On September 14, 2003, Michael Phillip-pi attempted to purchase a 12-gauge shotgun and ammunition from a sporting goods store in Terre Haute, Indiana. The attendant handed Phillippi а copy of ATF Form 4473 and told him to complete the form truthfully and accurately. The attendant indicated that the form would be used to complete a background cheсk. This case arose as a result of the answer Phillippi gave to question 12b, which asks: “Are you under indictment or information in any court for a felony, or any other crime, for which the judge сould imprison you for more than one year?” Without asking any additional questions of the attendant, Phillippi answered, “No.” Further, he signed the certification at the bottom of the form that said: “I understand that a person who answers ‘yes’ to any of the questions 12b through 12k is prohibited from purchasing or receiving a firearm.... I also understand that making any false oral or writtеn statement ... with respect to this transaction, is a crime punishable as a felony.”
Although none of Phillippi’s answers precluded the sale of the shotgun, when the attendant contacted the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), he was instructed to “delay” the transaction. The attendant told Phillippi that he would have to wait three days for NICS to rеcontact the sporting goods store. Although he paid for the shotgun and ammunition and received a sales receipt, NICS ultimately denied permission for the sale because of Phillippi’s history of domestic violence and drug abuse. It turned out that he had qualifying felony cases pending in three different counties: a charge of obtaining a contrоlled substance by fraud filed in March 2003 in Vigo County, Indiana; charges of forgery and attempted acquisition of a controlled substance by fraud filed in April 2003 in Tip *1063 pecanoe County, Indiana; and an arrest for felony intimidation in Edgar County, Illinois, on September 9, 2003.
Phillippi was charged with one count of making a false statement in connection with the attempted аcquisition of a firearm and ammunition from a federally licensed firearms dealer.
See
18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(6). Before trial he filed a motion
in limine
to exclude evidence of two of the three pending charges, arguing that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Old Chief v. United States,
The district court denied the motion in limine except as it regarded the Edgar County сharge. The court distinguished Old Chief on the ground that Phillippi’s proposed stipulation was not a method of proof equivalent to the government’s evidence. To make it equivalеnt, the court suggested, Phillippi would have to stipulate as well to his knowledge that he could be imprisoned for more than one year. Phillippi refused to make the additionаl stipulation, thinking, as his counsel explained at oral argument, that this would be tantamount to confessing the crime. The court then weighed the probative value of the governmеnt’s evidence against a risk of prejudice it considered “quite slight” and concluded that the prejudice did not outweigh the probative value. See Fed.R.Evid. 403.
At trial, the government introduced the two felony informations and had the respective court reporters read into the record the portions of the transcripts involving colloquies on the charges. Philliрpi testified in his own defense, explaining to the jury that his false answer on ATF Form 4473 was an “honest mistake” that resulted because he “went through” the paperwork “too quickfiy].” Neverthеless, the jury found him guilty. The district court imposed a fine of $15,000 and sentenced him to 50 months’ imprisonment and three years’ supervised release.
On appeal, the sole issue is whether the district court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of both of the pending felony charges. Phillippi points out that in
Old Chief,
the Supreme Court reversed the district court’s decision to аdmit the full record of the defendant’s prior felony conviction, because it found that the danger of prejudice due to the similarity between the offense of conviction and the charged offense substantially outweighed the probative value of the record evidence.
See Old Chief,
This analysis, however, misses the point of
Old Chief.
The Court deliberately limited its holding to “cаses involving proof of felon status,”
see id.
at 183 n. 7,
The existence of this additional purpose is enough to take Phillippi’s case outside the scope of
Old Chief. Old Chief
itself indicated that its result was not applicable in cases like this one when it warned that “[t]he issue of substituting one [sort of evidence] for the other normally arises only when the record of conviction would not be admissible for any purpose beyond proving status, so that excluding it would not deprive the prоsecution of evidence with multiple utility.”
See Old Chief,
Here, we would have no ground for disturbing the district court’s decision to admit the government’s evidence, even if the government had wanted to introduce the second information only because it believed that two adjurations about the felony penalty were better than one.
See Gonzalez v. DeTella,
We perceive no abuse of discretion in the district court’s admission of this evidence, and therefore we Affirm the judgment of conviction.
