In this appeal from his convictions for several counts of assault, including assault with a dangerous weapon (D.C. Code § 22-502 (1989)), and related offenses, appellant makes only one argument requiring extended discussion. 1 He contends that the trial judge’s modification of the standard jury instruction explaining the concept of “reasonable doubt” was constitutional error and reversible despite his failure to object to it at trial. Finding no plain error, we affirm.
The standard (“Redbook”) instruction on reasonable doubt in this jurisdiction states:
Reasonable doubt, as the name implies, is a doubt based on reason, a doubt for which you can give a reason. It is such a doubt as would cause a juror, after careful and candid and impartial consideration of all the evidence, to be so undecided that he cannot say that he has an abiding conviction of the defendant’s guilt. It is such a doubt as would cause a reasonable person to hesitate or pause in the graver or more important transactions of life. However, it is not a fanciful doubt nor a whimsical doubt, nor a doubt based on conjecture. It is a doubt which is based on reason. The government is not required to establish guilt beyond all doubt, or to a mathematical certainty or a scientific certainty. Its *794 burden is to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.[ 2 ]
Except for strictly formal changes (e.g., substituting “you” for “he”), the only change which the trial judge made to the instruction was to substitute the phrase “a deep rooted belief in” for the phrase “an abiding conviction of.”
In a recent decision,
United States v. Merlos,
Although the Supreme Court has stated that “attempts to explain the term ‘reasonable doubt’ do not usually result in making it any clearer to the minds of the jury,”
Holland v. United States,
The judge’s modification of the standard instruction stemmed, most probably, from his dissatisfaction with the phrase “abiding conviction,” a dissatisfaction we share. The adjective “abiding” borders on the archaic, hence may carry little precise meaning to modern ears; and “conviction” has its own *795 potential for confusion with, say, conviction for a crime. We therefore do not shy from encouraging trial judges to substitute for “abiding conviction” the participial phrase “firmly convinced” employed in the federal pattern instruction referred to above. 5 That modification of the Redbook instruction would be slight yet beneficial.
Our present task, however, is to decide this ease, and the critical point is that we do not review here for whether the trial judge’s reformulation was error, even of constitutional magnitude. Appellant made no objection to the instruction as given. In these circumstances our obligation is to inquire whether the alleged defect was “plain error” under the test of Super.Ct.Crim.R. 52(b). Under this standard we ask, first, whether the error was “obvious or readily apparent,”
Harris v. United States,
Applying this test to the present case, we conclude first that the discernible difference between a “deep rooted belief’ and an “abiding conviction” is not great enough to establish “forfeited error” under Rule 52(b).
Olano,
— U.S. at —,
Neither was the asserted error so prejudicial to appellant’s rights “as to jeopardize the very fairness and integrity of the trial.”
Harris,
[t]he reasonable doubt instruction did not eliminate any essential elements of the charged offenses. It did not serve to direct a verdict of guilty. It did not omit to mention reasonable doubt altogether. It simply reformulated one component of an otherwise entirely accurate and comprehensive reasonable-doubt instruction.
Moreover, this was not a complex case nor one at all close on the evidence. The government presented strong proof of assault with a dangerous weapon (the only conviction appellant even challenges for sufficiency),
i.e.,
that appellant forced his way into the victim’s apartment, chased her, pushed her to the floor, kicked her several times in the ribs with his steel-toed boots, and at the same time threatened to kill her.
See United States v. Jensen,
We must consider, nevertheless, appellant’s argument that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Sullivan v. Louisiana, supra,
entirely “bars application of a plain error, prejudice inquiry” to a ease, which he asserts this to be, in which the jury’s findings are “vitiated” by a misdescription of the burden of proof. Even on the hypothesis that the judge partly misdescribed the government’s burden here, appellant’s reliance on
Sullivan
is misplaced. The Court in
Sullivan
had before it no issue of failure of the defendant to object to an instruction. It held that a constitutionally deficient reasonable doubt instruction cannot be
harmless
error under
Chapman v. California,
The plain error rule reflects a “careful balancing of our need to encourage all trial participants to seek a fair and accurate trial the first time around against our insistence that obvious injustice be promptly redressed.”
United States v. Frady,
Accordingly, with the exception that appellant’s two convictions for simple assault must be vacated on remand, the judgment of conviction is
Affirmed.
Notes
. We reject appellant’s claim that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction for assault with a dangerous weapon,
i.e.,
with steel-toed boots.
See Arthur v. United States,
. Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 2.09 (3d ed. 1978) (the "Redook”). After the trial in this case, the fourth edition of the standard jury instructions was published; it leaves the reasonable doubt instruction essentially unchanged.
. See Federal Judicial Center, Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions, No. 21 (1988 ed.) ("Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves you firmly convinced of the defendant’s guilt”).
. In
Merlos, supra,
the D.C. Circuit originally found the defective reasonable doubt instruction to be constitutionally harmless error. After the Supreme Court decided
Sullivan v. Louisiana, supra,
however, the court of appeals vacated its judgment as to Merlos' co-defendant who had objected to the instruction, and remanded for a new trial as to him.
See United States v. Loriano,
. Thus the sentence in question from the standard Redbook instruction would be changed to read as follows (substituting “you," as did the trial judge, for "a juror” or “he [she]”): "It is such a doubt as would cause you, after careful and candid and impartial consideration of all the evidence, to be so undecided that you cannot say that you are firmly convinced of the defendant’s guilt." Despite our observation in note 8, infra, we do not go farther here and urge revision of the syntax of this somewhat complicated sentence.
. No similar definition was given to the jury in Merlos.
. In this respect the instruction was similar to other parts of the instruction given in Merlos.
. We note that in Merlos, supra, the phrase "strong belief” appeared in a straightforward, easily-grasped sentence defining the government's burden of proof. By contrast, the phrase "deep rooted belief” in our case appeared in a rather involuted description of what would not satisfy the government’s burden ("such a doubt as would cause one of you ... to be so undecided that you could not say you have an abiding conviction....”). As a practical matter (in a case where the jury apparently did not have the judge's instructions in writing), one wonders whether the jury even assimilated this complex sentence before the judge moved on to the rest of the instruction.
. Sullivan
s reasoning was twofold. First, a jury verdict which, because it lessens the government’s burden of proof, "does not produce [a jury verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt],” — U.S. at —,
. The
Cage
instruction compounded the error by defining evidentiary certainty in terms of "moral certainty.”
