski). The liability of the credit union is thus measured by the liability of Sacharczyk. We refer to St. Michael’s and Sacharczyk as defendants rather than as principal and aider and abettor since their liabilities are coterminous. See 18 U.S.C. § 2(b) (aider and abettor punished as principal).
Defendants assert the following grounds for reversal of their convictions: (1) the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Sacharczyk knowingly and willfully failed to report large currency transactions to the IRS; (2) the evidence was insufficient to warrant giving the jury an instruction on willful blindness; (3) the evidence was insufficient to prove “a pattern” of illegal activity; (4) the evidence was insufficient to prove concealment by use of a trick, scheme or device in a matter before the IRS; (5) some of the transactions that were bases for the defendants’ convictions were not reportable transactions; (6) the court erred by refusing to give a missing witness instruction; (7) the court erred by admitting evidence concerning extrinsic gambling activi *584 ties of Sacharczyk’s father; and (8) the government’s closing argument unduly-prejudiced defendants’ right to a fair trial.
III. THE CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS REPORTING ACT CONVICTIONS
Our analysis is governed by the following:
[T]he standard of review for a judgment of acquittal notwithstanding the verdict is identical to the test employed to measure the sufficiency of evidence supporting a guilty verdict. The test is whether, considering the evidence as a whole, taken in the light most favorable to the government, together with all legitimate inferences that can be drawn from such evidence, a rational trier of fact could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. United States v. Hensel,699 F.2d 18 , 33 (1st Cir.), cert. denied,461 U.S. 958 ,103 S.Ct. 2431 ,77 L.Ed.2d 1317 (1983); United States v. Patterson,644 F.2d 890 , 893 (1st Cir.1981) (citing Jackson v. Virginia,443 U.S. 307 , 319,99 S.Ct. 2781 , 2789,61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979)). We must resolve any issue of credibility in favor of the jury’s verdict, United States v. Winter,663 F.2d 1120 , 1127 (1st Cir.1981), and we must defer to the jury’s verdict if the evidence can support varying interpretations, United States v. Rivera-Sola,713 F.2d 866 , 869 (1st Cir.1983). In other words, the prosecutor need only produce that quantum of evidence by which a reasonable trier of fact could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; there is no requirement to produce evidence that would compel a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. McNatt,
In order to sustain the defendants’ felony convictions under 31 U.S.C. § 5322(b) the government must prove the following beyond a reasonable doubt:
First, that a financial institution was involved in a currency transaction exceeding $10,000;
Second, that in connection with such a currency transaction, no currency transaction report was filed at the time required;
Third, that the failure to file the Currency Transaction Report at the time required was willful; and
Fourth, that the failure to file was part of a pattern of illegal activity involving transactions of more than $100,000 during a twelve month period.
Brief for the government at 24; see 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313 & 5322. Of these elements, the defendants assert that the evidence is insufficient to establish that the failure to file: (1) was “willful,” i.e., done with either actual knowledge or willful blindness and/or (2) was part of a “pattern of illegal activity.” We deal with each of these contentions separately.
A. Knowing and Willful Violation of 31 U.S.C. § 5322(b)
Our analysis focuses upon the propriety of the trial judge’s willful blindness instruction and the sufficiency of the evidence. Sacharczyk argues that the lower court should not have instructed the jury on willful blindness because the government failed to produce any evidence to support such an instruction. She maintains that the government has not presented “evidence of a
conscious
course of
deliberate
ignorance,
i.e.,
of purposeful blinding while knowing that a crime was likely in progress.... ”
United States v. Masse,
A “willful blindness instruction is appropriate when: (1) defendant claims a lack of knowledge, (2) the facts suggest a conscious course of deliberate ignorance, and (3) the instruction, taken as a whole, cannot be misunderstood by a juror as
mandating
such an inference.”
United States v. Hogan,
In the case at bar, there is no issue concerning requirements one and three. Sacharczyk’s main line of defense was that she had no knowledge of the failures to file CTRs or of the consequences of such omissions. And the trial judge took care to instruct the jury that a willful blindness instruction does not mandate an inference of willful blinding. 1
We thus limit our discussion to the second willful blindness prerequisite: did the government present evidence that suggested a course of deliberate blindness by Sa-charczyk? We believe it did. The following evidentiary facts might support a finding that Sacharczyk deliberately chose a course of willful blindness to the CTR violations. First, in the fall of 1983, DiPerna spoke with her concerning the filing of CTRs. While the regulations he provided her omitted any mention of civil or criminal penalties, their discussion put her on notice that CTRs needed to be filed for certain currency transactions that exceeded $10,-000 and that the credit union had participated in at least two such transactions in the preceding year. Second, in February, 1984, DiPerna again spoke with Sacharczyk concerning the necessity of filing CTRs. At that time she told DiPerna that she had filed the French and Perry CTRs with the IRS. She showed him xeroxed copies of these filled-out forms. Third, on the backs of these CTRs were directions for answering the questions asked on the fronts of the forms. Also detailed were the civil and criminal penalties that could result from a failure to file. Fourth, when agents of the IRS questioned Sacharczyk concerning her knowledge of CTRs, she explained that DiPerna had been the first to inform her of their existence and that on his request she had filled out and filed two CTRs. She produced copies of these for the agents along with the CTR regulations that DiPer-na had given her. Finally, the government asserted that in her role as treasurer/bookkeeper/clerk, Sacharczyk would have had the opportunity to learn that currency transactions exceeding $10,000 were taking place at the credit union.
“The purpose of the willful blindness theory is to impose criminal liability on people who, recognizing the likelihood of wrongdoing, nonetheless consciously refuse to take basic investigatory steps.”
Rothrock,
Though the evidence was not overwhelming, the jury had a reasonable basis for inferring that Sacharczyk had read the backs of the CTRs in order to fill them out. As noted, the backs of these forms also contained warnings concerning the penalties for not filing CTRs. Given these facts, the jury could have inferred that Sacharc-zyk knew that the failure to file CTRs was against the law. Based on DiPerna’s discovery of the two unreported transactions, Sacharczyk was put on notice that the credit union, in fact, handled reportable transactions. These inferences, and Sacharc-zyk’s position at the credit union, support a finding that if she did not know about the specific transactions charged in the indictment, it was only because she consciously chose to be ignorant of them. We believe that the evidence and inferences permissibly drawn therefrom were sufficient to support both the willful blindness instruction and the jury’s ultimate determination of willful failure to report beyond a reasonable doubt.
B. A “Pattern of Illegal Activity”
The Currency Transactions Reporting Act defines both felony and misdemeanor offenses for knowing and willful failures to file CTRs. The felony provisions are implicated when:
A person willfully violates] this subchap-ter or a regulation prescribed under this subchapter (except section 5315 of this title or a regulation prescribed under section 5315), while violating another law of the United States or as part of a pattern of illegal activity involving transactions of more than $100,000 in a 12-month period....
31 U.S.C. § 5322(b). In the case at bar, the government charged the defendants with felonious violations, alleging that the acts named in the indictment constituted a “pattern of illegal activity involving transactions of more than $100,000 in a 12-month period.” The trial judge instructed the jury that it could find there was a pattern of illegal activity if it determined “beyond a reasonable doubt that there were repeated and related violations” of the Act. The defendants argue that the government has failed to produce any evidence that could support a finding that the transactions named in the indictment formed a “pattern of illegal activity.” We cannot agree.
In
United States v. Bank of New England, N.A.,
Under the evidence adduced, it was clear that the repeated failures by the Bank to report were directly related to the withdrawals by McDonough [the individual customer]. These failures were not isolated events; they entailed repeated failures to file CTRs on similar transactions by the same customer. The similarity of the transactions, coupled with the frequency and regularity of their repetition, establish a related scheme.
Id.
Sacharczyk and St. Michael’s argue mightily that here, unlike in
Bank of New
*587
England,
there is absolutely no evidence that would link the currency transfers named in the indictment to one another. They stress that the indictment charged fifty different violations of the Act involving twenty-five different customers. They point out that the transactions named in the indictment consisted of differing forms of currency transfers: cash withdrawals, cash deposits, purchases of Treasurer’s checks, loan proceeds, and the cashing of third-party checks. Absent evidence of some relation among these transactions, Sacharczyk and St. Michael’s contend that they are simply repeated, “isolated events,” which are prosecutable only under the misdemeanor provision of the Act.
See Bank of New England,
At the outset, we reaffirm that to establish a pattern of illegal activity under the Act, the government must prove that the transactions involved were both repeated and related to one another.
See Bank of New England,
In a case like the one at bar, however, where a financial institution has systematically failed to file any CTRs, the above approach is inapt. While a relationship must still be established, it may be proven without linking the underlying transactions. The necessary connection can be shown by proving that the financial institution chronically and consistently failed to file any CTRs. By showing a consistent failure to report, the government has proven an overall relationship among the transactions. There is a pattern of not reporting.
The language of the statute and its legislative history support this interpretation. 31 U.S.C. § 5311 declares that the purpose of the statute is “to require certain reports or records where they have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory investigations or proceedings.” We agree with the Second Circuit that, in passing this legislation
Congress was largely concerned with the fact that the relative freedom accorded domestic and foreign currency transactions by American law in combination with the secrecy accorded currency transactions by certain foreign nations facilitated major criminal schemes, such as the laundering of money earned in criminal enterprises, the evasion of income taxes by gambling establishments, and the perpetuation of multinational securities frauds. In selecting among remedies, Congress rejected substantive restrictions on monetary or currency transactions but instead provided for a system of compulsory recordkeeping and reporting designed to diminish the advantages accorded such illegal activities by existing domestic and foreign law. See generally Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act: Hearings on H.R. 15073 Before the House Committee on Banking and Currency, 91st Cong., 1st and 2d Sess. 11 (1970); Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act-Hearings on S. 3678 and H.R. 15073 Before the SubComm. on Financial Institutions of the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. 13 (1970); H.R.Rep. No. 975, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. (1970), reprinted in 1970 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 4394-4416.
*588
Dickinson,
When the government proves that a financial institution has willfully failed to file CTRs for any of its reportable transactions or that it has filed for only a few out of a vast number of its reportable transactions, a sufficient relationship has been established between those acts to constitute a pattern of illegal activity and thereby trigger the Act’s felony provision. Congress placed the responsibility for filing CTRs on the financial institutions. It is incongruous to believe that Congress intended that a financial institution could insulate itself from felony prosecution by showing that it had not filed CTRs for any of its reportable transactions. Such a systemic disregard of the Act’s reporting requirements is an open invitation to money launderers and other criminals to use the financial institution for hiding their ill-gotten gains. Moreover, allowing only misdemeanor prosecutions of such pervasive and repeated violations may not be sufficient to deter future transgressions. As the House Report explained in discussing the felony provisions of the Act:
It should be noted that serious violations under this title may involve very large sums of money, and fines of as much as $10,000 or more might be shrugged off as a mere cost of doing business. To have any real deterrent effect, the potential fine must be large enough to have some real economic impact on potential violators.
H.R.Rep. No. 975, 91st Cong., 2d Sess. (1970),
re-printed in
1970 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 4394, 4406;
see also Valdes-Guerra,
We hold that under the standards outlined above, there was sufficient evidence for the jury to have found that St. Michael’s failure to file any CTRs comprised “a pattern of illegal activity.”
IV. THE 18 U.S.C. § 1001 CONVICTIONS
Defendants contest their convictions for violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001. The statute provides:
Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact, or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent statement or entry, will be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
St. Michael’s and Sacharczyk assert that: (1) the trial judge’s instructions failed to apprise the jury that an “affirmative act” of concealment was a prerequisite to convicting for the offense; (2) the evidence was insufficient to establish such an act; and (3) the government failed to prove any concealment or misrepresentation concerning a “matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States.” While we are unpersuaded by defendants' latter two contentions, we reverse the § 1001 convictions because we find that the judge’s jury instruction was fatally flawed.
A. The Charge
The judge instructed as follows on the § 1001 count:
It is the Government’s charge that Barbara, Janice, and the Credit Union, knowingly, willfully concealed material facts by trick, scheme or device; that what they were doing was concealing the true nature of these large currency transactions from the Internal Revenue Service. And there is a statute which says that you may not knowingly, willful *589 ly conceal material facts from an agency of the Government performing its functions. That’s a violation, if you personally do it, of a statute that bears number 1001 of Title 18. I’m sure that’s of no particular interest to you. But if one assists another person in doing that, then the person who aids, abets, commands, induces or assists another is responsible as a principal, even though they are what people ordinarily call an aider and an abettor.
The quarrel defendants have with this instruction is that it allowed the jury to find them guilty based solely on the fact that they failed to file CTRs. What is lacking in the charge, they assert, is the requirement that the government prove some “affirmative act” of concealment beyond the failure to file CTRs. The government accepts this standard as well: “Mere passive failure to reveal a material fact to a federal agency will not sustain a 1001 conviction; the government must prove an affirmative act by which a material fact is actively concealed.” Brief for government at 39;
see United States v. Shannon,
In an attempt to save the conviction on this count, the government seems to argue that, even though the jury was not specifically charged that an affirmative act of concealment must be found in order to convict, it necessarily must have concluded that defendants engaged in affirmative acts of concealment. Thus, it contends we may affirm because any error in the charge was harmless.
See, e.g., United States v. Doherty,
While the government is correct that these facts, if believed by the jury, would be sufficient to sustain a conviction under § 1001 that does not dispose of the issue. Defendants maintain that the jury may have disbelieved the government’s evidence concerning this incident and still have found them guilty under § 1001 simply for not filing CTRs. We agree. In
Doherty,
we affirmed convictions based upon faulty instructions because we were certain that the jury
must have found
all of the necessary elements of the crime,
see Doherty,
There is one additional argument made by the government that requires a response. It argues that Sacharczyk’s affirmative misrepresentations to DiPerna concerning the filing of the French and Perry CTRs, standing alone, would be enough to sustain the § 1001 convictions. This argument is at best misguided.
The grand jury indicted the defendants in pertinent part as follows:
56. The defendants] ... concealed material facts from the Internal Revenue Service in a matter under its jurisdiction, as herein described:
a. The defendants ... failed to file, and caused the failure to file, Currency Transaction Reports (IRS Forms 4789)....
*590 b. That in addition to the transactions referred to in paragraph 56(a) herein, the defendants ... further engaged in a trick, scheme and device which enabled them to withhold the filing of Currency Transaction Reports on behalf of St. Michael’s Credit Union for two separate currency transactions, and thereby withhold and conceal material facts from IRS in a matter under its jurisdiction, by creating copies of false and fictitious Currency Transactions [sic] Reports and representing to bank examiners for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts they were retained copies of those Currency Transaction Reports which had been filed with IRS; said false representation and display causing the bank examiners to conclude that St. Michael’s Credit Union was in compliance with Federal Currency Reporting Laws and further caused the examiners to abandon their investigation of St. Michael’s Credit Union’s compliance with said laws.
The judge’s instructions to the jury mirrored the indictment. See supra pp. 588-589.
Section 1001 is written in the disjunctive; the offenses are separated by the word “or.” 18 U.S.C. § 1001. The case law affirms that § 1001 incorporates two separate and distinct offenses: (1) concealing material facts from a federal agency by trick, scheme or device
or
(2) making false or fraudulent representations to a federal agency or department.
2
See Anzalone,
The government asserts that “misrepresentation alone” may be enough to sustain a conviction under the trick, scheme or device offense of § 1001. It is sufficient, however, only where the defendant has been charged with the offense of making “false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations.” 18 U.S.C. § 1001. The case cited as support for the government’s position is in accord with this. In United States v. Woodward, as the government points out, the Supreme Court stated in a footnote that an affirmative misrepresentation alone would support a § 1001 conviction. If the entire footnote is read, however, it is clear that the Supreme Court was speaking only of a prosecution for making false statements.
In Woodward’s case, the Government did not have to prove the existence of a trick, scheme, or device. Woodward was charged with violating 1001 because he made a false statement on the customs form. This type of affirmative misrepresentation is proscribed under the statute even if not accompanied by a trick, scheme, or device.
Woodward,
The government also asserts that, in two circuits, “concealment of material facts from the IRS in itself is violative of section 1001.” In other words, the government argues that the mere failure to file might support a conviction under § 1001 without additional proof of an affirmative act of concealment. We do not believe the cases cited by the government stand for that proposition.
See United States v. Nersesian,
B. The Jurisdictional Requirement
Section 1001 prohibits misrepresentations and affirmative concealments “in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States.” Defendants argue that the affirmative acts of concealment proffered by the government —Sacharczyk’s actions concerning the French and Perry CTRs — were not matters within the jurisdiction of the IRS. Even if the government’s evidence is accepted, defendants contend that the most Sacharczyk has done is conceal facts from a state agency. We do not agree.
The Supreme Court has held that the “statutory language requiring that knowingly false statements be made ‘in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States’ is a jurisdictional requirement. Its primary purpose is to identify the factor that makes the false statement an appropriate subject for federal concern.”
United States v. Yermian,
In this circuit, as in virtually all others, it has been held that a concealment or misrepresentation need not be made directly to a federal agency or department to sustain a § 1001 conviction.
See Notarantonio,
Defendants’ argument that there is no necessary link between Sacharczyk’s actions and statements concerning the
*592
French and Perry CTRs and the jurisdiction of the IRS is misplaced. All of the cases cited for support by the defendants concern prosecutions under § 1001 for making false representations or statements to a non-federal agency. The question presented was whether the false statements impacted the function of a federal agency.
See, e.g., Petullo,
The case at bar presents a different scenario. Defendants were prosecuted for “knowingly and willfully concealing] and covering] up, by trick, scheme, and device, material facts to the Internal Revenue Service, by failing to file, and causing the failure to file Currency Transaction Reports.” The failure to file CTRs clearly falls within the jurisdiction of the IRS. Although not so explicitly stated, defendants’ position is that the affirmative acts alleged by the government that form the basis for the trick, scheme, or device element of a § 1001 offense also must have taken place within the jurisdiction of a federal agency. We do not agree.
The jurisdictional element of a § 1001 offense is controlled by the substantive falsehoods or acts of concealment charged in the indictment. Whether the prosecution is for making a false statement or for concealing a material fact, the jurisdictional element of § 1001 turns on whether the falsity or coverup would result in the “perversion of the authorized functions of a federal agency or department.”
Notarantonio,
Even if we accepted defendants’ argument that the affirmative acts must also be within the jurisdiction of a federal agency, our result would remain unchanged. The government produced evidence that: (1) DiPerna, the state bank examiner, had been directed by the IRS to begin enforcing the rules and regulations concerning CTRs; (2) DiPerna examined St. Michael’s in part to ensure their compliance with federal laws regarding CTRs; (3) during the examination, he discovered two reportable transactions for which no CTRs had been filed; (4) he informed Sacharczyk that if they were filed with the IRS he would not mention them in his report; (5) Sacharczyk filled out CTR forms for the two transactions; (6) she showed copies of them to DiPerna and stated that she had filed them with the IRS; (7) DiPerna did not report the credit union’s previous failure to file these CTRs; (8) Sacharczyk never, in fact, filed the two CTRs.
These actions and representations perverted the functioning of the IRS. For these two reportable transactions, no CTRs were filed. But for the alleged ruse engineered by Sacharczyk, the IRS would have learned of the omissions from DiPerna’s report. As DiPerna testified, he was at the credit union to ensure its compliance with the federal laws. The IRS must rely on *593 such local examiners to ferret out violations. By allegedly duping this agent, Sa-charczyk successfully avoided IRS discovery of St. Michael’s failure to file CTRs. We believe this suffices to place her alleged actions within the jurisdiction of a federal agency even under the defendants’ standard.
To sum up. There is no jurisdictional bar to the § 1001 count. Although there was sufficient evidence for a conviction, the jury instruction was fatally flawed and the conviction cannot be salvaged by any of the theories advanced by the government. The conviction on this count must, therefore, be vacated.
V. REPORTABILITY OF THE LAGAÑAS TRANSACTIONS
Defendants next argue that ten of their convictions for failing to file CTRs (Counts 3, 5, 10, 13, 17, 19, 20, 22, 24, and 41) should be reversed because the transactions fell outside of the Act’s reporting requirements. They assert that the transactions involving Paul Lagañas did not constitute exchanges of currency in excess of $10,000 and, therefore, were not reportable. We examine these transactions in detail.
In nine of the these transactions, Lagañas came to the credit union and presented a number (10-50) of third-party checks that were endorsed over to him. These checks, while individually well under $10,000, together exceeded that amount. At the end of each transaction, Lagañas was given over $10,000 in cash. The defendants argue that since Lagañas presented the teller with numerous checks, these transfers should be considered multiple transactions. They maintain that a bank has a duty to file CTRs on multiple transactions that exceed $10,000 only where it knows that the exchanges have been structured to avoid the CTR requirements. This argument is contrary to the law of this circuit.
Under our holding in
Bank of New England, N.A.,
In the instant case, McDonough’s [Defendant’s] practice was to visit the same branch of the same bank on only one occasion in a single day. He simultaneously would present a single bank teller two to four checks, all made payable to cash, for varying amounts under $10,-000 which, when added together, eq-ualled a sum greater than $10,000. In return, the same bank teller would transfer to him in a single motion a wad of cash totalling more than $10,000.
We have no trouble categorizing such conduct as a single physical transfer of currency in excess of $10,000 from the Bank to McDonough. We, therefore, conclude that the language of the regulations itself gave the Bank fair warning that McDonough’s transactions were reportable. This case does not, as the Bank suggests, involve a bank customer engaging in multiple currency transactions. McDonough engaged in thirty-one separate transactions, each exceeding $10,000, which were effected by the use of multiple checks. The use of multiple cheeks during a single transfer of currency is not the same as multiple currency transactions.
Bank of New England,
That the Lagañas transactions may not have been deceptively structured to avoid the requirements of the Act does not warrant a different result. The holding in Bank of New England controls. We find that nine of the Lagañas transactions were reportable.
The tenth Lagañas transaction, Count three, is more troubling. Count three charged that the defendants violated the Act by failing to file a CTR for the Lagañas transactions that occurred on September 23, 1983. On that date Lagañas made four trips to the credit union, cashing *594 checks at each visit. His September 23, 1983 transactions were as follows:
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The government argues that these four multiple transactions should be aggregated and seen as a single transfer totalling $14,-834.87. 4 The defendants maintain that neither the Act nor its implementing regulations can be read to require the aggregation of these multiple transactions into one reportable exchange. Such a reading, they contend, would violate the notice provisions of the fifth amendment. There is a rift in the circuits on this issue; we come down on the side of the defendants.
To guide our analysis, we begin by plotting this circuit’s two fixed stars concerning the interpretation of the Currency Transactions Reporting Act. In
United States v. Anzalone,
Our second bearing comes from
Bank of New England.
As discussed,
supra,
the defendants in that case argued that presenting multiple checks to a bank at the same time on the same day should be considered unreportable “multiple transactions” under the rationale of
Anzalone.
We distinguished between multiple transactions performed on different days and multiple check exchanges performed at one time on the same day. In the latter case, we held that such an exchange is not a multiple transaction but a single exchange subject to the Act’s reporting requirements.
See Bank of New England,
Each of the parties in the instant action gleans different lessons from Anzalone and Bank of New England. The defendants contend that as in Anzalone, Laga-ñas’ four exchanges of currency, which were made at different times on September 23, 1983, should be considered multiple transactions. Since no individual exchange exceeded $10,000, there was no requirement to file a CTR for the transactions. The government, on the other hand, urges that we look behind these temporal differences and assess the economic reality of Lagañas’ transactions. The simple fact is that no matter what number of trips Laga-ñas made to the credit union on September 23, 1983, he exchanged checks for a cash sum totalling over $10,000. Since the purpose of the Act is to deter money laundering and related uses of illegal gains, the government asserts that allowing defendants to escape the Act’s reporting requirements simply by dividing transactions into smaller amounts would defeat the goals of the statute. Since neither Anzalone nor Bank of New England are dispositive of this issue, we 'look to our sister circuits.
Our research reveals that five other circuits have considered whether a financial institution is required to file a CTR for an individual’s multiple transactions, which were carried out at the same bank, on the same day, but at different times. The Fifth and Eleventh Circuits have held that the Act’s reporting requirements reach these types of transactions. The cases indicate that these circuits would look behind the form of the transaction and assess its economic reality.
See e.g. United States v. Tobon-Builes,
While these interpretations of the Act and its regulations allow for the vigorous enforcement of the currency laws, we find the interpretations offered by the Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Circuits to be on firmer constitutional ground. They hold that a financial institution has no duty to aggregate into one reportable transaction separate physical transfers of currency made on the same day.
See United States v. Risk,
[T]he Currency Transactions Reporting Act did not require the reporting of transactions in excess of $10,000. The Act did nothing more than authorize the Secretary of the Treasury to promulgate regulations governing disclosure. See United States v. Larson,796 F.2d 244 , 245 (8th Cir.1986). The regulations that the Secretary promulgated under this authority did not expressly require aggregation. Rather, they merely required financial institutions to report “physical transfers of currency,” 31 C.F.R. § 103.11 (1986), in excess of $10,000. The essential characteristic of a structured transaction is that the customer effects several discrete “physical transfers] of currency,” id. The original regulations gave no hint that financial institutions were required to assess the economic reality behind these acts.
Gimbel,
Since aggregation is not explicitly or implicitly required by either the statute or its implementing regulations, we find that imposing criminal liability for such conduct violates the notice provisions of the fifth amendment.
See Anzalone,
[although this court, like all other institutions of the United States, is supportive of the law enforcement goals of the government and society, we cannot engage in unprincipled interpretation of the law, lest we foment lawlessness instead of compliance. Kolender v. Lawson,461 U.S. 352 , 361,103 S.Ct. 1855 , 1860,75 L.Ed.2d 903 (1983). This is particularly so when the confusion and uncertainty in this law has been caused by the government itself, and when the solution to that situation, namely eliminating any perceived loop holes, lies completely within the government’s control. If the government wishes to impose a duty ... to report “structured” transactions, let it require so in plain language. It should not attempt to impose such a duty by implication, expecting that the courts will stretch statutory construction past the breaking point to accommodate the government’s interpretation.
United States v. Anzalone,
We pause to reaffirm the basis of our holding in
Bank of New England.
There, we upheld convictions stemming from mul-ti-check exchanges totalling over $10,000 that were made at “one bank in one day to a single customer during a single visit.”
Bank of New England,
VI. THE MISSING WITNESS INSTRUCTION
Defendants next argue that the trial court erred by failing to give a missing witness instruction as a result of the government’s failure to call Paul Lagañas to the stand. They assert that the trial judge used an incorrect standard to determine whether to give the instruction.
The rationale behind the missing witness instruction has been stated as follows: “the failure of a party to produce available evidence that would help decide an issue may justify an inference that the evidence would be unfavorable to the party to whom it is available or whom it would ordinarily be expected to favor.” 2 C. Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 489 (1982). First Circuit precedent has established three circumstances that may warrant a missing witness instruction.
[T]he jury may draw an inference adverse to a party toward whom the missing witness is “favorably disposed,” because the party would normally be expected to produce such a witness, see United States v. Johnson, supra,467 F.2d at 809 ; United States v. Wright, supra,573 F.2d at 684 . In addition, the jury may draw an adverse inference when a party fails to produce a material witness who is peculiarly available to that party. United States v. Davila Williams, supra [496 F.2d 378 (1st Cir.1974)], United States v. Diaz, supra [535 F.2d 130 (1st Cir.1976) ]. See 2 C. Wright, Federal Practice & Procedure, Criminal § 489 (1969).... [Finally], when a party having exclusive control over a witness who could provide relevant, noncumulative testimony fails to produce the witness, it is permissible to draw an adverse inference from that party’s failure to do so, even in the absence of any showing of the witness’s predisposition toward the party. See United States v. Johnson,562 F.2d 515 , 517 (8th Cir.1977).
United States v. Ariza-Ibarra,
The defendants contend that Lagañas was “peculiarly available” to and within the “exclusive control” of the government because he had indicated that were he called as a witness, he would assert his fifth amendment rights and refuse to testify. Since the government has the right to grant immunity from prosecution to a witness, 6 defendants maintain its failure to do so mandates an adverse inference against the government. This is especially so, they argue, where, as in this case, the government referred to Lagañas and his currency transfers in a way designed to imply that they were related to illicit activities.
Absent a claim of favorable disposition, where a witness is equally available to either party there is ordinarily no basis for a missing witness instruction.
See United States v. Currier,
Although not noted by the parties, our research indicates that at least two circuits have dealt with this issue. Both are in
*598
accord in holding that the government’s failure to immunize a witness, without more, does not give rise to a missing witness instruction.
See United States v. Flomenhoft,
Congress has conferred the power to immunize witnesses uniquely upon the executive branch. United States v. Frans,697 F.2d 188 (7th Cir.1983). The immunization statutes are not designed to benefit defendants.697 F.2d at 191 . Absent a substantial showing of prosecu-torial abuse of discretion, courts will not review a prosecutor’s immunization decision. United States v. Frans, supra; In re Perlin,589 F.2d 260 , 269 (7th Cir.1978); United States v. Smith,542 F.2d 711 , 715 (7th Cir.1976) (“The law is clear that in this Circuit a district court is powerless to direct the prosecution to seek use immunity in order to secure testimony which the defendant deems relevant.”); United States v. Rauhoff,525 F.2d 1170 , 1178 (7th Cir.1975); United States v. Allstate Mortgage Corp.,507 F.2d 492 , 494-95 (7th Cir.1974), cert. denied,421 U.S. 999 ,95 S.Ct. 2396 ,44 L.Ed.2d 666 (1975).
Requiring a missing witness instruction each time the prosecution decides not to immunize a witness would constitute a substantial judicial encroachment upon prosecutorial discretion. This is not a case where there has been a clear prosecutorial abuse of discretion violating the due process clause. The district court properly refused Flomenhoft’s missing witness instruction.
Flomenhoft,
A witness’ decision to invoke his fifth amendment privilege against testifying makes him neither peculiarly available to the government nor within the government’s exclusive control. Based on the evidence presented below, the trial judge determined Lagañas was “available to anybody and that he’s capable of testifying.” Lagañas’ purported assertion of his fifth amendment rights changes this finding only by making him “equally unavailable” to both parties.
United States v. Simmons,
The defendants stress that they do not argue for a blanket rule requiring a missing witness instruction whenever the government refuses to immunize an unwilling witness. They assert that a missing witness instruction is appropriate here, because the government: (1) stated it could not find Lagañas when, in fact, he had been at a known address throughout the trial; (2) selectively obtained immunity for other witnesses; and (3) built a large part of its case around a witness who had asserted his fifth amendment rights. 7 The flaw in the defendants’ argument is its inherent dependency upon the government's failure to immunize Lagañas. As we stated above, absent some abuse of discretion, we do not believe a negative inference may be drawn from that prosecu-torial decision. Stripped of its references to the immunity denial, defendants’ argument for a missing witness instruction is reduced to the contention that the government should have called Lagañas because he was involved in many of the indicated transactions and because the government implied that his transactions were part of an illegal operation. Neither of these as-severations make Lagañas peculiarly available to or within the exclusive control of *599 the government. 8 We affirm the district judge’s decision not to issue a missing witness instruction.
VII. THE ADMISSION OF EXTRINSIC GAMBLING EVIDENCE
The defendants vigorously protest the district court’s admission of certain evidence concerning the alleged gambling activities of Janice Sacharczyk’s father, Chester Szczawinski. They assert that absent proof of Sacharczyk’s knowledge of these illicit activities, they were irrelevant to any material fact at issue in this case. Moreover, they contend that even if the evidence had some slight relevancy, its probative value was greatly outweighed by the unfairly prejudicial impact its introduction probably had upon the jury. The government maintains that the evidence was relevant and highly probative of whether Sacharczyk had either a specific intent or a motive to violate the Act’s reporting requirements.
A. The Evidence
Two witnesses testified regarding Chester Szczawinski’s gambling operation. Francis Falkowski was Chester Szczawin-ski’s nephew and a former president of St. Michael’s. He resigned from the credit union in September, 1983. He testified that he believed Szczawinski had engaged in bookmaking at the credit union. He based that conclusion on the following: (1) Szczawinski spent some amount of time in the basement offices at St. Michael’s; (2) Falkowski had seen brown envelopes being passed from the upstairs offices of the credit union to those on the lower level; (3) one evening, after closing, Falkowski observed Szczawinski xeroxing a number of “football cards” (used for gambling) on the St. Michael’s copying machine. There was no evidence presented that Janice Sacharc-zyk was at the credit union at these times or that she observed any of the activities allegedly seen by Falkowski.
The second witness to testify concerning Szczawinski’s gambling activity was Philip DiNatale. DiNatale testified, under a grant of immunity, to the effect that Szczawinski was a bookmaker and that he had acted as Szczawinski’s agent. Two of the transactions named in the indictment involved DiNatale and allegedly were connected to Szcawinski’s gambling operation. In describing those transactions, DiNatale testified that he twice went to St. Michael’s to secure Treasurer’s checks in order to pay a gambling debt owed by Szczawinski to a customer. DiNatale stated that he paid the debt in Treasurer’s checks because the customer had requested it. DiNatale stated further that he went to St. Michael’s to obtain the checks only because he had an account there; he had not been ordered “to use” St. Michael’s for the transaction. DiNatale testified that Szczawinski did not even know he was obtaining Treasurer’s checks to pay the debt. To DiNatale’s knowledge, no bookmaking had ever taken place at St. Michael’s. As for defendant Sacharczyk, DiNatale testified that she had nothing to do with his Treasurer’s check transactions. When he was asked whether he knew Janice Sacharczyk, he responded, “A little, very little.”
B. The Law
In order for evidence to be admitted at trial, it must be relevant to a material fact
*600
at issue, and its probative value must not be substantially outweighed by its unfairly harmful or prejudicial effect upon the jury.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 401, 402 & 403;
United States v. Lamberty,
“Evidence is relevant if it has any tendency to make the existence of any fact consequential to the determination of the action more or less probable.”
Lamberty,
was highly relevant to the element of willfulness the government must prove in a 31 U.S.C. § 5322 violation. Willfulness in almost every case must be proven indirectly since it is a state of mind; it is “usually established by drawing reasonable inferences from the available facts.” United States v. Bank of New England,821 F.2d 844 (1st Cir.1987), cert. denied,484 U.S. 943 ,108 S.Ct. 328 ,98 L.Ed.2d 356 (1987) citing to United States v. Wells,766 F.2d 12 , 20 (1st Cir.1985). [The gambling evidence] was relevant to Sacharczyk’s knowledge of the use of the Credit Union’s cash resources, and any motive she might have had to act willfully-
Brief for the government at 16.
We accept the proposition that if the evidence shows, directly or by inference, that Sacharczyk knew or “must have known” of Szczawinski’s gambling activities, it would be relevant to establishing both her intent and her motive in failing to file the CTRs. Despite the fact that the government conceded that Sacharczyk was not a part of the gambling operation, a jury might reasonably infer willfulness or motive if they found that Sacharczyk knew of customers and relatives who had reason to keep their $10,000 transactions hidden from the IRS.
As there was no direct evidence that Sacharczyk knew of her father’s alleged gambling activities, their relevancy is dependent upon whether the evidence reasonably supports the inference that she must have known of those activities. There are three bases for such an inference. First, Chester Szczawinski spent some time on the premises of the credit union. Second, he occasionally told the loan officers to give loans to individuals for whom he vouched. The government asserts that these loans were used to finance Szczawin-ski’s bookmaking operation. Third, Janice Sacharczyk is Chester Szczawinski’s daughter. We do not believe these facts, even giving them the greatest possible weight, support an inference that Sacharc-zyk must have known of her father’s gambling activities.
The first two arguments in support of the inference are easily dispatched. The government produced no evidence that Sa-charczyk ever saw bookmaking at St. Michael’s. DiNatale, Szczawinski’s agent, testified that Chester Szczawinski did no gambling business at St. Michael’s and that he had an office elsewhere for such purposes. Falkowski’s testimony concerning the xeroxing of football cards does not affect our conclusion, because he could not place Sacharczyk at the credit union on that evening. There is no basis for finding that Sacharczyk saw any alleged xeroxing. Nor is there any connection between the loan approvals and Sacharczyk. Even if it were found that Szczawinski was instrumental in getting loans approved for certain individuals, there was no evidence that Sacharczyk had knowledge of all of the loan approvals much less of their allegedly illegitimate purpose. The government’s argument that she sometimes recorded new *601 loans does not prove she knew of her father’s role in the loan approvals or of their allegedly illicit purpose.
Nor do we believe that the daughter-father relationship between Sacharczyk and Szczawinski proves that she must have known of his alleged gambling activity. We have been able to find only one case that discusses what reasonable inferences might be drawn from a familial relationship. In
United States v. Williams,
In the ease at bar, Szczawinski was not a charged co-conspirator, nor was Sacharc-zyk alleged to be part of the gambling operation. As in Williams, the main link between the alleged acts of Szczawinski and Sacharczyk’s failure to file CTRs was their familial relationship. This is too weak a nexus to support the inference that Sacharczyk must have known of the gambling operation. While “[t]he gods [v]isit the sins of the fathers upon the children,” Euripides, Phrixus, frag. 970, in the absence of evidence, the law must not.
The trial judge, at least initially, was also concerned that the gambling evidence was not relevant. When first notified that the government intended to introduce evidence concerning the gambling activities of third parties, the trial judge sought assurances from the government that it was going to prove that the defendants knew of the gambling activities. The government responded in the affirmative. The evidence, however, was later admitted without the assured foundation. Despite numerous objections, side-bar conferences, and written motions by defense counsel raising the issue, the trial judge never explained his ruling. While we do not and will not require a trial judge to set forth, on the record, his/her reasoning concerning evi-dentiary matters, we have noted on numerous occasions that such on-the-record rationale is one indicator of a thoughtful exercise of discretion.
See United States v. Mann,
We believe that the trial judge’s original instincts were correct. Absent some nexus between Szczawinski’s alleged gambling activities and the defendants in this case, the gambling evidence was irrelevant. We find, therefore, that the admission of that evidence constituted an abuse of discretion on relevancy grounds.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 401 & 402;
United States v. Cunningham,
Even were we to afford some minimal probative significance to the gambling evidence, we would still find its admission to be an abuse of discretion because its “probative value (if any) is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice_”
United States v. Roger,
These findings, however, do not end our inquiry. Although not addressed by the government, we must determine whether in light of the entire record the erroneous admission of the gambling evidence could be found harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Lamberty,
To answer this question, we have reviewed the entire record; we have considered the likely impact of the error on the minds of the jurors, Kotteakos v. United States,328 U.S. 750 , 763-64,66 S.Ct. 1239 , 1247,90 L.Ed. 1557 (1946); and we have asked ourselves whether we can say “with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the [juror’s] judgment was not substantially swayed by the error,” id. at 765,66 S.Ct. at 1248 , accord United States v. Pisari,636 F.2d 855 , 859 (1st Cir.1981); see Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(a) (error harmless if it “does not affect substantial rights”). Compare Chapman v. California,386 U.S. 18 , 24,87 S.Ct. 824 , 828,17 L.Ed.2d 705 (1967) (higher standard for federal constitutional error).
United States v. Mazza,
Now, I have got to say something, perfectly honestly, because I think it would be dishonest of me if I did not say so. There is a very thin thread here and I’m going to listen very closely, depending upon the testimony of the next two witness’s, to motions for directed — for judgments of acquittal. I’m going to listen very closely to them. Because I think that this is a very thin case, this case, these women. I have got to tell you my honest feeling about it. I dislike taking matters away from a jury because if a jury goes in the direction in which the Judge happens to be tending it saves the Judge a problem. Do you know what I mean?
So in civil cases, at any rate, ordinarily, what I do is let the jury decide it. They can always take the verdict away.
In criminal cases, it’s a different story, if the jury should convict. So I’m going to study these motions for directed findings of not guilty closely. And I think it’s only fair for me to tell the government that.
We believe the prosecution overreached by introducing evidence of Szczawinski’s *603 gambling activities without connecting them to the defendants. Because this error may well have swayed the jury’s ultimate determinations of guilt, we have no choice but to remand for a new trial.
Since we vacate the defendants’ convictions, we have no need to reach defendants’ final argument that the prosecution’s closing argument prejudiced their right to a fair trial. We note only that defendants’ argument is based, in part, on the claim that the prosecution implicitly linked many of the transactions named in the indictment to Szczawinski’s bookmaking. The prosecution’s closing argument thus underscores and heightens the likelihood that the prejudicial impact of the admission of evidence concerning Szczawinski’s gambling activities affected the jury’s verdict.
CONCLUSION
We hold the following:
(1) The evidence was sufficient to support both the trial judge’s willful blindness instruction and the jury’s finding of willful violations under 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313 & 5322(b).
(2) The transactions at issue were sufficiently repeated and related to form a “pattern of illegal activity” that would trigger the felony provision of the Act. 31 U.S.C. § 5322(b).
(3) The illegal activities alleged in the indictment were “within the jurisdiction of [a] department or agency of the United States.” 18 U.S.C. § 1001.
(4) The judge’s instructions failed to charge that an affirmative act of concealment is necessary to convict under the scheme, trick or device offense of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. This omission constitutes reversible error as to that count and a retrial is necessary.
(5) Nine of Lagañas’ transactions were-multi-check exchanges made during one visit to a single bank. These fell within the Act’s reporting requirements.
(6) One of Lagañas’ transfers (Count three) was a multiple transaction that did not implicate the Act’s reporting requirements. The defendants’ convictions on Count three are, therefore, reversed.
(7) No missing witness instruction was warranted because Lagañas did not become peculiarly available to the government or within its exclusive control solely by asserting his fifth amendment rights.
(8) The introduction of gambling evidence concerning Sacharczyk’s father constitutes reversible error.
We vacate, therefore, the defendants’ convictions and remand for a new trial on all counts except Count three.
So ordered.
Notes
. He charged the jury as follows:
Now, I have said that knowledge can be established by way of inference. And an inference of knowledge may be drawn from the fact, if you find it to be a fact, that a person deliberately closes his or her eyes to what would otherwise have been obvious to them. Now, you have to be careful. You may not draw an inference of knowledge from negligence or mistake. Negligence indeed, even gross negligence, is not a proper basis to support a finding of willfulness or to support a finding of knowledge. Nor is error, nor is mistake. Willful blindness may constitute knowledge of a fact only if you should find that the individual to whom knowledge is sought to be attributed was aware of a high probability that that fact existed. I ask you to keep in mind that I’m not suggesting one way or the other as to how you should find. I'm not suggesting that you should make any such finding; I’m simply telling you that you may infer knowledge if you find willful blindness to a fact.
These women are said by the Government to have deliberately ignored currency transactions knowing that would constitute a violation of reporting requirements. That must be proved by the Government beyond a reasonable doubt for you to find that it is so.
. We construe 56(b) to charge the offense of concealing by trick, scheme or device a material fact from the IRS, as did the district judge. See supra pp. 588-589. The “false representation" noted in the final clause is the affirmative act of concealment necessary to establish the trick, scheme or device under § 1001.
. Both parties suggest that to properly determine whether a statement or concealment is in a matter within the jurisdiction of a federal agency, we must focus on whether the falsity would have "the natural tendency to influence, or [be] capable of influencing the [federal] agency.”
United States v. Dick,
. On appeal the government suggests that we focus solely on the last two transactions, since taken together they constitute an exchange of over $10,000. That approach would affect neither our reasoning nor our result.
. The Secretary has recently closed the multiple transaction loophole by promulgating 31 C.F.R. § 103.22(a)(1), which provides in pertinent part: "Multiple currency transactions shall be treated as a single transaction if the financial institution has knowledge that they are by or on behalf of any person and result in either cash in or cash out totalling more than $10,000 during any one business day.... ”
. We continue to leave open the question of whether, under certain circumstances, “due process might require immunization of defense witnesses.”
United States v. Flaherty,
. There is a disagreement over whether, if immunized, Lagañas’ testimony would have helped the defendants. Defendants contend that he would have undermined the government’s case, while the government maintains that Lagañas’ testimony would have aided the prosecution.
. Defendants do not argue that Lagañas would have been "favorably disposed” to the government, presumably because of their argument that had he been granted immunity, his testimony would have undermined the government’s case.
See United States v. Ariza-Ibarra,
The judge seemed to feel that based on the government’s references to Lagañas, the jury might have inferred that his testimony would have aided the prosecution. Since the government failed to call him, the judge concluded that a negative inference could be drawn against the prosecution. As the defendants have not argued the point, we have no occasion to consider whether a witness in Lagañas’ adverse position might ever be considered "favorably disposed" to the government for the purposes of a missing witness instruction.
