ORDER DENYING PETITION TO RECALL MANDATE
This matter comes before the court on petitioner-appellant Mikel Bornfield’s (Bornfield) Petition to Recall Mandate filed June 8, 1999. The petition is denied.
Bornfield, by and through his counsel, petitioned this court to recall the mandate affirming his conviction and sentence for engaging in a monetary transaction in criminally derived property, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1957(a).
See United States v. Bornfield,
In support of his petition, Bornfield attached an affidavit of the district court
1
explaining how the district court’s past procedures allowed objections to jury instructions to take place in conferences off the record. It is this procedure which resulted in this court’s review of an incomplete record. If this court accepts the district court’s affidavit as correct, Born-field objected in two off the record conferences with the district court’s law clerks to the deliberate ignorance instruction with respect to Count 1 and then briefly restated the “reasons” for his objection on the record. The district court apparently attempts to modify the record to reflect that Bornfield “raised this objection, for
*1146
the reasons stated on the record, and that the Court overruled the objection.” We have repeatedly counseled against similar procedures.
See Dixon v. City of Lawton, Okla.,
Contrary to Bornfield’s assertions and the district court’s insinuations, this court did not err. On the certified record before this court, there was no proper objection to the deliberate ignorance instruction with respect to Count 1. The error in this case lies with the district court and Born-field.
At trial, the district court erroneously held initial jury instruction conferences off the record with inadequate procedures for preserving the objections for appellate review. In its affidavit, the district court averred that Bornfield stated on the record his reasons for his objection. On the contrary, Bornfield’s statements during the on the record jury instruction conference did not qualify as proper objections to the instruction.
2
Bornfield,
On appeal, the proper composition of the record was Bornfield’s obligation. 10th Cir. R. 10.3 (“[I]t is counsel’s responsibility to see that the record on appeal is sufficient for consideration and determination of the issues on appeal.”); Fed. R.App. P. 10. He was obligated to ensure his objection was properly preserved in the record, even if the initial objection conferences were not recorded. Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(c) provides for the submission of a statement of the evidence in situations were the proceedings were not recorded. Fed. R.App. P. 10(c). Rule 10(e) also allows for correction or modification of the record if any differences arise about whether the record truly discloses what occurred in the district court or if anything material is omitted. Fed. R.App. P. 10(e). Furthermore, the lack of a proper objection on the record should have become obvious in the preparation of his appellate briefs. Tenth Circuit Rule 28.2(c) requires the appellant challenging a jury instruction to include in his opening brief “a statement as to where a proper objection and the court’s ruling thereon may be found in the record.” 10th Cir. R. 28.2(c) (emphasis added). It is irrelevant that “[the district court and] both parties understood throughout the course of the trial that [Bornfield] objected” to the instruction, as the district court points out in its affidavit. There was not a proper objection on the record for appellate review.
Notwithstanding Bornfield’s off the record objection, there is no manifest injustice. The result of this appeal would have been the same. Although this court analyzed the challenge to the deliberate igno-
*1147
ranee instruction under the plain error standard, rather than abuse of discretion, the analysis was thorough and included a detailed review of the record on appeal.
3
Bornfield,
Notes
. We refer to the district court’s "Memorandum Opinion and Order” as an affidavit because we cannot discern under what authority the court had jurisdiction to issue such an order or to attempt to modify the record on appeal so late in the judicial process. This court's opinion,
Bornfield,
. In its affidavit, the district court makes much of the fact that Bornfield summarized his objection on the record and merely failed to use the specific word "object.” Contrary to the district court's inferences, the specific use of "object” is not always necessary. It is necessary, however, to "stat[e] distinctly the matter to which that party objects and the grounds of the objection” on the record before the jury retires to consider its verdict. Fed.R.Crim.P. 30. Generalized objections, such as those Bornfield made on the record, are insufficient.
Bornfield,
. The district court evidently missed this analysis because in its affidavit it stated that this court "declined to address this issue.”
