Defendants Johnelle Elem
1
аnd Odell Jennings (collectively “Defendants”) appeal the district court’s denial of a motion for a new trial based upon the government’s failure to comply with
Brady v. Maryland,
I. Background
On February 5, 1998, a federal grand jury returned a ten-count superseding indictment charging Jennings, Elem, and Clarence Anderson 2 with participating in a series of armed bank rоbberies. Anderson pleaded guilty to one count of armed bank robbery and testified before the grand jury that returned the superseding indictment against Jennings and Elem. Anderson also testified for the government at Jennings’s and Elem’s trial.
At trial, Anderson’s testimony described five armed bank rоbberies and identified Jennings and Elem as participants in three of the robberies. Moreover, on direct examination the prosecution asked Anderson about the lawyer provided to him during post-arrest questioning. The following colloquy took place bеtween the prosecutor and Anderson:
Q. During the day did you ask to speak with an attorney?
A. Yes.
Q. And did the FBI allow an attorney to come and visit you?
A. Yes.
Q. And was he a private attorney?
A. No.
*880 Q. A private attorney that you had retained?
A. No.
Q. So how did he come to be your attorney?
A. He’s a government attorney.
Q. Is he a Federal Defender?
A. Yes.
Q. I mean, does he work for the United States Attorney’s Office or the defense—
A. Yes. The United States Attorney’s Office.
Q. In the past?
A. Yes.
Q. Does he work for the U.S. Attorney’s Office now?
A. No.
Q. So who does he work for now?
A. The government — the public defenders [sic] office.
During the exchange, the district judge overruled defense counsel’s relevancy objection. Following a four-day trial, a jury found both Jennings and Elem guilty as charged.
Approximately seven months after the jury rendered its verdict, Defendants learned that a journalist named Shane Du-Bow published an article in GQ Magazine about the bank robberies. DuBow had been a customer in one of the banks at the time of the robbery and interviewеd Anderson during the course of his research for the article. The district court expressed concern that DuBow’s interviews may have influenced Anderson’s trial testimony. Accordingly, the district judge authorized Defendants to depose both Du-Bow and Anderson regarding the timing of the interviews.
During the DuBow and Anderson depositions, Jennings and Elem learned for the first time that Anderson had testified before the grand jury that returned the superseding indictment against them. However, the prosecution had never furnished Defendants with a transcript of Anderson’s testimony. Jennings and Elem then reviewed Anderson’s grand jury testimony and DuBow’s interview notes and identified several inconsistencies with Anderson’s trial testimony, including the following:
(1) In his direct examination at trial, Anderson testified that he supported himself by robbing drug dealers, whereas he told Shane DuBow that he in fаct sold illegal drugs. DuBow’s interview notes describe in some detail Anderson’s drug-dealing activity.
(2) Anderson testified at trial that he received a gun used in the second robbery from an individual on the street, but he said before the grand jury that he received it from a friend named “Pookiе.”
(3) Anderson testified at trial that he contacted Jennings to initiate the plan to rob the first bank. In contrast, Anderson told the grand jury that Jennings contacted him, and he agreed to go with Jennings.
(4) In describing the first robbery at trial, Anderson testified that before Defendants entered the bаnk, Jennings, Anderson and a third defendant named Joe Smith obtained sunglasses at a dollar store. Before the grand jury, Anderson testified that Jennings sent him and Smith to purchase the sunglasses.
(5) Anderson provided inconsistent descriptions regarding the location of a third defendant immediately following the fourth robbery.
Based upon this evidence, Jennings and Elem moved the district court for a new trial. In support of their motion, Jennings and Elem argued that they could have *881 used Anderson’s grand jury testimony and DuBow’s interview notes to impeach Anderson at trial. Elem also argued that the identification of Anderson’s attorney as a former prosecutor improperly bolstered Anderson’s credibility as a witness.
The district court reviewed all of the relevant material and denied Defendants’ motion. The district court held that the incоnsistencies between Anderson’s trial testimony and his grand jury testimony were not material for two reasons. First, Defendants cross-examined Anderson on matters far more damaging to his credibility; and second, the evidence corroborating Anderson’s identification of the Defendants as his accomplices was overwhelming. This appeal followed.
II. Discussion
A. Anderson’s Grand Jury Testimony
Jennings and Elem argue that the government’s failure to deliver Anderson’s grand jury testimony constituted a violation of both Brady v. Maryland and the Jencks Act. Defendants claim that had they received Andersоn’s grand jury testimony, their cross-examination would have been more effective and would have altered the outcome of the trial.
We review for abuse of discretion the denial of a motion for new trial based upon newly discovered evidence claimed to violate
Brady. See United States v. Asher,
1. Brady v. Maryland
Under
Brady v. Maryland,
In this case, the inconsistencies between Anderson’s grаnd jury testimony and his trial testimony do not undermine the legitimacy of the jury’s verdict for several reasons. First, the main purpose of Anderson’s testimony at trial was to identify Jennings and Elem as his accomplices. While Anderson may have mistaken minor details, nothing in Anderson’s grand jury testimony wеakens his identification of Jennings and Elem. Second, the inconsistencies between Anderson’s grand jury testimony and his trial testimony would not have the effect that they must to state a viable Brady claim — that is, damaging Anderson’s credibility to such an extent that the jury would discredit his identificatiоn of Jennings and Elem. The government never concealed Anderson’s credibility, but rather directly impeached him by identifying prior felony convictions, prior bad acts, prior inconsistent statements, and bias and prejudice for his deal with the government. 3 Why the jury would *882 disbelieve Andersоn after hearing that he gave inconsistent accounts regarding which defendant actually purchased sunglasses prior to one of the robberies is beyond comprehension.
Faced with such trivial discrepancies, the district court held that the government’s failure to turn over Anderson’s grand jury testimony did not result in prejudice because it could have no conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding. Cf
. United States v. Nash,
2. Jencks Act
The Jencks Act provides that “witness statements in the possession of the United States which relate to the subject matter as to which the witness testifies shall be turned over to the defendant for examination and use.”
United States v. Radix Laboratories, Inc.,
B. DuBow’s Interview Notes
Jennings and Elem next contend that their “ignorance” of DuBow’s interviews with Anderson, conducted before and during Anderson’s preparation as a witness, impeded their ability to effectively cross-examine Anderson. This, Defendants reason, resulted in a violation of the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clausе, particularly in light of the government’s failure to turn over Anderson’s grand jury testimony.
The Sixth Amendment guarantees each defendant the right to “be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const., amend. VI. The Supreme Court has said that “a criminal defendant states a violation of the Confrontation Clause by showing that he was prohibited from engaging in otherwise appropriate cross-examination designed to show a prototypical form of bias on the part of the witness.”
Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
In this case, nothing that occurred during Defendants’ trial remotely approaches a Confrontation Clause violation. The government is not required to relinquish material it does not possess, of which it was not aware, or over which it had no control. What Defendants have failed to do (and what they cannot do) is identify any action, either by the prosecution or the trial court, that prevented them from obtaining DuBow’s interview notes and using those notes during Anderson’s cross-examination. Becausе the disputed material was equally available to both parties, Defendants’ inability to obtain DuBow’s interview notes does not warrant a new trial.
C. Questions Regarding Anderson’s Attorney
Finally, Jennings and Elem maintain that the government intentionally bolstered Anderson’s credibility at trial by asking several questions regarding whether a former federal prosecutor represented Anderson. According to Jennings and Elem, this bolstering rose to a level that warrants a new trial.
It is true that the government may not “vouch” for the credibility of government witnesses.
United States v. Cor-nett,
In this case, the first is absent because the prosecutor said nothing that directly bolstered Anderson’s credibility. Nor did the government imply facts tending to lend Anderson credibility. While the question regarding Anderson’s counsel was perhaps improper, it fails to rise to the level of reversible error. In each of the cases where this court has found improper vouching, a direct and cognizable link existed between prosecutorial comments and the witness’s credibility.
See, e.g., Cornett,
Furthermore, even if the prosecution intended the jury to draw an inference regarding Anderson’s credibility, we find that the risk to Defendants’ “substantial rights” was slight, and any error that occurred was harmless.
Cornett,
III. Conclusion
Jennings and Elem failed to establish that the government’s miscоnduct caused them any prejudice at trial. Nor have they demonstrated that any government action deprived them of the right to cross-examine the prosecution’s witnesses. Accordingly, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Throughout the proceedings below, Elem was alternately referred to as "Johnelle” and "Johnell.” The proper spelling, based upon all relevant briefs and the government’s indictment, is "Johnelle.”
. The indictment charged additional defendants not relevant to this appeal.
. Defense cоunsel’s cross-examination was equally damaging to Anderson's credibility. *882 Anderson admitted lying to government investigators about his name, the number of people who were involved in the series of bank robberies, his brother's alleged lack of involve-merit in the robberies, the kind of weapon used in the second robbery, and the fate of a vehicle used in the second robbery.
