Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
Appellant Bernardo Lloyd was convicted of one count each of possessing with intent to distribute five grams or more of cocaine base, possessing with intent to distribute cannabis, assault with a dangerous weapon and possessing a firearm during the commission of a crime of violence. Lloyd contends that all of his convictions should be reversed because the district judge delivered a coercive anti-deadlock charge and communicated with the jurors during their deliberations (including giving the challenged deadlock instruction) while Lloyd was absent from the courtroom. In addition, Lloyd challenges his conviction of possessing with intent to distribute more than five grams of cocaine base on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to establish that the substance he possessed was vaporizable cocaine base, known as “crack,” rather than some other form of cocaine base. We affirm all of Lloyd’s convictions because we conclude that the deadlock charge was not coercive, that conducting the proceedings in Lloyd’s absence caused him no prejudice and that the evidence was sufficient to establish the seized substance was “crack” cocaine.
I.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government as we must,
see United States v. Roy,
Around noon on May 17, 2003, while driving a green Ford Expedition with his young daughter as passenger, Lloyd came upon a commercial tow truck belonging to Nemr Ibrahim stopped in the 1600 block of Levis Street N.E. in Washington, D.C., with the driver-side door open and blocking Lloyd’s passage. Lloyd honked at Ibrahim, who was securing a disabled car to the tow truck. The driver of the disabled car responded by closing the tow truck door and Lloyd pulled alongside the tow truck and began to curse Ibrahim. Ibrahim approached Lloyd’s vehicle and an argument ensued until Lloyd retrieved a handgun from the console area of his vehicle, pointed it toward Ibrahim’s face and threatened to shoot him in the head. Ibra-him then stepped away from Lloyd’s vehicle and Lloyd drove off. Ibrahim called the police and reported the incident, along with Lloyd’s license plate number.
Later the same day, police officers stopped Lloyd driving a green Expedition, with his daughter and her mother as passengers. The police explained that a “serious crime” had occurred in the Expedition and took the vehicle and its occupants to the Fifth District police station. Trial Tr. 231. Once there, the police impounded the vehicle but let Lloyd and his passengers depart. Afterward, Ibrahim was called in to inspect the vehicle and he identified it as the one in which Lloyd had drawn the gun on him. A few days later, Ibrahim identified Lloyd himself from a photo array.
Based on Ibrahim’s identification, Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Detective Dexter E. Martin obtained a search warrant for the Expedition. During the following vehicle search, he noticed the console cover between the front seats was loose. When he lifted it, he found a silver handgun and some ziplock bags containing “a white rock-like substance” and “a green weed substance,” along with a scale, a knife and ski masks. Trial Tr. 151.
A grand jury indicted Lloyd on five counts: (1) unlawfully possessing with intent to distribute five grams or more of cocaine base in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(l)(B)(iii); (2) unlawfully possessing with intent to distribute cannabis in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(D); (3) using, carrying and possessing a firearm during a drug trafficking offense in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(i); (4) assault with a dangerous weapon in violation of D.C.Code § 22-402; and (5) possessing a firearm during the commission of a crime of violence in violation of D.C.Code § 22-4504(b). Appellant’s App. (App.) 12.
Lloyd’s trial began on September 8, 2004. To establish the contents of the seized ziplocks, the Government introduced a Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) laboratory analysis, which identified the substances as 27.8 grams of 52% pure “[cjocaine base” in eleven bags, 3.3 grams of 75% pure “[cjocaine hydrochloride” in four bags and 32.3 grams of marijuana in twenty-five bags, App. 15, and which the parties stipulated was “true and accurate,” Trial Tr. 162. In addition, MPD Sergeant John J. Brennan, who was qualified as an expert, testified on the distribution, packaging and use of crack cocaine in the District of Columbia and identified the white, rock-like substance in the ziplocks as “crack cocaine.” Id. 194.
The jury began deliberating at 12:15 p.m. on September 9, 2004. Around 4:00 that afternoon, the jury sent a note to the judge, which note read:
The jury is having difficulty determining some of the evidence. We are hung on Counts 1, 2, + 4. We are close but *1300 need some encouragement and instructions from the bench.
App. 16. It was dated “9-9-04” and signed by the jury foreman. The judge recalled the jurors and, at the foreman’s request, instructed them further on “identification,” that is, whether it was Lloyd who committed the crimes charged, and on the jurors’ duty not to consider the nature of the crimes charged — for example, that they involved drugs and a gun. The judge then addressed the jury as follows:
[Y]ou indicate in your message that you are hung on counts one, two, and four. You are close but need some encouragement and instructions. And certainly I’m here to provide encouragement; whether the additional instructions— whether my elaboration on the instructions is useful or not, I’ll leave to you to decide.
But I think it might be useful for you to hear this additional instruction called partial verdict.
You do not have to reach unanimous agreement on all of the charges before returning a verdict on some of them. If you have reached unanimous agreement on soine of the charges, you may return a verdict on those charges and then continue deliberating on the others.
Trial Tr. 290. The jury then resumed deliberating.
A short time later, the jury sent the judge a second note and asked to speak with him without counsel present. In response, the judge assembled both counsel and stated as follows:
I want the record to reflect that the clerk has in his hands a copy of the note that was handed to me from the jury. The note, which I will place under seal until this case is completed, begins something to the effect of, if possible, we would like to meet you in the courtroom without counsel or the Defendant being present. And then it goes on to say something to the fact [sic] like we are hung, and then he begins to spell out exactly how they are split on which counts.
I literally averted my eyes when I realized what I was about to read, and did not read what the splits are. I don’t know what the splits are on what counts, did not finish reading the note, will not read the rest of the note, and believe that what I need to do is to call the jury back here, tell them that we are placing that note under seal and that I’m not reading it, tell them that it’s inappropriate, that I really ought to rub their nose in the instruction. I don’t think I could have been plainer about what I told them about not revealing their split. And tell them that if they have a question for me — well, I will tell them, A, that I will not meet them in the absence of counsel, but that if there’s anything in the rest of the note that I should know, I’ll be happy to hear it, but that I cannot, will not know or hear anything about the way they’re split. Any objection to what I’ve said so far?
Trial Tr. 293-94. He later re-emphasized that he had not read the actual numerical split: “[L]et the record be perfectly clear, I did not read, do not know what they told me, but the fact that they told me is of record, and the note will be under seal until we have a verdict or some other termination of this case.” 1 Id. 295. Before the judge recalled the jury, Lloyd’s counsel informed him: “Your Honor, for the record, Mr. Lloyd went downstairs and I’ll waive his presence.” Id.
*1301 The jury returned to the courtroom at 4:38 and the judge advised it as follows:
I called counsel in here pretty quickly after getting your last note, and Mr. Lloyd is downstairs getting a soft drink or something, and it’s okay with me and it’s okay with counsel if he not be here for this brief encounter. And it’s going to be quite brief.
Members of the jury, we have a communication — what we have here is a failure of communication. I only read about the first two lines of the note that I was given from you, and then I literally closed it up and averted my eyes. Because the note says quite plainly how you’re divided on issues, and I thought I made it pretty clear in the instruction that you are not to tell anybody how you’re divided on anything until or unless we have a verdict.
Now, if you think we’re just sharing information between the judges of the facts and judges of the jury, I’m afraid it doesn’t work that way. We cannot — I cannot have a conference with you out of the presence of counsel. We just can’t do that. I mean, it’s got to be — the lawyers on both sides have a stake in this and they have a right to be here.
And so I’m going to ask you either to — well, the answer to the question I did read was can we meet out of the presence of the lawyers, and the answer is, I’m afraid not. And then I stopped reading, and I literally stopped reading, closed it up, stopped reading, and we placed it under seal for the rest of the proceeding. Because I can’t know that, I don’t want to know it, I don’t want to hear it. That’s entirely secret, and for you to know and nobody else to know, until or unless you have a unanimous verdict or the case is terminated in some other way.
Id.
295-96. After an additional exchange with the jurors, the judge dismissed them and informed counsel he intended to give the jury a Thomas anti-deadlock charge— so named because we endorsed it for use in this Circuit in
United States v. Thomas,
Now, please listen to this instruction. The verdict must represent the continued [sic] judgment of each juror. In order to return a verdict, it is necessary that each juror agree to the verdict; in other words, your verdict must be unanimous. It is your duty as jurors to consult with one another and to deliberate with a view to reaching an agreement, if you can do so without violence to individual judgment. Each of you must decide the case for yourself, but do so only after an impartial consideration of the evidence with your fellow jurors.
In the course of your deliberations, do not hesitate to re-examine your own views and change your opinion if convinced it is erroneous, but do not surrender honest conviction as to the weight or effect of evidence solely because of the opinion of your fellow jurors or for the mere purpose of returning a verdict. You are not partisans, you are judges, judges of the facts. Your sole interest is to ascertain the truth from the evidence in the case.
Id. 301. After giving these instructions, the judge released the jurors for the day.
The jury resumed deliberating the following morning and around 11:00 a.m. reported a unanimous verdict. It convicted Lloyd of Counts 1, 2, 4 and 5 and acquitted him of Count 3.
*1302 On December 21, 2004, the judge sentenced Lloyd to concurrent terms of 84 months on Count 1 and 60 months on each of Counts 2, 4 and 5, to be followed by four years of supervised release. See App. 19-21.
Lloyd filed a notice of appeal on January 3, 2005.
II.
As noted supra, Lloyd asks the court to reverse (1) his conviction of Counts 1, 2, 4 and 5 based on the judge’s communications with the deliberating jurors — both because the Thomas deadlock instruction had a coercive effect on the jurors and because the communications occurred while Lloyd was absent from the courtroom; and (2) his conviction of Count 1 because the evidence did not establish that the white substance in the ziplock bags retrieved from the console was “crack” cocaine. We address each argument seriatim.
A. Communications with the Jury
First, Lloyd argues that the deadlock instruction was “impermissibly coercive” in light of the two jury notes and the judge’s responses to them. “To reverse for coercion, a court must find that ‘in its context and under all the circumstances the judge’s statement had the coercive effect attributed to it.’ ”
United States v. Spann,
Juror coercion can occur “where the judge, in his communications to the jury, is unduly coercive,” which typically arises when “the jury, having been unable to agree, is sent back by the judge for further deliberations” and “the judge’s instruction in sending the jury back had a ‘possibly coercive effect.’ ”
(Robert) Williams v. United States,
At Lloyd’s trial, the jurors’ numerical division was not “revealed in court” nor even known to the judge. As the judge carefully explained to counsel and the jury, he stopped reading the second note before he reached the numerical division and therefore did not know what the division was or whether the jury was leaning toward conviction or acquittal. Thus, we do not face the “precarious” situation where the judge “give[s] a supplemental charge to consider each other’s views when he was already advised that only [a minority of] jurors voted for acquittal.”
Mullin v. United States,
Nor is this case like
Smith v. United States,
Lloyd also identifies other circumstances at trial that he claims rendered the deadlock charge coercive but we find none of them telling. He points, for example, to the first jury note, which informed the judge that the jury was “close” to a verdict on three counts but that it “needfed] some encouragement and instructions from the bench,” App. 16, and asserts that the judge’s reference to these words in open court would have appeared coercive to the minority jurors. We are not persuaded.
4
*1304
After all, the first note here did not, as did the note in
(Robert) Williams,
reveal the jurors’ actual numerical split. Nor did the judge (unlike the
Smith
judge) respond to this note with a deadlock charge. Instead, he expanded upon his instructions, at the jury’s specific request, and added a partial verdict instruction. It was not until after the second jury note, which specifically stated the jury was “hung” and requested that the jurors speak with the judge apart from counsel (and which went on to set out the unread numerical division), that the judge decided to give a deadlock instruction. Thus, the circumstances here are similar to those we faced in
United States v. Spann,
in which we found no ground for reversal — notwithstanding comments the trial judge made to the jury after a first deadlock note were “inappropriate and probably proscribed under
Thomas
” — because the improper comments “had no direct effect on the jury — that is, they did not break the jury deadlock or cause the guilty verdict.”
When the jurors resumed deliberation on the third day they again reached deadlock, despite the judge’s admonition of the previous evening. Thus, we do not see how any of the cited remarks could have, by themselves, coerced the jury to return the guilty verdict so as to warrant reversal. It was only after the judge delivered the supplemental charge in response to the second deadlock note that the jury finally reached a unanimous verdict.
Id.
(citation omitted). Here too, the jurors resumed deliberating after the first jury note and remained unable to reach a verdict. After the jury sent the second note, the judge gave the Thomas instruction and recessed court for the day. The jurors did not resume deliberating and reach a unanimous verdict until the next day. We therefore see no causal nexus between the exchange following the first note, even if objectionable, and the jury’s ultimate verdict.
Cf. Thomas,
Finally, Lloyd asserts that the district court violated his right under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 43 and the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the United States Constitution to be present when the judge discussed the second jury note with counsel and then communicated with the jurors (with counsel present), and in particular, when he gave the anti-deadlock instruction. Assuming that Lloyd had such a right and that he did not waive it— issues we do not reach — we conclude that any violation of the right was harmless. 5
*1305
Ordinarily, we review for harmlessness under the standard set out in
Kotteakos v. United States,
Although we have found no ground under the circumstances of this case to reverse Lloyd’s conviction based on the deadlock instruction or the judge’s other communications with the jury in Lloyd’s absence, we nonetheless caution the district court against expanding on the
Thomas
script after a jury indicates deadlock.
See
Trial Tr. 296 (elaborating on roles of court, jurors and lawyers). In prescribing the
Thomas
instruction for use in this Circuit, we decried “ ‘the large amount of litigation which the use of the original
Allen
charge has engendered,’ ” noting in particular that “ ‘[o]ne of the sources of trouble on appeal has been that the language actually used tends to vary from judge to judge, and this lack of uniformity in a delicate context is full of pitfalls.’ ”
*1306 B. Sufficiency of “Crack” Evidence
Lloyd also challenges the sufficiency of the trial evidence to establish that the substance in the seized ziploeks was “crack” cocaine, that is, smokable or va-porizable cocaine base. Following our recent decision in
United States v. Powell,
In
Powell,
a DEA forensic chemist testified that the substance in the ziplock bags seized from the defendant was 83% pure “cocaine base” and his written report to this effect was admitted into evidence. In addition, the two arresting officers testified they had seen “crack” many times and the substance seized was crack cocaine. Finally, Sergeant Brennan, qualified as an expert in that case as well, testified from a photograph that the substance was “crack.” The court concluded that the evidence, “[w]hile not exactly overwhelming, ... was enough to enable a rational trier of fact to determine that [the substance] was crack cocaine.”
Lloyd asserts that Brennan’s testimony “demonstrated a lack of precision regarding the critical distinction recognized in
[United States v. Brisbane,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment convicting Lloyd of Counts 1, 2, 4 and 5 of the superseding indictment.
So ordered.
Notes
. The note was apparently misplaced after being placed under seal and it is not a part of the record on appeal. See Appellant’s Br. 15 n. 3.
. The
Allen
charge was "[s]o named after receiving approbation by the Supreme Court in
Allen v. United States,
. Lloyd posits that the judge would have inferred that there were only one or two holdouts, that those were holding out for acquittal and that it was therefore reasonable to believe that the dissenting jurors felt coerced based on the judge’s hypothetical inferences. We cannot credit such speculative reasoning.
. What occurred here is not, as Lloyd asserts, "analogous to” what occurred in
(Ronald) Williams, supra.
Appellant’s Br. 16. There, the jury foremen wrote a note asking “[c]an the (two) alternate jurors replace the minority voters?” and, when questioned by the judge, disclosed that the jury was divided by "a clear minority,”
. In a letter submitted after oral argument pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(j), the Government cited as relevant to the waiver issue our recent decision in
United States v. Hoover-Hankerson,
.
Vaporized cocaine in
powder
form is “pharmacologically inactive.”
Powell,
