United States v. Sawyer ( 1996 )


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    June 24, 1996 United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 95-1689

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    F. WILLIAM SAWYER,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    ERRATA SHEET ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this Court issued on May 30, 1996, is amended
    as follows:

    Page 35, line 4 - change "is" to "in"






























    United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 95-1689

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    F. WILLIAM SAWYER,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________
    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Thomas R. Kiley, with whom Carl Valvo, Steven H. Goldberg, _________________ ___________ ___________________
    Matthew L. Schemmel, and Cosgrove, Eisenberg & Kiley, P.C., were on ____________________ ___________________________________
    brief for appellant.
    Timothy W. Jenkins, Gary C. Adler, and O'Connor & Hannan, L.L.P., __________________ _____________ _________________________
    were on brief for State Government Affairs Council, amicus curiae.
    Ralph D. Gants, Susan Murphy, and Palmer & Dodge, were on brief ______________ ____________ _______________
    for The Massachusetts Association of Professional Lobbyists, amicus
    curiae.
    Michael Kendall, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ________________
    Jonathan Chiel, Acting United States Attorney, and Amy Lederer, _______________ ____________
    Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.

    _____________________
    May 30, 1996
    _____________________
















    STAHL, Circuit Judge. Appellant F. William Sawyer STAHL, Circuit Judge. _____________

    appeals his convictions for mail and wire fraud, interstate

    travel to commit bribery, and conspiracy to commit those

    offenses. The district court imposed a $10,000 fine, and

    sentenced him to imprisonment for twelve months and one day.

    In this appeal, Sawyer claims that the district court erred

    in its jury instructions and in evidentiary rulings, and that

    the evidence was insufficient to establish his guilt beyond a

    reasonable doubt. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the

    convictions and remand for further proceedings.

    I. I. __

    Facts Facts _____

    Viewing the record in the light most favorable to

    the verdict, United States v. Wihbey, 75 F.3d 761, 764 (1st _____________ ______

    Cir. 1996), a rational jury could have found the following

    facts from the trial evidence.

    During the indictment period, 1986 to March 1993,

    the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company ("Hancock")

    employed the defendant-appellant, F. William Sawyer, as a

    senior lobbyist within its Government Relations Department.

    As the largest life insurance company in Massachusetts,

    Hancock had a continuing and abiding interest in the state's

    insurance laws. Sawyer's job was to lobby the Massachusetts

    Legislature on Hancock's behalf. In particular, his job

    description required him to: research and develop Hancock's



    -2- 2













    position on pertinent legislation; communicate relevant

    information to representative government officials in order

    to effect a favorable outcome and to protect the Company's

    interests; and establish and maintain relationships with

    legislators as well as with members of industry associations.

    A principal focus of Sawyer's lobbying activities

    was the Legislature's Joint Insurance Committee ("Insurance

    Committee"), composed of state representatives and senators.

    The Insurance Committee has the ability to impact life

    insurance regulations more than any other legislative

    committee. To this end, it reviews approximately 300 bills

    per year, about fifty of which affect the life insurance

    industry. During each year of the indictment period,

    Massachusetts life insurance companies actively sought the

    passage of about five bills, most of which made it

    successfully through the Insurance Committee "in some form or

    another." Robert J. Smith, a research analyst and director

    for the Committee, testified that, during the indictment

    period, Sawyer was one of three lobbyists who appeared most

    often to lobby for bills sought by the life insurance

    industry.

    The Insurance Committee is co-chaired by a senate

    and house member, each with equal control over the fate of

    bills assigned to the Committee. The Chairs have the ability

    to schedule hearings, assign bills to the hearing calendar



    -3- 3













    and subsequent executive sessions, advocate bills at

    executive sessions, and take other action to advance them

    through the Committee. Each Chair could "carry" a bill,

    i.e., actively guide it through the Legislature as a whole; ____

    alternatively, a Chair could send it to the "Study Committee"

    which usually shelved it.

    During the indictment period, Sawyer focused his

    lobbying activities on the house members of the Insurance

    Committee, some of whom took action that directly or

    indirectly affected Hancock's interests. Representative

    Francis H. Woodward was the House Chair of the Insurance

    Committee from 1986 to 1990. Research analyst Smith

    identified Sawyer as the lobbyist he saw most often with

    Representative Woodward during Woodward's tenure as the

    Committee's House Chair. During this time, the Insurance

    Committee never rejected Woodward's recommendations on bills

    affecting the life insurance industry and Woodward "carried"

    most of the bills sought by the industry. Representative

    Frank Emilio, a member from 1986 to 1990, sponsored a

    September 1990 bill on behalf of Hancock. Representative

    John F. Cox sponsored bills that Hancock supported in

    November 1990 and December 1991. In addition,

    Representatives Walsh, Mara, and Driscoll sponsored

    legislation sought by the life insurance industry.





    -4- 4













    "Legislative Reports" issued by the Hancock

    Government Relations Department to senior Hancock officers,

    and signed by Sawyer, outlined specific lobbying efforts and

    proceedings in the Massachusetts Legislature pertinent to

    Hancock's interests. In July 1990, Sawyer wrote a memorandum

    to Hancock's Management Committee summarizing the successful

    efforts of Hancock lobbyists, including himself, in excluding

    Hancock from a bill that would have subjected it to a $100-

    million tax liability. In a September 1990 memorandum to the

    Management Committee, Sawyer referred to a 1990 bill, filed

    by Representative Emilio, that allowed Hancock to assess and

    report its real estate advantageously. A November 1990

    letter from Ralph F. Scott, Hancock's Assistant Legislative

    Counsel, to Representative Cox indicated that Sawyer and

    Scott planned to work with Cox in obtaining favorable action

    on a specific bill that he had sponsored for Hancock.

    During the indictment period, Sawyer paid for

    numerous meals, rounds of golf, and other entertainment for

    and with Massachusetts legislators, including many members of

    the Insurance Committee. Although Sawyer initially paid for

    most of these activities himself, they were treated as

    business expenses and reimbursed by Hancock (hereinafter

    "expenditures"). In accordance with Hancock's procedures,

    Sawyer would complete monthly expense vouchers, attaching

    receipts and a handwritten calendar that identified the



    -5- 5













    recipients of the expenses. Sawyer's supervisor, Raeburn B.

    Hathaway, the head of Hancock's Government Relations

    Department, reviewed Sawyer's expense vouchers and approved

    them for reimbursement. Hathaway's secretary would then

    detach the detailed calendars from the vouchers, keeping the

    calendars within the Government Relations Department, and

    forward the voucher, alone, to the accounting department for

    payment.

    Analysis of Sawyer's expense vouchers and calendars

    during the indictment period revealed that the top three

    recipients of his expenditures were: Representative Woodward,

    who received more than $8,000 worth of expenditures during

    his tenure as Insurance Committee House Chair; Robert

    Howarth, an Insurance Committee member from 1986 to 1992

    (over $3,000); and Representative Emilio (over $2,500).

    After these three legislators left office, Sawyer, on behalf

    of Hancock, expended practically nothing on entertaining them

    (Woodward, $0; Howarth, $8.33; and Emilio, $85.65).

    Specifically, Sawyer's expenditures included

    thousands of dollars for golf -- in and out of state -- with

    various Massachusetts legislators including Representative

    Francis Mara, Woodward's 1991 successor as Insurance

    Committee House Chair. Sawyer also hosted dinners for

    legislators and their families. In September 1992, Sawyer

    provided Representative Mara and his wife tickets for a show



    -6- 6













    in Hancock's private box at the Wang Center and ordered an

    accompanying dinner.

    The apparent catalyst for this prosecution was a

    December 1992 trip to Puerto Rico where Sawyer, other

    lobbyists, and a group of legislators, including

    Representative Mara, travelled for a legislative conference.

    The group did not stay at the conference site, but instead

    went to a different resort where Sawyer paid for many of the

    legislators' meals, transportation, and golf. Hancock

    reimbursed Sawyer for some $4,000 of entertainment expenses

    from the Puerto Rican trip.1

    Both Sawyer and his supervisor, Hathaway, had

    reason to believe that these expenditures could or did

    violate certain state laws. In his office, Sawyer kept

    internal Hancock memoranda, newspaper articles, and opinions

    of the Massachusetts Ethics Commission, all explaining or

    reporting on Massachusetts ethics-in-lobbying. While some of

    the documents varied in their interpretations, they




    ____________________

    1. In 1986, Sawyer and his wife travelled with
    Representative Woodward and his wife to New Orleans for the
    Super Bowl. Hancock provided the game tickets and reimbursed
    Sawyer for the airfare. The district court instructed the
    jury that, because this trip occurred before the mail fraud
    statute proscribed honest services fraud, it could not
    provide the sole basis for a mail fraud conviction. The
    court added, however, that the jury could consider the trip
    as evidence of Sawyer's state of mind with respect to the
    alleged scheme to defraud.

    -7- 7













    nonetheless advised on compliance with laws regarding

    gratuities, gifts, and lobbying expenditures.

    In April 1993, a reporter from the Boston Globe

    newspaper queried Richard Bevilacqua, Hancock's Director of

    Employee and Customer Communications, about Sawyer's

    entertainment of legislators during the 1992 Puerto Rico trip

    and about Hancock's legislative agenda during that period.

    Bevilacqua, in turn, asked Sawyer about the trip, and Sawyer

    opined, "it's difficult to take anyone out to lunch or dinner

    these days without going over [the] amount [permitted by

    law]." This set of events prompted Hancock to begin an

    internal investigation into Sawyer's legislative

    expenditures.2 Bruce A. Skrine, vice president, corporate

    counsel and secretary for Hancock, asked Sawyer for his

    expense records. Contemporaneous with Sawyer's production of

    the records, Sawyer told Skrine that the expenses were

    "consistent with the way . . . things were done on Beacon

    Hill." Sawyer also told Skrine that his reason for making

    the expenditures was "to get to know" the legislators and to

    develop "a certain relationship so that you could turn to


    ____________________

    2. In the Spring of 1993, the United States Attorney's
    Office for the District of Massachusetts ("USAO") commenced
    an investigation into Hancock's involvement in the allegedly
    illegal expenditures on legislators. In March 1994, Hancock
    entered into a civil settlement with the USAO whereby it paid
    a fine of about $1,000,000 and promised to cooperate with the
    USAO. In return, the USAO agreed not to prosecute Hancock
    for any matter relating to the investigation.

    -8- 8













    them"; he further indicated that he made these expenditures

    to "build and maintain relationships," gain "access to

    legislators," and get legislators to "return his calls as a

    result of [the expenditures]."

    Sawyer caused the mailing of items related to the

    expenditures on legislators, including golf bills,

    reimbursement requests, and credit card bills. Sawyer also

    caused the making of interstate telephone calls to arrange

    for some of the entertainment.

    Following a nine-day trial, the jury convicted

    Sawyer of fifteen counts of mail fraud, nine counts of wire

    fraud, eight counts of interstate travel to commit bribery,

    and one count of conspiracy. The jury acquitted Sawyer of

    two additional mail fraud counts.

    II. II. ___

    Mail and Wire Fraud Counts Mail and Wire Fraud Counts __________________________

    The government charged that Sawyer and his

    unindicted co-conspirator -- his Hancock supervisor, Hathaway

    -- engaged in a scheme to deprive the Commonwealth of

    Massachusetts and its citizens of the right to the honest

    services of their state legislators,3 and used the mails and

    ____________________

    3. According to the indictment, the legislators' duty of
    honest services included the obligation to perform their jobs
    as Massachusetts lawmakers free from deceit, fraud,
    dishonesty, favoritism and self-enrichment. By consent of
    the parties, the district court struck the word "favoritism"
    in this description. United States v. Sawyer, 878 F. Supp. _____________ ______
    279, 294 (D. Mass. 1995). In addition to this general duty

    -9- 9













    interstate telephone wires in furtherance of the scheme, in

    violation of 18 U.S.C. 1341, and 1343.4

    Sawyer contends that his convictions impermissibly

    involve the federal government in setting standards of good

    government for local and state officials. He argues that

    this case is exemplary of the "dangers of standardless

    federal criminal enforcement and unbridled prosecutorial

    discretion long-recognized under the mail fraud statute." We

    have already considered and rejected these arguments,


    ____________________

    of honest services, the indictment stated that the
    legislators had a specific duty to abide by the Massachusetts
    laws set forth in the indictment. The indictment identified
    both the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and its citizenry as
    the fraud victims; for simplicity, we will refer only to the
    public (or "citizenry") as the victim.
    With regard to the scheme to defraud, the
    indictment charged, inter alia, that Sawyer gave, and _____ ____
    legislators accepted, travel, lodging, golf, meals and other
    entertainment in violation of Massachusetts law; that Sawyer
    monitored the public coverage of the Massachusetts
    Legislature so that he could ensure the nondisclosure of his
    gratuities; that Sawyer was given greater access to the
    Insurance Committee and its House Chair than was available
    generally to the citizenry; that the House Chair of the
    Insurance Committee repeatedly performed official acts
    advocated by Sawyer on behalf of Hancock; and that Sawyer's
    direct supervisor approved of, and authorized Hancock's
    reimbursement of Sawyer for, his illegal gratuities.

    4. In relevant part, 18 U.S.C. 1341 and 1343 provide:

    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 . . . [uses
    the mails or wires, or causes their use]
    for the purpose of executing such scheme
    or artifice . . . [shall be punished].

    -10- 10













    however. See United States v. Silvano, 812 F.2d 754, 758-59 ___ _____________ _______

    (1st Cir. 1987). Congress may protect the integrity of the

    interstate mails and wires by forbidding their use in

    furtherance of schemes to defraud a state and its citizens,

    whether or not it can forbid the scheme itself. See id. at ___ ___

    758 (citing Badders v. United States, 240 U.S. 391, 393 _______ _____________

    (1916)); United States v. Rendini, 738 F.2d 530, 533 (1st ______________ _______

    Cir. 1984).5

    Sawyer also contends that the government has failed

    to establish that he committed "honest services" mail and

    wire fraud ("honest services fraud") within the meaning of

    the statutes. To explain our resolution of this issue, we

    provide a brief overview of the law of honest services fraud.

    The ultimate issue is whether or not the "scheme" presented

    at trial actually targeted the Massachusetts' citizens' right




    ____________________

    5. Some have observed that these statutes are increasingly
    used effectively to convict and punish for the substantive
    fraud, and that the use of the mails or wires is merely a
    "jurisdictional hook" to bring the conduct within the
    proscription of the mail and wire fraud statutes. See Peter ___
    J. Henning, Maybe It Should Just Be Called Federal Fraud: The _________________________________________________
    Changing Nature of the Mail Fraud Statute, 36 B.C. L. Rev. ___________________________________________
    435 (1995); cf. Schmuck v. United States, 489 U.S. 705, 722- ___ _______ _____________
    23 (1989) (Scalia, J. dissenting) (disagreeing with
    majority's conclusion that certain mailings were in
    furtherance of the demonstrated scheme, and observing that
    "[t]he law does not establish a general federal remedy
    against fraudulent conduct, with the use of the mails as the
    jurisdictional hook . . . . In other words, it is mail fraud,
    not mail and fraud, that incurs liability." (internal
    citations, quotations and alterations omitted)).

    -11- 11













    to "honest services" within the meaning of the mail fraud

    statute.

    To prove mail and wire fraud, the government must

    prove, beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) the defendant's knowing

    and willing participation in a scheme or artifice to defraud

    with the specific intent to defraud, and (2) the use of the

    mails or interstate wire communications in furtherance of the

    scheme.6 United States v. Montminy, 936 F.2d 626, 627 (1st _____________ ________

    Cir. 1991) (listing mail fraud elements); United States v. ______________

    Cassiere, 4 F.3d 1006, 1011 (1st Cir. 1993) (listing wire ________

    fraud elements). Because the relevant language in both the

    mail and wire fraud statutes is the same, we analyze both

    offenses together for the purposes of this case and, for

    simplicity, we refer only to mail fraud. See United States ___ _____________

    v. Boots, 80 F.3d 580, 586 n.11 (1st Cir. 1996). _____

    Traditionally, the mail fraud statute reached

    schemes that deprived the fraud victim of property or some

    other item of economic value. See generally, United States ___ _________ ______________

    v. Grandmaison, 77 F.3d 555, 565-66 (1st Cir. 1996). Some ___________

    courts later expanded the scope of the statutes to encompass

    schemes intended to defraud citizens of their intangible,

    ____________________

    6. The use of the mails or wires to further the fraudulent
    scheme need only be "incidental." United States v. ______________
    Grandmaison, 77 F.3d 555, 566 (1st Cir. 1996). Moreover, the ___________
    "[d]efendant[] need not personally use the [mails or] wires
    as long as such use was a reasonably foreseeable part of the
    scheme in which [he] participated." United States v. Boots, _____________ _____
    80 F.3d 580, 585 n.8 (1st Cir. 1996).

    -12- 12













    non-property right to the honest services of their public

    officials. See generally, W. Robert Gray, Comment, The ___ _________ ___

    Intangible-Rights Doctrine and Political-Corruption _____________________________________________________________

    Prosecutions Under the Federal Mail Fraud Statute, 47 U. Chi. __________________________________________________

    L. Rev. 562, 563 (1980) and cases cited therein. Those

    courts rationalized that a public official "acts as `trustee

    for the citizens and the State . . . and thus owes the normal

    fiduciary duties of a trustee, e.g., honesty and loyalty' to ____

    them." Silvano, 812 F.2d at 759 (quoting United States v. _______ _____________

    Mandel, 591 F.2d 1347, 1363 (4th Cir.), aff'd in relevant ______ _________________

    part en banc, 602 F.2d 653, 653 (4th Cir. 1979), cert. _____________ _____

    denied, 445 U.S. 961 (1980)). ______

    In 1987, the United States Supreme Court held,

    contrary to every circuit court that had decided the issue,

    that the mail fraud statute did not prohibit schemes to

    defraud citizens of their intangible, non-property right to

    honest and impartial government. McNally v. United States, _______ _____________

    483 U.S. 350, 359 (1987); see United States v. Ochs, 842 F.2d ___ _____________ ____

    515, 521 (1st Cir. 1988) (noting Court's unexpected

    decision), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 895 (1990). Congress _____ ______

    quickly reacted to the McNally decision by enacting 18 U.S.C. _______

    1346, which provides that, for the purposes of, inter alia, _____ ____

    the mail and wire fraud statutes, "the term `scheme or

    artifice to defraud' includes a scheme or artifice to deprive

    another of the intangible right of honest services." We have



    -13- 13













    recognized that 1346 was intended to overturn McNally and _______

    reinstate the reasoning of pre-McNally case law holding that _______

    the mail fraud statute reached schemes to defraud individuals

    of the intangible right to honest services of government

    officials. See Grandmaison, 77 F.3d at 565-66.7 ___ ___________

    The concept of governmental "honest services" in

    this context eludes easy definition. As Judge Winter has

    aptly noted:

    One searches in vain for even the vaguest
    contours of the legal obligations created
    beyond the obligation to conduct
    governmental affairs "honestly" or
    "impartially," to ensure one's "honest
    and faithful participation" in government
    and to obey "accepted standards of moral
    uprightness, fundamental honesty, fair
    play and right dealing" . . . . (citation
    omitted) [T]he quest for legal standards
    is not furthered by reference to "the
    right to good government" and the duty
    "to act in a disinterested manner."



    ____________________

    7. See also 134 Cong. Rec. H11108-01, 1988 WL 182261 (Oct. ___ ____
    21, 1988) (statement of Rep. Conyers) ("This amendment is
    intended merely to overturn the McNally decision. No other _______
    change in the law is intended."); 134 Cong. Rec. S17360-02,
    1988 WL 182529 (Nov. 10, 1988), Section Analysis of Judiciary
    Committee Issues in H.R. 5210, (Statement of Sen. Biden)
    ("[Section 1346] overturns the decision in McNally . . . . _______
    The intent is to reinstate all of the pre-McNally case law _______
    pertaining to the mail and wire fraud statutes without
    change"). But see United States v. Brumley, 79 F.3d 1430, ___ ___ ______________ _______
    1440 (5th Cir. 1996) (holding that 1346 does not clearly
    reach schemes to defraud citizens of their right to
    government officials' honest services).
    Given the peculiar history and evolution of
    honest-services mail fraud, we review case law from before
    and after the McNally decision for guidance in discerning the _______
    parameters of this federal crime.

    -14- 14













    United States v. Margiotta, 688 F.2d 108, 142-143 (2d Cir. _____________ _________

    1982) (Winter, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)

    (quoting Mandel, 591 F.2d at 1361), cert. denied, 461 U.S. ______ _____ ______

    913 (1983).

    The cases in which a deprivation of an official's

    honest services is found typically involve either bribery of

    the official or her failure to disclose a conflict of

    interest, resulting in personal gain. In a leading case

    involving the bribery of a state governor on legislative

    matters, the Fourth Circuit explained how bribery of an

    official can constitute honest services fraud:

    [T]he fraud involved in the bribery of a
    public official lies in the fact that the
    public official is not exercising his
    independent judgment in passing on
    official matters. . . . When a public
    official has been bribed, he breaches his
    duty of honest, faithful and
    disinterested service. . . . [T]he
    official has been paid for his decisions,
    perhaps without even considering the
    merits of the matter. Thus, the public
    is not receiving what it expects and is
    entitled to, the public official's honest
    and faithful service.

    Mandel, 591 F.2d at 1362; see also, Boots, 80 F.3d at 592-94 ______ ___ ____ _____

    (involving scheme to bribe Native-American police chief in

    exercise of his border patrol duties); United States v. _____________

    Holzer, 816 F.2d 304, 308 (7th Cir.) (judge's systematic ______

    receipt of bribes and "loans" to influence official actions),

    vacated, 484 U.S. 807 (1987) (ordering reconsideration in _______

    light of McNally); United States v. Isaacs, 493 F.2d 1124, _______ _____________ ______


    -15- 15













    1149-51 (7th Cir.) (public officials received bribes intended

    to induce special favors and preferential treatment for

    certain racing interests), cert. denied, 417 U.S. 976 (1974). _____ ______

    A public official has an affirmative duty to

    disclose material information to the public employer. See ___

    Silvano 812 F.2d at 759. When an official fails to disclose _______

    a personal interest in a matter over which she has decision-

    making power, the public is deprived of its right either to

    disinterested decision making itself or, as the case may be,

    to full disclosure as to the official's potential motivation

    behind an official act. See id. (upholding conviction of ___ ___

    city fiduciary who failed to disclose material information

    about unnecessary spending of city money for secret

    enrichment of fiduciary's friend). Thus, undisclosed, biased

    decision making for personal gain, whether or not tangible

    loss to the public is shown, constitutes a deprivation of

    honest services. See e.g., Grandmaison, 77 F.3d at 567 (city ___ ____ ___________

    board member took secret action to influence award of public

    contract to official's private construction-business

    interest); United States v. Waymer, 55 F.3d 564 (11th Cir. _____________ ______

    1995) (board of education member received secret commissions

    from companies contracting with school system), cert. denied, _____ ______

    No. 95-887, 64 U.S.L.W. 3653, 3656 (U.S. May 20, 1996).

    The broad scope of the mail fraud statute, however,

    does not encompass every instance of official misconduct that



    -16- 16













    results in the official's personal gain. For example, in

    United States v. McNeive, 536 F.2d 1245, 1246 (8th Cir. _____________ _______

    1976), a city plumbing inspector repeatedly accepted

    unsolicited gratuities in connection with his non-

    discretionary, administrative duty to issue plumbing permits.

    Although McNeive may have violated a city ordinance banning

    the acceptance of gratuities by city officials, the court

    found his conduct beyond the reach of the mail fraud statute

    because there was no evidence that the gratuities

    disadvantaged the city in any respect or that they deterred

    McNeive from otherwise conscientiously performing his duties.

    Id. at 1251. In short, the "scheme" was shown to neither ___

    involve nor contemplate the deprivation of McNeive's honest

    services to the city or public.

    Likewise, in United States v. Rabbitt, 583 F.2d _____________ _______

    1014, 1026 (8th Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 1116 _____ ______

    (1979), the Eighth Circuit reversed the mail fraud

    convictions of Rabbitt, a state representative. Rabbitt had

    offered to introduce a friend's architectural firm to certain

    public officials responsible for awarding state architectural

    contracts, in return for a ten percent commission on any work

    awarded. Id. at 1020. The government charged that his ___

    receipt of the resulting, undisclosed commissions defrauded

    the citizens of Rabbitt's honest services. Id. at 1025. The ___

    evidence showed, however, that the officials who awarded the



    -17- 17













    architectural contracts did so on merit alone and Rabbitt

    played no role in the selection of the firm. Id. at 1026. ___

    Because Rabbitt did not control the awarding of the

    contracts, or otherwise fail to fulfill his official duties,

    his conduct did not deprive the citizens of his honest

    services. Id. (noting case's resemblance to McNeive, 536 ___ _______

    F.2d at 1251-52). The court also observed that the

    government failed to cite any applicable standard requiring

    Rabbit to disclose his interest in the contracts, and thus,

    the citizens were not deprived of any right to such

    disclosure. Id. at 1026. ___

    The McNeive and Rabbitt cases illustrate that _______ _______

    although a public official might engage in reprehensible

    misconduct related to an official position, the conviction of

    that official for honest-services fraud cannot stand where

    the conduct does not actually deprive the public of its right

    to her honest services, and it is not shown to intend that

    result. Similarly, if a non-public-official is prosecuted

    for scheming to defraud the public of an official's honest

    services, the government must prove that the target of the

    scheme is the deprivation of the official's honest services.

    If the "scheme" does not, as its necessary outcome, deprive

    the public of honest services, then independent evidence of

    the intent to deprive another of those services must be

    presented. See United States v. D'Amato, 39 F.3d, 1249, 1257 ___ _____________ _______



    -18- 18













    (2d Cir. 1994) ("Where the scheme does not cause injury to

    the alleged victim as its necessary result, the government

    must produce evidence independent of the alleged scheme to

    show the defendant's fraudulent intent."); United States v. ______________

    Von Barta, 635 F.2d 999, 1005-1006 n.14 (2d Cir. 1980) __________

    (noting that "the prosecution must prove that some actual

    harm or injury was at least contemplated"), cert. denied, 450 _____ ______

    U.S. 998 (1981). With this background, we consider the facts

    of this case.



































    -19- 19













    A. Scheme to Defraud _____________________

    Here, the government did not prosecute Sawyer on

    the theory that he, as a lobbyist, directly owed a duty of

    honest services to the Commonwealth or its citizens. Rather,

    the government sought to prove that Sawyer engaged in conduct

    intended to cause state legislators to violate their duty to

    the public. The government sought to establish this scheme

    by proving that Sawyer intentionally violated, or caused

    members of the legislature to violate, two Massachusetts

    statutes.

    Briefly, these two Massachusetts statutes,

    discussed more fully infra, are: (1) Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, _____

    6 (the "gift" statute), which prohibits -- under threat of

    civil penalties -- a "legislative agent" from offering or

    giving to a public official (or an official's acceptance of)

    "gifts" aggregating $100 or more per year; and (2) Mass. Gen.

    L. ch. 268A, 3 (the "gratuity" statute), which prohibits --

    under threat of civil and criminal penalties -- anyone from

    giving to a legislator (or a legislator from soliciting or

    accepting) anything of "substantial value . . . for or

    because of any official act performed or to be performed" by

    that person. Through the violation of these laws, the

    government contended, Sawyer stole the honest services of the

    legislators.





    -20- 20













    In general, proof of a state law violation is not

    required for conviction of honest services fraud. See ___

    Silvano, 812 F.2d at 759. Indeed, the incorporation of a _______

    state law violation in such a prosecution may cause

    complications. See United States v. Washington, 688 F.2d ___ _____________ __________

    953, 958 (5th Cir. 1982) (reversing mail fraud conviction

    where jury should have been instructed that the defendant

    "should not be found guilty of the federal offense merely

    because he violated state law"). Here, however, the parties

    agree that the indictment, as structured, required it to

    prove that Sawyer violated at least one state law. Thus, the

    state laws in question had to be correctly charged as a

    matter of state law, and the violation of at least one had to

    be proven.

    Sawyer appeals various aspects of the court's jury

    instructions on the state statutes and their role in the

    alleged scheme to defraud. To determine whether the court's

    instructions adequately explained the law or whether they

    "tended to confuse or mislead the jury," United States v. _____________

    Alzanki, 54 F.3d 994, 1001 (1st Cir. 1995) (internal _______

    quotations and citation omitted), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. _____ ______

    909 (1996), we review the entire charge pertaining to the

    role of the state statutes in this honest services fraud

    prosecution:

    In this case the government has charged
    Mr. Sawyer with devising a scheme or


    -21- 21













    artifice; that is, a plan, to deprive the
    Commonwealth of Massachusetts and its
    citizens of their right to the honest
    services of members of the Massachusetts
    Legislature by giving or offering to
    those legislators gifts of free travel,
    lodging, golf, meals, and other
    entertainment. I instruct you that under
    the mail and wire fraud statutes, a
    scheme to defraud can be a plan to
    deprive the public of its right to the
    honest services of members of the
    Massachusetts Legislature.
    Elected public officials, such as
    members of the Massachusetts Legislature,
    owe certain duties to the Commonwealth of
    Massachusetts and to its citizens. One
    of those duties is the duty to act
    honestly. The government charges that by ______________________________
    violating and causing legislators to _________________________________________
    violate certain state statutes, Mr. _________________________________________
    Sawyer deprived the public of its right _________________________________________
    to the honest services of members of the _________________________________________
    Massachusetts Legislature and, therefore _________________________________________
    devised a scheme to defraud. ___________________________
    In other words, the government
    alleges that the defendant violated ___________________
    federal laws, mail fraud and wire fraud, _________________________________________
    by intentionally violating or causing _________________________________________
    Massachusetts legislators to violate _________________________________________
    certain state laws. Accordingly, in ____________________
    order to prove the first element of the
    mail fraud and/or wire fraud, that the
    defendant devised a scheme to defraud,
    the government must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant
    intentionally violated or caused members
    of the Massachusetts Legislature to
    violate at least one of the following two
    state laws . . . . (emphasis added).

    After describing the two statutes, the court continued:

    If you find beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the defendant devised or created a
    scheme to defraud in which he
    intentionally violated or caused a
    violation of at least one of the laws
    that I have just described, then you may
    find that the government has proved the


    -22- 22













    first element of mail fraud and wire
    fraud.

    These instructions permitted the jury to find the

    requisite scheme to defraud upon proof that Sawyer violated,

    or caused legislators to violate, either one of the state ______

    statutes. In other words, the jury was allowed to find that

    a violation of either statute, without more, constituted the

    deprivation of honest services.8 At oral argument before

    this court, the government affirmed that it chose the state

    law violations as "the sole vehicle to prove the scheme or

    artifice to defraud" in order to "narrow the issues of intent

    and good faith." Thus, we analyze both state statutes in

    light of the law of honest services, set forth above, to

    determine whether the court's instructions erroneously

    permitted a conviction for conduct not within the reach of

    the mail fraud statute.

    1. The Gift Statute ____________________


    ____________________

    8. After the court instructed the jury, Sawyer lodged the
    following objection:

    Your Honor, I believe that the Court's
    instruction failed to properly instruct
    the jury that, even if it finds that the
    defendant violated one of the two state
    statutes . . . the defendant would not be
    guilty of any federal offense, mail fraud
    and wire fraud offense, unless [the
    violation] was part of a plan to defraud
    the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or its
    citizens of the duty of honest services.

    The court declined any further charge.

    -23- 23













    The first Massachusetts statute on which the

    alleged scheme to defraud was based is ch. 268B, 6 (the

    "gift statute"), which provides:

    No legislative agent shall knowingly and
    wilfully offer or give to a public
    official or public employee or a member
    of such person's immediate family, and no
    public official or public employee or
    member of such person's immediate family
    shall knowingly and wilfully solicit or
    accept from any legislative agent, gifts
    with an aggregate value of one hundred
    dollars or more in a calendar year.

    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, 6. We discuss Sawyer's challenges

    to the court's instructions on the statutory definitions

    before turning to the statute's relation to the scheme to

    defraud.

    a. "Legislative Agent" _______________________

    The court instructed the jury that, under the

    statute, a legislative agent cannot give or offer gifts

    aggregating $100 or more to a legislator or member of the

    legislator's family. It further instructed that a

    "legislative agent" is "any person who, for compensation or

    reward, does any act to promote, oppose or influence

    legislation." See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, 1(g).9 Sawyer ___

    ____________________

    9. The entire definition of "legislative agent," for
    purposes of the gift statute, is:

    any person who for compensation or reward
    does any act to promote, oppose or
    influence legislation . . . . The term
    shall include persons who, as any part of
    their regular and usual employment and

    -24- 24













    argues that this instruction failed to reflect his assertion

    that a person is a "legislative agent" only when he is so

    registered with the Secretary of State or he is actually

    engaging in lobbying activity at the time he gave the alleged

    gifts.

    The court instructed that a legislative agent is

    one who is paid to "promote, oppose or influence

    legislation," i.e., to lobby, and that such agents are ____

    forbidden to give or offer certain "gifts." The instruction,

    as a whole, adequately conveyed the idea that such gifts are

    forbidden only when given by those who, at the time of the

    gifts, are paid to actually lobby. While there may be a

    person with the job title "lobbyist" who does not actually

    engage in lobbying, there was ample evidence here that Sawyer

    lobbied at the time he gave the alleged "gifts." Moreover,

    the fact that he had an obligation to register with the

    Secretary of State, see Mass. Gen. L. ch. 3, 40, 41, does ___

    not alter the definition. No further instruction was

    required.

    b. Shared Meals as "Gifts" ___________________________


    ____________________

    not simply incidental thereto, attempt to
    promote, oppose or influence legislation
    . . . whether or not any compensation in
    addition to the salary for such
    employment is received for such services.

    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, 1(g); see also 3 39 (identical ___ ____
    definition in statutory section on disclosure obligations).

    -25- 25













    The court instructed the jury that "gifts," under

    the relevant Massachusetts law, are "a payment,

    entertainment, subscription, advance, services or anything of

    value, unless consideration of equal or greater value is

    received." See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, 1(g). Much of the ___

    evidence offered to prove Sawyer's violations of the gift

    statute was his payment for shared meals and entertainment

    with the legislators. Sawyer contends that his payment for

    "shared hospitality" does not constitute a "gift" within the

    meaning of the statute. The issue turns out to be

    potentially complicated and involves somewhat convoluted

    analysis of the statutory history of a comparable law set

    forth at Mass. Gen. L. ch. 3, 43. We have carefully

    reviewed the arguments on both sides, and for the reasons set

    forth in the district court's ruling, see Sawyer, 878 F. ___ ______

    Supp. at 282-84, we conclude that Sawyer's shared meals

    could, if the jury so found, fit within the gift definition's

    term "entertainment" and/or the very broad phrase, "anything

    of value."

    c. Relation to Scheme to Defraud _________________________________

    As explained above, under the court's jury

    instructions regarding the scheme to defraud, Sawyer's

    intentional violations of the gift statute, by their very

    occurrence (or ipso facto), must deprive the public of their ____ _____

    legislators' honest services. Sawyer challenges this legal



    -26- 26













    premise, arguing that such violations do not necessarily

    deprive the public of those services.10 For the reasons

    that follow, we agree.

    The gift statute, which forbids a legislative agent

    from "knowingly and wilfully" giving a "public official . . .

    gifts with an aggregated value of one hundred dollars or more

    in a calendar year," Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, 6, simply

    limits, by a dollar-amount, the gift-giving by lobbyists to

    legislators. It is a prophylactic civil prohibition that

    addresses appearances of -- but not actual -- corruption. A

    violation of the Massachusetts gift statute does not

    necessarily entail any improper motive to influence, or

    otherwise affect, the official duties of the recipient. It ______

    is possible for a lobbyist to give a legislator items falling

    within the statute's definition of "gift," or for a


    ____________________

    10. The government claims that Sawyer has only challenged
    the evidentiary sufficiency of his fraudulent intent, and
    thus has waived a jury instruction challenge on the issue.
    We disagree. While Sawyer ultimately endeavors to persuade
    us that the evidence was insufficient to support his
    conviction, he squarely challenges the very legal theory upon
    which he was convicted. He particularly challenges the
    government's theory (as accepted by the district court) that,
    as a matter of law, the scheme to defraud could be predicated
    upon state law violations alone, without the intent to
    deprive the public of honest services. Sawyer not only
    lodged an adequate objection on this issue with the trial
    court, see supra note 8, his brief to this court thoroughly ___ _____
    addresses the precise legal issues surrounding the interplay
    between the mail statute, the state statutes, and the
    requirement of fraudulent intent. The legal arguments are
    sharply presented and the record is adequate for our review.
    Thus, we conclude that the issue is properly before us.

    -27- 27













    legislator to accept such gifts, without an accompanying

    intent to cause the legislator to deviate from the honest

    performance of official duties. While such gifts would

    constitute a gift-statute violation, not every such

    circumstance would necessarily amount to a deviation from the

    official's performance of honest services to the public.11

    Thus, unlike the honest services fraud cases, noted above, in

    which an official was bribed or took official action based on

    a secret conflict of interest, a gift statute violation, even

    if intentional, does not in itself amount to honest services

    fraud.

    While the Massachusetts' citizenry expects their

    legislators to comply with laws pertaining to their official

    capacity, the presence of such illegal conduct, even though

    it relates to public office, does not by itself (or, per se) ___ __

    establish honest services fraud. Cf. See United States v. ___ ___ _____________

    Dowling, 739 F.2d 1445, 1449-50 (9th Cir. 1984) (rejecting _______

    government's suggestion that "the presence of illegal conduct

    alone may constitute the basis of the `fraud' element of a

    mail fraud prosecution" and stating that "to hold otherwise .

    . . would have the potential of bringing almost any illegal

    act within the province of the mail fraud statute"), rev'd on ________

    other grounds, 473 U.S. 207 (1985); United States v. Gallant, _____________ _____________ _______

    ____________________

    11. We note that under Massachusetts law, violation of the
    gift statute is punishable by no more than a $2000 civil _____
    fine.

    -28- 28













    570 F. Supp. 303, 309 and n.7 (S.D.N.Y. 1983) (noting that

    Congress forbade the use of the mails in furtherance of "any

    scheme or artifice to defraud" and not in furtherance of "any

    crime"). To allow every transgression of state governmental

    obligations to amount to mail fraud would effectively turn

    every such violation into a federal felony; this cannot be

    countenanced.

    Because the court's instructions allowed the jury

    to equate a gift statute violation with the deprivation of

    honest services, it also permitted the jury to find an

    "intent to defraud" from the intent to violate the statute,

    without more. To establish the scheme to defraud through

    these violations, however, it must also have been charged and

    shown that the intent behind the violations was the ______

    deprivation of honest services. See D'Amato, 39 F.3d at 1257 ___ _______

    (explaining that where harm is not the necessary result of

    the scheme, independent evidence of fraudulent intent is

    required). Thus, this case required a separate instruction

    that, to prove the intent to commit honest services fraud,

    the jury had to find that Sawyer intended to influence or __________________________

    otherwise improperly affect the official s performance of _____________________________________________________________

    duties, not merely that he intended to violate the state ______

    statute.12 Allowing the jury to find that Sawyer intended

    ____________________

    12. This intent is not equivalent to, or subsumed within,
    the intent to deceive the public, discussed infra. In _______ _____
    addition to deceit (the gravamen of "fraud"), the government ______

    -29- 29













    to defraud the public of its right to honest services based

    on proof of gift statute violations alone constituted

    reversible error. See United States v. Doherty, 867 F.2d 47, ___ _____________ _______

    57 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 492 U.S. 918 (1989) (observing _____ ______

    that reversal of convictions is required if instructions

    "could have led the jury to convict for conduct outside the

    proscription of the mail fraud statute").

    2. The Gratuity Statute ________________________

    The second Massachusetts statute upon which the

    convictions for honest-services mail fraud rely, is ch. 268A,

    3 (the "gratuity statute"), which provides, in part:

    (a) Whoever, otherwise than as provided
    by law for the proper discharge of
    official duty, directly or indirectly
    gives, offers or promises anything of
    substantial value to any present or
    former state . . . employee . . . for or
    because of any official act performed or
    to be performed by such an employee
    . . . .
    (d) . . . shall be punished by a fine of
    not more than three thousand dollars or
    by imprisonment for not more than two
    years, or both.

    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 3.




    ____________________

    must also show the intent to harm (in this case, to deprive ____
    of honest services). See McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc. v. ___ ____________________________
    Heritage Travel, Inc., 904 F.2d 786, 791-92 (1st Cir.) _______________________
    (explaining that mail fraud requires both deceit and
    deprivation), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 992 (1990); D'Amato, 39 _____ ______ _______
    F.3d at 1257 (explaining that "the deceit must be coupled
    with a contemplated harm to the victim") (quotation and
    citation omitted).

    -30- 30













    The centerpiece of the gratuity statute is the

    giving of an item of "substantial value" (the "gratuity"), to

    an official, "for or because of any official act performed or

    to be performed" by the official. Because this language

    entails some connection between the gift and the performance

    of official duties, a gratuity statute violation -- unlike a

    gift statute violation -- may itself be sufficient to

    implicate the duty of honest services in a given case. As

    with the gift statute, however, not every violation of the

    gratuity statute automatically encompasses an intent to

    induce the public official to alter or deviate from the

    performance of honest and impartial services. We explain.

    A Massachusetts gratuity offense does not require a

    finding of corrupt intent, i.e., improper intent to influence ____

    official decision making. See Commonwealth v. Dutney, 348 ___ ____________ ______

    N.E.2d 812, 821 (Mass. Ct. App. 1976) (finding gratuity

    offense to be a lesser included offense of Massachusetts

    bribery statute, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 2, which adds the

    element of "corrupt intent" i.e., intent to influence);13 ____

    ____________________

    13. The Massachusetts bribery statute, which did not form a
    part of this case, provides, in part:

    Whoever, directly or indirectly,
    corruptly gives, offers or promises _________
    anything of value to any state . . .
    employee . . ., with intent . . . to ____________ __
    influence any official act or any act ____________________________
    within the official responsibility of
    such employee [shall be punished].


    -31- 31













    cf. United States v. Mariano, 983 F.2d 1150, 1159 (1st Cir. ___ _____________ _______

    1993) (observing that gratuity offense, unlike bribery, does

    not involve a "corrupt purpose"). Rather, only some lesser

    intent need be shown. A jury might be charged to find a

    bribery or gratuity offense in the alternative, thus allowing

    it to convict for a gratuity offense if it is convinced that

    the defendant gave something to a public official because of

    an official act, but is not persuaded that the defendant had

    a corrupt intent to influence that act. See, e.g., Dutney, ___ ____ ______

    348 N.E.2d at 821.

    As the word "gratuity" implies, the intent most

    often associated with the offense is the intent to "reward"

    an official for an act taken in the past or to be taken in

    the future. See Mariano, 983 F.2d at 1159 (noting that, ___ _______

    unlike one who bribes, the gratuity offender "gives the gift

    without attaching any strings, intending it instead as a

    reward for actions the public official has already taken or

    is already committed to take"). The official act might

    otherwise be properly motivated; and the gratuity, though

    unlawful, might not be intended to influence the official's

    mindset with regard to that particular action. In some

    cases, such as a reward for long-past official action, the

    intent to influence could not possibly exist. A finding of

    honest services fraud, however, requires, in connection with

    ____________________

    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 2(a) (emphasis added).

    -32- 32













    the gratuity, the intent to cause an official to deviate from

    the honest performance of services.

    Thus, as with the gift statute, proof of a

    violation of the Massachusetts gratuity statute, without

    more, does not establish an intent to commit honest services

    fraud. The government must prove that the conduct was

    accompanied by the requisite intent. This intent could be

    shown in a number of ways. For example, a bribery-like,

    corrupt intent to influence official action necessarily is an

    intent to deprive the public of an official's honest

    services. A person might not, however, give an unlawful

    gratuity with the intent to effect a specific quid pro quo. ____ ___ ___

    Rather, as the government contends here, a person with

    continuing and long-term interests before an official might

    engage in a pattern of repeated, intentional gratuity

    offenses in order to coax ongoing favorable official action

    in derogation of the public's right to impartial official

    services. Such conduct would be akin to (although not a

    classic case of) the conflict of interest cases noted above.

    See, e.g., Grandmaison, 77 F.3d at 567; Silvano, 812 F.2d at ___ ____ ___________ _______

    759. Here, for example, while Sawyer may not have provided

    the legislators with direct kickbacks or commissions arising

    out of the specific official action, he may have intended the

    legislators generally to treat preferentially Hancock's

    interests, knowing that the free meals, entertainment, and



    -33- 33













    golf would continue so long as favorable official acts were,

    at some point, taken.

    In this case, the district court did not, in fact,

    instruct the jury on a true "gratuity" offense. Instead, it

    instructed the jury that, to establish a gratuity offense,

    the government must prove that Sawyer "gave something of

    substantial value to a legislator with the intent to _____________________

    influence an official act of that legislator." While this __________________________

    instruction erroneously added an intent-to-influence element

    to the gratuity offense, it also had the effect of charging

    the jury to find the requisite intent for honest services

    fraud.14

    3. Conclusion: Scheme to Deprive of Honest ___________________________________________________

    Services ________

    The jury was permitted to find the first element of

    mail and wire fraud, the scheme to defraud, upon proof that

    either the gift statute or the gratuity statute was violated.

    The gift statute as charged, however, was a legally ____

    insufficient basis upon which to find the scheme to defraud.

    ____________________

    14. The court also instructed the jury that it is not a
    defense to a gratuity charge that the official act would have
    occurred even if the gratuity had not been given. See United ___ ______
    States v. Previte, 648 F.2d 73, 82 (1st Cir. 1981). Sawyer ______ _______
    assigns error to this instruction, contending that the fact
    that the act would have occurred without the gratuity is
    indicative of good faith. Sawyer fails to explain, however,
    how the fact that an official act would have occurred anyway
    could have affected his state of mind when giving the ___
    gratuities. The court's instruction was a correct statement
    of the law, relevant to this case, and it was not in error.

    -34- 34













    Although the gratuity statute was properly instructed in ________

    terms of honest services mail fraud, we cannot tell if the

    convictions were based on that statute or the insufficiently

    charged gift statute. When a jury has been presented with

    several bases for conviction, one of which is legally

    erroneous, and it is impossible to tell which ground the jury

    convicted upon, the conviction cannot stand. United States _____________

    v. Nieves-Burgos, 62 F.3d 431, 435-36 (1st Cir. 1995). _____________

    The government contends that if we find error with

    respect to the gift statute, we should affirm the convictions

    because the jury found that Sawyer committed gratuity

    offenses within the Travel Act convictions, discussed infra. _____

    We cannot assume from the Travel Act convictions, however,

    that the jury based its mail and wire fraud convictions on

    the gratuity statute. The court charged the jury to consider

    each offense as separate bases for the mail and wire fraud

    charges. Accordingly, the possibility exists that, when

    convicting on the mail and wire fraud charges, the jury

    focused on violations of the gift statute, alone. See Boots, ___ _____

    80 F.3d at 589 (declining to affirm conviction where it was

    possible that the jury focused its verdict on erroneous

    basis). Thus, for the foregoing reasons, Sawyer's mail and

    wire fraud convictions must be reversed.

    Sawyer contends that the evidence was insufficient

    to prove an intent to influence the legislators' official



    -35- 35













    acts and that therefore his conviction should be reversed

    without the possibility of retrial. We cannot agree. At

    trial, there was evidence that Sawyer intentionally and

    repeatedly provided legislators with valuable gifts of

    entertainment for the purpose of obtaining "greater access"

    to,15 and of developing a "certain relationship with,"

    legislators. A jury could credit Sawyer's defense that he

    thought his expenditures were lawful and that they were meant

    only for goodwill entertaining. Taking the evidence in the

    light most favorable to the prosecution, however, see United ___ ______

    States v. Olbres, 61 F.3d 967, 970 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, ______ ______ _____ ______

    116 S. Ct. 522 (1995), a jury could also rationally infer,

    beyond a reasonable doubt that Sawyer intended that his

    repeated gifts and gratuities would induce legislators to

    perform official acts to benefit Hancock's interests

    regardless of, or at the expense of, the public interest.

    ____________________

    15. We do not think that the desire to gain access, by
    itself, amounts to an intent to influence improperly the
    legislators' exercise of official duties. The government
    points to no legislative duty to provide equal access to all
    members of the public; and, from a practical standpoint, we
    doubt one exists. See Sawyer, 878 F. Supp. at 294 (striking ___ ______
    phrase "free from favoritism" from indictment's list of
    legislators' duties). True, Sawyer's very job description
    required him to develop contacts in the Legislature, and, as
    with all lobbyists, his employment goal was to persuade and
    influence legislators to benefit certain interests. Such
    endeavors, however, are protected by the right "to petition
    the Government for a redress of grievance" guaranteed by the
    First Amendment of the United States Constitution, see United ___ ______
    States v. Harriss, 347 U.S. 612, 625 (1954); it would be ______ _______
    impermissible to rely upon the lobbying position simpliciter
    to establish a corrupt intent to influence.

    -36- 36













    Hence, retrial is not precluded. See Boots, 80 F.3d at 589- ___ _____

    90 (reversing because of legal error in instructions but

    remanding for possible retrial because the evidence was

    sufficient for proper conviction); United States v. Ochs, 842 _____________ ____

    F.2d 515, 529 (1st Cir. 1988) (same).

    In view of the possibility that the government may

    choose to retry this case, we think it is useful to add a

    cautionary word concerning the relationship between state and

    federal law in cases such as this one. Our comments are

    addressed primarily to the mail fraud statute but apply in

    some measure to the Travel Act charge, discussed infra, as _____

    well. Two problems are of specific concern to us.

    First, concerning the theft of honest services jury

    instruction, an overemphasis on what state law forbids may

    lead the jury to believe that state rather than federal law

    defines the crime, or more specifically, that any violation

    of a state law or regulation concerning lobbying or related

    matters amounts to honest services fraud. Wire and mail

    fraud are federal offenses; and while state violations may _______

    play a role, the jury should not be allowed to slip into the

    misunderstanding that any violation of proliferating state

    laws and regulations controlling this area automatically

    amounts to a federal crime.

    In a similar vein, we think there exists a risk in

    this case -- particularly in view of the prosecutor's closing



    -37- 37













    argument with its repeated emphasis on permissible dollar

    limits in lobbying -- that the jury could wrongly believe

    that any expenditure in excess of that allowed by state

    statute or regulation by itself constitutes the federal

    offense. The district court has ample authority under

    Federal Rule of Evidence 403 to limit evidence concerning

    state law requirements where that evidence is substantially

    more prejudicial than probative. And, in all events, jury

    instructions need to make clear that for the federal honest

    services fraud to be proven, the defendant must have the

    intent to affect a legislator's performance of an official

    act and not merely to make payments in excess of some state

    specified limitations.

    B. Intent to Deceive _____________________

    Whether or not a new trial on the mail and wire

    fraud counts is allowable requires us to reach Sawyer's

    additional contention that the evidence was insufficient to

    establish his intent to deceive the public. To this end,

    Sawyer contends that because the government did not establish

    that he had a duty to disclose his illegal gifts and

    gratuities to the public, his intent to deceive the public

    had to be shown through affirmative acts of deception, which

    he claims are absent here.

    To establish mail fraud -- in cases involving

    honest services fraud and otherwise -- the alleged scheme



    -38- 38













    must involve deception in the deprivation of money, property,

    or the right to honest services. See McEvoy Travel Bureau, ___ ______________________

    Inc. v. Heritage Travel, Inc., 904 F.2d 786, 791 (1st Cir.) ____ ______________________

    ("[N]ot every use of the mails or wires in furtherance of an

    unlawful scheme to deprive another of property constitutes

    mail or wire fraud. . . . Rather, the scheme must be intended

    to deceive another, by means of false or fraudulent _______

    pretenses, representations, promises or other deceptive

    conduct.") (citations omitted), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 992 _____ ______

    (1990); see also Grandmaison, 77 F.3d at 567 (finding that ___ ____ ___________

    public official's conduct of secretly delivering gratuities

    to other officials for favorable action, "without disclosing

    his actions to other [officials]," falls within purview of

    honest services mail fraud) (citing McEvoy Travel, 904 F.2d ______________

    at 791); United States v. Bush, 522 F.2d 641, 648 (7th Cir. _____________ ____

    1975), cert. denied, 424 U.S. 977 (1976).16 While a _____ ______

    ____________________

    16. Under 18 U.S.C. 1346, "the term 'scheme or artifice to
    defraud' includes a scheme or artifice to deprive another of _______
    the intangible right of honest services." (emphasis added).
    We do not think the word "deprive" in this section eliminates
    the requirement of deceit in an honest services fraud ______
    prosecution. Nor do we find that a deprivation of "honest"
    services, by definition, necessarily includes the deceit
    factor sufficient for mail fraud. By enacting 1346,
    Congress meant to overturn McNally, 483 U.S. 350 (1987), _______
    which held that the scheme to defraud must be intended to
    deprive another of money or property. Grandmaison, 77 F.3d ___________
    at 566. And prior to McNally, courts endorsing the honest- _______
    services mail fraud theory invariably required some showing
    of deceit which is inherent in the term "fraud." See ___
    Silvano, 812 F.2d at 759-60; Mandel, 591 F.2d at 1361; United _______ ______ ______
    States v. Barber, 668 F.2d 778, 784-85 (4th Cir.), cert. ______ ______ _____
    denied, 459 U.S. 829 (1982). We find nothing that indicates ______

    -39- 39













    misrepresentation of fact is not required to establish mail

    fraud, McEvoy Travel, 904 F.2d at 791, a demonstrated intent _____________

    to deceive is required.

    When the conduct of a government official is

    involved, "the affirmative duty to disclose material

    information arises out of [the] official's fiduciary

    relationship to [the public]." Silvano, 812 F.2d at 758; see _______ ___

    id. at 760 ("Although not all dishonest or disloyal conduct ___

    by an employee violates the mail fraud statute, an employee's

    breach of a fiduciary duty falls within the strictures of the

    statute when it encompasses the breach of a duty to disclose

    material information to the employer."). Thus, an official's

    intentional violation of the duty to disclose provides the

    requisite "deceit." See id. at 760 (noting that failure to ___ ___

    disclose "under circumstances where the non-disclosure could

    or does result in harm to the employer is a violation of the

    mail fraud statute") (citation and internal quotations

    omitted).

    Here, although the issue has not been clearly

    presented by the parties, it appears that the requisite

    intent to deceive could have been shown either through

    Sawyer's own acts of deception toward the public with respect

    ____________________

    a change in this requirement for establishing honest services
    mail or wire fraud. Thus, while it may be difficult to
    conceive of a scheme to deprive someone of the right to
    honest services without intending to deceive that person, the
    intent to deceive must nonetheless be established.

    -40- 40













    to the gift/gratuity statute violations, or through his

    efforts to ensure that the legislators deceived the public

    with respect to the violations. The latter requires evidence

    only that Sawyer intended to cause the legislators

    intentionally to fail to disclose material information about

    the violations,17 although evidence that he intended the

    legislators to affirmatively misrepresent themselves in this

    regard would also suffice. At bottom, the evidence must be

    sufficient to establish Sawyer's intent that, in the end, the

    publicbedeceivedwith respecttohisunlawfulgifts andgratuities.

    Therefore, we must determine if the admissible

    evidence, viewed in light most favorable to the jury's

    verdict, is sufficient for a rational jury to find that

    Sawyer intended that the public be deceived. See United ___ ______

    States v. Kaplan, 832 F.2d 676, 679 (1st Cir. 1987), cert. ______ ______ _____

    denied, 485 U.S. 907 (1988). The evidence need not compel an ______

    intent-to-deceive finding; rather, it is only required that a

    reasonable jury could be persuaded, beyond a reasonable

    doubt, that Sawyer had such intent. See United States v. ___ _____________

    O'Brien, 14 F.3d 703, 706-707 (1st Cir. 1994). And we are _______

    mindful that a jury may choose among the reasonable

    alternatives posed by the evidence. United States v. Olbres, _____________ ______

    ____________________

    17. Although allegations that Sawyer caused legislators to
    violate their statutory disclosure obligations were withdrawn
    by the government at trial, the obligation to disclose
    material information inheres in the legislator's general
    fiduciary duty to the public. Silvano, 812 F.2d at 758. _______

    -41- 41













    61 F.3d 967, 973 (1st Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. _____ ______

    522 (1995). Finally, the specific intent to deceive may be

    proven (and usually is) by indirect and circumstantial

    evidence. See O'Brien, 14 F.3d at 706 (observing that fraud ___ _______

    crimes "by their very nature, often yield little in the way

    of direct proof"); Kaplan, 832 F.2d at 679; see also United ______ ___ ____ ______

    States v. Nivica, 887 F.2d 1110, 1113 (1st Cir. 1989) ______ ______

    (opining that "factual circumstances may signal fraudulent

    intent in ways as diverse as the manifestations of fraud

    itself"), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1005 (1990). _____ ______

    At first blush, it may appear that bribery of a

    public official necessarily incorporates a finding that the

    offender intended to "trick" or "deceive" the public into

    thinking that the official was acting independently when, in

    fact, the official was actually motivated by the bribe.

    While we have little doubt that bribes are usually given in

    secrecy, see Holzer, 816 F.2d at 309 (observing that "no ___ ______

    public official in the United States takes bribes openly"),

    bribery and gratuity statutes generally, as here, do not

    require a separate element of deception. Ostensibly, a _______

    person could offer an illegal bribe to a public official and

    not be concerned with its secrecy. Thus, the evidence

    presented must permit a finding that Sawyer not only gave the

    unlawful gifts or gratuities with the intent to deprive the

    public of honest services, but that he also intended to



    -42- 42













    deceive the public about that conduct. See Bush, 522 F.2d at ___ ____

    648.

    Here, the government presented evidence that Sawyer

    gave the unlawful gifts and gratuities during the seven years

    of the indictment period until the Boston Globe exposed the

    practice in May 1993. Much of his entertainment of lobbyists

    took place out-of-state -- usually at industry and

    legislative conferences -- where members of the Massachusetts

    citizenry generally would not observe the questionable

    activities. Unlike his acts of "non-public" entertainment,

    Sawyer ensured compliance with state ethical standards for a

    1993 Boston Marathon brunch, potentially a high profile

    event. In his office, Sawyer kept newspaper articles

    reporting legislators' activities with lobbyists, and in

    particular, the ethical ramifications of such relationships.

    In one article, Representative Mara (a recipient of Sawyer's

    unlawful gifts or gratuities) is quoted as saying, "Everyone

    picks up their own tabs at [legislative] conferences. . . .

    These conferences have become almost nonexistent." These

    articles were kept in notebooks with other materials

    regarding lobbying laws.

    A jury rationally could infer that Sawyer was

    cognizant of his ethical obligations in lobbying, knew of the

    public awareness of lobbying activity, and repeatedly gave

    hidden unlawful gifts and gratuities until he was publicly



    -43- 43













    exposed. While not overwhelming, the combined evidence is

    sufficient to permit a reasonable jury to find, beyond a

    reasonable doubt, that Sawyer intended to deceive the public

    about his unlawful expenditures on legislators. See United ___ ______

    States v. Ortiz, 966 F.2d 707, 711 (1st Cir. 1992) ______ _____

    (explaining that "juries are not required to examine the

    evidence in isolation, for `individual pieces of evidence,

    insufficient in themselves to prove a point, may in

    cumulation prove it. The sum of an evidentiary presentation

    may well be greater than its constituent parts.'" (quoting

    Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 179-80 (1987)), _________ ______________

    cert. denied, 506 U.S. 1063 (1993); United States v. _____ ______ ______________

    Montminy, 936 F.2d 626, 627-28 (1st Cir. 1991).18 ________



    ____________________

    18. The government also presented evidence that Sawyer
    somehow concealed his expenditures on legislators from his
    Hancock superiors other than Hathaway. The government does
    not argue that this evidence can amount to the requisite
    deceptive conduct, nor did it rely on it to prove the intent
    to deceive. In any event, Sawyer's deceptive conduct toward
    Hancock, alone, cannot form the basis of this honest services
    fraud conviction. Rather, the alleged victims of the mail
    fraud -- here, the state and the public -- must be the ones
    deceived. Thus, in order for any deception of Hancock to
    form a part of the scheme to deprive the Commonwealth and her
    citizens of legislators' honest services, some showing that
    such conduct was connected to the defrauding of alleged
    victims is required. See McEvoy Travel, 904 F.2d at 794 & ___ _____________
    n.13 (rejecting position that a scheme to defraud is
    established if the deception of one party causes deprivation
    to another); Lifschultz Fast Freight, Inc. v. Consolidated ______________________________ ____________
    Freightways Corp., 805 F. Supp. 1277 (D.S.C. 1992) (requiring _________________
    convergence of identity of injured and deceived), aff'd on ________
    other grounds, 998 F.2d 1009 (4th Cir.) (Table), 1993 WL ______________
    241742, cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 553 (1993). _____ ______

    -44- 44













    For the foregoing reasons, Sawyer's mail and wire

    fraud convictions must be vacated and remanded for a possible

    new trial.

    III. III. ____

    Travel Act Counts Travel Act Counts _________________

    The government charged Sawyer with knowingly and

    wilfully travelling and causing others to travel in

    interstate commerce with the intent to promote, carry on and

    facilitate the promotion and carrying on of unlawful

    activity, to wit, illegal gratuities in violation of Mass.

    Gen. L. ch. 268A, 3, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1952 (the

    "Travel Act").19 The government asserted that Sawyer

    violated the Massachusetts gratuity statute subsequent to

    interstate travel to the following destinations: Tulsa,

    Oklahoma; Orlando, Florida; Savannah, Georgia; Scottsdale,

    Arizona; Key Largo, Florida; Charleston, South Carolina;

    Amelia Island, Florida; and Puerto Rico.

    ____________________

    19. The Travel Act proscribes travel in interstate commerce
    "with intent to . . . promote, manage, establish, carry on,
    or facilitate the promotion, management, establishment, or
    carrying on, of any unlawful activity." 18 U.S.C. 1952(a).
    "Unlawful activity" is defined as, inter alia, "bribery . . . _____ ____
    in violation of the laws of the State in which committed or
    of the United States." 18 U.S.C. 1952(b); see United ___ ______
    States v. Arruda, 715 F.2d 671, 681 (1st Cir. 1983). The ______ ______
    district court instructed the jury that a violation of the
    gratuity statute constituted "unlawful" activity within the
    purview of the Travel Act, a view with which we agree to the
    extent that the court instructed that something of value was
    given in order to influence the performance of an official
    act. Sawyer does not dispute that a gratuity violation of
    this character is "bribery" for purposes of the Travel Act.

    -45- 45













    Sawyer argues that his Travel Act convictions must

    be reversed because: (1) the court erroneously instructed the

    jury on the gratuity statute; (2) the evidence was

    insufficient to establish the gratuity offenses; (3) the

    court barred him from presenting evidence crucial to his

    defense; and (4) the court improperly admitted summary

    evidence introduced by the government. Although we discuss

    and reject each of these arguments in turn, we nonetheless

    reverse his conviction on these counts because the district

    court's instructions on the meaning of "bribery," for the

    purposes of the Travel Act, were fatally flawed.

    A. Gratuity Statute Jury Instructions ______________________________________

    Because the Travel Act convictions rely upon

    violations of the Massachusetts gratuity statute, we now

    address an additional state-law aspect of the gratuity

    statute about which the parties disagree.

    The gratuity statute requires that the item of

    "substantial value" be given "for or because of any official

    act performed or to be performed." Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A,

    3(a). An "official act" is defined as: "any decision or

    action in a particular matter or in the enactment of

    legislation." Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 1(h).20 Here,

    ____________________

    20. A "particular matter" is further defined as:

    any judicial or other proceeding,
    application, submission, request for a
    ruling or other determination, contract,

    -46- 46













    Sawyer allegedly bestowed gratuities upon legislators who

    were members of the Insurance Committee. Thus, for purposes

    of this discussion, we proceed on the theory that the

    government had to prove that Sawyer gave the gratuities "for

    or because of . . . any decision or action in the enactment

    of legislation." See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 3(a), 1(h). ___

    The parties' interpretations of the gratuity

    statute differ with respect to the scope and character of the

    connection required between the gratuity and the official

    act. Sawyer contends that the gratuity must be linked to a

    specific, identifiable official act. The government argues

    that it is sufficient to prove that the gratuity would not

    have been given but for the legislator's ability to take

    official action favorable to Sawyer. In a pretrial ruling on

    Sawyer's motions to dismiss, the district court agreed with

    the government's interpretation, and instructed as such.21

    ____________________

    claim, controversy, charge, accusation,
    arrest, decision, determination, finding,
    but excluding enactment of general
    legislation . . .

    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 1(k).

    21. The court's jury instructions on this issue were as
    follows:

    I instruct you that the government has to
    prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant intended to influence the
    action of the legislator on any official
    matter which was pending before the
    legislator or which may, by law, have
    been brought before the legislator at

    -47- 47













    No Massachusetts court decision has yet interpreted

    the operative "for or because of any official act" language

    in ch. 268A, 3(a). To support their respective positions,

    the parties present differing arguments regarding the

    statutory language, legislative history, comparable statutes,

    and State Ethics Commission rulings. We consider these

    sources separately.

    1. Statutory Language ______________________

    The gratuity statute prohibits the giving of

    gratuities "for or because of any official act performed or

    to be performed." Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 3. The statute

    does not read "for or because of the official's position." ___

    Rather, it forbids gratuities motivated by "any official act"


    ____________________

    some later time.
    . . . .
    I further instruct you that the
    government need not prove that the
    alleged gratuity was linked to a specific
    identifiable act. In other words, the
    government need not prove that the
    gratuity was given as a quid pro quo;
    that is, in exchange for any one specific
    act performed or to be performed by the
    legislator. The government does not have
    to show that there was an agreement
    between the defendant and the legislator
    requiring the legislator to perform
    certain acts in exchange for the
    gratuity.
    The government must prove, however,
    that the defendant gave the alleged
    gratuity to a legislator with the
    expectation that the legislator would use
    his influence on official matters in ways
    favorable to the defendant.

    -48- 48













    and further defines, rather meticulously, "official act."

    See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 1(h) & (k). Thus, on the face ___

    of the statute, it does not appear that the unlawfulness of

    the gratuity could be established by proof that it was

    motivated solely by the official's position. In other words,

    proof of the offense requires something more than a simple

    showing that "but for" the official's authority, the gratuity

    would not have been given.22

    This observation, however, does not lead to the

    conclusion that the gratuity must be shown to be motivated by

    a specifically identified official act. As noted supra, a _____

    gratuity offense is essentially a bribery offense without

    proof of "corrupt intent." The concern behind the gratuity

    statute, like the bribery statute, is the potential

    undermining of official integrity. A gratuity does not

    compromise this integrity because of its possible effect on

    the official's "position"; rather, the danger is in its

    ability to affect the official's performance of duties, i.e., ____

    "official acts." It is not surprising, then, that the




    ____________________

    22. For example, if the parent of a student gives the school
    principal a gift of substantial value at the student's
    graduation, that alone would not constitute a gratuity
    offense, even though the parent would not have given the gift
    "but for" the principal's position. If, however, the gift
    was given under circumstances in which the principal had the
    discretion to decide whether or not the student would
    graduate, a gratuity offense might be found.

    -49- 49













    statute proscribes gratuities motivated by "official acts"

    rather than "official position."

    Thus, the use of the term "official act" appears to

    ensure that the gratuity would be deemed unlawful only when

    the giving of an item of "substantial value" is linked to the

    official's performance of duties. The connection between the

    gratuity and the performance of official duties, however,

    does not necessarily require the identification of a specific

    official act, and we find nothing in the statutory language

    to require such a demonstration.

    2. Legislative History _______________________

    The gratuity statute was based, in part, upon a

    bill drafted by a 1962 Massachusetts Special Commission on

    Code of Ethics. See Report of the Special Commission on Code ___

    of Ethics, 1962 House Doc. No. 3650, p.8. Nothing in the

    Commission's Report, however, assists us in resolving the

    instant question. It states only: "It should be noted that

    to constitute a criminal act, the giving or receiving of the

    item of such `substantial value' must be `for or because of'

    an official act." Id. at 11; see Commonwealth v. Famigletti, ___ ___ ____________ __________

    354 N.E.2d 890, 893 (Mass. Ct. App. 1976) (noting same

    language in the report). The Report neither parses out what

    these terms mean, nor gives examples of what was intended.

    From this we discern only that the Commission was concerned





    -50- 50













    that "innocent" gifts to officials would not fall within the

    gratuity statute's purview.

    The Commission's report does tell us that "[m]uch

    of the language of the proposed legislation is taken and

    adapted from [a proposed federal bribery/gratuity bill]."

    Report of Special Commission, supra at 8; see Dutney, 348 _____ ___ ______

    N.E.2d at 822 n.16. As discussed below, however, the

    comparable federal gratuity statute, 18 U.S.C. 201(c), is

    also unhelpful in resolving the question before us.

    3. Comparable Statutes _______________________

    In support of its position, the government relies

    on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's interpretation

    of a different statute in Commonwealth v. Lapham, 156 Mass. ____________ ______

    480, 31 N.E. 638 (Mass. 1892), and on federal cases

    interpreting the federal gratuity statute, 18 U.S.C.

    201(c).

    Lapham involved a milk dealer who attempted to ______

    bribe a city milk inspector and was convicted under a statute

    punishing anyone who:

    corruptly gives, offers or promises to
    any executive, legislative . . . or
    judicial officer . . .any gift or
    gratuity whatever, with intent to
    influence his act, vote, opinion,
    decision, or judgment on any matter,
    question, cause, or proceeding, which may
    be then pending, or may by law come or be
    brought before him in his official
    capacity.




    -51- 51













    Mass. Pub. St. ch. 205, 9 (Ch. 349 Revised May 21, 1891);

    see Lapham, 31 N.E. at 638-39. The milk dealer argued that ___ ______

    the indictment was insufficient because it did not aver a

    particular matter to be influenced. Id. The Supreme ___

    Judicial Court disagreed, reasoning as follows:

    Nor is it necessary in an indictment
    under [ch. 205, 9] to aver that the
    corrupt intention to influence the act,
    opinion, decision or judgment of the
    inspector was in relation to any specific
    and particular matter then pending before
    him, or which was then expected to come
    before him. It is enough to aver a
    corrupt intention so to influence him in
    any matter which may then be pending, or
    which may by law come or be brought
    before him. If for example an executive,
    legislative or judicial officer is bribed
    corruptly to favor a particular person in
    any and all matters affecting that person
    which may come before such officer,
    without specification or knowledge of the
    particular matters likely to come up, the
    statute is broad enough to include such a
    case. A narrower construction of a
    similar statute has been adopted in
    Alabama, but we cannot follow it.
    Barefield v. State, 14 Ala. 603 [1848]. _________ _____

    Id. at 639. ___

    The difficulty with the government's reliance on

    Lapham is, of course, the fact that it involved a differently ______

    worded statute. The Lapham statute proscribes a corrupt gift ______

    to influence an official act "on any matter . . . which may ___

    be then pending or may by law come or be brought before him ___

    in his official capacity." Mass. Pub. St. ch. 205, 9 (Ch.

    349 Revised May 21, 1891) (emphasis added). In holding that



    -52- 52













    an averment of a specific matter was not necessary, the

    Lapham court repeatedly used the word "may." See, e.g., id. ______ ___ ____ ___

    ("It is enough to aver a corrupt intention so to influence

    him in any matter which may then be pending, or which may by ___ ___

    law come or be brought before him.") (emphasis added).

    The question is whether the absence of the word

    "may" in the present gratuity statute, see Mass. Gen. L. ch. ___

    268A, 3, 1(h) & (k), signifies, by negative implication,

    the requirement of a specific official act. The reasoning in

    Lapham does seem to indicate some relationship between the ______

    word "may" and the absence of a specificity requirement. We

    think, however, that it does not follow that the word "may"

    is the only manner in which to indicate that particular

    official acts need not be shown to establish a gratuity

    offense.

    The present statute proscribes a gift "for or

    because of any official act performed or to be ___

    performed,"23 and further defines "official act" as "any ___

    ____________________

    23. The phrase "performed or to be performed" affords
    temporal flexibility between the gratuity and any motivating
    official act. Mass. Gen. L. ch 268A 3(a); Dutney, 348 ______
    N.E.2d at 821 n.14. This temporal flexibility is also
    present in the Lapham statute ("may then be pending or which ______
    may by law come or be brought before him"), ch. 205, 9
    (1891), as well as the federal gratuity statute ("may at any
    time be pending, or which may by law be brought before [an
    official]") noted infra. 18 U.S.C. 201(a)(3). In our _____
    view, and contrary to the district court, while the language
    affording temporal flexibility is consistent with the absence
    of an official-act specificity requirement, it does not
    compel that result. See Sawyer, 878 F. Supp. at 287. ___ ______

    -53- 53













    decision or action in a particular matter or in the enactment

    of legislation." Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 3(a), 1(h)

    (emphasis added). Use of the broad term "any" is consistent

    with a legislative intent to proscribe gifts motivated by

    unidentified official acts. Most importantly, given the

    reasoning set forth in Lapham, we think that if the ______

    Massachusetts Legislature had wanted to drastically narrow

    the scope of the gratuity offense by requiring specifically

    identified official acts, it would have spoken more clearly

    than it has. In the end, the Lapham case supports the ______

    conclusion that a gratuity offense may be established without

    proof that a specific official act was the motivation for the

    gratuity.

    The government also relies on cases interpreting

    the similarly worded federal gratuity statute, 18 U.S.C.

    201(c),24 that indicate that a conviction under that


    ____________________

    24. The federal gratuity statute, 18 U.S.C. 201(c),
    provides, in pertinent part:

    Whoever -- [] otherwise than as provided
    by law for the proper discharge of
    official duty -- [] directly or
    indirectly gives, offers, or promises
    anything of value to any public official
    . . . for or because of any official act
    performed or to be performed by such
    public official . . . shall be
    [punished].

    The term "official act" is further defined in 18
    U.S.C. 201 (a)(3) as:


    -54- 54













    statute does not require a showing that the gratuity was

    linked to a specific official act. See, e.g., United States ___ ____ _____________

    v. Bustamante, 45 F.3d 933, 940 (5th Cir.) ("it is sufficient __________

    for the government to show that the defendant was given the

    gratuity simply because he held public office"), cert. _____

    denied, 116 S. Ct. 473 (1995); United States v. Niederberger, ______ _____________ ____________

    580 F.2d 63, 68-69 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 980 _____ ______

    (1978); United States v. Standefer, 610 F.2d 1076, 1080 (3d _____________ _________

    Cir. 1979) (en banc), aff'd on other grounds, 447 U.S. 10 _______________________

    (1980). The government reasons that because much of the

    Massachusetts gratuity statute's language was based upon the

    federal statute, see Dutney, 348 N.E. 2d at 822 n.16, and ___ ______

    because some federal cases hold that specific acts need not

    be shown, a similar interpretation of the state law should

    obtain.

    Reliance on those cases, however, is undermined

    by the fact that the First Circuit has expressly reserved

    ruling on the question of whether or not a gratuity

    prosecution under the federal statute requires proof of a

    "causal relation to any `specific, identifiable act.'"


    ____________________

    any decision or action on any question,
    matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
    controversy, which may at any time be
    pending, or which may by law be brought
    before any public official, in such
    official's official capacity, or in such
    official's place of trust or profit.


    -55- 55













    United States v. Previte, 648 F.2d 73, 82 n.8 (1st Cir. 1981) _____________ _______

    (quoting Niederberger, 580 F.2d at 68-69). Sawyer, on the ____________

    other hand, cites no federal gratuity cases (or state

    gratuity cases, for that matter) squarely holding that

    specific acts must be shown; although, he does cite cases in ____

    which specific official acts were shown, see e.g., United ____ ___ ____ ______

    States v. Biaggi, 853 F.2d 89, 99-100 (2d Cir. 1988), cert. ______ ______ _____

    denied, 489 U.S. 1052 (1989); United States v. Brewster, 506 ______ _____________ ________

    F.2d 62, 77-78 (D.C. Cir. 1974)). This is not the proper

    case for us to decide the federal issue. Thus, we conclude

    that it would be inappropriate to take any guidance here from

    cases interpreting the federal gratuity statute.

    4. State Ethics Commission Pronouncements __________________________________________

    The Massachusetts State Ethics Commission is the

    primary civil enforcement agency for violations of the

    gratuity statute. Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268B, 3(i). The

    Ethics Commission has the power and duty to investigate

    alleged gratuity offenses, initiate appropriate adjudicatory

    proceedings, and order civil penalties if it concludes that a

    violation has occurred. Id. 4. Upon the petition of any ___

    party, a final action of the Ethics Commission is subject to

    review by the Massachusetts superior court, which may

    enforce, modify or set aside the order. Id. 4(k). ___

    The Ethics Commission has repeatedly interpreted

    the gratuity statute as forbidding gifts motivated generally



    -56- 56













    by the official's authority to act favorably for the donor.

    See In Re Charles F. Flaherty, 1990 SEC 59 (Disposition ___ ____________________________

    Agreement) ("`All that is required to bring [the gratuity

    statute] into play is a nexus between the motivation for the

    gift and the employee's public duties'" (quoting In Re George ____________

    A. Michael, 1981 SEC 59, 68)); SEC Commission Advisory No. 8 ___________

    "Free Passes" (May 14, 1985) (noting that "even in the

    absence of any specifically identifiable matter that was, is

    or soon will be pending before the official, [the gratuity

    statute] may apply" (citing United States v. Standefer, 452 _____________ _________

    F. Supp. 1178, 1183 (W.D. Pa. 1978)).

    We give the Ethics Commission's interpretation some

    deference. See Olszewski v. Berube, 3 Mass. L. Rptr. 297, ___ _________ ______

    1995 WL 808889 (Mass. Super. No. 922666) (Jan. 27, 1995) at

    *2 (stating that although the Ethics Commission's "decision

    on matters within its competence is to be given great weight,

    the courts are the final interpreter" (citing Finkelstein v. ___________

    Board of Reg. in Optometry, 349 N.E.2d 346, 348 (Mass. _____________________________

    1976)). That deference, however, is tempered not only by the

    fact that no Massachusetts court has passed on the Ethics

    Commission's interpretation, but also because this is a

    criminal case and the Ethics Commission is charged only with

    civil enforcement. The Commission may very well have valid

    reasons for adopting a broad, prophylactic interpretation of

    the statute in its civil dispositions of individual



    -57- 57













    transgressions; its interpretation is easier to prove and the

    offender is more likely to settle with the Commission if she

    does not have to admit to more egregious wrongdoing.

    Nonetheless, we note that the Ethics Commission's

    interpretation of the gratuity statute has been left

    undisturbed by the Massachusetts Legislature, and its

    interpretation is not "arbitrary, unreasonable or

    inconsistent" with the statute. Finkelstein, 349 N.E.2d at ___________

    348. Thus, the Ethics Commission's opinion on the matter

    further supports the conclusion that a specific official act

    need not be identified in a gratuity offense.

    5. Conclusion: Jury Instructions _________________________________

    The absence of a Massachusetts court decision on

    this issue is troubling. We have carefully considered,

    however, all of the authority and arguments on Sawyer's

    behalf, and none of them is availing. We also take note of

    the fact that Sawyer does not cite a single gratuity case,

    either federal or state (and we have found none), holding

    that a specific official act must be linked to the unlawful

    gratuity. Thus, we conclude that the Massachusetts gratuity

    statute does not require proof that the offender gave the

    item of "substantial value" because of a specifically

    identified official act. Of course, the identification of

    certain official acts in relation to the gratuity might make





    -58- 58













    a gratuity offense easier to prove, and we suspect that most

    cases will include such proof although it is unnecessary.

    B. Sufficiency of the Evidence _______________________________

    In cases such as this one, it becomes clear why

    particular official acts need not be shown. The evidence at

    trial showed that Sawyer gave items (that could be found to

    be of "substantial value") to Massachusetts legislators who

    had the ability to take official action favorable to Hancock,

    and that those gifts effectively ceased after the legislators

    left office. While the government did not detail all of the

    legislators' acts that were favorable to Hancock, the

    government did show that Sawyer had a long-term, ongoing

    interest in the official acts of the legislators, and that he

    knew his gratuities were unlawful. From this evidence, the

    jury could rationally infer that the gratuities were

    motivated by the legislators' performance of official duties,

    i.e., that they were given "for or because of any official ____

    act," within the meaning of the Massachusetts gratuity

    statute, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A, 3.

    C. Evidentiary Issues ______________________

    1. Exclusion of Skrine Memorandum __________________________________

    Sawyer contends that the court unduly restricted

    the presentation of evidence that he entertained lawmakers

    solely out of friendship and goodwill and he believed that





    -59- 59













    this did not violate the gratuity statute.25 Specifically,

    he appeals the court's exclusion of a document, written by

    Bruce Skrine, memorializing Skrine's interview with Sawyer

    after the Boston Globe's inquiry into the Puerto Rico trip.

    That document reflects Sawyer's assertion that such

    entertainment, while perhaps excessive in Puerto Rico, "was

    commonly done and that, [the] legislators were all friends of

    his and that they were not in anyway [sic] discussing

    legislation or lobbying."

    At trial, Sawyer did not attempt to offer this

    document to prove his state of mind with respect to his

    expenditures. In fact, he indicated to the court that its

    admission was not necessary because he had already elicited

    the desired testimony from Skrine. Later on, however,

    pointing out that the document did not mention that he

    entertained to "gain access" to legislators, Sawyer offered

    it to impeach Skrine. The court did not permit its admission

    on that basis, but it did allow Sawyer to cross-examine

    Skrine on that very issue. Because Sawyer did not offer the

    document for the purpose he now asserts on appeal, he has


    ____________________

    25. Sawyer also raises arguments as to his good faith
    conduct vis a vis the gift statute, which is not relevant to ___ _ ___
    the Travel Act counts. Such contentions would be relevant to
    the mail and wire fraud counts, which we have reversed. We
    leave the good faith issues surrounding the gift statute
    (which are dependent on the evidence adduced at trial) for
    the district court to resolve on remand, should the
    government choose to retry those counts.

    -60- 60













    forfeited this claim. See United States v. Whiting, 28 F.3d ___ _____________ _______

    1296, 1302 (1st Cir.) (explaining that evidence must have

    been offered for the purpose asserted on appeal to preserve

    issue) (citing Tate v. Robbins & Myers, Inc., 790 F.2d 10, 12 ____ _____________________

    (1st Cir. 1986)), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 378, 498, 499, 532 _____ ______

    (1994). But because the issue may again arise on remand, we

    further hold that because Sawyer was able to obtain the

    desired testimony on the issue he now asserts, we would find

    no abuse of discretion in its exclusion. See United States ___ _____________

    v. Newman, 49 F.3d 1, 5-6 (1st Cir. 1995) (reviewing court's ______

    exclusion of evidence for abuse of discretion).26

    2. Admission of Computer Summaries ___________________________________

    Sawyer assigns reversible error to the district

    court's admission of five charts, Exhibits 1, 1Q, 1R, 1S and

    1T, proffered by the government. Exhibit 1 was a forty-nine

    page computer printout summarizing 612 expenditures,

    occurring between January 1, 1986 and March 31, 1993, that

    were recorded in Sawyer's appointment calendars, expense

    records and other admitted documents. Exhibits 1Q, 1R and 1S

    ____________________

    26. Sawyer also argues that the court erroneously refused to
    instruct the jury on his defense-theory that it was his
    belief that if expenditures were permitted under the
    lobbying-disclosure obligations set forth in Mass. Gen. L.
    ch. 3, then those expenditures (although they had to be
    disclosed) were also allowed under the gratuity statute.
    Upon review of the record, we agree with the district court
    that this instruction was unwarranted because Sawyer did not
    present any evidence that, during the indictment period, he
    actually believed that his expenditures were permitted by the
    lobbying-disclosure laws.

    -61- 61













    are extracts of Exhibit 1 that isolate the expenditures for

    Representatives Woodward, Howarth and Emilio. Exhibit 1T

    contrasts the amount spent on those three Representatives

    while they were members of the Legislature with the amount

    spent on them after they left that office. Sawyer contends

    that these charts were admitted on an insufficient foundation

    and that they were misleading, argumentative and prejudicial.

    Federal Rule of Evidence 1006 provides, in

    pertinent part:

    The contents of voluminous writings . . .
    which cannot conveniently be examined in
    court may be presented in the form of a
    chart, summary, or calculation. The
    originals or duplicates shall be made
    available for examination or copying, or
    both, by [the other party].

    Before admitting such evidentiary presentations, the court

    must first ensure that each is grounded upon a "sufficient

    factual basis," i.e., upon independently established evidence ____

    in the record, and that "possible prejudice or confusion does

    not outweigh their usefulness in clarifying the evidence."

    United States v. Drougas, 748 F.2d 8, 25 (1st Cir. 1984) ______________ _______

    (citing J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Weinstein's Evidence 1006 ____________________

    (1983)); see United States v. Nivica, 887 F.2d 1110, 1125 ___ _____________ ______

    (1st Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1005 (1990); United _____ ______ ______

    States v. Sorrentino, 726 F.2d 876, 884 (1st Cir. 1984). ______ __________

    When a court admits such summaries,

    [c]are must be taken to insure that
    summaries accurately reflect the contents


    -62- 62













    of the underlying documents and do not
    function as pedagogical devices that
    unfairly emphasize part of the
    proponent's proof or create the
    impression that disputed facts have been
    conclusively established or that
    inferences have been directly proved.

    Drougas, 748 F.2d at 25 (citing Weinstein's Evidence, supra _______ ____________________ _____

    1006). We review the admission of summaries for abuse of

    discretion. Nivica, 887 F.2d at 1126. ______

    Sawyer contends that the district court improperly

    admitted the summaries because they did not include evidence

    of his expenditures on legislators before and after the time

    period covered in the summaries, or his expenditures of

    personal funds. He argues that this was unduly misleading

    because it created a "false impression" as to the date the

    alleged conspiracy began, and falsely implied that the

    expenditures ended after the three named representatives left

    office. We disagree.

    The summaries were based on evidence that was

    already independently admitted and that was relevant to

    Sawyer's questionable expenditures during the indictment

    period. Sawyer had the opportunity, on cross-examination, to

    place the summaries in context with his total financial

    activity. See Nivica, 887 F.2d at 1125 (concluding that ___ ______

    argument that summaries failed to, inter alia, reflect "total _____ ____

    financial activity" "affect[s] weight rather than the

    admissibility"). On the matters to which Sawyer assigns



    -63- 63













    undue prejudice, he had ample opportunity to explore them on

    cross-examination, which he did. He also could have offered

    his own contrary evidence, including his own summary (which

    he did not do). As we stated in Nivica, 887 F.2d at 1126: ______

    So long as the government, exercising due
    diligence, collects whatever records are
    reasonably available and succeeds in
    introducing them, it may be permitted
    (subject, of course, to relevancy and
    perscrutation under Fed. R. Evid. 403) to
    summarize the data it has managed to
    obtain. If defendants possessed
    exculpatory records not in the
    government's files, they could have
    offered them at trial or prepared their
    own summary. By the same token, if there
    were gaps in the charts, the defense . .
    . had every opportunity to exploit them.
    In the last analysis, completeness of the
    underlying records was for the jury.

    We conclude that the summaries were based on a sufficient

    foundation and that the court did not abuse its discretion in

    admitting them.

    D. Protective Instruction __________________________

    Having rejected all of Sawyer's arguments, we think

    there is one flaw in the proceedings that does have to be

    addressed in the interests of justice and especially in light

    of the possibility of future prosecutions of this kind. Our

    concern arises from the close relationship between lobbying

    activities that are lawful from the standpoint of federal

    law, even if deplorable, and associated or slightly more

    extreme versions of such conduct that can constitute federal

    violations. The problem is, in some respects, novel; the


    -64- 64













    reason for its novelty is that it appears that prosecutions

    on facts like these have not generally been brought.

    A review of pre-McNally theft of honest services _______

    cases and of bribery and gratuity cases under the counterpart

    federal statute, 18 U.S.C. 201, indicates, as we have

    already noted, that most involved straightforward corruption

    -- most often, quid pro quo bribery or blatant conflict of ____ ___ ___

    interest. While the issue in those cases was typically

    whether or not the conduct actually occurred, in most of them

    the alleged conduct was blatantly illegal. This case is

    distinct in that the conduct itself may not be very

    different, except possibly in degree, from the kind of

    routine cultivation of friendship in a lobbying context that,

    while arguably very unattractive, is not "bribery" within the

    meaning of the Travel Act.

    The practice of using hospitality, including lavish

    hospitality, to cultivate business or political relationships

    is longstanding and pervasive. The government does not

    argue, and we do not believe, that payments for

    entertainment, lodging, golf, sports events, and the like

    would constitute violations of the Travel Act (or the mail

    and wire fraud statutes) if the aim of the lobbyist were

    simply to cultivate a business or political "friendship" with

    the legislator. It may well be that all such hospitality

    should be flatly prohibited by law, but if Sawyer had this



    -65- 65













    limited intent -- to cultivate friendship rather than to

    influence an official act -- the federal statutes here

    involved would not be violated.27

    The charge to the jury in this case followed the

    conventional formula for prosecutions involving political

    corruption. But where the difference between lawful and

    unlawful turns primarily on intent, and the lawful conduct is

    itself most unattractive, we think the jury needs to be told

    specifically that the defendant has not violated the bribery

    component of the Travel Act (or committed honest services

    fraud) if his intent was limited to the cultivation of

    business or political friendship. Only if instead or in

    addition, there is an intent to cause the recipient to alter

    her official acts may the jury find a theft of honest

    services or the bribery predicate of the Travel Act. Absent

    some explicit explanation of this kind, the conventional

    charge will be slanted in favor of conviction.28

    ____________________

    27. See, e.g., United States v. Arthur, 544 F.2d 730 (4th ___ ____ _____________ ______
    Cir. 1976); United States v. Brewster, 506 F.2d 62 (D.C. Cir. _____________ ________
    1974); cf. Dukehart-Hughes Tractor & Equipment co. v. United ___ ________________________________________ ______
    States, 341 F.2d 613 (Ct. Cl. 1965). ______

    28. It is not clear whether the government would contend
    that a gratuity violation involving only a reward for an
    official act (even without any intent to influence any future
    official act) could constitute "bribery" for purposes of the
    Travel Act. We are extremely doubtful whether this would
    constitute bribery for these purposes and do not read the
    Second Circuit as ruling on this point in United States v. _____________
    Biaggi, 853 F.2d 89, 100-02 (2d Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 489 ______ _____ ______
    U.S. 1052 (1989). The fact that a gratuity violation
    involving an intent to influence is essentially bribery, see ___

    -66- 66













    In reaching this conclusion, we intend no criticism

    of the able district judge who was coping with a somewhat

    novel foray by the government. But where, as here, the line

    between the merely unattractive and actually criminal conduct

    is blurred, the court must take pains to explain the

    difference to the jury. The Second Circuit took this same

    view in a closely related context, saying: "When an elected

    official who has received campaign contributions is charged

    with extortion and with receiving bribes, the charge must

    carefully focus the jury's attention on the difference

    between lawful political contributions and unlawful

    extortionate payments and bribes." United States v. Biaggi, _____________ ______

    909 F.2d 662, 695-96 (2d Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 499 U.S. _____ ______

    904 (1991).

    Having concluded that the jury charge was mistaken,

    we must consider whether Sawyer should get the benefit of the

    error. This is a close call. On the one hand, Sawyer did

    not explicitly ask for the sort of language we think

    appropriate. Ordinarily, the failure to make an explicit

    objection requires the defendant to satisfy the plain error

    test of United States v. Olano, 113 S. Ct. 1770, 1777 (1993). _____________ _____

    On the other hand, a number of Sawyer's objections were

    ____________________

    853 F.2d at 101, does not mean that every possible
    application of a gratuity statute fits the rubric. In all
    events, if the government intends to rely upon an intent to
    influence theory, our protective instruction would be
    required here.

    -67- 67













    closely related in that they sought in several different ways

    -- which we do not accept -- to protect one engaged in good

    faith lobbying from prosecution.

    On balance, we think that the Travel Act counts, as

    well as the mail and wire fraud convictions, ought to be

    reversed and retried under proper instructions. Although the

    evidence here would be adequate to infer improper intent, the

    issue is close and an explanatory instruction could well

    affect the outcome. Also, the fact that the prosecution was

    novel makes us look more tolerantly on Sawyer's failure to

    articulate precisely the shape of the necessary protective

    instruction.

    Apart from the expense of retrial, the government

    has very little to complain about in this result. We have

    agreed that the Massachusetts gratuity statute does not

    require the government to link the gratuity to a specific

    official act. We have also found that the evidence here is

    sufficient to convict (although we can imagine reasonable

    people thinking otherwise). And while we are somewhat

    concerned about the lack of fair warning of a prosecution

    such as this one, we see no legal basis for precluding the

    government from embarking on what is in practical terms an

    expansive reading of the federal statutes. Against this

    backdrop, we think it even more important that Sawyer get the

    benefit of the few protections that remain.



    -68- 68













    IV. IV. ___

    Conspiracy Count Conspiracy Count ________________

    Sawyer was also convicted, under 18 U.S.C. 371,

    of one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, and

    to violate the Travel Act. The court instructed the jury

    that it could find Sawyer guilty of conspiracy if it found,

    beyond a reasonable doubt, that he conspired with his

    supervisor, Hathaway, to commit any one of the three objects,

    i.e., the substantive offenses as charged. Because all of ____

    the objects -- mail and wire fraud and the Travel Act

    violations -- were erroneously charged and instructed, the

    conspiracy convictions must be reversed as well.

    Retrial is not precluded if the evidence is

    sufficient to prove the existence of a conspiracy, Sawyer's

    knowledge of and voluntary participation in it, and an overt

    act in furtherance of it. See United States v. Yefsky, 994 ___ _____________ ______

    F.2d 885, 890 (1st Cir. 1993); see generally, United States ___ _________ ______________

    v. Frankhauser, 80 F.3d 641, 653 (1st Cir. 1996). The ___________

    agreement need not be explicit; a tacit agreement will

    suffice. Direct Sales Co. v. United States, 319 U.S. 703, ________________ _____________

    712-13 (1943). To establish Sawyer's voluntary participation

    in the conspiracy, the evidence must establish both his

    intent to agree and his intent to effectuate the object of

    the conspiracy. Yefsky, 994 F.2d at 890; see also United ______ ___ ____ ______

    States v. Piper, 35 F.3d 611, 615 (1st Cir. 1994), cert. ______ _____ _____



    -69- 69













    denied, 115 S. Ct. 1118 (1995). Neither the agreement nor ______

    Sawyer's participation in it need be proven with direct

    evidence. Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 80 (1942); _______ _____________

    see Frankhauser, 80 F.3d at 653. ___ ___________

    Sawyer contends that the evidence was

    insufficient to prove that: (1) he and Hathaway knowingly

    agreed to commit the offenses; (2) he voluntarily

    participated in such an agreement; and (3) either of them

    performed any overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. We

    disagree. The government presented evidence that Hathaway

    supervised Sawyer in his lobbying activities. From

    Hathaway's receipt of many of the same legal memoranda and

    Massachusetts Ethics Commission rulings that Sawyer received,

    a jury could rationally infer that Hathaway (an attorney,

    like Sawyer) knew and understood the ethical obligations in

    lobbying. Some of these documents had both Sawyer's and

    Hathaway's names on them; thus, a jury could find that

    Hathaway and Sawyer knew of each other's knowledge of the

    lobbying laws.29 Sawyer turned to Hathaway, his

    ____________________

    29. For example, one trial exhibit was a memorandum from
    Sawyer to Hathaway, enclosing a 1990 State Ethics Commission
    Disposition Agreement with House Majority Leader Charles
    Flaherty. That agreement concerned the giving of Celtics
    basketball game tickets to Representative Flaherty by a
    person with interests before him, and how that might violate
    the Massachusetts gratuity statute, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 268A,
    3. Sawyer and Hathaway discussed the Flaherty Disposition
    during a meeting with Bruce Skrine (vice president, counsel
    and secretary for Hancock) in which Sawyer and Hathaway
    expressed concern about compliance with state ethics law in

    -70- 70













    supervisor, for approval of his expense vouchers. Hathaway

    performed this responsibility throughout the indictment

    period, and in so doing was the only person (other than

    Sawyer) to have detailed knowledge of the specific

    legislators, often members of the Insurance Committee, who

    received the gifts and gratuities.

    Thus, the jury could reasonably infer that Hathaway

    and Sawyer both knew that the expenditures were unlawful, and

    from this, that the reason for the repeated illegal gifts and

    gratuities to key legislators was to secretly influence

    legislative action. Given the evidence of the repeated

    submission and approval of the expense vouchers, a jury could

    rationally find that Hathaway and Sawyer agreed, at least

    tacitly, to the pattern of unlawful conduct. Finally, the

    jury could also infer that Sawyer and Hathaway knew that the

    mails and wires would be used to facilitate the entertainment

    and/or reimbursement (e.g., the mailing of bills related to, ____

    and the making of telephone calls to arrange, the

    entertainment), and that interstate travel in connection with

    the entertainment (e.g., reimbursement of out-of-state golf) ____

    would or had to occur. The overt acts charged in the

    indictment included Sawyer's giving of illegal gratuities and

    Hathaway's approval and authorization of reimbursement, and

    the evidence was sufficient to establish those acts.

    ____________________

    planning for the 1993 Boston Marathon brunch.

    -71- 71













    Thus, despite the underlying legal error, the

    evidence was sufficient to establish the conspiracy offense

    and a new trial on this count is allowable should the

    government so choose.

    V. V. __

    Conclusion Conclusion __________

    Sawyer raises a number of other issues that we have

    reviewed, find to be without merit, and that warrant no

    further discussion.

    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the mail ______

    fraud, wire fraud, Travel Act and conspiracy convictions, and

    remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. ______





























    -72- 72






Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1689

Filed Date: 5/30/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015

Authorities (53)

United States v. Boots , 80 F.3d 580 ( 1996 )

United States v. Wihbey , 75 F.3d 761 ( 1996 )

United States v. Ruben Ortiz, A/K/A Ruben Ortiz De Jesus, ... , 966 F.2d 707 ( 1992 )

United States v. Frankhauser , 80 F.3d 641 ( 1996 )

United States v. Grandmaison , 77 F.3d 555 ( 1996 )

United States v. Alzanki , 54 F.3d 994 ( 1995 )

United States v. Frank Nieves-Burgos , 62 F.3d 431 ( 1995 )

United States v. Joseph Silvano, Jr., United States of ... , 812 F.2d 754 ( 1987 )

UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Kevin F. O’BRIEN, ... , 14 F.3d 703 ( 1994 )

United States v. Cassiere , 4 F.3d 1006 ( 1993 )

united-states-v-aristedes-drougas-united-states-of-america-v-michael-a , 748 F.2d 8 ( 1984 )

United States v. Olbres , 61 F.3d 967 ( 1995 )

United States v. Anthony F. Previte , 648 F.2d 73 ( 1981 )

United States v. Maurizio P. Rendini , 738 F.2d 530 ( 1984 )

United States v. Gjon N. Nivica, United States of America v.... , 887 F.2d 1110 ( 1989 )

United States v. Abel A. Mariano, Jr., United States of ... , 983 F.2d 1150 ( 1993 )

United States v. Staniford A. Sorrentino , 726 F.2d 876 ( 1984 )

United States v. John M. Arruda, United States of America v.... , 715 F.2d 671 ( 1983 )

Steven TATE, Plaintiff, Appellant, v. ROBBINS & MYERS, INC.,... , 790 F.2d 10 ( 1986 )

United States v. John Montminy , 936 F.2d 626 ( 1991 )

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