United States v. Mark Ciavarella, Jr. ( 2013 )


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  •                                         PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 11-3277
    _____________
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    v.
    MARK CIAVARELLA, JR.,
    Appellant.
    ____________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 3:09-CR-00272-002)
    District Judge: Honorable Edwin M. Kosik
    ____________
    Argued
    November 14, 2012
    Before: RENDELL, FUENTES, and CHAGARES,
    Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: May 24, 2013 )
    Albert J. Flora, Jr., Esq. [ARGUED]
    33 West South Street
    1
    Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701
    William Ruzzo, Esq.
    590 Rutter Avenue
    Kingston, PA 18704
    Counsels for Appellant Mark Ciavarella, Jr.
    Peter J. Smith, Esq., United States Attorney
    Gordon A.D. Zubrod, Esq., Assistant United States Attorney
    [ARGUED]
    Michael A. Consiglio, Esq., Assistant United States Attorney
    Office of United States Attorney
    Ronald Reagan Federal Building
    228 Walnut Street
    P.O. Box 11754
    Harrisburg, PA 17108
    William S. Houser, Esq., Assistant United States Attorney
    Amy C. Phillips, Esq., Assistant United States Attorney
    Office of United States Attorney
    235 North Washington Avenue
    P.O. Box 309, Suite 311
    Scranton, PA 18503
    Counsels for Appellee United States of America
    ____________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ____________
    FUENTES, Circuit Judge:
    2
    Mark Ciavarella, a former state judge, was convicted
    by a jury in the Middle District of Pennsylvania of
    racketeering, honest services mail fraud, money laundering
    conspiracy, filing false tax returns, and several other related
    crimes. The charges resulted from the so-called “Kids for
    Cash” scandal that erupted in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania
    in late 2008. Ciavarella and his fellow judge, Michael
    Conahan, were accused of receiving over $2.8 million in three
    years from a commercial builder, Robert Mericle, and an
    attorney and businessman, Robert Powell, in exchange for
    helping to construct and operate juvenile detention centers
    and placing juvenile offenders there. Ciavarella complains
    that the District Court Judge overseeing his case was biased
    and should have recused himself early on, when Ciavarella
    asked him to do so. Ciavarella also assigns numerous trial and
    sentencing errors, which we discuss in detail below.1
    Over the course of several years, Ciavarella committed
    hundreds of juveniles to detention centers co-owned by
    Powell, including many who were not represented by counsel,
    without informing the juveniles or their families of his
    conflict of interest. By the summer of 2008, Ciavarella and
    Conahan, aware that they were under criminal investigation,
    met with Mericle and Powell to collaborate on their stories,
    discuss how to mitigate the effects of damaging witnesses,
    and encourage the destruction of records. Unbeknownst to
    them, Powell was wearing a recording device during these
    1
    Ciavarella raises challenges to evidentiary rulings,
    sufficiency of the evidence, and the timeliness of his
    prosecution, as well as claims that his sentence violated his
    Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial and was substantively
    unreasonable.
    3
    meetings, exposing Ciavarella and Conahan‟s efforts to
    obstruct justice.
    By early 2009, law enforcement officials gathered
    sufficient evidence to charge the two judges. Ciavarella and
    Conahan subsequently entered into an agreement with the
    Government under which they pled guilty to an Information
    charging them with wire fraud and conspiracy in exchange for
    an agreed 87-month sentence. Noting that the stipulated
    sentences were significantly lower than the advisory U.S.
    Sentencing Guidelines for the charged offenses, the District
    Court rejected the plea agreement, and Ciavarella and
    Conahan withdrew their guilty pleas. Shortly thereafter, a
    grand jury returned a 48-count Indictment. Ciavarella
    proceeded to trial, was found guilty of twelve counts against
    him and was ultimately sentenced to 336 months‟
    imprisonment, as well as restitution, forfeiture, and a special
    assessment. This appeal ensued. With the exception of Count
    7 for honest services mail fraud, we will affirm the judgments
    of conviction and sentence on all counts. We will remand to
    the District Court to modify the judgment with respect to the
    special assessment as to Count 7.
    I.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.      Replacement of the Existing County-Run
    Juvenile Detention Center
    Ciavarella served on the Luzerne County Court of
    Common Pleas from 1996 through January 2009. He
    primarily served on the Juvenile Court, and in January 2007,
    was named President Judge of the Court, succeeding Judge
    4
    Michael Conahan who had served as President Judge since
    January 2002.
    The circumstances relating to the various counts in the
    Indictment began in 2000. That year, Ciavarella and Conahan,
    along with other county officials, began expressing concerns
    about the serious disrepair and deplorable conditions at the
    Luzerne County Juvenile Detention Facility. Some county
    officials wanted to build a new county-run detention center,
    but Ciavarella advocated for the construction of a private
    facility, which could then be leased to the county. Ciavarella
    along with Conahan helped bring together potential investors
    for this project, including Robert Powell, a lawyer and friend
    of Conahan, and Robert Mericle, a local commercial builder
    and friend of Ciavarella. Powell and his business associate,
    Greg Zappala, ultimately created Pennsylvania Child Care,
    LLC (“PACC”) to develop the new private juvenile detention
    center, and Powell hired Mericle Construction Company to
    build it. In July 2001, Mericle informed Ciavarella that he
    would pay him a referral fee of 10% of the contract price, and
    Ciavarella asked him to make the payment through Powell.
    Ciavarella and Conahan agreed to split the payment because
    Conahan “put the deal together.” App. 1205.
    B.      Kickbacks to Ensure Completion of the
    Juvenile Detention Center
    As part of the plan to help Powell and Mericle ensure
    completion of the project, Ciavarella and Conahan engaged in
    various endeavors to stymie the county‟s efforts to build and
    operate its own facility. Most critically, when Powell had
    trouble securing financing for construction in late 2001,
    Ciavarella and Conahan agreed to create a lease between
    5
    PACC and Luzerne County to secure a bank loan. The judges
    agreed that Conahan would sign a lease in January 2002, after
    he became President Judge and would have the authority to
    bind the county. The lease, which the judges prevented any
    county officials from seeing, committed the county to pay
    $1.314 million per year to PACC in exchange for PACC
    housing the county‟s juvenile offenders.
    In February 2002, after Powell secured financing,
    Mericle and PACC finalized a construction contract, which
    included an agreement that Mericle would pay a $997,600
    referral fee after he completed construction of the facility. It
    was Mericle‟s understanding that he would make the payment
    to Powell, but that Ciavarella would be the ultimate recipient.
    In January 2003, when construction was nearing completion,
    Conahan provided Powell with wire transfer instructions.
    Pursuant to the instructions, Mericle transferred the referral
    fee to Conahan and Ciavarella through a series of transactions
    between multiple individuals and companies to ensure the
    funds were not traceable. While Mericle Construction
    reported the payment for tax purposes, Ciavarella never
    reported the income.
    After PACC began operations, Powell and Mericle
    worked to develop a second juvenile detention center,
    Western PA Child Care (WPACC), and expand PACC from
    48 beds to 60 beds. Ciavarella received referral fees for each
    of these projects. In July 2005, Mericle paid Ciavarella a $1
    million referral fee for WPACC and in February 2006,
    Mericle paid Ciavarella a $150,000 referral fee for the PACC
    expansion. Mericle received the instructions from Ciavarella
    and made the payment by transferring funds to the Pinnacle
    Group of Jupiter, LLC, a corporation that Ciavarella,
    6
    Conahan, and their wives formed in January 2004.
    Altogether, Mericle paid $2,147,600 in referral fees to
    Ciavarella and Conahan.
    C.      Ensuring Success for the New Detention
    Centers
    In January 2002, Conahan appointed Ciavarella to the
    Juvenile Court, a position that Ciavarella leveraged to place
    juvenile offenders with PACC to perpetuate the scheme.
    Months earlier, the outgoing President Judge had removed
    Ciavarella from the Juvenile Court and appointed himself, but
    when Conahan became President Judge, Conahan instead
    reappointed Ciavarella to that position as Juvenile Court
    Judge. By February 2003, PACC had begun operating, and
    Ciavarella started keeping regular tabs on how many beds
    were utilized at any given time. In November 2003,
    Ciavarella and Conahan called Powell into a meeting to
    discuss how many juveniles Ciavarella had sent to PACC and
    what the county had paid PACC for housing the juveniles. In
    2003, alone, Ciavarella detained more than 100 juveniles at
    PACC. Based on this information and on a cursory estimate
    of PACC‟s profits, Ciavarella concluded that PACC was
    “doing very, very well” and that he “want[ed] a part of it.”
    App. 532-33. After Powell responded with concerns about
    cash flow, Ciavarella said “he didn‟t care . . . [and] want[ed]
    to be paid” his share. App. 535-36. The judges told Powell
    that they had formed the Pinnacle Group and would use it to
    purchase a condo, and Powell could use it to make “rent”
    payments. In February 2004, Pinnacle purchased an
    uninhabitable condo in Jupiter, Florida. From January to
    September 2004, Powell sent $590,000 in numerous personal
    and business checks to Pinnacle, identified as payments for
    7
    rent and marina fees, financed through Powell‟s draws on
    PACC and his law firm, which he kept hidden from his
    business partner Zappala.
    In July 2005 and February 2006, Ciavarella and
    Conahan received referral fees from Mericle for the
    construction of WPACC and expansion of PACC. Both
    payments were funneled through several conduits. Shortly
    thereafter, Ciavarella and Conahan again pressured Powell to
    make more payments. In June 2006, the judges called Powell
    into another meeting to discuss how much money Ciavarella
    had made for Powell by detaining juveniles at PACC and
    WPACC. For the year 2005, Ciavarella had detained more
    than 100 juveniles at PACC and had begun placing juveniles
    at WPACC. The judges told Powell, “Look, you‟re in this
    business, we helped you get into it, you‟re making a lot of
    money, you‟re going to give us some.” App. 568. Powell
    testified that he “wasn‟t paying them for any services
    rendered, [but] was paying them because they demanded it in
    their position of authority.” App. 568. Despite his reluctance,
    Powell began working with his law firm‟s Chief Financial
    Officer, Pat Owens, to structure transactions to withdraw
    large sums of cash from his law firm and from PACC and
    WPACC. From August to December 2006, Powell made cash
    payments totaling $143,500 to Ciavarella and Conahan
    through boxes filled with cash delivered by Powell and his
    law partner, Jill Moran, to Conahan and his judicial aide.
    D.     Failure to Disclose Conflicts of Interest
    Ciavarella and Conahan perpetuated their scheme by
    failing to disclose their receipt of payments from Mericle and
    Powell. Also, while obligated by Pennsylvania law to file
    8
    financial interest statements reporting on outside income,
    from 2003 through 2007, Ciavarella and Conahan filed false
    statements and failed to report their outside income, financial
    interests, or gifts related to PACC, Powell, or Mericle.
    Additionally, though they were ethically required to disclose
    their financial relationships with parties in cases in which
    they presided over as judges, and required to recuse
    themselves from such cases, Ciavarella and Conahan
    repeatedly failed to disclose their financial relationships with
    Powell, Mericle, PACC, and WPACC despite presiding over
    several trials in which they were litigants between 2004 and
    2008.
    Furthermore, Ciavarella never disclosed his conflict of
    interest with the juvenile detention centers when he presided
    over the cases of juvenile offenders and committed them to
    detention at PACC or WPACC. In many cases, with the intent
    of increasing his personal gain, Ciavarella disregarded the
    recommendation of juvenile probation officers evaluating the
    juvenile offenders‟ cases and ordered their detention.
    Ciavarella also exerted pressure on the staff of the Court of
    Common Pleas to recommend the detention of juvenile
    offenders, and on certain occasions, as a result of pressure
    from Ciavarella, probation officers changed their
    recommendations from release of the juveniles to
    recommendations of detention.
    Following the discovery of this scheme, a special
    master was appointed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to
    review the cases of juveniles who were not represented by an
    attorney and were committed to PACC and WPACC by
    Ciavarella. The special master indicated that “a very
    substantial number” of the juveniles did not knowingly or
    9
    intelligently waive their right to counsel. Confidential
    Presentence Report (“PSR”) ¶ 103. The investigation also
    revealed “that there was routine deprivation of children‟s
    constitutional rights to appear before an impartial tribunal and
    to have an opportunity to be heard.” PSR ¶ 103.
    E.     Ciavarella’s Obstruction of Justice
    In 2007, Ciavarella, Conahan, and Powell learned that
    they were under criminal investigation when they heard that
    witnesses had received grand jury subpoenas. Ciavarella met
    with Mericle in November 2007 to let Mericle know that
    Ciavarella could go to jail if Mericle reported that he had paid
    Ciavarella a referral fee through Powell. Ciavarella also
    encouraged Mericle to destroy records.
    After learning about Mericle‟s testimony before a
    grand jury, in January 2008, Ciavarella and Conahan met with
    Powell to coordinate their “stories.” PSR ¶ 45. They
    instructed Powell to testify that he had never given them any
    boxes of cash. But by the summer of 2008, Powell had begun
    cooperating with investigators and wore a recording device
    during his conversations with Ciavarella and Conahan. In a
    July 2008 conversation, Ciavarella, Conahan, and Powell
    discussed how to discredit any testimony by Powell‟s law
    partner Jill Moran if she reported her delivery of Powell‟s
    cash to Conahan.
    F.     The Indictment and Prosecution
    In January 2009, Ciavarella and Conahan were
    charged with honest services wire fraud and conspiracy. Both
    subsequently pleaded guilty before District Judge Edwin M.
    10
    Kosik of the District Court for the Middle District of
    Pennsylvania, conditioned upon the Court‟s acceptance of
    binding plea agreements with a stipulated 87-month
    sentences. As noted above, Judge Kosik rejected the plea
    agreements because of his concern that the stipulated
    sentences were far below the Guidelines for the charged
    offenses. He also cited the Probation Office‟s presentence
    report prepared in connection with his review of the plea
    agreements, which represented that Ciavarella had continued
    to publicly deny receipt of money in exchange for committing
    juveniles to detention, despite the contradictory offense
    conduct proffered by the Government. Ciavarella also
    essentially denied committing juveniles in exchange for
    money at the plea hearing. Ciavarella and Conahan then
    withdrew their pleas, and in September 2009, a grand jury
    returned a 48-count Indictment against Conahan and
    Ciavarella.2 Conahan eventually pleaded guilty to
    racketeering conspiracy and received a 17-year sentence.
    Ciavarella‟s trial began in February 2011. Throughout
    the trial, Ciavarella sought to demonstrate that Mericle‟s
    payments were legitimate referral fees and not bribes or
    kickbacks. Specifically, he argued that there was no quid pro
    quo, that is, no agreement that Ciavarella was sending
    juveniles to PACC and WPACC in exchange for payments
    from Powell. As part of this defense, Ciavarella sought to
    prove that Powell was embezzling from his law firm and the
    detention centers in order to support his lavish lifestyle rather
    2
    On September 29, 2010, a superseding Indictment
    was returned against Ciavarella containing the same charges
    but with revised language to conform with Skilling v. United
    States, 
    130 S. Ct. 2896
     (2010).
    11
    than to pay kickbacks to Ciavarella. Nevertheless, on
    February 18, the jury found Ciavarella guilty of 12 charges:
    racketeering (Count 1), racketeering conspiracy (Count 2),
    four counts of honest services mail fraud (Counts 7, 8, 9, and
    10), money laundering conspiracy (Count 21), conspiracy to
    defraud the United States (Count 35), and four counts of
    subscribing to a materially false tax return (Counts 36, 37, 38,
    and 39). Ciavarella was acquitted of honest services wire
    fraud, bribery, money laundering, and extortion. Thereafter,
    the District Court sentenced Ciavarella to 336 months of
    imprisonment and 3 years of supervised release and ordered
    Ciavarella to pay restitution in the amount of $1,173,791.94,
    to forfeit $997,600, and to pay a special assessment of
    $1,200.
    II.    ANALYSIS
    Ciavarella raises several issues on appeal, addressing a
    host of challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, the
    timeliness of his prosecution, the impartiality of the District
    Judge, the admissibility of evidence, and his sentence.3 We
    will address each of Ciavarella‟s arguments in turn.
    A.     Ciavarella’s Recusal Motions
    Ciavarella challenges the denial of his three motions to
    recuse Judge Kosik. His initial recusal motions were premised
    on Judge Kosik‟s pretrial conduct, and his last motion was
    3
    The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 3231
    . We have appellate jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and 
    18 U.S.C. § 3742
    (a).
    12
    predicated on the opinions expressed by Judge Kosik in his
    responses to letters from the public.4
    1.     Statements in Citizens Voice Article
    In July 2009, months after Ciavarella and Conahan
    entered guilty pleas, Powell also pleaded guilty before
    District Judge Kosik. During Powell‟s plea hearing, the
    District Court asked Powell whether there was “underlying
    consideration for the payments which was part and parcel
    with the concealment of the payments.” App. 29. The District
    Court‟s question was in response to media reports about
    Ciavarella and his claim that he never detained juveniles in
    exchange for money. Powell responded that “there was no
    quid pro quo per se,” that is, no detention of juveniles in
    exchange for payments, and that he had only acted as a
    conduit for Mericle‟s referral fees. App. 29. One month later,
    the District Court rejected Ciavarella‟s and Conahan‟s plea
    agreements.
    Days after the District Court rejected the plea
    agreements, the Citizens Voice newspaper published an
    article, which purported to detail a conversation between
    Judge Kosik and another individual that the reporter had
    overheard outside of the courtroom minutes after Powell‟s
    guilty plea. The article reported:
    4
    We review the District Court‟s denial of Ciavarella‟s
    recusal motions for abuse of discretion. Johnson v.
    Trueblood, 
    629 F.2d 287
    , 290 (3d Cir. 1980).
    13
    Kosik stood near an elevator outside his
    courtroom and casually discussed what had just
    happened therein, including an attempt by
    Powell‟s attorney to portray some payments to
    the judges as a “finder‟s fee”—not as an
    incentive for them to sent a steady stream of
    juveniles to the detention facilities co-owned by
    Powell. . . .
    How could there not have been a “quid pro
    quo?” Kosik wondered, portending the
    sentiments he expressed Friday in a five-page
    memorandum rejecting plea agreements
    between former Luzerne County Judges Mark
    A. Ciavarella Jr. and Michael T. Conahan and
    federal prosecutors.
    The evidence of Ciavarella and Conahan‟s
    judicial prostitution—of their so-called kids for
    cash scheme—was abundant and clear, Kosik
    continued. . . .
    App. 71. The article went on to quote repeatedly, with and
    without attribution, from the District Court‟s opinion
    rejecting Ciavarella‟s plea agreement.5
    5
    The Citizens Voice article reported that Kosik said,
    “Conahan, pounding the same callous, iron fist he used to
    force the county‟s use of the private facilities in 2003,
    „attempted to obstruct and impede justice, and failed to
    clearly demonstrate affirmative acceptance of responsibility
    with this denials and contradictions of evidence.‟” App. 71.
    The article went on say Kosik referenced Conahan‟s “denials
    14
    After withdrawing his guilty plea, Ciavarella moved to
    disqualify Judge Kosik on the grounds that Judge Kosik had
    improperly relied on extrajudicial statements—including
    media reports and Ciavarella‟s presentence report—in
    denying the plea agreement, and that Judge Kosik‟s
    statements reported in the Citizens Voice article could be
    perceived as comments on the merits of the case and on
    Ciavarella‟s guilt. The District Court denied the recusal
    motion.
    Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 455
    (a), a judge must recuse himself
    “in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably
    be questioned.” “The judge does not have to be subjectively
    biased or prejudiced, so long as he appears to be so.” Liteky
    v. United States, 
    510 U.S. 540
    , 553 n.2 (1994). To ensure the
    integrity and impartiality of the judiciary, judges must
    scrupulously avoid making public comments on pending
    litigation. See Code of Conduct for United States Judges
    (hereinafter “Code of Conduct”) Canon 3A(6) (Judicial
    Conference 2009) (“A judge should not make public
    comment on the merits of a matter pending or impending in
    any court.”).
    concerning his alleged offenses, „including the receipts of
    money.‟” App. 72. The article also noted that Kosik “bristled”
    that Ciavarella “„has resorted to public statements of remorse,
    more for his personal circumstances. . . . Yet he continues to
    deny what he terms “quid pro quo” his receipt of money as a
    finder‟s fee.‟” App. 72. Each of these statements that the
    Citizens Voice article attributes to statements by Judge Kosik
    is contained in the District Court‟s opinion rejecting
    Ciavarella‟s and Conahan‟s plea agreements. App. 21-22.
    15
    Ciavarella urges us to rely on the First Circuit‟s
    approach in In re Boston’s Children First, 
    244 F.3d 164
     (1st
    Cir. 2001). There a district judge had spoken with a
    newspaper reporter about a pending case, and the Court held
    that because the case involved a “matter of significant local
    concern” and because the judge‟s “comments were
    sufficiently open to misinterpretation so as to create the
    appearance of partiality, even when no actual prejudice or
    bias existed,” recusal was warranted under 
    28 U.S.C. § 455
    (a). 
    Id. at 169, 170
    .
    This case, however, is different. Unlike in Boston’s
    Children First, it is not clear whether the comments attributed
    to Judge Kosik were ever actually made by him outside the
    context of a judicial proceeding. The Citizens Voice article
    implied that a reporter overheard Judge Kosik “casually
    discuss[ing] what had just happened” at Powell‟s plea hearing
    and “wonder[ing]” how there could “not have been a „quid
    pro quo?‟” App. 71. But despite the reporter‟s implication
    that the statements had been made outside the courtroom,
    every statement attributed to Judge Kosik had in fact been
    expressed by him in his judicial opinion rejecting Ciavarella‟s
    and Conahan‟s plea agreements or in the courtroom during
    Powell‟s plea hearing. In fact, in its opinion denying the
    recusal motion, the District Court denied ever having spoken
    with the media regarding a case or person charged and
    compared the Citizens Voice article with its July 31, 2009
    opinion. Judge Kosik stated that “[t]he article‟s sources were
    not extra-judicial, but [were] quoted from judicial filings.”
    App. 30. We agree. For this reason, Ciavarella‟s reliance on
    Boston’s Children First is unavailing.
    16
    Nor do Judge Kosik‟s statements in his July 31, 2009
    opinion and at Powell‟s plea hearing warrant recusal on the
    basis that they gave an appearance of partiality. Cheney v.
    United States District Court for the District of Columbia is
    illustrative. In Cheney, Justice Scalia issued an opinion
    responding to a motion for recusal based on a trip and flight
    that he had taken the year before with Vice President Cheney.
    The recusal motion cited to newspaper articles, and Justice
    Scalia responded to correct inaccuracies and state that
    “largely inaccurate and uninformed opinions cannot
    determine the recusal question.” Cheney, 
    541 U.S. 913
    , 924
    (2004) (Scalia, J., mem.). To the contrary, “the recusal
    inquiry must be „made from the perspective of a reasonable
    observer who is informed of all the surrounding facts and
    circumstances.‟” 
    Id.
     (quoting Microsoft Corp. v. United
    States, 
    530 U.S. 1301
    , 1302 (2000) (Rehnquist, C.J., mem.)
    (citing Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at 548
    )).
    Here, too, no reasonable person who is informed of all
    of the facts would believe that Judge Kosik‟s impartiality
    could be questioned based on the statements in the
    proceedings as reported in the Citizens Voice article. The
    statements Judge Kosik made during Powell‟s plea colloquy
    and in the District Court‟s opinion rejecting Ciavarella‟s plea
    agreement were based on the knowledge he gained over the
    course of judicial proceedings. “[O]pinions formed by the
    judge on the basis of . . . prior proceedings[] do not constitute
    a basis for a bias or partiality motion unless they display a
    deep-seated favoritism or antagonism that would make fair
    judgment impossible.” Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at 555
    . Ciavarella has
    failed to demonstrate such a “deep-seated favoritism or
    antagonism.” 
    Id.
     To the contrary, Judge Kosik‟s statements
    were merely “assessments relevant to the case, whether they
    17
    are correct or not.” United States v. Wecht, 
    484 F.3d 194
    , 220
    (3d Cir. 2007). “As such, they do not demonstrate bias, even
    if they are „expressions of impatience, dissatisfaction, [or]
    annoyance.‟” Knoll v. City of Allentown, 
    707 F.3d 406
    , 411
    (3d Cir. 2013) (quoting Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at 555
    ) (alteration in
    original).
    Finally, we note that under § 455(a), “[d]iscretion is
    confided in the district judge in the first instance to determine
    whether to disqualify himself because the judge presiding
    over a case is in the best position to appreciate the
    implications of those matters alleged in a recusal motion,”
    particularly when “the district court judge has presided over
    (i) an extraordinarily complex litigation (ii) involving a
    multitude of parties (iii) for an extended period of time.” In re
    Kensington Int’l Ltd., 
    353 F.3d 211
    , 224 (3d Cir. 2003)
    (internal quotation marks, citation and alterations omitted).
    Here, at the time of Ciavarella‟s initial March 1, 2010 recusal
    motion and subsequent renewals of that motion, Judge Kosik
    had presided over Ciavarella‟s highly complex case for well
    over a year, and over many of Ciavarella‟s co-conspirators‟
    cases, and he was well-suited to understand the implications
    of the Citizens Voice article. We find no abuse of discretion in
    the District Court‟s denial of the recusal motions.
    2.     Information Received by the District
    Court Prior to Rejecting Plea
    Ciavarella next contends that Judge Kosik‟s recusal
    was also warranted following the rejection of Ciavarella‟s
    guilty plea. He argues that Judge Kosik relied on the
    presentence report during his plea hearing, which contained
    18
    factually disputed evidence,6 to prejudge both the strength of
    the Government‟s case and Ciavarella‟s guilt. He also asserts
    Judge Kosik considered media reports as support for his
    conclusion that Ciavarella “has resorted to public statements
    of remorse, more for his personal circumstances, yet he
    continues to deny what he terms „quid pro quo‟ his receipt of
    money as a finder‟s fee.” App. 21.
    But Ciavarella has not pointed to any extrajudicial
    source on which the District Court relied. Rather, his denials
    of sending juveniles to detention for money were contained in
    the record, including in Ciavarella‟s plea colloquy stating that
    he was “not in complete agreement at this time on all of the
    facts alleged in the Information.” Supp. App. 60-61. As we
    recently stated, “[t]o warrant reassignment under § 455(a), a
    case generally must involve apparent bias deriving from an
    extrajudicial source, meaning something above and beyond
    judicial rulings or opinions formed in presiding over the
    case.” United States v. Bergrin, 
    682 F.3d 261
    , 282 (3d Cir.
    2012). As there is no showing of extrajudicial sources that
    Judge Kosik relied on, Ciavarella‟s argument fails.
    Nor can the District Court‟s ability to preside
    impartially over the remaining jury trial be questioned due to
    its exposure to the presentence report. We have never held
    that a judge must recuse him or herself after viewing a
    presentence report and rejecting a plea. To the contrary, we
    have recognized that “circumstances often may arise when
    6
    Because Ciavarella did not object to the presentence
    report when given the opportunity to do so, his contention
    that it contained factually disputed evidence is not properly
    before us.
    19
    the judge views a defendant‟s presentence report for
    legitimate purposes before trying him or presiding over his
    trial.” United States v. Small, 
    472 F.2d 818
    , 822 (3d Cir.
    1972). Furthermore, “[i]t has long been regarded as normal
    and proper for a judge to sit in the same case upon its remand,
    and to sit in successive trials involving the same defendant.”
    Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at 551
    . Ciavarella fails to demonstrate any
    sufficient basis for recusal.
    3.     Judicial Response to Citizen Letters
    In response to media requests and prior to sentencing,
    the District Court disclosed that it had received nearly 200
    letters from the public regarding the case and authored seven
    letters in response to some of those letters. In disclosing the
    public‟s letters, the District Court stated that it had “not read
    or considered, nor will it read or consider, the bulk of such
    materials in determining the sentence to be imposed [on
    Ciavarella].” App. 42. The Court then publicly released all of
    the letters, with the exception of those requesting
    confidentiality. The seven responses that Judge Kosik sent
    contained the following statements:
    February 20, 2009 . . .
    Thank you for your letter and expressed
    concerns over the corruption which has come to
    light in Luzerne County, and most seriously
    with the courts.
    My personal opinions are in complete sympathy
    with those you express. The only difference is
    20
    that my personal beliefs cannot guide my
    responsibility and judgments.
    As you know, the government has entered into
    an agreement with the defense with regard to
    the sentence which is binding if neither side
    rejects it. According to the government, this
    resulted because of the legally questionable
    Count I of the indictment. To proceed, it would
    result in litigation and appeals which could
    extend any finality in the case for at least one
    year. I need to determine if the government‟s
    reasoning is correct, and I must do so as
    detached as possible.
    I am not sure we have seen the end of many
    transgressions in your county.
    App. 1507 (hereinafter “Wojack response”).
    March 2, 2009 . . .
    Thank you for your letter and frank expressions.
    If personal opinions were our only guide, we
    are on the same page. . . .
    The prosecution stated the plea bargain was
    reached because of some legal uncertainties in a
    law which prohibits corrupting public service.
    To litigate the uncertainties before finality
    would result in extending the presumption of
    innocence for a least a year. Accordingly, they
    21
    claim to have been guided by the need of
    closure.
    App. 1510.
    July 16, 2009 . . .
    Thank you for your note concerning the
    pending case before me. I appreciate your views
    and hope that ultimately you can respect the
    final consideration in the case before me.
    App. 1518.
    July 23, 2009 . . .
    Thank you for your letter of July 21 concerning
    the case of two judges out of Luzerne County.
    Your sentiments are noted. However, I have yet
    to receive a pre-sentence report which will aid
    in making a decision.
    App. 1516.
    Feb. 24, 2010 . . .
    Thank you for your letter . . . voicing your
    concerns regarding Judge Michael Conahan.
    This is just another example of why Judge
    Conahan and his cohort have been indicted and
    expect to go to trial in the federal criminal case.
    
    22 App. 1512
    .
    May 6, 2010 . . .
    I thank you for the letter expressing interest in
    and opinions concerning the judicial process as
    it may play out in the case of former Judge
    Conahan.
    I appreciate your views and hope that ultimately
    you can respect the final consideration in the
    case before me.
    App. 1520.
    June 15, 2010 . . .
    Thank you for your letter dated April 30, 2010,
    and received by me on June 14, 2010. I am
    sorry justice is so slow, but ultimately I hope
    you find it to be true.
    App. 1514. Ciavarella renewed his prior recusal
    motion based on these letters.
    When a sitting judge comments on a pending case, he
    or she should heed the clear tenets expressed in our Code of
    Conduct for United States Judges. Judges should adhere to
    the following standards:
    [3A(1)] A judge should be faithful to, and
    maintain professional competence in, the law
    23
    and should not be swayed by partisan interests,
    public clamor, or fear of criticism. . . .
    [3A(6)] A judge should not make public
    comment on the merits of a matter pending or
    impending in any court. A judge should require
    similar restraint by court personnel subject to
    the judge‟s direction and control. The
    prohibition on public comment on the merits
    does not extend to public statements made in
    the course of the judge‟s official duties, to
    explanations of court procedures, or to scholarly
    presentations made for purposes of legal
    education. . . .
    [3C(1)(a)] A judge shall disqualify himself or
    herself in a proceeding in which the judge‟s
    impartiality might reasonably be questioned,
    including but not limited to instances in which:
    [] the judge has a personal bias or prejudice
    concerning a party, or personal knowledge of
    disputed evidentiary facts concerning the
    proceeding . . . .
    Code of Conduct Canon 3. Given the Canon‟s clarity, we
    emphasize that writing letters to non-parties about a case
    during its pendency is highly discouraged.7
    7
    Nonetheless, we recognize that the “Code is designed
    to provide guidance to judges,” and adherence is not
    mandatory. Code of Conduct Canon 1 cmt. (emphasis added).
    Furthermore, “it is possible to violate the Code without
    creating an appearance of partiality; likewise, it is possible for
    24
    The inquiry here, however, is whether Judge Kosik‟s
    conduct violates 
    28 U.S.C. § 455
    (a) and triggers a duty to
    recuse. We have carefully analyzed the contents of each letter
    and are troubled by the correspondence and the expressions of
    Judge Kosik‟s thoughts on Ciavarella and his conduct.
    Nevertheless, though Judge Kosik‟s personalized responses to
    any letters from the public was ill-advised, their contents do
    not mandate his recusal because no reasonable person would
    question Judge Kosik‟s impartiality under these unique
    circumstances. Nor does our review of the record show
    anything other than proceedings conducted by a fair and
    impartial jurist.
    We find that the letters fall into three categories: (1)
    those in which Judge Kosik expressed his personal opinion
    about the case but clearly stated that those opinions could not
    affect his judgments; (2) those in which Judge Kosik never
    expressed an opinion but stated that he “appreciated” the
    recipient‟s viewpoint; and (3) those where Judge Kosik
    neither expressed an opinion nor took note of the recipient‟s
    comments but responded with the status of the case. The
    second and third groups of letters abide by the Code of
    Conduct‟s standards because they merely provided
    “explanations of court procedures,” Code of Conduct 3A(6),
    and took “particular care so that the comment does not
    denigrate public confidence in the judiciary‟s integrity and
    impartiality.” Commentary to Code of Conduct Canon 3A(6).
    No reasonable person could question Judge Kosik‟s
    impartiality based on these letters.
    a judge to comply with the Code yet still be required to recuse
    herself.” Boston’s Children First, 
    244 F.3d at 168
    .
    25
    The first category of letters, however, causes us greater
    concern because the letters in that category contain Judge
    Kosik‟s personal opinions about Ciavarella and the case
    before him. Because Ciavarella must only demonstrate that
    Judge Kosik appears to be biased, see Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at
    553
    n.2, we must consider whether a reasonable person might
    question Judge Kosik‟s impartiality based on the opinions
    expressed in this correspondence. As the Supreme Court has
    stated, when a judge‟s opinion is formed by the proceedings
    before him, his opinions do not constitute bias “unless they
    display a deep-seated favoritism or antagonism that would
    make fair judgment impossible.” 
    Id. at 555
    . Because, as
    noted, Judge Kosik‟s opinions did not result from any
    extrajudicial source, but from events occurring in the course
    of proceedings, for recusal to be warranted, Ciavarella must
    meet Liteky‟s high bar of deep-seated antagonism. We
    conclude that Ciavarella has failed to do so given that in each
    letter in which Judge Kosik expressed his opinion, he also
    expressly stated that his personal opinion would not guide his
    rulings. This stands in stark contrast to United States v. Antar,
    where we required recusal of a district judge who commented
    at the sentencing hearing that his “object in this case from day
    one ha[d] always been to get back to the public that which
    was taken from it as a result of the fraudulent activities of this
    defendant and others.” 
    53 F.3d 568
    , 573, 579 (3d Cir. 1995),
    abrogated on other grounds by Smith v. Berg, 
    247 F.3d 532
    (3d Cir. 2001). Judge Kosik‟s comments do not “display [the]
    high degree of antagonism” we found in Antar. 
    Id. at 576
    .
    At oral argument, defense counsel cited the response to
    Wojack as most exemplary of Judge Kosik‟s perceived bias
    and apparent partiality. Wojack had written to Judge Kosik to
    26
    “search the deepest veins of [his] soul and find reason not to
    let these two judges off lightly,” pleading that “[s]even and a
    third years and some forfeiture of wealth is not severe enough
    punishment to begin the healing of the public trust.” App.
    1506. Wojack said that Ciavarella and Conahan had
    “committed the most serious crime against the people” by
    using their courtrooms as “a business for profit at the expense
    of children.” App. 1506. The defense contends that Judge
    Kosik‟s response evidenced his partiality. This view,
    however, requires consideration of only certain sentiments
    expressed—“My personal opinions are in complete sympathy
    with those you express” and “I am not sure we have seen the
    end of many transgressions in your county”—while
    disregarding others—“The only difference is that my personal
    beliefs cannot guide my responsibility and judgments” and “I
    need to determine if the government‟s reasoning is correct,
    and I must do so as detached as possible.” Wojack response.
    As the Supreme Court noted in Liteky, “[i]mpartiality is not
    gullibility. Disinterestedness does not mean child-like
    innocence. If the judge did not form judgments of the actors
    in those court-house dramas called trials, he could never
    render decisions.” Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at 551
     (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted). Viewing Judge Kosik‟s
    statements in the Wojack correspondence as a whole, no
    reasonable observer who is informed of all of the surrounding
    facts and circumstances would believe that Judge Kosik could
    not, and did not, act impartially. Recusal was not required.
    4.     Overall Perception of Bias
    Finally, Ciavarella contends that “the totality of Judge
    Kosik‟s pre-trial and trial conduct conveyed a message that he
    loathed Ciavarella and believed that he accepted bribes, thus
    27
    warranting disqualification.” Ciavarella‟s Br. at 22. We must
    consider whether recusal is warranted considering the totality
    of the circumstances involved in the proceedings. See, e.g.,
    United States v. Kennedy, 
    682 F.3d 244
    , 259-60 (3d Cir.
    2012).
    Viewing the record in its entirety, it appears that Judge
    Kosik had serious concerns about Ciavarella‟s alleged
    conduct. In his correspondence, in the Memorandum rejecting
    Ciavarella‟s plea agreement, and in his denial of the initial
    recusal motion, Judge Kosik expressed his belief that
    Ciavarella‟s conduct amounted to “corruption,” Wojack
    response, that the undisputed evidence showed that Ciavarella
    committed the county to housing juvenile offenders “under
    circumstances amounting to constitutional deprivations,”
    App. 29, and that due to Ciavarella‟s conduct, “confidence in
    the judicial system . . . may be corrupted for a time well after
    this case.” App. 22. Yet a judge‟s negative view of a
    defendant based on evidence in the record does not constitute
    actual or apparent bias for the purpose of a recusal motion.
    The judge who presides at a trial may, upon
    completion of the evidence, be exceedingly ill
    disposed towards the defendant who has been
    shown to be a thoroughly reprehensible person.
    But the judge is not thereby recusable for bias
    or prejudice, since his knowledge and the
    opinion it produced were properly and
    necessarily acquired in the course of the
    proceedings, and are indeed sometimes (as in a
    bench trial) necessary to completion of the
    judge‟s task. . . . Also not subject to deprecatory
    characterization as „bias‟ or „prejudice‟ are
    28
    opinions held by judges as a result of what they
    learned in earlier proceedings.
    Liteky, 
    510 U.S. at 550-51
    . Here, any negative views that
    Judge Kosik had of Ciavarella do not arise from extrajudicial
    source and do not amount to the extreme animus necessary to
    make fair judgment impossible. See 
    id. at 555
    . Rather, they
    arose from the very matters presented to him, especially in the
    setting of the rejected plea agreement wherein Ciavarella
    essentially admitted the underlying conduct later found by the
    jury to be criminal. For these reasons, we hold that there was
    no abuse of discretion in the District Court‟s denial of the
    recusal motions.
    B.     AUSA Zubrod’s Statements as a Party
    Admission
    Ciavarella contends that the District Court erred by
    excluding statements made by Assistant U.S. Attorney
    Gordon Zubrod at Mericle‟s plea hearing, arguing that the
    evidence would have reinforced Ciavarella‟s defense that the
    payments were not bribes or kickbacks.8
    Following presentation of the Government‟s case-in-
    chief, Ciavarella sought to admit the following statement by
    Zubrod made at Mericle‟s plea hearing.
    8
    We review the District Court‟s decision to exclude
    evidence for abuse of discretion. United States v. Bobb, 
    471 F.3d 491
    , 497 (3d Cir. 2006). “However, to the extent the
    District Court‟s admission of evidence was based on an
    interpretation of the Federal Rules of Evidence, the standard
    of review is plenary.” 
    Id.
    29
    Referral fees are a common place practice. . . .
    Fee splitting between the parties, for example,
    between Judge Ciavarella and Mr. Powell, that
    kind of fee splitting is also a common practice
    in the real estate business. . . .
    This is not a kickback or a bribe in any sense. It
    is a common practice. It is not a legal quid pro
    quo. It is a common practice between
    businessmen in real estate transactions. Mr.
    Mericle simply paid a finder‟s fee to the judges
    in accordance with standard practice. To him,
    his payment of the fee was what he had done
    hundreds of times before and was not related to
    the office that the judges held or any decisions
    by the judges. . . .
    App. 1537. In response, the District Court sought to clarify
    that Zubrod‟s description of referral fees addressed only
    Mericle‟s state of mind and not the intent of other
    participants. The Court inquired:
    THE COURT: What you‟re suggesting is that
    any relationship Mr. Mericle had to the juvenile
    centers that were constructed by him or his
    company was entirely different than any
    relationship that may have existed between Mr.
    Powell and the two judges that you were
    referring to; is that correct?
    MR. ZUBROD: That‟s correct . . . . [Powell]
    understood it to be a quid pro quo that he would
    30
    not get juveniles anymore if he didn‟t pay up
    the money. . . .
    THE COURT: [I]t‟s my recollection that in the
    case of the two judges you represented that
    there was a quid pro quo between Mr. Powell
    and between the judges. That is not the case [as
    to Mericle‟s intent]; is that correct?
    MR. ZUBROD: That‟s correct, Your Honor.
    There‟s no quid pro quo.
    App. 1539.
    Ciavarella argued that Zubrod‟s statement was a party
    admission that Mericle‟s payments were not a bribe or
    kickback but were permissible referral fees. The District
    Court refused to allow the statements to be used as party
    admissions but permitted Ciavarella to represent that the
    statements supported Mericle‟s mental state concerning the
    payments.
    Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A) permits the
    admission of statements made by a party opponent. Ciavarella
    argues that “[t]he rule simply requires that the admission at
    issue be contrary to a party‟s position at trial.” Ciavarella‟s
    Br. at 30.9 We must consider whether the Government has
    9
    We have stated that “[t]o be admissible [under Rule
    801(d)(2)], a party‟s admission „must be contrary to that
    party‟s position at the time of the trial.‟” United States v.
    Ferri, 
    778 F.2d 985
    , 991 (3d Cir. 1985) (quoting Butler v. S.
    Pa. Co., 
    431 F.2d 77
    , 80 (5th Cir. 1970)). However, other
    31
    adopted inconsistent or mutually contradictory positions in its
    successive series of suits against Mericle and Ciavarella.
    Zubrod‟s statement only referred to Mericle‟s intent about the
    payments and not the intent or state of mind of Ciavarella,
    Conahan, or Powell, which was the focus of the
    Government‟s case against Ciavarella. Zubrod stated that
    Powell “understood it to be a quid pro quo,” while to Mericle,
    his payment was a fee and was “standard practice,” not a
    “quid pro quo.” App. 1539. Thus, the Government‟s position
    at Ciavarella‟s trial—that Ciavarella ordered juvenile
    offenders to detention in exchange for money—is neither an
    inconsistent nor a mutually contradictory position from its
    theory at Mericle‟s plea hearing. Accordingly, we find no
    abuse of discretion in the District Court‟s exclusion of
    Zubrod‟s statements at Mericle‟s plea hearing.10
    courts have addressed whether the admission must be against
    the party‟s interest and have concluded that Rule
    801(d)(2)(A) contains no such limitation. See, e.g., United
    States v. McGee, 
    189 F.3d 626
    , 632 (7th Cir. 1999) (citing
    cases). Because Ciavarella only argues that Zubrod‟s
    statements should have been admissible because they were
    contrary to the Government‟s position at trial, we need not
    address whether to relax our limitation on the admissibility of
    a party opponent‟s statements.
    10
    Moreover, under the District Court‟s ruling,
    Ciavarella could have introduced Zubrod‟s statement through
    Mericle‟s cross-examination.
    32
    C.     Cross-Examination of Powell and Owens
    Ciavarella contends that the District Court violated his
    Sixth Amendment right of confrontation when it limited his
    cross-examination of Powell and Powell‟s CFO, Patrick
    Owens, on substantial facts in controversy that went to the
    core of his defense and undermined Powell‟s credibility.11 To
    determine whether limitations on cross-examination violate
    the Confrontation Clause, we employ the following two-step
    test:
    First, we must determine whether that ruling
    significantly inhibited [a defendant‟s] effective
    exercise of her right to inquire into [the]
    witness‟s “motivation in testifying”; and
    second, if the District Court‟s ruling did
    significantly inhibit [the defendant‟s] exercise
    of that right, whether the constraints it imposed
    on the scope of [the] cross-examination fell
    within those “reasonable limits” which a trial
    court, in due exercise of its discretion, has
    authority to establish.
    11
    We review the District Court‟s limitations on cross-
    examination based on relevancy for abuse of discretion.
    United States v. Silveus, 
    542 F.3d 993
    , 1005 (3d Cir. 2008).
    We review for plain error objections that were not specifically
    raised before the District Court. United States v. Christie, 
    624 F.3d 558
    , 567 (3d Cir. 2010) (applying plain error review for
    claim that admission of testimony violated the Confrontation
    Clause).
    33
    United States v. Chandler, 
    326 F.3d 210
    , 219 (3d Cir. 2003).
    Ciavarella sought throughout the trial to portray
    Powell as a large and powerful figure, who was incapable of
    being extorted by Ciavarella and instead was embezzling
    from his companies to support his lavish lifestyle. The
    defense inquired into Powell‟s credit card statements,
    confronting him about a December 2003 statement containing
    over $21,000 in charges, a January 2004 statement containing
    over $13,000 in charges, and a February 2004 statement
    containing over $15,000 in charges. After the questioning of
    Powell about his third credit card statement, the District Court
    asked the defense about the relevance of the line of
    questioning and subsequently sustained an objection by the
    Government.
    Ciavarella also attacked Powell‟s credibility through
    the testimony of Owens regarding Powell‟s demeanor and his
    structuring of transactions. Owens testified that Powell‟s
    demeanor changed in 2006 and 2007 and that Powell had
    become paranoid, quick tempered, and demanding. Around
    that time, according to Owens, Powell had directed Owens to
    withdraw large amounts of cash from Powell‟s companies.
    The defense on cross-examination sought to demonstrate that
    it was Powell‟s embezzlement from his companies that had
    led to his changed demeanor and not Ciavarella‟s alleged
    extortion demands. However, after Ciavarella had asked
    Owens about Powell‟s business partner Greg Zappala‟s lack
    of knowledge of Powell‟s withdrawals from the companies
    they jointly owned, the District Court inquired as to the
    relevance of Powell‟s embezzlement, prompting an objection
    from the Government that the District Court sustained. The
    Government then conceded that “[t]he issue of paranoia,
    34
    however, as a motive separate from the extortion may be
    marginally relevant.” App. 729. Nevertheless, the District
    Court maintained its ruling.
    “[T]rial judges retain wide latitude insofar as the
    Confrontation Clause is concerned to impose reasonable
    limits on . . . cross-examination based on concerns about,
    among other things, harassment, prejudice, confusion of the
    issues, the witness‟ safety, or interrogation that is repetitive or
    only marginally relevant.” Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 
    475 U.S. 673
    , 679 (1986). “Van Arsdall requires us to strike a balance
    between the constitutionally required opportunity to cross-
    examine and the need to prevent repetitive or abusive cross-
    examination.” United States v. Casoni, 
    950 F.2d 893
    , 919 (3d
    Cir. 1991).
    Although Ciavarella initially argued at trial that
    Powell‟s testimony addressing his credit card statements was
    relevant to the defense‟s theory that Powell‟s lavish lifestyle
    made him incapable of being extorted, on appeal, Ciavarella
    now argues that the evidence was relevant instead to show
    that Powell was embezzling from his companies to support
    his lifestyle. However, Ciavarella failed to demonstrate either
    at trial or on appeal any different conclusion that the jury
    might have reached had it learned more about Powell‟s
    specific spending habits, and thus we cannot conclude that the
    District Court abused its discretion. Regarding Owens‟s
    testimony, while we agree that evidence related to Powell‟s
    change in demeanor and structuring of transactions may have
    been relevant to support Ciavarella‟s argument that Zappala
    did not know that Powell was stealing from their companies,
    we hold that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in
    excluding this evidence. Ciavarella had already questioned
    35
    Owens about Zappala‟s lack of knowledge about Powell‟s
    withdrawals from his companies, and further questioning
    would have been repetitive. Ciavarella has not explained what
    the jury may have learned from further testimony on Powell‟s
    withdrawals. As “the Confrontation Clause does not grant
    unfettered rights to cross-examine witnesses,” United States
    v. Friedman, 
    658 F.3d 342
    , 356 (3d Cir. 2011), we conclude
    that the District Court‟s ruling “fell within those „reasonable
    limits‟ which a trial court, in due exercise of its discretion,
    has authority to establish.” Chandler, 
    326 F.3d at 219
    .
    D.     Use of Evidence of Ciavarella’s              and
    Conahan’s Conflicts of Interest
    Ciavarella argues that the District Court erred under
    Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) by admitting evidence that
    demonstrated that he and Conahan failed to disqualify
    themselves in certain lawsuits over which they presided.
    Ciavarella argues that this evidence was not relevant, failed to
    assist the jury in understanding whether the payments were
    bribes or part of a scheme to defraud, and that even if
    relevant, was unfairly prejudicial.12 Even if we assume
    Ciavarella is correct that Rule 404(b) applies in this instance
    because extrinsic offense evidence is at issue,13 we find no
    abuse of discretion.
    12
    We review the District Court‟s admission of Rule
    404(b) evidence for abuse of discretion, and “the district court
    has significant leeway in reaching its decision.” United States
    v. Jemal, 
    26 F.3d 1267
    , 1272 (3d Cir. 1994).
    13
    The Government maintains that the District Court
    correctly ruled that the evidence is “intrinsic evidence of
    36
    The Government sought to introduce evidence under
    Rule 404(b) that Ciavarella and Conahan failed to disqualify
    themselves or disclose their conflicts of interest in cases over
    which they presided involving Mericle, Powell, PACC, and
    WPACC as litigants. The American Bar Association‟s Model
    Code of Judicial Conduct requires all judges to either
    disqualify themselves from or disclose their interest in
    proceedings in which their impartiality may be questioned
    due to their economic interest in the subject matter in
    controversy. Model Code of Judicial Conduct R. 2.11 (2011).
    “Almost every State . . . has adopted the American Bar
    Association‟s objective standard . . . .” Caperton v. A.T.
    Massey Coal Co., 
    556 U.S. 868
    , 888 (2009).14 Ciavarella
    testified that though he knew of the affirmative duty to
    disqualify himself in certain cases, he failed to do so.
    Multiple attorneys that represented opposing parties in cases
    Ciavarella‟s guilt on the honest services fraud counts.” Gov‟t
    Br. at 47. “Rule 404(b) does not extend to evidence of acts
    which are „intrinsic‟ to the charged offense.” United States v.
    Cross, 
    308 F.3d 308
    , 320 (3d Cir. 2002) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    14
    Pennsylvania has adopted a similar rule for
    disqualification. PA. CODE OF JUDICIAL CONDUCT Canon
    3(C)(1)(c) (“Judges should disqualify themselves in a
    proceeding in which their impartiality might reasonably be
    questioned, including but not limited to instances where[]
    they know that they . . . have a substantial financial interest in
    the subject matter in controversy or in a party to the
    proceeding, or any other interest that could be substantially
    affected by the outcome of the proceeding . . . .”).
    37
    before Ciavarella against Powell or companies owned by
    Mericle testified about the judges‟ failure to disqualify
    themselves or disclose their financial relationships. When the
    relationships were specifically inquired about, Ciavarella
    downplayed them or responded angrily. In each case, there
    had been rulings squarely in favor of Mericle, Powell, and the
    juvenile detention centers. Witnesses testified that had the
    opposing counsels known about Ciavarella‟s and Conahan‟s
    relationships, it would have affected the counsels‟ handling of
    their cases.
    As is relevant to Ciavarella‟s argument on appeal,
    extrinsic evidence of other bad acts is admissible under
    Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b) if three requirements are
    met. First, the evidence must be offered for a proper purpose
    under Rule 404(b); second, the evidence must be relevant
    under Rule 402; and third, the probative value of the evidence
    must outweigh its potential for unfair prejudice under Rule
    403. Huddleston v. United States, 
    485 U.S. 681
    , 691 (1988).15
    Proper purposes for the evidence include “motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity,
    absence of mistake, or lack of accident.” Fed. R. Evid.
    404(b). “Rule 404(b) is a rule of inclusion, not exclusion,
    which emphasizes the admissibility of other crimes
    evidence.” Gov’t of V.I. v. Edwards, 
    903 F.2d 267
    , 270 (3d
    Cir. 1990).
    15
    As a fourth requirement under Rule 404(b), evidence
    must also “be accompanied by a limiting instruction (where
    requested) about the purpose for which the jury may consider
    it.” Cross, 
    308 F.3d at 320-21
    .
    38
    To determine the relevance of the Rule 404(b)
    nondisclosure evidence, we must consider whether it would
    aid in the proof of a “fact . . . of consequence in determining
    the action.” Fed. R. Evid. 401(b). For the Government to
    prove honest services mail fraud, it must demonstrate, among
    other things, that there was a scheme to defraud, which
    includes any course of action to deprive another of money,
    property, or the intangible right to honest services through
    fraudulent representations reasonably calculated to deceive a
    person of “ordinary prudence.” United States v. Pearlstein,
    
    576 F.2d 531
    , 535 (3d Cir. 1978); 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1341
    , 1346;
    see also United States v. Riley, 
    621 F.3d 312
    , 325 (3d. Cir.
    2010) (setting forth the elements of honest services mail
    fraud). Fraudulent representations include the concealment of
    material facts and a failure to disclose information when the
    defendant is under a known legal duty to disclose. Third
    Circuit Model Jury Instructions 6.18.1341-1 (2012); see also
    Bonilla v. Volvo Car Corp., 
    150 F.3d 62
    , 70 (1st Cir. 1998).
    Here, the nondisclosure evidence serves a proper purpose
    under Rule 404(b) and is relevant to proving that the
    payments furthered the scheme to defraud through
    Ciavarella‟s failure to disclose his financial relationships in
    cases he presided over when there was an affirmative duty to
    do so and by assisting Mericle and Powell with favorable
    rulings during trial.
    However, Ciavarella argues that the Rule 404(b)
    evidence could only be relevant to support a conflict-of-
    interest theory of honest services fraud, which is no longer
    viable after Skilling v. United States. In Skilling, the Supreme
    Court held that for the honest services fraud statute, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1346
    , to survive constitutional scrutiny, it may only be
    interpreted to criminalize fraud based on bribes and kickbacks
    39
    and not based on a failure to disclose a conflict of interest.
    
    130 S. Ct. at 2931-33
    . The bribery-and-kickback theory of
    honest services fraud requires “a quid pro quo, that is, a
    specific intent to give or receive something of value in
    exchange for an official act.” United States v. Wright, 
    665 F.3d 560
    , 567-68 (3d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted). Thus, while the evidence of nondisclosure
    by itself may not constitute honest services fraud based on a
    conflict-of-interest theory under Skilling, we believe that
    where there is also evidence of bribery or kickbacks, as there
    was before the District Court, then the evidence may be
    relevant to proof of a scheme to defraud under a bribery-and-
    kickback theory of honest services fraud. Furthermore, the
    District Court had instructed the jury that the Government
    was required to prove that the scheme to defraud must be
    conducted through the use of bribes and kickbacks and that a
    government official could breach his or her duty of honest
    services through the use of bribes and kickbacks.
    Finally, Ciavarella maintains that even if the evidence
    is relevant, it still should have been excluded as unfairly
    prejudicial because it touched on the impermissible conflict-
    of-interest theory of honest services fraud. However, there is
    no indication that the Government used the Rule 404(b)
    evidence to demonstrate a conflict of interest, and the District
    Court clearly instructed the jury as to the limited purpose for
    which it could use the evidence and that the honest services
    charges required proof of a bribe or kickback. Thus, contrary
    to Ciavarella‟s contention otherwise, the District Court was
    within its “significant leeway,” Jemal, 
    26 F.3d at 1272
    , in
    admitting the Rule 404(b) nondisclosure evidence, and there
    was no abuse of discretion.
    40
    E.     False Financial Disclosures as Evidence of
    Honest Services Mail Fraud
    Ciavarella contends that the evidence of false financial
    disclosure statements cannot sustain a conviction for honest
    services mail fraud based on a conflict-of-interest theory
    under Skilling, without evidence that Ciavarella accepted a
    bribe in exchange for filing the false disclosure statements.16
    Under Pennsylvania law, judges must file annual financial
    interest statements reporting on their outside financial
    interests, creditors, income, and gifts. 204 Pa. Code. § 29.52.
    For the years 2003 through 2007, Ciavarella and Conahan
    filed false financial interest statements in which they failed to
    disclose their receipt of payments from Mericle and Powell.
    Ciavarella‟s argument is without merit. While the
    Skilling Court confined criminality under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1346
     to
    schemes involving bribes or kickbacks, Skilling, 
    130 S. Ct. at 2931
    , “[t]he bribery theory does not require that each quid, or
    item of value, be linked to a specific quo, or official act.
    Rather, a bribe may come in the form of a „stream of
    benefits.‟” Wright, 
    665 F.3d at 568
     (quoting United States v.
    Bryant, 
    655 F.3d 232
    , 240-41 (3d Cir. 2011)). As noted,
    concealment of material information through false disclosure
    statements, by itself, cannot serve as the basis for an honest
    16
    We apply de novo review over questions of statutory
    interpretation. United States v. Pavulak, 
    700 F.3d 651
    , 671
    (3d Cir. 2012). “We review the legal accuracy of a district
    court‟s jury instructions de novo.” United States v. Maury,
    
    695 F.3d 227
    , 261 (3d Cir. 2012).
    41
    services mail fraud conviction, but when there is evidence
    that the concealment by false disclosures furthers a scheme to
    defraud through bribes and kickbacks, then the false
    disclosure statements can support such a conviction. Here, the
    false financial disclosures that Ciavarella mailed are relevant
    to both the “use of the mails” and the “scheme to defraud”
    elements. The District Court properly instructed the jury that
    the Government was required to prove that the scheme to
    defraud was conducted through the use of bribes or kickbacks
    through the use of the mails. It also instructed that a
    government official may breach his or her duty of honest
    services through bribery or kickbacks and that the jury must
    find that the defendant engaged in undisclosed biased
    decision making through bribery or kickbacks.
    Ciavarella also cites to United States v. Genova, 
    333 F.3d 750
     (7th Cir. 2003), for the proposition that the “mere
    mailing” of false disclosure statements cannot constitute mail
    fraud because “the mailing of false statements does not read
    like the definition of bribery.” Ciavarella‟s Br. at 46. Genova
    involved the city prosecutor‟s payment of kickbacks to the
    mayor in exchange for the city‟s legal business. Genova, 
    333 F.3d at 754
    . While the Court held that false financial
    disclosure statements were not predicate offenses under RICO
    because the state‟s disclosure requirement “does not read like
    a definition of bribery,” it permitted the false disclosures to
    support the mail fraud convictions. 
    Id. at 758
    . Thus, contrary
    to Ciavarella‟s position, Genova reaffirms our view that the
    false financial statements at issue in the instant action can
    support Ciavarella‟s honest mail fraud convictions. In
    Genova, the Court held that the false disclosures were part of
    a scheme to defraud because “[k]eeping a lid on the
    kickbacks was essential to permit their continuation” and “[a]
    42
    jury sensibly could conclude that the false mailings were
    integral to this scheme.” 
    Id. at 759
    . Here, too, a jury could
    conclude that Ciavarella‟s mailing of false financial
    disclosure statements was “integral” to his scheme to defraud
    through the use of bribes or kickbacks and that the false
    disclosures helped “keep a lid on the kickbacks” received by
    Ciavarella.
    F.     Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Ciavarella next challenges the sufficiency of the
    evidence supporting his convictions for RICO, RICO
    conspiracy, honest services mail fraud, and money laundering
    conspiracy.17
    1.     RICO Conviction (Count 1)
    Ciavarella was convicted of racketeering in violation
    of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1962
    (c) based on two predicate acts—honest
    services wire fraud based on three wire transfers on January
    21, 24, and 28, 2003 (Racketeering Act One) and money
    laundering conspiracy (Racketeering Act Thirteen). The
    January 2003 wire transfers involved the $997,600 payment
    from Mericle to Ciavarella and Conahan. In essence,
    Ciavarella contends that the RICO conviction cannot be
    sustained because the 2003 payment from Mericle did not
    17
    We affirm the jury‟s verdict when there is
    substantial evidence that, viewed in the light most favorable
    to the government, would permit a reasonable finder of fact to
    convict. Wright, 
    665 F.3d at 567
    . A defendant raising a
    sufficiency of the evidence challenge has an exceedingly high
    burden. 
    Id.
    43
    constitute a bribe given the jury acquitted him of the bribery
    counts related to Mericle‟s 2005 and 2006 payments and
    because Mericle testified that the 2003 payment was also a
    legitimate referral fee. Absent evidence that the January 2003
    payment was a bribe, the racketeering predicate act of honest
    services wire fraud cannot be sustained.
    A payment constitutes a bribe “as long as the essential
    intent—a specific intent to give or receive something of value
    in exchange for an official act—exists.” United States v.
    Kemp, 
    500 F.3d 257
    , 282 (3d Cir. 2007). The Government is
    not required to prove that the payments were intended “to
    prompt a specific official act. . . . [Rather,] payments may be
    made with the intent to retain the official‟s services on an „as
    needed‟ basis, so that whenever the opportunity presents itself
    the official will take specific action on the payor‟s behalf.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Here, the Government presented the following
    evidence to support the jury‟s conclusion that the payment
    Ciavarella received from Mericle in 2003 constituted a bribe:
    the 2003 payments were transferred through multiple
    individuals to a company owned by Conahan, which
    ultimately transferred the funds to Ciavarella and Conahan;
    Ciavarella agreed to split the fee with Conahan because
    Conahan had done much of the work to confer the benefit on
    Mericle; Powell treated the payment as income for tax
    purposes; Conahan‟s company falsely reported the funds in
    the company books as a consultant‟s fee; Ciavarella worked
    to close down the existing county facility and move its best
    employees to PACC; Conahan, with Ciavarella‟s knowledge,
    signed a lease to assist Powell in securing financing;
    Ciavarella and Conahan failed to disclose the conflicts of
    44
    interest in civil cases before them; and Ciavarella and
    Conahan mailed false financial disclosure statements. While
    Ciavarella and Mericle testified that the payment was a
    referral fee and not a bribe, the jury was free to disbelieve
    them. Thus, there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable
    jury to conclude that the 2003 payment from Mericle
    constituted a bribe to support the predicate act for honest
    services wire fraud and to sustain the RICO conviction.
    Ciavarella fails to meet his high burden.
    2.     Honest Services Mail Fraud Convictions
    (Counts 7, 8, 9, and 10)
    There was also sufficient evidence to allow a
    reasonable jury to convict Ciavarella on each of the honest
    services mail fraud convictions based on the mailing of the
    Statement of Financial Interests in April 2004, March 2005,
    April 2006, and March 2007. For an honest services mail
    fraud conviction, in addition to the traditional mail fraud
    elements and that the scheme was conducted through the use
    of bribes or kickbacks, the Government must also prove: (1)
    “that the payor provided a benefit to a public official
    intending that he will thereby take favorable official acts that
    he would not otherwise take”; and (2) “that the official
    accepted those benefits intending, in exchange for the
    benefits, to take official acts to benefit the payor.” Wright,
    
    665 F.3d at 568
    . Because the jury found that the 2003
    payment constituted a bribe or kickback to support
    Racketeering Act One, there was sufficient evidence for a
    reasonable jury to conclude that Ciavarella‟s nondisclosure of
    that payment in his Statements of Financial Interests
    constituted honest services mail fraud.
    45
    3.     RICO      Conspiracy and  Money
    Laundering Conspiracy Convictions
    (Counts 2 and 21)
    Ciavarella also contends that the conspiracy
    convictions cannot be sustained absent proof of a bribe or
    kickback. Because we hold that there was sufficient evidence
    for a rational jury to conclude that the 2003 payment from
    Mericle constituted a bribe to support the racketeering
    predicate act, Ciavarella‟s challenges to the RICO and money
    laundering conspiracy convictions also fail.
    G.     Statute of Limitations
    Ciavarella argues that the RICO, honest services mail
    fraud, and conspiracy convictions are time-barred.18
    18
    “We exercise plenary review over whether counts of
    an [I]ndictment should have been dismissed for violating the
    statute of limitations.” United States v. Bornman, 
    559 F.3d 150
    , 152 (3d Cir. 2009). However, when a defendant waived
    a challenge to the statute of limitations, then we review for
    plain error. United States v. Jake, 
    281 F.3d 123
    , 132 (3d Cir.
    2002). A five-year statute of limitations applies to all of the
    convictions. 
    18 U.S.C. § 3282
    (a). For a RICO charge, at least
    one of the predicate acts must have occurred within five years
    of the indictment. Manna v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 
    51 F.3d 1158
    , 1168 n.1 (3d Cir. 1995) (Becker, J., concurring in part
    and dissenting in part) (citing United States v. Persico, 
    832 F.2d 705
    , 714 (2d Cir. 1987)).
    46
    On January 23, 2009, after an Information was filed,
    Ciavarella signed a plea agreement, waiving any statute-of-
    limitations defense to charges under investigation in the event
    Ciavarella “vacates or sets aside any conviction or sentence of
    incarceration imposed pursuant to [the] plea agreement.”
    Supp. App. 41. After the District Court rejected the plea
    agreement, on September 9, 2009, a grand jury returned an
    Indictment, charging Ciavarella with numerous offenses. A
    superseding Indictment was returned on September 29, 2010,
    containing the same charges but with revised language to
    conform with Skilling.
    Following the return of the superseding Indictment,
    Ciavarella sought dismissal of certain charges as time-barred,
    including the honest services wire fraud counts (Counts 3, 4,
    and 5), honest services mail fraud counts (Counts 7, 8, and 9),
    bribery counts (Counts 11, 12, 13, and 14), money laundering
    counts (Counts 22, 23, 24, and 25), and extortion counts
    (Counts 27, 28, 29, and 30). The District Court denied the
    motion, holding that the charges were timely as of the filing
    of the original Indictment and that that the superseding
    Indictment did not expand on the charges. Post-trial,
    Ciavarella sought dismissal of the racketeering conviction and
    the conspiracy convictions (Counts 1, 2, and 21), arguing that
    the 2003 payment that served as a basis for the convictions
    was outside the statute of limitations. The District Court
    denied the motion as untimely. On appeal, Ciavarella
    challenges those convictions as time-barred, and reasserts his
    statute-of-limitations challenge to Count 7, the honest
    services mail fraud conviction, based on the April 2004
    disclosure statement.
    47
    1.      RICO, RICO Conspiracy, and Money
    Laundering Conspiracy (Counts 1, 2, and
    21)
    Ciavarella argues that the two predicate acts for his
    RICO conviction—honest services wire fraud based on three
    wire transfers, the last of which occurred on January 28,
    2003, and money laundering conspiracy—occurred more than
    five years before the September 9, 2009 Indictment, and thus
    the RICO count is time barred. Additionally, the conspiracy
    convictions are time barred, according to Ciavarella, because
    the conspiracy was completed on the date of its final act—
    January 28, 2003. However, while Ciavarella objected prior
    to trial to other counts as time-barred, he did not include
    Counts 1, 2, or 21 in his objection.
    “[I]n criminal cases[,] the statute of limitations does
    not go to the jurisdiction of the court but is an affirmative
    defense that will be considered waived if not raised in the
    district court before or at trial.” United States v. Karlin, 
    785 F.2d 90
    , 92-93 (3d Cir. 1986). While Ciavarella would have
    been entitled to an instruction on the applicable statute of
    limitations to inform the jury of the need to prove that at least
    one predicate act occurred within five years of the date of the
    indictment, Jake, 
    281 F.3d at 129
    , he did not request it.
    Accordingly, under our current precedent, Ciavarella failed to
    preserve this objection, and we will not consider it on appeal.
    Ciavarella looks to the Sixth Circuit, which has held
    that while the statute of limitations is not a jurisdictional bar,
    it is of such importance that it can be raised for the first time
    on appeal. United States v. Titterington, 
    374 F.3d 453
    , 458-60
    48
    (6th Cir. 2004). But this is not the law in our Circuit. Rather,
    we have held, consistent with nearly all of our sister Circuits,
    that the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense that
    will be waived if not properly preserved prior to or during
    trial. See Karlin, 
    785 F.2d at 92-93
    ; see also United States v.
    Arky, 
    938 F.2d 579
    , 582 (5th Cir. 1991) (“[I]t is difficult to
    conceive why [the statute of limitations defense] alone, of all
    the defendant‟s affirmative defenses, should not be waived if
    not asserted at trial.”).
    2.      Honest Services Mail Fraud (Count 7)
    (a)    Application      of    Statute     of
    Limitations
    Ciavarella adequately preserved his objection to Count
    7‟s statute of limitations by raising it in his pre-trial motion to
    dismiss. Count 7 alleges a violation of honest services mail
    fraud based on the mailing of a Statement of Financial
    Interests in April 2004. The original Indictment was filed on
    September 9, 2009, over five years after the conduct alleged
    in Count 7. This count is clearly time-barred absent any
    waiver by Ciavarella.
    The Government argues that Ciavarella expressly
    waived the statute-of-limitations defense through his January
    2009 plea agreement. The plea agreement states:
    The defendant further agrees to waive any
    defenses to the prosecution of [any] charges
    [currently under investigation related to this
    matter] based upon laches, the assertion of
    speedy trial rights, any applicable statute of
    49
    limitations or any other grounds in the event
    that the defendant successfully vacates or sets
    aside any conviction or sentence of
    incarceration imposed pursuant to this plea
    agreement.
    Supp. App. 41. As previously stated, Ciavarella signed the
    plea agreement, later withdrew his guilty plea, and proceeded
    to trial where he was found guilty of Count 7 on February 18,
    2011. The Government contends, though, that Ciavarella‟s
    “conviction” was established by his guilty plea, and that “[b]y
    withdrawing his plea, Ciavarella „vacated and set aside‟ his
    conviction.” Gov‟t Br. at 60-61.
    We see no basis for the Government‟s interpretation of
    the waiver provision in the plea agreement. The language—
    “vacates or sets any conviction . . . imposed pursuant to this
    plea agreement”—clearly contemplates a conviction that was
    achieved due to that plea agreement. Here, Ciavarella‟s
    conviction on Count 7 was achieved not as a result of the plea
    agreement, as Ciavarella withdrew his plea and proceeded to
    trial, but as a result of the jury‟s verdict. Moreover, the plea
    agreement also states that “either party has the right to
    withdraw from this agreement and withdraw any guilty plea
    entered” if the District Court fails to accept the stipulated
    sentence. Supp. App. 48. This is precisely what occurred
    here. Accordingly, even if we found the agreement regarding
    the statute-of-limitations waiver to include this type of
    situation, the waiver was nullified by the Court‟s rejection of,
    and the parties‟ withdrawal from, the agreement. For these
    reasons, we hold that Ciavarella did not waive his statute-of-
    limitations defense to the honest services mail fraud count
    50
    based on a mailing in April 2004, and we will vacate the
    conviction for Count 7.
    (b)    Effect of Vacatur
    Having vacated Count 7, we address whether we must
    remand for resentencing de novo. Resentencing on all counts
    is warranted “when a multicount conviction produces an
    aggregate sentence or sentencing package.” United States v.
    Davis, 
    112 F.3d 118
    , 122 (3d Cir. 1997) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Resentencing de novo is necessary
    when a defendant is found guilty on a
    multicount indictment, there is a strong
    likelihood that the district court will craft a
    disposition in which the sentences on the
    various counts form part of an overall plan.
    When a conviction on one or more of the
    component counts is vacated, common sense
    dictates that the judge should be free to review
    the efficacy of what remains in light of the
    original plan, and to reconstruct the sentencing
    architecture upon remand . . . if that appears
    necessary in order to ensure that the punishment
    still fits both crime and criminal.
    
    Id.
     (citing United States v. Pimienta-Redondo, 
    874 F.2d 9
    , 14
    (1st Cir. 1989)).
    District courts should resentence de novo when an
    interdependent count of an aggregate sentence is vacated. 
    Id. at 123
    . In United States v. Miller, the defendant‟s two child
    pornography counts were grouped, but when one of the
    51
    counts was vacated on appeal, the remaining count had a
    lower total offense level, and thus we held that de novo
    resentencing was appropriate. 
    594 F.3d 172
    , 181 (3d Cir.
    2010). Similarly, in Davis, the defendant‟s counts for drug
    offenses and for use of a firearm in connection with a drug
    trafficking offense were grouped. 
    112 F.3d at 119
    . After
    vacating the firearm offense, we recognized that those counts
    were interdependent because without the firearm offense, the
    total sentence would be calculated differently. 
    Id. at 121
    .
    Here, the District Court combined the offenses into
    multiple groups, each of which received its own sentence that
    ran consecutive to the other groups‟ sentence. In the group
    containing Count 7, Counts 1, 2, 8, 9, 10, and 21 were also
    included because the offense level for those counts is
    determined largely based on loss amount. See U.S.S.G.
    § 3D1.2(d). Under the Sentencing Guidelines, when multiple
    counts are grouped, the court applies the Guideline for the
    count with the highest offense level. Id. § 3D1.3(a). In the
    relevant group, the money laundering conspiracy, Count 21,
    led to the highest offense level, and resulted in an adjusted
    offense level of 44. See id. §§ 2B1.1(b)(1)(J), 2C1.1(a)(1),
    (b), 2S1.1(a)(1), 3A1.1(b), 3C1.1. Because the remaining
    groups‟ offense levels are far lower, they did not affect
    Ciavarella‟s total offense level. Id. § 3D1.4(c). With the
    maximum offense level of 43 and a criminal history category
    of I, his advisory Guideline range is life imprisonment.
    Absent Count 7, Ciavarella‟s total offense level and advisory
    Guideline range is identical. Ultimately, however, the District
    Court sentenced Ciavarella to a below-Guidelines sentence of
    336 months‟ imprisonment, which included a 240-month
    sentence for the group of offenses containing Count 7. Thus,
    because the vacated count did not affect Ciavarella‟s total
    52
    offense level, Guideline range, or sentence, we hold that
    resentencing de novo is not required. Davis, 
    112 F.3d at
    121-
    23. However, because Ciavarella was ordered to pay a special
    assessment of a hundred dollars for each count, including
    Count 7, totaling $1,200, we will vacate the imposition of the
    special assessment as to Count 7 and remand to the District
    Court to amend the judgment to reduce the special assessment
    consistent with this opinion.
    H.     The District Court’s Consideration             of
    Evidence During Sentencing
    Finally, we consider Ciavarella‟s challenges to his
    sentence. He argues that the District Court relied on improper
    evidence and made findings of fact that were inconsistent
    with the jury verdict, in violation of his Sixth Amendment
    right to a jury trial, and imposed a substantively unreasonable
    sentence.19
    Contrary to Ciavarella‟s contention, his Sixth
    Amendment right to a jury trial is not implicated by fact
    finding during a sentencing proceeding unless those facts
    increase the statutory maximum punishment. Apprendi v. New
    19
    We review a district court‟s factual findings for clear
    error. United States v. Grier, 
    475 F.3d 556
    , 561 (3d Cir.
    2007) (en banc). We “consider the substantive reasonableness
    of the sentence imposed under an abuse-of-discretion
    standard.” Gall v. United States, 
    552 U.S. 38
    , 51 (2007). In
    evaluating the substantive reasonableness of a sentence, we
    consider “whether the record as a whole reflects rational and
    meaningful consideration of the factors enumerated in 
    18 U.S.C. § 3553
    (a).” Grier, 
    475 F.3d at 561
    .
    53
    Jersey, 
    530 U.S. 466
    , 490 (2000); Grier, 
    475 F.3d at 562
    (“Once an individual has been convicted by a jury beyond a
    reasonable doubt of the predicate facts of illegal conduct,
    triggering a statutory maximum penalty, a court may impose
    any sentence on the individual up to that maximum.”). Here,
    the total sentence imposed was 336 months‟ imprisonment,
    less than the maximum statutory penalties, which total 137
    years‟ imprisonment, excluding Count 7. See 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 371
    , 1341, 1956(a), 1962(c),(d), 1963; 
    26 U.S.C. § 7206
    (1).
    Ciavarella‟s argument that the District Court relied on
    improper evidence in sentencing him is also without merit.
    He asserts that the District Court should not have considered
    Powell‟s testimony, any payments by Powell, or the 2005 and
    2006 payments by Mericle, which the jury had rejected.
    Additionally, because the jury rejected the bribery charges
    and the notion of a conflict of interest, according to
    Ciavarella, the District Court improperly increased his
    sentence based on his failure to disclose that conflict of
    interest to juvenile offenders. But “a jury‟s verdict of
    acquittal does not prevent the sentencing court from
    considering conduct underlying the acquitted charge, so long
    as that conduct has been proved by a preponderance of the
    evidence.” United States v. Watts, 
    519 U.S. 148
    , 157 (1997).
    “[T]he jury cannot be said to have necessarily rejected any
    facts when it returns a general verdict of not guilty.” 
    Id. at 155
     (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, the District
    Court considered Powell‟s testimony and evidence of
    additional payments from Powell and Mericle, and it found
    the relevant conduct was proved by a preponderance of the
    evidence. We find no clear error in the District Court‟s factual
    findings because there is sufficient evidence in the record to
    54
    support the finding of multiple payments and an ongoing
    conflict of interest.
    Additionally, Ciavarella‟s challenge to the District
    Court‟s consideration of letters from the public also fails
    because a “court may consider relevant information without
    regard to its admissibility under the rules of evidence
    applicable at trial, provided that the information has sufficient
    indicia of reliability to support its probable accuracy.”
    U.S.S.G. § 6A1.3(a). While Ciavarella asserts that the letters
    lack reliability, he fails to provide any basis for this
    conclusion sufficient to establish a violation of his due
    process rights. See United States v. Matthews, 
    773 F.2d 48
    , 51
    (3d Cir. 1985) (recognizing that a court determines whether a
    defendant‟s due process rights have been violated by the
    sentence court relying on “misinformation of a constitutional
    magnitude”).
    Finally, Ciavarella argues that his sentence was
    substantively unreasonable. Ciavarella‟s advisory Guideline
    range was life imprisonment. The District Court considered
    the arguments of both parties, including the defense‟s
    arguments for a sentence less than life imprisonment. It
    ultimately imposed a below-Guideline sentence of 336-
    months‟ imprisonment having “taken into account . . . the
    factors [it was] obliged to consider under Section 3553(a).”
    App. 1504. When a sentence is outside of the Guidelines
    range, we “give due deference to the district court‟s decision
    that the § 3553(a) factors, on a whole, justify the extent of the
    variance.” Gall, 
    552 U.S. at 51
    . Here, the 336-month below-
    Guidelines sentence, while significant, is permissible. We are
    assured that the District Court properly evaluated the §
    3553(a) factors. United States v. Lychock, 
    578 F.3d 214
    , 219
    55
    (3d Cir. 2009) (“A sentencing court need not discuss and
    make findings as to each of the § 3553(a) factors . . . .”). We
    hold that the sentence is substantively reasonable.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate Ciavarella‟s
    conviction on Count 7, vacate the special assessment as to
    Count 7, and affirm the District Court‟s judgments of
    conviction and sentence as to the remaining counts. We will
    remand to the District Court to modify the judgment with
    respect to the special assessment consistent with this opinion.
    56