On May 11, 1987, a jury convicted Phelix Roberts of aiding and abetting the robbery of a United States post office, endangering the life of a United States postal worker, and conspiring to rob a post office, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2114, 2, and 371 (1987). Roberts appeals the district court’s
1
denial of his amended motion for a judgment of acquittal or a new trial based on the government’s failure to turn over evidence favorable to his defense as required by
Brady v. Maryland,
Johnny Lee Johnson, an accomplice of Roberts’s who had been convicted for his role in the post office robbery after a jury trial in September of 1986, testified against Roberts. Prior to his own trial, Johnson had denied any involvement with the robbery in two interviews with a postal inspector. The postal inspector made written reports of both interviews. Neither these reports containing Johnson’s false exculpatory statements nor the statements themselves, which were never transcribed, were made available to Roberts despite a timely discovery request. Roberts claims that if he had had the reports, he could have used them to impeach Johnson and thereby cross-examine him more effectively.
Under
Brady,
the suppression of evidence favorable to the defendant is grounds for reversal only if the evidence is material to guilt or punishment.
Brady,
The district court found that “the defense conducted a vigorous and thorough cross-examination of Johnson” and that the availability of the postal inspector’s reports would not have “materially added” to the examination’s effectiveness. Having read the postal inspector’s reports and considered them in the context of the trial, we agree. Johnson was examined both on his past criminal record and the inconsistencies between his testimony and the testimony of other witnesses. Johnson also testified that he had been convicted for his involvement in the robbery after a trial, which necessarily implies that he at one time denied his participation. The transcript of Johnson's trial, including the postal inspector’s testimony that Johnson initially professed innocence, was available prior to Roberts's trial. In short, revealing Johnson’s earlier denials to the jury could not have further undermined Johnson’s credibility to such an extent that the outcome of the trial might have been altered.
See United States v. Peltier,
Our analysis of the Jencks Act violation leads to a similar conclusion. In the absence of evidence of either bad faith on the part of the government or prejudice to the defendant, a failure to disclose Jencks Act material ordinarily will not result in a reversal.
See United States v. Moeckly,
Roberts also contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict. In reviewing a jury verdict for the sufficiency of the evidence, we must view the evidence most favorably to the government, giving the government the benefit of all reasonable inferences logically drawn from that evidence.
United States v. Maull,
Finally, in an amended brief, Roberts argues that the district court committed reversible error in giving only a general witness instruction rather than an accomplice testimony instruction. However, Roberts did not offer an accomplice testimony instruction at trial, and such an instruction is required only when the accomplice testimony is uncorroborated.
See United States v. McGinnis,
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Henry Woods, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
