OPINION
Defendant-Appellant Jerome Ian Owens appeals his conviction for armed bank robbery on the grounds that (1) the district court declined to investigate the possibility of jury bias, (2) prosecutorial misconduct deprived him of a fair trial, (3) the evidence underlying two counts of the indictment was insufficient, (4) the district court erred in its evaluation of restitution, and (5) he is entitled to remand for resentencing under
United States v. Booker,
— U.S.-,
I.
Owens was arrested on September 21, 2002 in connection with a string of bank robberies. Owens was identified by his mother from a security photograph taken during the fourth and final robbery. Owens was indicted on, and pleaded not guilty to, fourteen related counts.
Over the course of the resulting trial, the Government put on evidence that Owens planned one robbery and physically participated in three others. Most of Owens’s accomplices testified to committing a robbery alongside Owens or testified that Owens admitted to them that he had committed a specific robbery.
*804 The accomplices largely corroborated one another. For instance, Damon Johnson, a participant in the fourth robbery, testified that he had once loaned Owens a gun that Owens returned stained by red dye. When Johnson asked about it, Owens described his participation in another of the four robberies. In that robbery, a dye pack exploded and a gun discharged. Lionel Sorrels, another accomplice, testified that Owens independently described a robbery wherein a gun discharged and' a dye pack exploded.
Bank employees, customers, and law enforcement authorities confirmed certain details provided by the co-perpetrators about the various robberies. Stevie Jones described a robbery he committed with Owens wherein Owens pushed a woman to the ground and referenced Flint, Michigan with the words “This is how we do it in Flint.” Bank employees and customers confirmed these two details. Adika Sutton claimed that she talked with Owens via a Nextel phone during a robbery on November 28, 2001, which Owens was alleged to have planned. Officer Valentine testified that when Sutton and her accomplice were caught driving away from the scene, police recovered a Nextel phone.
Owens denied any involvement in the November 2, 2000, May 10, 2001, and November 28, 2001 robberies. He admitted participation in the February 15, 2002 robbery, but claimed that he was coerced by the other robbers. The other perpetrators denied that they coerced Owens and bank employees singled out Owens as the leader of the February 15 robbery.
The trial did have several notable anomalies. First, a juror passed a note to the judge asking whether Owens could present a danger to the jury because “[h]e was staring at [the juror] uncomfortably.” Defendant’s counsel asked the court to question the juror about the note but the court declined. Upon agreement by both parties, the court instructed the courtroom deputy to advise the jury that “to the best of the Court’s knowledge and all the parties’ knowledge, [Owens] does not pose a security risk to anyone.” Second, the court admonished a prosecutor for commenting on the credibility of a Government witness during his closing argument. Finally, a prosecutor asked the jury during her closing argument if they had ever been the victims of a crime and, if so, how they felt about Owens’s claim that he was a victim.
On February 5, 2004, the jury convicted Owens on all but one of the fourteen counts charged. The court sentenced him to 1,411 months in prison based on the United States Sentencing Guidelines. The court adjusted the sentence upward for obstruction of justice and evidence of leadership. Of the 1,411 months, 1,260 were part of a statutory minimum imposed by 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). The court also ordered Owens to pay $229,900 in restitution under the Victim and Witness Protection Act.
Owens now appeals his conviction, sentence, and the order of restitution. We have jurisdiction to hear Owens’s timely appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
A. Jury Bias
When a juror passed a note to the district judge articulating her discomfort with Owens for “staring at her,” Owens’s trial counsel requested that the juror be investigated for the possibility of bias. The district judge denied the request but assured the jury that Owens did not present a danger. We review the district judge’s decision not to question the juror for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Davis,
*805
In
Remmer v. United States,
the Supreme Court held that a trial court, faced with an indication of jury bias, must conduct “a hearing with all interested parties permitted to participate.”
We have defined an “extraneous influence” as “one derived from specific knowledge about or a relationship with either the parties or their witnesses.”
Herndon,
When a defendant stares at a juror during the course of his trial, however, he has introduced no outside contact with, nor special information about, a party or witness. In
United States v. Lopez,
To hold otherwise, moreover, is to create incentives for a defendant to make his or her jury uncomfortable. Although it was never determined whether Owens actually stared at the preoccupied juror during his trial, a defendant is not automatically entitled to a
Remmer
hearing because he has managed to insult or frighten a juror.
Cf. United States v. Reesor,
Ultimately, the abuse of discretion standard is a highly deferential one.
See Hardyman v. Norfolk & Western Railway,
We conclude that Owens’s staring was not an extraneous influence, and we accordingly affirm the district court’s refusal to question the juror who authored the note.
B. Prosecutorial Misconduct
1. Claim of improper challenge to defense witness credibility.
Defense counsel objected when, during closing argument, one prosecutor said that defense witness LaShawn Winston had “an incentive to make a deal with the defendant” because he might be a wit
*806
ness at her upcoming trial. When cross-examined, the witness had specifically denied entering into a
quid pro quo
with Owens. The trial judge nevertheless ruled that the prosecutor’s comment constituted fair argument. We review allegations of prosecutorial misconduct to which trial counsel objected
de novo. United States v. Barnett,
“A prosecutor may not express a personal opinion concerning ... the credibility of a trial witness” because to do so “exceeds the legitimate advocate’s role by improperly inviting the jury to convict on a basis other than a neutral independent assessment of the record proof.”
Caldwell v. Russell,
In this case, there was sufficient evidence to support the prosecutor’s comments. Stevie Jones testified inter alia that Winston and Owens robbed at least one bank together before Winston admitted that she was under investigation for another, unsolved bank robbery. If credited, these facts alone support the inference that Winston had some incentive to lie, which is all the prosecution argued. Accordingly, we affirm the district court.
2. Claim of improper vouching for witness for prosecution.
During closing argument, one prosecutor referred to the plea agreements signed by several Government witnesses, Owens’s accomplices in the robberies, which condition federal immunity on their truthful testimony at trial. In apparent response, the judge said, “I’m afraid you are coming dangerously close here to vouching.” Because defense counsel did not object at the time, we review the claim of improper vouching for plain error.
United States v. Carroll,
The prosecutor uttered his statements in response to defense counsel who, in her closing, suggested that each Government witness had “some motivation” to testify falsely in light of an “obligation” or “plea agreement.” When a defendant attacks the credibility of a government witness for signing a plea agreement, the prosecution is entitled to refer to the agreement in rebuttal.
See United States v. Francis,
Even where the defense did not mention the plea agreement, this Court condones its reasonable use by the prosecution.
See United States v. Trujillo,
Following its admonishment, furthermore, the trial court reminded the jurors that they, not the prosecutor, were the trier of fact. The prosecutor himself repeatedly echoed the judge on this point stating, “You twelve are the judges ... all I can do is highlight the facts and the argument.” An immediate instruction by the trial court mitigates otherwise improper vouching.
See Carroll,
Generally speaking, “improper vouching includes either blunt comments or comments that imply that the prosecutor has special knowledge of facts not in front of the jury.”
Francis,
3. Claim of improper pandering to jury prejudice.
A second prosecutor speculated during her closing that some of the jurors had “probably been the victims of crimes.” She asked the jurors how it made them feel that “the defendant in this case wants [them] to think of him as the victim.” She went on to question the plausibility of Owens’s claim of duress in the robbery where he was caught on tape. Defense counsel did not object at the time. As with his claim of vouching, therefore, we review Owens’s claim of pandering for plain error.
Carroll,
Even in a straightforward case, improper pandering may furnish grounds to vacate and remand.
See, e.g., Boyle v. Million,
This Court determines flagrancy by examining four factors: (1) whether the statements tended to mislead the jury or prejudice the defendant, (2) whether the statements were isolated or among a series, (3) whether the statements were deliberate, and (4) the total strength of the evidence against the accused.
Boyle,
Not only was the comment at issue isolated, it is not clear from the record whether the comment was even calculated to prejudice the jurors against Owens: it may have been calculated to cast doubt on Owens’s claim of duress. Further, the evidence against Owens, especially with respect to his defense of duress, was overwhelming. Each of his collaborators de
*808
nied that Owens was under duress. The customers and employees of the bank, moreover, testified that Owens appeared to be the leader of the February 15 robbery. In light of the trial as a whole and the evidence against him, Owens has not shown that the prosecutor’s comment was flagrant.
Cf. Modena,
C. Sufficiency of Evidence
Owens questions the sufficiency of evidence supporting his conviction on Counts Four and Five of the indictment. This Court reviews such a challenge
de novo, see United States v. Knipp,
Counts Four and Five relate to the robbery of the Michigan National Bank on May 10, 2001. The evidence presented at trial was sufficient to support a conviction. Stevie Jones-Owens’s friend and subsequent bank robbery accomplice-identified a partially disguised Owens from a surveillance photo. Jones, Damon Johnson, Lionel Sorrells, and Adika Johnson, all testified that Owens admitted to them that he had robbed the bank, that a red dye pack had exploded on the money, and that someone had fired a gun. Bank employees corroborated these details.
Owens argues that too much of the evidence of his guilt comes from his co-conspirators. He cites to
Opper v. United States,
D. Restitution
The trial court ordered restitution under the Victim and Witness Protection Act (‘VWPA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3663, in the amount of $229,900 to the various banks Owens was convicted of robbing, despite acknowledging that he was all but indigent. A district judge may choose to order restitution under the VWPA but, as Owens points out, the record must contain “some indication that the sentencing court considered the defendant’s financial condition in ordering restitution.”
United States v. Purther,
Because Owens was convicted of various crimes of violence resulting in the loss of property or money to an identifiable victim, restitution was ultimately mandatory under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act. 18 U.S.C. § 3663A. Thus, if the district judge named the wrong statute, his mistake was harmless.
Cf. United States v. Vandeberg,
Moreover, although a judge
should
name the applicable statute,
see United States v. Padgett,
Finally, the MVRA is technically an amendment to the VPWA.
See U.S. v. Perry,
E. Sentencing
The trial court sentenced Owens to 1,411 months of imprisonment. Of the 1,411 months sentenced, 1,260 were mandated by statute.
See
18 U.S.C. §§ 924(c)(1)(A)(i)-(C)(i). At issue, therefore, are the 151 months within the trial court’s discretion. We review legal conclusions regarding sentencing calculations
de novo. United States v. Hazelwood,
At trial, Owens objected to an enhancement of his sentence for obstruction on the ground that the Government had not proved the underlying charge of perjury. Owens renews this objection on appeal. To impose an enhancement for obstruction through perjury a district court must articulate two things. “First, the court must identify the particular portions of the defendant’s testimony it considers to be perjurious.”
United States v. Chance,
Were this the end of the matter, we would affirm the enhancement. Yet Owens has also challenged the constitutionality of his sentence, citing
United States v. Booker,
— U.S.-,
III.
Finding no error at trial, we AFFIRM the conviction in all respects, AFFIRM the order of restitution, but REMAND for resentencing in light of Booker.
