This appeal comes to us in an unusual procedural posture. The defendants were convicted in 1980 of three federal offenses: kidnapping in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1); transporting women across state lines for immoral purposes in violation of the Mann Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2421; and conspiracy to commit the foregoing offenses in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. This court reversed the convictions in 1981 on the basis оf the prosecutor’s impermissible allusion, during closing argument, to the defendants’ failure to deny raping and kidnapping the victims.,
See United States v. Hastings,
Shortly after the Supreme Court handed down its decision, all the defendants indicated to this court that they wish to press the review of two issues: the trial court’s failure to permit the defendants’ voir dire regarding racial prejudice and the trial court’s failure to sever the trials of the defendants. In addition, defendants Anderson and Gibson 2 raise claims relating to the sufficiency of the evidence, to the rule of lenity, and to the prejudicial effect of the government’s closing argument, while defendants Williams and Gibson contend that the victims’ emotional outbursts during trial were prejudicial and that the trial court erred in allowing the witnesses to express their testimony in legal conclusions. For *1271 the reasons discussed below, we affirm the defendants’ convictions.
The facts surrounding the crimes in this case are set forth in both the Supreme Court majority opinion and Justice Stevens’s concurrence, and we will recount them only briefly. At approximately 2:00 a.m. on October 11, 1979, three young white women and a white man were riding in a car near East St. Louis, Illinois, when a turquoise Cadillac forced them off the road. The occupants of the Cadillac, five black men later identified as the defendants, forcibly removed the women from the car in which they were riding. Two of the defendants immediately raped one of the women and forced her to perform acts of sodomy. The defendants then put the women into the Cadillac and drove them to St. Louis, Missouri, where the defendants repeatedly raped and sodomized the women. At approximately 6:00 a.m., the women were released, and they contacted the St. Louis police. On the basis of the women’s descriptions of their attackers and the locations of the sexual attacks, the рolice arrested the defendants.
VOIR DIRE
On the first morning of the defendants’ trial, the court conducted voir dire of two panels of prospective jurors. Approximately five minutes before the court began the voir dire of the first panel, the defense attorneys handed the court forty-four proposed questions for the prospective jurors. Eighteen of these questions dealt with racial attitudes. The trial court refused to make the requested inquiries regarding race, 3 and it instead asked the group of prospective jurors three questions that were capable of revealing racial bias: one question specifically referred to racial prejudice; one referred to prejudice of any kind; and one referred to the prospective jurors’ frame of mind. 4
Although these three questions did not produce any response from the first panel of prospective jurors, a number of these prospective jurors already had expressed a belief that they would be unable to remain impartial due to either the nature of the crimes or the publicity surrounding the case. During the voir dire of the second panel, the court’s specific reference to racial prejudice produced a response from one woman, who indicated that the race of the participants of the trial would affect her verdict.
The defendants argue that, by asking only three general questions that might reveal racial bias and by posing these questions to the prospective jurors as a group, the trial court failed to provide adequate assurances of the impartiality among jury members and failed to elicit sufficient information upon which counsel could exercise their challenges. The government re *1272 plies that the trial court’s method of conducting voir dire was well within its discretion.
The Supreme Court has indicated that, under its supervisory powers, it would require federal trial courts to make a voir dire inquiry into racial bias in cases involving crimes of interracial violence. In
Rosales-Lopez v. United States,
Federal circuit courts similarly have acknowledged that trial courts have wide discretion in formulating voir dire questions relating to racial bias. For example, in
United States v. Grant,
*1273
This court will not find that a trial court abused its discretion in conducting voir dire where there is “sufficient questioning to produce, in light of the factual situation involved in the particular trial, some basis for a reasonably knowledgeable exercise of the right of challenge.”
United States v. Martin,
Furthermore, the factual situation surrounding the crimes in this case did not require that the prospective jurors be examined individually. Although the crimes had been reported in the news media, there is no indication that either they or other recent evеnts has sparked racial discord among the local citizenry. This case thus is distinguishable from
United States v. Bear Runner,
SEVERANCE
In their Joint Supplemental Brief, the defendants claim that defendant Williams presented a defense that was antagonistic to the defenses of the other defendants and that the trial court erred in failing to sever their trials due to these antagonistic defenses. In addition, as a separate point, it is contended that defendant Gibson’s trial should have been severed from that of defendant Anderson.
Antagonistic Defenses
According to the defendants, Williams attempted to show at trial that the victims had consented to be transported to St. Louis, while the other defendants only sought to demonstrate to the jury that the government had failed in its burden of identifying the defendants as perpetrators of the crimes. The defendants argue that, since these two defenses were inconsistent, the trial court should have severed the case and each defendant should have been tried separately. In support of their position, the defendants point to the Supreme Court’s majority opinion in this case, which observed that the “dеfense efforts presented patently and totally inconsistent theories.”
United States v. Hasting,
At the outset, we note that, prior to the Supreme Court’s remand of this case to *1274 this court, the defendants had never raised the argument of antagonistic defenses. 6 We thus are doubtful that the defendants properly preserved this point for our consideration. Even if the point is properly before us, howevеr, we find that the defenses presented in this case were not mutually antagonistic so as to require severance.
It is settled in this circuit that “[mjutually antagonistic defenses mandate severance only when acceptance of one party’s defense precludes the acquittal of the other.”
United States v. Banks,
Severance of Gibson from Anderson
During trial, defendant Anderson introduced into evidence a photograph of a police lineup in which both Anderson and Gibson apрeared. Two witnesses, a police officer and the male companion of the victims, identified Gibson in the photograph while they testified before the jury. In the defendants’ joint brief to this court, it is argued that Gibson’s arrest violated the dictates of
Payton v. New York,
We need not determine the legality of Gibson’s arrest in light of
Payton,
for it is clear from the Supreme Court’s review of the record in this case that any prejudice to Gibson resulting from the introduction of the photograph at trial was minimal. The Court stated that the testimony of the three victims, “who described in detail the repeated wanton acts of the defendants during three hours in two states, ... negated] any doubt as to identification.”
United States v. Hasting,
We have carefully considered the defendants’ remaining claims, and we conclude that they are without merit. Accordingly, we affirm the defendants’ convictions.
Notes
. Our earlier opinion incorrectly referred to defendant Hasting as “Hastings.”
. Defendant Gibson, in a status report filed with this court on August 23, 1983, stated that he adopts the positions of all other defendants. We thus understand Gibson to be pressing the additional claims articulated by Anderson and Williams in their status reports.
. After posing his prepared questions to thе prospective jurors of the first panel, the trial court called a sidebar conference with the attorneys of all the parties. During this sidebar, the court asserted that he found the defense counsels’ proposed questions to be “largely argumentative" and that many were irrelevant. Stating that the proposed questions would be confusing to the jury, the court accordingly .refusеd to ask them. See Trial Tr. at 42.
. The court phrased the questions as follows: Members of the jury panel, the five defendants here are all black males and all of the complaining witnesses in this case are white females. I am not suggesting by this that any of you have any racial prejudice. However, I call your attention to the fact that if the interracial nature of the participants in this case wоuld have any effect on your verdict, we would like to know about it. In other words, if you tend to believe a person of one race and tend to disbelieve a person of another race simply because of that person’s racial background, I would like to know.
Trial Tr. at 37, 78.
Do you know, ladies and gentlemen, of any reason why you might be prejudiced for or against the government or for оr against these defendants or any one of them because of the nature of the charges placed against them or for any other reason whatever?
Trial Tr. at 38, 79.
If you members of this jury panel were on trial here today as these defendants are, or if you were their attorneys charged with the responsibility of representing them and defending them in this case, or if you were the Government charged with the responsibility of prosecuting this case, do you know of any reason why you would not be content to have your case tried by someone that’s in the same frame of mind that you’re in today?
Trial Tr. at 38, 80.
. For another formulation of this test, see
United States v. Dellinger,
. Indeed, at oral argument, one of the defense counsel admitted that the only reason the defendants are now arguing that Williams's defense was antagonistic is because the Supreme Court noticed inconsistencies in the defense theories.
. In his brief filed prior to this court’s first decision in this case, defendant Gibson argued that the victims’ in-cоurt identifications of Gibson were tainted by the alleged illegal arrest. Although in his status report,
see supra
note 2, Gibson did not specifically identify this claim as one that he wished to renew, we have considered this question, and we find it to be without merit. In
Crews v. United States,
