Appellants raise two issues in this appeal from their convictions by a jury of felony murder while armed during the commission of a burglary in the first degree (D.C.Code §§ 22-2401, -3201 (1981)) and first degree *166 burglary (D.C.Code § 22-1801(a) (1981)). They contend their convictions of burglary, and the associated felony murder counts,' cannot stand because the government failed to produce sufficient evidence that they entered the premises with the intent to steal. They also argue that the prosecutor’s closing argument substantially prejudiced them and infected the verdict. After reviewing the record, we conclude there was sufficient evidence for the jury to convict appellants of first degree burglary and the associated felony murder counts, but reverse because the prosecutor’s closing argument in the persona of the decedent was improper, as the government concedes, and substantially prejudiced appellants. 1
I.
Antonio Alameda, age 51, was murdered in his apartment in Northwest Washington, D.C. between the evening of June 12 and the morning of June 13, 1980. He had been stabbed fifteen times, his throat had been cut, and a plastic camera cover had been tied over his head. 2 There were bruises on the ring finger of his left hand and his pants pockets were turned inside out; his empty wallet was found in a waste basket. His apartment had been ransacked and property was missing, including a new television set, new stereo, camera equipment, and jewelry (cuff links, tie clips, St. Christopher medals, and a ring with a stone and engraving). His car keys and his car, which was usually parked next to the apartment building, were missing.
The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, 3 established that Mr. Alameda had befriended young boys over the years, some of whom had lived with him, including appellant William Hawthorne. Around the time William had lived there, Mr. Alameda had purchased a television set, a sofa and stereophonic equipment. Mr. Alameda also had a small darkroom and camera equipment in his apartment. Appellant’s brother, Michael Hawthorne, had lived with Mr. Alameda for several years before William had moved in, and had seen William at Mr. Alameda’s apartment in April, 1980 listening with Mr. Alameda to his new stereo. 4
The appellants were cousins and boyhood friends who had grown up together and were together regularly, according to Jet-er’s aunt, Layonne Towles. She also testified that around the time of Mr. Alameda’s murder, 5 both appellants had come late one night to her home on Ontario Road, Northwest, where Jeter lived, and she had seen fresh blood on Hawthorne’s hands and shoes. Charlotte Hill Lacy, in whose home on Park Road, Northwest, Hawthorne and his mother lived, testified she saw blood on his clothes around the same time, early one morning. Several days after the murder, Jeter’s cousin, Sandra Grigsby, saw the appellants in her home in Northeast, while they were looking at camera equipment *167 and jewelry, including a ring and St. Christopher medal which Michael Hawthorne identified as belonging to Mr. Alameda. Edith Grigsby, Jeter’s aunt and Sandra’s mother, substantially corroborated Sandra’s testimony and also testified that Hawthorne had told her he had recently disposed of a television set and stereophonic equipment that he had taken from someone else’s home. Later he told her that someone had killed Mr. Alameda, tying a plastic bag over his head, and had laughed when she said he must have been involved since he seemed to know so much about it. Barbara Graves also testified that during the summer of 1980 Hawthorne told her that he and another person 6 had gone to Mr. Alameda’s apartment, and that he had hit Mr. Alameda and the other person had stabbed Mr. Alameda, and afterwards they had taken Mr. Alameda’s property from the apartment. Barbara’s mother, Ann Graves, testified that Hawthorne had told her the same thing in November 1981.
Other testimony established that there was no sign of forced entry to Mr. Alame-da’s apartment, thereby indicating that Mr. Alameda, who was very cautious about letting people into his apartment, knew his killers. Jeter’s fingerprint was found in dust on the windowsill inside Mr. Alame-da’s apartment. 7 Mr. Alameda’s car was found a block from Jeter’s home on Ontario Road, Northwest, and James Richardson had bought Mr. Alameda’s ring from Jeter a few days after the murder.
Appellant Hawthorne did not present any evidence in his defense. Appellant Jeter’s defense was that he was not in the neighborhood when Mr. Alameda was killed and had left his fingerprint in the apartment in March, when he had helped a friend move Mr. Alameda’s old sofa out of the apartment. 8
II.
The appropriate standard in reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence is “whether there was sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jur- or could fairly conclude guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Head v. United States,
The crime of burglary requires an entry, with or without a breaking, and a contemporaneous intent to commit a criminal offense.
Massey, supra
note 3,
Unexplained or unsatisfactorily explained possession of stolen property cannot, by itself, give rise to the inference that a burglary was committed; by itself such evidence only gives rise to the inference that the possessor stole the property or received stolen property.
White v. United States,
The case against appellants is strikingly similar to
Byrd, supra,
The evidence against appellant Hawthorne established that he was well acquainted with Mr. Alameda, knew he owned valuable property, and was in possession of Mr. Alameda’s property after he had been murdered. His admission that he was in Mr. Alameda’s apartment and took his property on the night he was murdered could properly be considered by the jury as corroborating evidence. Thus, a reasonable inference arises that Hawthorne entered the apartment intending to steal valuable property that he was later found to possess.
Byrd, supra,
Accordingly, we hold there was sufficient evidence of burglary in the first degree upon which a jury could find the appellants guilty.
Byrd, supra,
III.
Appellants also urge reversal of their convictions on the ground that the prosecutor’s closing argument was improper and substantially prejudiced the outcome of their trial. The government has conceded the impropriety of the closing argument but asserts the proper standard of review is plain error which appellants have failed to demonstrate.
The government contends that appellants’ failure to object until the initial closing argument was over, despite the trial court’s admonitions to counsel to object promptly to alleged errors, constitutes a waiver of review except for plain error.
Watts v. United States,
This court has held that once prosecutorial misconduct has been found, the conviction will be reversed if the error rises to the level of substantial prejudice.
Dent v. United States,
The prosecutor delivered most of his closing argument in the first-person voice of the deceased, Mr. Alameda. In the first sentence of his initial closing argument, the prosecutor announced to the jury that “I on behalf of Mr. Alameda have an opportunity to speak to you.” Then, after explaining the nature of the circumstantial evidence, the prosecutor returned to the theme of speaking for Mr. Alameda. The argument rambled through aspects of Mr. Alameda’s life, including his good works for the community’s young people, his planned trip to visit his parents, his hopes to live to be 60 years old and to die from natural causes, and suggestions that he was a homosexual. In focusing on the murder, the prosecutor, still speaking as Mr. Alameda, described how he answered the door and let appellants into his apartment, how he felt when he was being stabbed, how he had not screamed because he could not believe it was happening to him, and how his throat was cut “as people often do in sacrifices.” The prosecutor told the jury, still as Mr. Alameda, that he was not angry at William Hawthorne but thought “it wasn’t fair. I shouldn’t have died that way.” The argument graphically portrayed the brutality of the killing 13 and highlighted Mr. Alameda’s kindliness. The prosecutor told the jury that Mr. Alameda’s eyes were open while he was being stabbed and that he had asked appellants why they were doing this *171 to him, since he would have given them the things they had taken if they had asked. The prosecutor continually told the jury about what Mr. Alameda knew after he had died, 14 and repeated that Mr. Alameda could not comprehend that William Hawthorne would do this to him since Mr. Alameda had taken him into his home.
Appellant Hawthorne claims the prosecutor’s closing argument is “a text-book illustration of what constitutes unfair, prejudicial tactics which were purposely designed wrongfully to appeal to the emotions and sympathy of the jury ...” contrary to the guidelines set for prosecutors by the Supreme Court in
Berger v. United States,
It is beyond peradventure to suggest that the prosecutor was confused about his responsibilities in this case. As set forth in
Berger, supra,
The United States Attorney is the representative not of any ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore, in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done. As such, he is in a peculiar and very definite sense the servant of the law, the twofold aim of which is that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer. He may prosecute with earnestness and vigor— indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one.
The question before us is whether the ill-founded rhetorical device, which the government commendably admits “has no place in a criminal trial,” was so pervasive and inflammatory that “when viewed in totality, ... the cumulative effect of prose-cutorial misconduct substantially interfered with the jury’s ability to evaluate the evi-dence_”
Powell, supra,
The first person singular rhetorical device had the dual effect of placing the prosecutor in the victim’s shoes and turning the prosecutor into Mr. Alameda’s personal representative. A prosecutor may no more represent the victim in this fashion than he may urge the jurors to place themselves in the victim’s shoes.
Clarke v. United States,
Finally, we cannot say with fair assurance that the trial court’s instructions to the jury adequately protected appellants. The trial court did not caution the prosecutor during his initial closing argument to the jury.
18
Parks v. United States,
The statements and arguments of counsel are not evidence. They are only intended to assist you in understanding the evidence and the positions of the parties.
In our view, this was insufficient to eradicate the harm done. Indeed it can be read to have exacerbated the error for the argument cannot fairly be characterized as “intended to assist ... in understanding the evidence.” The prosecutor’s in persona argument required more than a delayed, minimal corrective instruction to assure that the jury was not improperly swayed in its judgment. See
Powell, supra,
Under these circumstances, we find “prejudice to the cause of the accused is so highly probable that we are not justified in assuming its nonexistence.”
Berger, supra,
[C]ase law in this jurisdiction has put counsel on notice that certain types of arguments are impermissible and that counsel who practice here, including *173 prosecutors, are expected to abide by those decisions. The failure by prosecutors to do so will result in the reversal of convictions whenever it is shown that prosecutorial excesses have created substantial prejudice and thus infected the verdict.
We hold appellants were substantially prejudiced by the prosecutor’s use of the first-person rhetorical device which transformed him into the victim begging for the jury’s sympathy. Accordingly we reverse appellants’ convictions and remand for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Appellant Jeter also contends he was prejudiced by the admission into evidence of an ineffectively redacted confession of his co-defendant who did not testify. He relies on
Bruton v. United States,
. The medical examiner testified that the cause of death was multiple stab wounds to the neck and upper back associated with asphyxiation caused by the plastic bag. He opined that two people with two knives had stabbed Mr. Alame-da, but admitted on cross-examination that he could not be sure how many people had done the stabbings.
.
Massey v. United States,
. There was also evidence that appellant William Hawthorne disapproved of Michael’s relationship with Mr. Alameda, and was upset that Michael was "messing” sexually with Mr. Alame-da.
. The government’s witnesses were unable to remember precise dates. They testified that these events occurred in the middle of June, when Mr. Alameda was killed.
.Outside the presence of the jury, it was determined that Hawthorne had identified the other person as Jeter. Ms. Graves’ statement had been redacted to eliminate Hawthorne’s references to Jeter and to a fingerprint on the windowsill.
. In its case-in-chief the government presented evidence of Mr. Alameda’s penchant for cleanliness in an attempt to establish that Jeter’s fingerprint was very recently left in the apartment. The windowsill on which the print was found had a slight layer of dust, indicating the sill had been recently dusted. Cross-examination established that it was impossible to know the age of a fingerprint.
. The friend, Walter Lacy, testified that Mr. Alameda had given him the sofa and he and Jeter had moved it in March 1980. But Mr. Gunther, who drove the van which was used to move the sofa, testified they had moved the sofa only two or three days before he heard of Mr. Alameda's death. Mr. Gunther did not identify Jeter in court as the person who helped to move the sofa.
.Appellants moved for judgment of acquittal at the close of the government’s case and again at the close of all the evidence. They were originally charged with felony murder and grand larceny, felony murder and robbery, and felony murder and burglary. At the close of the government’s case the trial court granted judgment of acquittal on the grand larceny and associated felony murder charges since the government had not produced evidence of the value of the stolen items. The jury acquitted both appellants of the robbery counts and the accompanying counts of felony murder.
. A defendant who introduces evidence after denial of the motion thereby waives that motion; consequently it is the denial of the motion made at the close of all the evidence that is the proper subject of our scrutiny, and in determining the propriety of the trial court’s denial of the motion at the close of all the evidence we may consider its sufficiency in the light of all the evidence introduced.
Franey v. United States,
. Trial counsel for both appellants made oral motions for mistrial immediately following the completion of the prosecutor’s initial closing argument, before any other closing arguments commenced.
. In
Harris, supra,
. The record indicates that during his argument the prosecutor put photographic exhibits of Mr. Alameda's body and apartment on the jury box and threw others (including Mr. Alameda’s shirt with blood stains) on the floor.
. For example, the prosecutor, as Mr. Alame-da, said "because William is very talkative and I knew he was going to tell his aunt that he had got somebody’s television and somebody’s receiver and sold it because they were big items.” Later he told the jury that it never crossed appellants’ minds that Sandra Grigsby would pay any attention to what was going on.
. The quotations in this paragraph are from the briefs filed by the parties in this court.
. Appellant Jeter also contends the prosecutor misstated testimony and used appellant Hawthorne’s admission against him, although the admission was only in evidence against Hawthorne. In view of our ruling, we do not examine these claims of error.
. For example, we find no other purpose reasonably evident in the prosecutor’s seance-like recounting of how Mr. Alameda felt about his murderers after he had died.
See Viereck v.
*172
United States,
. After denying defense counsels’ motions for mistrial, the trial court admonished the prosecutor, during a bench conference, to refrain from such tactics in his rebuttal argument.
