A jury сonvicted appellant of manslaughter while armed, D.C.Code §§ 22-2405, -3202 (1989), for strangling Damon Chase to death with a belt after a prolonged fist fight. Appellant was sentenced to prison for not fewer than seven nor more than twenty-one years. On appeal, he contends: (1) the trial court erred in refusing to permit appellant’s trial counsel to impeach a government witness with a prior inconsistent statement, and (2) the prosecutor engaged in misconduct during closing and rebuttal arguments when he commented on appellant’s failure to testify, shifted the burden of proof to the defense, and misstated medical testimony. We affirm.
I. Facts
According to appellant’s written statement given to investigating detectives five hours after the incident, 1 appellant was sitting in his apartment with three others watching a football game. He had drunk three six-packs of beer by the time Chase entered the apartment “talking shit” 2 and telling appellant “he would whip my ass.” Appellant told Chase to leave and said he did not fear Chase. Chase, he said, then “started swinging on me and hit me in the mouth.” Appellant tackled Chase, threw him on the floor, began hitting him, and told Chase he “was going to kill him.” Appellant described the remainder of the fight:
I was on top of him hitting him, then he was on top of me hitting me, and then I flipped him back over and hit him some more. Then I took my belt from my pants and put it around his neck and started choking him. He started saying, “No,” and then I let him go. I said to him that I was going to kill him today, and I meant to do it. I choked him some more and then I got off him and he was laying there. I then got off him.”
George Nickens, who owned the apartment, died before trial. Defense counsel read into evidence Nickens’ grand jury testimony, including the signed statement he had given to the police. That statement substantially corroborated appellant’s statemеnt: Nickens added that appellant held the belt around Chase’s neck “from 5 to 10 minutes.” Nickens also said that during the fight appellant was fighting for his life because “[i]f Chase had had the leverage on him, he’d have killed [appellant].”
According to Metropolitan Police Officers Beckwith and Williams, when they arrived appellant explained that Chase (who was on the floor motionless, his face turning blue) was not dead; he was only faking. Appellant grabbed Chase’s feet and dragged the body across the floor attempting to revive Chase. When Chase did not recover, appellant became nervous, began pacing, and said: “Yeah. I killed him. I choked him.”
Not surprisingly, appellant claimed self-defense, arguing thаt at the time appellant choked Chase, Chase still posed a threat from which appellant had to use deadly force to protect himself.
II. Refusal To Permit Impeachment With Prior Inconsistent Statement
Appellant contends the trial court erred in precluding defense counsel from using a *915 prior inconsistent statement to impeach the principal government witness, Thomas Frederick. 3 Frederick had known both Chase and appellant for a number of years. At trial, Frederick testified that he had opened the door and let Chase into Nick-ens’ apartment. Chase then told Delores Henry (the other visitor in the apartment) that she had a phone call at another apartment in the сomplex. Frederick returned to the kitchen and heard (but did not see) Chase and appellant arguing and beginning to fight. Frederick watched the last part of the fight from the kitchen. Frederick testified that he had drunk a “half pint” and some beer that afternoon and that his drinking impaired his memory of the fight.
Defense counsel perceived that Frederick’s testimony contrаdicted a written statement he had given to the police the day of the fight. In that statement, 4 Frederick declared that Chase had come to the apartment to challenge appellant to fight, not to tell Henry she had a phone call. In the statement, moreover, Frederick described Chase as a “pain in the ass” and claimed — in contrast with his trial testimony — that he had been present when the fight started.
At trial, counsel attempted to impeach Frederick with this written statement. Frederick remembered making the statement but could not recall what he had told the police or whether he had signed the statement. Counsel attempted — but failed — to refresh Frederick’s memory with the statement.
Appellаnt’s counsel then tried to call as a witness the detective who had taken Frederick’s statement, but the trial court denied permission to do so. The court did so because Frederick “didn’t remember anything he told the police in that statement, and he didn’t know anything more about how the fight started than he testified on direct, and ... indeed, he had been drinking, which leaves seriоus doubts respecting whatever it was he told the police in that statement is accurate or true.” The trial court also refused to admit Frederick’s statement into evidence.
We agree with appellant that the trial court erred in refusing to permit the proffered impeachment and the extrinsic evidence of Frederick’s prior statement. Wе note, first, that as a general proposition prior inconsistent statements are admissible, upon request, for purposes of impeachment (but not for the truth of the statement itself).
See Jefferson v. United States,
[W]hen the witness denies giving the answer, or does not remember doing so and his recollection is not refreshed upon the reading of the questions and his answers, the deposition should be offered and received as evidence that the statements were made, again only to affect credibility and not as affirmative evidence.
Id. at 128 (footnote omitted). That rule should apply in all cases, civil and criminal, with respect to all prior inconsistent statements, whether depositions, statements to the police, or other earlier utterances.
The trial court accordingly erred in ruling Frederick’s prior statement inadmissible for impeachment. We now determine
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whether the error was harmless.
See Jefferson,
The ultimate issue is whether appellant acted with reasonable force approximately thirty minutes after Chase had entered the apartment, i.e. at the time, after a prolonged fistfight, when appellant took off his belt and choked Chase to death over a period of five to seven minutes. Frederick’s apparent inconsistencies about Chase’s entry into the apartment did not directly pertain to this crucial time. The possibility that Chase did not come to the apartment as a benign visitor may have enhanced appellant’s claim that he responded to Chase initially in self-defense and, in Nickens’ words, “was fighting for his life.” But even if Chase entered the apartment in a threаtening manner and started the fight — as Nickens and appellant himself stated without contradiction — this does not necessarily imply that appellant was still acting in self-defense thirty minutes later, when appellant killed Chase. Any impeachment discrediting Frederick’s “benign visitor” testimony, while reinforcing Nick-ens’ and appellant’s statements, was only marginally relevant to the issue of self-defense later, when appellant choked Chase over a substantial period of time. At that time appellant was clearly in control of the situation and appeared not to be in imminent danger. By his own admission, after he started to choke Chase and Chase exclaimed “No,” appellant “let him go.” But then appellant tоld Chase he “was going to kill him today” and “choke him some more” —to death.
Furthermore, Frederick’s unimpeached trial testimony was not inconsistent with appellant’s self-defense theory. Even if the jury credited Frederick’s testimony— that Chase had entered the apartment as a benign visitor — Chase still could have started the fight later by throwing a punch at appellаnt (as both Nickens and appellant said Chase did) and thereby triggered appellant’s right of self-defense. 5
In sum, the court’s error was harmless because the proffered inconsistencies did not relate to the crucial time during the fight or otherwise substantially affect appellant’s claim of self-defense.
III. PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
Appellant also contends the prosecutor tainted the verdict with impermissible comments during closing and rebuttal arguments. In reviewing alleged prosecutorial misconduct, we first must determine whether the prosecutor’s words or actions constituted misconduct.
See Hammill v. United States,
A. Prosecutor’s Comments on Appellant’s Failure to Testify
In closing, the prosecutor asked:
*917 [W]here are the facts that showed that at that time, Frederick Gray actually believed he was in danger of death or serious bodily harm? Where is that evidence? Where is the evidence that that was reasonable? And where is the evidence that showed he had to take his belt off and crush Damon Chase’s throat?
And in rebuttal the prosecutor stressed: [W]here is the evidence that at the point in this fight, where Frederick Gray was sitting on Damon Chase’s back on the ground that Frederick Gray actually felt himself in fear of death or serious bodily injury, that that was reasonable at that point and that he has to kill to protect himself at that point.... There wasn’t one word about that.
The trial court overruled defense counsel’s objections to these statements.
Appellant contends the prosecutor improperly commented on appellant’s failure to testify. Appellant acknowledges that these comments do not expressly refer to his failure to testify. He relies, however, on
Logan v. United States,
Appellant argues that the prosecutor’s comments about what appellant “actually believed” and “actually felt” when he was choking Chase “naturally and necessarily” implicated his failure to testify at trial. Appellant stresses that he was the only person who could have provided this information. This argument is unconvincing. We do not attach the most sinister possible interpretation to a prosecutor’s remarks, particularly when evidence of an intended impropriety is lacking (as in this case).
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
Moreover, appellant’s own statement was not the only source of evidence on the question whether, subjectively, appellant feared imminent serious bodily injury. On occasion, a defendant’s subjective belief of danger can be determined from the objective circumstances of the killing.
See Fersner v. United States,
In this case, the jury heard two eyewitness accounts of the fight — Frederick’s trial testimony and Nickens’ signed statement — as well as appellant’s own statement. The prosecutor’s comments in closing and on rebuttal, therefore, may be viewed as comments on the failure of the defense in general to demonstrate any basis for believing appellant actually felt or believed he was in imminent danger of bodily harm justifying deadly force in response. The prosecutor’s comments did not naturally and necessarily implicate defendant’s failure to testify.
B. Shifting Burden of Proof
Similarly unavailing is the contention that thеse same comments by the prosecutor, questioning “where is the evidence?” to show appellant was in fear, improperly shifted the burden of proof of self-defense to appellant. We must evaluate the prosecutor’s statements in context, considering
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the effects of the trial court’s corrective action, if any,
see Irick,
We have said that, “once raised, self-defense is an element of homicide that must be disproved by the government beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Davis v. United States,
C. Comments on Physical Evidence
Finally, we turn to appellant’s contention that the prosecutor improperly tainted the verdict when he repeatedly misstated the evidence of Chase’s physical condition. We do not believe the prosecutor misstated evidence.
The prosecutor attempted to undermine appellant’s claim of self-defense by arguing, in closing, that Chase’s heart condition and brain swelling prevented Chase from inflicting serious injury or death on appellant. The prosecutor based these comments on evidence of record. Dr. Compari-ni testified that Chase had a very damaged heart and, as a consequence, could not perform as well as someone with a normal heart. Dr. Comparini also testified that Chase’s brain had swelled, either from blows to the head or from lack of oxygen. She further testified that she сould not pinpoint the precise moment when the swelling occurred, but she concluded that blows to Chase’s head during the fight could have caused some of the swelling.
Given this medical testimony, “we do not discern anything in the remarks challenged by the defense which goes beyond reasonable (though perhaps partisan) inferences from the evidence. Thе judge’s routine instruction to the jurors that their recollection controls was, in our view, sufficient to remedy any arguable overstatement.”
Dixon,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant exercised his right not to testify at trial. His prior statement was proffered by the government and admitted into evidence.
. Appellant explained that he and Chase had been arguing earlier that day.
. Appellant’s name is Frederick Gray. All references to "Frederick” in this opinion are to the government's witness, Thomas Frederick.
. Frederick’s written statement is not in the record on appeal. The trial court summarized it, however, during a bench conference with counsel at trial and in this way preserved the statement for the record.
. Defense counsel did use thе prior statement, during cross examination, to question Frederick about his testimony. The jury heard Frederick's alleged statements to the police that Chase had come into the apartment and challenged appellant to a fight, and that Frederick had seen the beginning of the fight. The jury, therefore, at least became aware of Frederick's possible inconsistencies.
This is not a case, however, in which the prior statement itself was before the fact-finder, even though not formally admitted in evidence.
See Fireman’s Ins. Co.,
. The trial court gave the following instructions: Criminal Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 2.08 (3d ed. 1978) (burden of proof); id. No. 2.26 (defendant’s right not to testify); id. No. 5.13 (self-defense).
