*881 OPINION
Nolan Edward Klein appeals his conviction, upon a jury verdict, of two counts of robbery with the use of a deadly weapon, one count of burglary, and one count of sexual assault with the use of a deadly weapon. See NRS 193.165; NRS 200.366; NRS 200.380; NRS 205.060. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm Klein’s conviction in all respects.
FACTS
On May 9, 1988, shortly after the 9:00 p.m. closing time of the Payless Shoe Store in Sparks, Nevada, a man accosted the 21-year old manager as she was cleaning the outside windows. Holding a knife to her stomach, he directed her back into the store where another employee was counting out the daily receipts from the register. The second employee reached for the telephone to summon help, but the man instructed her to put it down. Waiving the knife, he demanded and received a bag containing $198. He then forced the two women to enter a bathroom at the rear of the store. After locking themselves in, the women attempted to summon the police by activating a portable alarm.
The alarm apparently failed to function, however, and a short time later, the man returned and ordered the manager out of the bathroom. Frightened, she complied. Announcing that he had to do something that would put him away for a long time, he sexually assaulted her while holding a knife to her throat. The assailant then returned his victim to the bathroom and, expressing remorse for his actions, promised to call the police to report his crimes. A short time later, the Sparks Police Department received and tape recorded a telephone call from an individual who reported that he had just robbed the store and left two women locked in the bathroom. Several weeks after the crimes occurred, the store manager identified appellant as the perpetrator from a police photograph. Appellant was subsequently arrested and brought to trial.
At trial, the two women both positively identified appellant as the robber and assailant. Additionally, the state presented the testimony of appellant’s former girlfriend who stated that she was familiar with appellant’s telephone voice and, after having heard the police tape recording of the telephone call reporting the robbery, she had “no doubt” that appellant had placed that call.
Although appellant elected not to testify at his trial, his counsel presented numerous witnesses in an effort to establish that appellant had an alibi on the night of the crime. Through the testimony *882 of appellant’s mother and sister, as well as others acquainted with appellant and his mother, the defense attempted to show that on the night of May 9, 1989, appellant was in Jack’s Bar in Carson City. Four of appellant’s alibi witnesses testified that they specifically recalled being with appellant in the bar on the night in question. They explained that they remembered appellant’s presence on that particular evening because the group at the bar had joked about a prophecy of Nostradamus, reportedly foretelling the occurrence of a great disaster on the following day.
The jury, however, apparently found the prosecution’s witnesses more credible than the witnesses for the defense. It returned verdicts of guilty on all counts. The district court sentenced appellant to serve consecutive terms totalling thirty years in the Nevada State Prison for the robberies with the use of deadly weapon, along with a concurrent five-year term for the burglary. In addition, the district court imposed two consecutive life terms with the possibility of parole for the sexual assault with the use of a deadly weapon. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Appellant first contends that prosecutorial misconduct fatally infected the proceedings below. While conceding that defense counsel tendered no contemporaneous objections to any of the challenged remarks of the prosecutor, appellant argues that our reversal of his conviction is warranted because the prosecutor committed “patently prejudicial and inflammatory misconduct” during his closing argument to the jury.
See, e.g.,
Sipsas v. State,
Appellant argues that the prosecutor’s closing remarks violated the Supreme Court Rules and the holdings of numerous recent decisions of this court.
See
SCR 173(5) (a lawyer shall not express “a personal opinion as to the justness of a cause, the credibility of a witness, ... or the guilt or innocence of an accused”); Witherow v. State,
Like the situation in
Witherow,
the jury’s determination of guilt at appellant’s trial was necessarily and primarily dependent upon its assessment of the credibility of the respective witnesses. Simply put, in resolving the question of appellant’s guilt or innocence, the jury was squarely confronted with the factual question of who was more believable, the state’s witnesses or appellant’s alibi witnesses. Statements by either counsel conveying a personal opinion “as to the veracity of witnesses in circum
*884
stances where veracity may determine the ultimate issue of guilt or innocence” clearly constitutes improper argument.
2
See
Harris v. United States,
To the contrary, the prosecutor began his closing argument by reminding the jury of the court’s instruction that nothing counsel might say during the trial was to be considered as evidence in the case. Moreover, rather than stating a personal opinion respecting the veracity of the respective witnesses, the prosecutor merely proceeded to
argue
to the jury that the facts in evidence established that the victims had no motive to lie, that another witness was “candid” in her testimony, and that appellant’s mother and sister had something “to gain” from their testimony, while the victims and appellant’s former girlfriend did not. It was entirely permissible for the prosecutor to argue the evidence before the jury in such a fashion and to suggest reasonable inferences that might be drawn from that evidence.
See generally
Yates v. State,
Appellant also contends that insufficient evidence was pre
*885
sented to the jury to support appellant’s conviction of the robbery of both store employees. Specifically, appellant argues, the state’s evidence demonstrated that only the store manager had a possessory interest in the stolen money, and the state completely failed to prove that the other employee had any possessory interest in the $198 that was actually taken from the store.
See
Phillips v. State,
Our review of the record on appeal, however, reveals sufficient evidence to establish appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt as determined by a rational trier of fact.
See
Wilkins v. State,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
The specific prosecutorial remarks at issue in this appeal include the prosecutor’s statements that the victims had “no motive to come in here and lie,” that it made “no difference to [the victims] whether or not [appellant was] convicted éxcept as a victim of crime” and that the victims only sought “justice.” Appellant also complains that the prosecutor improperly told the jury that appellant’s former girlfriend “was candid with you.” Additionally, *883 appellant maintains that, in characterizing the testimony of appellant’s mother and sister, the prosecutor improperly stated:
It’s wrong to get on the stand and not tell the truth and the whole truth. It’s for you to determine whether or not they were. It’s understandable if they didn’t. But they’re the ones that have got something to gain by this, not the two victims that testified, not [appellant’s former girlfriend.]
We note, for example, that during defense counsel’s closing argument in the instant case, the district court quite properly sustained the prosecutor’s objection to a statement by defense counsel conveying her personal beliefs. The district court immediately instructed the jury “not to pay any attention to the personal opinions of counsel.”
As the court also noted in Harris, the “universally accepted and proper form of comment on the contradictions in testimony” entails argument focusing the jury’s attention on the fact that if it believes one witness, it must also disbelieve the contradictory testimony of the other witness. Id. at 658, n.3.
