In this аppeal, we address Malcolm Baker’s argument that his conviction for possessing a gun as a felon should be vacated because the Government failed to disclose information on the history of the gun’s ownership, in violation of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brady v. Maryland,
*421 I. BACKGROUND
On the night of December 6, 2003, Malcolm Baker was standing on a sidewalk when two Chicago Police Department trainee officers observed him drinking from a beer bottle. They slowed their cruiser and called to him. According to the officers, Baker immediately dropped the beer bоttle and ran. The officers got out of the cruiser and chased him through the residential area. As they were running, one of the officers noticed that Baker was clutching something in his waist area, and he radioed the dispatch officer that they were dealing with a possible “UUW” (unlawful use of a weapоn). The chase culminated one block away from where the officers first observed Baker. Baker fell, and Officer O’Carrol saw a gun fall from Baker’s waist to the ground. The officers testified at trial that Baker fell towards the weapon in a manner suggesting that he was trying to retrieve it, but the second officеr, Officer Bartuch, simultaneously kicked the gun to the curb. After handcuffing and arresting Baker, they picked up the gun, which was a loaded, .40 caliber, semiautomatic pistol.
Before trial, Baker moved for the disclosure of exculpatory evidence. The Government turned over documents identifying Chamon White as the registered owner of the gun, where he purchased the gun, White’s employment as an Illinois Department of Corrections (“IDOC”) prison guard, and White’s address. Baker asked the Government to stipulate that he was not the registered owner of the gun. The Government agreed, with the express reservatiоn that Baker could not “seek to introduce any evidence or make any argument, directly or indirectly, about the identity of the registered owner of the gun.” The Government also turned over documents that indicated the gun had been used in an April 2003 murder in Maywood, Illinois, several months before Baker’s arrest. Baker moved in limine to exclude the documents that connected the gun to the Maywood murder and moved to exclude any reference to the murder at trial. The Government agreed, “provided that defendant did not seek to introduce any evidence or make any argument ... about the wherеabouts or possession of the gun before December 6, 2003.”
Three weeks before trial, the Government submitted additional documents to the district court under seal and requested that the district court conduct an in camera review to determine whether the documents needed to be turned over to Baker. The Government was still investigating the April 2003 murder involving the gun and did not want to release reports that might compromise the investigation. The reports consisted of interviews of Chamon White and an individual named Kaywan Palmer, as well as an analysis of fingerprints found on the gun and at the murder scene. The Government arguеd that these documents related only to “the persons who possessed the weapon between January 2003 and April 9, 2003.”
After a hearing, the district court, applying Rule 16 and Brady, found that the contested documents did not have to be turned over because they were irrelevant. Baker was convicted and now appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
The district court’s determination that the disputed information did not have to be disclosed is accorded substantial deference, and Baker can only succeed if he demonstrates that the district court’s decision constituted an abuse of discretion.
See United States v. O’Hara,
B. Alleged Brady Violation
Pursuant to the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Brady,
“the government has the affirmative duty to disclose evidence favorable to a defendant and material either to guilt or punishment.”
United States v. Fallon,
Baker argues that had he possessed additional information on the gun’s ownership history, he would have been able to more successfully investigate the weapon’s background to prove his theory at trial — that the gun was either already present on the street when he arrived or that one of the officers brought the gun to the crime scene. He also argues, without explaining why, that the information might have been useful to impeach the Government’s witnesses. Baker does not actually contend that the reports constituted exculpatory material, but rather that there was some possibility that they might lead to unknown exculpatory material and that his trial preparation was hampered. We rejected such an argument in
Fallon,
where the defendant “argue[d] that his trial strategy was affected by the late disclosure of [certain] statements.”
Fallon,
More to the point, Baker cannot demonstrate that there is a “reasonable probability” that he would have been acquitted had he possessed the suppressed information. In a prosecution for possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), the ownership of the gun is not dispositive.
See United States v. Hubbard,
The verdict demonstrates that the jury found that the two Chicago Police officers who arrested Baker were credible, and he has not articulated how additional information on the gun’s history would have impeаched the officers’ testimony. We have no reason to believe that a different outcome would have resulted had Baker possessed the information. For the purposes of the Brady inquiry, the best case scenario for Baker’s theory that the gun was already lying on the ground is that one of the рrior owners lived at an address directly in front of or near the location where Baker was arrested. Baker has not demonstrated that such a conclusion can be drawn from the suppressed information. But even if this were true, it would not overcome the officers’ testimony that the gun fell from Baker’s waist and that he appeared to attempt to retrieve it. Nor would it provide a reasonable explanation for Baker’s decision to flee from the police and later resist arrest. The jury would be left scratching their heads over the infinitesimally low odds that Baker, a convicted felon, fled the police and managed to be unluckily apprehended at the exact location of an abandoned firearm.
Baker’s other theory — that the police planted the weapon — faced additional hurdles that we do not envision the alleged exculpatory evidence would overcome. For the jury to accept this theory, the history of the gun would have to have been sufficient to convince the jury members that two rookie police officers had already become so corrupt that they had begun to employ the use of “drop guns” 1 to set up otherwise law-abiding citizens who happened to be consuming beer on the streets of Chicago. We doubt that the history of the gun would have aided Baker in making such a demonstration, or that it would have explained the officers’ pre-apprehension radio to the dispatch officer that there was a possible UUW, based on their observation that Baker was clutching his waist.
Moreover, the Government supplied Baker with significant information on the history of the weapon. The name and occupation of the original owner of the gun was disclosed. As a result, Baker had a signifiсant starting point for an investigation on the history of the gun’s ownership, if he believed such an investigation would be fruitful. The Government also stipulated at trial that Baker was not the registered owner of the gun.
We confronted similar facts in
Gillaum,
Here, as in Gillaum, the jury could have considered the reports describing additional past owners of the gun, found them persuasive, and still convicted Baker on the basis of the eyewitness testimony of two police officers. But Baker’s argument here is less persuasivе than the argument made in Gillaum because the critical evidence relied on by the jury was the observation of two police officers rather than the testimony of one officer who claimed only that the defendant had admitted possessing the gun. Gillaum underscores that evidence of alternativе ownership will rarely be sufficient to demonstrate materiality where there is credible evidence of possession. Furthermore, this case is subject to a more deferential standard of review than that applicable in Gillaum because the Government properly submitted the contested rеports to the district court for in camera review. Baker has not demonstrated that there is any reasonable possibility the alleged Brady material would lead to his acquittal. He therefore falls far short of demonstrating any abuse of discretion on the part of the district court.
C. Alleged Rule 16 Violation
For substantially the same reasоns, Baker also fails to demonstrate that the district court abused its discretion when it concluded that a Rule 16 violation did not occur.
See United States v. Jackson,
But in the context of this case, that additional breadth is not imрlicated, since the disputed information in no way incriminated Baker. The information was not used by the Government in its case-in-chief *425 and was not obtained from Baker. The only question is whether the disputed information was material to the preparation of Baker’s defense, ie., was it exculpatory or helpful for impeachment? The answer is no. See 2 Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice & Procedure § 254 (3d ed.2000) (“to satisfy the requirement of [Rule 16] materiality a defendant must demonstrate some indication that the pretrial disclosure of the disputed evidence would enable defendant significantly to alter the quantum of proof in his or her favor”). Since the answer is no, Baker has not demonstrated an abuse of discretion in the district court’s conclusion that the disputed information was immaterial.
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
.
See Wells v. Rushing,
