William Kinney and Kevin Kelly (“defendants”) were convicted of conspiracy and mail fraud based on their involvement with a fundraising effort for a law enforcement charity. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Arthur D. Spatt, Judge, entered the convictions pursuant to a jury verdict and imposed sentences of incarceration. Defendants appeal their convictions primarily on the ground that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict. Additionally, defendants appeal their sentences on several fronts. Because we find that defendants’ convictions were adequately supported by the evidence and their sentences were properly calculated, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Defendants worked for a company called American Interconnect Agency (“AIA”), a business which contracted with various charitable organizations to solicit funds on their behalf. Kinney was the vice president and founder of AIA, and Kelly was the office manager. In the fall of 1992, AIA contracted to raise funds for the Drug Enforcement Agency of New York (“DEANY”), a non-profit organization not connected to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration whose primary purpose was to educate police officers. The one-year contract provided that AIA would solicit potential contributors to DEANY within the state of New York and sell them advertising space in two journals that would be produced by AIA during the contract term and distributed widely to DEANY’s 1200 members and all its contributors. Of the money raised by AIA, the first $40,000 was guaranteed to DEANY and AIA was to keep what remained after paying the costs of solicitation and journal production.
The contract was negotiated by Kinney and John Belizzi, the executive director of DEANY. During these negotiations, Bel-izzi specified that AIA could not make misrepresentations in its solicitations as to the purpose of the contributions or the identity of the solicitors. In particular, Belizzi emphasized to Kinney that AIA salespeople should not hold themselves out as police officers or as connected with the Drug Enforcement Administration of the United States Department of Justice. Belizzi also told Kinney that the salespeople should not tell potential contributors that funds raised would be used to educate " children or to put more police officers on the street. Belizzi did not state to Kinney that the funds would be used to buy bulletproof vests or to supplement a death fund for police officers slain in the line of duty.
DEANY received the $40,000 guaranteed under the contract in May 1998. By the end of the contract year, however, AIA had not published either of the two journals as promised, although it had raised over $200,000 — in addition to the $40,000 given to DEANY — through its advertising solicitations. In November 1993, AIA’s records were seized by the U.S. Postal Inspection Services and arrest warrants were issued for defendants, charging them with mail fraud. Defendants were ultimately indicted for mail fraud and conspiracy based on their alleged misrepresentations that (1) they would produce the
At trial, the government presented testimony from people who had been solicited by AIA and contributed money to DEANY in exchange for advertising space in the promised journals. These witnesses testified that the AIA salesmen had told them that their donations would go to drug education for children, that the salesmen identified themselves as law or drug enforcement officers, and that they were told that their advertising would appear in the next journal. Because AIA had not published a journal by November 1993 when its records were seized, none of these witnesses ever received the expected advertising. The government also introduced testimony from two AIA salesmen who said that they consistently made misrepresentations as to their identities and as to how the solicited funds would be used, and that.they did so based on “pitch sheets” prepared by Kinney.
Additional testimony was presented from people involved in preparing to publish the journals. Kinney’s secretary testified that she sorted advertising copy as it came in from contributors and put it in a box in Kinney’s office, where it was found in the November 1993 seizure. A graphic designer testified that he communicated with Kinney about the journal, but never received any advertising or editorial copy from him.
Kinney testified on his own behalf that he had collected advertising and editorial copy for the DEANY journal and taken steps to have the journal published. He claimed that he had sent editorial copy to the graphic designer, but mistakenly used the wrong address so that it never was received. Kinney also testified that he instructed his salesmen not to represent themselves as police officers or tell contributors that their money would go to drug education. Kelly did not testify.
After the jury returned a guilty verdict on all counts in October 1998, the district court held hearings on sentencing. Based on the hearings, the district court calculated defendants’ sentences as follows: In addition to the base offense level, each defendant’s offense level was increased for the amount of loss produced by the fraud, the fact that the scheme involved more than minimal planning and/or more than one victim, and the fact that defendants misrepresented that they were acting on behalf of a charitable organization. The district court also enhanced Kinney’s sentence on obstruction of justice grounds because he perjured himself at trial, and enhanced Kelly’s sentence because of his role as a manager.
Kinney’s and Kelly’s convictions and sentences were entered by judgment on July 14, 1999 and June 10,1999 respectively. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Defendants appeal the sufficiency of the evidence supporting their convictions for mail fraud, arguing that they did not make false or material misrepresentations and that they lacked the requisite fraudulent intent for the crime. Defendants also contest the propriety of their sentences on several fronts, the most significant being that it was erroneous to apply a two-level enhancement for misrepresenting that they were acting on behalf of a charitable organization. We will discuss each of these arguments in turn.
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
As we recently reiterated in
United States v. Salameh,
The crime of mail fraud, which served as the basis for defendants’ conviction, has three elements: “(1) use of the mails to further (2) a scheme -to defraud with (3) money or property as the object of the scheme.”
United States v. Gole,
We find no merit in defendants’ contentions. At the heart of the government’s case was the charge that defendants misrepresented the fact that AIA would print contributors’ advertising in two journals. Defendants do not argue that this misrepresentation was not material, but rather that the government failed to prove that they did not intend to publish the journals. To support their argument, they cite the case of
United States v. D’Amato,
We cannot agree with defendants’ argument. Unlike the case at bar, D’Amato turned on the allegation that the defendant had not performed services provided for in a contract between him and Unisys, the party he was accused of defrauding. See id. at 1261. Here, the misrepresentations at issue were made not to DEANY, the other party to the AIA contract, but rather to the individual contributors solicited by defendants. More importantly, the evidence in D’Amato demonstrated that Uni-sys never expected the defendant to provide the services at issue and therefore no criminal intent could be established from his failure to do so. Id. (“There is ... no dispute that D’Amato performed all the services for Unisys that were requested of him.”). In this case, even if the contributors to DEANY could be said to have entered into a contract with AIA, they clearly expected to get their advertisements published in a journal and never did. Thus D’Amato’s holding, which is based on the distinction between breach of contract and fraud, is of negligible assistance to defendants.
The government offered the following evidence of defendants’ criminal intent to defraud DEANY’s contributors by not publishing the journals: (1) the fact that the advertising copy received from contributors was found in Kinney’s office at least five months after the last promised date of publication; (2) testimony by Bellizzi that he repeatedly inquired about the status of publication but never saw any efforts toward publication; (3) testimony by the graphic artist that he did not receive any copy for the journal and reminded Kinney in May and June 1993 that none had been provided; (4) testimony by a contributor that Kelly told him that the journal would be published monthly; (5) testimony by
Indeed, defendants offer very little to challenge such a finding. The only credible evidence offered that raises a competing inference regarding intent is Kinney’s assertion that journal copy was mis-delivered in June 1993, necessitating a trip to Albany for additional copy. This “fact,” however, comes from Kinney’s own testimony and therefore goes only to the weight of the evidence, not its sufficiency.
See United States v. Ramirez,
Here, the victims of defendants’ fraud— the DEANY contributors—were given false information about
how
their money would be spent, and made a decision whether to donate money based on that information. We cannot agree with defendants that these misrepresentations did not affect the contributors’ understanding of their bargain with DEANY and mislead them as to the nature and quality of DEANY’s activities. In such circumstances, we have not hesitated to hold that
Starr
and
Regent
have no application.
See United States v. Walker,
In sum, we find that defendants have not overcome their burden of demonstrating that their convictions were unsupported by sufficient evidence of fraudulent intent. We will therefore not disturb the judgment of the jury that defendants were guilty of mail fraud.
II. Sentencing
Defendants challenge the district court’s enhancement of their sentences pursuant to the United States Sentencing Guidelines (“U.S.S.G.”) § 2Fl.l(b)(4) (1998),
1
which allows a two-level enhancement where the offense involved “a misrepresentation that the defendant was acting on behalf of a charitable, educational, religious or political organization.”
See id.
On appeal of a sentence, we apply a
de novo
standard of review to the court’s legal determinations, giving due deference to the district court’s application of the guideline provision to the facts.
See United States v. Echevarria,
The correct interpretation of U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(4) as applied to charitable solicitations has yet to be addressed by this Court. The district court adopted the reasoning of
United States v. Bennett,
A close reading of
Bennett
and the cases from other circuits addressing the application of Section 2Fl.l(b)(4) convince us that the district court’s approach was the right one. In
Bennett,
the defendant created a Ponzi scheme in which he induced people to buy into a charitable organization with the promise that their money would be doubled by an anonymous donor and be donated to the charity of their choice.
Bennett used his position there to ensnare donors with falsehoods designed to generate contributions. He exploited his victims’ altruism to reap personal, pecuniary gain. We find no authority for the proposition that the enhancement applies only if the “charitable” organization is fraudulent from its inception and in every facet of its operations.... Regardless of their motivation to give money to [the organization], donors had a right to expect that their contributions would be used in the manner that Bennett had promised.
Other circuits have reached equivalent conclusions. In
United States v. Aramony,
the court held that an enhancement under Section 2Fl.l(b)(4) is appropriate “even if the defendant did not misrepresent his authority to act on behalf of a particular organization, but rather only misrepresented that he was conducting an activity wholly on behalf of such organization.”
Defendants cite two cases that they claim represent the “majority” view with respect to Section 2Fl.l(b)(4)’s application. One,
United States v. Starr,
Defendants are better served in their reliance on
United States v. Frazier,
No other circuit has adopted the position set forth by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Frazier. See Aramony,
Applying the reasoning of
Bennett
to this case, the district court correctly concluded that defendants had employed misrepresentations about the use of donated funds and their own identities for personal enrichment. While we recognize that “boiler room” contracts such as the one entered into by DEANY and ALA are not illegal, defendants raised in excess of $200,000 for themselves by relying partially on unauthorized solicitation tactics. Despite having been specifically prohibited by the executive director of DEANY from holding themselves out as law enforcement officers and from representing that donated money would go to student drug education and an officers’ death benefit fund, defendants used such misrepresentations, as well as the allure of widespread distribution of the promised journals, to induce people to contribute. Defendants’ conduct fits comfortably into Bennett’s criteria of “ensnar[ing] donors with falsehoods designed to generate contributions .... [and] exploiting] ... victims’ altruism to reap personal, pecuniary gain.”
III. Defendants’ Other Arguments
Defendant Kelly claims his conviction was tainted because the district court erroneously admitted evidence of uncharged wrongful acts under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b). Additionally, defendants challenge their sentences on a variety of other grounds, including the district court’s amount of loss calculation, its finding that Kelly was a manager, and its finding that Kinney had obstructed justice by perjuring himself at trial. We have considered defendants’ arguments on all these points and find them to be without merit.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court in all respects.
Notes
. We note that throughout the briefs, all parties refer to the applicable Guideline provision as Section 2F1.1(b)(3). Although this was the correct citation prior to the 1998 Guidelines, amendments in 1998 put the applicable provision at U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(4). Because defendants were sentenced in 1999, the 1998 Guidelines apply. See U.S.S.G. § 1B1.11(a).
