Convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), Terry Lynn Collins received a sentence of more than 15 years (188 months) in prison. He appeals, claiming that his conviction should be reversed under
United States v. Tavares,
*6 First, the facts, as they were presented to the jury. Renewing an old and unfriendly acquaintance, Collins, leaning out of his car window, got into an escalating argument with Harry Albizu in front of Albizu’s parents’ home in Fitchburg on April 29, 1992. When Harry’s hefty older brother appeared on the front steps, Collins drove off, yelling back to Harry, “I’ll be right back. I’m gonna shoot your fuckin’ ass.” Apparently believing Collins to be a man of his word, an upset Harry Albizu hailed a police car, containing Fitch-burg State College Police Officer Lord, told him of the threat, and Officer Lord radioed the Fitchburg police for help. Albizu’s sister called the police in the meantime. •
Sure enough, Collins returned shortly, in the Camaro he and his wife had just bought, and this time bringing two men with him. Collins yelled for Albizu to come out and out Albizu came, but only to the porch. Collins tried to entice Albizu down from the porch steps with various insults concerning Albizu’s relationship with his mother. Albizu tried to persuade Collins to leave, but the weightlifting bar he threw at Collins missed.
Hearing police sirens approaching, Collins gestured to his two comrades. They put a long stick-like object that was wrapped up into the hatch of the Camaro. As the police arrived, Collins, still yelling at Albizu, backpedaled toward his car.
Police Officer Romano, as he patted down Collins at the side of the Camaro, saw shotgun shells on the back seat. The hatch door to the car was ajar. As Officer Romano looked in, he saw a pump shotgun in a partially zippered case next to two loose shotgun shells. The gun was fully loaded. A fishing license and fishing rods, also in the hatch, belonged to Collins. Officer Romano asked Collins if the shotgun was his. Collins replied sarcastically, “No. .It’s yours.”
Collins was placed under arrest. Hearing that he was being arrested, an agitated Collins pointed at Albizu, and said to a police officer he knew, “Why am I being arrested? They’ve got guns too.”
Simultaneously, Police Officer Raymond was interviewing Albizu. A visibly upset Al-bizu described the initial argument he had had with Collins, and quoted Collins’ statement as described earlier.
The gun was owned by Collins’ father, who kept it at his house, which was where Collins lived.
The Tavares Claim
The prosecution at trial introduced, without objection, Coffins’ prior felony conviction for manslaughter and referred several times to the manslaughter conviction in argument. Coffins’ counsel did not offer to stipulate that Coffins was a felon for purposes of § 922(g)(1). Indeed, under the law of this Circuit at the time of trial, the government would not have been required to accept such a stipulation.
See United States v. Collamore,
This Court has twice since applied
Ta-vares.
In
United States v. Melvin,
Hoping to benefit from
Tavares,
Coffins attempts to shoehorn his arguments into categories that ill fit. He argues that he suffered from ineffective assistance of counsel because his counsel neither objected to nor offered to stipulate as to the manslaugh
*7
ter conviction.
1
But counsel made no error in light of the law at the time. The test for an ineffective assistance of counsel claim as articulated in
Strickland v. Washington,
Counsel, though, can hardly be faulted for not objecting or for failing to stipulate, given the law at the time. Considerations of fairness also raise questions about the appropriate standard of review where the failure to object (or to stipulate) most likely was based on counsel’s correct understanding of the law at the time.
In
United States v. Marder,
The
Marder
court applied plain error analysis. It is worth noting that
Marder
had less sympathy with counsel’s failure to object and for good reason. At the time of trial, this Circuit’s law foreshadowed the Supreme Court’s decision and the precise issue had caused withdrawal of an opinion by this Court and reconsideration en banc. Counsel was on notice.
Id.
at 572 n. 5. The
Marder
court avoided analysis of issues that have divided other circuits on whether an “error” occasioned by a change in law was plain error and whether the defendant’s substantial rights were affected
2
by turning to the last prong of the
Olano
analysis: whether the “error” “seriously affects the fairness, integrity or public reputation of the judicial proceedings.”
Id.
at 574 (quoting
Olano,
— U.S. at -,
Even if we allow for the differences between the positions of counsel who faded to object in Marder and this ease, it does not assist Collins. If there was any error here, regardless of who has the burden on prejudice, such error was not prejudicial. The district court on several occasions gave limiting instructions as to the manslaughter conviction, and the evidence of Collins’ guilt was *8 overwhelming, including evidence from his own mouth.
Excited Utterance
Collins argues that the district court erred in admitting into evidence Albizu’s statement to Officer Raymond that Collins had said, “I’ll be right back. I’m gonna shoot your fuckin’ ass.” Collins argues that Albizu’s testimony at trial — that the threat had been “I’m going to come back and get your ass” — did not confirm the statement. The variance does not make the statement inadmissible, but only raises questions of credibility for the jury to decide.
See United States v. Portalla,
The district court’s decision to admit evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Bailey,
Sufficiency of the Evidence
Collins argues that the government presented insufficient evidence to convict him of being a felon in possession of a firearm because he was a mere passenger in the car in which the firearm was found. This argument is without merit.
Our inquiry is whether there was evidence from which a rational trier of fact could conclude that Collins was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
See United States v. Moreno,
The conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. This Court does not normally consider ineffective assistance of counsel claims on direct appeal.
See, e.g., United States v. Costa,
. The Second Circuit has held that where the court has clarified the law, fairness requires that the burden on plain error analysis be shifted to the
government
to show that any error did not affect the defendant's substantial rights, varying from Olano's rule that in the usual plain error analysis the burden is on the
defendant
to show actual prejudice.
See United States v. Viola,
