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Before WIENER, SOUTHWICK, and COSTA, Circuit Judges. WIENER, Circuit Judge:Defendant-Appellant Michael Baker was the Chief Executive Officer of ArthroCare, a publicly traded medical-device company. Baker, along with the company’s other senior executives, engaged in a “channel-stuffing” scheme that involved sending excess products to a distributor that did not need those products. ArthroCare reported those shipments as legitimate sales, which inflated the company’s revenue numbers in its financial reports. Baker hid this scheme from ArthroCare’s board and auditors, and he made false statements to the SEC and to investors about the company’s business model and relationships with its distributors. When it was uncovered that the statements were false and that some of these sales were not legitimate, ArthroCare restated its earnings and revenues, causing its stock price to drop.This is the second time Baker has been convicted. He was first convicted in 2014, but this court vacated that conviction based on erroneous evidentiary rulings. At the second trial, after seven days of testimony—including from the other ArthroCare executives involved in the scheme—a jury convicted Baker on charges of wire fraud, securities fraud, making false statements to the SEC, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud.Baker appealed, raising challenges to the district court’s evidentiary rulings and jury instructions. Finding no reversible error, we AFFIRM.I. Facts and ProceedingsA. Factual BackgroundMichael Baker was the CEO of ArthroCare, a publicly traded medical- device company based in Austin, Texas. ArthroCare’s products used a technology that allowed doctors to cut, seal, and remove tissue at a low temperature and in a minimally invasive manner. ArthroCare sold its products to hospitals and surgery centers through sales representatives, sales agents, and, relevant here, distributors. As CEO, Baker was involved in ArthroCare’s day-to-day operations. He worked closely with other senior executives, including Michael Gluk, the Chief Financial Officer, John Raffle, the Senior Vice President of Operations, David Applegate, the Vice President of the “spine division,” and Steve Oliver, the Senior Director of Financial Planning.[1]Baker set growth targets for the company and oversaw a “channel- stuffing” operation to inflate ArthroCare’s revenue numbers. Baker, as well as Gluk, Raffle, and Applegate, hid the fraudulent nature of this operation from ArthroCare’s board of directors, audit committee, and auditors. They also made false statements to investors about the company’s revenue projections and relationships with its distributors. When all this was uncovered, ArthroCare restated its past earnings and revenue, causing its stock price to drop and its investors to sustain significant losses.This court previously described the basic structure of the channel- stuffing scheme between ArthroCare and one of its distributors, DiscoCare; Baker’s false statements to investors about that relationship; and how the fraud was uncovered:“Channel stuffing” is a fraudulent scheme companies sometimes attempt, in an effort to smooth out uneven earnings— typically to meet Wall Street earnings expectations. Specifically, a company that anticipates missing its earnings goals will agree to sell products to a coconspirator. The company will book those sales as revenue for the current quarter, increasing reported earnings. In the following quarter, the coconspirator returns the products, decreasing the company’s reported earnings in that quarter. Effectively, the company fraudulently “borrows” earnings from the future quarter to meet earnings expectations in the present. Thus, in the second quarter, the company must have enough genuine revenue to make up for the “borrowed” earnings and to meet that quarter’s earnings expectations. If the company does not meet expectations in the second quarter, it might “borrow” ever-larger amounts of money from future quarters, until the amounts become so large that they can no longer be hidden and the fraud is revealed.ArthroCare carried out exactly this fraud, with DiscoCare playing the role of coconspirator. Over several years, ArthroCare fraudulently “borrowed” around $26 million from DiscoCare. This “borrowing” occurred by directing DiscoCare to buy products from ArthroCare on credit, with the agreement that ArthroCare would be paid only when DiscoCare could sell those products. Although this can be a legitimate sales strategy, it was fraudulent here because DiscoCare purchased medical devices that it knew it could not sell reasonably soon for the sole purpose of propping up ArthroCare’s quarterly earnings. This fraud was carried out under the day-to-day supervision of John Raffle, the Vice President of Strategic Business Units, and of David Applegate, another [ArthroCare] executive.DiscoCare’s business model (apart from the accounting fraud) was potentially wrongful, though no charges were brought. DiscoCare provided a medical device for which most insurers refused reimbursement. To sell its device, DiscoCare reached agreements with plaintiffs’ attorneys in civil actions for personal injuries. These agreements resulted in the majority of DiscoCare’s sales. Under this agreement, DiscoCare would treat clients of the attorneys. The plaintiffs’ attorneys would then cite the expense of their clients’ treatment as a reason for defendants to settle personal injury lawsuits. DiscoCare also allegedly illegally coached doctors on which billing codes to use, in an effort to increase insurance reimbursements. This practice allegedly went as far as instructing doctors to perform an unnecessary surgical incision to classify the treatment as a surgery. No charges were filed on any of this conduct.ArthroCare subsequently purchased DiscoCare for $25 million, a price that far exceeded its true value (DiscoCare had no employees at the time). During this purchase, the fraud began to unravel, with media reports alleging accounting improprieties. To reassure investors, Gluk and Baker made several false statements during a series of conference calls. As evidence mounted, the audit committee of ArthroCare’s board of directors commissioned an independent investigation by forensic accountants and the law firm Latham & Watkins. As a result of this investigation, the board determined that Raffle and Applegate had committed fraud and that Gluk and Baker had not adequately supervised them. The board restated earnings, resulting in a significant drop in the value of ArthroCare stock. The board fired Raffle and Applegate for their roles in the fraud. The board also fired Gluk, determining that he had been remiss in not detecting the fraud earlier. Finally, theboard fired Baker, determining that he should have implemented better internal controls.[2]After the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) investigated, a grand jury indicted Baker and Gluk on charges for wire fraud, securities fraud, making false statements to the SEC, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud.B. Procedural BackgroundBaker has been convicted twice for his conduct relating to the fraud at ArthroCare. At the first trial in June 2014, a jury convicted Baker and Gluk on all counts. On appeal, this court vacated Baker’s and Gluk’s convictions on evidentiary grounds and remanded for a new trial.[3]On remand, Gluk admitted that he had participated in the fraud, agreed to cooperate and testify against Baker, and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud. The government retried Baker, this time with Gluk as a witness. The facts established at the second trial largely track the facts in the first trial, as this court set them out in the previous appeal.[4] The government put on thirteen witnesses, including: Gluk,[5] Raffle,[6]Applegate,[7] Oliver,[8] ArthroCare’s Chief Medical Officer and Audit Committee chairman, and several analysts and investors who testified to their reliance on Baker’s statements.At trial, Baker’s counsel conceded that a fraud had occurred at ArthroCare, but the defense was that Gluk, Raffle, and Applegate had orchestrated it without Baker’s knowledge. Baker’s counsel attempted to show that although Baker was generally aware of the nature of DiscoCare’s business, he did not have specific knowledge about the fraudulent details, or he learned about them too late. Baker’s counsel also sought to undermine Gluk’s, Raffle’s, and Applegate’s credibility based on their plea deals with the government and their own participation in the DiscoCare scheme. Baker did not testify or present witnesses, but his counsel did introduce exhibits, including the SEC memoranda that this court had held were admissible.The jury convicted Baker on twelve counts and acquitted him on two of the wire fraud counts and one false statement count. The trial court then (1) sentenced him to a 240-month term of imprisonment and five years of supervised release; (2) imposed a $1 million fine; and (3) ordered that he forfeit $12.7 million.Baker timely appealed.II. AnalysisBaker challenges his conviction on four grounds. First, he contends that the FBI case agent’s testimony was improper “summary witness” testimony. second, he asserts that the district court should have admitted the sEC deposition testimony of Brian simmons, ArthroCare’s former controller who invoked the Fifth Amendment and did not testify at Baker’s trial. Third, he challenges the district court’s jury instruction on wire fraud, insisting that it did not require the government to prove the “obtain money or property” element of that offense. Finally, he maintains that the district court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on “advance knowledge” for accomplice liability under Rosemond v. United States, 134 S. Ct. 1240 (2014). We address each issue in turn.A. Summary Witness Testimony1. BackgroundFBI Special Agent Steven Callender was the case agent. He reviewed many of the documents admitted into evidence and testified at trial. Baker contends that Agent Callender’s testimony was impermissible “summary witness” testimony.Baker objected at trial to Agent Callender’s testimony. The district court overruled his objection and allowed Agent Callender to testify, but stated that its ruling did not stop Baker’s counsel “from making an objection if [the testimony] gets into substantive evidence. If he’s just talking about his research of documents, that’s tangible, then he can go into the summary. But if he gets into any other testimony, feel free to object.”When the prosecutor asked Agent Callender to explain his summary charts setting out the exhibits that corresponded to each count in the indictment, Baker’s counsel objected to the witness “being asked whether or not these are the exhibits that correspond to those counts in the indictment.” The district court overruled that objection, stating “I think this is a very complicated case.” The court then gave the jury a limiting instruction about the use of demonstratives and summary witnesses:[L]et me remind you, a demonstrative evidence is really not evidence. When he moves to introduce it, he’s just giving notice that he’s got a [sic] demonstrative evidence. If we had a great big blackboard or bulletin board while he presents a witness, he could have the witness — or he can draw on it with regard to the witness’ testimony. So this is not evidence. It is merely an illustration because they’re going to use this FBI agent as a summary witness, and you’ll give it whatever substance that you think it deserves, if any.Agent Callender then testified. His testimony consisted primarily of reading and explaining (1) exhibits that had already been admitted at the trial and (2) new exhibits that were being admitted through his testimony. The exhibits he testified about included audio clips, transcripts of conference calls, documents showing ArthroCare’s organizational charts, board presentations, payroll information, emails between Baker and other executives, and SEC filings.2. AnalysisWe review “the admission of evidence, including summaries and summary testimony, for abuse of discretion.”[9] “If there is error, it is ‘excused unless it had a substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.’”[10]We “allow[] summary witness testimony in ‘limited circumstances’ in complex cases,” but have “repeatedly warned of its dangers.”[11] “While such witnesses may be appropriate for summarizing voluminous records, as contemplated by Rule 1006, rebuttal testimony by an advocate summarizing and organizing the case for the jury constitutes a very different phenomenon, not justified by the Federal Rules of Evidence or our precedent.”[12] “In particular, ‘summary witnesses are not to be used as a substitute for, or a supplement to, closing argument.’”[13]“To minimize the danger of abuse, summary testimony ‘must have an adequate foundation in evidence that is already admitted, and should be accompanied by a cautionary jury instruction.’”[14] “Moreover, ‘[f]ull cross- examination and admonitions to the jury minimize the risk of prejudice.’”[15] Summary Witnesses in General Baker claims that, in general, summary witness testimony is inadmissible. He argues that summary witnesses lack personal knowledge of the matter to which they are testifying, so Rule 602 of the Federal Rules of Evidence prohibits that type of testimony. He also contends that, because Rule 1006, which governs summaries, is located within Article X of the Rules that govern “writings and recordings”—and not “witnesses”—Rule 1006 does not allow live summary witnesses.Regrettably, Baker does not cite United States v. Armstrong, the key Fifth Circuit case that refutes these arguments. Contrary to Baker’s contention that summary witnesses are inadmissible, this circuit expressly allows summary witnesses to summarize voluminous records in complex cases.[16] Agent Callender’s Testimony The next issue is whether Agent Callender’s testimony permissibly summarized the voluminous evidence, or impermissibly “organiz[ed] the case for the jury” or served as a “substitute” for closing argument.[17]Baker contends that Agent Callender’s testimony was “wholly argumentative,” drew inferences for the jury, and impermissibly summarized the prosecutor’s closing argument. Baker flags several parts of Agent Callender’s testimony as objectionable: (1) Agent Callender read an email in which Raffle indicates that Baker had approved adding DiscoCare employees to the ArthroCare payroll; (2) the prosecutor asked Agent Callender whether a letter in an employee’s file was “consistent or inconsistent” with ArthroCare’s organizational charts; (3) testimony about a conference call at which Gluk discussed a “small success fee” paid to DiscoCare and subsequent emails showing a related $10 million payment to DiscoCare; (4) Agent Callender’s discussion of emails that Baker had sent to himself containing his monthly stock portfolio; and (5) Agent Callender’s testimony about particular exhibits that corresponded to the counts listed on a demonstrative chart. Baker describes this testimony as “highlighting] key pieces of prosecution evidence,” “walk[ing] through the charges count by count,” and “indistinguishable from a closing argument.”The government counters that most of Agent Callender’s testimony was not “summary witness” testimony, but rather was about exhibits that were being admitted during his testimony. The government also argues that the large number of documents and the complexity of the case justified the use of a summary witness.When Agent Callender began testifying, the government introduced twenty-one new exhibits, each of which was admitted. Much of his testimony consisted of reading the contents of those exhibits aloud. Baker’s specific objections are primarily to the parts of Agent Callender’s testimony that introduced those new exhibits. But, this type of testimony is not summary testimony.[18]In contrast, Agent Callender’s testimony that tied specific, already- admitted exhibits to the substantive indictment counts listed on a demonstrative chart is summary testimony. Such testimony is permissible in complex cases with voluminous evidence. Contrary to Baker’s contention that this was not a complex case, channel stuffing is a relatively complicated type of fraud. The jury heard seven days of testimony; there were 15 charges; and the district court stated that it was “a very complicated case.” The evidence was also voluminous. The government introduced 193 exhibits and Baker introduced 87. Agent Callender gave a “rough estimate” that the investigation involved “between three and seven million” documents.A review of the testimony shows that, although Agent Callender highlighted some key pieces of evidence, the testimony did not draw inferences for the jury, was not “wholly argumentative,” and did not serve as a substitute for closing argument.[19] Rather, the testimony consisted of reading the contents of exhibits and sorting through the evidence to show how the documents related to each other and to the charges in the indictment.[20] This type of testimony is different from the testimony that this circuit has excluded, such as allowing a case agent “to recap a significant portion of the testimony already introduced by the Government” during a rebuttal case,[21] putting on a summary witness “before there [was] any evidence admitted for the witness to summarize,”[22] or using a summary witness to “merely [] repeat or paraphrase the in-court testimony of another as to ordinary, observable facts . . . .”[23] We conclude that Agent Callender’s testimony was permissible.To the extent that Agent Callender’s testimony went too far, all three curatives were present: (1) the testimony had an adequate foundation in the evidence already admitted; (2) the district court gave the jury a limiting instruction about summary evidence generally; and (3) Baker’s counsel cross- examined Agent Callender.[24] These minimized the risk of prejudice, so any error was harmless.[25]B. Brian Simmons’s SEC Deposition TestimonyIn 2010, the SEC deposed Brian Simmons, ArthroCare’s former controller, in its civil investigation of the company. At the first trial, Baker sought to subpoena Simmons, but Simmons refused to testify, asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Baker and Gluk sought to admit Simmons’s SEC deposition testimony under Rule 804(b)(1). In a written order, the district court excluded the testimony.At the second trial, after Raffle, Applegate, and Gluk testified that Simmons had participated in the fraud at ArthroCare,[26] Baker again subpoenaed Simmons. But Simmons refused to testify on Fifth Amendment grounds, and Baker again sought to admit excerpts of Simmons’s SEC deposition testimony. Baker proffered excerpts of that testimony, in which Simmons (1) denied wrongdoing and awareness of improper activities at ArthroCare and (2) stated that ArthroCare’s audit committee and outside auditor, PricewaterhouseCoopers, were aware of a “bill-and-hold” practice for ArthroCare’s sales to DiscoCare. The district court, referencing its order in the first trial, again excluded the testimony.Rule 804(b)(1) provides exceptions to the rule against hearsay for “former testimony” of witnesses who are unavailable. It provides:(b) . . .(1) Former Testimony. Testimony that: was given as a witness at a trial, hearing, or lawful deposition, whether given during the current proceeding or a different one; and is now offered against a party who had – or, in a civil case, whose predecessor in interest had – an opportunity and similar motive to develop it by direct, cross-, or redirect examination.[27] Simmons’s deposition testimony contains hearsay and his invocation of the Fifth Amendment made him unavailable.[28] The issues therefore are (1) whether the DOJ and the SEC are the “same party” or “predecessors in interest,” and (2) if so, whether the sEC, in its civil investigation of ArthroCare, had both the opportunity and a similar motive to the DOJ in developing Simmons’s testimony.We review the district court’s exclusion of the testimony for abuse of discretion.[29] We conclude that the SEC and the DOJ were not the same party for 804(b) purposes under these circumstances. But even if the agencies were the same party, they did not have sufficiently similar motives in developing Simmons’s testimony.1. Same PartyThis court has not decided whether the SEC and the DOJ are the same party for 804(b) purposes.[30] The case law on this issue is limited, and no court has expressly held that the SEC and the DOJ are the same party.[31] Courts sometimes proceed directly to the “similar motive” inquiry.[32]Baker contends that the two agencies are the same party because they are both Executive Branch agencies. He relies primarily on United States v. Sklena, 692 F.3d 725, 730-32 (7th Cir. 2012), which held that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) and the DOJ were the same party for 804(b) purposes. He also relies on Boone v. Kurtz, 617 F.2d 435, 436 (5th Cir. 1980), in which we held that different government agencies were the same party for res judicata purposes.In response, the government cites United States v. Martoma, 12-Cr. 973, 2014 WL 5361977, at *3-5 & n.5 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 8, 2014), in which the district court considered whether an unavailable coconspirator’s prior SEC deposition was admissible at a later criminal trial. The Martoma court held that the SEC and DOJ were not the same party for 804(b) purposes.[33]In Sklena, the Seventh Circuit relied on the significant control that the DOJ exercised over the CFTC, including the CFTC’s statutory mandate to report to the DOJ.[34] The court reasoned that the “statutory control mechanism suggests to us that, had the Department wished, it could have ensured that the CFTC lawyers included questions of interest to the United States when they deposed [the non-testifying codefendant].”[35] The court’s holding also relied on the agencies’ “closely coordinated roles on behalf of the United States in the overall enforcement of a single statutory scheme.”[36] The Sklena court concluded that “[fjunctionally, the United States is acting in the present case through both its attorneys in the Department and one of its agencies, and we find this to be enough to satisfy the 'same party' requirement of Rule 804(b)(1)."[37]Here, the district court determined that the SEC and the DOJ were not the same party because the SEC conducted an independent investigation of ArthroCare and its employees and independently pursued its own criminal and civil actions. On appeal, Baker disagrees with that conclusion. He points to several emails between prosecutors and SEC investigators describing telephone calls, meetings, and “working together.” According to Baker, these show that the SEC “was functionally working as part of the prosecution team.”In response, the government points out that (1) the SEC did not participate in any interviews conducted by the DOJ; (2) the DOJ was not present at any of the SEC’s depositions; (3) an SEC attorney was not cross- designated or assigned to the prosecution team; and (4) the DOJ did not provide the SEC with materials from its investigation. In an order denying the designation of the SEC as part of the prosecution team at the first trial, the district court concluded that “[wjhile the SEC provided some material to the Government---which the Government, in turn, has provided to Defendants--- the SEC's investigation pre-dated and was independent from the Government's investigation, and there was no overlap of personnel or direction." The government also notes that when the DOJ formally requested information from the SEC, the SEC faced restrictions responding to that request and limited the information it provided to the DOJ.Although there was some cooperation between the two agencies, it was not extensive enough for the SEC and the DOJ to be deemed the same party. Baker's contention that the SEC and the DOJ coordinated closely is undermined by (1) the telephone calls and meetings Baker cites occurred after Simmons's February 2010 deposition and (2) the district court's specific findings that the SEC had been uncooperative and limited the information it provided to the DOJ.Sklena does not mandate a different result. Unlike the CFTC, the SEC is not statutorily required to report to the DOJ, nor must the two agencies cooperate to enforce the same statutory scheme. The SEC is an independent agency with its own litigating authority.[38]2. Opportunity and Similar MotiveEven if the SEC and the DOJ were deemed to be the same party, they did not share a sufficiently similar motive in developing Simmons’s testimony. When, as here, testimony in a prior civil proceeding is being offered against the government in a subsequent criminal proceeding, this court considers “(1) the type of proceeding in which the testimony is given, (2) trial strategy, (3) the potential penalties or financial stakes, and (4) the number of issues and parties.”[39]At the first trial, the district court excluded the testimony, ruling that the SEC and the DOJ did not have sufficiently similar motives. At the second trial, the district court referenced its previous order and again excluded Simmons’s testimony. The court added that there was “no question” that Simmons was “involved in a conspiracy if there was a conspiracy,” and that he would have had “to be deaf, blind and dumb in his position not to see it.” The court concluded that (1) “the SEC ha[d] been totally noncooperative in this criminal case from the beginning, declined to share any information to the Department of Justice [or] counsel in this case for the defense” and would not “provide its investigators to cooperate in any way”; (2) The SEC’s civil investigation of ArthroCare was “totally different from a criminal trial”; and (3) the court’s review of the SEC deposition testimony showed no “basis for any cross-examination.”Even if we assumed that the SEC and the DOJ are the same party, the agencies did not have sufficiently similar motives. First, the stakes and burdens of proof were different: The SEC was in the discovery phase in relation to potential civil enforcement actions, whereas the DOJ was investigating for potential criminal involvement after a grand jury indictment. Second, the focuses and motivations of the investigations were different: The SEC was likely developing a factual background regarding wrongdoing at the company generally, whereas the DOJ would have been gathering evidence to convict specific individuals.[40] Third, the lack of cross-examination shows the agencies’ different trial strategies: The SEC deposition excerpts show no sign of cross- examination or additional follow-up questions after Simmons denied his involvement and that he had any conversations with Baker. In contrast, for the reasons we have already explained, the agencies were not coordinating their activity to a degree that would have led the SEC lawyer to cross-examine Simmons like a criminal prosecutor would have.[41]The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding Simmons’s deposition testimony.C. The “Obtain Money or Property” Element of Wire FraudBaker next contends that the term “obtain money or property” in the wire fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1343, requires the government to plead and prove that Baker “intended to obtain money or property from deceived investors.” This challenge to the jury instructions presents a question of statutory interpretation, so we review it de novo.[42] We also review de novo Baker’s contention that the indictment did not charge the elements of the offense.[43]Baker asked for a jury instruction defining a “scheme to defraud” as one “intended to obtain money or property from the victim by fraudulent means,” and requiring that the defendant intended to “acquire[] some money or property that the victim gives up.” The district court denied that request. Instead, the district court’s jury instructions on wire fraud required, in relevant part:That the defendant knowingly devised, or intended to devise, any scheme to defraud, that is to deceive investors about ArthroCare Corporation’s financial condition[.]….A “scheme to defraud” means any plan, pattern, or course of action intended to deprive another of money or property, or bring about some financial gain to the person engaged in the scheme.After the jury convicted Baker, he moved for a judgment of acquittal. He reasserted his objection to the definition of a “scheme to defraud,” focusing on the “or bring about some financial gain to the person engaged in the scheme” language. The district court denied the motion, concluding that “the focus” of a scheme to defraud is on “depriving the victim of property for some benefit” and that there is “no requirement that a defendant must directly gain or possess [the victim's] property.” The court explained that “substantial evidence was presented to show the misleading and fraudulent statements made by Baker induced investment in ArthroCare,” and that “a rational trier of fact could have found the goal of the scheme . . . was to deprive investors of money they otherwise would have possessed.”On appeal, Baker challenges this instruction on two grounds. First, he contends that the wire fraud statute imposes a “mirror image” requirement. For support, he relies on the Supreme Court’s decision in Skilling v. United States, which states that under “traditional” fraud, “the victim’s loss of money or property supplied the defendant’s gain, with one the mirror image of the other.’”[44]Although Baker describes that statement from Skilling as its holding, a review of the case proves otherwise. In context, the Court was comparing “traditional” fraud with honest-services fraud:Unlike fraud in which the victim’s loss of money or property supplied the defendant’s gain, with one the mirror image of the other, . . . the honest-services theory targeted corruption that lacked similar symmetry. While the offender profited, the betrayed party suffered no deprivation of money or property; instead, a third party, who had not been deceived, provided the enrichment.[45]Skilling did not impose a “mirror image” requirement for wire fraud. As the district court explained, “Skilling merely commented that traditional fraud features a bilateral relationship—one between the offender and the victim— while the honest-services theory concerns a trilateral relationship between bribe-giver, bribe-recipient, and betrayed party. . . . Skilling did not interpret wire fraud or securities fraud to require proof the defendant sought to personally acquire money or property from the victim.” Moreover, no court has held that a “mirror image” transaction is necessary.[46]Baker next points to the language of § 1343, which provides:Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, . . . transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, . . . any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined . . . or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.[47]Baker compares the statute’s “obtaining money or property” language with the jury instruction’s definition of a “scheme to defraud” that required that the scheme intended to “bring about some financial gain to the person engaged in the scheme.” According to Baker, the instruction did not require the government to prove that he intended to obtain property from a victim, but instead allowed for a conviction based on a scheme that was only intended to bring about a financial gain to Baker.Baker relies on Sekhar v. United States, a case interpreting the Hobbs Act, which held that “a defendant must pursue something of value from the victim that can be exercised, transferred, or sold . . . .”[48] However, “[u]nlike the mail fraud statute, the Hobbs Act expressly requires the Government to prove that the defendant ‘obtain[ed] property from another.’”[49]He also relies on United States v. Honeycutt, a case interpreting the federal forfeiture statute, which held that a defendant may not “be held jointly and severally liable for property that his co-conspirator derived from a crime but that the defendant himself did not acquire.”[50] But Honeycutt did not consider the wire fraud statute and therefore did not broaden the Court’s interpretation of that offense.[51]Section 1343 does not require an intent to obtain property directly from a victim. In United States v. Hedaithy, the Third Circuit considered a similar assertion. There, the defendants argued that a scheme must be “designed to actually ‘obtain’ the victim’s property.” The court rejected that argument on several grounds:We reject [that argument], primarily because it is inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in Carpenter [v. United States, 484 U.S. 19 (1987)]. Although the defendants in Carpenter clearly “obtained” the Journal’s confidential business information, this was not the conduct, according to the Court, that constituted the mail fraud violation. Rather, the conduct on which the Court focused was the act of fraudulently depriving the Journal of the exclusive use of its information.Furthermore, Defendants’ argument misconstrues the language of other relevant decisions. For example, they rely upon the Supreme Court’s statement in Cleveland [v. United States] that “[i]t does not suffice, we clarify, that the object of the fraud may become property in the recipient’s hands; for purposes of the mail fraud statute, the thing obtained must be property in the hands of the victim.” [531 U.S. 12, 15 (2000)]. The context in which this statement was written, however, clarifies that the Court was not setting out a requirement that a mail fraud scheme must be designed to “obtain” property. Rather, this language reflects the Court’s conclusion that a victim has been defrauded of “property,” within the meaning of the mail fraud statute, only if that which the victim was defrauded of is something that constitutes “property” in the hands of the victim.Defendants also insist that their interpretation of the mail fraud statute is supported by the Supreme Court’s holdings, in McNally and Cleveland, that § 1341′s second clause—”or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent promises”—”simply modifies” the first clause—”any scheme or artifice to defraud.” McNally, 483 U.S. at 359, 107 S. Ct. 2875; Cleveland, 531 U.S. at 26, 121 S. Ct. 365. Defendants construe this language as meaning that any violation of the mail fraud statute must involve a scheme for obtaining the victim’s property. We do not read McNally or Cleveland as providing any such requirement. . . . In neither case, . . . did the Court hold that a mail fraud violation requires that the second clause of § 1341 be satisfied.[52]In addition to the Third Circuit’s persuasive rejection of the argument that Baker advances, this court, in United States v. McMillan, held that an indictment sufficiently charged mail fraud in the context of a scheme to “defraud the victim insofar as victims were left without money that they otherwise would have possessed.”[53] This court also explained that the “issue is whether the victims’ property rights were affected by the misrepresentations.”[54]The jury instructions here allowed for a conviction if Baker intended to deceive the victims out of their money for his own financial benefit. The evidence at trial showed that Baker did just that: (1) He made false statements to investors and potential investors to induce them to hold onto or buy ArthroCare stock; (2) he knew the statements did not accurately reflect ArthroCare’s business model or revenue projections; and (3) the scheme was intended to benefit Baker via bonuses and appreciation of his own stock options. By inducing investments in ArthroCare, the scheme affected the victims’ property rights by wrongfully leaving them “without money that they otherwise would have possessed.”[55]The jury instructions were not erroneous.D. “Advance Knowledge” for Accomplice LiabilityBaker challenges the jury instructions on accomplice liability as lacking an express “advance knowledge” instruction. Baker preserved this objection.[56] Because this challenge to the jury instruction is based on statutory interpretation, we review it de novo.[57]Baker was charged as both a principal and an aider or abettor under 18 U.S.C. § 2 for the wire and securities fraud charges. The district court’s jury instructions on “Aiding and Abetting (Agency)” included some general language about accomplice liability, then stated:You must be convinced that the Government has proved each of the following beyond a reasonable doubt:First: That the offenses alleged in Counts Two through Twelve were committed by some person;Second: That the defendant associated with the criminal venture;Third: That the defendant purposefully participated in the criminal venture; andFourth: That the defendant sought by action to make that venture successful.“To associate with the criminal venture” means that the defendant shared the criminal intent of the principal. This element cannot be established if the defendant had no knowledge of the principal’s criminal venture.No. 17-51034“To participate in the criminal venture” means that the defendant engaged in some affirmative conduct designed to aid the venture or assist the principal of the crime.This instruction tracked the Fifth Circuit Pattern Instruction on accomplice liability.[58] The Note to that section of the Pattern Instructions implicitly limits the “advance knowledge” instruction to prosecutions for “aiding and abetting a § 924(c) offense—using or carrying a firearm when involved in a crime of violence or drug trafficking offense . . . .”[59]In Rosemond, the Supreme Court interpreted the federal accomplice liability statute, 18 U.S.C. § 2, as it applies to 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), which prohibits “us[ing] or carr[ying]” a firearm “ during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime.” The Court held that “the Government makes its case by proving that the defendant actively participated in the underlying drug trafficking or violent crime with advance knowledge that a confederate would use or carry a gun during the crime’s commission.”[60] The jury instructions there were erroneous “because they failed to require that the defendant knew in advance that one of his cohorts would be armed.”[61]The issue here is whether an express “advance knowledge” instruction on accomplice liability is necessary for all offenses or instead applies only to accomplice liability for § 924(c) or similar “combination” offenses.This circuit has not decided the broader issue, though we did recently describe Rosemond as “address[ing] the application of the aiding and abetting statute when the underlying crime of conviction is ‘compound’ in nature.”[62] This court applied Rosemond to the defendant’s conviction as an accomplice to aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A, which criminalizes (1) the unlawful use of identification of another (2) during and in relation to the commission of a predicate offense.[63] The conviction was affirmed because “the jury could have reasonably inferred that” the defendant had advance knowledge that the “scheme involved the unauthorized use of the identities of real people and the ability to walk away from the scheme.”[64]There is disagreement among the circuits that have decided this issue. The Eleventh Circuit, in an unpublished opinion, declined to apply Rosemond in the context of accomplice liability for possession of marijuana.[65] That court explained that Rosemonds holding did not apply “beyond aiding or abetting § 924(c) offenses.”[66]Baker pushes against these holdings, citing United States v. Encarnacion-Ruiz, a case in which the First Circuit explained that Rosemonds “general principle”—that an aider and abettor must “participate[ ] in a criminal scheme knowing its extent and character”—”is not limited to double- barreled crimes.”[67] Baker also cites other out-of-circuit cases applying Rosemond to non-924(c) offenses.[68] Finally, he refers to the pattern jury instructions on accomplice liability from the First, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits that incorporate a generalized “advance knowledge” instruction.[69]We hold that an express “advance knowledge” instruction is necessary only for “combination offenses.” In Rosemond, the Supreme Court limited its reasoning to combination offenses: “The questions that the parties dispute, and we here address, concern how those two requirements—affirmative act and intent—apply in a prosecution for aiding and abetting a § 924(c) offense. Those questions arise from the compound nature of that provision.”[70] The Court explained that § 924(c) is a freestanding offense that “is, to coin a term, a combination crime. It punishes the temporal and relational conjunction of two separate acts, on the ground that together they pose an extreme risk of harm. . . . And so, an act relating to drugs, just as much as an act relating to guns, facilitates a § 924(c) violation.”[71] Given the Court’s concern about the combination of two types of advance knowledge—of both drug dealing and the use of a gun—Rosemonds need for a special instruction only arises for similar combination offenses.This court’s application of Rosemond in Carbins confirms that interpretation. [72] And the Eleventh Circuit’s reasoning limiting Rosemond to § 924(c) offenses, although narrower than the “combination offense” approach we adopt, also supports our view.[73]Wire fraud is not a combination offense. Unlike § 924(c) and § 1028A (the aggravated identity theft statute considered in Carbins), § 1343 includes no requirement that the offense be committed “during and in relation to” a predicate offense. Instead, § 1343 criminalizes the distinct offense of committing fraud by way of a wire communications facility. Because wire fraud is not a combination offense, an express “advance knowledge” instruction for aiding and abetting that offense was not necessary.The jury instructions comported with the general aiding and abetting knowledge and intention requirements reiterated in Rosemond. They were not erroneous.E. Baker’s “Other” ObjectionsBaker contends that, in addition to the purported Rosemond error, the jury instructions were flawed in several other ways. Baker did not object to these issues in the district court, so they are reviewed for plain error. [74] None of these challenges has merit under the plain-error test.First, Baker challenges the instruction that: “If another person is acting under the direction of the defendant or if the defendant joins another person and performs acts with the intent to commit a crime, then the law holds the defendant responsible for the acts and conduct of such other persons just as though the defendant had committed the acts or engaged in such conduct.” Baker contends that this statement “is no longer legally accurate after Rosemond,” and that the instruction implied that he could be liable for the crimes of ArthroCare’s employees who were “acting under” his direction.This instruction prefaced the formal elements of accomplice liability. Given that context, the instruction simply set out the basic principle of accomplice liability and was followed by a formal four-part definition. This instruction was not erroneous.[75]Next, Baker contends that the Pinkerton instruction was improper, noting that Pinkerton is controversial and has been criticized by courts. He also contends that “there was no evidentiary basis” for the Pinkerton instruction. But this circuit has repeatedly applied Pinkerton,[76] and the evidence at trial— including testimony from three coconspirators—provided a sufficient basis for the instruction.Finally, Baker argues that the court’s “reckless indifference” instruction was improper because it conflicted with the wire fraud statute’s required “specific intent to defraud.”[77] But we have approved such instructions.[78] The “reckless indifference” instruction was not erroneous.III. ConclusionBaker’s conviction is, in all respects, AFFIRMED.

 
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