Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Andre Brown appeals his conviction for possession of ammunition by a convicted felon in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), arguing that the district court erred in allowing the jury to find him guilty of possessing only ammunition when the grand jury had indicted him for possession of both a firearm and the ammunition found inside. For the following reasons, we reject Brown’s arguments and affirm his conviction.
I.
On April 1, 2005, Metropolitаn Police Officers conducted a “buy-bust” undercover drug investigation. Around 5:35 p.m., an undercover officer who had just completed a buy-bust with a different suspect witnessed Brown, who had just entered the parking lot, toss a plastic bag appearing to contain plant leaves behind a parked car and then get into the car’s driver’s seat. The undercover officer had already called in the arrest team to detain other suspects, but added instructions to stop Brown and recover the item he had just discarded behind his vehicle.
When arresting officers pulled into the parking lot in marked police cruisers, one cruiser parked immediately in front of Brown and his vehicle. Officer Robert Munn got out of the passenger door of that cruiser and walked directly towards Brown’s vehicle. As Munn approached, he saw Brown reach for his waistband area, then reach over to open and close his glove box. In short order, Munn and the other officers removed Brown from the ear, recovered a bag of marijuana from behind the vehicle and searched its interior. Uрon opening the glove box, the officers found a loaded Hi-Point .45 caliber pistol. Officer Munn’s initial affidavit in support of the sworn criminal complaint against Brown described the pistol as a “Hi-Point 9mm” rather than as a .45 caliber semiautomatic pistol.
By the time the case was presented to the grand jury, this discrepancy in the pistol’s description was recognized and corrected. The grand jury returned a two count indictment against Brown charging him with possession of marijuana and with unlawfully possessing a firearm, “that is, a Hi-Point .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol, and did unlawfully and knowingly receive and possess ammunition, that is, .45 caliber ammunition” in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) due to Brown’s prior felony conviction.
When confronted at a pre-trial suppression hearing with the discrepancy between his charging document and the wording of the indictment, Officer Munn, rather than simply admitting he made a mistake on his charging document, insisted that he had only meant that the pistol appeared to be a 9mm due to its style, and then implied that the pistol in question may have been capa
Prior to trial, the government submitted the standard “Red Book” jury instruction on the § 922(g)(1) count. The wording of this instruction only addressed possession of a firearm-not ammunition. Brown proposed instructions which would have required the government to show that he knowingly possessed both the firearm and the ammunition. The district court decided to use the “Red Book” instruction, despite its silence on the ammunition issue. Before sending the jury in for deliberations, however, the court recognized that thе instruction was “a little misleading because [it] doesn’t say anything about the ammunition at all, just the firearm, and they can find him guilty of possession of ammunition and not the firearm, so it’s either/or. I should tell them that.”
After asking for any objections from counsel and hearing none, the court orally instructed the jury that it could find Brown guilty on the § 922(g)(1) count based on finding that he knowingly possessed either the firearm or the ammunition even though the indictment “charges possession of a firearm and ammunition.” After giving the new instruction, the court conferred with counsel on the appropriate wording for the written instructions. The government requested a disjunctive instruction, with language that the defendant could be found guilty for possessing “ammunition or firearm or both,” and the court proposed adopting this language. Brown’s counsel objected to this disjunctive written instruction, arguing that the indictment said “and” and that the evidence the government had presented only supported a conjunctive wording. After consulting the statutory language, which reads “any firearm or ammunition,” the court decided that the disjunctive instruction was appropriatе.
The next day, while the jury was deliberating, the jury foreperson sent out a note asking for clarification of the jury instruction, and asked whether the jury had to find both possession of the ammunition and the firearm. The court proposed responding with a simple “no,” though the government asked that the court use this opportunity to clarify the disjunctive nature of the instruction. Brown’s counsel reiterated her position that the requirement should be phrased in the conjunctive “and” because that is what the indictment read, and that giving a disjunctive instruction now constituted a variance from the indictment. The court asked her if she had any authority to support her position that the court’s instruction had created a fatal variance between the indictment and the jury instruction, but she had none. The government argued that the “variance” was permissible because the government had put on evidence supporting a finding on the ammunition issue, and that, in any case, the statute’s language trumped the indictment’s.
Soon thereafter, the jury sent a note stating that it had reached a verdict, but when it returned to the courtroom to render the verdict, the foreperson gave the court an incomplete verdict form and made a confusing statement about being “locked on the firearm.” The court instructed the jury to continue with deliberations, and soon afterwards the jury returned a verdict that remained locked on the possession of a firearm charge but wаs unanimous on the questions of possession of ammunition and drugs. The jury foreperson subsequently announced that the jury found Brown guilty of possessing a
Brown made a post-trial motion for acquittal or, alternatively, for a new trial, making some of the same arguments now presented to this Court for rеview. The district court denied Brown’s motions and sentenced him to thirty-three months imprisonment followed by two years of supervised release. This appeal timely followed.
II.
Brown advances three arguments in support of his contention that the district court issued an erroneous jury instruction at his trial. We consider each below.
A. Instruction Unsupported by Evidence Presented
Brown's first argument is that the government's evidеnce did not support the district court's jury instruction, as all evidence presented concerned a loaded weapon and this precluded a finding that Brown possessed ammunition separate from a weapon. While Brown does not argue that a jury verdict may be struck down for being inconsistent, he argues that a trial court must take steps to avoid suсh an inconsistent verdict. Brown cites Joy v. Bell Helicopter Textron,
We are not persuaded by this argument. True, it is proper for a trial court to refuse to submit to the jury a count on which the government has failed to present any evidence that would allow a rational juror to find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,
see, e.g., Bartak,
As Brown concedes, the fact that a jury comes to a factually inconsistent verdict is not, by itself, grounds for reversal.
See Dunn v. United States,
B. Constructive Amendment
Brown’s second argument is that, by instructing the jury that it could find him guilty of either possessing the weapon “or” the ammunition, the district court constructively amended the indictment. Brown cites
Stirone v. United States,
Brown cites two Eleventh Circuit cases as support for his argument. In
United States v. Narog,
These two cases are inapposite, however, as both merely stand for the proposition that a defendant may not be found guilty of a specific crime for which he was not indicted. In
Narog,
the governmеnt had specifically charged the defendant with possession and distribution of pseu-doephedrine knowing that it would be used to manufacture methamphetamine.
Narog,
Unlike those two cases in which the district courts issued jury instructions which could have permitted a guilty finding on an unindicted charge, Brown was specifically indicted for both possessiоn of a Hi-Point .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol and for possession of .45 caliber ammunition. Therefore, the court’s instruction that they could find Brown guilty for possession of either injected no possibility of conviction of an offense not alleged in the indictment.
In any case, it is well established that if a criminal statute disjunctively lists multiple acts which constitute violations, “the prosecution may in a single count of an indictment or information charge several or all of such acts in the conjunctive and under such charge make proof of any one or more of the acts, proof of one alone, however, being sufficient to support a conviction.”
District of Columbia v. Hunt,
C. Effective Bifurcation of Charge
Brown's final argument is that, in contravention of circuit precedent, the district court's disjunctive jury instruction effectively treated the firearm and the ammunition it contained as two seрarate offenses. In United States v. Clark,
We disagree. In
Clark,
the fundamentаl issue was not a court’s implicit division of possession of ammunition and possession of a firearm into separate counts, but an
actual indictment and conviction
on two separate counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) for possession of a single loaded firearm. Clark’s defendant was indicted for two counts of violating § 922(g)(1): one count for possessing a firearm and a second count for possеssing the ammunition inside.
Id.
at 862-63. While not even discussed specifically, to the extent that
Clark’s
jury instruction was flawed for permitting such a double conviction, the flaw resulted from the improper indictment.
Clark
involved two separate counts of conviction, but does not speak to the issue of whether the two grounds within a single count need to be charged with a
The English language lacks a precise, simple term that courts may use to refer to each act in a disjunctively phrased criminal statute, so the district court’s slight lapse in referring to each of the two elements as “counts” is understandable. But, more importantly, we fail to see that use of this terminology led to jury confusion about the nature of the crime with which Brown was charged — specifically on the question of whether the two acts constituted separate substantive counts of violating § 922(g)(1). The verdict form the court submitted to the jury clearly showed the members that they could find Brown guilty of violating the statute either by finding that he unlawfully possessed a firearm, unlawfully possessed ammunition, or both. The jury correctly completed the form by marking that it unanimously fоund Brown guilty by reason of his possession of ammunition while reflecting that it came to no conclusion on the question of his possession of a firearm option by leaving that space blank. We see no evidence that they considered the two questions as belonging to separate offenses.
Finally, while Brown argues that the “court even went so far as to send the jury back to deliberate further when the verdict form was blank with respect to the firearm portion of Count I” in support of his argument that the court implied to the jury that the two elements were distinct substantive counts, the record shows that the district court sent the jury back to deliberate primarily because the foreperson appeared confused about what the jury had actually decided on this count. In any case, when the jury subsequently returned and presented a coherent oral verdict, the court accepted its verdict form with the firearm possession section left blank. This demonstrates both that the district court did not require the jury to return verdicts on both acts and that the jury correctly understood that arriving at such a verdict was not required to find the defendant guilty on that count.
III.
For the reasons set forth above, appellant’s conviction is
Affirmed.
