Appellant Ernest Dixon was indicted 1 for the robbery of some $4,280.63 from the Produce State Bank of Hollandale, Minnesota, a village of 280 people. He was also charged with a second count of possession of that money, knowing it to have been stolen, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(c). A mistrial was declared on the robbery count when the jury could not agree, but Dixon was convicted on the possession count.
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Dixon asserts two errors: (1) that, under United States v. Jones,
The facts are clear and convincing. Dixon remained in a waiting car while two other participants robbed the bank. They returned to the car with the money, and were driven away by him. Earlier, Dixon was observed in the car by a local bar owner living nearby, who recognized the car as that of Francisco Hernandez, an acquaintance. Later, the bar owner observed the car bound out of town with Dixon driving and Hernandez and another man in the rear seat; he saw the car stop and Hernandez took the driver’s seat. Local police radioed an alert; the car was stopped by police officers in a nearby town, Faribault; and the stolen cash and firearms were found under the front seat. Hernandez and Rivera pled guilty. Hernandez testified for the Government.
It. is, of course, hornbook law that where robbery and the lesser offense of possession are charged in the indictment, the jury must be told that the defendant cannot be guilty of both crimes. United States v. Jones,
Here, however, the jury convicted Dixon of possession and there was a mistrial on the robbery count. Since we know that the jury entered a guilty verdict on the possession count, no prejudice could result from an áffirmance of that count.
2
Cf.
United States v. Tyler,
As to the instructions given, Dixon seems to quibble over words. Certainly the substance of the requests were incorporated in the instructions given, and the omissions of which Dixon complains were included in the instructions at a subsequent point. Finally, Dixon objects to the omission of some adjectives and the addition of some restrictive words, but we believe such distinctions are of no significance, taking the instructions as a whole. While in Holland v. United States,
Affirmed.
