Vinаl S. Duncan appeals from a judgment of conviction entered on May 28, 1993 in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (T.F. Gilroy Daly, Judge), following a jury trial. On October 1, 1992, Duncan was charged in a multi-count indictment with conspiracy, bank fraud, and making corrupt payments to public officials. Specifically, Count One charged Duncan with conspiring (1) to impair and impede the lawful functioning of the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), (2) to impair and impede the lawful functioning of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (“Federal Bank Board”), and (3) to commit bank fraud, all in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. Count Two charged Duncan with bank fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1344. Count Four charged Duncan with conspiring to make corrupt payments to public officials, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. Count Five charged Duncan with making *99 corrupt payments to public officials, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 666(a)(2). 1
The jury convicted Duncan on Counts One, Two, Four and Five. On May 21, 1993, the district judge sentenced Duncan to sixty months incarceration on Count One and sixty months incarceration on Count Two (pre-guideline counts). Judge Daly concluded that the United States Sentencing Guidelines (“U.S.S.G.”) applied to Counts Four and Five and imposed a four-level upward adjustment for Duncan’s leadership role in the corrupt political payment scheme pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a). He adjusted Duncan’s sentence upward an additiоnal two points for perjury pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3C1.1. Consequently, the court sentenced Duncan to sixty months imprisonment on Count Four and sixty-five months for Count Five. All sentences were ordered to run concurrently. In addition, supervised release was imposed for a three-year term. Duncan was ordered to pay concurrent fines of $100,000 on Counts Four and Five and a $200 special assessment.
On appeal, Duncan contends that (1) the district court erred by admitting the expert testimony of an IRS agent which stated a legal conclusion; (2) his conviction on Counts One and Two were barred by the Ex Post Facto Clause and Count One is time-barred; and (3) the district court erred by upwardly adjusting his sentence for a leadership role in conjunction with the political corruption charge. For the reasons stated below, we reject all of appellant’s claims and we affirm the judgment.
BACKGROUND
The charges in this case arise from two separate criminal schemes. The conspiracy, bank fraud and tax-related charges (Counts One and Two) stem from defendant’s involvement in the fraudulent acquisition and sale of property on Meriden Road while a director of Security Savings & Loan Association (“SSLA”). The corrupt political payoff charges (Counts Four and Five) stem from payments made by The Taft Group, Inc. (the “Taft Group”), a corporatiоn comprised of Duncan and two others, to Joseph J. Santo-pietro, the former Mayor of Waterbury, Connecticut and to Santopietro’s family and associates.
SSLA and the Meriden Road Transaction
The basic facts of the Meriden Road transaction are undisputed. In November of 1980, Duncan and approximately thirteen other investors formed the bank, SSLA. Duncan was a bank director and later a member of the bank’s loan committee.
In 1983, SSLA planned to open a new branch on the east side of Waterbury. Bank officials identified two adjoining parcels of land located on Meriden Road in Waterbury as a potential site. The five directors on SSLA’s loan committеe — Duncan, Richard Barbieri, Mario Albini, Domenic Daddona and Francis Campion — discussed purchasing the properties for themselves and leasing the properties to the bank. Barbieri, who was also SSLA’s president, informed the other committee members that the Federal Bank Board regulations prohibited such a purchase unless all of the bank’s directors were involved in the transaction. Nevertheless, in February of 1983, the five committee members, without disclosing their intentions to the bank’s other directors, purchased the properties secretly through a nominee, John Colucci — a longtime personal friend of Duncan. Colucci obtained a $200,000 purchase money mortgage from SSLA to buy the properties. Without informing the other directors of their interest in the properties, Duncan, Barbieri, Daddona and Campion, as members of the loan committee, voted to grant Colucci the loan. Thereafter, Colucci leased one of the two parcels to the bank to use as a branch office. Duncan was a partner along with the other four beneficial owners of the subject Meriden Road properties (hereinafter collectively, the “beneficial owners”) in a separate partnership called Shaw Management. Through Shaw Management, *100 Duncan managed the properties for Colucci and reimbursed him for any tax liabilities incurred as a result of his nominal ownership.
In their capacity as SSLA directors, Duncan and the other beneficial owners voted to purchase one parcel from Colucci without disclosing their interest to the other directors. Colucci sold the property to SSLA for $200,000 and used the proceeds to pay off the remainder of the mortgage. In 1985, under similar circumstances, SSLA bought the remaining parcel for $135,000. Thereafter, Colucci paid $20,000 to each of the beneficial owners, including Duncan, in several checks of less than $10,000 each. 2 Once again, Duncan and thе other beneficial owners did not inform SSLA’s other directors that they were the true owners of the purchased property. In addition, Duncan did not report his profits from the sales of these properties on his tax returns.
The Government presented evidence at trial that in the Spring of 1990, Duncan, Barbi-eri and Campion learned that bank regulators and investigators were probing banking practices at SSLA. Barbieri and Cam-pion testified that they and Duncan met shortly thereafter and agreed to continue to conceal their involvement in the Meriden Road properties. Duncan did not deny his involvement in the Meriden Road transactions. Rather, he asserted that he lacked the necessary intent to defraud the bank, the Federal Bank Board, or the IRS.
In July 1990, federal regulators forced Barbieri and John Corpaci, SSLA’s executive vice president, to resign from their positions at SSLA. Subsequently, three separate investigations were commenced: an investigation into SSLA’s bank practices by the Office of Thrift Supervision (“OTS”), a criminal inquiry into the bank’s practices by the FBI, and a political corruption and tax investigation by the FBI and IRS. The IRS ease agent, Thomas Mulligan, (“Agent” or “Agent Mulligan”), who would later testify about the Meriden Road transactions and the general functioning of the tax system at Duncan’s trial, partiсipated in the investigation.
Corrupt Payments to Political Officials
In 1986, Duncan along with Barbieri and Corpaci formed the Taft Group. Duncan was the president, Barbieri, the vice-president, and Corpaci, the secretary-treasurer. The Taft Group was primarily involved in real estate development and investments.
The record evidence discloses that Joseph Santopietro was elected Mayor of Waterbury in 1985. Shortly after taking office, he struck a deal with the Taft Group wherein he and his associates would profit from the Taft Group’s real estate and investment opportunities in exchange for favorable treatment by the Administration and city agencies. Between 1986 and 1990, many payments and benefits were extended to Santopietro and his associates. Specifically, Santopietro was often permitted to participate or benefit financially from the Taft Group’s real estate deals and he and his associates were given favorable treatment at SSLA. In addition, the Taft Group made payments to Santopie-tro, frequently funneling payoffs to him through his associates or through sham transactions.
At trial, Duncan did not deny that public officials were given corrupt payments. However, Duncan contended that he lacked guilty knowledge and intent to make improper payments. In contrаst, Duncan’s partners, Bar-bieri and Corpaci, each of whom had pleaded guilty and had agreed to testify for the Government, provided testimony concerning Duncan’s guilty knowledge and intent.
DISCUSSION
Duncan contends on appeal that: (1) the expert testimony of Agent Mulligan invaded the province of the jury by stating a legal conclusion; (2) his conviction on Counts One and Two were barred by the Ex Post Facto Clause and Count One is time-barred; and (3) the sentencing judge clearly erred in adjusting upward Duncan’s sentence, because *101 Duncan contends that there is no evidence that he played a leadership role in the political corruption scheme. We addrеss each of these contentions in turn.
Expert Testimony
Duncan’s contention that the expert testimony of Agent Mulligan was erroneously admitted lacks merit. As a general proposition, the decision of whether to admit expert testimony is left to the discretion of the trial judge and should not be set aside unless “manifestly erroneous.”
United States v. Schwartz,
In
Scop,
we reversed appellant’s conviction for securities fraud on the grounds that an expert witness stated “highly prejudicial” legal conclusions in expressing his opinion about the defendant’s conduct.
Hygh
is similarly inapposite.
Hygh
was a civil rights action brought against a police officer which alleged excessive use of force.
[T]he question, “Did T have the capacity to make a will?” would be excluded [because the answer would merely tell the jury what result to reach], while the question, “Did T have sufficient mental capacity to know the nature and extent of his property and the natural objects of his bounty and to formulate a rational scheme of distribution?” would be allowed.
Id. Here, the terms “money laundering” and “false” are analogous to the advisory committee’s second question — although the answer sought is a factual conclusion, it does not simply tell the jury what decision to make. Agent Mulligan’s testimony falls within the pertinent part of Fed.R.Evid. 704(a), which reads: “[T]estimony in the form of an opinion or inference otherwise admissible is not objectionable because it embraces an ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact.” Id. Accordingly, we find that Agent Mulligan’s testimony was admissible.
Even if we were to hold to the contrary, such an error in the overall context of this case would be harmless.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 61. It is well-established that the party asserting error bears the burden of demonstrating prejudice.
See Palmer v. Hoffman,
Here, the allegedly impermissible testimony “was expressed within a larger body of otherwise unobjectionable testimony concerning [the functioning оf the tax system] from which the jury could easily have drawn the same conclusions that [the witness] did.”
Hygh,
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 61 sets forth the applicable standard for determining if error is harmless. It states, in pertinent part: “No error in either the admission or the exclusion of evidence ... is ground for granting a new trial or for setting aside a verdict ... unless refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial justice.”
Id.
Reviewing the record in total, we conclude that “substantial justice” would not require us to reverse appellant’s conviction even if we were to find the district court erred on the expert testimony ruling.
See Hygh,
Ex Post Facto Clause and Statute of Limitations
Next, Duncan contends that his convictions for bank fraud and conspiracy to commit bank fraud are barred by the Ex *104 Post Facto Clause 5 because all elements of the conspiracy occurred prior to the enactment of the bank fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1344. He argues that any activity which may have constituted conspiracy to commit bank fraud and actual bank fraud concluded prior to 1984, when he and the other members оf SSLA’s loan committee agreed to secretly purchase the Meriden Road properties and later sell them to the bank at a profit. We are unpersuaded by his argument.
Duncan concedes that, according to our precedents, continuing offenses such as conspiracy and bank fraud do not run afoul of the
Ex Post Facto
Clause if the criminal offenses continue after the relevant statute becomes effective.
See United States v. Torres,
Appellant acknowledges that the second parcel of the Meriden Road properties was sold to SSLA in April of 1985 and, shortly thereafter, the resulting profits were distributed to the beneficial owners in checks of less than $10,000. He posits, however, that the sale of the land and distribution of the profits was not a component of the bank fraud or conspiracy and, therefore, not a continuation of the criminal venture. His argument rests on an inaccurate interpretation of the crime charged.
Under Title 18 of the United States Code, Section 1344, persons are guilty of bank fraud if they “knowingly execute[], or attempt[ ] to execute, a scheme ... to obtain any of the moneys, funds, credits, assets, securities, or other property owned by, or under the custody or control of, a financial institution, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises.” Id. Duncan assumes that the fraudulent scheme with which he was charged and convicted under this statute was the “usurpation of ... [SSLA’s] ‘corporate opportunity.’ ” So construed, he concludes that the fraud was complete when the opportunity was usurped — at the time the properties were purchased. But, the Meriden Road conspirators did not merely intend to seize for themselves two pieces of property аt a bargain. Rather, the central purpose of the charged scheme was to secretly purchase and then sell the properties to the bank at a premium. The Government presented ample evidence to demonstrate that the conspirators purchased the properties knowing that they could extract a greater price from SSLA and decided to make a profit accordingly. It is thus reasonable to conclude that profiteering from the premium sale of these properties to SSLA was the central object of the charged criminal conduct. To hold otherwise would require us to divorce the initiаl deception of the bank from the central purpose of the fraudulent venture, which we are not prepared to do. We therefore conclude that the scheme was not fully executed until Duncan and his co-conspirators reaped a profit from the transactions.
It is undisputed that Duncan and the other beneficial owners sold SSLA the first parcel of land in October of 1984 for $200,000 and the second parcel in April of 1985 for $135,-000. With the sale of the first property, the beneficial owners were able to recoup their initial investment of $200,000. With the sale of the two properties combined, Duncan and his co-conspirators secured $335,000 and netted an aggregate profit of $135,000, approximately 67% on their initial investment. Given these facts, it was certainly reasonable for the jury to conclude that the extraction of this large profit, due to the fraudulent actions of Duncan and his co-conspirators, was completed only after the sale of the second parcel in 1985. It is likely that the jury was referring to the sale of this second property
*105
and the distribution of the resulting profits when it found in its verdict, that an overt act in furtherance of the bank fraud conspiracy occurred after October 12, 1984. So interpreted, this jury verdict is consistent with caselaw in the statute of limitations context, wherein we have held that a “conspiratorial agreement that includes a payoff ..'. continues ... until the conspirators receive their anticipated profits.”
United States v. Fletcher,
Duncan also contends that his conviction for conspiracy (Count One) should be overturned because the charge of conspiring to impair, obstruct, and defeat the lawful functioning of the IRS is time-barred. Appellant’s conviction for conspiracy is sustained by evidence of acts committed in furtherance of the bank fraud — acts that were identified in Count One of the indictment as overt acts. Under the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Griffin v. United States,
Sentencing Guidelines
Duncan’s final argument, that the district court erred in increasing his sentence on Counts Four and Five (the corrupt political payment charges) pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a), must also fail. The district court increased Duncan’s offense level four points based on its finding that Duncan played an aggravating role as a “leader in the corrupt payments scheme.” U.S.S.G. § 3Bl.l(a) provides for a four level enhancement “[i]f the defendant was [a] ... leader of criminal activity that involved five or more participants or was otherwise extensive.... ” “A district court’s findings under section 3B1.1 regarding a defendant’s role in a criminal activity is a factual determination that will not be overturned unless ‘clearly erroneous.’ ”
United States v. Garcia,
Duncan does not challenge the § 3Bl.l(a) increase on the grounds that the scheme involved fewer than five participants or that it was not extensive. Rather, he asserts that he was merely a passive participant, and thus, the district court’s finding that he
*106
played a leadership role in the corruption scheme was clearly erroneous. However, the Government presented sufficient evidence to support Judge Daly’s finding that Duncan was a leader in the corrupt payment scheme. Duncan was the president of the Taft Group — the primary vehicle through which corrupt payments were made to Santopietro and his associates. Although Duncan claims that he was unаware of any political payoffs, this is directly contradicted by the testimony of his two Taft Group partners — Barbieri and Corpaci. They testified that they met regularly, often daily, with Duncan to discuss,
inter alia,
Taft Group ventures and that Duncan, to their knowledge, was aware of corrupt payments that were made. Duncan’s awareness of the payoffs is further supported by the fact that he was licensed to deal in real estate and was frequently the central figure in certain Taft Group real estate ventures. And since the corrupt payments generally related to real estate projects of the Taft Group or other entities where Duncan was a principal, it is not unreasonable to infer that Duncan knew and approved of the payments. The Government presented considerable direct and circumstantial evidence of specific transactions wherein Duncan was aware of, and in some cases directly involved in, dispensing favors and payments. For example, evidence was presented that Duncan was involved in the leasing of uninhabitable office space, through which he and his partners funnelled payments totaling $63,000 to Santopietro. The evidence supports a finding that Duncan knew of and profited from corruption, certainly while he was the president of the Taft Group, the central institutional party in several corrupt schemes, and that he was a principal figure in numerous other entities that were also instruments of corruption. Given the abundance of evidence, the district court’s decision to assess a four step sentence increase based on Duncan’s leadership role was not at all clear error.
6
See United States v. Cotto,
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of conviction in all respects.
Notes
. Count Three alleged a criminal forfeiture claim based on the bank fraud count, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 982(a)(2). The Government chose not to pursue this claim and it is not a subject of this appeal. Count Six was a separate 18 U.S.C. § 371 conspiracy charge to defraud the United States by impairing, obstructing and impeding the lawful function of the Department of Treasury and IRS in its assessment and collection of taxes. Duncan was acquitted of this charge.
. As of the pertinent dates herein, federal law has required financial institutions to report to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue all deposits that total $10,000 or more. 31 C.F.R. § 103.22(a)(1). Checks for less than $10,000, cashed on different days, have not been subject to this reporting requirement. See id. at § 103.22.
. Appellant takes exception to a number of questions which the Government was permitted to ask the Agent concerning the proper functioning of the tax system and the importance of filing tax returns accurately. These questions, however, did not ask the witness to express legal conclu
*102
sions, but only to explain sophisticated aspects of a regulatory system for which the witness had expertise. We have generally permitted the elicitation of testimony from expert witnesses that shed light on activities not within the common knowledge of the average juror.
See, e.g., Carson,
. Appellant correctly asserts that part of the Agent's investigation was “many, interviews with Colucci and Barbieri,” two government witnesses. However, he erroneously suggests that these interviews necessarily influenced the Agent's testimony. The language which is arguably objectionable — that the tax returns were "false” and that “money-laundering” took place — did not require assessment of any witnesses' credibility. It is undisputed that Duncan was a part owner of the Meriden Road properties and a review of his tax filings reveals that he did not pay taxes on that land. Similarly, there was evidence such as records of Taft Group transactions that indicated money had been laundered. In addition, while Duncan claims he was unaware that the Taft Group was used to launder money, he does not challenge that it could have occurred. Hence, Agent Mulligan could easily have concluded that tax- filings were false and money was laundered without weighing the testimony of other witnesses.
. An
Ex Post Facto
law is one which (1) punishes an act which was innocent when done, (2) makes the punishment of a crime more burdensome after its commission, or (3) deprives the defendant of any defense that was legally available at the time the offense was committed.
See Beazell v. Ohio,
. Arguing to the contrary, the appellant asserts thаt because he played a limited role in the payoff scheme in comparison to his two Taft Group partners — Barbieri and Corpaci — the district court was clearly erroneous. But such comparative analyses are irrelevant, since one conspirator’s leadership role is not dispositive on the question of whether another was also a leader.
Cf.
U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1, Application Note 4 ("There can, of course, be more than one person who qualifies as a leader ... [in a] conspiracy.”);
Garcia,
