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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
For the Fifth Circuit
___________________________
No. 93-8705
___________________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
VERSUS
ALBERT G. BUSTAMANTE,
Defendant-Appellant.
___________________________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Texas
____________________________________________________
(February 13, 1995)
Before DAVIS, BARKSDALE and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
Bustamante appeals his conviction and sentence on two counts
of a ten count indictment charging RICO and related offenses. We
affirm.
I.
Albert G. Bustamante was elected to the United States House
of Representatives in November 1984 and served until his defeat
in 1992. In 1993, a federal grand jury returned a ten-count
indictment against Bustamante, accusing him of using his public
office for personal enrichment.
Count One alleged that Bustamante conducted the affairs of
an enterprise, his congressional office, through a pattern of
racketeering activity, in violation of the Racketeer Influenced
and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c).

The alleged pattern of racketeering activity consisted of nine
predicate acts: accepting a bribe in violation of former 18
U.S.C. § 201(c) (now § 201(b)) and accepting eight illegal
gratuities in violation of current 18 U.S.C. § 201(c) and its
predecessor, 18 U.S.C. § 201(g). Count Two charged Bustamante
with conspiring to violate the RICO statute. In Counts Three
through Ten, the same eight acts of accepting illegal gratuities
were charged as individual violations of the gratuity statutes.
After a two-week trial, the jury found Bustamante guilty of
Counts One and Four and acquitted him of the other charges. To
support the RICO conviction, the jury found that Bustamante had
committed Predicate Act One (accepting the bribe) and Predicate
Act Three (accepting the same illegal gratuity charged in Count
Four).
Using the United States Sentencing Guidelines, the district
court sentenced Bustamante to concurrent terms of incarceration
of 42 months on Count One and 24 months on Count Four, and
concurrent terms of supervised release of two years on Count One
and one year on Count Four. Bustamante was also ordered to pay
total fines of $55,000 and a $100 special assessment.
Bustamante challenges his convictions and sentence on
numerous grounds which we consider below.
II. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Bustamante contends that the government failed to produce
sufficient evidence to support his conviction on either the bribery
charge (Predicate Act One) or the illegal gratuity charge
(Predicate Act Three/Count Four). As Bustamante correctly points
2

out, his RICO conviction is based on only two predicate acts, the
minimum number required to establish a pattern of racketeering
activity. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5). If the evidence is insufficient to
support the jury's finding that Bustamante committed either
predicate act, his RICO conviction must be overturned.
This Court will uphold a conviction as long as a rational
trier of fact could have found that the evidence established the
elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. United States v.
Pofahl, 990 F.2d 1456, 1467 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S.Ct. 266
(1993). The jury is free to choose among reasonable constructs of
the evidence, which need not exclude every reasonable hypothesis of
innocence. United States v. Maseratti, 1 F.3d 330, 337 (5th Cir.
1993), cert. denied, 114 S.Ct. 1096 (1994). We view all inferences
from the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury verdict.
United States v. Basey, 816 F.2d 980, 1001 (5th Cir. 1987). With
these ground rules in mind, we turn to the particular facts and
proof of each predicate act.
A. The Bribe
As Predicate Act One, the indictment alleged that in February
1986, Bustamante accepted a $35,000 bribe in exchange for using his
official influence on behalf of Falcon Food Services and
Management, Inc. (Falcon Foods). Since 1983, Falcon Foods had held
the food service contract for Lackland Air Force Base (Lackland) in
San Antonio, Texas. This contract was set to expire in 1986, when
the Air Force planned to conduct a competitive bidding process to
award a new multi-million dollar contract. Hoping to win the
renewed contract, Falcon Foods enlisted Bustamante's aid.
3

In late 1985, Bustamante invited Brigadier General Richard
Gillis to lunch at a private club in San Antonio. At that time,
General Gillis was in charge of the San Antonio Contracting Center,
which handled all procurement for military bases in the region,
including Lackland. At trial, General Gillis testified that he
believed he would be having lunch only with Bustamante and did not
expect to discuss the Lackland contract.
When General Gillis arrived at the club, Bustamante introduced
him to Douglas Jaffe, Jr., owner of Falcon Foods, Evaristo "Eddie"
Garcia, president of Falcon Foods, and Morris Jaffe, Douglas
Jaffe's father. During lunch, Douglas Jaffe (Jaffe) persistently
tried to persuade General Gillis that Falcon Foods was doing a
great job at Lackland and should have its contract renewed.
Prohibited by regulations from discussing a contract that was open
to bidding, General Gillis became increasingly uncomfortable with
Jaffe's lobbying effort. When his repeated attempts to change the
subject were unsuccessful, General Gillis left the club.
In January of 1986, a $223,000 promissory note bearing
Bustamante and his wife's signatures came due. By mid-February,
the Bustamantes had paid (or made arrangements to pay) all but
$35,000 of the amount owed. On February 15, although he had not
yet received the remaining $35,000 from any source, Bustamante
wrote a check that completely satisfied the promissory note.
Three days later, Bustamante received a check for $35,000 from
Garcia, which he deposited into his bank account. This check bore
the handwritten notation "sale of note." This notation allegedly
referred to a $35,000 second lien note that Bustamante held on a
4

former home. Bustamante claimed that he sold this second lien note
to Garcia to raise the money to pay off the balance of the $223,000
promissory note. However, no other written documentation of the
alleged sale was produced at trial. Additionally, though it had a
face value of $35,000, in February 1986 the second lien note's
present value was only $22,000.
At the time that he wrote the check to Bustamante, Garcia only
had $493.42 in his checking account; within a few days, Garcia's
account had overdrawn by more than $34,000. Douglas Jaffe wrote
Garcia a $35,000 check from Jaffe's personal account, which Garcia
deposited on February 24.
At some point in February, Bustamante also applied for a
$35,000 loan from San Antonio Savings Association (SASA). On
February 25, SASA approved the loan. Bustamante took no prompt
action on the loan.
On March 4, Bustamante placed a telephone call to Isodoro
Leos, the officer assigned to handle the Lackland contract, and
left a message complaining about the fact that the Air Force had
delayed bidding on the Lackland contract. Returning the call, Leos
informed Bustamante's secretary that the Congressman should make
his future inquiries in writing.1
The next day, Bustamante closed on the SASA loan and executed
a $35,000 promissory note. Bustamante secured the loan with the
same second lien note he claimed to have sold to Garcia weeks
earlier. On March 14, SASA issued a $35,000 cashier's check to
1The government argued that this event made Bustamante
realize that his illicit advocacy might be exposed, causing him
to take action to cover up the money he had received.
5

Bustamante, representing the principal of the loan. The back of
the check showed that Bustamante endorsed both his and his wife's
names. The check also bore a typewritten notation stating "Deposit
Only to the HSB Construction Inc. Account" and listing an account
number. HSB Construction belonged to Douglas Jaffe. Unlike most
of Jaffe's companies, however, HSB Construction was not a
subsidiary of Jaffe's corporate umbrella, the Jaffe Group, Inc.
On March 18, the Air Force opened the sealed bids for the
Lackland Contract. Falcon Foods had submitted the highest of seven
bids. Following standard procedure, the Air Force began to work
its way up from the bottom of the list, looking for the lowest
bidder that was also "responsive and responsible," factors having
to do with a contractor's ability to carry through on its promised
performance. After disqualifying the two lowest bidders, the Air
Force found itself running out of time to hire a new contractor
before the existing Falcon Foods contract expired on April 30.
To ease the time crunch, on April 17 the Air Force attempted
to exercise its contractual option to temporarily extend its
existing contract. Unfortunately for the Air Force, the
notification deadline had expired two days earlier. No longer
bound by the contract, Falcon Foods responded with a counter-offer
that was $150,000 more per month than it had previously charged.
The Air Force rejected the counter-offer. Afraid that it would not
find a qualified bidder by April 30, the Air Force decided to place
the new contract through a faster minority set-aside program
operated by the Small Business Administration. In this manner, the
Air Force awarded the Lackland contract to Aleman Food Service
6

(Aleman Foods). Aleman Foods had been the fourth lowest bidder.
On April 24, the day of the award to Aleman, Leos received a
call from Bustamante, who insisted that Leos explain why the
original bidding process had been scuttled. Dissatisfied with
Leos, Bustamante next berated Leos' boss, the deputy director for
contracting. Still unplacated, Bustamante telephoned General
Gillis and expressed his anger that Falcon Foods had not been
awarded the Lackland contract. Bustamante threatened General
Gillis that he had "better turn this around" or Bustamante would
end his career. On April 25, Bustamante wrote to the General
Accounting Office demanding an explanation of the award to Aleman
Foods. At approximately the same time, another disgruntled bidder
obtained a restraining order that prohibited Aleman Foods from
serving food until all protests to the award were resolved. Left
with no food service contractor, the Air Force fed its troops
prepackaged meals from its war reserve stock from May 1 to July 31,
when Aleman Foods was finally allowed to begin meal service.
To find bribery, the jury is required to find that a public
official accepted a thing of value in return for being influenced
in the performance of an official act. United States v. Evans, 572
F.2d 455, 480-81 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 870 (1978).
Bustamante first contends that the government produced
insufficient evidence for the jury to decide that his actions on
behalf of Falcon Foods were "official acts." This contention is
spurious. Without question, Bustamante took action in his official
capacity as a congressman on a "matter" (the award of a government
food service contract) which was "then pending." 18 U.S.C. §
7

201(a)(3).
Bustamante next argues that the jury could not legitimately
find that the $35,000 payment from Garcia was a quid pro quo for
any assistance he gave to Falcon Foods. First, Bustamante
maintains that he provided an entirely innocent explanation for the
$35,000 that he received from and returned to Garcia. Bustamante
testified that he was on his way to SASA to borrow the $35,000 he
needed to pay off his promissory note when he told Garcia, a long
time friend, about the planned loan. Garcia offered to buy
Bustamante's second lien note instead. Bustamante accepted, not
knowing that Garcia did not have enough money to make the purchase
himself. Bustamante bought back the second lien note, however,
because his wife did not approve of the sale. Bustamante had
already used Garcia's $35,000 to pay off his own promissory note,
so he went to SASA for a loan after all, to get the money to
reimburse Garcia. Bustamante asserts that he did not know that the
money for the purchase really came from Jaffe, nor that the money
he repaid to Garcia ended up in Jaffe's account. However,
Bustamante's explanation is the type of alternative hypothesis of
innocence that the jury need not exclude when reaching a guilty
verdict. Maseratti, 1 F.3d at 337.
Bustamante also argues that the evidence does not persuasively
support the government's cover-up theory - that Leos' instruction
to communicate in writing spurred Bustamante to incur the SASA loan
for the purpose of hiding the $35,000 payment. However,
disregarding the government's cover-up theory, the evidence was
more than sufficient for the jury to find that Bustamante accepted
8

a bribe in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 201(b). Bustamante received a
large amount of money from the principals of Falcon Foods at a time
when Falcon Foods needed Bustamante's assistance and when
Bustamante needed the funds. Neither Bustamante nor Garcia
documented the "sale" of the second lien note in any standard
manner. Garcia, a successful businessman, supposedly purchased
this second lien note at a price $13,000 higher than its present
value. Though Garcia appeared to make this purchase, it was Jaffe
who actually supplied the money. Additionally, Bustamante
telephoned a brigadier general and threatened to end his career if
the Lackland contract was not re-awarded to Falcon Foods. Given
these facts, the jury's guilty verdict must stand. See United
States v. Biaggi, 909 F.2d 662, 683-84 (2d Cir. 1990), cert.
denied, 499 U.S. 904 (1991).
B.
The Illegal Gratuity
As Predicate Act Three and Count Four, the indictment alleged
that Bustamante accepted an illegal gratuity. Unopposed in the
1984 general election, Bustamante's seat in Congress was a foregone
conclusion once he won the primary election. In the period between
the primary and general elections, Bustamante was invited to
participate in a fledgling company called San Antonio Video
Corporation (SAVC). SAVC had been organized by Oliver S. Heard and
R. Lawrence Macon, both local attorneys and friends of Bustamante.
Heard and Macon formed SAVC to compete for the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) license for a commercial television
station.
On November 29, 1984, a few weeks after the general election,
9

SAVC filed its licensing application with the FCC. Although the
application listed Bustamante as owning 18.5 percent of SAVC, he
had not actually contributed any money at that time.
To purchase his share of SAVC, Bustamante was expected to make
an initial pro rata contribution of approximately $15,000. This
would entitle Bustamante to 16 percent of the non-voting stock;
Heard, Macon, and Heard's law firm also owned portions of the non-
voting stock. SAVC also issued voting stock, which was owned by
three minority women.2
In the event that SAVC was fortunate enough to win the FCC
license, Bustamante was expected to make a second contribution of
$650,000 toward the roughly $5 million start-up cost. Like several
of the other investors, Bustamante did not have the financial
strength to contribute such a substantial sum. Heard and Macon
planned to borrow the start-up cost using the FCC license as
collateral, then lend this money to the other investors, including
Bustamante. Macon testified at trial that, if push came to shove,
he would not have forced Bustamante to repay this loan.
Bustamante did not even have the initial $15,000 on hand. To
make his up-front stock purchase, Bustamante applied for a $20,000
loan from Groos Bank in San Antonio in April 1985 (the Groos Bank
loan). According to an internal bank document entitled "Loan
Application" the loan was needed to "[i]nvest in a new television
broadcasting company" and was "made as a result of a specific
request on the part of Oliver S. Heard, Jr., Guarantor." The Loan
2The fact that SAVC would be controlled by minority women
entitled it to a "comparative preference" during the FCC
licensing process.
10

Application included Heard's financial statement, his net worth and
annual income. Just three days earlier, Groos Bank had granted the
Bustamantes another $20,000 loan, for personal purposes, which was
also "based on the specific request and financial strength of
guarantor Oliver S. Heard, Jr."
As part of the FCC's licensing procedure, SAVC and its rivals
litigated their claims before an administrative law judge (ALJ).
In May 1985, as part of this process, Bustamante testified about
his initial stock purchase as well as the potential $650,000 future
payment. Bustamante testified that he had taken out the Groos Bank
loan to make his initial stock purchase in the fall of 1984.
Bustamante denied that Heard had guaranteed this loan.
The FCC litigation extended over a number of years. During
this time, three installments on Bustamante's Groos Bank loan
became due in April 1986, 1987, and 1988. Bustamante missed all
three of these payments. On April 20, 1988, Groos Bank allowed
Bustamante to renew the loan by relying on Heard's original
guaranty. At the same time, Bustamante took out another loan to
cover the accumulated interest on the original Groos Bank loan;
this loan was also covered by the Heard guaranty. In July 1988,
Bustamante combined both of these loans into a single $20,140.69
obligation. Like each of the previous loans, this consolidation
loan relied on Heard's guaranty. Bustamante made two of the
monthly installment payments on this loan.
In October 1988, the FCC litigation finally ended. SAVC was
not awarded the FCC license, but did get $175,000 in settlement
from the company that did receive the license. On October 27,
11

1988, three days after SAVC received the settlement, Heard issued
Bustamante a check for $19,467.53, the exact amount that Bustamante
still owed to Groos Bank. Bustamante immediately repaid the
consolidated Groos Bank loan in full.
SAVC's other investors did not receive such priority
treatment. On October 31, 1988, Macon wrote a letter to Heard
stating that before the shareholders would receive refunds of their
pro rata contributions, the settlement money would be used to pay
off SAVC's outstanding bills. This included loans that Heard and
Macon had made to SAVC during its lengthy effort to obtain the FCC
license. The record does not reflect whether the other SAVC
shareholders ever received their share of the settlement proceeds.
To find a public official guilty of accepting an illegal
gratuity, a jury must find that the "official accepted, because of
his position, a thing of value 'otherwise than as provided by law
for the proper discharge of official duty.'" Evans, 572 F.2d at
480. Generally, no proof of a quid pro quo is required; it is
sufficient for the government to show that the defendant was given
the gratuity simply because he held public office. Id. at 479;
United States v. Secord, 726 F. Supp. 845, 847 (D.D.C. 1989)
(sufficient for government to show that gratuity was given "simply
because of [a person's] official position, in appreciation for
their relationship, or in anticipation of its continuation"). In
addition, the jury need not find that the official accepted the
gratuity with the intent to be influenced. The jury must only
conclude that the evidence establishes beyond a reasonable doubt
that the official accepted unauthorized compensation. Evans, 572
12

F.2d at 480.
Bustamante's challenges to his illegal gratuity conviction
rely on his interpretation of the charge against him. According to
Bustamante, the indictment alleges only that he accepted two
specific things of value: Heard's Groos Bank loan guaranty for the
initial loan to purchase SAVC stock and the promise of future loans
in the amount of $650,000, both at no risk to himself. Bustamante
argues that his conviction for accepting these two things of value
is invalid because the government failed to prove (1) that he knew
of Heard's loan guaranty and (2) that the Groos Bank loan was
actually risk-free.

Bustamante views the charge too narrowly. Bustamante was not
merely accused of accepting these particular guarantees and
promises, but of allowing Macon and Heard to shoulder the
responsibility for his SAVC investment from start in 1984 to finish
in 1988. Bustamante is correct that the indictment alleges that he
accepted "Loan Guarantees ($20,000) and Promises of Loans
($650,000)", and "a loan guarantee for the purchase of stock and
the promise of future loans for additional investment in [SAVC],
all at no personal risk . . . ." However, the indictment also
describes the broader investment scheme of which these loans were
a part. For example, the indictment alleges "[Bustamante] was
invited by SAVC's controllers to participate in SAVC at no personal
risk to himself." The government's counsel, without objection from
Bustamante, succinctly explained its theory to the jury in closing
argument: "[t]he crime is a carry, a carry of Albert Bustamante in
13

this transaction."3
Viewed in this light, the proper question is whether
Bustamante knew that Heard and Macon were giving him a risk-free
investment in SAVC. We are convinced that the above evidence was
sufficient to allow the jury to find that Bustamante rested firmly
on Heard and Macon's shoulders for the SAVC investment. In
addition, the Groos Bank officer who handled Bustamante's loans,
Neyland Allen, testified that he knew of only one instance in Groos
Bank history in which the bank had purposefully kept a guarantor
secret from the borrower. Given Bustamante's long friendship with
Heard and the context of this entire transaction, the fact that
Allen could not specifically remember informing Bustamante of
Heard's guaranty is not fatal. Bustamante also emphasizes that he
himself testified that he did not know of the guaranty. However,
the jury was free to reject this testimony. United States v.
Anderton, 679 F.2d 1199, 1202 (5th Cir. 1982).
Likewise, Bustamante's argument that the government failed to
prove that the Groos Bank loan was risk-free misses the mark. The
government was required to prove what it alleged - a risk-free
investment carry, not a risk-free loan. Heard and Macon gave
Bustamante the precise amount needed to repay his investment loan,
which exceeded the amount he actually invested, at a time when they
were not repaying other investors. This fact alone strongly
supports the jury's conclusion that Bustamante's SAVC investment
3Bustamante does not argue that this characterization or the
proof at trial were fatally at variance with the indictment. In
fact, in another section of his own brief, Bustamante argues that
Count Four described a "single, continuing gratuity violation"
that ended in 1988.
14

was risk-free.
Leaving no stone unturned, Bustamante also suggests that the
government was required to prove that the gratuity was given in
exchange for an official act. As we noted above, this is not the
government's burden.
The jury was also entitled to conclude that Bustamante
received the SAVC gratuity because of his status as a congressman.
Bustamante was invited to invest after his seat in Congress was
assured. He brought no broadcasting experience to SAVC. Because
he owned non-voting stock, his Hispanic ethnicity did not
contribute to the minority preference. His inclusion certainly
added no financial strength to the venture. The government
produced evidence that Heard's firm called on Bustamante to assist
them in his official capacity, demonstrating that Heard had reason
to appreciate his relationship with the Congressman and anticipate
its continuation. Considering these circumstances, the jury was
entitled to find that Heard and Macon sustained Bustamante
throughout his SAVC investment because he was a member of the
United States Congress.
C.
The Pattern of Racketeering Activity
Bustamante argues next that, even if the evidence establishes
both predicate racketeering acts, the government did not prove a
pattern of activity within the meaning of the RICO statute. To
establish a pattern of racketeering activity, the government must
show a series of at least two related predicate acts that
constitute a threat of continuing racketeering activity. Tel-
Phonic Services, Inc. v. TBS Intern., Inc., 975 F.2d 1134, 1139-40
15

(5th Cir. 1992) (citing H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell, 492 U.S.
229 (1989)). At the time of his trial, Bustamante was no longer in
office. Thus, to satisfy the continuity requirement, the
government had to establish "a closed period of repeated conduct,"
which it could do by showing "a series of related predicates
extending over a substantial period of time." H.J. Inc., 492 U.S.
at 241, 242.
Bustamante concedes that Predicate Acts One and Three are
related but argues that they are not sufficiently continuous.
Again, Bustamante's argument depends primarily on his constricted
interpretation of the acts comprising his acceptance of the SAVC
gratuity. Bustamante argues that the gratuity offense was
completed in 1985, when he accepted the loan guaranty and the
promise of future loans. He contends that when the gratuity is
added to the 1986 Falcon Foods bribe, his racketeering activity
occurred over a short, isolated period of approximately eleven
months. On this basis he maintains that the evidence was
insufficient to permit the jury to find either that his
racketeering acts covered a substantial period of time or posed a
threat of ongoing activity.
Bustamante's argument is belied by the record. As discussed
above, the record reveals that Bustamante did more than accept the
loan guaranty and promise of future loans in 1985 - he continued to
allow Heard and Macon to carry him. This gratuity did not end
until Bustamante accepted the 1988 loan repayment. Bustamante's
racketeering acts therefore continued for a period of nearly four
years. This time period is substantial. See United States v.
16

Pellulo, 964 F.2d 193, 209 (3d Cir. 1992); Metromedia v. Fugazy,
983 F.2d 350, 369 (2d Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 113 S.Ct. 2445
(1993).
In addition, the jury was entitled to conclude that
Bustamante's actions amounted to a threat of continuing criminal
activity. Indeed, the gratuity itself threatened to continue as
long as the SAVC investment continued; had SAVC obtained the FCC
license, Heard and Macon probably would have sustained Bustamante's
investment for a much longer period of time. Bustamante makes much
of the fact that the jury found him not guilty of the other seven
alleged racketeering acts. However, these acquittals are not
inconsistent with the jury's conclusion that Bustamante's criminal
behavior threatened to continue, at least during the closed-end
four year period of activity. See United States v. Freeman, 6 F.3d
586, 596 (9th Cir. 1993) (by their nature, crimes such as bribery
suggest the threat of long term activity).
III. Statute of Limitations
Bustamante argues that his prosecution for the SAVC gratuity
is barred by the five year statute of limitations in 18 U.S.C. §
3282.4 He contends that the limitations period started to run when
he first accepted the gratuity in 1985 and that it expired in 1990
long before his 1993 indictment.
Bustamante relies on United States v. Hare, 618 F.2d 1085 (4th
Cir. 1980), in which the defendant accepted an illegal gratuity in
4At trial, Bustamante first raised this defense in a post-
verdict motion for acquittal. Because we find that the gratuity
charge is not barred by the statute of limitations, we decline to
address whether, under the circumstances of this case,
Bustamante's failure to raise this issue earlier amounts to
waiver.
17

the form of a loan with favorable interest and payment provisions.
Hare accepted the loan in 1970 and made periodic payments on the
loan until 1975. Because Hare was not indicted until 1979, he
argued that the five year limitations period had expired. The
court agreed, holding that the gratuity was complete when Hare
received the loan and that the statute of limitations could not be
extended simply because Hare continued to benefit from the
favorable terms every time he made a payment. The court based its
decision on Toussie v. United States, 397 U.S. 112 (1970), which
held that the doctrine of continuing offenses should be applied
sparingly, to avoid undermining the congressional policy of repose.
Hare is distinguishable from Bustamante's case. The Hare
Court itself limited its holding to the specific facts alleged in
Hare's indictment, which asserted that Hare committed one act of
accepting a gratuity in 1970. Hare, 618 F.2d at 1087. In
contrast, Bustamante's indictment charges that his acts of
accepting the SAVC gratuity extended over a period of years. As we
explained in the previous section, Bustamante is not accused of
committing a crime that has continuing effects after its
completion. Rather he was charged with accepting illegal
gratuities over an extended period of time. Unlike Hare,
Bustamante was therefore charged with continuing criminal behavior.
Accordingly, we find that Bustamante's acceptance of the SAVC
gratuity occurred within the five year limitations period.5 See
5This holding precludes Bustamante's argument that the
district court should not have sentenced Bustamante under the
United States Sentencing Guidelines. United States v. Devine,
934 F.2d 1325, 1332 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 112 S.Ct. 349
(1991) (guidelines apply to offense initiated but not completed
18

United States v. Morales, 11 F.3d 915, 918 (9th Cir. 1993).
IV. Defense Witness Immunity
Bustamante argues next that the district court erred by not
granting immunity to a trial witness, Eddie Garcia, pursuant to a
grand jury immunity order. In September 1992, the government
subpoenaed Garcia to testify before the grand jury investigating
Bustamante. The government applied for and received an order
compelling Garcia to testify under a grant of immunity. Both the
application and order were captioned "IN RE GRAND JURY PROCEEDINGS"
and given the cause number "SA92CR270." Under this order, Garcia
testified before the grand jury twice.
In February 1993, the indictment against Bustamante was
returned, creating cause number "SA93CR039." Garcia was subpoenaed
by the government to testify at Bustamante's trial. When he
received his trial subpoena, Garcia's attorney wrote a letter to
the government stating that, if called at trial, Garcia would
invoke the fifth amendment and refuse to testify because "it is our
belief the [former immunity order] does not extend to any
testimony, other than grand jury testimony, requested of him in
this case." After receiving no response, Garcia filed a motion
with the trial court requesting a protective order immunizing his
trial testimony and stating that the former immunity order "did not
specifically require or compel [Garcia] to testify in [SA93CR039]."
Although the government never called Garcia as a witness
during the trial, Bustamante did. When Bustamante was ready to
call Garcia to testify, Bustamante's attorney informed the trial
before October 31, 1987).
19

court that Garcia wished to speak with the court. Garcia told the
court that he wanted to testify but that "I'd like to have . . .
immunity . . . I think it's only fair for me to have immunity."
When the court asked if Garcia would be receiving immunity, the
government responded that Garcia had been given immunity before the
grand jury but that he would not be granted immunity for his
testimony at trial. The government explained that it believed that
Garcia had perjured himself in his grand jury testimony.
Garcia's attorney then appeared in court to explain that,
despite his earlier statements, he believed that the language of
the immunity order granted Garcia immunity throughout the grand
jury proceedings and the trial. Garcia's attorney explained that
at the time he had written the letter and motion, he did not
possess a copy of the immunity order and had only seen it briefly,
immediately before Garcia's grand jury appearance. After listening
to both Garcia's attorney and the government, the trial court ruled
that the immunity order only applied to Garcia's testimony before
the grand jury. Believing that Garcia would not testify without
immunity, Bustamante did not call him as a witness.
Bustamante now argues that the district court incorrectly
interpreted Garcia's immunity order. Bustamante cites several
decisions holding that the court must interpret an immunity
agreement generously to protect the witness's fifth amendment right
against self-incrimination. However, these decisions describe the
rights of the party to the immunity agreement, not the rights of a
third party. Garcia's personal rights under the agreement cannot
20

form the foundation for Bustamante's own claim on this issue.6
Neither party cites, nor can we find, any case describing a
defendant's right to assert error based on a trial court's
interpretation of another person's immunity order. Our review of
the existing case law makes clear that a defendant's rights are
only implicated by a third party's immunity status when that status
intrudes on the defendant's due process protections. In United
States v. Chagra, 669 F.2d 241, 259-261 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
459 U.S. 846 (1982), we held that the sixth amendment compulsory
process right does not enable a defendant to "demand that the
government shield a witness from the consequences of his own
testimony." It is also settled that, unless the government has
abused its immunity power, a defendant has no due process right to
have the trial court immunize defense witnesses. United States v.
Follin, 979 F.2d 369, 374 (5th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 113 S.Ct.
3004 (1993); United States v. Thevis, 665 F.2d 616, 638-41 (5th
Cir.), cert. denied, 456 U.S. 1008 (1982). In addition, a
defendant cannot prevent the government from revoking a prior grant
of immunity when the government has a good faith belief that the
witness testified falsely. United States v. Taylor, 728 F.2d 930
(7th Cir. 1984).
These decisions illuminate the underlying
principle that a defendant only has grounds to complain about the
treatment of a witness's immunity when the government is using its
6Neither Bustamante nor the government frames this as an
issue of standing. It is sufficient for us to note that
Bustamante has provided no reason why he should escape the
general rule that a litigant cannot base her own claim on the
legal rights and interests of a third party. United States v.
Shaw, 920 F.2d 1225, 1229 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 926
(1991).
21

immunity privilege to unfairly skew the facts presented to the
jury, thereby breaching the defendant's right to due process of
law. Accordingly, we evaluate Bustamante's claims under this
standard.
Bustamante maintains that the government's interpretation of
Garcia's immunity order is unfair because it is inconsistent with
the manner in which the government treated another witness.
Bustamante contends that the government informed the trial court
that this witness's immunity order, identical to Garcia's, extended
to testimony at trial. However, we do not read the government's
statements in this way; in fact, it appears that the government was
asking the court to extend the former order to apply to the trial.7
Bustamante also points out that the government never charged
Garcia with perjury. However, this fact is not sufficient to allow
this Court to infer that the government was concealing Garcia's
truthful testimony because it would have helped Bustamante. See
Taylor, 728 F.2d at 936. In fact, the record reveals that before
the government was aware that Bustamante wanted to call Garcia as
a witness, the government had disclosed Garcia as an unindicted co-
conspirator. This detail supports the government's statement to
7The actual interchange was:
GOVT: In March of 1992, Jerry Hoyack called before the
grand
jury and was given a grant of immunity . . . and
we would
like your Honor to essentially, for counsel's
purposes,
sort of refresh your order compelling his
testimony.
COURT: Okay. Does the same order, is the Government saying
that the same order of immunity that took place before
the grand jury, the Government intends to follow in
trial, as well?
GOVT: Precisely.
COURT: So immunity is still being granted to the witness.
GOVT: Precisely.
22

the trial court that it declined to further immunize Garcia because
he had "outstanding criminal liability."
In sum, nothing in the record causes us to believe that the
government was acting in bad faith by advocating its limited
interpretation of Garcia's immunity. The record also does not in
any way suggest that the trial court itself violated Bustamante's
due process rights in making its ruling on Garcia's immunity.
Accordingly, we conclude that Bustamante's due process rights were
not implicated by the trial court's decision that the immunity
order was limited to testimony before the grand jury.
Bustamante also argues that, even if the trial court correctly
interpreted Garcia's immunity order, the court should have ordered
immunity to stem the government's misbehavior. See, e.g., Follin,
979 F.2d at 374. As discussed above, the record does not support
this argument. More importantly, Bustamante did not ask the trial
court to grant immunity on any ground other than the existing
immunity agreement. Bustamante makes no attempt to establish that
the trial court was obligated to order immunity on its own
initiative and we decline to bear this burden for him. See Taylor,
728 F.2d at 934 n.3.
V. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Bustamante argues next that government counsel made numerous
improper comments which caused the jury to be prejudiced against
him. He contends that these instances of misconduct so permeated
the trial that this Court should reverse his convictions.
23

A. Opening statement
Bustamante complains that, during its opening statement, the
government maligned the defendants and certain witnesses, misstated
evidence, attempted to establish Bustamante's guilt by association,
and suggested that certain witnesses might lie. However, because
Bustamante made no objection to any of these statements we will
review only for plain error. United States v. Andrews, 22 F.3d
1328, 1341 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S.Ct. 346 (1994); United
States v. Bermea, 30 F.3d 1539, 1564 (5th Cir. 1994). To meet this
standard, Bustamante must prove:
(1) an error;
(2) that is obvious or "so conspicuous that 'the trial judge
and prosecutor were derelict in countenancing [it], even absent the
defendant's timely assistance in detecting [it],'" United States
v. Calverley, 37 F.3d 160, 163-64 (5th Cir. 1994) (en banc)
(quoting United States v. Frady, 456 U.S. 152 (1982)); and
(3) that affected the defendant's substantial rights, usually
by affecting the outcome of the proceeding, id. (citing United
States v. Olano, 113 S.Ct. 1770 (1993)).
In addition, we will correct a plain error affecting
substantial rights only if it "'seriously affect[ed] the fairness,
integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.'" Id.
(quoting United States v. Atkinson, 279 U.S. 157 (1936)). See also
United States v. Rodriguez, 15 F.3d 408, 414-15 (5th Cir. 1994).
We have carefully reviewed the above statements of which
Bustamante complains. Even if the district court abused its
discretion in allowing them, which we doubt, such error certainly
did not rise to the level of plain error.
B. Improper closing argument
Bustamante argues that, during its closing argument, the
24

government improperly suggested that Jaffe, Garcia and Heard were
guilty of criminal conduct and called attention to Bustamante's
decision not to call them as witnesses. However, as the government
points out, Bustamante's own counsel had already repeatedly
highlighted the fact that the government did not call these
witnesses. The district court overruled Bustamante's objection to
this argument. The district court did not err in permitting the
government to respond to Bustamante's own argument suggesting that
the jury draw unfavorable inferences from the government's failure
to call these witnesses.
C. Improper cross-examination of Bustamante
Bustamante first complains that the government suggested that
he had received other uncharged illegal gratuities by asking him
twice "You've never gotten anything from Doug Jaffe?" At trial,
Bustamante's attorney objected on the ground that the government
was trying to introduce evidence of extraneous bad acts prohibited
by Federal Rule of Evidence (FRE) 404(b). The government responded
that these inquiries were directly relevant to the Falcon bribe, in
addition to being fair impeachment questions. The district court
apparently agreed, but limited the government's questioning to
Jaffe's involvement in the $35,000 payment Bustamante received from
Garcia. Bustamante now argues that the question itself was
improper because it implied Bustamante had received other
gratuities from Jaffe. We disagree. The record leads us to
conclude that a reasonable jury would interpret this question as
referring to the gratuity with which Bustamante had been charged,
a matter which the government was entitled to explore.
25

Bustamante next complains that the government twice asked
questions intimating that Bustamante had done other improper things
in his past, then stated in the jury's presence that it had outside
evidence to support these questions. Bustamante contends that the
government thus gave unsworn testimony about his prior bad acts.
However, the record reveals that the government made these
statements after Bustamante's attorney suggested in front of the
jury that the government asked these questions in bad faith. In
this context, the government's statements were not improper. In
any event, these statements certainly do not amount to plain error,
which is the applicable standard given that Bustamante never
objected to them.
Bustamante also complains about two series of questions the
government asked regarding two other specific instances of
uncharged prior conduct: Bustamante's failure to report or pay
taxes on certain income, and Bustamante's solicitation of an
unrelated bribe in 1987. At trial, Bustamante objected that the
government was introducing FRE 404(b) evidence without first
disclosing it to the defense as required by a pretrial order. The
government correctly responded that, because it was using this
evidence to impeach Bustamante's credibility, FRE 404(b) did not
apply. United States v. Tomblin, No. 93-8679, 1994 WL 720034, at
*13 (5th Cir. Dec. 30, 1994). The district court allowed both
lines of questioning. Bustamante now contends that these questions
were highly prejudicial.
Bustamante's argument places the cart before the horse. We
assess the prejudicial quality of these questions only if we
26

conclude that they were improper. United States v. MMR Corp., 907
F.2d 489, 501 (5th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 499 U.S. 936 (1991).
They were not. FRE 608(b) allows the government to inquire into
specific instances of conduct relevant to Bustamante's character
for truthfulness. Both the failure to report income and the
solicitation of bribes are relevant to the issue of honesty. E.g.,
Tomblin at *13. The record reveals that, prior to embarking on
each series of questions, the government informed the district
court of the factual support for its inquiries, thus establishing
a good faith basis for its questions. We conclude that the
district court did not err in permitting these questions.
Lastly, Bustamante asserts that the government commented on
his assertion of his fifth amendment rights before the grand jury.
At the start of his direct examination, Bustamante stated "I've
been waiting a long time for this day to come." On cross-
examination, the government asked "You were given an opportunity to
come in and tell the government your version [of the facts],
weren't you?" and "I sent your attorney a letter inviting you to
come in to the grand jury and tell your story under oath, at that
time, didn't I?" The district court sustained Bustamante's
objections to both questions.
On appeal, the government argues that these questions were
properly designed to impeach Bustamante's earlier testimony. We
disagree. The rule is well established that a witness generally
may not be cross-examined about her choice to invoke the fifth
amendment privilege in grand jury proceedings. United States v.
Robichaux, 995 F.2d 565, 568 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S.Ct.
27

322 (1993). We need not consider the relationship between this
rule and the government's right to impeach a witness, because in
Bustamante's case the government was not fairly impeaching his
earlier statement. Bustamante's general introductory remark that
he had been waiting a long time for his trial date to arrive cannot
be interpreted as a complaint that he had never before had a chance
to speak to the government or the grand jury. The government's
remarks were thus improper.
This, however, is not the end of the inquiry. We will only
find reversible error if the government's improper comments cast
serious doubt on the jury's verdict. United States v. Rocha, 916
F.2d 219, 234 (5th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 500 U.S. 934 (1991).
In making this evaluation, we consider (1) the likelihood and
degree that the jury was prejudiced by the remarks; (2) the
effectiveness of any cautionary instructions given by the court;
and (3) the strength of the legitimate evidence of the defendant's
guilt. Id.; Andrews, 22 F.3d at 1341. In assessing prejudice, we
consider several factors, including whether defense counsel
objected to the improper remark, asked the court for a curative
instruction or moved for a mistrial on the ground of the
misconduct. United States v. Wright-Barker, 784 F.2d 161, 175 (5th
Cir. 1986). We consider the error in the overall context in which
it occurred. See Bermea, 30 F.3d at 1564.
For a number of reasons, we conclude that these statements do
not cast the jury's verdict into serious doubt. First, they were
brief and the court sustained Bustamante's objections. Second, the
court instructed the jury to disregard any questions or answers
28

that it ruled improper. Third, counsel did not move for a mistrial
or a curative instruction. Finally, the government's proof of
guilt was strong. In the context of this three-week trial we are
satisfied that these brief remarks did not prejudice Bustamante's
substantial rights.8
VI. Brady Review
Bustamante asks this
court to review the transcripts of the grand jury proceedings for
exculpatory evidence that the government should have disclosed.
Before trial, the district court reviewed these transcripts in
camera and concluded that they contained no Brady evidence.
Without arguing that the district court erred, Bustamante asks this
Court to conduct its own review of the transcripts. However, we
decline to scour the grand jury record without some showing either
that the district court failed to identify Brady material or that
the government failed to disclose it. Jones v. Butler, 864 F.2d
348, 356 (5th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1075 (1989) (after
district court holds in camera hearing, we will ordinarily not go
beyond court's finding that records contain no Brady material).
See also United States v. Register, 496 F.2d 1072, 1081 (5th Cir.
8Bustamante identifies several other questions as improper.
First, he complains that, in its cross-examination of Laurence
Macon, the government asked questions designed to inform the jury
of evidence that the trial court had previously excluded.
Second, he complains that, during Rebecca Bustamante's cross-
examination, the government insinuated that Bustamante had used
his official influence to advance Mrs. Bustamante's career.
Lastly, he complains that the government attempted to elicit
testimony about Bustamante's bad character from another defense
witness. At trial, Bustamante's attorney objected to each of
these remarks and the court sustained each objection. Counsel
asked for neither curative instruction nor a mistrial. We are
not persuaded that these isolated questions prejudiced
Bustamante's substantial rights.
29

1974), cert. denied, 419 U.S. 1120 (1975).
VII. Sentencing
Bustamante argues that the sentence for his RICO conviction
was impermissibly enhanced by double counting. The district court
determined Bustamante's base offense level of 19 from the RICO
sentencing guideline, U.S.S.G. § 2E1.1, then increased that level
by two for Bustamante's abuse of a position of public trust, under
§ 3B1.3. Bustamante argues that, because his congressional office
was already used to satisfy the RICO enterprise element, the
district court could not also properly enhance his sentence for
abusing that office. This argument is meritless.
We agree with the analysis of the Seventh Circuit in United
States v. Ford, 21 F.2d 759 (7th Cir. 1994). In Ford, the court
held:
The crime of racketeering, [unlike simple bribery], does not
in all cases entail an abuse of trust, so that the minimum
base offense level of 19 already established for all RICO
offenses does not already incorporate that element. Instead,
the Sentencing Commission has determined that all RICO
offenses merit a minimum offense level of 19, and those RICO
offenses that entail an abuse of trust must, under the logic
of the Guidelines, be distinguished on the basis of that
additional element by receiving the two-level enhancement.
Id. at 766. See also United States v. Butt, 955 F.2d 77, 89 (1st
Cir. 1992).9 The district court did not err in arriving at its
sentence.
9The RICO sentencing guideline allows a sentencing court to
derive the base offense level either from the RICO guideline or
by using the offense level from the underlying racketeering acts.
In Bustamante's case, the district court used the base offense
level specified by the RICO sentencing guideline. We do not
address whether our decision would be different had the court
taken the base offense level from the underlying bribery and
gratuity offenses, §§ 2C1.1 and 2C1.2, which do not allow the
abuse of public trust enhancement.
30

VIII.
For the reasons stated above, Bustamante's conviction and
sentence are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
31

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