Dennis Lovelace was convicted by a jury of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a). Caught red-handed in Milwaukee with a trunk full of cocaine and drug paraphernalia, Lovelace, the driver of the car, and another passenger *652 were arrested. At trial, the government introduced into evidence and repeated four times an informant’s tip that had led to Lovelace’s arrest. The substance of the tip was that Lovelace was to be in Milwaukee at a certain address on a certain day with cocaine for sale. Because this tip fingered Lovelace, as opposed to his passenger, who was never prosecuted, Lovelace argues on appeal that the admission of this tip unfairly prejudiced his trial. In addition, Lovelace argues that the government’s closing argument, which contained a scornful remark or two about trial process, deprived him of a fair trial. We affirm.
I.
Milwaukee police received a tip that Dennis Lovelace would be on the 2600 block of West North Avenue in a rental car for the purpose of delivering cocaine. Acting on this tip, Milwaukee Police Detective Baker and Special Agent Gibson hunted for Lovelace on West North Avenue. Not finding him, they traveled to a part of the city where Lovelace was known to frequent, and then to Lovelace’s girlfriend’s house. Still empty-handed, they returned to West North Avenue, where they spotted a dark green Bonneville. Gibson and Baker ran a check on the Bonneville’s plates and discovered that they were listed as belonging to an Oldsmobile Cutlass owned by Avis Renb-a-Car. 1 Diverted by another suspicious car, the detectives left West North Avenue, only to cross the Bonneville’s path again, at which time they pulled it over.
The officers requested identification and rental papers from the Bonneville’s occupants: driver Lovelace and his passenger Shabazz. Detective Baker then asked permission to search the trunk, which Lovelace freely granted. In the trunk Baker found a tripartite duffel bag, the center compartment of which contained a brick of cocaine, 34 zip-lock plastic bags, and an electronic scale. From one end compartment, the police recovered more cocaine. From the other end compartment, the police found a travel itinerary and a boarding pass bearing Lovelace’s name. Also in the trunk were dry cleaning with tags marked with Lovelace’s mother’s address and a hotel receipt belonging to Sha-bazz. From Lovelace’s person, police recovered three pagers and $1,050 in small bills; from Shabazz, police recovered one pager.
At trial, the government’s theory was that of constructive possession: Lovelace was the driver of the car that contained a trunk full of cocaine; on his person was a large quantity of cash and three pagers, indicia of a drug dealer; and in the duffel bag with the cocaine, scale and small plastic bags, were travel documents bearing Lovelace’s name. The gist of Lovelace’s defense was insufficiency of the evidence. His counsel vaguely theorized that the rental car could be likened to a “community car”, he pointed out that there was no evidence the pagers worked, that there were no weapons in the car, and that there was no proof clothing in the car belonged to Lovelace. With respect to the tip, the government first outlined its bare allegations in opening argument; both Detectives Starr and Baker testified to its content; and the government repeated its substance in closing argument. The jury convicted Lovelace, and the court sentenced him to 87 months of imprisonment, four years of supervised release, and a $2,000 fine.
II.
Lovelace argues that the admission of the tip was an abuse of the trial judge’s discretion. Tips that inform law enforcement of criminal activity may be offered into evidence for the purpose of explaining actions undertaken pursuant to a criminal investigation; their function, courts reason, is to give context, rather than to prove criminal activity.
See United States v. Reyes,
Tips have been considered relevant in a criminal trial where they contribute to an understanding of the defendant’s state of mind or when used in response to a defense tactic.
See United States v. Forrester,
The lack of a compelling reason to admit the tip was compounded by its potential for prejudice. Federal Rule of Evidence 403 provides that relevant evidence may be excluded where its “probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.” The worry with a tip containing a specific charge of criminality is that it has great potential to be credited by the jury. Such a tip can be particularly prejudicial where it addresses a disputed issue or is made by a knowledgeable declarant (and therefore presumably believed by the jury).
See Reyes,
Here the admission of the tip sounds several alarms. Most significant among them is that this tip goes to the heart of the only colorable dispute at trial: whether Lovelace was the right man. In this constructive possession case, Lovelace argued insufficiency of the evidence. One logical conclusion to draw from the defense that there just was not enough information to connect the drugs to Lovelace is that the drugs belonged to Shabazz or another member of the car’s “community.” In this light, the tip, which tied the drugs to Lovelace alone, could be thought by the jury to offset the defense’s explanation and thus could be prejudicial to Lovelace’s defense.
Cf. United States v. Martinez,
A chameleon-like factor reviewing courts look to in assessing potential prejudice is the existence of a curative instruction. Potentially determinative, it is the. court’s direction that distinguishes a tip from hearsay for the jury.
See Reyes,
In our judgment, the tip should not have been admitted. It was, and our task is to determine whether it affected the outcome of Lovelace’s trial.
See United States v. Zapata,
III.
In the government’s closing argument, the prosecutor addressed the following words to the jury:
Trials are an amazing process. If you were any place but in this courtroom, if you were outside in your everyday life and someone walked up to you and said, hey, this is what happened on March 29, 1996, and they relayed these facts to you, you’d go, wow, that guy is guilty. It is only in a courtroom where we sit and listen to arguments such as the arguments that have been made on behalf of Mr. Lovelace which are simply blind alleys, ladies and gentleman, and have to give those things serious consideration. The law requires that.
At this point in the trial, Lovelace objected and moved for a mistrial, which was denied. Lovelace maintains that this portion of the government’s closing argument is an instance of prosecutorial misconduct because the remarks “pander to latent cynicism” and “call into question the fact finding process.” The government counters that these remarks were simply the prosecution’s way of inviting the jury to ignore factually unsubstantiated arguments made by the defendant. We use
*655
the same standard of review as we did above and ássess whether the trial judge by allowing the prosecution’s remarks abused his discretion.
See United States v. Marshall,
The defense has some reason to complain. Because one may read into “amazing” a tone of disrespect for our practices and procedures, these remarks do not add to the stature of the profession or of the courts. It would behoove the government to avoid such insinuations in the future and find a better way to impart to the jury that it use common sense. We cannot, however, go so far as to say that these remarks are facially improper. Through his sarcasm (or in spite of his sarcasm), the prosecution does remind the jury of its duty to deliberate within the parameters of the law. Because his argument in no way sought to displace the burden of proof under which Lovelace was convicted, we need not proceed with a consideration of the whole trial record.
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The plate registration error was later deemed to be Avis's fault.
. At the first instance of the tip’s admission, the court read the following instruction:
The court has allowed the witness to testify as to the fact that they received this tip and what *654 they did pursuant to the receipt of that tip. Now, that's not offered for the truth of the allegations in the tip; that’s offered to explain only the actions of the officers. In other words the declarant here is testifying to what somebody else told somebody in the department, and that's of course hearsay. There's no way of cross-examining the tip, so the court allows it only for the purpose of explaining to you what the officers did or why they did what they did; it's not offered for the truth of the matter that's asserted in the tip. And I want you to make that distinction because you may not base your verdict upon the tip or the information that was relayed to the police department in that tip.
At the second admission, the court simply said, "As I previously advised the jury, the information that was received by this officer and which was passed on is not offered for the truth of the information but merely to explain the actions that were taken by the police officer.”
