United States v. Jermaine Surtain ( 2013 )


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  •      Case: 11-30525       Document: 00512187631         Page: 1    Date Filed: 03/26/2013
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    March 26, 2013
    No. 11-30525                        Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee
    v.
    JERMAINE SURTAIN; CHARLES MOSS; DAVID SAMUELS,
    Defendants-Appellants
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:09-CR-123-4
    Before KING, SOUTHWICK, and GRAVES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Defendants-Appellants appeal their convictions and sentences on various
    counts relating to their involvement in three insurance fraud schemes. For the
    reasons that follow, we VACATE David Samuels’s sentences on Counts 12 and
    13 of the superseding indictment, REMAND for resentencing on one of those
    counts (at the government’s election), and AFFIRM in all other respects.
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIRCUIT RULE 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should
    not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIRCUIT RULE 47.5.4.
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    No. 11-30525
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On December 4, 2009, the grand jury returned a superseding indictment
    against Defendants-Appellants David Samuels, Charles Moss, and Jermaine
    Surtain, variously charging them and three other co-defendants with one count
    of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud under 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
    , three counts
    of mail fraud under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1341
    , seven counts of wire fraud under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1343
    , one count of use of fire to commit obstruction of justice and two counts
    of use of fire to commit mail fraud under 
    18 U.S.C. § 844
    (h)(1), one count of
    making a false statement under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
    , and aiding and abetting under
    
    18 U.S.C. § 2
     as to the wire fraud, mail fraud, and use-of-fire counts. The charges
    arose from separate insurance fraud schemes that culminated in arson, murder,
    and the destruction of a van used in the killing.
    At trial, cooperating co-defendant Damian Landry testified that Samuels
    worked with him at Volunteers of America, an elder care provider in New
    Orleans. When Landry and his wife fell behind on mortgage payments for her
    house in 2002, Samuels advised Landry to increase his insurance coverage on
    the house and burn it down for the proceeds. Landry agreed, and Samuels set
    out to find someone who would set fire to the house for a share of the insurance
    money. Samuels ultimately recruited Moss, an army buddy of his from Detroit.
    Landry testified that on the day the house burned down, he and Samuels
    reported to work, and Landry then left to get breakfast. Samuels and Moss met
    Landry later that morning and told him they would burn the house that day.
    Samuels gave Landry the keys to his green Chrysler van, and Landry gave
    Samuels the keys to a white 1991 Chevrolet with temporary tags. The car was
    unregistered, making it impossible to trace. At Samuels’s direction, Landry went
    to a client’s house so that he would have an alibi.
    A neighbor testified that he was at home when he heard an explosion from
    across the street. When he got to the window, he saw Landry’s house burning.
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    He also saw a man with a burned face and hair leave the house and enter an
    older white car with temporary tags, which then sped away. Landry received a
    phone call from his probation officer, who told him that his house was on fire.
    Before Landry could return home, Samuels called and told him to come to
    Samuels’s house. When he arrived, Samuels and Moss entered Landry’s vehicle.
    Moss’s face was burned, and Samuels said they had to take Moss to the hospital.
    Landry refused, and Samuels instead had his brother Chris take Moss. Landry
    then returned home to find his house destroyed. He and Samuels later took the
    white Chevrolet to a wrecking yard to be demolished.
    Landry filed a fire insurance claim on the house, but did not mention the
    arson to the insurance company. Because the insurance payment he received
    was not as large as he had anticipated, he used it to pay the mortgage company
    and did not tell Samuels that he had obtained the money. After Samuels
    pressured him for the insurance proceeds several times (sometimes violently),
    Landry gave Samuels $3,000 from his tax refund.
    Landry further testified that while the fire insurance claim was pending
    in July 2003, he accompanied Samuels to insurance agent Stefan James’s office.
    Samuels and James (a cooperating co-defendant in this matter) discussed
    obtaining $100,000 to $150,000 of insurance coverage on the life of Treyor
    Winston August, Samuels’s cousin. To that end, Samuels unsuccessfully sought
    to convince Landry to pose as August.
    James testified that he knew Samuels through his wife, who also worked
    at Volunteers of America. James had sold life insurance policies to Samuels and
    Samuels’s wife, and had socialized with Samuels on occasion. James described
    Samuels as a braggart, and testified that Samuels once said he would have his
    cousin killed for stealing drugs from him. Several weeks after making this
    statement, Samuels came to James’s office with Landry.
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    Even though James was aware of Samuels’s fraudulent and murderous
    intentions, he ultimately sold Samuels a “double-indemnity” life insurance
    policy. This meant that although the policy’s face value was $75,000, it would
    pay out $150,000 if August’s death were accidental. Samuels structured the
    policy in this way because any policy with a face value of $100,000 or more would
    have prompted the underwriter to collect the insured’s blood and urine, and
    administer a medical exam. August surely would have become aware of the
    policy had he been asked for these things. The policy’s beneficiaries—Samuels
    and his mother, Teresa—were falsely listed as August’s brother and mother.
    Although August was listed as the policy’s owner, Samuels signed August’s
    name on the application, had his own address listed on the policy to prevent
    August from discovering its existence, and also noted on the application that
    August should not be contacted at his workplace regarding the policy. Samuels
    was involved in three subsequent fraudulent policies: (1) He took out a second
    policy on August’s life for $25,000, the beneficiary being his sister, co-defendant
    Maria Samuels; (2) he provided information to allow James to obtain a $25,000
    policy on August’s life; and (3) he obtained a $90,000 “key man” policy on
    August’s life, the beneficiary being his company, Sam’s Realty and Maintenance.
    Samuels’s brother Chris, who had taken Moss to the hospital following the
    Landry house fire, testified that Samuels asked him to kill August for $20,000.
    Samuels showed him one of the fraudulent life insurance policies to demonstrate
    a means of payment. Chris testified that he was unwilling to kill his cousin, but,
    wanting to stall Samuels and warn August, said he would do it. Chris told
    August of Samuels’s plan and the insurance policy, and gave him a gun for
    protection. As he related at trial, however, he felt that August did not take the
    threat seriously.
    Apparently becoming impatient that Chris had not killed August, Samuels
    eventually sought someone else for the task. According to phone records,
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    Samuels placed two calls on April 24, 2004 to Surtain, who was his sister’s ex-
    boyfriend and the father of her child, and who had recently returned to New
    Orleans. Kelvin Marshall, who three years later would be apprehended with
    Surtain in a burglary, testified that between 9:00 and 10:00 PM on April 24th,
    Surtain called him to obtain nine-millimeter rounds for a pistol. Marshall went
    to a friend’s house on Cortez Street to retrieve the ammunition. He then gave it
    to Surtain, who was waiting outside with his girlfriend. The girlfriend dropped
    Marshall off at a nearby bar; Surtain test-fired the pistol out the vehicle’s
    window along the way. The girlfriend dropped Surtain off on Canal Street near
    Warren Easton High School.
    August’s girlfriend testified that Samuels came to her house on April 24th
    to ask for August. Although August was not home the first time Samuels came
    by, Samuels returned a second time after he had come back from work. Samuels
    stayed for a while, then left. Around nightfall, Moss came to August’s home in
    Samuels’s green van. Moss spoke with August, left, then returned between 8:00
    and 8:30 PM. He and August left between 9:00 and 9:30 PM, purportedly to
    celebrate August’s birthday. Samuels attended a church service that night.
    Samuels later told a special agent of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
    Firearms and Explosives (ATF) that August had been shot in “the van,” ran
    away, struggled with the shooter, and was shot once more. A trail of blood
    consistent with this version of events was found at the murder scene. An
    eyewitness testified that he and his wife were driving south on Bienville Street
    between 9:50 and 10:00 PM on April 24th. Shortly after they crossed Jefferson
    Davis Parkway, the witness saw a man bending over another man on the
    median, and noticed the man on the ground had a large amount of blood on his
    shirt. As the witness drove away, the first man shot the other one in the head.
    An autopsy revealed that August had been shot six times, including once in the
    head. Police recovered spent nine-millimeter casings from the murder scene.
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    Surtain’s girlfriend testified that Surtain called her later that night to pick
    him up because police were in the area. She picked him up about two blocks
    away from Jefferson Davis Parkway, and dropped him off on Cortez Street.
    Marshall testified that Surtain returned to the house on Cortez Street that
    night. Surtain’s jeans were covered in blood. The next day, Surtain told Marshall
    and others that “he shot a dude” who then wrestled Surtain to the ground,
    causing him to drop the gun. Surtain said that he “slammed the dude,” retrieved
    the gun, and shot him again. James testified that Samuels told him he had
    cleaned out blood from the van with bleach or ammonia.
    At 10:53 PM on April 24th, Samuels called James, and said, “Winston
    ha[s] been killed. He’s dead. What do we need to do to get the claims process
    going?” To avoid suspicion, James advised Samuels to wait before filing a claim.
    Samuels’s sister’s claim was filed in June 2004, and his mother’s claim was filed
    in July 2004. The insurance companies denied the claims due to
    misrepresentations on the applications, and mailed refunds of the premiums to
    Samuels, his sister, and his mother.
    A New Orleans police investigator spoke with Moss and Samuels on the
    morning of April 26th, and explicitly told Moss not to leave town until the
    detective investigating August’s murder could interview him. Samuels’s
    girlfriend took Moss to the bus station later that day, where he boarded a bus for
    Detroit. Although Moss initially told police that August was alive and walking
    up the street the last time Moss had seen him, he later told ATF agents that he
    saw August lying in the fetal position after Moss exited a bar.
    A GEICO employee testified that on April 28, 2004, someone requested
    increased coverage on Samuels’s van. Samuels’s ex-wife and then-girlfriend,
    Yolanda Fleming, testified that Moss called her and Samuels’s home on the
    night of May 7, 2004, asking for Samuels. Samuels, who had just returned home,
    spoke with Moss for about five minutes, then left the house. Samuels testified
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    that he had also spoken with Surtain that night, but said their conversation had
    been about drugs. Phone records showed that Samuels and Surtain called each
    other twenty-six times on May 7th, including shortly before midnight.
    Between 1:00 and 2:00 AM on May 8th, Samuels called Fleming to ask
    about his van, which was parked outside their house. Fleming said the van was
    okay, then went back to sleep. Phone records showed that Samuels called
    Surtain immediately after Fleming hung up, and again nine minutes later.
    Fleming was later awoken by an explosion, and saw that the van was on fire.
    Security camera footage showed that two individuals carrying something
    approached the van that night and broke the passenger window. Shortly
    thereafter, the van ignited. A fire inspector testified that the arsonists had
    probably poured a flammable liquid into the car and set fire to it.
    After Fleming alerted emergency services, she called Samuels to tell him
    what had happened. He instructed her to give the firemen and police a piece of
    paper on which she had, at his direction, written times and dates when he had
    purportedly received threatening phone calls. Fleming testified that she had
    never received any threatening phone calls or been present when Samuels
    received one. Samuels later suggested to his friend, Tony Veal, that the arsonists
    destroyed the van because they thought Samuels had killed August. Upon being
    questioned about the threats, Samuels was unable to relate any details about
    their nature or content.
    The fire inspector who examined the van testified that it was abnormally
    parked in an area where it would not cause Samuels’s house to catch fire, but
    was still in view of the security camera. Samuels stated that he had moved the
    van between 2:00 and 3:00 PM on May 7th to wash it. The investigator noticed,
    however, that the closest water spigot was on the corner of the house opposite
    the van. Samuels reported the fire to his insurance company on May 8th. The
    insurance company issued a check to him for $4,094, which he later cashed.
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    Three years after these events took place, Surtain and Marshall were
    apprehended in a burglary. Acting on information provided by Marshall, the
    ATF initiated an investigation, during which ATF agents interviewed Samuels
    about the life insurance policies he had obtained from James. Although he
    sought to appear cooperative and provided some information about the murder,
    Samuels told the agents, “I didn’t have any life insurance on [August].” The
    agents knew this statement was false because they had obtained insurance
    records showing that Samuels’s company had paid the premiums. Samuels
    warned James that agents had interviewed him, and would likely seek to
    interview James as well. He warned James not to “rat,” while at the same time
    making the motion of pulling a gun trigger.
    The government later indicted Samuels, Moss, Surtain, and three other
    co-defendants. While under indictment, Surtain spoke about his case to his
    cellmate in St. Bernard Parish Jail, Orlando Brown. He told Brown, inter alia,
    that his case involved arson and fraud; he was not worried about being convicted
    because he had disposed of the gun he had used to commit his crime; he had not
    been charged with murder; he had sent someone to pick up the murder victim;
    he had “tussled with the guy and then he shot him”; he was not worried about
    his child’s mother or her brother testifying against him because he knew at
    which jail the brother was being housed; his case involved insurance; his child’s
    mother and her brother were beneficiaries, but he was not a main beneficiary;
    and “if everything went right,” he would be paid for his part in his crime. He also
    stated that “they had a policy to get this guy, he was supposed to pick the guy
    up on his birthday.” Insurance records established that August was murdered
    the day before his twenty-seventh birthday. While he was incarcerated, Surtain
    made two recorded phone calls—one to Samuels’s father and another to
    Samuels. Surtain asked Samuels’s father to tell Samuels that he was
    “dummying up all the way around,” and that it would be best if Samuels would
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    also “dummy up.” In Surtain’s call to Samuels, they agreed not to cooperate with
    investigators.
    After an eight-day trial, the jury found Surtain and Moss guilty of
    conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, and use of fire to commit obstruction
    of justice in relation to the van fire. Moss was also found guilty on one count of
    use of fire to commit mail fraud in relation to the house fire. Samuels was found
    guilty on all fifteen counts. Once again, these included one count of conspiracy
    to commit mail and wire fraud, three counts of mail fraud, seven counts of wire
    fraud, one count of use of fire to commit obstruction of justice, two counts of use
    of fire to commit mail fraud, one count of making a false statement, and aiding
    and abetting. 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2
    , 371, 844(h)(1), 1001, 1341, 1343.
    Moss and Surtain were respectively sentenced to 420 months’ and 180
    months’ imprisonment. Samuels was sentenced to 900 months’ imprisonment.
    They timely appealed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Surtain argues that the evidence was not sufficient to convict
    him on Count 1 (conspiracy) and Count 12 (use of fire to commit obstruction of
    justice). Moss also challenges his conviction on Count 12. Samuels raises a host
    of issues on appeal, including multiplicity, evidentiary sufficiency, improper
    testimony, failure to sever the defendants’ trial, prosecutorial misconduct, and
    procedural unreasonableness of his sentence. We address each issue in turn.
    A.    Surtain’s Conspiracy Conviction
    1.    Legal Standards
    By moving for a judgment of acquittal immediately after the government
    rested, Surtain properly preserved his evidentiary sufficiency argument. Fed. R.
    Crim. P. 29(a); United States v. Frye, 
    489 F.3d 201
    , 207 (5th Cir. 2007). A
    challenge to the sufficiency of evidence supporting a criminal conviction is
    reviewed de novo. United States v. McDowell, 
    498 F.3d 308
    , 312 (5th Cir. 2007).
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    “When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, this Court views all
    evidence, whether circumstantial or direct, in the light most favorable to the
    Government with all reasonable inferences to be made in support of the jury’s
    verdict.” United States v. Moser, 
    123 F.3d 813
    , 819 (5th Cir. 1997). “[W]e
    consider whether ‘any rational trier of fact could have found the essential
    elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’” United States v. Jara-Favela,
    
    686 F.3d 289
    , 301 (5th Cir. 2012) (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319
    (1979)). “The evidence need not exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence
    or be completely inconsistent with every conclusion except guilt, so long as a
    reasonable trier of fact could find that the evidence established guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” Moser, 
    123 F.3d at 819
    .
    A conspiracy conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
     requires proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt of: “(1) an agreement between two or more persons to pursue
    an unlawful objective; (2) the defendant’s knowledge of the unlawful objective
    and voluntary agreement to join the conspiracy; and (3) an overt act by one or
    more of the members of the conspiracy in furtherance of the objective of the
    conspiracy.” United States v. Coleman, 
    609 F.3d 699
    , 704 (5th Cir. 2010).
    “A jury is free to infer the existence of a conspiracy from the presence,
    association, and concerted action of the defendant with others.” United States v.
    Curtis, 
    635 F.3d 704
    , 719 (5th Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted). Knowledge of the conspiracy’s unlawful objective “may be inferred from
    surrounding circumstances.” United States v. Grant, 
    683 F.3d 639
    , 643 (5th Cir.
    2012) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    2.    Discussion
    Surtain’s evidentiary sufficiency challenge focuses on the second
    conspiracy element. He argues the government failed to establish that he knew
    August was to be murdered in furtherance of an insurance fraud scheme. We
    disagree.
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    Insurance agent James’s testimony established the existence of a
    conspiracy to obtain life insurance proceeds by murdering August. Samuels
    initially asked his brother Chris to kill August. After Chris failed to do this,
    Samuels twice called Surtain on the day of August’s murder. Other testimony
    established that, on the night of August’s murder, Surtain obtained ammunition
    from Marshall, was dropped off near the site of August’s murder, and later
    returned to Marshall’s friend’s house with blood covering his clothes. He later
    described the murder to Marshall. James testified that Samuels called him
    shortly after August’s death to ask how to submit a life insurance claim.
    According to Surtain’s cellmate, Brown, Surtain said in jail that he would
    not be arrested for a murder he had committed because he was not the “main”
    or “prime” beneficiary of insurance policies on the murder victim’s life.
    Significantly, Surtain told Brown that “they had a policy to get this guy.” He also
    said that if everything went well, he would still get paid. The jury could have
    inferred that Surtain was promised money for murdering August, and had been
    told that the money would come from an insurance policy. This inference is
    strengthened by the fact that Samuels showed his brother the fraudulent
    insurance policy to induce him to kill August. The jury could have reasonably
    inferred that Samuels also would have presented the insurance policy to Surtain
    as proof of payment ability. The evidence thus was sufficient to establish that
    Surtain knew the conspiracy’s objective was to commit insurance fraud. See
    Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 319
    .
    Surtain attacks Brown’s testimony on two grounds. First, he incorrectly
    contends that the jury was not permitted to rely on Brown’s testimony because
    evidence of Surtain’s extra-judicial statements was uncorroborated. We conclude
    that “substantial independent evidence” justified reliance on Brown’s testimony.
    United States v. Sterling, 
    555 F.3d 452
    , 456 (5th Cir. 2009). He accurately
    related details of the conspiracy that Surtain had provided, and which
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    corresponded with other evidence offered at trial. These included the nature of
    the charges against Surtain, details of the murder, and Surtain’s lack of concern
    that his “baby mama and her brother” would testify against him. Accordingly,
    the jury could justifiably rely on Brown’s testimony respecting Surtain’s
    jailhouse statements. See 
    id.
     (federal courts do not apply the traditional corpus
    delicti doctrine (citing Opper v. United States, 
    348 U.S. 84
    , 93 (1954))).
    Second, Surtain states in his brief that Brown “agreed that Mr. Surtain
    had no knowledge of the insurance fraud prior to the death of Mr. August.” We
    can find no record support for this assertion. Surtain also contends that
    Marshall made the same representation. Although Marshall testified that
    Surtain had not mentioned anything to him about an insurance scam, Marshall
    never affirmatively stated that Surtain had no knowledge of the scam. Moreover,
    it is unclear how Marshall might have obtained such knowledge.
    B.     Surtain’s and Moss’s Use-of-Fire Convictions
    1.    Legal Standards
    Because Moss and Surtain preserved their evidentiary sufficiency
    argument as to Count 12 (use of fire to commit obstruction of justice and aiding
    and abetting), we apply de novo review, viewing all evidence in the light most
    favorable to the verdict. McDowell, 
    498 F.3d at 312
    ; Moser, 
    123 F.3d at 819
    . We
    “must affirm if any reasonable construction of the evidence could establish the
    defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Booker, 
    334 F.3d 406
    , 409 (5th Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    A conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 844
    (h)(1) for use of fire to commit a felony
    requires sufficient proof that the defendant (1) used fire (2) to commit a felony
    that can be prosecuted in a court of the United States. United States v. Nguyen,
    
    28 F.3d 477
    , 481 (5th Cir. 1994). A person commits obstruction of justice when
    he “corruptly alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other
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    object, or attempts to do so, with the intent to impair the object’s integrity or
    availability for use in an official proceeding.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1512
    (c)(1).
    The federal aiding and abetting statute provides that “[w]hoever commits
    an offense against the United States or aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces
    or procures its commission, is punishable as a principal.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    . A
    conviction under this provision requires sufficient proof that “the elements of the
    substantive offense occurred and that the defendant associated with the criminal
    venture, purposefully participated in the criminal activity, and sought by his
    actions to make the venture succeed.” United States v. Garcia, 
    242 F.3d 593
    , 596
    (5th Cir. 2001).
    2.     Discussion
    The government argues that Moss counseled Samuels to destroy the van,
    which permitted Moss’s use-of-fire conviction on an aiding-and-abetting theory.1
    
    18 U.S.C. § 2
    . It relies on evidence showing that (1) Moss had a strong motive to
    destroy the murder evidence in the van; (2) Moss placed a five-minute phone call
    to Samuels approximately five-and-a-half hours before the van was burned; and
    (3) Moss was returning a call that Samuels had placed to Moss’s “burner” cell
    phone, which had been used only in connection with criminal activity. As we will
    discuss, the evidence was sufficient to convict Moss on Count 12.
    As outlined above, the trial evidence established that Moss had driven
    August to the murder site in the van, and that Surtain had killed him. James
    testified that Samuels told him he had cleaned blood out of the van shortly after
    August’s murder. Because the blood could have linked all three defendants to
    1
    Although the district court gave the jury a co-conspirator liability instruction, it
    specifically instructed the jury that the instruction applied only to Counts 2 through 11.
    Accordingly, we will not consider co-conspirator liability with respect to Count 12. See United
    States v. Crain, 
    33 F.3d 480
    , 486 n.7 (5th Cir. 1994) (citing Pinkerton v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 640
    , 645 (1946)).
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    August’s murder and the related insurance fraud scheme, the jury could have
    inferred that they had an overwhelming motive to destroy this evidence.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, the phone calls from
    Samuels’s phone show that he was urgently trying to contact Moss on the night
    of the van fire. Moss had returned to Detroit on April 26, 2004. Samuels called
    Moss’s cell phone at 9:23 PM on May 7th, then checked his voicemail. He called
    Moss’s girlfriend four minutes later, and spoke with her for two minutes.
    Immediately after this call, Samuels called a house near Detroit. Records showed
    a call from Moss to his girlfriend at 9:30. Samuels called Surtain at 9:31. Moss
    called Samuels’s house at 9:33, just after Samuels had returned home. The two
    spoke for five minutes, and Samuels left immediately after the call ended.
    Between Moss’s departure from New Orleans and that night, Samuels and Moss
    had called each other four times—three times on the night Moss left for Detroit
    (a one-minute call, and two calls in quick succession several hours later, lasting
    seven seconds and fifty-five seconds), and once on May 1st (one minute).
    The phone at which Samuels first tried to reach Moss is also significant.
    Phone records showed that Surtain and Samuels tended to call this phone—a
    “burner” cell phone with an Indianapolis area code—only during periods when
    they were involved in criminal activity in which Moss also participated,
    including in the days leading up to August’s murder. The defendants further
    highlighted this phone’s significance by denying their knowledge of the phone
    or its connection to Moss. Surtain told investigators that the phone number was
    associated with a woman he had met at the New Orleans Convention Center.
    Although Moss’s ex-wife testified that Moss had used this phone to call her, he
    told investigators he had no knowledge of the phone number associated with it.
    He went so far as to deny having had any cell phone in April 2004, even though
    Samuels made calls to his phone at that time. Viewed in the light most favorable
    14
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    No. 11-30525
    to the verdict, Samuels’s calling this phone indicated that he wished to discuss
    criminal activity with Moss.
    Moreover, the jury could have reasonably inferred that Moss was
    Samuels’s go-to man for advice about incendiary devices. After all, Samuels had
    summoned him from Detroit to New Orleans to burn down the Landry house.
    True, the fact that Moss set his own hair on fire in that incident implies that
    Samuels’s confidence in him might have been misplaced, but the point stands
    that Samuels knew Moss to have experience with setting things on fire.
    Although the jurors did not know and could not have known with certainty
    the content of the phone conversation, they hardly could have believed that
    Samuels called Moss to discuss the weather. Samuels had not spoken with Moss
    in days, yet he suddenly and urgently sought to contact Moss mere hours before
    the van fire. Given the strong inference that they spoke about the van fire, and
    Moss’s overwhelming motive to destroy the murder evidence, the jury could have
    found beyond a reasonable doubt that Moss, at minimum, gave words of
    encouragement to Samuels in violation of the federal aiding-and-abetting
    statute. See United States v. Gulley, 
    526 F.3d 809
    , 816 (5th Cir. 2008) (“An aider
    and abettor is liable for criminal acts that are the ‘natural or probable
    consequence of the crime’ that he . . . encouraged.” (citation omitted)); United
    States v. Bowen, 
    527 F.3d 1065
    , 1078 (10th Cir. 2008) (“Even mere ‘words or
    gestures of encouragement’ constitute affirmative acts capable of rendering one
    liable under this theory.” (citation omitted)).
    Moss argues that (1) the jury’s verdict “rest[ed] on mere suspicion,
    speculation, or conjecture, or on an overly attenuated piling of inference on
    inference,” United States v. Rojas Alvarez, 
    451 F.3d 320
    , 333 (5th Cir. 2006)
    (citation omitted); (2) his conviction must be reversed because there is no
    evidence of what he discussed with Samuels on May 7th; and (3) he could not
    have abetted Samuels’s offense because Samuels had already resolved to destroy
    15
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    No. 11-30525
    the van. See United States v. Powers, 
    168 F.3d 741
    , 746–47 (5th Cir. 1999);
    United States v. Galvan, 
    693 F.2d 417
    , 419–20 (5th Cir. 1982); Grimes v. United
    States, 
    379 F.2d 791
    , 795 (5th Cir. 1967). We disagree.
    “[W]hat the fact finder is permitted to infer from the evidence in a
    particular case is governed by a rule of reason, and . . . fact finders may properly
    use their common sense and evaluate the facts in light of their common
    knowledge of the natural tendencies and inclinations of human beings.” United
    States v. Ayala, 
    887 F.2d 62
    , 67 (5th Cir. 1989) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted). “[C]ircumstances altogether inconclusive, if separately
    considered, may, by their number and joint operation, especially when
    corroborated by moral coincidences, be sufficient to constitute conclusive proof.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Coggeshall v. United States (The Slavers), 69 U.S. (2 Wall.) 383, 401
    (1865)). Given Moss’s overwhelming motive to destroy the murder evidence, the
    jury could have reasonably inferred that Moss sought to embolden Samuels in
    this venture, even if only briefly during their five-minute conversation.
    Samuels’s abruptly leaving his home after speaking with Moss—only minutes
    after having arrived there—fits the narrative of a man who has just obtained
    something he wanted or needed to accomplish his mission.
    Moreover, Moss’s reliance on Powers, Galvan, and Grimes is misplaced. In
    each of those cases, we reversed a conviction that was based primarily on
    evidence that a phone call or phone calls had taken place. Powers, 
    168 F.3d at
    746–47; Galvan, 
    693 F.2d at
    419–20; Grimes, 
    379 F.2d at 795
    . Moss argues that
    these cases stand for the proposition that “telephone records are not, standing
    alone, sufficient evidence to support a” conviction. United States v. Williams, 
    264 F.3d 561
    , 574 (5th Cir. 2001) (citing Powers, 
    168 F.3d at
    746–47; Galvan, 
    693 F.2d at 419
    ). The instant matter is distinguishable, however, because the
    government offered more than “telephone records . . . standing alone.” There is
    strong circumstantial evidence of what Moss and Samuels discussed, and the
    16
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    No. 11-30525
    jury could have inferred from Moss’s overwhelming motive and Samuels’s
    behavior after their phone call that Moss encouraged Samuels to destroy his van
    at some point during their not all too brief conversation.
    Finally, Moss argues that he could not have helped the van fire to succeed
    because Samuels had already decided to destroy the van: Samuels had increased
    the van’s insurance coverage days before, and parked it away from the house
    earlier that day. We agree that the evidence shows Samuels likely would have
    destroyed the van even if he had not been able to contact Moss. Nonetheless,
    conviction on an aiding-and-abetting theory does not require the defendant’s acts
    to cause the criminal venture to succeed. It requires only association with the
    criminal venture, purposeful participation therein, and an affirmative act meant
    to make the venture succeed. Garcia, 
    242 F.3d at 596
    . There was sufficient proof
    that Moss satisfied these elements.
    As for Surtain, he and Samuels called each other twenty-six times on May
    7th, including shortly before midnight. Samuels called his girlfriend at 1:06 AM
    and 1:12 AM on May 8th to ask if his van was okay; she said it was. Immediately
    after the 1:12 phone call, Samuels called Surtain, and called him again at 1:22
    AM. The van fire occurred at about 3:00 AM.
    Surtain dismisses the large volume of calls between him and Samuels as
    a natural result of their relationship. Samuels was Surtain’s drug dealer and the
    brother of his child’s mother. Using their common sense, however, the jurors
    could have found that even ties as close as these did not explain the flurry of
    phone calls on May 7th, and that it was no coincidence they occurred the day
    before the van fire. Moreover, Samuels’s relationship with Surtain does not
    explain why Samuels twice called Surtain just after he learned his van was still
    intact. This, combined with Surtain’s strong motive to destroy the murder
    evidence, permitted the jury reasonably to infer that Surtain had encouraged
    17
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    Samuels during their phone calls to destroy the van. Accordingly, we will not
    reverse Surtain’s conviction on Count 12.
    C.     Samuels’s Use-of-Fire Convictions
    Samuels argues that his two use-of-fire convictions and sentences that
    arose from the van fire must be vacated as multiplicitous. Samuels contends that
    a single fire cannot give rise to separate convictions under § 844(h)(1), even if
    that fire facilitated separately chargeable offenses—in this case, mail fraud and
    obstruction of justice. 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1341
    , 1512(c)(1). As we will discuss, we will
    vacate Samuels’s use-of-fire sentences because Congress did not clearly state its
    intent to impose multiple punishments under § 844(h)(1) in the instant
    circumstances.
    1.    Legal Standards
    Because Samuels did not raise a multiplicity objection before trial, he has
    waived this challenge as to his use-of-fire convictions. See Fed. R. Crim. P.
    12(b)(3)(B); United States v. Soape, 
    169 F.3d 257
    , 265–66 (5th Cir. 1999). He can
    challenge the multiplicity of his sentences for the first time on appeal, however,
    because they are to run consecutively to each other and to his other sentences,
    and separate monetary assessments were imposed as to each conviction. See
    United States v. Marroquin, 
    885 F.2d 1240
    , 1246 (5th Cir. 1989). We apply plain-
    error review because Samuels raised no objection at sentencing. United States
    v. Ogba, 
    526 F.3d 214
    , 232 (5th Cir. 2008).
    Section 844(h)(1) provides as follows:
    Whoever uses fire or an explosive to commit any felony which may
    be prosecuted in a court of the United States . . . including a felony
    which provides for an enhanced punishment if committed by the use
    of a deadly or dangerous weapon or device shall, in addition to the
    punishment provided for such felony, be sentenced to imprisonment
    for 10 years. In the case of a second or subsequent conviction under
    this subsection, such person shall be sentenced to imprisonment for
    20 years. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, . . . the term
    18
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    of imprisonment imposed under this subsection [shall not] run
    concurrently with any other term of imprisonment including that
    imposed for the felony in which the explosive was used or carried.
    2.    Discussion
    “In general, ‘multiplicity’ is the charging of a single offense under more
    than one count of an indictment.” Soape, 
    169 F.3d at 266
    . “The rule against
    multiplicity is grounded in the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against double
    jeopardy . . . .” United States v. Buchanan, 
    485 F.3d 274
    , 278 (5th Cir. 2007)
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A multiplicity violation arises,
    inter alia, when the government has impermissibly divided a single criminal act
    or transaction into multiple violations, and separately charged each one under
    the same provision. See 
    id.
     at 278–79. Here, the government argues that a single
    fire occasioned by Samuels permitted separate punishments under § 844(h)(1)
    because it helped him to commit separately chargeable felonies.
    We confronted similar circumstances in United States v. Evans, 
    854 F.2d 56
     (5th Cir. 1988), rev’g in part 
    848 F.2d 1352
     (5th Cir. 1988). In Evans, the
    defendant had presented false identification to obtain a firearm and ammunition
    in a single transaction. 
    848 F.2d at 1354
    . She was convicted for two violations
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (a)(6), which prohibits exhibiting “false, fictitious, or
    misrepresented identification” “in connection with the acquisition . . . of any
    firearm or ammunition.” In addressing the defendant’s double jeopardy
    challenge, we concluded that the dispositive question was whether Congress had
    intended to “punish as two offenses the single making of one false statement in
    connection with one purchase on the same occasion of both a firearm and
    ammunition.” Evans, 
    854 F.2d at 58
    . This requires us to determine “[w]hat
    Congress has made the allowable unit of prosecution.” 
    Id. at 59
     (quoting United
    States v. Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp., 
    344 U.S. 218
    , 221 (1952)). If the statutory
    text and legislative history are not dispositive of Congress’s intent, we apply the
    19
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    rule of lenity, resolving the multiple-punishment question in the defendant’s
    favor. 
    Id.
     (citing Ladner v. United States, 
    358 U.S. 169
    , 177 (1958); Bell v. United
    States, 
    349 U.S. 81
    , 84 (1955)).
    As set out above, § 844(h)(1) provides penalties for any person who “uses
    fire or an explosive to commit any felony.” The government implicitly argues that
    “use of fire” is the proper unit of prosecution, and that Congress thus intended
    multiple punishments in Samuels’s circumstances. This interpretation is not
    unreasonable; after all, Samuels “used fire” to commit mail fraud, and also “used
    fire” to obstruct justice. Nonetheless, because the more lenient statutory
    construction is no less plausible, we must apply the rule of lenity.
    In United States v. Phipps, 
    319 F.3d 177
    , 186–89 (5th Cir. 2003), the
    government offered a similar interpretation with respect to 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c)(1).
    Section 924(c)(1) provides punishment for any person who “uses or carries a
    firearm” “during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking
    crime.” The defendant in Phipps had committed two violent crimes—carjacking
    and kidnaping—through the single “use” of a firearm. 
    319 F.3d at 186
    . After
    examining § 924(c)(1)’s text and legislative history, we held that Congress’s
    intent as to the “unit of prosecution” was ambiguous, thus compelling us to apply
    the rule of lenity. Id. at 187–88. Accordingly, we held that the applicable unit of
    prosecution was “the use, carriage, or possession of a firearm during and in
    relation to a predicate offense.” Id. at 186. Because § 844(h)(1)’s text parallels
    that of § 924(c)(1) in relevant part, the applicable unit of prosecution would also
    appear to be the pairing of a “use” and a “felony.” See Phipps, 
    319 F.3d at 186
    .
    The government argues that its interpretation is supported by § 844(h)(1)’s
    requirement that punishment under that provision be served consecutively to
    any term of imprisonment imposed for the underlying felony. Section 924(c)(1)
    also imposes consecutive punishment, however, and we considered and rejected
    the same argument in Phipps, 
    319 F.3d at 187
    . Although this requirement
    20
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    No. 11-30525
    undoubtedly evinces an intent to impose harsh punishment for § 844(h)(1)
    violations when they occur, it does not establish what constitutes a violation.
    Because we perceive no other part of the statutory text that materially
    distinguishes § 844(h)(1) from § 924(c)(1), we are not compelled to reach a result
    different from the one we reached in Phipps.
    Nor does § 844(h)(1)’s legislative history provide relevant instruction. It
    reveals only that Congress wished to discourage the widespread use of explosive
    and incendiary devices to accomplish criminal objectives. As we explained in
    Phipps, 
    319 F.3d at 187
    , such an expression of intent does not resolve the
    ambiguity that confronts us. See Organized Crime Control Act of 1970, Pub. L.
    No. 91-452, 
    84 Stat. 922
    , 957 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 18
    U.S.C.); H.R. Rep. No. 91-1549 (1970), reprinted in 1970 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4007; see
    also Anti-Arson Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-298, 
    96 Stat. 1319
     (adding “fire” to
    
    18 U.S.C. § 844
    ); H.R. Rep. No. 97-678 (1982), reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N.
    2631. Likewise, the legislative history of § 924(c)—the provision on which
    § 844(h) was originally modeled, H.R. Rep. No. 91-1549, at 69—does not answer
    this question. See Phipps, 
    319 F.3d at
    186–87 & n.6; Gun Control Act of 1968,
    Pub. L. No. 90-618, 
    82 Stat. 1213
    , 1224 (codified at 
    18 U.S.C. § 921
     et seq.); S.
    Rep. 90-1097 (1968), reprinted in 1968 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2112.
    Further supporting our decision today, we held in United States v. Severns,
    
    559 F.3d 274
    , 291 (5th Cir. 2009), that a single “fire incident” did not support
    multiple sentences under § 844(h)(1), even when that fire furthered multiple
    predicate offenses. In Severns, the government charged two § 844(h)(1) violations
    after the defendant burned down her gun store in furtherance of one mail fraud
    and one wire fraud offense. Analogizing the use-of-fire provision to § 924(c)(1),
    we held that the defendant “may be prosecuted and punished for use of fire to
    commit mail fraud or use of fire to commit wire fraud, but not both.” Severns,
    
    559 F.3d at 291
    .
    21
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    The government argues that Severns is inapposite because the underlying
    mail and wire fraud offenses in that case were committed to achieve the same
    objective—to obtain fire insurance proceeds from the gun store’s destruction. 
    559 F.3d at
    276–77. It contends that Samuels’s distinct criminal objectives in
    burning his van—to destroy evidence and fraudulently obtain insurance
    proceeds—permit a different result. Based on our § 924(c)(1) caselaw, we cannot
    accept this reasoning. In United States v. Walters, 
    351 F.3d 159
    , 161 (5th Cir.
    2003), the defendant was convicted on two § 924(c)(1) charges for a single
    bombing, the predicate offenses being assaulting the federal officer who had
    opened the explosive package and damaging the federal building in which the
    package was opened. 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 111
    , 844(f). We rejected the government’s
    argument that “dual criminal purposes” supported multiple punishments under
    § 924(c)(1), and vacated the defendant’s sentences. Walters, 
    351 F.3d at
    173
    (citing Phipps, 
    319 F.3d at 183
    ). In light of § 844(h) and § 924(c)(1)’s parallel
    textual structures, the identical purpose motivating each provision’s enactment,
    H.R. Rep. No. 91-1549, at 69, and our past reliance on the latter provision to
    interpret the former, Severns, 
    559 F.3d at 291
    , we have ample reason to extend
    the Walters court’s holding to the instant matter.
    Thus, applying the rule we articulated in Evans, 
    854 F.2d at 59
    , and
    reiterating our decision in Severns, 
    559 F.3d at 291
    , we hold that it was error to
    impose multiple sentences under § 844(h)(1) based on a single “fire incident” that
    facilitated two underlying felonies. That Samuels had multiple criminal
    objectives in causing the fire does not alter this result.
    3.    Plain-Error Review
    Having held that it was error to impose a sentence on each of Counts 12
    and 13, we must now determine whether this error was plain, and whether to
    correct it. To establish plain error, Samuels must show that “(1) there is error;
    (2) the error was clear and obvious, not subject to reasonable dispute; and (3) the
    22
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    error affected his substantial rights.” United States v. Hebron, 
    684 F.3d 554
    , 558
    (5th Cir. 2012). We may “remedy the error, but only if it seriously affects the
    fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Id.
    Whether an error is “clear and obvious” depends on the clarity of
    applicable law. See United States v. Meza, 
    701 F.3d 411
    , 434 (5th Cir. 2012)
    (vacating the defendant’s multiplicitous sentences sua sponte because the error
    was “clear in light of” controlling authority). “[T]he focus of plain error review
    should be whether the severity of the error’s harm demands reversal, and not
    whether the district court’s action . . . deserves rebuke.” United States v.
    Escalante-Reyes, 
    689 F.3d 415
    , 423 (5th Cir. 2012) (en banc) (citation omitted).
    We have found plain error when there was “no relevant distinction[]” between
    the case at bar and controlling precedent. Meza, 701 F.3d at 433.
    The government has correctly noted that the facts in Severns are
    somewhat different from those present in the instant matter. We think, however,
    that this difference is so slight, the controlling rule in Severns so clear, the
    weight of Walters so one-sided, and an expression of legislative intent supporting
    the government’s position so lacking, that the decision we have reached today
    was all but certain. Moreover, this error severely affects Samuels’s substantial
    rights. Our view of his conduct in this matter notwithstanding, we cannot allow
    an additional twenty-year term of imprisonment to be imposed when controlling
    authority so clearly establishes its illegality. Accordingly, we will vacate his
    sentences on Counts 12 and 13, remand for dismissal of one of these counts (at
    the election of the government), and order resentencing. Meza, 701 F.3d at 434.
    We deem the conviction on the remaining count affirmed. See id.
    D.     Samuels’s Mail Fraud Convictions
    1.    Legal Standards
    Samuels argues there was insufficient evidence to support his mail fraud
    convictions under Counts 3 and 4. He contends that the mailings underpinning
    23
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    No. 11-30525
    these convictions were not made in furtherance of the life insurance fraud.
    Although Samuels moved for acquittal at the close of the government’s evidence,
    he did not renew this motion at the close of his defense. In these circumstances,
    we review for plain error. United States v. Villasenor, 
    236 F.3d 220
    , 222 (5th Cir.
    2000) (per curiam). On plain-error review, an evidentiary insufficiency challenge
    “will be rejected unless the record is devoid of evidence pointing to guilt or if the
    evidence is so tenuous that a conviction is shocking.” United States v. Delgado,
    
    672 F.3d 320
    , 330–31 (5th Cir. 2012) (en banc) (citation omitted).
    A mail fraud conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1341
     requires sufficient proof
    that: “(1) the defendant devised or intended to devise a scheme to defraud,
    (2) the mails were used for the purpose of executing, or attempting to execute,
    the scheme, and (3) the falsehoods employed in the scheme were material.”
    United States v. Ratcliff, 
    488 F.3d 639
    , 643–44 (5th Cir. 2007). “One ‘causes’ the
    mails to be used ‘[w]here one does an act with knowledge that the use of the
    mails will follow in the ordinary course of business, or where such use can
    reasonably be foreseen.’” United States v. Ingles, 
    445 F.3d 830
    , 835 (5th Cir.
    2006) (alterations in original) (quoting Pereira v. United States, 
    347 U.S. 1
    , 8–9
    (1954)). The material that has been mailed need not be “fraudulent in itself.”
    United States v. Shively, 
    927 F.2d 804
    , 814 (5th Cir. 1991) (citation omitted). Our
    decisions construing the wire fraud statute are equally applicable to matters
    involving the mail fraud statute. United States v. Mills, 
    199 F.3d 184
    , 188 (5th
    Cir. 1999) (citing Carpenter v. United States, 
    484 U.S. 19
    , 25 n.6 (1987)).
    2.     Discussion
    The mailings underlying Counts 3 and 4 were related to the life insurance
    scheme. The government offered evidence that the insurance company sent a
    letter to Samuels’s mother—the other beneficiary on the policy—informing her
    that her claim had been denied. The insurance company then mailed a premium
    refund check to Samuels and his mother. Samuels concedes the fact of these
    24
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    mailings, and does not deny that he knew mailings would take place after he
    applied for the policy. He argues instead that these mailings did not advance the
    scheme’s objective.
    Undeniably, Samuels’s life insurance fraud scheme failed. Because
    Samuels had not disclosed August’s history of drug use or his past treatments
    for gunshot wounds on the insurance application, the insurance company denied
    coverage and refunded the premiums. Thus, the mailings we have described do
    not, on their face, appear to have furthered the scheme.
    Significantly, the mail fraud statute does not require the fraudulent
    scheme to be successful. Adjmi v. United States, 
    346 F.2d 654
    , 657 (5th Cir.
    1965); see also United States v. Loney, 
    959 F.2d 1332
    , 1337 n.14 (5th Cir. 1992)
    (wire fraud). We have held that once a defendant obtains money from a fraud,
    “actions taken to avoid detection” advance the fraudulent scheme because they
    “allow the perpetrator to escape apprehension.” United States v. Allen, 
    76 F.3d 1348
    , 1363 (5th Cir. 1996) (wire fraud). To be sure, inasmuch as the mailings at
    issue did not help Samuels obtain life insurance proceeds, they failed to advance
    the scheme. But these mailings helped Samuels in a different way—they gave
    Samuels notice of whether he should continue to seek proceeds by filing his own
    claim as the second beneficiary. In an apparent effort to determine whether his
    scheme would actually work, Samuels did not file his claim at the same time as
    his mother’s. Because his mother’s claim was denied, he declined to file his own
    claim, thus making it less likely that he would be investigated and discovered.
    Samuels argues that a mail fraud conviction cannot rest on a mailing whose
    “only likely effect . . . would be to further detection of the fraud or to deter its
    continuation.” United States v. LaFerriere, 
    546 F.2d 182
    , 187 (5th Cir. 1977). As
    we have discussed, however, the government makes a colorable argument that
    the mailings at issue helped Samuels avoid detection.
    25
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    Assuming, arguendo, that “Plan B” mailings—i.e., mailings notifying a
    would-be fraudster that he should end a well-advanced scheme so that he can
    avoid detection and apprehension—are not “incident to an essential part of the
    scheme” under our prior decisions, we cannot say it was plain error not to acquit
    Samuels on this basis. See Ingles, 
    445 F.3d at 835
    ; Allen, 
    76 F.3d at 1363
    . He
    offers no decision by this or any other court squarely holding that “Plan B”
    mailings cannot support a mail fraud conviction, nor does he cite any decision
    that makes such a holding inevitable. Because the challenge Samuels raises is
    thus “subject to reasonable dispute,” Hebron, 684 F.3d at 558, and because the
    record is not “devoid of evidence pointing to guilt,” Delgado, 672 F.3d at 331, we
    will not reverse Samuels’s mail fraud convictions.
    E.     Brown’s Testimony
    Samuels argues that the district court plainly erred by allowing Brown
    (Surtain’s cellmate) to offer incriminating testimony against him. As discussed
    above, Brown testified that Surtain had told him: (1) He would not be found
    guilty because he disposed of the gun used in the murder; (2) he was not worried
    that “his baby mama and her brother” would testify against him because he
    could “get to” the brother; and (3) he was not concerned about being connected
    to the insurance fraud because he was not “a main beneficiary on the policies,”
    although the person “that was in St. Charles [Parish Jail]” was a beneficiary.
    Samuels contends that, although his name was not explicitly mentioned
    in these statements, they nevertheless implicated him in Surtain’s crimes
    because he was the person referred to as the “brother” and the person “in St.
    Charles.” Samuels further asserts that this testimony amounted to inadmissible
    hearsay, and violated his rights to confrontation, due process, and a fair trial.
    Samuels concedes that plain-error review applies. United States v. Vargas-Soto,
    
    700 F.3d 180
    , 182 (5th Cir. 2012).
    26
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    No. 11-30525
    Because the statements at issue are nontestimonial, we reject Samuels’s
    Confrontation Clause argument. See Davis v. Washington, 
    547 U.S. 813
    , 825
    (2006)     (statements     made     by    one      prisoner   to   another     are   “clearly
    nontestimonial”). “[A] statement that is not testimonial cannot violate the
    Confrontation Clause.” Brown v. Epps, 
    686 F.3d 281
    , 286 (5th Cir. 2012)
    (alteration in original) (citation omitted); see also Davis, 
    547 U.S. at
    823–24.
    Samuels also argues that the admission of Brown’s statements violated his
    rights to due process and a fair trial because Brown’s testimony was “unreliable”
    and “extremely prejudicial.” Samuels relies on Bruton v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    , 126 (1968), in which the Supreme Court held that a non-testifying co-
    defendant’s confession inculpating the other defendant was inadmissible at their
    joint trial.2 Samuels ignores that the Bruton rule “is a narrow one that applies
    only to statements that directly implicate the defendant without reference to
    other admissible evidence.” United States v. Jimenez, 
    77 F.3d 95
    , 98 (5th Cir.
    1996). In other words, we have consistently held that Bruton “is not violated
    unless a co-defendant’s statement directly alludes to the complaining defendant.”
    United States v. Espinoza-Seanez, 
    862 F.2d 526
    , 534 (5th Cir. 1988) (citation
    omitted) (collecting cases). Indirect references do not implicate Bruton. 
    Id.
    Here, Brown’s testimony does not directly implicate Samuels as a
    participant in the criminal activity for which he was convicted. Brown’s first
    statement—that Surtain admitted to disposing of the gun—does not implicate
    Samuels at all. Additionally, Surtain’s comment that he could “get to” Samuels,
    whom he did not mention by name, suggests only that Surtain was concerned
    that Samuels might serve as a witness against him, not that Samuels was
    himself a participant in the criminal scheme. Similarly, Surtain did not name
    2
    Although Samuels characterizes this as a due process and fair trial issue, we note that
    Bruton properly is understood to be a Confrontation Clause case. Regardless, as we explain,
    we find no error under Bruton.
    27
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    No. 11-30525
    Samuels as the beneficiary of the insurance policy; rather, Samuels himself
    admitted this in his opening statement.
    In any event, we note also that Bruton has been further limited “to cases
    where the admission of the incriminating statements was not within a firmly
    rooted exception to the hearsay rule.” United States v. Saks, 
    964 F.2d 1514
    , 1525
    (5th Cir. 1992). We recently addressed whether a hearsay exception applies in
    circumstances analogous to those present here. United States v. Ebron, 
    683 F.3d 105
    , 132–34 (5th Cir. 2012). In Ebron, two prisoners (Mosley and Ebron) were
    alleged to have murdered a fellow inmate. 
    Id.
     at 120–21. A third prisoner
    (Bailey) testified at Ebron’s trial that, while Mosley and Bailey were cellmates,
    Mosley admitted to him that he and Ebron had committed the murder. 
    Id.
     at
    132–33. On appeal, Ebron maintained that although the statement qualified as
    a statement against penal interest under Federal Rule of Evidence 804(b)(3) as
    to Mosley, its admission against Ebron was improper. 
    Id. at 133
    . We rejected
    Ebron’s argument, however, concluding that “[u]nlike the situation where a
    declarant implicates himself and the defendant in a statement made to officials,
    a statement made outside a custodial context does not provide the same set of
    incentives that create the risk of an unreliable statement.” 
    Id.
     The same is true
    here. Thus, contrary to Samuels’s argument, the district court did not err in
    admitting Brown’s challenged testimony, as the statements at issue qualify
    under the hearsay exception for statements against penal interest.
    For these reasons, we reject Samuels’s contention that the district court
    plainly erred in admitting Brown’s testimony. Further, even were we to accept
    that the court erred, we conclude that Samuels still could not prevail on plain-
    error review because he is unable to demonstrate that this purported error
    affected his substantial rights. Even absent the complained-of statements, the
    evidence of Samuels’s guilt was overwhelming.
    28
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    F.     Trial Severance
    Samuels argues that the district court should have severed his trial from
    that of Moss and Surtain. He did not move for severance at trial, and did not join
    in his co-defendants’ multiple, unsuccessful motions to sever. Samuels thus
    contends on appeal that the court should have severed the proceedings sua
    sponte even though it repeatedly denied his co-defendants’ severance motions.
    A defendant must move for severance before trial, or show good cause for
    failing to do so. Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(3)(D), 14(a). Because Samuels has done
    neither, he has waived this argument. United States v. Cantu-Ramirez, 
    669 F.3d 619
    , 624 (5th Cir. 2012).
    G.     Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Samuels argues that the prosecutors’ conduct rendered his trial
    fundamentally unfair. He raises three misconduct issues on appeal, contending
    that the prosecutors (1) repeatedly and improperly asked leading questions;
    (2) made improper remarks in their closing and rebuttal arguments; and
    (3) misused a summary witness to recapitulate earlier witnesses’ testimony.
    In deciding a claim of prosecutorial misconduct, we first “assess whether
    the prosecutor made an improper remark. If the prosecution has made an
    improper remark, we must then ask whether the defendant was prejudiced.”
    Ebron, 683 F.3d at 140 (internal citation omitted). Although we usually consider
    each remark individually, “[t]here may be instances where improper statements,
    which are not individually prejudicial enough to require reversal, could cumulate
    to affect the defendant’s substantial rights. However, such instances are rare in
    this circuit.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “In considering
    whether prosecutorial misconduct warrants reversal, the determinative question
    is whether the prosecutor’s remarks cast serious doubt on the correctness of the
    jury’s verdict.” Delgado, 672 F.3d at 334–35 (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).
    29
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    1.    Leading Questions
    Federal Rule of Evidence 611(c) provides that “[l]eading questions should
    not be used on direct examination except as necessary to develop the witness’s
    testimony. Ordinarily, the court should allow leading questions: (1) on cross-
    examination; and (2) when a party calls a hostile witness, an adverse party, or
    a witness identified with an adverse party.” Samuels offers fourteen instances
    of purportedly improper questioning by the prosecutors, and contends that their
    cumulative effect was to render his trial fundamentally unfair.
    Although it cannot be denied that the prosecutors repeatedly asked
    leading questions, and that the court admonished them again and again,
    Samuels has not established that such questioning “cast serious doubt on the
    correctness of the jury’s verdict.” Delgado, 672 F.3d at 334–35 (citation omitted).
    As to most of the instances that Samuels cites, he does not explain how prejudice
    resulted; ignores that other, properly elicited testimony established the facts he
    sought to suppress; or fails to mention that the court stopped the improper
    questioning before the witness responded. Even assuming that the remaining
    occurrences prejudiced Samuels in some measure, he does not explain whether
    or how they materially affected the jury’s verdict.
    Samuels calls our attention to judicial statements respecting the harm
    that leading questions can cause. United States v. Durham, 
    645 F.3d 883
    , 891
    (7th Cir. 2011) (“[V]alid concerns regarding the overuse of leading questions
    exist.”); Stine v. Marathon Oil Co., 
    976 F.2d 254
    , 266 (5th Cir. 1992) (“[A]ny good
    trial advocate who is allowed leading questions can both testify for the witness
    and argue the client’s case by the use of leading questions.”); United States v.
    McGovern, 
    499 F.2d 1140
    , 1142 (1st Cir. 1974) (leading questions “may supply
    a ‘false memory’” in a friendly witness (citation omitted)). However, he offers no
    analogous case—indeed, he offers no case at all—in which a judgment of
    conviction has been reversed based on leading questions. We do not suggest that
    30
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    No. 11-30525
    leading questions never cause reversible error. Before we will grant appellate
    relief, however, we must be convinced that such questions affected a defendant’s
    substantial rights. Ebron, 683 F.3d at 140. Samuels has not convinced us of this.
    2.    Prosecutors’ Closing and Rebuttal Arguments
    Samuels further contends that, during the prosecutors’ closing and
    rebuttal arguments, they (1) argued facts that were not in evidence and misled
    the jury, (2) improperly vouched for government witnesses, and (3) improperly
    attacked the defendants and defense counsel. Because Samuels did not object to
    the purportedly improper statements, we review for plain error. Id. at 141.
    a.    Facts not in Evidence
    In discussing Samuels’s role in the Landry house fire, the prosecutor
    stated: “And you recall Mr. Samuels who testified, obviously, before lunch,
    talking about this is some kind of an electrical fire. . . . But you see, con men,
    they think they can convince people. That was an arson.” Samuels contends that
    he never offered such testimony. In fact, Samuels testified that Landry had
    burned down his own house and blamed faulty electrical wiring. The prosecutor
    thus appears to have misunderstood or misremembered Samuels’s testimony in
    a way that made Samuels appear to be dishonest. This mistake did not affect the
    integrity of the proceedings, however. As we will explain, witness credibility was
    a main point of contention in closing arguments, and ample evidence permitted
    the jury to infer that Samuels had offered false testimony.
    In discussing the van fire, the prosecutor stated that a New Orleans fire
    investigator said the van had been moved away from Samuels’s house to keep
    the house from catching fire and to place the van in full view of the security
    camera, thus aiding his alibi. As Samuels concedes, the investigator testified
    that the security camera captured the arson on tape, and that the house would
    have been damaged if the van had been parked closer to it. Although it is true
    that the investigator did not say these were Samuels’s reasons for parking the
    31
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    No. 11-30525
    van where he did, the jury could have made this reasonable inference based on
    the investigator’s testimony.
    On rebuttal, the prosecutor criticized Samuels for allowing Surtain—his
    sister’s ex-boyfriend—to live in his apartment even though his sister bore ill will
    toward him following their break-up. The government thus suggested that
    Samuels would not have permitted Surtain to stay with him but for Surtain’s
    assistance in August’s murder. Samuels contends that none of the trial evidence
    revealed Maria Samuels’s feelings about her relationship with Surtain. However,
    Samuels’s cross-examination testimony established that Maria’s relationship
    with Surtain ended, and that she gave their baby to her parents. Samuels sought
    to justify his continuing relationship with Surtain by noting that Surtain
    remained his niece’s father. Accordingly, although the prosecutor’s rebuttal
    statement did not perfectly characterize the evidence, neither was it unfairly
    prejudicial.
    Finally, the prosecutor sought to discredit Samuels’s alibi—his presence
    at church while Moss and Surtain were dealing with August—by stating that
    “[t]his guy went to church for the first time in [his] life, while this guy drove his
    van to lure him out so he could be killed.” In the context of the entire proceeding,
    a reasonable jury would have recognized that this statement was not meant to
    represent facts in evidence. Samuels’s apparent modus operandi throughout the
    events recounted at trial was to establish alibis to distance himself from the
    crimes he had planned: He was at a church service while Surtain was killing
    August, was away from his home while others set his van on fire, and had
    instructed Landry to visit a client while Moss was setting fire to his house.
    Further, he appeared to play up his involvement in church activities—he
    testified that his great, great grandfather had founded the church, and that he
    had reminded his mother to retrieve a robe they were to give their minister.
    Accordingly, a reasonable juror would have recognized the prosecutor’s
    32
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    hyperbolic statement as an attack on Samuels’s credibility. See Ebron, 683 F.3d
    at 143 (“[T]he use of colorful pejoratives is not improper.”).
    b.     Vouching
    Samuels contends that the prosecutor improperly vouched for government
    witnesses’ credibility, including that of ATF agents Robert Stoltz and Wyatt
    Evans, and Samuels’s cooperating co-defendants. “[A] personal assertion by a
    prosecutor of a government witness’s credibility is impermissible.” United States
    v. Gracia, 
    522 F.3d 597
    , 601 (5th Cir. 2008). Personal vouching does not
    necessarily constitute reversible error, however. “The test for improper vouching
    for the credibility of a witness is whether the prosecutor’s expression might
    reasonably lead the jury to believe that there is other evidence, unknown or
    unavailable to the jury, on which the prosecutor was convinced of the accused’s
    guilt.” United States v. McCann, 
    613 F.3d 486
    , 495 (5th Cir. 2010) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted).
    As to Stoltz and Evans, the prosecutor stated:
    And these two phenomenal agents, Bobby Stoltz and Wyatt Evans,
    they went backwards. They went to the Augusts. “Hmm, insurance.
    Let’s dig a little deeper.” That led to Stefan James, and that led to
    this prosecution. Just phenomenal work that you saw over the last
    week. . . . [W]e put on a compelling case, thanks to those two
    gentlemen right here.
    Samuels argues that the prosecutor thus “wrapp[ed] his witnesses in the
    government’s cloak of veracity and invok[ed] his personal status as the
    government’s attorney to assure the jury of the credibility of those agents.”
    Gracia, 
    522 F.3d at
    606–07. We disagree. The prosecutor’s comments that Stoltz
    and Evans were “phenomenal” and did “phenomenal work” appear to have been
    based on his description of their investigation. Further, he did not specifically
    refer to their credibility as witnesses. Accordingly, we do not believe that a jury
    33
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    No. 11-30525
    indisputably would have believed the prosecutor’s comments were based on
    evidence not offered at trial. See McCann, 
    613 F.3d at 495
    .
    As to the cooperating witnesses, the prosecutor stated in rebuttal:
    Why in the world would someone come in and tell the truth about
    themselves, go in and plead guilty before this Court, be facing an
    enormous amount of penalties, and then start lying about somebody
    else? In hopes – in hopes – that they can bamboozle the judge who
    will then say, “If the government gets bamboozled, oh, I’m going to
    grant a reduction.” It makes no sense.
    ***
    Well, you put yourself in all those witnesses’ shoes with these
    cowboys, with these dudes, and you decide whether or not you are
    at risk.
    Orlando [Brown], who will be in jail for a long time; Stefan [James],
    who will be in jail for a long time; Damian [Landry], who will be in
    jail for a long time; the family members, your family members, your
    wife, your brother, your aunt. You decide whether or not there is
    any risk, if it’s all cotton. That you have the hope, maybe, hopefully,
    that a judge will give you a decent sentence versus whether or not
    these guys will.
    Although a prosecutor “cannot express a personal opinion on the credibility of
    witnesses,” he or she “may argue fair inferences from the evidence that a witness
    has no motive to lie.” Gracia, 
    522 F.3d at 601
    . From the above statements, we
    perceive no personal vouching for the cooperating witnesses’ credibility. In each
    of these statements, the government fairly implied, based on record evidence,
    that the witnesses had strong motives not to lie. Moreover, the prosecutor made
    these comments on rebuttal to counter specific attacks defense counsel had made
    on the witnesses’ credibility. Bolstering is permitted in such circumstances.
    McCann, 
    613 F.3d at 495
    .
    Relying on one of our previous cases, Samuels nevertheless argues that
    reversible error occurred. In Gracia, four of the prosecutor’s statements were at
    issue: (1) He stated that border patrol agents who had testified at trial were
    34
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    No. 11-30525
    “very, very credible”; (2) he asked the jury whether an agent “who has worked
    as a law enforcement agent for many years, that is his career, that is his chosen
    life, a man from this area, a man with a family . . . would throw all that away by
    taking this stand and taking an oath and lying to you to get Mr. Gracia”; (3) he
    urged the jury “to respect [the agents’] efforts as law enforcement officials and
    to believe the testimony that they offered”; and (4) he stated that “to acquit
    Gracia, [the jury] would have to believe that the agents ‘got out of bed’ on the
    day they arrested Gracia and decided that this was ‘the day that [they] were
    going to start [a] conspiracy to wrongfully convict Mr. Gracia.’” 
    522 F.3d at 600
    (third and fourth alterations in original). On plain-error review, we reversed the
    defendant’s conviction because each of these statements urged conviction based
    on “something uniquely within the prosecutor’s knowledge.” 
    Id. at 601
    . As we
    have discussed, however, the prosecutor in the instant matter made fair
    inferences respecting the witnesses’ credibility, and referred to the record
    evidence on which his statements were based. Accordingly, Samuels’s reliance
    on Gracia is misplaced.
    c.    Character Attacks
    Samuels argues that the prosecutors improperly called him a “con man”
    and a “liar,” and made inappropriate remarks about defense counsel:
    But you see, con men, they think they can convince people.
    ***
    You see, all that was designed to do, Mr. Con Man, you see, it’s a
    preemptive strike . . . .
    They have lied every chance that they got so that they can try to
    bamboozle you.
    ***
    [Defense counsel] forgot to talk about [Samuels’s] performance up
    there. Because you had the opportunity to listen to two hours of
    fabrication. It’s a pathological liar. A guy that had an answer, and
    35
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    a bad answer, for everything. Even when he looked at himself
    telling the 1,001 lie[s] to the agents in April of 2009 . . . . He can’t
    keep a story straight . . . .
    And that’s the benefit of you being able to watch somebody on the
    witness stand. Because you really did get to see a master – I’m not
    saying he’s not a master. But you got to see a pathological liar.
    ***
    He can connive.
    The prosecutor also attacked defense counsel’s arguments as “defense lawyer
    myths” and “ultimate lawyering.”
    “A prosecutor may not go beyond the evidence and attack a defendant’s
    character or veracity.” Delgado, 672 F.3d at 336. In the instant matter, the
    government relied heavily on cooperating witnesses’ testimony, and Samuels’s
    defense hinged on the testimony he offered to establish that the government had
    gotten the wrong man. Witness credibility thus became a point of contention in
    both sides’ closing arguments; defense counsel attacked government witnesses’
    truthfulness just as much as the government attacked Samuels’s.
    As we have recently discussed, “[i]mproper assertion of a prosecutor’s
    personal opinion is easily recognized. . . . [I]t includes personal expressions such
    as ‘I think,’ ‘I know,’ ‘I believe,’ or other expressions that either explicitly or
    implicitly convey the prosecutor’s personal impressions.” Id. at 336–37 (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted). The prosecutor in the instant matter did
    not employ such phrases or otherwise squarely imply that he was offering
    credibility assessments not based on trial evidence. Indeed, each of the
    purportedly improper statements Samuels cites was couched in evidence that
    tended to show he had lied or sought to mislead others on specific occasions.
    “While the prosecutor should have chosen his words more carefully, his
    argument differs from improper argument in that its meaning and effect would
    36
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    No. 11-30525
    have been no different had he simply added the words ‘As I’ve explained, the
    evidence shows’ before stating that [Samuels] had lied.” Id. at 337.
    The prosecutor’s comments about “defense lawyer myths” and “ultimate
    lawyering” were also made in the context of a battle over witness credibility.
    Fairly construed, these were attacks on defense counsel’s arguments, not
    personal attacks against the defendants’ attorneys. Accordingly, these comments
    were not improper.
    On plain-error review, we cannot say that the prosecutor’s comments in
    closing and rebuttal arguments affected Samuels’s substantial rights or “cast
    serious doubt on the correctness of the jury’s verdict.” Ebron, 683 F.3d at 140
    (citation omitted); Delgado, 672 F.3d at 334–35. Accordingly, we will not reverse
    Samuels’s convictions on this basis.
    3.    Summary Witness Testimony
    The government’s final witness was New Orleans police detective and ATF
    task force officer Robert Stoltz. Much of his testimony concerned the records of
    phone calls from, to, and between the defendants. Samuels argues that the
    government improperly used Stoltz’s testimony to recapitulate earlier
    government witnesses’ testimony, in effect offering a “supplemental closing
    argument.” He notes five instances in which Stoltz testified that earlier
    witnesses had confirmed their association with certain phone numbers or
    discussed the timing of certain calls.
    Samuels also complains that the government asked ATF agent Wyatt
    Evans about Damian Landry’s testimony respecting money he said he had given
    Samuels. Evans testified that Landry had not said he gave Samuels insurance
    money, but had instead given Samuels money from his tax refund.
    The evidentiary rule respecting summary witnesses “does not contemplate
    summarization of live testimony presented in court.” United States v. Nguyen,
    
    504 F.3d 561
    , 572 (5th Cir. 2007) (citation omitted). “Summary witnesses may
    37
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    not be used as a substitute for, or a supplement to, closing argument.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Assuming, arguendo, that these witnesses’ recapitulation of prior
    testimony constituted error, we do not agree that it affected Samuels’s
    substantial rights or “seriously affect[ed] the fairness, integrity, or public
    reputation of” his trial. Hebron, 684 F.3d at 558. The witnesses made minor
    references to other witnesses’ statements; this made up a trifling part of their
    overall testimony. Their testimony thus did not constitute “supplemental closing
    arguments,” and reversal is not justified on this basis.
    H.     Samuels’s Sentence
    Samuels also argues that his sentence was procedurally unreasonable and
    violated his Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury and Fifth Amendment right
    to due process. Specifically, he contends that although he was not charged with,
    and the jury did not find him guilty of, August’s murder, his offense level under
    the Sentencing Guidelines was driven primarily by this supposedly unproven
    offense conduct.3 Because Samuels did not raise this objection at sentencing, we
    review his sentence for plain error. United States v. Peltier, 
    505 F.3d 389
    , 392
    (5th Cir. 2007).
    Although Samuels was initially sentenced to 900 months’ imprisonment,
    we have ordered that his sentences on Counts 12 and 13 be vacated on
    multiplicity grounds, and that a sentence be imposed as to only one of these
    3
    Samuels further contends that he could not fully defend himself because substantial
    evidence was washed away by Hurricane Katrina. Samuels does not elaborate on what
    “substantial evidence” was lost, and his record citations are uninstructive or irrelevant.
    He also argues that because he was not charged with August’s murder after New
    Orleans police investigated the matter, there must not have been enough evidence to support
    a murder conviction. We are not concerned with what evidence was available to New Orleans
    police at that time, nor what evidence would be required for a murder conviction under
    Louisiana law. Samuels ignores that the trial evidence presented in the instant matter
    overwhelmingly proved that, as alleged in the superseding indictment, he had August killed
    for insurance money.
    38
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    counts. The sentences we have vacated (and the sentence that must be
    reimposed on remand) are mandatory and inflexible, and are to be served
    consecutively to any other term of imprisonment. 
    18 U.S.C. § 844
     (h)(1). Because
    Samuels’s challenge essentially goes to his Guidelines offense level, which was
    not affected by his convictions or sentences on Counts 12 and 13 (and thus is not
    affected by our mandate respecting these counts), we will address his Guidelines
    argument in the interest of judicial efficiency. See United States v. Magdaleno-
    Sanchez, 169 F. App’x 830, 831 (5th Cir. 2006) (unpublished) (per curiam)
    (addressing Guidelines argument “in the interest of judicial efficiency and to
    provide guidance on remand” even though the defendant’s sentence had already
    been vacated on other grounds). We conclude that no error arose from Samuels’s
    sentence.
    Samuels correctly notes that he was not separately charged with murder
    in this matter. He was, however, convicted of conspiracy to commit mail and wire
    fraud under Count 1. The government alleged in that count that Samuels
    fraudulently obtained insurance on August’s life and then had him murdered,
    and offered ample evidence proving as much. The district court thus applied
    § 2B1.1(c)(3) of the Sentencing Guidelines, which provides that where “the
    defendant was convicted under a statute proscribing false, fictitious, or
    fraudulent statements or representations generally . . . [and] the conduct set
    forth in the count of conviction establishes an offense specifically covered by
    another guideline in Chapter Two (Offense Conduct), [the court should] apply
    that other guideline.” U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1(c)(3) (2010).
    The district court then correctly applied § 2A1.1 (First Degree Murder),
    the practical effect of which was a twenty-one-step increase in Samuels’s offense
    level. His Criminal History Category of IV and offense level of forty-seven
    rendered an advisory Guidelines sentencing range of life imprisonment. Absent
    § 2A1.1’s application, and assuming that no further adjustments would have
    39
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    applied to Samuels’s offense level, his advisory sentencing range would have
    been 92 to 115 months. Nonetheless, the Guidelines portion of his
    sentence—that is, the portion not affected by the three mandatory consecutive
    sentences imposed under 
    18 U.S.C. § 844
    (h)(1)—was limited by statutory
    maximum sentences. 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 371
    , 1001, 1341, 1343. This part of the overall
    sentence amounted to twenty-five years’ imprisonment. See 
    id.
     §§ 3553(a),
    3584(b) (setting out the factors to consider in determining whether sentences
    should run concurrently or consecutively). The three mandatory § 844(h)(1)
    sentences increased his overall sentence to seventy-five years’ imprisonment.
    Relying on dicta in one of our prior cases, Samuels argues that this is a
    “case[] where a sentencing fact [(i.e., August’s murder)] is a ‘tail that wags the
    dog of the substantive offense,’ and might arguably require a finding beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” United States v. Mergerson, 
    4 F.3d 337
    , 344 (5th Cir. 1993)
    (quoting McMillan v. Pennsylvania, 
    477 U.S. 79
    , 88 (1986)). We recently
    explained that we “ha[ve] never required such a heightened burden” for offense
    conduct findings, and our sister circuits have rejected it as well. United States
    v. Brooks, 
    681 F.3d 678
    , 713 & n.31 (5th Cir. 2012). Accordingly, the district
    court did not plainly err in applying the preponderance standard for Guidelines
    purposes. See United States v. Setser, 
    568 F.3d 482
    , 498 (5th Cir. 2009).
    Even if a heightened standard applied, however, we would not reverse
    Samuels’s conviction. Remarkably, Samuels contends that August’s homicide
    and Samuels’s role in it were “unproven.” Once again, the government alleged
    that, in satisfaction of the conspiracy count’s “overt act” requirement, Samuels
    agreed to pay Surtain to kill August, and that Surtain fatally shot August on
    April 24, 2004. As outlined above, the government offered an overwhelming
    amount of evidence establishing that Samuels had August killed to obtain life
    insurance proceeds, and certainly enough to satisfy the reasonable doubt
    standard for purposes of the conspiracy count and the first-degree murder
    40
    Case: 11-30525      Document: 00512187631      Page: 41   Date Filed: 03/26/2013
    No. 11-30525
    sentencing guideline. U.S.S.G. § 2A1.1; see also 
    18 U.S.C. § 1111
     (“Murder is the
    unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought. Every murder
    perpetrated by any . . . kind of willful, deliberate, malicious, and premeditated
    killing . . . is murder in the first degree.”).
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE Samuels’s sentences on Counts 12
    and 13 of the superseding indictment, REMAND for reversal by the district court
    of his conviction on one of these counts (at the government’s election) and
    dismissal of that count, and order resentencing on the remaining count. We
    deem the judgment of conviction on the remaining count AFFIRMED. In all
    other respects, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.
    41
    Case: 11-30525      Document: 00512187631     Page: 42   Date Filed: 03/26/2013
    No. 11-30525
    JAMES E. GRAVES, JR., Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in
    part:
    I concur with the majority in all respects except for its affirmance of the
    conviction of Charles Moss and Jermaine Surtain on Count 12 for aiding and
    abetting the use of fire to commit obstruction of justice.
    The jury instruction on Count 12 requires that, to convict, the jury must
    find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant “knowingly caused the use
    of fire to alter, destroy, mutilate, or conceal a record, document, or other object,
    or attempted to do so, with the intent to impair the object[’]s integrity or
    availability for use in an official proceeding, or otherwise obstruct, influence, or
    impede any official proceeding.”       The jury instruction then lists the four
    elements of a charge of aiding and abetting, which was the charge Moss and
    Surtain were facing in relation to Count 12:
    For you to find the defendant guilty of this crime, you must be
    convinced that the government has proved each of the following
    beyond a reasonable doubt:
    1.    That . . . the offense charged . . . was committed by
    some person;
    2.    That the defendant associated with the criminal
    venture;
    3.    That the defendant purposefully participated in the
    criminal venture; and
    4.    That the defendant sought by action to make that
    venture successful.
    The jury instruction further explains: “The term ‘to associate with
    the criminal venture’ means that the defendant shared the criminal intent of the
    principal. This element cannot be established if the defendant had no knowledge
    of the principal’s criminal venture.” And “[t]he term ‘to participate in the
    criminal venture’ means that the defendant engaged in some affirmative conduct
    designed to aid the venture or assisted the principal of the crime.”
    42
    Case: 11-30525     Document: 00512187631      Page: 43    Date Filed: 03/26/2013
    No. 11-30525
    The majority’s opinion is correct that inferences supported by
    circumstantial evidence can satisfy the elements of a crime, but those inferences
    must be reasonable. United States v. Moreland, 
    665 F.3d 137
    , 149 (5th Cir.
    2011) (quotation omitted) (“We [] will draw upon only reasonable inferences from
    the evidence to support the verdict.”). “Courts cannot credit inferences within
    the realm of possibility when those inferences are unreasonable.” 
    Id.
     (quotation
    omitted). Moreover, we “uphold the verdict if, but only if, a rational juror could
    have found each element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id. at 155
    (quotation omitted). “A verdict may not rest on mere suspicion, speculation, or
    conjecture, or on an overly attenuated piling of inference on inference.” 
    Id. at 149
     (quotation omitted).
    With respect to the four elements of the aiding and abetting charge for
    Count 12, the first element is easily satisfied. David Samuels along with two
    unidentified individuals committed the underlying offense of burning the van to
    obstruct justice.
    Regarding the second element, “associating with the criminal venture,” a
    reasonable jury would have to infer that Moss and Surtain had knowledge of and
    shared in Samuels’s criminal intent, and had a motive to burn the van. I agree
    that circumstantial evidence supports the inference that Moss and Surtain both
    knew about Samuels’s van burning scheme and shared his motive—to destroy
    evidence of Treyor Winston August’s murder.1
    The third and fourth elements, however, are more troublesome. The third
    element requires that Moss and Surtain engaged in some affirmative conduct to
    aid or assist Samuels in the burning of the van. The majority, citing United
    States v. Gulley, 
    526 F.3d 809
    , 816 (5th Cir. 2008), properly notes that mere
    encouragement is sufficient to “aid or assist.” The fourth element requires that
    1
    It is immaterial here that Samuels had an additional motive of collecting the
    insurance payout for the destroyed van.
    43
    Case: 11-30525      Document: 00512187631     Page: 44   Date Filed: 03/26/2013
    No. 11-30525
    Moss and Surtain sought by action to make the van burning successful. The
    content of the phone calls between Moss and Samuels, and Surtain and Samuels
    on the day and night of the van fire are unknown. Therefore, to properly find
    Moss and Surtain guilty beyond a reasonable doubt on the third and fourth
    elements, a jury would have to make two additional inferences: that the three
    were discussing the burning of the van during those calls; and that during those
    calls, Moss and Surtain aided or encouraged Samuels in setting the van ablaze.
    I agree that a reasonable jury, based on circumstantial evidence, could
    have made the second inference regarding the likely content of the phone calls.
    Nevertheless, the third inference—that Moss and Surtain aided or encouraged
    Samuels—is a prime example of “speculation, [] conjecture, or an overly
    attenuated piling of inference on inference.” Moreland, 
    665 F.3d at 149
    . This
    inference is not tethered to any circumstantial evidence, and is therefore
    unreasonable. I cannot accept the majority’s ruling that a rational juror could
    have found beyond a reasonable doubt that Surtain and Moss encouraged
    Samuels to burn the van during the calls or that Samuels sought Moss’s advice
    on how to burn the van since Moss was the so-called go-to man on incendiary
    devices. The record is clear that Samuels was the ringleader and organizer of
    every criminal scheme. Based on the history of the three’s interactions, it is
    indeed more likely that Samuels was instructing Surtain and Moss during those
    calls, informing them of his plan to burn the van and what the others should do
    next.
    Because a reasonable jury could not have found Moss and Surtain guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt on the last two elements of the aiding and abetting
    charge, I dissent from the majority’s affirmance of the conviction of Moss and
    Surtain on Count 12.
    44