United States v. Tamela Lee ( 2019 )


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  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 19a0045p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                               ┐
    Plaintiff-Appellee,   │
    │
    >      No. 17-3868
    v.                                                │
    │
    │
    TAMELA M. LEE,                                          │
    Defendant-Appellant.     │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
    No. 1:15-cr-00445-1—Christopher A. Boyko, District Judge.
    Argued: October 18, 2018
    Decided and Filed: March 18, 2019
    Before: KEITH, CLAY, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Jerome A. Madden, MADDEN LAW PLLC, Washington, D.C., for Appellant.
    Elliot D. Morrison, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Jerome A. Madden, Virginia W. Hoptman, MADDEN LAW PLLC, Washington,
    D.C., for Appellant. Elliot D. Morrison, UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE,
    Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellee.
    CLAY, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which KEITH and NALBANDIAN, JJ.,
    joined. NALBANDIAN, J. (pp. 27–29), delivered a separate concurring opinion.
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                                Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    CLAY, Circuit Judge. Defendant Tamela M. Lee (“Defendant” or “Lee”) appeals from
    the district court judgment convicting her on six counts after a plea of not guilty and sentencing
    her to a total term of sixty months’ imprisonment.        Counts One through Four concerned
    conspiracy to commit honest services mail and wire fraud, honest services mail fraud, Hobbs Act
    conspiracy, and Hobbs Act extortion, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1346, 1349, and
    1951. Counts Five and Six concerned obstruction of justice and false statements to law
    enforcement, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2) and 18 U.S.C. § 1001.             On appeal,
    Defendant challenges the sufficiency of her indictment on Counts One through Four in light of
    the Supreme Court’s decision in McDonnell v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2355
    (2016), as well as
    the sufficiency of the evidence for all of her convictions. For the reasons set forth below, we
    AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
    BACKGROUND
    Factual History
    In 2013, Defendant Tamela Lee was sworn in as a member of the Summit County
    Council to represent District 5 in Akron, Ohio. She signed an oath of office stating that she
    would “faithfully, honestly, and impartially discharge and perform all the duties incumbent on” a
    member of the Council. (Supplemental Appendix at 90.) This case concerns Defendant’s
    relationship with Omar Abdelqader (“Abdelqader”), who owned a business in District 5 but did
    not reside there. The FBI began investigating the relationship between Defendant in her position
    as Summit County Councilperson and Abdelqader in October 2013 following complaints that
    Abdelqader “was insisting on monthly cash payments from other local businesses” that he would
    give to Defendant in exchange for political favors. (R. 126, Transcript, PageID # 849–50.)
    Defendant knew Abdelqader through her husband, and Abdelqader helped support Defendant
    when her husband unexpectedly left the country for long stretches of time.           Defendant’s
    husband’s departure left her in serious financial difficulties, and Abdelqader supported her by
    No. 17-3868                                United States v. Lee                                      Page 3
    allowing her to take items from his convenience store, paying for services for her, and giving her
    money. The FBI obtained wiretaps on both Defendant’s and Abdelqader’s cellular phones,
    which allowed the FBI to monitor many conversations and text messages between Defendant and
    Abdelqader.1
    A. Defendant’s Intervention in Assault Case
    On June 1, 2014, Abdelqader’s nephews, Sharif Hamed (“Hamed”) and Samir
    Abdelqader (“Samir”), were arrested for felonious assault after an altercation with an
    unidentified man in Akron. Abdelqader turned to Defendant for help with the matter on June 8,
    2014. He first asked her to attend a hearing for Samir, and when she told him she could not
    attend, she offered to call or email the judge instead. In the same conversation, Defendant and
    Abdelqader discussed Defendant’s financial problems, and Abdelqader promised her that they
    would “work it out.” (R. 126, Transcript, PageID # 911.) On June 9, 2014, Defendant placed
    calls to the Summit County Juvenile Court bailiff and the judicial assistant for the Summit
    County Juvenile Court judge. In a conversation with his brother (Samir’s father) later that day,
    Abdelqader told his brother that he had discussed the case with Defendant, stating that he had
    given Defendant two hundred dollars and that he had promised to give her an additional three
    hundred dollars if she “finish[ed] up this matter for [Abdelqader].” (Id. at PageID # 924–26.)
    Defendant deposited two hundred dollars in her bank account on June 10, 2014.
    Two days later, on June 12, 2014, Abdelqader texted Defendant. He reminded her of his
    nephew’s name and stated “Please don’t forget to call. We have court today at 2.” (Id. at
    PageID # 938.) That afternoon, Defendant placed several calls to the Akron Municipal Court
    judge who was handling the case and his staff. Those calls lasted 51 seconds and 5 minutes and
    44 seconds, respectively.2 The next day, Defendant and Abdelqader discussed the case again.
    Abdelqader told Defendant “I really need your help in these two cases . . . with my two
    nephews.”      (Id. at PageID # 946.)         When Abdelqader expressed outrage at the charges,
    1The  FBI obtained permission to wiretap Abdelqader’s phone on June 4, 2014, and it obtained permission
    to wiretap Defendant’s phone on June 21, 2014.
    2The FBI had not yet begun wiretapping Defendant’s phone when these conversations occurred, so the
    content of these conversations is unknown.
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                              Page 4
    Defendant tried to describe to him why his nephews were culpable “from a legal position,”
    explaining “you have to understand, that by the law of the State of Ohio and the United States of
    American [sic], when you do that—it’s wrong!” (Id. at PageID # 947–49.) Defendant suggested
    that Abdelqader’s nephew could try to press charges against the other man in the altercation.
    Abdelqader told Defendant “the only thing I need from you is, is try to, try to explain to these
    people what exactly happened.” (Id. at PageID # 949.) The conversation shifted to Defendant’s
    money problems, and Abdelqader told Defendant to come by his convenience store so he could
    give her money. Finally, Defendant promised Abdelqader right before they hung up that she
    would speak with her friend at the prosecutor’s office.
    On June 14, 2014, Defendant spoke with Abdelqader regarding her calls to the judge and
    stated that she was “broke.” (Id. at PageID # 957.) Abdelqader told Defendant to send her
    daughter to pick up fifty dollars from his store.         They also discussed his nephews’ case:
    Defendant told Abdelqader that she had missed calls from the judge and the bailiff, and he asked
    her to “try to get a hold of them and let them know what’s going on.” (Id. at PageID # 960.)
    Shortly before Hamed’s hearing on June 17, 2014, Defendant went to the court and spoke
    with Judge Larson, the judge in the case. Defendant said that she was there as a character
    witness, incorrectly claiming that Samir was her relative. Defendant then went to discuss the
    issue with the prosecutor in the case, Marisa Pappas (“Pappas”). Defendant told Pappas that
    Hamed was her nephew, she wanted to be a character witness for him, and she was on the
    County Council.
    On July 9, 2014, Defendant texted Gertrude Wilms (“Wilms”), the chief city prosecutor
    for the city of Akron, whom she knew through their mutual involvement in Akron politics.
    Wilms called Defendant back on July 10, 2014, and Defendant began talking about Abdelqader’s
    nephews’ case. Wilms told Defendant “I don’t know what we’re talking about,” and Defendant
    responded:
    Okay, uh, the boy on Arlington the 17 year old who hit the guy with the car,
    anyway. Like my favorite, favorite, favorite people. I know Samir, I don’t know
    the other boy. Samir works right here right around the corner from me.
    But anyway, I had asked them, why did anybody, you know the other guy was
    28 and they were 17. I said, “Why wasn’t the 28-year-old charged?” And
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                               Page 5
    anyway they said they had come down, the parents came down to um press
    charges against the 28-year-old. And I just told them, I said, “Well look I’ll call
    Gert, and I’ll just tell her what I know.” And I’m not trying to influence you, you
    can’t say I’m trying to influence you. I’m trying to make you think. That’s all
    I’m trying to do; just trying to make you think.
    (R. 132, Transcript, PageID # 1378.) The conversation continued:
    LEE: But, the history with what happened with them and that 28 year old guy
    who started the fight. I’ve always known that story. You know, from the boy
    who works at Lorenzo’s, you know I know everybody that works at everybody’s
    store. And that he’s a problem. And that he’s the one who went into the, he saw
    their car, and went into the barbershop and started the fight. So this whole thing
    started because of this 28 year old bully, going in and harassing the 17 and 18
    year old boys. And Samir is the nicest, sweetest.
    WILMS: Well what happened that Samir got charged?
    LEE: Well because the 17 year old, when the police started coming, everyone
    started running, and the 17 year old was in the car and he was trying to get around
    the curb to run away, well he actually hit the 28 year old. (UI).
    WILMS: With the car?
    LEE: Yeah.
    WILMS: Okay.
    LEE: So, all of their, their case is the 17 year old and the 18 year old, you know,
    both of their cases, you know, have gone forward because you know when it
    happened, you know I told them I said, “Look you hit somebody with a car.”
    WILMS: Yeah.
    LEE: There, there’s no getting around that, I mean that’s just stupid. But Samir
    he says he “Wasn’t trying to hit him,” he “Was trying to get away.”
    WILMS: Okay. Is his case still pending?
    LEE: Uh huh.
    WILMS: Who is the attorney.
    LEE: I don’t know who they went and got as their attorney?
    WILMS: Okay. So he told his attorney all this and everything. Is this the case
    that's pending in Larsen’s Court?
    LEE: Yeah.
    WILMS: Okay.
    LEE: But they came, the parents came down to press charges against the 28 year
    old.
    WILMS: Whose parents?
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                                Page 6
    LEE: Both of them, Samir and his cousin, they both came down about a week
    ago and they were told that it’s up to the Prosecutor, whether or not, you know to
    press charges against the 28 year old.
    WILMS: Alright, I’m going to have to look at this stuff and call you back
    because none of this story is making sense.
    LEE: Is what?
    WILMS: I’ll pull some police reports and I’ll call you back.
    LEE: Okay honey and then maybe I’ll make more sense when you know what
    I’m talking about.
    WILMS: Yeah, I don’t know exactly what happened so and we usually don’t sign
    charges when the police have made a decision on scene, who they think is the
    primary aggressor, we don’t second guess that, so it's not likely to get charges but
    I'll look into it.
    LEE: Okay. Because there were actually two altercations. Because he came into
    the barbershop and started the fight and then the barbershop owner told them, you
    know, to get off their property or whatever. (OV) What the witnesses saw, what
    the witnesses saw was the second, um, altercation—
    WILMS: Uh huh.
    LEE: —in the street. The 28 year old started it and then if you look at like the
    text message history and all the other stuff, well the 28 year old has been
    harassing these boys for months.
    WILMS: Okay, let me take a look at it Tamela and I’ll call you back.
    LEE: Oh, okay thanks Gert.
    WILMS: Uh huh. Hmm. Bye.
    LEE: Bye bye.
    (Id. at PageID # 1379–81.) There was no prohibition on members of the public calling Wilms to
    discuss a case. After the call, Wilms checked the case file and discussed it with the prosecutor
    assigned to the case, ultimately concluding that no charges should be filed against the
    unidentified man. Wilms called Defendant back and left her a voicemail to that effect. Wilms
    testified that she believed if she did not call Defendant back, Defendant might “go over [Wilms’]
    head and contact [her] supervisor,” the law director. (Id. at PageID # 1388.)
    B. Defendant’s Letter to the IRS
    Abdelqader’s friend Malek Albanna (“Albanna”) had a son, George Albanna (“George”),
    who was under investigation by the IRS. Unbeknownst to Abdelqader and Defendant, Albanna
    was assisting the FBI in its investigation of Abdelqader and Defendant. Albanna recorded a
    No. 17-3868                            United States v. Lee                                  Page 7
    conversation between himself and Abdelqader in May of 2014. In that conversation, Albanna
    and Abdelqader discussed George’s case. Albanna told Abdelqader that a church had written a
    character letter supporting George. He then asked Abdelqader, “Didn’t you once tell me . . . that
    you’d arrange for me a document, or a letter from her . . . that girl you got . . . she’d be testifying
    that George is upstanding?” (R. 126, Transcript, PageID # 875.) Abdelqader replied, “I can . . .
    Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! I can get her . . . to put it in a document . . . . I’ll get her to make you a
    document . . . with a governmental stamp, also.” (Id.) When Albanna stated “No matter what it
    costs—I’ll pay!”, Abdelqader responded “whatever it does cost, I’ll pay—because George is my
    son, man!” (Id. at PageID # 876–77.) Abdelqader reiterated later in the conversation, “I’ll get
    her to prepare a document for you, and it would [be] stamped with the stamp of the government.”
    (Id. at PageID # 877.)
    On June 20, 2014, Albanna and Abdelqader discussed George’s case again. Albanna
    asked, “What happened with the woman in regards to George?”                 (Id. at PageID # 972.)
    Abdelqader responded, “I swear . . . I can go anytime to get the paper from the woman. She told
    me: ‘Whenever you ready . . . whenever you need it . . . Anytime you need it—the paper is
    available.’” (Id. at PageID # 972–73.) Abdelqader continued, “Do you understand me? She
    came . . . to the court with my nephew . . . I mean she’d do whatever . . . you know what I mean?
    . . . I just tell her whatever I want to do. But she said ‘Whenever you need it’ . . . She tells me,
    ‘I will bring it to you on the same day.’” (Id. at PageID # 973.) When Abdelqader mentioned
    the fact that Defendant had come to his nephews’ trial, Abdelqader stated that “her presence did
    change the entire situation, my man.” (Id. at PageID # 976.)
    On July 26, 2014, Abdelqader and Defendant discussed the letter. Portions of that
    conversation are included:
    LEE: I didn’t get that letter done, or come up there, so,
    ABDELQADER: Mmm.
    LEE: And he didn’t send me the letter, he just sent me a d--n blank letterhead, so,
    ABDELQADER: Mmm.
    LEE: I have to re-type it.
    ABDELQADER: Uh huh.
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                                  Page 8
    LEE: And, it’s been so long, Omar, I don’t even remember. You have to tell me
    again, what it is that you need?
    ABDELQADER: Uh, just saying that you know this guy and you know his
    family, and he’s a good, you know, good person, and, you know, your knowledge
    of them is, you know, they’re good people, and, you know, something like that.
    Something just to show that you,
    LEE: Okay.
    ABDELQADER: His behaviors and stuff like that, you know?
    ...
    LEE: Okay, now who does this need to go to?
    ABDELQADER: Huh? What is it? Who does it need to go to?
    LEE: Yeah.
    ABDELQADER: Uh, to those, to those - he has an issue with the IRS, so, to the
    people at, you know, from the IRS, I guess.
    ...
    LEE: What’s his name?
    ABDELQADER: George Albanna.
    LEE: George?
    ABDELQADER: Albanna. Let me, let me, let me send you his name, who it’s
    supposed to go to.
    ...
    ABDELQADER: And this is going to a supervisor, Yory, um, I’m gonna have to,
    I’m gonna have to send you a text with that. I can’t even -
    LEE: Alright.
    ABDELQADER: I’ll send you that’s who it’s going to. But, just something
    about him and you know, you know the Albanna family and they are, you know
    good people, something like that. Alright, let me send you a text for where it’s
    going to, but just bring me a copy to the store and if you want me, I’ll send it or, if
    you guys are gonna send it, either way, but I would like to have a copy of it and
    give it to the parents, alright? Hello?
    LEE: I, I’m typing.
    ABDELQADER: Okay. I have to write this down on a piece of paper and send it.
    I’m gonna send you a text in a few. Where’s this going to. You need, you need
    where this is going to, or - but it has, it has the name of the guy, too.
    LEE: Yeah.
    ABDELQADER: Supervisor Yory.
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                                Page 9
    (R. 127, Transcript, PageID # 1089–92.) Later that afternoon, Defendant and Abdelqader spoke
    on the phone again. Defendant asked Abdelqader to come by her house and pick up the letter.
    Defendant told Abdelqader that she was hungry and out of cigarettes, and Abdelqader offered to
    bring her cigarettes and food. Abdelqader later told Albanna, “whatever I say she will do,”
    referring to Defendant. (Id. at PageID # 1109.) On July 30, 2014, Abdelqader asked Defendant
    to mail the letter. In the same conversation, Abdelqader told Defendant he had $500 to give her,
    including $200 from Albanna. On July 31, 2014, Abdelqader told Albanna, “I swear she is
    getting from me 200 to 300 a week. Cigarettes, chips, candy, and this and that; don’t charge her.”
    (Id. at PageID # 1141–42.)
    In the letter, which Defendant wrote on Summit County Council letterhead, Defendant
    stated that she had “known George and his family for 10 years.” (Defendant Br. at 27.) She
    claimed that she had “had numerous opportunities to work with and engage the family in the
    community on various issues related to the conduction of business.” (Id.) Defendant also
    claimed that George’s “family is often my eyes and ears to ensure that our residents and
    consumers are protected and treated fairly and I value their contribution.” (Id.) In concluding,
    Defendant stated “I am not privy to the facts in this case but I want to state with surety that
    whatever has prompted this is a sort of aberration and not business as usual for this family.
    George is young and possibly naïve but I am certain that his father and family will be diligent in
    future oversight.” (Id.) She closed the letter by stating, “I ask that you consider this letter and
    my confidence in the credibility of the family as you resolve the case.” (Id.)
    C. FBI Investigation
    Defendant began to suspect that Albanna was recording her on August 28, 2014. On
    August 29, 2014, FBI officers searching Defendant’s trash discovered that she had thrown away
    the letter she wrote to the IRS on behalf of Albanna’s son George. FBI agents then interviewed
    Defendant at her home on September 9, 2014. At trial, one of the FBI agents testified that
    Defendant answered several of his questions untruthfully during that interview. Defendant told
    the FBI agent, inter alia, that she “disclosed on her campaign finance report all contributions that
    were made to her;” that Abdelqader distributed invitations to Defendant’s fundraisers when he
    collected donations for her; that she did not call Judge Larson; and that she had never spoken
    No. 17-3868                         United States v. Lee                             Page 10
    with the prosecution regarding Abdelqader’s nephews’ case. (R. 132, Transcript, PageID #
    1430–32.) The government presented evidence at the trial indicating that these statements were
    all untrue. Defendant also told the FBI agent that “anything that she received from Omar
    Abdelqader she would pay back after she got her paycheck and she’d pay him back on Fridays.
    And she also said if [the FBI] were to look at her Huntington Bank accounts [the FBI] would be
    able to confirm that.” (Id. at PageID # 1434.) But when the FBI reviewed her bank records, they
    only showed two transactions where Defendant transferred a total of $46 from her bank accounts
    to Abdelqader’s.
    After the agents left, Defendant and Abdelqader spoke on the phone. Defendant and
    Abdelqader had the following conversation:
    LEE: The FBI just left my house.
    ABDELQADER: Uh huh. About what?
    LEE: Every letter I’ve ever done for you and your family.
    ABDELQADER: Yeah. They are, they was at my house too.
    LEE: You talk to them?
    ABDELQADER: Yeah. I talk to them. They ask me, you know, they ask me I
    said, you know, I know your husband. Me and your husband are good friends.
    And uh, they ask me if uh, there was any money was tra- you know, exchanged or
    I never give you s--t anyway. I never give you any do- any money anyway. So
    what’s the problem.
    LEE: I told them, I said, if I need money and he knows I have a problem and
    he’ll loan me money. But it’s a loan. I have to pay that money back.
    ABDELQADER: Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, this, this, this -Exactly. There was
    nothing given for free, never anything (background: And you never did s--t for
    us).
    ...
    ABDELQADER: Mrs. Tammy. We didn’t do anything wrong.
    LEE: No.
    ABDELQADER: It was never, it was anything that was wrong that we have
    done. I never give you any money for free. I never, you never came in, you know
    none of that s--t so what do we have to worry for. We didn’t do nothing wrong.
    What did we do wrong?
    LEE: No, I told them I said
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                              Page 11
    ABDELQADER: Every time you come to the store and got stuff you paid for it.
    So, what’s the problem. Because you a politician you cannot come to the store
    and lie.
    LEE: I told them I said my relationship with him is because of a friend not
    because of my position on county council.
    ABDELQADER: Yeah, this is exactly, this is exactly what it is Mrs. Tammy we
    didn’t do nothing wrong. I mean they came in and tried.
    (R. 127, Transcript, PageID #1179–80.)
    Procedural History
    On December 8, 2015, the government filed an indictment against Defendant. Counts
    One through Four of the indictment charged Defendant with conspiracy to commit honest
    services mail and wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1346, and 1349; honest
    services mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1346; Hobbs Act conspiracy, in
    violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951; and Hobbs Act extortion, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951.
    Counts Five and Six of the indictment charged Defendant with obstruction of justice, in violation
    of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2); and making a false statement to law enforcement officers, in violation
    of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2).
    Defendant moved to dismiss Counts One through Four of the indictment after the
    Supreme Court decided 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2355
    . Defendant argued that, post-McDonnell,
    the indictment did not allege sufficient facts to establish a violation of law on Counts One
    through Four. The district court denied the motion.
    Lee pled not guilty and proceeded to trial in February of 2017. At the close of trial,
    Defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal under Fed. R. Crim. P. 29. Defendant argued that
    the government had failed to prove evidence of a conspiracy, a quid pro quo relationship
    between Defendant and Abdelqader, or obstruction of justice or false statements. Defendant also
    argued that the government had not provided evidence sufficient to satisfy the Supreme Court’s
    standard for official acts as described in McDonnell, stating, “[t]he kinds of contacts that she’s
    making with these people are the sorts of routine constituent services that the Supreme Court has
    said are not a violation of the statutes under which she’s indicted.” (R. 132, Transcript, PageID
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                               Page 12
    #1469.) The district court denied the motion. The jury found Defendant guilty on all counts.
    This appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Sufficiency of the Indictment
    Standard of Review
    This court reviews the sufficiency of an indictment de novo. United States v. Davis,
    
    306 F.3d 398
    , 411 (6th Cir. 2002).
    Analysis
    Defendant argues that Counts One through Four of her indictment should be vacated
    because they do not adequately lay out the elements of her alleged crimes. The Supreme Court
    described the standard for testing the sufficiency of an indictment in Hamling v. United States,
    
    418 U.S. 87
    , 117–18 (1974):
    [A]n indictment is sufficient if it, first, contains the elements of the offense
    charged and fairly informs a defendant of the charge against which he must
    defend, and, second, enables him to plead an acquittal or conviction in bar of
    future prosecutions for the same offense. It is generally sufficient that an
    indictment set forth the offense in the words of the statute itself, as long as those
    words of themselves fully, directly, and expressly, without any uncertainty or
    ambiguity, set forth all the elements necessary to constitute the offence intended
    to be punished. Undoubtedly the language of the statute may be used in the
    general description of an offence, but it must be accompanied with such a
    statement of the facts and circumstances as will inform the accused of the specific
    offence, coming under the general description, with which he is charged.
    
    Id. (internal quotations
    and citations omitted); accord United States v. McAuliffe, 
    490 F.3d 526
    ,
    531 (6th Cir. 2007). Further, “[t]he indictment must be read as a whole, accepting the factual
    allegations as true, and construing those allegations in a practical sense with all the necessary
    implications. An indictment is to be construed liberally in favor of its sufficiency.” 
    McAuliffe, 490 F.3d at 531
    .
    An indictment “must be a plain, concise, and definite written statement of the essential
    facts constituting the offense charged.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 7(c)(1). Counts One through Four of
    No. 17-3868                            United States v. Lee                              Page 13
    the indictment against Defendant charged her with committing honest services fraud and Hobbs
    Act extortion, under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1346, and 1951. Those charges require that the
    official acted with intent to deprive the public of honest services and that the official acted
    “under color of official right.” 
    Id. A conviction
    under these statutes requires either an “official
    act” in furtherance of the corrupt relationship or an agreement to perform an official act.
    
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2367
    . An official act is “any decision or action on any question,
    matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy, which may at any time be pending, or which may
    by law be brought before any public official, in such official’s official capacity, or in such
    official’s place of trust or profit.” 
    Id. (quoting 18
    U.S.C. § 201(a)(3)).
    A. “Official Act” as Defined in McDonnell
    Defendant argues that the indictment against her should have been dismissed because it
    failed to adequately set forth official acts that she committed as part of the allegedly corrupt
    arrangement, as explicated by the Supreme Court in McDonnell. In McDonnell, the Court
    grappled with the question of what constitutes an “official act” for purposes of honest services
    fraud and Hobbs Act extortion. 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2367
    –75. In that case, the Governor of
    Virginia had received over $175,000 in gifts and loans from a Virginia businessman, Jonnie
    Williams (“Williams”), who hoped the Governor would facilitate state-sponsored scientific
    studies of a nutritional supplement Williams planned to sell. 
    Id. at 2364.
    The allegedly corrupt
    acts the Governor took in return for the gifts included introducing Williams to Virginia’s
    Secretary of Health and Human Resources (the “Secretary”), hosting Williams at a lunch event
    with Virginia research scientists and discussing the nutritional supplement with them, passing
    from Williams to the Secretary a letter containing a proposed research protocol for studies on the
    nutrition supplement, and promoting the supplement at a meeting between the Governor and
    state officials concerning Virginia’s health plan for state employees. 
    Id. at 2362–64.
    The Supreme Court determined that the Fourth Circuit had applied an incorrect standard
    to determine whether the Governor’s actions constituted “official acts.” 
    Id. at 2375.
    The Fourth
    Circuit had upheld the district court’s jury instruction that “official act” included “‘acts that a
    public official customarily performs,’ including acts ‘in furtherance of longer-term goals’ or ‘in a
    series of steps to exercise influence or achieve an end.’” 
    Id. at 2366
    (quoting United States v.
    No. 17-3868                             United States v. Lee                                 Page 14
    McDonnell, 
    792 F.3d 478
    , 505–06 (4th Cir. 2015)). Instead, the Supreme Court in McDonnell
    identified a two-part test for an official act: “[f]irst, the Government must identify a question,
    matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy that may at any time be pending or may by law be
    brought before a public official. Second, the Government must prove that the public official
    made a decision or took an action on that question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding, or
    controversy, or agreed to do so.” 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2368
    (internal quotation omitted).
    The Court determined that “[s]etting up a meeting, talking to another official, or organizing an
    event (or agreeing to do so)—without more—does not fit [the] definition of official act.” 
    Id. at 2372
    (internal quotation omitted). In contrast, “a decision or action to initiate a research study—
    or a decision or action on a qualifying step, such as narrowing down the list of potential research
    topics—would qualify as an ‘official act.’” 
    Id. at 2370.
    Importantly, a public official did not actually have to perform an official act herself. An
    official could be culpable under the standard described in McDonnell if the official “use[d] his
    official position to exert pressure on another official to perform an “official act,” or if the official
    “use[d] his official position to provide advice to another official, knowing or intending that such
    advice [] form the basis for an ‘official act’ by another official.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original). And
    the official could be convicted without actually taking those actions—without actually exerting
    pressure or providing advice to another official. 
    Id. If a
    jury found the evidence to be sufficient
    to demonstrate that the defendant agreed to take an official act in exchange for the gifts, such a
    determination would be sufficient to support a guilty verdict. 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court explained:
    Under this Court’s precedents, a public official is not required to actually make a
    decision or take an action on a “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
    controversy”; it is enough that the official agree to do so. The agreement need not
    be explicit, and the public official need not specify the means that he will use to
    perform his end of the bargain. Nor must the public official in fact intend to
    perform the “official act,” so long as he agrees to do so. A jury could, for
    example, conclude that an agreement was reached if the evidence shows that the
    public official received a thing of value knowing that it was given with the
    expectation that the official would perform an “official act” in return. It is up to
    the jury, under the facts of the case, to determine whether the public official
    agreed to perform an “official act” at the time of the alleged quid pro quo. The
    jury may consider a broad range of pertinent evidence, including the nature of the
    transaction, to answer that question. . . .
    No. 17-3868                             United States v. Lee                                 Page 15
    Of course, this is not to say that setting up a meeting, hosting an event, or making
    a phone call is always an innocent act, or is irrelevant, in cases like this one. If an
    official sets up a meeting, hosts an event, or makes a phone call on a question or
    matter that is or could be pending before another official, that could serve as
    evidence of an agreement to take an official act. A jury could conclude, for
    example, that the official was attempting to pressure or advise another official on
    a pending matter. And if the official agreed to exert that pressure or give that
    advice in exchange for a thing of value, that would be illegal . . . .
    In sum, an “official act” is a decision or action on a “question, matter, cause, suit,
    proceeding or controversy.” The “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
    controversy” must involve a formal exercise of governmental power that is
    similar in nature to a lawsuit before a court, a determination before an agency, or
    a hearing before a committee. It must also be something specific and focused that
    is “pending” or “may by law be brought” before a public official. To qualify as
    an “official act,” the public official must make a decision or take an action on that
    “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy,” or agree to do so. That
    decision or action may include using his official position to exert pressure on
    another official to perform an “official act,” or to advise another official, knowing
    or intending that such advice will form the basis for an “official act” by another
    official. Setting up a meeting, talking to another official, or organizing an event
    (or agreeing to do so) — without more — does not fit that definition of “official
    act.”
    
    Id. at 2370–72
    (internal citation omitted). Because the district court’s jury instructions did not
    ensure that the jury reached its decision to convict within those parameters, the Supreme Court in
    McDonnell vacated the judgment of conviction and remanded for further proceedings. 
    Id. at 2375.
    B. Defendant’s Indictment
    Defendant argues that the indictment against her should have been dismissed because it
    did not include facts “to support the ‘more’ required by McDonnell.” (Defendant Br. at 50.)
    According to Defendant, McDonnell should be read to create an unspoken new standard for
    determining when an official has “provide[d] advice” or “exert[ed] pressure” on another official
    to take an official act. (Id. at 44–47.) Defendant claims that an official can only “provide
    advice” to a second official if the first official is in an advisory role to the second, and an official
    can only “exert pressure” on a second official if the first official has “leverage or power” over
    the second official. (Id.) However, nowhere in McDonnell did the Supreme Court state that it
    was creating such a rule. See generally McDonnell, 
    136 S. Ct. 2355
    .
    No. 17-3868                             United States v. Lee                                Page 16
    To support the proposition that the term “provides advice” requires an official to hold an
    advisory role, Defendant cites the Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Birdsall,
    
    233 U.S. 223
    (1914).      In Birdsall, the Supreme Court found that fraud indictments were
    sufficient when the officials who had allegedly accepted bribes “were charged with the duty of
    informing and advising the Commissioner of Indian Affairs” concerning the relevant matter. 
    Id. at 227.
    The Supreme Court in McDonnell stated that Birdsall was fully consistent with the
    decision in McDonnell because “[t]he ‘official action’ at issue in Birdsall was ‘advising the
    Commissioner of Indian Affairs, contrary to the truth,’ that the facts of the case warranted
    granting leniency to certain defendants convicted of ‘unlawfully selling liquor to Indians.’”
    
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2371
    (quoting 
    Birdsall, 233 U.S. at 227
    –30). Nowhere in McDonnell
    or Birdsall did the Court state that officials not holding advisory roles over other officials could
    not be convicted of honest services fraud or Hobbs Act extortion. The same is true of the Third
    Circuit’s decision in United States v. Repak, 
    852 F.3d 230
    , 237 (3d Cir. 2017), in which the
    Third Circuit upheld a conviction of an official who held an advisory role. The fact that officials
    holding advisory roles have been convicted for accepting gifts in exchange for providing advice
    does not mean that holding an advisory role is necessary for such a conviction.
    Defendant’s argument that an official cannot “exert pressure” without holding a position
    with direct leverage over other officials is similarly uncompelling. To support that argument,
    Defendant cites the Second Circuit’s decision in United States v. Silver, 
    864 F.3d 102
    (2d Cir.
    2017). However, that case involved jury instructions, not an indictment, and the court remanded
    because “the District Court’s instructions on honest services fraud and extortion d[id] not
    comport with McDonnell and [we]re therefore in error . . . [and] this error was not harmless
    because it [was] not clear beyond a reasonable doubt that a rational jury would have reached the
    same conclusion if properly instructed, as is required by law for the verdict to stand.” 
    Id. at 106.
    The district court in Silver had specifically instructed the jury that an official act “‘is not limited
    to voting on a bill, making a speech, passing legislation, it is not limited to that,’ but rather,
    includes ‘any action taken or to be taken under color of official authority’”—exactly what
    McDonnell determined was an incorrect interpretation of “official action.” 
    Id. at 118
    (quoting
    district court jury instructions) (emphasis in original).
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                              Page 17
    The Second Circuit in Silver did not conclude that the defendant, who at the time of the
    alleged acts was Speaker of the New York State Assembly, was unable to “exert pressure” due to
    a lack of official leverage over other officials when he sent an associate a letter on Assembly
    letterhead offering to help obtain permits for an event. 
    Id. at 120.
    The Second Circuit found the
    jury instructions improper because a jury could have found that the defendant’s “letter offering
    general assistance with an event occurring in his district—absent any actual ‘exertion of
    pressure’ on other officials regarding a particular matter under their consideration—did not
    satisfy the standards for an official act as defined by McDonnell.” Id.; see also United States v.
    Fattah, 
    902 F.3d 197
    , 238–46 (3rd Cir. 2018) (inter alia, reversing conviction because improper
    jury instructions, written pre-McDonnell, could have resulted in jury conviction without finding
    that emails, letters, and phone call in support of ambassadorship constituted impermissible
    attempts to exert pressure or provide advice on a pending matter). The Silver court never
    indicated that it was reversing based on a finding that the defendant was unable to exert pressure
    on other officials because he lacked professional leverage over them.
    Defendant also relies on United States v. Rabbitt, 
    583 F.2d 1014
    (8th Cir. 1978), a case
    decided decades before McDonnell. 
    Id. (abrogated on
    other grounds by McNally v. United
    States, 
    483 U.S. 350
    , 356 (1987)). Rabbitt concerned, inter alia, a member of the Missouri
    House of Representatives who took payments from an architectural firm in exchange for
    “recommend[ing] the [ ] firm as competent architects to persons authorized to employ architects
    for state projects.” 
    Rabbitt, 583 F.2d at 1020
    . On its face, Rabbitt provides some support for
    Defendant’s position. The court in that case overturned Rabbitt’s conviction, explaining: “[t]he
    Government failed to prove [the architectural firm] entertained a reasonable belief Rabbitt
    possessed effective control over the award of architectural contracts necessary to establish
    extortion ‘under color of official right’ in violation of the Hobbs Act.” 
    Id. at 1028.
    However,
    the Rabbitt decision provides minimal analysis supporting its decision to apply this requirement.
    
    Id. Circuit courts
    on two occasions have called Rabbitt’s logic into question. See United States
    v. Urciuoli, 
    513 F.3d 290
    , 296 (1st Cir. 2008) (avoiding the issue of “whether or not Rabbitt is
    correct”); United States v. Holzer, 
    816 F.2d 304
    , 308–09 (7th Cir. 1987) (“We very much doubt
    the soundness of this reasoning. The fact that the defendant did not control the award of contracts
    should not be decisive if his position as a state legislator gives his recommendations a weight
    No. 17-3868                             United States v. Lee                                 Page 18
    independent of their intrinsic merit.”) (vacated on other grounds by Holzer v. United States,
    
    484 U.S. 807
    (1987)). Moreover, the Supreme Court in McDonnell did not cite Rabbitt once—a
    strange omission, if the Supreme Court was intending to adopt Rabbitt’s reasoning. 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 1355
    –75. We therefore decline to create additional restrictions on the meaning of
    “provide advice” and “exert pressure.”
    Furthermore, Defendant fails to address the fact that the standard for sufficiency of an
    indictment is not the same as that for a conviction. As explained above, an indictment is “read as
    a whole, accepting the factual allegations as true, and construing those allegations in a practical
    sense with all the necessary implications. An indictment is to be construed liberally in favor of
    its sufficiency.” 
    McAuliffe, 490 F.3d at 531
    . The Sixth Circuit has stated that an indictment
    need not specifically state each factor of a charge that must be proven, as long as the facts
    alleged, taken together, support the elements of the charge. See 
    id. at 531–32
    (“[A]n indictment
    is not fatally insufficient for its failure to allege these elements in haec verba, if the facts alleged
    in the indictment warrant the inference of such elements.”).
    In McAuliffe, the defendant challenged the sufficiency of an indictment for mail fraud.
    
    Id. at 531.
    A charge of mail fraud required the government to prove that the defendant had used
    the mail “having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for
    obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or
    promises.” 
    Id. (quoting 18
    U.S.C. § 1341). A necessary element of the crime is materiality of
    the falsehood: “[a] misrepresentation is material if it has a natural tendency to influence, or is
    capable of influencing, the decision of the decision-making body to which it was addressed.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    omitted).     The defendant in McAuliffe argued that the indictment was
    insufficient because it had not alleged that he had acted with intent to defraud or that his
    misrepresentations were material. 
    Id. However, the
    Sixth Circuit found that the indictment was
    adequate because the facts alleged supported inferences of both intent and materiality. 
    Id. at 532.
    In McAuliffe, the Sixth Circuit also cited approvingly the Second Circuit’s decision in
    United States v. Klein, 
    476 F.3d 111
    , 113–14 (2d Cir. 2007). In that case, the defendant
    challenged the sufficiency of an indictment that also failed to allege materiality, when “a bank
    fraud conviction required a showing that the fraudulent conduct was material, although the bank
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                              Page 19
    fraud statute does not contain that actual word.” 
    Id. at 113.
    The Second Circuit in Klein found
    that the indictment was sufficient because “an allegation of materiality can be inferred from use
    of the word fraud in the indictment.” 
    Id. As in
    McAuliffe and Klein, the government’s indictment of Defendant in this case
    contains sufficient facts to notify Defendant of the charges against her and enable her to plead
    double jeopardy if charged for the same crime and facts in a future proceeding. See 
    Hamling, 418 U.S. at 117
    . Defendant’s indictment alleges, inter alia, that she took “official action” to
    benefit Abdelqader by helping him “achieve favorable outcomes in judicial and administrative
    proceedings,” and it sets out facts supporting those allegations. (R. 3, Indictment, PageID # 14–
    42.) For example, the indictment includes the transcript of a conversation between Defendant
    and a local prosecutor, in which Defendant asks why the unidentified man in the altercation with
    Abdelqader’s nephews had not been charged as well, and states “I’m not trying to influence you,
    you can’t say I’m trying to influence you. I’m trying to make you think. That’s all I’m trying to
    do; just trying to make you think.” (Id. at 30.) At a minimum, the indictment supports an
    inference that Defendant had agreed to perform an official act or pressure or advise other
    officials to perform official acts in exchange for gifts or loans from Abdelqader. See 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2370
    –71 (“Under this Court’s precedents, a public official is not required to
    actually make a decision or take an action on a question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
    controversy; it is enough that the official agree to do so.” (internal quotations omitted)).
    Therefore, the indictment sufficiently alleges the elements of Counts One through Four, and
    district court did not err in denying Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Indictment.
    II.    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Standard of Review
    The Sixth Circuit in United States v. Vichitvongsa, 
    819 F.3d 260
    , 270 (6th Cir. 2016),
    described the standard for reviewing a district court’s denial of a motion for acquittal based on
    insufficiency of the evidence:
    We review a district court’s denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal de novo,
    assessing whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                               Page 20
    the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. In so doing, we draw all reasonable
    inferences in support of the jury’s verdict and will reverse a judgment for
    insufficient evidence only if the judgment is not supported by substantial and
    competent evidence upon the record as a whole. Substantial evidence is such
    relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept to support a conclusion. It is
    evidence affording a substantial basis of fact from which the fact in issue can be
    reasonably inferred. In sum, a defendant claiming insufficiency of the evidence
    bears a very heavy burden.
    (internal quotations and citations omitted) (emphasis in original). “Circumstantial evidence
    alone is sufficient to sustain a conviction and such evidence need not remove every reasonable
    hypothesis except that of guilt.” United States v. Odum, 
    878 F.3d 508
    , 515 (6th Cir. 2017)
    (internal quotations omitted).   “In analyzing such a claim, we do not weigh the evidence,
    evaluate witness credibility, or displace the jury’s judgment with our own.” United States v.
    Wagner, 
    382 F.3d 598
    , 610–11 (6th Cir. 2004).
    Analysis
    Defendant makes three separate arguments to support her case. First, Defendant claims
    the government failed to allege facts sufficient to sustain Defendant’s conviction on Counts One
    through Four. Second, Defendant claims that the government failed to allege facts sufficient to
    sustain Defendant’s conviction on Counts Five and Six. Finally, Defendant argues that if this
    Court vacates Defendant’s conviction for Counts One through Four but upholds her conviction
    for Counts Five and Six, this Court should vacate Defendant’s sentences on Counts Five and Six
    and remand for re-sentencing. We address each argument in turn.
    A. Sufficiency of the Evidence on Counts One through Four
    Defendant argues that the district court erred by refusing to grant her motion for
    judgment of acquittal after the close of evidence. Defendant claims that the district court should
    have granted acquittal because “the government [] failed to present evidence that Lee had
    actually exerted pressure on, had the power or leverage to exert pressure on, or was in an
    advisory role with, the other officials.” (Defendant Br. at 51.) Defendant argues that the jury
    could have reached a guilty verdict for improper reasons, because the district court did not
    instruct the jury that, in order to convict, it was required to find that Defendant held an advisory
    No. 17-3868                                   United States v. Lee                                        Page 21
    role or held power or leverage over the officials with whom she communicated. But the jury
    instructions that the district court gave were consistent with both McDonnell’s narrow definition
    of “official act” and Defendant’s proposed instructions, and Defendant raised no objection to
    those instructions when they were presented to the jury. 3 More importantly, as discussed above,
    we do not adopt Defendant’s additional constraints on the requirements for an official to
    “provide advice” or “exert pressure” on another official.
    Moreover, Defendant bases her argument on an incorrect standard of law.                                  The
    government did not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant actually took
    official action or provided advice to or exerted pressure on another official to take an official
    action. Instead, the evidence was sufficient if it could have led a rational juror to conclude
    beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant agreed to perform one of those actions in exchange for
    bribes from Abdelqader. See 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2370
    –71. As the Court in McDonnell
    explained:
    Under this Court’s precedents, a public official is not required to actually make a
    decision or take an action on a ‘question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
    controversy’; it is enough that the official agree to do so. The agreement need not
    be explicit, and the public official need not specify the means that he will use to
    perform his end of the bargain. Nor must the public official in fact intend to
    perform the ‘official act,’ so long as he agrees to do so. A jury could, for
    example, conclude that an agreement was reached if the evidence shows that the
    public official received a thing of value knowing that it was given with the
    expectation that the official would perform an ‘official act’ in return. It is up to
    the jury, under the facts of the case, to determine whether the public official
    agreed to perform an ‘official act’ at the time of the alleged quid pro quo.
    
    Id. at 2370–71
    (citations omitted). The district court did not err in denying the motion for
    acquittal, because the evidence was sufficient for a rational juror to conclude beyond a
    reasonable doubt that Defendant agreed to perform official acts or pressure or advise other
    officials to perform official acts in exchange for gifts. The government was not required to
    prove that Defendant actually did successfully perform official acts or pressure or advise other
    officials to do so.
    3Defendant   stated after the jury instructions were read: “We would like to continue to use the Sixth Circuit
    Pattern Jury Instructions as updated in 2016,” and agreed when the government stated “[Defendant] objected to any
    additions to the Sixth Circuit Pattern Jury Instructions.” (R. 164, Transcript, PageID # 1722–23.)
    No. 17-3868                            United States v. Lee                                Page 22
    And while Defendant spends a substantial portion of her brief arguing that McDonnell’s
    facts compel a conclusion that the evidence was insufficient in this case, the Supreme Court in
    McDonnell never determined that the facts in that case were necessarily insufficient. Rather, the
    Court stated that “hosting an event, meeting with other officials, or speaking with interested
    parties is not, standing alone, a ‘decision or action’” that could support a quid pro quo corruption
    conviction. 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2370
    . Therefore,
    [s]imply expressing support for the [Anatabloc] research study at a meeting,
    event, or call—or sending a subordinate to such a meeting, event, or call—
    similarly does not qualify as a decision or action on the study, as long as the
    public official does not intend to exert pressure on another official or provide
    advice, knowing or intending such advice to form the basis for an ‘official act.’
    
    Id. at 2371
    (emphasis added).        So if the jury credited testimony presented at Governor
    McDonnell’s trial that he had not expected anything from his subordinates other than to attend
    meetings with Walker, then Governor McDonnell’s conviction would have been based on
    improper grounds. 
    Id. at 2374.
    However, the Supreme Court specifically recognized that “[t]he
    jury may have disbelieved that testimony or found other evidence that Governor McDonnell
    agreed to exert pressure on those officials to initiate the research studies or add Anatabloc to the
    state health plan,” and the jury could have properly convicted on those grounds. 
    Id. at 2375.
    In sum, the Supreme Court remanded because the jury instructions were overbroad,
    which meant that the jury could have convicted McDonnell for conduct that was not unlawful;
    but the jury also could have convicted McDonnell for proper reasons based on the jury’s
    evaluation of the evidence presented. 
    Id. at 2374–75.
    Because the jury in the case at hand was
    properly instructed under McDonnell, the district court did not have to grant Defendant’s motion
    for acquittal simply due to similarities between the facts of this case and of the facts in
    McDonnell.
    The evidence presented at Defendant’s trial was sufficient for a rational juror to have
    concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant either performed or agreed to perform an
    official act or to pressure or advise another official to perform an official act, as construed by the
    Supreme Court in McDonnell. As explained above, “[this Court] do[es] not weigh the evidence,
    evaluate witness credibility, or displace the jury’s judgment with [its] own.” Wagner, 382 F.3d
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                              Page 23
    at 610–11. It is immaterial whether this Court would have found Defendant guilty, as long as
    there was sufficient evidence presented at trial for a rational juror to have reached that
    conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Id. At trial,
    the government presented evidence that, inter alia, Defendant called the chief
    prosecutor for the city of Akron (the boss of the prosecutor in charge of Abdelqader’s nephews’
    case) and asked why charges had not been brought against the unidentified man in the
    confrontation with Abdelqader’s nephews. The government presented evidence that as part of
    that conversation, Defendant stated “I’m not trying to influence you, you can’t say I’m trying to
    influence you. I’m trying to make you think. That’s all I’m trying to do; just trying to make you
    think.” (R. 132, Transcript, PageID # 1378.) A juror could easily have heard those words and
    concluded that they meant the exact opposite—that Defendant was, in fact, trying to influence
    the prosecutor.   Moreover, the prosecutor testified that she believed if she did not return
    Defendant’s calls, that Defendant “might go over [the prosecutor’s] head and contact [her]
    supervisor,” the law director for the city of Akron, and that Defendant had never contacted her in
    such a way regarding other cases. (Id. at 1388.)
    The government also presented evidence that Abdelqader told his brother he had given
    Defendant $200 and had promised to give her an additional $300 if she “finish[ed] up this
    matter.” (R. 126, Transcript, PageID # 924–26.) The jury certainly could have discounted this
    evidence or interpreted it in a different way, but a rational juror could have interpreted this
    evidence and other evidence the government presented as establishing a quid pro quo
    arrangement, as clarified by McDonnell, beyond a reasonable doubt. The jury could rationally
    have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt based on this evidence that Lee agreed to or
    “intend[ed] to exert pressure on [the prosecutor] or provide advice, knowing or intending such
    advice to form the basis for an ‘official act,’” namely, opening charges against the unidentified
    man in the altercation with Abdelqader’s nephews.            
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2371
    .
    A prosecutor bringing charges against a defendant is certainly within the meaning of “official
    act” regarding a “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding, or controversy,” as defined by
    McDonnell. 
    Id. at 2374.
    In fact, the Supreme Court in McDonnell specifically recognized that
    “an ‘official act’ is a decision or action on a ‘question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                              Page 24
    controversy’ . . . [that] must involve a formal exercise of government power that is similar in
    nature to a lawsuit before a court [or] a determination before an agency”—exactly the types of
    matters with which Defendant interfered. 
    Id. at 2372
    . The district court did not err in denying
    Defendant’s motion for acquittal on Counts One through Four, because the evidence was
    sufficient for a rational juror conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant had agreed to
    or had in fact pressured or advised other officials to perform official acts in exchange for
    receiving things of value from Abdelqader.
    B. Sufficiency of the Evidence on Counts Five and Six
    Defendant next claims that the district court erred in denying her motion for acquittal on
    Counts Five and Six. Under Counts Five and Six, Defendant was found guilty of obstruction of
    justice and false statements to law enforcement. To sustain a conviction for obstruction of
    justice under 18 U.S.C § 1512(c)(2) and false statements to law enforcement officers under
    18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2), the government was required to show that Defendant acted with intent.
    See United States v. Jeter, 
    775 F.2d 670
    , 675–76 (6th Cir. 1985); United States v. Siemaszko,
    
    612 F.3d 450
    , 462 (6th Cir. 2010).
    Defendant argues that “no rational juror could have concluded that Lee intentionally
    sought to obstruct justice or lie to law enforcement officers.” (Defendant Br. at 57.) In support
    of Defendant’s argument that the evidence was not sufficient for a rational juror to conclude
    beyond a reasonable doubt that she was guilty on Counts Five and Six, Defendant cites the fact
    that “[t]he testifying FBI agent acknowledged several times in her testimony that Lee appeared to
    be ‘all over the place,’ and that sometimes her answers conflicted and they could be construed as
    truthful.” (Id. at 58.) However, just because the jury could have interpreted the evidence to
    indicate that the government had not proven Defendant guilty of Counts Five and Six beyond a
    reasonable doubt does not mean that the jury had to evaluate the evidence that way. Again,
    “[this Court] do[es] not weigh the evidence, evaluate witness credibility, or displace the jury's
    judgment with [its] own.” 
    Wagner, 382 F.3d at 610
    –11.
    “[D]raw[ing] all available inferences and resolv[ing] all issues of credibility in favor of
    the jury’s verdict,” a rational juror could have concluded, based on the evidence at trial, that
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                              Page 25
    Defendant intentionally obstructed justice and lied to law enforcement agents. United States v.
    Bankston, 
    820 F.3d 215
    , 235 (6th Cir. 2016) (internal quotations omitted). The government
    presented evidence that after Defendant became suspicious that she was being recorded,
    Defendant threw away a letter she had written to the IRS on behalf of Albanna’s son. The
    government also presented evidence that Defendant falsely told an FBI agent that “she disclosed
    on her campaign finance report all contributions that were made to her;” that she falsely told the
    agent that Abdelqader distributed invitations to Defendant’s fundraisers when he collected
    donations for her; that she falsely told the agent that she did not call Judge Larson; and that she
    falsely told the agent she had never spoken with the prosecution regarding Abdelqader’s
    nephews’ case. (R. 132, Transcript, PageID # 1430–32.) These are only some of the examples
    of evidence the government presented indicating that Defendant deliberately sought to obstruct
    justice and made false statements to law enforcement officers. The jury could have determined,
    based on its own evaluation of the credibility of the evidence, that the evidence on Defendant’s
    behalf was more compelling than the evidence the government presented.              However, the
    government presented ample evidence at trial upon which a rational juror could have based a
    conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant met the intent requirement of 18 U.S.C.
    § 1512(c)(2) and 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2). Therefore, the district court did not err in refusing to
    grant Defendant’s motion for acquittal on Counts Five and Six.
    C. Resentencing on Counts Five and Six
    Finally, Defendant asserts that if this Court “vacates Counts One through Four, but not
    Counts Five and Six, the Court should vacate the sentences on Counts Five and Six and remand
    the case for resentencing.” (Defendant Br. at 59.) See United States v. Clements, 
    86 F.3d 599
    ,
    601 (6th Cir. 1996). For the reasons discussed above, we do not vacate Counts One through
    Four, so we need not remand for resentencing on Counts Five and Six.
    CONCLUSION
    Because the indictment against Defendant sufficiently alleged the elements of honest
    services fraud and Hobbs Act extortion, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision that the
    indictment was sufficient. And because the government presented sufficient evidence to allow a
    No. 17-3868                          United States v. Lee                             Page 26
    rational juror to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant was guilty on all counts, we
    AFFIRM Defendant’s convictions. Because we do not vacate Defendant’s sentence on Counts
    One through Four, we also deny her request to remand for resentencing.
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                                  Page 27
    _________________
    CONCURRENCE
    _________________
    NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge, concurring.            I concur in the lead opinion, which
    accurately sets forth the governing law and, I believe, reaches the correct result under that law.
    Nevertheless, I am troubled by this case and write separately to explain why. To be clear, there
    is nothing admirable or praiseworthy, to say the least, about defendant Tamela Lee’s conduct.
    Lee very plainly traded on her status as an elected official to receive remuneration in a way that
    certainly “looks” illegal. But the question here is whether what she did was illegal under federal
    (not state) law and whether she must serve significant time in federal prison for what she did.
    Although I concur with the lead opinion in this case, I express two specific reservations.
    First, the main question in this case is whether Lee received the relevant gifts in exchange
    for performing an “official act.” There is no dispute that Lee herself did nothing official: she
    took no action that would fall under the official responsibilities or duties of a Summit County
    Council member. Instead, the government alleged that Lee agreed to influence the official acts
    of others with regard to a state criminal case and an IRS investigation. But trying to influence
    someone else’s official acts and performing one’s own official acts would seem to be entirely
    different.
    The government’s theory, though arguably inconsistent with what the statutes actually
    say, is consistent with what the Supreme Court said in McDonnell v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 2355
    (2016), about the federal bribery statute, 18 U.S.C. § 201. Namely, that a public official
    can be culpable if he attempted to exert pressure on a different public official to influence that
    public official in the performance of an official act. 
    McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2370
    . For that
    proposition, the McDonnell Court relies on its own decision in United States v. Birdsall,
    
    233 U.S. 223
    (1914). But I question whether Birdsall should be read so broadly.
    Birdsall concerns a scheme involving two subordinate officers, appointed by the
    Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who accepted bribes in exchange for attempting to influence the
    Commissioner.     
    Id. at 229.
      But Birdsall differs from this case in this important respect:
    No. 17-3868                                 United States v. Lee                                       Page 28
    in Birdsall, the subordinate officers were responsible for advising the Commissioner—the same
    person whom they sought to influence. Indeed, the Court explained that “by the regulations and
    established requirements of the Department of Interior [the officials] were charged with the duty
    of informing and advising the Commissioner of Indian Affairs” regarding the matters involved in
    the case. 
    Id. at 228.
    And the Court stated that the public officials had been charged with
    receiving money “with the intent that their official action should be thus influenced.” 
    Id. at 230
    (emphasis added). Subordinates who must advise their superiors as part of their official duties
    are, in fact, performing “official acts.”1
    The Court’s holding in Birdsall does not support the much broader proposition that any
    public official who tries to influence another public official takes an “official act” herself,
    regardless of the relationship between the two officials. To say that Lee is positioned with
    respect to the IRS, for example, in the same way that the officials in Birdsall were positioned
    with respect to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, is a stretch. Yet it appears to be a stretch that
    McDonnell permits.
    That leads to my second concern. Assuming that one reads the federal bribery statute
    broadly to encompass attempts to influence that are outside the scope of a defendant’s official
    responsibilities, it would make sense to look for a limiting principle. Here, Lee suggests that a
    culpable public official must at least have some leverage over the public official that she is
    attempting to influence. Of course, there is nothing in the federal bribery statute that would
    require such leverage, but the statute does not seem to strictly prohibit one public official’s
    attempts to pressure another public official into taking an official act, either. In effect, Lee’s
    proposed leverage requirement would cabin the broad implications of the “influence” or “advice”
    theories generally.
    Nevertheless, as the lead opinion recognizes, the Supreme Court has not recognized a
    leverage requirement, leaving the broader implications of McDonnell in place. To be sure, the
    1The    Court also noted that it was not necessary that the duties of the subordinates be “prescribed by a
    written rule or regulation.” 
    Birdsall, 233 U.S. at 231
    . Those “duties” could be “fixed” by “established usage which
    constituted the common law of the Department” or by “settled practice.” 
    Id. But that
    would make their actions no
    less official.
    No. 17-3868                           United States v. Lee                                Page 29
    McDonnell Court rejected the even broader theories that the government tried to proffer with
    regard to the meaning of “official act.” But in so doing, I believe, the Court left in place equally
    broad (and questionable) theories in the particular influence scenarios that this case addresses.