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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 18-12024
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:16-cr-00243-ODE-JFK-1
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
versus
NATHAN VAN BUREN,
Defendant - Appellant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Georgia
________________________
(October 10, 2019)
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Before MARTIN, ROSENBAUM, and BOGGS,∗ Circuit Judges.
ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge:
Perhaps Dudley Field Malone said it best when he opined, “One good
analogy is worth three hours’ discussion.”1 Or in this case, 15 pages of discussion.
See infra at pp. 9–23.
Take, for example, this case.
“[A] lawsuit before a court” is a pretty big deal to most people. But a
generic “question” or “matter,” in common usage, maybe not so much.
That impression may change, though, if we clarify what we mean by
“question” or “matter” in a specific context by analogizing to something else. So if
we say that, for our purposes, to qualify as a “question” or a “matter,” the question
or matter must be of the same significance or scope as “a lawsuit before a court,” a
person would understand that we are not talking about just any old question or
∗ Honorable Danny J. Boggs, United States Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, sitting by
designation.
1
Richard Nordquist, The Value of Analogies in Writing and Speech, ThoughtCo.,
https://www.thoughtco.com/what-is-an-analogy-1691878 (last visited Oct. 8, 2019). Along with
Clarence Darrow, Dudley Field Malone defended John Scopes in the 1925 “Scopes Trial,”
formally known as State v. Scopes. Scopes Trial, Encyclopaedia Britannica, https://www.
britannica.com/event/Scopes-Trial (last visited Oct. 8, 2019) (“Scopes Trial”); Malone’s Trial
Speech (Full Text), Historical Thinking Matters, http://historicalthinkingmatters.org/scopestrial/
1/sources/44/fulltext/ (last visited Oct. 8, 2019) (“Malone’s Trial Speech”). In that case,
Tennessee, led by William Jennings Bryan, prosecuted Scopes for allegedly teaching evolution at
a Tennessee high school. Scopes Trial. Scopes was convicted and fined $100. Scopes v. State,
289 S.W. 363, 367 (Tenn. 1927). The Tennessee Supreme Court then vacated the judgment
since Tennessee law required a jury—not a judge—to assess any fine of more than $50.00, but in
Scopes’s case, the trial judge had done so. Id. The Tennessee law Scopes was accused of
violating was ultimately repealed in 1967. Scopes Trial.
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matter; we are referring to only questions or matters on the same scale as “a
lawsuit before a court.” To use a metaphor, the analogy here is a bridge to
understanding.
In this case, though, that bridge was never built. The government charged
Nathan Van Buren with honest-services fraud (through bribery) for undertaking an
“official act” in his capacity as a police officer, in exchange for money. At the
close of the evidence, the district court instructed the jury that an “official act” is a
decision or action on a “question” or “matter.” But it did not inform the jury that
the “question” or “matter” in this context must be comparable in scope to a lawsuit,
hearing, or administrative determination. The jury convicted Van Buren.
Since the jury was not instructed with the crucial analogy limiting the
definition of “question” or “matter,” and because the government itself did not
otherwise provide the missing bridge, we cannot be sure beyond a reasonable
doubt that the jury convicted Van Buren of the offense that Congress criminalized
when it enacted the honest-services-fraud and bribery statutes. For this reason, we
must vacate Van Buren’s honest-services-fraud conviction and remand for a new
trial on that count. Van Buren was also charged with and convicted of computer
fraud, and we affirm that conviction.
I.
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Nathan Van Buren was a sergeant with the Cumming, Georgia, Police
Department. In his capacity as a police officer, Van Buren came to know a man
named Andrew Albo. Albo was a recent widower in his early sixties, who
allegedly fancied younger women, including minors and prostitutes. He allegedly
paid prostitutes to spend time with him and then often accused the women of
stealing the money he gave them. At least one woman also alleged Albo
surreptitiously recorded and harassed her. The Deputy Chief of Police in the
Cumming Police Department believed that Albo “had a mental health condition”
and considered Albo to be “very volatile,” so he warned his officers to “be careful”
with Albo.
Van Buren did not heed the Deputy Chief’s caveat. Instead, he fostered a
relationship with Albo. Van Buren, who first met Albo when he helped arrest
Albo for providing alcohol to a minor, often handled the disputes between Albo
and various women. At the time, Van Buren was grappling with financial
difficulties, and Van Buren saw in Albo a chance to improve his situation. So Van
Buren decided to ask Albo for a loan. To justify his request, Van Buren falsely
claimed he needed $15,368 to settle his son’s medical bills. He explained to Albo
that he could not obtain a loan from a bank because he had shoddy credit.
Unbeknownst to Van Buren, however, Albo recorded their conversations.
Albo presented the recording of Van Buren’s loan solicitation to a detective in the
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Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office. He told the detective that Van Buren was
“shak[ing] him down for his money.” Albo’s complaint drew the suspicion of the
FBI, which created a sting operation to test how far Van Buren was willing to go
for money. Under the plan, Albo was to give Van Buren some cash, and in
exchange, Albo was to ask Van Buren to tell him whether Carson, a woman he
supposedly met at a strip club, was an undercover police officer.
Over a series of meetings and communications monitored and recorded by
the FBI, Albo put the plan into action. At lunch with Van Buren on August 21,
2015, Albo handed Van Buren an envelope with $5,000, telling him that this was
“not the whole thing.” Van Buren offered to pay Albo back, but Albo waved that
off, saying money was “not the issue.” Instead, Albo told Van Buren he had met a
woman he liked at a strip club, but he needed to know if she was an undercover
officer before he would pursue her further. Van Buren agreed to help.
On August 31, Albo followed up on a previous discussion the pair had had
about searching the woman’s license plate in the police database. During that
conversation, Albo asked Van Buren whether he had had a chance to conduct the
search yet. Van Buren replied, “As far as running the plates, I don’t—I don’t think
I got the right plate numbers from you.” Van Buren then told Albo to just text him
the plate number, so Albo texted Van Buren “Pkp” and “1568,” a fake license plate
number created by the FBI. Van Buren responded that he would look into the
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matter, but he would need the “item” first. Albo replied that he had “2,” and the
pair scheduled to meet for lunch.
At lunch, Albo passed Van Buren an envelope containing $1,000 and
apologized that he did not have $2,000, as they had discussed.2 Van Buren asked
Albo for the woman’s name, explaining that “the car may not [be] registered to
her.” After learning that her name was Carson, Van Buren promised to attend to
the matter promptly, and Albo responded, “then I will have all the money for you.”
A few days later, on September 2, 2015, Van Buren searched for license-
plate number PKP1568 in the Georgia Crime Information Center (“GCIC”)
database, an official government database maintained by the Georgia Bureau of
Investigation (“GBI”) and connected to the National Crime Information Center
(“NCIC”) maintained by the FBI. Van Buren then texted Albo to tell him he had
information for him.
The next day, the FBI and GBI arrived at Van Buren’s doorstep and
conducted an interview with Van Buren. During the interview, Van Buren
admitted he had concocted a fake story about his son’s need for surgery to justify
asking Albo for $15,000. He also conceded he had received a total of $6,000 from
Albo. In addition, Van Buren confessed he had run a tag search for Albo and he
2
The FBI actually gave Albo $2,000 to pass to Van Buren, so it appears Albo may have
attempted to retain $1,000 for himself.
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knew doing so was “wrong.” And while Van Buren asserted that $5,000 of the
money he received from Albo was a “gift,” he did reply “I mean he gave me
$1,000” when asked if he received anything in exchange for running the tag.
Finally, Van Buren conceded he understood the purpose of running the tag was to
discover and reveal to Albo whether Carson was an undercover officer.
A federal grand jury charged Van Buren with one count of honest-services
wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 1346, and one count of felony
computer fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1030. At trial, the government
presented the FBI’s recordings of the interactions between Van Buren and Albo,
and the jury convicted Van Buren of both counts.
Van Buren now appeals his convictions. He argues the jury instructions the
district court gave were incorrect, insufficient evidence exists to support his
convictions, and the district court denied him his Sixth Amendment right to
confront an adverse witness during the trial.
We agree that the jury instructions on the honest-services count were fatally
flawed. But we nevertheless conclude the government presented sufficient
evidence to support a conviction on that count, so we remand that charge for a new
trial. On the other hand, we find no deficiencies with either the jury instructions
for or the evidence supporting the computer-fraud charge. Finally, we also reject
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Van Buren’s claim that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to confront an
adverse witness at trial.
II.
We conduct a de novo review of the legal correctness of a jury instruction,
but we review for abuse of discretion questions concerning the phrasing of an
instruction. United States v. Prather, 205 F.3d 1265, 1270 (11th Cir. 2000). We
likewise review for abuse of discretion a district court’s refusal to give a requested
jury instruction. United States v. Carrasco, 381 F.3d 1237, 1242 (11th Cir. 2004).
As for the sufficiency of evidence to support a conviction, we review that de
novo, considering the evidence “in the light most favorable to the government and
drawing all reasonable inferences and credibility choices in favor of the jury’s
verdict.” United States v. Taylor, 480 F.3d 1025, 1026 (11th Cir. 2007). Under
this standard, we have explained that the jury’s verdict survives “unless no trier of
fact could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Lyons, 53
F.3d 1198, 1202 (11th Cir. 1995).
Finally, we review de novo a Confrontation Clause claim. United States v.
Curbelo, 726 F.3d 1260, 1271–72 (11th Cir. 2013).
III.
We divide our discussion into three parts. In Section A, we address Van
Buren’s objections as they pertain to his honest-services-fraud conviction. Section
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B considers Van Buren’s objections to his computer-fraud conviction. And finally,
we examine Van Buren’s remaining arguments in Section C.
A.
We begin with honest-services fraud. The government theorized that Van
Buren deprived the public of his honest services by accepting a bribe, as that act is
defined by the federal bribery statute, 18 U.S.C. § 201. Under § 201, a public
official may not seek or receive anything of value in return for “being influenced in
the performance of any official act.” 18 U.S.C. § 201(b)(2). The statute defines an
“official act,” in turn, as “any decision or action on any question, matter, cause,
suit, proceeding or controversy, which may at any time be pending, or which may
by law be brought before any public official, in such official’s official capacity, or
in such official’s place of trust or profit.” Id. § 201 (a)(3).
The controversy here centers on how a jury should be instructed regarding
what constitutes an “official act.” As relevant on appeal, the district court
instructed the jury as follows on the honest-services-fraud count:
With respect to Count 2, you are instructed that it is a federal crime to
use interstate wire, radio or television communications to carry out a
scheme to defraud someone else of a right to honest services. The
Defendant can be found guilty of this crime only if all of the
following facts are proven beyond a reasonable doubt:
First, that the Defendant knowingly devised or participated in a
scheme to fraudulently deprive the public of the right to honest
services of the Defendant through bribery or kickbacks. Second, that
the Defendant did so with an intent to defraud the public of the right
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to the Defendant’s honest services; and, third, that the Defendant
transmitted or caused to be transmitted by wire, radio or television
some communication in interstate commerce to help carry out the
scheme to defraud.
...
Bribery and kickbacks involve the exchanges of a thing or things of
value for official action by a public official. Bribery and kickbacks
also include solicitation of things of value in exchange for official
action, even if the thing of value is not accepted or the official action
is not performed, that is, bribery and kickbacks include the public
official’s solicitation or agreement to accept something of value,
whether tangible or intangible, in exchange for an official act,
whether or not the payor actually provides the thing of value, and
whether or not the public official ultimately performs the requested
official action.
To qualify as an official act, the public official must have made a
decision or taken an action on a question or matter. The question or
matter must involve the formal exercise of governmental power. It
must also be something specific which requires particular attention
to the question or matter by the public official.
(emphasis added).
Van Buren objected, arguing that the district court should have instead
instructed the jury this way:
To qualify as an official act, the public official must have [made a
decision or taken an action] . . . on a question, matter, cause, suit,
proceeding, or controversy. Further, the question, matter, cause,
suit, proceeding, or controversy must involve the formal exercise of
governmental power. It must be similar in nature to a lawsuit
before a court, a determination before an agency, or a hearing
before a committee. It must also be something specific which
requires particular attention by a public official.
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The public official’s [decision or action] . . . on that question,
matter, cause, suit, proceeding, or controversy may include using
his official position to exert pressure on another official to
perform an official act, or to advise another official, knowing or
intending that such advice will form the basis for an official act by
another official. But setting up a meeting, talking to another
official, or organizing an event (or agreeing to do so)—without
more—is not an official act.
(emphases added).3
A district court’s refusal to provide a requested instruction constitutes
reversible error if (1) the requested instruction was legally correct, (2) the content
of the requested instruction was not otherwise covered, and (3) the omitted
instruction was so vital that its absence seriously impaired the defense. United
States v. Opdahl, 930 F.2d 1530, 1533 (11th Cir. 1991). After careful review, we
conclude that all these conditions are present here, and the district court committed
reversible error in declining to instruct the jury that an “official act” “must be
similar in nature to a lawsuit before a court, a determination before an agency, or a
hearing before a committee.” To explain why, we start with McDonnell v. United
States, 136 S. Ct. 2355 (2016), the case on which Van Buren relied in requesting
the refused instruction.
i.
3
For convenience, we have underlined and bolded the parts of Van Buren’s requested
instruction that do not appear in the corresponding italicized and bolded instructions the district
court gave the jury.
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Like Van Buren’s case, McDonnell also involved a prosecution for honest-
services fraud where the government defined the crime by reference to the bribery
statute. McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2365. There, the government indicted former
Virginia Governor Robert McDonnell and his wife, Maureen McDonnell, for
bribery. Id. at 2361. The couple had accepted about $175,000 in loans, gifts, and
other benefits from “the CEO of Star Scientific, a Virginia-based company that
developed and marketed Anatabloc, a nutritional supplement made from anatabine,
a compound found in tobacco.” Id. at 2361–62. In exchange, the government
alleged, McDonnell had committed at least five “official acts” for Star Scientific
and its CEO:
(1) he had arranged meetings between Star Scientific’s CEO and Virginia
government officials to discuss and promote Star Scientific’s interests;
(2) he had hosted and attended events at the Governor’s Mansion designed
to encourage Virginia university researchers to study and promote Star
Scientific’s products;
(3) he had contacted other government officials to encourage Virginia state
research universities to initiate studies favorable to Star Scientific;
(4) he had promoted Star Scientific by allowing its CEO to invite people to
exclusive events at the Governor’s Mansion; and
(5) he had recommended that senior government officials in the Governor’s
office meet with executives from Star Scientific.
Id. at 2365–66.
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The district court there instructed the jury that “official acts” are those that
“a public official customarily performs,” including acts “that have been clearly
established by settled practice as part of a public official’s position” and acts that
further long term goals or contribute to “a series of steps to exercise influence or
achieve an end.” Id. at 2366, 2373. So charged, the jury convicted McDonnell of
honest-services fraud, and the Fourth Circuit affirmed. The Supreme Court,
though, vacated that conviction because the instructions incorrectly described an
“official act.” Id. at 2375.
In explaining why, the Court observed that the words “cause, suit,
proceeding or controversy” in § 201(a)(3) “connote a formal exercise of
governmental power, such as a lawsuit, hearing, or administrative determination.”
Id. at 2368. With that in mind, the Supreme Court applied the interpretive canon
noscitur a sociis (“a word is known by the company it keeps”) to conclude that a
“question or matter”—words that appear in the same series of items as “cause, suit,
proceeding or controversy” in the definition of “official act”—must likewise “be
similar in nature to a cause, suit, proceeding or controversy.” Id. at 2368-69
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Confining the plain meaning of
“question” or “matter” in this way makes sense, explained the Court, since
otherwise, “the terms ‘cause, suit, proceeding or controversy’ would serve no role
in the statute—every ‘cause, suit, proceeding or controversy’ would also be a
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‘question’ or ‘matter.’” Id. at 2369. The Supreme Court also cautioned against
considering the question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy at too high
a level of generality; rather, the Court reasoned, any qualifying question, matter,
cause, suit, proceeding, or controversy must be “focused and concrete.” Id.
And to give further color to the phrase “question, matter, cause, suit,
proceeding or controversy,” McDonnell looked to the surrounding text. “Pending”
and “may by law be brought,” McDonnell explained, “suggest something that is
relatively circumscribed—the kind of thing that can be put on an agenda, tracked
for progress, and then checked off as complete.” Id. As for “may by law be
brought,” that implies “something within the specific duties of an official’s
position.” Id. And the word “any” indicates that “the matter may be pending
either before the public official who is performing the official act, or before
another public official.” Id.
Putting it all together, “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
controversy” must be a formal government action analogous to a lawsuit, hearing,
or administrative determination that can be pending before any public official. It
must be specific and concrete, fall within the duties of an official’s position, and be
relatively circumscribed, capable of being put on an agenda, tracked for progress,
and checked off as complete.
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The McDonnell Court then applied this definition to the facts of its case.
“The first inquiry,” the Court said, is whether the activity at issue—a meeting, call,
or event—is itself a “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy.” Id.
at 2368. Since the Court determined the activity was not, it moved on to the next
inquiry: whether the meeting, call, or event could “qualify as a ‘decision or action’
on a different question or matter.” Id. at 2369.
Answering that question, of course, required the Court to first identify the
different question or matter being acted on. Id. The Court began by explaining
that something like “Virginia business and economic development” could not
constitute an underlying matter because it is defined at too high a level of
generality and is not something that could be “pending” before a public official, as
the Court has construed “pending.” Id.
Then the Court turned to the Fourth Circuit’s formulation of the underlying
questions:
(1) “whether researchers at any of Virginia’s state universities would initiate
a study of Anatabloc”;
(2) “whether the state-created Tobacco Indemnification and Community
Revitalization Commission would allocate grant money for the study of
anatabine”; and
(3) “whether the health insurance plan for state employees in Virginia would
include Anatabloc as a covered drug.”
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Id. at 2369–70 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The Court agreed
with that formulation of the questions. Each of those questions, McDonnell
explained, “is focused and concrete, and each involves a formal exercise of
governmental power that is similar in nature to a lawsuit, administrative
determination, or hearing.” Id. at 2370. Still, merely setting up a meeting, hosting
an event, or calling another official—while actions related to those questions—
ultimately could not qualify as actions or decisions on those questions. Something
more was needed: for example, a decision to actually initiate a research study or to
provide advice to another official with the intent to cause the other official to
perform an official act. Id.
Then the Supreme Court turned to the jury instructions the district court
gave. Based on its interpretation of the “official act” language in § 201,
McDonnell concluded that the jury instructions were “significantly overinclusive.”
Id. at 2373–75. In particular, the district court had instructed the jury that an
“official act” includes “actions that have been clearly established by settled
practice as part of a public official’s position” and could include acts designed to
contribute to a long-term result. Id. at 2373. But that description did not inform
the jury that an official act must be on a “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding
or controversy,” nor did it explain how to identify such an underlying “question,
matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy.” Id. at 2374. So while the Fourth
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Circuit noted possible questions on which McDonnell had perhaps acted, nothing
guaranteed that the jury found those questions on its own; instead, the Supreme
Court was concerned that the jury may have “convicted Governor McDonnell
without finding that he agreed to make a decision or take an action on a properly
defined question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy.” Id. at 2374–75
(internal quotation marks omitted). As a result, the Court concluded the error in
the instructions was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.
The Supreme Court left it to the Fourth Circuit to decide whether to dismiss
the case or remand for a new trial. To make this determination, the Fourth Circuit
was to ascertain whether enough evidence existed to convict McDonnell of honest-
services fraud, given the Supreme Court’s clarification of “official act.” If so, the
Fourth Circuit could remand for a new trial. Otherwise, it was to dismiss the
charge. Id. at 2375.
ii.
McDonnell compels us to conclude that the instructions here were erroneous,
the error was not harmless, and a remand for a new trial on the honest-services
charge is the appropriate remedy.
As we have noted, the district court instructed jurors that an “official act”
involves a decision or action “on a question or matter” and that this question or
matter “must involve the formal exercise of governmental power” and be
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“something specific which requires particular attention.” But the court declined to
give Van Buren’s requested instruction that the question or matter “must be similar
in nature to a lawsuit before a court, a determination before an agency, or a hearing
before a committee,” reasoning that that instruction was inapplicable to Van
Buren’s case and would only confuse the jury.
This was error. As we have explained, McDonnell concluded that the words
“cause,” “suit,” “proceeding,” and “controversy” “connote a formal exercise of
governmental power, such as a lawsuit, hearing, or administrative determination.”
McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2368. So a “question” or “matter”—housed in the same
statutory phrase as “cause,” “suit,” “proceeding,” and “controversy”—similarly
must involve a formal action of the same gravity as a lawsuit, hearing, or
administrative determination. That analogy—“such as a lawsuit, hearing, or
administrative determination”—is critical to understanding the meaning of
“question” or “matter” as those terms are used in the federal bribery statute. And
because the qualification that the “question or matter” be similar in nature to a
“lawsuit, hearing, or administrative determination” is the product of statutory
interpretation, not of McDonnell’s facts, this qualification applies with equal force
to Van Buren’s case.
This qualification also provides crucial context for what “formal exercise of
governmental power” means, as that phrase is used in the district court’s jury
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instruction. Without this analogy limiting the meaning of “question” or “matter,” a
“formal exercise of governmental power” could mean anything that a public
official does that falls within the scope of the official’s duties. Omitting the
analogy unravels essential statutory limitations that the Supreme Court identified
concerning the meaning of “official act.”
Naturally, removing those protections opens the door to the same harmful
effects that the Supreme Court described in McDonnell. Although the district court
here informed the jury that the “question” or “matter” had to be a “formal exercise
of governmental power,” that phrase did not illuminate the scale or nature of the
“question” or “matter” that would qualify, since it was not accompanied by an
instruction that the exercise of governmental power must be comparable to a
lawsuit, agency determination, or committee hearing. As in McDonnell, then, the
instructions “provided no assurance that the jury reached its verdict after finding” a
qualifying underlying question or matter. 136 S. Ct. at 2374.
And the government’s arguments only reinforce our doubt that the jury
identified a proper “question” or “matter” before convicting Van Buren. The
government does not argue that the license-plate search is itself the question or
matter, but rather that the search was an action on a question or matter. But the
government’s formulation of the “question” or “matter” at issue reveals its own
misinterpretation of those terms as they are used in the federal bribery statute.
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Specifically, the government contends that the underlying “question” is “whether
to provide information to Albo about whether a woman was working as an
undercover police officer.”
That, of course, is not a “question” or “matter” comparable to a lawsuit,
hearing, or administrative determination. Nor is it a “question” or “matter” like the
ones the Supreme Court identified as similar in McDonnell. As we have noted,
those questions asked whether to initiate a study at a state university, whether to
allocate grant money for a particular study, and whether to include something as a
covered drug. McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2370. Each of these three “questions” is a
formal exercise of governmental power that is similar in nature to, say, an
administrative determination. Merely divulging information to a civilian is not.
And if the government could not identify a proper question on which Van Buren
acted, we can have no confidence that the jury did.
The government’s incorrect formulation of the “question” or “matter” here
also threatens to transform any improper disclosure by a public official into an
“official act” under the bribery statute, regardless of whether the disclosure was
meant to influence a formal exercise of governmental power that is analogous to a
lawsuit, hearing, or administrative determination. But as McDonnell reminded us,
“a statute in this field that can linguistically be interpreted to be either a meat axe
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or a scalpel should reasonably be taken to be the latter.” 136 S. Ct. at 2373 (citing
United States v. Sun-Diamond Growers of Cal., 526 U.S. 398, 408, 412 (1999)).
Not only was the government’s “question” incorrect, but the jury
instructions also prevented Van Buren from pointing out the government’s
mistake. Because the jury was not told that the “question” or “matter” must be
similar in nature to a lawsuit before a court, a determination before an agency, or a
hearing before a committee, Van Buren had no effective way to highlight the
government’s failure to identify an appropriate “question” on those grounds. Had
the jury been properly instructed, Van Buren very well could have successfully
made that argument. So we cannot say the error was harmless. See United States
v. Browne, 505 F.3d 1229, 1267–68 (11th Cir. 2007) (“The correct focus of
harmless-error analysis is whether it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt that a
rational jury would have found the defendant guilty in the absence of the error.”).
In sum, Van Buren’s requested jury instruction that the question or matter
“must be similar in nature to a lawsuit before a court, a determination before an
agency, or a hearing before a committee” was correct and would have conveyed
critical information that the instructions did not otherwise cover. Its omission
deprived Van Buren of a potent argument and allowed the jury to convict him
without identifying a qualifying “question” or “matter” on which he acted.
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We therefore vacate Van Buren’s honest-services-fraud conviction. Opdahl,
930 F.2d at 1533 (explaining that failure to give a requested instruction is
reversible if the instruction is correct, not otherwise covered, and important enough
that its omission seriously impaired the defense). To the extent our prior precedent
holds that an “official act” is simply “[e]very action that is within the range of
official duty,” see United States v. Moore, 525 F.3d 1033, 1041 (11th Cir. 2008)
(quoting United States v. Birdsall, 233 U.S. 223, 230 (1914)), without regard to
whether that action is on a proper “question, matter, cause, suit, proceeding or
controversy,” it has clearly been abrogated by McDonnell. See United States v.
Archer, 531 F.3d 1347, 1352 (11th Cir. 2008) (showing how an intervening
decision by the Supreme Court abrogates clearly inconsistent precedent).
Nevertheless, our vacatur of Van Buren’s honest-services-fraud conviction
does not end our inquiry into that charge. Van Buren also argues the government
failed to present sufficient evidence to convict him of bribery, raising the question
of whether we should remand for retrial or dismiss the charge. McDonnell, 136 S.
Ct. at 2375. After examining the evidence, we conclude a retrial is warranted.
Had the government identified a correct question or matter, the evidence,
when viewed in the light most favorable to the government, was sufficient to allow
a reasonable juror to conclude that Van Buren was guilty of bribery beyond a
reasonable doubt. Taylor, 480 F.3d at 1026 (describing standard of review on a
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sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge). Among other things, Van Buren confessed
to the FBI and GBI that he ran the tag search for money. He also said that he knew
the purpose of the search was to discover and reveal whether Carson, the woman
Albo allegedly met at the club, was an undercover officer. If the government had
identified the underlying matter as something like an investigation into illegal
activity, such as prostitution, at the strip club, it may have been able to prove its
case.
Such an investigation would have been a specific, formal government action,
within the ambit of police activity, that is comparable to a lawsuit, hearing, or
administrative determination. It could have been put on an agenda, tracked for
progress, and marked off as complete. And Van Buren could have acted on the
underlying investigation because he could have influenced its findings had he
identified an undercover agent in his tag search and revealed her cover to Albo.
That Carson did not exist does not matter. The government presented evidence
that Van Buren was fully prepared, and acted, to compromise a potential
investigation, in exchange for money. His guilt or innocence cannot turn on
whether he was lucky enough that the person he searched for fortuitously did not
exist or that no investigation of the strip club was actually occurring.
For these reasons, we remand for a new trial on the honest-services-fraud
count. McDonnell, 136 S. Ct. at 2375.
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B.
Next, we turn to Van Buren’s computer-fraud conviction. For searching
Carson’s tag in the GCIC system, Van Buren was convicted of violating the
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which makes it a crime to obtain “information
from any protected computer” by “intentionally access[ing] a computer without
authorization or exceed[ing] authorized access.” 18 U.S.C. §1030(a)(2)(C). Van
Buren contends that two problems specific to his computer-fraud charge
undermine his conviction. He argues, first, that the district court should have
instructed the jury on the lesser-included offense of misdemeanor computer fraud,
and, second, that the government did not present enough evidence to sustain his
conviction. We are not persuaded.
i.
The computer-fraud crime of which Van Buren was convicted is a
misdemeanor unless, among other things, it was committed for private financial
gain, in which case it is a felony. 18 U.S.C. § 1030(c)(2). The district court
instructed the jury on only felony computer fraud: it told the jury that to return a
guilty verdict against Van Buren, it must conclude that Van Buren acted for private
financial gain. But it did not raise the possibility that Van Buren could still be
convicted of the lesser-included, misdemeanor version of the offense, should the
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jury conclude the financial element was missing. Van Buren argues that this
omission of the misdemeanor instruction amounted to reversible error.
To succeed on his claim, Van Buren must meet a two-part test. First, he
must satisfy the “elements test” by proving that the charged offense encompasses
all the elements of the lesser offense. Here, that is not a problem. Indeed, the
parties do not dispute that the “elements test” is satisfied: the sole difference
between the felony and misdemeanor versions of crime, as relevant to Van Buren’s
case, is the private-financial-gain element. But Van Buren must also meet a
second requirement: he must demonstrate that the evidence would have allowed a
rational jury to acquit him of the greater offense while convicting him of the lesser.
United States v. Whitman, 887 F.3d 1240, 1246–47 (11th Cir. 2018), cert.
denied, 139 S. Ct. 1276, 203 (2019). This he cannot do.
Van Buren’s problem arises from the fact that the record contains no
evidence that Van Buren engaged in computer access for any reason other than
financial gain. As an initial matter, Van Buren’s argument that there is evidence
he ran the search as part of a good-faith effort to investigate Albo’s other troubles
with women does him no good: if Van Buren truly ran the PKP1568 tag as part of
a legitimate good-faith investigation, that would absolve him of computer fraud
entirely, since he would just be doing his job. As a result, even assuming a jury
could find he acted in good faith, that would not support the inference that a
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rational jury could have convicted him of misdemeanor computer fraud. Plus, the
record lacks any evidence that Van Buren ran the PKP1568 tag as part of a good-
faith investigation.
Perhaps sensing the hole in this argument, Van Buren alternatively urges
that the money he received was only a loan. Even if we call the money Van Buren
received a “loan,” though, a loan still confers financial benefit. As Van Buren
admitted, he needed money to cover his bills but was having trouble securing a
loan because of his poor credit. So receiving what appears to be an interest-free
cash loan that he could use to cover any immediate needs counts as financial gain.
Van Buren next claims the record contains evidence that he ran the GCIC
search before Albo offered him money to do so. This “evidence” appears to
consist of the brief phone call between Van Buren and Albo on the morning of
August 31, 2015, when Albo asked Van Buren if he had run the license plate yet,
and Van Buren replied, “I don’t—I don’t think I got the right plate numbers from
you.” Van Buren suggests this conversation demonstrates that Van Buren had
already run a search on Carson’s plate before receiving the $1,000 payment, so he
had no financial motive for the unauthorized search.
But the rest of the record frustrates Van Buren’s attempt to capitalize on his
stray remark. First, on August 21—ten days before the August 31 conversation on
which Van Buren relies—Van Buren had already received $5,000 from Albo and
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agreed in principle to investigate Carson. And second, even setting aside those
facts, which independently establish financial gain, the record reflects that Albo
did not provide Van Buren with Carson’s purported plate number for the first time
until after the August 31 conversation. In fact, Van Buren only ever tried to run
Carson’s alleged tag number once, and that occurred on September 2, 2015—
again, after the August 31 conversation. So on this record, Van Buren’s “I don’t
think I got the right plate numbers from you” comment can be understood to mean
only that he had not yet received Carson’s license-plate information from Albo.
Finally, Van Buren tries to show that a jury could have determined he
wrongly accessed the computer for reasons other than financial gain: he highlights
a comment he made to Albo during a recorded conversation on August 26, 2015.
At that time, Van Buren stated, “I’m not charging for helping you out.” In that
convoluted exchange, though, Van Buren simultaneously claimed he was not
looking into Carson for money, while he also probed whether Albo would continue
to “help [him] out with the rest of the medical bills.” Van Buren refers to the
“rest” of the bills, of course, because he had already received $5,000 of the
$15,368 he allegedly needed and had already agreed to research Carson’s identity
by that point. And later, Van Buren texted Albo for more money as a condition of
running the search and took another $1,000. But perhaps most significantly, Van
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Buren expressly confessed to the FBI and GBI that he ran the tag search for
money.
In short, no jury could have rationally believed that if Van Buren searched
Carson’s tag in the GCIC system on September 2, 2015, he did it for some non-
financial, unidentified reason. The district court therefore did not abuse its
discretion in declining to give the misdemeanor-computer-fraud instruction.
ii.
We next consider Van Buren’s contention that the evidence did not
sufficiently support his conviction for computer fraud. Although styled as a
sufficiency-of-the-evidence challenge, the animating force behind this argument is
an appeal to overrule United States v. Rodriguez, 628 F.3d 1258 (11th Cir. 2010),
where we held that even a person with authority to access a computer can be guilty
of computer fraud if that person subsequently misuses the computer.
Rodriguez, the defendant in that case, was a Social Security Administration
(“SSA”) employee who, for personal reasons, used the SSA’s computer database to
research information such as birth dates and home addresses of 17 people.
Rodriguez, 628 F.3d at 1260. This violated SSA policy, which prohibited
employees from obtaining information from SSA databases without a legitimate
business reason. Id. Rodriguez was convicted of computer fraud.
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On appeal, though, he argued he was innocent because “he accessed only
databases that he was authorized to use,” albeit for inappropriate reasons. Id. at
1263. We rejected that argument. We noted that the computer-fraud statute
defines “exceeds authorized access,” as “to access a computer with authorization
and to use such access to obtain or alter information in the computer that the
accesser is not entitled [so] to obtain or alter.” Id. at 1263 (quoting § 1030(e)(6)).
Then we determined that the defendant had “exceeded his authorized access and
violated the [computer-fraud statute] when he obtained [the victims’] personal
information for a nonbusiness reason.” Id. (emphasis added).
Van Buren points out that our sister circuits have criticized Rodriguez’s
interpretation of “exceeds authorized access,” since it purportedly allows
employers or other parties to legislate what counts as criminal behavior through
their internal policies or their terms of use. Echoing the defendant’s argument in
Rodriguez, Van Buren alleges that he is innocent of computer fraud because he
accessed only databases that he was authorized to use, even though he did so for an
inappropriate reason.
We acknowledge that other courts have rejected Rodriguez’s interpretation
of “exceeds authorized access.” See, e.g., United States v. Nosal, 676 F.3d 854,
860 (9th Cir. 2012) (en banc) (noting that activities like “[Google]-chatting with
friends, playing games, shopping or watching sports highlights” on a work
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computer are routinely prohibited by computer-use policies, and worrying that
“under the broad interpretation of the [computer-fraud statute], such minor
dalliances would become federal crimes”); United States v. Valle, 807 F.3d 508,
528 (2d Cir. 2015) (“While the Government might promise that it would not
prosecute an individual for checking Facebook at work, we are not at liberty to
take prosecutors at their word in such matters.”). But under our prior-precedent
rule, “a prior panel’s holding is binding on all subsequent panels unless and until it
is overruled or undermined to the point of abrogation by the Supreme Court or by
this court sitting en banc.” Archer, 531 F.3d at 1352. Since Van Buren has
identified no Supreme Court or en banc decision of this Circuit that abrogates
Rodriguez, we must continue to follow it.
And under Rodriguez, there is no question that the record contained enough
evidence for a jury to convict Van Buren of computer fraud. The evidence showed
that Van Buren accepted $6,000 and agreed to investigate Carson. It demonstrated
that Van Buren searched what was supposed to be Carson’s tag in the GCIC
database. At trial, one of the assistant deputy directors of the GCIC testified that
the database is supposed to be used for law-enforcement purposes only and that
officers are trained on the proper and improper uses of the system. Van Buren also
admitted to the FBI and GBI that he knew it was “wrong” to run the tag search and
that he had done so for money. And as we have noted, Rodriguez previously
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rejected the contention that misusing databases a defendant lawfully can access
does not constitute computer fraud. Taken in the light most favorable to the
verdict, under our binding Circuit precedent, a jury could have found beyond a
reasonable doubt that Van Buren committed computer fraud for financial gain.
C.
Van Buren raises two remaining arguments: one challenging the district
court’s decision to decline giving good-faith instructions to the jury, and the other
asserting that his Sixth Amendment right to confront Albo was violated at trial.
We address each in turn.
i.
First, Van Buren contends the district court abused its discretion in refusing
to give his requested good-faith instructions. Specifically, Van Buren asked for
two good-faith instructions, one explaining that good faith is a complete defense to
any charge that requires willfulness and one explaining that good faith is a
complete defense to any charge that requires intent to defraud. The district court
declined to give those instructions, reasoning that the record lacked any evidentiary
basis to support them. That decision fell within the proper scope of the district
court’s discretion.
As we have explained, a district court’s refusal to provide a requested
instruction is reversible error if (1) the requested instruction was legally correct, (2)
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the content of the requested instruction was not otherwise covered, and (3) the
omitted instruction was so vital that its absence seriously impaired the defense.
Opdahl, 930 F.2d at 1533. A good-faith instruction is legally correct if any
foundation in evidence supports it. United States v. Martinelli, 454 F.3d 1300,
1315 (11th Cir. 2006). But Van Buren has not met even this minimal evidentiary
bar.
He points out that in the past, he and other officers had searched license
plates Albo had provided, as part of legitimate investigations into Albo’s issues
with other women. That’s true. What’s missing, though, is any evidence that Van
Buren searched the particular tag at issue this time—PKP1568—for a law-
enforcement purpose. So Van Buren’s requested instruction is not “correct”
because no evidentiary basis supports it.
Nor has Van Buren showed that omission of the good-faith instructions
seriously impaired his defense, since even assuming that any trace of good faith
could be squeezed from the record, it would have been negligible in the face of the
overwhelming evidence of wrongdoing. See Martinelli, 454 F.3d at 1316 (holding
that the absence of a good-faith instruction did not seriously impair the defense,
since “the evidence of fraud . . . was overwhelming and the evidence of good faith
was slight.”).
ii.
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Finally, Van Buren argues he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to
confront adverse witnesses. Albo did not testify at Van Buren’s trial because he
allegedly had fled to Italy. In Albo’s absence, the government played the
recordings that the FBI had taped of the conversations between Albo and Van
Buren. Van Buren contends that the admission of Albo’s statements on the
recordings violated his constitutional right to confront Albo. We find no merit to
that argument.
The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause guarantees a criminal
defendant “the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S.
Const. amend. VI. This usually means that the defendant must have an opportunity
to cross-examine an adverse witness at trial before that witness’s statements may
be admitted. Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 53-54 (2004). But
significantly, the Confrontation Clause does not block statements that are used “for
purposes other than establishing the truth of the matter asserted.” Id. at 59 n.9.
For instance, in United States v. Price, 792 F.2d 994 (11th Cir. 1986), the
government relied on recordings between the defendant and another individual,
since the person who made the recordings had passed away before trial. Id. at 996.
The defendant asserted that admitting the other person’s statements on the
recording violated his Confrontation Clause right. We rejected that argument,
finding that “[t]he single purpose for admitting the [other person’s] statements was
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to make understandable to the jury the statements made by [the defendant]
himself.” Id. at 997. Put simply, the statements in question were not offered for
their truth, so the defendant’s “Sixth Amendment right of confrontation and to
present a defense was not violated by the introduction of the tapes into evidence.”
Id.
The same is true here: Albo’s statements were admitted only to provide
context for Van Buren’s statements and to show their effect on Van Buren. For
example, whether Albo was actually interested in Carson or whether he actually
wanted to learn her real identity was not at issue here; the truth or falsity of those
claims did not tend to make it more or less likely that Van Buren had committed a
charged crime. Rather, the government offered those statements solely to put into
context Van Buren’s remarks and actions. Because none of Albo’s recorded
statements was offered for its truth, none was subject to the Confrontation Clause.
IV.
For all the above reasons, we vacate Van Buren’s honest-services-fraud
conviction and remand for a new trial on that charge. We affirm his computer-
fraud conviction.
VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART.
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