Brian Lee Booker was convicted in the District Court 1 of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon under 18 U.S.C.App. § 1202(a)(1). He admitted to being a convicted felon, but he claims in this appeal that he was unfairly prejudiced at trial because the government was allowed to prove that his previous convictions were also for violation of the firearms statutes. We reject his contentions and affirm the judgment.
The evidence supporting the verdict is clear-cut. Two St. Louis police officers, Givens and Parks, approached the defendant on the 5200 block of Vernon Street in St. Louis after receiving a report from a citizen that a man fitting the defendant’s description was selling drugs on this block. As they approached Booker, he began to run. Officer Givens pursued him to the door of 5202 Vernon, where Booker was pounding on the door. Booker then jumped off the porch and fled toward the rear yard. *862 Officer Givens followed him and saw him throw a pouch or purse toward the eastern portion of the yard. Givens and Parks then caught the defendant and recovered the pouch. It contained a loaded .357 magnum revolver.
Although Booker denied possession of the gun at trial, he does not contest the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal. His only contention is that he was denied a fair trial, and therefore denied due process of law as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment, by the way in which the government proved and argued its case.
Booker had, in fact, been three times convicted of felonies, and all of them were firearms crimes. His most recent conviction was for possession of a sawed-off shotgun; it occurred on July 2, 1982. The government proved this conviction, which was of course an element of the offense charged, by testimony and documentary evidence. When Booker took the stand in his own defense, cross-examination revealed that he had been convicted twice previously of firearms offenses in addition to the July 2, 1982, conviction which the prosecution proved in its case in chief.
Booker says that he had offered to stipulate to his prior conviction and that, therefore, proof of the nature of the offense was both unnecessary and highly prejudicial because of the similarity of that case to the present charge. The jury was likely to believe, he argues, that if he did it once, he would do it again. This he says is contrary to the spirit of Rule 404(b), Fed.R. Evid., and basically unfair. The government, however, did not agree to accept the stipulation, but rather elected to put on its proof. We think the government was well within its rights in doing so. In
United States v. Bruton,
Booker relies on a footnote in our opinion in
Jackson,
It is true that in
Bruton
we acknowledged “that a case might be imagined where proof of a plurality of convictions would be prejudicial.”
Defendant also complains that the government in its closing argument laid unnecessary stress on his prior firearms convictions and invited the jury to convict him on the unfair theory that someone who had so often violated the law must be guilty. We disagree. The government’s closing argument said nothing that was not both true and supported by the record, and *863 counsel’s references to defendant’s prior convictions were apparently only a fair response to defense counsel’s claim, in his closing argument, that his client had “turned his life around.” Booker’s last conviction had occurred on July 2, and the offense for which he was on trial was alleged to have happened on July 26.
The judgment is affirmed. The Court appreciates the service of appointed counsel.
Notes
. The Hon. James H. Meredith, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. It is worth noting that, in
Bruton,
evidence of a previous felony conviction for illegal possession of a firearm was put before the jury, see
