Albert Verrecchia, a convicted felon, was indicted on two counts of possessing a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Each count accused Verrecc-hia of possessing multiple firearms. He was convicted after a jury trial. For the first time on appeal, Verrecchia argues that the trial court erred in not instructing the jurors that they had to agree unanimously on at least one particular firearm that he possessed out of the two named in Count One and оut of the twenty-one named in Count Two. He also objects— again, for the first time on appeal — to numerous portions of the prosecutor’s closing argument. We affirm.
*296 I. Background
In early 1996, the Rhode Island State Police were attempting to locate a number of weapons that had been stolen during a series of burglaries in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. The police arrested one Michael Rossi in connection with several burglaries, and eventually secured his сooperation in the investigation into the location of the stolen weapons. Rossi claimed that Verrecchia, his associate, had hidden the weapons in a location unknown to Ros-si. The police initiated a sting operation whereby a police officer would pose as a drug dealer wishing to purchase two of the firearms. Rossi contacted Verrecchia and arranged for Verrecchia to meet the officer. After meeting, the undercover officer agreed to purchase a .45 caliber Star Arms handgun and an AK-47 assault rifle from Verrecchia. Verrecchia stated that it would take him some time to find the two guns, which he said he had stored in a coffin-sized crate.
Verrecchia left in his truck, drove to a barn he rented, and retrieved the two weapons from the crate, all while under police airplane surveillance. After meeting the undercover officer and displaying the two weapons, which were in a box in the truck, Verrecchia was arrested. After his arrest he acknowledged that the crate contained guns and gave the police keys to the barn and the crate. Inside the crate the police found, inter alia, twenty-one additional firearms, a sawed-off shotgun, and several pipe bombs, the latter being separately packaged in a bag.
A four-count federal indictment issued against Verrecchia. Cоunt One charged that he was a felon and that he possessed the Star Arms handgun and the AK-47 that he had transported in his truck and attempted to sell to the undercover officer, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Count Two charged that he possessed the twenty-one firearms found in the crate in the barn, also in violation of § 922(g)(1). Counts Three and Four charged that he possessed the sawed-off shotgun and two pipe bombs in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 5861(d) (prohibiting the possession of certain types of fireаrms defined in 26 U.S.C. § 5845 if not registered to the possessor in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record).
At trial Verrecchia argued that he was entrapped into the sale of the guns described in Count One, and that Rossi, acting as an agent of the government, had threatened him with violence and that these threats caused Verrecchia to deliver the guns. Verrecchia denied possession of the contents of the crate (the guns described in Counts Two and Threе and the pipe bombs described in Count Four), claiming that Rossi had borrowed the crate and sublet the barn space, and that Rossi had the key to the locks on the barn and the crate. The jury found Verrecchia guilty on Counts One and Two and not guilty on Counts Three and Four.
II. Jury Unanimity Instruction
Counts One and Two alleged that Verrecchia violated 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), which provides: “It shall be unlawful for any person ... who has been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceеding one year ... to ... possess in or affecting commerce, any firearm or ammunition.... ” The district court gave the following instruction to the jury regarding those counts:
The government is not required to prove that the defendant possessed every firearm described in every count of the indictment. The possession element for a particular count may be established if you find that the defendant knowingly possessed any firearm described in that count of the indictment.
Towards the end of the charge to the jury, the court instructed the jury that “to render a verdict, all 12 of you must agree. That is, your verdict must be unanimous.”
Verrecchia claims on appeal that the district court erred in failing to instruct the jurors that they had to agree
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unanimously on at least one particular weapon that he possessed out of the two listed in Count One and out of the twenty-one listed in Count Two.
1
Because he did not object to the unanimity instructions given before the jury began its deliberations, we review for plain error.
See United States v. Bradstreet,
Verrecchia raises two related arguments for requiring jury unanimity on the specific weapons he possessed. He argues first that Counts One and Two each charged more than one crime — i.e., that they were duplicitous — and that a specific unanimity instruction was required to cure that duplicity. He also argues that if each count charged only one crime, and hence was not duplicitous, the possessiоn of a particular weapon is still an element of the crime on which the jury must be unanimous.
A. Duplicity and “the allowable unit of prosecution”
“Duplicity is the joining in a single count of two or more distinct and separate offenses.”
United States v. Martinez Canas,
Verreсchia’s argument raises the question, addressed by the Supreme Court in the leading case of
Bell v. United States,
We are the only circuit that has not ruled on “the allowable unit of prosecution” under the felon-in-possession statute (§ 922(g)(1) or its predecessors). The other courts of appeals have addressed the issue and have all agreed that the simultaneous possession of multiple firearms, or a firearm and ammunition, constitutes only one crime.
See United States v. Pelusio,
Those cases all rely, directly or indirectly, on
Bell
and the Supreme Court’s holding therein that “if Congress does not fix the punishment for a federal offense сlearly and without ambiguity, doubt will be resolved against turning a single transaction into multiple offenses.”
Significantly, in many of the cases in which the courts havе found a Beii-type ambiguity, the object of the offense has been prefaced by the word “any.” Seemingly this is because “any” may be said to fully encompass (i.e., not necessarily exclude any part of) plural activity, and thus fails to unambiguously define the unit of prosecution in singular terms.
Id. at 667.
We agree with the
Kinsley
court that with respect to the allowable unit of prosecution, “any firearm” is as ambiguous as “any woman or girl” was in
Bell. See id.
at 669. In the absence of any evidence that Congress clearly intended to treat each possession of a firearm as a separate violation of § 922(g)(1), the Supreme Court’s holding in
Bell
requires us to resolve the ambiguity “against turning a single transaction into multiple offenses.”
Contrary to Yerrecchia’s contention, therefore, the governmеnt could not have properly charged him with twenty-three separate crimes for the twenty-three different guns he allegedly possessed. Instead, the indictment here correctly grouped the firearms into counts based on the place of possession: the guns Verrecc-hia had in his truck during the sting operation were charged together under Count One, and those he possessed in the crate in the barn were charged together under Count Two. Each count charged only one offense, despite the references in each to multiple firearms. Verrecchia was not entitled to a specific unanimity instruction to cure the alleged duplicity because neither count was duplicitous.
B. Possession of a particular firearm as an element of the crime
Verrecchia also argues, albeit somewhat opaquely, that even if the simultaneous possession of multiple firearms is only one violation оf § 922(g)(1), the district court still plainly erred by failing to instruct the jurors that to convict him of such a violation they must unanimously agree on at least one particular firearm that he possessed. The recent Supreme Court case of
Richardson v. United States,
Whether a particular fact is a means or an element is a “value choice[ ] more appropriately made in the first instance by a legislature than by a court.”
Schad v. Arizona,
“When interpreting a statute, we look first to the language.”
Richardson,
Other provisions of the statute are consistent with this interpretation. The categories of persons prohibited from possessing firearms include not only those, like Verrecchia, “who ha[ve] been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one yеar,” § 922(g)(1), but also fugitives, drug addicts, illegal aliens, domestic abusers, and those who have renounced their U.S. citizenship, been committed to a mental institution, or dishonorably discharged from the military, see § 922(g)(2)-(9). In addition, the category of felons is modified by 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(20), which carves out exceptions for criminal antitrust convictions, state offenses formally classified by state law as misdemeanors despite carrying sentences longer than one year, and convictions which have been expunged, set aside, pardoned, or for which civil rights have been restored without restriction on the right to possess firearms. The specific, technical description of the status of the possessor contrasts with the general description “any firearm,” 2 supporting the conclusion that Congress’s focus was on the felon and not on the nature or number of firearms possessed.
The punishment provisions for violations of § 922(g) reveal a similar focus. Knowing violations of § 922(g) аre punishable by imprisonment for up to ten years. See 18 U.S.C. § 924(a)(2). Violators with *300 three prior violent felony or drug offenses may be punished by a fine of up to $25,000 and are subject to a minimum sentence of fifteen years. See id. § 924(e)(1). Conversely, where an individual’s circumstances are judged to make him less of a threat to public safety, he may petition the Secretary of the Treasury for exceptional relief from the proscriptions of § 922(g). See id. § 925(c). Nothing in these statutory provisions indicates an intent on the part of Congress to link culpability to the nature or quantity of the weapons possessed, and the fine and minimum sentence provisions, as well as the available exception, reinforce our impression that Congress was primarily concerned with the characteristics of the individual felon in possession.
We also look to the legislative history for further evidence of Congressional intent.
See Kinsley,
In Congressional discussion of § 1202(a), Senator Tydings stated that it was “primarily designed to restrict access to handguns to criminals.”
Ball v. United States,
Considerations of tradition and potential unfairness, the other factors analyzed by the Supreme Court in
Richardson,
do not
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indicate that Congress had a different focus. Verrecchia does not identify, and we are not aware of, any legal tradition that sheds light on the question before us.
Cf. Richardson,
Nor does this case present the kind of potential unfairness noted in Richardson. The Court saw two risks in treating each “violation” as a means to the series required for a continuing criminal enterprise conviction rather than as an element. First, it would permit “wide disagreement” among jurors about what the defendant had done, considering the many types of conduct “of varying degrees of seriousness” that qualify as violations of the federal drug laws. Id. at 1711. Second, it would aggravate the danger that jurors might fail to focus on factual detail and convict a defendant of being a drug kingpin on the basis of bad reputation alone. See id. Those risks are not present here. Each possession of a firearm by a felon is of equal seriousness, a fact that mitigates the significance of potential juror disagreement about which firearms are possessed. Furthermore, the only issue in a § 922(g)(1) case is usually whether the defendant possessed the gun or guns in question. Therefore, a juror in such a case is less likely to ignore the underlying factual detail than one presented with the massive and complicated evidence that typically accompanies a continuing criminal enterprise prosecution. We thus see no reason to conclude that Congress was moved by any perception of unfairness to trеat the possession of a particular firearm as an element of a § 922(g)(1) violation.
Finally, although there is almost no case law directly on point, relevant precedent supports the view that the possession of a particular firearm is not an element. One court of appeals faced the identical issue and held, without extensive discussion, that failure to give a specific unanimity instruction was not plain error warranting reversal.
See United States v. Sims,
In sum, the language of the statute and the other considerations examined above convince us that Congress did not intend the possession of a particular firearm to be an element of á § 922(g)(1) violation. There was thus no еrror, let alone plain error, in the district court’s failure to give an instruction requiring jury unanimity on any particular firearm that Verrecchia possessed.
III. Closing Argument
Verrecchia objects to a lengthy list of asserted errors in the government’s closing argument. He claims that the prosecutor implied a contradiction between the testimony of the undercover police officer and Verrecchia where there was none. He also alleges that the prоsecutor made numerous misstatements of the evidence, and made improper comments on the cred
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ibility of Verrecchia as a witness. Finally, Verrecchia contends that the prosecutor erred in arguing that Verrecchia lied about threats made to him by Rossi; the government concedes error on this point. Since Verrecchia did not object to any of these prosecutorial statements at trial, the alleged errors are subject to plain error review.
See United States v. Bey,
To establish plain error, a defendant must show that the alleged error was “clear under current law” or “obvious,” and that the error was prejudicial in that it “affected the outcome” of the trial; even where that is the case, reversal is discretionary and will be warranted only where the plain error “seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
United States v. Olano,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We will occasionally refer to such an instruction as a "specific unanimity” instruction.
See United States v. Hernandez-Albino,
. The term “firearm” is defined at 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(3) to mean:
(A) any weapon (including a starter gun) which will or is designed to or may readily be converted to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive; (B) the frame or receiver of any such weapon; (C) any firearm muffler or firearm silencer; or (D) any destructive device. Such term does not include an antique firearm.
