United States v. Reeder, 1st Cir. (1999)

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<pre> United States Court of Appeals <br>
For the First Circuit <br>
____________________ <br>
<br> <br>No. 97-1831 <br> <br>
UNITED STATES,
<br> <br>
Appellee, <br>
<br> v.
<br> <br> GEORGE WAYNE REEDER, A/K/A
WAYNE REEDER, <br> <br>
Defendant, Appellant. <br> <br>
____________________ <br>
<br> APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT
COURT <br> <br> FOR THE DISTRICT OF
RHODE ISLAND <br> <br> [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S.
District Judge] <br> <br>
____________________ <br>
<br> Before
<br> <br> Torruella, Chief Judge,
<br> <br> Aldrich and Cyr, Senior Circuit Judges.
<br> <br>
_____________________ <br>

<br> Dennis P. Riordan, with whom Dylan L. Schaffer, Riordan &


<br>Rosenthal, Law Offices of e.robert (bob) wallach, P.C. and <br>e. robert (bob)
wallach, P.C. were on brief, for appellant. <br> Sangita K. Rao, Attorney,
Department of Justice, with whom <br>Margaret E. Curran, United States Attorney,
and Craig N. Moore, <br>Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief, for
appellee. <br> <br> <br>
____________________ <br>
<br> March 10, 1999
<br> ____________________
TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. Appellant, George Wayne
Reeder, <br>was charged with five counts of wire fraud, in violation of 18
<br>U.S.C. 1343, and five counts of interstate transportation of <br>stolen
property, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 2314. The charges are <br>based on five
wire transfers made in June 1988. The transfers were <br>to pay liens and costs
on properties owned by Reeder which had been <br>posted as collateral for the
purchase of two insurance companies. <br>Reeder's first trial in May 1996
resulted in a hung jury. <br>Following a retrial in October 1996, Reeder was
convicted of all <br>ten counts. The district court sentenced Reeder to forty-six
<br>months in prison and ordered him to pay restitution in the amount <br>of $16.5
million. In all respects, we affirm. <br>
BACKGROUND
<br> We review the facts of a criminal case on appeal from a
<br>conviction in the light most favorable to the verdict. See United <br>States v.
Gonzlez-Maldonado, 115 F.3d 9, 12 (1st Cir. 1997). Our <br>presentation of the
facts draws considerably on our recent opinion <br>in United States v. Christopher,
142 F.3d 46 (1st Cir. 1998). <br> In mid-1987, Charles
Christopher and other investors <br>formed a holding company called Resolute
Holdings, Inc. <br>("Resolute") for the purpose of acquiring insurance companies.
<br>Resolute sought to acquire American Universal Insurance Company <br>
("American"), an insurer headquartered in Providence, Rhode Island, <br>and
Diamond Benefits Life Insurance Company ("Diamond"), an insurer <br>that was
licensed in Arizona and had its principal offices in <br>California. Resolute,
however, was a shell company, with no assets <br>except $250,000 in working
capital. In late 1987, Christopher and <br>Resolute enlisted the participation of
Reeder, a California <br>developer who had real estate holdings and controlled
several <br>companies, including Hill Top Developers ("Hill Top"). Reeder
<br>agreed to contribute capital to the insurance companies in exchange <br>for a
share in Resolute. <br> In early February 1988, Reeder
negotiated a deal with <br>Resolute. Under the terms of Reeder's deal with
Resolute, in <br>exchange for Reeder's capital contribution to the insurance
<br>companies, Reeder received a 60% share of Resolute and about $2 <br>million
in yearly profit participation. Reeder thus acquired a <br>controlling interest in

Resolute, although the formal transfer of <br>Resolute shares to Reeder did not
become official until June 1988. <br> In addition to reaching
an agreement with the respective <br>sellers of American and Diamond, Resolute
had to obtain the <br>approval of state insurance regulatory authorities. By
statute, <br>the Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation ("RIDBR") had to
<br>approve the sale of American, and the Departments of Insurance in <br>both
Arizona and California had to approve the sale of Diamond. <br>Resolute
submitted an application, known as a Form A statement, to <br>each of those three
states. Each Form A required the disclosure of <br>extensive background and
financial information about the <br>individuals involved in the acquisition, their
business plan for <br>the company, and the financial means by which the company
would be <br>acquired, so that the regulators could assess whether the
<br>acquisition would jeopardize the interests of policyholders. <br>
As part of its acquisition plan submitted to the <br>insurance
regulators, Resolute agreed to capitalize the insurance <br>companies by
contributing Reeder's $50 million promissory note, <br>secured by Heritage Ranch
and Indian Palms, to American. To <br>capitalize Diamond, Resolute agreed to
contribute Reeder's $12 <br>million promissory note, secured by Indian Springs.
<br> The acquisition of Diamond had an additional
component. <br>Resolute had negotiated for Diamond to assume a block of
annuity <br>policies from the Life Assurance Company of Pennsylvania
("LACOP"). <br>As consideration for its assumption of about $31 million in
LACOP's <br>annuity obligations, Diamond was to receive about $29.4 million in
<br>cash from LACOP. Of that sum, $18 million was to be delivered to
<br>Diamond at closing, with the remainder to follow several months <br>later.
<br> At the time of Resolute's Form A applications, all of the
<br>Reeder properties securing Reeder's promissory notes -- Heritage <br>Ranch,
Indian Palms, and Indian Springs -- had extensive liens on <br>them. On Heritage
Ranch and Indian Palms alone, the total was <br>about $17 million. Those
preexisting liens were significant <br>because they meant that American's and
Diamond's security interests <br>would be subordinated to other mortgages on the
properties. In <br>addition, pre-existing liens on the collateral decreased the
value <br>of the promissory notes, thereby decreasing the amount of capital
<br>with which the insurance companies could do business. <br>
In February 1988, Reeder made a deal with Christopher
<br>that Resolute would purchase Reeder's liens from the banks so that <br>the
closings could go forward. Reeder and Resolute made repeated
<br>representations to the insurance regulators that the pre-existing <br>liens on the
Reeder properties would be cleared by closing. At the <br>same time that these
representations were being made, however, <br>Reeder was repeatedly advised that
Resolute had no means by which <br>to pay the debt. <br> In
the Form A filings submitted to Rhode Island, Arizona, <br>and California,
Resolute represented that all pre-existing liens on <br>the collateral securing its

promissory notes to the insurance <br>companies would be discharged at or before


closing on Resolute's <br>acquisition. <br> On March 10,
1988, Arizona approved Resolute's <br>acquisition of Diamond. Resolute
understood that, by Diamond's <br>closing, it still had to provide documentation
demonstrating that <br>the pre-existing liens on the property securing the notes to
<br>Diamond had been cleared. <br> The Rhode Island
regulators were particularly concerned <br>about the encumbrances on the property
securing the promissory note <br>to American. In late April, RIDBR chief legal
counsel Nancy Mayer <br>wrote to Resolute asking whether Reeder's corporations
owned <br>Heritage Ranch and Indian Palms "free and clear of all
<br>encumbrances." <br> Reeder later admitted that he knew
that the liens would <br>not be paid off by the closings on the insurance companies,
despite <br>the representations to the regulators. Nevertheless, Reeder was
<br>still actively involved in the acquisition of the insurance <br>companies. On
May 24, Reeder had a meeting with Christopher and <br>several other Resolute
principals to decide who was going to run <br>the insurance companies. Reeder,
soon to be the majority <br>shareholder of Resolute, had the ultimate authority to
make that <br>decision. Against the strong opposition of the other Resolute
<br>principals, Reeder placed Christopher in charge of the insurance
<br>companies. <br> The RIDBR scheduled an approval
hearing on the American <br>acquisition for May 26. On May 24, just two days
prior to that <br>hearing -- when Reeder knew that the American closing was
imminent <br>-- Reeder signed a number of documents relating to the purchase of
<br>American, including a capitalization agreement that was submitted <br>to the
RIDBR as part of the Form A application. In the <br>capitalization agreement,
Reeder represented that, "[t]here are no <br>actions, suits or proceedings, pending
or threatened, to the <br>current actual knowledge of the Makers, effecting [sic] the
$50 <br>Million Note or any portion of the property, at law or in equity or
<br>before or by any federal, state, municipal or other governmental
<br>department, commission, [or] board." This statement was not true.
<br>Reeder knew that suits were threatened against both Heritage Ranch <br>and
Indian Palms, the two properties securing the $50 million <br>promissory note to
American. <br> At the time Reeder signed the capitalization
agreement, <br>Reeder had a $10 million note outstanding with Continental Bank,
<br>secured by Heritage Ranch. Reeder had missed a $2.3 million
<br>amortization payment due in October 1987. In a meeting with
<br>Continental in December 1987, Reeder told the bank that he did not <br>have
the cash to meet his obligations under the loan. On March 11, <br>1988,
Continental notified Reeder that he was in default and that <br>the bank might
institute foreclosure proceedings. On April 29, <br>Continental demanded full
payment on the loan, and on June 3, 1988, <br>Continental filed for foreclosure on
Heritage Ranch. <br> Reeder was also delinquent on several
loans he had <br>outstanding with Home Federal Bank ("Home Fed"). Reeder

owed Home <br>Fed more than $7 million for loans that were secured by both
<br>Heritage Ranch and Indian Palms, and he had not made payments on
<br>certain loans since June 1987. On May 12, Home Fed demanded
<br>payment in full on one of the loans secured by Heritage Ranch. <br>
On May 26, 1988, Rhode Island held the approval hearing
<br>on the proposed acquisition of American by Resolute. Resolute
<br>maintained its position that it would pay off the pre-existing <br>liens on the
Reeder properties securing the promissory note by <br>closing. Indeed, at some
point that day, although not at the <br>formal hearing, RIDBR Chief Counsel
Mayer was told that the pre- <br>existing liens on the Reeder properties had been
cleared. <br> On May 27, 1988, the RIDBR issued a
conditional order <br>approving Resolute's acquisition of American. Although
the <br>transaction closed that day, the order made clear that the transfer <br>of
ownership would not become final until Resolute submitted final <br>title insurance
policies for Heritage Ranch and Indian Palms "to be <br>effective as of the closing
date which indicat[e]" that "all <br>mortgages, deeds of trust and the like have been
paid in full and <br>discharged." On June 7, 1988, California issued an order
approving <br>Resolute's acquisition of Diamond, which Arizona had already
<br>approved on March 10. The extensive liens on Heritage Ranch, <br>Indian
Palms, and Indian Springs were not paid off by May 27, when <br>the American
purchase closed, nor by June 14, when the Diamond <br>purchase closed. <br>
On May 28, 1988, Christopher told Reeder that the
<br>regulators had approved the American acquisition. A few days <br>later,
Reeder and Christopher had a private meeting to discuss the <br>acquisitions at
Reeder's office in California. Christopher <br>confirmed that the liens on Reeder's
properties had not yet been <br>discharged. Reeder became angry when
Christopher informed him that <br>the Rhode Island regulators had amended the
release clause <br>provision of Reeder's promissory note to American. <br>
The release clause governed the rate at which Reeder had
<br>to pay down the balance on the $50 million promissory note to <br>American
if he sold portions of the properties securing the note. <br>Under the original
provision, Reeder was required to pay American <br>only 110% of the appraised
value of each lot sold, even though the <br>lots could be sold for a price
considerably higher than the <br>appraised value. Under the amended release
clause, all monies <br>received from the sales of portions of the properties securing
the <br>note had to be applied to reducing the principal balance of the <br>note.
Reeder could not receive any monies from the sale of the <br>lots until the $50
million note had been paid off in its entirety. <br>Nor could Reeder take money
from the insurance companies for <br>development costs associated with Heritage
Ranch or Indian Palms. <br>Reeder found the amended release clause to be
"untenable," because <br>it deprived him of the steady cash flow he had expected
from the <br>sale of lots at Heritage Ranch and Indian Palms. <br>
Reeder arranged with Christopher, in an oral agreement

<br>with no documentation, for an $18 million "loan" to Hill Top. The


<br>"loan" was to be secured by Windbrook Country Club, yet another of
<br>Reeder's properties, which was worth only $3 million. Although <br>Reeder
later said that, he expected that Resolute would be the <br>entity loaning Hill Top
funds under the Windbrook "loan," Reeder <br>knew that Resolute had no assets
except the insurance companies. <br>Reeder also knew that, upon Resolute's
acquisition of Diamond, <br>Diamond was to receive the LACOP annuity
money, the first <br>installment of which was in the amount of $18 million -- the
same <br>amount as the Windbrook loan. <br> On June 13,
Reeder signed the documents for the Windbrook <br>loan. Under the terms of the
Windbrook loan, Diamond -- not <br>Resolute -- agreed to lend Hill Top up to $18
million to pay off <br>liens on Heritage Ranch, Indian Palms, and Windbrook
Country Club. <br>The documents were dated June 15, 1988 -- the day after the
<br>expected Diamond closing. <br> The Windbrook loan
violated state regulatory <br>requirements. Under Arizona insurance regulations,
Diamond could <br>not advance loan proceeds in an amount greater than the value
of <br>the collateral backing the loan. In addition, it could not invest <br>more
than 10% of its assets in a single investment. No waiver was <br>requested or
received for the $18 million Windbrook loan. In <br>addition, the insurance
regulators required that the money to pay <br>off the liens come from an external
source. <br> After Reeder's private meeting with Christopher
about the <br>Windbrook loan, Reeder began settlement negotiations with
<br>Continental and Home Fed over his outstanding loan obligations. On
<br>June 7, Reeder reached a settlement with Continental for a <br>"discounted
note payoff" in which Reeder agreed to pay off his $10 <br>million note to
Continental for about $8.7 million. Reeder <br>arranged for the payment to be
due on June 16 -- two days after the <br>anticipated Diamond closing. <br>
On June 10, Resolute shareholders met in Dallas, Texas
<br>for their first meeting. One of Reeder's attorneys, Arthur Karma
<br>attended the meeting as a proxy for Reeder, the controlling <br>shareholder.
Pursuant to Reeder's instructions, Karma voted to <br>make Christopher a
director of both insurance companies, as well as <br>the new President of American
and the CEO of Diamond. In addition, <br>Reeder had twice instructed Karma to
make certain that Christopher <br>paid off the Continental loan, which Reeder had
settled a few days <br>earlier. Karma related Reeder's message to Christopher,
and <br>Christopher said the liens would be paid in the next few days. <br>
Unbeknownst to Colleen Comey, the President of Diamond,
<br>on June 13, the day before the closing on Diamond, Christopher <br>directed
Keith Bell, an employee of American, to open an account in <br>Diamond's name at
Fleet Bank in Providence, Rhode Island. On <br>June 15, the day after Diamond's
closing, Christopher directed Bell <br>to have LACOP transfer the first installment
of $18 million owed to <br>Diamond to the Fleet Bank account. <br>
Once the $18 million was deposited in the Fleet Bank

<br>account, Christopher directed Bell to make a series of wire <br>disbursements.


Five of those transfers were pursuant to Reeder's <br>directions and for Reeder's
benefit. <br> On June 16, Reeder caused $8.7 million to be
sent from <br>the Diamond account to Continental Bank in Chicago, per the
<br>settlement he had reached with the bank on June 7. This payment
<br>extinguished the most substantial pre-existing lien on Heritage <br>Ranch.
<br> Also on June 16, 1988, Reeder caused $465,000 to be
<br>transferred to an account of the Burrillville Land Company in Santa
<br>Monica, California. Reeder had no interest in that company or its
<br>accounts. Burrillville, however, was managed by Carlsberg
<br>Management, which was closely associated with Reeder's businesses.
<br>Then, on June 17, through written instructions, Reeder had the <br>account
manager, Theresa DeLeon, allocate the $465,000 into three <br>separate checks for
$100,000, $315,000, and $50,000, all payable to <br>Hill Top. <br>
On June 23, 1988, Reeder caused $825,000 to be
<br>transferred to the client trust account of James Patison, the <br>lawyer who had
negotiated the Home Fed settlement for Reeder. <br>Reeder stated that this
$825,000 transfer, which he discussed with <br>Christopher at their private meeting
in early June, involved <br>payments to Reeder of funds he felt he was owed by
Home Fed in <br>connection with two joint ventures Home Fed and Reeder had
engaged <br>in: Whimpy Gentry and Rancho 187. Reeder's settlement
agreement <br>with Home Fed, however, stated that it resolved all disputes
<br>between the parties, including those two matters. Reeder admitted <br>that
the insurance companies were wholly unrelated to those two <br>projects. Reeder
also admitted that the $825,000 transfer <br>represented a portion of the discount he
was able to negotiate in <br>his settlement with Home Fed. <br>
On June 23, 1988, Reeder caused $459,000 to be
<br>transferred to Carlsberg Management. As with the earlier transfer <br>to
Burrillville, Reeder gave DeLeon written instructions on how to <br>disburse the
funds. The same day the funds were received, DeLeon <br>cut two checks: one
for $384,000 payable to Hill Top, and one for <br>$75,000 payable to a Reeder
intercorporate account. Reeder stated <br>that this wire transfer, as well as the
prior June 16 transfer of <br>$465,000, represented the approximately $1 million
discount he had <br>negotiated on his outstanding debt with Continental Bank.
Reeder <br>also admitted that he had made an agreement with Christopher at
<br>their early June meeting to take these amounts, as compensation for <br>the
amended release clause, for development costs at Heritage <br>Ranch -- a use
that was prohibited by the regulators. <br> Reeder had signed
the settlement agreement with Home Fed <br>on June 22, which required him to pay
Home Fed approximately $5.9 <br>million. The Diamond account at Fleet Bank,
however, had been <br>nearly exhausted by this time and did not have sufficient
funds to <br>cover that amount. Therefore, $3 million was transferred to
<br>Diamond's Fleet account from an American account without any

<br>justification or supporting documentation. <br> Then, on


June 24, 1988, Reeder caused approximately $5.9 <br>million to be transferred from
the Fleet account to Home Fed in <br>payment of Reeder's obligations to that bank.
<br> The total amount taken from the insurance companies for
<br>Reeder's benefit was approximately $16.5 million, consisting of <br>$13.5
million taken from Diamond and $3 million taken from <br>American. <br>
By August 1988, Colleen Comey, Diamond's President, had
<br>become concerned about the whereabouts of the LACOP money. At that
<br>point, as annuity holders attempted to cash in their policies, <br>Diamond was
writing checks that were returned for insufficient <br>funds. When Comey began
inquiring whether the LACOP money had been <br>received, she learned that it was
gone. In trying to determine how <br>the money had been spent, she was unable
to reconstruct the <br>transactions. Finally, after failing to receive an adequate
<br>explanation from Christopher, Comey called Reeder to report her <br>concerns
about the missing $18 million and make further inquiries. <br>Reeder expressed
no surprise at all when Comey informed him of the <br>missing $18 million, but he
gave her no information about the <br>missing money, simply telling her to speak to
Christopher or <br>William Geary, another Resolute principal. On September 22,
1988, <br>concerned that the second installment of $10 million soon due from
<br>LACOP would likewise disappear, Comey froze the Fleet account and
<br>alerted regulators. The next day she was fired. <br>
DISCUSSION
<br>I. Sufficiency of the Evidence <br> When a defendant
challenges his criminal conviction, <br>claiming that the government failed to
present sufficient evidence <br>to prove the defendant guilty of the charged crime,
the court must <br>"view the evidence, together with all reasonable inferences that
<br>may be drawn therefrom, in the light most favorable to the <br>government,"
United States v. Campa, 679 F.2d 1006, 1010 (1st Cir. <br>1982), and while so
doing, must ask whether "a rational trier of <br>facts could have found guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt." United <br>States v. Ingraham, 832 F.2d 229, 239 (1st Cir.
1987), cert. <br>denied, 486 U.S. 1009 (1988). The court must apply this standard
<br>both to direct and to circumstantial evidence; "[c]ircumstantial <br>evidence
is intrinsically no different from testimonial evidence, <br>and is entitled to similar
weight." United States v. Van Helden, <br>920 F.2d 99, 101 (1st Cir. 1990)
(citations omitted). Thus, the <br>government may use circumstantial evidence to
prove its case. <br>However, the total evidence, with all reasonable inferences
made in <br>the light most favorable to the government, must be such that a
<br>rational trier of fact could have found guilt beyond a reasonable <br>doubt.
See United States v. Mena, 933 F.2d 19, 23 (1st Cir. 1991). <br>Furthermore,
the government need not present evidence that <br>precludes every reasonable
hypothesis inconsistent with guilt in <br>order to sustain a conviction. See United
States v. <br>Guerrero-Guerrero, 776 F.2d 1071, 1075 (1st Cir. 1985), cert.
<br>denied, 475 U.S. 1029 (1986). Rather, the jury is at liberty to <br>select

freely among a variety of reasonable alternative <br>constructions of the evidence.


See United States v. Smith, 680 <br>F.2d 255, 259 (1st Cir. 1982), cert. denied,
459 U.S. 1110 (1983). <br> A. Wire Fraud <br>
Reeder argues that his wire fraud convictions cannot
<br>stand because there is no evidence in the record that he knew that
<br>Christopher's assurances concerning the liens were false, much less <br>that he
shared Christopher's intent to deceive and defraud the <br>regulators. See
Defendant's Br. at 21. We find his argument <br>unpersuasive. <br>
To prove wire fraud, the government must establish beyond
<br>a reasonable doubt: (1) the defendant's knowing and willing <br>participation
in a scheme or artifice to defraud with the specific <br>intent to defraud; and (2) the
use of interstate wire <br>communications in furtherance of the scheme. See
United States v. <br>Sawyer, 85 F.3d 713, 723 (1st Cir. 1996). <br>
Reeder challenges only the intent element. He concedes
<br>that Resolute and Christopher made numerous representations to the
<br>regulators that the liens on Reeder's properties would be paid off <br>by
closing. He also admits that Christopher made these <br>misrepresentations with
the intent to deceive as part of a scheme <br>to defraud the insurance regulators.
Reeder's argument is that the <br>evidence does not demonstrate that he knew
those representations to <br>be false because he allegedly believed that Resolute
would pay off <br>the liens. <br> At trial, Reeder testified that
he did not expect that <br>the liens would be paid off by closing, and that he did not
think <br>that Resolute would pay off the liens before closing. Reeder's own
<br>testimony provided evidence that, despite the repeated <br>representations
made to the insurance regulators that the pre- <br>existing liens on his properties
would be cleared by closing, <br>Reeder knew that the liens would not be
discharged at that time. <br> Furthermore, Reeder was the de
facto majority shareholder <br>of Resolute. He admitted that the huge amount of
money he was <br>fronting for the insurance companies was too much to be put at
risk <br>without control of Resolute. Although Reeder did not formally
<br>receive his shares in Resolute until June 1988, the jury was <br>entitled to infer
that he was the one making decisions for Resolute <br>before that time, as he was
on May 24 when he placed Christopher in <br>charge of the insurance companies.
The evidence further showed <br>that Reeder kept in close and direct contact with
Christopher <br>throughout the acquisition process, and Jarrell Ormand, Resolute's
<br>lawyer in Texas, communicated with Reeder in responding to <br>inquiries
from the RIDBR. From this evidence, the jury could infer <br>that Reeder was
intimately involved with Resolute's effort to <br>acquire the insurance companies
and responsible for the <br>representations made to the regulators on behalf of
Resolute that <br>the liens on his properties would be cleared by closing. <br>
The evidence also demonstrated that Reeder knew that
<br>Resolute had no means by which to pay off the liens. In letters on <br>March
11, May 13, and May 20, Karma and his law partner, David <br>Bence, informed

Reeder of their increasing concern over Resolute's <br>failure to make any


arrangements to discharge the debt. Reeder, <br>however, ignored their pleas for
a meeting, and instead made his <br>own false representation to the regulators that
no suits were <br>threatened against the properties backing his promissory note to
<br>American, even though two banks were about to initiate foreclosure
<br>proceedings. From this sequence of events, the jury could <br>reasonably
infer that Reeder was aware of the fact that the liens <br>on his properties would not
be paid off by closing, and that he <br>intended to deceive the regulators when he
and Resolute made the <br>repeated representations that his properties would be
unencumbered <br>upon Resolute's acquisition of the insurance companies. See
United <br>States v. Cassiere, 4 F.3d 1006, 1024 (1st Cir. 1993) ("Guilty
<br>knowledge may be inferred where instances of fraud are repeatedly
<br>brought to a defendant's attention without prompting alteration of <br>his
facilitative conduct.") (quotation omitted). <br> In support of
his assertion that he believed that <br>Resolute would discharge his liens, Reeder
relies primarily on <br>statements made by him, his corporations, or Christopher
and his <br>agents that Resolute would pay off the liens. The simple fact that
<br>those statements were made, however, does not prove that Reeder <br>believed
them. Moreover, the jury was entitled not only to <br>disbelieve Reeder's
statements, but also "[to] legitimately . . . <br>presume[] that the fabrication[s]
w[ere] all the more proof of <br>[his] guilt." United States v. Jimnez-Prez, 869
F.2d 9, 10 (1st. <br>Cir. 1989). <br> Reeder's participation in
making misrepresentations to <br>the regulators, his use of the wires to divert $16.5
million of the <br>insurance companies' funds, and his fraudulent efforts to conceal
<br>his actions overwhelmingly establish his intentional participation <br>in the
scheme to defraud. Based on this evidence, a rational trier <br>of fact could
easily have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. <br> B.
Interstate Transportation of Stolen Property ("ITSP") <br>
Reeder contends that his ITSP convictions must be
<br>overturned because the government failed to prove that he knew that <br>the
property was taken by fraud. We disagree. <br> To convict
on the five ITSP counts, the jury had to find <br>that Reeder transported in
interstate commerce $5,000 or more that <br>he knew to have been stolen,
converted, or taken by fraud. SeeDowling v. United States, 473 U.S. 207, 214
(1985) (stating the <br>elements of 18 U.S.C. 2314). Reeder agrees that
Christopher <br>engaged in a scheme to defraud, and, as explained above, the
<br>evidence demonstrates that, after the insurance companies were <br>acquired,
Reeder entered into an agreement with Christopher to <br>divert $16.5 million of
the insurance companies' funds for his own <br>purposes and structured the
transactions to conceal his activities. <br>Based on that evidence alone, the jury
could reasonably infer that <br>Reeder knew that the money he transported had
been taken by fraud. <br>II. Government's Closing Argument <br>
Reeder argues that his convictions must be reversed

<br>because the government's closing argument misled the jury into <br>finding
guilt based on conduct not amounting to fraud. At trial, <br>Reeder did not object
to any portion of the prosecutor's closing <br>argument. Therefore, his claim is
reviewed only for plain error. <br>See United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 6, 1415 (1985). <br> Reeder contends that the prosecutor argued
that the jury <br>could convict Reeder of wire fraud based: (1) on his admission that
<br>he took $1 million from the insurance companies in response to the
<br>amended release clause; (2) on his violation of a state regulation <br>by failing
to secure a waiver from Arizona for the Windbrook loan; <br>or (3) on his failure to
comply with the Windbrook contract terms <br>by taking money for purposes other
than the discharge of liens. <br>Reeder contends that such proof would be
insufficient to sustain <br>his convictions because it would not constitute "a fraud in
<br>obtaining the property." Defendant's Br. at 30. <br>
Contrary to Reeder's assertions, the government did not
<br>argue to the jury that it could convict Reeder of fraud if it found <br>simply
that he had taken $1 million from the insurance companies, <br>violated a state
regulation, or disregarded the loan terms. <br> We consider
the prosecutor's comments within the <br>framework and context of the entire case.
See United States v.Morales-Cartagena, 987 F.2d 849, 854 (1st Cir. 1993).
Evidence at <br>trial demonstrated that Reeder: (1) admitted that he took $1
<br>million from the insurance companies; (2) failed to disclose or <br>secure a
waiver from the state regulators for the Windbrook "loan" <br>despite his
knowledge that insurance company transactions were <br>subject to strict oversight;
and (3) took money from the insurance <br>companies for purposes unrelated to the
business of the insurance <br>companies and not covered by the terms of the
Windbrook "loan." <br> In his closing argument, the
prosecutor argued that this <br>evidence, in the context of and in combination with
other evidence, <br>demonstrated Reeder's knowing participation in the fraudulent
<br>diversion of insurance company assets and his intent to defraud. <br>See,
e.g., United States v. Woodward, 149 F.3d 46, 62 (1st Cir. <br>1998) (violation of
state law probative of intent to deceive in <br>mail fraud case); see id. at 57 ("The
jury was entitled to infer <br>[defendant's] intent from the circumstances
surrounding his <br>actions, from indirect, as opposed to direct, evidence.") <br>
(quotation omitted); see also United States v. Tajeddini, 996 F.2d <br>1278, 1282
(1st Cir. 1993) ("[T]he prosecutor is entitled, in <br>closing, to ask the jury to draw
warrantable inferences from the <br>evidence admitted during trial."). <br>
There is no reason to believe that the jury erroneously
<br>concluded that it could convict simply because Reeder violated a
<br>regulatory order or breached a contract. Defense counsel <br>repeatedly
warned the jury that Reeder was "not on trial for <br>violating a conditional order"
or "for violation of a state <br>statute." They further informed the jury that "[t]his
is not a <br>breach of contract case," and that the jury had to decide whether
<br>Reeder "knowingly and willfully obtain[ed] the money through deceit <br>or

fraud." Furthermore, the trial court's instructions cured any <br>alleged error in
the closing argument. The court correctly <br>instructed the jury on the elements
of the offense for both the <br>wire fraud and the ITSP counts. The court
specifically instructed <br>the jury that "[t]he violation of an insurance regulatory
order or <br>state law is not itself a federal crime." <br>III. Variance <br>
Reeder argues that the alleged theories of conviction
<br>offered by the prosecution in its closing argument varied from the <br>theory
of conviction alleged in the indictment. Specifically, he <br>contends that the
government urged the jury to convict on what he <br>terms "non-fraud" theories: (1)
the admission that Reeder took $1 <br>million; (2) the failure to get a waiver for the
Windbrook loan; <br>and (3) the failure to comply with the contract terms. He
urges <br>this Court to reverse because these "non-fraud" theories of
<br>conviction varied from the theory of fraud charged in the <br>indictment.
Reeder argues that his rights were substantially <br>affected by the alleged
variance because the jury was allowed to <br>convict on a theory insufficient to
constitute the federal crime of <br>wire fraud. Reeder's variance argument is
simply a restatement of <br>his claim that the jury may have convicted him on a
legally <br>insufficient theory based on the government's closing argument.
<br>Couched in different terms, it is still unconvincing. <br>
A variance occurs when the proof at trial paints a <br>portrait
that differs materially from the scenario detailed in the <br>indictment. See
United States v. Vavlitis, 9 F.3d 206, 210 (1st <br>Cir. 1993). A variance requires
reversal of a conviction only if <br>it is both material and prejudicial, for example,
if the variance <br>works a substantial interference with the defendant's right to be
<br>informed of the charges. See Vavlitis, 9 F.3d at 210. When, as <br>here,
the indictment gives a defendant particular notice of the <br>events charged, and the
proof at trial centers on those events, <br>minor differences in the details of the
facts charged, as <br>contrasted to those proved, are unlikely to be either material or
<br>prejudicial. <br> There was no variance between the
evidence presented at <br>trial and the indictment. The proof at trial is
necessarily more <br>detailed than the facts alleged in the indictment, which is
simply <br>a "plain, concise and definite written statement of the essential
<br>facts constituting the offense charged." Fed. R. Crim. P. 7(c)(1). <br>The
indictment charged a scheme to defraud encompassing the <br>acquisition of
insurance companies and the diversion of the <br>companies' assets. Paragraphs
28 to 44 of the Redacted Indictment <br>discuss the fraudulent activity undertaken
after the acquisition of <br>the insurance companies, and specifically refer to the
Windbrook <br>loan. See RI 36-38. To the extent that: (1) the admission
<br>concerning taking $1 million because of the amended release clause; <br>(2)
the failure to secure a waiver for the Windbrook loan; and (3) <br>the failure to
comply with the Windbrook loan terms were not <br>specifically detailed in the
indictment, these facts did not <br>materially vary the nature of the charged
fraudulent scheme. <br> No prejudice resulted because Reeder

was not deprived "of <br>sufficiently specific information to prepare a defense,


unfairly <br>surprise[d] . . . at trial, or isolate[d] . . . from the <br>constitutional
protection against double jeopardy." United States <br>v. Fermn Castillo, 829
F.2d 1194, 1197 (1st Cir. 1987). <br>IV. Unanimity <br>
Reeder argues that the district court erred in failing to
<br>instruct the jurors that they had to unanimously agree on "the <br>theories and
acts of fraud" underlying their guilty verdict. We <br>find no such error. <br>
In Schad v. Arizona, the Supreme Court held that, in
<br>returning general verdicts in cases in which the government has <br>alleged in
a single count that the defendant committed the offense <br>by one or more
specified means, jurors are not required to agree <br>upon a single means of
commission. See 501 U.S. 624, 631 (1991) <br>(plurality opinion); id. at 649
(Scalia, J., concurring in part and <br>concurring in the judgment) (explaining that,
for example, where "a <br>woman's charred body has been found in a house, and
there is ample <br>evidence that the defendant set out to kill her," the jury does not
<br>have to agree on whether defendant "strangled victim to death," or <br>"left her
unconscious and set the fire to kill her"). While a jury <br>must agree on all of
the elements of an offense, it need not agree <br>on the means by which all the
elements were accomplished. <br> Here, the jury was
instructed that one of the elements of <br>the wire fraud counts was the defendant's
knowing participation in <br>a scheme to defraud. The government alleged and
proved a single <br>scheme to defraud. While the jurors had to unanimously
agree that <br>Reeder knowingly participated in a scheme to defraud -- an element
<br>of the crime -- they did not, contrary to Reeder's contention, have <br>to
unanimously agree on each piece of evidence offered to prove <br>Reeder's
participation. <br>V. Attorney-Client Privilege <br> At
trial, Reeder objected to the district court's <br>admission of Karma's testimony
about his 1991 conversation with <br>Reeder, during which Reeder asked for
Karma's help in covering up <br>his use of insurance company money. The
district court found that <br>Karma's testimony was not protected by the attorneyclient <br>privilege on two bases. First, the court determined that the
<br>conversation was admissible under the crime-fraud exception to the
<br>attorney-client privilege. Second, the court determined that <br>Reeder had
waived the attorney-client privilege by failing to <br>object to Karma's extensive
prior testimony about his <br>communications with Reeder relating to the insurance
company <br>transactions. We agree with the district court that Reeder's
<br>conversation with Karma was admissible under the crime-fraud
<br>exception. <br> The importance and sanctity of the
attorney-client <br>privilege is well established. See Upjohn v. United States,
449 <br>U.S. 383 (1981). Because it "'withhold[s] relevant information <br>from
the factfinder,'" United States v. Zolin, 491 U.S. 554, 562 <br>(1989) (citation
omitted), the "'attorney-client privilege does not <br>apply where the client consults
an attorney to further a crime or <br>fraud.'" Motley v. Marathon Oil Co., 71 F.3d

1547, 1551 (10th Cir. <br>1995) (quoting In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Company
X), 857 F.2d <br>710, 712 (10th Cir. 1988)). "It is the purpose of the crime-fraud
<br>exception to the attorney-client privilege to assure that the 'seal <br>of
secrecy,'" between lawyer and client does not extend to <br>communications 'made
for the purpose of getting advice for the <br>commission of a fraud' or crime."
Zolin, 491 U.S. at 563 <br>(citations omitted). "Thus, the attorney-client
privilege is <br>forfeited inter alia where the client sought the services of the
<br>lawyer to enable or aid the client to commit what the client knew <br>or
reasonably should have known to be a crime of fraud." United <br>States v.
Rakes, 136 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 1998) (emphasis added). <br> In
order to successfully invoke the crime-fraud <br>exception, the government must
make a prima facie showing that the <br>attorney's assistance was sought in
furtherance of a crime or <br>fraud. See In re Grand Jury Subpoenas
("Subpoenas"), 144 F.3d 653, <br>660 (10th Cir. 1998); United States v. Jara, 973
F.2d 746, 748 (9th <br>Cir. 1992). A district court's determination to admit
evidence <br>under the crime-fraud exception is reviewed for abuse of
<br>discretion. See Subpoenas, 144 F.3d at 659; In re Grand Jury <br>Proceedings,
102 F.3d 748, 751 (4th Cir. 1996); In re Sealed Case, <br>754 F.2d 395, 399-400
(D.C. Cir. 1985). The facts underlying the <br>district court's decision on the
crime-fraud exception are reviewed <br>for clear error. See United States v.
Jacobs, 117 F.3d 82, 87 (2d <br>Cir. 1997). <br> The record
demonstrates that, in their 1991 conversation, <br>Reeder told Karma that he had "a
problem" with some of the <br>insurance company transactions. Reeder then
admitted that he had <br>taken more than $1 million from the insurance companies,
and handed <br>Karma a document indicating that more than $1 million from the
<br>insurance companies had not been properly applied. Thereafter, <br>Reeder
stated that he could explain how he had used the money. <br>After reviewing the
transactions, Karma said, "This won't work. <br>The monies that were sent by
American Universal were for work that <br>had been performed for liens that were
already on the property." <br>Reeder responded, "No problem. 'I can get my
friends to write new <br>invoices and we'll pay them as of 1988.'" Karma told
Reeder that <br>to do so would be asking 20-30 people to commit fraud, that he did
<br>not want any part of it, and he advised Reeder not to do it. <br>Reeder then
stated, "I thought maybe you could come up with some <br>idea." Karma once
again refused to help Reeder cover up the <br>transactions, responding, "Wayne,
it's a crime. I don't want <br>anything to do with it. Don't ever discuss it with
me again." The <br>district court's determination that the government made a
prima <br>facie showing that Reeder solicited Karma's assistance to cover up
<br>his criminal conduct was not an abuse of discretion. Reeder sought
<br>Karma's services to enable him to commit what he knew or reasonably
<br>should have known to be fraud. See Rakes, 136 F.3d at 4. <br>
Reeder argues that the crime-fraud exception does not
<br>apply because he was simply asking Karma's advice about whether he

<br>could solve a problem in a particular manner. The record belies <br>Reeder's


assertion. Reeder did not merely ask Karma whether <br>backdating invoices
would be illegal, which would be equivalent to <br>Reeder's hypothetical about "the
head of a corporation asking his <br>counsel if he can condition a campaign
contribution to a politician <br>on the politician's promise to support legislation."
Here, Reeder <br>twice asked for Karma's help in a cover-up of Reeder's
fraudulent <br>diversion of the insurance companies' money. See Subpoenas, 144
<br>F.3d at 660 ("The exception does not apply if the assistance is <br>sought only
to disclose past wrongdoing, . . . but it does apply if <br>the assistance was used to
cover up and perpetuate the crime or <br>fraud."). Therefore, the district court did
not abuse its <br>discretion in admitting Karma's testimony under the crime-fraud
<br>exception. <br> Because we hold that the conversation
was admissible <br>under the crime-fraud exception, there is no need to reach the
<br>waiver issue. <br>VI. Evidentiary Rulings <br> Reeder
challenges several of the district court's <br>evidentiary rulings. We review a district
court's rulings on <br>admissibility and relevance for abuse of discretion. See
Cassiere, <br>4 F.3d at 1018. Under Fed. R. Evid. 403, relevant evidence may be
<br>excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the <br>danger of
prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the <br>jury. This Court grants
the trial court "especially wide latitude" <br>when Rule 403 balancing is the subject
of review. See United <br>States v. Rivera-Gmez, 67 F.3d 993, 996 (1st Cir.
1995). "[O]nly <br>rarely -- and in extraordinary circumstances -- will we, from
the <br>vista of a cold appellate record, reverse a district court's on- <br>the-spot
judgment concerning the relative weighing of probative <br>value and unfair
effect." Williams v. Drake, 146 F.3d 44, 47 (1st <br>Cir. 1998) (quotation
omitted). <br> First, Reeder argues that the district court erred
in <br>excluding testimony from Karma and Reeder that the Windbrook loan
<br>was restructured to substitute Resolute for Diamond as the payor. <br>The
crime was completed when Reeder made the wire transfers in June <br>1988,
thereby diverting the insurance companies' funds for his own <br>purposes.
Evidence of elaborate accounting transactions undertaken <br>after June 1988 to
restructure the Windbrook loan are irrelevant to <br>Reeder's state of mind at the
time that he misappropriated the <br>$16.5 million. In any event, any error in the
exclusion was <br>harmless because the district court allowed both Reeder and
Ormand <br>to testify that the Windbrook loan was rebooked as a loan from
<br>Resolute. See United States v. Brown, 938 F.2d 1482, 1488 (1st <br>Cir.
1991) (any error in the exclusion of evidence is rendered <br>harmless where
"defendant's theory . . . was manifested to the jury <br>through testimony which
was allowed"). <br> Second, Reeder challenges the district
court's exclusion <br>of notes taken by Bence, Karma's law partner, during a June
13, <br>1988, conversation with Ormand, to the effect that Ormand did not
<br>think that the Windbrook loan violated state insurance laws. This
<br>evidence was inadmissible because Reeder failed to lay a proper

<br>evidentiary foundation. Reeder sought to introduce this exhibit <br>through


Karma. Karma testified, however, that he did not know what <br>Bence discussed
with Ormand that day. Reeder thus sought to <br>introduce "Mr. Ormand's
opinion as expressed to Mr. Bence as <br>recorded by Mr. Bence on a paper that's
in this witness's [Karma's] <br>file," about a conversation that Karma had already
testified he <br>knew nothing about. The district court suggested that the
document <br>might be admissible through Ormand, that defense counsel could
<br>offer it through Bence, or that Reeder could testify about it. <br>Reeder did
not pursue any of these avenues. Consequently, the <br>district court did not
abuse its discretion in determining that <br>this document could not be introduced
through Karma. <br> Third, Reeder argues that the district
court erroneously <br>excluded evidence demonstrating that various people knew
about the <br>Windbrook loan. Reeder sought to introduce through Durfee,
<br>American's Chief Financial Officer, a letter that Durfee wrote to <br>Ormand
referring to the documents that were required in order to <br>make certain booking
entries at American regarding the <br>restructuring of the Windbrook loan. The
government objected based <br>on relevance. The court queried where the
original documents <br>supporting the book entries referred to in the letter were,
and <br>defense counsel stated that he did not have them. The court then
<br>excluded the exhibit on the basis that this evidence was "secondary <br>at best"
and explained, "I think we need something a little <br>better." The court also
stated, "Certainly, you can ask this <br>witness if he has a recollection if this was
recorded on the <br>books." Defense counsel failed to ask that question. The
district <br>court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that Reeder had failed <br>to
lay a proper foundation for the admissibility of the Durfee <br>letter by failing to
produce the documents that would support the <br>accounting entries discussed in
the letter. <br> Later, Reeder sought testimony from Durfee as
to whether <br>the Windbrook loan was restructured so that it became a receivable
<br>of Resolute rather than Diamond. As discussed above, the district <br>court
did not exceed its discretion in determining that the <br>relevance of that testimony
was substantially outweighed by the <br>confusion it would bring to the case.
Moreover, Durfee was allowed <br>to testify that he was aware of the Windbrook
loan and of the wire <br>transfers from Diamond's account at Fleet Bank, thereby
supporting <br>Reeder's defense that many people were aware of the loan. <br>
On re-cross examination of Ormand, Reeder sought to
<br>introduce an August 9, 1988, letter Ormand sent to one of <br>Resolute's other
lawyers that discussed some of the transactions <br>involved in the restructuring of
the Windbrook loan. Ormand <br>testified that he did not know if a copy was
mailed to Comey, <br>Diamond's President, but that a copy "probably was sent" to
her. <br>Comey had testified that she did not remember receiving the letter.
<br>The district court sustained the government's objection that the <br>letter
was inadmissible hearsay and irrelevant. Reeder argues that <br>this evidence
would have demonstrated that Diamond executives were <br>aware of the

restructuring, and would have refuted Comey's prior <br>testimony that she had
difficulty obtaining information about the <br>whereabouts of the LACOP money.
<br> The district court's ruling was proper. First, the
<br>document was inadmissible hearsay with respect to the facts <br>contained
within it. Second, the document was not admissible to <br>impeach Comey,
because Reeder failed to establish a proper <br>foundation that the letter was even
sent to Comey, let alone <br>whether she received it. Third, the district court's
decision that <br>the evidence was outside the limited scope of a re-cross
<br>examination was not an abuse of discretion. Fourth, the district <br>court's
decision that evidence relating to the details of the <br>restructuring was irrelevant
was not an abuse of discretion. <br> Finally, Reeder sought to
introduce notes Ormand took <br>during a March 1988 conversation with Susan
Gallinger, Resolute's <br>local counsel in Arizona, in which they discussed the
feasibility <br>of having Diamond purchase the liens. The court properly
sustained <br>the government's objection that the notes were inadmissible
<br>hearsay. Reeder does not even attempt to argue that the district <br>court's
ruling was erroneous. Nor does Reeder explain how this <br>evidence was
relevant to demonstrating that regulators or insurance <br>company executives were
aware of the Windbrook loan, or how the <br>exclusion of this evidence affected
his defense. Thus, the <br>evidence was properly excluded. <br>
Contrary to Reeder's assertion, the district court's
<br>evidentiary rulings taken together did not amount to a Sixth <br>Amendment
violation eviscerating his defense. Under the <br>Constitution, a defendant "does
not have an unfettered right to <br>offer [evidence] that is incompetent, privileged,
or otherwise <br>inadmissible under standard rules of evidence." Montana
v.Egelhoff, 518 U.S. 37, 42 (1996) (quoting Taylor v. Illinois, 484 <br>U.S. 400,
410 (1988)); United States v. Kepreos, 759 F.2d 961, 964 <br>(1st Cir.) (same),
cert. denied, 474 U.S. 901 (1985). The district <br>court's rulings were proper and
within its discretion. <br>VII. Sentencing Issues <br>
Reeder was sentenced under Guideline 2F1.1 of the 1988
<br>Sentencing Guidelines Manual. His base offense level was 6. The
<br>court imposed an 11-level upward adjustment because the amount of <br>loss
involved exceeded $5 million. In imposing the upward <br>adjustment, the
district court found that the loss in this case was <br>$16.5 million, the money
Reeder had Christopher divert from the <br>Fleet Bank account for Reeder's benefit.
The court added two more <br>offense levels because the offense involved more
than minimal <br>planning or a scheme to defraud more than one victim, and
imposed <br>a four-level role in the offense enhancement. As a result,
<br>Reeder's total offense level was determined to be 23. Reeder was
<br>assigned to Criminal History Category I, resulting in a guidelines <br>range of
46-57 months. The district court sentenced him to 46 <br>months of
imprisonment. Reeder argues that the district court: (1) <br>incorrectly calculated
the amount of the loss; and (2) incorrectly <br>imposed a four-level role in the

offense enhancement. Neither <br>argument is persuasive. <br>


A. Loss calculation <br> Reeder
challenges the district court's loss calculation. <br>He argues that the $16.5 million
figure cannot be used in <br>calculating his offense level because the government
argued in the <br>Christopher case that Christopher alone was responsible for that
<br>loss. <br> Under the Guidelines, loss is the "value of the
property <br>taken." U.S.S.G. 2B1.1 comment. 2 (1988) (cross-referenced
from <br> 2F1.1)). After adding 11 levels to Reeder's base offense level
<br>because the amount of loss exceeded $5 million, the court declined <br>to
grant a downward departure based on Reeder's argument that the <br>loss amount
overstated the seriousness of his offense because <br>Christopher contributed to the
loss. <br> "[T]he victim loss table in U.S.S.G. 2F1.1(b)(1)
<br>presumes that the defendant alone is responsible for the entire <br>amount of
victim loss specified in the particular loss range <br>selected by the sentencing
court." United States v. Gregorio, 956 <br>F.2d 341, 346 (1st Cir. 1992). Any
portion of the total loss <br>sustained by the victim as a consequence of factors
extraneous to <br>the defendant's criminal conduct is not deducted from total
"victim <br>loss" prior to the determination of the applicable guideline
<br>sentencing range pursuant to U.S.S.G. 2F1.1(b)(1). See id. at <br>347
("victim loss" table encapsulates "heartland" sentencing <br>formula for reflecting
approximate total "victim loss" in the <br>guideline sentencing range). Rather,
whatever distortive effects <br>extraneous causes may have had on the total "victim
loss" <br>calculation may warrant a departure from the applicable guideline
<br>sentencing range. See U.S.S.G. 2F1.1, comment. (n. 10) <br>("downward
departure may be warranted" where "total dollar loss <br>that results from the
offense may overstate its seriousness," which <br>"typically occur[s]" when
defendant's fraud "is not the sole cause <br>of the loss"); United States v. Kopp,
951 F.2d 521, 531 (3d Cir. <br>1991) ("To the extent actual loss had other, more
proximate causes, <br>a discretionary downward departure -- but not a mandatory
'loss' <br>adjustment -- might be appropriate."). <br> We lack
jurisdiction to review the district court's <br>decision not to depart downward under
the long-standing rule that <br>"a criminal defendant cannot ground an appeal on a
sentencing <br>court's discretionary decision not to depart below the guideline
<br>sentencing range." United States v. Pierro, 32 F.3d 611, 619 (1st <br>Cir.
1994), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 1119 (1995); see generally, <br>United States v.
Tucker, 892 F.2d 8, 9 (1st Cir. 1989) (holding <br>that the defendant may not
appeal a district court's decision not <br>to depart downward). <br>
Reeder attempts to circumvent the limitations on this
<br>Court's review of departure decisions by recasting his argument as <br>an
attack on the loss amount used in calculating the adjusted <br>offense level. This
Court has clearly held, however, that <br> <br> [a]ny
portion of the total loss sustained by <br> the victim as a
consequence of factors <br> extraneous to the defendant's

criminal conduct <br> is not deducted from total "victim loss"


prior <br> to the determination of the applicable <br>
guideline sentencing range . . . . Rather, <br>
whatever distortive effects extraneous causes <br>
may have had on the total "victim loss" <br>
calculation may warrant a departure from the <br>
applicable [guideline range]. <br> <br>United States v.
Shattuck, 961 F.2d 1012, 1016-17 (1st Cir. 1992). <br>Thus, Reeder's argument
that the district court erred in failing to <br>consider other causes, such as
Christopher's participation, for the <br>loss in calculating Reeder's adjusted offense
level is incorrect as <br>a matter of law. <br> Second, Reeder argues that
the loss amount attributed to <br>him should be offset by the property that was
eventually forfeited <br>to the insurance companies. That contention is
foreclosed by our <br>decision in Christopher. As we stated there: "To reduce the
loss <br>by the value of the foreclosed collateral . . . would double count: <br>the
insurance companies were entitled to the protection of lien- <br>free collateral
without having to reduce their own capital in order <br>to pay off the liens."
Christopher, 142 F.3d at 55. Thus, <br>Reeder's effort to distinguish himself
from Christopher on the <br>basis that Reeder contributed properties to the
companies is <br>unavailing. If not for Reeder's diversion of funds, the insurance
<br>companies would have the forfeited collateral and the $16.5 <br>million. As
the district court stated, "What [Reeder] want[s] is <br>credit for what he left in the
bank after he robbed it."
B. Offense Enhancement <br> Reeder challenges the fourlevel enhancement for his role <br>as an organizer or leader of a criminal activity
that involved (1) <br>five or more participants or (2) was otherwise extensive.
See <br>U.S.S.G. 3B1.1(a). Reeder contends only that he did not lead or
<br>organize five or more persons who were "criminally responsible" for <br>the
offense. He makes no argument that the criminal activity was <br>not "otherwise
extensive," the basis for the district court's <br>enhancement. United States v.
Rostoff, 53 F.3d 398, 413 (1st Cir. <br>1995) (extensiveness prong does not depend
on number of <br>participants). Reeder's assertion that Christopher was the true
<br>leader is irrelevant. The district court found that Reeder had <br>ultimate
control of Resolute, placed Christopher in charge of the <br>insurance companies,
and directed the disposition of monies taken <br>from the companies. A careful
review of the record leaves no doubt <br>as to the extensiveness of the criminal
enterprise. <br>
CONCLUSION
<br> For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm.</pre>
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