Defendant Daniel Iwegbu appeals his conviction for conspiracy to import heroin. He argues that the trial court erred in failing to conduct a hearing on the voluntariness of his alleged confession, and in failing to give a jury instruction regarding the alleged confession. Because the district court’s errors, if any, do not rise to the level of plain error, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
DEA agent Tim Stover, one of the officers who arrested Iwegbu, testified that he interviewed Iwegbu after he was taken to the DEA’s Dallas offices. He stated that after reading Iwegbu his rights, Iwegbu voluntarily confessed to his involvement in a heroin smuggling operation. According to Stover, Iwegbu made several incriminating statements, including an admission that he had recruited Pam Jones and Veronica Baker (both of whom testified against him) for the operation. Stover testified that Iwegbu admitted that a large sum of cash seized from him by U.S. Border Patrol agents was intended as payment to Jones, Baker, and himself, as well as to cover еxpenses for the operation.
After the Government called seven witnesses and rested its case, Iwegbu testified as the sole defense witness. His defense was that Pam Jones was a spurned lover who had set him up. On cross-examination, he dеnied making inculpatory statements to Stover, and stated that he was not read his rights until just before he left the DEA offices, after “they [had] kept me there for a long time.” He also claimed that Stover had insulted him, threatened him with life in prison, and “told me I should help them, you know.” Stover denied telling Iwegbu that he should cooperate with the Government, and denied “threatening him with life in prison or anything like that.”
*274 DISCUSSION
Iwegbu complains that his testimony put in issue the voluntariness of his alleged confession. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3501(a) (1985):
[A confession] shall be admissible in evidence if it is voluntarily given. Before such confession is received in evidence, the trial judge shall, out of the presence of the jury, determine any issue as to voluntariness. If the trial judge determines that the confession wаs voluntarily made ... [he] shall instruct the jury to give such weight to the confession as the jury feels it deserves under all the circumstances.
The statute is written in mandatory language, and therefore
once
an issue arises as to the voluntariness of a confession, the district court should conduct a voluntariness hearing and givе the instruction required by the statute. In this case, Iwegbu’s counsel did not file a motion to suppress the confession, did not request a hearing or instruction, and did not object to Stover’s testimony. We have held however that even when no request is made fоr the hearing and instruction, the district court should comply with the statute
sua sponte
when the evidence clearly raises a question of voluntariness.
United States v. Renteria,
We face two issues. First, did the evidence raise a genuine issue of voluntariness, triggering the requirements of a hearing and instruction? Second, if the issue of volun-tariness was in issue, did the district cоurt’s failure to conduct the hearing and give the instruction
sua sponte
amount to reversible error? We pretermit the first issue and assume that a genuine issue of voluntariness was raised.
Compare Renteria,
Assuming
arguendo
that the issue of voluntariness was raised, we turn to whether the district court’s failure to give the instruction and сonduct the hearing constitutes reversible error. Since there were no requests or objections raised in the district court regarding the confession testimony, the errors asserted on appeal must amount to plain error under the most rеcent writing of the Supreme Court.
United States v. Olano,
- U.S. -, -,
While
Olano
leaves open the possibility that some forfeited errors can be corrected regardless .of their effect on the outcome of the trial, or that some errors should be presumеd prejudicial, — U.S. at -,
Applying this standard of review, we hold that the failure to give the instruction and conduct the hearing was not plain error. Regarding the hearing, the district court was faced with a situation where the governmеnt witness insisted that the confession was entirely voluntary, and the defendant insisted that there had been no confession at all. Even if the court had conducted a voluntariness hearing, the court would have had to conclude that any confessiоn given was given voluntarily. Hence, such a hearing would not have affected the evidence presented to the jury. 3
Based on all the circumstances in this case, we also conclude that the failure to give a voluntariness instruction, if errоr at all, does not constitute plain error. First, the district court did give a general instruction on the credibility of witnesses.
4
A vol-untariness instruction focuses the jury on the need to exercise extra caution and attention when considering confession testimony. We agree with Iwegbu that a general credibility
*276
instruction does not satisfy the requirements of § 3501(a).
See United States v. McLernon,
Second, Iwegbu denied making any incriminating statements, and hence shifted the focus of the trial away from the issue of voluntariness and towаrd the issue of whether the statements were made at all. Again, we agree with Iwegbu that denying that a confession was made does not render § 3501(a) inapplicable.
United States v. Barry, 518
F.2d 342, 346-47 (2d Cir.1975) (“[Section 3501] is not qualified ... by a defendant’s denial that he has ever made any inculpatory statements.... A defendant may properly claim that he made no incriminating statements and that any statements which the jury might find that he made were coerced.”). However, this testimony limited any possible prejudice resulting from the failure to give the instruction, by shifting the emphasis of the trial away from the volun-tariness issue.
Cf. United States v. Gonzalez,
Third, the confession testimony was strongly corroborated by other evidence presented at trial, including the testimony of three other participants in the smuggling scheme and an undercоver agent. The confession testimony was cumulative of other evidence on which a reasonable jury easily could have convicted Iwegbu. Iwegbu’s defense—that he was set up by Pam Jones because he ended their affair—was directly contradicted by Jones, who denied the existence of the affair. Iwegbu’s trial testimony regarding the seized cash was also contradicted by several witnesses.
Fourth, in the context of the whole district court proceeding, the issue of voluntаriness was downplayed to the point that it was a minor issue. This issue was never raised by either side prior to trial, during opening or closing statements, or during the charge conference. Iwegbu concedes that the district court had no way of knowing thаt there was even an issue of voluntariness until Iwegbu testified. Counsel for Iwegbu made no mention of Stover’s confession testimony during his closing argument.
Cf. United States v. Fuentes,
We conclude that Iwegbu has not met his burden of showing prejudice.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
United States v. Espinoza-Seanez,
.Some of our prior сases suggest that certain errors by the district court, including the failure to comply with § 3501(a), are plain error
per se,
but that such plain errors are not reversible if they are harmless.
E.g., Oakley,
. On appeal, Iwegbu does not seriously contend otherwise. Nowhere in his appellate briefs does he argue that a hearing would have convinced the district court that the confession, if any, was coerced. His "Statement of the Issue” in his opening brief addresses only the failure to give the instruction, as do his "Summary of the Argument” and his headings under the argument sections of his opening brief.
. The jury was instructed as follows:
You are the sole judges of the credibility оr "believability" of all witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony. You should carefully scrutinize all the testimony given, the circumstances under which each witness has testified, and every matter in evidence which tends to show whether a witness is worthy of belief. In weighing the testimony of a witness you should consider the relationship of the witness to the government or to the defendant; the witness’ interest, if any, in the outcome of the case; the witness' manner of testifying; the witness' opportunity to observe or aсquire knowledge concerning the facts about which the witness testified; the witness' candor, fairness and intelligence; and the extent to which the witness has been supported or contradicted by other believable evidence. You may, in short, accept or reject the testimony of any witness in whole or in part.
