Aftеr a trial by jury, appellant Larry Finch was convicted of aggravated assault while armed and assault with a dangerous weapon. His appeal challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and the propriety of the prosecutor’s rebuttal argument. We affirm.
I.
We need not discuss at length the question of sufficiency of thе evidence. Witnesses testified that appellant, who was intoxicated and behaving belligerently and abusively to those around him, disturbed Anthony Jones in Dupont Circle while Jones was playing chess. An argument ensued. Jones asked appellant to move away, but appellant instead moved closer, and as Jones turned to facе him, appellant suddenly plunged a knife deep into Jones’s neck. Jones required emergency surgery to repair two life-threatening lacerations to his right carotid artery. Viewed in the light most favorable to sustaining the verdict,
see Curry v. United States,
II.
Appellant’s main contention is that the trial court erred in not granting him a mistrial after the prosecutor, in her rebuttal argument, improperly (1) expressed her personal opinions of his and other witnesses’ credibility, (2) referred to him as a convictеd thief and drug dealer, and (3) argued facts not in evidence. Appellant did not object to the comments in the first category, but he did object (unsuccessfully) to the comments in the latter two and moved for a mistrial on those grounds. We agree with appellant that some of the prosecutor’s comments were objectionable. On balance, however, we conclude that the improprieties were not so prejudicial as to entitle appellant to reversal of his conviction.
The principles that govern our review of appellant’s claim are well-settled. We start by determining whether the challenged comments were, in fact, improper. If they were, we must determine whether the trial judge erred or abused his discretion in responding to them.
See Irick v. United States,
1.
Expression of personal opinions as to the credibility of witnesses.
We often have admonished that “[i]t is improper for a lawyer to express a
personal
opinion about a witness’ veracity [or credibility] during arguments to the jury.”
Id.
at 43 (emphasis added; citations omitted). Such comments are objectionable to the extent that they “convey the impression that evidence not presented to the jury, but known to the prosecutor, supports the charges against the defendant ... [or] induce the jury to trust the Government’s judgment rather than its own view of the evidence.”
Young,
the key inquiry is whether the attorney is commenting on the evidence, which he may do, or expressing a personal opinion, which is taboo. A comment will be within the acceptable range as long as it is in the general nature of аrgument, and not an outright expression of opinion.
Id. at 36 (emphasis in original).
Appellant claims that the prosecutor, in rebuttal argument, improperly expressed her personal opinion about the credibility of the complainant Anthony Jones,
2
a prosecution witness named Earl
We take a more dim view of the prosecutor’s comments about appellant, which are quoted in footnote 4. The italicized comments were unquestionably improper, because they did not discuss the evidence at all and articulated only the prosecutor’s unsupported, not wholly coherent — but nonetheless forceful — assertions that appellant was lying to avoid admitting his guilt.
See, e.g., Jones v. United States,
As previously noted, appellant did not object to the prosecutor’s expressions of her personal opinions regarding the defense witnesses’ credibility. The trial judge was alert to the problem those expressions posed, however. Almost immediately after the rebuttal argument, thе
2.
Characterization of Appellant as a Convicted Thief and Drug Dealer.
Appellant argues that the prosecutor aggravated the impropriety of her personal opinion comments about him when she also told the jury that the defense was asking it “to accept the word of a convicted thief and a convicted drug dealer.” See footnote 4,
supra.
Indeed, we havе deprecated such loose name-calling, even when the defendant has testified and been impeached with prior convictions, because it tends “to blur the already murky distinction which the jury must draw between the use of evidence of prior crimes as a reflection of credibility and the use of such evidence as a denotation of criminal character.”
Harris v. United States,
Thаt said, it is important not to overstate the gravity or the impact of the impropriety and the trial judge’s failure to acknowledge it. The reference was brief; the prosecutor did not dwell on appellant’s criminal record; and she linked his “convicted” status to the creditworthiness of his “word.” Especially because the priоr offenses were non-violent ones, the comment “did not come close to suggesting that [appellant] had a propensity to commit the crime charged, which would make
8.
Argument of Facts Not in Evidence.
“It is improper for an attorney to make an argument to the jury based on facts not in evidence or not rеasonably inferable from the evidence.”
Morrison v. United States,
Appellant argues that “with no facts in evidence [in particular, no expert opinion] to support her argument, the prosecutor [improperly] speculated [that] the nature and ‘angle’ of the wound sustained by Anthony Jones could only have resulted from appellant attacking Jones in the manner that Jones testified, not from appellant acting in self-defense.” We are not persuaded by this contention.
Jones testified that he was stabbed as he turned around to face appellant, who was standing nearby. Appellant testified that, acting in self-defense, he raised his knife and stabbed Jones when Jones “leaped” on him. Dr. Giordano, the surgeon who operated on Jones, testified that instead of going “directly backward,” Jones’s knife wound went “across the neck” from left to right. On the basis of this testimony, we think the prosecutor legitimately could argue that the sideways nature of the stab wound was consistent with Jones’s version of events rather than appellant’s version.
III.
Some, though not all, of the challenged comments by the prosecutor in her rebuttal argument were improper. We do not condone them. Nonetheless, we have found no error by the trial judge entitling appellant to reversal. His convictions are hereby affirmed. 8
Notes
. As we explained in Irick, although the complaint may be directed at the prosecutor,
it is our function to review the record for legal error or abuse of discretion by the trial judge, not by сounsel. Such error or abuse may, to be sure, embrace not only incorrect rulings but also, on occasion, failure to intervene sua sponte when such intervention is called for, ... or to react with sufficient promptness and vigor to prosecu-torial misdeeds.... Nonetheless, absent some improper ruling or omission by the trial judge, we cannot ordinarily reverse a conviction, and our ultimate focus must therefore be on what the judge did or failed to do.
. With regard to Jones, the prosecutor argued:
Now, Mr. Jones, contrary to what defense counsel would have you believe, Mr. Jones did not overstate the evidence. He told you what he remembers and he told you what he doesn’t remember. For example, he told you he didn’t see a knife in the defendant’s hand. He didn’t see it coming. He also told you that at first, he didn't feel anything. He was honest about that. He wasn’t overstating what he remembered and what he did not.
And he acknowledged that he had an altercation with the defendant two to three years ago and even told you during that altercation, pеople had to come and separate the defendant and Mr. Jones. But he also told you that at that time, there was no physical contact between the two of them. There might have been had not other people intervened. So he told you all these things. He didn't have to tell you this. This man, we submit is very credible.
. With regard to Daniels, the prosecutor argued:
Now, let's talk about Mr. Daniels, Earl Daniеls, the other chess player. Now, Mr. Daniels' testimony was incredibly straightforward. It was incredibly credible. He did not embellish. He told you what he saw and again, he didn’t tell you he saw everything. He told you that at the very moment of the stabbing, he was not looking. He acknowledged that. But he also told you what he saw immediately before the stabbing and what he sаw immediately after the stabbing_This is what Mr. Daniels testified to. This is what he saw. It was an incredibly clear, unembellished account.
(Emphasis added.)
. Regarding appellant’s credibility, the prosecutor began by stating, "first of all, with the defendant, you’re being asked to accept the word of a convicted thief and a convicted drug dealer.” An immediate defense objection was overruled; we shall address infra the propriety of the prosecutor's characterization of appellant as a convicted thief and drug dealer. The prosecutor continued:
[EJveryone is saying he committed this crime. Clearly, out of all of the witnesses, the defendant has a motive to tell — not to tell the truth about what he did that night. Because if he told the truth аbout what he did that night, wouldn't he have to confess to the crime?
Now, just because he’s the defendant, doesn't mean he has a free license to get on the stand and tell you a false story. There’s nothing in the law, nothing in the Judge's instruction that gives him that right just because he’s the defendant. The defendant clearly made false statements becаuse he knows he’s guilty. He had something to hide. And if he knows he’s guilty, shouldn't that be enough for you, for you to find him guilty?
(Emphasis added.)
. The judge instructed as follows:
Ladies and gentlemen, I wish to give you a few concluding instructions before you retire to deliberate. First, remember what I told you before the arguments, sometimes during the arguments, a lawyer for one party or another may have appeared to state a personal belief or opinion concerning the fact whether a witness can be believed.
As I told you before the lawyers argued, the lawyers are not permitted to express such a personal opinion during argument. The lawyers may only argue to you based on what the evidence shows. So if you think a lawyer expressed a personal opinion during argument, disregard the personal opinion and judge this case based only on the evidence.
. In
Harris,
the prosecutor remarked that "evidence that he’s a thief is introduced to tell you that he's not the kind of man you should believe when he gets up on the witness stand.”
. The instruction was as follows:
You have heard evidence that the defendant, Larry Finch has previously been convicted of crimes. A defendant’s prior criminal conviction is admitted into evidence solely for your consideration in evaluating the defendant’s credibility as a witness. The fact that the defendant was convicted of a crime in the past is not evidence that the defendant is guilty of the offense with which he is charged in this case. You must not draw any inference of guilt against the defendant from his prior conviction. You may only consider his prior conviction in evaluating the credibility of his testimony in this case.
. Although neither party mentions it, we presume that the conviction on the lesser offense
