United States v. Craig ( 2019 )


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  •                            UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    ____________________________________
    )
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,           )
    )
    v.                            )                Crim. Action No. 19-0125 (ABJ)
    )
    GREGORY B. CRAIG,                   )
    )
    Defendant.        )
    ____________________________________)
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    On April 11, 2019, a grand jury indicted defendant Gregory Craig for two offenses arising
    out of statements he made to the National Security Division of the United States Department of
    Justice in 2013. Indictment (“Ind.”) [Dkt. # 1]. The statements related to his possible obligation
    to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, 22 U.S.C. §§ 611–621 (“FARA” or “the
    Act”), in connection with work he performed for the government of Ukraine. 
    Id. Craig and
    his
    law firm were engaged to prepare a report, and the alleged false statements and omissions set forth
    in the indictment concern the extent of his participation in any public relations effort within the
    United States associated with the December 2012 release of the report. Ind. ¶¶ 7–46. Count One
    alleges that Craig engaged in a scheme to “knowingly and willfully falsify, conceal, and cover up
    . . . material facts” in his communications with the Division’s Foreign Agents Registration Act
    Unit (“the FARA Unit” or “the Unit”) in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1), and that he did so to
    avoid registering as a foreign agent and making the disclosures required under the Act. Ind.
    ¶¶ 47–48. Count Two alleges that he made false statements of material fact in an October 11, 2013
    letter furnished to the FARA Unit under the provisions of the Act, and that he omitted material
    facts necessary to make those statements not misleading in violation of sections 612 and 618 of
    FARA, 22 U.S.C. §§ 612 and 618(a)(2). Ind. ¶¶ 66–67.
    The indictment sets forth the defendant’s alleged “manner and means” of carrying out the
    scheme to conceal charged in Count One: (1) withholding information from attorneys within his
    law firm; (2) drafting false and misleading descriptions of his media contacts to be distributed
    within the law firm and also provided to the FARA Unit; and (3) omitting material facts “regarding
    his acts in furtherance of Ukraine’s media plan” and his own contacts with reporters in his
    communications with the FARA Unit. Ind. ¶ 50. In a section entitled, “Execution of the Scheme,”
    the indictment sets forth the specific false statements and omissions allegedly made by the
    defendant to his firm’s general counsel and in letters to, and a meeting with, the Unit. Ind.
    ¶¶ 51–65.
    The defendant has filed two motions to dismiss, one for each count in the indictment.
    Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss Count One [Dkt. # 19] (“Def. Count One Mot.”); Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss
    Count Two [Dkt. # 20] (“Def. Count Two Mot.”). 1 This opinion concludes that Count Two must
    be dismissed, but Count One will proceed to trial.
    With respect to Count Two, while the Court can fairly square the plain language of
    22 U.S.C. § 618, FARA’s false statement provision, with the government’s application of that
    provision to the October 11, 2013 letter the defendant submitted to the Department of Justice
    FARA Unit “Re: FARA Registration,” it finds, after application of the full range of tools of
    statutory construction, including an analysis of the statute as a whole, that the legislature’s clear
    1       A sealed, unredacted version of Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Count One appears on the
    docket as well. [Dkt. # 23]. Defendant filed his motions to dismiss on May 10, 2019. On May 31,
    2019, the government opposed both motions. See Gov’t Opp. to Mot. to Dismiss Count One [Dkt.
    # 32] (“Gov’t Opp. to Count One Mot.”); Gov’t Opp. to Mot. to Dismiss Count Two [Dkt. # 35]
    (“Gov’t Opp. to Count Two Mot.”). And on June 7, 2019, defendant filed his reply briefs. Reply
    in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss Count One [Dkt. # 36] (“Def. Reply for Count One Mot.”); Reply in
    Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss Count Two [Dkt. # 37] (“Def. Reply for Count Two Mot.”). The Court
    heard oral argument on the motions on July 10, 2019. See Tr. of Proceedings, July 10, 2019 [Dkt.
    # 83] (“Tr.”).
    2
    intent cannot be discerned. Given this ambiguity concerning the breadth of the provision and the
    documents to which it was intended to apply, the rule of lenity requires the dismissal of the count.
    With respect to Count One, the question posed in the motion to dismiss is whether the
    indictment alleges a scheme to conceal something that Craig would have had a legal duty to reveal.
    The answer is yes: the Foreign Agents Registration Act creates the duty and puts individuals on
    notice of their specific disclosure obligations. The statute applies to anyone acting as a “foreign
    agent,” and that term is statutorily defined to include individuals who are engaged not in just
    political advocacy, but also, certain public relations activities in the United States in the interests
    of foreign entities or individuals. 22 U.S.C. § 611(c). Foreign “agents” are not spies – what they
    do is legal. But they are required to register, which simply means they must disclose their activities
    and who paid for them. 
    Id. § 612(a).
    Registration entails the completion of a government form
    that asks specific questions about the registrant’s own public relations activities and any
    participation of public relations firms, in addition to other information. 
    Id. Thus, this
    indictment,
    which alleges that Craig carried out a scheme to conceal his potential status as a foreign agent, by
    making a series of false or misleading statements and omissions allegedly obscuring the true timing
    and full nature of his public relations activities on behalf of Ukraine, states an offense under
    18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1) that comports with Circuit precedent and the Constitution’s due process
    clause. FARA places individuals on notice of a duty, arising out of both a federal statute and the
    government forms used to implement it, to reveal the very information Craig is charged with
    concealing.
    Also, the statute is not the sole source of the duty. In this case, the government agency
    charged with implementing FARA initiated an inquiry, and it asked focused questions, probing
    Craig’s role in the public relations effort surrounding the release of a report that Craig and his law
    3
    firm prepared for the government of Ukraine. The legal work – the creation of the report – was
    not the issue; the FARA Unit asked about statements made to the press about the report. The
    questions were posed for the stated purpose of enabling the agency to ascertain whether Craig or
    the firm was obliged to register as a foreign agent as a result of those activities, and Craig
    responded to these inquiries for the stated purpose of persuading the FARA Unit that he was not.
    Moreover, after the Unit informed Craig of its decision that he and his firm were bound to register,
    he embarked on an active effort to persuade the agency to change its position. Thus, this case is
    not United States v. Safavian, 
    528 F.3d 957
    (D.C. Cir. 2008), the appellate decision that forms the
    foundation of Craig’s motion. Unlike the defendant in that case, Craig is not charged with failing
    to volunteer information based on some undefined set of obligations. And he was not answering
    questions without any guideposts about what was or was not important: they are in the statute,
    they are in the registration form, and the FARA Unit laid out what it needed to know.
    The indictment alleges that Craig was engaged in ongoing communications with a law
    enforcement agency for the specific purpose of determining whether he was subject to a clearly
    defined statutory requirement to disclose public relations activities and identify their sponsor.
    Once he chose to answer the Unit’s questions about facts directly related to that inquiry and the
    underlying duty, and then again when he took up the banner of persuading the agency that its
    decision was wrong, he was obliged to be both truthful and complete. The facts the indictment
    alleges he omitted were the facts necessary to make the registration determination; the indictment
    sets forth sufficient facts to allege that they were – contrary to the defendant’s argument – the very
    sort of facts he was being asked about, and they were the facts that a foreign agent would ultimately
    have to disclose. Finally, it was the omission of those facts that allegedly made what he did say
    false or misleading, so they are appropriately included in the indictment for that reason alone. For
    4
    these reasons, set forth in more detail below, Count One will not be dismissed as a matter of law
    for lack of a duty to disclose.
    The Court also concludes, based on the D.C. Circuit’s decisions in Bramblett v. United
    States, 
    231 F.2d 489
    (D.C. Cir. 1956), and United States v. Hubbell, 
    177 F.3d 11
    (D.C. Cir. 1999),
    that Count One is not barred by the statute of limitations.
    STATUTORY BACKGROUND
    The Foreign Agents Registration Act is a disclosure statute. It requires anyone engaged in
    political or public relations activities in the United States on behalf of a “foreign principal” to
    register with the Attorney General to disclose the agency relationship. Ind. ¶ 3, citing 22 U.S.C.
    §§ 611–12. Section 612 of the Act requires any person acting as an “agent of a foreign principal”
    to file a registration statement, 22 U.S.C. § 612, and “agent of a foreign principal” is defined to
    mean anyone “who directly or through any other person . . . engages within the United States in
    political activities for or in the interests of such foreign principal” or “acts within the United States
    as a public relations counsel . . . for or in the interests of such foreign principal.” 
    Id. § 611(c)(1)(i),
    (ii). The Act defines “political activities” to mean
    any activity that the person engaging in believes will, or that the person
    intends to, in any way influence any agency or official of the Government
    of the United States or any section of the public within the United States
    with reference to formulating, adopting, or changing the domestic or foreign
    policies of the United States or with reference to the political or public
    interests, policies, or relations of a government of a foreign country or a
    foreign political party.
    
    Id. § 611(o).
    And it defines “public-relations counsel” as
    includ[ing] any person who engages directly or indirectly in informing,
    advising, or in any way representing a principal in any public relations
    matter pertaining to political or public interests, policies, or relations of such
    principal.
    
    Id. § 611(g).
    5
    The purpose of the Act is to prevent covert influence over U.S. policy by foreign principals.
    Ind. ¶¶ 3–4, citing 22 U.S.C. §§ 611–12. Simply put, the statute ensures that the public is informed
    of the true source or sponsor behind the information being disseminated for its consideration.
    Agents are required to submit a registration form to the FARA Unit, which is part of the National
    Security Division within the Department of Justice, and to file regular supplements. Ind. ¶ 3, citing
    22 U.S.C § 612.
    THE INDICTMENT
    For purposes of a motion to dismiss, the Court is required to accept the facts alleged in the
    indictment as true. 2 The recitation of alleged facts that follows supplies the backdrop for the
    assessment of defendant’s legal challenges of the charges against him, but it should not be read to
    signal the Court’s point of view about the accuracy of the allegations or the defendant’s guilt or
    innocence in this case. The facts have yet to be proved, and the defendant is presumed to be
    innocent unless and until the government proves his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
    In early 2012, the government of Ukraine, a foreign principal under FARA, engaged
    defendant and his law firm to prepare a report concerning the 2011 trial of former Ukrainian Prime
    Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. Ind. ¶¶ 5–7. Tymoshenko’s trial and conviction in Ukraine garnered
    2       “‘In ruling on a motion to dismiss for failure to state an offense, a district court is limited
    to reviewing the face of the indictment and, more specifically, the language used to charge the
    crimes.’ United States v. Sharpe, 
    438 F.3d 1257
    , 1263 (11th Cir. 2006) (emphasis in original).
    ‘Adherence to the language of the indictment is essential because the Fifth Amendment requires
    that criminal prosecutions be limited to the unique allegations of the indictments returned by the
    grand jury.’ United States v. Hitt, 
    249 F.3d 1010
    , 1016 (D.C. Cir. 2001).” United States v. Sunia,
    
    643 F. Supp. 2d 51
    , 60 (D.D.C. 2009). Notwithstanding this legal principle, defendant chose to
    support his pleadings with numerous exhibits, see Exs. 1–12 and 21–23 to Def. Count One Mot.
    [Dkt. ## 19-1–19-15] and Sealed Exs. 13–20 [Dkt. ## 23-1–23-8], and the government responded
    in kind. See Gov’t Exs. 1–7 [Dkt. ## 32-1–32-7]. This decision is based solely on the facts alleged
    on the face of the indictment, and the factual background section of the opinion refers to documents
    provided to the Court by the defendant in support of his motion only when those documents were
    specifically referenced in the indictment.
    6
    criticism from Western governments and the media, and the firm was retained to conduct an
    independent inquiry into whether Tymoshenko had received a fair trial in accordance with Western
    standards of justice and prepare a report with its findings. Ind. ¶¶ 6–7. The indictment alleges that
    with the help of an American lobbyist, Ukraine planned to utilize the report as part of a larger
    strategy to improve its international public image. Ind. ¶ 7.
    From the start of the project, Craig was aware of FARA’s requirements. Ind. ¶ 8. On or
    about February 13, 2012, he emailed the co-author of the report, also a partner at the firm, saying,
    “I don’t want to register as a foreign agent under FARA. I think we don’t have to with this
    assignment, yes?” Ind. ¶ 9. According to the indictment, Craig was concerned that registration as
    an agent of Ukraine could affect efforts by the lawyers involved to obtain government employment
    in the future. Ind. ¶ 8. Also, registration would have required the firm to disclose that a private
    Ukrainian citizen had paid more than $4 million for the firm’s services on the report, and that the
    firm had also been hired by Ukraine to assist in a second prosecution of Tymoshenko for other
    charges. 
    Id. The indictment
    alleges that Craig feared these revelations would undermine the
    perceived independence of the report. 
    Id. Neither the
    amount of the fee nor the source of the funding for the report was a matter of
    public record at that time, and the indictment details Craig’s involvement in keeping it secret. In
    April of 2012, he prepared and signed a formal engagement letter with the Ukrainian Ministry of
    Justice that falsely stated that the total fee for the work would only amount to approximately
    $12,000 U.S. dollars and made no mention of the $4 million from the private individual. Ind. ¶ 13.
    After completing the formal engagement letter, Craig continued to discuss the registration
    question with other lawyers in the firm, focusing particularly on Ukraine’s interest in public
    7
    relations. On or around April 17, 2012, an associate within the firm relayed advice from a partner
    with FARA experience:
    In his view, our work writing a report evaluating the Ukrainian proceedings
    would not trigger FARA obligations. However, if we were to perform
    public relations work aimed at the US, if our London lawyers were to do so,
    or if we were to subcontract with a PR firm to do so, then we would be
    obligated to register under FARA.
    Email of Apr. 17, 2012, Ex. 1 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-1] at 1; Ind. ¶ 15. In response to
    this advice, the firm attorney who co-authored the report told defendant:
    I think our engagement should not include PR advice. . . . [S]omebody else
    can hire the PR team and manage that. I say this for two reasons. First, it
    will create a FARA problem. Second, I actually think it’s much better for
    our representation to be “rule of law” advisers, not “rule of law”-and-PR
    advisers. Including a PR component as part of our representation has the
    potential to undermine our work. We’re in this representation as lawyers,
    not spin doctors, and I think it’s important that we are able to say that. In
    any event, the FARA issue looks insurmountable.
    Email of Apr. 17, 2012 at 1; Ind. ¶ 15. Defendant responded: “Good advice.” Email of Apr. 17,
    2012 at 1; Ind. ¶ 15.
    The indictment goes on to allege that on or around April 30, 2012, defendant gave the
    Ukraine’s American lobbyist the names of four public relations firms that he thought could handle
    media messaging and strategy for the report’s release, including a PR firm he had worked with
    previously. Ind. ¶ 17. Defendant advocated for Ukraine to retain that firm, 3 and Ukraine did with
    the help of the American lobbyist. Ind. ¶ 18.
    Defendant also communicated with the American lobbyist about the message to be
    communicated at the time of the report’s release, discussing concerns that a draft of the report
    3       According to the indictment, on or about May 7, 2012, defendant prepared talking points
    stating that the PR firm was the right choice for Ukraine because “they will be with us in the
    battle.” Ind. ¶ 18.
    8
    might be leaked and the need to ensure that the report would be viewed as independent: “The
    worst thing that could happen to the project, to this law firm, to your guy and to me would be to
    have someone on your side falsely leak a story that ‘[Law Firm] Finds Tymoshenko Guilty’ ‘[Law
    Firm] Report Exonerates Ukraine.’ That kind of story would be a disaster. We have to join arms
    to get something just a little more nuanced. Yes?” Ind. ¶ 21.
    With respect to the funding for the report, the indictment alleges that a bank account in
    Cyprus controlled by the lobbyist was used to pass the more than $4 million in payments from the
    private Ukrainian to defendant’s law firm – facts the defendant did not disclose publicly. Ind. ¶ 23.
    When the media began to question the publicly reported $12,000 fee for the report, defendant
    communicated with others at his firm and worked with the lobbyist to create a backdated letter and
    false invoice from defendant’s firm to the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice for $1,250,000, allegedly
    so that it would appear that the Ministry, and not the private Ukrainian, had paid for the report.
    Ind. ¶¶ 24–27.
    In late August, the public relations firm’s strategy documents for the release of the report
    were forwarded to defendant. Ind. ¶ 28. The documents included a statement that “[the Law Firm]
    cannot proactively lead in communications, given their restrictions by FARA registration and
    disclosure.” 
    Id. They also
    included “a spreadsheet titled ‘Master Control Grid,’ which stated that
    on the day before the Report’s public release, Craig would provide ‘[m]edia briefings’ to select
    journalists to be later identified.” 
    Id. In September
    of 2012, as defendant and his firm finalized the report, the lobbyist sent
    defendant a draft PR plan in preparation for the report’s release, writing, “I wanted to get this
    document to you to bring your thinking into the process.” Ind. ¶ 30. The draft plan stated that the
    release would “provide an opportunity for the independent endorsement of the Government
    9
    message that the trial of Yulia Tymoshenko (YT) was not politically motivated and that her
    conviction was based on evidence before the court.” 
    Id. And it
    proposed taking several steps
    before the public release of the report: leaking the report to a media outlet, having a former
    Congressman at a U.S.-based lobbying firm retained by Ukraine brief a selected journalist, and
    arranging for Craig to brief the journalist as well. 
    Id. On or
    around September 23, 2012, defendant met with the lobbyist, a senior executive of
    the PR firm, and others in New York to discuss the report’s release. Ind. ¶¶ 31–32. At the meeting,
    defendant agreed to provide a copy of the report and a briefing to a selected reporter, and he
    suggested the name of a particular reporter he knew. Craig also agreed that he and others would
    “background,” or speak off the record to reporters concerning the report’s release, Ind. ¶ 31, but
    he emailed the lobbyist and the PR firm the next day to tell them that providing background to
    reporters was against firm policy. Ind. ¶ 32.
    About a week later, on or around October 2, 2012, defendant contacted a reporter he knew
    (“Reporter 1”) to ask whether the reporter would be willing to discuss the report with a former
    Congressman who was working on behalf of Ukraine. Ind. ¶ 33. The two did not talk at that time
    because the release of the report was delayed. 
    Id. Two months
    later, the report was finalized and scheduled to be released on December 13,
    2012. At that point, the manager of the PR firm emailed Reporter 1 to ask if he would be interested
    in receiving a copy of the report and an exclusive briefing with defendant Craig prior to its official
    release. Ind. ¶ 37. Defendant also sent an email: “I just learned that the Ukrainians intend to
    release our report . . . on Thursday . . . and that [they] have determined that you should be given
    first look at it. . . . [I]f you are interested, I would be happy to get you a copy . . . and even happier
    to talk to you about it.” Ind. ¶ 38. Defendant then spoke with Reporter 1 on or around December
    10
    11, 2012, he personally hand-delivered a copy of the report to Reporter 1’s home in Washington,
    D.C., and he reported in an email to the PR firm: “[w]e told [Reporter l] that it was his if he wanted
    to use it. He agreed to get back to us with an answer tomorrow. Tomorrow is not too late for
    [another U.S. reporter] or for [another major U.S. newspaper].” Ind. ¶ 39.
    On or around December 12, 2012, defendant received an email containing six questions in
    advance of a scheduled telephone interview with Reporter 2, a Moscow-based colleague of
    Reporter 1, and he sent an on-the-record quote to Reporter 1 in Washington to use in an article.
    Ind. ¶ 40. The quote read: “We leave to others the question of whether this prosecution was
    politically motivated. Our assignment was to look at the evidence in the record and determine
    whether the trial was fair.” 
    Id. Later that
    evening, an article written by Reporter 1 and Reporter 2
    was published. 
    Id. It included
    the quote defendant emailed to Reporter 1 and stated that the report
    would be released the following day. 
    Id. On or
    about December 12, 2012, defendant also gave an interview to a newspaper reporter
    from the United Kingdom who had been identified in the media plan prepared by the PR firm. Ind.
    ¶ 41. Paragraph 42 of the indictment alleges that “[a]s a result of these acts in furtherance of
    Ukraine’s public relations strategy regarding the Report, Craig had an obligation under FARA to
    register as an agent of Ukraine.” Ind. ¶ 42.
    On December 13, 2012, the government of Ukraine officially released the report, and
    defendant’s law firm then responded to inquiries from two other media publications. Ind.
    ¶¶ 43–44. That day, the American lobbyist congratulated Craig with an email with the subject
    line: “Well Done.” Ind. ¶ 45. He wrote, “The pro has emerged again. The initial rollout has been
    very effective and your backgrounding has been key to it all.” 
    Id. 11 Less
    than a week after these events, the Managing Director of the law firm heard from the
    FARA Unit. See Ind. ¶ 51. In a letter dated December 18, 2012, “Re: Possible Obligation to
    Register Pursuant to the Foreign Agents Registration Act,” the Chief of the Unit drew the firm’s
    attention to a newspaper article and wrote: “[i]t has come to our attention . . . that your firm may
    be engaged in activities on behalf of the Ministry of Justice of the Government of Ukraine, which
    may require registration pursuant to the Foreign Agents Registration Act.” Letter of Dec. 18, 2012,
    Ex. 3 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-3]; see Ind. ¶ 51. She asked the firm to provide the Unit
    with several categories of information “[i]n order that we may determine whether your
    organization is required to register,” including “a description of the activities the firm has engaged
    in or the services it has rendered to the Ministry of Justice of the Government of Ukraine.” Letter
    of Dec. 18, 2012; see Ind. ¶ 51.
    It was defendant who answered on behalf of the firm. Writing on or about February 6,
    2013, “to respond to your letter . . . dated December 18, 2012,” Craig described the engagement
    and emphasized that it was an explicit component of the assignment that the firm would not provide
    any services that would be covered under FARA or would require registration. Ind. ¶ 53; see Letter
    of Feb. 6, 2013, Ex. 4 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-4] at 2. The indictment notes that the
    letter made no reference to defendant’s contacts with U.S. media surrounding the release of the
    report or his involvement in the PR firm’s media plan. Ind. ¶ 53.
    On April 9, 2013, the FARA Unit acknowledged receipt of defendant’s February 6 letter
    and its enclosures “responding to our letter of December 18, 2012, concerning your firm’s possible
    obligation to register pursuant to the Foreign Agents Registration Act.” Letter of Apr. 9, 2013,
    Ex. 5 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-5] at 1; see Ind. ¶ 54. Its letter of April 9 advised the
    defendant: “[w]e have reviewed the materials, and need additional information to determine
    12
    whether your firm is obligated to register under the Act.” Letter of Apr. 9, 2013 at 1. The Unit
    posed a number of questions related to any funding the firm received beyond the $12,000 and the
    existence and identity of any additional funding sources, and the letter included a series of
    questions concerning public relations:
    (1) To whom, if anyone, did your firm release or distribute the report and
    when? . . .
    (5) What [had been the law] firm’s understanding of what would happen to
    the report when it was released to the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice?
    (6) Did you or anyone in your firm have any media interviews or comments
    to the media, public, or government officials about the report and the
    findings of your firm?
    Letter of Apr. 9, 2013 at 2; Ind. ¶ 54.
    Throughout April and May 2013, defendant and the co-author of the report prepared a
    response to the FARA Unit’s questions, with defendant drafting that portion of the response
    describing his contacts with the media and the timing and intent of those contacts. Ind. ¶ 55.
    Defendant signed a letter dated June 3, 2013 that responded to the FARA Unit. Ind. ¶ 56;
    Letter of June 3, 2013, Ex. 6 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-6] at 1 (“The purpose of this letter
    is to reply to the questions in your letter of April 9, 2013.”). He answered question 1:
    In addition to giving the report to representatives of the Government of
    Ukraine, the law firm on December 12–13, 2012 provided a copy of the
    report (1) to Ms. Tymoshenko’s legal team in Ukraine, and to a member of
    her legal team in the United States . . . (in response to his request); (2) to a
    representative of the individual in Ukraine who helped fund the project . . . ;
    (3) to [Reporter 1]; [and the other reporters with whom the firm
    communicated after the report’s public release].
    Letter of June 3, 2013 at 2. He answered question 5 by stating: “[t]he law firm viewed the
    distribution of the report as a matter that would be decided by the Ukraine Government in its sole
    discretion. The law firm did not advise the Ministry on that issue.” Letter of June 3, 2013 at 3.
    In response to question 6, he wrote:
    13
    The law firm issued no statements and made no comments to the media, the
    public or government officials about the report. Gregory Craig provided
    brief clarifying statements about the report to [Reporter 1] and [the other
    reporters with whom the firm communicated after the report’s public
    release]. One purpose of the statements was to correct misinformation that
    the media had received – and was reporting – from the Ministry of Justice
    and from the Tymoshenko legal team in Ukraine. Neither the law firm nor
    its lawyers sought to influence American public opinion or US government
    policy.
    Letter of June 3, 2013 at 3. The letter did not identify the private Ukrainian or state how much the
    firm had been paid for the report. See Letter of June 3, 2013; Ind. ¶ 57.
    On or around September 5, 2013, the FARA Unit notified defendant and the firm that it
    had determined the dissemination of the report required registration.
    Our review of the documentation concludes that [the law firm] was an agent
    of the Ministry and was engaged in political activities in the United States
    for the Ministry. You indicate that your firm was paid by the Ukraine to
    produce an independent report on the Tymoshenko prosecution, and that the
    report was disseminated to news media by your firm. You further state that
    you spoke with representatives of the media to correct misinformation
    regarding the report. The dissemination of the report to the media and your
    communications with the media were political activities as defined in
    22 U.S.C. § 611(o) of FARA. Furthermore, by engaging in these activities
    for the Ministry, [the law firm] acted as a public relations counsel, publicity
    agent, and information-service employee as defined in Section 611 of the
    Act. We have determined that your actions in contacting the media were
    activities meant to influence the U.S. public with reference to the political
    or public interests, policies or relations of Ukraine. Accordingly, [the law
    firm] must register under FARA as an agent of the Ministry.
    Letter of Sept. 5, 2013, Ex. 7 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-7] at 1; see Ind. ¶ 58.
    On or around September 19, 2013, defendant spoke to the law firm’s General Counsel and
    advanced the position that the firm should resist registering under FARA. Ind. ¶ 59. He also sent
    an email to the General Counsel containing the following statements, which the indictment alleges
    are false and misleading:
    14
    Just for the record:
    (1) [The Law Firm] did not “disseminate the report to the news media.”
    Three media outlets who were not able to obtain a copy of the report
    from the Ministry in Kiev, contacted us and asked us to provide them
    with a copy. The report was a public document.
    (2) At no time did [the Law Firm] “contact the media.” Quite to the
    contrary, we were approached by the media – asked for interviews,
    asked for background commentary, etc. – and we did not respond. The
    only time we responded was to correct misinformation.
    (3) To the best of my recollection, our statements to the press were not
    about Ukraine. They were to correct misinformation. The statements
    were about our report and us.
    
    Id. The following
    day, on September 20, 2013, defendant transmitted a draft of a letter
    responding to the FARA Unit to the General Counsel. It included statements that:
    •   When Craig gave the report to Reporter 1 and the two publications with which the
    law firm had communicated after the report’s public release, it was because
    Ukrainian authorities had already publicly released it “much earlier in that day, but
    these three outlets - for some reason - had not been able to obtain copies of the
    report. They approached the firm, asked us if we could provide them with a copy,
    and we did so.”
    •   “No one in this law firm initiated any contacts with the media.”
    •   “[M]y contact with [the three journalists] was for the sole purpose of defending my
    law firm and correcting misinformation.”
    Ind. ¶ 60.
    The letter was not sent. Ind. ¶ 60. Instead, defendant and the firm’s General Counsel met
    in person with the FARA Unit Chief and members of the staff on October 9, 2013. Ind. ¶ 61. The
    indictment alleges that in that meeting, Craig made false and misleading statements that were
    consistent with the statements made to the General Counsel, in particular, “that his media contacts
    were solely reactive and for the purpose of correcting misinformation.” 
    Id. 15 Two
    days later, at the request of the FARA Unit, defendant put his position in writing. He
    sent a letter “Re: FARA Registration” setting out information “[i]n further consideration of the
    issues raised in your letter of September 5, 2013.” Letter of Oct. 10, 2013, Ex. 9 to Def. Count
    One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-9] at 1; Ind. ¶ 62. According to the indictment, the letter reiterated some of
    what defendant said at the October 9 meeting, and it included the following statements:
    [T]his law firm provided a copy of the Tymoshenko Report (“the Report”)
    to certain U.S. media outlets. This was done in response to requests from
    the media. The firm did not provide copies of the Report to any other media
    outlets in the United States.
    With respect to statements appearing in [two publications], those statements
    were intended to correct mischaracterizations of the Report, some of which
    were attributable to Ukraine. . . .
    In responding to inaccuracies in U.S. news reports – some of which were
    directly attributable to Ukraine – the law firm did not consult with Ukraine,
    did not inform Ukraine, did not act under instruction from Ukraine and was
    in no way serving as an agent for Ukraine.
    Letter of Oct. 10, 2013 at 1–2; Ind. ¶ 62.
    Thereafter, the FARA Unit informed Craig in a letter dated January 16, 2014 of its revised
    conclusion that defendant and his firm did not need to register as agents of Ukraine based on the
    information that Craig had provided. “[Y]ou indicated that your comments to the [three media
    outlets] were not political activities, but were meant to correct mischaracterization of the Report
    attributable to the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice and Tymoshenko’s Ukrainian lawyers . . . .” Letter
    of Jan. 16, 2014, Ex. 10 to Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-10] at 1; Ind. ¶ 64.
    The indictment posits that “[u]nder FARA, when responding to the FARA Unit’s inquiries,
    Craig had a duty to provide material information and not to willfully make misleading statements
    16
    or omit material facts.” Ind. ¶ 52. It alleges that the letters of June 3, 2013 and October 11, 2013 4
    contained statements that were false or misleading, Ind. ¶¶ 56, 62, that the statements made orally
    at the October 9, 2013 meeting were false and misleading, Ind. ¶61, and that in his written and oral
    communications, the defendant omitted a number of material facts:
    •   that Craig generated the report, knowing and intending that the Lobbyist
    and his client, the Government of Ukraine, planned to release it publicly
    to influence U.S. public opinion and policy, and that such influence was
    the purpose for which Ukraine commissioned the Report;
    •   that Craig had recommended and facilitated Ukraine’s hiring of the PR
    Firm;
    •   that Craig had been informed of the PR Firm’s evolving media strategy
    throughout the fall of 2012;
    •   that Craig had met with the Lobbyist, a senior executive of the PR Firm,
    and others on September 23, 2012, in New York City and discussed the
    PR Firm’s plans, and that Craig had suggested that Reporter 1 receive a
    copy of the Report in connection with the Report’s rollout;
    •   that Craig had, consistent with the media strategy, connected Reporter 1
    and the former Congressman in or about October 2012;
    •   that Craig had, consistent with the media strategy, contacted Reporter 1
    on or about December 11, 2012, spoken with him about the Report, and
    hand-delivered an exclusive advance copy of the Report to Reporter 1’s
    home;
    •   that Craig also had contact with, and provided an interview to, Reporter
    2 on or about December 12, 2012, before the Report’s public release;
    •   that Craig had, in coordination with representatives of Ukraine,
    communicated with Reporter 1 in an effort to ensure that Reporter 1’s
    newspaper would publish an article before the official release of the
    Report;
    4      The letter was dated October 10, 2013, Letter of Oct. 10, 2013, Ex. 9 to Def. Count One
    Mot., and sent on October 11, 2013. Ind. ¶ 62; see also Def. Count One Mot. at 15.
    17
    •   that Craig had, consistent with the media strategy, provided an interview
    to the reporter from the U.K. newspaper on or about December 12, 2012,
    before the Report’s public release; and,
    •   that Craig kept the PR Firm Manager informed of Craig’s acts consistent
    with the media strategy.
    Ind. ¶ 63.
    The indictment also alleges that defendant repeated certain of these false and misleading
    statements to the Office of Special Counsel in an October 19, 2017 interview. Ind. ¶ 65.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A criminal defendant may move to dismiss an indictment before trial based on a “defect in
    the indictment,” Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(3)(B), including constitutional challenges. See United
    States v. Eshetu, 
    863 F.3d 946
    , 952 (D.C. Cir. 2017), vacated in part on reh’g on other
    grounds, 
    898 F.3d 36
    (D.C. Cir. 2018); United States v. Seuss, 
    474 F.2d 385
    , 387 n.2 (1st Cir.
    1973). “When considering a motion to dismiss an indictment, a court assumes the truth of [the
    indictment’s] factual allegations.” United States v. Ballestas, 
    795 F.3d 138
    , 149 (D.C. Cir. 2015).
    ANALYSIS
    I.     Motion to Dismiss Count One
    A.      The indictment alleges an offense under 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1).
    Count One incorporates the factual allegations set forth in the first forty-six paragraphs of
    the indictment and alleges that the defendant engaged in a scheme to knowingly and willfully
    falsify, conceal, and cover up material facts within the jurisdiction of the Department of Justice
    FARA Unit for the purpose of avoiding registration as an agent of Ukraine – that is, to avoid
    making the disclosures that are statutorily required under FARA if one is acting as a foreign agent.
    Ind. ¶¶ 48–49. The indictment then alleges in paragraph 50 that the manner and means of
    executing the scheme included: defendant’s withholding of information concerning his contacts
    18
    with Reporters 1 and 2 from attorneys within his own law firm; his drafting false and misleading
    descriptions of his media contacts for distribution within the law firm and to the FARA unit; and
    his omitting “material facts regarding his acts in furtherance of Ukraine’s media plan and [his]
    contacts with Reporter 1 and Reporter 2 in his communications with the FARA unit.” Ind. ¶ 50.
    Paragraphs 51 through 64 detail the steps allegedly undertaken in the “execution of the scheme,”
    including: making material false and misleading statements and omissions in the June 3, 2013
    letter to the FARA Unit, Ind. ¶ 56; providing false and misleading information to the law firm’s
    General Counsel on September 19, 2013, Ind. ¶ 59; incorporating the false and misleading
    statements in a September 20, 2013 draft of a letter to the FARA Unit responding to its
    determination that Craig should register, Ind. ¶ 60; making false and misleading statements that
    were material to the FARA Unit’s determination during the October 9, 2013 meeting, Ind. ¶ 61;
    making false and misleading statements in the October 11, 2013 written submission to the FARA
    Unit after the meeting, Ind. ¶ 62; and omitting facts material to the FARA Unit’s inquiry in these
    written and oral communications with the Unit. Ind. ¶ 63.
    The false statements statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1001, can be violated in three ways. Section
    1001(a)(1) subjects someone who, in a matter within the jurisdiction of any of the three branches
    of the U.S. government, knowingly and willfully, “falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick,
    scheme, or device a material fact.” 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1). Subsection (a)(2) prohibits the making
    of “any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation,” and subsection (a)(3)
    19
    covers the making or use of “any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any
    materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry.” 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2), (3). 5
    The elements of a scheme to conceal facts from an executive agency under subsection
    (a)(1) are that: “(1) the defendant had a duty to disclose material information, (2) the defendant
    falsified, concealed, or covered up such a fact by trick, scheme, or fraud, (3) the falsified,
    concealed, or covered up fact was material, (4) the falsification and/or concealment was knowing
    and willful, and (5) the material fact was within the jurisdiction of the Executive Branch.” United
    States v. White Eagle, 
    721 F.3d 1108
    , 1116 (9th Cir. 2013); see also United States v. Dale,
    
    782 F. Supp. 615
    , 626 (D.D.C. 1991), quoting United States v. Swain, 
    757 F.2d 1530
    , 1533 (5th
    Cir.), cert. denied, 
    474 U.S. 825
    (1985) (“The elements of an offense under the concealment
    portion of the statute are: (1) knowingly and willfully; (2) concealing and covering up by trick,
    scheme, or device; (3) a material fact; (4) in any matter within the jurisdiction of a department or
    agency of the United States.”).
    While there is case law that indicates that “[t]he different types of fraudulent conduct
    proscribed by section 1001 are not separate offenses . . . rather they describe different means by
    which the statute is violated,” United States v. Stewart, 
    433 F.3d 273
    , 319 (2d Cir. 2006), the
    differentiating characteristic of a violation specifically charged under subsection (a)(1) is the
    scheme. As the court explained in United States v. London, 
    550 F.2d 206
    (5th Cir. 1977), courts
    5       The previous version of the statute was not broken out into separate subsections:
    “[w]hoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States
    knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material
    fact, or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses
    any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent
    statement or entry, will be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or
    both.” See United States v. St. Michael’s Credit Union, 
    880 F.2d 579
    , 588 (1st Cir. 1989), quoting
    18 U.S.C. § 1001.
    20
    must give full effect to the “trick, scheme, or device” language in that prong of section 1001, and
    the language “implies the requirement of an affirmative act by which means a material fact is
    concealed.” 
    Id. at 213.
    Thus, the government bears the burden of demonstrating more than a mere
    passive failure to disclose something; it must show that the defendant “committed affirmative acts
    constituting a trick, scheme, or device.” Id.; see also 
    Safavian, 528 F.3d at 965
    n.8, citing United
    States v. Woodward, 
    469 U.S. 105
    , 108 (1985) and 
    London, 550 F.2d at 213
    (“[C]oncealment must
    be accomplished in a particular way: by a ‘trick, scheme, or device.’”). Section (a)(1) prohibits
    employing a scheme to “falsif[y], conceal[ ], or cover[ ] up” material facts, 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1)
    (emphasis added), and the law is clear that both the making of false statements and the deliberate
    withholding of material facts in the face of a duty to disclose them can be among the necessary
    affirmative acts for scheme purposes. See United States v. 
    Hubbell, 177 F.3d at 13
    (indictment
    including acts of falsification and concealment properly charged a scheme offense); see also
    
    London, 550 F.2d at 213
    , citing United States v. Markham, 
    537 F.2d 187
    , 192–93 (5th Cir. 1976); 6
    see also 
    Dale, 782 F. Supp. at 615
    (“[A] person’s deliberate failure to disclose to the government
    material facts, in the face of a duty to disclose such facts, constitutes an ‘affirmative act’ within
    the contemplation of the statute.”), aff’d 
    991 F.2d 819
    (D.C. Cir. 1993).
    Defendant has moved to dismiss Count One based on the fundamental principle recognized
    in United States v. Safavian and other cases that there must be a legal duty to disclose in order for
    there to be a concealment offense in violation of section 1001(a)(1). Def. Count One Mot. at 1,
    
    citing 528 F.3d at 964
    . “Falsity through concealment exists where disclosure of the concealed
    6       In Markham, the Fifth Circuit upheld the sufficiency of a section 1001 indictment that
    listed a set of separate falsifications by the defendant to conceal the material facts at issue; the
    scheme included the defendant’s causing a patent application to be filed in the names of two
    individuals who were not the true inventors and his filing a series of misleading statements with
    the Patent 
    Office. 537 F.2d at 193
    .
    21
    information is required by a statute, government regulation, or form.” United States v. Calhoon,
    
    97 F.3d 518
    , 526 (11th Cir. 1996), citing United States v. Tobon-Builes, 
    706 F.2d 1092
    , 1096 (11th
    Cir. 1983); see also White 
    Eagle, 721 F.3d at 1117
    (“[A] conviction under § 1001(a)(1) is proper
    where a statute or government regulation requires the defendant to disclose specific information
    to a particular person or entity.”).
    This requirement arises out of the constitutional prerogative that an individual charged with
    a crime must have been on notice that his conduct could violate the law. 
    Safavian, 528 F.3d at 964
    , quoting United States v. Kanchanalak, 
    192 F.3d 1037
    , 1046 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (“[T]o comply
    with Fifth Amendment due process, the defendant must have ‘fair notice . . . of what conduct is
    forbidden. . . . [T]his ‘fair warning’ requirement prohibits application of a criminal statute to a
    defendant unless it was reasonably clear at the time of the alleged action that defendants’ actions
    were criminal.”); see also United States v. Crop Growers Corp., 
    954 F. Supp. 335
    , 344–48 (D.D.C.
    1997) (holding that absent an unambiguous requirement to disclose, a prosecution for failure to
    disclose would offend due process considerations).
    While defendant is correct that these legal principles apply to a prosecution under section
    1001(a)(1), his case can be distinguished from Safavian, and neither that decision, nor Crop
    Growers, nor the other authorities set forth in defendant’s motion require the dismissal of the
    indictment in this case. First, the disclosure obligations underlying the alleged scheme to conceal
    by defendant arise directly out of the FARA statute and are referenced in the FARA registration
    form. And second, once the defendant undertook to respond to, and attempt to influence the
    outcome of, the FARA Unit’s assessment of his potential obligation to register, and again when he
    chose to attempt to persuade the agency to revisit its determination that registration was required,
    22
    he was bound to be truthful and not to misstate or leave out facts material to the determination or
    necessary to ensure that his statements were not misleading.
    Given the primacy of the Safavian opinion to defendant’s attack on the indictment, it is
    helpful to include a detailed discussion of that decision here. In Safavian, the defendant was
    convicted at trial of three counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1) and one count of obstructing
    justice in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 
    1505. 528 F.3d at 959
    . The charges arose out of statements the
    defendant made on three separate occasions concerning a golf trip to Scotland with lobbyist Jack
    Abramoff in August of 2002. 
    Id. at 959–62.
    At that time, Safavian was chief of staff of the General
    Services Administration, and Abramoff was asking him for information concerning two GSA-
    controlled properties in which he or his clients might potentially have an interest. 
    Id. at 959.
    In
    July of 2002, in advance of the trip, Safavian requested an ethics opinion from the general counsel
    of the agency concerning whether he could accept the privately chartered air transportation
    Abramoff planned to provide. 
    Id. at 960.
    In March of 2003, the GSA Office of Inspector General
    began investigating the trip, and Safavian was interviewed twice by a GSA agent who eventually
    closed the investigation. 
    Id. at 961.
    And a year later, in March of 2004, the Senate Committee on
    Indian Affairs began investigating Abramoff. 
    Id. In the
    course of that broader investigation, the
    Committee asked Safavian to produce records relating to the 2002 trip, and Safavian responded in
    writing. 
    Id. at 961–96.
    Counts One and Four of the indictment alleged obstruction of justice, and Counts Two,
    Three, and Five of the indictment charged Safavian with violations of section 
    1001(a)(1). 528 F.3d at 962
    –63. Counts One and Three were based on his interviews with the GSA inspector, Count
    Two was based on his request for an ethics opinion, and Counts Four and Five were based on his
    letter to the Senate Committee. 
    Id. at 962.
    The jury acquitted the defendant of the charge of
    23
    obstructing the Senate inquiry in Count Four. 
    Id. Safavian was
    convicted of the other counts, and
    he appealed. 
    Id. The portion
    of the opinion that is relevant to this motion addresses the charges
    brought under section 1001(a)(1).
    In the false statements counts in Safavian, the indictment charged that the defendant had
    committed each offense by concealing or misrepresenting more than one category of information, 7
    and the jury was asked to indicate whether it had reached a verdict with respect to each individual
    specification. Thus, with respect to Count Two, the violation of section 1001(a)(1) in connection
    with seeking a GSA ethics opinion, the verdict form called for the jurors to specify:
    If we have found the defendant GUILTY of COUNT II, it is because we
    have agreed unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant:
    A. concealed his assistance to Mr. Abramoff in GSA-related activities; or
    B. concealed Mr. Abramoff’s business relationships with GSA; or
    C. falsely stated to the GSA ethics officer that Mr. Abramoff did all of his
    work on Capitol Hill, when in truth and in fact, Mr. Safavian well
    knew, prior to the August 2002 Scotland trip, that Mr. Abramoff was
    seeking to lease or purchase GSA-controlled property.
    7      Count Two alleged that Safavian
    did knowingly and willfully falsify, conceal, and cover up by a trick,
    scheme, and device material facts, that is in connection with seeking and
    obtaining a GSA ethics opinion regarding his travel, defendant Safavian
    (A) concealed his assistance to Lobbyist A in GSA-related activities;
    (B) concealed Lobbyist A’s business relationships with GSA; and
    (C) falsely stated to the GSA ethics officer that Lobbyist A did not have any
    business with and was not seeking to do business with GSA and that
    Lobbyist A did all his work on Capitol Hill, when in truth and in fact, as
    defendant Safavian well knew, prior to the August 2002 Scotland trip
    Lobbyist A was seeking to lease or purchase GSA-controlled property
    in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1). United States v. Safavian, No. 1:05-cr-0370 (D.D.C. 2005),
    Indictment [Dkt. # 6] ¶ 29. Count Three alleged that he concealed or misrepresented the same
    facts during the investigation being conducted by the GSA-OIG. See 
    id. ¶ 31.
    24
    See United States v. Safavian, No. 1:05-cr-0370 (D.D.C. 2005), Verdict Form [Dkt. # 119] at 2.
    Similar questions were posed with respect to Count Three. See Verdict Form at 3. The jury
    indicated that for Count Two, it found the defendant guilty of both Specification A – concealing
    his assistance to Mr. Abramoff in GSA-related activities, and Specification C – the false statement
    about Abramoff’s activities. Verdict Form at 2; see 
    also 528 F.3d at 962
    . For Count Three, it
    selected only the concealment offense described in Specification A. Verdict Form at 3; see 
    also 528 F.3d at 962
    .
    Safavian contended on appeal that his concealment convictions should be overturned
    because the government had failed to establish the necessary duty to disclose the particular facts
    and circumstances specified in the 
    counts. 528 F.3d at 964
    . The D.C. Circuit agreed. 
    Id. at 965.
    With respect to Count Two, which arose out of Savafian’s decision to avail himself of the
    opportunity to seek ethics advice from the appropriate official within his agency, the Court
    emphasized the value and voluntary nature of communications with ethics committees available
    throughout the government: “[i]t is not apparent how this voluntary system . . . imposes a duty on
    those seeking ethical advice to disclose – in the government’s words – ‘all relevant information’
    upon pain of prosecution for violating § 1001(a)(1).” 
    Id. at 964.
    Furthermore, the Court found
    that while the government agreed that there must be a legal duty to disclose underlying a
    concealment offense in violation of section 1001(a)(1), it “failed to identify a legal duty except by
    reference to vague standards of conduct for government employees.” 
    Id. The Court
    complained
    that the standards of conduct identified by the prosecution “range from the exceedingly vague . . .
    to somewhat more descriptive[,]” and that “[o]nly one has anything to do with disclosure.” 
    Id. 25 These
    strictures are of no more help to the government’s argument than the
    regulation on seeking ethics advice. Their relationship to Safavian’s duty
    under § 1001(a)(1) is tenuous at best. If an employee violates a standard of
    conduct, he may be subject to disciplinary action. § 2635.106(a). We
    cannot see how this translates into criminal liability under 18 U.S.C.
    § 1001(a)(1) whenever someone seeking ethical advice or being
    interviewed by a GSA investigator omits “relevant information.”
    
    Id. As the
    Court put it, “[t]he ethical principles give no indication of the particular facts or
    information an executive employee must disclose. Nor do they suggest that they have any bearing
    on conduct during a GSA investigation or a request for an ethics opinion.” 
    Id. at 965.
    The Court was less expansive about the reasoning underlying its decision to dismiss Count
    Three, which alleged that the same material facts were omitted and misrepresented in the interview
    with the GSA investigator. See Safavian Indictment ¶ 31. It found, as noted above, that the general
    ethical standards for government employees were unhelpful, and it also rejected the prosecution’s
    argument that the concealment convictions for both Counts Two and Three should be upheld based
    on a “principle that once one begins speaking when seeking government action or in response to
    questioning, one must disclose all relevant 
    facts.” 528 F.3d at 965
    ; see 
    id. (“The government
    essentially asks us to hold that once an individual starts talking, he cannot stop. We do not think
    § 1001 demands that individuals choose between saying everything and saying nothing.”). For
    these reasons, the Court of Appeals reversed Safavian’s convictions for concealment. 
    Id. 8 Defendant
    points to paragraph 63 of the indictment, which sets out the list of ten facts Craig
    allegedly omitted from his oral and written statements to the FARA Unit, and he contends that in
    the absence of a legal duty to disclose those facts, Count One cannot stand. See Def. Count One
    8      Safavian’s conviction on Specification C of Count Two, the affirmative false statement
    made to the ethics official, was reversed on other grounds, and therefore, the Court was not
    required to rule on whether that specification would have been sufficient alone to sustain the
    
    conviction. 528 F.3d at 965
    –67.
    26
    Mot. at 19 (“The legal question, therefore, is whether the failure to disclose these ‘material facts’
    violated § 1001(a)(1).”); see also Def. Count One Mot. at 22 (“Mr. Craig had no legal duty to
    disclose the facts that the government faults him for omitting.”); Tr. at 17, 21, 34.
    Defendant is correct that in accordance with the decisions in Safavian and Crop Growers,
    a defendant must have had a legal duty to disclose something before he can be held criminally
    liable for its concealment. As Safavian stated, “[c]oncealment cases in this circuit and others have
    found a duty to disclose material facts on the basis of specific requirements for disclosure of
    specific 
    information.” 528 F.3d at 964
    (collecting cases). Those requirements can be found in
    statutes, regulations, or government forms. United States v. 
    Calhoon, 97 F.3d at 526
    ; see also
    United States v. Moore, 
    446 F.3d 671
    , 678 (7th Cir. 2006) (duty to disclose conflicts of interest in
    connection with government contracts arose in part from the applicable federal regulations and the
    clear language in the contract documents implementing those regulations); 
    Kanchanalak, 192 F.3d at 1046
    (duty found in agency’s interpretation of its regulations). But those principles do not
    require the dismissal of the indictment in this case. The fact that the indictment is premised upon
    a specific statutory regime, with standard disclosure forms, as well as a law enforcement inquiry
    into a determination that the defendant allegedly took steps to influence, differentiates Count One
    from the charges arising out of vague ethical standards that troubled the Court in Safavian.
    Paragraph 49 alleges what the scheme was designed to conceal: “[t]he purpose of the
    scheme was for Craig to avoid registration as an agent of the Ukraine. Registration would require
    disclosure of the fact that [a wealthy private individual in Ukraine] had paid Craig and the Law
    Firm more than $4 million for the Report and the Law Firm’s parallel engagement with Ukraine.”
    Ind. ¶ 49. Thus, looking at the indictment in its entirety, and accepting the allegations as true as
    the Court is required to do at this time, Count One alleges a scheme to conceal something that
    27
    Craig would have been statutorily required to disclose under section 612(a) of FARA: that he was
    an “agent of a foreign principal” – that is, 1) that he engaged within the United States in “political
    activities,” 22 U.S.C. § 611(c)(1)(i), which are statutorily defined to include “any activity . . . that
    the person intends to, in any way influence . . . any section of the public,” 
    id. § 611(o);
    and/or 2)
    that he acted within the United States “as a public relations counsel, publicity agent, information-
    service employee, or political consultant.” 
    Id. § 611(c)(1)(ii).
    Thus, it is FARA that provides the
    source of the statutory duty to disclose the particular information that the government goes on to
    allege in paragraph 63 that he withheld: his alleged involvement in the public relations effort
    surrounding the report on behalf of his foreign client. Ind. ¶ 63.
    Moreover, the FARA registration form contains specific questions about whether the
    registrant was involved in disseminating information, the manner in which information was
    disseminated, and the involvement of any public relations firm, in addition to who funded the
    effort. See Section V-Informational Materials, Registration Statement Pursuant to the Foreign
    Agents Registration Act of 1938, as amended, https://www.justice.gov/file/991281/download. 9
    And FARA is a statute that specifically provides for the imposition of criminal sanctions for a
    failure to register or disclose. See 22 U.S.C. § 618(a).
    These clear provisions and forms align with circumstances found sufficient in 
    Moore, 446 F.3d at 678
    –79, 10 and differentiate the case from both Safavian, 
    528 F.3d 957
    , and White
    Eagle, 
    721 F.3d 1108
    . See Def. Count One Reply at 5. In White Eagle, a general federal regulation
    9      The form was also submitted as Exhibit 21 to defendant’s motion to dismiss. Ex. 21 to
    Def. Count One Mot. [Dkt. # 19-13].
    10      As counsel for the defense put it, “Moore is easy. The duty of Moore to disclose her
    relationship with her relative . . . comes right out of the regulations and the contracts themselves.”
    Tr. at 18.
    28
    encouraging reporting of wrongdoing was not enough to create the necessary duty to 
    disclose. 721 F.3d at 1117
    . The court found that it could not conclude the that defendant’s mere silence in
    the face of a broad rule could be interpreted as an affirmative misrepresentation:
    [a]lthough the regulation discusses reporting “fraud” and “corruption,” . . .
    it does not provide specifics on what kind of information should be reported
    or to whom. Nor does it discuss criminal liability for failure to abide by its
    provisions. . . . Nothing in § 1001(a)(1) or the regulation indicates that a
    failure to report could effectively be read as a statement that no fraud was
    taking place.
    
    Id. at 1118,
    citing 
    Safavian, 528 F.3d at 964
    . As another court in this district explained while
    summarizing the available precedents:
    “[w]hile the concealment of a fact that no one has a legal duty to disclose
    may not be a violation of [section 1001], such is not the case where a
    regulation or form requires disclosure.” United States v. Perlmutter,
    
    656 F. Supp. 782
    , 789 (S.D.N.Y. 1987), aff’d, 
    835 F.2d 1430
    (2d Cir. 1987).
    A defendant’s nondisclosure in such a circumstance is “distinguishable
    from a ‘passive failure to disclose’ or ‘mere silence in the face of an unasked
    question.’” United States v. Dale, 
    782 F. Supp. 615
    , 627 (D.D.C. 1991).
    United States v. Bowser, 
    318 F. Supp. 3d 154
    , 170 (D.D.C. 2018).
    For these reasons, the circumstances surrounding defendant’s statements to the government
    cannot be compared to the vague, ill-defined situation that prompted the decision in Safavian. In
    Safavian, the Court was chagrined that the government could only point to broad ethical standards,
    and not to any requirement to reveal 
    anything. 528 F.3d at 965
    . But FARA presents an entirely
    different situation – it is a disclosure statute. It specifically requires people to reveal when they
    are engaged in political or public relations activities on behalf of foreign clients. See 22 U.S.C. §
    611(c)(1)(i), (ii). The statute itself, including the definitions section, placed defendant on notice
    of his obligations, which were enforceable with criminal sanctions. See 22 U.S.C. §§ 611, 618.
    So while Safavian did not have a duty to volunteer that he may have violated ethical precepts, and
    the executives of the Crop Growers Corporation – particularly in light of the Fifth Amendment –
    29
    did not have a duty to disclose to the Securities and Exchange Commission that they may have
    violated unrelated campaign finance laws, see Crop Growers 
    Corp., 954 F. Supp. at 346
    –48, there
    was a specific statutory source of a duty that would have required Craig to disclose if, as alleged,
    he engaged in public relations efforts on behalf of Ukraine. 11
    Defendant insists that since the case turns upon his responses to the Unit’s inquiries, it is
    on all fours with that portion of the Safavian opinion that dealt with Count Three, the interview
    with the investigator from the office of the GSA inspector general. See Def. Count One Mot. at 23
    (“Safavian held in no uncertain terms that an individual has no freestanding obligation to ‘disclose
    all relevant facts’ ‘in response to questioning’ from a government official.”). With respect to that
    count, the Court of Appeals made two points: it noted, as discussed above, that the standards the
    government identified were too vague, and it rejected a government argument it paraphrased as,
    “once an individual starts talking, he cannot 
    stop.” 528 F.3d at 965
    ; 
    id. (“We do
    not think § 1001
    demands that individuals choose between saying everything and saying nothing.”). But that is not
    the government’s theory here. The prosecution is not premising criminal liability on the mere fact
    that Craig engaged in some conversation with the Unit and for that reason alone, he was obligated
    to keep going. In contrast to Safavian, the prosecution’s theory is that defendant’s duty to provide
    11      The defendant submits that he had no duty under FARA section 612 because it only applies
    to “registrants,” and he was not a registrant. Tr. at 50. This is not quite accurate; the duty to
    disclose the information detailed in section 612 is imposed on anyone who acts as an “agent of a
    foreign principal.” 22 U.S.C. § 612(a). More important, “registration” is disclosure, so all
    defendant is saying is: I didn’t have a duty to disclose because I didn’t have a duty to disclose.
    And that circular reasoning begs the question. The legal question posed by this motion is whether
    there is a source in a statute, regulation, or form for the duty to disclose allegedly violated here
    that places individuals on notice of their obligations, and that legal question has been answered.
    The question of whether Craig violated that duty is the question for the jury. And the Court does
    not have to decide whether Craig was required to register because the indictment is based on
    Craig’s alleged concealment of facts that were material to the agency’s attempt to figure that out,
    not the absence of a FARA registration statement.
    30
    full answers to the questions was a duty arising out of the specific statutory disclosure requirements
    that formed the sole predicate for both the written and the oral communications. Tr. at 40–43.
    When one reviews the particular omissions alleged in paragraph 63 to be among the acts
    undertaken in execution of the scheme, they all relate to alleged participation in the public relations
    effort preceding and surrounding the release of the report and thus, they flow directly from the
    disclosure obligations in FARA. The indictment alleges that from the start of the representation,
    Craig was specifically aware of the connection between public relations and the potential need to
    register, that he explicitly addressed the issue in the engagement letter, and that he sought,
    received, and approved advice on FARA obligations from other lawyers in the firm. Ind.
    ¶¶ 13–15.    Therefore, the situation can be distinguished from Safavian’s need to navigate
    uncharted waters.
    Furthermore, the government correctly argues here that Craig’s deliberate engagement with
    the FARA Unit as it wrestled with the FARA determination was an additional source of a duty,
    and that conclusion does not contravene the Safavian opinion. Gov’t Opp. to Count One Mot.
    at 18. The FARA Unit informed the law firm and Craig in two different letters that it was engaged
    in a specific inquiry concerning the firm’s and Craig’s potential obligations to register under the
    statute. See Ind. ¶¶ 51, 54; Letter of Dec. 18, 2012; Letter of Apr. 9, 2013 at 1. Craig responded
    to each of those letters. Ind. ¶¶ 53, 56. In September 2013, the agency informed Craig “that it had
    determined that the Law Firm had acted as Ukraine’s agent through the dissemination of the Report
    and communication with the media, and that the Law Firm would thus need to register under
    FARA.” Ind. ¶ 58 (emphasis added). Craig then sat down with the FARA Unit in person and
    submitted another letter, setting forth facts to support his contention that the firm “was in no way
    serving as an agent for Ukraine.” Ind. ¶¶ 61–62. Thus, all of the alleged communications with the
    31
    agency, written and oral, were for the express purpose of influencing the agency’s determination
    concerning the applicability of statutory disclosure obligations. Defendant has pointed to no case
    that suggests that telling half-truths would be acceptable in that situation. Indeed, the applicable
    precedent specifically differentiate a passive failure to volunteer information from making
    misleading omissions in an interview in the context of an underlying legal duty to disclose.
    In United States v. 
    Moore, 446 F.3d at 671
    , cited with approval in 
    Safavian, 328 F.3d at 964
    , the court found that the duty to disclose conflicts of interest arose not only from the applicable
    regulations incorporated in the government contracts the defendant had signed, but also in the
    course of her communications with city officials who were investigating the conflicts of interest
    problem.
    The evidence before the jury easily permitted it to conclude that Moore,
    who signed this contact to obtain HUD block grant funds, knew what the
    standards were and deliberately avoided disclosing the conflict to the City
    even when she was asked directly about it. Indeed, even if she did not, . . .
    the repeated inquiries from City officials about conflicts of interest
    repeatedly triggered a duty to disclose. Once the City explicitly asked for
    information, the failure to respond honestly is something far greater than a
    failure to volunteer 
    information. 466 F.3d at 678
    . “Even if she had the right to remain silent, she did not have the right affirmatively
    to mislead City officials or to lie . . . .” 
    Id. at 679.
    In footnote 7 of the Safavian opinion, the Court made a point of distinguishing the Moore
    case because Moore’s duty to disclose arose from requirements in federal statutes, regulations, or
    government 
    forms. 528 F.3d at 965
    n.7. It also distinguished United States v. Cisneros,
    
    26 F. Supp. 2d 24
    (D.D.C. 1998), because the questions posed by the government agent in that
    case were “rooted in a government form that the defendant had filled out.” 
    Id. Craig insists
    that
    he is more similar to Safavian because he had no statutory duty to respond to the Unit’s inquiries
    at all, much less, to provide the omitted information. See Def. Count One Mot. at 24 (emphasizing
    32
    that DOJ “requested” the information but there was no obligation to supply it, and pointing to the
    agency’s lack of authority to issue Civil Investigative Demands (“CIDs”)). But the absence of
    CID authority relates to the scope of the Unit’s power to investigate a failure to disclose; it does
    not define the duty to disclose. Defendant Craig is blurring the critical distinction between the
    underlying statutory duty to disclose certain facts and a hypothetical duty, not alleged to have been
    violated here, to volunteer information to an unsuspecting agency or to respond to polite requests
    for information instead of remaining silent as he had the right to do. Thus, this case more closely
    resembles Moore and Cisneros than Safavian, and footnote 7 supplies grounds to conclude that
    the D.C. Circuit would rule differently in this situation.
    Also, in United States v. Stewart, 
    433 F.3d 273
    , 318 (2d Cir. 2006), cited in White 
    Eagle, 721 F.3d at 1117
    , the court found the evidence sufficient to convict a defendant on a concealment
    theory because an SEC investigator’s specific questions regarding another individual’s stock trades
    created a duty to disclose information about those trades. Id.; see 
    also 433 F.3d at 318
    (“The
    ‘essential issue’ is whether [d]efendant knowingly and willingly falsified, concealed, or covered
    up information relevant to the investigation . . . . Defendant’s legal duty to be truthful under section
    1001 included a duty to disclose the information he had regarding the circumstances . . . even
    33
    though he voluntarily agreed to meet with investigators.”), quoting United States v. Stephenson,
    
    895 F.2d 867
    , 874 (2d Cir. 1990). 12
    The defense protested at the hearing that the ten alleged omissions should not be held
    against Craig; he had no way of knowing he was obligated to talk about the particular facts listed
    in paragraph 63 of the indictment. See Ind. ¶ 63; 13 Tr. at 18 (“You can’t prosecute somebody for
    not saying something they’re not asked.”); Tr. at 51 (“[N]one of the questions asked would have
    12       The defendant does not actually dispute that an individual would have a legal obligation to
    be not only truthful, but complete when asked specific questions. He simply argues –
    unpersuasively – that the indictment does not allege those circumstances, and it simply alleges a
    failure to volunteer information. See Tr. at 16–17.
    MR. TAYLOR: I think what they said was that when you are being
    interviewed by – when you are – let’s put it this way: When you are
    speaking to a government agent – so the context is in 1001, you’re speaking
    to someone within the context of 1001 – and you are alleged to have failed
    to say things in that conversation, things which you were not asked to say,
    but which you were supposed to guess at because they were later determined
    to be material or relevant or interesting. You’re supposed – you cannot be
    prosecuted for not saying those things, unless there is a specific duty to say
    specific things.
    THE COURT: But if you are specifically told: We want to talk to you
    about X, and these are the particular facts that are important to us, are you
    then on notice that you have to be truthful and –
    MR. TAYLOR: That would be a different case from this one.
    
    Id. 13 That
    is: that defendant wrote the report knowing that its purpose was for the American
    lobbyist and the government of Ukraine to use it to influence U.S. public opinion and policy; that
    Craig had recommended and facilitated Ukraine’s hiring of the PR firm, been informed of its media
    plan, met with the lobbyist and an executive of the PR firm about the plan, and suggested that
    Reporter 1 receive a copy of the report with the report’s release; that he had connected Reporter 1
    and the former Congressman, spoke with Reporter 1 on December 11, 2012 about the report, hand-
    delivered an exclusive advance copy of it to Reporter 1’s home, gave an interview to Reporter 2
    before the report was released to the public; that he had provided an interview to a reporter from a
    U.K. newspaper before the report’s release; and that he had kept the PR firm apprised of his efforts
    consistent with the media plan. Ind. ¶ 63.
    34
    required the disclosure of . . . what is alleged to be not disclosed in Paragraph 63.”). But this
    argument falls flat in light of the specific focus of the government’s inquiry. Counsel for the
    defendant agreed at the hearing that the agency’s letters gave rise to a duty to be truthful in any
    response, Tr. at 52, and the December 18, 2012 and April 9, 2013 letters from the FARA Unit put
    the defendant on notice of exactly what was of interest to the questioners.
    [P]lease provide this office with (1) a complete statement of the ownership
    and control of the firm, (2) a description of the nature of the firm’s regular
    business and/or activity, (3) a description of the activities the firm has
    engaged in or the services it has rendered to the Ministry of Justice of the
    Government of Ukraine or any other foreign entity and (4) a copy of the
    existing or proposed written agreement, if any, or a full description of the
    terms and conditions of each existing or proposed oral agreement, if any,
    the firm may have with the Ministry of Justice of the Government of
    Ukraine or any other foreign entity .
    Letter of Dec. 18, 2012 at 1.
    (1) To whom, if anyone, did your firm release or distribute the report and
    when? . . .
    (5) What [had been the law] firm’s understanding of what would happen to
    the report when it was released to the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice?
    (6) Did you or anyone in your firm have any media interviews or comments
    to the media, public, or government officials about the report and the
    findings of your firm?
    Letter of Apr. 9, 2013 at 2; see also Ind. ¶ 54.
    The subsequent September 5, 2013 letter from the agency, in which it announced its
    determination, specifically predicated the determination on defendant’s dissemination of the report
    to, and communications with, the media. Ind. ¶ 58; see Letter of Sept. 5, 2013. Defendant then
    briefed the Unit Chief in person and followed up with a written submission, supplying facts about
    that issue in an effort to refute the agency’s finding. Ind. ¶¶ 61–62. The defendant was not groping
    in the dark; the indictment alleges that each of the facts enumerated in paragraph 63 that the
    defendant knowingly omitted bears directly on the only issue that was on the table.
    35
    Moreover, the facts in paragraph 63 were properly included in this indictment for another
    reason: they are the very facts that allegedly render the statements in paragraphs 56 and 62 to be
    false or misleading. See Tr. at 96 (“[GOVERNMENT COUNSEL]: . . . [T]he substantive count,
    which appears in Paragraph 48, alleges between June 3rd, 2013, and January 16, 2014, a scheme
    to make false statements and conceal material information. And incorporates by reference the
    false statements that the defendant made in Paragraph 56, the false statements that the defendant
    made in . . . Paragraph 61, the false statements in Paragraph 62, and the material omissions in
    Paragraph 63.”). Defendant seems to acknowledge this. See Def. Count One Mot. at 12–13
    (stating the “omitted ‘material facts’ in Paragraph 63 explain what the Indictment alleges is
    misleading” about the alleged false or misleading statements). Notwithstanding defendant’s
    attempts to characterize the indictment as one charging nothing more than concealment, the
    indictment tracks the statutory language and alleges that defendant did “falsify, conceal and cover
    up.” Ind. ¶ 48. The alleged “manner and means” of the scheme to conceal include both false
    statements and omissions, see Ind. ¶ 50, and the alleged false or misleading statements are as much
    a part of the execution of the alleged scheme as the omissions itemized in paragraph 63. Ind. ¶ 56
    (alleging false statements in the June 3, 2013 letter to the FARA Unit); Ind. ¶ 62 (alleging false
    statements in the October 11, 2013 letter); see also Gov’t Opp. to Count One Mot. at 3
    (“Significantly, defendant’s motion completely fails to acknowledge that the scheme with which
    he is charged involved not only concealment, but also affirmative false statements.”).
    Here, the government’s inclusion of alleged omissions in the set of acts alleged to have
    been committed in execution of the scheme do not present a risk of the harm the rule applied in
    Safavian was meant to prevent. As in 
    Bowser, 318 F. Supp. 3d at 170
    , and 
    Dale, 782 F. Supp. at 626
    , there is no “passive” failure to disclose because the omission allegations are part and parcel
    36
    of the false statement allegations. And there is no concern about “silence in the face of an unasked
    question,” 
    Bowser, 318 F. Supp. 3d at 170
    , quoting 
    Dale, 782 F. Supp. at 627
    , because the issues
    were raised in the written inquiries from the agency. And notwithstanding defendant’s contention
    that “[t]here is no duty ‘under FARA’ to volunteer all potentially relevant information in response
    to questions from the FARA unit,” Def. Count One Mot. at 20, this case, unlike Count Two in the
    Safavian case, is not based on a failure to “volunteer” anything.
    For all of these reasons, the Court concludes that the allegations set forth in the indictment
    are sufficient to allege that defendant knowingly and willfully falsified, concealed, or covered up
    information he had a duty to disclose in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1). 14 The Court
    underscores that the burden remains with the government to prove this allegation beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    While this was not one of the grounds identified for the motion to dismiss, defendant argues
    in a footnote at the end of his pleading that the indictment does not state a scheme offense. Def.
    Count One Mot. at 27 n.17, citing 
    London, 550 F.2d at 214
    , Woodward, 469 U.S. at108 n.5 (which
    quotes the statement in London that section 1001 requires an “affirmative act”), and 
    Safavian, 528 F.3d at 967
    n.12. The Court will therefore address this contention as well, and it finds that the
    allegations in the indictment suffice to set forth the affirmative conduct required to allege a
    “scheme” under section 1001(a)(1).
    14      Defendant also moved to dismiss Count One on the basis that the grand jury was
    “erroneously instructed about [a] nonexistent legal duty” to disclose information to the FARA
    Unit. Def. Count One Mot. at 1, 25–27, citing Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(3)(A)(v). Because the Court
    finds that Craig did have a legal duty to disclose, it need not go behind the face of the indictment
    to reach defendant’s claim of legal error before the grand jury.
    37
    The primary thrust of defendant’s motion is that since there was no duty to provide the
    information that was allegedly omitted, those allegations must be excised from the indictment. See
    Def. Count One Reply at 10–12. At that point, he submits, the indictment would not allege the
    scheme needed for a violation of section 1001(a)(1) – as opposed to (a)(2) – because a scheme
    cannot be predicated on false statements. 
    Id. He points
    to a footnote in the Safavian decision for
    that proposition. Def. Count One Mot. at 27 n.17, 
    citing 528 F.3d at 967
    n.12; see also Tr. at 37–
    38. But he also asserts that the unedited indictment is just a collection of isolated statements and
    omissions that do not add up to a scheme. Def. Count One Mot. at 27 n.17.
    Since the Court has found that the duty exists, paragraph 63 will remain in the indictment.
    But the Court notes that the Safavian footnote says only – in dicta – that Safavian was correct when
    he argued that “a false statement alone cannot constitute a . . . 
    scheme.” 528 F.3d at 967
    n.12,
    citing 
    Woodward, 469 U.S. at 108
    n.4 (emphasis added). And in the cited footnote in Woodward,
    the Supreme Court simply observed that in that case, the government did not have to prove a
    scheme at all because Woodward was only charged with making a false 
    statement. 469 U.S. at 108
    n.4 (“This type of affirmative misrepresentation is proscribed . . . even if not accompanied by
    a . . . scheme.”).
    In London, the Fifth Court did not indicate that a series of alleged false or misleading
    statements – with or without omissions – could not state an offense; indeed, it specifically
    highlighted its previous opinion in Markham where those circumstances were deemed to be
    sufficient. 
    London, 550 F.2d at 213
    , discussing 
    Markham, 537 F.2d at 192
    –93. Moreover, the
    London court’s particular concern was avoiding the prospect of a 1001(a)(1) prosecution based
    solely on an “exculpatory no,” when a similar prosecution would have been barred in that circuit
    under subsection (a)(2). 
    Id. at 213–13.
    38
    The upshot of all of these cases is that a scheme offense must be based on active
    falsification or concealment, and not merely passivity or silence. This conclusion is consistent
    with United States v. St. Michael’s Credit Union, 
    880 F.2d 579
    , 589–90 (1st Cir. 1989), which was
    also cited in Safavian footnote 
    12, 528 F.3d at 967
    n.12, and by the defense at the hearing. Tr. at
    10. The case involved a financial institution’s failure to file currency transaction 
    reports. 880 F.2d at 581
    . The court agreed with the defense that for the section 1001 count, the trial court should
    have instructed the jury that the government was required to establish some affirmative act of
    concealment beyond the mere failure to file the reports, and it rejected the notion that the fact that
    a bank had “passively failed to file” the reports could support a conviction “[a]bsent other acts that
    might form part of a scheme to affirmatively conceal facts from a federal agency.” 
    Id. at 589–91.
    Craig is correct when he points out that the First Circuit rejected the government’s attempt
    to uphold the conviction by arguing the individual defendants’ misrepresentations could provide
    the necessary evidence of a “scheme.”             The St. Michael’s court did conclude that
    “misrepresentations alone” would not be sufficient to constitute a scheme to conceal because
    section 1001 criminalizes falsification or concealment through a trick or scheme “or” the making
    of a false or misleading 
    statement. 880 F.2d at 590
    (emphasis added) (“Section 1001 is written in
    the disjunctive; the offenses are separated by the word ‘or.’”). But the decision is not binding on
    this Court.
    More important, the question is not presented in this case. The indictment is not based on
    a mere failure to file a registration statement or a mere false statement in a letter. And it is not
    based on an “isolated” omission. It alleges a set of related false statements, omissions, and actions,
    all with the same objective. Moreover, the indictment alleges, among other things, that after the
    Unit announced its determination that Craig would have to disclose his activities on behalf of a
    39
    foreign principal, Craig did not merely passively fail to comply. He allegedly encouraged his law
    firm to resist and took steps to advance the effort. Ind. ¶¶ 59–62. He drafted proposed submissions
    to submit to the government to persuade it to change its position, and he attended a meeting in an
    effort to do so in person, at which and after which it is alleged that he misstated the facts and
    declined to mention material information. Ind. ¶¶ 60–62.
    As in United States v. Hubbell then, “the indictment sets forth the acts of falsification and
    concealment; the nature of the scheme by which these material facts were falsified and concealed;
    and the material facts that [the defendant] 
    concealed.” 177 F.3d at 13
    . Therefore, the Court does
    not need to speculate about whether a narrower indictment would have survived a motion to
    dismiss, and it concludes that the indictment as written is sufficient to allege a scheme.
    B.      Count One is not barred by the statute of limitations.
    Defendant also moves to dismiss Count One on statute of limitations grounds. Def. Count
    One Mot. at 27–34. Because the indictment charges defendant with a single “scheme,” rather than
    individual false statements, and the scheme ended within the limitations period, the Court finds
    that Count One is timely.
    It is well-established that “[s]tatutes of limitations normally begin to run when the crime is
    complete.” Toussie v. United States, 
    397 U.S. 112
    , 115 (1970), quoting Pendergast v. United
    States, 
    317 U.S. 412
    , 418 (1943). This typically means that the statute of limitations begins to run
    “as soon as each element of the crime has occurred.” United States v. McGoff, 
    831 F.2d 1071
    ,
    1078 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
    In this case the applicable statute of limitations is five years. See 18 U.S.C. § 3282(a). The
    indictment was returned by a grand jury on April 11, 2019. See Ind. Thus, any criminal conduct
    prior to April 11, 2014 would typically be time-barred. But here, defendant entered into a series
    of tolling agreements with the government to exclude 190 days from the statute of limitations
    40
    calculation. Def. Count One Mot. at 28 n.18. Therefore, the operative date for the statute of
    limitations is October 3, 2013, and the government could prosecute an offense that took place after
    that date. 
    Id. at 28
    n.18.
    The parties’ dispute centers on when the offense was “complete,” and thus when the statute
    of limitations began to run. Defendant argues that the offense was “complete” prior to October 3,
    2013, so “Count One must be dismissed to the extent it relies on statements made or other alleged
    conduct occurring before that date.” Def. Count One Mot. at 28–31. The government contends
    that the crime was not “complete” until October 11, 2013, at the earliest, when defendant
    committed the last act in furtherance of the charged scheme, and thus Count One is timely. Gov’t
    Opp. to Count One Mot. at 27–31.
    This case is squarely governed by the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in Bramblett v. United States,
    
    231 F.2d 489
    (D.C. Cir. 1956). In that case, a U.S. Congressman was convicted of engaging in a
    scheme to conceal material facts under 18 U.S.C. § 1001 by falsely representing to the Disbursing
    Office of the House of Representatives that he had hired a clerk, in order to draw an extra pay
    check. 
    Id. at 490.
    The defendant argued that the prosecution was time-barred because the crime
    was “complete” when he filed the initial false designation form to the Disbursing Office, an act
    that fell outside of the statute of limitations period. 
    Id. at 490–91.
    The Court of Appeals rejected
    that position, noting that the indictment alleged that the defendant repeated the false statement
    each time he subsequently drew the fake clerk’s paycheck, and those subsequent acts in furtherance
    of his “scheme” squarely fell within the limitations period. 
    Id. at 491.
    Central to the Court’s
    holding was its finding that “the indictment [did] not merely charge the making of a false
    statement,” but rather a “continuing crime of falsification by a scheme.” 
    Id. Based on
    that key
    distinction, the Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the crime was complete when he
    41
    originally submitted the false form, and instead held that “the period of limitations did not begin
    to run until the scheme ended.” 
    Id. Similarly, here,
    as the defendant himself emphasizes, the indictment plainly charges
    defendant with a single “scheme” under section 1001(a)(1), rather than individual false statements
    under (a)(2), see Def. Reply for Count One Mot. at 2 (“There is no question that this indictment
    charges a concealment scheme under 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1) and not willful false statements under
    subsection (a)(2).”) (emphasis omitted), 15 and that scheme ended within the limitations period.
    According to the indictment, the alleged scheme lasted from “June 3, 2013, to on or about January
    16, 2014,” when the FARA unit reversed its decision requiring defendant to register in reliance of
    the defendant’s representations. Ind. ¶¶ 48–49, 64. More important, the indictment accuses
    defendant of committing the last two acts in furtherance of the scheme within the limitations
    period. 
    Id. ¶¶ 61–62.
    Specifically, defendant is charged with making false and misleading
    statements during the October 9, 2013 meeting with the FARA unit, and in his October 11, 2013
    letter to FARA. 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    Court finds that the limitations period did not begin to run
    on the charged scheme until October 11, 2013, at the earliest, and Count One is timely.
    Defendant argues that the Court should not apply the rule in Bramblett because the case
    was overruled by the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in 
    Toussie, 397 U.S. at 114
    –15. Def.
    Count One Mot. at 31, 33. Toussie held that the statute of limitations begins to run when a crime
    is complete “unless the explicit language of the substantive criminal statute . . . or the nature of the
    crime involved is such that Congress must assuredly have intended that it be treated as a continuing
    15      It is difficult to square defendant’s argument that the scheme crime was complete once he
    sent the letters of February 6 or June 3, 2012, see Def. Count One Mot. at 31, with his insistence
    that those actions could not constitute the crime charged since 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1) requires
    proof of something more: a scheme. See Def. Count One Mot. at 27 n.17.
    42
    
    one.” 397 U.S. at 115
    . This narrow exception is known as the “continuing offense doctrine,” and
    it applies to statutes that contemplate a “prolonged course of conduct.” 
    Id. at 120.
    Defendant
    insists that 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1) is not a “continuing offense,” and that the charged offense was
    complete prior to October 3, 2013. Def. Count One Mot. at 30–31.
    The Court need not decide whether section 1001(a)(1) is a continuing offense because it is
    still bound by the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Bramblett, which held that a scheme offense is not
    complete until the scheme 
    ends. 231 F.2d at 491
    . 16 That ruling was re-affirmed and applied by
    the D.C. Circuit well after Toussie; in United States v. Hubbell, the D.C. Circuit held that “the
    plain language of § 1001 permits the charging of scheme crimes,” and it reversed a district court
    that had dismissed a section 1001 count for vagueness. 
    177 F.3d 11
    , 13 (D.C. Cir. 1999). The
    Court relied on Bramblett, noting that in that case it had rejected the defendant’s argument that a
    prosecution under section 1001 was time-barred because
    “the indictment [did] not merely charge the making of a false statement,”
    but instead alleged a falsification by scheme. By “falsifying a material fact,
    and in leaving it on file, thereby continuing the falsification in order
    repeatedly to partake of the fruits of the scheme,” the defendant committed
    a continuing crime of falsification by scheme that “fairly falls within the
    terms of section 1001.”
    16      Other circuits have observed that the continuing offense doctrine is not applicable when
    some of the charged conduct falls within the limitations period. Both the Ninth and Tenth Circuits
    have observed that “[the continuing offense] doctrine applies only where it is contended that the
    actual conduct of the defendant ended but the crime continued past that time, not where . . . the
    charged criminal conduct itself extends over a period of time.” United States v. Reitmeyer,
    
    356 F.3d 1313
    , 1321 (10th Cir. 2004), quoting United States v. Jaynes, 
    75 F.3d 1493
    , 1506–07
    (10th Cir. 1996); United States v. Morales, 
    11 F.3d 915
    , 918 (9th Cir. 1993) (same).
    43
    
    Id., quoting Bramblett,
    231 F.2d at 491. 17 Therefore, Bramblett has not been overruled, as the
    defendant argues, and since it remains binding on this Court, Count One will proceed. 18
    II.    Motion to Dismiss Count Two
    In a separate motion, defendant has also moved to dismiss Count Two of the indictment
    for failure to state an offense. Def. Count Two Mot. at 1. Count Two alleges that in the letter sent
    to the FARA Unit on October 11, 2013, defendant Craig knowingly and willfully made false
    statements of material fact and omitted material facts in violation of 22 U.S.C. § 612 and
    § 618(a)(2). Ind. ¶¶ 66–67.
    17     While the Bramblett Court used the phrase “continuing crime of falsification by a 
    scheme,” 231 F.2d at 491
    , the Court has not officially characterized section 1001(a)(1) as a “continuing
    offense” which is a “term of art” that carries a different meaning than the ordinary usage of those
    words. 
    McGoff, 831 F.2d at 1078
    .
    18      Other courts have applied the same principle after the Toussie decision. See United States
    v. Heacock, 
    31 F.3d 249
    , 256 (5th Cir. 1994) (holding that in an 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(1) scheme,
    as in a conspiracy, “the statute of limitations does not begin to run on a ‘scheme’ crime . . . until
    each overt act constituting the scheme has occurred”); United States v. Menendez, 
    137 F. Supp. 3d 688
    , 688–700 (D.N.J. 2015), aff’d, 
    831 F.3d 155
    (3d Cir. 2016) (relying on Bramblett to hold that
    defendant’s 1001(a)(1) prosecution was not time-barred even though some of the conduct fell
    outside of the limitations period because he was charged with a single, extended “scheme” and
    “the scheme did not end, at the earliest, until [defendant] filed his last financial disclosure form”
    which fell within the limitations period).
    Defendant cites United States v. Sunia, 
    643 F. Supp. 2d 51
    (D.D.C. 2009), but the relevant
    portion of that case concerned three counts brought under a different statute, 18 U.S.C. § 666,
    which prohibits theft, embezzlement, and bribery in connection with programs receiving federal
    funds. The court rejected the government’s argument that the counts could reach those acts that
    took place outside the statute of limitations on the basis that the indictment charged a “continuing
    offense,” but it took great pains to specifically differentiate such offenses from those that involve
    a scheme or pattern of illegal conduct. 
    Id. at 70–71.
    Here, the indictment charges defendant with
    the “scheme” specifically proscribed in section 1001(a)(1) and specifically addressed in Bramblett,
    so the case is inapposite. Ind. ¶¶ 48–49.
    44
    The “False Statements and Willful Omissions” provision of FARA states:
    (a) Any person who . . .
    (2) in any registration statement or supplement thereto or in any
    other document filed with or furnished to the Attorney General
    under the provisions of this subchapter willfully makes a false
    statement of a material fact or willfully omits any material fact
    required to be stated therein or willfully omits a material fact or a
    copy of a material document necessary to make the statements
    therein and the copies of documents furnished therewith not
    misleading, shall, upon conviction thereof, be punished by a fine of
    not more than $10,000 or by imprisonment for not more than five
    years, . . . .
    22 U.S.C. § 618(a)(2).
    The motion to dismiss argues that the October 11, 2013 letter does not fall under this
    provision of the Act because it was not a registration statement or supplement, nor was it a
    document “filed with or furnished to the Attorney General under the provisions of” the Act. Def.
    Count Two Mot. at 1, quoting 22 U.S.C. § 618(a)(2).
    According to defendant, section 618(a)(2) applies only to submissions mandated by the
    statute, and the letter that forms the basis for this count was sent voluntarily and not pursuant to
    any legal obligation. Def. Count Two Mot. at 1–2. Thus, he maintains, it was subject to the general
    prohibition against making false statements to the government found in 18 U.S.C. § 1001, but not
    the specific FARA-related prohibition in 22 U.S.C. § 618(a)(2). 
    Id. Defendant points
    out that all
    of his responses to the FARA Unit’s requests for information were voluntary, and that he was not
    obligated to respond to the agency’s letters at all, and he notes that the indictment specifically
    alleges that he provided the October 11 letter “at the FARA Unit’s Request.” Ind. ¶ 62; Def. Count
    Two Mot. at 4.
    In its opposition, the government contends that defendant’s interpretation essentially writes
    the words “or in any other document” out of the statute, and that the Court is bound to reject that
    45
    argument and give effect to every word included in the provision by the legislature. Gov’t Opp.
    to Count Two Mot. at 12–13, citing United States v. Menasche, 
    348 U.S. 528
    , 538–39 (1955) (“It
    is a cardinal principal of statutory construction [] to save and not to destroy[,] that is, to give effect,
    if possible, to every clause and word of a statute.”).
    This is a close question. The Court is required to begin with the language of the statute
    itself, and the plain language of the statute certainly supports the government’s view that the
    October letter from Craig to the FARA Unit Chief, concerning the “obligation under FARA to
    register,” Ind. ¶ 42; Letter of Oct. 10, 2013, Ex. 9 to Def. Count One Mot., and responding directly
    to the Unit’s determination that the law firm did have to register, was a document “furnished” to
    the FARA Unit “under the provisions” of FARA, and that a false statement in that document would
    be actionable under section 618. But the Court is required to use all the tools of statutory
    construction at its disposal.
    The Court finds much of defendant’s analysis of the text of section 618 to be strained and
    unpersuasive, and it cannot conclude that the plain language of the provision standing alone
    requires the Court to adopt defendant’s reading of the statute. But application of the case law the
    defendant cites could support either reading, a review of the statute as a whole supports the
    defendant’s interpretation, and the legislative history does not unequivocally support the
    46
    government’s position. Given those ambiguities, the rule of lenity requires the dismissal of the
    charge. 19
    Defendant makes several arguments in support of his position. First, he submits that if one
    applies the canon of statutory construction ejusdem generis, the phrase “or in any other document
    filed with or furnished to the Attorney General under the provisions of this subchapter” must be
    interpreted to refer to a “registration statement” or “supplement thereto.” Def. Count Two Mot. at
    6–7. The doctrine of ejusdem generis deals with the interpretation of a residual catchall phrase at
    the end of a series or enumerated list, and it requires courts to interpret such catchall phrases by
    reference to the preceding, more specific, items in the list. Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. Adams,
    
    532 U.S. 105
    , 114–15 (2001) (explaining that ejusdem generis is a statutory canon “[w]here
    general words follow specific words in a statutory enumeration, the general words are construed
    to embrace only objects similar in nature to those objects enumerated by the preceding specific
    words.”) (internal citation omitted). The government questions whether the doctrine applies given
    the lack of commas separating the items in the list preceding the general term. Gov’t Opp. to
    Count Two Mot. at 2, 10–13, citing Ali v. Fed. Bureau of Prisons, 
    552 U.S. 214
    , 224–25 (2008)
    19      Defendant suggested at the hearing on the motions to dismiss that Count One must fall with
    Count Two, Tr. at 30–33, but that is not correct. The government did not rely solely on section
    618 – the FARA false statements provision – as the source of the duty to disclose for purposes of
    section 1001; it pointed to the FARA statute as a whole, including sections 611 and 612. Gov’t
    Opp. to Count One Mot. at 18–19. Defendant scoffed at the suggestion that section 611 – a
    definitions section – would be of value. See Def. Reply for Count One at 3–4. But it is in the
    definitions section that Congress specifically defined political activities to include public relations,
    thereby establishing the parameters of the statutory disclosure obligation in section 612 and putting
    defendant and others on clear notice of their obligations. The fact that the FARA false statements
    provision may be limited to registration statements, and one cannot prosecute false statements or
    omissions in other communications with the Unit under that narrow provision, does not mean that
    they are not illegal; as counsel for the defendant arguing Count Two pointed out: “[t]o be sure, 18
    U.S.C. Section 1001 applies to any statement that Mr. Craig or anyone else makes to a government
    agency, including the FARA unit.” Tr. at 71.
    47
    (declining to apply ejusdem generis where the structure of the phrase defined two categories in the
    disjunctive rather than listing specific items separated by commas).
    But the problem with defendant’s argument does not turn on the presence or absence of the
    punctuation that is sorely needed here. The Court finds ejusdem generis to be of little assistance
    because the provision does not contain a list or series at all. It says, “in any registration statement
    or supplement . . . or in any other document,” 22 U.S.C. § 618(a)(2), not “in any registration
    statement, supplement, or other document.” So the provision simply sets out two separate
    categories of documents – separated by the conjunction – in which the false statement could be
    found; it is not a list with a general catch-all at the end.
    Second, the defendant highlights the words, “or willfully omits any material fact required
    to be stated therein,” and suggests that the use of the word “required” in the middle of the provision
    modifies the earlier term, “any other document filed or furnished” and indicates that the
    “document” must be one that was “required” to be filed. Def. Reply for Count Two Mot. at 5. But
    this completely ignores the structure of the provision. The statute warns that whoever, “in a
    registration statement or supplement . . . or in any other document” does one of three things –
    “willfully makes a false statement of material fact or willfully omits any material fact required to
    be stated therein or willfully omits a material fact . . . necessary to make the statements therein . . .
    not misleading” – will be subject to criminal sanctions. 22 U.S.C. § 618(a) (emphasis added). In
    other words, it lists, as does 18 U.S.C. § 1001, the three ways in which an individual could commit
    a false statement offense, and the word “required” in the second prong specifies the type of
    omission that could be actionable under that prong. So while it narrows the scope of the omissions
    clause, it has no bearing on the nature of the documents in which the three types of false statements
    or omissions could be found.
    48
    However, at the hearing on this motion, the defense also honed in on the phase “filed with
    or furnished to the Attorney General under the provisions of this subchapter.” Tr. at 66–68; Def.
    Reply for Count Two Mot. at 1. Defendant argues that “under the provisions of” is limiting
    language that has been accorded particular significance by the Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit,
    and he points to the discussions of the meaning of the word “under” in Ardestani v. INS,
    
    502 U.S. 129
    (1991), D.C. Hosp. Ass’n v. District of Columbia, 
    224 F.3d 776
    (D.C. Cir. 2000),
    and Blackman v. District of Columbia, 
    456 F.3d 167
    (D.C. Cir. 2006). Tr. at 69–71; Def. Count
    Two Mot. at 4.
    Ardestani addressed the availability of attorneys’ fees under the Equal Access to Justice
    Act, 5 U.S.C. § 504(a) 
    (“EAJA”). 502 U.S. at 131
    .     The petitioner had prevailed in an
    administrative deportation proceeding brought by INS, and he sought fees under the EAJA. 
    Id. That statute
    provides that an agency that conducts an “adversary proceeding” must award fees to
    the prevailing party; an “adversary proceeding” is defined in section 504(b)(1)(C) as “an
    adjudication under section 554 of this title,” and section 554 is the provision that “delineates the
    scope” of the proceedings governed by the formal adjudication requirements set forth in the
    Administrative Procedure Act. 
    Id. at 132–33.
    The Court explained that while immigration proceedings were at one time subject to the
    Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), Congress had passed a separate statute – the Immigration
    and Naturalization Act – that lays out the exclusive procedural requirements. 
    Id. at 133–34.
    Since,
    therefore, the deportation proceeding was not subject to or “under” the APA, it followed that the
    EAJA was not applicable.       
    Id. at 134.
       Ardestani argued that since the new deportation
    requirements resembled the formalities available under the APA, the fee provision still applied,
    but the Court disagreed, reading “under” as a restrictive term.
    49
    “The starting point in statutory interpretation is ‘the language [of the statute]
    itself.’” . . . The word “under” has many dictionary definitions and must
    draw its meaning from its context. In this case, the most natural reading of
    the EAJA’s applicability to adjudications “under section 554” is that those
    proceedings must be “subject to” or “governed by” § 554. Indeed, in
    addition to the court below, six United States Courts of Appeals have
    determined that the plain and ordinary meaning of “under” as it appears in
    the EAJA is that proceedings must be governed by the procedures mandated
    by the APA. . . . As one court has observed, the word “under” appears
    several times in the EAJA itself, and “[i]n other locations, no creative
    reading is possible – ‘under’ means ‘subject [or pursuant] to’ or ‘by reason
    of the authority of.’” St. Louis Fuel & Supply Co. v. Fed. Energy Regulatory
    Comm., 
    890 F.2d 446
    , 450 (D.C. Cir. 1989).
    
    Id. at 135
    (other internal citations omitted).
    In D.C. Hospital Association, the issue was whether payments made by managed care
    organizations to hospitals for inpatient care provided to low income patients should have been
    included when calculating the hospitals’ operating costs for Medicare 
    purposes. 224 F.3d at 778
    .
    The statutory provision in question included the words “the amount paid under the State plan to
    the hospital for operating costs for inpatient hospital services.” 
    Id. at 779,
    quoting 42 U.S.C.
    § 1396r-4(c)(1). Once again, the Court began with the language of the statute itself.
    The Supreme Court has observed that “[t]he word ‘under’ has many
    dictionary definitions and must draw its meaning from its context.” We see
    nothing in the context of the Medicaid statute, however, that would require
    us to give the word other than its ordinary meaning. “Under” is defined as
    “required by[,] in accordance with[, or] bound by.” Webster’s Third New
    International Dictionary 2487 (1981).
    
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted). With that, it concluded that the operating costs incurred by
    hospitals serving low income patients may not be excluded. 
    Id. at 780.
    In Blackman, the D.C. Circuit was called upon to interpret an attorneys’ fee provision in
    the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (“IDEA”) that capped the fees available for an
    “action or proceeding . . . under the 
    [IDEA].” 456 F.3d at 176
    –77. The action in the case was not
    an IDEA proceeding, but the party seeking fees – in this case, the defendant – had prevailed in a
    50
    civil rights action brought against the District under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to enforce rights afforded
    by the IDEA. 
    Id. at 169.
    While the Court recited the holdings in Ardestani and the D.C. Hospital
    Association case, it used that guidance to read the word “under” more broadly:
    [T]he word “under” has many dictionary definitions and we draw its
    meaning from the context of the statute before us. Both the High Court and
    this court have interpreted a provision analogous to the one before us. In
    Ardestani, the Court interpreted the attorney’s fees provision of the Equal
    Access to Justice Act (EAJA). The EAJA requires a court to award fees to
    a party prevailing in “an adjudication under section 554” of the APA. The
    Court decided that “the most natural reading of the EAJA’s applicability to
    adjudications ‘under section 554’ is that those proceedings must be ‘subject
    to’ or ‘governed by’ § 554.” The Court also approvingly cited this court’s
    decision interpreting the same phrase. Our decision in St. Louis Fuel &
    Supply Co. v. FERC, 
    890 F.2d 446
    (D.C. Cir. 1989), held that the term
    “under,” as used in the EAJA’s attorney’s fees provision, “means ‘subject
    [or pursuant] to’ or ‘by reason of the authority of.’” 
    Id. at 450
    (alteration in
    original); see also D.C. Hosp. Ass’n. v. District of Columbia, 
    224 F.3d 776
    ,
    779 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (“‘Under’ is defined as ‘required by[,] in accordance
    with [, or] bound by.’” (quoting Webster’s Third New International
    Dictionary 2487 (1981) (alteration in original)).
    
    Id. at 176–77
    (internal citations omitted).
    The upshot of the Blackman ruling was restrictive; it imposed a ceiling on the District’s
    obligation to pay attorneys’ fees. See 
    id. at 178.
    But the reasoning behind the decision appears to
    indicate that the words “under the provisions of” need not be strictly construed to mean “required
    by” since there is no way that a section 1983 action could be considered to be “required by” the
    IDEA. And the cases and dictionary entries the Circuit relies upon list “required by” as only one
    of the available definitions.
    It is something of a struggle to square these decisions with each other, much less to figure
    out how they apply to the instant situation. As in D.C. Hospital Association, there is nothing in
    the FARA statute that would require this Court to give the word “under” anything other than its
    ordinary meaning. All three opinions seem to point the reader in the direction of the dictionary
    when a “natural reading” is indicated, but there is more than one synonym in the dictionary.
    51
    If the Court were to simply give the word “under” its “ordinary meaning,” as these
    precedents require it to do, it could easily find that the letter Craig sent to press his case with the
    agency was submitted “under” – as in, under the auspices of – FARA. The October 11 letter was
    a letter objecting to, and providing more information to refute, a registration decision the agency
    had already made based on its application of specific provisions of the statute. The October 9
    meeting, and Craig’s letter summarizing the meeting, were intended to influence a determination
    made under FARA. All of the communications to and from the Department of Justice arose in the
    context of nothing but FARA, they were in furtherance of the Unit’s implementation of FARA,
    and they could be appropriately characterized as filed “subject to,” “governed by,” or “by reason
    of authority of” FARA. See 
    Ardestani, 502 U.S. at 135
    . This reading of the statute would be
    consistent with Blackman, which was cited by defendant even though it did not apply a strict
    interpretation to the requirement that an action be filed “under” the IDEA at all. Def. Reply for
    Count Two Mot. at 4. 20
    20     See 
    Blackman, 456 F.3d at 177
    (internal citation omitted).
    The appellees maintain that the district court correctly determined that
    section 140(a)’s applicability to actions “under the [IDEA]” means that
    attorney’s fees are subject to the cap only if the IDEA is the explicit statutory
    basis of the plaintiff’s cause of action. . . . We agree that such an action is
    plainly brought “under the [IDEA].” But we do not agree that the plain
    meaning of “under” precludes the applicability of section 140(a) to an action
    using section 1983 to enforce the IDEA’s [free appropriate public
    education] right. Section 1983 is not the source of substantive rights but
    rather “a method for vindicating federal rights elsewhere conferred.” The
    [ ] appellees’ section 1983 action sought to vindicate rights conferred by the
    IDEA. Their action is “governed by” and “subject to” the IDEA because,
    in the absence of the IDEA, the appellees would have no federal right to
    vindicate. At the very least, . . . their action was brought “pursuant to” or
    “by reason of the authority of” the IDEA.
    52
    However, the fact that the FARA provision says “filed under the provisions of this
    subchapter” as opposed to just “filed under” the statute tends to support defendant’s interpretation
    since there is no “provision of” FARA pursuant to which the letter was filed or furnished. 21 Thus,
    using other choices from the collection of definitions the Court is bound to bring to this analysis,
    it can plainly be said that Craig’s submission was not “required by” or “bound by” any statutory
    provision. See D.C. Hosp. 
    Ass’n, 224 F.3d at 779
    . The letter was transmitted in connection with,
    under the auspices of, and regarding FARA; it was filed at the request of the agency; and it
    ultimately influenced the outcome of the determination made pursuant to or “under” the statute.
    But the application of circuit precedent leaves some lingering doubt as to whether it was filed
    “under the provisions of” FARA. Since the Court can read the language either way, this points in
    the direction of the rule of lenity.
    The rule is a tool of last resort, though, and a court is supposed to exhaust all other means
    of statutory construction before throwing up its hands. See Lockhart v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 958
    , 968 (2016), quoting Callanan v. United States, 
    364 U.S. 587
    , 596 (1961) (the rule of lenity
    should be employed “only ‘at the end of the process of construing what Congress has expressed’
    when the ordinary canons of statutory construction have revealed no satisfactory construction”).
    21      While there is a regulation that enables potential registrants to pose inquiries to the agency
    and seek FARA advice, see 28 C.F.R. § 5.2, neither the statute nor the regulations specifically call
    for or address the exchange of information initiated by the agency that took place in this case, or
    the submission of a letter disputing a registration determination or summarizing an oral
    presentation such as the one transmitted by Craig on October 11. It is notable that the regulations
    concerning inquiries made by potential registrants require that “[a]ny information furnished orally
    shall be confirmed promptly in writing,” and that those writings must be certified as true. 
    Id. § 5.2(g).
    But this does not clear up the ambiguity; while it suggests, contrary to defendant’s
    assertion, that there may be documents other than registration statements or supplements that are
    “furnished” to the agency, it does not clarify the meaning of “under the provisions of.”
    53
    Defendant points the Court to the legislative history of the statute, and while, as is often the case,
    it is not definitive, it offers some grounds to support his position. Def. Count Two Mot. at 11–14.
    Defendant notes that the original statute made it unlawful to make false statements “in
    complying with the provisions of this Act.” Def. Count Two Mot. at 12 (emphasis omitted),
    quoting Pub. L. No. 75-583, § 5, 52 Stat. 631, 633 (1938). When Congress amended the Act in
    1942 to reflect its current text, the false statement provision was revised to reflect amendments
    elsewhere in the statute that required registrants to “furnish” supporting documents to the Attorney
    General. 
    Id., citing Pub.
    L. No. 77-532 § 8(a)(2), 56 Stat. 248, 257 (1942). So, according to
    defendant, documents “furnished” to the Attorney General in section 618(a)(2) refers to the
    expanded filing requirements under FARA, not an expansion of false statements provision itself.
    Def. Count Two Mot. at 12–13.
    The defense also points to the Voorhis Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2386, a statute which requires
    organizations acting under foreign control with the purpose of overthrowing the government to
    register with the Attorney General. Def. Count Two Mot. at 13. According to defendant, that
    statute was parallel to FARA and also had a false statement provision applicable only to statements
    that were required to be filed by the Voorhis Act. 
    Id., citing 18
    U.S.C. § 17 (1940) (applying to
    “[w]hoever in a statement filed pursuant to section 15”). Defendant contends that Congress
    intended FARA to mirror the Voorhis Act, supporting his reading of section 618(a)(2) as applying
    only to statements that were required to be filed by FARA. Def. Count Two Mot. at 13–14.
    The government emphasizes that the legislative history of the 1942 amendment of FARA
    shows Congress transferred the Act’s administration from the State Department to the Justice
    Department because it had “the machinery to enforce” the statute. Gov’t Opp. to Count Two Mot.
    at 16–17, quoting “Amending Act Requiring Registration of Foreign Agents,” Hearings before the
    54
    Subcommittee No. 4 of the Committee on the Judiciary on H.R. 6045, 77th Cong., 1st Sess. 28
    (Nov. 28, 1941) (statement of Hon. Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Ass’t Sec’y of State). The Department
    shortly thereafter promulgated regulations that invited potential registrants to submit information
    to the Department to determine whether they were required to register, and told Congress that it
    relied on voluntary submissions of information from potential registrants and from separate
    investigations of the FBI to enforce the Act. Gov’t Opp. to Count Two Mot. at 17–19. According
    to the government, this legislative history shows that interpreting FARA’s false statement
    provision as applying only to documents submitted pursuant to a specific FARA provision would
    frustrate Congress’s purpose in amending the Act to strengthen its enforcement. Gov’t Opp. to
    Count Two Mot. at 19–20. Thus, while both sides are able to point to aspects of the legislative
    history a supporting their position, it is not clearly not determinative.
    The Supreme Court has explained that the rule of lenity is to be invoked if after a court has
    considered the text, structure, history and purpose of the statute, “there remains a grievous
    ambiguity or uncertainty . . . such that the Court must simply guess as to what Congress intended.”
    United States v. Castlemen, 
    572 U.S. 157
    , 172–73 (2014), quoting Barber v. Thomas, 
    560 U.S. 474
    , 488 (2010). The structure of the statute as a whole also gives the Court reason to pause.
    Section 611 specifies what acting as an agent consists of, making it clear what types of
    activities are of interest to the Department of Justice and what activities need to be disclosed. 
    Id. § 611.
    Thus, it defines the boundaries of the registration obligation that appears in section 612:
    No person shall act as an agent of a foreign principal unless he has filed
    with the Attorney General a true and complete registration statement and
    supplements thereto as required by subsections (a) and (b) of this
    section . . . .
    22 U.S.C. § 612(a). Section 612(a) goes on to require that “the registration statement shall include”
    the items listed in subsections (1) through (11). 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    This lends support to the
    55
    government’s argument that the words “any other document filed or furnished to the Attorney
    General” cannot, as the defense contends, Tr. at 68, refer to the eleven categories of documents
    listed in section 612(a) because those are “included” in the registration statement. Tr. at 92.
    But section 612 goes on. Subsection (d) warns that the mere filing of a timely registration
    statement will not necessarily preclude prosecution “as provided for in this subchapter, for willful
    failure to file a registration statement or supplement thereto” or:
    for a willful false statement of a material fact therein or the willful omission
    of a material fact required to be stated therein or the willful omission of a
    material fact or copy of a material document necessary to make the
    statements made in a registration statement and supplements thereto, and
    the copies of documents furnished therewith, not misleading
    
    Id. § 612(d).
    This characterization of the false statement provision found in section 618 suggests
    that Congress understood the provision to apply only to false statements or omissions in
    registration statements. While the government argues, with some force, that section 612(d) also
    reveals that Congress knew how to draft a more limited provision, and the fact that it used these
    words in section 612(d) and not section 618, coupled with the “or any other document” language,
    signifies that Congress had something broader in mind in section 618. Gov’t Suppl. Mem.
    Regarding Count Two [Dkt. # 74] at 4–5. At the end of the day, one ends up with two equally
    plausible and supportable textual interpretations.
    Given all of those circumstances, the Court cannot overlook the fact that the Supreme Court
    has been steadfast in insisting upon clarity in the language of criminal statutes. “The rule of lenity
    requires ambiguous criminal laws to be interpreted in favor of the defendants subjected to them.”
    United States v. Santos, 
    553 U.S. 507
    , 514 (2008). “[T]he tie must go to the defendant.” Id.; see
    also United States v. Davis, 
    139 S. Ct. 2319
    , 2333 (2019) (stating that the rule of lenity “teach[es]
    that ambiguities about the breadth of a criminal statute should be resolved in the defendant’s
    56
    favor”); United States v. Thompson/Center Arms Co., 
    504 U.S. 505
    , 513–18 (1992) (applying the
    rule of lenity after noting the Court was “left with an ambiguous statute” after analyzing the
    language, structure, purpose, and history of the statute); United States v. Nofziger, 
    878 F.2d 442
    ,
    450, 452 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (applying the rule of lenity after finding that the statute contained
    “language that is as amenable to one interpretation as the other,” with no clear legislative history
    or official interpretation).
    For this reason, the motion to dismiss Count Two will be granted.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Count One [Dkt. # 19] is
    DENIED, and Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Count Two [Dkt. # 20] is GRANTED.
    SO ORDERED.
    AMY BERMAN JACKSON
    United States District Judge
    DATE: August 6, 2019
    57