Officers seeking to execute an arrest warrant for Jermaine Thomas, who had been charged with first degree murder, proceeded to the address given in the supporting affidavit. There they encountered the defendant May and others, but not Thomas. The weapons and drugs found on the premises resulted in May’s indictment and conviction, after a jury trial, for possession with intent to distribute cocaine; and for using and carrying a firearm in connection with that offense, for *516 possessing a firearm with an altered serial number, and for possessing an unregistered firearm.
As to the validity of the search, May recognizes that the Fourth Amendment permits law enforcement officers to search the dwelling of the subject of an arrest warrant provided they have reason to believe the suspect is there.
See Payton v. New York,
May’s next contention has more substance. The district court instructed the jury that “[p]roof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves you with a strong belief in a defendant’s guilt” and that “[i]f based on your consideration of the evidence you have a strong belief that the defendant is guilty of one or more of the crimes charged, it is your duty to find him guilty.” In
United States v. Merlos,
Because an unconstitutional reasonable-doubt instruction can never constitute harmless error under Rule 52(a), Fed.R.Crim.P.
(Sullivan v. Louisiana,
— U.S.-,-,
Before the court charged the jury in this case, it held an off-the-record conference on the instructions and then told counsel to place their objections on the record. May’s counsel, James R. Holloway, Esq., stated: “We had requested in our requested instructions that Your Honor give the standard *517 reasonable doubt instruction in the Redbook Instruction, 2.09.” The court responded:
As I told you informally, I’ve been giving for some time the reasonable doubt instruction from the Pattern Criminal Instructions prepared by a subcommittee on pattern jury instructions of the judicial conference of the United States.
I haven’t seen a reasonable doubt instruction yet that I think is ideal. I keep thinking I’ll take a day sometime and try to blend everything together into what seems to be a better one, but I don’t have it yet.
So I give the one from the judicial conference instruction book.
In order to preserve the issue for appeal, Rule 30 required defense counsel to identify distinctly the “strong belief’ portion of the instruction and to state why he considered it objectionable.
See, e.g., United States v. Logan,
Nevertheless, this court has twice determined that colloquies almost identical to the one just quoted, colloquies with the same judge relating to the same instruction, amounted to a sufficient objection to preserve the issue for appeal.
See Purvis,
Because Rule 30 requires counsel to put their objections on the record and to spell out the reasons for them
(see, e.g., United States v. Agnes,
The case is remanded. The district court, upon consideration of whatever submissions defendant’s attorney and the attorney for the government may wish to make, shall determine whether, in the off-the-record conference on instructions in this case, attorney Holloway stated an objection to the “strong belief’ portion of the court’s proposed reasonable doubt instruction and the grounds of the objection. In making that determination the court may consider submissions from attorney Holloway and from the government attorney who attended the conference. If the court finds that attorney Holloway made the objection and sufficiently stated the grounds for it, the court shall enter an order *518 vacating May’s conviction and setting the case down for a new trial. If the court finds that attorney Holloway did not make the objection or sufficiently state the grounds for it in the conference, the court shall enter a final judgment so stating.
Remanded.
Notes
.
Merlos I,
decided in February 1993, was our first decision holding unconstitutional a jury instruction equating reasonable doubt with a strong belief. May’s trial took place in June 1992.
United States v. Washington,
