United States v. Tony DeVaughn Nelson ( 2013 )


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  •                Case: 12-11066      Date Filed: 03/13/2013      Page: 1 of 39
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    _________________________
    No. 12-11066
    _________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 3:10-cr-00023-TCJ-TEM-1
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    versus
    TONY DEVAUGHN NELSON,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    _________________________
    (March 13, 2013)
    Before WILSON and HILL, Circuit Judges, and HUCK, * District Judge.
    HUCK, District Judge:
    *
    Honorable Paul C. Huck, Senior United States District Judge for the Southern District
    of Florida, sitting by designation.
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 2 of 39
    Tony Nelson, a former member of the Jacksonville Port Authority’s
    (JaxPort[’s]) board of directors, was convicted in the Middle District of Florida for
    honest-services mail fraud under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1341
     and 1346, federal funds
    bribery under 
    18 U.S.C. § 666
    (a)(1)(B), conspiracy to commit mail fraud and
    bribery under 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
    , and several other crimes predicated on these
    offenses. On appeal, he challenges his convictions on three grounds. First, Nelson
    argues that the fraud and bribery statutes under which he was convicted are
    unconstitutionally vague as applied in this case because they fail to describe the
    nature and scope of the fiduciary obligations owed by public officials to the
    public—i.e. they lack an “ascertainable standard” by which Nelson and the jury
    could have determined whether his conduct was unlawful. Second, Nelson argues
    that he is entitled to a new trial because the district court improperly instructed the
    jury on what constitutes a “bribe” for purposes of his honest-services and federal
    funds bribery charges. Finally, Nelson argues that the district court committed
    reversible error by admitting the testimony of JaxPort’s director of procurement,
    Louis Naranjo, which he asserts allowed the jury to convict him on the basis of
    uncharged conduct.
    Upon review of the parties’ briefs and the record, and with the benefit of oral
    argument, we affirm.
    2
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    I.
    JaxPort is an independent agency and political subdivision of the State of
    Florida and is responsible for the development and maintenance of Jacksonville’s
    public seaport terminals. The agency is governed by a seven-member, all-
    volunteer board. The Mayor of Jacksonville appoints four members, and the
    Governor of Florida appoints three others. The board elects a chairman, who leads
    the board. Board members serve four-year terms and may serve a maximum of
    two terms. JaxPort has a staff of approximately 150 employees and several
    officers, including a chief executive officer, who reports to the board.
    Nelson was appointed to the board in 2001 by Jacksonville Mayor John
    Delaney and served as chairman of the board from March 2006 until September
    2007. He remained a member of the board until resigning in 2008 amid allegations
    that he solicited and accepted bribes from one of JaxPort’s private dredging
    contractors, Subaqueous Services, Inc. (“SSI”), and its owner, Lance Young.
    These allegations, which we summarize here, led to an FBI investigation and
    ultimately to this criminal action.1
    Nelson was introduced to Young in the fall of 2005 by another JaxPort board
    member, Marty Fiorentino, at Young’s Jacksonville Jaguars luxury suite. At the
    1
    We recount the facts as the jury found them. We also describe here certain undisputed
    facts that, while unnecessary to the jury’s verdict, are otherwise relevant to this appeal. Where
    helpful, such as where we recount a witness’s characterization of events or a witness’s testimony
    involving statements made to him or her by someone else, we indicate who testified to that fact.
    3
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    time, Fiorentino, a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist, was under contract with
    Young to lobby on behalf of SSI in the Jacksonville area. For these services,
    Young paid Fiorentino $5,000 per month. According to Nelson, Fiorentino told
    him that the City of Jacksonville’s Deputy General Counsel and Co-Ethics Officer,
    Steven Rohan, advised Fiorentino that he could lobby on behalf of SSI so long as
    he abstained from voting on matters involving SSI or Young.
    Following their initial meeting, Young and Nelson became friendly,
    speaking by telephone on a weekly basis and socializing regularly. Nelson was a
    frequent guest in Young’s Jaguars suite, and whenever Young was in Jacksonville
    they would have dinner at Young’s expense. Although they did not yet have a
    formal understanding that Nelson would help SSI with its business at JaxPort,
    Nelson offered Young advice on submitting bids for JaxPort projects. For
    example, Young testified that, in the fall of 2005, Nelson suggested that SSI
    include in its first bid proposal a provision for participation by “disadvantaged”
    contractors, which was supposed to improve the chances of SSI’s bid being
    selected. Although JaxPort did not accept this initial bid, Nelson would credit the
    success of SSI’s subsequent bids, at least in part, to this advice.
    Around the same time, Nelson urged JaxPort staff to retain SSI for dredging
    work. Louis Naranjo, JaxPort’s director of procurement, testified that in
    November 2005 JaxPort’s chief financial officer, Ron Baker, asked Naranjo to
    4
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    attend a meeting with Nelson at Nelson’s downtown Jacksonville office.2
    According to Naranjo, Nelson complained about the performance of JaxPort’s
    dredging contractor, SeaTech, and told Naranjo that he should cancel JaxPort’s
    contract with the company. Naranjo testified that he responded by telling Nelson
    that he saw no reason to cancel the SeaTech contract and that, in any event, he did
    not have such authority. In response, Nelson told Naranjo that if Naranjo could not
    cancel the contract, Nelson would find someone else who could. Naranjo further
    testified that Nelson told him that SSI was “ready to go and could do this work.”
    Meanwhile, Young grew frustrated because Fiorentino was, in Young’s
    view, not doing enough to help SSI at JaxPort. Young testified that Fiorentino was
    “really good at introducing [him] to people” but “wasn’t doing anything for
    [him]”—“there was no movement on [his] problem.” Young added that, in the
    summer of 2006, when he told Fiorentino he was not going to renew their
    agreement, Fiorentino suggested that he speak with Nelson, who by then was
    chairman of the JaxPort board.
    According to Young, when he expressed to Nelson his disappointment with
    Fiorentino, Nelson responded that he was getting “twice as much” done for Young
    and SSI than Fiorentino ever did. Young further testified that Nelson told him that
    2
    As discussed below, Nelson argues that Naranjo’s testimony concerning the content of
    this meeting, which predates the alleged conspiracy, should not have been allowed into evidence.
    This argument forms the basis for Nelson’s third ground for reversal.
    5
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    he “wanted to be on the payroll,” which Young understood to be a solicitation for a
    bribe.
    After considering Nelson’s request and discussing the matter with his state-
    wide lobbyist, Frank Bernadino, Young arranged to retain Nelson as a “consultant”
    through Bernadino’s company, the Wren Group, at a rate of $8,500 per month. To
    avoid making payments directly to Nelson, Young paid Nelson’s fees to Wren
    Group, which in turn paid Nelson through Nelson’s company, Ja-Ash, Inc.
    Regular payments were made in this fashion from August 2006 through the
    summer of 2007, after which time, according to Young, he and Nelson agreed that
    Nelson would be paid through a deferred, lump-sum payment. According to
    Young, this new arrangement was put in place because SSI had to discontinue all
    lobbying activities in anticipation of the sale of SSI to Orion Marine Group, which
    left Young without a method of paying Nelson through Wren Group. Young told
    Nelson that he would be paid in full following the sale of SSI. In accordance with
    their agreement, Young gave Nelson a check for $50,000 in March 2008.
    The testimony presented at trial reflects that, although Nelson never voted
    on an SSI contract while receiving payments from the company, he was frequently
    called upon by Young to help SSI with various other matters before JaxPort.
    Young testified, for example, that he asked Nelson for his assistance in persuading
    JaxPort to approve a change order to one of SSI’s dredging contracts. According
    6
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    to Young, Nelson later reported that he made several phone calls to unspecified
    JaxPort staff members and assured Young that the change order would be
    approved. The change order, which was indeed approved in September 2007,
    added almost $150,000 of work to SSI’s contract.
    Young also testified that Nelson agreed to help SSI obtain early release of
    approximately $585,000 in “retainage” (a portion of the earned contract price
    withheld until project completion) under a contract with JaxPort. JaxPort’s
    manager of contracts and administration, Elaine Varnot, corroborated this
    testimony, stating that she was instructed by JaxPort’s director of finance and the
    project manager to release the retainage funds to SSI (through SSI’s general
    contractor for the project), which she eventually did. Varnot added that, in her
    experience, the making of such an exception was unprecedented. Other examples
    of matters in which Nelson apparently intervened on SSI’s behalf include instances
    where he requested that JaxPort increase the price of its contract with SSI to
    account for increased fuel costs (a request that was ultimately denied) and where
    he requested that SSI be paid on particular claims.
    Nelson’s relationship with Young and SSI did not go unnoticed. In response
    to complaints from other JaxPort vendors about the alleged conflict of interest, in
    February 2007, Baker called a private meeting with JaxPort staff to discuss the
    Nelson-SSI relationship. At that meeting, Baker directed JaxPort’s ethics officer,
    7
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    Linda Williams, to conduct an investigation. That same day, Nelson met with the
    City of Jacksonville’s general counsel, Cindy Laquidara, to discuss the
    accusations. Laquidara testified that Nelson told her that he and SSI once
    submitted a joint bid for a project through the United States Army Corps of
    Engineers (“Corps”), but that the bid failed. Nelson did not disclose that he was
    also receiving payments from SSI for “consulting” services. Based on these
    representations, Laquidara sent an email to Nelson advising him that his
    relationship with SSI did not present any conflicts of interest; Nelson then
    forwarded the email to Baker. Nelson also denied having a business relationship
    with SSI or Young (beyond the Corps bid) in his conversations with Williams and
    others. Recordings of Nelson’s meeting with Williams reflect that he denied ever
    receiving “a dollar, a penny, or a nickel” from SSI.
    By February 2008, the FBI had begun intercepting Nelson’s calls with
    Young.3 In these recordings, Nelson and Young are heard discussing, among other
    things, Young’s negotiations to sell SSI to Orion and how the new ownership
    would affect the level of access that Nelson was willing to provide the company at
    JaxPort. Nelson suggested that, without Young, Orion would not enjoy the same
    level of access that SSI had enjoyed in the past, which prompted a discussion about
    possible arrangements whereby Nelson could continue to work on behalf of the
    3
    Recordings of these calls were introduced at trial through Young.
    8
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    company. Under one suggestion, Young, as a consultant to Orion, would have
    facilitated payments between Orion and Nelson, as Bernardino had done through
    the Wren Group. However, both Nelson and Young were concerned that, because
    Orion was such a large company, Nelson would not have the same “coverage” with
    Orion as he had with SSI. For this reason, Nelson and Young also discussed the
    possibility of presenting “opportunities” to a company named Manson
    Construction, an Orion competitor.
    Before these opportunities materialized, however, Nelson and Young were
    approached by the FBI and were specifically asked about their relationship.
    Angela Kapala-Hill, the FBI Special Agent who conducted the interviews, testified
    that Young initially claimed that the $50,000 payment was for a “consulting fee,”
    while Nelson claimed that it was a loan. Nelson also denied having a business
    relationship with SSI. However, according to Kapala-Hill, Nelson would later
    acknowledge that the payment was for providing SSI with “access” at JaxPort, and
    that, without these payments, he would not have helped the company to the extent
    that he did.4 Kapala-Hill further testified that Nelson admitted to knowing that the
    payments were illegal. 5
    4
    Young, who would become a cooperating witness for the Government, also eventually
    admitted that the payments were for providing access to JaxPort.
    5
    On cross-examination, Kapala-Hill acknowledged that the word “bribe” did not appear
    in any of the Government’s notes of her interviews with Nelson. She also acknowledged that the
    notes from one of the interviews, prepared by another agent present at the meeting, reflected that
    9
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    In January 2010, a grand jury indicted Nelson on one count of conspiracy to
    commit honest-services mail fraud, bribery, and money laundering (
    18 U.S.C. § 371
    ); twelve counts of mail fraud based on checks mailed to Nelson through the
    Wren Group (
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1341
    , 1346); eleven counts of money laundering based
    on the same checks (
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    (a)(1)(B)(I)); twelve counts of federal-funds
    bribery (
    18 U.S.C. § 666
    (a)(1)(B)); and one count of making a false statement to
    an FBI agent (
    18 U.S.C. § 1001
    ).6 At the conclusion of a three-week trial, the jury
    found Nelson guilty on all but one count of mail fraud. This appeal followed.
    II.
    Nelson challenges his conviction on three grounds. First, echoing concerns
    expressed in Justice Scalia’s concurring opinion in Skilling v. United States, 
    130 S. Ct. 2896
     (2010), Nelson argues that the mail fraud and bribery statutes under
    which he was convicted, 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1341
    , 1346, 666(a)(1)(B), are
    unconstitutionally vague as applied to his conduct. Second, Nelson argues that the
    district court’s instructions to the jury on his honest-services mail fraud and federal
    program bribery counts were plainly erroneous because, according to Nelson, the
    instructions effectively provided, in a circular fashion, that “Nelson took a bribe if
    Nelson said that he “now” knows that the payments were “wrong,” with the word “now”
    underlined.
    6
    Counts 37-43, which charged Nelson with a separate fraud scheme, were severed and
    dismissed after trial.
    10
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    he had the intent to do so and had the requisite intent if he in fact took a bribe,”
    leaving the jury to speculate as to an essential point of law—i.e. what constitutes a
    “bribe.” Lastly, Nelson argues that the district court abused its discretion in
    admitting Naranjo’s testimony about his November 2005 meeting with Nelson
    because the events described by Naranjo relate to uncharged conduct that preceded
    the alleged conspiracy. We address these issues in turn.
    A.    Void for Vagueness
    We review whether §§ 1341, 1346, and 666(a)(1)(B) are unconstitutionally
    vague as applied to Nelson’s conduct de novo. See United States v. Wayerski, 
    624 F.3d 1342
    , 1347 (11th Cir. 2010). As an outgrowth of the Fifth Amendment’s Due
    Process Clause, we have held that “[a] statute is void for vagueness if it fails to
    define the criminal offense [1] with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can
    understand what conduct is prohibited and [2] in a manner that does not encourage
    arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.” United States v. Tobin, 
    676 F.3d 1264
    ,
    1278 (11th Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have also
    recognized, however, that “[s]tatutes are not automatically invalidated as vague
    simply because difficulty is found in determining whether certain marginal
    offenses fall within their language.” United States v. Duran, 
    596 F.3d 1283
    , 1290
    (11th Cir. 2010) (quoting United States v. Nat’l Dairy Prods. Corp., 
    372 U.S. 29
    ,
    32 (1963)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Where the law is definite, the
    11
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    general rule is that knowledge of the law is presumed; ignorance of the law or a
    mistake of law is no defense to a criminal prosecution. 
    Id.
    According to Nelson, all three statutes share the same infirmity: as applied
    to the facts of his case, each lacks a “clear criterion of guilt” distinguishing
    between lawful and unlawful conduct. Specifically, Nelson argues that, because
    his convictions for mail fraud and bribery ultimately rested upon allegations of
    “honest-services” fraud under § 1346, the absence of language in the statute
    describing the character and scope of the fiduciary relationship from which the
    honest-services obligation arises precluded Nelson (and the jury) from determining
    whether his relationship with Young and SSI was prohibited.7 This indeterminacy,
    7
    The federal mail fraud statute prohibits the use of the mails in furtherance of a “scheme
    or artifice to defraud.” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1341
    . The “honest-services amendment,” 
    18 U.S.C. § 1346
    ,
    modifies the federal mail fraud statute to allow the United States to predicate a mail fraud charge
    on a “scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.” Thus, as
    modified, § 1341 provides in relevant part:
    Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or
    artifice to [deprive another of the intangible right of honest
    services], for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice or
    attempting so to do, places in any post office or authorized
    depository for mail matter, any matter or thing whatever to be sent
    or delivered by the Postal Service, . . . or takes or receives
    therefrom, any such matter or thing . . . shall be fined under this
    title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
    In this case, the honest-services statute also potentially modifies the federal funds bribery statute,
    
    18 U.S.C. § 666
    (a)(1)(B), which makes it a crime to “corruptly” demand, solicit, or accept a
    bribe. The jury in this case was instructed that, “[t]o act ‘corruptly’ means to act voluntarily,
    deliberately and dishonestly to either an unlawful end or result or to use an unlawful means to
    accomplish an otherwise lawful end or result.” Nelson could thus be found to have acted
    “corruptly” under the bribery statute if he intended to deprive another of the right to his honest
    services.
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    he adds, allowed the jury to determine his guilt “based on the ‘personal
    predilections’ of its members,” and enabled the Government to prosecute him in a
    discriminatory fashion. 8
    As discussed below, because Nelson’s argument hinges on the supposed
    vagueness of the honest-services statute, we do not write on a clean slate. To
    frame our discussion, we first summarize the history of the honest-services
    doctrine and the relevant parts of the Supreme Court’s decision in Skilling, which
    upheld § 1346 against a facial challenge on due process grounds through a limiting
    construction of that statute. Second, in light of the majority’s reasoning in that
    case, we consider whether there is merit to Nelson’s contention that the facts
    surrounding his arrest and conviction are such that it would violate due process to
    uphold his convictions under §§ 1341, 1346, and 666(a)(1)(B).
    1.
    The honest-services doctrine arose from various decisions interpreting the
    phrase “scheme or artifice to defraud” in the original mail fraud statute as
    encompassing not only deprivations of money or property but also certain
    “intangible rights.” See Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2926
    . “Honest-services” fraud,
    these courts reasoned, differed from traditional fraud in that the victim of the fraud
    8
    Nelson argued and lost a motion to dismiss for selective prosecution at trial. He does
    not appeal that ruling here.
    13
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    did not necessarily suffer a loss of money or property. See, e.g., Shushan v. United
    States, 
    117 F.2d 110
    , 119 (5th Cir. 1941). For example, “if a city mayor (the
    offender) accepted a bribe from a third party in exchange for awarding that party a
    city contract, yet the contract terms were the same as any that could have been
    negotiated at arm’s length, the city (the betrayed party) would suffer no tangible
    loss.” See Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2926
    . In that example, the actionable harm
    derived from “the denial of that party’s right to the offender’s ‘honest services.’”
    
    Id.
     (quoting United States v. Dixon, 
    536 F.2d 1388
    , 1400 (2d Cir. 1976)).
    In 1987, however, the development of the “intangible rights” line of cases,
    and thus the honest-services doctrine, came to a halt with the Supreme Court’s
    decision in McNally v. United States, 
    483 U.S. 350
     (1987). The McNally Court
    held that the mail fraud statute must be read as limited in scope to the protection of
    property rights. 
    Id. at 360
    . “If Congress desires to go further,” the Court added, “it
    must speak more clearly than it has.” 
    Id.
    Congress responded the following year by adopting § 1346, which provides:
    “For the purposes of [Chapter 63 of Title 18 of the United States Code (“Mail
    Fraud and Other Fraud Offenses”)], the term ‘scheme or artifice to defraud’
    includes a scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest
    services.” In effect, the statute restored the mail fraud statute to its pre-McNally
    position and incorporated those decisions of the courts of appeals recognizing an
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    intangible right to honest services. Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2928
    ; United States v.
    Walker, 
    490 F.3d 1282
    , 1297 n. 16 (11th Cir. 2007).
    Against this background, Jeffrey Skilling, the former Chief Executive
    Officer of Enron Corporation, appealed his conviction in the Southern District of
    Texas for conspiracy to commit honest-services wire fraud under § 1346, arguing
    that § 1346 was unconstitutionally vague in violation of the Fifth Amendment. 9
    Styling his argument as a facial, rather than as an as-applied challenge to the
    statute, Skilling identified what he believed were fatal indeterminacies in § 1346
    and the decisional law it incorporated. Of relevance here, Skilling claimed that the
    pre-McNally honest-services cases, and thus the statute itself, failed to address or
    were in conflict on various core issues, such as whether the obligation to provide
    honest services extends only to persons taking “official action” and whether the
    use of the fiduciary position to accomplish the alleged fraud is a necessary element
    of the offense. See Brief for Petitioner at 40–42, 
    130 S. Ct. 2896
     (2010). “Without
    consensus on these basic questions,” Skilling maintained, “any argument that the
    statute codified a single, coherent, preexisting conception of honest services—a
    conception obviously available to ordinary persons from prior caselaw—falls apart
    completely.” 
    Id. at 42
    .
    9
    Skilling also argued that § 1346 did not reach his conduct (artificially inflating stock
    prices to profit from increased salary and bonuses).
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    While acknowledging that Skilling’s argument “ha[d] force,” as the pre-
    McNally cases “were not models of clarity or consistency,” the Supreme Court
    held that any vagueness concerns regarding § 1346 could be obviated through a
    limiting construction of the statute. Id. at 2929 – 31. “The ‘vast majority’ of the
    honest-services cases,” the Court observed, “involved offenders who, in violation
    of a fiduciary duty, participated in bribery or kickback schemes.” Id. at 2930
    (citing United States v. Runnels, 
    833 F.2d 1183
    , 1187 (6th Cir. 1987)).10 By
    limiting the scope of § 1346 to these “core” pre-McNally applications, the Court
    found that § 1346 did not present any due process concerns, either in terms of fair
    notice or the risk of arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. Id. at 2931– 33.
    The Court concluded: “[a] criminal defendant who participated in a bribery or
    kickback scheme, in short, cannot tenably complain about prosecution under §
    1346 on vagueness grounds.” Id. at 2934. 11
    Writing separately, Justice Scalia responded that, even if the pre-McNally
    honest-services doctrine could be pared down to a bribery and kickback core (he
    10
    Surveying various pre-McNally decisions, the Court noted that the circuit courts
    uniformly described bribery and kickbacks as the “core,” “most obvious,” “typical,” “clear-cut,”
    and “uniform[]” forms of honest-services fraud. Id. at 2931.
    11
    Despite upholding the constitutionality of the honest-services statute, the Court vacated
    Skilling’s conviction on the basis that, following the limiting construction of § 1346, his conduct
    did not lie within the reach of the statute.
    16
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    believed it could not), 12 limiting the statute in this manner would still not solve its
    “most fundamental indeterminacy: the character of the ‘fiduciary capacity’ to
    which the bribery and kickback restriction applies.” Id. at 2938 (Scalia, J.,
    concurring in part and concurring in judgment). “What,” he asked rhetorically, “is
    the criterion of guilt?” Id. at 2939. Without a clear answer to this question (among
    others), Justice Scalia reasoned, § 1346 did not give sufficient notice of the
    conduct prohibited under the statute.13
    The majority responded to this argument in a footnote, explaining that
    debates concerning the source and scope of fiduciary duties were “rare” in pre-
    McNally bribery and kickback cases, and that “[t]he existence of a fiduciary
    relationship, under any definition of that term, was usually beyond dispute.” Id. at
    2931 n. 41. As examples, the Court cited the relationships between public
    officials and the public, employers and employees, and union officials and union
    members. Id. Later in the opinion, the Court added that, “[a]s to fair notice . . . it
    has always been ‘as plain as a pikestaff that’ bribes and kickbacks constitute
    12
    Justice Scalia remarked: “Perhaps it is true that ‘Congress intended § 1346 to reach at
    least bribes and kickbacks. That simply does not mean, as the Court now holds, that § 1346
    criminalizes only bribery and kickbacks.” Id. at 2939 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and
    concurring in judgment) (emphasis in original) (internal citations omitted).
    13
    Justice Scalia concurred with the majority in that he agreed that Skilling received a fair
    trial and that Skilling’s honest-services conviction should be reversed. Unlike the majority,
    however, Justice Scalia would have vacated Skilling’s conviction on constitutional grounds.
    17
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    honest-services fraud, and the statute’s mens rea requirement further blunts any
    notice concern.” Id. at 2933 (internal citations omitted).
    2.
    Against this narrow framework, Nelson challenges his convictions below on
    an as-applied basis, arguing that the scope of his fiduciary obligations to JaxPort
    were indeterminate under §§ 1341, 1346, and 666(a)(1)(B). As a result, Nelson
    argues, he and the jury were left without any criterion by which to judge whether
    the payments he received from Young and SSI were proper, such as legitimate
    payments to a lobbyist, or improper, such as bribes. Further, he argues, the jury
    was left without any guidance in determining whether he acted with “corrupt
    intent” or the “intent to defraud,” as is required under these statutes.
    Nelson emphasizes that his is not a “prototypical” bribery case where
    “neither the financial relationship between the public official and his payor nor the
    acts performed by the official on behalf of the payor are legitimate . . . .” Rather,
    he argues, this is a case where “neither the existence of a contractual financial
    relationship with a public official nor the conduct engaged in by the public official
    is—without more—illegitimate.” To this point, Nelson notes that, as an unpaid
    and part-time board member, he was allowed to do business with companies that
    contract with JaxPort, provided only that he abstain from voting on any matters in
    which he might have a conflict of interest. He adds that, as a board member, he
    18
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    never voted on a contract under which Young or SSI stood to benefit, and that, for
    much of his tenure, all of JaxPort’s contracts with private companies were
    approved by JaxPort’s staff, rather than by its board.
    Of course, that this case is not “prototypical,” or that Nelson claims that he
    did not personally know that his conduct was unlawful, does not necessarily mean
    that the statutes under which he was convicted are unconstitutional as applied.
    “Void for vagueness simply means that criminal responsibility should not attach
    where one could not reasonably understand that his conduct is proscribed.” United
    States v. Nat’l Dairy Prods. Corp., 
    372 U.S. 29
    , 32 (1963) (emphasis added). It
    does not mean that the statute must define every factual situation that may arise.
    United States v. Biro, 
    143 F.3d 1421
     (11th Cir. 1998). The existence of “marginal
    cases in which it is difficult to determine the side of the line on which a particular
    fact situation falls is no sufficient reason to hold the language too ambiguous to
    define a criminal offense.” 
    Id. at 1430
     (quoting United States v. Petrillo, 
    331 U.S. 1
     (1947) (internal quotation marks omitted)). Moreover, ignorance of the fact that
    one’s conduct is a violation of the law is no defense to criminal prosecution.
    United States v. Duran, 
    596 F.3d 1283
    , 1291 (11th Cir. 2010) (citing Cheek v.
    United States, 
    498 U.S. 192
     (1991)).
    In light of these principles, as well as the majority’s reasoning in Skilling,
    we conclude that the statutes at issue gave Nelson adequate notice of the conduct
    19
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013       Page: 20 of 39
    they prohibit. At the outset, we note that the supposed “indeterminacies” that
    Nelson highlights in these provisions—namely, the absence of statutory language
    or pre-McNally caselaw explicitly defining the scope of the honest-services
    obligation—were acknowledged by the Skilling majority and found insufficient to
    warrant striking down § 1346 on vagueness grounds. We thus reject Nelson’s
    contention that “the issues raised by Justice Scalia were simply not addressed by
    the majority, and thus remained as problems for the lower courts to address in the
    future.”
    While it is true that Skilling does not foreclose an as-applied challenge to the
    § 1346 (or to other statutes under which criminality may depend on whether the
    defendant intended to violate his or her duty of honest services), we are mindful of
    the Supreme Court’s observation that defendants charged with bribery or
    kickbacks face an uphill climb in arguing they did not and could not reasonably
    understand that their conduct was illegal under the statute. We are similarly
    reluctant to find § 666(a)(1)(B) unlawful as applied, as Nelson’s challenge to the
    federal funds bribery statute is essentially the same as his challenge to the mail
    fraud and honest-services provisions.14
    14
    Nelson seems to argue that, because § 666(a)(1)(B) required that the jury find that he
    acted “corruptly,” the indeterminacy of his fiduciary obligations under the honest-services statute
    spill over into his federal funds bribery charges. We note that we recently held that the phrase
    “corrupt[] . . . intent to influence or reward” in the bribery context is unambiguous, particularly
    in light of statute’s scienter requirement. See United States v. Benner, 442 F. App’x 417, *1
    20
    Case: 12-11066       Date Filed: 03/13/2013      Page: 21 of 39
    Simply put, we find that there is nothing in the nature of Nelson’s conduct or
    his role on the JaxPort board, in particular, that separates him from those similarly
    charged with bribery who, according to the Supreme Court, “cannot tenably
    complain about . . . vagueness.” Nelson’s case is not exceptional. In the first
    place, though he was not paid for his work as a JaxPort board member and worked
    only part time, Nelson does not dispute that he was a public official. As we have
    previously held, “[p]ublic officials inherently owe a fiduciary duty to the public to
    make governmental decisions in the public’s best interest.” United States v. de
    Vegter, 
    198 F.3d 1324
    , 1328 (11th Cir. 1999) (citing United States v. Lopez-Lukis,
    
    102 F.3d 1164
    , 1169 (1997)). Indeed, we have described bribery of a public
    official as the “paradigm case” of honest-services fraud. United States v.
    Langford, 
    647 F.3d 1309
    , 1321 (11th Cir. 2011).
    Further, the evidence presented at trial reflects that Nelson agreed to
    represent SSI’s interests before JaxPort in exchange for monthly payments routed
    through a middleman. While we have not held that a quid pro quo exchange is
    required in all honest-services cases, the existence of such an arrangement
    undoubtedly blunts any argument that the defendant lacked notice that his conduct
    was unlawful. This “classic” bribery and kickback scenario, like the scheme at
    (11th Cir. 2011) (affirming the defendant’s conviction under 
    18 U.S.C. § 215
    (a)(1)). Accord
    United States v. McElroy, 
    910 F.2d 1016
    , 1021 (2d Cir. 1990).
    21
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013        Page: 22 of 39
    issue in McNally, is squarely within the range of conduct that Congress aimed to
    prohibit through the passage of § 1346. See Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2922
    .15
    We also find unpersuasive Nelson’s argument that §§ 1341, 1346, and
    666(a)(1)(B) are vague as applied because these statutes and the cases interpreting
    them do not explicitly limit their application to bribes and kickbacks taken in
    connection with the performance of one’s “official” or “customary” powers or
    duties. Even if, for argument’s sake, we were to find the statutes vague in this
    regard, Nelson’s argument assumes that his actions did not involve the exercise of
    his official or customary powers. 16 We disagree. For purposes of the honest-
    services and federal funds bribery statutes, a board member who uses his position
    of authority to direct or influence someone else in his organization to do something
    15
    In finding that Congress intended to “reverse” McNally on its facts,” the Skilling
    majority rejected the Government’s argument that § 1346 proscribes all “undisclosed self-
    dealing by a public official or private employee—i.e. the taking of official action by the
    employee that furthers his own undisclosed financial interests while purporting to act in the
    interests of those to whom he owes a fiduciary duty.” 
    130 S. Ct. at 2932
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Nelson argues that several of our earlier decisions, upon which we rely today,
    similarly recognize an unrestrained “undisclosed conflict of interest” theory of honest-services
    fraud. See, e.g., Lopez-Lukis, 
    102 F.3d at 1169
     (“If the official secretly makes his decision
    based on his own personal interests . . . the official has defrauded the public of his honest
    services.”). See also Langford, 
    647 F.3d 1309
     at 1321–22. We do not read these decisions so
    broadly. These cases did not involve a “mere failure to disclose a conflict of interest.” See
    Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2932
    . Rather, all of these cases, like the instant case, involved public
    officials who solicited or accepted bribes or kickbacks—“classic honest services fraud that
    existed before, and after, Skilling.” See Langford, 
    647 F.3d at
    1322 n 9.
    16
    Nelson stresses that the evidence presented at trial established only that, as a member
    and chair of the JaxPort board, his official duties were to vote on certain contracts, none of which
    were involved in this case, and to appoint and provide long-term “vision and guidance” to the
    JaxPort’s chief executive officer. “[T]here was no evidence that [his] duties included any hands-
    on, day to day involvement in the running of [JaxPort].”
    22
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013       Page: 23 of 39
    that he could not do himself is nonetheless acting in his official capacity. See
    generally, Lopez-Lukis, 
    102 F.3d 1164
     (11th Cir. 1997).17 It is the authority
    inherent in his position as a board member that has enabled him to exercise his
    influence in the first place, and he has a duty to exercise those powers honestly and
    in the organization’s interests, rather than his own.
    Finally, to the extent there is any doubt as to the meaning of §§ 1341, 1346,
    and 666(a)(1)(B) as applied to this case, we find that any potential vagueness in
    these provisions is mitigated by their scienter requirements. See Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2933
    ; Benner, 442 Fed. App’x at 420. As noted above, due process does not
    require that criminal statutes speak with absolute clarity as to all possible
    applications. “The constitutionality of a vague statutory standard is closely related
    to whether that standard incorporates a requirement of mens rea.” United States v.
    17
    Lopez-Lukis involved a public official who accepted bribes in exchange for her vote
    and the use of her influence to secure a majority vote from other board members on those
    matters. See 102 F.2d at 1168. Considering these acts independently of one another, we
    observed:
    The appellees concede that a county commissioner commits
    honest-services fraud when she sells her vote. It is no less a
    violation of sections 1341 and 1346, however, for that
    commissioner, in addition to selling her vote, to take steps to
    ensure that a majority of commissioners vote with her. In both
    scenarios, the commissioner deprives her constituents of their right
    to her honest services by deciding how to vote based on her own
    interests. The second scenario simply makes this deprivation more
    concrete. In addition to depriving her constituents of their right to
    her honest services, she seeks to ensure that the actions the Board
    takes are in her own bests interests instead of the best interest of
    the public.
    102 F.2d at 1168 (internal citations omitted).
    23
    Case: 12-11066       Date Filed: 03/13/2013       Page: 24 of 39
    Waymer, 
    55 F.3d 564
    , 568 (11th Cir. 1995) (citing Colautti v. Franklin, 
    439 U.S. 379
    , 395 (1979)). In this case, to convict Nelson for honest-services fraud, the
    Government had to prove that he “devised or intend[ed] to devise any scheme or
    artifice to [deprive another of the intangible right of honest services].” See 
    18 U.S.C. § 1341
    , 1346. Likewise, to convict Nelson of federal funds bribery, the
    Government had to prove that he “corruptly” solicited or demanded something of
    value, “intending to be influenced or rewarded . . . .” 
    18 U.S.C. § 666
    (a)(1)(B).
    We are satisfied that, if in fact Nelson reasonably believed that his conduct was
    lawful, due to the nature of his role on the JaxPort board or for any other reason,
    the jury could have found that he did not have the intent required to commit these
    crimes. 18 The jury did not.
    B.    The Court’s Instructions to the Jury
    Next, Nelson argues that we should vacate his mail fraud and federal funds
    bribery convictions because the manner in which the district court instructed the
    jury on these charges “failed to provide the jury with a means of discerning
    18
    Jury Instruction No. 21 provided that:
    ‘Good faith’ is a complete defense to a charge that requires intent
    to defraud. A defendant isn’t required to prove good faith. The
    Government most prove intent to defraud beyond a reasonable
    doubt. An honestly held opinion or an honestly held belief cannot
    be fraudulent intent—even if the opinion or belief is mistaken.
    Similarly, evidence of a mistake in judgment, an error in
    management, or carelessness can’t establish fraudulent intent.
    24
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 25 of 39
    whether [he] took a bribe.” Nelson concedes that, because he did not raise this
    objection at trial, plain error review applies. See United States v. House, 
    684 F.3d 1173
    , 1196 (11th Cir. 2012) (citing United States v. Felts, 
    579 F.3d 1341
    , 1343
    (11th Cir. 2009)). Thus, we will reverse his convictions only if the jury
    instructions, considered as a whole, “[were] so clearly erroneous as to result in a
    likelihood of a grave miscarriage of justice, or the error seriously affect[ed] the
    fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” United States v.
    Starke, 
    62 F.3d 1374
    , 1381 (11th Cir. 1995).
    Nelson cites to two points of error in the court’s instructions, both
    concerning what he argues are “hopelessly circular” propositions on an “essential
    point of law”—i.e. what constitutes a “bribe.” First, Nelson argues that the court’s
    honest-services instruction was circular because the phrase “intent to defraud,”
    defined in the instruction as “act[ing] knowingly and with the specific intent to
    solicit, demand, or accept bribe payments,” conflated the statute’s mens rea
    requirement with the underlying criminal conduct: bribery. Thus, Nelson argues,
    the jury was effectively instructed that “Nelson took a bribe if he had the intent to
    do so and he had the requisite intent if he in fact took a bribe.” As Nelson
    concedes, however, he specifically requested that the language “specific intent to
    25
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013        Page: 26 of 39
    solicit, demand, or accept bribe payments” be included in the court’s instruction. 19
    Further, when the court asked Nelson’s attorney whether the instruction as finally
    written conformed to what he requested, Nelson’s attorney replied, “Yes, sir.”
    Nelson cannot now complain about the circularity of an instruction that he, through
    counsel, requested and approved. 20 See United States v. Silvestri, 
    409 F.3d 1311
    ,
    1337 (11th Cir. 2005) (“When a party responds to a court’s proposed jury
    instructions with the words ‘the instruction is acceptable to us,’ such action
    constitutes invited error.”).
    Nelson’s second argument is similarly unavailing. According to Nelson,
    because the court’s instructions provided that corrupt intent is an element of both
    honest-services fraud and federal funds bribery, and because the term “corruptly”
    was defined therein as requiring the jury to find that Nelson intended to act
    19
    Our pattern instruction for §§ 1341 and 1346 defines the phrase “intent to defraud” as
    meaning “to act knowingly and with the specific intent to deceive someone, usually for personal
    financial gain or to cause financial loss to someone else.” See Eleventh Circuit Pattern Jury
    Instructions (Criminal Cases), Basic Instruction 50.2 (2010). Maintaining that this “garden
    variety” definition is not suitable for cases that do not involve traditional deception, such as the
    instant case, Nelson’s attorney asked the court to strike all of the language following “specific
    intent to” and replace it with “solicit, demand, or accept bribe payments.”
    The court obliged.
    20
    Nelson now claims that the only reason he requested this definition was “to insure that
    simple concealment would not be grounds for conviction.” Be that as it may, whether Nelson
    had good reason to request the instruction does not change the fact that any resulting confusion
    was a product of his own doing.
    26
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013       Page: 27 of 39
    “unlawfully,” 21 the jury was effectively instructed that Nelson “act[ed] ‘corruptly’
    [if] his conduct [was] unlawful and his conduct [was] unlawful if he act[ed]
    corruptly.” The net effect of this error, Nelson maintains, was to “propel[] the jury
    to look elsewhere to determine whether [he] engaged in culpable conduct and to
    engage in subjective individual judgments unmoored from any coherent legal
    standard.”
    We disagree. The court’s definition of “corruptly,” adopted verbatim from
    our pattern instruction for federal funds bribery, did not merely instruct the jury
    that Nelson “act[ed] ‘corruptly’ [if] his conduct [was] unlawful,” but rather, it
    required—correctly—that the jury find that Nelson voluntarily and deliberately
    engaged in unlawful conduct. See Eleventh Circuit Pattern Jury Instructions
    (Criminal Cases), Basic Instruction 24.2 (2010). In other words, Nelson had to
    know that accepting payments from SSI in exchange for representing the
    company’s interests at JaxPort was something that the law forbids. The jury was
    thus propelled to look to Nelson’s state of mind in joining the conspiracy—a task
    that, as noted above, the jury was equipped to take on.
    In any event, even to the extent that the court’s instructions may be
    considered to contain a degree of circularity, we are not left with “substantial and
    21
    The term “corruptly” was defined in the federal funds bribery instruction as acting
    “voluntarily, deliberately and dishonestly to either accomplish an unlawful end or result or to use
    an unlawful method or means or result.” The term was not defined in the honest-services
    instruction.
    27
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 28 of 39
    ineradicable doubt as to whether the jury was properly guided in its deliberations.”
    See United States v. Beasley, 
    72 F.3d 1518
    , 1525 (11th Cir. 1996). On the whole,
    the instructions “accurately express the law applicable to the case.” See 
    id.
     And,
    as other circuits have observed, the term “corruptly” has a commonly understood
    meaning. See United States v. McElroy, 
    910 F.2d 1016
    , 1021 (“The term
    ‘corruptly’ is ordinarily understood as referring to acts done voluntarily and
    intentionally and with the bad purpose of accomplishing either an unlawful end or
    result, or a lawful end or result by some unlawful method or means.”) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); United States v. Pommerening, 
    500 F.2d 92
    , 97 (10th
    Cir. 1974) (The “words ‘corruptly’, ‘value’, and ‘influence’ are applied in their
    ordinary, everyday sense. It is obvious from reading [18 U.S.C. §] 201(b) that
    Congress intended to prohibit individuals from giving government employees,
    while they are acting in their official capacity, compensation in return for special
    favors.”). We therefore decline to reverse Nelson’s convictions merely because
    isolated clauses of the jury instruction may be “confusing, technically imperfect, or
    otherwise subject to criticism.” Beasley, 
    72 F.3d at 1525
    .
    C.    The Testimony of Louis Naranjo
    Finally, Nelson argues that the district court erred under Rule 403 of the
    Federal Rules of Evidence in admitting the testimony of JaxPort’s director of
    procurement, Louis Naranjo, who testified regarding a meeting he had with Nelson
    28
    Case: 12-11066      Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 29 of 39
    before the alleged conspiracy. Rule 403 permits a trial judge to exclude otherwise
    relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger
    of unfair prejudice. The court’s authority should be used sparingly, however, as
    “the balance under Rule 403 should be struck in favor of admissibility.” United
    States v. Elkins, 
    885 F.2d 775
    , 784 (11th Cir. 1989). Similarly, on appeal, we
    “look at the evidence in a light most favorable to its admission, maximizing its
    probative value and minimizing its undue prejudicial impact.” 
    Id.
     Only upon a
    clear showing of abuse of discretion will we reverse a trial court’s evidentiary
    ruling. See United States v. Brannan, 
    562 F.3d 1300
    , 1306 (11th Cir. 2009).
    “[W]e must affirm unless we find that the district court has made a clear error of
    judgment, or has applied the wrong legal standard.” United States v. Frazier, 
    387 F.3d 1244
    , 1259 (11th Cir. 2004) (en banc).
    As explained above, the testimony at issue pertained to a November 2005
    meeting wherein Nelson, in the presence of JaxPort’s CFO, Ron Baker,
    complained to Naranjo about JaxPort’s dredging contractor, SeaTech, and asked
    Naranjo to cancel JaxPort’s contract with the company. According to Young,
    Nelson also suggested that SSI was “ready to go.” Nelson objected to the
    admission of this testimony at trial, but the district court, following a proffer
    examination of the witness, concluded that Naranjo’s testimony would not be
    29
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013   Page: 30 of 39
    unfairly prejudicial. The district court later reaffirmed this ruling when denying
    Nelson’s motion for a new trial.
    On appeal, Nelson argues that, by admitting Naranjo’s testimony, the district
    court “invited the jury to convict [him] on the basis of uncharged conduct.”
    Specifically, Nelson highlights the fact that the events described in Naranjo’s
    testimony took place almost a full year before Nelson and Young’s alleged
    conspiracy. Nelson also stresses that, in the broader context of the Government’s
    case, Naranjo’s testimony “stood alone as a dramatic instance of Nelson pressuring
    a [JaxPort] staff member in apparent support of SSI.” Nelson argues that “[t]here
    was no evidence of similar conduct during the course of the conspiracy.”
    On balance, and in light of the principles described above, we do not find
    that the district court abused its discretion in allowing Naranjo’s testimony.
    Although Naranjo’s testimony related to conduct that preceded the conspiracy
    alleged in the indictment, it was unquestionably probative as to a number of issues
    bearing upon Nelson’s guilt. For example, Naranjo’s testimony corroborated and
    gave context to Young’s testimony that, in asking to be “put on the payroll,”
    Nelson told Young that he was already doing “twice as much” for SSI as Forentino
    was doing. Likewise, Naranjo’s testimony illustrated how and to what degree
    Nelson was capable of exercising influence over JaxPort staff—particularly its
    CFO, Ron Baker, who arranged the meeting between Nelson and Naranjo. Thus,
    30
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 31 of 39
    the jury might have reasonably inferred from Naranjo’s testimony that, at the time
    of the conspiracy, Nelson believed that his meeting with Baker and Naranjo was
    illustrative of the type of favors that he was willing and able to offer SSI in
    exchange for bribe payments.
    At the same time, however, Naranjo’s testimony was not necessarily
    prejudicial to Nelson’s case, as other inferences could be drawn from the
    November 2005 meeting. As recognized by the district court, Naranjo’s cross-
    examination of Naranjo highlighted various issues related to SeaTech’s
    performance from which the jury might have reasonably inferred that “Nelson was
    doing everybody a favor by suggesting that SeaTech be terminated.” This
    conclusion lends support to Nelson’s theory of the case—namely, that, in
    representing SSI’s interests at JaxPort, he was never in violation of his fiduciary
    obligations to the board or to the public.
    Accordingly, we find that the district court did not make a clear error of
    judgment or apply the wrong legal standard in admitting Naranjo’s testimony.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    31
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013   Page: 32 of 39
    WILSON, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    The dissent may well be correct that the investigation of Nelson began with
    a pre-Skilling theory of criminal concealment. And if the Government’s case
    rested only on Nelson’s nondisclosure of the SSI payments, then I would be
    inclined to agree with the dissent that no crime within the meaning of § 1346
    occurred. Skilling definitively foreclosed the possibility that honest services fraud
    could criminalize undisclosed conflicts of interest. But the record shows that
    Nelson did not merely hide a business relationship—he hid payments that were
    intended to influence his actions as the chairman of JaxPort. It should come as no
    surprise that bribes are often concealed. Nelson’s concealment was not the crime;
    it was merely a symptom.
    I am also unpersuaded that Young’s payments to Nelson were not bribes
    because they were “permitted.” Permitted by whom? Nelson points to two
    grounds: the rubber stamp of Jacksonville’s General Counsel Cindy Laquidara, and
    the fact that Nelson refrained from voting on SSI matters. For starters, a
    municipality’s legal opinion hardly binds the Justice Department or this court.
    More importantly, Laquidara based her opinion on a mere fraction of the truth,
    because Nelson only revealed to her that he had submitted a joint bid with SSI to
    the United States Army Corps of Engineers. He did not reveal the most important
    information: he was on SSI’s payroll as a lobbyist.
    32
    Case: 12-11066     Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 33 of 39
    Nelson’s only remaining justification is that he recused himself from voting
    on matters involving SSI. This presumably stems from section 112.3143(3)(a) of
    the Florida Statutes, which provides that no “public officer shall vote in an official
    capacity upon any measure . . . which he or she knows would inure to the special
    private gain or loss of any principal by whom he or she is retained.” Although this
    argument must undoubtedly fail, it reveals that Nelson is likely as much a victim of
    circumstance as his own cupidity. Nelson seems to have been under the
    impression that as long as he recused himself, he could accept any payment that
    came his way.
    Yet it cannot be the case that public officials are immune from the federal
    corruption laws simply because they refrain from voting “yea” or “nay,” for the
    simple fact that it cannot be seriously contended that Nelson’s influence on the
    board was limited to voting. The record contained numerous instances of Nelson
    exerting influence on SSI’s behalf. Although we have not decided if bribery in the
    honest services context requires a showing of quid pro quo, even assuming that it
    does, this case obviously meets that standard. See United States v. Siegelman, 
    640 F.3d 1159
    , 1173–74 (11th Cir. 2011), cert. denied, 
    132 S. Ct. 2711
     (2012). For
    example, Young testified that he asked for, and received, Nelson’s help in
    obtaining a change order’s approval that added almost $150,000 of work to SSI’s
    contract. Young also testified that he understood his payments to Nelson to be
    33
    Case: 12-11066    Date Filed: 03/13/2013    Page: 34 of 39
    bribes. There was more than enough evidence for a jury to find that Nelson
    knowingly accepted payments that were intended to influence his acts as a public
    official.
    It is unfortunate that it appears to have been routine for JaxPort board
    members to lobby for companies that routinely brought business before it. It is
    entirely conceivable that Nelson became swept up in what was the standard
    operating procedure for the board’s unpaid, part-time members. The dissent points
    out that Fiorentino, a fellow board member and lobbyist, was “innocent” simply
    because he did not conceal his financial relationship with Young. I must agree
    that I am unable on this record to discern a difference between Fiorentino’s
    conduct and Nelson’s. But Fiorentino’s lack of a conviction does not
    automatically gut Nelson’s. For whatever reason, the Government opted not to
    pursue Fiorentino, and the Court has no authority—absent very unusual
    circumstances—to interfere with the exercise of the prosecutor’s charging
    discretion.
    34
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013       Page: 35 of 39
    HILL, J., dissenting:
    Tony Nelson concealed his financial relationship with SSI from JaxPort.
    This was not a crime. The investigation of him and the indictment against him,
    however, were instigated at a time when such concealment was thought by all to be
    a crime. After Skilling, we know that it never was. Nelson’s concealment of a
    financial interest in SSI was not a violation of his fiduciary duty to JaxPort. It did
    not deprive JaxPort of his honest services.1
    Nevertheless, Nelson was convicted of honest services fraud. The evidence
    was that he was told that, as a part-time, unpaid member of JaxPort Board, he
    could lawfully advocate on behalf of SSI – as a paid lobbyist, just as was
    Fiorentino – and he did so. The evidence was that he was told he could not vote on
    any matter involving SSI and that he did not do so. 2
    1
    During the time of misapprehension by many that concealment would be criminal, FBI agents
    made an early-morning, unannounced call on Nelson at his home. One agent questioned him and
    another made notes. During the meeting, Nelson admitted that he had not told JaxPort of his
    relationship with SSI. This concealment would have been seen as enough for a prosecution at
    the time. Thereafter, Skilling was decided; the prosecution became one for bribery.
    2
    I am troubled by the concurrence’s reference to Jacksonville General Counsel’s advice to
    Nelson that he was permitted to be a paid lobbyist for SSI so long as he did not vote as a “rubber
    stamp” opinion. The reference implies that there was something wrong or lacking in the opinion
    and there is no evidence in the record to support such an inference. Furthermore, if Nelson was
    not entitled to rely on Jacksonville’s rules – as interpreted by its own lawyer and regarding its
    own entity – to guard that his behavior was not in violation of those rules, then how is any local
    official safe from federal prosecution based on its own interpretation of those rules.
    35
    Case: 12-11066        Date Filed: 03/13/2013       Page: 36 of 39
    The evidence was that no economic harm befell JaxPort as the result of Nelson’s
    lobbying for SSI.3
    So the question becomes, where is the crime here? The only difference that
    I can see between what the government says is the innocent conduct of Fiorentino
    and the guilty conduct of Nelson is that Nelson concealed his relationship with
    SSI. This is not a crime. Skilling flatly rejects such a theory of honest services
    fraud.
    The majority opinion correctly states that in order to be guilty of honest
    services fraud, the jury had to find that “Nelson voluntarily and deliberately
    engaged in unlawful conduct.” But then it goes on to say that “Nelson had to know
    that accepting payments from SSI in exchange for representing the company’s
    interest at JaxPort was something that the law forbids.” But this is not so. The law
    did not forbid Nelson from representing SSI’s interests – only from voting on any
    matter affecting them, which he did not do.
    So, once again – where is the crime here?
    As a result of Skilling, I believe that a financial concealment case morphed
    into a bribery prosecution. The only remaining problem – but a pretty significant
    one – was that Nelson had been told that he could accept payment from SSI to
    3
    The concurrence notes that Nelson helped SSI get a change order. This is no evidence of
    wrongdoing – the testimony was that SSI was due the change order and the additional payment.
    Nelson’s conduct in assisting SSI to get the change order, therefore, could not be a violation of
    his duty to JaxPort.
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    advocate on its behalf in connection with the JaxPort. His agreement with SSI to
    do so – and to receive payment for doing so 4 – cannot be a bribe if it is permitted.
    Therefore, the government’s theory became that the concealment of his financial
    relationship – although not a crime in itself – was evidence that Nelson’s intent in
    accepting payment was corrupt, making otherwise legal payments illegal – a bribe.
    There are two problems with this theory. The first is a legal objection and
    the second a failure of proof.
    First, the government failed to prove Nelson had a corrupt intent to be
    bribed. The government proved only that Nelson sought to conceal his relationship
    with SSI – not why. Contrary to the majority opinion, the government did not
    prove that Nelson thought what he was doing was illegal. The word “bribery” does
    not appear anywhere in the FBI agent’s notes of her interviews with Nelson. She
    admitted at trial that those notes contain Nelson’s statement that he “now” knows
    that the payments were “wrong.” 5 The word “now” was underlined three times by
    the agent. Clearly Nelson sought to hide the SSI payments. I do not know why.
    But neither does anyone else – least of all the jury. Perhaps tax evasion was his
    motive. That is a crime; just not the crime charged here.
    4
    It should be noted, I think, that Nelson received payment monthly whether he accomplished
    anything or not.
    5
    The concurrence notes that Young testified that he thought the payments were bribes, but
    Young’s mens rea cannot be used to convict Nelson.
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    Second, and more importantly, concealment alone is legally insufficient to
    prove Nelson had corrupt intent to be bribed. If Nelson had no duty to disclose his
    financial relationship with SSI, as Skilling says, and the payments were permitted,
    as he was told, then the jury was not permitted to infer a corrupt intent to be bribed
    by his concealment. The government’s theory was that – although concealment is
    not a crime – it was evidence of corrupt intent and this mens rea turned lawful
    lobbying into unlawful bribery. I disagree. Bribery requires a corrupt agreement
    to perform an unlawful official act – an actus reus. In this case, Nelson agreed to
    perform a lawful act. The lobbying was permitted. An agreement to perform a
    lawful act is called a contract, not bribery. Even if the government had proved a
    mens rea, I don’t believe that it proved an actus reus in this case.
    In my view, the jury instructions in this case were fatally defective. The jury
    was instructed that Nelson had a duty to JaxPort, the existence of which is an
    essential element of the crime of honest services fraud. But they were never
    enlightened as to the nature and limits of this duty. The unique circumstance of
    this case – that Nelson was a part-time, unpaid member of the board, fully entitled
    to lobby JaxPort on behalf of SSI and to be paid for those efforts – required that the
    jury be carefully instructed as to the limits of his duty to JaxPort. That was not
    done. If it had, maybe he would have been acquitted.
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    Nor did the instructions require the jury to find any corrupt intent apart from
    Nelson’s concealment of his relationship with SSI. If his acceptance of payment
    was not unlawful, then the only evidence upon which the jury could have
    concluded that he had a corrupt intent in accepting them was that he concealed
    them. But we know that concealment cannot be the crime here.
    The majority says that if these instructions were error, the error was not
    plain. I disagree. Failure to adequately instruct the jury on the scope of Nelson’s
    duty to JaxPort – an essential element of the crime of honest services fraud – and
    the necessity to find a violation of that duty is fatal to the verdict. Failure of the
    instructions to require the jury to find that he had a corrupt intent – apart from his
    concealment of a financial interest in SSI – was also fatal to the verdict.
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    39