[364] Garwood

                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                        FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT


                          __________________

                              No. 93-9074
                          __________________



     UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                                           Plaintiff-Appellee,

                                  versus

     NITIN SHAH,

                                           Defendant-Appellant.

         ______________________________________________

      Appeal from the United States District Court for the
                   Northern District of Texas
         ______________________________________________

                          (January 31, 1995)


Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, GARWOOD, and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges.

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

     Defendant-appellant Nitin Shah (Shah) appeals his conviction,

following a jury trial, of making a false statement in violation of

18 U.S.C. § 1001.    We affirm.

                     Facts and Proceedings Below

     The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the

verdict, reflects the following.

     On June 9, 1992, the General Services Administration (GSA)

issued a solicitation for the purchase of irons, ironing boards,

and ironing board pads.     The solicitation called for a bid from
each of a number of prospective suppliers.         Because the bid was to

be negotiated, not sealed, the offeror was allowed to alter the

price after submission but before the award. Among the prospective

bidders was Omega Electronics (Omega), a small California company

that had held the previous contract for steam irons with GSA.

Omega had also previously dealt with GSA and the GSA contract

specialist, Linda Brainard (Brainard), on an undisclosed number of

small purchase contracts.      Brainard testified that these contracts

occasioned   numerous   telephone   contacts      between    her    and   Shah,

Omega's president.

     On July 1, 1992, GSA mailed the solicitation for iron products

to Omega's address in San Carlos, California.           The solicitation

contained    the   following   language   under    section    13,    entitled

"Certificate of Independent Price Determination":

     "(a)    The offeror certifies thatSQ
            (1) The prices in this offer have been arrived at
            independently,   without,   for   the  purpose   of
            restricting    competition,     any   consultation,
            communication, or agreement with any other offeror
            or competitor relating to (i) those prices, (ii)
            the intention to submit an offer, or (iii) the
            methods or factors used to calculate the prices
            offered;
            (2)   The prices in this offer have not been and
            will not be knowingly disclosed by the offeror,
            directly or indirectly, to any other offeror or
            competitor before bid opening (in the case of a
            sealed bid solicitation) or before contract award
            (in the case of a negotiated solicitation) unless
            otherwise required by law; and
            (3) No attempt has been made or will be made by
            the offeror to induce any other concern to submit
            or not to submit an offer for the purpose of
            restricting competition.

     "(b) Each signature on the offer is considered to be a
     certification . . . that the signatorySQ
          (1) . . . has not participated and will not
          participate in any action contrary to subparagraphs

                                    2
              (a)(1) through (a)(3) above . . . ."

The same solicitation was also sent to Kipper & Company, a New York

concern specializing in the supply of hand and power tools to

commercial and governmental customers.                  Jerome Kipper (Kipper),

president of Kipper & Company, testified that he and Shah had

spoken    a    "few    times"       on   the    telephone.1        Besides     these

conversations, which occurred sometime in November or December of

1991, Shah and Kipper communicated only occasionally and very

briefly during the early part of 1992.

     On   July    7,   1992,    shortly        after    Omega   received   the   GSA

solicitation but one day before Omega sent it out, Shah telephoned

Kipper and suggested that they share their bids.                   Shah explained

that, by fixing and exchanging price information, they could rig

the bidding and thus split the award.                According to his plan, Shah

would acquire the delivery depots west of the Mississippi, while

Kipper would take those to the east.                In response to this proposal,

Kipper told Shah that he "questioned . . . [Shah's] ethic but

admired his ambition."         Although he clearly did not agree to trade

price information, Kipper testified that he was "non-committal" at

the close of the conversation.            Shah again left his phone number.

     The next day, July 8, 1992, Shah signed and mailed the

solicitation     to    GSA,    in    which     he   certified    that   the   prices

contained in the bid "have not been and will not be disclosed."                   In

the solicitation, he identified himself as the Managing Partner of

Omega and listed the San Carlos, California, address as well as the


1
     During those conversations, Shah sought a price quote on a
large quantity of Black & Decker irons.

                                          3
telephone number earlier given to Kipper.                     Shah also filled in

blanks throughout the solicitation, including information above and

below     section   13,       the    certification      of     independent    price

determination.

     Kipper reported his July 7 conversation with Shah to both GSA

and his attorney.         Under the supervision of a GSA investigator,

Kipper made two telephone calls to Shah on July 15, 1992, several

days after both Kipper and Shah had submitted their bids to GSA.

Both conversations were recorded and transcribed.                    In the first

call, Kipper introduced himself and apologized for not having

called him back "the other day."               In vague terms, Kipper reminded

Shah of their July 7 conversation.              After agreeing that they could

still   withdraw    their      submitted       bids,   Shah    asserted    that   the

swapping of price information would be to their mutual advantage.2

When Kipper asked Shah if he had ever swapped prices with other

vendors, Shah answered,

     "No. This is the first occasion and I SQ you sounded
     that you're a . . . shrewd businessman, and you will
     understand the logistics and mechanics of it, so that's
     why I talk to you frankly. I wouldn't be talking . . .
     like this to anybody else.

     "MR. KIPPER:      Okay.

     "MR. SHAH: I just took a calculated risk, rather. You
     know, you can only talk . . . to certain people, not all
     the people would be cooperative and all that. . . . I
     hope you understand what I'm saying."

Without    detailing      a   plan    to   swap    prices,     Kipper     ended   the

conversation and told Shah he would call him back.                 The jury heard


2
     Shah observed that, in a bidding battle, "we lose money and
the Government gains that"; he described the plan as working
"together as a complement rather than an adversary."

                                           4
this entire conversation. Although the transcript and audiotape of

the second July 15 conversation were not put in evidence, Kipper

testified that, during that conversation, they agreed to fax to

each    other   their      bids    and,       further,   that   Shah    requested

confidentiality.      They then carried out this agreement.3

       On   January   6,   1993,    a   grand     jury   returned   a   one-count

indictment against Shah charging him with "knowingly and willfully"

having made a "false, fictitious and fraudulent" statement to GSA,

a government agency, contrary to 18 U.S.C. § 1001, namely "the

statement that the prices in this offer have not been and will not

be knowingly disclosed by the offeror, directly or indirectly, to

any other offeror or competitor before bid opening or contract

award."     The indictment formed the basis of an arrest warrant,

which two GSA special officers executed at Shah's San Carlos,

California, address. After entering a plea of not guilty, Shah was

tried and convicted before a jury in July 1993.                 At the close of

the government's case (Shah presented no evidence), Shah properly

but unsuccessfully moved for acquittal.              He was sentenced to three

years' probation and fined $5,000.              Shah filed a timely appeal.

                                   Discussion

       On appeal, Shah contends that the jury lacked sufficient

evidence of identity and falsity, that the court erred in refusing

a proposed instruction, and that the indictment varied fatally from



3
     Shah faxed Kipper a copy of the bid pages from his
solicitation, and Kipper sent fictitious price information in
exchange. The actual fax was retrieved by Kipper & Company's
vice president, Adam Mellon, who authenticated the document at
trial.

                                          5
the proof at trial.        Shah also argues that a promise of future

performance cannot, as a matter of law, constitute a violation of

18 U.S.C. § 1001.         This last issue, as well as the related

evidentiary claim, are the pith of Shah's appeal and, for that

reason, will be discussed first.

     Section 1001, known as the False Claims Act, prohibits the

knowing and willful making of "false, fictitious or fraudulent

statements    or    representations"4     on     a     matter    "within    the

jurisdiction of any department or agency of the United States."                 18

U.S.C. § 1001.5    The purpose of this broadly worded statute is "to

protect the authorized functions of governmental departments and

agencies    from   the   perversion   which    might    result   from   .   .   .

deceptive practices." United States v. Gilliand, 61 S.Ct. 518, 522

(1941).    To establish a violation, the government must prove five

elements:    "(1) a statement, that is (2) false (3) and material,


4
     In applying the terms "false, fictitious or fraudulent," we
have emphasized the potentially perverting effect of the
statements, which "must have a natural tendency to influence, or
be capable of affecting or influencing, a governmental function."
United States v. Markham, 537 F.2d 187, 196 (5th Cir. 1976),
cert. denied, 97 S.Ct. 739 (1977). The alleged
"misrepresentation need not have influenced the actions of the
Government agency, and the Government agents need not have been
actually deceived." Id.
5
     Section 1001 provides:

          "Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of
     any department or agency of the United States knowingly
     and willfully falsifies, conceals or covers up by any
     trick, scheme, or device a material fact, or makes any
     false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or
     representations, or makes or uses any false writing or
     document knowing the same to contain any false,
     fictitious or fraudulent statement or entry, shall be
     fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than
     five years, or both."

                                      6
(4) made with the requisite specific intent, [and] (5) within the

purview of government agency jurisdiction."      United States v.

Puente, 982 F.2d 156, 158 (5th Cir.) (quoting United States v.

Lichenstein, 610 F.2d 1272, 1276 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 100

S.Ct. 2991 (1980)), cert. denied, 113 S.Ct. 2934 (1993).6     With

regard to the "requisite specific intent," we have observed, "A

false representation is one . . . made with an intent to deceive or

mislead."   United States v. Guzman, 781 F.2d 428, 431 (5th Cir.),

cert. denied, 106 S.Ct. 1798 (1986).7   In words more relevant to

this case, the district court correctly instructed the jury that

the government must prove "that the defendant made the false

statement for the purposes of misleading the General Services

Administration."

     The central issue in this case, however, focuses only on the



6
     In this Circuit, whether a statement is material is a
question of law. United States v. McIntosh, 655 F.2d 80, 82 (5th
Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 102 S.Ct. 1450 (1982). Contra United
States v. Gaudin, 28 F.3d 943 (9th Cir. 1994) (en banc) (breaking
with every other circuit decision on point to rule that
materiality is a question of fact for the jury), cert. granted in
part, 63 U.S.L.W. 3268 (Jan. 6, 1995). This question was
therefore not before the jury.
7
     Section 1001, however, "does not require an intent to
defraud SQthat is, the intent to deprive someone of something by
means of deceit." Lichenstein, 610 F.2d at 1277. In this sense,
the False Claims Act seeks to protect more than the simple
proprietary interests of the federal government; it "has for its
object the protection and welfare of the government,"
specifically protection against "deceit, craft or trickery"
designed "to interfere with or obstruct one of [the United
States's] lawful government functions." McNally v. United
States, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 2881 n.8 (1987) (citation omitted).
Section 1001 is thus distinct from general fraud statutes, such
as the mail fraud statute, wherein "any benefit which the
Government derives from the statute must be limited to the
Government's interests as property holder." Id.

                                 7
second element, falsity.       We are asked to decide whether what Shah

stated or represented in the solicitation could violate section

1001, and, if so, whether the government proved that it did.                 The

critical language in the solicitation reads, "The prices in this

offer have not been and will not be knowingly disclosed by the

offeror . . . to any other offeror or competitor before . . .

contract award."     The statement was made when Shah submitted the

solicitation on July 8, 1992.              As of that date, there is no

evidence that Shah had disclosed any price information.                He had

only proposed doing so the day before.             It was not until July 15

that Shah actually disclosed the information.           Therefore, only the

"will not disclose" portion of the statement is at issue.

       By disclosing his bid to a competitor, Shah broke a promise

made   and   certified    in   the   solicitation.      As   the   government

concedes, however, a broken promise is not alone a basis for

criminal     liability   under   section     1001.     Otherwise,    as     Shah

correctly points out, every breach of a governmental contract would

be converted into a section 1001 false statement, thus exposing the

breaching party to criminal prosecution. To establish a violation,

then, the government must prove, among other things, that the

statement    "I   will   not   disclose    price   information     before   the

contract award" was false when made.               Shah contends that this

statement can be neither true nor false when made because it is

simply a prediction of future performance.           As such, the statement

is either true or false only after the promise is carried out or

broken.      The government, on the other hand, argues that this

statement clearly implies and manifests an intent which itself may

                                       8
render a promise true or false when made and which may be proved by

circumstantial evidence of Shah's state of mind.             According to the

government, if Shah all the while intended to disclose price

information, but nevertheless promised not to, he made a false and

fraudulent statement to GSA in violation of section 1001.

       To support its argument, the government cites two cases from

other circuits, United States v. Hartness, 845 F.2d 158 (8th Cir.),

cert. denied, 109 S.Ct. 308 (1988), and United States v. Mandanici,

729 F.2d 914 (2d Cir. 1984).           In Hartness, the defendant argued

that he could not be prosecuted under section 1001 for making a

false projection of future income because a projection, when made,

is neither true nor false.           Hartness, 845 F.2d at 160.       Although

the issue posed in Hartness is identical to that here, the facts

are somewhat    different.       There,       projections   of   income    on   an

application to the Farmers Home Administration were governed in

part by objective criteria, by facts then in existence:                   namely,

the amount of current income.8          Id.     The court recognized that a

wrong prediction, standing alone, cannot support liability under

section 1001:   "No one can be prosecuted for failing to accurately

predict the future."      Id.   The existence of verifiable facts in the

projection    equation,     however,        distinguished   the    defendant's

statement from a pure prediction and made his prosecution that much

less   problematic.       Id.   at    160-61.      Hartness,     therefore,     is

different from the case at hand, in which the truth or falsity of



8
     In Hartness, the defendant had based the projection on full-
time employment even though the applicant, a full-time college
student, had then worked only part time.

                                        9
Shah's statement is not so readily or objectively discernible.

      Mandanici is more persuasive.       There, the defendant was

convicted of making the following two false statements:     (1) that

the estimated price of some renovation work was $88,000 and (2)

that he would do $88,000 worth of work.       Mandanici, 729 F.2d at

916-17. The government claimed that these two statement were false

when made.    According to the government, the first statement was

false because, at the time it was made, the defendant knew the work

would not cost that much.        Id. at 919-20.     The court found

insufficient evidence to support that charge because the evidence

at trial addressed only the defendant's intention not to carry out

the work and not his knowledge of the costs.    Because there was no

evidence on the record from which a juror could find that the work,

if performed, would cost anything other than $88,000, the court

reversed the conviction on this count.     Id. at 920.

      The court, however, upheld the conviction on the second count.

Id.   The second statement was a promise to do $88,000 worth of

workSQin other words, to do the renovation work that was the basis

of the price estimate. According to the charge, when the defendant

made this statement, he actually did not intend to do $88,000 worth

of work.     Id.   The circumstantial evidence in support of this

charge included a letter indicating completion of the work and

false documentation of expenditures, both submitted after the

statement was made.   Id.   Based on this "ample" evidence, the court

agreed that the defendant had "falsely represented his intentions"

and upheld the conviction.    Id.   Shah asserts that Mandanici (like

Hartness) is distinguishable because the false statement at issue

                                    10
there was "intrinsically intertwined" with the price estimation, a

verifiable   fact.   That   fact,   however,   was   assumed    true   in

Mandanici, and its accuracy had no bearing on whether the defendant

had misrepresented his intentions to perform the renovation work

fully.   In short, had the defendant done the work promised, there

was no reason to suspect that the price would be any less or more

than the $88,000 estimated.   Nonetheless, Shah is correct that, in

focusing on the sufficiency of the evidence, the Second Circuit

presumed precisely what is at issue in this case:              whether a

promise to perform can ever violate section 1001.

     Although it is true that Mandanici does not explicitly support

the government's argument, Shah too fails to cite authoritative

support for his contention that a promise cannot be false and thus

the basis of prosecution under section 1001.          Shah relies on

Williams v. United States, 102 S.Ct. 3088 (1982).9       In Williams,

the Supreme Court considered whether an insufficient funds check

could be considered a false statement within the meaning of 18

U.S.C. § 1014.10 Although the government argued that a check stated

that the drawer had sufficient funds in the bank, the Court

rejected this reading.   The checks were, according to the Court,

not technically statements at all; they "served only to direct the


9
     Shah also cites United States v. Glover, 25 F.Cas. 1339
(C.C.D.C. 1831). In Glover, the court held that a "promissory
oath cannot be the subject of an indictment for perjury," which
holding probably restates what the government does not dispute:
that to break a promise does not make the promise false when
made. In any event, Glover is too cursory to be helpful. Over
160 years old, the decision is exactly two sentences long, and
the context of the holding is unclear.
10
     Section 1014 prohibits making a false statement to a bank.

                                 11
drawee     banks      to    pay    the     face      amounts     to     the     bearer,       while

committing petitioner to make good the obligations if the banks

dishonored the drafts."                  Williams, 102 S.Ct. at 3091.                         This,

according to the Court, was the only "meaning" of a check.                                Id. at

3092.       The       Court       noted,     moreover,          that     the     government's

interpretation of a check's meaning did not necessarily comport

with common understanding:                 "[I]t would be equally plausible to

suggest that . . . the drawer will have sufficient funds deposited

in his account by the time the check clears, or that the drawer

will make good the face value of the draft if it is dishonored by

the bank."       Id. at n.7.

      Like Mandanici, Williams does not directly confront the issue

presented in this case.                  Simply put, the issue in Williams was

whether    a     check      makes   a     statement       at     all    and,     if    so,    what

statement.       Although the Court could not agree with the government

about what exactly a check implicitly represents, there is no

dispute in this case as to what Shah stated and thereby clearly

implied.       Contrary to Shah's suggestion, the Supreme Court did not

hold that a check was a promise and therefore not a statement.

Williams    neither         mentioned       nor      pursued     a     distinction      between

statements and promises.                The Court never suggests that a promise

cannot,     as    a   matter       of    law,     be   or      contain      a   statement       or

representation.            Instead, a check is not a statement because it is

not   "a    factual         assertion,"         because     it       does     not     "make    any

representation as to the state of petitioner's bank balance."                                  Id.

at 3091.    By relying on Williams for the proposition that a promise

is not a statement, Shah begs the very question at issue:                                whether

                                                12
the statement at hand is capable of being termed true or false;

whether, in other words, a promise can be construed as "a factual

assertion."

      Finally,   the   holding   in   Williams   must     be   considered    in

context; the Court was obviously troubled by the government's

characterization of a check's meaning and feared that such an

interpretation would expose anyone who bounced a check to federal

criminal liability.      Id. at 3092.       This concern mirrors Shah's

suggestion that the government's interpretation of false statement

or representation under section 1001 would criminalize every broken

promise.    The government, however, makes no such contention here.

It is not breaking a promise that exposes a defendant to criminal

liability, but making a promise with the intent to break it.

Whereas breaking a promise cannot retroactively render the promise

false   when   stated,   generally    the   making   of    a   promise   will

necessarily imply an intent to perform, the absence of which may

itself make a promise false when stated.

      This distinction is critical.         In the present context, the

statement "I will not disclose prices" is something more than a

prediction; it clearly contains a necessary implication, signified

by the phrase "I will," that the maker intends to do what he

promises.      See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 530(1) cmt. c

("Since a promise necessarily carries with it the implied assertion

of an intention to perform it follows that a promise made without

such an intention is fraudulent . . . .")         (emphasis added).         The

implication is necessary because the statement's meaning depends on

it.     In the setting of this case, the statement "I will not

                                      13
disclose prices, but I intend to disclose prices" is nonsense

because the second clause negates the communicated meaning of the

first.11

     That a promise can inherently be false when made is supported

by case law not cited by either party.         In Elmore v. United States,

267 F.2d 595 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 80 S.Ct. 82 (1959), the

defendant   was    convicted     of    making     false      statements     and

representations    on   an      application      to    the      Farmers    Home

Administration in violation of the Commodity Credit Corporation

Act, 15 U.S.C. § 714m(a).12     The defendant purchased surplus wheat

from the government on the condition that the wheat be used only to

feed livestock or poultry.       Id. at 602.       Although the defendant

certified as much, the wheat was later used for other purposes.

Following   his   conviction,    the       defendant   argued    that     "false

statements" should be confined to "false statements of existing

fact":

     "Since the statements by the defendant in regard to the
     4200 bushels of wheat purchased . . . were not statements
     of facts but promises as to the future use of the
     commodity, it is said that he committed no crime. . . .
     It is said that if Congress had intended to make false


11
     We cannot ignore the plain but implicit meaning of the
promise. In United States v. Clark, 546 F.2d 1130, 1134 (5th
Cir. 1977), the defendant submitted a form on which he had made a
written statement assigning payments "said to be due" to a third
party even though that third party was due nothing. Though the
statement on the form was thus literally true, we went beyond
these words to consider what the defendant in effect represented,
namely, that he had something to assign. Id. See United States
v. Thomas, 593 F.2d 615, 620 n.17 (5th Cir. 1979) (ruling that
the statement was in effect false even if literally true), cert.
denied, 101 S.Ct. 120 (1980).
12
     Section 714m(a) prohibits the making of false statements for
the purpose of influencing the Commodity Credit Corporation.

                                      14
     promises as to the future a criminal offense . . ., it
     would have made express provision therefore as it did in
     18 U.S.C. § 1341 [the mail fraud statute] . . . ." Id.
     at 603.

The court rejected this argument and read the statute to cover

"false and fraudulent promises which the maker does not intend to

perform."   Id.   In terms of frustrating the purpose of the act, the

court could see no practical difference between false statements

and false promises:

     "[I]t cannot be supposed that Congress intended to direct
     the criminal sanctions of the act only against those who
     make false statements of existing fact and to exculpate
     those who should obtain surplus commodities by making
     false promises which they do not intend to fulfill. In
     practical effect, a false promise fraudulently given
     amounts to a false statement of an existing intent and it
     can be as destructive as the false statement of a
     material fact. We think Congress intended to cover it by
     the statute." Id. (emphasis added).

In so holding, the court noted that other courts had taken similar

approaches to the Selective Service and Training Act of 1940, the

Home Owners' Loan Corporation Act of 1942, and the False Claims

Act, the statute at issue in this case.13

     As the Fourth Circuit recognized in Elmore, there is a series

of cases in which this Court has upheld convictions for making

false promises in violation of section 1001.        All these cases

involve applications by veterans for a Home Loan Guaranty, in which

the veterans had to certify that the loans were for the purchase of


13
     The court cited Todorow v. United States, 173 F.2d 439 (9th
Cir.), cert. denied, 69 S.Ct. 1169 (1949), in which the defendant
was convicted of falsely promising in an application to purchase
surplus army trucks that the trucks were for his own use and not
for resale. The court did not, however, discuss the distinction
between promises and other statements, but simply held that there
was sufficient circumstantial evidence that the defendant's
representation was false when made.

                                  15
a home.   In Corcoran v. United States, 229 F.2d 295, 297 (5th Cir.

1956), for instance, the defendant was charged with causing to be

made a promise to use loan proceeds for the purchase of a home when

the applicant "did not intend to occupy the said property as his

home."      The Court upheld the conviction, noting that if the

Veterans Administration had known that the applicant never intended

to so use the funds, the loan would have been rejected.    See also

McClanahan v. United States, 230 F.2d 919 (5th Cir.) (upholding the

conviction of an accomplice who caused to be made such statements

of purpose where applicant had no real intent to occupy the

premises), cert. denied, 77 S.Ct. 33 (1956); Russell v. United

States, 222 F.2d 197 (5th Cir. 1955) (same).     Although in all of

these cases this Court termed the statement of purpose "false," we

never explicitly discussed a distinction between statements of

existing fact and those of future performance, as the Fourth

Circuit did in Elmore.   See also United States v. Elliott, 771 F.2d

1046, 1050 (7th Cir. 1985) (upholding conviction of the defendant-

applicant where defendant claimed he had changed his mind after

filling out the application).

     Albeit implicit, this Court's assumption in prior cases that

a promise can be a false statement is supported by the common law

of fraud.    Although "[i]t is a general rule that fraud cannot be

predicated upon statements which are promissory in their nature at

the time they are made and which relate to future action or

conduct," 37 Am.Jur. 2d, Fraud and Deceit, § 60, it is also

generally accepted, under common law principles, that

     "fraud may be predicated on promises made with a present

                                 16
      intention not to perform them or, as the rule is
      frequently expressed, on promises made without any
      intention of performance . . . .   The gist of the fraud
      . . . is not the breach of the agreement to perform, but
      the fraudulent intent of the promisor, the false
      representation of an existing intention to perform where
      such intent is in fact nonexistent. . . . The generally
      accepted modern theory categorizes a promise which the
      promisor does not intend to carry out, as a misstatement
      of material and subsisting fact." Id. § 68 (footnotes
      omitted).14

Furthermore,      "[a]   person's    statement     that   he   intends   to   do

something when he has no present intention of doing it is a false

statement of an existing fact, because it falsely represents the

state of his mind, and the state of his mind is a fact."             Id. § 64

(footnote omitted).         See also Restatement (Second) of Torts §

530(1) ("A representation of the maker's own intention to do or not

to do a particular thing is fraudulent if he does not have that

intention").      This common-law understanding of fraud comports with

the words and purpose of section 1001.

      Nevertheless, at oral argument, Shah argued that the terms of

section 1001 should not be read to cover promises.             Shah relies on

the   principle    of    expressio   unius   est   exclusio    alterius   (the

expression of one thing is the exclusion of another), based on the

absence of the word "promises" in section 1001, as compared to its




14
     Generally, "there is no inference of fraudulent intent not
to perform from the mere fact that a promise made is subsequently
not performed." Id. (footnote omitted). See also id. § 478;
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 530(1) cmt. d. However, where
the nonperformance is coupled with other probative factors, such
as "where only a short time elapses between the making of the
promise and the refusal to perform it, and there is no change in
the circumstances," an intent not to perform when the promise was
made may, in appropriate circumstances, be properly inferred. 37
Am. Jur. 2d, Fraud and Deceit, § 478 (footnotes omitted).

                                      17
presence in the mail, wire, and bank fraud statutes.15             We reject

this argument for two reasons.              First, as mentioned before, a

promise to perform is not only a prediction, but is generally also

a representation of present intent.           Promises and representations

are simply not mutually exclusive categories.            The plain terms of

the statute can therefore be said to cover representations of

present intent.

      Further, the inclusion of the word "promise" in the mail fraud

statute is a "codification" of an old Supreme Court case, in which

the Court held that the absence of the word "promise" in the

statute did not prevent prosecution for making a promise without

any intention of performance.           In Durland v. United States, 16

S.Ct. 508 (1896), the defendant was convicted of fraudulently

promising to issue bonds, which amounted to a "scheme or artifice

to defraud" in violation of the statute.             The defendant argued

that, under the common law of false pretenses, "fraud . . . must be

the misrepresentation of an existing or past fact, and cannot

consist of the mere intention not to carry out a contract in the

future."    Id. at 511.    Without delving into common law principles,

the Court rejected this contention, construing the statute to

"includ[e] everything designed to defraud by representations as to

the past or present, or suggestions and promises as to the future."

Id.   A promise, the Court concluded, can be as fraudulent as a

statement   of   present   fact   if   the    promisor   never   intended   to


15
     These statutes prohibit "any scheme or artifice to defraud,"
as well as schemes for obtaining money or property by "false or
fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises." 18 U.S.C.
§§ 1341, 1343, 1344.

                                       18
perform.     Id.   According to the Court,

       "If the testimony had shown that . . . the defendant . .
       . had entered in good faith upon that business, believing
       that out of the moneys received they could, by investment
       or otherwise, make enough to justify the promised
       returns, no conviction could be sustained, no matter how
       visionary might seem the scheme. The charge is that, in
       putting forth this scheme, it was not the intent of the
       defendant to make an honest effort for its success, but
       that he resorted to this form and pretense of a bond
       without a thought that he . . . would ever make good its
       promises.   It was with the purpose of protecting the
       public against all such intentional efforts to despoil,
       and to prevent the post office from being used to carry
       them into effect, that this statute was passed; and it
       would strip it of value to confine it to such cases as
       disclose an actual misrepresentation as to some existing
       fact, and exclude those in which is only the allurement
       of a promise. This, which is the principal contention of
       counsel, must be overruled." Id.

The Supreme Court has recently recognized that the congressional

inclusion of the word "promise" in the mail fraud statute is, in a

sense,   a   redundancy,    a   "codification"      of   existing   case    law.

McNally v. United States, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 2880-81 (1987).

       For the foregoing reasons, we reject Shah's contention that a

"promise to perform" cannot, as a matter of law, ever violate

section 1001.       We hold that, under section 1001, a promise may

amount to a "false, fictitious or fraudulent" statement if it is

made   without     any   present   intention   of   performance     and    under

circumstances such that it plainly, albeit implicitly, represents

the present existence of an intent to perform.16


16
     Shah contends the trial court erred in refusing the
following instruction:

            "You are instructed that you cannot convict unless
       the facts that you find to be false beyond a reasonable
       doubt occurred before the making of the statement
       containing those facts, and, further, that the
       defendant knew that the facts were false."

                                      19
     In the present setting, it is clear that the statement or

promise implicitly represents Shah's present intent.            We now

determine whether the government proved falsity in this case. Shah

claims, in his first evidentiary point, that the evidence was

inadequate to support the necessary premise that Shah had no

intention of carrying out the promise when he made it.      We view the

evidence in the light most favorable to the jury verdict and will

affirm if a rational trier of fact could find that the government

proved all essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable

doubt.   United States v. Mackay, 33 F.3d 489, 493 (5th Cir. 1994).

As mentioned earlier, whether a defendant intended to perform is a

question of fact concerning the defendant's state of mind.         The

mere fact of subsequent nonperformance is not alone sufficient for

conviction.   See note 14, supra.    Although the call is a close one,

we cannot say that the circumstantial evidence in this case was

insufficient to justify the verdict.      Courts have routinely relied

on   circumstantial   evidence      to   support   such   false-promise

determinations.   See Corcoran, 229 F.2d at 297; Elliott, 771 F.2d

at 1050; Mandanici, 729 F.2d at 920; Todorow, 173 F.2d at 443-44.


Because this proposed instruction at best confusingly states the
law, the district court was right to refuse it. United States v.
Linn, 889 F.2d 1369, 1371-72 (5th Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 111
S.Ct. 43 (1990). The relevant facts must be false when the
statement is made, not before or after that time. Furthermore,
to the extent the proposed instruction was based on the
assumption that a promise cannot be false, it was mistaken and
confusing. The district court correctly charged the jury that it
must find that "the defendant made the statement intentionally
knowing that it was false" in order to convict Shah. The court
went on, "A statement is false if it was untrue when made and
then known to be untrue by the person making it." This
instruction represents a correct and adequate statement of the
law.

                                    20
See also note 14, supra.

     At   the    end   of    the   first      conversation,     Kipper    was    "non-

committal," and Shah left his telephone number.                  From these facts,

a jury could infer that the matter was not abandoned, but was

rather left open.           That Shah submitted his bid before actually

exchanging the information does not invalidate this inference.

When he submitted his offer, Shah was aware that the bids could be

changed up until the contract award.                  Indeed, he stated as much in

his initial exchanges with Kipper during their first monitored

conversation on July 15. Further, although Shah did not reinitiate

further contact after their conversation on July 7, when Kipper

called a few days after the submission of the bids, Shah was

immediately receptive to his earlier suggestion and wasted no time

arranging      an    exchange      of    bid     information.          During     this

conversation,       which    occurred     so    shortly      after   Shah's     July   8

statement, Shah neither expressed surprise at Kipper's broaching

the subject nor treated it as an about-face.                         Shah certainly

intended to exchange price information on July 7 and July 15; under

the evidence, the jury could infer that he had the same intention

on July 8.     In short, the evidence introduced at trial as to events

both before and after the submission of Shah's offer supports the

jury's verdict.

     Shah also claims that the government failed to prove that the

Nitin   Shah    who    submitted        the     bid    and   exchanged    the    price

information was the Nitin Shah who was arrested.                     This contention

is without merit.           Given that the GSA agent who arrested Shah

testified that he found Shah at the address listed on the bid as

                                           21
that of Omega Electronics and that the Nitin Shah arrested was the

only    Nitin    Shah   living       at   that    address,   the   only    logical

interpretation of the evidence at trial was that the Shah who was

arrested was the one who committed the crime.                 There was nothing

whatever to suggest the contrary.              The government need not make a

case    for     identity       air-tight;        identity    may   be     inferred

circumstantially, and the ample circumstantial evidence in this

case pointed in only one directionSQtoward the defendant.                         See

United States v. Royals, 777 F.2d 1089, 1091 (5th Cir. 1985).

       We must likewise reject Shah's final evidentiary claim:                   that

the    government     failed    to    prove    that   Shah   actually     read    the

certification and thus made his statement "knowingly."                  As a party

to prior supply contracts with GSA, Shah was not new to the bidding

process or to the GSA's forms. Further, Shah filled in information

both below and above section 13, the section at issue.                           Shah

supplied requested information in over sixty separate locations

throughout      the   solicitation,       including    his   signature     in    four

places.   Finally, Shah's request for confidentiality suggests that

he knew of the certification.             Nothing suggests that he did not.

A jury could infer beyond a reasonable doubt that Shah read and

understood what he signed and submitted.               See Puente, 982 F.2d at

159; see also United States v. Munna, 871 F.2d 515, 517 (5th Cir.

1989), cert. denied, 110 S.Ct. 871 (1990).

       Finally, we find no support for Shah's contention that there

was an impermissible variance between the indictment and the proof

at trial.        The basis for this claim is the omission in the

indictment of the two parenthetical phrases contained in the actual

                                          22
statement in the solicitation:        that prices will not be disclosed

before bid opening "(in the case of a sealed bid solicitation)" or

contract award "(in the case of a negotiated solicitation)."17 Shah

claims   that,     by    omitting   this   parenthetical     language,      the

government relieved itself of the obligation of proving what bid

arrangement was at issue and whether there had been a contract

award or bid opening at the time the statement was made.              However,

to constitute reversible error, there must be not only a variance,

but a material one.       United States v. Moree, 897 F.2d 1329, 1334

(5th Cir. 1994) ("A mere variance in language between proof and the

explicit language of the indictment which does not constitute the

modification of an essential element of the offense charged is not

error.").     It    is   not   essential   that   the   government,    in   the

indictment, set up verbatim the factual bases for its allegation of

falsity, so long as the facts to be proved are implicit in the

allegation.   Id.

     To be material, the variance must "prejudice[] the defendant's

'substantial rights,' either by surprising the defendant at trial

or by placing the defendant at risk of double jeopardy."               United

States v. Robinson, 974 F.2d 575, 578 (5th Cir. 1992).            Here, the


17
     The indictment describes the relevant false statement as
follows: "[t]he prices in this offer have not been and will not
be knowingly disclosed by the offeror, directly or indirectly, to
any other offeror or competitor before bid opening or contract
award unless otherwise required by law." The statement contained
in the solicitation, which was admitted in evidence at trial,
reads as follows: "The prices in this offer have not been and
will not be knowingly disclosed by the offeror, directly or
indirectly, to any other offeror or competitor before bid opening
(in the case of a sealed bid solicitation) or contract award (in
the case of a negotiated solicitation) unless otherwise required
by law."

                                      23
variance is immaterial because it did "not impair the defendant's

ability to defend himself through failing to identify the nature of

the charge."   Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted).   Because

Shah was at all times fully aware what provision of the bid was the

basis for the indictment, he cannot credibly claim surprise.

United States v. Arlt, 567 F.2d 1295, 1298 (5th Cir.) (finding no

prejudice where the indictment incorrectly identified the form upon

which defendant allegedly made a false statement because defendant

was in any event aware what statement in the actual form the

government was relying on), cert. denied, 98 S.Ct. 2250 (1978).

Because Shah has failed to show that the variance was material, we

reject this final contention.

                            Conclusion

     For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court

is

                                                         AFFIRMED.




                                 24
