The United States appeals the district court’s order granting a new trial and its denial of the government’s motions for reconsideration of its order granting a new trial and to enforce the recusal of Chief Judge Morey L. Sear following the convictions of Michael O’Keefe, Sr., Eric Schmidt, John O’Brien, Gary Bennett, and Paul Schmitz (collectively “O’Keefe”). We vacate the order granting a new trial and remand to the district court to consider O’Keefe’s remaining *888 arguments, as yet unaddressed, for new trial. We deny the government’s request to remand this case to a judge outside the Eastern District of Louisiana.
I
We briefly, outline the facts of this case insofar as they are relevant to this appeal, largely concerning procedural matters. O’Keefe operated the management company of Physicians National Risk Retention Group (“PNRRG”), a Louisiana medical malpractice insurer, and the other defendants were involved with the company in various capacities. When PNRRG became insolvent and the state of Louisiana moved to have it liquidated, the defendants arranged to have Builders and Contractors Insurance, Limited (“BCI”), a Bahamian corporation run by Charles Donaldson, act as a reinsurer. Various assets of PNRRG were taken out of PNRRG’s estate to cover liabilities and, claims that wére transferred to BCI, and put in the trust account of O’Keefe’s law firm on behalf of BCI. Ultimately, a large portion of these assets of PNRRG found their way into the personal bank accounts of the defendants through a complex scheme found by the jury to be fraudulent.
In a series of indictments listing differing factual bases whose relevance we shall discuss later, a grand jury charged O’Keefe and the other defendants with multiple crimes, including conspiracy, wire, fraud, mail fraud, and money laundering. The two main government witnesses were Donaldson and Johnny Moore, participants in the scheme. During pre-trial preparation, a Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) 302 report 1 was prepared from the notes of FBI Special Agent Phillips based on a telephone interview between Donaldson, his attorney, government prosecutors, Phillips and other law enforcement personnel. According to the transcribed FBI 302 report of this interview, someone stated that “O’Keefe suggested that BCI’s shareholders meeting minutes be altered to make it appear that Donaldson had authority to enter into the PNRRG/BCI contract” (the “minutes”). It is unclear who made this statement, but when Donaldson later pled guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana to one count of mail fraud in exchange for his testimony in this case, the prosecutors incorporated this statement into the factual basis of the guilty plea in such a way as to make it appear that Donaldson made the statement.
During the trial against O’Keefe before Chief Judge Sear and immediately prior to Donaldson’s direct testimony, the government provided a copy of the FBI 302 report to the defense, pursuant to the Jencks Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3500 et. seq. On direct questioning, the government did not ask. any questions concerning the minutes, but when one of the defense attorneys questioned Donaldson about the minutes on cross-examination, Donaldson admitted to accusing O’Keefe falsely of participating in the alteration of the minutes. 2 In a sidebar conference that fol *889 lowed, the government denied that Donaldson had ever accused O’Keefe of helping to alter the minutes and stated that the FBI 302 report was mistaken if it attributed the statement to Donaldson, an explanation that the court rejected. On redirect, the government half-heartedly attempted to bolster Donaldson’s credibility. After Donaldson left the stand, defense counsel moved to strike the testimony of Donaldson, which the court refused to do. In closing arguments, the defense highlighted Donaldson’s impeachment, and the court included a strong statement admonishing the jury to consider carefully the credibility of witnesses in its jury instructions. Despite Donaldson’s testimony and impeachment, the jury convicted O’Keefe and his co-defendants.
After trial, the defense made various post-trial motions, including a motion for new trial. Chief Judge Sear conducted a hearing on the motions at which the parties presented legal arguments but no evidence. The court granted the new trial motion because it found that Donaldson falsely accused O’Keefe of participating in the alteration of the minutes, and that the government knew about the falsehood because the two prosecutors gave inconsistent answers as to whether they learned of the falsehood prior to trial. The court also found that the long, drawn-out pauses before Donaldson answered the defense counsel’s questions in the colloquy set out above supported an inference that the government knew about Donaldson’s false accusation prior to trial. Several other factors reinforced the court’s finding that Donaldson’s false testimony warranted a new trial. First, the court found that the government’s release of the FBI 302 reports to the defense complied with the Jencks Act, but did not comply with the government’s obligations under
Brady v. Maryland,
After granting the new trial, Chief Judge Sear disqualified himself from further involvement. This case was then assigned to Judge Mary Ann Vial Lemmon, and the government filed a motion for reconsideration of the order granting new trial (“motion for reconsideration”). Judge Lemmon transferred the case back to Chief Judge Sear, who denied both the government’s motion to enforce recusal and the motion for reconsideration. This appeal timely followed.
II
Prior to consideration of the merits, we resolve various challenges to our jurisdiction in this case. These jurisdictional challenges center on the government’s notice of appeal, whether Chief Judge Sear appropriately ruled on the motion for reconsideration after his recusal, and if we find that Chief Judge Sear should not have ruled on the motion for reconsideration, whether we must remand to Judge Lemmon to decide the motion for reconsideration.
A
O’Keefe argues that we have no jurisdiction to hear this appeal because the notice of appeal filed by the government fails to *890 comport with the requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 3731, which governs interlocutory appeals by the government from orders granting new trial. 3 The government’s notice of appeal specified the denial of the reconsideration of the order granting new trial and the order mooting all other motions filed by the government, including the government’s motion to enforce recusal of Chief Judge Sear. O’Keefe argues that because the government appealed the denial of the reconsideration of the order granting new trial rather than the order granting new trial, § 3731 does not permit jurisdiction over this appeal.
We rejected a similar jurisdictional challenge in
United States v. Greenwood,
[although in form the Government’s notice of appeal was from the district court’s July 30 denial of the motion to reconsider, in substance the appeal is one from the district court’s sentences imposed in the spring of 1991.... [S]o long as a notice of appeal puts the other side on notice that the final judgment is the subject of the appeal, a technical defect in the notice of appeal is not fatal (citations omitted).
Greenwood,
Here, we find that O’Keefe was put on notice by the government’s notice of appeal and that he was not prejudiced'by the misstatement in the notice of appeal. First, appeal of an order granting new trial can be fairly inferred from a notice appealing denial of reconsideration of that order because the connection between the two is clear and direct.
See Matute v. Procoast Nav. Ltd.,
*891 B
The government argues that Judge Sear erred in failing to enforce his recusal and in denying the motion for reconsideration. 5 O’Keefe argues that Chief Judge Sear properly refused to enforce the recusal because, quite simply, Judge Lemmon could not reconsider what Judge Lemmon had not considered in the first place.
Once a judge recuses himself from a case, the judge may take no action other than the ministerial acts necessary to transfer the case to another judge, even when recusal is improvidently decided.
See Doddy v. Oxy USA, Inc.,
O’Keefe (as Chief Judge Sear noted below) essentially argues that an exception from the bright-line rule for recusals described above should be created for motions for reconsideration because a judge cannot reconsider what that judge has not considered previously. Toward this end, O’Keefe cites
McRae v. United States,
*892 C
The “harmless error” standard is used to determine whether orders that a judge issues after the judge has, or should have, recused himself must be vacated.
See Liljeberg v. Health Serv. Acquisition Corp.,
Applying the three-part harmless error test, we first note that little risk of injustice to the parties will result from not vacating the denial of the motion for reconsideration and remanding for reconsideration by Judge Lemmon. The record is sufficient for us to review the order granting new trial. Our review of the order granting a new trial and the denial of the motion for reconsideration under an abuse of discretion standard,
United States v. Pankhurst,
*893
Second, our decision today.’aids, rather than prejudices justice in other cases because it clarifies an unclear area of the law and serves as a caution to district court judges of the importance of taking no discretionary actions after recusal. It was not until 1984 that 18 U.S.C. § 3731 was amended to permit the government to appeal the interlocutory grant of a new trial. Pub.L. No. 98-473, § 1206, 98 Stat.1986 (1984) (codified at 18 U.S.C. § 3731).
Liljeberg,
which established the three-part harmless error standard for review of decisions made by a judge after recusal becomes appropriate, was not decided until 1988.
Liljeberg v. Health Serv. Acquisition Corp.,
Finally, there is little risk of undermining the public's confidence in the judicial process. While in some eases vacation of orders issued by a judge will restore public confidence in the legal system,
see United States v. Jordan,
Ill
“[I]t is established that a conviction obtained through use of false evidence, known to be such by representatives of the State, must fall under the Fourteenth Amendment.... The same result obtains when the State, although not soliciting false evidence, allows it to go uncorrected when it appears.”
Napue v. Illinois,
We review an order granting new trial under an abuse of discretion standard.
United States v. Pankhurst,
The Supreme Court has recently defined materiality in terms of a “reasonable probability” of a different outcome.
Kyles v. Whitley,
It is axiomatic that not every lie is material. Along with other circuits, we have limited material lies to those that occur as a part of the prosecution’s case.
See Hudson v. Blackburn,
Not all falsehoods are material partially because of our concern with preserving the adversarial system: it is the prerogative of defense counsel to plan his or her cross-examination strategy, and undue clarification or interruption by the prosecution might interfere with that strategy.
See Mills v. Scully,
The trial court concluded that although some of Donaldson’s falsehoods were revealed to the jury, the “true nature and scope of Donaldson’s perjury was never disclosed or corrected by the government, or revealed on cross-examination by the defendants.” Order at 71. The nature and scope of these falsehoods went unrevealed because the government never stated until after trial why it amended the indictment against O’Keefe, why it permitted the cross-examination of Donaldson to go forward with the FBI 302 report that it knew to be incorrect, and why the two prosecutors gave inconsistent answers as to when they learned of the falsehoods. The long, drawn-out pauses before Donaldson answered the defense’s questions during the critical cross-examination colloquy also supported the- inference that Donaldson had previously told the government about his false accusation of O’Keefe. Further, the court found that the government improperly bolstered the credibility of Donaldson on redirect and during its closing argument by eliciting testimony that even though O’Keefe had not participated in the alteration of the minutes, he had knowingly incorporated them into an affidavit presented to a Louisiana state court. Finally, the court concluded that the prosecution thought that the testimony concerning the minutes was material because it had changed the indictment in an attempt to cover up the falsehood and to mislead . defense counsel. On appeal, the government, argues that all of Donaldson’s falsehoods were revealed to the jury, and that even if they were not, those falsehoods were not material to the jury’s verdict because Donaldson’s testimony was overwhelmingly corroborated by other evidence and witnesses.
We first believe that the trial court abused its discretion when it made the factual finding that the government changed the indictments in an , attempt to mislead the defense. This factual finding was an abuse of discretion because whether or not the government attempted to mislead the defense, the defense had too much knowledge of the minutes to be misled. The record shows that defense counsel and the government conferred prior to trial regarding the indictment ás a result of various pretrial motions made by the defense contesting the statement in an earlier version of the indictment charging that O’Keefe had knowingly included the false minutes in an affidavit he presented to a Louisiana state court. The order granting new trial itself notes that the defense took depositions concerning the minutes and strongly contested the charge in the indictment concerning O’Keefe’s knowing incorporation of the minutes into the affidavit. The government sent the defense a letter' conceding that Donaldson had altered the minutes by himself. 9 Therefore, this indictment change and the documents provided to the defense, when combined with the FBI 302 report, put defense counsel on notice of possiblé falsehoods or inconsistencies uttered in the past by Donaldson, even if the defense did not know the precise reason the indictment was changed. As a result, we hold that the district court abused its discretion by finding that the prosecution altered, the- indictment in an attempt to mislead the defense because even if the prosecution made *896 such an attempt, the defense had too much knowledge of the minutes to be misled.
With respect to the district court’s legal conclusion of materiality, falsehoods, to the extent that any were uttered, occurred as a result of the defense’s cross-examination, not from testimony elicited by the prosecution. Once those falsehoods emerged, the' defense had total leeway in cross-examining Donaldson and used the information provided by the prosecution to powerful effect.
See United States v. Adebayo,
We find that the falsehoods were sufficiently exposed before the jury to enable the jury to weigh those falsehoods in its deliberations. Defense counsel moved, immediately after Donaldson left the stand, to have his entire testimony stricken from the record, but Chief Judge Sear refused, stating that Donaldson’s credibility was for the jury to decide. Defense counsel then made impeachment of Donaldson the centerpiece of their closing arguments.
10
Chief Judge Sear also included a strong cautionary statement in the jury instructions. Thus, the jury knew that Donaldson had lied either when he stated that he had not previously falsely accused O’Keefe of participating in the alteration of the minutes or when he stated that he had accused O’Keefe of participating in altering the minutes. The jury was also able to evaluate the long, drawn-out pauses before Donaldson answered the defense’s questions.
See United States v. Grosz,
Defense counsel argued in their motion for new trial and before us that they would have proceeded differently, that they would have attempted to impeach the government as well as Donaldson and would have discussed how the factual basis for the guilty plea was selected, had they known the full facts surrounding Donaldson’s false testimony at the time. We disagree on several counts. First, the defense repeatedly characterized Donaldson as being completely impeached during its closing arguments. Second, the testimony of Donaldson was overwhelmingly corroborated by other witnesses, and the falsehoods occurred on collateral matters.
See Kopycinski v. Scott,
A review of cases finding a violation of
Napue
shows that thé falsehoods in those cases have usually been far more serious than those that occurred in this case. We have found a violation of
Napue
in cases when there was a material discrepancy between the testimony of government witnesses and defense witnesses, the government was aware that its witnesses committed perjury on the stand but such perjury was not disclosed to the jury, and the credibility of the witnesses was the key to the jury’s determinatioh of guilt or innocence.
Barham,
The grant of a new trial is necessarily an extreme measure, because it is not the role of the judge to sit as a thirteenth member of the jury.
See State v. Ladabouche,
rv
Although we find that ño violation of
Napue
occurred; we will nevertheless uphold the district court’s order granting new trial if it is in the “interests of justice.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 33. These'“interests of justice” may be based on the trial judge’s evaluation of witnesses and weighing of the evidence.
See Tibbs v. Florida,
First, .the trial court noted that the FBI 302 reports were provided to the defense within the time mandated by the Jencks Act,
12
18 U.S.C. § 3500
et seq.,
but stated that it could not “conclusively find that the production of the reports during trial did not adversely affect the court’s ability to reach a just conclusion, particularly in light of the government’s conduct in connection with the FBI 302 reports of Charles Donaldson.” Order, at 54. The argument is not that the government suppressed evidence,
see Brady v. Maryland,
In this case, the government submitted the FBI 302 report of Moore to the court for an
*899
in camera
review after cross-examination had begun, following which the court gave the report to the defense. Trial was recessed for the remainder of that day to allow the defense time to prepare. Donaldson’s FBI 302 report was turned over to the court for
in camera
review prior to the beginning of his direct testimony, and the court then handed it over to the defense. During the more than one day of Donaldson’s testimony, the defense was able to review the testimony. Although turning these reports over to the defense earlier would have certainly avoided the delays during trial, based on our review of the record and the absence of any affirmative finding (other than the conclusion) by Chief Judge Sear that the delayed disclosure of the reports may have impaired O’Keefe’s ability to effectively cross-examine Donaldson and Moore, we cannot find that the delayed disclosure of the FBI 302 reports violated
Brady. See Lawrence v. Lensing,
Next, the district court also found that the changes in the testimony of Moore, another key government witness, cast a cloud over his testimony, which, when viewed “in light of the circumstances surrounding Donaldson’s testimony,” supported the grant of a new trial. However, Chief Judge Sear also found that O’Keefe could not point to any specific instances of perjury by Moore, and that the changes in Moore’s testimony provided ample grounds for cross-examination. No violation of Napue was alleged in connection with Moore’s testimony, and these inconsistencies were explored before the jury on cross-examination. Further, Chief Judge Sear separately considered the inconsistencies in Moore’s testimony as the basis for a new trial in another part of the order granting new trial and concluded that the claims of O’Keefe with regard to Moore’s testimony lacked merit. Thus, without being viewed in the light of a Napue violation, this basis for new trial also has little merit.
Finally, the district court found that the prosecution’s attempts to mislead defense counsel by altering the indictment, in light of Donaldson’s testimony at trial, supported granting a new trial. We have already discussed the changes in the indictment, and have found that the district court abused its discretion in finding that the government attempted to mislead the defense by redrafting the indictment because the prominence of the minutes in pretrial proceedings made it impossible for the government to have misled the defense. Thus,, this basis for new trial has little merit.
Viewed as a whole, each of these three findings of the court primarily relied upon the finding of a Napue violation because each finding was discussed “in light of’ the Napue violation. Taking away the finding of a violation of Napue, we are unable to conclude that the remaining grounds for grant of new trial meet our past standards for grant of new trial or would be in the “interests of justice.” Thus, we conclude that Chief Judge Sear abused his discretion in granting a new trial. Accordingly, we vacate the order granting a new trial. 13
V
When Chief Judge Sear granted the motion for new trial, he declined to address O’Keefe’s remaining arguments for new trial, which included arguments based on the government’s voluntary dismissal of five counts from the indictment after the government had concluded its case, the alleged “marginal” nature of the evidence, and the cumulative effect of all the grounds asserted in all other defense motions. We accordingly remand to the district court to hear these remaining arguments for new trial.
The government has suggested that if a remand is needed, the case should be remanded to a judge outside the Eastern District of Louisiana, relying on
United States v. Jordan,
For the foregoing reasons, the order granting new trial is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED to Judge Lemmon to hear O’Keefe’s remaining arguments for new trial. The government’s motion to remand this case to a court outside the Eastern District of Louisiana is DENIED.
Notes
. An FBI 302 report is a typed transcription of the notes of an FBI agent’s interview with a witness, usually prepared for testimony of a witness who may be presented at trial.
. Thé following colloquy occurred between Simmons, the attorney for O'Keefe, and Donaldson, on cross-examination:
Q: Did you tell anyone that Mr. O'Keefe had created those minutes of December '88 by the addition of the words “five years thereafter.”
A: I don’t recall. I — I know that I admitted I said that I created — I put them in myself.
Q: That's not my — my question. Let me rephrase it.
A: Did — did. I tell anyone that he suggested that? I — I can’t recall if I did.
Q: Since you've started cooperating with the Government, when you're supposed to be trulhfully, have you ever told anyone that Mr. O’Keefe created those minutes of December 1988? And by create I mean adding the five years thereafter?
A: I don’t think so. I may have.
Q: You may have?
A: Yes, I can’t recall. Was that a clear answer? I can’t recall.
Q: You're suggesting that you may have accused him of creating documents that you created?
A: I said I can’t recall.
Q: Isn’t it a fact, Mr. Donaldson, that you told the agent that Mr. O’Keefe suggested that the minutes be altered?
A: (No response)
Q: Didn't you tell the agents that?
A: No, I did not.
Q: Your testimony under oath is that on March 3, 1995, you did not tell Agent Susan *889 Phillips that Mr. O’Keefe suggested that the BCI shareholders minutes be altered to make it appear that Donaldson had authority to enter into the contract; did you make that statement to the F.B.I.?
A; At — -I—I did, yes.
Q; And that was a false statement, wasn’t it sir?
A; It was a false statement.
Q: And you lied to the FBI, did you not?
A: Yes I did.
Based on this exchange, the court found that Donaldson uttered four possible falsehoods. First, in court on cross-examination, Donaldson falsely accused O'Keefe of participating in altering the minutes. Second, in his guilty plea, Donaldson agreed with the factual basis of the plea, which contained the statement falsely suggesting that O’Keefe participated in the alteration of the minutes. Third, if Donaldson did not previously falsely accuse O’Keefe of participating in the alteration of the minutes, then he uttered a falsehood when he admitted in court that he had accused O’Keefe of participating in the alteration of the minutes. Finally, the court found that Donaldson uttered a falsehood when he stated that the government did not know, prior to trial, that he had lied concerning altering the minutes.
. 18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1994) provides in relevant part:
In a criminal case an appeal by the United States shall lie tú a- court of appeals from a decision, judgment, or order of a district court ... granting a new trial after verdict or judgment ... except that no appeal shall lie where the double jeopardy clause of the United States Constitution prohibits further prosecution.
Id.
. O’Keefe alternatively argues that noticing the motion for reconsideration without mentioning the order granting new trial resulted in the government waiving appeal on the issue of the order granting new trial. A notice of appeal “must designate the judgment, order, or part thereof appealed from.” Fed R.App.P. 3(c). While a policy of liberal interpretation of notices of appeal is the rule when the intent to appeal an unmentioned or mislabeled ruling is clear and no prejudice will result to the opposing party, when only a specified judgment or part thereof is noticed, the notice of appeal is generally strictly construed.
See C.A. May Marine Supply Co. v. Brunswick Corp.,
. Chief Judge Sear stated that
[b]ecause of the sensitive nature of the court’s inquiry concerning conduct of government counsel, the court's personal participation and questioning of counsel in connection with that inquiry, and the findings of the court resulting from that inquiry, the court feels compelled to recuse itself from further handling of this matter in accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 455.
United States v. O’Keefe, No. 96-31181, at 71 (E.D.La. Aug. 15, 1996) (order granting new trial) (hereinafter "Order”).
. We recognize that our ruling- today may put one district judge in the somewhat uncomfortable position of having to pass judgment on the
*892
discretionary rulings of another judge in the future. However, the values underlying 28 U.S.C. § 455, including "protecting the litigants’ constitutional entitlement to an unbiased adjudication and the public’s perception of the integrity of the judicial process” demand no less.
See Doddy,
. Another option is also available: we could hold the appeal in abeyance and remand the motion for reconsideration to Judge Lemmon for her to rule on the motion for reconsideration. In the event that Judge Lemmon vacated the order granting new trial, this appeal would then become moot. Although our decision in
Greenwood
could arguably be read to endorse such an approach,
see Greenwood,
. As the Supreme Court noted in
Ornelas,
"[i]n-dependent review is therefore necessary if appellate courts are to maintain control of, and to clarify the legal principles.”
Id.
at -,
. Affidavits by both government prosecutors in this case and other members of the prosecutorial team state that the indictment was republished to narrow the issues in contention, not to mislead the defense. These affidavits are part of the record on appeal, Fed.R.App.P. 10(a), because they were included with the government’s reconsideration motion. In light of Chief Judge Sear's specific refusal to find that the government attorneys either suborned perjury or committed misconduct, these affidavits are one piece of evidence to be considered in deciding whether the government attempted to mislead the defense by republishing the indictment.
. The various defense counsel representing the various defendants made the following statements in the course of their closing arguments:
Attorney Ashley: Is it inconceivable, as you sit there, ladies and gentlemen, that after Charles Donaldson lied to this litany of people, including a federal judge, a federal prosecutors, is it inconceivable that he lied to these folks? ... No, it’s not inconceivable at all.
Attorney Martzell: Mr. Donaldson. I made a little calculation of the legal experience of the people on this side of the bench. I have not included the Judge's years at the bar. Something over 200 years of legal experience sitting out here. I guaranty, none of us ever have in the past or will have the unique experience that we had here of having a man admit under oath that he falsely accused one of the Defendants and didn't tell the government about it. Attorney Simmons: And it's been suggested that he didn't lie before you. When you go back there and you can deliberate any way you want, but see if you've been mislead by Mr. Donaldson. What were you thoughts at the time direct testimony was over? Starting to sound credible? What were your thoughts after cross-examination? Incredible. You were mislead. You were mislead hand-in-hand with the Prosecution. The question is whether they may know about it, but you were mislead by at least Mr. Donaldson.
. This finding that the falsehoods were not material is not negated by the prosecution’s halfhearted attempt to bolster the credibility of Donaldson on redirect and in closing arguments. Any such bolstering as may have occurred does not rise to the level of bolstering in cases where we have reversed the denial of a new trial.
See Sanfilippo,
. The Jencks Act requires the government to produce any statements made by a witness concerning the subject matter on which the witness has testified that are in the possession of the government after the witness has testified on direct examination in a criminal trial prosecuted by the federal government. 18 U.S.C. § 3500(b); Fed.R.Crim.P. 26.2.
. In light of our vacation of the order granting new trial, we decline to address arguments concerning whether the grant of new trial should include Schmitz.
