OPINION EN BANC
John A. Grant, a former chapter 7 debt- or, appeals his felony conviction for concealing art work belonging to the chapter 7 estate, claiming that there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction and that the prosecutor made improper remarks during closing argument. A panel of this court initially vacated the judgment of conviction on the ground that the government had not established an essential element of
*801
the crime of concealment,
see
18 U.S.C. § 152 (1979 & Supp.1991), namely, that the art work “belonged” to the chapter 7 estate at the time of the alleged concealment.
United States v. Grant,
I
BACKGROUND
We relate the material facts in the light most favorable to the verdict.
United States v. Lopez,
During May 28, 1987, Grant initiated voluntary chapter 11 proceedings in his individual capacity and in behalf of Summit, which continued to operate as a debtor in possession. Grant scheduled “15 prints & photographs ... located at 92 State Street” as.property of his own chapter 11 estate. On November 17, 1987, the chapter 11 proceedings relating to Grant and Summit were converted to chapter 7 liquidation proceedings. Grant learned .of the court-ordered chapter 7 conversions the same day. Two days later, the newly-appointed chapter 7 trustee [hereinafter “trustee”] scheduled a November 20 meeting with Grant and Grant’s counsel in Summit’s offices at 92 State Street in Boston.
On the morning of November 20, the trustee, accompanied by Linda Young, Esquire, counsel to the chapter 11 creditors committee and the trustee, arrived at 92 State Street, where Young noticed that there were “significantly less and different furnishings” than she remembered from her visit one month earlier. Young informed the trustee that a “number of large prints” were missing and had been replaced with “inexpensive photographs.” The trustee notified Grant and Grant’s counsel that items may have been removed from the Summit offices, and asked that Grant accompany him to the Grant residence in Winchester, Massachusetts, to conduct an immediate inventory of its contents. The. trustee rejected Grant’s suggestion that the inventory be deferred for three days. When Grant misinformed the trustee that he had scheduled a meeting with another attorney “later that morning,” the trustee arranged to meet Grant in Boston at 1:00 in the afternoon, at which time they were to proceed to the Grant residence and conduct the inventory. Young discussed with Grant and his attorney the legal consequences of the onset of the chapter 7 proceedings, informing Grant that he no longer had authority to conduct the Summit business and that the trustee was responsible for collecting and liquidating all assets of the chapter 7 estates. Their meeting at 92 State Street ended at approximately 10:30 a.m.
Upon leaving 92 State Street, and without informing -the trustee of his plans, Grant took the train to Winchester and drove to his residence, arriving at approximately 11:40 a.m. When two former assistants arrived for a previously scheduled meeting with Grant, they saw him loading unidentified items into his van. At Grant’s direction, the assistants packed office equipment and eight or nine framed items *802 into their own vehicles. One assistant recognized the framed items as Stobart prints previously located at the Summit offices in Burlington. Grant drove his loaded van to the train station, parked it, and took the MBTA back to Boston to meet the trustee as previously arranged. Grant’s assistants drove home with the Stobart prints in their vehicles. Meanwhile, a member of the former chapter 11 creditors committee had observed the removal of property from the Grant residence and notified the trustee, who contacted the FBI.
Immediately upon receiving the report of Grant’s activities, the trustee and Linda Young drove to the Grant residence. Grant returned to Winchester by train, but decided to walk home from the train station rather than drive the loaded van. The FBI arrived shortly thereafter. When Grant was confronted with the report that he had been seen removing items from the residence, he admitted to removing files and office equipment but did not mention the Stobart prints. The trustee conducted an inventory of the contents of the Grant residence. 2 Notwithstanding Grant’s testimony that he retrieved the removed items later that day, he never informed the trustee of their return. The indictment charged a continuing concealment, extending from November 20, 1987, through the date of indictment on March 20, 1990.
During the course of the chapter 7 proceedings, the trustee commenced several adversary proceedings against Grant and Grant's wife, who filed claims against the chapter 7 estates. One of these adversary proceedings involved an objection to Grant’s discharge, based on the alleged concealment of an unspecified number of Stobart prints belonging to the jointly-administered chapter 7 estates. Grant, Grant’s wife, and the trustee entered into a settlement agreement in August 1989, whereby the trustee would release all claims relating to the adversary proceedings pending against the Grants and would abandon any interest, inter alia, in their Winchester residence, its contents, and furnishings, in return for a $250,000 cash payment arranged by Mrs. Grant. Six months later, Grant was indicted for allegedly concealing “at least six Stobart prints with an approximate value of $12,000.” Following a three-day jury trial, Grant was convicted and sentenced to a twelve-month probationary term.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Elements of Bankruptcy Fraud
The concealment offense with which Grant was charged under the indictment in this case required proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Grant knowingly concealed property of his chapter 7 estate from the chapter 7 trustee, with specific intent to defraud creditors.
See United States v. Guiliano,
1. Property of Chapter 7 Estate
a. Consequences of Abandonment and the “Relation Back" Doctrine
Grant first contends that the government failed, as a matter of law, to *803 establish that the Stobart prints were “property belonging to the [chapter 7] estate.” 18 U.S.C. § 152. Relying on the “relation back” doctrine developed under the Bankruptcy Act of 1867 (and its successor statutes) [hereinafter “Bankruptcy Act”], Grant contends that his conviction must be set aside in light of the trustee’s post-concealment abandonment of the Sto-bart prints. According to Grant, the putative abandonment revested title in the same entity which held it at the commencement of the case and any interim concealment of the prints was nullified retroactively. 4
As Grant’s “relation ■ back” claim is raised for the first time on appeal, we review for plain error,
see, e.g., United States v. Dietz,
We note at the outset that the doctrine of “relation back” has been recognized in bankruptcy proceedings for more than a century, yet Grant has not cited to a criminal case in which the doctrine was applied. No less significantly, the doctrine originated within the very dissimilar framework of the Bankruptcy Act, and its application in relation to these chapter 7 proceedings under the Bankruptcy Code would serve none
*804
of the benign purposes for which it was fashioned. Rather, its extension to criminal proceedings for bankruptcy fraud arising out of a chapter 7 case would disserve the interests of justice which the “relation back” doctrine was designed to serve.
See, e.g., Wallace v. Lawrence Warehouse Co.,
The bankruptcy doctrine of “relation back” was designed to assimilate the technical niceties of common law notions of title to the title vesting provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. See generally 4A James W. Moore, Collier on Bankruptcy 111170.-05, 70.42, at 69-75, 499-516 (14th ed. 1978) [hereinafter “4A Collier'’]. The technical rigidity of common law conceptions of title required that title at all times repose in some ascertainable person or entity. Id. at 73. Under the Bankruptcy Act, however, title to non-exempt property did not pass from the bankrupt by operation of law until the appointment and qualification of the trustee in bankruptcy, often weeks or months after the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. There being no alternative repository for the title of the bankrupt during the gap period preceding the qualification of the trustee in bankruptcy, the “vesting” mechanism of the doctrine of “relation back” became the fictional device whereby the trustee in bankruptcy acceded retroactively to the title held by the bankrupt as of the date of bankruptcy. 6
The “relation back” mechanism principally at issue in the present case — the title “revesting” mechanism — was designed to afford retroactive relief from random inequities visited upon third parties during the pre-abandonment period occasioned by the unsynchronized interaction between the title vesting scheme ordained under Bankruptcy Act § 70 and the appointment and qualification of the trustee in bankruptcy under Bankruptcy Act §§ 44(a), 45, 50(b) & (k), 11 U.S.C. §§ 72(a), 73, 78(b) & (k). 7 *805 During the pre-abandonment period, the bankrupt was able to effect transfers to third parties who could be required by the trustee in bankruptcy to disgorge the property which was the subject of the transfer. See, e.g., Bankruptcy Act §§ 21(g), 70(d), 11 U.S.C. §§ 44(g), 110(d). In the event of an abandonment of the subject property by the trustee, the title “revesting” mechanism served to enable the interim transferee to assert the rights acquired by virtue of the interim transfer from the bankrupt.
The principal raison d’etre of the “vesting” mechanism no longer obtains under the Bankruptcy Code. The commencement of a voluntary chapter 7 case establishes a chapter 7 estate to which virtually all property interests of the debtor pass by operation of law. See Bankruptcy Code §§ 301, 302, 541(a), 11 U.S.C. §§ 301, 302, 541(a). The chapter 7 estate becomes the immediate repository for whatever title the debtor held at the commencement of the case, precluding the gap period which arose in proceedings under the Bankruptcy Act. Given the demise of the gap period, and the fact that title no longer vests in the trustee, the continuing vitality of the ancillary “revesting” mechanism is questionable as well. 8 Thus, the technical hurdles obstructing Grant’s attempt to deploy a coherent “relation back” theory are insurmountable.
Perhaps more importantly, however, neither “relation back” mechanism was designed to insulate bankruptcy fraud, either in the bankruptcy proceeding itself or in any related criminal proceeding. Like other criminal statutes, section 152 is intended to deter the outlawed conduct.
See, e.g., Oneida Motor Freight, Inc. v. United Jersey Bank,
The present case exemplifies a type of harm the bankruptcy fraud statute was designed to prevent. Although Grant vigorously argues that all the Stobart prints were abandoned by the trustee, their settlement agreement is more naturally interpreted as an abandonment of the two Sto-bart prints located and inventoried at the Grant residence, and not the five or six other Stobart prints allegedly removed on November 20, 1987.
See supra
note 4. It is sufficient to note that Grant’s concealment of Stobart prints on November 20, 1987, put the trustee at a significant disad
*806
vantage in ascertaining the nature and value of the chapter 7 estate’s interest in these prints.
See In re Tarpley,
The entire experience under the Bankruptcy Act reveals no recorded instance in which the doctrine of “relation back” was utilized to exonerate a bankrupt (or anyone else) from criminal responsibility for concealing property from a trustee in bankruptcy. The benign fiction that an abandonment reinstates the title the debtor held at the date of bankruptcy was designed to minimize injustice to third parties, not invite it. Similarly, as the doctrine of “relation back” lies in the realm of theoretics, its capacity to reform reality doubtless did not extend to undoing Grant’s removal and concealment of the Stobart prints while they remained property of the chapter 7 estate, any more than an abandonment of property purposely ruined by fire could restore the premises, undo the arson, or exonerate the arsonist.
b. Sufficiency of Evidence of Ownership of Prints
Grant challenges the sufficiency of the government’s evidence that the Stobart prints were “property belonging to [his chapter 7] estate,” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 152, clause l.
9
The present contention reduces to the basic proposition that particular elements of the prosecution’s case, viewed in isolation, were inconclusive on the issue of the ownership of the Stobart prints.
10
Of course we review the evidence as a whole and in context, not in piecemeal isolation.
United States v. Geer,
The government introduced evidence that (1) Grant signed most of the invoices as the “purchaser,” 11 (2) a Summit employee represented to its insurer that the Stobart prints were “owned” by Grant, (3) at least two prints were stored in the Grant residence, (4) Grant’s chapter 11 schedules listed “15 prints & photographs ... located at 92 State Street” as his personal property, 12 and (5) during the chapter 7 proceedings, Grant testified under oath that the Stobart prints belonged to him. 13
*807 Our review of a criminal defendant’s challenge to an unfavorable jury verdict allegedly based on insufficient evidence is a deferential one:
We assess the sufficiency of the evidence as a whole, including all reasonable inferences, in the light most favorable to the verdict, with a view to whether a rational trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. We do not weigh witness credibility, but resolve all credibility issues in favor of the verdict. The evidence may be entirely circumstantial and need not exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence; that is, the factfinder may decide among reasonable interpretations of the evidence.
United States v. Lopez,
2. Evidence of Fraudulent Intent
Grant insists that there was not enough evidence from which the jury could have concluded, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he removed the Stobart prints from his residence with the specific intent to defraud creditors. Analogizing to adversary proceedings under Bankruptcy Code § 727,
14
Grant contends that a debtor normally will not be denied a discharge based on allegations of fraudulent concealment if the property was
scheduled
or otherwise
disclosed
to the trustee during the early stages of the bankruptcy proceedings.
See, e.g., In re Hirengen,
First, the manner of Grant’s disclosure of the prints did not preclude a jury finding . that he subsequently concealed them. The crime of concealment includes “withhold[ing of] knowledge” or “prevent[ing] disclosure
or recognition.
”
United States v. Turner,
Second, the evidence was sufficient to support a finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Grant knew that the chapter 7 conversion deprived him of any authority to remove property of the chapter 7 estate. The jury would have been entitled to conclude that a reasonable person in Grant’s position, having been informed only a few hours earlier that the trustee suspected that items had been removed from Summit’s offices, and having agreed to an immediate inventory of the contents of the Grant residence, would understand, either as a lay person or as an attorney, that he was not authorized to remove property from the residence prior to the inventory. In addition, Linda Young, who served successively as counsel to the chapter 11 creditors committee and the chapter 7 trustee, testified at trial that the legal consequences of the chapter 7 conversion were discussed with Grant and his attorney during their meeting at 92 State Street on the morning of November 20, 1987, just a few hours before Grant removed the Stobart prints from the Winchester residence. Among the matters discussed was the fact that the trustee was solely responsible for taking possession of “all of the assets of the various corporations and Mr. Grant.” (Emphasis added).
Third, the jury was not required to ascribe conclusive weight or import to Grant’s testimony that he arranged to have the prints returned to the Winchester residence shortly after the trustee learned of their removal. Further, if the jury chose to credit Grant’s testimony that he made arrangements to return the prints to the Grant residence, it was not required to conclude that the chapter 7 trustee was so informed. Moreover, in neither event did Grant’s testimony preclude a finding that he
removed
the prints with the requisite fraudulent intent to conceal, even if he returned them after their removal had been discovered. Although the replacement of removed property may be probative evidence of a lack of fraudulent intent, it is not dispositive.
See United States v. Klupt,
3. Evidence of Value
Grant contends that section 152 implicitly requires that the concealment involve a “substantial amount” of property “material” to the chapter 7 estate,
see United States v. Key,
Grant cites no authority for the suggested “substantiality” requirement and nothing in the language of section 152 supports it.
See Kanner v. United States,
Finally, a careful review of the record convinces us that there was sufficient evidence to support a jury finding, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Grant concealed as many as eight or nine Stobart prints. 20 Additionally, the jury was not *810 required to credit the liquidation-valuation evidence presented by Grant, rather than the much higher “cost” or “market value” evidence introduced by the government. 21
B. Prosecutor’s Closing Statement
Grant contends that the following statements by the prosecutor misstated the evidence and improperly impugned his credibility: Grant (1) testified that he “engaged in” the purchase of the Stobart prints, (2) was “excited about [the prints]” at the time of the purchases, (3) kept a list of the prints in his personal files, (4) knew that the prints would “go to his creditors” if he did not conceal them, (5) would have future access to the Winchester residence, thereby necessitating an immediate inventory of its contents, (6) misinformed the trustee at their November 20 meeting that he had an appointment with another attorney from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30, (7) could not have returned in time for the eleven o’clock meeting, according to the Boston-Winchester train schedule admitted in evidence, (8) filled his van with so many items from the Winchester residence that it was necessary to place additional items in his assistants’ vehicles, (9) actually removed “eight or nine Stobart prints” from the residence, (10) told his assistants to return the prints because “we got caught,” (11) never arranged to have his assistants return the prints to the residence, and (12) testified that “he didn’t take those prints.”
Since Grant did not object to any of the prosecutor’s remarks at trial, we review for plain error,
see Rodriguez-Cardona,
Grant contends that the prosecutor improperly injected his personal opinion into the case by stating that (1) it made “good sense” for the trustee to harbor suspicions about Grant and to decide to conduct an immediate inventory of the Winchester residence, and (2) that defendants often deny criminal intent and knowledge when they are caught in the act. The first set of statements, considered in context, did not express personal opinion, but attempted to characterize the trustee’s actions on November 20, 1987, as objectively reasonable. The latter statements fairly informed the jury that Grant’s disclaimers, after the event, as to his criminal intent and knowledge at the time of the event, were not dispositive. See supra p. 808. 22
Based on a careful review of the record, we conclude that the prosecutor’s statements, amounting at most to zealous characterizations of the government’s evidence, were not improper, and neither affected the fundamental fairness of the trial nor resulted in a miscarriage of justice.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In May 1986, an inventory reflected that 22 Stobart prints were located at the Summit business offices in Burlington, Massachusetts. After the business was beset by financial difficulties, Summit eventually relocated to smaller offices at 92 State Street in Boston. Sometime after the relocation, Grant stored at least two Stobart prints in the basement of the Grant residence at 18 Everett Avenue, Winchester, Massachusetts. In February 1987, a Summit employee forwarded a copy of the May 1986 inventory to Summit’s insurer. The cover letter described the 22 Stobart prints as "art work owned by Mr. Grant." The least expensive print on the inventory was valued at $1200.
. At trial, Grant introduced an auctioneer’s valuation of the contents of the residence as of March 15, 1988, which reflected only two Sto-bart prints, entitled "Docks Awash” and "Robert E. Lee,” valued at $50 apiece. On the Stobart Gallery price list, “Docks Awash" and “Robert E. Lee” were assigned a combined value of $3,600.
. At trial, the district court read to the jury a condensed version of the applicable statute, which provides as follows:
Whoever knowingly and fraudulently conceals from a ... trustee ..., or from creditors in any case under title 11, any property belonging to the estate of a debtor ... [s]hall be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 152, cl. 1 (1979 & Supp.1991). Section 152 was amended in October 1979 to reflect changes in terminology occasioned by the enactment of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978. As the amendments are largely irrelevant to the issues raised on appeal, where appropriate we cite to authority antedating the 1979 amendment.
. Grant’s "relation back” claim cannot succeed unless the trustee abandoned the chapter 7 estate’s entire interest in all the Stobart prints. As a general rule, an abandonment does not relinquish an
undisclosed
interest in property.
See Dushane
v.
Beall,
[T]he Trustee shall and does hereby abandon all claim, right, title and interest in and to the real property and all property and furnishings located at 18 Everett Avenue, Winchester, Massachusetts.
(Emphasis added). Given the site-specific description in the settlement agreement, we cannot rule out an intention to abandon only the interests of the chapter 7 estate in the two Stobart prints discovered at the Winchester residence designated in the agreement. Although the settlement agreement purportedly released Grant from all claims relating to the adversary proceedings pending against the Grants, including the action to deny Grant a discharge in bankruptcy based on alleged acts of fraudulent concealment, the settlement agreement merely provided:
The trustee shall be deemed to have given a general release to John A. Grant and all other Debtors in these cases, excepting only any claims related to (1) undisclosed or heretofore unknown assets of the Jointly Administered Chapter 7 Estates, or (2) assets wrongfully retained or withheld by John A. Grant and/or any other of the Debtors.
(Emphasis added). In the complaint objecting to discharge, the trustee alleged that Grant had concealed “valuable Stobart prints," but did not specify their titles, number or value. Thus, the release contemplated by the settlement agreement reasonably can be interpreted to exclude prints still being concealed from the trustee at the time of the abandonment. Furthermore, as previously stated, the indictment charged a continuing concealment extending through the date of the indictment, and the district court instructed the jury on the continuing concealment theory-
. Grant’s motion for judgment of acquittal addressed neither the scope of the putative abandonment nor its legal consequences, see supra note 4, see infra notes 6 & 7, effectively depriving the district court of an opportunity to consider the merits of the “relation back” claim. Nevertheless, since the “relation back" claim urged on appeal would preclude the establishment of an essential element of the crime charged, we review for "plain error.”
. The “vesting" mechanism. The most familiar version of the “relation back" doctrine developed under the Bankruptcy Act was its title “vesting" mechanism. Under Bankruptcy Act § 70(a), 11 U.S.C. § 110(a), the title held by the bankrupt at the date of bankruptcy passed by operation of law to the trustee in bankruptcy upon qualification, see Bankruptcy Act §§ 44(a), 45, 50(b) & (k), 11 U.S.C. §§ 72(a), 73, 78(b) & (k), which might be weeks after the filing of a voluntary petition and many months after an involuntary petition. In the interim, the bankrupt frequently retained possession of the property, and not infrequently engaged in transactions relating to it. See 4A Collier ¶ 70.05, at 70. The "vesting" mechanism enabled the trustee in bankruptcy, upon qualification, to acquire the title held by the bankrupt at the date of bankruptcy, free of most interim transfers by the bankrupt, the principal exception being transfers from the bankrupt to bona fide purchasers for value in the ordinary course of business. See Bankruptcy Act § 70(d), 11 U.S.C. § 110(d); see also 4A Collier ¶ 70.05, at 70.
.
The "revesting” mechanism.
Under the ancillary "revesting” mechanism, title to property abandoned by the trustee in bankruptcy as valueless or unduly burdensome,
see
4A
Collier
¶ 70.42, at 511, was deemed to revert to the bankrupt, or to a bona fide transferee from the bankrupt during the pre-abandonment period,
see, e.g.,
Bankruptcy Act § 70(a)(2), (b) & (d), 11 U.S.C. § 110(a)(2), (b) & (d);
Brown v. O’Keefe,
. Grant cites no case invoking the "relation back” doctrine under the Bankruptcy Code. The "revesting" mechanism developed under the Bankruptcy Act was premised entirely on the trustee's prior accession to title, which now passes directly to the debtor estate under Bankruptcy Code § 541(a). The Code contains no provision which allows for an automatic, retroactive revesting of title in the debtor at the time of the abandonment. See Bankruptcy Code §§ 363(b), 554, 11 U.S.C. §§ 363(b), 554.
. Even though the government might have charged Grant (under either clause one or seven of section 152) with concealing Stobart prints belonging to the Summit chapter 7 estates, the indictment specifically charged that "Grant owned framed prints" which he concealed from the trustee in In re Grant, Case 87-10831-CJK, Grant’s individual chapter 7 case.
. Grant argues, for example, that his listing of Summit's office address on some of the "Stobart print” invoices established an intent to donate them to Summit.
. Grant argues that the government failed to produce cancelled checks issued to purchase the Stobart prints and that the checks remained in the possession of the trustee. Not only does the failure to produce the alleged checks not undermine the evidence presented by the government at trial, but Grant concedes that any such checks would have been as readily available to the defense by way of subpoena.
. Grant points out that the attorney who prepared the chapter 11 petitions and property schedules was not called to testify to their accuracy. The government bore no burden to buttress the unchallenged reliability of the property schedules Grant signed under oath.
. Grant’s March 17, 1988 deposition was introduced at trial. At the deposition, Grant acknowledged that he had owned between eight and twelve Stobart prints, and expressly stated that he did not "believe [Summit] ever owned any of the prints.” (Emphasis added.) AI- *807 though Grant attempts on appeal to explain away the inconsistency, the effort falls short in light of his categorical denial that Summit ever owned any of the prints. The jury was responsible for evaluating any testimonial inconsistencies and was free to consider Grant's pre-indictment deposition as substantive evidence of his ownership of between eight and twelve Stobart prints. See Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(1), (2).
. Bankruptcy Code § 727(a)(2)(B) provides, in pertinent part:
(a) The court shall grant the debtor a discharge unless—
(2) the debtor, with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud a creditor or an officer of the estate charged with custody of property under this title, has transferred, removed, destroyed, mutilated, or concealed ...
(B) property of the estate, after the date of the filing- of the petition_
. Grant repeatedly testified at trial that he was uncertain as to the number of Stobart prints within his control on the eve of bankruptcy, even suggesting that many of the prints simply may have been left behind during Summit’s various relocations prior to bankruptcy.
. The district court declined to instruct the jury that the government was required to prove that the concealed property was "worth approximately $12,000,” the amount charged in the indictment. Instead, the jury was instructed that the government was required to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, "that the prints represented a substantial amount of property, and that may be as little as several hundred dollars." Cf. Bankruptcy Code § 542(a), 11 U.S.C. § 542(a) (requiring turnover to trustee unless "property is of inconsequential value or benefit to the estate”) (emphasis added).
. The ‘‘victim loss" estimate is not controlling in the present context, as it did not purport to reflect or approximate any finding of fact implicit in the general verdict, either as to the number of prints concealed or their value. See infra notes 20, 21 and accompanying text.
.. The authority cited by Grant is inapposite.
United States v. Key,
Grant argues also that there was a fatal variance between the value alleged in the indictment ($12,000) and the value established at trial. Given our conclusion that the record would support a finding that the concealed prints were worth approximately $12,000, as alleged in the indictment,
see infra
note 21, Grant’s variance claim cannot succeed.
See United States v. Flaherty,
. Although
de minimis
value may be probative evidence of the absence of an intent to defraud,
cf. In re Taub,
. Grant argues that the testimony of Maureen Murphy, one of Grant’s administrative assistants, was totally discredited on cross-examination. Murphy testified on. direct examination that Grant had described to her the quality of the Stobart prints at the time he purchased them, and that approximately eight of the prints previously hung in the Summit offices where she worked. Murphy said she believed, based on her observations and familiarity with these Stobart prints, that Grant had removed eight or nine Stobart prints from his residence on November 20, 1987. On cross-examination, defense counsel repeatedly asked Murphy if she was "absolutely sure” about her identification, or whether it was "possible” that some of the . framed objects were actually diplomas or photographs. Murphy conceded that she was not an art expert and that it was “possible” that some ■ of the items were not actually Stobart prints. She nonetheless steadfastly maintained that she was "pretty sure” about her identification of the prints. Viewing all the testimony in context, and given the covert manner of Grant's removal *810 of the prints, the jury reasonably could have ’ concluded that Grant concealed as many as ' eight or nine Stobart prints.
. The two Stobart prints discovered at the Winchester residence were appraised by a general auctioneer who conceded at trial that he had appraised art work only three or four times in seventeen years, and that the low value he assigned the two Stobart prints was based on the assumption that they would be sold in a general auction along with all the other contents and furnishings of the Grant residence. On the other hand, the government introduced evidence that the remarqued prints, part of a valuable limited series of art work, could have been sold separately through an art gallery at prices several times the auctioneer's valuation. Of course, Grant’s concealment preempted any opportunity for the estate to determine the optimum mode of liquidation. Nevertheless, the lowest price listed by Stobart Gallery for any "remarqued” Stobart print as of November 1987 was $1,500; the highest $6,000.
. Grant also contends that the prosecutor improperly vouched for (1) the testimony of Linda Young, by suggesting that she "ha[d] no interest in the [criminal] case” because her association with the Grant bankruptcy case had ended in 1988, and (2) the testimony of Grant’s former assistants, by suggesting that, if they had any bias, it would be in
favor
of their former employer. Improper vouching occurs where " ‘the prosecution ... placets] the prestige of the government behind the witnesses [ ] by making explicit personal assurances of the witness’ veracity,’” or where the prosecutor "‘implicitly vouchfes] for the witness’ veracity by indicating that information not presented to the jury supports the testimony.’ ”
United States v. Martin,
