United States v. Manning

USCA1 Opinion













United States Court of Appeals
United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
For the First Circuit
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No. 92-1893

UNITED STATES,

Appellee,

v.

TRENT MANNING,

Defendant, Appellant.

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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Selya, Circuit Judge,
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Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
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and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
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Robert B. Mann with whom Mann & Mitchell was on brief for
________________ ________________
appellant.
Sean Connelly, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, with whom
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Edwin J. Gale, United States Attorney, District of Rhode Island, was
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on brief for appellee.


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May 6, 1994
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STAHL, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, defendant-
STAHL, Circuit Judge.
_____________

appellant Trent Manning challenges, on several grounds, his

convictions for possession with intent to distribute cocaine,

use of a firearm during and in relation to a drug trafficking

crime, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

Manning's principal appellate claim is that improper comments

made by the prosecutor during closing arguments undermined

the fairness of his trial. After carefully reviewing the

record, we conclude that the prosecutor's comments did so

infect the proceedings below that Manning is entitled to a

new trial. Accordingly, confining our discussion and

analysis to the prosecutorial misconduct issue, we vacate the

convictions.

I.
I.
__

BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
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A. Relevant Factual Background
A. Relevant Factual Background
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It is undisputed that late in the afternoon on

October 7, 1991, several members of the Providence Police

Department executed a search warrant at Manning's mother's

house, located at 151 Doyle Avenue in Providence, Rhode

Island. In the course of their search, the police officers

seized, inter alia, a brown briefcase which contained the
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material that formed the basis of the charges in the

indictment: two bags of cocaine weighing 124.64 grams,





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various drug paraphernalia, a loaded .9 millimeter handgun,

and six copper pipe bombs.

It also is undisputed that just prior to the raid,

two men drove up to Manning's mother's house in Manning's red

Jeep Cherokee. The man in the passenger seat was one Sean

Duncan, who was detained by the police but never charged in

connection with this case. The vehicle's driver, however,

was not apprehended at the scene. The identity of the driver

was (and is) perhaps the most hotly contested issue in this

case, as it was (and is) the government's theory that the

driver brought the brown briefcase into the house. The

government argued successfully that the driver was Manning;

Manning and Duncan testified that the driver was one Troy

McKenzie. The primary government witness on the issue of the

driver's identity was Detective Joseph Lennon, a member of

the search team that day. Lennon testified that, after

having been given the order to execute the search warrant, he

approached the rear of 151 Doyle Avenue, where he saw

Manning, whom he knew and with whom he had conversed on other

occasions, standing outside the Cherokee and in front of the

house's garage. Lennon testified that Manning was holding

the brown briefcase. Lennon also testified to seeing Duncan

seated in the passenger seat of the Cherokee.

Lennon further testified that, upon seeing Manning,

he identified himself as a police officer and, with gun



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drawn, ordered Manning to stop. According to Lennon's

testimony, Manning ignored this directive, walked slowly into

the garage, and closed and locked the door behind him.

Lennon testified that his pursuit of Manning into the

building was delayed by the presence of Manning's rottweiler,

which was running around loose in the driveway area behind

the house. After eventually gaining entrance to the garage

(about three to five minutes later), Lennon found and seized

the brown briefcase. He did not, however, find Manning in

the house.

Detective David Lussier also testified concerning

the identity of the driver of the Cherokee just prior to the

raid. Lussier, who also had known Manning for some time,

testified that he observed Manning, along with a companion,

drive by his surveillance position (located about 50 yards

from the house in a parking lot which provided a direct view

into the rear yard of 151 Doyle Avenue) just three or four

minutes before the raid. Indeed, Lussier testified that he

ordered that the warrant be executed at that time precisely

because he feared that eye contact between himself and

Manning had caused his surveillance to be compromised. After

ordering the raid, Lussier testified that he drove to the

front of the house, entered it through the front door, and

proceeded to the basement, where he found a broken window

through which Manning apparently had escaped.



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In contrast to the detectives' testimony, both Sean

Duncan and Manning testified that the driver of the car at

the time of the raid was (as noted above) Troy McKenzie. The

substance of their testimony was that Duncan and Manning had

been riding around together throughout the day, that they had

picked up McKenzie at some point in the afternoon, and that

they thereafter drove to the residence of Manning's

girlfriend. At this point, Manning gave McKenzie and Duncan

$40 and asked them to take his rottweiler, which was being

kept at his mother's house, to the veterinarian for a rabies

shot. McKenzie and Duncan then drove the Cherokee over to

Manning's mother's house to pick up the dog. Duncan

testified that McKenzie entered the house to fetch the dog

while he waited in the car. Shortly thereafter, the raid

occurred. Duncan also testified that he had "no idea" was

happened to Troy McKenzie after he entered the house.

One week after the execution of the search warrant,

Manning voluntarily turned himself in to the police. He

subsequently was charged with and convicted of the crimes

noted above, all of which necessitated a finding that Manning

was the person in possession of the brown briefcase who

disappeared into 151 Doyle Avenue at the time of the raid.

B. The Prosecutor's Comments
B. The Prosecutor's Comments
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Manning complains of four different comments made

by the prosecutor during the course of his closing argument.



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First, Manning contends that the prosecutor improperly

vouched for the credibility of certain prosecution witnesses

during the following colloquy:

[PROSECUTOR]: If Lussier is going to
come in and lie to you he could have done
that very, very easily. There's a
million little ways they could have given
it to the Defendant. But they cannot.
The prosecution witnesses cannot engage
in that kind of conduct. They're bound
by the truth.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I object to that,
your Honor.

THE COURT: Overruled.

[PROSECUTOR]: They're bound by their
oath and limits of honesty. The last
thing you might ask yourselves ---

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I object to that,
again I have a motion.

THE COURT: Overruled, motion denied.

(Hereinafter "First Passage"). The government concedes that

this passage contains improper witness-vouching by the

prosecution.

Next, Manning argues that the prosecutor engaged in

additional improper witness-vouching and inappropriately

implied that he had additional incriminating evidence when,

in responding to a defense argument concerning the lack of

probative fingerprint evidence on the items in the brown

briefcase, he stated:

[PROSECUTOR]: [W]hen we get to this gun
and these bombs and this dope we've got
an eyewitness who knows the Defendant and


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saw it all in his hands. So it doesn't
matter whether there's a print on it or
not. But they looked anyways and what
did that BCI officer tell you? He told
you that there were some partial prints
on those items but nothing that was good
enough to use for identification
purposes. Nothing that has sufficient
points of comparison on it for him to be
positive and we have to be fair, we have
to be positive. Prosecution ---

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I object to that, Judge.

THE COURT: Overruled.

[PROSECUTION]: Prosecution must always
be fair. . . .

(Hereinafter "Second Passage"). The government acknowledges

that this prosecutorial argument also contained improper

witness-vouching, but denies that it implied the existence of

additional incriminating evidence. Rather, the government

contends that it was an effort to suggest "that prosecution

witnesses had not created false evidence[.]"

Third, Manning asserts that the prosecutor

impermissibly appealed to the jury's emotions when, near the

conclusion of the prosecutor's initial closing argument, the

following exchange took place:

[PROSECUTOR]: Twelve responsible people
will deliberate on this case. Take
responsibility for yourselves. Take
responsibility for your community.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I object to that.

THE COURT: The jury's responsibility is
to follow the Court's instructions and
find the facts.



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(Hereinafter "Third Passage"). The government denies that

thisargumentconstituted animproperappealtothe jury'semotions.

Finally, Manning charges that the prosecutor again

impermissibly appealed to the jury's emotions at the

conclusion of his rebuttal argument:

[PROSECUTOR]: Convict the Defendant
fairly because the facts and the law
compel conviction. Convict the Defendant
because justice compels conviction.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I object to that,
too. . . .

THE COURT: I direct the jury to ignore
the last statement of the United States
Attorney. Your responsibility, as I told
you at the beginning, is to determine
whether or not, in light of the law that
is given to you by the Court, the
government has met its burden of proving
the Defendant guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt. . . .

(Hereinafter "Fourth Passage"). Although it is not entirely

clear, the government appears to concede that this argument

was improper. See Government's Brief at 41 (acknowledging
___

that this argument "is somewhat similar to exhortations that

have been deemed impermissible").

II.
II.
___

DISCUSSION
DISCUSSION
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Manning's prosecutorial misconduct argument, as

developed in his brief and at oral argument, proceeds along

the following lines. First, Manning correctly notes that, in

order to convict him of the crimes with which he was charged



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in the indictment, the jury was obliged, as a threshold
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matter, to find that he was the person who disappeared into
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the garage at 151 Doyle Avenue while holding the brown

suitcase. Next, Manning observes that this finding

necessarily must have been anchored upon determinations (1)
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that Detectives Lennon and Lussier were credible witnesses on

this issue, and (2) that he and Duncan were not. Finally,

Manning contends that the improper witness-vouching committed

by the prosecutor, which was allowed by the trial court over

his objection, both alone and in conjunction with the

prosecutor's implication that there existed additional

inculpatory evidence and the prosecutor's other inflammatory

rhetoric, so compromised the jury's ability to make these

essential and liminal credibility determinations that his

trial was rendered fundamentally unfair. We find Manning's

reasoning to be persuasive.

We begin by laying the groundwork for our analysis.

First, we think that the First and Second Passages contain

improper witness-vouching by the prosecution. See, e.g.,
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United States v. Innamorati, 996 F.2d 456, 482 (1st Cir.)
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(prosecutor may not vouch for government witnesses), cert.
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denied, 114 S. Ct. 409 and 114 S. Ct. 459 (1993); United
______ ___ ______

States v. Martin, 815 F.2d 818, 821-23 (1st Cir.), cert.
______ ______ _____

denied, 494 U.S. 825 (1987). Next, we believe that the Third
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and Fourth Passages include improper appeals to the jury to



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act in ways other than as a dispassionate arbiter of the

facts. See, e.g., United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 17
___ ____ _____________ _____

(1985) (prosecutor erred in telling jury to "do its job");

United States v. Mandelbaum, 803 F.2d 42, 44 (1st Cir. 1986)
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(prosecutor erred in urging jury to "do its duty"). Finally

we think it rather obvious that, when read in context, the

prosecutor's comments in the Second Passage were an attempt

to counter defense counsel's anticipated argument relating to

the lack of fingerprint evidence on the items seized from the

brown briefcase. Insofar as the comments were intended to

relieve the jury of any misapprehension that there were no
__

fingerprints on these items, these comments were not

improper. Given that defense counsel had not suggested that

the partial prints were not Manning's, cf. Young, 470 U.S. at
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11-14 (discussing the "invited response" doctrine), however,

the insinuation that the partial prints were inculpatory,

which we believe inhered at least in the prosecutor's

statement that "we have to be fair, we have to be positive,"

was impermissible. See e.g., United States v. Udechukwu, 11
___ ____ ______________ _________

F.3d 1101, 1106 (1st Cir. 1993) (prosecutor may not imply

that the government has inculpatory information that is not

in evidence); United States v. Smith, 982 F.2d 681, 683 (1st
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Cir. 1993) (similar).1


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1. Additionally, we note that the improper arguments
challenged on appeal are by no means the only inappropriate
comments made to the jury by the prosecution during closing

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We also feel constrained to express our belief that

the government's overreaching in this case was not entirely

limited to the prosecutor's conduct at trial. While we

acknowledge that the government was forthright in admitting

that the prosecutor engaged in impermissible witness-

vouching, we are surprised at several of the other positions

staked out in the government's appellate brief. First, we

are hard-pressed to comprehend, let alone agree with, the


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arguments. By way of illustration, we offer the following
passage where the prosecutor described his view of the
"roles" played by the judge, jury, and, especially, defense
counsel in a criminal trial:

[PROSECUTOR]: We all play roles in this
trial. You have seen what the Judge does
and ruled on the law [sic]. As a jury,
you serve a role, a function in this case
too, you represent the people of the
United States, the citizens of the State
of Rhode Island. By your verdict you
will speak for those citizens. By your
verdict you will determine---

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I object to that.

THE COURT: Just a moment. The jury will
make the decision among themselves based
on the instructions and the evidence
they've heard.

[PROSECUTOR]: Yes, your honor. You are
fact finders and in order to find the
facts one of the things you have to do is
to decide which of the facts are true.
You will have to assess the credibility
of the witnesses. Some prosecutors get
up and say that the role of defense
attorney is to cloud the issues or make
smoke screens. I liken them to
Shakespeare's players, full of sound and
fury signifying nothing . . . .

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government's characterization of the Second Passage, "in full

context," as an effort to suggest "that prosecution witnesses

had not created false evidence" (a claim the defense never

made). Instead, as noted above, we think it plain (1) that

the government was responding to defense counsel's

anticipated argument that the jury should consider the

absence of probative fingerprint evidence on the items found

in the brown briefcase to be exculpatory, and (2) that, in

stating that the prosecution "ha[s] to be fair" and "has to

be positive," the prosecutor went too far and hinted that the

partial prints tended to inculpate Manning.

The government's references to extra-circuit

caselaw and strained attempt to distinguish the inflammatory

rhetoric here from the cases cited by Manning also strike us

as inappropriate. By now, we think it should be beyond

question that, in this circuit at least, arguments urging a

jury to act in any capacity other than as the impartial

arbiter of the facts in the case before it are improper. See
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Mandelbaum, 803 F.2d at 44; cf. Arrieta-Agressot v. United
__________ ___ ________________ ______

States, 3 F.3d 525, 529-30 (1st Cir. 1993) (inflammatory
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arguments distract jury from the only issue presented in a
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case: whether the evidence establishes guilt beyond a

reasonable doubt).

We turn now to our analysis. In this circuit, we

have identified several factors relevant to a determination



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of whether prosecutorial misconduct has "`so poisoned the

well,'" see United States v. Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d 607, 610
___ _____________ _____________

(1st Cir. 1991) (quoting United States v. Capone, 683 F.2d
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582, 586-87 (1st Cir. 1982)), that a new trial is required.

Although we have used slightly varying terminology in

describing these factors, the common denominators are (1) the

severity of the misconduct; (2) the context in which it

occurred; (3) whether the judge gave any curative

instructions and the likely effect of such instructions; and

(4) the strength of the evidence against the defendant. See,
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e.g., Udechukwu, 11 F.3d at 1106; Arrieta-Agressot, 3 F.3d at
____ _________ ________________

528-30; Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d at 610; United States v.
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Quesada-Bonilla, 952 F.2d 597, 601-02 (1st Cir. 1991);
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Capone, 683 F.2d at 585-86. These factors guide our
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conclusion as to whether the misconduct likely affected the

trial's outcome. E.g., Udechukwu, 11 F.3d at 1106; Arrieta-
____ _________ ________

Agressot, 3 F.3d at 528.2
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2. This line of authority, which derives from Capone, also
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often speaks of the need to deter future prosecutorial
misconduct, e.g., Udechukwu, 11 F.3d at 1106; Quesada-
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Bonilla, 952 F.2d at 602; United States v. Brown, 938 F.2d
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1482, 1489 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 611 (1991),
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Capone, 683 F.2d at 586, as an additional legitimate basis
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for reversal. As we have previously noted, however, see
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Smith, 982 F.2d at 686 n.8; United States v. Osorio, 929 F.2d
_____ _____________ ______
753, 763 (1st Cir. 1991), and as the government argues here,
our power to act solely on this basis has, at the least, been
significantly circumscribed by the Supreme Court, see United
___ ______
States v. Hasting, 461 U.S. 499, 506 (1983) (use of
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supervisory power to deter prosecutorial misconduct
inappropriate where error in case-at-bar was harmless). At
any rate, while we fervently hope that our decision might

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In this case, we think that all of these factors

militate in favor of reversal. The prosecutorial

overreaching that took place here, while certainly not

conscience-shocking, was pervasive. Moveover, it occurred

during closing arguments -- the last words spoken to the jury

by the trial attorneys -- and in no way was provoked by

improper arguments of defense counsel. Cf., e.g., United
___ ____ ______

States v. Machor, 879 F.2d 945, 956 (1st Cir. 1989), cert.
______ ______ _____

denied, 493 U.S. 1081 (1990) and 493 U.S. 1094 (1990).
______ ___

More importantly, the district court not only

failed to give curative instructions to counter the improper

First and Second Passages, but it also tacitly indicated that

the arguments in these Passages were proper by overruling

defense counsel's contemporaneous objections to them.3 As a

result, we think it likely that the jury inferred that

Detectives Lennon and Lussier, as both law enforcement

officials and prosecution witnesses, could properly be
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considered as having a heightened duty to testify honestly.


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have the effect of deterring prosecutors from straying into
forbidden territory in the future, we emphasize that today's
result is in no way informed by a deterrent animus.

3. With regard to the Third and Fourth Passages, while
failing to tell the jury to disregard the prosecutor's
comments, the district judge did remind the jury that its
___
responsibility was to find the facts. Thus, we think it
unlikely that a significant amount of prejudice was
engendered by the inflammatory rhetoric in those Passages.
Accordingly, we restrict our analysis to the likely effects
of the witness- vouching and hints at the existence of
additional inculpatory evidence in First and Second Passages.

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Of course, such an inference undermines the impartiality with

which the jury is supposed to make credibility

determinations.4 Moreover, as we have stated, we think that

the jury could have inferred from the "we have to be fair, we

have to be positive" comments that the partial fingerprints

on the items in the brown briefcase were Manning's.

This leads to our final and most important point.

While there may have been abundant evidence in this case that

Manning was a drug dealer and that the drug paraphernalia

seized at 151 Doyle Avenue was Manning's, the question of

whether Manning committed the crimes with which he was

charged in the indictment (i.e., possession of the contraband
__ ___ __________

items seized from the brown briefcase) turned entirely on
________

whether, with regard to the issue of who carried the brown

briefcase into 151 Doyle Avenue, the jury believed Detectives

Lennon and Lussier or whether it believed Manning and Duncan.

In our view, each of the witnesses gave a plausible account

on this threshold question; that is to say, neither version

of who was carrying the briefcase was inherently unlikely to
__________


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4. In so stating, we obviously are unconvinced by the
government's argument that the district court's admonition,
in its final instructions, that "the United States Government
stands no higher before this Court than does Defendant" was
sufficient to cure both the witness-vouching in the First and
Second Passages and the effect of the court's overruling of
defense counsel's contemporaneous objections. Indeed, this
instruction, referring as it does to "the United States
Government," in no way rebuts the above-noted implication
that Detectives Lennon and Lussier, as Providence police
__________
officers, had a heightened duty to testify honestly.

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be true. Given this, and given the further fact that we are

precluded from making independent credibility determinations

on appeal, see United States v. Alvarez, 987 F.2d 77, 83 (1st
___ _____________ _______

Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 147 (1993), the question
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before us really is whether the prosecutorial misconduct in

the First and Second Passages (which, as we have stated,

significantly interfered with the jury's ability to make an

essential and liminal credibility determination) was likely

to have affected the trial's outcome, see, e.g., Udechukwu,
___ ____ _________

11 F.3d at 1106; Arrieta-Agressot, 3 F.3d at 528. We are
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compelled to conclude that this question must be answered in

the affirmative. Accordingly, Manning is entitled to a new

trial.

III.
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CONCLUSION
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Nearly sixty years ago, the Supreme Court stated:

The United States Attorney is the
representative not of an ordinary party
to a controversy, but of a sovereignty
whose obligation to govern impartially is
as compelling as its obligation to govern
at all; and whose interest, therefore, in
a criminal prosecution is not that it
shall win a case, but that justice shall
be done. As such, he is in a peculiar
and very definite sense the servant of
the law, the twofold aim of which is that
guilt shall not escape or innocence
suffer. He may prosecute with
earnestness and vigor -- indeed, he
should do so. But, while he may strike
hard blows, he is not at liberty to
strike foul ones. It is as much his duty
to refrain from improper methods


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calculated to produce a wrongful
conviction as it is to use every
legitimate means to bring about a just
one.

Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935). For the
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third time in the last six months, we find ourselves in the

regrettable position of vacating a conviction because a

United States Attorney has failed to honor sufficiently these

precepts. See Udechukwu, 11 F.3d at 1106; Arrieta-Agressot,
___ _________ ________________

3 F.3d at 530; see also United States v. Moreno, 991 F.2d
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943, 949-50 (1st Cir.) (Torruella, J., dissenting) (arguing,

inter alia, that the prosecutorial misconduct in that case
_____ ____

warranted reversal of defendant's conviction), cert. denied,
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114 S. Ct. 457 (1993).

Vacated and remanded.
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