United States v. Maddox, Edward

                        United States Court of Appeals


                     FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT


             Argued September 10, 1998   Decided October 9, 1998 


                                 No. 97-3082


                          United States of America,

                                   Appellee


                                      v.


                                Edward Maddox,

                                  Appellant


                 Appeal from the United States District Court

                         for the District of Columbia

                                (96cr00151-01)


     Lisa B. Wright, Assistant Federal Public Defender, argued 
the cause for appellant.  With her on the briefs was A.J. 
Kramer, Federal Public Defender.  Neil H. Jaffee, Assistant 
Federal Public Defender, entered an appearance.

     Chrisellen R. Kolb, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the 
cause for appellee.  With her on the brief were Wilma A. 



Lewis, U.S. Attorney, John R. Fisher, Thomas J. Tourish, 
Jr., and Mary B. Murphy, Assistant U.S. Attorneys.

     Before:  Silberman, Randolph, and Garland, Circuit 
Judges.

            Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge Randolph.


     Randolph, Circuit Judge:  The principal issue in this appeal 
is whether the conviction of Edward Maddox, after a jury 
trial, for unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon (18 
U.S.C. s 922(g)) should be set aside because of the prosecu-
tor's improper closing argument.

     Maddox's trial lasted less than an hour.  The government 
presented one witness, the defense none.  Officer Riddle 
testified that he and six other officers drove in three police 
cars to an area known for narcotics trafficking and violence.  
Riddle said he spotted Maddox and two other men at the end 
of a cul-de-sac.  As the cars approached, the men dispersed.  
Maddox began walking through a parking lot, towards the 
street.  Riddle testified that he saw Maddox drop something 
shiny.  With Maddox only a few feet away, Riddle left his car 
and retrieved the object--a key on a key ring with the 
insignia of the Enterprise car rental company.  Riddle looked 
over the cars in the lot, matched the key to an unlocked 
Mazda 626 and proceeded to search the car. Under the 
driver's seat, he discovered a loaded 9 mm. semi-automatic 
pistol;  in the glove compartment, he found several signed 
Enterprise rental agreements for the car naming Maddox as 
the lessee;  in the console between the two front seats he 
found Maddox's driver's license.

     Cross-examination of Riddle revealed that no fingerprints 
were found on the pistol;  that no one took fingerprints from 
the inside of the car;  that Riddle never saw Maddox in the 
car;  that the key and key ring had "not been preserved as 
evidence" (Tr. 122);  and that at the time Riddle said he was 
retrieving the key ring, most of the other six officers had 
already gotten out of their cars.  Defense counsel also sought 
to impeach Riddle with a prior inconsistent statement regard-
ing whether he had instructed Maddox to "stop."


     The prosecution and defense had entered into three stipula-
tions, which the prosecutor read to the jury at the close of the 
evidence:  the Enterprise leasing agreements found in the car 
were true and accurate copies of records maintained in the 
regular course of business;  the pistol had been manufactured 
in Massachusetts;  and Maddox had a prior conviction for a 
crime punishable by imprisonment for more than a year.

     In her closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury:

     [PROSECUTOR:]  Where are the keys?  Are the keys 
     the key to the case?  No.  If your car gets stolen and 
     somebody comes to me and tells me I need to prosecute 
     the person who stole my car, and we find a guy driving 
     your car, ladies and gentlemen, is the suggestion that I 
     need to impound your car for a year until we get around 
     to trying the case?  No, ladies and gentlemen.  You give 
     the property back to its rightful owner.

     [DEFENSE COUNSEL]:  Objection, Your Honor.  
     There is no evidence of that.

     THE COURT:  Overruled.

     [PROSECUTOR]:  You give the property back to its 
     rightful owner.  And why?  Enterprise rental owned 
     that car.  It went back to its owner, ladies and gentle-
     men.

     The district court erred in overruling the objection. The 
prosecution had introduced no evidence regarding what hap-
pened to the car and to the key and key ring after Maddox's 
arrest.  We have held many times before, and we hold once 
again, that in closing argument counsel may not refer to, or 
rely upon, evidence unless the trial court has admitted it.  
See, e.g., United States v. Small, 74 F.3d 1276, 1280 (D.C. Cir. 
1996);  United States v. Boyd, 54 F.3d 868, 871 (D.C. Cir. 
1995);  United States v. Foster, 982 F.2d 551, 555 (D.C. Cir. 
1993);  United States v. Teffera, 985 F.2d 1082, 1088, 1089 n.6 
(D.C. Cir. 1993).  The reasons are obvious.  The practice 
disregards, indeed violates, the rules governing the admission 
of evidence.  Typically, the attorney's statements amount to 
blatant hearsay about matters not in the record.  The trans-

gressing attorney makes himself an unsworn witness.  And 
when it is the prosecutor who goes outside the record, the 
effect is to deprive the defendant of his right to cross-examine 
the witnesses against him.  See Wayne R. LaFave & Jerold 
H. Israel, Criminal Procedure s 24.5 (2d ed. 1992).

     None of what we have written thus far is meant to preclude 
prosecutors (or defense counsel) from referring to matters of 
common public knowledge or human experience.  But the 
prosecutor's statements in this case were of a different sort.  
It is not common knowledge, and for all we know it may not 
even be true, that the police customarily return car keys 
having evidentiary value to the owners of the cars.  It seems 
far more likely that the police would retain the key pending 
trial and give the owner a duplicate if one were needed.  At 
any rate, the prosecutor's representations went beyond any-
thing amounting to common understanding.  She tried to 
convince the jury that the key to this particular rental car had 
been returned to the Enterprise rental company, a matter 
unsupported by any evidence.  And the prosecutor doubtless 
employed this tactic because, an hour earlier, defense coun-
sel's opening statement stressed the fact that the key was 
missing.

     Still, if this had been the prosecutor's only misstep we 
would be inclined to sustain the conviction.  The defense 
never disputed that officer Riddle seized a key to the Mazda 
and, given the rental agreements designating Maddox as the 
lessee, it seems beyond doubt that the key came from the 
defendant.  The prosecutor's improper remarks had the ef-
fect of diminishing the value of the missing evidence instruc-
tion the trial judge gave to the jury--that they were permit-
ted to draw an adverse inference from the government's 
failure to produce the key and key ring.  But we cannot see 
how the instruction would have been of much assistance to 
the defense even if the prosecutor had confined her summa-
tion to the evidence.

     After the prosecutor finished, defense counsel addressed 
the jury.  Making the most of the little he had to work with, 
counsel attacked Riddle's testimony about the defendant's 



dropping of the key ring.  This was a critical piece of 
evidence.  It tended to show the defendant's guilty knowl-
edge:  Maddox must have discarded the key because he knew 
the car contained something incriminating, something he did 
not want the police to discover.  Unless the jury disbelieved 
officer Riddle on this subject, defense counsel had no pros-
pect of convincing the jury--as he attempted to do--that 
because the car was unlocked in an area notorious for crime, 
anyone could have placed the pistol under the seat without 
Maddox knowing it, or that someone else could have been 
using the car after borrowing it from Maddox.  And so 
defense counsel pounded away:

     Mr. Maddox doesn't go away from the police....  What 
     does he do?  What does the person do that has the keys 
     to the rental car, the keys that you don't have?  What 
     does he do?  He walks right towards the police and 
     drops them essentially right in front of the police.  It is 
     simply preposterous, ladies and gentlemen.  It is simply 
     preposterous.  It did not happen.  It did not happen.  It 
     is not corroborated by any testimony whatsoever.  Why?  
     Well, there is only one person who testified.

     Shortly into her rebuttal, the prosecutor countered:

     If [defense counsel] for one minute believed that these 
     names over here, that these officers--Royster, Queen, 
     Latson, McGee, Littlejohn and Jones--what is the mat-
     ter with the government, why didn't they ... take up 
     three days of your time and call every one of these 
     officers and make them say the same thing up there and 
     make you guys stay here longer?

     [DEFENSE COUNSEL]:  Objection, Your Honor.

     THE COURT:  Overruled.

     [PROSECUTOR]:  Why didn't they do that?  You should 
     infer that they've got something to hide because they 
     didn't call those people, [defense counsel] says.  Well, 
     Edward Maddox doesn't have any obligation to call a 
     case, but, ladies and gentlemen, use your common sense.  
     If [defense counsel] believed that any of those officers, 


     whose names he knew--if he thought any of those offi-
     cers would contradict what Investigator Riddle said, do 
     you think you would have heard from them?  You heard 
     nothing contradicting that officer's testimony because I 
     submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, that nobody's testi-
     mony would have.  And hearing four days' worth of the 
     same thing may have been exciting for some of you, but I 
     doubt it.

In other words, each of the other six officers would have 
confirmed what Riddle had told the jury;  and the jurors 
could thank the prosecutor for not calling those officers to the 
stand and wasting three or four days of the jurors' valuable 
time.

     The prosecutor crossed well over the line between the 
permissible and the impermissible, as the government now 
admits.  Why the district court refused to sustain the defense 
objection is beyond us.  When a prosecutor starts telling the 
jury about what other potential witnesses would have said if 
the government had only called them, it is time not merely to 
sustain an objection but to issue a stern rebuke and a curative 
instruction, or if there can be no cure, to entertain a motion 
for a mistrial.  That the trial was so short and so simple 
made the prosecutor's improper remarks all the more potent.  
Contrast Donnelly v. DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637, 645 (1974);  
Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 639 (1993).  The defense 
had attacked Riddle's credibility, especially his testimony 
about the dropping of the key.  Yet the prosecutor's rebuttal 
improperly propelled the jury into believing everything Rid-
dle had told them.  How could the jury disbelieve Riddle 
when a half-dozen other officers on the scene agreed entirely 
with his version of the events?  The judge's refusal to sustain 
the objection, done in open court, only made matters worse.  
Jurors unschooled in the proprieties of closing argument may 
have thought the defense was objecting to the accuracy of the 
prosecutor's representations.  If so, the court's overruling of 
the objection signified that the prosecutor had correctly de-
scribed what the missing witnesses would attest.  Maddox did 
not mount much of a defense, but he was entitled to present 
his case to the jury without the extra burden of having to 



overcome six additional adverse witnesses at a point when the 
evidence had closed.  The right to cross-examine is a "sub-
stantial" right of every defendant.  The law requires us to 
disregard errors and irregularities that do "not affect sub-
stantial rights," Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a);  28 U.S.C. s 2111, but 
the errors of the trial judge and the prosecutor are not of 
that sort.  Can we be sure that the prosecutor's improper 
rebuttal and the court's erroneous overruling of the defense 
objection "did not influence the jury" or had only a "very 
slight effect"?  Kotteakos v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 764-
65 (1946).  No, we cannot be sure of any such thing.  It may 
well be that in a trial uninfected by the sort of overreaching 
that took place here, Maddox would have been convicted.  
But that is not the correct harmless-error inquiry.  See 
United States v. Smart, 98 F.3d 1379, 1391 (D.C. Cir. 1996);  
see also Harry T. Edwards, To Err is Human, But Not 
Always Harmless:  When Should Legal Error Be Tolerated?, 
70 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1167, 1199-1206 (1995).  The question is 
"whether the guilty verdict actually rendered in this trial was 
surely unattributable to the error," Sullivan v. Louisiana, 
508 U.S. 275, 279 (1993), and because that question must be 
answered in the negative, the defendant's conviction cannot 
stand.  The judgment of conviction is reversed and the case is 
remanded for a new trial.

     So ordered.