Defendant Robert Dumas (Dumas) raises seven issues for this Court’s review challenging his conviction by a jury for both possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and distribution of same. A five year sentence was imposed with a three year special parole term on each count to run concurrently.
*413 In November 1979, a paid informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) met Dumas in a bar in Corpus Christi, Texas. On February 12, 1980, this informant telephoned Dumas at his place of employment and inquired about the possibility of purchasing some methamphetamine. The two agreed to meet, and at the subsequent meeting the paid informant agreed to purchase a gram of methamphetamine from Dumas. Later that night, the informant and a Special Agent for the DEA met Dumas at his apartment and paid him $85.00. Dumas left his apartment and returned thirty minutes later with the gram of methamphetamine.
Dumas argued at trial that he was entrapped, and maintained that he only sold the methamphetamine to get rid of the informant and because he felt obligated to the informant who had given him some methamphetamine a few days before. The defense included the testimony of a psychologist who categorized the informant as a “father-figure” who had obligated Dumas by giving him narcotics.
Following our consideration of Dumas’ appeal, we affirm his conviction.
Dismissing A Juror
After the jury had been selected, but before they were sworn, the District Court released a juror and replaced him without notifying the parties. The juror’s employer, the U.S. Army, wrote a letter to the District Court requesting that the juror be excused because he was scheduled to be out of town on the day the trial was to commence. The letter recited that the juror was urgently needed to perform a fuel inspection at a U.S. Air Force base in California. On the morning of trial, defense counsel, on learning of this for the first time, objected to the replacement of the juror, moved for a mistrial, and asked that another jury be picked. The District Court replaced the juror with an approved alternate and overruled the objections.
Dumas first complains that the juror was neither unable to perform his duties nor was he disqualified. See F.R.Crim.P. 24(c). He alleges an abuse of discretion by the District Court in excusing the juror for a mere conflict in employment scheduling. More specifically, Dumas doubts the urgency of the juror’s job as compared with the urgency of a criminal trial.
In this Circuit, it is within the trial judge’s sound discretion to remove a juror and replace him with an alternate whenever that juror’s ability to perform his duties becomes impaired.
U. S. v. Dominguez,
Complaint is also made that the juror was excused without prior notification of and consultation with defense counsel. Relying on F.R.Crim.P. 43(a), which requires that a defendant be present “at every stage of the trial including the empaneling of the jury...,” Dumas contends that the dismissal of the above juror was not justified by any immediate necessity or emergency, and he was thus denied the opportunity to test the factual basis as well as the validity of the reason for the dismissal.
This Court in Dominguez, supra, stated: It is clear from the record that it was by inadvertence and not design that defense counsel was not present when the determination of whether the juror should be excused was made. While it is clearly *414 the better practice to have defense present when such an excusal is granted, the trial judge’s misunderstanding about the status of this particular juror does not merit reversal of appellant’s conviction in this case.
We are in agreement with the Second, Seventh and Tenth Circuits that a deprivation of the right to defendant’s presence under Rule 43 is subject to the harmless error rule.
See, e. g., U. S. v. Schor,
Limits On Cross-Examination
There is nothing to the claim that the Court unduly limited cross-examination of the informant by sustaining the prosecutor’s objection to a repetitive question. Indeed, the record shows that defense counsel, in spite of the sustained objection, was able to ask the same question of the informant on another occasion during cross-examination. The question was actually asked on four occasions, and answered negatively without objection by the Government twice.
Proof Of An Extraneous Offense
During cross-examination of the Government’s informant, defense counsel asked the informant about a telephone conversation with Dumas. The informant replied that Dumas said, “[My attorney] is my God right now and he told me not to sell any more dope until after a prior case had been settled in court.” During direct examination of Dumas, he testified that the statements made to the informant were merely fictitious and an attempt to stop the informant from bothering him. On cross-examination, Government counsel asked if it was also fictitious that' Dumas had charges pending against him, and Dumas replied that the entire story was fictitious. Defense counsel immediately objected to the question regarding an offense, and added that the prosecutor had “previously stated that he would not go into such things on cross-examination or otherwise and we don’t believe that we have opened the door on anything.” After hearing argument the District Court found that when defense counsel elicited the testimony concerning the pending charge against Dumas,
1
the door was opened to this line of testimony.
See U. S. v. Walker,
*415 An Improper Question?
Following the line of testimony regarding charges pending against Dumas, the prosecutor asked, “Do you know that your father and [an attorney] came to my office yesterday and tried to get me to dismiss these charges against you?”. Defense counsel objected to the question as irrelevant and immaterial, and requested that a mistrial be granted because this “is something that cannot be washed from the minds of the jury.” The District Court denied the motion for mistrial and instructed the jury to disregard the “testimony of the United States Attorney that has been made in open court.” Dumas now argues that the prosecutor’s expression of personal opinion, because of his status and role as a spokesman for the Government, tended to tip the scales of justice in favor of the Government.
This was not an expression of opinion, but a direct question about the fact known to the prosecutor. Whether it should have been asked we need not decide, since the Judge’s instructions were immediate and adequate.
The Prosecution’s Final Argument
We find no error, and certainly no plain or harmful error, in the prosecutor’s final argument to which no objection was made. It was a permissible response to the defense’s argument.
U. S.
v.
Cotton,
Jury Instructions On Entrapment
The entire defense was entrapment by the Government informant. Dumas contends that the District Court’s instruction on entrapment was vague and confusing. Specifically, Dumas argues that the use of the words “law enforcement officers or their agents” was not sufficiently precise so as to clear up any confusion that the jurors may have had as to whether the District Court meant Government Agents or agents of Government Agents. Dumas made no request at trial for a more precise instruction on agency. The instruction that defense counsel proposed simply defined entrapment as being “induced or persuaded by law enforcement officers or their agents to commit the crime charged in the indictment,” thus his requested charge was almost identical in this respect to the District Court’s.
We find no error in the entrapment instruction given to the jury in this case. The informant was often referred to as an agent during trial, and Dumas’ defense was partially based on the fact that the informant was a paid Government employee. 2
Maximum Sentence Imposed
There is no error in the imposition of the maximum five year sentence which was within the statutorily permissible limits of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). No objection was made to the pre-sentence report, and the District Court was permitted to consider evidence of crimes for which Dumas had been indicted but not convicted.
U. S. v. Benton,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On direct examination of Dumas, when asked about a conversation with the informant, Dumas replied that “I made up a fictitious story that — I said my lawyer had been down at the building and that they had been following me all night.. . and I couldn’t afford to do anything that would get me in trouble and I just made up the story so he wouldn’t harass or bother me anymore.”
. The present facts are clearly distinguishable from those in
U. S. v. Anderton,
