Appellant, Donte J. Kidd, challenges his conviction on the charge of first-degree premeditated murder while armed.
1
He mainly contends that the trial court’s erroneous aiding and abetting jury instruction violated his constitutional due process right, because under our decision in
Wilson-Bey v. United States,
FACTUAL SUMMARY
The government presented evidence showing that on June 29, 2002, around 3:30 a.m., DeWayne Weaver was shot and killed in the 1400 block of Canal Street, in the Southwest quadrant of the District, near P Street and Fort McNair. Three eyewitnesses gave testimony at trial in behalf of the government. Rebecca Lindsay, who resided in the area of the shooting, was playing in the courtyard of the Canal Street apartment complexes 4 with her younger brother, Robert Lindsay. As the siblings bounced a basketball back and forth, the ball at one time veered toward Mr. Weaver. Mr. Weaver retrieved the basketball, returned it to Robert, and walked toward a clothesline pole. When Mr. Weaver was approximately twenty feet away from Ms. Lindsay, she saw Mr. Kidd emerge from a “cut” or alleyway. She knew Mr. Kidd because she had dated his brother. Nothing obstructed Ms. Lindsay’s view. As Mr. Kidd emerged from the cut, he had a black gun in his hand. Mr. Weaver held his hands out and said, ‘What? You can’t take a as* whipping?” Ms. Lindsay also saw a second man come out of the alleyway with a gun. Mr. Kidd stood on one side of Mr. Weaver and the second man on the other side; Mr. Kidd pointed his gun to Mr. Weaver’s side. Ms. Lindsay watched as a third man arrived with a gun and walking fast, stood behind Mr. Weaver, pointed the gun close to the back of his head and shot him. Ms. Lindsay heard two shots. Mr. Weaver fell to the ground; the shooter ran away. Ms. Lindsay “hesitated,” and ran into an apartment building (1414), but she went out again to get her brother. They went into the building. Ms. Lindsay heard several more shots, and after a “couple of seconds,” she went outside again. She noticed that Mr. Weaver was dead, and that another person (Irving Winslow) had been shot, but she did not see that shooting. Because of her fear, Ms. Lindsay did not speak to the police until July 6, 2002, but she did tell Alicia Hawkins and Sharice Foxx on June 29, 2002, that she saw the shooting. She also reported to them that Mr. Kidd was at the scene of the shooting and had a gun. While speaking with the police on July 6, Ms. Lindsay identified Mr. Kidd as one of the individuals who pointed a gun at Mr. Weaver.
Robert Lindsay testified that Mr. Kidd was a friend, and that he knew Mr. Weaver through Mr. Weaver’s brother. Mr. Weaver and Mr. Kidd did not get along. He had seen them fight and argue. On June 29, around 3:30 a.m., he was playing basketball with his sister, shooting the ball against the numbers on the apartment building. After Mr. Weaver returned the basketball to him when he lost control of it, Mr. Lindsay saw him walk over to a *122 clothesline pole, and observed Mr. Kidd and someone else walk toward him. Mr. Kidd had a gun which he pointed toward Mr. Weaver’s “lower stomach.” The second person held a gun to Mr. Weaver’s head. Mr. Weaver “mentioned something earlier about a fight,” saying: “You can’t take an as* whipping.” Mr. Weaver did not have a gun in his hand. A third man “came out of the cut, [and] shot Mr. Weaver in the back of his head.” Mr. Weaver “went limp.” Mr. Lindsay was about fifteen feet away and had an unobstructed view of the shooting. His sister ran into the apartment building, but he “[s]tood there because [he] was shocked.” Mr. Kidd and the second man ran. “The third individual picked up some silver things off the ground,” and ran. Mr. Lindsay heard “multiple” shots as the perpetrators ran away. His sister came back, “grabbed” him, and they returned to the apartment. When he emerged from the apartment building, he saw Mr. Weaver on the ground. He also observed that Mr. Win-slow had been shot in the leg. Mr. Lindsay did not speak with the police on June 29, 2002, but he spoke with a detective on February 13, 2003. He identified Mr. Kidd as one of the persons who held a gun to Mr. Weaver.
At the time of the shooting, Alicia Hawkins, who also lived in the neighborhood, was drinking beer with her friend Sharice Foxx, Irving Winslow, and others on the porch at the 1420 apartment building. She had consumed about four beers. When she left the porch to return to her apartment, located in the 1414 building, she saw Mr. Kidd and another man around Mr. Weaver. She noticed that Rebecca and Robert Lindsay also were in the courtyard. Ms. Hawkins knew Mr. Kidd and had been “intimate’ with him ‘a few times.’ She also knew Mr. Weaver and the Lindsays. Mr. Kidd had ‘his arm out,” but she could not see what was in his hand. Another man “[c]ame from ‘round the corner, stuck his arm out, and [Mr.] Weaver fell.’” The man’s arm had been pointing “from [Mr. Weaver’s] head to [his] neck,’ and Ms. Hawkins had heard ‘about two’ shots. Mr. Kidd and the other men ‘took off after Mr. Weaver fell. Ms. Hawkins went back toward the porch on which she had been sitting and went into the building. She heard more shots, around two or three. Seconds later, she left the building and went to Mr. Weaver to see ‘where he had been shot at.’ She held his hand and was crying; there was no response from him. Soon she heard Irving Winslow ‘screaming’ and walked across the street. Mr. Winslow had been shot ‘[i]n the legs.’ ” Ms. Hawkins went into the 1414 building and saw Rebecca and Robert Lindsay. Rebecca described what she had witnessed.
The prosecutor brought out on direct examination of Ms. Hawkins that she had lied to certain law enforcement officials about details she had not seen. Because she was “angry and upset,” Ms. Hawkins went to Fort McNair and told a police officer that “Donte [Kidd] and his friends shot [Mr.] Weaver and shot [Mr.] Win-slow.” Although she did not see a gun in Mr. Kidd’s hand, Ms. Hawkins reported that he had a gun when Mr. Weaver was shot, and she lied to the police about seeing Mr. Winslow shot. When Ms. Hawkins spoke with a police detective later that evening, she also lied about seeing both Mr. Kidd and the shooter with a gun. She said she was upset and repeated details mentioned by Ms. Lindsay. When defense investigators interviewed her, Ms. Hawkins said Mr. Kidd was dead, which was not true. However, Ms. Hawkins stated when she appeared before the grand jury, she only recounted what she actually had seen.
*123 Sharice Foxx, who lived in the Southwest neighborhood, was drinking beer (and also a small cup of Hennessy) and sitting on the porch of the 1420 apartment budding with Ms. Hawkins, Mr. Winslow, and others on the early morning of Mr. Weaver’s murder. Ms. Foxx’s best Mend was Mr. Weaver’s brother. She confirmed that Ms. Hawkins had left the porch that morning to go to the bathroom. Mr. Winslow received a telephone call and left the porch. As she was walking through the courtyard, Ms. Foxx heard two shots, followed by a “pause.” She was “stunned.” Ms. Hawkins returned and “pulled” her into the 1420 building. Ms. Foxx ran to the second floor and got down on the ground. She heard five more shots, but did not see the shooting. After the shots stopped, she looked out of the window and saw Mr. Winslow on the ground. When she heard Ms. Hawkins scream, “They shot Weaver,” she went outside and over to Weaver who was on the ground, on his back, with blood coming from his head. She took his hand and asked him to squeeze her hand, but there was no response. She spoke with Rebecca Lindsay a little bit later, and Ms. Lindsay described what she had seen. Ms. Foxx recounted the details in court that Ms. Lindsay had given her.
Dr. Gertrude Juste, a District of Columbia medical examiner, performed an autopsy on Mr. Weaver’s body. She explained that he died from “a gunshot wound to the head which perforated [his] brain.” The wound was located “at the base of [his] skull.” She recovered several bullet fragments from his head.
Detective Jeffrey Owens of the Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD”), the lead investigator assigned to Mr. Weaver’s murder, informed the jury that he located three witnesses to the shooting — Rebecca and Robert Lindsay and Ms. Hawkins. All three implicated Mr. Kidd as involved in the shooting. In addition to investigating Mr. Weaver’s murder, Detective Owens was assigned to the shooting of Mr. Winslow. He interviewed Mr. Winslow’s mother, who said Carlton Edwards shot her son. Detective Owens was unable to link Mr. Edwards to Mr. Winslow’s shooting; Mr. Winslow refused to cooperate with the investigation. Detective Owens arrested Mr. Kidd in Southeast Washington on July 16, 2002, and spoke with him. 5 Mr. Kidd maintained that he was home in bed at the time of the Weaver shooting. But, he stated that he and Mr. Weaver had been “beefing” because Mr. Weaver had shot paint balls all over his blue Impala automobile. Detective Owens, MPD Investigator Kevin McConnell, and MPD Officer Dwayne Mitchell were part of a team which executed a search warrant at Mr. Kidd’s Naylor Road Southeast residence on July 16, 2002. Investigator McConnell discovered a Brinks’ home security black metal box in a trash can in the kitchen. The name “Tay” [Mr. Kidd’s nickname] was “scraped into the top [of the box].” Officer Mitchell opened the black box and found inside Mr. Kidd’s social security and health cards, a District of Columbia identification card bearing Mr. Kidd’s name, and a loaded semiautomatic .45 caliber Colt pistol. 6
*124 At the time of Mr. Weaver’s murder, defense witness, Sergeant Anthony Weeda, was a military policeman stationed at Fort McNair, on guard in the guard’s shack at the P Street gate. 7 He heard gunfire and screaming coming from apartments at P and Canal Streets on the early morning of June 29, 2002. He noticed a “[l]ot of people ... exiting, running from the courtyard screaming”; and one individual was “kind of running backwards,” but he was unable to see the individual’s face. He saw “muzzle flashes [from the barrel of a gun] pointing into [the] courtyard along with the gunfire.” Sergeant Weeda crouched down, but soon got up and went to the corner of P Street and Canal. There, he saw the same individual he had observed running backwards. The man was “running down Canal Street towards M Street,” but Sergeant Weeda did not see a gun or the person’s face. When he crouched down in front of a car, he heard “some ladies crying” and saw Mr. Winslow on the ground.
Primarily through the testimony of Mr. Winslow’s mother, the defense sought to show that Mr. Kidd was not involved in the shooting of Mr. Winslow. Mr. Winslow’s mother was awakened in the early morning on June 29, 2002, by the sound of gunfire — two shots. After hearing more shots, she went to the window of her bedroom. She saw a man whom she had known for several years, Carlton, shoot her son three times in the leg. She informed the police. She did not see the shooting of Mr. Weaver.
The case was submitted to the jury on June 29, 2004. And, on June 30, 2004, the jury returned guilty verdicts on the charges of first-degree murder while armed and possession of a firearm during a crime of violence.
ANALYSIS
Mr. Kidd contends that the trial court’s aiding and abetting instruction to the jury concerning the
mens rea
requirement of the charged crime was constitutional error under our decisions in
Wilson-Bey, supra,
and
Kitt v. United States,
We first determine whether the constitutional harmless error standard must be applied due to a structural defect, that is, the failure of the trial court to instruct the jury correctly on the
mens rea
requirement of an aiding and abetting first-degree murder case. In light of Supreme Court precedent and our own cases, we reject Mr. Kidd’s structural error argument. In
Arizona v. Fulminante,
United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez,
The Court has resisted adding jury instructional errors which omit an element of the charged offense to its list of structural errors. As the Court observed in
Neder v. United States,
Unlike such defects as the complete deprivation of counsel or trial before a biased judge, an instruction that omits an element of the offense does not necessarily render a criminal trial fundamentally unfair or an unreliable vehicle for determining guilt or innocence.
Id.
at 9,
Similarly, our decision in
Wheeler v. United States,
Only where there has been an objection has this court applied a constitutional harmless error standard in first-degree premeditated murder while armed cases which were tried under an aiding and abetting theory. We were careful in
Wilson-Bey, supra,
to ascertain whether, in fact, as required by Rule 30 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure, appellants had raised the precise objection to the aiding and abetting jury instruction in the trial court that they presented for our review.
9
We concluded that “albeit imperfectly, the challenge to the natural and probable consequences instruction [was] adequately preserved.”
Id.
at 829. Therefore, because “the error [was] of constitutional dimension, ... the
Chapman
harmless error standard should apply.”
Id.
at 843 (citing
Neder, supra,
Here, there was absolutely no objection to the incorrect aiding and abetting instruction and our review is for plain error.
See Thomas v. United States,
The third prong of the plain error standard focuses on whether the plain error affected Mr. Kidd’s substantial rights. “Normally, although perhaps not in every case, the defendant must make a specific showing of prejudice to satisfy the ‘affecting substantial rights’ prong” of the plain error rule.
Olano, supra,
Mr. Kidd has not met his burden on the third prong of the plain error test. Given the government’s proof, we are satisfied that there was no reasonable probability that the incorrect aiding and abetting instruction had a prejudicial effect on the outcome of Mr. Kidd’s trial. “First degree premeditated murder is murder committed with the specific intent to kill after premeditation and deliberation.”
Downing, supra,
On the record before us, reasonable jurors could infer and conclude from the testimony of the Lindsays, Detective Owens, and Investigator McConnell, that beyond a reasonable doubt Mr. Kidd had thought about and reflected on killing Mr. Weaver, and further that he had the specific intent to participate in the killing, as evidenced by his possession of a gun pointed to the stomach or side of Mr. Weaver; 12 his anger and argument over Mr. Weaver’s throwing paint balls at his car; his knowledge of the presence of a second man who stood on the other side of Mr. Weaver with a gun; his continuing gun-pointed presence next to Mr. Weaver while a third man approached rapidly and shot Mr. Weaver in the back of the head, mortally wounding him; and his flight immediately after the shooting. In short, the government presented strong and substantial evidence of premeditation, deliberation, and specific intent, uncontroverted by anything except Mr. Kidd’s self-serving statement to Detective Owens that he was home in bed at the time of Mr. Weaver’s murder. Indeed, the government emphasized premeditation and deliberation at the outset and end of its case before the jury, indicating during its opening statement that “this is a premeditated and deliberate killing,” and stating during its closing argument that “[f]irst degree murder while armed is the premeditated murder of a person,” and “there has to be some thought given to the murder of an individual.” Thus, this case is strikingly different from Kitt. There, we reversed a first-degree premeditated murder while armed conviction “because the government failed to present and the jury instruction failed to require the necessary proof of specific intent to kill, premeditation and deliberation.” We said, “the circumstances of [the decedent’s] killing remain shrouded in mystery.” Here, there was no mystery since two eyewitnesses, who knew Mr. Kidd, described details of the shooting and identified him as a participant, and the government stressed premeditation and deliberation.
Based upon our review of the record, we are convinced that Mr. Kidd was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder while armed because reasonable jurors inferred “from the facts and circumstances surrounding [the] murder” that he had “the requisite
mens rea,” Kitt,
Even if Mr. Kidd’s substantial rights had been affected by the incorrect aiding and abetting instruction, correction of the error is not required under the fourth prong of the plain error test, “whether the forefeited error ‘seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.’ ”
Thomas,
Mr. Kidd’s Other Arguments
We are unpersuaded by Mr. Kidd’s other arguments and dispose of them summarily. He challenges the trial court’s admission into evidence of one of the two guns removed from his residence after Mr. Weaver’s murder, mainly on the grounds that the gun “was not conclusively connected to the murder of Mr. Weaver,” and that the government used the gun to “bolster[ ] the weak case against Mr. Kidd not by proving anything, but by adding to the appearances of the case.” Our review of this issue is guided by the well known principle that the admissibility of evidence “is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court[,] and this court will not disturb its ruling absent an abuse of discretion.”
Dockery v. United States,
Mr. Kidd contends that “the government, under the claim of the prior identification rule, was able to give the jury several times the testimony of Rebecca Lindsay, its strongest witness,” and thus improperly, to use a “weaker witness [for example, Alicia Hawkins] to bolster the testimony of [a] stronger witness by repetition.” We disagree. “The exclusion of prior consistent statements is intended to avoid the prejudice of unfairly bolstering the witness’ credibility.”
Porter v. United States,
*130
Finally, Mr. Kidd asserts that the trial court erred by “significantly curtail[ing][ ][his] attempt to present another view of how the decedent was killed,” that is, that “Mr. Weaver may well have been shot by ‘friendly fire’ aimed at Mr. Kidd.” Hence, he argues, the trial court improperly curtailed his cross-examination of Detective Owens concerning his investigation of Mr. Winslow’s shooting. “The Sixth Amendment guarantees to criminal defendants not only the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses against them, but also ‘the right to present evidence that someone else committed the offense for which [he] is on trial.’ ”
Bruce v. United States,
Here, the trial court did not preclude all cross-examination regarding Detective Winslow’s investigation into the shooting of Mr. Winslow; questions relating to those posed by the government as to that investigation were permitted. When defense counsel sought to conduct additional cross-examination of Detective Win-slow, the trial court inquired whether counsel was attempting to show that Mr. Edwards “did something” or that the police “didn’t investigate the Winslow shooting,” he replied “Both.” Defense counsel explained that an eyewitness said Mr. Edwards shot Mr. Winslow, that his shooting was “related” to that of Mr. Weaver, and that “the court has heard all of the evidence from Mr. Mulderig and from Dr. Juste, but, more importantly, the evidence from Sergeant [Weeda].” 13 The judge expressed concern that “this doesn’t elicit any evidence at all; just invites further hearsay and speculation....” Nevertheless, the trial court did thereafter permit additional cross-examination of Detective Owens regarding his investigation of the Winslow shooting. On this record, we are satisfied that even assuming that the trial court abused its discretion in curtailing defense counsel’s cross-examination of Detective Owens, the error was harmless, given the eyewitness testimony.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
So ordered.
Notes
. D.C.Code §§ 22-2101, -4502 (2001). He also was convicted of possession of a firearm during a crime of violence, in violation of D.C.Code § 22-4504(b).
. In
Wilson-Bey,
we considered a longstanding jury instruction — "[a]n aider and abettor is legally responsible for the natural and probable consequences of the crime in which [h]e intentionally participates.”
. Since Mr. Kidd’s trial occurred in June 2004, the trial judge did not have the benefit of our Wilson-Bey decision.
. Apartment buildings close to the murder scene were located at 1414 and 1420 Canal Street; the courtyard was in front of 1414 and along the side of 1420.
. Detective Owens was unable to identify the two men who were with Mr. Kidd at the time of the Weaver shooting.
. Two other government witnesses testified. Officer David Murray of the MPD forensic science division or mobile crime lab examined the crime scene and recovered evidence from that scene, including bullets and fragments. Officer Michael Mulderig, also from the MPD forensic science division, testified as a firearms expert, indicating that most of the ballistics evidence was so damaged that conclusions could not be drawn. However, the *124 bullets used to shoot Mr, Winslow came from a special .38 revolver.
. Fort McNair is the location of the United States Army Military District of Washington.
. That Mr. Kidd gets the benefit of our
Wilson-Bey
decision is clear.
See Roberts v. Unit
*125
ed States,
. Rule 30 provides, in pertinent part:
No party may assign as error any portion of the charge or omission therefrom unless that party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which that party objects and the grounds of the objection.
. We also have applied plain error review "where an indictment omits an element of the offense for which a defendant is later convicted where there has been no objection.”
Peay v. United States,
. Thus, we do not follow the "modified plain error” rule.
See United States v. Viola,
. “Carrying a gun to the scene of the murder is 'highly probative of premeditation and deliberation’ because it suggests that the defendant arrived on the scene with a preconceived plan to kill.”
Busey v. United States,
. Although at trial defense counsel referred only generally to the testimony from Dr. Juste, Officer Mulderig and Sergeant Weeda, on appeal he argues that there is some evidence from these witnesses that the shooting of Mr. Weaver was not at close range and that someone else shot him.
