Defendants Thomas K. Welch and David R. Johnson were the President and Senior Vice President, respectively, of the Salt Lake City Bid Committee for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games (SLBC). Community leaders organized the SLBC in the late 1980’s as an I.R.C. § 501(c)(3) not-for-profit corporation under the direction of a board of trustees. The SLBC’s primary purpose was to secure, in cooperation with the United States Olympic Committee (USOC), the right from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to host the quadrennial Winter Games in Utah. 1 The IOC is an “international non-governmental nonprofit organization” based in Lausanne, Switzerland. One of the primary duties of individual IOC members from participating countries is to cast votes to elect the host city for the Olympic Games. 2 In June 1995, the IOC awarded the 2002 Olympic Winter Games to Salt Lake City, Utah. 3
In July 2000, a federal grand jury indicted Defendants Welch and Johnson on fifteen bribery-related counts of criminal misconduct in connection with the SLBC’s activities in procuring the 2002 Games. Count I of the indictment charged Defendants with conspiracy to defraud the United States by committing numerous bribery-related offenses in violation of 18 *1085 U.S.C. § 371. Counts II through V charged Defendants with use of communications in interstate and foreign commerce to facilitate unlawful activity in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(3). Counts VI through X charged Defendants with mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. Lastly, Counts XI through XV charged Defendants with wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343. Upon Defendants’ motion and over a magistrate judge’s contrary recommendations, the district court dismissed the indictment in its entirety. The Government appeals. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731. We reverse and remand.
I.
According to the indictment, Salt Lake City began competing for the Olympic Winter Games around 1988. In 1994, the SLBC and USOC jointly executed and filed with the IOC an “Undertaking” in which they agreed to abide by the provisions of the International Olympic Charter and to act in accord with the IOC’s instructions to candidate cities bidding on the 2002 Winter Games. As part of the 2002 bidding process, the IOC distributed a series of instructions to candidate cities and IOC members. IOC members similarly are bound by the Charter and take an oath to remain free from commercial influence. As stated in the indictment, the instructions “limited certain expenditures by candidate cities, created rules concerning visits by IOC members to candidate cities, and placed limitations on the value of gifts ■ and other benefits which could be given to IOC members by and on behalf of candidate cities.”
Meanwhile, between February 1988 and July 1999, Defendants purportedly utilized interstate facilities, contrary to federal law, tó engage in a bribery scheme to “misappropriate and misapply the monies and funds of the SLBC[ ] by diverting SLBC income and by giving ... money and other material benefits to influence IOC members to vote for Salt Lake City to host the Olympic Winter Games[.]” Among other things, the indictment alleges Defendants instructed an SLBC “sponsor” “to make a series of payments to the defendants in cash so that the payments would not appear on the SLBC’s books and records and could be diverted by the defendants for their own personal purposes.”
The indictment alleges Defendants (1) made direct and indirect payments of money and other things of substantial value to IOC members; (2) paid for tuition, living expenses, and spending money for the children and relatives of IOC members; (3) paid for medical expenses of IOC members and their relatives; and (4) paid for personal and vacation travel expenses of IOC members and their relatives. Defendants also purportedly obtained lawful permanent resident alien status for an IOC member’s son through submission of false and misleading documents to immigration authorities. Defendants allegedly conferred valuable benefits upon amenable IOC members totaling approximately $1,000,000 in value. 4
*1086 According to the indictment, neither the SLBC, its board of trustees, nor its contributors were aware of Defendants’ scheme. Similarly, neither the USOC, IOC, Salt Lake City, State of Utah, nor the United States had any knowledge of Defendants’ activities. The indictment alleges Defendants secretly retained and paid Alfredo La Mont, the USOC’s Director of International Relations, to assist them “in influencing the conduct of IOC members in connection with the IOC’s election” of Salt Lake City to host the Winter Games. To further conceal their illicit activities, Defendants allegedly (1) made payments to IOC members in cash; (2) created and funded a sham program known as the National Olympic Committee Program ostensibly to provide athletes in underprivileged countries with training and equipment; (3) entered into sham contracts and consulting agreements on behalf of the SLBC; (4) recorded payments and benefits which the SLBC provided to IOC members inaccurately in corporate books and records; (5) placed false, fraudulent, and misleading information in SLBC financial records and statements, and (6) failed to disclose material information in public documents.
Based on the foregoing, Count I of the indictment alleges ninety-eight overt acts by one or both Defendants in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud in violation of 18 U.S.C.- § 371. The conspiracy count is based upon four substantive offenses — the three substantive offenses alleged in the remaining counts of the indictment, and fraud in procuring an alien registration receipt card by false claims and statements in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1546. Counts. II through V of the indictment each allege one specific instance of Defendants’ use of “a facility in interstate or foreign commerce” with the intent to carry on an “unlawful activity” in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(3). The unlawful activity or predicate offense on which Counts II through V rely is “bribery of various IOC members” in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a). 5 Counts VI through X each allege one instance of Defendants’ use of the United States mail to further their unlawful scheme in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. 6 Finally, Counts XI through XV each allege one instance of Defendants’ use of “wire communications in interstate and foreign commerce” to further their unlawful scheme in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343. 7
*1087 II.
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss the indictment in its entirety pursuant to Fed. R.Crim.P. 12 for failure to state a criminal offense. The district court referred Defendants’ motion to a magistrate judge, who after briefing and oral argument, issued two reports and recommendations. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1). The first report recommended the district court deny Defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts II through V. The second report recommended the court deny Defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts VI through XV. 8 Defendants lodged timely objections to both reports. See id. Upon de novo review, the district court rejected the magistrate judge’s recommendations and dismissed the indictment in two stages.
A.
Like the magistrate judge’s first report, the district court’s first order focused exclusively on Counts II through V of the indictment, or the Travel Act counts. Commonly referred to as the Travel Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1952 provides in relevant part:
(a) Whoever ... uses the mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce, with intent to—
(3) ... promote, manage, establish, carry on, or facilitate the promotion, management, establishment, or carrying on, of any unlawful activity, and thereafter performs or attempts to perform—
(A) an act described in paragraph ... (3) shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both[.]
Id. § 1952(a)(3)(A). Subsection (b) defines “unlawful activity” as, among other things, “bribery ... in violation of the laws of the State in which committed[.]” Id. § 1952(b)(i)(2). In this case, the “unlawful activity” on which the Travel Act counts rely is bribery as defined by Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a). Entitled “Bribery of or receiving bribe by person in- the business of selection, appraisal, or criticism of goods or services,” § 76-6-508(l)(a) provides in relevant part:
(1) A person is guilty of a class A misdemeanor when, without the consent of the ... principal, contrary to the interests of the ... principal:
(a) he confers, offers, or agrees to confer upon the ... agent, or fiduciary of ... [the] principal any benefit with the purpose of influencing the conduct of the ... agent, or fiduciary in relating to his ... principal’s affairs!.]
The district court dismissed the Travel Act counts based upon alternative holdings. The court initially held that § 76-6-508 was an invalid predicate for charging a violation of the Travel Act. The court offered several reasons for its holding. First, the court suggested that “[f|ederal prosecution of this case based upon Utah law does not advance the goals of the Travel Act.” According to the court, “Congress enacted [the Travel Act] to assist states in enforcing their laws against participants in organized crime who use state boundaries to avoid prosecution. A fair reading of the indictment does not reflect *1088 that defendants are members of a criminal enterprise, an organized syndicate or a ‘crime family.’ ” (citation omitted). Second, the court relied on a lack of reported Utah cases involving § 76-6-508 outside the employment context to suggest Defendants’ alleged conduct did not violate the Utah bribery statute and thus did not constitute “unlawful activity” as required by the Travel Act. Similarly, the court relied on the lack of prior state prosecutions under the statute to suggest “that Utah does not view such conduct as a prosecuto-rial priority, or even a crime.” Finally, the court suggested the indictment threatened the balance of power between federal and state government. The court stated “neither the history nor the language of the Travel Act would sanction an expansive interpretation that would jeopardize the balance of powers between the state and federal governments when a continuous course of organized criminal conduct is not present and when there is no state enforcement to reinforce.”
In the alternative, the district court held Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a) was unconstitutionally vague as applied to Defendants. According to the court, neither § 76 — 6—508(l)(a)’s language nor its prior applications gave Defendants reasonable notice their alleged conduct was proscribed. Suggesting the sufficiency of the Travel Act counts turned on whether Defendants’ alleged conduct violated § 76-6-508(l)(a), the court phrased the issue as “whether Utah’s commercial bribery statute gave [Defendants] fair warning, in reasonably clear language, that it was criminal to offer inducements and gifts to IOC members to persuade them to vote for Salt Lake City as host for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games.”
To support its alternative holding, the district court focused on three phrases within § 76-6-508(l)(a). First, the court reasoned the phrase “any benefit” was vague because it “leaves defendants to guess” what conduct is proscribed. The court stated “[i]t ... broaches absurdity to believe that the [Utah] legislature intended to criminalize good will gifts or gestures, especially in the context of promoting Salt Lake City and the State of Utah on the world stage to host the Olympic Winter Games.” Second, the court reasoned the phrase “in relating to his ... principal’s affairs” was vague because it did not specify whether the principal must suffer a detriment as a result of the agent’s or fiduciary’s acts. Finally, the court explained the phrase “contrary to the interests of the ... principal” was vague because “[a] subjective evaluation by the defendants, as well as by police and prosecutors, is required to determine what is ‘contrary to the interests’ of the IOC and its members.”
In the end, the district court summarized its view of the indictment’s Travel Act counts: “[U]nder the guise of aiding Utah with its law enforcement, federal prosecutors have co-opted an obscure Utah misdemeanor bribery statute of uncertain and improbable application as the only basis for charging defendants with four federal Travel Act felonies.” Given its view, the court refused to “speculate that the Utah legislature intended Utah’s commercial bribery statute to apply to defendants’ alleged conduct in seeking to bring the Olympic Winter Games to Salt Lake City and Utah.”
B.
The district court’s second order addressed Counts VI through XV of the indictment, or the mail and wire fraud counts. The mail and wire fraud statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343 respectively, proscribe the use of mail and wire to fur *1089 ther a “scheme or artifice to defraud.” 9 In its second order, the court independently sustained the mail and wire fraud counts, and recognized those counts’ “alternative property theories,” namely that Defendants contrived a scheme with the intent to defraud the SLBC of (1) “actual property,” (2) “its right to control how its property was used,” and (3) “its right to defendants’ honest services.” 10 The court also sustained Count I of the indictment, the conspiracy count, to the extent it relied on the mail and wire fraud charges.
Nevertheless, the district court held its prior dismissal of the Travel Act counts required dismissal of the conspiracy, mail, and wire fraud counts as well. The court reasoned the grand jury’s decision to indict Defendants on the Travel Act counts may have influenced its decision to indict them on the remaining counts. The court noted each count of the indictment alleged the same bribery scheme:
An analysis of the conspiracy, mail and wire fraud charges indicates that the fraud scheme charged by the grand jury relies heavily on allegations that defendants bribed IOC members unlawfully in order to win the Olympic Winter Games. Review of the indictment reflects inflammatory allegations of bribery in violation of Utah law, unlawful bribery, misappropriation of money and like characterizations.
The court concluded these allegations were so prevalent and interrelated that they could not be segregated and stricken without improperly amending the indictment in violation of the Fifth Amendment’s grand jury guarantee.
III.
On appeal, the Government challenges all adverse aspects of the district court’s two orders dismissing the indictment. Defendants, of course, defend those same aspects of the orders. Recognizing that we may affirm on any ground supported by the record, Defendants offer additional arguments which they presented to the district court.
See United States v. Lott,
We review the sufficiency of an indictment and issues of statutory inter
*1090
pretation involved therein de novo.
See United States v. Giles,
A.
Concerned with state and local governments’ inability to cope with the interstate nature of complex criminal enterprises, Congress enacted the Travel Act as part of the Attorney General’s 1961 legislative program directed against “organized crime.”
See Perrin v. United States,
As set forth by the Act’s plain language, the elements necessary to sustain a Travel Act conviction are (1) travel in interstate or foreign commerce or use of the mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce, (2) with the intent to promote, manage, establish, carry on, or facilitate the promotion, management, establishment, or carrying on, of any unlawful activity, and (3) performance of or an attempt to perform an act of promotion, management, establishment, or carrying on of the enumerated unlawful activity. 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a)(3). The district court never suggested the Travel Act counts fail to allege the foregoing elements, and neither have Defendants. Instead, the concern focuses largely on whether the Utah Commercial Bribery Statute legitimately defines the “unlawful activity” required for this Travel Act prosecution.
1.
In
Perrin
the Supreme Court upheld the Travel Act conviction of a defendant who, with two other individuals, engaged in a scheme to steal confidential data from a geological exploration company. The three sought to bribe a company employee as proscribed by Louisiana state law. The Court held: “Congress intended ‘bribery ... in violation of the laws of the State in which committed’ to encompass conduct in violation of state commercial bribery statutes”
Perrin,
a.
First, the district court concluded the Travel Act counts are insufficient because they fail to allege Defendants are members of a criminal enterprise or organized crime. Neither § 1952’s language nor, since
Perrin,
the case law construing it support the district court’s conclusion.
See United States v. Dailey,
Similarly, where bribery is the predicate offense in a § 1952 prosecution, neither the Act’s language nor the case law construing it support the district court’s conclusion that such bribery must be part of a criminal or business enterprise. The Travel Act’s definition of “unlawful activity” set out in subsection (b) includes two relevant subparts. Subpart (i)(l) defines “unlawful activity” as “any business enterprise involving gambling, liquor on which the Federal excise tax has not been paid, narcotics or controlled substances ..., or prostitution offenses in violation of the laws of the State in which they are committed or of the United States[.]” 18 U.S.C. § 1952(b)(i)(l). Subpart (i)(2) defines “unlawful activity” as “extortion, bribery, or arson in violation of the laws of the State in which committed or of the United States[.]”
Id.
§ 1952(b)(i)(2). Unlike subpart (i)(l), conspicuously absent from subpart (i)(2)’s definition is any requirement that bribery be part of a business enterprise. Clearly, “the language of the Act reflects an intent to treat extortion, bribery, and arson differently from gambling, liquor, narcotics, and prostitution offenses.”
United States v. Wander,
*1092 b.
Second, the district court’s reliance on the lack of reported cases involving Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508 outside the employment context, and more specifically, the lack of Utah state prosecutions under the present allegations is misplaced. These observations have no bearing on the question of whether § 76-6-508(l)(a) properly characterizes Defendants’ alleged activity as bribery. The predicate offense,
ie.,
the “unlawful activity,” in a Travel Act prosecution serves only to define the accused’s conduct.
See United States v. Davis,
An actual violation of § 76-6-508(l)(a) is not an element of the alleged Travel Act violations in this case and need not have occurred to support the Government’s § 1952 prosecution.
See Davis,
Moreover, viewing a prosecutor’s failure to utilize a penal statute in a particular instance as a guide to statutory construction finds no support in law. “[Executive branch policy judgments about the desirability of certain types of prosecutions ... are not guided solely by the language of the statute.”
United States v. Piervinanzi,
c.
Finally, due to misplaced federalism concerns over the Government’s prosecution, the district court refused to give the Travel Act what it labeled an “expansive interpretation.” In discounting those same concerns over twenty years ago, the Supreme Court explained that Congress in enacting the Travel Act—
employed its now familiar power under the Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution to prohibit activities of traditional state and local concern that also have an interstate nexus.... Because the offenses are defined by reference to existing state as well as federal law, it is clear beyond doubt that Congress intended to add a second layer of enforcement supplementing what it found to be inadequate state authority and state enforcement.
Perrin,
In its order dismissing the indictment’s Travel Act counts, the- district court narrowly perceived the indictment as the Government’s attempt to assert jurisdiction over a matter- of purely state and local concern.
Cf. United States v. Ferber,
2.
Broader concerns resolved, we turn next to the language of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508, and in particular, subsection (l)(a), to determine whether the Utah commercial bribery statute’s “definition” of bribery is unconstitutionally vague. Bribery occurs under § 76-6-508(l)(a) when an individual “without the consent of the ... principal, contrary to the interests of the ... principal ... confers, offers, or agrees to confer *1094 upon the ... agent or fiduciary of a[ ] ... principal any benefit with the purpose of influencing the conduct of the ... agent, or fiduciary in relating to his ... principal’s affairs[.]” Id. § 76-6-508(a)(l).
Focusing primarily on the phrases “any benefit,” “in relating to,” and “contrary to the interests of,” the district court concluded the Utah statute’s language failed to provide Defendants with fair notice that their “bid-seeking efforts” constituted “unlawful activity” within the meaning of the Travel Act. Consequently, the court held § 76-6-508(l)(a) unconstitutionally vague, proffering an additional basis why the statute could not serve as' the predicate offense for the indictment’s Travel Act counts. Our analysis of the Utah statute as applied to the indictment in this case persuades us the district court failed to narrow its inquiry consistent with the proper constitutional standard, and thus erred in its holding.
When considering a vagueness challenge to a penal statute, courts begin with the presumption that the statute comports with the requirements of federal due process and “must be upheld unless satisfied beyond all reasonable doubt that the legislature went beyond the confines of the Constitution.”
United States v. LaHue,
Realistically, “ ‘most statutes ... deal with the untold and unforeseen variations on factual situations and the practical necessities of discharging the business of government inevitably limit the specificity with which legislatures can spell out prohibition.’ ”
United States v. Agnew,
Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a) is unconstitutionally vague as applied to Defendants only if its language “fails to provide people of ordinary' intelligence a reasonable opportunity to understand” that Defendants’ conduct, as alleged in the indictment, was proscribed.
Hill v. Colorado,
When interpreting statutes our primary goal is to evince the true intent *1095 and purpose of the legislature. We discern legislative intent and purpose by first looking to the “best evidence” of its meaning, which is the plain language of the statute itself. When examining the statutory language, we assume the legislature used each term advisedly and in accordance with its ordinary meaning.
State v. Martinez,
a.
The district court concluded the words “any benefit” were “inherently ambiguous because the breadth of the language encompasses all gifts including expressions of courtesy such as good will gifts.” We agree with the district court that “it ... broaches absurdity to believe the [Utah] legislature intended to criminalize good will gifts and gestures, especially in the context of promoting Salt Lake City and the State of Utah on the world stage to host the Olympic Winter Games.” Neither § 76-6-508(l)(a), nor the indictment, however, in any way seek to criminalize “good will gifts and gestures.” Webster’s Third New Int'l Dictionary 979 (1981) (hereinafter “Webster’s ”) defines “good will” as “a will acting freely from pure disinterested motives.” Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a), in clear contrast, requires a defendant confer or agree to confer a “benefit” upon the agent or fiduciary of a principal “with the purpose of influencing the conduct of the ... agent, or fiduciary in relating to his ... principal’s affairs[.]” (emphasis added). The district court failed to appreciate the limiting effect of § 76-6-508(l)(a)’s mens rea requirement on the phrase “any benefit” and on the statute as a whole.
To establish Defendants’ violation of the Travel Act, the Government must prove, among other things, that Defendants acted with a culpable state of mind. The Travel Act requires an act “with intent to ... promote ... or facilitate the promotion ... of any unlawful activity!.]” The “unlawful activity” in this case, bribery under § 76-6-508(l)(a), requires an act “with the purpose of influencing ... conduct[.]” Both statutes require the Government prove Defendants acted with a higher level of culpability than mere knowledge.
13
The Travel Act requires a specific “intent to ... promote^]”
See United States v. James,
A vagueness challenge to a penal statute based on insufficient notice rarely succeeds where the requisite mental state is one of purpose or specific intent. The Supreme Court “has long recognized that the constitutionality of a vague statutory standard is closely related to whether that standard incorporates a requirement of
mens rea.” Colautti v. Franklin,
Contrary to the district court’s conclusion, no construction of § 76-6-508(l)(a) as applied to the allegations of the Travel Act counts could encompass those who confer or attempt to confer “benefits” upon an agent or fiduciary without unlawful purpose. The district court expressed concern that the words “any benefit” “leaves defendants to guess whether such gestures as transporting IOC members to and from the airport is sanctioned by § 76-6-508, but providing dinner for them is not; whether providing dinner is legal under the statute, but providing lodging is not; and so on and so forth.” In doing so, the court went well beyond the four corners of the indictment to hypothetical “benefits” which § 76-6-508(l)(a) may or may not proscribe.
See Hill,
Counts II, III, and IV of the indictment allege Defendants made or caused to be made international wire transfers in the amounts of $12,000, $1,000, and $15,000 respectively. Those counts further allege Defendants made those transfers to three IOC members with the “intent to ... promote ... or facilitate the promotion” of the crime of bribery as defined by § 76-6-508(a)(1). Count V alleges Defendants received an interstate fax from Alfredo La Mont, the USOC representative Defendants allegedly retained to assist them in their bribery scheme. That count further alleges Defendants received the fax with the “intent to ... promote ... or facilitate the promotion” of the crime of bribery as defined by § 76-6-508(l)(a).
At trial, Defendants will be free to argue before the jury that they facilitated these transfers and correspondence,' if proven, absent the requisite intent to promote bribery. Absent proof of an intent to influence conduct, Defendants’ use of interstate and international channels of commerce would not promote the designated “unlawful activity” as required by 18 U.S.C. § 1952(a).
See Jones,
Employing much the same rationale as the district court, Defendants suggest “most gifts given to persons in a position to make decisions have, at some level, an intent to influence those persons, but not all of those gifts are unlawful.” (emphasis added). Defendants add the Government does not “suggest that all benefits given with the intent to influence IOC members were bribes.” (emphasis added). Neither § 76-6-508(l)(a) nor the indictment, however,- concerns itself with “most gifts” and “all benefits.” The indictment plainly states that certain expenditures, gifts, and other benefits tendered to IOC members were within IOC guidelines and permissible. The indictment does not oppose Defendants’ undertaking on behalf of the SLBC to persuade IOC members, within the bounds of the law, as to the merits of their cause.
Instead, the indictment alleges Defendants clandestinely employed interstate and international channels of commerce to assist them in conferring direct and indirect cash payments and other benefits on IOC members “with the purpose of influencing” those members to cast their votes for Salt Lake City — not on the basis of the city’s merits as mandated by the IOC, but on the basis of the members’ personal gain. In other words, the indictment alleges Defendants used the channels of commerce to promote bribery, “a concept well-understood by the ordinary person.”
Gaudreau,
The district court’s oft-repeated view that the Utah legislature could not have intended § 76-6-508(l)(a) to encompass Defendants’ alleged conduct finds no support in law. While we seriously doubt the
*1098
Utah legislature would endorse a “win at all costs” approach in regard to the Olympic Winter Games, whether it might is irrelevant. Nothing in the applicable law,
i.e.,
the language of the Utah statute, its sparse legislative history, or the few cases construing it, binds us to such a proposition. As we earlier explained, “most statutes ... deal with the untold and unforeseen variations on factual situations[.]”
Agnew,
b.
The district court next reasoned the phrase “in relating to his ... principal’s affairs” was unduly vague because it left one to guess whether the principal need suffer some detriment and was thus “susceptible to two distinct interpretations.”
16
The requirement that one must intend to influence an agent’s or fiduciary’s conduct “in relation to” his principal’s affairs consistently appears in state commercial bribery statutes.
See United States v. Parise,
Despite the district court’s concern, § 76-6-508(l)(a)’s language does not require the principal actually “suffer some detriment.”
Cf. Parise,
c.
The court further reasoned the phrase “contrary to the interests of the ... principal” was unduly vague because “[a] subjective evaluation by the defendants ... is required to determine what is ‘contrary to the interests’ of the IOC and its members.” Consistent with the statute’s aim to protect the duty of loyalty, § 76-6-508(l)(a) does not require that the principal suffer some detriment. Rather, the statute requires only that the proscribed conduct be “contrary to the interests of’ the principal, or in other words, opposed to the principal’s concerns. 17 See Webster’s, supra at 495, 1178 (defining the terms “contrary” and “interest” respectively).
The IOC’s interest is not limited to the desirability of the chosen site as the district court suggested. The IOC clearly has an interest in the fairness of the bidding process as evidenced by, among other things, the Olympic Charter. As stated in the indictment: “The Olympic Charter prohibited IOC members from accepting from governments, organizations, or other legal entities or natural persons, any mandate liable to bind them or interfere with their -freedom of action and vote.” Fairness in the site selection process depends on the undivided loyalty of IOC members to the IOC — a loyalty critical to the IOC’s mission. See Report of the IOC ad hoc Commission to Investigate the Conduct of Certain IOC Members and to Consider Possible Changes in the Procedures for the Allocation of the Games of the Olympiad and Olympic Winter Games (1999). We believe a person of ordinary intelligence would understand that Defendants’ alleged conduct was “contrary to the interest of’ the IOC.
To the extent, if any, the phrase “contrary to the interest of’ requires “subjective evaluation by the defendants,” it is like the myriad of other phrases appearing in § 76-6-508(l)(a) with which the district court found fault. “ ‘[T]he law is full of instances where a man’s fate depends on his estimating rightly, that is, as the jury subsequently estimates it, some matter of degree.’ ”
United States v. Villano,
Gaudreau,
We do not suggest Defendants have violated the Travel Act or even come “perilously close” to violating it, although the indictment plainly supports the former view. That ultimately is for a jury to decide. What we decide is that the statutory definition of “unlawful activity,”
ie.,
Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a), on which the indictment’s Travel Act counts rely, conveyed sufficiently clear warning to Defendants as to the criminal nature of their alleged conduct when measured by common understanding and practices.
See Villano,
3.
Although Defendants raised the issue, one aspect of § 76-6-508(l)(a) upon which the district court declined comment involves the requisite relationship of principal and agent. Defendants argue that because the requisite relationship did not exist between the IOC and its members, or, in the alternative, because Defendants could not reasonably have understood such a relationship existed, we should uphold the district court’s dismissal of the Travel Act counts. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 12(b). According to Defendants, “[t]here is no application of law to facts which transforms this membership organization [the IOC] into a ‘principal’ and its members into ‘agents’ or ‘fiduciaries.’ ” Assuming the Government meets its evidentiary burden at trial, we *1101 conclude resolution of this argument, like other arguments aimed at § 76-6-508(l)(a)’s language, is properly left to a jury applying the applicable law to the facts of this case.
a.
Defendants argue the question of whether an IOC member is an agent or fiduciary of the IOC “is answered by looking first to the law of the country in which the IOC is organized to determine what rights and obligations Swiss law imposes on this Swiss organization and its members.” Defendants present the affidavit of Dr. Wolfgang Wiegand, an “expert in Swiss law.” 19 Based upon certain presumptions, Dr. Wiegand opines that Swiss law would not recognize IOC members as agents or fiduciaries of the IOC “as defined by the Utah Commercial Bribery Statute.”
We reemphasize that Federal law, not Swiss law, governs whether Defendants’ alleged conduct violated the Travel Act. Thus, federal law, albeit reliant upon definitions derived from state law, governs whether an IOC member is an agent or fiduciary of the IOC.
It must be made clear that 18 U.S.C. § 1952 charges a Federal crime, and Federal courts are required to consider every element of the crime and every issue raised under each element. The law involved is Federal law, and all issues raised thereunder become Federal law issues. If necessary to the resolution of a § 1952 case, a Federal court may interpret state law, but it does so as one step in the process of properly interpreting a Federal criminal statute.
United States v. D’Amato,
Testimony on the rights and obligations Swiss law imposes on the IOC and its members may be relevant in determining whether such rights and obligations create an agency or fiduciary relationship between the IOC and its members under Utah Code. Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a). Evidence that addresses the facts and circumstances of the IOC relationship to its members under Swiss law would potentially be relevant, as would evidence of the IOC’s and its members’ understanding of that relationship. This is so because to prove IOC members acted as agents of the IOC as required by Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a), the Government must establish the IOC manifested that its members could act for it, the members accepted this, and both parties understood this arrangement.
See Wardley Corp. v. Welsh,
Although Dr. Wiegand’s opinion as to whether, for example, IOC members under Swiss law had authority to alter legal relationships between the IOC and third parties, could indeed be relevant, his con-clusory opinion that Swiss law would not recognize IOC members as agents or fiduciaries (i.e., applying the Swiss law standard of “agent” or “fiduciary”) is not relevant in determining whether federal law via the Utah Commercial Bribery Statute *1102 would do so. To conclude otherwise might very well result in largely disinterested foreign law sheltering from Travel Act prosecution international criminal elements doing business within and without the United States. Sanctioning such shelter would frustrate the significant federal interest in protecting interstate channels of commerce from persons whose criminal activities take them “across State or National boundaries!!.]’ ” 20 H.R.Rep. No. 966 at 4 (emphasis added).
b.
Consistent with the Travel Act’s mandate, we look to Utah law to provide us with the federal definition of “bribery” applicable in this case. Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a) requires that the recipient of the “benefit” be an “agent” or “fiduciary” of a “principal.” The Utah Supreme Court, in a civil law context, defines “agent” as a person authorized by another to “ ‘act on his behalf and subject to his control.’ ”
21
Gildea v. Guardian Title Co.,
Similarly, the existence of a fiduciary relationship in Utah is a question of fact where the evidence or inferences to be drawn therefrom conflict.
See Rio Algom Corp. v. Jimco Ltd.,
Established principles, however, guide the inquiry. A fiduciary is a person in whom another places particular confidence. A fiduciary has a duty to act primarily for the benefit of the other and thus also may be an agent.
See Restatement (Second) of Agency
§ 13 (“An agent is a fiduciary with respect to matters within the scope of his agency.”). “Generally, in a fiduciary relationship, the property, interest, or authority of the other is placed in the charge of the fiduciary.”
First Sec. Bank,
There is no invariable rule which determines the existence of a fiduciary relationship, but it is manifest in ah the decisions that there must be not only confidence of the one in the other, but there must exist a certain inequality, ... business intelligence, knowledge of the facts involved, or other conditions, giving to one advantage over the other.
Id. (internal quotations and footnote omitted). The parties may expressly create a fiduciary relationship through contract, or Utah law may imply such a relationship “due to the factual situation surrounding the involved transactions and the relationship of the parties to each other and to the questioned transactions.” Id. at 1332 (internal quotations and footnote omitted). 23
Defendants argue “[n]o reasonable person would expect that IOC members would be considered agents or fiduciaries of .the IOC in a criminal prosecution under the commercial bribery statute.” Applying the preceding definitions of “agent” and “fiduciary” to the indictment’s factual allegations, we disagree. The IOC entrusts its members with the power and responsibility to select on behalf of the IOC the host city for the Olympic Games. To ensure fairness in the site-selection process, IOC members must make their selection with undivided loyalty to the IOC free from commercial influence. IOC members appear subject to the control of the IOC at least to the extent they operate under certain express standards of conduct designed to promote fairness, and may be expelled from the “organization” for failure to adhere to these standards. The indictment’s allegations are sufficient to withstand Defendants’ argument, which best await the Government’s trial evidencie. We simply cannot conclude as a matter of law that the relationship between the IOC and its members places Defendants’ conduct outside § 76-6-508(l)(a). Rather, we view the question of a principal-agent/fiduciary relationship between the IOC and its members as one of fact which the Government must establish and against which Defendants may defend. Consequently, we will not deprive the Government the opportunity to meet its burden of establishing the requisite relationship between the IOC and its members which § 76-6-508(l)(a), and thus the Travel Act, requires.
B.
Having concluded Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a) is a valid predicate for the Travel Act violations alleged in Counts II through V of the indictment, we now turn to the district court’s decision to dismiss Counts VI through XV of the indictment,
ie.,
the mail and wire fraud counts. Because we have upheld the sufficiency of the Travel Act counts, we need not address the district court’s holding that the
*1104
mail and wire fraud counts cannot be segregated from the Travel Act counts without improperly amending the grand jury’s indictment in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
See United States v. Cusumano,
The elements of federal mail fraud as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1341 are (1) a scheme or artifice to defraud or obtain property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, (2) an intent to defraud, and (3) use of the mails to execute the scheme.
See United States v. Haber,
1.
In this case, the mail and wire fraud counts set forth the required elements in the language of the statutes. In addition, each count independently sets forth an alleged interstate or international mailing or wire transfer designed to further the scheme.
See supra
nn. 6 and 7. Thus, the mail and wire fraud counts, like the Travel Act counts, are sufficient in that they set forth the elements
of
the offenses charged, and provide Defendants fair notice of the charges against them.
See Avery,
a.
First, Defendants argue the mail and wire fraud counts fail to allege they intended to inflict economic harm on or injure the SLBC’s property rights. Although the indictment alleges Defendants’ conduct subjected the SLBC “to the foreseeable risk of economic harm,” we have found no case which requires such an allegation; An intent to inflict economic harm on or injure the property rights of another is not an element of federal mail or wire fraud. “The gist of the offense[s] is a scheme to defraud and the use of interstate communications to further that scheme.”
United States v. O’Malley,
The notion of harm in a mail or wire fraud prosecution is important only in the
*1105
sense that proof of contemplated or actual harm to the victim or others is one means of establishing the necessary intent to defraud.
See, e.g., United States v. Cochran,
“A variety of circumstantial evidence has been held relevant to infer fraudulent intent. Intent may be inferred from evidence that the defendant attempted to conceal activity. Intent to defraud may be inferred from the defendant’s misrepresentations, knowledge of a false statement as well as whether the defendant profited or converted money to his own use.”
Rather, the intent to defraud under §§ 1341 and 1343 is akin to the intent to deceive in order to deprive one of property or honest services.
See United States v. Hollis,
The common-law element of intent to induce action or inaction by one in reliance on another’s deceit or misrepresentation (actual reliance is not required) translates not only into the bank fraud context but also into the mail and wire fraud context.
See id.
A fact-finder may infer an intent to defraud where a defendant intends to deprive another of its money, other property, or right to honest services through deceit or misrepresentation.
See id.
at 28-29. Consistent with this conclusion, the Supreme Court has recognized “the words ‘to defraud’ ... usually signify the deprivation of something of value by trick, deceit, chicane or overreaching.”
McNally v. United States,
b.
We likewise reject Defendants’ argument that the mail and wire fraud counts must allege an intent to achieve personal gain. Such intent, like the intent to harm, is not an element of the mail or wire fraud statute.
See Vinyard,
Defendants rely on the Seventh Circuit’s split panel decision in
United States v. Bloom,
Notably, Bloom addressed only the intangible rights theory of fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1346. No appellate court to our knowledge has ever held an intent to achieve personal gain is an element of a traditional mail or wire fraud charge involving the deprivation of property. See United States v. Stockheimer, 157 F.3d *1107 1082, 1087 (7th Cir.1998) (post-Bloom mail fraud decision recognizing “[a]n intent to defraud does not turn on personal gain.”). Bloom’s rationale is inapplicable to the Government’s allegation that Defendants sought to deprive the SLBC of property.
And we are unwilling to become the first court to embrace
Bloom’s
pleading requirements in the context of honest services fraud. Defendants urge us to judicially legislate by adding an element to honest services fraud which the text and structure of the fraud statutes do not justify. To do so would effectively endorse the proposition inherent in Defendants’ (and Bloom’s) argument that depriving a victim of the intangible right to honest services, no matter how significant the foreseeable harm to the victim or others
might
be, never constitutes honest services fraud in the absence of the perpetrator’s personal gain.
See, e.g., Vinyard,
266 F.Sd at 326-329 (construing § 1346 to require proof (not an allegation) of “reasonably foreseeable” harm, actual or potential). Thus, at the very least,
Bloom’s
approach is under-inclusive.
See United States v. Panarella,
The right to honest services is not violated by every breach of contract, breach of duty, conflict of interest, or misstatement made in the course of dealing.
See Cochran
2.
Lastly, Defendants challenge the Government’s basis for the mail and wire fraud counts. Those counts allege Defendants—
devised and intended to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud the [SLBC] and to obtain [its] money and property by means of material false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises, and to deprive the [SLBC] of [its] intangible right to the honest services of the defendants and others.
The Government indicates the mail and wire fraud charges are predicated on three alternative theories, namely that Defendants “contrived a scheme to defraud the SLBC (1) of actual property, (2) of its right to control how its property was used and (3) of its right to defendants’ honest services.” Defendants argue that none of the Government’s theories are viable. At this preliminary stage, ie., subject to proof at trial, we conclude all three theories remain viable. 26
*1108 a.
Defendants first assert that “because the [SLBC’s] funds were spent for the purpose for which they were intended — to get the Games — the [SLBC] was not deprived of money or property.” To the contrary, Defendants, regardless of the end result, deprived the SLBC of its funds at the time Defendants allegedly obtained them for use under fraudulent pretenses. In other words, Defendants deprived the SLBC of property if their fraudulent conduct caused the SLBC to permit the use of its funds in a manner which the SLBC, if cognizant of the truth, would not have sanctioned.
Just as a borrower still commits bank fraud if he knowingly provides or withholds from a bank materially false information to induce a loan and then repays it,
see Hollis,
b.
Defendants next assert that after
Cleveland v. United States,
The difference between
Cleveland
and this case is readily apparent. Here, the SLBC’s monies constituted “property in the hands of the victim.” The Supreme Court recognized long ago that property defined in the “ordinary, everyday sense[ ]” is not only the tangible “thing which is the subject of ownership,” but also “the owner’s [intangible] right to control and dispose of that thing.”
Crane v. Commissioner,
*1109 c.
Lastly, Defendants assert § 1346 does not apply to honest services fraud in the private sector. Defendants are mistaken. Although judicial construction has limited § 1346’s application in the private sector to curb over-criminalization, see
Vinyard,
IV.
The judgment of the district court dismissing the indictment is REVERSED. Because all substantive counts of the indictment are sufficient, the conspiracy count is sufficient as well. This cause is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
SO ORDERED. 30
Notes
. Among other reasons, Congress established the USOC as a not-for-profit corporation to represent the United States in its relations with the IOC. See 36 U.S.C. § 220505(c)(2). The USOC is authorized to select from among candidate cities in the United States the city that will compete against cities in other countries for the right to host the Olympic Games. See id. § 220503(3).
. The IOC consists of three organs: the Session, the Executive Board, and the President. The Session, which is a general meeting of all IOC members, is the “supreme organ of the IOC;” its decisions are final. Although the Session is the "supreme organ,” the authority to manage the affairs of the IOC is vested in the Executive Board, which consists of the President, four Vice-Presidents and six additional members, all of whom the Session elects. The majority vote of all IOC members, i.e., the Session, determines the host city for the Olympic Games.
.Thereafter, the SLBC renamed itself the Salt Lake City Organizing Committee for the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. Defendant Welch continued as President until August 1997, while Defendant Johnson continued as Senior Vice President until January 1999. We refer to both corporate entities as the SLBC.
. According to the indictment, foreign “consultants” to Defendants identified the amenable IOC members. The alleged payments and benefits to IOC members included: (1) $320,000 to Jean Claude Ganga of the Congo; (2) $91,000 to Bashir Attarabulsi of Libya; (3) $42,000 to Charles Mukora of Kenya; (4) $20,000 to Zen Gadir of the Sudan; . (5) $78,000 to Un Yong Kim of South Korea; (6) $195,000 to Rene Essomba of Cameroon; (7) $3,000 to Austin Sealy of Barbados; (8) $30,000 to Augustin Arroyo of Ecuador; (9) $1,200 to Slobodan Filopovic of Yugoslavia; (10) $99,000 to David Sibandze of Swaziland; (11) $107,000 to Lamine Keita of Mali; (12) $33,750 to Pitjo Haggman of Finland; (13) $8,000 to Guirandou. N’Daiye of the Ivory Coast; (14) $5,000 to Anton Geesink of the *1086 Netherlands; and (15) $20,000 to Sergio San-tander-Fantini of Chile.
. Count II alleges a $12,000 wire transfer between Salt Lake City and London, England to an IOC member. Count III alleges a $1,000 wire transfer between the same locations to another IOC member. Count IV alleges a $15,000 wire transfer between Salt Lake City and Paris, France to an IOC member. Finally, Count V alleges a faxed letter between Colorado Springs, Colorado and Salt Lake City from Alfredo La Mont to Defendant Welch.
. Count VI alleges the mailing from Salt Lake City to Bethesda, Maryland of a $1,165 check payable to the Fairmont Plaza for the apart- • ment lease of an IOC member’s daughter. Count VII alleges the mailing from Salt Lake City to Colorado Springs, Colorado of a $3,000 check payable to "ARCA, Inc.” for the benefit of an IOC member. According to the indictment, ARCA was a United States company controlled by Alfredo La Mont. Count VIII alleges the mailing from Salt Lake City to Washington, D.C. of a $5,998 check payable to Howard University for the tuition of an IOC member's son. Count IX alleges the mailing between the same locations of a $9,122 check payable to American University for the tuition of an IOC member’s daughter. Finally, Count X alleges the mailing between the same locations of a $8,557.50 check payable to American University for the tuition of the same IOC member’s daughter.
.Counts XI, XII, XIII and XV allege the same underlying transactions as Counts IV, II, III, and V, respectively. See supra n. 5. Count *1087 XIV alleges a wire transfer from Salt Lake City to Springfield, Missouri to an IOC member’s son.
. Although the magistrate judge never addressed Count I's conspiracy allegations, the judge apparently believed Count I's sufficiency turned on the sufficiency of the indictment’s substantive counts. Aside from Count I’s immigration fraud charge under § 1546, which Defendants have not challenged on appeal, this is true.
. Section 1341 provides in relevant part:
Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, ... for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice or attempting so to do, places in any post office or authorized depository for mail matter, any matter or thing whatever to be sent or delivered by the Postal Service, ... shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
Section 1343 provides in relevant part:
Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or ior obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, radio, television communication in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
. Section 1346 defines the phrase "scheme or artifice to defraud” as used in §§ 1341 and 1343, as including a "scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.” 18 U.S.C. § 1346.
. The only recognized exception to this rule, inapplicable in this case, is where factual issues are undisputed and the Government fails to object to the district court's resort to evidence outside the four corners of the indictment."
Hall,
. Although the legislative history of the Travel Act is sparse,
see Rewis v. United States,
*1092 The House version of the Travel Act contained an amendment unacceptable to the Justice ' Department. The Senate bill defined "unlawful activity” as "any business enterprise involving gambling, liquor ... narcotics, or prostitution offenses in violation of the laws of the State ... or ... extortion or bribery in violation of the laws of the States.” S.Rep. No. 644, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 2 (1961). However, the House amendment, by defining "unlawful activity” as "any business enterprise involving gambling, liquor, narcotics, or prostitution offenses or extortion or bribery in connection with such offenses in violation of the laws of the State,” required that extortion [and bribery] be connected with a business enterprise involving the other enumerated offenses. H.R.Rep. No. 966, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 1 (1961). [...] The House Senate Conference Committee accepted the Senate version. See H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 1161, 87th Cong., 1st Sess. (1961).
Nardello,
. A person acts knowingly or with a “general intent” if he is aware that the result is practically certain to follow from his conduct, whatever his desire may be as to that result.
United States v. Bailey,
. In
Bailey,
the Court explained that "[i]n a general sense, 'purpose' corresponds loosely with the common-law concept of specific intent, while 'knowledge' corresponds loosely with the concept of general intent.”
. Despite Defendants’ contrary assertion, the Government is not required to prove Defendants specifically intended to violate Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-508(l)(a) to establish the requisite "unlawful activity” under the Travel Act.
Cf. United States v. Hawthorne,
. On appeal, Defendants throw into the mix of purportedly vague terms the phrase "without the consent of ... the principal!.]" They complain that § 76-6-508(l)(a) "does not explain whether ‘consent’ means affirmative consent by the principal or whether ‘consent’ could be inferred from the principal’s acquiescence in prior, similar gifts.” Defendant’s argument is unfounded. Webster's includes "acquiescence” in its definition of "consent.” Webster's, supra at 482. The law has long recognized that consent generally may be "express” or "implied,” and we will not depart from that common understanding in interpreting § 76-6-508(l)(a).
. At least one other state includes a similar phrase in its commercial bribery statute. See N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 638:7 ("contrary to the best interests of the ... principal”). In addition to New Hampshire, at least eight states’ commercial bribery statutes, like § 76-6-508(l)(a), use the phrases "any benefit,” "without the consent of,” and "in relation to.” Ala.Code § 13A-11-120; Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 13-2605; Conn. Gen.Stat. § 53a-60; 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/29A-1; Nev.Rev.Stat. 207.295; N.Y. Penal Law § 180.00 (McKinney); N.D. Cent.Code § 12.1-12-08; S.D. Codified Laws § 22-43-1. . Reportedly, thirty-seven states prohibit commercial bribery in some form. See Don Zarin, Doing Business Under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, § 11.5 at 11-8 n. 34.1 (Practicing Law Institute 2001).
. To comport with due process, a penal statute must not only provide people of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to understand what conduct it proscribes, but also must give adequate guidance to law enforcement officials, courts, and juries in order to prohibit arbitrary and discriminatory application.
See Hill,
. Defendants gave notice in the district court of their proposed application of Swiss law as required by Fed.R.Crim.P. 26.1. Rule 26.1 requires a party intending "to raise an issue concerning the law of a foreign country” to provide reasonable written notice to opposing parties and the court.
.Unlike its predecessor, the
Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws
made "[n]o attempt .,. to deal ... with the special Conflict of Laws problems presented by criminal law.”
Id.
§ 2 cmt. c. The commentary notes, however, that "[m]any of the principles stated in this Restatement ... are applicable to criminal law.”
Id.; see also
Leflar,
supra
at 45-46. An analysis under the "most significant relationship” approach as described in the
Restatement (Second)
undoubtedly calls for the application of federal rather than Swiss law in this instance.
See id.
§ 6(2) (setting forth factors relevant to choice of law including "the relative interests of ... states in the determination of the particular issue”). The Utah Supreme Court has endorsed the Restatement's approach in the civil context.
Waddoups v. Amalgamated Sugar Co.,
. Because the Utah Supreme Court has not specifically addressed the meaning of agent or fiduciary as used in § 76-6-508(l)(a) or any other penal statute, we again rely on general principals of Utah state law.
See Meredith v. Winter Haven,
. Section 1 of the Restatement (Second) of Agency defines "agency” as "the fiduciary relation which results from the manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall act on his behalf and subject to his control, and consent by the other so to act.”
. For instance, in
Thatcher v. Peterson,
. The second phrase in the first element of §§ 1341 and 1343 relating to a scheme or artifice "for obtaining-property ..." modifies the first phrase addressing a "scheme or artifice to defraud” by "making it unmistakable that the statute[s] reach[ ] false promises and misrepresentations as to the future as well as other frauds involving money or property.”
Cleveland v. United States,
. Citing
United States v. Stewart,
the fraud statutes did not incorporate all the elements of common-law fraud. The common-law requirements of "justifiable reliance” and "damages,” for example, plainly have no place in the federal fraud statutes. By prohibiting the "scheme to defraud,” rather than the completed fraud, the elements of reliance and damage would clearly be inconsistent with the statutes Congress enacted.
. Even if one or two of the Government's three fraud theories were insufficient to state an offense against Defendants, that would not necessarily render the mail and wire fraud counts themselves insufficient so long as one theory remains viable.
See,
e.g.,
O’Leary v. United States,
. In
Scheidler,
the Supreme Court held abortion opponents seeking to “shut down” abortion clinics did not commit extortion within the meaning of the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C.
*1109
§ 1951, because they did not “obtain” property as required by the Act.
See id.
§ 1951(b)(2) (defining "extortion” as used in subsection (a) as "the obtaining of property from another”). The Court assumed without deciding the opponents "deprived or sought to deprive [complainants] of their alleged property right of exclusive control of their business assets[.]” Scheidler,-U.S. at-,
.Our only encounter with § 1346 to date came in
Cochran,
. We reject Defendants' suggestion that § 1346 is unconstitutionally vague as applied in this case. Courts have routinely rejected vagueness challenges to § 1346 in cases involving schemes in which defendants breached a duty owed by an agent to a principal, and so do we.
See Rybicki,
. Defendants’ "Motion to Dismiss the United States’ Appeal” based upon the Government’s presentation of evidence outside the district court record is DENIED. In its reply brief, the Government briefly summarized evidence it intends to present at trial to demonstrate the criminal nature of payments and other benefits Defendants allegedly conferred upon IOC members. The Government asserts this was necessary to rebut Defendants’ argument that any benefits conferred were simply good will gifts and gestures. We need not decide whether the Government’s reply summary constituted proper rebuttal. Because we did *1110 not rely on it to uphold the sufficiency of the indictment, Defendants suffered no prejudice therefrom. Accordingly, any violation of procedural rules was harmless.
