United States v. Michael Chaparro

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 18-2513 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. MICHAEL L. CHAPARRO, Defendant-Appellant. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Western Division. No. 3:16-cr-50010-1 — Frederick J. Kapala, Judge. ____________________ ARGUED DECEMBER 11, 2019 — DECIDED APRIL 13, 2020 ____________________ Before FLAUM, HAMILTON, and BARRETT, Circuit Judges. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. A jury found Michael Chaparro guilty on three felony charges for viewing and transporting child pornography. The charges arose from three crimes sep- arated by significant gaps in time: viewing child pornography on a hard drive in July 2013, transmitting child pornography files over the Internet in August 2014, and viewing child por- nography on a smartphone in November 2014. Chaparro was sentenced to three concurrent prison terms of 210 months 2 No. 18-2513 each. On appeal he challenges his convictions on three distinct grounds: the sufficiency of the evidence that he was the per- son using the electronic devices; the admission at trial of a statement that he made to Pretrial Services; and allegedly im- proper remarks by the prosecutor during rebuttal. The first and third challenges were not raised in the dis- trict court and provide no basis to disturb the convictions. Granted, the government’s case could have been stronger as to the identity of the devices’ user. The computer forensics led investigators to a home, not to an individual, and little evi- dence showed that Chaparro resided at the relevant street ad- dress before December 2014. Nevertheless, there was suffi- cient evidence to sustain the convictions on plain-error re- view. Any improper rebuttal comments did not affect Chap- arro’s substantial rights. The admission of Chaparro’s pretrial services statement was an error, though. When Congress created Pretrial Ser- vices, it made pretrial services information “confidential” and specifically prohibited its admission “on the issue of guilt in a criminal judicial proceeding.” 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(1) & (3). This rule may protect some accused defendants, but its most important benefits accrue to the judicial system as a whole. Confidentiality helps pretrial services officers obtain the in- formation needed to make quick and accurate recommenda- tions about pretrial release and detention. This case concerns a judge-made impeachment exception to Congress’s mandate of confidentiality. In his pretrial inter- view, Chaparro had said that he lived at the scene of the crimes on all the relevant dates. The government left the rec- ord blank on that key point during its case in chief. Chap- arro’s lone witness, his uncle Eddie Ramos, then testified that No. 18-2513 3 Chaparro did not live at the address until just before his ar- rest. As rebuttal, the government sought to call the pretrial services officer who interviewed Chaparro. The district court allowed the testimony, over objection, relying on cases from other circuits that have recognized an exception to pretrial confidentiality for impeachment. See, e.g., United States v. Griffith, 385 F.3d 124 (2d Cir. 2004). Those precedents were inapposite, and it was a legal error to admit Chaparro’s statement to Pretrial Services. Chaparro’s words were not a prior inconsistent statement by Ramos, the testifying witness. Instead, the government used them for “impeachment by contradiction” against Ramos. Despite the “impeachment” label, someone else’s contradictory statement is relevant only if it is offered for the truth of the matter as- serted. The statement by Chaparro was thus offered as evi- dence of guilt, a purpose specifically prohibited by statute. This error was not harmless for two of the three convictions. Considered for its truth, Chaparro’s statement filled a key gap in the government’s cases on the July 2013 and August 2014 charges. Those convictions must therefore be vacated. Chap- arro is entitled to a new trial on those charges or, in the alter- native, to resentencing on the remaining conviction. I. Sufficiency of the Evidence We first explain why the evidence was sufficient to sup- port the jury’s guilty verdicts on all three charges. Our review on this question is limited to “plain error.” Although Chap- arro moved for a directed verdict under Rule 29 at the close of the government’s case, he failed to renew that motion at the close of all the evidence. He thus forfeited his sufficiency chal- lenge, and we review for a “manifest miscarriage of justice.” See United States v. Clark, 787 F.3d 451, 459 (7th Cir. 2015); 4 No. 18-2513 United States v. Natale, 719 F.3d 719, 743 (7th Cir. 2013); United States v. Williams, 298 F.3d 688, 692 (7th Cir. 2002). Under this standard, we will overturn the jury’s verdict “only if ‘the rec- ord is devoid of evidence pointing to guilt, or if the evidence on a key element of the offense was so tenuous that a convic- tion would be shocking.’” Natale, 719 F.3d at 743, quoting United States v. Turner, 551 F.3d 657, 662 (7th Cir. 2008). We begin with some background common to all charges. The investigation started in August 2014 when an undercover detective in Pennsylvania, Robert Erdely, recorded the Inter- net Protocol (IP) address of a computer transmitting child pornography to him over the Internet. The IP address corre- sponded to an AT&T account in the name of Eva Chaparro, the defendant’s grandmother, with service at a home in McHenry, Illinois.1 Based on Erdely’s tip, Detective Michelle Asplund of the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at the home on December 2, 2014. Accompa- nying her was Zeus Flores, a forensic computer examiner with the Illinois Attorney General’s Office. When law enforcement arrived, only three people were in the house: Eva Chaparro, her husband Hector Chaparro—that is, the defendant’s grandfather—and Eddie Ramos, the defendant’s uncle. Officers searched the home for computers and found two Gateway-brand laptops and a Compaq-brand desktop. Flores examined these computers on site and determined that the 1 “IP addresses identify computers on the Internet, enabling data packets transmitted from other computers to reach them.” Nat’l Cable & Telecommunications Ass’n v. Brand X Internet Servs., 545 U.S. 967, 987 n.1 (2005). Erdely testified that “as someone connects to me on the Internet … I see his IP address,” allowing Erdely “to find out who the customer is, at least the person paying the bill for that Internet service.” No. 18-2513 5 desktop’s hard drive contained child pornography. During the search, Michael Chaparro arrived at the home. The officers seized an LG-brand smartphone from him. The smartphone could not be examined on site, but Flores later determined that it too had child pornography stored in its memory. A grand jury indicted Michael Chaparro on three charges. Count One charged him with transporting child pornography over the Internet to Erdely in August 2014. Counts Two and Three charged him with accessing child pornography with in- tent to view it on the LG smartphone in November 2014 and on the Compaq desktop in July 2013. For clarity, we address the sufficiency of the evidence as to the charges in chronolog- ical order rather than the order in the indictment. A. Count Three – Accessing Material on the Hard Drive Count Three charged Chaparro with accessing an image of child pornography stored on the Compaq desktop’s hard drive on July 30, 2013, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(5)(B). Chaparro concedes that the hard drive con- tained child pornography. He argues that the government failed to prove that he himself accessed any image on the hard drive or that there was a connection to interstate commerce. The forensic evidence showed that someone used the hard drive to access child pornography on July 30, 2013. On the date of the search, December 2, 2014, Flores, the computer ex- aminer, removed the hard drive from the Compaq desktop computer and analyzed it using special software. The desktop had not been powered on in over fifteen months, since August 24, 2013. But Flores was able to recover records of Internet searches for child pornography as well as images of child por- 6 No. 18-2513 nography from the drive. A user of the computer had down- loaded a video on July 30, 2013 titled, in part, “11Yo Pe- dofilia.” System logs indicated that folders containing child pornography had been opened by a user. Chaparro does not dispute these points. The record also included circumstantial evidence that Mi- chael Chaparro was the user of the hard drive on July 30, 2013. Most directly, the Compaq desktop had a single user account named “M1KEY.” In addition, the officers found the desktop in an upstairs bedroom, and evidence suggested that this bed- room belonged to Michael Chaparro—at least on the date of the search. Detective Asplund testified without objection that Eva Chaparro told her it was Michael’s bedroom. Photo- graphs of the room showed video-gaming equipment and sticks of men’s deodorant, items one might expect in the room of a 26-year-old man rather than his grandmother. Another photograph showed a partially obscured coffee mug with the printed letters “ … hael” visible. On the other hand, Ramos testified that the room with the desktop computer was a “guest room/game room” and that Michael slept in a basement bedroom. Ramos also testified that the whole extended family, including his siblings, chil- dren, and grandchildren, stayed overnight at the house from time to time and used the computers. The jury was entitled to discount Ramos’s testimony on these points. As the govern- ment said in closing, the messy upstairs room—bed unmade, half-empty water bottles on the dressers, video-gaming equipment strewn about—did not resemble a guest bedroom. Granted, there was little evidence of how long Michael Chaparro had slept in the room with the desktop computer, or even how long he had lived at his grandparents’ house. The No. 18-2513 7 only direct evidence of Chaparro’s past residency was his statement to Pretrial Services, admitted in the government’s rebuttal case as purported “impeachment,” that he lived with his grandparents from December 2011 to December 2014. As explained below, the district court should not have admitted that confidential statement because it provided substantive evidence of guilt. But “a reviewing court must consider all of the evidence admitted by the trial court when considering a sufficiency of the evidence challenge, regardless of whether that evidence was admitted erroneously.” United States v. Rah- man, 805 F.3d 822, 839 (7th Cir. 2015), citing Lockhart v. Nelson, 488 U.S. 33, 39 (1988). Applying this principle, the record was not “devoid of evidence pointing to guilt” as to the user of the hard drive. Natale, 719 F.3d at 743. Chaparro also argues that the government offered no evi- dence that any image travelled through interstate commerce, a distinct basis for legal insufficiency. The statute defines the necessary connection to interstate commerce expansively: the image must have been “mailed, or shipped or transported us- ing any means or facility of interstate or foreign commerce or in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce by any means, including by computer” or “produced using materials that have been mailed, or shipped or transported in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce by any means, including by computer.” 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(5)(B). The government pre- sented evidence that satisfied both paths to meet this test. First, the images on the hard drive were downloaded from the Internet, so the Internet transported them. The Internet is a facility of interstate commerce. See United States v. Horne, 474 F.3d 1004, 1006 (7th Cir. 2007) (explaining in Hobbs Act case that the Internet “crosses state and indeed international 8 No. 18-2513 boundaries”). Second, simply copying “computerized im- ages” using “computer equipment” counts as “producing” the images under this provision. See United States v. Anderson, 280 F.3d 1121, 1125 (7th Cir. 2002). The hard drive was manu- factured in China, so the images were “produced” using ma- terial transported in foreign commerce when they were cop- ied onto the hard drive. The evidence was legally sufficient to convict Chaparro on Count Three. B. Count One – Transporting Material Through Interstate Commerce Count One charged Michael Chaparro with using the In- ternet to transport images of child pornography on August 7, 2014, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(1). The forensics are again undisputed. On that date, a device at the Chaparro home in Illinois sent child pornography to Erdely, the under- cover Pennsylvania detective, over the Internet. The device specifically shared pieces of a “torrent” file named “817e.” As explained at trial, the “BitTorrent” network allows anony- mous users to combine multiple files and to share them with one another as one electronic package called a “torrent file.” Torrent 817e contained specific child pornography images listed in the indictment. Chaparro argues that there was insufficient evidence that he was the user who shared pieces of torrent 817e with Erdely. The device that transmitted to Erdely was never found, as the government admitted at trial. (Recall that the Compaq desk- top was not powered on after August 2013, so it was not the device sharing child pornography on August 7, 2014.) Never- theless, the record contained evidence that Michael Chaparro, and not some other user of the home’s Internet connection, No. 18-2513 9 shared torrent 817e in August 2014. First, the jury heard Chap- arro’s inadmissible statement to Pretrial Services that he lived at the home at that time. As noted, that statement must be con- sidered in evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence. In addition, two facts implied a single user of both the re- covered hard drive and the unrecovered device that contacted Erdely. Forensic investigation revealed that pieces of 817e had also been downloaded to the recovered hard drive. And the August 2014 device gained access to the BitTorrent network using software called “Tixati,” a rare program that Erdely had never encountered in hundreds of investigations. Tixati had also been installed on the recovered hard drive. These simi- larities were competent evidence, if not conclusive evidence, that one person committed both crimes. See Fed. R. Evid. 404(b) (evidence of other acts admissible to prove identity through modus operandi); United States v. Gomez, 763 F.3d 845, 854 (7th Cir. 2014) (en banc). More generally, the evidence supporting the convictions for accessing child pornography was admissible on this charge to show that Chaparro had a propensity to transport child pornography. See Fed. R. Evid. 414(a) (evidence of any other child molestation crime “may be considered on any matter to which it is relevant”), 414(d)(2)(B) (defining “child molestation” to include all crimes under 18 U.S.C. § 2252A). The government made this argument in closing: “the Defend- ant is the one living in a room with a hard drive containing child pornography and a phone containing child pornogra- phy. The evidence shows that he was the one sharing child pornography from that IP address … .” Because propensity evidence was admissible, this argument was appropriate, and 10 No. 18-2513 the record was not “devoid of evidence” supporting a convic- tion on Count One. C. Count Two – Accessing Material on the Smartphone Count Two charged Chaparro with accessing child por- nography stored on an LG-brand cellular telephone on No- vember 24, 2014, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(5)(B). As with Count Three, Chaparro argues that the government failed to prove that he was the person who accessed the im- ages on the telephone or that a specific image travelled through interstate commerce. Again, the conduct and its connection to interstate com- merce were amply supported. Forensic analysis of the smartphone showed that a user performed searches for terms related to child pornography on the morning of November 24, 2014. The smartphone had saved to its memory thumbnail versions of child pornography images that a user viewed that morning. The images arrived on the smartphone over the In- ternet, and the smartphone was manufactured in South Ko- rea. These facts satisfied the interstate or foreign commerce element of the crime. Sufficient evidence also showed that Chaparro was the user of the smartphone on November 24, 2014. Officers seized the device from him when he walked into the house during the search on December 2, eight days after the charged con- duct. The smartphone’s memory contained specific evidence that Chaparro was also using it on the date of the crime. A text message sent from the smartphone at 12:04 PM on November 24 read, “Hey alyssa its mike. Nick asked me to text ya.” Two minutes earlier, a phone identified as “Nicksnew” had sent Alyssa’s number to the smartphone. These messages imply No. 18-2513 11 that Michael Chaparro was using the smartphone on Novem- ber 24. The evidence was sufficient to sustain a guilty verdict on Count Two. II. Use of Statement to Pretrial Services to “Impeach by Contradic- tion” Chaparro next argues that the district court erred when it allowed the government to impeach his only witness, Eddie Ramos, using the statement that Chaparro himself had made to Pretrial Services. The Pretrial Services Act provides that in- formation from pretrial interviews is “not admissible on the issue of guilt in a criminal proceeding” unless the charges stem from conduct relating to Pretrial Services. 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(3). The question is whether this provision allows one person’s account to Pretrial Services to be admitted to im- peach a different person at trial by “specific contradiction.” No court of appeals has decided this issue before, although some have ruled that the government may impeach witnesses using their own statements to Pretrial Services. We conclude that the statute compels a different result here, especially when interpreted in light of established evidence doctrine. The admission of Chaparro’s statement was an error. Its ad- mission was harmless as to Count Two (the smartphone charge), but it was not harmless as to Counts One and Three. A. Admission at Trial We first summarize the proceedings in the district court that gave rise to this question. Just before the close of evi- dence, and without prior notice, the government called pre- trial services officer James Wheatley as a rebuttal witness. Ed- die Ramos had testified for the defense that Chaparro had lived with a girlfriend from Easter 2013 to Thanksgiving 2014. 12 No. 18-2513 Since that time span covered all the charged conduct, Ramos’s testimony would have severely damaged the government’s case if the jury had credited it. The government called Officer Wheatley, who would testify that Chaparro said in his pretrial interview that he had been living at that home “for three years prior to his arrest.” Attempting to distinguish the “issue of guilt” statutory language, the government argued that it wished to use Chaparro’s statement “for the purpose solely of impeaching Mr. Ramos.” The prosecutor did not mention at that time Ramos’s own statement to Pretrial Services. Both the defense and Pretrial Services itself opposed hav- ing Officer Wheatley testify about what Chaparro had told him. The defense argued that Chaparro’s statement would in fact go to “an issue of guilt” and more broadly that pretrial communications “are supposed to be confidential.” Officer Wheatley, who was already present in court, had spoken with the chief of Pretrial Services and expressed “our position” that “information obtained in the bond report should not be used at trial.” Officer Wheatley also cited confidentiality regula- tions promulgated by Pretrial Services that he believed barred his testimony. See 8A Guide to Judiciary Policy § 240 (Sept. 23, 2019), formerly 8A Guide to Judiciary Policy app. 5A (Dec. 28, 2010). The current version of the regulations is attached as an appendix to this opinion.2 The district court initially denied the government’s re- quest, ruling that the statute “shields the Pretrial Services of- ficer from having to give this testimony.” Minutes later, how- ever, the court returned to the subject after discovering United 2 It is also publicly available online: https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/ default/files/guide-vol08a-ch02-sec240-confidentialityregs_0.pdf. No. 18-2513 13 States v. Griffith, 385 F.3d 124 (2d Cir. 2004). That case held that “a defendant’s statements to pretrial services are admissible against the defendant when used to impeach the defendant’s credibility.” Id. at 126. The district court acknowledged that Chaparro’s case raised “the defendant’s witness’s credibility” instead of “the defendant’s credibility,” but decided Griffith was on point either way. Officer Wheatley took the stand. Before his testimony be- gan, the district court gave a limiting instruction to the jury: “the testimony that Mr. Wheatley may give you regarding the Defendant’s statements may be considered by you only insofar as it may affect the credibility of Eddie Ramos and not for any other purpose.” (Emphasis added.) Officer Wheatley then ex- plained that he had interviewed Chaparro on March 3, 2016 to gather information for the bond report. Chaparro said that he “had lived with his grandparents from approximately De- cember of 2011 to December of 2014” and did not mention liv- ing anywhere else. In a brief cross-examination, Officer Wheatley acknowledged that he could not “say with 100 per- cent certainty” that every defendant tells “the 100 percent cor- rect truth” to Pretrial Services. During redirect examination, the government without warning asked Wheatley instead about statements Ramos had made to Wheatley. The defense did not object to this expan- sion during redirect. Officer Wheatley testified that he had sought to verify Chaparro’s residence by interviewing Ramos, whom Chaparro had named as a family member to contact. Wheatley said that “Ramos confirmed what the defendant had told me,” namely that Chaparro “lived with his grand- parents” from “December 2011 to December 2014.” 14 No. 18-2513 After Officer Wheatley left the stand, the government raised the issue of adding a jury instruction given the redirect testimony: “the [original] instruction that we tendered to the court is impeachment by contradiction. What the redirect brought out from Mr. Wheatley was that Mr. Ramos made a prior inconsistent statement.” (Emphasis added.) The govern- ment gave the court a new jury instruction it had already pre- pared, and the defense did not object. The new instruction as given to the jury read: “You have heard evidence that before the trial, Eddie Ramos made a statement that may be incon- sistent with his testimony here in court. You may consider an inconsistent statement made before the trial only to help you decide how believable his testimony was here in court.” (Em- phasis added.) Thus, although the court had explicitly ruled on the ad- mission of only Chaparro’s statement to Pretrial Services, the jury also heard evidence of Ramos’s statement to Pretrial Ser- vices. Confounding matters further, during the government’s closing arguments, the prosecutor cited Chaparro’s statement to Officer Wheatley—not Ramos’s—as proof that Ramos was “a desperate liar.” On appeal, Chaparro challenges the admis- sion only of his own statement; he emphasizes that he does not appeal the admission of Ramos’s, which would fall within the Griffith exception for impeachment. See Reply Br. at 4–6. B. The Evidentiary Error We review an evidentiary ruling for an abuse of discretion. E.g., United States v. Driggers, 913 F.3d 655, 658 (7th Cir. 2019). We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo, however. E.g., Nielen-Thomas v. Concorde Inv. Servs., LLC, 914 F.3d 524, 527 (7th Cir. 2019). And a legal error is “an abuse of discretion by definition.” Abu-Shawish v. United States, 898 No. 18-2513 15 F.3d 726, 736 (7th Cir. 2018). Using a defendant’s statements to Pretrial Services to impeach a witness other than the de- fendant by “specific contradiction” violates the confidential- ity protections that Congress enacted. The district court made a legal error and thus abused its discretion when it allowed the government to use Chaparro’s confidential statement to impeach Ramos. 1. The Statute and Implementing Regulations We begin with the text of the Pretrial Services Act of 1982, which established pretrial services agencies in each judicial district and specified their functions and powers. See Pub. L. No. 97-267, 96 Stat. 1136 (1982) (codified as amended at 18 U.S.C. §§ 3152–3155). Section 3153(c)(1) establishes a baseline rule that pretrial services information should remain confi- dential: “Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsec- tion, information obtained in the course of performing pre- trial services functions in relation to a particular accused shall be used only for the purpose of a bail determination and shall otherwise be confidential.” 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(1). Paragraph (2) then directs Pretrial Services to issue regulations creating five exceptions to the confidentiality bar, none of which ap- plies to this case. See § 3153(c)(2); see also 8A Guide to Judici- ary Policy § 240.20.30(b) (regulations promulgated under par- agraph (2)). This case instead concerns the third and final paragraph of the subsection, which adds a further caveat: Information made confidential under para- graph (1) of this subsection is not admissible on the issue of guilt in a criminal judicial proceeding unless such proceeding is a prosecution for a 16 No. 18-2513 crime committed in the course of obtaining pre- trial release or a prosecution for failure to ap- pear for the criminal judicial proceeding with respect to which pretrial services were pro- vided. 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(3) (emphasis added). Under this provision, Chaparro’s statement was not admissible “on the issue of guilt” in his trial. The Eleventh Circuit, for example, has held that allowing a pretrial services officer to identify the defend- ant’s voice went to the issue of guilt and thus violated the Act. See United States v. Perez, 473 F.3d 1147, 1151–52 (11th Cir. 2006) (nevertheless affirming on plain-error review). The pretrial confidentiality mandated by Congress is de- signed to help judges make prompt, accurate, and lawful pre- trial release decisions. A core duty of Pretrial Services is to “[c]ollect, verify, and report to the judicial officer, prior to the pretrial release hearing, information pertaining to the pretrial release of each individual charged with an offense.” 18 U.S.C. § 3154(1). Judges rely on these reports when deciding whether to release defendants pending trial under the Bail Reform Act, § 3142. See, e.g., United States v. Mundy, No. 4:19-cr-00018- TWP-VTW, 2019 WL 3729318, at *1, *3 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 8, 2019); United States v. Gaunt, No. 1:18-cr-70-TLS, 2018 WL 5993885, at *3 (N.D. Ind. Nov. 15, 2018); United States v. Khan, No. 1:15- cr-00286, 2015 WL 4475537, at *4 (N.D. Ill. July 21, 2015). Pretrial services officers often do not receive investigative assignments until the defendant is arrested. They must pre- pare their reports “in only a few hours,” according to a former Chief Pretrial Services Officer for the District of Nevada. See James R. Marsh, Performing Pretrial Services: A Challenge in the Federal Criminal Justice System, Fed. Probation, Dec. 1994, at 3. No. 18-2513 17 Chaparro’s case illustrates the required haste. He was in- dicted on March 1, 2016; Officer Wheatley prepared an initial report on March 2; Chaparro was arraigned on March 3; that same day, Officer Wheatley interviewed Chaparro and Ra- mos and prepared an addendum report. The magistrate judge ordered Chaparro released on bond on March 7. Pretrial confidentiality is essential to the reliability of this rapid process. It would obviously discourage prompt and candid interviews if defendants’ statements could later be used to prove their guilt. Both the Senate and House Confer- ence reports on the Act stressed this concern. The Senate Re- port said that pretrial information “should be confidential and only be used for a bail determination” in order “to pro- mote candor and truthfulness by the defendant in bail inter- views.” S. Rep. No. 97-77, at 12 (1981). The House Conference Report explained that the goal of § 3153(c)(3) was to obtain accurate information for the courts: “the limitation on admis- sibility is necessary to further the objective of ensuring that the court receives the most complete information possible.” H.R. Rep. No. 97-792, at 9 (1982) (Conf. Rep.). Practical experience has justified Congress’s concerns. In the article cited above, Chief Officer Marsh noted that some defense attorneys were “advising their clients not to answer certain questions posed to them by pretrial services officers or interview at all.” Marsh, supra, at 4. In 2005—the last year for which such data are available—12.1 percent of defendants na- tionwide refused to be interviewed. See Admin. Office of the U.S. Courts, Judicial Business Table H-2: Interviews and Types of Pretrial Services Reports (2005).3 This fact shows that 3 Available online at https://www.uscourts.gov/statistics-reports/judi- cial-business-2005. “Judicial notice of historical documents, documents 18 No. 18-2513 a non-trivial minority of defendants already perceive danger in cooperating with Pretrial Services. An overly permissive reading of § 3153(c)(3) would likely corroborate these fears and interfere with the proper operation of the courts in pre- trial release and detention decisions. The regulations promul- gated by Pretrial Services make this same point: “The disclo- sure of pretrial services information for purposes other than determining pretrial release, particularly for prosecution pur- poses, would deter a person from cooperating with an officer and deprive the court of necessary information.” 8A Guide to Judiciary Policy § 240.10(b).4 Emphasizing the importance of this issue, the reliability of pretrial release decisions has a constitutional dimension. To comply with the Due Process Clause, pretrial detention au- thorized by the Bail Reform Act must be “regulatory, not pe- nal.” United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 746 (1987). In up- holding the Act, the Supreme Court underlined its reliability safeguards: “the procedures by which a judicial officer evalu- ates the likelihood of future dangerousness are specifically contained in the public record, and reports of administrative bodies is proper.” Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin v. Thompson, 161 F.3d 449, 456 (7th Cir. 1998). 4Because Pretrial Services is an arm of the judiciary within the Ad- ministrative Office of the U.S. Courts, see 18 U.S.C. § 3152(a), regulations it promulgates do not receive Chevron deference in the traditional sense. See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Resources Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844 (1984) (“We have long recognized that considerable weight should be accorded to an executive department’s construction of a statutory scheme it is entrusted to administer … .” (emphasis added)). Nevertheless, Pretrial Services had a congressional mandate to issue the confidentiality regula- tions, and we give them due respect as the views of the office tasked with a crucial function for the courts. No. 18-2513 19 designed to further the accuracy of that determination.” Id. at 751. Pretrial confidentiality promotes this important aim. In light of the strong policy favoring confidentiality of pre- trial services information, we note the procedure district courts should follow when asked to order its disclosure. Judges may certainly order disclosure permitted by the Act in appropriate circumstances. The pretrial services regulations recognize this power, allowing officers to disclose pretrial in- formation if “authorized by confidentiality regulations or di- rected by a judge for good cause shown.” 8A Guide to Judiciary Policy § 240.20.20(a) (emphasis added). In this case, none of the authorized exceptions was relevant. See § 240.20.30 (list- ing fourteen categories of authorized disclosures). Officer Wheatley thus refused to testify at Chaparro’s trial until the court ordered him to do so. District courts should exercise this power in accordance with the pretrial services regulations and any relevant local rules. The regulations specify factors for a judge to consider before finding good cause for disclosure: (1) any promise of confidentiality made to the information’s source; (2) any harm the disclosure might cause; (3) the overall policy in favor of confidentiality; and (4) the purpose of the disclosure. § 240.20.30(i). The regulations also direct generally that any disclosure “be limited to the minimum information necessary to carry out the purpose of the disclosure.” § 240.20.30. The local rules of the district court in this case similarly require any disclosure to be supported by good cause and to be no broader than necessary to accomplish its purpose. See N.D. Ill. Local Crim. R. 46.4(b)(1) & (d). Even without a controlling local rule, those are sensible standards. 20 No. 18-2513 Here, the district judge neither found that the government had shown good cause to introduce the pretrial services state- ments nor limited Officer Wheatley’s testimony to the mini- mum information necessary for impeachment. Granted, not every departure from the regulations and local rules neces- sarily violates the Pretrial Services Act. But district courts can minimize the risk of erroneously admitting evidence by re- quiring litigants to show good cause for disclosure in the first place. See, e.g., United States v. Mbirika, No. 1:12-cr-00602- PKC, 2013 WL 5295195, at *2–3 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 16, 2013) (find- ing government failed to show good cause after considering “(1) the kind and character of the information sought, (2) the stated need for the information and (3) the availability of com- parable information from other sources”). Such an inquiry might have led the district court to limit Officer Wheatley’s testimony and prevented this statutory dispute. At this stage, however, our task is to evaluate whether the admission of Chaparro’s statement violated the Act. 2. An Implied Impeachment Exception to Pretrial Confi- dentiality We thus return to the “issue of guilt” language in 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(3). Five circuits have held that, because the Act spe- cifically bars pretrial services evidence “on the issue of guilt,” it implicitly permits such evidence for impeachment pur- poses. See United States v. Ackies, 918 F.3d 190, 206 (1st Cir. 2019); United States v. Griffith, 385 F.3d 124, 126 (2d Cir. 2004); United States v. Stevens, 935 F.2d 1380, 1393–97 (3d Cir. 1991); United States v. Wilson, 930 F.2d 616, 619 (8th Cir. 1991); United No. 18-2513 21 States v. De La Torre, 599 F.3d 1198, 1205 (10th Cir. 2010).5 These decisions cite the traditional distinction between guilt and impeachment evidence and then apply the canon that “the expression of one thing suggests the exclusion of others.” Exelon Generation Co., LLC v. Local 15, Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers, 676 F.3d 566, 571 (7th Cir. 2012) (in Latin, “expressio unius est exclusio alterius”). Paragraph (1) of § 3153(c) makes strict con- fidentiality the norm, but paragraph (3) adds a specific prohi- bition against admitting pretrial information as guilt evi- dence. The prior decisions concluded that Congress thus im- plied an exception for impeachment evidence. See Griffith, 385 F.3d at 126; Stevens, 935 F.2d at 1395; Wilson, 930 F.2d at 619. We have not interpreted § 3153(c) before, but we reached an analogous result under a similar statute that barred evi- dence from mental competency examinations “on the issue of guilt in any criminal proceeding.” United States v. Castenada, 555 F.2d 605, 608 (7th Cir. 1977), quoting 18 U.S.C. § 4244 (1976). There, we allowed the impeachment of a testifying de- fendant using statements he had made to a government psy- chiatrist because they were “offered by the Government on the limited issue of credibility rather than on the issue of guilt.” Id. at 609. Our reasoning in Castenada comports with other circuits’ analyses of the Pretrial Services Act. As for the pretrial services regulations, no provision men- tions the implied impeachment exception, either to endorse or disparage it. The subsection on the use of pretrial services information in prosecutions merely repeats the language of the Act, including the “issue of guilt” proviso. 8A Guide to 5 See also United States v. Balogun, 463 Fed. Appx. 476, 483 (6th Cir. 2012) (same). 22 No. 18-2513 Judiciary Policy § 240.20.30(j). As noted above, a general “good cause” exception recognizes that district judges may order the disclosure of information after considering, among other factors, “the purpose of the disclosure.” § 240.20.30(i). The good cause provision could embrace an impeachment ex- ception in some form. That said, any negative inference carries risk. We cannot be certain which concepts, if any, Congress was contrasting with the language it included. See Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 107 (2012) (negative-implication doctrine properly applies “only when the unius (or technically, unum, the thing specified) can reasonably be thought to be an expression of all that shares in the grant or prohibition involved”); see also Alto Dairy v. Vene- man, 336 F.3d 560, 566 (7th Cir. 2003) (“omissions are not en- actments; and even deliberate omissions are often subject to alternative interpretations”). Here, an alternative explanation for the “issue of guilt” proviso in § 3153(c)(3) is that Congress was exempting sentencing decisions. Indeed, the previous paragraph expressly authorizes the release of pretrial services information “for the purpose of compiling presentence re- ports.” 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(2)(C); see United States v. Morrison, 778 F.3d 396, 400 (2d Cir. 2015) (holding that this provision permits pretrial services information at sentencing). This ready alternative, alongside the clear textual directive against disclosure, casts some doubt on the inference that the statute does not apply to impeachment. But we need not resolve that issue here. For purposes of this case, we assume without deciding that Congress in- tended to create the impeachment exception found by other circuits. Chaparro himself does not contest the existence of an No. 18-2513 23 impeachment exception. He disputes only its scope. We must classify use of his statement as either guilt or impeachment evidence, so we turn to impeachment doctrine. 3. Specific Contradiction Distinguished from Other Meth- ods of Impeachment There are five general methods to impeach a witness: (1) attacking character for truthfulness; (2) introducing a prior inconsistent statement; (3) establishing bias; (4) showing im- paired capacity to perceive, recall, or relate the events in ques- tion; and (5) contradicting the substance of the testimony. See United States v. Lindemann, 85 F.3d 1232, 1243 (7th Cir. 1996), citing Charles Alan Wright & Victor James Gold, 27 Federal Practice and Procedure: Evidence § 6094 (1990); see also 4 Mark S. Brodin et al., Weinstein’s Federal Evidence §§ 607.04– .08 (2d ed. 2018) (listing same five methods). In this case, we are concerned with methods (2) and (5): prior inconsistent statements and specific contradiction. Only prior inconsistent statements differ meaningfully from guilt evidence, and that point of law shows the error here. Nearly every case recognizing an impeachment exception to pretrial services confidentiality approved impeaching a witness by his or her own prior inconsistent statements to Pre- trial Services—method (2). See Ackies, 918 F.3d at 206 (state- ment of defense witness); Griffith, 385 F.3d at 125 (statement of testifying defendant); Stevens, 935 F.3d at 1393 (statement of defense witness); United States v. Hernandez-Espinoza, 890 F.3d 743, 746 (8th Cir. 2018) (statement of defendant at sen- tencing); United States v. Issaghoolian, 42 F.3d 1175, 1177 (8th Cir. 1994) (statement of testifying defendant); Wilson, 930 F.2d at 619 (statement of testifying defendant); De La Torre, 599 24 No. 18-2513 F.3d at 1205 (statement of testifying defendant); see also Caste- nada, 555 F.2d at 608–09 (statement of testifying defendant).6 In the only case that did not involve inconsistent statements, the defendant had told a pretrial services officer that he was a “hustler.” This was held admissible to show his lack of char- acter for truthfulness—method (1). See United States v. Smith, 973 F.2d 1374, 1378–79 (8th Cir. 1992). Impeachment by inconsistent statements attacks the gen- eral credibility of a witness rather than the substantive truth of specific testimony. “There is a crucial distinction between the use of a prior inconsistent statement of a witness only to impeach the credibility of the witness and its use to prove as a fact what is contained in the statement.” United States v. Die- trich, 854 F.2d 1056, 1062 n.5 (7th Cir. 1988), quoting United States v. Ragghianti, 560 F.2d 1376, 1381 (9th Cir. 1977). The critical point is this: a prior inconsistent statement casts doubt on a witness’s reliability no matter which version, if either, is true. “The attack by prior inconsistent statement is not based on the theory that the present testimony is false and the former statement true. Rather, the theory is that talking one way on the stand and another way previously is blowing hot and cold, raising a doubt as to the truthfulness of both statements.” 1 Kenneth S. Brown et al., McCormick on Evidence § 34, at 209 (7th ed. 2013) (emphasis added). Federal Rule of Evidence 613(b) thus allows admission of a prior inconsistent statement for im- peachment even if the statement would be inadmissible for its 6 See also Balogun, 463 Fed. Appx. at 483 (statement of testifying de- fendant). No. 18-2513 25 truth. See United States v. Severson, 49 F.3d 268, 272 (7th Cir. 1995).7 The impeachment at issue in Chaparro’s case was differ- ent. The district court allowed the admission of two pretrial services statements, one by Chaparro and the other by Ramos. Ramos’s was a prior inconsistent statement: whether or not Ramos told the truth to Officer Wheatley, the fact that he said different things at different times undermined his credibility. As the government noted at trial, however, the admission of Chaparro’s statement instead constituted “impeachment by contradiction.” It undermined “the substance of [Ramos’s] testimony”—method (5) in Lindemann, 85 F.3d at 1243—by showing that someone else had said something different. Chaparro rightly challenges this latter technique. To be sure, introducing contradictory extrinsic evidence is a recog- nized method of impeachment. See United States v. Kozinski, 16 F.3d 795, 805 (7th Cir. 1994) (“Impeachment by contradic- tion is a valid method of impeachment and ‘simply involves presenting evidence that part or all of a witness’ testimony is incorrect.’”), quoting Simmons, Inc. v. Pinkerton’s, Inc., 762 F.2d 591, 604 (7th Cir. 1985). Although not expressly mentioned in 7 The same observation applies to most other instances of impeach- ment. Evidence regarding a witness’s lack of character for truthfulness, bias, or impaired capacity usually does not implicate substantive issues in the case, so the line between guilt and impeachment is easy to draw. In fact, the very concept of “impeachment” is commonly defined in terms of the distinction between credibility and substantive truth. See Chiasson v. Zapata Gulf Marine Corp., 988 F.2d 513, 517 (5th Cir. 1993) (“Substantive evidence is that which is offered to establish the truth of a matter to be determined by the trier of fact … . Impeachment evidence, on the other hand, is that which is offered to discredit a witness … .” (quotation marks omitted)). 26 No. 18-2513 the Federal Rules of Evidence, “impeachment by contradic- tion” existed at common law and “can be inferred from the relevance rules and Rule 607.” Charles Alan Wright & Victor James Gold, 27 Federal Practice and Procedure: Evidence § 6096, at 655 (2d ed. 2007); cf. United States v. Abel, 469 U.S. 45, 51 (1984) (reaching analogous conclusion regarding the le- gal foundation of bias impeachment). Notwithstanding its name, impeachment by contradic- tion—also called “specific contradiction,” 1 Broun, McCor- mick on Evidence § 45—differs in a fundamental respect from most other impeachment: it seeks to establish substantive facts. See United States v. Boswell, 772 F.3d 469, 476 (7th Cir. 2014) (impeachment by contradiction “involves presenting evidence that the substance of a witness’s testimony is not to be believed” (emphasis added)). The problem is that contrary substantive evidence can “impeach” only if the jury accepts it as substantively true. That characteristic undermines the guilt-impeachment distinction for our purposes.8 A story from American legal lore illustrates this point. In 1858, Abraham Lincoln defended William “Duff” Armstrong, a man accused of murder in Beardstown, Illinois. See Irving Younger et al., Principles of Evidence 12–14 (5th ed. 2007). The prosecution’s key witness testified that he saw the killing by 8The guilt-impeachment line can blur in other situations as well. For instance, the use of prior convictions to impeach a defendant’s character for truthfulness under Rule 609 can verge on impermissible propensity evidence. See generally United States v. Thomas, 933 F.3d 685, 690 (7th Cir. 2019) (Rules 404 and 609 are meant to “ensure that a defendant is con- victed based on the evidence relevant to the charged offenses, not a sup- posed propensity to commit crimes”). We do not speculate on other cases that might raise similar issues under the Pretrial Services Act. No. 18-2513 27 the light of a full moon high overhead. Id. at 13. Lincoln im- peached the witness by contradiction. He famously used an almanac that reported a quarter-moon below the horizon at the alleged time of the murder. Id.; see also 2 John Henry Wig- more, Evidence in Trials at Common Law § 1000, at 1156 (1904) (giving this story as example of impeachment by con- tradiction). Armstrong was acquitted. Note, however, that if the lunar tables in the almanac had been inaccurate, they would not have cast any doubt on the witness’s testimony. Their effect depended on their truth.9 The Lincoln example shows that specific contradiction, ra- ther than targeting a witness’s credibility, merely adds con- trary evidence to the record. So “impeachment by contradic- tion” is a bit of a misnomer, at least using the normal defini- tion of impeachment that contrasts it with substantive evi- dence. This point has long been recognized. In the original 1904 edition of his now-canonical treatise, Dean Wigmore ex- plained that specific contradiction presents substantive evi- dence in another guise. His analysis merits quoting at length: [C]ontradiction in itself does nothing proba- tively, no[t] unless the contradicting witness or witnesses are believed in preference to the first one, i. e. unless his error is established. It is not the contradiction, but the truth of the contradict- ing assertion as opposed to the first one, that constitutes the probative end. Nevertheless, the 9 In a different account, the witness reported a three-quarters moon, not a full moon. See John Evangelist Walsh, Moonlight: Abraham Lincoln and the Almanac Trial 52–55 (2000). In John Ford’s version, Henry Fonda induces the witness not only to recant his testimony but also to confess on the stand. See Young Mr. Lincoln (Cosmopolitan Productions 1939). 28 No. 18-2513 contradiction, being the usual and prominent feature of the process by which that end is aimed at, has served as the common name to designate the probative end itself. This is not wrong, provided it be clearly understood what that end is. 2 Wigmore, Evidence § 1000, at 1157.10 Wigmore’s advice to keep clear “what the probative end is” guides us here. The government introduced Chaparro’s pretrial services statement that he had been living with his grandparents precisely because it contradicted Ramos’s testi- mony on a key fact. The power of Chaparro’s statement to “impeach” Ramos depended on its truth—just as Wigmore ex- plained. Yet the Pretrial Services Act barred admitting Wheat- ley’s testimony for its truth. Chaparro’s residency at the rele- vant times was central to the government’s case, so the testi- mony went to an “issue of guilt” under the Act. 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(3); see United States v. Perez, 473 F.3d 1147, 1151 (11th Cir. 2006) (evidence implicated “the issue of guilt” because it tended “to prove that [the defendant] had been involved in the drug transactions for which he was charged”). Admitting the statement violated the Act. Assuming an exception exists under § 3153(c)(3) for other forms of impeachment, applying 10 For a more recent articulation of the same point, see James L. Kainen, The Impeachment Exception to the Exclusionary Rules: Policies, Prin- ciples, and Politics, 44 Stan. L. Rev. 1301, 1331 (1992) (in the hearsay context, “impeachment proof is distinguished from substantive proof by its ability to reflect on the credibility of a witness’s testimony, regardless of the ‘truth of the matter asserted’ by the evidence. In this context, therefore, impeach- ment-by-contradiction proof would be excluded from the rubric of im- peachment.”). No. 18-2513 29 that exception to include specific contradiction by a statement from someone other than the witness is contrary to the confi- dentiality protections Congress enacted.11 4. Comparisons to Other Areas of Law that Distinguish Guilt from Impeachment The line we draw is consistent with the lines of precedent from which other circuits have drawn to allow use of a wit- ness’s statement to Pretrial Services to impeach his or her own testimony: (1) evidence suppressed under the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments; and (2) grand jury testimony. Both categories of normally inadmissible evidence are subject to impeachment exceptions. But for both categories, only a wit- ness’s own statements—not some other person’s contradic- tory account—can be used to impeach him or her at trial. To begin with exclusionary rules, evidence suppressed to remedy a constitutional violation can still be introduced to impeach a testifying defendant’s credibility. See, e.g., Michi- gan v. Harvey, 494 U.S. 344, 349–51 (1990) (statement by de- fendant procured through Sixth Amendment violation); United States v. Havens, 446 U.S. 620, 626–28 (1980) (evidence suppressed as the fruit of an illegal search); Oregon v. Hass, 420 U.S. 714, 721–22 (1975) (statement by defendant procured through Fifth Amendment violation). But the Supreme Court 11 Our analysis is consistent with the collateral evidence rule on im- peachment. “[I]f a matter is collateral (that is, if it could not be introduced into evidence as substantive proof) then it cannot be proven simply to con- tradict the witness’ testimony for impeachment purposes.” Simmons, 762 F.2d at 604–05. “To put it another way, ‘one may not contradict for the sake of contradiction; the evidence must have an independent purpose and an independent ground for admission.’” United States v. Payne, 102 F.3d 289, 294 (7th Cir. 1996) (emphasis added), quoting Kozinski, 16 F.3d at 806. 30 No. 18-2513 has limited the scope of this impeachment exception to testi- fying defendants; other defense witnesses cannot be im- peached with suppressed evidence. See James v. Illinois, 493 U.S. 307, 313 (1990). “Expanding the class of impeachable wit- nesses from the defendant alone to all defense witnesses,” the Court explained, “would not promote the truthseeking func- tion to the same extent as did creation of the original excep- tion, and yet it would significantly undermine the deterrent effect of the general exclusionary rule.” Id. at 313–14. The rules for grand jury testimony are similar. The general rule is that grand jury testimony is secret and cannot be used in a later trial. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(2); United States v. Procter & Gamble Co., 356 U.S. 677, 681 (1958) (noting “long- established policy that maintains the secrecy of the grand jury proceedings in the federal courts”). But if a witness at trial gave inconsistent testimony to a grand jury, that testimony may be admitted against the witness. See United States v. Han- dlin, 366 F.3d 584, 592 (7th Cir. 2004) (testifying defendant); United States v. Cooper, 767 F.3d 721, 728 (7th Cir. 2014) (de- fense witness). In fact, due to the rule that sworn prior incon- sistent statements are not hearsay, a witness’s conflicting grand jury testimony can often be admitted not only for im- peachment but also as substantive proof. See Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(A); Cooper, 767 F.3d at 728. That result depends, however, on the same witness testifying both before the grand jury and at trial. We are aware of no authority permitting “im- peachment by contradiction” of a witness using someone else’s grand jury testimony. The comparisons to constitutional violations and grand jury testimony thus reinforce our conclusion that Chaparro’s No. 18-2513 31 confidential statement to Pretrial Services could not be intro- duced to impeach Ramos. C. Harmless Error? Improper admission of evidence does not call for reversal if the error was harmless. The general test for harmless error at trial is whether it is “clear beyond a reasonable doubt that a rational jury would have found the defendant guilty absent the error.” United States v. Bonin, 932 F.3d 523, 538 (7th Cir. 2019), quoting Neder v. United States, 527 U.S. 1, 18 (1999). For an incorrect evidentiary ruling, “we consider ‘whether the prosecution’s case would have been significantly less persua- sive in the mind of the average juror if the erroneously admit- ted evidence had been excluded.’” United States v. Williams, 900 F.3d 486, 489 (7th Cir. 2018), quoting United States v. Saun- ders, 826 F.3d 363, 370 (7th Cir. 2016). We will affirm if “the error had no substantial influence on the verdict” because “other untainted incriminating evidence is overwhelming.” United States v. Zuniga, 767 F.3d 712, 717 (7th Cir. 2014), quot- ing United States v. Dominguez, 992 F.2d 678, 681 (7th Cir. 1993). Chaparro presents two distinct theories of the harm caused by the admission of his statement to Officer Wheatley. First, he argues, his statement undermined the credibility of Ramos, his only witness, who had given testimony that tended to exonerate Chaparro on several fronts. We reject this theory. Chaparro challenges the admission only of his own statement, but the jury heard an identical statement made by Ramos. The final jury instructions mentioned only Ramos’s prior inconsistent statement, not the “impeachment by con- tradiction” via Chaparro. For impeaching Ramos, Chaparro’s statement to Officer Wheatley was cumulative. “As a general 32 No. 18-2513 rule, errors in admitting evidence that is merely cumulative of properly admitted evidence are harmless.” Jordan v. Binns, 712 F.3d 1123, 1138 (7th Cir. 2013). We are satisfied that ex- cluding Chaparro’s statement would not have made Ramos any more credible to the average juror. Second, Chaparro argues that there is a risk that the jury considered his statement as substantive evidence of guilt, not- withstanding the limiting instruction, and that in this role his admission bolstered the government’s case in chief. This the- ory abandons Ramos’s testimony and refocuses on a weak- ness in the government’s case noted above: the lack of any di- rect evidence that Chaparro lived at his grandparents’ home in the years before the search on December 2, 2014. To evalu- ate whether Chaparro’s statement had a “substantial influ- ence on the verdict” by this mechanism, Zuniga, 767 F.3d at 717, we must assess two nested risks: (1) whether the jury con- sidered Officer Wheatley’s testimony on direct examination for its truth; and (2) whether the testimony had a substantial influence on the verdict. The logic of impeachment by contradiction answers the first question in Chaparro’s favor. Granted, we start from the presumption that juries heed limiting instructions: though it may be a “fiction,” the “usual view” is that “limiting instruc- tions cure everything.” United States v. Myers, 892 F.2d 642, 645 (7th Cir. 1990). We have made clear, however, that this presumption is rebuttable. See, e.g., Empress Casino Joliet Corp. v. Balmoral Racing Club, Inc., 831 F.3d 815, 834 (7th Cir. 2016) (“Absent indications to the contrary, we presume that juries heed limiting instructions.” (emphasis added)), citing United States v. Mallett, 496 F.3d 798, 802 (7th Cir. 2007). No. 18-2513 33 The presumption is rebutted here because the limiting in- struction did not even make sense as applied to Chaparro’s own statement to Pretrial Services. The power of specific con- tradiction evidence depends on the jury’s accepting its truth. See above at 26–28; Kozinski, 16 F.3d at 805; 2 Wigmore, Evi- dence § 1000, at 1157. That is why Chaparro’s statement went to an “issue of guilt” under the Pretrial Services Act. Unless the jury believed Chaparro’s statement that he lived with his grandparents on the relevant dates, what doubt could it pos- sibly have cast on Ramos’s contrary testimony? We have great confidence in jurors, but we cannot fairly expect them to obey contradictory or illogical instructions. The jury was told to consider as “impeachment” evidence a statement that was probative only if it was true, but also to disregard the truth of the statement. That’s too much to ask. No matter how diligent and attentive, the jury simply “could not follow the court’s limiting instruction” and still treat Chaparro’s statement as relevant. See Mallett, 496 F.3d at 802. There is a substantial risk that the jury considered Officer Wheatley’s testimony on direct examination as guilt evidence. The second, more fact-specific question is whether the government’s case would have been “significantly less per- suasive in the mind of the average juror” without Chaparro’s statement that he lived at the scene of the crime on all the rel- evant dates. Williams, 900 F.3d at 489. The statement amounted to an admission by the defendant—a defendant who had exercised his constitutional right to remain silent— to a crucial fact for the government on two of the three charges. In particular, Chaparro admitted that he lived at his grandparents’ home on July 30, 2013, the date that someone 34 No. 18-2513 viewed child pornography on the hard drive, as charged in Count Three of the indictment. The police did not search the Chaparro home until over sixteen months later, in December 2014, at which point that desktop computer had not been powered on for over fifteen months. As summarized above, there was plenty of evidence that Michael Chaparro was liv- ing in the bedroom with the desktop computer on the date of the search. Eva Chaparro told Asplund the room was his, and it contained a coffee mug labeled “ … hael.” Michael Chap- arro showed up at the house while police were still there. But the government needed to show that Chaparro was the hard drive’s user on July 30, 2013. The record contained no evidence, other than Chaparro’s inadmissible statement, that he lived at his grandparents’ home in the summer of 2013. Detective Asplund testified that she learned shortly before the search that “an older couple” and “possibly two or three other individuals” might live at the house. She also testified that “you never really know who lives in a house until you get in there and ask who lives there,” conceding that she could not say whether Chaparro lived at the house before the search. The government submitted no public records or anything else to prove where Chaparro lived in the prior months and years. The only admissible record evidence arguably probative of Chaparro’s residency sixteen months prior appears to have been the desktop’s user account name, “M1KEY.” That does suggest that Chaparro at least configured the computer at some point, but it does not place him in the home at any par- ticular time. Given the government’s weak case on this point, Chaparro’s admission of his residency, considered for its truth, substantially strengthened the inference that he was the user of the hard drive. No. 18-2513 35 Chaparro also admitted to Officer Wheatley that he lived at his grandparents’ home on August 7, 2014, the date that someone at the house sent child pornography over the Inter- net to Erdely, as charged in Count One. Although this crime was closer in time to the search—four months prior—the gov- ernment again presented no specific evidence that Chaparro lived at his grandparents’ home at that time. As the defense elicited on cross examination, Detective Erdely did not have “any idea” who was present in the Chaparro home in early August 2014. The computer that sent pornography to Erdely was never recovered, so the government could present no di- rect evidence of who used it. True, we concluded above that the government presented sufficient evidence to sustain the conviction on Count One on plain error review. But we relied on the erroneously admitted pretrial services statement, spe- cific similarities between the conduct charged in Counts One and Three, and the propensity evidence allowed under Rule 414. See above at 8–10. The untainted evidence for Count One, without a conviction on Count Three, was perhaps not even sufficient, let alone “overwhelming.” Zuniga, 767 F.3d at 717. Here, too, Chaparro’s admission of his residency helped the government’s case significantly. Even if considered for its truth, however, Chaparro’s state- ment to Wheatley would not have had a substantial influence on the verdict for viewing child pornography on the smartphone. The smartphone conviction did not depend on Chaparro’s living anywhere in particular. Officers seized the smartphone from him when he walked into the house during the search. The smartphone’s user had viewed child pornog- raphy just eight days earlier and had identified himself in a text message that day as “mike.” On Count Two, residence was not particularly relevant. The exclusion of Chaparro’s 36 No. 18-2513 statement to Wheatley would not have made the govern- ment’s case on County Two “significantly less persuasive” to the average juror. Williams, 900 F.3d at 489. The error was harmless as to that conviction. Chaparro’s admission to Officer Wheatley provided by far the best evidence of his presence at the scene of the crimes in Counts One and Three. There is at least a reasonable doubt whether, without the erroneous admission, the jury would have found Chaparro guilty as to those charges. Those con- victions must be reversed. III. The Government’s Rebuttal Argument Chaparro’s final argument is that improper comments by the government during its closing rebuttal require a new trial. Because the conviction as to Count Two remains intact, we must address this argument as well. Chaparro did not object to any of the statements he now challenges on appeal, so our review is for plain error. In this context, plain error requires a defendant to “demonstrate that the comments at issue were ‘obviously’ or ‘clearly’ improper … [such] that not only was [he] deprived of a fair trial, but also that the outcome of the trial probably would have been different absent the prosecu- tion’s remarks.” United States v. Kelerchian, 937 F.3d 895, 917 (7th Cir. 2019) (alterations in original), quoting United States v. Hills, 618 F.3d 619, 640 (7th Cir. 2010). “An error is not plain unless it is of such an obvious nature that the trial judge and prosecutor were ‘derelict in countenancing’ it, even absent the defendant’s timely objection.” United States v. Turner, 651 F.3d 743, 751 (7th Cir. 2011), quoting United States v. Frady, 456 U.S. 152, 163 (1982). No. 18-2513 37 Chaparro first argues that the government improperly shifted the burden of proof by arguing that Chaparro could have subpoenaed family members to corroborate Ramos and brought forth exculpatory Internet activity records (“router logs”) if they existed. These comments were permissible. Not every criticism of a defendant’s case by the government raises due process concerns: “If the evidence at issue does not impli- cate a defendant’s right against self-incrimination, and the jury has been properly instructed as to the burden of proof, a prosecutor may comment on a defendant’s failure to present evidence contradicting the government’s proof at trial.” United States v. Glover, 479 F.3d 511, 520 (7th Cir. 2007); see also United States v. Flournoy, 842 F.3d 524, 528 (7th Cir. 2016) (“[A]s long as it is clear to jurors that the government carries the burden of proof, the prosecutor may tell the jury that a defendant has the power to subpoena witnesses.” (alteration in original)), quoting United States v. Miller, 276 F.3d 370, 374– 75 (7th Cir. 2002). Neither of the prosecutor’s statements im- plicated Chaparro’s right against self-incrimination, and the district court properly instructed the jury on the burden of proof. In addition, as in Flournoy, the prosecutor “explicitly stated twice that the government bore the burden of proving [Chaparro’s] guilt.” Id. The other category of statements that Chaparro challenges gives us more pause. Ostensibly upset that the defense had cross-examined government witnesses, the prosecutor de- manded: “why all the examination of Erdely and Rich? … Why tear down Erdely and Rich? There is no reason. They didn’t hurt him … . And same is really true with Zeus Flores. What did he do to harm the Defendant?” Needless to say, the accused has the right to cross-examine a government witness 38 No. 18-2513 whether or not that witness has “hurt” the accused. The pros- ecutor then turned to testimony by Ramos that a police of- ficer’s “machine gun” had frightened him during the search. The prosecutor bristled at the suggestion that an officer had acted inappropriately: “Did anybody tell you how the choices and decisions are made by the planners before they do a search warrant? Anybody? Anything? No, no questions asked. Just criticism.” Most troubling, the prosecutor re- framed this grievance in much broader terms: “So it seems like we have to face it all the time, anybody that’s associated with law enforcement in this country just seems to have to face it every time they turn around. Somebody has got to say that law enforcement behaved badly, they did bad things.” (Emphasis added.) “Taken as a whole, which is the right way to take a series of questionable remarks by a prosecutor,” these comments “exceeded the proper bounds of argument.” Hennon v. Cooper, 109 F.3d 330, 333 (7th Cir. 1997). The prosecutor’s appeal to the hardships faced by “law enforcement in this country” in- voked contemporary political controversies wholly unrelated to the charges. He linked Chaparro with unnamed critics who unfairly attack police officers generally and portrayed himself as the defender of the police. But a prosecutor represents the United States, not the government witnesses: “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.” Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935). Accord- ingly, prosecutors must not “appeal[] to jurors’ prejudices and fears,” Hennon, 109 F.3d at 333, or make arguments that are excessively “inflammatory or political.” United States v. Boros, 668 F.3d 901, 911 n.9 (7th Cir. 2012). No. 18-2513 39 Although the comments were improper, they do not re- quire vacating the conviction on Count Two on plain-error re- view. The government presented ample evidence to prove its case on the smartphone charge. In any event, the comments were irrelevant: the trial did not concern the propriety of the search of the home. So we cannot say that “the outcome of the trial probably would have been different absent the prosecu- tion’s remarks.” Kelerchian, 937 F.3d at 917; see United States v. Klemis, 859 F.3d 436, 442–43 (7th Cir. 2017) (upholding verdict on plain error review despite the prosecutor’s “naked appeal to passion rather than reason and evidence” because “the ev- idence of [the defendant’s] guilt was plentiful and compel- ling”). IV. Remedy The convictions as to Counts One and Three must be re- versed because of the erroneous admission of Chaparro’s pre- trial services statement. The Count Two conviction remains intact. Chaparro was sentenced to three concurrent terms of imprisonment of 210 months each, raising the question of what remedy is required. Neither party objected to the district court’s finding that each count carried an offense level of 37 under the Sentencing Guidelines. Indeed, all three counts nec- essarily carried the same offense level because they were grouped pursuant to Guideline 3D1.2. Because of our deci- sion, however, it matters whether the guideline range for Count Two would have been lower without the convictions on Counts One and Three. In addition, some of the specific characteristics that in- creased Chaparro’s offense level likely would not apply to the smartphone conviction on its own. A two-level increase for 40 No. 18-2513 distribution stemmed solely from the transportation convic- tion. See U.S.S.G. § 2G2.2(b)(3)(F). A five-level increase ap- plied because the offenses involved over 600 images in total, but only two images were found on the smartphone. See § 2G2.2(b)(7)(D). It appears that, without Counts One and Three, Count Two might have carried a substantially lower offense level. Thus, if the government declines to retry Chap- arro, he is still entitled to resentencing on Count Two with a new guideline calculation. The convictions as to Count One and Count Three of the indictment are REVERSED, and the sentence on Count Two is vacated. The case is remanded to the district court for a new trial on Counts One and Three and/or resentencing on Count Two in a manner consistent with this opinion. No. 18-2513 41 APPENDIX 42 No. 18-2513 No. 18-2513 43 44 No. 18-2513 No. 18-2513 45 46 No. 18-2513 No. 18-2513 47 48 No. 18-2513 No. 18-2513 49 50 No. 18-2513 No. 18-2513 51 52 No. 18-2513