Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
In
United States v. Crowder,
Davis first contends that Officer Farmer’s testimony at trial and his testimony at the suppression hearing were in conflict and that the district court therefore should have permitted Davis to introduce the suppression hearing transcript into evidence.
*149 At the suppression hearing, when asked where he filled out the buy report, Farmer stated that he filled it out at the police station:
Defense counsel: “That’s something [the buy report] you filled out back at the station, right?” Farmer: “Yes.”
Defense counsel never asked Farmer whether he filled out every section of the buy report at the station. Later at trial, Farmer gave more specific answers, testifying that he filled out most of the report at the station but filled out the clothing description at the sсene before the police arrested Davis. Also at trial, Farmer explained on redirect that he filled out the clothing description on the scene so thаt “if the arrest team asked me again what was the clothing description, I have it written down so I can remember it better and I wouldn’t make a mistake in the clothing descriptiоn.”
Davis stresses Farmer’s failure to state at the suppression hearing where and when he filled out the clothing description portion of the buy report. There are three answers to this line of argument. First, it may not have been entirely clear to the district court that Farmer’s response at the suppression hearing — in light of the broad question defense counsel asked him — gave rise to a testimonial inconsistency. See
United States v. Hale,
As to the second ground
for
rehearing, the district court also did not abuse its discretion in admitting Officer Farmer’s redacted “buy” report. Even if the buy report was inadmissible as a public record under Fed.R.Evid. 803(8)(B), it was admissible under Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(1)(C) as a statement of identification made after perceiving Davis. The facts here are similar to those in
United States v. Coleman,
In challenging the buy report’s admissibility, Davis relies on
United States v. Oates,
Even if the district court erred in admitting the redacted buy report and permitting the government to refer to it during closing, any such error was harmless and did not prejudice Davis.
See Clarke,
The third issue Davis raises relates to the district court’s determination to admit evidence of Davis’s bad acts. See Fed. R. Evid. 403. It is clear that the district court took its respоnsibility under Rule 403 seriously. The district court explicitly “weigh[edj” and analyzed the probative value of admitting evidence of Davis’s pri- or bad acts. And the district court took aсcount of and sought to limit any potential prejudice to Davis by, among other things, excluding mention of the prior bad acts until the end of the government’s case in chief аnd barring reference to them in the government’s opening and closing statements.
Whether the district court included in the Rule 403 balancing Davis’s proposed stipulation is not сlear. On the one hand, the district court stated that it would follow
United States v. Hudson,
At all еvents, if the district court failed to weigh the proposed stipulation in the balance, a remand would nevertheless be unwarranted. The factors germane to the Rulе 403 determination are readily apparent and an on-the-record consideration of the proposed stipulation would not have changed the district сourt’s ruling.
See United States v. Graham,
In
Old Chief v. United States,
the Supreme Court reiterated that as a general rule, district courts may—indeed should—permit the government to introduce relevant evidence of bad aсts to prove
*151
elements of guilt (excluding felony status) and to establish all the circumstances surrounding the offense.
See
The petition for rehearing is denied.
So ordered.
Notes
. Because Crowder II recounts the facts of this case, we do not repeat them here.
