Court Opinion

ID: 202652
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2011-02-07 05:58:47+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:43:00.121094
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                        For the First Circuit

No. 03-2073
No. 04-1424

                       UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                               Appellee,

                                  v.

                        EDISON MISLA-ALDARONDO,

                         Defendant, Appellant.

             APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

          [Hon. Carmen Consuelo Cerezo, U.S. District Judge]

                                Before

                         Howard, Circuit Judge,

               Stahl and Baldock,* Senior Circuit Judges.

     Laura Maldonado Rodríguez for appellant.
     Thomas M. Gannon, Attorney, Appellate Section, Civil
Division, U.S. Department of Justice, with whom Rosa E.
Rodríguez-Velez, United States Attorney, and Nelson Perez-Sosa,
Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief, for appellee.

                             March 2, 2007

     *
         Of the Tenth Circuit, sitting by designation.
           STAHL, Senior Circuit Judge.          Edison Misla Aldorando

("Misla"),   the   former   Speaker   of   the   Puerto    Rico   House   of

Representatives, was convicted in U.S. District Court for the

District of Puerto Rico of extortion, money laundering, and witness

tampering.   The charges stemmed from a scheme by a group bidding to

purchase a state hospital being privatized.        The group sought, and

paid for, Misla's help in securing the regulatory approval needed

for the purchase.     A jury convicted Misla and he was sentenced to

71 months' imprisonment and three years' supervised release, fined

$12,500, and ordered to forfeit $147,400.          Misla now appeals his

conviction and sentence, and the denial of his motion for a new

trial.   We affirm.

                         I. Factual Background

           In the late 1990s, the Puerto Rico Department of Health

(PRDH) and the Government Development Bank (GDB) began privatizing

the island’s state-owned hospitals. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 24, §§

3301-3325 (repealed 2003).        Investors were identified through a

competitive bidding process, with private entities with an existing

hospital management contract being given an option to purchase that

particular   hospital   without    participating    in    any   competitive

bidding process.

           The Dr. Alejandro Otero Lopez Hospital (HAOL) in Manatí,

Puerto Rico, was a public hospital managed by Carribean Hospital

Corporation (CHC).      Co-defendants Dr. José De Jesús Toro ("De

                                   -2-
Jesús") and Dr. Alvin Ramírez Ortiz ("Ramírez") owned Carribean

Anesthesia Services, Inc. (CAS), HAOL's anesthesiology provider.

CAS wished to purchase HAOL, and to circumvent the bidding process

it needed first to acquire CHC's management contract.

           De Jesús and Ramírez hired co-defendant José Ivan Ramos

Cubano ("Ramos") to assist with the purchase of the CHC contract

and, ultimately, HAOL in exchange for consulting fees of $15,000

per month and a partnership in their company.        The first step, the

purchase of the CHC contract, required the approval of PRDH. Ramos

arranged for a meeting with co-defendant José Gerardo Cruz Arroyo

("Cruz"), the head of PRDH's legal division.              Ultimately, Cruz

would take a bribe in order to allow CAS to purchase CHC's contract

to manage HAOL.

           The next step was obtaining GDB's approval for the

purchase of HAOL outright.       Ramos testified that he solicited the

assistance of Misla because Misla had a close relationship with

Marcos Rodríguez Ema ("Rodríguez"), GDB's president.          Misla agreed

to help secure GDB's approval in exchange for payment.            Ramos also

testified that Misla, in furtherance of the agreement, arranged

meetings   between   CAS   and   Rodríguez   that   CAS   could    not   have

otherwise obtained.    Ramos’s testimony was corroborated by that of

Ramírez.

           In October 1997, an independent law firm engaged by GDB

recommended that CAS be deemed ineligible to purchase HAOL because

                                    -3-
CAS owed an outstanding debt to PRDH.              Regardless, Rodríguez

ordered the privatization committee to accept CAS’s offer of $14

million for HAOL and to arrange for CAS to repay the outstanding

debt at a future date.    The sale of HAOL to CAS was completed on

September 17, 1998.

          Between   August     and   October    1998,   Ramos   transferred

approximately $147,400 from HAOL -- now managed by CAS -- to Misla

by cashing checks and furnishing the proceeds directly to Misla or

his associates.

          In May 2001, Puerto Rico’s Justice Department began

investigating the transaction and eventually Misla.             In October

2001, Ramos agreed to cooperate with the government and record his

conversations with Misla.      While being recorded, Misla suggested,

among other things, that Ramos leave the country for a while; that

they come up with a cover story for the payments; and that he,

Misla, would work to stall or stop the investigation.

          On October 25, 2001, Misla was indicted for extortion,

money laundering, and witness tampering. Following a jury trial,

Misla was convicted on five of the six charges.1         On June 20, 2003,

the district court sentenced Misla to concurrent terms of 71

months'   imprisonment   for    each       conviction   and   three   years'

     1
      He was not convicted on Count 5, one              of the extortion
charges.

                                     -4-
supervised release.              The court also ordered him to forfeit the

$147,400 paid to him by Ramos.

                   Additional facts relevant to the various issues on appeal

are recited below.

                                       II. Discussion

A. Pretrial Motions

                   1. Background

                   The indictment, as well as unrelated charges against

Misla        for    sexual     assault    on    a    minor,    generated     considerable

pretrial           publicity.      The    publicity         included    posters      put    up

throughout San Juan bearing Misla’s photograph and the caption,

“Stealing Prohibited: the Government does not admit competitors.”2

Alleging that this pretrial publicity was prejudicial, Misla moved

for   a       change      of   venue     to    the   Virgin     Islands      and,    in    the

alternative,          a   90-day    continuance        to     allow    for   any    pretrial

publicity to subside.               Misla also requested expanded jury voir

dire.

                   The district court denied all motions, but conducted

individualized voir dire over a five-day period.                         Misla submitted

a list of 84 proposed voir dire questions to the court.                            The court

selected several of Misla’s proposed questions, including questions

concerning pretrial publicity, the sexual assault charges pending

against Misla, and whether the jurors believed Misla to be a

        2
            This is the translation as provided by the defendant.

                                               -5-
corrupt   politician.         During    voir    dire,   Misla   requested     five

additional peremptory challenges.              He renewed his request at the

close of voir dire.         Both motions were denied.

           Of   the    84    jurors    interviewed,     13   were   excused   for

possible bias. After the completion of voir dire, Misla challenged

an additional eight jurors for cause.              The district court denied

the challenges.       Ultimately, the final petit jury contained only

one of the jurors that had been challenged by Misla.3

           We review a district court's decisions on motions for

change of venue, continuance, expanded voir dire, and additional

peremptory challenges for abuse of discretion.               See United States

v. Brandon, 17 F.3d 409, 441 (1st Cir. 1994) (change of venue);

United States v. Rodríguez-Marrero, 390 F.3d 1, 21-22 (1st Cir.

2004) (continuance); United States v. Anagnos, 853 F.2d 1, 5 (1st

Cir. 1988) (expanded voir dire); United States v. Marrero-Ortíz,

160 F.3d 768, 776 (1st Cir. 1998) (peremptory challenges) (citing

United States v. Cox, 752 F.2d 741, 748 (1st Cir. 1985)).

           2. Change of Venue

           A change of venue is proper if the court determines that

there exists "so great a prejudice against the defendant . . . in

the transferring district that the defendant cannot obtain a fair

and impartial trial there."            Fed. R. Crim. P. 21(a).        In making

     3
      This juror, number 80, was challenged because he had
expressed his understanding that, as a matter of statistics, most
defendants are found guilty at trial.

                                        -6-
this determination, we ask 1) whether the degree of inflammatory

publicity had so saturated the community such as to make it

"virtually impossible to obtain an impartial jury," United States

v. McNeill, 728 F.2d 5, 9 (1st Cir. 1984), or 2) if prejudice

cannot be presumed, whether nonetheless the empaneled jury was

actually prejudiced against the defendant.                     See United States v.

Rodríguez-Cardona, 924 F.2d 1148, 1158 (1st Cir. 1991); United

States v. Angiulo, 897 F.2d 1169, 1181 (1st Cir. 1990).                    Misla does

not argue actual juror prejudice on appeal, and so we review only

for whether prejudice should have been presumed from the extent of

the pretrial publicity.

               A presumption of prejudice is reserved for those extreme

cases       where    publicity   is    "both       extensive     and   sensational    in

nature."        Id.     Merely a high volume of media coverage is not

sufficient to presume prejudice, if that coverage is factual, as

opposed to inflammatory.              Id.; see Brandon, 17 F.3d at 441.               A

court may judge the partiality of the community by looking to the

"length to which the trial court must go in order to select jurors

who appear to be impartial."               Murphy v. Florida, 421 U.S. 794, 802-

03 (1975).          In general, "[i]t is sufficient if the juror can lay

aside his impression or opinion and render a verdict based on the

evidence presented in court."                Dobbert v. Florida, 432 U.S. 282,

302 (1977) (quoting Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 723 (1961)).                        But

when    a    large    percentage      of    the    venire   is   disqualified,   this

                                             -7-
evidence   of    prejudice    in    the    community   may     lead   a   court   to

"properly question the remaining jurors' avowals of impartiality."

Angiulo, 897 F.2d at 1181-82 (citing Murphy, 421 U.S. at 802-03).

           The    publicity      surrounding    this    case    was    undoubtedly

extensive.      Misla had been the Speaker of the Puerto Rico House of

Representatives      and   was     simultaneously      being    investigated      on

charges of sexual assault on a minor.                   To address this, the

district court conducted an extensive and individualized voir dire,

taking 15 to 25 minutes with each juror and asking each upwards of

50 questions.

           The questions were substantially the same for all jurors

and covered subjects such as: the jurors' own beliefs in Misla's

guilt or innocence; which newspapers they read, radio stations they

listened to, and television stations they watched; whether they had

read particular newspaper articles or columns; whether they had

listened to the comments of the Secretary of Justice; whether they

had participated in, or listened to the results of, any radio

polls; whether they had discussions with others about the case;

whether they were members of a political party; and whether they

had views about the corruption of politicians in general, and Misla

and his party in particular.          The district court further inquired

into whether the jurors or any close friends or family members had

ever been a victim of rape or sexual molestation.                     The district

                                          -8-
court also inquired extensively into the jurors' understanding of

the presumption of innocence and the burden of proof.

           In the end, only 13 out of 84 jurors were excused for

possible bias.    This rate of disqualification, roughly 15 percent,

is too low to be sufficient to presume prejudice in the community.

See Murphy, 421 U.S. at 803 (no prejudice presumed where around 25

percent of venire "indicated an opinion" as to guilt); Brecheen v.

Reynolds, 41 F.3d 1343, 1351 (10th Cir. 1994) (25% of venire

excluded "for cause"); United States v. Moreno Morales, 815 F.2d

725, 735 (1st Cir. 1987) (25% of venire "admitted . . . to

believing that defendants were guilty"); accord Irvin, 366 U.S. at

727 (prejudice presumed where 90% of venire "entertained some

opinion as to guilt").         Even if we include the eight additional

jurors that Misla challenged for cause (but which the judge found

were not biased), the percentage would only be 25 percent.

           While a low percentage of disqualification is not a safe

harbor against a finding of prejudice, it is strong evidence

against it.      But it may nonetheless be countered by persuasive

direct   evidence   of   the    level   of   saturation   of   inflammatory

publicity.    See Rodríguez-Cardona, 924 F.2d at 1158.         Here, Misla

provided the district court with, by his count, over 180 articles

attempting to show such saturation, and the court nonetheless held

that change of venue was not necessary given the extensive voir

                                    -9-
dire that was planned.4             Misla does not now point us to any

specific evidence that would lead us to believe that the judge

abused her discretion in denying the motion, especially given the

success of the voir dire.5           Accord Rideau v. Louisiana, 373 U.S.

723 (1963) (holding, in reversing conviction based solely on

pretrial publicity without a finding of actual prejudice in jurors,

that television broadcast of filmed confession seen by two-thirds

of the community necessitated a presumption of prejudice) (cited in

Moreno Morales, 815 F.2d at 735-36).

            3. Continuance

            "We grant 'broad discretion' to a trial court to decide

a continuance motion and will only find abuse of that discretion

with a showing that the court exhibited an 'unreasonable and

arbitrary   insistence       upon    expeditiousness   in    the   face    of   a

justifiable request for delay.'"               United States v. Rodríguez-

Marrero, 390 F.3d 1, 21-22 (1st Cir. 2004) (quoting United States

v. Rodríguez Cortes, 949 F.2d 532, 545 (1st Cir. 1991)).                  "Among

the factors to be considered in reviewing a denial of a motion for

a   continuance   are    .     .    .   the    defendant's   diligence,     the

     4
      In denying Misla's motion for reconsideration of the denial
of the motion for change of venue, the district court said that it
would reconsider the issue of venue if the voir dire was
unsuccessful.
     5
      Misla argues, incorrectly, that the district court denied the
change of venue motion because it was filed close to the beginning
of trial. In fact, that reason was raised only in the denial of
the certification to appeal.

                                        -10-
inconvenience to the court and other parties, the likely utility of

a continuance, and any unfair prejudice caused by the denial."

United States v. Orlando-Figueroa, 229 F.3d 33, 40 (1st Cir. 2000).

          Here, Misla argues for a continuance only on the grounds

of pretrial publicity, which, as discussed above, was sufficiently

addressed by the voir dire.    With that issue dealt with, denying

the motion for continuance was not an unreasonable or arbitrary

insistence on expeditiousness, and thus the judge did not abuse her

discretion.

          4. Expanded Voir Dire

          Misla is imprecise in his objection to the voir dire

procedures.   In his brief, Misla at times seems to be saying that

the voir dire should have been expanded to allow more of his

questions to be asked.   At other times, he seems to be arguing that

the questions that were asked were prejudicial (which, if true,

would not be solved by expanding the number of questions).      The

latter argument has no merit since the questions Misla complains of

here, relating to sexual molestation, were precisely those that he

requested be asked.

          The former argument, that the voir dire should have been

expanded yet further beyond the already expanded voir dire that the

court conducted, also fails.   In deciding on the manner in which to

conduct voir dire, the court "has broad discretion . . . subject

only to the essential demands of fairness.      It need not permit

                                -11-
counsel to dominate the process, nor pose every voir dire question

requested by a litigant."     Real v. Hogan, 828 F.2d 58, 62 (1st Cir.

1987) (citation omitted).

           The only specific question Misla says should have been

asked was one regarding whether the jurors were talking about the

case among themselves while awaiting voir dire.             The judge denied

the particular question as being too open-ended and not probative

of whether the particular juror being questioned had talked about

it in a way that might have influenced the juror's opinion of

Misla's   guilt.    The    judge   said    that   the   existing    voir   dire

questions adequately delved into that area.             We agree.   The judge

did a thorough job of probing for bias and Misla is far from making

the required showing that the lack of this question or others

prejudiced him.6    See Murphy, 421 U.S. at 803; see also United

States v. Casas, 425 F.3d 23, 48-49 (1st Cir. 2005) (lengthy

individualized voir dire sufficient to overcome any prejudice as a

result of juror communications with third party).

           5. Additional Peremptory Challenges

           Misla   asked    for,   and     was    denied,   five    additional

peremptory challenges. Misla argues, essentially, that he was owed

more peremptory challenges because he had been denied several of

his for-cause challenges.     To the degree that this is a roundabout

     6
      In addition to the lack of any evidence of actual prejudice
on the part of the jury, we note the additional fact that the jury
empaneled through this process actually acquitted Misla on Count 5.

                                    -12-
attempt to challenge those for-cause denials, it fails.               "'There

are few aspects of a jury trial where we would be less inclined to

disturb a trial judge's exercise of discretion, absent clear abuse,

than in ruling on challenges for cause in the empaneling of a

jury.'" United States v. González-Soberal, 109 F.3d 64, 69-70 (1st

Cir. 1997) (quoting United States v. McCarthy, 961 F.2d 972, 976

(1st Cir. 1992)).     Misla raises no other substantive argument for

why more peremptory challenges were required.            Given that he did

not use any of his allotted ten challenges on the cause-challenged

jurors, we fail to see the connection, particularly since, again,

there has been no claim of actual prejudice among the petit jury

members.     There was no abuse of discretion.

B. Ramos-Pubill Connection

             1. Background

             During trial on December 4, 2002, counsel for Misla was

cross-examining     Ramos,   the   government's       cooperating    witness.

Seeking to impeach him, counsel asked Ramos about several different

bad   acts   allegedly   attributable     to   him.     In   one    particular

exchange, counsel asked Ramos about an investment of $300,000 he'd

taken from a gas station owner named Eduardo Pubill to invest on

his behalf in a company called Telefónica Hispanoamericano.                It

turned out that Eduardo Pubill's son, Edgardo, was a convicted drug

trafficker, and that it was likely that the $300,000 were proceeds

of illegal drug sales that Edgardo was seeking to launder through

                                   -13-
his   father's    gas    station    and   the       Telefónica     Hispanoamericano

investment.

           Counsel for Misla challenged Ramos on whether he knew

that he was laundering money, but Ramos denied knowing the source

of the money, saying that he simply believed that an owner of a gas

station would be likely to have excess cash to invest.                    At sidebar,

the government said that Ramos had only discovered the illegal

source of the funds while being debriefed by then–U.S. Attorney

Guillermo Gil in preparation for trial in this case.                   Gil, having

worked on the prosecution of Edgardo Pubill, was aware of the gas

station   in     question     because     he    had    attempted     to    seek   its

forfeiture,      since   it   was   likely      a    front   for    Edgardo's     drug

trafficking.      The district court ordered the government to look

into the Ramos-Pubill transaction further, and any other potential

activities or cases involving Eduardo Pubill, the father.

           Two days later, on December 6, 2002, the prosecution

reported that Eduardo Pubill had no federal convictions. The court

then ordered the prosecution to obtain official certification from

federal investigating agencies, such as the Federal Bureau of

Investigation (FBI), the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and

the U.S. Customs Service, as to whether there was any evidence that

Ramos laundered money for Eduardo Pubill or his son, Edgardo.

           On December 9, 2002, the judge, having inquired with the

Probation Office, reported that Eduardo Pubill did in fact have a

                                        -14-
prior conviction, in case no. 92-194.   On the same date, the court

issued an order requiring the FBI, DEA, Customs Service, and

Internal Revenue Service to produce any interview or investigation

reports related to case no. "92-094," against Eduardo Pubill, and

no. "91-299," against Edgardo Pubill, that referenced Ramos or

Telefónica Hispanoamericana.   Unbeknownst to the court or counsel,

case no. 92-194 was incorrectly cited on the order as no. 92-094.

Perhaps because of this error, no further information about a

conviction of Eduardo Pubill was discovered.

            Upon learning of the court's order, Deputy U.S. Marshal

Roberto Vizcarrondo recalled an interview he had done with an

informant named Pedro Torres Molano ("Torres") on December 4, 2001,

when Vizcarrondo was detailed to the FBI Intelligence Research

Center, in which Torres had stated that he had helped to launder

the Pubills' money through Ramos, and that Ramos was well aware of

the source of the funds.    On December 11, 2002, he forwarded the

draft Form 302 interview sheet ("Form 302"), in which he had

earlier written the details of the conversation, to FBI agent José

Figueroa.   The next day, the Form 302 was provided to the court by

FBI agent Jane Erickson.     She noted that the Form 302 was not

related to the case numbers referenced in the court’s December 9

order, but was relevant to Ramos and Telefónica Hispanoamericano.

            After an inspection of the document, the court issued a

subsequent order that: (1) indicated that the newly discovered Form

                                -15-
302 was relevant to witness Ramos; (2) included a redacted copy of

the Form 302; and (3) granted Misla a continuance until December

17, 2002.

            Torres was called to testify, and in his testimony on

December    20,   2002,    he     stated    that     he   informed      Ramos    that

“supposedly the money came from an illegal source.”                    Tr. 12/20/02

at 44.     Soon after that, the court interrupted the testimony to

hold an evidentiary hearing to determine whether Misla could also

use the Form 302 to impeach Ramos. During the evidentiary hearing,

Vizcarrondo, FBI Special Agent Judith Priegues-López ("Priegues"),

and FBI Agent Carlos Hernández testified that the Form 302 was

created but never indexed or uploaded to the central server where

other agents would have been able to query the form. They also

testified that Vizcarrando had originally provided the Form 302 to

Priegues, who then hand-delivered a disk with the interview to

Hernández's    office     after   telling      him   by   phone   to    expect    it.

Hernández     testified    that    he    recalled     the   conversation         with

Priegues, but that he never received the disk, and did not follow

up with Priegues when it did not appear.

            Misla then moved to have the jury discharged and the

indictment dismissed, alleging prosecutorial misconduct.                        Misla

argued that Hernández had been present during Ramos's testimony and

remained silent despite remembering his conversation with Priegues

about the Form 302.        The district court denied the motion ruling

                                        -16-
that,   while       Misla   had   difficulty    obtaining   the    impeachment

material, he now had the material and could make effective use of

it.

            The testimony of Torres resumed after the close of the

evidentiary hearing.         Torres was allowed to review the Form 302,

and he clarified his earlier testimony by further stating that he

"told Ramos . . . that it was being said that the money coming from

Pubil[l] were proceeds of drugs."            Tr. 12/20/02 at 163.

            The trial continued on December 26, 2002. Misla recalled

Ramos and cross-examined him regarding his prior testimony about

the transaction with Eduardo Pubill.           Misla also moved that day to

question both Hernández and Priegues regarding the Form 302,

stating that such testimony would allow the jury to make inferences

regarding     the    government's    intention    to   withhold    impeachment

material.

            On January 14, 2003, the district court denied Misla's

motion to question Hernández and Priegues.             The court stated that

Misla   was      merely     attempting    to     demonstrate      prosecutorial

misconduct, and that such evidence was not relevant to impeaching

Ramos. Trial continued from that point, and a verdict was reached.

            On October 9, 2003, nearly nine months after the jury had

returned a verdict, the prosecution filed an informative motion

stating that Eduardo Pubill, the source of the money that Ramos

invested    in   the    Telefónica    Hispanoamericano      stock,    had   been

                                      -17-
previously convicted in federal court of structuring financial

transactions to avoid reporting requirements, in violation of 31

U.S.C. § 5324.     The motion stated that the government was filing

the   motion   because     this    information     was   contrary     to    the

government's   assertion    at     trial    that   Eduardo   Pubill   had    no

convictions.     The government explained this lapse by saying that

earlier database searches by several agencies had turned up nothing

except for the conviction of Eduardo's son, Edgardo Pubill.                 The

case number for this conviction was 92-194, which, as discussed

above, had been erroneously given as 92-094 in the district court's

order seeking more information on Pubill.

          Misla    moved   to     dismiss    the   indictment   or,   in    the

alternative, for a new trial.              He argued that the failure to

disclose Eduardo Pubill's conviction earlier was prosecutorial

misconduct that denied him the chance to fully impeach Ramos, the

government's main witness.        The district court denied the motion,

saying that even without the record of Eduardo Pubill's conviction,

there was ample material with which to impeach Ramos, including the

testimony of Torres.     The district court also stated that it would

have been straightforward for Misla to discover the error in the

case number and bring it to court's attention.

                                    -18-
            2. The Form 302 Interview

            We review for abuse of discretion a district court's

decision on how to handle a delayed disclosure.         United States v.

Catano, 65 F.3d 219, 227 (1st Cir. 1995).

            Prior to trial, Misla sought discovery under Giglio v.

United States, 405 U.S. 150 (1972), of information potentially

useful in impeaching government witnesses.            Under Giglio, the

withholding of such impeachment information would fall under the

rule of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), that suppression of

favorable evidence violates due process if the evidence is material

to guilt or punishment.         Giglio, 405 U.S. at 154.         Where the

evidence is never forthcoming, we ask whether that nondisclosure

"might have affected the outcome of the trial."         United States v.

Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 104 (1976).        However, where the evidence is

only delayed, we ask instead "whether defendant's counsel was

prevented    by   the   delay   from   using   the   disclosed    material

effectively in preparing and presenting the defendant's case."

United States v. Ingraldi, 793 F.2d 408, 411-12 (1st Cir. 1986);

see Catano, 65 F.3d at 227.

            To prevail on this argument, the defendant must at a

minimum make "a prima facie showing of a plausible strategic option

which the delay foreclosed." United States v. Devin, 918 F.2d 280,

290 (1st Cir. 1990); see United States v. Lemmerer, 277 F.3d 579,

588 (1st Cir. 2002).        Misla has made no such showing here.

                                   -19-
Instead, he argues only that the circumstances of the disclosure

imply   an   attempt   by   the   government   to    deliberately      keep   the

information from Misla.           Even if that were true, it is not

sufficient    to    force   a   mistrial    where    the   defendant    is    not

prejudiced.        "The critical inquiry is not why disclosure was

delayed but whether the tardiness prevented defense counsel from

employing the material to good effect."             Devin, 918 F.2d at 290.

             The district court found that the delayed disclosure had

no effect, since Misla was still able to use the information to

impeach Ramos.      Indeed, Misla appears to have been fully aware of

the allegations contained in the Form 302 prior to trial, since the

allegations of money laundering first came to light through his

counsel's cross-examination of Ramos.          Given this, we fail to see

how Misla was prejudiced by the delayed disclosure of the Form 302

interview with Torres.

             Misla also challenges the district court's ruling to

disallow the testimony of Hernández and Priegues, the FBI agents

who had originally handled the Form 302.              The court stated that

testimony regarding an alleged cover-up was not relevant to the

case, especially given that Misla already had the Form 302 admitted

into evidence to use to impeach Ramos.         Misla argues that the fact

of any government cover-up would have bolstered his argument that

Ramos was lying about laundering the Pubill money.

                                     -20-
          It may be that this ruling should be reviewed as a

typical evidentiary matter, rather than as a ruling on a possible

sanction for a Brady violation, but regardless our review is solely

for abuse of discretion.     United States v. Guerrier, 428 F.3d 76,

79 (1st Cir. 2005) (as to evidentiary ruling); Catano, 65 F.3d at

227 (as to decision on delayed disclosure).       For the same reasons

as discussed above, we find no such abuse here.

          3. The Eduardo Pubill Conviction

          Following the government's informative motion of October

9, 2003, regarding Eduardo Pubill's conviction for structuring

financial transactions to avoid reporting requirements, Misla moved

to dismiss the indictment or, in the alternative, for a new trial.

The judge denied the motion.

          This issue presents a slight puzzle with respect to our

standard of review, though it is easily resolved.         The denial of

the motion appears to be subject to our review under the standards

given in Brady and Gigilio, just as the delayed disclosure of the

Form 302 interview with Torres was, as discussed above.                  The

government's   informative   motion   describes   this   as   a   case    of

nondisclosure, which would subject them to a relatively tough

standard of review if we were to review under Brady.          See Agurs,

427 U.S. at 104 (whether disclosure "might have affected the

outcome of the trial").      However, it's not clear that this is

nondisclosure -- or even delayed disclosure -- since the court

                                 -21-
informed both parties on December 9, 2002, during trial, of exactly

this conviction.    The trouble arises because of the court's error

in noting the case as no. 92-094 rather than no. 92-194 in its

December 9 order.     Perhaps as a result of that clerical error,

though we can't know for sure, no party seems to have followed up

on that particular case, and thus no party informed the court of

its error in reporting the case number.7

          As the district court itself noted after receiving the

government's informative motion,

     [t]he fact that this motion has been filed at all leads
     to confusion since the Court, despite the government's
     representation during trial that Mr. Eduardo Pubill-
     Rivera had not been convicted, took the initiative to
     probe into the matter. The result of that inquiry was
     the disclosure to the parties of Mr. Eduardo Pubill-
     Rivera's conviction and sentence. . . .      We do not
     anticipate any controversy arising from the information
     provided in the government's last motion since this is
     not newly discovered information but rather data
     disclosed and utilized during the trial.

     7
      We note that in the transcript for December 9, 2002, the case
number was given correctly at one point.        Tr. 12/9/02 at 4.
Therefore, it would have been a simple matter for the mistake to be
corrected. We have not found any reference in the transcripts, nor
have the parties pointed us to one, where the parties reported
pursuing the mistakenly cited case no. 92-094 and discovering that
it was unrelated to Pubill.
     It's not entirely clear from the record why what should have
been a routine matter of searching conviction records was so
fraught with difficulty. In addition to the judge's clerical error
in reporting the case number, some confusion about names may have
played a role. In the instant case, Eduardo and Edgardo's surname
is given as "Pubill," but in the transcripts the parties also used
"Pubil" and "Purill." The indictment and judgment of Edgardo also
used "Pubil."

                                -22-
Sealed Order, October 10, 2003. We agree with the district court's

reasoning.   This is at worst an instance of delayed disclosure,

since the information came out during trial, and thus we again ask

"whether defendant's counsel was prevented by the delay from using

the disclosed material effectively in preparing and presenting the

defendant's case."   Ingraldi, 793 F.2d at 411-12.   Our standard of

review of the denial of the motion is, again, abuse of discretion.8

     8
      The government's brief would have us review the denial of a
new trial under the standards of Fed. R. Crim. P. 33, rather than
Brady, presumably because they would classify the evidence of
Pubill's conviction as "newly discovered" rather than as something
known to the government but not disclosed. If it were true that
the conviction had never been disclosed, this distinction would be
important. We would find an abuse of discretion in the denial of
a motion for a new trial under Rule 33 only if the new evidence
created an "actual probability that an acquittal would have
resulted if the evidence had been available." United States v.
Sepulveda, 15 F.3d 1216, 1220 (1st Cir. 1993). On the other hand,
we would find an abuse of discretion in the denial of a new trial
for a Brady violation if the new evidence merely created a
"reasonable probability that the evidence would have changed the
result." United States v. Josleyn, 206 F.3d 144, 151 (1st Cir.
2000). "The standard applied to new trial motions based on Brady
violations is thus more favorable to defendants." Id. However,
because the disclosure was at worst delayed, rather than
nonexistent, our review standards are substantially equivalent.
See United States v. Osorio, 929 F.2d 753, 758 (1st Cir. 1991)
(noting that standard of review for delayed disclosure under
Ingraldi is essentially one of prejudice).
     This spares us the difficulty of determining whether the
government can "newly discover" a conviction that it itself
secured. Cf. Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 437 (1995) (holding
that "prosecutor has a duty to learn of any favorable evidence
known to the others acting on the government's behalf in the case"
(emphasis added)); Osorio, 929 F.2d at 761 (applying Brady to
evidence of a witness's drug dealing that was not known to
prosecutor, but known to others in his office, and holding that the
"prosecutor charged with discovery obligations cannot avoid finding
out what 'the government' knows, simply by declining to make
reasonable inquiry of those in a position to have relevant

                               -23-
Catano, 65 F.3d at 227.   We find no such abuse here, simply because

Misla was not prevented from preparing by the delay.    In his brief,

Misla constructs an unlikely string of events: knowledge of Eduardo

Pubill's conviction for a financial crime would have led to him

being called to testify; he would then have disclosed the money

laundering scheme with Ramos; the judge would have been forced to

instruct the jury that Ramos was a perjurer; and this would have so

undermined his credibility, as the government's main witness, as to

make conviction of Misla impossible.   This is inference piled upon

inference, particularly since Ramos had already been impeached over

the Pubill connection (not to mention his own involvement in the

conspiracy at issue in the instant case).       More fundamentally,

because Misla was provided this information during trial, but

apparently did not pursue it, we cannot say that the delay caused

any prejudice.

            Finally, it should not be forgotten that Ramos was the

witness, not Pubill.      While prior convictions of Ramos would

clearly be material under Giglio, it is not so clear that the

conviction of a person with whom that witness did business is also

material.   At some point, the human chain of bad behavior becomes

too attenuated to be relevant to the trial at hand.    Here, however,

knowledge"). But cf. United States v. Bender, 304 F.3d 161, 164
(1st Cir. 2002) (stating, in dictum, that duties under Brady may be
required only of those such as "members of the prosecuting team,
including police investigators working for the prosecution").

                                -24-
we are not called upon to make that determination, because in any

event Misla was not prejudiced. Therefore, the judge did not abuse

her discretion.

C. Ramírez Testimony

          Misla next argues that the district court should have

struck the testimony of Alvin Ramírez, one of the CAS principals,

on the grounds that he lacked personal knowledge. Because this was

an evidentiary ruling to which Misla objected, our review is for

abuse of discretion.   United States v. Brown, 450 F.3d 76, 78 (1st

Cir. 2006).   Even if the court erred, we will not reverse if the

error is harmless. Id. at 79; see United States v. García-Morales,

382 F.3d 12, 17 (1st Cir. 2004) (error is harmless "if it is highly

probable that the error did not influence the verdict").

          Ramírez testified about seeing checks from HAOL to Ramos

that ultimately ended up in the hands of Cruz and Misla.   Ramírez

testified several times, however, that he did not know at the time

about the intended use of these specific checks, but only found out

when the government showed him the evidence that they had gathered

during their investigation.     Defense counsel objected, but the

district judge allowed the testimony, saying that Misla was free to

cross-examine Ramírez about the source of his knowledge.

          Misla's argument is thinly developed, and he cites to no

particular rule of evidence or cases supporting the proposition

                               -25-
that to have allowed this testimony is reversible error.9        We

decline now to explore all the possible interpretations of the

argument since, in any event, any potential error was harmless.

Despite not knowing the specific purpose of the funds, Ramírez

testified -- based on his personal knowledge -- that he saw the

checks; that he knew that Ramos intended to pay Misla; that Ramos

told him that "nothing in life is free and everything costs money,"

tr. 11/25/02 at 16; and that he assumed that the meeting they were

able to secure with Misla "was [not] a favor that was done just to

help us," id. at 61.   Furthermore, the jury heard explicitly about

the source of his knowledge, whether it came during the events in

question or only during later litigation, and thus had a sufficient

basis to judge his credibility.         Finally, the other evidence

against Misla was substantial.    Given this, even if it were error

to allow the testimony, any error was harmless.    See Fed. R. Crim.

P. 52(b).

D. Insufficient Evidence as to Counts 2, 3, 4, and 6

            Misla contends that the district court erred in not

dismissing Counts 2 (Hobbs Act extortion, 18 U.S.C. § 1951(a)), 3,

     9
      United States v. Falu-González, 205 F.3d 436 (1st Cir. 2000),
the one case that Misla does point us to, is inapposite. In that
case, a witness testified to knowing about some sales of drugs, but
in fact had not observed the sales and had only been told of them
by another. The judge allowed the testimony as an admission of a
co-conspirator, and thus admissible under an exception to the
hearsay rule. Id. at 438; see Fed. R. Evid. 802(d)(2)(E). That
analysis is not relevant here.

                                 -26-
4   (two    counts     of    conspiring      to    launder   money,   18      U.S.C.   §

1956(a)(1)(B)(i),           (a)(3)(A)   &    (B),    and    (h)),   and   6    (witness

tampering, 18 U.S.C. § 1512). He avers that there was insufficient

evidence to sustain a guilty verdict on each count.                           We review

attacks on the sufficiency of evidence supporting jury verdicts de

novo.      United States v. Washington, 434 F.3d 7, 15 (1st Cir. 2006).

In doing so, we review the evidence "in the light most favorable to

the prosecution," considering whether "any rational trier of fact

could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a

reasonable doubt."           Id.

              1. Count 2

              To challenge his conviction for extortion under color of

official      right,    Misla      latches    onto    a    clerical   error     in   the

indictment.      The indictment names Count 2 as "Interference with

Commerce by Extortion Induced by Economic Fear and Under Color of

Official Right" (emphasis added).                  Therefore, Misla argues, the

government was bound to prove both economic fear and color of

official right, not just one or the other, which is all that the

statue requires. See 18 U.S.C. § 1951(b)(2) ("The term 'extortion'

means the obtaining of property from another, with his consent,

induced by wrongful use of actual or threatened force, violence, or

fear, or under color of official right" (emphasis added)).10

      10
      Count 1, charging conspiracy to commit extortion, did not
contain this misstatement, saying instead "Economic Fear and/or
Under Color of Official Right."     Misla does not appeal his

                                            -27-
            We have held that:

     Where a statute . . . sets forth several different means
     by which an offense may be committed, it is permissible
     for a count in an indictment to allege all or several of
     these means in the conjunctive. A conviction on such a
     count will stand if the evidence establishing one or more
     of the means of commission alleged is sufficient to
     support a jury verdict.

United States v. Garcia-Torres, 341 F.3d 61, 66 (1st Cir. 2003)

(quoting United States v. Barbato, 471 F.2d 918, 922 n.3 (1st Cir.

1973)).11

            Working from the incorrect assumption that the government

had to prove both elements, Misla argues the insufficiency only of

the "economic fear" element, but does not challenge the evidence

for the "under color of official right" element.           The judge

correctly instructed the jury in the disjunctive (following the

language of the statute, not the indictment), and thus a jury could

have convicted Misla by finding "color of official right" extortion

conviction under Count 1.
     11
      We note that this does not conflict with our holdings
prohibiting duplicitous indictments. See, e.g., United States v.
Verrecchia, 196 F.3d 294, 297 (1st Cir. 1999) (prohibited
duplicitous indictments are those that join in a single count two
or more distinct offenses).       The problem with a duplicitous
indictment is that a jury could convict without unanimity as to any
particular offense. Here, because Count 2 names only one offense,
this is not a concern.     See United States v. Arreola, 467 F.3d
1153, 1157 (9th Cir. 2006) (noting distinction between whether "the
statute at issue creates separate offenses, or simply describes
alternative means to commit the same crime").

                                 -28-
alone.    That evidence is unchallenged here and this fact is

sufficient to dispose of the issue.12

          2. Counts 3 and 4

          Misla's challenge to the money laundering charge is that

the government described the same acts as both extortion and money

laundering. Because he was charged with laundering the proceeds of

the extortion, the two acts must be distinct, he argues, and

therefore there was insufficient evidence to sustain a conviction

for money laundering.

          To prove conspiracy to commit money laundering, the

government was required to show that Misla agreed with one or more

co-conspirators to 1) knowingly conduct a financial transaction 2)

involving funds that Misla knew to be the proceeds of some form of

unlawful activity and 3) that were in fact the proceeds of a

"specified   unlawful   activity,"   and   4)   that   Misla   knew   the

transactions to be designed in whole or in part to conceal or

disguise the nature, location, source, ownership, or control of the

proceeds of such unlawful activity.     18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i);

     12
      Even so, the fear element was also presented to the jury.
The fear element of the statute can include fear of economic loss,
including loss of future business opportunities. See United States
v. Bucci, 839 F.2d 825, 827-28 (1st Cir. 1988). The government
argued at trial, and there was sufficient evidence for a jury to
find, that the parties were induced to pay Misla in part for fear
that, if another bidder won the right to buy HAOL, CAS's
anaesthesiology contract might not be renewed.

                                -29-
see, e.g., United States v. Cruzado-Laureano, 404 F.3d 470, 483

(1st Cir. 2005).

            "The   laundering   of   funds    cannot    occur   in   the       same

transaction through which those funds first became tainted by

crime."     United States v. Richard, 234 F.3d 763, 769 (1st Cir.

2000).     However, this is "not a requirement that the underlying

crime must be fully completed before any money laundering can

begin."     United States v. Castellini, 392 F.3d 35, 48 (1st Cir.

2004).     The two crimes need not be "entirely separate in time."

Id.

            Misla argues that, until the money reached his hands, the

act of extortion was not completed, and that since, once the money

reached him, there was no effort to conceal it, there was no money

laundering.    Any of the acts that took place prior to his receiving

the money, he argues, cannot suffice to be money laundering because

there were no proceeds of extortion yet to conceal. The government

responds    that   the   extortion   was    completed   when    Ramos,     a   co-

conspirator, received the funds from HAOL, Ramírez, and De Jesús,

and that Ramos and Misla took steps at that point to conceal the

transactions, including making some checks payable to Misla's sons

and an aide.

            That Misla attempted to conceal the source of the money

before it actually came into his possession cannot relieve him of

criminal liability for money laundering. As we said in Castellini,

                                     -30-
focusing on simultaneity would "obscure the real principle" behind

separating the offenses, viz. "that 'money laundering criminalizes

a transaction in proceeds, not the transaction that creates the

proceeds.'"       Id. at 38 (quoting United States v. Mankarious, 151

F.3d 694, 705 (7th Cir. 1998)).              The transaction that created the

proceeds -- the act of extortion -- is sufficiently distinct from

the side transactions done to hide the trail -- e.g., writing

checks to relatives and aides -- even if both crimes were complete

only upon the arrival of the funds in Misla's hands.

            Furthermore, we should not forget that here Misla was

charged    with    conspiracy       to    commit    both    money   laundering      and

extortion,      and     therefore    is    liable     for   the   acts   of   his   co-

conspirators.         Indeed, the indictment specifically references the

facts of Count 1 (the conspiracy to extort) to describe the source

of the unlawful funds applicable to both Counts 3 and 4.                        Since

Misla is liable for the acts of his co-conspirators, such as Ramos,

a reasonable jury could have found that the act of extortion was

sufficiently complete upon Ramos taking control of the funds from

HAOL.     Any of the concealing transactions that follow thus would

clearly involve proceeds of unlawful activity.

            3. Count 6

            Finally, Misla challenges his conviction for witness

tampering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b)(1), (2), and (3).

After   Ramos     had    agreed     to    cooperate    with   the   government,     he

                                           -31-
recorded conversations with Misla in which Misla discussed ways to

conceal the crime, including having Ramos say that he had actually

been repaying a loan to Misla, and having Ramos leave Puerto Rico.

Misla argues that because Misla's tampering was directed at Ramos,

a "plan instituted by conspirators to provide a false story to

protect themselves cannot constitute witness tampering."        Def.

Brief at 45.   He claims that, because he did not know that Ramos

was already cooperating, he did not have the necessary intent to

commit the crime of witness tampering.

          Section 1512(b) states, in relevant part:

     Whoever knowingly . . . corruptly persuades another
     person, or attempts to do so, . . . with intent to
     influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of any person
     in any official proceeding [or] cause or induce any
     person to withhold testimony . . . shall be fined under
     this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or
     both.13

In his brief, Misla argues that he could not have known that Ramos

was a "witness," given that he believed they were still co-

conspirators, and thus he lacked the necessary intent.          That

argument is off the mark, since it focuses on the status of the

person, rather than the proceedings.     The key is not whether the

defendant knows or doesn't know that someone is a "witness" (a term

not in the text of the statute), but rather whether he is intending

     13
      Persuading or trying to persuade a potential witness to
testify to something other than the persuader's "true belief"
counts as "corruptly persuading" a person under § 1512. Cruzado-
Laureano, 404 F.3d at 487.

                               -32-
to   head   off   the      possibility       of   testimony      in   an    "official

proceeding."

            What's necessary is that there be sufficient evidence

that the defendant knew that an official proceeding14 had begun, or

that he believed one to be likely in the future, and that he

intended to influence any possible testimony in that proceeding.

See United States v. Frankhauser, 80 F.3d 641, 652 (1st Cir. 1996)

(analyzing § 1512(b)(2)(B)); United States v. Kelley, 36 F.3d 1118,

1128 (D.C. Cir. 1994) ("The statute only requires that the jury be

able    reasonably    to    infer    from      the    circumstances        that    [the

defendant], fearing that a grand jury proceeding had been or might

be instituted, corruptly persuaded persons with the intent to

influence   their     possible      testimony        in   such   a    proceeding.").

However, while the proceeding need not be imminent, 18 U.S.C. §

1512(e)(1), it must be more than merely foreseeable, Frankhauser,

80 F.3d at 652.      To hold otherwise would allow a witness tampering

charge in, e.g., any conspiracy where the co-conspirators agreed to

a story at the outset of the conspiracy, merely because they had

foreseen a possibility of eventual arrest and trial.                    This is the

class of cases in which Misla would like to place himself.

            His   efforts     to   do   so    are    unsuccessful.         There    was

substantial evidence that Misla believed an investigation to be

       14
      An "official proceeding" includes federal trials and federal
grand jury investigations. United States v. Frankhauser, 80 F.3d
641, 651 (1st Cir. 1996)

                                        -33-
likely and forthcoming when he began his attempts to persuade

Ramos.     Indeed,   Ramos   testified,    regarding   his    first    taped

conversation with Misla:

     A.   [Ramos] . . . So I went to Mr. Edison Misla and I
     told him, "Edison, we are being investigated."

     He said, "I'm going to send my attorney to investigate at
     the U.S. Attorney's Office if I'm a target."

     . . .

     Q.   [Prosecution] Sir, when you used the word target,
     what do you mean by that?

     A.    A target is the object of an investigation being
     held.

     Q.   Did you continue having conversations with Edison
     Misla concerning this investigation?

     A.   That's right . . . . And then one or two days later
     he told me that he had sent his attorney, and his
     attorneys had gone to the federal U.S. Attorney's Office
     and spoken to prosecutor Gil and yourself, and that you
     had told him that Mr. Misla was not a target.

Tr. 12/2/02 at 13.

             It is thus clear that Misla was aware of an ongoing

investigation and the likelihood of a future official proceeding,

and any of the later conversations with Ramos were directed at

influencing or preventing Ramos's possible testimony in such a

proceeding.    See United States v. Freeman, 208 F.3d 332, 338 (1st

Cir. 2000) (finding evidence sufficient where defendant knew of

investigation, and knew that his own conduct might subject him to

criminal liability). It is immaterial whether or not Misla knew or

believed   that   Ramos   was   already   cooperating.       Indeed,   it's

                                   -34-
immaterial whether Ramos actually was cooperating, or even that he

actually testify at all.            See United States v. Risken, 788 F.2d

1361, 1369 (8th Cir. 1986) ("witness status is expressly not

required under § 1512, which specifically refers to 'persons' and

not 'witnesses'").15          There was sufficient evidence for the jury to

believe that Misla, fearing the results of an investigation that he

knew was ongoing, attempted to persuade Ramos to change or withhold

testimony, and that ends the matter.

E. Sentencing

               1. Guidelines Calculation

               Misla   contends     that   the   district      court   erred   in

calculating his Sentencing Guidelines range.                In particular, he

challenges the enhancement for more than one bribe being involved,

the imposition of a fine, and the enhancement for the amount of

loss.        These objections were properly preserved for appeal.              We

review       the   district    court's   interpretation   of    the    sentencing

guidelines de novo and the factual findings underlying the sentence

for clear error.        See, e.g., United States v. Meada, 408 F.3d 14,

24 (1st Cir. 2005).

               Section 2C1.1(b)(1) of the Sentencing Guidelines calls

for a two-level increase to the base offense level for extortion

        15
      It is also immaterial that the U.S. Attorney's Office told
him he was not a target. First, a jury could find that he still
feared that he could become a target later. Second, the statute
does not require that the person attempting to tamper with a
witness actually be the target of the official proceeding.

                                         -35-
where more than one bribe is involved.       Section 1B1.3 states that,

when calculating the base offense levels under Chapter Two of the

Guidelines, a sentencing court should include, "in the case of a

jointly   undertaken   criminal   activity   .   .   .   ,   all   reasonably

foreseeable acts and omissions of others in furtherance of the

jointly undertaken criminal activity." Misla contends here that he

should not be held accountable for the bribes of his co-defendant

Cruz, because he had no knowledge of them.

             Misla raised this issue below, and the district court

held that, even if Misla didn't know about specific bribes, it was

reasonably foreseeable to him that Cruz would receive a bribe. The

court pointed to a lunch meeting arranged by a lobbyist whom CAS

and Ramos had hired to introduce Ramos, De Jesús, and Ramírez to

Cruz, the head of the legal department at PRDH and central to

getting PRDH's approval for CAS's purchase of the CHC management

contract.     Cruz would eventually take a bribe from the group in

order to secure approval. Ramos testifed:

     Q. [Prosecution] Do you know, sir -- if you know -- did
     José Gerardo Cruz Arroyo request anything in exchange
     from Dr. DeJésus [sic] for giving the okay to this
     transaction?

     A. [Ramos] All I remember is a conversation with Dr.
     DeJésus where he told me that he was taking care of
     everything.

     . . .

     Q. When Dr. DeJésus told you he was taking care of
     everything, did he explain to you what he was taking care
     of and what he was doing?

                                  -36-
      A. At that moment, he didn't, but later on I realized
      what was going on.

      Q. What did you realize later on that was going on?

      A. Well, I discovered that a car was being paid for him.
      And then months later, after he left in December the
      Department of Health, I realized that he had been forced
      to get a contract and work with the CAS Management
      office.

      Q. [Prosecution] When you say he had been forced, who is
      "he"?

      A. [Ramos] Dr. DeJésus Toro had forced the management to
      give work to attorney José Gerardo Cruz.

Tr.   11/27/02   at   8-9.      Misla    argued   at   sentencing,   based   on

testimony in the case, that Ramos only mentioned Cruz to Misla

once, and that it was prior to Cruz receiving the car Ramos

testified to above.          Therefore, he argues, the only time Misla

heard anything about Cruz, he could not have heard about a bribe.

           The court held that a later piece of testimony by Ramos

about that meeting with Misla called that inference into question:

      Q. So on this first occasion, sir, what is it that you
      explained, to the best of your recollection, to Edison
      Misla?

      A. I called him and explained to him, explained what our
      objective was, which was to purchase the hospital, that
      he knew about it, that we had already spoken to Freddy
      Valentin, and that the contact had already been made with
      [José] Gerardo Cruz, with attorney [José] Gerardo Cruz,
      and that all that was left was for us to obtain the favor
      from the Government Development Bank.

Id. at 24.       The court held that, because of this meeting and

conversation, it was reasonably foreseeable to Misla that Cruz was

                                        -37-
being bribed, like himself, for his participation in the scheme.

We cannot say that this finding was clearly erroneous.

            Misla next argues that the court erred in fining him

$12,500, the bottom of the applicable range of $12,500 to $500,000.

Under the Sentencing Guidelines, "the court shall impose a fine in

all cases, except where the defendant establishes that he is unable

to pay and is not likely to become able to pay any fine."           USSG §

5E1.2.   We review a sentencing court's imposition of fines for

abuse of discretion.     United States v. Savoie, 985 F.2d 612, 620

(1st Cir. 1993).    "The defendant bears the burden of demonstrating

that his case warrants an exception to the rule that a fine be

imposed."   United States v. Peppe, 80 F.3d 19, 22 (1st Cir. 1996).

Misla concedes that he withheld information on his finances during

the preparation of the presentence report (PSR).         Because of this,

the court held, he had not met his burden of showing that he would

be unable to pay.

            Misla now points to his objection to the PSR, in which he

stated that his "only source of income to be able to pay a fine

would be his monthly pension.      The pension is used to satisfy his

debts, as already listed in the report."         The judge did not abuse

her discretion in deciding that this was insufficient to meet

Misla's burden.

            Finally,   Misla   argues    that   the   combination   of   the

$12,500 fine and the $147,000 forfeiture violates the Eighth

                                  -38-
Amendment.    We pause only to note that forfeiture will violate the

Eighth Amendment only if it is "grossly disproportional to the

gravity of the defendant's offense."     United States v. Bajakajian,

524 U.S. 321, 328 (1998); see United States v. Heldeman, 402 F.3d

220, 223 (1st Cir. 2005).     As we discuss in Section II.E, infra, it

is not grossly disproportional, and neither is its combination with

a fine that is less than three percent of the allowable fine under

the Guidelines.

            2. Booker Error

            Misla argues that the district court erred in sentencing

him under a mandatory guidelines system.       Here, he relies on the

Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220

(2005).     However, he concedes that he did not preserve this claim

of error.    As a result, our review is only for plain error.   United

States v. Antonakopoulos, 399 F.3d 68, 75 (1st Cir. 2005).      We will

find such error only if "the defendant [points] to circumstances

creating a reasonable probability that the district court would

impose a different sentence more favorable to the defendant under

the new 'advisory Guidelines' Booker regime."     Id.   First, we note

that Misla's sentence of 71 months' imprisonment is right in the

middle of the Guidelines range of 63 to 78 months, evidence that

the judge was comfortable with the Guidelines range.     Furthermore,

Misla raises only the same objections he made to the Guidelines

calculation itself.    Those issues having been resolved in favor of

                                  -39-
the government, we see no reasonable probability that the judge

would have sentenced differently under an "advisory Guidelines"

system.

F. Forfeiture

            1. Money Judgment

            Misla's challenge to the forfeiture order involves a

question that often comes up in cases where the government seeks

criminal    forfeiture       of    cash,       rather   than   specific      property.

Pursuant    to     Rule    7(c)(2)       of    the   Federal   Rules    of    Criminal

Procedure, the government gave notice in the indictment of an

intent to seek forfeiture of all property involved in, or traceable

to, the money laundering offense.                    It later filed a Bill of

Particulars pointing to specific property it alleged was traceable

to   the   money    laundering       proceeds,       including   an    apartment   in

Luquillo, Puerto Rico.             The government did not mention in the

indictment any intent to seek substitute assets in lieu of the

property it named as traceable to the proceeds of the offense.

            After the verdict, the government moved for a judgment of

forfeiture    under       Rule    32.2    of   the   Federal   Rules    of   Criminal

Procedure, and a hearing was held.               At the hearing, the government

stated an intention to go after only cash, rather than the real

property that had been in the Bill of Particulars.                    The government

also stated that it did not intend to seek forfeiture of any

substitute assets.         Misla argued that the government was not in a

                                          -40-
position to ask for forfeiture of cash because they had not

identified any particular pool of cash that could be traceable to

the money laundering.        The court ordered forfeiture of $147,400,

pointing to specific checks that the government had provided as

exhibits.

              On   appeal,   Misla    makes    a    subtle,     but    ultimately

unavailing, argument.        He says that any attempt by the government

to seize cash is equivalent to seizing substitute assets, because

the original proceeds of the offense are no longer available, and

that   is   something    that   the   government      expressly       declined   an

interest in doing.      It being therefore impossible to execute this

forfeiture order, he argues, the order should not have been issued

in the first place.      He also argues that it would be too late now

for the government to try to seek any substitute assets, since he

was given no notice in the indictment of an intent to do so.

              As to his first point, we have said that

       [a] money judgment permits the government to collect on
       the forfeiture order in the same way that a successful
       plaintiff collects a money judgment from a civil
       defendant. Thus, even if a defendant does not have
       sufficient funds to cover the forfeiture at the time of
       the conviction, the government may seize future assets to
       satisfy the order.

United States v. Hall, 434 F.3d 42, 59 (1st Cir. 2006); see United

States   v.    Candelaria-Silva,      166    F.3d   19,   42   (1st    Cir.   1999)

(“[C]riminal forfeiture may take several forms [including] an in

personam judgment against the defendant for the amount of money the

                                      -41-
defendant obtained as proceeds of the offense.”).            Here, the

government sought a forfeiture judgment under Rule 32.2, which

provides that "[i]f the government seeks a personal money judgment,

the court must determine the amount of money that the defendant

will be ordered to pay."    Fed. R. Crim. P. 32.2(b)(1).     This is in

contrast to where the government seeks forfeiture of "specific

property," in which case the government has to show a "nexus

between the property and the offense."      Id.

           Misla   is   mistaken,    therefore,   in   arguing    that   a

forfeiture order can apply only to the specific proceeds of the

offense.   If the government seeks, and the court grants, a money

judgment16 as part of the forfeiture order, then "the government

need not prove that the defendant actually has the forfeited

proceeds in his possession at the time of conviction."           Hall, 434

F.3d at 59.   If the government has proven that there was at one

point an amount of cash that was directly traceable to the offense,

and that thus would be forfeitable under 18 U.S.C. § 982(a), that

is sufficient for a court to issue a money judgment, for which the

     16
      The district court's order is not as explicit as we would
like in this regard.    The order of forfeiture could be read as
referring only to the specific funds that were laundered, though
the subsequent judgment includes an unambiguous order to forfeit
$147,400 in cash. Misla does not pursue this point on appeal, so
we assume here that a money judgment was entered against him. This
position is bolstered by the transcript of the forfeiture hearing,
in which the long discussion between the judge and the attorneys
centered specifically around the power of the judge to enter a
money judgment, rather than an order to forfeit the specific
traceable proceeds.

                                    -42-
defendant will be fully liable whether or not he still has the

original corpus of tainted funds -- indeed, whether or not he has

any funds at all.

              The question of how the government can enforce that

judgment is a somewhat different question, however.                   There is a

split of authority as to whether the government can seize assets

with a money judgment just as any judgment creditor could, or

whether the government must follow the substitute assets provisions

of 21 U.S.C. § 853(p)17 (we discuss the dispute briefly below).

Here, however, we need not answer that question, because it does

not appear from the record that the government has yet taken any

action to enforce the judgment.          We note, however, that, contrary

to Misla's assertion, the government would not be constrained from

seeking forfeiture of substitute assets under § 853(p) in the

future.       Misla argues that the government's disclaimer at the

forfeiture hearing of an intent to seek substitute assets, coupled

with    the   lack   of   any   notice   of   an   intent   to   do   so   in   the

indictment, would be fatal to any later attempts to go after

substitute assets.        If this were true, Misla's objection to the

forfeiture order would have some teeth.             But it is not true.

              "Criminal forfeiture orders are something of a mongrel,"

United States v. Hurley, 63 F.3d 1, 23 (1st Cir. 1995), and this

       17
      18 U.S.C. § 982(b)(1) incorporates 21 U.S.C. § 853, with the
exception of subsection (d).

                                     -43-
fact seems to have confused Misla.            Although the government must

include in the indictment notice of which property it plans to seek

forfeiture of, Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(c)(2), that notice is only as to

particular property, not as to particular statutory elements. Even

though it must be mentioned in the indictment, forfeiture is not a

substantive element of an offense, but is rather "an element of the

sentence imposed following conviction." Libretti v. United States,

516 U.S. 29, 38-39 (1995) (emphasis in original); see United States

v. Moffitt, Zwerling & Kemler, P.C., 83 F.3d 660, 664-65 (4th Cir.

1996).      Section 982 says simply that "[t]he court, in imposing

sentence . . . shall order" the forfeiture of property "involved

in" or "traceable to" the offense.           18 U.S.C. § 982(a)(1).     And in

cases where, inter alia, the original property "cannot be located

upon the exercise of due diligence" or "has been transferred or

sold to, or deposited with, a third party" then "the court shall

order the forfeiture of any other property of the defendant."              21

U.S.C.      §   853(p)(1)(A)   &   (B),   (2).    All   that   is   necessary,

therefore, for a court order to issue is that these conditions be

met.    No additional notice is necessary.18

                In Hurley, we allowed an order for substitute assets to

be entered after the case had already been appealed, which would

       18
      Even if notice were to be required, there was plenty. The
government asked for forfeiture under 18 U.S.C. § 982, without
specifying a subsection. § 982 expressly incorporates 21 U.S.C. §
853.   18 U.S.C. § 982(b)(1).   Thus § 982 also incorporates the
substitute assets provision at § 853(p).

                                      -44-
imply that the government could ask for such an order at any time.

63 F.3d at 23-24.         We noted there that "the government might not

even know that substitution is necessary until it seeks to take

possession of the property specified in the initial forfeiture

order."      Id.; see United States v. Voigt, 89 F.3d 1050, 1088 (3d

Cir. 1996) (on remand to apply the substitute assets provision, no

de novo hearing necessary).

             In Candelaria-Silva we said that "[t]he forfeiture of

substitute assets is a matter left solely to the court."                   166 F.3d

at 43.    In that case the parties chose, unlike here, to have the

forfeiture amount tried to a jury, which determined that $6,000,000

in proceeds was the asset subject to forfeiture.                   But, we said,

"the jury has no role in determining, subsequently, whether the

property has been dissipated and whether the government is thereby

entitled to the forfeiture of substitute assets."              Id.   All we said

that   was    necessary    for   the   government     to   show    was   that    the

principal forfeitable property was not available. Id. at 42. This

is where the burden of the government lies: in showing that the

principal     forfeitable    assets    --     that   is,   those   named    in   the

indictment -- are unavailable at the end of the trial, not in

giving notice at the beginning of the trial of an intent to invoke

the substitute assets provisions.           Indeed, to allow the failure to

specifically name the substitute assets provision of the forfeiture

statute in the indictment -- or the substitute assets themselves --

                                       -45-
to defeat any later attempt to go after substitute assets would

allow defendants to avoid forfeiture simply by transferring away

the assets after the indictment has come down. See United States v.

Hatcher, 323 F.3d 666, 673 (8th Cir. 2003) ("The defendant does not

need to know the identity of the substitute assets to marshal a

defense to the forfeiture. Accordingly, [it is] not require[d] that

the indictment specify what property will be sought as substitute

assets.")

              If the government instead acts to enforce the money

judgment without using the substitute assets provisions of §

853(p), it raises the question of whether that is permitted, which

is a question we need not reach here.          The question is important,

since § 853(p) places a greater burden on the government before

assets can be seized.        There is some split of authority among the

circuits on whether the government must follow the procedures of §

853(p) or not.       See, e.g., United States v. Vampire Nation, 451

F.3d   189,    202   (3d   Cir.   2006)   ("[T]he   in   personam   forfeiture

judgment may also be distinguished from a general judgment in

personam.     The judgment in personam here is one in forfeiture and

is limited by the provisions of [§ 853]."); Hall, 434 F.3d at 59

(noting that a forfeiture money judgment is equivalent to a civil

judgment, though that issue was not directly before the court).

              In summary, a court may properly issue a money judgment

as part of a forfeiture order, whether or not the defendant still

                                      -46-
retains   the   actual   property    involved    in   the   offense,   or     any

property at all.      Furthermore, the money judgment can be used in

the future to seek forfeiture of substitute assets by court order

under § 853(p) and Rule 32.2, even where the government has not

expressed an intent to do so at any time before it seeks such an

order.    We leave for another day the question of whether, in

seeking to seize assets to satisfy that judgment, the government is

required to do so under the substitute assets provisions of §

853(p), or whether it may use the judgment to attach assets just

like any other judgment creditor could.

           2. Forfeiture Amount

           After reviewing the record we find that the judge made no

error in calculating the forfeiture amount. The $147,400 amount is

supported by checks entered into evidence and testimony of Ramos

that the funds from the checks were delivered to Misla.                     Misla

attempts some arithmetical sleight of hand to arrive at a lower

figure,   but    he   and   the     government    largely    agree     on     the

characterization of most of the checks.          They differ only as to the

checks made out to Francisco Diez and Raul Ferrer (exhibits 89 and

91) and one $10,000 check Ramos received from the hospital (exhibit

94).

           Misla argues that the government stated at the forfeiture

hearing that the Diez and Ferrer checks were not included in the

forfeiture calculation.      In fact, the government stated only that

                                     -47-
Diez's check was not included; it did not disavow the Ferrer check.

Moreover, even the disavowal of the Diez check was oversight on the

government's part; the Diez check was included in the forfeiture

calculation,    and   the   government    pointed   to   the   evidence   and

testimony in the record supporting its inclusion in the forfeiture

amount.      As to the $10,000 check, Misla simply misreads the

testimony.     Misla argues that two $10,000 checks constituted

Ramos's salary and thus should not have been considered.           In fact,

only the second of the two $10,000 checks constituted Ramos's

salary.   He testified that he gave Misla either $9000 or $9500 of

the first $10,000, and the government relied on the lower figure in

calculating the amount.      There was no error.19

                             III. Conclusion

          For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district

court is affirmed.

     19
      Misla makes an additional argument tying back to his earlier
argument regarding the money judgment and substitute assets, namely
that he can only forfeit those amounts still in his possession and
unspent. As discussed above, this argument is unavailing to him.

                                   -48-