Appellant Thomas Howard, Jr., was indicted and tried for first degree murder. Having denied appellant’s motion, made after the Government’s opening argument and again at the conclusion of the prosecution’s case, for acquittal of the offense in the first degree, the District Court charged the jury on first degree murder, second degree murder, and manslaughter. The jury returned a verdict of murder in the second degree, and Howard was sentenced to imprisonment for fifteen years to life.
Since appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence that he killed the victim, it is unnecessary to give a full précis of the evidence. Joyce Brig-mon, a seven year old girl, was murdered on the evening of November 26, 1965, while alone in the first floor apartment of her mother, Iris Brigmon, and her mother’s common-law husband, Charles Williams. The evidence showed that her throat was brutally slashed after she screamed “Daddy”, apparently for help. There were no eyewitnesses and the *290 Government’s case connecting appellant with the crime chiefly consisted of the circumstantial evidence that he was very near the apartment immediately prior to the crime, that very shortly after the killing he was discovered by Charles Williams in the yard just outside the apartment, that he fled upon being discovered and discarded some of his clothing, and that human blood stains were found on the clothing he threw away in flight. Appellant’s testimony was that he discovered the girl’s body after she had been murdered and had picked her up, only to be frightened away when Charles Williams appeared and threatened to kill him.
We treat first with a number of secondary grounds for reversal put forward by appellant and then, separately, with his primary point.
I.
A.
Appellant contends that the instruction on circumstantial evidence, though concededly embodying the minimum elements required for such a charge and though no objection to it was raised at trial, provides ground for reversal because it was too brief to impress upon the jury the caution to be exercised in a case heavily laced with circumstantial evidence. But it is settled that “Once the judge has made an accurate and correct charge, the extent of its amplification must rest largely in his discretion.” United States v. Bayer,
B.
Appellant also urges that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of malice aforethought. We are unable to conclude, however, “that reasonable jurymen must necessarily have * * * [a reasonable] doubt” that Joyce Brigmon was killed with malice. Curley v. United States,
Although the point is not mentioned by counsel, we feel constrained by Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b) and Belton v. United States,
C. Another argument is that the trial court committed reversible error by restricting the cross-examination of Charles Williams — step-father of the victim and the first witness for the prosecution — on the subject of whether he had been present the previous day at voir dire for the selection of the jury. Earlier on the day of the attempted cross-examination, Williams had stated under oath, but out of the presence of the jury, that he had been at the voir dire *292 and had been identified to the panel. 5 Defense counsel did not attempt to cross-examine at that time but shortly thereafter, on cross-examination in open court, he did raise this problem and asked Williams several questions on the latter’s presence in the courtroom at voir dire. Although Williams’ evidence was consistent with the record and with the recollection of the trial court and the prosecution, defense counsel thought he had been absent and sought to test his credibility and competency by further inquiry into the matter of whether he had stood to be identified. The court refused to allow this line of questioning.
Although opportunity to cross-examine is a fundamental right demanding great respect
(e. g.,
Alford v. United States,
D.
We need touch only briefly on appellant’s assertion, as a ground for reversal, that the evidence produced by the Government at the preliminary hearing was insufficient to sustain a finding of probable cause.
8
Prior to this appeal appellant had not raised this issue at any time. In these circumstances, and after indictment and trial, the contention finds no support whatever in Ross v. Sirica,
II.
The primary focus of the appeal is that the trial court erred in denying the motion for acquittal of murder in the first degree and submitting that issue to the jury on insufficient evidence of premeditation and deliberation. We do not reach the question of the adequacy of the evidence, for we agree with the Government that, even if erroneous, the submission of first degree murder, when the jury returned a verdict in the second degree, was harmless.
Counsel has presented us with, and our research has revealed, no authority dealing with the precise problem. However, this court has held that it is not reversible error to instruct on a lesser included offense, even though there is no evidence to support that charge, if the jury returns a verdict of guilty of the greater offense. Goodall v. United States,
Goodall
and
Austin,
taken together, show that the erroneous submission to the jury of an offense of which the accused is not convicted is not reversible unless there is prejudice. In
Austin
the court thought it “clear that no undue prejudice [would] result” from the entry of a conviction of second degree murder.
Id.
at 193,
Government counsel mentioned the death penalty only, once in his closing statements (when he announced to the jury that the Government was not recommending it). More important, counsel *294 for the defense never raised the subject after the second motion to acquit was denied. It is true that a substantial portion of the closing argument for appellant, as well as that of the Government, was devoted to the issue of premeditation and deliberation. But a reading of the defense’s exceedingly brief presentation shows that the focus on premeditation and deliberation in no way foreclosed argument on any other issue. 12 Moreover, there is no hint in the record that the emphasis in the argument and the charge on premeditation and deliberation confused or misled this jury which found for appellant on that score.
Appellant’s second hypothesis of prejudice — that the instruction on first degree murder may have unduly influenced the verdict in the second degree — gives the jury far less credit than it deserves. We see, and appellant offers, no theory upon which to base a realistic conclusion that the jury might have compromised its views because of, or was confused and misled by, the mere submission of the first degree charge for its consideration. With the judge’s charge on first degree, second degree, and manslaughter before it, the jury decided that the offense of murder in the second degree fitted the evidence. On this record there was nothing unusual or untoward about that reasonable determination. Similarly, there is no ground to suppose that, if only second degree murder and manslaughter had been submitted to them, the jury would, on this record, have chosen the latter. Appellant’s counsel did not argue for a finding of manslaughter, or even discuss it, but rather that his client*was innocent; and the evidence was such that a jury which held defendant to be the killer would in all probability also go on to find that he killed with malice. See note 2, supra.
The last of appellant’s claims is that counsel might not have taken the risk of putting defendant on the witness stand if the first degree murder charge had been withdrawn at the conclusion of the Government’s case. The record indicates, however, not only that counsel had little choice as to putting appellant on the stand but that no basis exists for concluding that the trial strategy would or should have differed if the offense of first degree murder had not been before the jury. Appellant’s attorney concentrated on three arguments: first, the weakness of the prosecution’s circumstantial evidence; second, appellant had no motive for the killing and, in fact, other persons — notably the girl’s mother (who was proved to have been at work) or her step-father — had more of an opportunity and motive to kill her than appellant had; third, appellant’s recital of the events of that evening was true. Appellant was the only defense witness.
It is very unlikely that, had the first degree murder charge been dropped, the defense would have declined to put appellant on the stand and would have instead relied solely on the claimed weaknesses in the Government’s case and on the unsubstantiated possibility that someone else murdered the girl. Further, if this strategy (keeping defendant off the stand) was too weak to use in defense of a first degree murder charge, it would have been equally weak in defense of the lesser offenses. The sole difference between first and second degree murder is premeditation and deliberation, but the direct and redirect examination of appellant was designed to exonerate him of all guilt, not to negate evidence of premeditation and deliberation.
We are left with one final question. In
Austin
the court “remanded to the District Court with directions to enter a judgment of guilty of murder in the second degree * * * unless the
*295
District Court determines that a new trial is in the interest of justice.”
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant seems to claim, somewhat halfheartedly, that the trial judge should likewise have charged that the jury could not convict on circumstantial evidence unless that evidence necessarily excluded every other hypothesis but guilt. No charge of that type was sought, and it would not have been error to refuse such a request if made. Holland v. United States,
supra,
. Counsel for appellant conceded that an inference of malice might be drawn from the circumstances of the murder, particularly from the fact that the girl screamed before her throat was cut, but maintained that the evidence was insufficient because a conclusion of malice requires a “double” or “pyramided” inference that must ultimately rest upon the inference that appellant killed the girl. Counsel considered that inference too weak to support the further inference that appellant committed the crime with malice aforethought. The sufficiency of the evidence to support the conclusion that Howard killed the girl is not questioned, and we see no reason to deal indirectly with that issue. The general language in some cases (referred to by appellant) warning against speculative “double” or “pyramided” inferences (United States v. Ross,
. A court may be more hesitant to hold an ambiguous or incorrect instruction harmless when the evidence is closely balanced.
See
United States v. Garguilo,
. Modifying language in the Belton charge,
see
. This questioning arose in connection with the defense’s motion for a mistrial on the ground that Williams had not been identified to the jury. (Defense counsel’s interest in this matter apparently stemmed from the possibility, in counsel’s view, that Williams could have been the killer.) Appellant does not maintain that the denial of a mistrial constituted reversible error.
.
See, e. g.,
Glasser v. United States,
.
See,
F.R.Crim.P. 52(a); Alford v. United States,
. The solo Government witness was a police officer, whose testimony was in part hearsay.
. If the jury in the cited case had returned a verdict of guilty of the lesser offense, the problem would be that of Green v. United States,
. That is our hypothesis in the present case; as indicated above, we do not decide the issue.
. The order of remand in Austin left the trial court with discretion to order a new trial. We deal with this issue infra.
. In particular, the defense’s lack of attention to the issue of the sufficiency of the evidence for a finding of malice, a question raised in this court, cannot be attributed to the denial of the motion for acquittal of first degree murder. Counsel could quite easily have argued to the jury that the evidence was inadequate to support an inference of either malice or premeditation and deliberation.
