Legal Research AI

United States v. Sullivan

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1996-05-31
Citations: 85 F.3d 743
Copy Citations
70 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                United States Court of Appeals
                    For the First Circuit
                                         

No. 95-1719

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       DENNIS SULLIVAN,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

No. 95-1760

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                        THOMAS PLATT,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

        APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

         [Hon. Morton A. Brody, U.S. District Judge]
                                                               

                                         

                            Before

            Selya, Stahl and Lynch, Circuit Judges.
                                                              

                                         

Judith H. Mizner for appellant Dennis Sullivan.
                            
Perry O'Brian for appellant Thomas Platt.
                         


Margaret  D. McGaughey,  Assistant  United  States Attorney,  with
                                  
whom  Jay  P. McCloskey,  United States  Attorney,  was on  brief, for
                               
appellee.

                                         

                         May 31, 1996
                                         

                             -2-


          LYNCH,  Circuit Judge.    An armed  robbery of  the
                      LYNCH,  Circuit Judge.
                                           

Country  Hospitality Inn in Bangor, Maine in 1994 that netted

the  robbers  approximately  $520 was  prosecuted  federally.

Defendant  Dennis Sullivan  was  sentenced for  the crime  to

spend almost the  next thirty  years of his  life in  prison.

Defendant  Thomas Platt  was  sentenced to  more than  thirty

years.   They appeal,  ably arguing  that the prosecutor  was

overly   zealous,   the   evidence   insufficient   and   the

instructions deficient.  While the prosecutor  overstepped in

asking  one  witness  to   comment  on  the  truthfulness  of

another's  testimony, the  misstep was  harmless error.   The

prosecution presented  enough evidence to prove  its case and

the instructions contained no error.  We affirm.

                              I

          Two  masked  men,  one  with a  sawed-off  shotgun,

robbed the  Inn in the early  morning of July 28,  1994.  The

Inn's night manager was  faced with the shotgun by a  man who

jumped  over the  countertop  and told  the  manager to  look

straight ahead and not at him.  Startled, the manager did not

get a full look at the robber.  He did get a good enough look

to testify that the robber was a man of medium build, between

5'8"  and 5'10" high, weighing between 140 and 160 pounds and

in  his early to mid-twenties.   The robber wore some sort of

ski  mask, or combination of  masks, and dark  clothing.  The

manager heard, but did not see, a second robber.  The robbers

                             -3-
                                         -3-


took  the  manager's checkbook,  his  $160 in  cash,  and his

grocery store  and bank cards.  The robber with the gun asked

the manager where the Inn's money  was.  The manager told him

it  was in  a drawer.   The  second robber  said that  he had

gotten  the drawer open and the robbers took the $360 inside.

The robbers told the manager to  lie down on the floor.  They

taped his eyes and mouth shut with duct tape and fled.

          Shortly thereafter, the  police stopped a car  with

four men but released them.   In the car were the  defendants

and two companions, Dale Braley and Timothy Boudreau.  Braley

and Boudreau eventually became cooperating witnesses.

          Meanwhile  the investigation  proceeded.   A police

dog  followed the  robbers' scent across  the field  around a

barn next  to an abandoned  house.   At the house  the police

observed tire tracks from a car that had rapidly accelerated.

Later, a citizen observed  a maroon bag on a  nearby roadside

and told the police about it.  The bag contained, among other

things,  a sawed-off  shotgun, a  locked box with  a shoulder

holster  inside  of  it,  two  masks,  dark  sweatshirts  and

camouflage hats.  It also  contained the rest of the roll  of

the  duct  tape  used  to bind  the  manager,  the  manager's

checkbook and his bank cards.  The bag had a  tag bearing the

name "Angela Turner."  Ms. Turner, it turned out, was Platt's

girlfriend.

                             -4-
                                         -4-


          The scheme unravelled.   The police followed  leads

to Braley  and Boudreau, who incriminated  Platt and Sullivan

while minimizing their own  roles in the crime.   Hearing the

police  were looking  to  question them,  Platt and  Sullivan

disappeared.   But  when  arrest warrants  were issued,  they

surrendered.

          Sullivan and Platt were  charged with conspiracy to

obstruct commerce  by  robbery in  violation of  18 U.S.C.   

1951,  obstructing  commerce  and  attempting  the   same  by

committing robbery in violation  of 18 U.S.C.    1951  and 2,

and using  or carrying a  firearm in  relation to a  crime of

violence, and aiding  and abetting the same,  in violation of

18 U.S.C.     924(c)  and 2.   Platt and  Sullivan were  each

charged  individually  with  possession   of  a  firearm  not

registered to them in  the National Firearms Registration and

Transfer  Record in  violation of  26 U.S.C.      5861(d) and

5871.   They were  also each charged  individually with being

felons in possession of  firearms, in violation of 18  U.S.C.

   922(g)(1),  924(a)(2) and 924(e)(1).   They were convicted

on  all  counts save  for  Sullivan's  acquittal  on the  two

firearm possession counts.

          It was clear that the four men were connected  with

the  crime and two had  actually committed it.   The question

was  which two.   At  trial the  theory  of defense  was that

Braley  and  Boudreau  had done  it  and  that  there was  no

                             -5-
                                         -5-


reliable identification of the defendants.  While a footprint

was  found on the Inn manager's countertop, it did not appear

to belong to either Sullivan or  Platt and the police did not

do the work to identify whose footprint it was.  

          At trial,  Braley testified  that the foursome  had

decided to commit  a crime and went  riding around in a  car.

Braley  and Boudreau both said  that Sullivan, who had worked

as a pizza delivery person, mentioned that the Inn would have

only  one employee there  and would  be a  good target  for a

robbery.  Braley testified  that they drove to  the abandoned

house  near the  Inn.   Sullivan and  Platt donned  masks and

camouflage gear  and walked  across a  field toward  the Inn.

Later, Sullivan and Platt returned.  They "dash[ed]" into the

car and told Braley to get out of there because they had seen

a cop.   In the  car, Sullivan said,  "I got that  guy good."

While holding his finger up to  the back of Braley's head  as

if he were pointing  a gun, Sullivan said he had  jumped over

the  motel counter and told the night manager to "[g]et right

down on the ground."   After the group had driven about eight

miles,  they noticed  a police  car  coming toward  them and,

afraid they might be  stopped, tossed the maroon bag  out the

window.  

          The  girlfriends of the  defendants implicated them

in the  crimes, but attempted  to recant those  statements at

trial.    Braley  and  Boudreau acknowledged  they  had  been

                             -6-
                                         -6-


charged  with involvement  with the  robbery in  state court.

Another  witness,  Vaughn  Stevenson,  testified  that  Platt

wanted to purchase the  sawed-off shotgun and that Stevenson,

who acted as  middleman for the  transaction, got the  weapon

from  the seller and put it into Platt's closet.  Stevenson's

friend, Danny Cray, also testified that Platt said  he wanted

to purchase the  shotgun and that Stevenson had delivered the

shotgun to the place where Platt was living.

          Sullivan argues that  the evidence was insufficient

to support his conviction  of using or carrying a  firearm in

connection with a crime of violence, particularly in light of

his  being  acquitted on  the  charges  of possession  of  an

unregistered  firearm and  being a felon  in possession  of a

firearm.  Sullivan also  argues the instruction on reasonable

doubt was in  violation of  his due process  rights and  that

several  prosecutorial  actions,  including the  prosecutor's

asking  Sullivan  to  comment  on  the  veracity  of  another

witness's  testimony, violated  due process.   Finally, under

different  labels  he  attempts   to  mount  an   ineffective

assistance of counsel claim.  

          Platt  argues  that  the district  court  erred  in

permitting the prosecutor to  question Sullivan as to whether

the  other witness  lied.   In  addition,  he argues  that  a

statement  made  by  the  prosecution  in  opening   argument

                             -7-
                                         -7-


violated  his  Fifth Amendment  rights  and  that there  were

evidentiary errors.  

          We treat each defendant's claims separately.

                              II

                           Sullivan
                                               

Sufficiency of the Evidence
                                       

          In assessing a challenge  to the sufficiency of the

evidence,  we "review  the  record to  determine whether  the

evidence and  reasonable  inferences therefrom,  taken  as  a

whole and in  the light  most favorable  to the  prosecution,

would  allow a rational jury to determine beyond a reasonable

doubt that  the defendants were  guilty as charged."   United
                                                                         

States  v. Mena-Robles,  4 F.3d 1026,  1031 (1st  Cir. 1993),
                                  

cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 1550 (1994).
                        

          Sullivan's  assertion  that  there was  not  enough

evidence  to show he carried or used the shotgun stresses two

points.   First, Sullivan says, it is undisputed that the gun

belonged to Platt and that the night manager did not see  who

carried  the gun.  He claims no  other evidence linked him to

the gun.  Second, he  says that the weakness of the  evidence

is  revealed by the jury's acquitting him of being a felon in

possession  of a  firearm and  of possessing  an unregistered

weapon.  

          As  to the  latter, "'[v]erdict  inconsistency does

not indicate that the  government necessarily failed to prove

                             -8-
                                         -8-


an essential element of its case beyond a reasonable doubt.'"

United  States v.  Calderon, 77  F.3d 6,  10 (1st  Cir. 1996)
                                       

(quoting  United States v. Lopez,  944 F.2d 33,  41 (1st Cir.
                                            

1991)); see also United States v. Powell, 469 U.S. 57 (1984).
                                                    

An inconsistent verdict does  not require vacating a criminal

conviction  as long as the appellate  court is satisfied that

there  was  sufficient  evidence  to sustain  the  counts  of

conviction.  See Calderon, 77 F.3d at 10.
                                     

          A jury could well have found that Sullivan actually

carried or used the  gun himself or, at the  least, knowingly

aided or  abetted the carrying  or use  of the gun.   It  was

clear  that at least one of the robbers carried the sawed-off

shotgun.   The  night manager testified  that the  robber who

accosted him  brandished a shotgun.   That robber  "used" the

firearm.  See  Bailey v. United  States, 116 S. Ct.  501, 508
                                                   

(1995).  A reasonable jury could have found that Sullivan was

that robber.  Braley testified that after the robbery, in the

car, Sullivan  put a pretend gun to Braley's head, apparently

imitating what he had  done to the night manager.  And, there

was testimony that Sullivan, in advance of the robbery, while

at  Platt's home,  picked up  the gun  and commented  that it

would be good to use in a robbery.  The  evidence showed that

the two  robbers walked across the  field to the Inn.   It is

reasonable to  infer that the gun  was brought to  the Inn by

one  or both and that the two  robbers were each aware of the

                             -9-
                                         -9-


shotgun  and its intended use.  A sawed-off shotgun is hardly

inconspicuous.1   The gun  was brought back  from the robbery

and put  in the bag  later abandoned by  the four men  in the

car.  In the bag were the masks and camouflage  garments also

used in the  robbery.   The evidence was  sufficient to  show

that  Sullivan knew  the  shotgun would  be  used or  carried

during  the robbery and that he took some action intending to

cause the  gun to be used  or carried.  See  United States v.
                                                                      

Luciano-Mosquera,  63  F.3d  1142,  1150  (1st   Cir.  1995),
                            

petition for cert.  filed, 64  U.S.L.W. 3765  (U.S. Apr.  26,
                                     

1996) (No. 95-1775); see also United States v. Price, 76 F.3d
                                                                

526, 529-30 (3d Cir. 1996) (The "[accomplice without the gun]

probably knew  in advance,  and  most certainly  knew at  the

time, what [the one with the gun] was doing."); United States
                                                                         

v. DeMasi, 40  F.3d 1306, 1316  (1st Cir. 1994)  (one can  be
                     

held  liable under aiding and abetting theory if he knew that

weapons would be used during the robbery),  cert. denied, 115
                                                                    

S.  Ct. 947  (1995).    The  jury  could  have  found  actual

knowledge and thus could easily have found that Sullivan knew

                    
                                

1.    United States v. Spinney, 65 F.3d 231, 238-39 (1st Cir.
                                          
1995),  which   vacated  the   firearms   conviction  of   an
accomplice,  is, on  its facts,  inapposite.  The  firearm in
Spinney  was a handgun that  was not visible  when the robber
                   
entered the bank and  the accomplice charged with  aiding and
abetting remained outside of the bank.  Moreover, in Spinney,
                                                                        
the  use  of the  gun was  not  contemplated at  the planning
stages, while here the jury could infer that it was.

                             -10-
                                         -10-


to a "practical  certainty" that the gun would be  used.  See
                                                                         

United States v. Spinney, 65 F.3d 231, 238 (1st Cir. 1995).
                                    

Reasonable Doubt Instruction
                                        

          Although he did not  object to the reasonable doubt

instruction  at   trial,  Sullivan  attempts  to  attack  the

instruction  on  appeal.   As  a  result,  he  must meet  the

strictures  of  plain error  review.   See  Fed. R.  Crim. P.
                                                      

52(b); Luciano-Mosquera, 63 F.3d at  1156.  In this  instance
                                   

the  standard of  review does  not alter the  outcome because

there was no error in the instruction.

          The judge instructed the jury as follows:

               Now, as I have indicated to you, the
          government has the burden of  proving the
          defendants  guilty  beyond  a  reasonable
          doubt.   Some of  you may have  served as
          jurors in  civil cases and when  you were
          told that it  is only necessary  to prove
          that a fact is  more likely true than not
          true, in a civil case, that's the burden.
          In criminal cases, the government's proof
          is subject to a higher standard.  It must
          be beyond a reasonable doubt.
               Now,     there's     been    several
          suggestions made to you during the course
          of  argument  with  regard to  reasonable
          doubt.  And I  point out to you  that the
          lawyers  have  the   right,  indeed   the
          responsibility, to point out to you those
          facts   or   that   evidence   or   those
          interpretations of  legal principles that
          is more persuasive  to their side  of the
          case.  I instruct you that, if what I  am
          telling you  about the law differs in any
          way  with what the  lawyers have told you
          about  the  law, I'm  instructing  you to
          follow the  law as I  give it to  you and
          not as the lawyers suggest[] it may be if
          there is a difference.

                             -11-
                                         -11-


               "Reasonable  doubt"   has  now  been
          defined for you in several different ways
          by  counsel,  and  I  instruct  you  that
          reasonable  doubt  defines  itself  --  a
          doubt that is reasonable.  It has a plain
          meaning,  and you as  jurors can consider
          the  plain  meaning  of reasonable  doubt
          with what the words say.
               The only  caveat  that you  must  be
          clear about as  it relates to  reasonable
          doubt is  that the government  must prove
          the guilt  of each of  the defendants for
          the crimes involved  beyond a  reasonable
          doubt as you interpret that term.

The  judge  thus  left the  fine  tuning  of  the meaning  of

"reasonable doubt" to the jurors, as is appropriate under our

precedent.   See United States v. Cassiere, 4 F.3d 1006, 1024
                                                      

(1st Cir. 1993).  

          Sullivan says that by referring to  the definitions

given   by   counsel,   the  judge   incorporated   erroneous

definitions.  The argument suffers from  three flaws.  First,

that is not a fair reading of the instruction, which told the

jurors  what  the judge's  instructions  were.   Second,  the
                                     

reference to counsel's  definitions was followed  immediately

by  a statement that the judge's instructions on the law were

to  be followed,  and,  if there  were  differences, not  the

lawyers'.   Third,  to  the extent  that Sullivan's  argument

rests on the premise  that his own counsel gave  an erroneous

definition of reasonable doubt, we will not entertain such an

argument.  Cf.  United States  v. Munson, 819  F.2d 337,  342
                                                    

(1st  Cir.  1987)  (no   plain  error  in  admitting  certain

                             -12-
                                         -12-


testimony  when,  among  other  problems, the  testimony  was

elicited by defense counsel on cross-examination).

Ineffective Assistance and Due Process Claims
                                                         

          Sullivan combines three arguments, tied together by

the common theme  that his counsel at  trial was ineffective.

For several  reasons, ineffective  assistance claims  are not

usually heard on direct  appeal.  See United States  v. Diaz-
                                                                         

Martinez,  71 F.3d 946, 953 (1st Cir. 1995); United States v.
                                                                      

Collins,  60 F.3d  4, 7  n.1 (1st  Cir. 1995).   There  is no
                   

reason here to depart from that rule.  

          To the  extent he  makes claims independent  of the

ineffective assistance  of counsel claim, they  fail on their

own.   Sullivan  complains  that,  despite Platt's  objection

which resulted in excluding the evidence, the evidence should

have been admitted that Platt and Braley committed  a robbery

of the Econolodge  the week  before the robbery  of the  Inn.

Sullivan  urges that the  evidence would have  been useful to

impeach  Braley.    Failing  that,  he  says,  severance  was

warranted.  

          His  initial  hurdle is  that  he  never sought  to

cross-examine  Braley about  the  Econolodge  matter, and  he

objected  to  the   government's  request  to  present   such

evidence.   Moreover,  he never  asked for  a severance.   At

best,  review of  his contentions is  for plain error.   In a

strange  twist, the  parties now  reverse the  positions they

                             -13-
                                         -13-


held  in  the  trial court  with  the  government saying  the

evidence was  cumulative and  Sullivan saying it  should have

been  admitted.   Switching  of position  aside,  this was  a

matter  of discretion  for the trial  judge and  the decision

hardly requires reversal  as plain error.   See United States
                                                                         

v. Innamorati,  996 F.2d 456,  478 (1st Cir.),  cert. denied,
                                                                        

114  S. Ct.  409 (1993).   The same  is true  for the alleged

error  in failing to sever the trials.   Cf. United States v.
                                                                      

Edgar,  No. 95-1190, slip  op. at 8 (1st  Cir. Apr. 19, 1996)
                 

(failure to  sever reviewed for abuse  of discretion); United
                                                                         

States  v.  Nason, 9  F.3d 155,  158  (1st Cir.  1993), cert.
                                                                         

denied,  114 S.  Ct. 1331  (1994) (same).   There  was strong
                  

evidence of guilt  in this case.   Sullivan's convictions  do

not rise to  a "miscarriage of justice."  See  Edgar, No. 95-
                                                                

1190, slip op. at 27 n.16.

          Sullivan's  second argument of  trial error is also

raised by Platt.  Through  a series of questions,  reproduced

in   the  margin,2  the  prosecutor  asked  Sullivan  whether

                    
                                

2.  Q:    So, I take it  you would deny that you  ever stated
          to Vaughn Stevenson that you wished you didn't have
          so many people involved in the robbery?
A:        You take it I deny that?
Q:        Yes.
A:        I certainly do, yes.
Q:        I take it that, when Vaughn testified to that,  you
          would say he was lying?
A:        I'd say --
[Defense counsel]:  Objection, your Honor.
. . . .
The  Court:   Objection's overruled.   He  can answer.   It's
cross-

                             -14-
                                         -14-


another witness, Vaughn  Stevenson, had  lied when  Stevenson

said that Sullivan  complained that he wished he  didn't have

so many people involved in the robbery.  This court stated in

United  States v. Akitoye, 923 F.2d 221, 224 (1st Cir. 1991),
                                     

that this  type of  questioning was  improper.   Other courts

have said the same.  See  United States v. Boyd, 54 F.3d 868,
                                                           

871  (D.C. Cir. 1995); United States v. Scanio, 900 F.2d 485,
                                                          

492-93 (2d Cir. 1990), overruled on other grounds, Ratzlaf v.
                                                                      

United  States,  510  U.S. 135  (1994).    If  there was  any
                          

ambiguity  left   after  Akitoye,  we  state   the  rule  now
                                            

emphatically:   counsel should not ask one witness to comment

on the veracity of the testimony of another witness.   As was

explained in Akitoye:
                                

          It  is not  the place  of one  witness to
          draw    conclusions   about,    or   cast
          aspersions    upon    another    witness'
          veracity.    The  "was-the-witness-lying"
          question framed by the prosecutor in this
          case was of that stripe.  It should never
          have been posed . . . .

                    
                                

          examination.
A:        Could I have the question again?
Q:        Vaughn Stevenson testified that you told him, while
          you  were  riding  in  his car  shortly  after  the
          robbery,  that you  told  him that  you wished  you
          hadn't had so many people involved in the robbery.
A:        Uh-huh.  And you  want my opinion as to  whether he
          lied?
Q:        And you're saying --  I take it you would  say that
          that  was a lie, that you  never said anything like
          that.
A:        You take that correctly, yes.

                             -15-
                                         -15-


923  F.2d at  224 (citations  omitted).   We expect  that the

office  of the United States Attorney3 and other counsel will

abide by the rule.

          The prosecution  next  misreads  a  line  of  cases

primarily from the Second Circuit and suggests that this non-

comment  rule applies  differently depending  on whether  the

other witness is a police officer or a lay witness.   Compare
                                                                         

Boyd,  54 F.3d at 871 ("It is . . . error for a prosecutor to
                

induce a  witness to  testify that  another  witness, and  in

particular a government agent,  has lied on the  stand.") and
                                                                         

United  States v. Richter, 826  F.2d 206, 208  (2d Cir. 1987)
                                     

("Prosecutorial cross-examination which  compels a  defendant

to  state  that  law   enforcement  officers  lied  in  their

testimony is improper.") with United States v. Gaind, 31 F.3d
                                                                

73, 77 (2d Cir. 1994) ("[T]he opposing witnesses in this case

were   former  [employees   of  defendant's   business],  not

government agents.") and Scanio, 900 F.2d at  493 ("While the
                                           

rule barring this type of cross-examination is not limited to

situations where the  defendant is  asked to  comment on  the

testimony of government agents,  . . . we have  shown special

concern with prosecutors utilizing what some persons perceive

as the  heightened credibility of government  agents . . . ."

                    
                                

3.  Appellate counsel for the United States assured the court
at oral argument that  attorneys in the Office of  the United
States Attorney  in Maine  would promptly be  instructed that
such questions are improper.

                             -16-
                                         -16-


(internal citations  omitted)).   The rule only  applies, the

prosecution says, when the other witness is a police witness,

not a lay witness.  We make no such distinction, nor does the

Second Circuit.4   That erroneous reading  misunderstands the

purpose of the rule.  The rule reserves to the jury questions

of credibility and thus makes it improper to induce a witness

to say another witness lied on the stand.  See  Boyd, 54 F.3d
                                                                

at 871.

          That this  rule was violated by  the prosecution is

not the  end of the  analysis.  The  question is whether  the

violation of the rule was harmless.  In context, it certainly

was.   While  evidence  of guilt  is  only one  factor to  be

considered,  such evidence  was very  strong.   See generally
                                                                         

Harry T. Edwards, To  Err Is Human, But Not  Always Harmless:
                                                                         

When Should Legal Error Be Tolerated?, 70 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1167
                                                 

(1995).   Two  witnesses  testified that  Platt and  Sullivan

committed  the robbery and  four witnesses tied  Platt to the

shotgun.  Moreover, the error was on a minor point:   whether

Sullivan in his testimony would say another witness was lying

                    
                                

4.  The distinction the Second Circuit draws is in evaluating
whether  the error  is harmless  once the  rule is  violated.
Whether  a witness is a  government agent may  be relevant in
determining whether  there is  prejudice or a  miscarriage of
justice.   See  Gaind,  31  F.3d  at  77  (in  reviewing  for
                                 
"miscarriage of justice," court  believed that questions  did
not alter the outcome of the trial); Scanio,  900 F.2d at 493
                                                       
("[T]he government's attempt to compel [defendant] to comment
on [witness's] veracity was improper; however, we believe any
error was harmless.").

                             -17-
                                         -17-


when the witness said Sullivan had  complained about too many

people  being involved  in the  robbery.   The  other witness

testified to Sullivan's complaint; Sullivan denied making it.

The damage to Sullivan's defense came from Stevenson's direct

testimony.    That there  was  a  contradiction between  that

testimony  and  Sullivan's was  obvious.    Pointing out  the

obvious  most   likely  scored   the  government,   at  most,

rhetorical points.    We cannot  say that  these few  largely

rhetorical questions from the  prosecutor affected at all the

outcome of the trial.   Cf. United States v.  Wihbey, 75 F.3d
                                                                

761, 771  (1st  Cir.  1996)  (improper  conduct  on  part  of

prosecutor not  implicating a  constitutional right does  not

require  reversal  unless  it  affected the  outcome  of  the

trial).

          Sullivan also argues that some of the comments made

by  the prosecution  in  its closing  argument were  improper

vouching  for  the credibility  of  certain  witnesses.   The

prosecutor argued:

               The  government would  suggest that,
          again,  Tim Boudreau,  if you  assess his
          believability  on  the witness  stand, he
          came off pretty believable.  But you have
          to   make   that  judgment,   ladies  and
          gentlemen.
               . . .   The  government suggests  to
          you  [Cray]  couldn't  have   lied  about
          anything up  on  the witness  stand.   He
          couldn't -- if he  was lying, he couldn't
          even remember his own name.

And on rebuttal, the prosecutor argued:

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          The government suggests  . . . that  they
          were up there telling the truth.
          . . . .
               .   .  .   [Braley]  told   you  the
          truth. . . .
          . . . .
               . . .  The government suggests  that
          . .  . Braley, . . . Stevenson, and . . .
          Boudreau .  . . are telling  the truth in
          this case.

As there  was no objection,  we review for plain  error.  See
                                                                         

United States v. Cruz-Kuilan, 75 F.3d 59, 62 (1st Cir. 1996).
                                        

          While  some  of the  statements  may  have been  an

appropriate  response  to  the   defendants'  attack  on  the

government witnesses'  credibility, see id., others  may have
                                                       

crossed the line into improper vouching.  See Wihbey, 75 F.3d
                                                                

at  771-73 (comment that  "what they  have done  is testified

. . .  truthfully   about  what  they   knew"  was   improper

vouching); United States  v. Manning, 23  F.3d 570, 572  (1st
                                                

Cir.  1994) (improper  witness  vouching  for  prosecutor  to

argue:  "If  [police witness] 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. . .  .   They're  bound by  their  oath and  limits of

honesty.").  Nevertheless, no miscarriage of justice resulted

and the comments  did not impact  the fairness, integrity  or

public reputation  of the judicial proceedings  and so should

not be noticed as plain error.  See Collins, 60 F.3d at 7.
                                                       

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                             III

                            Platt
                                             

Prosecutor's Opening Statements
                                           

          Platt  argues  that the  prosecutor's  statement in

opening  that the jury would "meet" the two defendants was an

improper  comment on  whether the  defendants would  testify.

Sullivan  objected to  the  comment and  at  the end  of  the

opening, Platt  moved  for a  mistrial.   The district  court

denied  the   motion,  but  offered  to   give  a  cautionary

instruction.      Apparently  for   strategic   reasons,  the

defendants rejected the offer.  

          Whether  the  prosecutor's  argument  violated  the

Fifth  Amendment  privilege  against   self-incrimination  is

reviewed de novo.   United States v. Hardy, 37  F.3d 753, 756
                                                      

(1st  Cir. 1994).   We review  the denial  of the  motion for

mistrial for abuse  of discretion.   See Wihbey,  75 F.3d  at
                                                           

773.  There was no violation of the Fifth Amendment here.  

          "A  prosecutor's comment  is improper  where, under

the  circumstances  of  the   case,  the  language  used  was

manifestly  intended or was  of such character  that the jury

would  naturally and necessarily take  it to be  a comment on

the failure  of the accused to  testify."  Hardy, 37  F.3d at
                                                            

757 (internal quotations omitted).  Sullivan's counsel agreed

that  the choice of words was not deliberate:  the prosecutor

meant to say that  the defendants would be introduced  to the

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jury.  And in fact, the defendants' lawyers did introduce the

defendants  to  the  jury   after  the  prosecutor  made  the

allegedly  offending remark.    In context,  the prosecutor's

word choice  did not  "naturally and necessarily"  comment on

the  defendants' privilege  against self-incrimination.   Cf.
                                                                         

Hardy, 37 F.3d at 757-58 (holding that prosecutor's statement
                 

that defendants, who  were sitting in  the courtroom but  did

not testify,  were "still running and  hiding today" violated

the Fifth  Amendment (emphasis removed)).  Thus, there was no

prosecutorial  misconduct  that  would   warrant  considering

mistrial.

Sufficiency of the Evidence
                                       

          Platt  also makes  a  claim that  the evidence  was

insufficient to  support his  conviction.  Platt  argues that

the evidence implicating him  as one of the two  robbers came

principally  from  Braley and  Boudreau.    Those two,  Platt

argues,  should  not have  been  believed  because they  were

cooperating witnesses who  gave inconsistent versions  of the

events  that   transpired  on   July  28,  1994.     However,

"'[c]redibility determinations are uniquely within the jury's

province,  and we defer to the jury's verdict if the evidence

can support varying inferences.'"  United States v. Calderon,
                                                                        

77 F.3d 6, 10  (1st Cir. 1996) (quoting Cruz-Kuilan,  75 F.3d
                                                               

at 62).   As the recital of the facts  shows, there was ample

evidence to convict Platt on all counts.

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Other Evidentiary Issues
                                    

          Platt  argues  that  the  district  court erred  in

excluding the  prior misdemeanor and  juvenile convictions of

certain  government  witnesses and  that  the district  court

abused  its  discretion  by  allowing   cross-examination  of

Sullivan  on a prior robbery conviction.   We have considered

Platt's arguments and find no abuse of discretion.5

          Finally,  Platt argues that  evidence that Boudreau

had  no  prior  criminal  convictions should  not  have  been

admitted.  Platt  argues that  the evidence  was admitted  in

violation  of  Fed. R.  Evid.  608  to  show Boudreau's  good

character.   Cf. Government of  Virgin Islands v.  Grant, 775
                                                                    

F.2d 508,  510-12 (3d Cir. 1985)  (such evidence inadmissible

under Rules 404 and 405 to  prove character of accused).  The

record  shows  that  it   was  admitted  to  further  develop

Boudreau's background  and it was thus  within the discretion

of the district court.   Cf. United States v.  Blackwell, 853
                                                                    

                    
                                

5.  Platt  seeks  a  stricter  standard  of  review  for  the
district  court's  exclusion  of  one  witness's  misdemeanor
conviction for theft by arguing that it "involved dishonesty"
and thus  should  have  been  admitted under  Fed.  R.  Evid.
609(a).   See United States v.  Tracy, 36 F.3d 187,  192 (1st
                                                 
Cir.  1994)  (district  court  does not  have  discretion  to
exclude   prior   convictions   involving    dishonesty   for
impeachment  purposes),  cert.  denied, 115  S.  Ct.  (1995).
                                                  
Theft, on  particular facts, could conceivably be  a crime of
dishonesty,   if   it  involves   some  element   of  deceit,
untruthfulness, or falsification.   See id.; United States v.
                                                                      
Mejia-Alarcon,  995  F.2d 982,  989  n.7  (10th Cir.),  cert.
                                                                         
denied, 114  S. Ct. 334 (1993).   But Platt points to nothing
                  
in  the record to support  his assertion that  the theft here
was a crime of dishonesty.

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                                         -22-


F.2d  86,  88  (2d Cir.  1988)  (error  to strike  background

evidence  that defendant  had no  prior arrests);  Grant, 775
                                                                    

F.2d  at 513 (trial court has wide discretion as to admission

of background evidence).   There was  no abuse of  discretion

here.

          Affirmed.
                               

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