In June 1984, after a bench trial in the Northern District of Illinois, the district court convicted Steven A. Kuna of five counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 and one count of making a false statement to the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001. Kuna appeals, arguing that during trial the district court constructively amended the mail fraud counts in violation of the fifth and sixth amendments, that the evidence was insufficient to support either the mail fraud counts or the false statement count, and that the district court improperly imposed restitution as a condition of probation on the false statement count. We affirm Kuna’s conviction, but vacate the condition of probation requiring restitution and remand to the district court for resentencing.
I.
The facts, as shown by the government at trial, reveal that from July 1979 through December 1979, Kuna and John DeLeeuw solicited Michigan residents to invest in Steve Kuna & Associates (Associates), a limited partnership which was to be formed to engage in business as a “market-maker/specialist” on the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE). Kuna & De-Leeuw were the general partners of Associates; Kuna was the managing general partner. Eventually over thirty investors invested approximately $1.3 million in Associates. The $1.3 million was placed in an escrow account at the Michigan National Bank (MNB), with which Kuna had executed an escrow agreement before soliciting investors. The terms of the escrow agreement provided that the offering proceeds were to be held in escrow until the conditions listed on the offering memorandum were satisfied. The offering memorandum had provided that the offering proceeds would be held in escrow until at least $600,000 had been deposited, until Associates was registered as a broker-dealer with the SEC and the Michigan Securities Bureau (MSB), and until Associates was approved for CBOE membership. The offering memorandum did describe the investment as involving a “high degree of risk,” but it also stated an intention to use trading strategies that would minimize the risk of loss. In his oral representations to po *816 tential investors, Kuna described the investment as a conservative one.
In December 1979, MNB transferred the offering proceeds to Continental Bank in Chicago, following receipt of a letter from MSB granting permission to release the funds. At the time, however, Associates had not applied for registration with the SEC nor had it applied for membership with the CBOE. On December 19, 1979, Kuna applied to the CBOE stating that he was a sole proprietor and would be trading with his own funds. He entered into an agreement to clear his trades with First Options of Chicago, Inc. in his own name on January 25, 1980. On January 30, 1980, he began trading on the CBOE in his own name but with Associates’s funds. On February 19, 1980, Kuna applied for registration with the SEC as a broker-dealer stating that he would be trading as a sole proprietor with his own funds.
During the time that Kuna was trading on the CBOE with Associates’s funds, he provided his limited partners with monthly reports which included a figure representing the monthly net liquidating balances in Associates’ account. These monthly reports were mailed out on the letterhead of Doherty Zable & Co., a Chicago accounting firm. The figures supplied to Doherty Zable by Kuna were false. Kuna stipulated at trial to the actual net liquidating balances in the First Options account. 1
In July 1980, the CBOE became aware" that Kuna was trading with partnership funds and that he had failed to disclose on his CBOE application the fact that he had previously been sanctioned by the National Association of Securities Dealers. Kuna then applied for CBOE membership on behalf of Associates on July 31, 1980. The CBOE permitted Kuna to resume trading only if he advised his investors of his previous failure to properly obtain CBOE membership. Kuna sent a letter telling investors that Associates had failed to comply with certain technical registration problems, but that the problem had been rectified.
Kuna resumed trading in October 1980, and proceeded to lose all of Associates’ money in high risk trading. On November 17, 1980, First Options froze Associates’s account and proceeded to liquidate it; Kuna informed DeLeeuw that he had lost all the partnership money and admitted to DeLeeuw and to Associates’ attorney and accountant that he had supplied the partners with false financial information.
During November 1983, the grand jury returned a fifteen count indictment against Kuna. After a bench trial, the district court acquitted Kuna on counts one through five, which charged mail fraud involving the mailings of the monthly reports for March, May, June and July 1980. The court convicted Kuna on counts six through ten, which charged mail fraud involving the mailings of the monthly reports for August, September and October, 1980. The court also convicted Kuna on count fifteen, involving the false statement to the SEC. The court sentenced Kuna to two years imprisonment on counts six through ten, the sentences to run concurrently. On count fifteen the court suspended imposition of sentence and placed Kuna on five years’ probation with the condition that Kuna make restitution to the partners of $1.2 million, less any accounts paid to them. The court also ordered that Kuna not practice as a broker-dealer.
II.
The defendant’s primary argument is that at trial the district court constructively *817 amended the indictment to charge the defendant with a scheme he had not been charged with in the indictment, thereby depriving the defendant of his fifth and sixth amendment rights to know the charge against him. The defendant relies on the fact that at trial the court stated “I think that if the government had their choice right now, they would reindict this crime and charge a George -type fraud, a deprivation of the fiduciary obligations owed to the limited partners____ But they didn’t charge it.” Tr. 563. The defendant also highlights the fact that when the court ruled on the case, the court stated: “I have narrowed the scheme charged by the government in a significant way.” Tr. of Ruling 5.
The ten mail fraud counts of defendant’s indictment charge that the defendant, in a scheme to “defraud and to obtain money and property by false and fraudulent pretenses and representations, and attempting so to do, did knowingly cause to be placed into the United States mail” envelopes to the various partners of Associates containing total equity reports for various months. Count one details the history of the scheme. The district court found that the government had proved a scheme beginning in August 1980, rather than in February 1980, and rejected the government’s theory that Kuna had intended at the outset to defraud his investors.
The defendant argues that the district court’s actions constitute a constructive amendment of the indictment. Defendant asserts that the indictment charged a scheme to obtain the investors’ money by false pretenses but that the government proved a scheme to prevent the discovery of the false pretenses. The government argues that at most there existed a variance between the scheme alleged in the indictment, which was broad, and the scheme proven at trial, which was narrower. The government argues further that the variance was not fatal because it did not actually prejudice the defendant: Kuna was able to prepare a defense and was able to ensure that he will not again be prosecuted for the same offense because of the variance in this case. The indictment charged Kuna with a scheme embracing the mailings of the false reports which was the scheme the district court found to have been proven. Count one of the indictment alleged that Kuna “would and did convert assets of Associates to his own use and benefit ... and would and did conceal the financial condition of Associates by submitting and causing the submission of false information to the partners of associates.” Indictment, U 4. The indictment also charged that Kuna “would and did cause financial reports to be sent to the partners of Associates from the office of Doherty Zable in Chicago. The false reports misrepresented the dollar value of Associates’ assets at First Options.” Indictment, 1114. Finally, the indictment charged that as of “September, 1980, defendant ... did not disclose to the partners of Associates that monthly total equity reports which he had caused to be sent them did not accurately state the financial condition of Associates.” 1118.
It does not surprise us that in construing the same set of facts the defendant cries “amendment,” while the government murmurs “variance.” While there exists only a “rather shadowy distinction” between amendments and variances, C. Wright, Fed.Prac. & Prox. Criminal § 516 (1982), a finding of one rather than the other achieves a crystal clear difference in result: “[ajmendments have been held to be prejudicial
per se,
while variances may be subject to the harmless error rule.”
United States v. Beeler,
In
United States v. Miller,
— U.S. -,
The Supreme Court first noted that Miller could not have been surprised at trial by the absence of proof of alleged complicity in the burglary, and that the indictment was also sufficient to allow Miller to plead it in the future as a bar to subsequent prosecutions.
Id.
at-,
In
Stirone
the Court found a constructive amendment of an indictment at trial. The indictment in
Stirone
charged the defendant with interference with the interstate importation
of
sand, while the evidence at trial showed the defendant interfered with the interstate exportation of steel. The Court held that this deprived the defendant of his “substantial right to be tied only on charges presented in an indictment returned by a grand jury,” and that there was no way of knowing whether the grand jury would have been willing to charge the defendant with the exportation offense.
Id.
at p. 217,
In a case preceding
Miller,
but essentially at one with its conclusion, this court construed
Stirone
and held that a constructive amendment is found where a “complex set of facts” is presented to the jury during the trial which is distinctly different from the set of facts set forth in the charging instrument.
United States v. Muelbl,
There was no “complex set of facts” proven at Kuna’s trial which differed from the facts charged in Kuna’s indictment. While the indictment did charge that Kuna “intended to devise” a scheme to defraud Associates’ investors, Indictment 113, and used the phrase “would and did” throughout the indictment to describe Kuna’s scheme, the indictment charged more. The indictment also charged Kuna with concealing financial information to Associates’s partners and causing false financial statements to be sent to them. The scheme proven therefore was simply a narrower version of the scheme alleged.
See United States v. Miller,
— U.S. -,
Moreover, to the extent that a variance existed, we think it was a harmless error in this case. A variance between allegation and proof is not fatal unless the defendant has been thereby deprived of an adequate opportunity to prepare a defense or has been exposed to a risk of being prosecuted twice for the same offense.
Muelbl,
III.
The defendant argues that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions on either the mail fraud counts or the count involving the making of false statements to the SEC. We must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government,
Glasser v. United States,
The district court found that Kuna’s trading was much riskier than that described in the offering memorandum, and that Kuna concealed his risky trading from Associates’s partners by sending them false financial reports. The Judge further found that “if the defendant had disclosed the correct financial information, the private investors would have conducted an investigation, would have learned that he had converted funds to his own use, would have *820 learned that he was trading more riskily than at least they perceived and as I perceive was described in the offering circular.” Tr. of Ruling 2-3. The district court’s findings are supported by the evidence. Investors testified at trial that they had been lulled into a false sense of security by the monthly financial reports. The defendant presented no defense, but did stipulate to the exhibit displaying the disparity between the actual net liquidating balance and the monthly reports to the partners. The defendant’s conviction therefore is supported by sufficient evidence.
The defendant also argues that insufficient evidence was introduced to prove that his application for registration as a broker-dealer with the SEC was false because he could have intended to register in his own name as a sole proprietor and engage in a business separate and independent of Associates’s business. The defendant introduced no evidence at trial to support this theory. Furthermore, the defendant’s argument on appeal acknowledges that in his application to the SEC he stated that he had obtained his CBOE membership with his own funds, that all capital required to conduct his business would be furnished by them and that he would operate his business as a sole proprietor with all income accruing to him. It is undisputed that on the date of his application to the SEC, Kuna had already traded in his own name on the First Options account. The account contained the funds of the investors in Associates and profits from the fund were to accrue to the partners. The evidence shows therefore that Kuna’s statements in his application that the capital, membership and profits belonged to him alone were proven to be false and we see nothing erroneous in the district court’s finding of falsity.
IV.
The district court convicted Kuna on count fifteen, the false statement count, suspended his sentence and placed him on probation for five- years. As a condition of probation, the district court ordered Kuna to make restitution to the limited partners in the amount of $1,200,000, less any amounts already paid to them. The statute under which the probation was imposed provides that a defendant on probation may be required to make restitution “to aggrieved parties for actual damages or losses caused by the offense for which conviction was had.” 18 U.S.C. § 3651. Kuna’s false statement submitted to the SEC knowingly misstated that he intended to purchase his CBOE membership with his own funds, to operate his business as a sole proprietorship, and to furnish his own capital. This offense does not involve aggrieved parties to whom restitution can be made, nor does it involve actual damages or losses which can be restored to the aggrieved parties, because the investors, the only aggrieved parties in this lawsuit, were not injured by the filing of this false statement. Nor did the district court find that the injury and loss proven at trial was attributable to the false statements. In fact, the court's findings indicate that it thought the injury and loss was attributable to Kuna’s risky trading. We therefore vacate the condition of probation and remand the case to the district court. In so far as the district court imposes a sentence consistent with the sanctions it originally intended to impose, and consistent with this opinion, the Double Jeopardy clause is not affected.
See United States v. Covelli,
V.
In conclusion, we affirm the defendant’s conviction for the reasons stated above and we vacate the condition of probation and remand for resentencing.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART.
Notes
. The disparities between the monthly reports and the net liquidating balances as stipulated to and introduced at trial are listed below:
First Month Doherty Options Ending Date Zable Statements Difference
Feb. 29, 1980 $1,247,260.00 $1,230,029.17 +$ 17,230.83
Mar. 31, 1980 $1,148,149.46 $1,103,149.48 +$ 44,999.98
Apr. 30, 1980 $1,396,766.13 $1,396,766.13 -0-
First Month Doherty Options Ending Date Zable Statements Difference
May 30, 1980 $1,526,411.84 $1,740,809.02 -$ 214,397.18
June 30, 1980 $1,721,187.43 $2,161,187.43 -$ 440,000.00
July 31, 1980 $1,731,323.29 $1,205,323.29 +$ 526,000.00
Aug. 20, 1980 $1,771,309.54 $ 999,309.54 +$ 780,000.00
Sept. 30, 1980 $1,818,940.93 $ 991,940.93 +$ 827,000.00
Oct. 31, 1980 $1,903,331.08 $ 134,794.17 +$1,768,536.91
