UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. WALTER P. REED; STEVEN P. REED
No. 17-30296
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
November 5, 2018
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge
Lyle W. Cayce, Clerk
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
Walter Reed served as District Attorney for Louisiana‘s 22nd Judicial District from 1985 to 2015. Federal prosecutors charged him and his son, Steven Reed,1 with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering and substantive counts of both wire fraud and money laundering. Walter Reed also drew additional counts of wire fraud, false statements on income tax returns, and mail fraud. The jury convicted on all but one count, and both defendants
I
The Reeds were indicted on nineteen counts.2 While overlapping in certain ways, the counts fall into three categories.
The first set of counts were drawn from both defendants’ use of Walter Reed‘s District Attorney campaign funds. The prosecution argued that Walter Reed solicited funds from donors on the premise that those funds would be used to facilitate his reelection, but instead used them for personal expenses unrelated to his campaign or the holding of public office—on multiple occasions, hiring Steven Reed to perform work at prices that did not correspond to the services provided. The defendants responded that each allegation had an innocent explanation.
Count 1 alleged that the Reeds conspired to engage in wire fraud and money laundering by funneling campaign funds to Steven Reed. The indictment described 21 overt acts on behalf of the conspiracy, linked to three distinct events. First, Walter Reed paid Steven Reed about $14,000 in campaign funds for producing an anti-drug service announcement worth only $2,000. Second, Walter Reed paid Steven Reed‘s company, Globop, about $550 for bar services at a “housewarming party” unrelated to the campaign.3 And third, Walter Reed paid Steven Reed‘s other company, Liquid Bread, to provide “Bar Services: Beverages and Liquor” at a campaign event featuring the band America, the “America Event.” The prosecution presented evidence that Liquid Bread only provided bar services and did not provide alcohol at the event, but that Walter Reed nonetheless paid Steven Reed $12 per person for 2,450 people. The prosecution also alleged that Walter Reed suggested to two other companies providing services at the America Event that they each pay Steven Reed $5,000 out of the amount Walter Reed‘s campaign had paid them, but that he did not disclose either $5,000 payment on his campaign finance reports. After receiving payment from the America Event, Steven Reed paid down a loan for which Walter Reed was the guarantor and on which Steven Reed had begun to incur late charges. Counts 7, 9, and 10 alleged that both defendants committed wire fraud and money laundering related to the America Event.
Counts 2-6 and 8 dealt with Walter Reed‘s additional use of campaign funds for personal expenditures. The prosecution alleged that Reed spent campaign funds to purchase dinners, restaurant gift cards, and flowers—all for non-campaign purposes. It further alleged that he used campaign funds to pay for dinners with Pentecostal pastors and their families, then used those dinners to recruit referrals for the private legal practice he operated concurrently with his District Attorney service. As the prosecution explained, on one occasion, Walter Reed used campaign funds to host one of these dinners, requested that his firm reimburse him because he obtained a referral during the dinner, and then kept the reimbursement for himself until the investigation was underway.4 It presented evidence at trial that the same pastor who gave Walter Reed the referral
The jury convicted both defendants of all counts related to use of Walter Reed‘s campaign funds, except for one money laundering count involving a $5,000 payment to Steven Reed at the America Event.
The second broad category of counts, counts 11-14, alleged that Walter Reed underreported income on his tax returns, including for failing to report campaign funds he had converted to personal use. The prosecution contended that Reed owed the Internal Revenue Service about $40,000 in unpaid taxes. The jury convicted Walter Reed of all tax counts.
The final category of counts, counts 15-19, alleged mail fraud related to Walter Reed‘s representation of St. Tammany Parish Hospital. The prosecution presented evidence that the Hospital entered into a representation agreement with the District Attorney‘s office, but that from 1994 to 2014, Reed began depositing checks meant for the D.A.‘s office into a personal bank account for a business entity he owned with his ex-wife, “Walter Reed Old English Antiques.” It argued that the Hospital intended to enter into a relationship with the D.A.‘s office, not with Reed in his personal capacity. The prosecution presented evidence that Reed was aware that the Hospital Board had repeatedly reaffirmed the D.A.‘s office‘s designation as special counsel, and that Reed sent another attorney from the D.A.‘s office when he was unable to attend Board meetings. It also presented testimony that in response to press inquiries, Reed asked one assistant district attorney who often attended meetings in his place to sign a false affidavit that Reed offered to pay him to attend. Reed‘s defense was that there was a misunderstanding, and that he had been under the impression that the Hospital began retaining him in his personal capacity in 1994. The jury also convicted Reed of all mail fraud counts.
The district court sentenced Walter Reed to a below-guidelines term of imprisonment of 48 months, and Steven Reed to a below-guidelines term of probation. It ordered Walter Reed to pay a $15,000 fine and $605,244.75 in restitution. It also imposed forfeiture of $46,200 jointly and severally against both defendants, and of $609,217.08 solely against Walter Reed. In determining how much forfeiture to impose, the district court declined to impose forfeiture for the “housewarming party” that the prosecution had identified as one of the 21 overt acts supporting the conspiracy count.5 Because the court concluded that there was sufficient evidence of other overt acts to support the conspiracy charges, however, this affected the forfeiture amount but not the defendants’ conspiracy convictions.
The Reeds raise several distinct issues on appeal. We reject all but one: the imposition of joint and several forfeiture liability.
II
One of the principal arguments of the Reeds is that in prosecuting offenses drawn from misuse of Walter Reed‘s D.A. campaign funds,6 the jury was asked to convict the Reeds of violation of campaign
The Reeds chiefly rely on the Supreme Court‘s decision in McDonnell v. United States,9 which was issued after trial but before the district court denied the Reeds’ post-trial motions for judgment of acquittal.10 It called on the Supreme Court to interpret “official act” in the federal bribery statute
Focusing on statutory text and precedent, the Court also noted “significant constitutional concerns” with a broader reading bringing a risk of “a pall of potential prosecution” over relationships between public officials and their constituents, reminding that it could not “construe a criminal statute on the assumption that the Government will use it responsibly.”13 Relatedly, the Court observed that “the term ‘official act’ is not defined ‘with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited,’ or in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement“—implicating due process concerns.14 And, finally, it identified “significant federalism concerns” attending a reading of “official act” that “involves the Federal Government in setting standards of good government for local and state officials.”15
While honest services fraud and the definition of “official act” in the bribery statute are not at issue here,16 the Reeds
The argument fails: to the extent that the prosecution pointed to Louisiana campaign finance law, it did so only to prove non-honest-services wire fraud and related offenses, a different context from McDonnell. The jury was tasked with determining whether the defendants committed simple wire fraud by defrauding Reed‘s donors.20 The government was not required to prove that the defendants ran afoul of Louisiana campaign finance law, in contrast to McDonnell, where the troublesome concept of an “official act” was agreed to be an element of the honest services fraud and Hobbs Act charges.21
As a result, the Reeds’ due process arguments are without merit. We agree with the district court that the conspiracy and wire fraud statutes at issue do not suffer the difficulties of “technical interpretation” of “official act,” as in McDonnell; and so are unattended by its vagueness concerns.22 Our recent decision in United States v. Hoffman is instructive. There, we reviewed convictions for wire and mail fraud related to filings and reports made in attempting to obtain state tax credits for film production.23 We concluded that prosecution for those offenses did not raise vagueness concerns—“lying to cheat another party of money has been a crime since long before Congress passed the first mail fraud statute making it a federal offense in 1872.”24 In Hoffman, “[t]he government did not have to prove violations of state law,” but
instead, “[t]he elements the jury had to find included terms like misrepresentations and property that have deep roots in both criminal and civil law.”25 Here too, the jury was not called upon to interpret technical federal statutes or even elements of Louisiana‘s campaign finance law—it was asked to determine whether the Reeds had committed fraud.
We also conclude that the Reeds’ prosecution did not impermissibly step on principles of federalism. McDonnell concerned a statute that, read broadly, might chill permissible official-constituent interactions.26 While the Supreme Court‘s narrow reading was informed by a broader reading‘s challenge to principles of federalism,27 it did not suggest that federal criminal law may never overlap with state regulation of governmental activity. We agree with the district court that “the federal government, in this case, enforced federal law—namely the federal fraud statute—and used state law only to prove mens rea and donor expectations.”28 While state governments certainly have “the prerogative to regulate the permissible scope of interactions between state officials and their constituents,”29 those state officials simultaneously must
comply with federal fraud statutes.30 In other words, if Reed‘s
We pause to observe that our holding here is consistent with our fellow circuits’ reluctance to extend McDonnell beyond the context of honest services fraud and the bribery statute, even where prosecutions involved local or state government officials.32 This is not to say that the federalism or vagueness concerns raised in McDonnell could never have teeth beyond the specific
statutes McDonnell interpreted, but rather that McDonnell should not be taken to prohibit prosecution for any federal crime that overlaps or intersects with state law or local governance.
III
The Reeds further raise a host of claimed errors in the district court‘s conducting of the trial. We will address the points of error, ultimately rejecting each of them.33
A
Steven Reed contends that the district court should have severed his case from Walter Reed‘s, and Walter Reed contends that the district court should have severed the Hospital counts from the other counts.
the district court the deference due, we find no abuse of discretion in its denial of both defendants’ motions to sever.
1
“[T]he federal judicial system has a preference for joint trials of defendants who are indicted together,”35 and “[a] defendant is not entitled to severance just because it would increase his chance of acquittal or because evidence is introduced that is admissible against certain defendants.”36 We have held that “[m]erely alleging a spillover effect—whereby the jury imputes the defendant‘s guilt based on evidence presented against his co-defendants—is an insufficient predicate for a motion to sever.”37 Instead, a defendant “must prove that: (1) the joint trial prejudiced him to such an extent that the district court could not provide adequate protection; and (2) the prejudice outweighed the government‘s interest in economy of judicial administration.”38 Severance is proper “only if there is a serious risk that a joint trial would compromise a specific trial right of one of the defendants, or prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence.”39
Turning to Steven Reed‘s trial with his father, he has not made the required showings. He argues that the joint trial prejudiced him because he was only charged in 4 of the 19 counts presented at trial and was prejudicially associated with Walter Reed‘s convictions on the other counts. But he has failed to establish that the district court‘s limiting instructions were inadequate protection against the harms he identifies.40 The court directed
Steven Reed‘s other arguments for severance speak more to his ability to present a defense, and arguably could not be cured by a limiting instruction. He claims that he was prejudiced because his separate counsel was not conflict free and declined to raise certain defenses that would have aided Steven Reed but put his father in a negative light.43 As Steven Reed did not adequately develop this argument before the trial court, we will not hold here that the district court abused its discretion in denying his motion to sever.44 He also claims that his father‘s testimony was a core portion of his defense, but that once evidence emerged in the trial of the Hospital counts that Walter Reed had asked an assistant District Attorney to lie on his behalf, Walter Reed‘s credibility as
to his defense, and that evidence emerging from the Hospital counts impeached that testimony. In sum, we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in not severing Steven Reed‘s trial from all or part of Walter Reed‘s, especially given the strong preference for joint trials and the fact that joint trials have significant benefits that go beyond efficiency.46
2
Walter Reed, in turn, urges us to hold that the district court should have severed the Hospital counts from the other counts.47 Joinder of counts is justified when there is “a series of acts unified by some substantial identity of facts or participants.”48 Because “[j]oinder of charges is the rule rather than the exception,” in order to justify severance of counts a defendant must show “clear, specific and compelling prejudice that resulted in an unfair trial.”49 As with joinder of defendants, “the mere presence of a spillover effect does not ordinarily warrant severance.”50 The district court found that all of the counts in the indictment were properly joined because they were “part of a common series of transactions with a singular purpose—to exploit Walter Reed‘s influence as district attorney for personal financial betterment.” It also found that “[t]o enrich himself, Defendant Walter Reed employed a singular means—fraud.” Walter Reed alleges a general spillover effect whereby the prosecution conflated his alleged violation of the public trust in the Hospital counts with
his misuse of nonpublic campaign funds in the campaign funding counts. But he has not adequately explained why, especially in light of the district court‘s limiting instructions to the jury to consider each count and the corresponding evidence on each count separately, he suffered “clear, specific, and compelling” prejudice resulting in an unfair trial.
B
The defendants contend that at trial, the district court made a series of erroneous evidentiary rulings. The district court did not abuse its broad discretion on these rulings.51
1
Both appellants contend that the district court improperly limited the expert testimony of Gray Sexton, a former Louisiana Board of Ethics general counsel.52 The district court initially excluded Sexton‘s proffered testimony in its entirety, but later allowed Sexton to offer limited testimony in response to Kathleen Allen, a prosecution witness who testified to certain aspects of campaign finance law. The court observed that it had thought Allen would primarily explain aspects of Walter Reed‘s campaign finance reports, but because she ultimately testified to her opinions on what the campaign finance laws required, Sexton should be allowed to respond. The Reeds argue that further “custom and practice” testimony from Sexton was critical to demonstrate that Walter Reed had a good faith belief that he was in
compliance with Louisiana law involving “dual purpose” campaign expenditures, so limiting Sexton‘s testimony also impermissibly limited their ability to present a defense.
A district court has “wide latitude” and “broad discretion” to exclude expert testimony.53 We will not disturb the court‘s exercise of its discretion to exclude such testimony unless the exclusion was “manifestly erroneous“—that is, unless it “amounts to a complete disregard of the controlling law.”54 The district court found that Sexton‘s proffered “custom and practice” evidence about the Ethics Board‘s treatment of campaign fund expenditures was not relevant to Walter Reed‘s state of mind or other issues in the case, since there was no suggestion that Walter Reed had been aware of the facts on which Sexton would testify, and that Sexton‘s testimony would not help the jury understand the core issue of fraud.55 We see no manifest error in the exclusion, especially because, as we have explained, this was not a trial of campaign finance violations.56
2
Walter Reed further argues that the district court erred in admitting certain
The Bruton doctrine “addresses the thorny Sixth Amendment problem where one defendant confesses out of court and incriminates a co-defendant without testifying at their joint trial.”59 The Supreme Court held that in such a case, the declarant‘s confession presents such a “powerfully incriminating extrajudicial statement[ ]” that a limiting instruction alone cannot safeguard the co-defendant‘s Sixth Amendment rights.60 But the Court has since clarified that Bruton applies only to facially inculpatory statements—and not to statements that only become inculpatory “when linked with evidence later introduced at trial.”61 It has explained that non-facially-inculpatory statements are less likely to inexorably steer a jury into disregarding limiting instructions, not to mention the practical impossibility of predicting in advance what statements might become inculpatory when coupled with other evidence presented at trial.62
We have some doubt about whether Bruton presents the appropriate lens
statement and its inculpatory value, introducing the statement did not violate Bruton.
Walter Reed raises other concerns about the introduction of the conversation, which we will not address in detail. We agree with the district court that, especially since the parties had previously stipulated to the authenticity of the documents, the district court did not err in allowing a Federal Bureau of Investigation financial analyst to read the record of the conversation out loud at trial.64 As for the introduction of the reporter‘s statements in conversation with Steven Reed, the district court instructed the jury not to consider her statements for their truth, and Walter Reed offers no argument for why this limiting instruction was insufficient to cure any prejudice.65
3
Finally, Walter Reed argues that the district court prevented him from presenting a complete defense to the Hospital counts because it barred his proffered testimony about statements by deceased St. Tammany Parish Hospital Chairman, Paul Cordes. Reed had sought to testify and offer evidence about a conversation he had with Cordes in 1994, in which allegedly Cordes arranged for Walter Reed to represent the Hospital in his personal capacity rather than his capacity as District Attorney. The district court excluded this testimony as presenting inadmissible hearsay.
No. 17-30296
The first question is whether Cordes‘s statements were hearsay, that is, an out-of-court statement offered to
The issue was therefore whether the statements fell under an exception to hearsay, which Reed had the burden to establish.69 He urges us to conclude that Cordes‘s statements should have been admitted under the residual exception to hearsay. We have been clear that the residual hearsay exception “is to be used only rarely, in truly exceptional cases,”70 and that the “lodestar” of the exception is whether a hearsay statement has “equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness” relative to other hearsay exceptions.71 Reed contends that Cordes‘s statements had equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness because his wife was prepared to testify that she participated in the conversation and other evidence corroborated that Reed had begun representing the Hospital in his personal capacity. This misunderstands the nature of the residual exception. As we have explained, “[t]he determination of trustworthiness is drawn from the totality of the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement, but it cannot stem
In any event, any error would have been harmless because the district court allowed Reed and his wife to testify extensively regarding Reed‘s reactions to the conversation. For example, Reed testified that “[a]fter a discussion with Mr. Cordes, [he] began attending the meetings in a personal capacity, and [he] began getting a check to Walter Reed.” He further testified that he alerted the D.A. office manager that the D.A.‘s office would no longer receive payment from the Hospital, and gave his office a memorandum to that effect. The district court also allowed Reed to introduce a letter, dated October 15, 1996, where he wrote to Cordes saying that while he had begun representing the Hospital two years prior, he had recently become aware that the board had never ratified his appointment as counsel. The letter attached a draft resolution for the Hospital Board to adopt; the defense also introduced a fax to Cordes‘s office dated October 21, 1996, also attaching a draft resolution. To the extent that Reed truly sought to introduce Cordes‘s statements to prove their impact on Reed as the listener, “the district court permitted [Reed] to elicit essentially the same (if not better) facts as those he originally proffered.”73 The jury‘s decision to nonetheless convict Reed on the Hospital counts is supported by the prosecution‘s contrary evidence that Reed was aware that the Hospital had never approved his appointment in a personal capacity, and that he sent members of the D.A.‘s office to take his place at meetings without arranging for any additional compensation.
The district court did not commit reversible error in its conduct of the trial.
IV
Walter Reed separately argues that prosecutorial misconduct presents grounds for reversing his conviction. Much of his argument centers on a claim that the prosecution effectively amended the indictment during trial. We conclude that Reed has not alleged any material variance, constructive amendment, or other prosecutorial misconduct that would justify reversal.
In discussing the Hospital counts, the indictment stated that
[i]t was further part of the scheme to defraud that in order to conceal the fact that he was taking money and property from the Office of the District Attorney for the 22nd Judicial District for the State of Louisiana, Walter P. Reed reported the funds that he diverted as income on his “Tier 2” personal financial disclosure to the Louisiana Board of Ethics, and, in all but one year, as gross
receipts on his personal income tax returns.
Based on an adding tape produced a month before trial, the prosecution ultimately determined that Reed had paid taxes on his Hospital legal fees every year, but that there had been a different $30,000 discrepancy on his tax reporting in 2009. The government contends that regardless of where the $30,000 discrepancy came from, it had not been properly reported on Reed‘s tax returns.74 At trial, the prosecution amended its exhibits to reflect that the missing $30,000 came from a different source, rather than from the hospital.
Reed now argues that the government‘s case impermissibly diverged from the indictment. He appears to frame this as a constructive amendment issue, but it is more appropriately addressed under the framework of material variance, which occurs “when the proof at trial depicts a scenario that differs materially from the scenario challenged in the indictment but does not modify an essential element of the charged offense.”75 The parties differ on what standard of review is appropriate, since Reed did not raise this argument until sentencing. We conclude that under any standard, Reed‘s claim fails.
We have held that “a variance between allegations and proof is fatal only when it affects the substantial rights of the defendant by failing to sufficiently notify him so that he can prepare his defense and will not be surprised at trial.”76 As the government explains, Reed‘s ability to prepare his defense was not hindered, because he was on notice of the prosecution‘s argument prior to trial and was aware of where the $30,000 discrepancy originated. The district court instructed the jury that any statements by the prosecution—including in the summary exhibits at issue here—were not themselves evidence that could support a conviction.77 Any variance did not affect Reed‘s substantial rights.
Relatedly, Reed argues that the pattern of prosecutorial misconduct was so prejudicial as to warrant a new trial, and that the aggregation of nonreversible errors amounts to a constitutional violation and warrants reversal. He cites no legal authority for his arguments that the prosecution engaged in misconduct warranting reversal,78 and we are not convinced that
V
Only Steven Reed directly challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for his conviction.81 His argument partially hinges on claims Walter Reed advances, which we have already rejected. He also disputes, however, that the prosecution proved some of the 21 overt acts included in the indictment to establish the conspiracy count, and avers that the evidence did not sufficiently support that he committed wire fraud or money laundering connected to the America Event.
We review the denial of a motion for acquittal based on the sufficiency of the evidence de novo, but will affirm “if a reasonable trier of fact could conclude from the evidence that the elements of the offense were established beyond a reasonable doubt, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and drawing all reasonable inferences from the evidence to support the verdict.”82 The jury, not we, evaluates the weight of the evidence and the credibility of witnesses.83
To prevail on the conspiracy count against Steven Reed, the prosecution needed to establish an agreement between the appellants to commit wire fraud or money laundering, an overt act committed by one of the conspirators in furtherance of the agreement, and the requisite criminal intent.84 Contrary to Steven Reed‘s
The evidence was likewise sufficient for the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Steven Reed committed the underlying offenses of wire fraud and money laundering. To prove wire fraud, the prosecution needed to show “(1) a scheme to defraud that employed false material representations, (2) the use of . . . interstate wires in furtherance of the scheme, and (3) the specific intent to defraud.”87 It produced evidence that Steven Reed knowingly accepted money from the campaign that was disproportionate to services he provided at the America Event, and that these funds were transferred using interstate wires. To prove money laundering, the prosecution needed to prove that Steven Reed knew that certain property represented the proceeds of unlawful activity and conducted a financial transaction involving those proceeds, knowing that the transaction was designed in whole or in part “to conceal or disguise” the nature, source, ownership, or control of the proceeds.88 It produced evidence that Steven Reed was aware that the $5,000 he received from the caterer at the America Event was fraudulently derived from Walter Reed‘s campaign funds and that Walter Reed arranged for that transfer with the intent to obscure its origin.89 We conclude that viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, a reasonable juror could have credited the evidence presented as establishing beyond a reasonable doubt that Steven Reed was part of the charged conspiracy and that he committed wire fraud and money laundering.
* * *
This concludes our review of the defendants’ convictions. On appeal, the Reeds have extensively listed strengths in their cases and weaknesses in the prosecution‘s case. They have also pointed to discretionary determinations the district court made, ones that a different court may have perhaps resolved differently. None of this, however, convinces us that this able district court impermissibly erred in how it conducted the defendants’ trial—or that the jury‘s ultimate decision to convict the
VI
We must separately consider the defendants’ challenges to the district court‘s imposition of forfeiture. As we have described, the district court ordered forfeiture of $46,200 jointly and severally against both defendants for the conspiracy conviction under Count 1, and ordered forfeiture of $609,217.08 against Walter Reed for the wire and mail fraud counts.90 We “review[] the district court‘s findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard of review, and the question of whether those facts constitute legally proper forfeiture de novo.”91 The defendants raise three primary challenges to the fact and amount of forfeiture.92
A
First, Walter Reed argues that the district court should have only imposed forfeiture on the Hospital mail fraud counts related to offenses occurring within the five-year statute of limitations for mail fraud. We see no clear factual error in the district court‘s finding that Reed had engaged in a continuing scheme over 20 years, and no legal error in its conclusion that he could therefore be required to forfeit all of the proceeds from that scheme under
Reed‘s reliance on the Supreme Court‘s decision in Kokesh v. SEC94 is mistaken. Kokesh concerned the civil forfeiture statute
B
Second, Walter Reed also argues that the forfeiture amount violated the Eighth Amendment prohibition against excessive fines. The Supreme Court has explained that “[t]he touchstone of the constitutional inquiry under the Excessive Fines Clause [of the Eighth Amendment] is the principle of proportionality.”99 “If the amount of [a punitive] forfeiture is grossly disproportional to the gravity of the defendant‘s offense, it is unconstitutional.”100 Here, the district court found that Walter Reed engaged in a twenty-year scheme to defraud by diverting payments meant for the D.A.‘s office into his personal bank account. His offenses had identifiable victims—the Hospital, his constituents, and the D.A.‘s office—and the money that he would forfeit came from those victims. The required forfeiture of $574,063.25 for the mail fraud offenses was not grossly disproportionate to the gravity of his offenses.101
C
Finally, all parties propose that the district court‘s imposition of joint and several liability between the defendants for a forfeiture amount of $46,200—representing proceeds related to both defendants’ convictions on the conspiracy count—should be vacated and remanded in light of the Supreme Court‘s decision in Honeycutt v. United States. Honeycutt held that joint and several forfeiture liability was not permitted for forfeiture under
VII
We vacate and remand the portion of the district court‘s forfeiture order imposing forfeiture of $46,200 jointly and severally between both defendants, and otherwise affirm.
Notes
A separate crime is charged against one or both of the defendants in each of the counts of the indictment. Each count and the evidence pertaining to it should be considered separately. The case of each defendant should be considered separately and individually. The fact that you may find one of the accused guilty or not guilty of any of the crimes charged should not control your verdict as to any other crime or any other defendant. You must give separate consideration to the evidence as to each defendant.
