Rаymond B. Weatherless was charged in a three count indictment in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland with: 1) rape in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of thе United States (18 U.S.C. § 2031); 2) assault with intent to rape (18 U.S.C. § 113(a)); and 3) assault by striking, beating, or wounding (18 U.S.C. § 113(d)). Following a jury trial and verdicts of guilty on all three counts, Judge Norman P. Ramsey, who presided at the trial, impоsed a sentence of fifteen years under Count One, fifteen years under Count Two, and six months, together with a $500 fine, under Count Three, all sentences to run concurrently.
Upon appeal, the Government has conceded that, under the facts and circumstances of the case, should we affirm the conviction and sentence under Count One, Cоunts Two and Three should merge into Count One. Accordingly, applying
United States v. Amos,
The evidence introduced at trial amply supported a factual determination that Weatherless, an employee at thе Fort Washington National Park in Maryland, raped a seventeen-year-old summer worker on June 2, 1981. Early that morning, the victim was working alone in an office-trailer facility. Weathеrless had known her for about two months and, although he was married to someone else, had proffered invitations for dates to her, which she had declined. He entered thе office-trailer, carried her by force to the restroom, 1 pulled down her pants, and raped her. Her testimony was that, while Weatherless never struck her and did not carry a weapon, she stopped crying out in self-defense because of her fear that he was going to hit her. She explicitly testified that the sexual act was committеd without her consent.
On the evening of June 2, 1981, she first claimed to have been raped when she told her boyfriend of the event. She reported the incident to her supervisor thе next day, and an interview with Federal Park Police soon ensued. A physical examination on June 8, 1981 revealed no bruises, scars, or other signs of physical injury.
There was testimоny of other witnesses verifying the victim’s isolation in the office-trailer on the morning of June 2, 1981. Moreover, one of her female co-workers testified to “fresh remarks” made by Weatherless on other occasions, and to the agitated state displayed by the victim on the morning of June 2, 1981. The co-worker also recalled the victim’s relation to her *181 on June 3, 1981 of what had happened on June 2, 1981.
Taking the stand in his own defense, Weatherless denied that any of his remarks to the co-worker constituted sexual advances. He further testified that the prosecutrix had promised him sexual relationships on a number of occasions, and that she voluntarily engaged in intercourse with him in the office-trailer on June 2, 1981. 2 Thus, the case ultimately turned primarily upon a credibility call between the prosecutrix and the accused, with the evidence sufficient to support either version.
Normally the case would occasion little comment, for under
Glasser v. United States,
In one important respect, there is no reasonable room for doubt that an impropriety did occur. In closing statements to the jury the prosecutor said:
Anything I say though I don’t want you tо take as an affront to [defense counsel]. They are doing their job. And, under the evidence of this case it is clear that what their job is is to represent this rapist. (Objection sustained)....
[Defense counsel] talks about his client’s testimony for four minutes, because he knows what everybody in this courtroom knows from the evidence, that his client is a liar....
[Defеnse counsel] saw and the defendant saw [the prosecutrix] testify here on Monday afternoon, and you know, the United States knows, everybody realizes who would believe thаt something happened to her on that June 2nd and they can’t win, they can’t get a not guilty verdict by maintaining the story on June 4th that he didn’t touch her and they knew it. So, the defendant got up there and lied to you. And everybody knows it. And they can’t even get up ....
(Objection sustained).
He is a looser [sic]....
He is a looser [sic]....
He is a looser [sic]....
He is a looser [sic]. He couldn’t even ejaculate. He has problems. He is a sick man. (Objection sustainеd).
Those remarks were well beneath the standard which a prosecutor should observe, and it does not lessen their impact that counsel who was responsible had the grace on appeal to acknowledge his error. Since any of us may occasionally err, it was understandable that he did so, and it is to his credit that he has cоnfessed his mistake. Yet the consideration before us is not an assessment of the prosecutor’s character viewed as a whole, but whether the remarks operated to prejudice Weatherless and deny him a fair trial.
Nevertheless, it is pertinent to observe that, at the time the remarks were made, no motion for a mistrial was made on behalf of Weatherless. The district judge denied a motion for a new trial based on those comments made during closing argu
*182
ment.
3
Upon review of the entire trial record, we are satisfied that the misconduct was not so egregious as to render ineffectual the type of curative measures employed by Judge Ramsey.
See United States v. Karas,
In the circumstances, Judge Ramsey’s denial of the new trial motion did not constitute an abuse of discretion; consequently, the decision of the district court should be affirmed.
See United States v. Elmore,
Notes
. The restroom was available for use by other employees, but as matters happened none entered during the course of the events here relevant.
. Weatherless’ statements were impeachеd by the fact that he had previously represented both orally and in a signed statement to the Park Police that he had never had intercourse with the prosecutrix. He lаter asserted that his initial denial proceeded from his concerns about possible adverse consequences for his job, by the fact that he was a family man, and by rеason of his church affiliation.
Also, Weatherless took the position that he was concerned over the possibility of prosecution for statutory rape (a groundless concern because the victim was over the age of fourteen, see Md.Ann.Code art. 27, § 461 et seq.).
. Counsel for Weatherless candidly admitted at the hearing on the motion for a new trial that the decision was made not to move for a mistrial as a matter of strategy, since he was willing to take the case to the jury at that point. There may, of course, be cases in which the inappropriateness of a prosecutor’s remarks may be so great that nothing which the trial judge might do of a curative nature would suffice. Concеivably, there may be cases in which the further prejudice resulting from a motion for mistrial or for curative instructions would only aggravate the situation. Nevertheless, such was not hеre the case. While not moving for a mistrial, counsel for Weatherless objected repeatedly, and time and again Judge Ramsey sustained the objections. Judge Ramsey further advised the jury that ”[s]tatements, answers, arguments of counsel are not evidence and you should not consider them as evidence."
