Norman Richardson, Jr., appeals his conviction on two counts of receiving stolen property. See D.C. Code Ann. § 22-3832(a), (c)(1) (Supp.1985). 1 The principal issue we address is whether the District Court committed reversible error in failing to repeat, before the jury recessed overnight, an admonition not to discuss the case.
I. Background
Between May and September of 1984, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, in conjunction with the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department, conducted an undercover “sting” operation through Florida Avenue Gold and Silver, a secondhand store. A central target was Arturo Council who, along with several accomplices, periodically sold stolen merchandise to the undercover agents. Council pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy, interstate transportation of stolen property, and receiving stolen property. He testified at appellant’s trial that appellant, in return for a share of the proceeds, had occasionally helped him carry merchandise into the store. Metropolitan police and FBI agents, one of them an undercover participant in the sting operation, testified to the details of three such visits.
Appellant was charged with one count of theft from an interstate shipment, see 18 U.S.C. § 659 (1982), of which he was acquitted, and one count of conspiracy in the sale and theft of goods from interstate commerce, see 18 U.S.C. § 371 (1982), as to which the jury was hung. But the jury convicted appellant on two counts of receiving stolen property, see D.C. Code Ann. § 22-3832(a), (c)(1) (Supp.1985). Appellant now appeals the conviction on two grounds, both of which we reject.
II. The Aiding-and-Abetting Instruction
Appellant’s first ground of appeal— that the District Court erred in instructing
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the jury on aiding and abetting — merits little discussion.
See
18 U.S.C. § 2 (1982) (federal aiding-and-abetting provision); D.C. Code Ann. § 22-105 (1981) (similar aiding-and-abetting provision for crimes under D.C. Code). Appellant advances two alternative theories. First, he argues that one cannot properly be convicted of aiding and abetting the commission of a crime unless the principal is convicted of the crime. Appellant notes, accurately, that the counts to which Council pleaded guilty do not necessarily cover the episodes in which appellant participated. But this makes no difference. Conviction of the principal is simply not a prerequisite to an aiding-and-abetting conviction. The latter may stand even where the principal is acquitted in a separate trial.
Standefer v. United States,
Second, appellant argues that there must be record evidence that would support conviction of the principal.
See Jackson v. United States,
III. The Jury Admonition
Appellant also challenges the District Court’s failure to repeat its admonition to the jurors not to discuss the case with anyone. Upon empaneling the jury, the District Court ordered a lunch recess and told the jury:
Please, as we separate either now or later this afternoon or tomorrow, whatever, don’t discuss anything in this case among yourselves or with anyone else. If someone approaches you and tries to talk to you about the case, please let me know.
Transcript (“Tr.”) at 57. The trial began upon the jury’s return from lunch. The District Court recessed the trial that evening, before the prosecution completed its case, without repeating the admonition. After instructing the jury the next evening, the District Court submitted the case to the jury for deliberation. Forty-five minutes later, the District Court dismissed the jury from the jury room, without reconvening in the courtroom, and again without repeating the admonition. 2
This omission was perilously close to the border of reversible error. Every person criminally accused has a constitutional right to a panel of impartial jurors, U.S. CONST. amend. VI, unprejudiced by extraneous influences,
see Remmer v. United States,
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Such admonitions are particularly crucial when the jury leaves the comparative shelter of the courthouse.
Hines v. United States,
Moreover, courts view the period of jury deliberation as the time of highest risk.
D 'Antonio,
This is not a case in which the jury separated for the night without ever having been admonished.
Compare United States v. Williams,
Ideally, of course, the trial court should repeat the admonition each time the jury leaves the custody of the marshals. As this court stated nearly 50 years ago:
[I]n all criminal cases whenever jurors are permitted to separate, the court should invariably admonish them not to communicate with any person or allow any person to communicate with them on any subject connected with the trial____
Brown v. United States,
But failure to do so is not automatically reversible.
See United States v. Weatherd,
We appreciate the multitude and complexity of details to which trial courts are *890 expected to attend in even the shortest of trials. In the heat of litigation, even the most seasoned trial judge may occasionally, and quite understandably, overlook an important detail. The danger is especially pronounced at the end of a long day when the jury and the litigants are anxious to get away. It is in part for that reason that the defense attorney — on pain of being held to have waived the ground of appeal — is expected to direct the trial court’s attention to any omission that might prejudice his client.
The government correctly observes that appellant’s attorney repeatedly failed to object below to the omission of which he complains. But as to the most crucial recess in this case — the overnight interruption of jury deliberations — he had no chance to do so. The District Court appears to have dismissed the jury by sending them a message in the jury room, without reconvening in court. See supra note 2. We think it far fairer — certainly less risky — to reconvene the jury and lawyers before dismissal for the evening, permitting counsel to hear precisely what is said and to object to any offending nuance. With such a practice, many potential appeals may be either avoided by correction of the omission or readily disposed of on the ground that the objection was waived.
We recognize that this may inconvenience lawyers; the time spent waiting for a jury is diverted from other endeavors, and, if counsel leave, it is often a burden to return to the courthouse for what seems to be a routine matter. But the trial court may plan around these problems. For example, if the closing arguments are completed late in the afternoon, the trial court can obviate the need for attorneys to return and possibly avoid any interruption of the deliberation by recessing and waiting until the next day to submit the case to the jury. Alternatively, the court might reconvene on the record, allowing absent counsel to participate by speakerphone. However, any procedure failing to assure counsel adequate participation in such a routine but potentially troublesome trial event poses an undue risk to the basic interest in fairness.
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The judgment of the District Court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The United States District Court for the District of Columbia had jurisdiction over this D.C. Code prosecution because it was "joined in the same information or indictment with [a] Federal offense," D.C. Code Ann. § 11-502(3) (1981).
. The record is ambiguous as to whether the jury was ever reconvened in the courtroom. See Tr. at 261. But counsel for appellant, who tried the case below, represented at oral argument that the District Court conveyed a message to the jury in the jury room dismissing them for the evening, without affording counsel any opportunity for objection.
. The trial judge must also admonish the jury to avoid exposure to media coverage of the trial.
Coppedge,
