United States v. Destin , 255 F. App'x 809 ( 2007 )


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  •            IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    November 13, 2007
    No. 06-20847                   Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    LAJUANA DESTIN and DENETRA McELROY,
    Defendant-Appellants,
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    USDC No. 4:04-CR-582
    Before KING, BARKSDALE, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Defendants-Appellants Lajuana Destin and Denetra McElroy appeal from
    final judgments of conviction for their participation in a scheme to fraudulently
    obtain unemployment benefits from the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC).
    Destin and McElroy challenge their convictions on the ground that the
    government presented insufficient evidence to support their respective
    convictions. Finding no error, we AFFIRM.
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
    No. 06-20847
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.
    On December 29, 2004, Destin, McElroy, and four others – John Slaughter,
    Jacqueline Ligon, Brenda Bowers, and Shalanda Nichols – were indicted by a
    grand jury in the Southern District of Texas on forty-four separate counts
    relating to a scheme to defraud the TWC from November 1996 through August
    2001. All of the defendants were charged in Count One with conspiracy to
    commit mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371.1 McElroy, along with
    Slaughter, was charged in Counts Two through Seven with mail fraud, in
    violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. Destin, along with Slaughter, was charged in
    Counts Forty-Two through Forty-Four, also under the mail fraud statute. A
    bench trial commenced before United States District Judge Melinda Harmon on
    March 27, 2006. At the close of the government’s case, on March 30, 2006,
    Destin and McElroy moved for a judgment of acquittal, which the district court
    denied. On April 3, 2006, following the close of both defendants’ cases, the
    district court found McElroy guilty on Counts One through Seven and Destin
    guilty on Counts One, Forty-Two and Forty-Four.2 McElroy was sentenced on
    October 6, 2006 to five years of probation on each of Counts One through Seven,
    with the sentences to run concurrently. She was ordered to pay restitution in
    the amount of $20,545. Destin was likewise sentenced on October 6, 2006 to five
    years of probation on Counts One, Forty-Two, and Forty-Four, with the
    sentences to run concurrently. She was ordered to pay restitution in the amount
    of $33,418.
    1
    Slaughter, Bowers, and Nichols each pleaded guilty before trial to Count One of the
    indictment as part of separate plea agreements with the Government. Ligon remained a
    fugitive throughout the district court proceedings.
    2
    At the time she announced the verdicts, Judge Harmon dismissed Count Forty-Three
    as to Destin because it was “just essentially surplusage” in light of the conduct charged in
    Count Forty-Four.
    2
    No. 06-20847
    B.
    The instant convictions arise from a scheme to defraud the TWC through
    the disbursement of unemployment benefits to persons who were not qualified
    to receive them. The TWC is the Texas state agency in charge of administering
    the federal government’s unemployment insurance system, which was created
    by the Social Security Act of 1935 to provide monetary benefits through the
    states to persons who are unemployed due to no fault of their own. Under this
    program, state-levied employer taxes, occasionally supplemented by federal
    funds, finance the benefits paid to unemployed persons in the private sector. In
    addition, federal grants cover all costs incurred by the relevant state agency in
    the course of administering the unemployment benefits program so long as the
    state meets certain statutory and regulatory requirements.
    According to a TWC representative who testified at trial, in order to
    qualify for and receive unemployment benefits from the TWC, a person must
    satisfy three eligibility criteria. First, the person must have had sufficient
    earnings during the “base period,” which consists of the first four of the last five
    completed calendar quarters. Second, the person’s last employment must have
    terminated under appropriate circumstances, which include being laid off for a
    lack of work. If a person was fired or quit her job, then TWC conducts an
    investigation to determine the person’s eligibility under this criterion. Finally,
    the claimant must be “able to work,” “available for work,” and “looking for work.”
    Beginning in late 1996 and continuing through the entire period of time
    relevant to the Destin and McElroy convictions, persons seeking unemployment
    benefits were required to visit a TWC office in order to initiate their claims.
    During that visit, according to the TWC representative, prospective recipients
    “would be directed to a claims taker who would ask a series of questions . . . to
    identify the person and next to determine what type of claim for unemployment
    was needed. And then they would be questioned about who their last employer
    3
    No. 06-20847
    was and their reason for separation from that work.” The claims-takers then
    entered this information directly into the TWC computer system, which it
    referred to as an “online application.” The TWC did not require claimants to fill
    out a paper application, and there was generally no paper record of these visits.
    After the person submitted the online application for unemployment benefits,
    the TWC provided the claimant with information on how to use its Tele-Serve
    system, which was the mechanism by which the TWC disbursed benefits to
    eligible recipients. Under the Tele-Serve system, payments of unemployment
    benefits were not automatically generated as a result of the filing of an
    application, but rather claimants were required to access the Tele-Serve system
    by phone every two weeks to request payments. While using the Tele-Serve
    system, a claimant was required to answer a series of “yes or no” questions using
    a touch-tone phone and then, at the end of the call, to certify that those answers
    were true and correct.     The questions focused on the claimant’s ongoing
    eligibility for receipt of unemployment benefits, including whether the person
    was able to work, available to work, and looking for work during the relevant
    two-week period.
    The Government contends that Slaughter, with the help of Destin and
    McElroy, knowingly and illegally manipulated TWC’s system for administering
    unemployment benefits so as to provide ineligible persons with payments from
    the unemployment insurance program. Slaughter, who began his employ with
    TWC in 1982, was at all relevant times in this matter a claims-taker for TWC.
    In that capacity, Slaughter met with prospective unemployment insurance
    recipients at a TWC office in Houston and assisted them in filling out and
    processing their applications for unemployment benefits. He testified that,
    beginning in about 1996, he learned that he could obtain benefits for persons
    who were otherwise ineligible through a loophole in the system known as the
    “one-day rule.” In other words, if a person had been fired from or quit her last
    4
    No. 06-20847
    job, she could not receive unemployment benefits; however, if that person then
    went to work for any entity for one day, and did not quit or get fired, she would
    be eligible for unemployment benefits. To exploit this loophole, Slaughter would
    input a fictitious employer as the claimant’s employer for one day, thereby
    making the claimant eligible to receive benefits. Slaughter testified that he
    started this scheme because “there was [sic] a lot of people that were not
    receiving their benefits who I knew could get their benefits through a loophole
    . . . .” He further testified that applicants would complain to him that they were
    entitled to receive benefits from the program because they had paid money into
    the unemployment insurance system, even though their beliefs were inaccurate.
    Slaughter initially aided claimants in obtaining benefits through this loophole
    for free because he “wanted to help people get their benefits. Simple as that.”
    Eventually, however, Slaughter testified that he began to receive gifts in
    exchange for his manipulation of the system through the one-day loophole and
    the use of fictitious employers. Over the course of the approximately five-year
    period during which Slaughter perpetrated his fraudulent scheme to obtain
    unemployment benefits, he filed at least one hundred to two hundred false
    claims in the TWC’s system. To carry out his scheme, he used about fifty to one
    hundred fictitious employer names. Ultimately, Slaughter improperly obtained
    more than $500,000 in unemployment benefits from TWC. It was TWC’s usual
    business practice to disburse unemployment benefits checks through the United
    States mail.
    C.
    The defendants’ involvement in the alleged scheme began in the mid-
    1990s. At trial, witnesses testified about their respective participation as
    follows.
    1. Denetra McElroy
    5
    No. 06-20847
    According to Slaughter, he first met McElroy at a bingo hall at some time
    between 1994 and 1996. On December 29, 1996, he helped McElroy fill out a
    claim for unemployment benefits. In that claim, he listed Grace Morgan as
    McElroy’s most recent employer, even though Morgan was not McElroy’s
    employer but was simply a woman that he knew. Slaughter also helped McElroy
    fill out claims for unemployment benefits in 1999 and 2000. In those claims, he
    listed Simon Adams as McElroy’s most recent employer, even though Adams was
    not McElroy’s employer but was simply a man that he knew. McElroy received
    benefits from her 1996, 1999, and 2000 claims as a result of the fictitious
    employer information.
    Additionally, during this time period, Slaughter testified that he would
    meet McElroy at bingo halls to discuss unemployment claims that she wanted
    him to file on behalf of other persons. On these occasions, McElroy provided
    Slaughter with a piece of paper that listed the names, addresses, and personal
    information of the persons for whom she asked him to file claims, as well as $100
    in cash for each claim that he filed. According to Slaughter, McElroy expressed
    to him that she knew these claimants were otherwise ineligible to receive
    benefits. This occurred approximately three or four times over the course of
    three years.
    One of the claimants who McElroy purportedly arranged to improperly
    receive benefits with Slaughter’s help was Yvette Jones. She testified that she
    was a distant relative of McElroy and lived on the same street as McElroy, about
    six or seven houses away. In the spring of 1999, Jones was fired from her
    position with Prudential Insurance for excessive health-related absences.
    Shortly thereafter, Jones ran into McElroy in their neighborhood and explained
    to McElroy that she had been terminated from her job at Prudential. During
    that conversation, McElroy urged Jones to file for unemployment benefits. Jones
    then proceeded to file a claim with TWC, which was denied. Some time later,
    6
    No. 06-20847
    Jones informed McElroy that her claim for benefits had been denied. McElroy
    then told Jones that she knew someone at TWC who could help Jones, but that
    it would cost $200. Jones subsequently filled out a new application, which her
    father gave to McElroy along with $200. A few days later, McElroy told Jones
    that she would begin to receive unemployment benefits, which did in fact occur.
    Throughout this time, Jones testified that she never spoke with anyone at TWC
    about her benefits, including Slaughter; she only spoke with McElroy. In late
    December 1999, Jones ceased receiving benefits from TWC. At about that time,
    McElroy asked Jones if she was still receiving benefits, to which Jones
    responded that she was not. McElroy then told Jones that she would check with
    someone at TWC to see if she had any more money in her account. Jones
    eventually gave McElroy another benefits application to fill out. Jones began to
    receive unemployment benefits again in mid-2000. Jones stated that McElroy
    was the only person to whom Jones spoke about unemployment benefits after
    she was initially denied benefits by TWC. Even though he had never met or
    spoken with Jones, Slaughter testified that he was the one who had manipulated
    the system to allow Jones to improperly obtain benefits. Although he could not
    recall whether McElroy asked him to file a claim on behalf of Jones, he
    confirmed that he had filled out a claim for Jones so that she could receive
    unemployment benefits after previously being denied by TWC on the basis that
    she was unable to work. That claim listed Jones’s address as 4706 Knotty Oaks
    Trail, which was close to McElroy’s address at the time, 4606 Knotty Oaks Trail.
    Slaughter was certain that someone had asked him to help obtain benefits for
    Jones.
    With regard to another claim, Slaughter testified that he used McElroy’s
    name and address as a fictitious employer to fraudulently obtain benefits for Roy
    Gaines in 1999. Slaughter had never met or spoken with Gaines before he filed
    a claim on his behalf. Instead, he testified that “[McElroy] would have contacted
    7
    No. 06-20847
    me and gave [sic] me the information to file it.” After Slaughter inputted Gaines’
    data into the TWC system, TWC sent a letter to McElroy’s home address because
    she was listed as Gaines’ most recent employer. Slaughter told McElroy to
    throw away any TWC correspondence that was mailed to her address.
    After the Government rested, McElroy testified that, at some time in 1996
    after she was terminated from her job with a manufacturing company, she
    approached Slaughter at a bingo hall because she recognized him from a
    previous visit she had made to a TWC office. McElroy explained to Slaughter
    that she believed that she had been unfairly terminated from her job. At that
    point, according to McElroy, Slaughter informed her that there is an exception
    to the general rule that persons who are terminated from their most recent
    employer are ineligible to receive unemployment benefits. The exception is for
    situations in which a supervisor is aware a person has to leave a job shift for
    medical reasons. McElroy then proceeded to visit Slaughter at his TWC office
    where she filled out a claim with his help. She testified that during that visit he
    told her that she was eligible to receive benefits and that he did not inform her
    that he was using a fictitious employer as part of her claim. She testified that
    she did not know Grace Morgan. In 1999, she returned to the TWC office to
    submit another claim for benefits. She personally requested that Slaughter be
    assigned to help her with her new claim. She stated that she believed she was
    eligible to receive benefits at that time.
    Regarding her name being used as an employer on certain claims
    processed by Slaughter, she testified that she and Slaughter never discussed her
    name being used as someone else’s employer. When she received correspondence
    in the mail from TWC, she testified that she immediately called TWC to speak
    with Slaughter. He told her that it was a “mistake” and that she should not
    open it. McElroy denied receiving more than one letter from TWC, even though
    8
    No. 06-20847
    TWC records indicated that she had been sent five letters concerning claims in
    which she had been listed as the employer.
    McElroy admitted that she brought Jones an application to fill out, and
    that she returned it to Slaughter on Jones’ behalf, along with $200. She believed
    the $200 was payment for Slaughter helping out Jones appeal the initial denial
    of benefits “on his off time.” She denied keeping any of that money for herself.
    She described her conduct as “maybe inappropriate or unethical,” but not illegal.
    As to Gaines’ claim, McElroy testified that she provided him with
    Slaughter’s contact information at TWC. She referred Gaines to Slaughter for
    help with a “job search project,” not to make a claim for benefits. McElroy
    testified that she was unaware Gaines began receiving unemployment benefits
    from TWC until one day when she was in a car with Gaines and he asked her to
    cash a $277 benefits check for him. She endorsed the check, writing “Roy
    Gaines, Pay to the Order of Denetra McElroy,” and cashed it. She stated that
    she immediately gave the $277 to Gaines.
    Gaines corroborated McElroy’s testimony that she had provided him with
    Slaughter’s telephone number for help with his employment search. Gaines
    spoke with Slaughter on the telephone and provided him with certain personal
    information, but they did not discuss applying for employment benefits. He then
    went down to the TWC office to drop off some forms related to his job search, but
    did not meet with or speak with Slaughter. Gaines testified that he was
    surprised when, about a month later, he began to receive unemployment checks
    from TWC. He asked McElroy, who was his ex-girlfriend, to cash one of these
    unemployment checks because he had lost his wallet and did not have a bank
    account at the time. Gaines denied ever discussing with McElroy his receipt of
    unemployment benefits.
    Ultimately, TWC paid McElroy in the following amounts: a weekly benefit
    of $262 from January 21, 1997 through May 7, 1997; a weekly benefit of $203
    9
    No. 06-20847
    from April 19, 1999 through July 21, 1999; and a weekly benefit of $200 from
    April 17, 2000 through May 22, 2000. TWC paid Jones a weekly benefit of $227
    for a total of $2,489 in 2000. TWC paid Gaines a total of $4,730 in benefits in
    1999.
    2. Lajuana Destin
    Like McElroy, Slaughter testified that he first met Destin in the mid-
    1990s. He filed false claims on her behalf using fictitious employers in 1996 and
    1999.    As part of the 1999 claim, Slaughter used the fictitious employer
    “Destiny” to help Destin obtain benefits for which she was otherwise ineligible
    because she had resigned from her most recent employ. Slaughter believed that
    he added the “y” to the end of Destin’s name because “it made it look more like
    an employer.” Slaughter inputted a P.O. Box address for Destiny, the fictitious
    employer, that he was certain was provided to him by Destin. He stated that
    there was no question in his mind that Destin knew he was filing a false claim
    on her behalf because she gave him the P.O. Box address that he used as her last
    employer’s address. Slaughter told her to throw away any correspondence she
    received from TWC at that address.
    Slaughter also used the name “Destiny” and the same P.O. Box address as
    a fictitious employer to help Floyd McClain and Randall Jordan obtain
    unemployment benefits. McLain had worked for the Texas Department of
    Criminal Justice, but had quit voluntarily in March 1999.          He thereafter
    attempted to obtain benefits through TWC’s Tele-Serve system, but he was
    deemed ineligible to receive benefits because he had voluntarily quit his last job.
    On July 23, 1999, Slaughter, who had never met with or spoken to McClain and
    was not the original claims-taker on this file, went into the system and changed
    McClain’s ineligibility status so that he could begin receiving payments.
    Slaughter stated that “someone would have prompted me to file a claim so that
    he may receive his benefits.” Although he could not precisely recall who
    10
    No. 06-20847
    provided him with the necessary information to make the changes to McClain’s
    claim, he said it was “more than likely I got it from [Destin]” because he used
    Destiny as the employer name and the P.O. Box that was assigned to Destin as
    his employer address. TWC records also indicate that Slaughter input a claim
    for Jordan, who reported having worked only for one day for Destiny, his most
    recent employer. When Slaughter used Destin’s P.O. Box address to make a
    false claim, he would notify her in advance and instruct her to throw away any
    correspondence she received from TWC at that address. According to Slaughter,
    Destin paid him on two or three occasions to file false claims.
    After the Government rested, Destin testified that she first applied for
    unemployment benefits in 1996. She could not recall with whom she spoke when
    she visited the TWC office. In 1999, after she lost her job with a company called
    Imperial Holly, she again applied for unemployment benefits. She testified that
    when she went to apply at the TWC office, Slaughter was randomly assigned to
    take her claim. She then provided him with information that he input into the
    computer. She stated that she did not pay Slaughter $100 to help her apply for
    benefits. She also testified that she knew McClain, but did not know that he had
    filed for unemployment benefits.
    On cross examination, Destin testified that she never received any
    correspondence from TWC regarding her being listed as an employer on other
    claims. She first testified that she received her unemployment benefit checks
    at her post office box, but then acknowledged that TWC records show that her
    checks were sent to her home address. Destin confirmed that in June 1999 she
    was instructed by the Tele-Serve system to contact TWC because of her
    enrollment in school at the time, which was a potential disqualification to her
    receiving unemployment benefits. Destin had filed her claim with Slaughter in
    March 1999, but her status as a student, which she had been since January of
    that year, was not an impediment to her eligibility to receive benefits until
    11
    No. 06-20847
    several months later when she notified the Tele-Serve system that she was a
    student. She could not recall subsequently contacting either Slaughter or
    someone else at TWC to discuss her school situation, nor could she recall being
    notified that she was still eligible to receive benefits about a week later.
    Ultimately, TWC paid Destin a weekly benefit of $287 from March 27,
    1999 through September 18, 1999, for a total of $7,317. TWC paid McClain a
    weekly benefit of $273 from July 24, 1999 through December 4, 1999, for a total
    of $5,469. TWC paid Jordan a weekly benefit of about $222 from January 18,
    2000 through February 14, 2000, for a total of $889.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Destin and McElroy argue that the evidence was insufficient to support
    their respective convictions. Both defendants moved for a judgment of acquittal
    only at the close of the Government’s case-in-chief, even though both defendants
    presented evidence and the Government put forth rebuttal evidence.
    Nevertheless, we have stated that “[w]hen a jury trial has been waived and a
    bench trial held we must determine whether [the] findings are supported by any
    substantial evidence.” United States v. Rosas-Fuentes, 
    970 F.2d 1379
    , 1381 (5th
    Cir. 1992) (internal quotations omitted) (noting that defendant’s failure to renew
    his motion for acquittal at close of all evidence in bench trial does not waive
    sufficiency review on appeal); see also United States v. Ceballos-Torres, 
    218 F.3d 409
    , 411 n.3 (5th Cir. 2000) (same). Evidence is sufficient to sustain a conviction
    if any rational trier of fact could have found that the evidence established guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt. See Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979);
    United States v. Serna-Villarreal, 
    352 F.3d 225
    , 234 (5th Cir. 2003).           In
    conducting this inquiry, we examine the evidence as a whole and construe it in
    the light most favorable to the verdict. 
    Id. “It is
    not [our] function to make
    credibility choices or to pass upon the weight of the evidence.” Rosas-Fuentes,
    12
    No. 
    06-20847 970 F.2d at 1381
    (quoting United States v. Jennings, 
    726 F.2d 189
    , 190 (5th Cir.
    1984)).
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Conspiracy
    McElroy and Destin argue that the evidence is insufficient to support their
    convictions for conspiracy to commit mail fraud. To prove conspiracy to commit
    mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371, the Government must establish “(1) an
    agreement between appellants and others (2) to commit the crime of mail fraud,
    and (3) an overt act committed by one of the conspirators in furtherance of that
    agreement.”    United States v. Sneed, 
    63 F.3d 381
    , 385 (5th Cir. 1995).
    Additionally, the Government must show that the defendant acted with intent
    to defraud. United States v. Garza, 
    429 F.3d 165
    , 168-69 (5th Cir. 2005). To
    prove mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341, the Government must prove “(1) a
    scheme to defraud; (2) the use of the mails to execute the scheme; and (3) the
    specific intent to defraud.” United States v. Holmes, 
    406 F.3d 337
    , 353 (5th Cir.
    2005) (quoting United States v. Bieganowski, 
    313 F.3d 264
    , 275 (5th Cir. 2002)).
    “The Government need not rely on direct evidence of a conspiracy; each element
    may be proven by circumstantial evidence.” 
    Id. at 351
    (quoting United States v.
    Mulderig, 
    120 F.3d 534
    , 547 (5th Cir. 1997)). We find the evidence adduced at
    trial sufficient to support conspiracy convictions for both defendants.
    1. Denetra McElroy
    The evidence shows that, beginning in 1996, Slaughter and McElroy
    agreed to a scheme to defraud the TWC that had as its genesis Slaughter’s
    ability to manipulate a loophole in the unemployment benefits system using
    fictitious employers such that persons otherwise ineligible to receive benefits
    could do so.   According to Slaughter’s testimony, which the district court
    considered credible, he met McElroy at bingo halls at various times between
    1996 and 2001 to discuss unemployment claims that she wanted him to file on
    13
    No. 06-20847
    behalf of other persons. See Burton v. United States, 
    237 F.3d 490
    , 498 (5th Cir.
    2000) (“A guilty verdict may be sustained even if supported only by the
    uncorroborated testimony of a co-conspirator, and even if the witness is
    interested due to a plea bargain, unless the testimony is incredible on its face.”).
    She provided him with the name, address, and Social Security number of these
    persons, so that he could enter an unemployment claim. McElroy also paid
    Slaughter $100 per claim that she wanted him to file. Slaughter testified that
    McElroy knew when she provided this information to him that these persons
    were otherwise ineligible to receive benefits. As part of the scheme, McElroy
    arranged for Yvette Jones to receive benefits through Slaughter’s assistance
    even though Jones never spoke with Slaughter or anyone else at TWC about her
    application. Jones testified that McElroy asked for and received $200 from
    Jones as part of this transaction.
    Viewed in a light most favorable to the Government, the evidence
    established that Slaughter and McElroy agreed to participate in a scheme that
    had as its objective the fraudulent disbursement of TWC funds. McElroy
    furthered the conspiracy by providing Slaughter with personal information, as
    well as cash, from persons who sought to obtain, and eventually did obtain,
    employment benefit checks that were sent through the mail.
    2. Lajuana Destin
    The evidence likewise shows that Destin conspired with Slaughter to
    obtain unemployment benefits for herself and others through the loophole in the
    TWC system that Slaughter was able to exploit. Slaughter testified that there
    was no doubt in his mind that Destin knew that he filed a fraudulent claim on
    her behalf in 1999 because she provided him with the post office box address
    that he used as her last employer’s address. TWC records show that Destin
    received her unemployment benefit checks at a different address. Destin had
    difficulty explaining how or why Slaughter would have been able to input both
    14
    No. 06-20847
    addresses in relation to her 1999 claim if she had not provided him with both
    addresses. Further, when TWC informed Destin later in 1999 that she may be
    ineligible to receive further benefits because of her student status, the evidence
    showed that Slaughter went into the TWC system and made a change to her file
    so that she could continue to receive unemployment benefits. Although Destin
    could not recall who she spoke with at TWC at that time concerning her
    potential ineligibility, she acknowledged that she had been instructed to contact
    TWC.     Finally, Slaughter testified that he helped Floyd McClain, an
    acquaintance of Destin’s, obtain unemployment benefits even though he had
    never met with or spoken with McClain and was not the original claims-taker
    on McClain’s file. Slaughter testified that it was more than likely that Destin
    contacted him regarding McClain’s claim because he used Destiny as the
    fictitious employer name and Destin’s post office box as the employer address so
    that McClain could begin to receive benefits. McClain was otherwise ineligible
    to receive benefits.
    Thus, viewed in a light most favorable to the Government, the evidence
    establishes that Slaughter and Destin agreed to pursue their scheme to obtain
    fraudulent benefits and that both Destin and Slaughter committed overt acts in
    furtherance of the conspiracy. The result of these acts was the disbursement of
    TWC unemployment benefits through the mail to persons who were ineligible
    to receive these benefits.
    B. Mail Fraud
    As discussed above, to prove mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341, the
    Government must prove (1) a scheme to defraud; (2) the use of the mails to
    execute the scheme; and (3) the specific intent to defraud. “The government
    need not prove that the accused used the mails himself or actually intended that
    the mail be used.” United States v. McClelland, 
    868 F.2d 704
    , 707 (5th Cir.
    1989). Rather, “[t]he mail fraud statute requires only that the mailing caused
    15
    No. 06-20847
    by the defendant’s actions be ‘incident to an essential part of the scheme.’”
    United States v. Ingles, 
    445 F.3d 830
    , 835 (5th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States
    v. Green, 
    494 F.2d 820
    , 824 (5th Cir. 1974)). “To cause a mailing, a defendant
    must 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, even though
    the use of the mails was not actually intended.” United States v. Duncan, 
    919 F.2d 981
    , 991 (5th Cir. 1990) (internal quotations omitted).
    1. Denetra McElroy
    The evidence is sufficient to support McElroy’s mail fraud convictions.
    Counts Two through Seven charge McElroy and Slaughter with executing a
    scheme to defraud the TWC that resulted in six unemployment benefits checks
    being sent through the mail to Yvette Jones. As detailed above, McElroy
    encouraged Jones to file for unemployment benefits in the spring of 1999. Jones
    testified that, after Jones’ application was initially denied, McElroy informed her
    that she knew someone at TWC who could help Jones. McElroy provided Jones
    with a new application and told Jones that it would cost $200, which Jones’
    father gave to McElroy. Soon thereafter, Jones began receiving unemployment
    benefits checks even though she had not personally met with or spoken with
    anyone at TWC after her initial claim had been denied. In late 1999, Jones
    ceased receiving benefits from TWC. Jones testified that, when McElroy learned
    of this development, she told Jones that she would check with someone at TWC
    to see if Jones had any more money in her benefits account. McElroy then
    provided Jones with a new application to fill out. Jones once again began
    receiving unemployment benefits checks in mid-2000, even though she had not
    personally communicated with anyone at TWC. Slaughter confirmed that
    someone had asked him to help obtain benefits for Jones and that he had never
    met or spoken with Jones. Slaughter also testified that he was the person who
    manipulated the system to allow Jones to improperly obtain benefits. Finally,
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    No. 06-20847
    evidence presented at trial showed that Jones received six checks from TWC
    during June, July, and August 2000, all of which came through the United
    States mails.
    Thus, there is sufficient evidence to show that McElroy knowingly engaged
    in a scheme to defraud TWC by exploiting a loophole in TWC’s benefits system
    and thereby causing unemployment benefits checks to be mailed to a person who
    was otherwise ineligible to receive them.
    2. Lajuana Destin
    There is also sufficient evidence to sustain Destin’s mail fraud convictions.
    on Counts Forty-Two and Forty-Four.          The evidence showed that Destin
    knowingly participated in a scheme to defraud the TWC for the purpose of
    obtaining unemployment benefits for herself and others who were otherwise
    ineligible. Destin provided false information, including fictitious employer
    addresses, so that Slaughter could exploit a loophole in TWC’s system.
    According to Slaughter, Destin paid him on two or three occasions to file false
    claims.     This scheme resulted in claimants fraudulently obtaining
    unemployment benefits checks through the United States mail. Specific to
    Counts Forty-Two and Forty-Four, the evidence shows that Slaughter inputted
    Randall Jordan’s claim for unemployment benefits. As part of that claim, Jordan
    reported having worked most recently for only one day for the fictitious employer
    Destiny, whose address was listed as Destin’s post office box. Jordan ultimately
    received benefits checks through the mails on January 29, 2000 and February
    12, 2000.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM Denetra McElroy’s and Lajuana
    Destin’s convictions.
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