NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
FILE NAME: 21A0507N.06
Case Nos. 20-4065/4066/4067
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
)
FILED
UNITED STATES of AMERICA, Nov 04, 2021
)
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Plaintiff-Appellee,
)
) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
v.
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
) THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
MICHAEL D. BUSCH (20-4065); BUSCH’S
) OHIO
COUNTRY CORNER (20-4066);
)
AMANDA JO BUSCH (20-4067),
)
)
Defendants-Appellants.
)
Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; BATCHELDER and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.
ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. In a joint trial, a jury convicted Michael
Busch, Amanda Busch, and Busch’s Country Corner, Inc. (collectively, “the Busches”) on charges
of conspiracy to commit offenses against the United States, food-stamp fraud, and wire fraud. In
a consolidated appeal, they claim a Brady violation, an incorrect jury instruction, and prosecutorial
misconduct. We find no reversible error as to any of these claims and AFFIRM.
I. Background
The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) modern food-stamp program is
known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). It provides food-purchasing
assistance to eligible, low-income individuals and households through an Electronic Benefit
Transfer (EBT) account with an associated debit card.1 The USDA—in conjunction with a
corresponding state agency—deposits a monthly dollar-value allotment of food-purchasing credit
1
See United States v. Busch, No. 3:18-cr-00079 (S.D. Ohio) (Dkt. No. 48, “Second Superseding Indictment,”
Feb. 28, 2019); see also USDA “Supplemental Nutrition Program (SNAP) Fact Sheet” (FNS-813, Dec. 2018),
available at https://www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/documents/snap_fact_sheet.pdf (last visited Oct. 1, 2021).
Case Nos. 20-4065/4066/4067, United States v. Busch, et al.
(money) into the EBT account and the account holder uses the EBT debit card to purchase eligible
food items at authorized retailers. To become a SNAP-authorized retailer, the store—e.g., butcher,
grocer, supermarket, convenience store—must apply for and obtain a SNAP license from the
USDA. All EBT transactions are conducted through an electronic point-of-sale (POS) system,
which debits the user’s monthly allotment, electronically deposits the corresponding payment to
the retailer’s bank account, and records the transaction. Retailers may accept EBT payment “only
in exchange for eligible food,” not “in exchange for cash.” 7 C.F.R. § 278.2(a). Nor may a retailer
accept EBT “in payment for items sold to a household on credit.” 7 C.F.R. § 278.2(f).
Michael and Amanda Busch owned and operated Busch’s Country Corner (BCC), a
specialty butcher and grocery store in the Findlay Market, in Cincinnati, Ohio. BCC was a SNAP-
authorized retailer and it processed 195,113 EBT transactions (i.e., about 500 per week) between
October 2010 and March 2018.2 Randall Busch, Michael’s brother, managed the day-to-day
operations at BCC. Michael was the boss but was ordinarily present at BCC only in the mornings.
Amanda was the BCC bookkeeper but worked from a home office and was seldom at BCC.
In May 2017, a taskforce of USDA Agents, Secret Service Agents, and local police
received a tip that BCC was trading cash for EBT charges and opened an investigation. In the 13
months between May 2017 and April 2018, an informant working for the taskforce traded EBT
credit for cash (i.e., conducted “controlled buys”) at BCC on eleven different days. For each of
those controlled buys, the taskforce provided the informant with one or more EBT cards (as many
as four), each with a different, fictitious accountholder name. The taskforce also equipped the
informant with multiple audio-video recording devices: one in his hat, another in his coffee cup,
2
The conspiracy alleged in this case, as detailed in the indictment, spanned January 2010 through April 2018
(100 months). But for reasons that have no bearing on the case or any issue in this appeal, the database queries used
to assess BCC’s EBT transactions spanned only October 2010 through March 2018 (90 months).
2
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and an open line on his cell phone so that agents could watch and listen in real time. At BCC, the
informant interacted with Randall, who processed the fraudulent EBT transactions through BCC’s
POS card reader, debiting an amount from each of the EBT cards (accounts) and giving the
informant half of that amount back in cash. Because the full amount of the charge was deposited
electronically into BCC’s bank account, BCC kept the other half of the fraudulent charge as profit.
For example, if the informant offered a card with the name “Jane Smith” and an available credit
of $911, Randall would charge $910 (which the USDA would transfer electronically to BCC’s
bank account) and pay the informant $455 in cash, thus retaining $455 in profit for BCC.3 Michael
was present in the videos for about half of the events and though he did not interact directly with
the informant, he twice participated by providing Randall with additional cash needed to complete
the trade.
Meanwhile, as part of its standard procedure in SNAP-fraud investigations, the taskforce
obtained a summary of BCC’s average monthly EBT activity: dollar amount transacted, number
of transactions, and dollar amount per transaction. The USDA logs every EBT transaction in its
“Antifraud Locator Using EBT Retailer Transaction” (ALERT) database, which includes itemized
transaction information, such as the date, time, retailer identification number, EBT card/account
number, card starting balance, charge, and card ending balance. Here, a query of the ALERT
database produced a summary report of the total aggregate and monthly averages of BCC’s EBT
transactions and dollar amounts for the 90-month period from October 2010 through March 2018.
3
Due to the use of multiple EBT cards, the eleven undercover visits produced 20 EBT trades. Two of those
trades were as depicted in the example here: an EBT card containing $911 of available EBT credit and a BCC charge
of $910, leaving $1 on the card. To add some perspective, the average beginning amount on these 20 EBT cards was
$706 (with a high of $1,300 and a low of $200) and the average BCC charge was $700, effectively charging the entire
card amount (only one trade left more than $11 remining on the card and four left zero). Fifteen of the 20 charges
were whole numbers (no cents). The other five were all in five-cent (nickel) increments, two of which simply emptied
the card (e.g., a card containing $1,289.95 and a BCC charge of $1,289.95, leaving a zero balance on the card).
3
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The same report was produced for several other SNAP-authorized retailers located in Findlay
Market that also had the same USDA designation (“meat specialty store”) as BCC.
A taskforce agent reviewed these summary reports, considered six of those other SNAP-
authorized retailers to be appropriate “comparators,” and calculated a cumulative average of the
monthly averages for those six comparators. BCC’s monthly averages for both EBT transactions
and EBT dollar amounts were significantly higher than the corresponding cumulative average for
the comparators over the designated period. The agent assumed that this difference was evidence
of SNAP fraud. The taskforce used this information in preparing search-warrant applications.
In May 2018, taskforce agents executed three search warrants: one at BCC, one at
Randall’s home, and a third at Michael and Amanda’s home. Among the evidence seized were
bookkeeping records from Amanda’s home office, which included, among other things, some year-
to-year accounting comparisons prepared by BCC’s external accountants. Two of them (2017 and
2018) had handwritten notes from the accountant asking Amanda how BCC’s profits were
increasing while its sales were decreasing. The agents also seized $191,135 in cash from a locked
safe in Michael and Amanda’s basement. Meanwhile, agents obtained call and text records from
the Busches’ cell phones, and video recordings from the Findlay Market surveillance system. BCC
had its own video surveillance system, which the Busches (particularly Amanda) could access
remotely, but the agents did not obtain recordings from that system.
The grand jury indicted Michael, Amanda, Randall, and BCC on numerous counts,
comprising multiple charges of conspiracy to commit offenses against the United States, SNAP
fraud, and wire fraud.4 See 7 U.S.C. § 2024(b), 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 371 & 1343. The simple version
of the prosecution’s theory was that Randall and Michael used BCC’s SNAP authorization to trade
4
The final indictment—the second superseding indictment—included a count charging conspiracy to commit
money laundering, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h), but the court dismissed that money-laundering charge prior to trial.
4
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cash for EBT payments on a 50% basis, and Michael and Amanda restocked the cash to facilitate
those fraudulent trades by withdrawing cash from the BCC bank account into which the USDA
deposited the EBT payments electronically. The indictment relied on the 13-month investigation,
including witness statements, the undercover controlled buys, and the results of the search
warrants. The indictment also referred to and relied on Ohio’s EBT transaction database, known
as “Conduent,” which is the functional equivalent of the USDA’s ALERT database, to estimate
the economic loss and accuse the Busches of almost $3.5 million in SNAP and wire fraud. That
is, the prosecutor—like the taskforce agent—assumed that the difference between BCC’s EBT
sales and the cumulative average of EBT sales for the six comparators was all due to fraud.
Specifically, BCC’s average monthly EBT sales ($60,151 per month) minus the cumulative
average for the six comparator businesses ($21,807 per month) was the amount directly
attributable to SNAP fraud ($38,344 per month). Applying that number to the 90-month period
produced a total estimated fraud amount of $3,450,960, which was 63.74% of BCC’s total EBT
sales of $5,413,629.
Michael, Amada, and BCC pleaded “not guilty” to all charges. Randall entered a guilty
plea pursuant to a plea agreement and agreed to testify against the others. The court accepted his
plea, convicted him of 20 counts of SNAP fraud, and sentenced him to five years of probation.
The prosecutor tried the remaining defendants to a jury. In a trial that spanned two weeks—
from June 10 to 21, 2019—the prosecutor presented 18 witnesses. The key witness was the
informant, who authenticated, narrated, and discussed the recordings of the controlled buys. From
the recordings, the jurors saw for themselves that the transactions were conducted at the BCC
counter, observable by anyone in the small BCC shop and with Michael’s concurrence or
cooperation. The informant testified that both Randall and Michael participated, that everyone at
BCC knew it was happening, and that he had seen others selling their EBT benefits for cash at
5
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BCC. Another witness testified that he had been a “runner”: he brought EBT cards to BCC for
Randall or Michael to execute a transaction, after which they gave him a paper bag to return to the
card’s owner. He testified that he only once saw what was in the paper bag (cash) but that the
cardowners would routinely withdraw the contents immediately and discard the bag. He estimated
that he did these runs 30 to 40 times per week for upwards of 200 different people. He explained
that he had a long relationship with the Busches and had worked for BCC occasionally, so he was
a constant presence at the store, entering and exiting through the back door, lingering there during
slow times, and routinely going behind the customer counter. This, combined with his familiarity
with the local community, caused Michael to approach him to initiate his role in “running” these
cards and paper bags. Another witness, a local EBT cardholder, testified that he had a “tab” at
BCC, so he left his EBT card (and PIN) there for Michael and Randall to charge it as necessary to
settle his tab.
Randall testified that Michael had taught him the fraudulent-EBT-transaction scheme. He
estimated that he and Michael had each done five to ten of these transactions per week. He
explained that all the proceeds went directly to BCC; he received no personal benefit. He testified
that Amanda was aware of the scheme and could watch via BCC’s surveillance cameras. Another
former BCC employee testified that she had seen Michael and Randall conducting the fraudulent
cash-for-EBT trades, including those described by the “runner” who had testified earlier; and she
testified that Michael and Amanda had authorized her to grant customers credit against future EBT
charges, specifically corroborating the testimony by the cardholder who ran a “tab” and left his
card at BCC. An adjacent business owner testified that he believed BCC had been trafficking EBT
charges, that he frequently saw the “runner” making trades with Randall or Michael, and that when
he would refuse a request for an illegal trade at his store, that cardholder would go to BCC.
6
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Several taskforce agents testified about the investigation, including the eleven controlled
buys, the executions of the search warrants, witness interviews, and other evidence obtained. The
final taskforce witness discussed the ALERT database reports, the comparison of BCC’s monthly
averages to the cumulative average for the six comparator stores, and the assumption that the
difference—the amount of $3,450,960—was directly attributable to SNAP fraud. After cross-
examination highlighted the flaws in this analysis and assumption, the prosecutor questioned the
witness on re-direct about a summary chart prepared by the taskforce using the Conduent database
and titled “Busch’s Country Corner Suspicious EBT Transaction January 2010 to April 2018,”
which alleged $494,000 in suspicious transactions. This total was divided into categories of
transactions that the taskforce and prosecutor considered suspicious, namely transactions executed
in the morning before the store opened (before 8:00 a.m.) and transactions for exact dollar amounts
of $100, $200, $300, or $400. On re-cross, the Busches’ defense counsel established that the agent
had not interviewed the EBT cardholders associated with those transactions to inquire as to
whether they were valid or fraudulent. This chart was not admitted as evidence.
The overall defense theory was that Randall had conducted the fraudulent EBT transactions
on his own, without Michael’s or Amanda’s knowledge. The defense called seven witnesses,
including Michael and Amanda, and four family members who had worked at BCC.5 The four
family members testified consistently that they had never seen any fraudulent EBT transactions,
were unaware of any fraud, and were shocked to learn of Randall’s perpetration of the fraudulent
EBT transactions. Given this emphatic (and consistent) testimony that they never saw Randall
commit any fraudulent EBT transactions, the obvious but likely unintended inference is that they
5
The other defense witness was an employee of Findlay Market, who provided maintenance and security
services at the Market. Under questioning from defense counsel, he agreed that he had been called to BCC on occasion
for security purposes, but he testified that he did not remember why.
7
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would not have seen Michael doing likewise. Amanda testified about her role at BCC as the
bookkeeper, which included her accounting for the cash. One aspect of BCC’s cash management
was referred to as “pocket cash” or “pocket,” which comprised large denomination bills ($100,
$50, or $20) that Randall or Michael would remove from the register throughout the day for
safekeeping, until these bills could be delivered to Amanda for accounting and deposit. An
incongruous aspect of BCC’s cash management was, as Amanda testified, that she would withdraw
cash from the BCC business bank account by writing and cashing a BCC business-account check,
in order to provide change for the BCC cash register. She did this about once per week and a
“typical amount” was about $1,250. She testified that Michael did likewise and would tell her
when he did, so that she could record it in her bookkeeping notebook. When asked why she and
Michael made such frequent trips to the bank to write checks for cash even though she had large
amounts of cash on hand and was receiving cash deliveries daily via the large denomination
“pocket,” her only answer was: “Because that’s how I was taught to do it.”
Michael testified that he would go to the bank two or three times per month to write and
cash checks from the BCC account to provide change for the BCC register. He said the typical
amount was between $500 and $2,000. Counterintuitively, he would correspondingly deliver large
denomination “pocket” cash to Amanda, of $1,000 to $2,000, four or five days per week. When
asked why he did not just exchange the large denomination “pocket” bills for smaller denomination
bills, rather than writing checks from the BCC account, his answer was: “I probably didn’t have
any pocket on me to do that.” Michael candidly admitted that he extended credit to EBT
cardholders with the understanding that he would charge their cards when they received allotment
from USDA, but that he did not consider it wrong.
The jury convicted the defendants as charged: Michael, Amanda, and BCC on the
conspiracy charges; and Michael on the SNAP- and wire-fraud charges. Because the prosecutor
8
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intended to argue that the $3.5-million amount was the proper “estimate of loss” for sentencing,
the Busches hired an expert to prepare an opposing estimate. The expert requested, and the
prosecutor provided, the “raw” or particularized EBT transaction data from the ALERT database.
The expert used this data set, his personal experience, and certain assumptions, to conduct his own
statistical analyses, from which he drew three conclusions. One, the prosecutor’s $3.5 million
estimate was unreliable and demonstrably incorrect. Two, “[t]he correct estimate of loss based on
the relevant data from the ALERT system is, statistically, effectively zero.” That is, according to
the expert’s analysis, there was no fraud at all. It bears recognizing that this conclusion is
irreconcilable with the direct evidence of fraud produced at trial, such as the videos of the
fraudulent transactions and the testimony of several witnesses. Turning this around, if there was
some fraud, as the evidence showed and the jury found, then this statistical analysis cannot be a
reliable means of assessing fraud or estimating loss. But the expert did that analysis anyway,
offering as his third conclusion an estimated loss-due-to-fraud of $15,526.75, based on the total of
the recorded undercover transactions ($14,123.67), two suspicious $50 transactions ($100), and
nine suspicious transactions that were executed on Mondays, when BCC was closed, and when
Randall would likely have been at BCC alone ($1,303.08).
The court held an evidentiary hearing prior to sentencing, at which this expert presented
his report and testified about it. Ultimately, his expert opinion was a reiteration of the report’s
conclusions: his statistical analysis showed that there was no EBT fraud or, at most, only a minimal
amount of loss due to fraud. At this hearing, defense counsel raised an accusation that the
prosecutor’s failure to provide the full set of transaction data from the ALERT database prior to
trial was a violation of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). The taskforce agent testified that
he did not have, much less use or rely on, the raw transaction data that the Busches’ expert used;
he had had and relied on only the monthly summaries. Therefore, he explained that while the raw
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data was available in the ALERT database, it was not provided to the defense prior to trial because
it was not provided to the taskforce or the prosecutor.
Following the hearing, the Busches moved to vacate their convictions, claiming that the
prosecutor’s failure to provide the particularized transaction data prior to trial was a Brady
violation. They argued that the data was exculpatory because their expert’s analysis concluded
that, “statistically speaking, SNAP fraud at Busch’s Country Corner was non-existent.” In
response, the prosecutor reminded the court that the taskforce agent had neither had nor used the
ALERT transaction data; he had only monthly summaries of that data, which the prosecutor had
provided to the defense prior to trial. And, when the agent had used raw transaction data from
Conduent (the state equivalent database) in preparation for trial, the prosecutor had given that data
to the defense.6 More importantly, the prosecutor argued, the data was not relevant to the
defendants’ guilt. At trial, the prosecutor proved his case based on the videos and testimony about
the controlled buys, testimony by co-conspirators (i.e., Randall, the “runner,” and the cardholder
with the tab), testimony by the former employee, testimony by BCC’s external accountant, and
testimony by the investigators and SNAP administrators. The monthly sales comparison did not
prove guilt, it merely estimated the amount of the loss attributable to the overall fraud scheme.
The district court held that the ALERT transaction data was not “material” because it was
not exculpatory: it did not concern, much less disprove, the prosecution’s charge that the Busches
conspired to defraud the United States with respect to eleven specific transactions. United States
v. Busch, No. 3:18-cr-00079, 2020 WL 1703191, at *5 (S.D. Ohio, Apr. 8, 2020). Nor was the
transaction data impeaching: it did not contradict or call into question any testimony as to that
6
This Conduent data set, which the prosecutor provided to the defense prior to trial, contained the raw
transaction data for the 195,113 EBT transactions at BCC. The only articulated difference between the Conduent data
provided before trial and the ALERT data provided after trial was that the ALERT data also had data for EBT
transactions at the comparator stores, whereas the Conduent data set had data for EBT transactions at only BCC.
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charge. Id. at *6. Because the data was not material, there was no prejudice, no question of
confidence in the jury’s verdict, and no Brady violation. Id. The court denied the motion.
At the ensuing sentencing hearing, the court heard argument about the appropriate means
of estimating loss for purposes of sentencing and rejected both parties’ approaches, explaining:
As stated, the government has the burden to prove the amount of the loss by
a preponderance of the evidence. And in situations where . . . the losses occasioned
by financial frauds are not easy to quantify, the district court need only make a
reasonable estimate of the loss given the available information.
...
The [c]ourt finds that none of the amounts set forth by the parties is
sufficiently reasonable in estimating a loss in this case. [The Busches’] expert
report provides a number of reasons why the government’s loss methodology and
calculation is flawed and not reasonable. The [c]ourt agrees with some of those
reasons. The [c]ourt also notes that the government’s calculation did come from a
comparative analysis that was used to obtain a search warrant.
However, the [Busches’] loss calculation of $14,123.67, which is merely
what it claims to be the amount of the actual fraud actually proven to have taken
place, the [c]ourt finds is also unreasonable. The $14,123.67 is only the . . . total
amount from the transactions performed by the confidential informant who testified
at trial. The [c]ourt does find . . . that amount to be unreasonable in light of the
testimony and the evidence.
And the [Busches’] expert[’]s suggested [] loss calculation only adds $1,303
from the Monday transactions to the $14,123.67 and makes some assumptions that
the [c]ourt finds also are not reasonable.
Having rejected those competing approaches, the court began its own approach by finding 2,700
to 3,600 fraudulent EBT transactions, based on Randall’s trial testimony of 30 to 40 per month.
The court calculated a range of $74,736 to $99,648 in total fraud, based on an overall average EBT
charge of $27.68 per transaction. And the court deemed the middle of that range to be the
appropriate estimate of loss, making it $87,192.
The court set Amanda’s total offense level at 14, her criminal history as category I, and her
guidelines’ advisory range at 15 to 21 months in prison. But it sentenced her to just five years of
probation with the first eight months under home confinement. The court set Michael’s total
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offense level at 17, his criminal history as category I, and his advisory range at 24 to 30 months.
It sentenced him to just 12 months in prison, imposed a fine of $50,000, and ordered forfeiture of
$87,192 in currency seized from his home. The court also ordered restitution in the amount of
$87,192, applied to Michael, Amanda, and BCC jointly and severally.
On appeal, the Busches allege three errors that would warrant reversal: a Brady violation,
an incorrect jury instruction, and prosecutorial misconduct. None of these has merit.
II. Brady
The Busches claim that the prosecutor violated Brady v. Maryland by failing to provide
them the full array of raw transaction data from the ALERT database.
To prove a Brady violation, a defendant must show that the undisclosed evidence is
both favorable to the defendant—meaning either exculpatory or impeaching—and
material either to guilt or to punishment. Evidence is material when there is a
reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result
of the proceeding would have been different. And a reasonable probability is a
probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome of the proceeding.
United States v. Lucas, 2021 WL 4099241, at *8 (6th Cir. Sept. 9, 2021) (quotation marks and
citations omitted); see United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985); Strickler v. Greene, 527
U.S. 263, 281 (1999); Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 433-34 (1995); Brady, 373 U.S. at 87.
The district court ruled that the ALERT transaction data “was not ‘material’ when viewed
in the context of the evidence presented at trial and the crimes for which the [Busches] were
charged (and convicted).” Busch, 2020 WL 1703191, at *5. The court explained that this data
does not show whether “any particular transaction is fraudulent or is not fraudulent.” Id. At most,
it enabled the Busches’ expert to construct a statistical analysis from which the Busches’ attorney
could: (1) argue “that there was not nearly as much food stamp fraud as the Government believed,”
and (2) “impeach [certain] witnesses’ estimates of how much food stamp fraud was occurring at
BCC.” Id. at *6. But the prosecutor “did not need to establish, and the jury did not need to find,
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widespread food stamp fraud occurring at BCC in order for the [Busches] to be convicted of the
counts on which they were found guilty,” namely “conspiracy to defraud the United States, and
. . . fraud with respect to eleven specific transactions.” Id. at *5 (quotation marks and underlining
omitted; emphasis added). The court found that the evidence at trial “provides more than sufficient
confidence in the jury’s verdict, even in light of the transactional data at issue and the [Busches’]
expert’s opinion of what such data shows.” Id. at *6. Therefore, the court concluded that the
ALERT transactional data was “not Brady material,” nor had the Busches “shown that prejudice
must have ensued” from the presumptive suppression of that data. Id. (quotation marks omitted).
The Busches fail to address, much less overcome, the district court’s reasoning. For
example, they say the ALERT transactional data was favorable to them because it would have
“allowed [them] to show by statistical analysis that ‘widescale’ fraud was not occurring at BCC—
the core of the government’s case against them.” But that was not the “core” of the case against
them. In fact, the district court’s premise was that widespread fraud was not even part of the
charges against them. Thus, favorable though it might be in a general sense, this was immaterial
to proving or disproving the charges against them.
Nevertheless, in their briefing, they press three reasons why the ALERT data was material.
None holds up under examination. First, they contend that the data “proved [their] theory at trial
that the fraud at BCC was limited and solely perpetrated by the government’s cooperating witness
Randy Busch without the knowledge or involvement of Michael or Amanda Busch.” But it did no
such thing. As the district court pointed out, the data itself does not show whether any transaction
is fraudulent or legitimate. At most, this data enabled the Busches’ expert to render an opinion,
based on his unique manipulation of the data, his personal knowledge or experience, and certain
partisan assumptions, some of which, the district court opined, were “not reasonable.” That is
perhaps the most critical point. The expert did not prove that Randall alone conducted the
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fraudulent transactions unknown to Michael and Amanda; he assumed that and extrapolated from
it. He started with that assumption (that Randall alone was conducting fraudulent EBT transactions
and hiding them from Michael) and applied it to two known facts—(1) the BCC shop is so small
that anyone present would witness the fraudulent EBT transactions and (2) Randall typically
worked alone at BCC on Mondays when it was closed to the public and, more importantly, Michael
was absent—to conclude that Randall was conducting fraudulent EBT transactions on Mondays,
unknown to Michael. Beyond being circular, this was contrary to the irrefutable video evidence
in which none of the eleven controlled buys occurred on a Monday.7 All eleven occurred during
ordinary business hours with other employees present, including Michael who twice participated.
And Randall made little effort to hide it. Recall also that the former employee testified to
witnessing this activity routinely.
Second, the Busches contend that the data “revealed that the government’s statistical
method of determining that there was allegedly fraud committed by others than Randy was
flawed.” The prosecution used its “statistical method” to estimate the total amount of loss that it
deemed attributable to BCC’s SNAP fraud. It did not use that statistical method to prove that
Michael, rather than Randall, committed the fraud. The prosecutor presented the videos of the
controlled buys and testimony from the informant, Randall, the runner, and the former employee
to prove that Michael participated in fraudulent EBT transactions.
And third, the Busches contend that the data was material because it “impeached the
testimony of the government’s most important witnesses.” These “most important witnesses”
were, in the Busches’ view, the runner and the agent who testified about the taskforce’s statistical
comparison. Even if the expert’s opinion did impeach their testimony, those two were arguably
7
The eleven controlled buys occurred on Tuesdays (3), Wednesday (1), Thursdays (6), and Friday (1).
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the prosecution’s least important witnesses; they were certainly not the most important, nor would
impeaching their testimony have created a reasonable probability of a different outcome. The
prosecution’s critical witnesses were the informant who authenticated, narrated, and discussed the
videos of the controlled buys, followed closely by Randall and the employee who witnessed
Randall and Michael committing the fraudulent EBT transactions on numerous occasions. The
expert opinion did not impeach their testimony. It did not even implicate their testimony in any
way.
In their appeal brief, the Busches made certain other contentions that are mistaken or
outright false. They say their “expert analysis caused the district court to reduce its calculation of
loss from $3,450,960 . . . to only $87,192.” The district court never accepted the prosecutor’s
tendered amount of $3.5 million, nor did the court ever calculate $3.5 million for itself, so the court
did not reduce “its” calculation of loss. The court did expressly reject the prosecutor’s $3.5 million
number and even “agree[d] with some of” the expert’s “reasons why the government’s loss
methodology and calculation is flawed and not reasonable,” but the court also stated expressly that
the Busches’ expert “makes some assumptions that . . . are not reasonable.” It is doubtful that the
court relied on the expert in the way the Busches imply, and it is certain that the expert’s report
did not cause the final $87,192 number.
The Bushes also say that “the only proof that the government introduced of SNAP fraud at
trial was ten fraudulent SNAP transactions between a government confidential informant and
Randy Busch.” As we have stated repeatedly, the prosecutor produced video of and testimony
about the eleven controlled buys (20 EBT card transactions), testimony from Randall who admitted
to the fraud and explained that Michael had trained him to do it, testimony from the outside
accountant who questioned how profits were up when sales were down, testimony from a nearby
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business owner about the EBT fraud, and testimony from a former employee who witnessed
Michael and Randall committing EBT fraud on numerous occasions.
Another odd, apparently confused, contention is that: “Had the government produced the
transaction data before trial, [the Busches] would have called [the expert] at trial to give the exact
testimony he gave at the post-trial hearing.” But the Busches hired the expert after trial and then
he requested the ALERT transaction data after he was hired. That is, they hired the expert even
though they did not yet know about the ALERT transaction data. They could have hired him
before trial in the same way they hired him after trial. The fact that the Bushes did not have the
ALERT data had no bearing on their hiring of the expert.
And, finally, they offer this misleading contention: “Still further, [the expert]’s testimony
suggested that ‘there were confidential informant transactions that were attempted but were not
successfully executed; in other words, the people at BCC declined to do fraudulent transactions.’”
The expert said this while explaining a caveat that he had included in his report, in which he had
warned of the possibility of one unsuccessful controlled buy that, if true, would require him to
change his analysis. But upon further questioning, the expert conceded that his suspicion of this
unsuccessful controlled buy had been refuted and he agreed that it had not occurred.
On the whole, the Bushes have not shown that the ALERT transactional data was
necessarily favorable to them—inasmuch as it was neither exculpatory nor impeaching—or
material to their guilt of the crimes charged. There is no reasonable probability that the result of
the trial would have been different if the data had been provided. See Bagley, 473 U.S. at 682.
They failed to prove a Brady violation.
III. Jury Instruction
The Busches claim the district court committed reversible error by instructing the jury to
convict them if it found that they had violated civil or administrative regulations, and further erred
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by refusing to instruct the jury to the contrary. We review de novo a claim that jury instructions
misstate the law. Hurt v. Com. Energy, Inc., 973 F.3d 509, 523 (6th Cir. 2020).
The prosecutor charged Michael with multiple counts of SNAP fraud under 7 U.S.C.
§ 2024(b)(1), which says, in pertinent part: “whoever knowingly uses, transfers, acquires, alters,
or possesses benefits in any manner contrary to this chapter or the regulations issued pursuant to
this chapter shall . . . be guilty of a felony.” Under those regulations, SNAP-authorized retailers
may not accept EBT payment “in exchange for cash,” 7 C.F.R. § 278.2(a), or “in payment for
items sold to a household on credit,” § 278.2(f). Restating this law as a single, simplified
proposition applicable to the prosecutor’s accusations in this case: it would be a felony for Michael
(acting as the SNAP-authorized retailer) to knowingly trade cash or provide goods on credit in
exchange for EBT payments. The court instructed the jury on those counts as follows:
For you to find the defendant guilty of SNAP fraud, you must find that the
government has proved each and every one of the following elements beyond a
reasonable doubt:
First, that the defendant acquired, possessed, used, or trafficked SNAP
benefits in a manner not authorized by law or the Department of Agriculture
regulations;
Second, that the defendant knew that he was acting unlawfully and intended
to violate the law;
Third, that the benefits in question had a value of at least $100.
Under the law, the Department of Agriculture regulations are that the only
authorized use of SNAP benefits is the recipient’s purchase of qualifying food at
the authorized retail store at a price prevailing in such stores.
No law or Department of Agriculture regulation allows anyone to sell or
purchase benefits for cash or other non-food items of value.
Further, no law or Department of Agriculture regulation allows anyone to
extend credit to an individual with the promise of payment in future benefits. The
government need not show that the defendant had knowledge of the specific law,
only that he knew that his conduct was unlawful.
The Busches contend that the reference to “regulations in th[is] criminal jury instruction[]
had the practical effect of rewriting the criminal law of SNAP fraud as enacted by Congress and
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inviting jurors to convict [them] for violating administrative regulations, not committing crimes.”
But the SNAP-fraud statute enacted by Congress, 7 U.S.C. § 2024(b)(1), expressly states that it is
crime to knowingly violate “the regulations issued pursuant to this chapter.” We reject this
contention out of hand.
It appears from a careful parsing of their brief, however, that the Busches’ actual contention
is that, because “a regulatory violation does not require specific intent while [a] criminal offense
does,” “the instructions were confusing and misleading about the most important issue for the jury
to decide—[their] intent.” That is, they accuse the district court of instructing the jury to convict
them of SNAP fraud even if it found that they did not specifically intend to violate the law, i.e., 7
U.S.C. § 2024(b)(1). That would be of concern if it were true, but it is not. In fact, it is impossible
to reconcile this accusation with the specific-intent aspect of the given instruction, which is: “to
find the defendant guilty of SNAP fraud, you must find . . . beyond a reasonable doubt . . . that the
defendant knew that he was acting unlawfully and intended to violate the law.” There is no merit
to this contention.
Finally, the Busches contend that a further “limiting instruction was necessary because the
government was permitted to introduce evidence at trial in a way that conflated regulatory
infraction with crime to the jury.” This is the same meritless argument in a different wrapper.
Given that 7 U.S.C. § 2024(b)(1) specifically sets out one element of SNAP fraud as a violation
of the SNAP regulations, the prosecutor had to prove that Michael violated the regulations. But,
as the specific-intent aspect of the instruction made clear, that violation alone was not enough; the
jury had to find that Michael specifically intended to act unlawfully. The instruction given was
correct and sufficient. We cannot agree that the jury was confused or misled, or that it convicted
Michael improperly. A further limiting instruction was not necessary.
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IV. Prosecutorial Misconduct
The Busches moved the district court for a new trial based on their claims of prosecutorial
misconduct. The district court denied the motion. They repeat those claims here.
Whether a prosecutor’s actions or statements at trial amount to misconduct raises “mixed
questions of law and fact, which we review de novo.” United States v. Carson, 560 F.3d 566, 574
(6th Cir. 2009). We use a two-step approach, in which we first decide whether the challenged
conduct was improper. United States v. Warshak, 631 F.3d 266, 302 (6th Cir. 2010). “[I]t is not
enough that the prosecutors’ remarks were undesirable or even universally condemned. The
relevant question is whether the prosecutors’ comments so infected the trial with unfairness as to
make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.” Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 181
(1986) (quotation marks and citation omitted). Thus, we consider the prosecutor’s conduct within
the context of the entire trial. United States v. Francis, 170 F.3d 546, 552 (6th Cir. 1999).
If we conclude that the conduct was improper, we must then determine whether it was so
flagrant as to warrant reversal. Warshak, 631 F.3d at 302. For this, we consider whether the
prosecutor’s conduct or comments were (1) misleading to the jury or prejudicial to the defendant,
(2) extensive or isolated, and (3) deliberate or accidental. Id. And we consider (4) whether the
evidence against the defendant was weak or strong. Id.
A. During Trial
The Busches claim that the prosecutor committed misconduct during trial by violating
certain of the court’s pre-trial evidentiary rulings when he solicited evidence about BCC’s cash-
management practices. This included (1) questioning Amanda about how she recorded cash for
bookkeeping purposes; (2) introducing the year-over-year accounting reports with the handwritten
notes asking how profits were up when sales were down; (3) questioning the outside accountant
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about Amanda’s cash-management practices, her recordkeeping, and the $191,135 cash hoard; and
(4) questioning former BCC employees about their having been paid in cash.
The district court rejected this claim, explaining that its pretrial ruling in limine prohibited
the prosecutor from introducing evidence that Amanda “failed to accurately report revenue and
income generated from cash sales at BCC to state and federal taxing authorities.” United States v.
Busch, No. 3:18-cr-079, 2019 WL 6682157, at *2 (S.D. Ohio, Dec. 6, 2019) (editorial marks
omitted). The prosecutor’s questioning and evidence about general cash management did not
implicate any tax evasion or tax fraud, and it was relevant to prove Amanda’s knowledge of the
SNAP-fraud because that cash flow, questionable cash recording, and overall cash management
were central to the prosecutor’s theory of the SNAP-fraud scheme. The court concluded that the
evidence had probative value that was not substantially outweighed by the dangers identified in
F.R.E. 403. Therefore, the court denied the motion for acquittal or a new trial. Id.
The district court also rejected the Busches’ claim that the jury could not have followed
the court’s instructions to disregard certain testimony or evidence. Courts presume that jurors will
follow an instruction to disregard inadmissible evidence, unless there is an “overwhelming
probability” that they would be unable to do so, Richardson, v. Marsh, 481 U.S. 200, 208 (1987),
and a strong likelihood that the evidence would be “devastating” to the defendant, Bruton v. United
States, 391 U.S. 123, 136 (1968). The district court found no reason to believe that this jury was
incapable of obeying its curative instructions. Busch, 2019 WL 6682157, at *3.
On appeal, the Busches complain that the prosecutor should not have questioned witnesses
or proffered evidence about Amanda’s cash management, criticize the court for allowing such
questioning and admitting such evidence (e.g., the year-over-year accounting reports with the
handwritten notes, testimony about the $191,135 cash hoard, and former employees’ testimony
that they had been paid in cash), and insist that this was irreparably prejudicial. But the Busches
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offer nothing to overcome the district court’s explanation or ruling. Moreover, they have offered
nothing that would show that the prosecutor’s conduct was even beyond the bounds of normal
adversarial advocacy, much less improper—particularly given that the court overruled the defense
objections at trial and admitted the evidence about which the Busches now complain.
B. During Closing Argument
The Busches claim that the prosecutor committed misconduct during his closing argument
in four ways: by (1) vouching for Randall’s credibility; (2) arguing that Randall’s guilt, alone, was
enough to prove their guilt; (3) mischaracterizing the evidence; and (4) misstating the law.
1. Vouching
The Busches claim that the prosecutor committed misconduct during his closing argument
by vouching for Randall’s credibility as a witness by stating that Randall was “not a liar” and “had
no motive to lie” given that he was bound by his plea agreement to testify truthfully.
The district court rejected this claim, explaining that, “[a]s a general matter, it is not
improper for the prosecutor to refer to the plea agreements of cooperating witnesses in the
expectation that their credibility will be at issue.” Busch, 2019 WL 6682157, at *3 (quotation and
editorial marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Reid, 625 F.3d 977, 983 (6th Cir. 2010)). The
court also noted that the defense had not objected to this part of the prosecutor’s closing. Id.
On appeal, the Busches fail to acknowledge, much less overcome, the district court’s
findings, the foremost being that their counsel did not object to this perceived vouching at trial.
The Busches therefore did not preserve this claim for appeal and our review is for plain error. See
United States v. Hall, 979 F.3d 1107, 1119 (6th Cir. 2020). “Plain error is (1) error (2) that was
obvious or clear, (3) that affected the defendant’s substantial rights and (4) that affected the
fairness, integrity, or public reputation of the judicial proceedings.” Id. (quotation and editorial
marks omitted). “We will reverse a conviction based on plain error only in exceptional
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circumstances that seriously affect the fairness of the trial.” United States v. Sills, 662 F.3d 415,
417 (6th Cir. 2011).
“Improper vouching occurs when a prosecutor either (1) bluntly states a personal belief in
a witness’s credibility, thereby placing the prestige of the office of the United States Attorney
behind that witness, or (2) implies that the witness’s testimony is corroborated by evidence known
to the government but not known to the jury.” United States v. Henry, 545 F.3d 367, 378-79 (6th
Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). In this case, the prosecutor did neither of these two things, but the
Busches point to three passages from his closing argument that, they contend, imply the same:
We learned that when Randall Busch came here and testified in this witness
box in front of you he had already pled guilty to being engaged in SNAP fraud at
the Busch’s Country store. The same case, same facts and circumstances as his
brother Michael and his sister-in-law Amanda. He, in fact, had even been sentenced
by this Court.
So with those facts, irrefutable facts in the open, you have to ask yourself,
what on earth motive to lie does Michael -- does Randall Busch have to testify
against his older brother, an older brother that he idolized, and his sister-in-law?
Does the government have some hammer over his head? That unless he testifies
the way we want him to, that somehow we are going to take retribution against him,
somehow the sentence is going to be affected? That horse has left the barn. He has
no motive to lie. In fact, out of all the witnesses, he had the most motivation to not
cooperate, but he did. And you have to yourself judge his credibility. His
mannerisms. His tone of voice. His body language. His answers.
The second passage is:
Randall Busch accepted responsibility. He pled guilty. He’s been
sentenced. His involvement in this overall SNAP fraud scheme is over. Was he a
conspirator with his brother and his sister? Absolutely.
I urge you to pay particular attention to the February 27, 2018, transaction
which Randall, Mike, and Amanda all have their tentacles in. If we introduced
nothing else other than the facts and circumstances of that undercover transaction,
that’s enough, that’s sufficient to meet the elements that indeed Randall, Michael,
and Amanda had entered into a criminal partnership, an understanding as to what’s
going on.
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The third passage is:
Defense witnesses. With the exception of Ms. Rosfeld, they all had the
same last name. Ms. Rosfeld’s obviously married. Her maiden name obviously is
Busch. What were the common threads? What was the common theme? All were
told not to conduct cash-for-EBT transactions. That’s fine. All knew about pocket,
but only Tyler collected pocket. All testified about how the business grew the past
eight years. All testified about acquiring some -- acquiring more counter space.
I guess it was a 36-foot counter at the market. And all felt betrayed [by Randall].
We talked about that with [Michael] Busch today. When you really think
about that term ‘betrayed,’ what are we talking about? Was it betrayed that he got
caught? Was it betrayed that he embarrassed the family? I’m sure it was all that.
Was it betrayed that he stole? Yes. But no one -- not his mother, not his sister, not
his niece, not his nephew, not even his sister-in-law -- said [Randall] lied. There is
a difference between being a thief and a liar. Randy is a thief. He’s not a liar.
And there is no evidence that Randy stole from the business. He didn’t do
it. There is no evidence.
The Busches contend that the prosecutor vouched for Randall’s credibility as a witness by
saying that Randall had “no motive to lie,” concluding that he “is a thief . . . not a liar,” and
insinuating that his guilty plea ensured his truthful testimony. But, considering these statements
in context, the prosecutor merely urged the jurors—when making their own assessment of
Randall’s credibility—to draw certain inferences from the evidence produced at trial. That is not
improper vouching. Moreover, considered in context, those statements were not obviously or
clearly improper, which likely explains why defense counsel did not object at the time. Nor did
they affect the outcome of this trial. This is not an “exceptional circumstance[] that seriously
affect[ed] the fairness of the trial.” See Sills, 662 F.3d at 417. We find no plain error.
2. Randall’s Guilty Plea
The Busches claim that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct during his closing argument
by referring to Randall’s guilty plea as substantive evidence of their guilt. The Busches refer again
to the first of the three passages above, in which the opening paragraph says:
We learned that when Randall Busch came here and testified in this witness box in
front of you he had already pled guilty to being engaged in SNAP fraud at [BCC].
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The same case, same facts and circumstances as his brother Michael and his sister-
in-law Amanda. He, in fact, had even been sentenced by this Court.
In the preceding section, the Busches argued that this passage was improper because it supported
the inference that Randall had no motive to lie during his testimony, given that he had already been
convicted and sentenced, and was no longer facing any further criminal proceedings. In this
section, the Busches argue that this passage was improper because it was a surreptitious means of
urging the jury to convict Michael and Amanda on an improper basis, namely that Randall is guilty,
so Michael and Amanda must be guilty too.
The district court rejected this claim, as it had the prior claim, explaining that it is generally
permissible for the prosecutor to refer to a witness’s plea agreement, and noted that defense counsel
had not objected to this part of the prosecutor’s closing. Busch, 2019 WL 6682157, at *3.
Therefore, our review is again for plain error. See Hall, 979 F.3d at 1119.
Two oddities about this argument stand out. One, this was a conspiracy case—a conspiracy
comprising Randall, Michael, Amanda, and BCC. Randall’s guilt was effectively an element of
the conspiracy charge, meaning the prosecutor had to demonstrate Randall’s guilt to the jury. And
two, the defense theory was that Randall committed the fraudulent EBT transactions unbeknownst
to Michael and Amanda. The entirety of the Busches’ defense was predicated on emphasizing
Randall’s guilt. The prosecutor’s reminding the jury that Randall had pled guilty was no worse
than the Busches’ counsel telling the jury that Randall was guilty; neither urged the jury to convict
Michael and Amanda based solely on Randall’s guilty plea. This was not plain error.
3. Mischaracterizing Evidence
The Busches claim that the prosecutor fabricated and mischaracterized evidence during his
closing argument. The Busches point to three specific instances. The first concerns the
prosecutor’s reference to: “The second set of books. The mystery set of books. The set of books
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that [the outside accountant] repeatedly asked Amanda to produce.” The Busches contend that
this assertion improperly “referenced ‘facts’ not in evidence,” because there was no evidence about
any second set of books. In response to the Busches’ post-trial motion raising this claim in the
district court, the prosecutor agreed that there was no “second set of books” and explained the
statement this way:
The reference to the so-called ‘second set of books’ was nothing more than classic
white collar metaphor referencing the glaring absence of any accurate books or records
produced or maintained by Amanda Jo concerning [BCC’s] cash transactions. This
subject was discussed during Amanda Jo’s testimony and [the outside accountant]’s
testimony. A close examination of the argument reveals that the Government
specifically indicated no such ‘second set of books’ in reality ever existed.
The district court concluded that “[t]roublesome as this might be, such improprieties are corrected
by a court’s instructions to the jury that the attorney’s arguments are not evidence.” Busch, 2019
WL 6682157, at *3.
The Busches do not contest the prosecutor’s explanation, which shows that, even if this
statement were improper (as the district court suggested), it did not rise to the level of prosecutorial
misconduct because it was not flagrant: it was not necessarily misleading to the jury, particularly
when considered in context; it was a passing turn of phrase, neither extensive nor deliberate; and
the overall evidence against the Busches was strong. See Warshak, 631 F.3d at 302.
The Busches’ second claim of mischaracterized evidence is the prosecutor’s statement that
Amanda “acknowledged knowing the SNAP rules and regulations,” whereas the actual testimony
was that “she was aware of the rules and regulations,” and “the difference between knowledge and
awareness is the difference between guilt and innocence.” Because defense counsel did not object
to this at trial, our review is for plain error, Hall, 979 F.3d at 1119, and this comes nowhere close
to plain error. Nor would this satisfy the flagrancy step of prosecutorial misconduct. See Warshak,
631 F.3d at 302. The prosecutor produced substantial evidence that Amanda knew the SNAP rules
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and regulations. She testified to having signed the USDA forms for the SNAP-retailer license and
several reauthorizations, in which she attested that she knew, understood, and would comply with
the rules and regulations. This contention is frivolous.
The Busches’ third claim of mischaracterized evidence is the prosecutor’s reference to
Amanda’s utterance about emptying a safety deposit box of cash. The prosecutor said:
The search warrants were executed on that fateful day, May 10, 2018. We
know that the search warrants were conducted at the store, at Randy’s house, [and]
at Michael and Amanda’s house. . . .
Correspondingly, $190,000 in excessive cash was found in Michael and
Amanda’s house. What do we know? As far Michael and Amanda’s only source
of income was the store. What do we also know? That Amanda, while [speaking
with a taskforce agent] out at the house, indicated [that] she just returned from
cleaning out a safe deposit box of cash. She had cash all over the place.
Defense counsel objected and the court sustained, saying “That will be stricken. Ladies and
gentlemen, you are instructed to disregard that.” Defense counsel did not specify that he was
directing his objection to the safe-deposit-box statement and the court did not specify exactly what
the jurors were to disregard. Moments later, the prosecutor said:
Amanda’s interview by [a taskforce agent]. She acknowledged knowing
the SNAP rules and regulations. She was able to accurately cite the percent of
overall store revenue generated by EBT sales. And she admitted to having just
removed cash from a bank safety security box. That’s what she told him.
There was no objection to this statement and our review is for plain error. Hall, 979 F.3d at 1119.
This does not rise to the level of plain error. This would not even satisfy the flagrancy step of
prosecutorial misconduct. See Warshak, 631 F.3d at 302.
4. Misstating the Law
The Busches claim the prosecutor engaged in misconduct during his closing argument by
misstating the law in a way that negated an essential element of the charged offense. The
prosecutor addressed the illegality of SNAP transactions for credit as follows:
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And first and foremost, the SNAP laws and regulations prohibit the
exchange of EBT benefits for cash, or extending credit or loans. Couldn’t be
clearer. The government is not in the business of floating loans. And the fact that
certain grocers, certain retailers, certain vendors for whatever reason take it upon
themselves that they are going to be the good samaritans or the Robin Hoods of
society is not a defense to breaking the law.
The Busches argue that “a ‘good Samaritan’ by definition lacks specific intent to defraud . . . [or]
violate the law,” which are “both elements of the underlying offenses charged.” Thus, they claim
this was reversible error.
Because defense counsel did not raise this objection at trial, our review is for plain error,
Hall, 979 F.3d at 1119, and this comes nowhere close to plain error. This would not even satisfy
the flagrancy step of prosecutorial misconduct. See Warshak, 631 F.3d at 302. Perhaps most
importantly, the judge instructs the jurors on the law. One of those instructions was that the judge,
not the attorneys, say what the law is. Another was that the jury had to find beyond a reasonable
doubt that Michael and Amanda had knowingly and intentionally violated the law. And a third
was that “good faith” “is a complete defense to all charges . . . because good faith on the part of
the defendant is simply inconsistent with the intent to defraud.”
While the term ‘good faith’ has no precise definition, it encompasses,
among other things, a belief or opinion honestly held in the absence of malice or ill
will, and an intention to avoid taking unfair advantage of another.
The burden of proving good faith does not rest with the defendant because
the defendant does not have any obligation to prove anything in this case. It is the
government’s burden to prove to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
acted with an intent to defraud.
If the evidence in this case leaves with you a reasonable doubt as to whether
the defendant acted with an intent to defraud or in good faith on any of the charges,
you must acquit the defendant of those charges.
Contrary to the Busches’ characterization of it, the prosecutor’s statement was consistent with this
instruction: a good faith mistake is excusable; a knowing and intentional violation of the law is not
excusable just based on a belief that a Good Samaritan would do so.
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The Busches have not proven that prosecutorial misconduct occurred at their trial.
V.
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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