Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.
Ronald Pierre challenges on several grounds his conviction for possession with intent to distribute crack cocaine. We have considered each of these, but find it necessary to discuss only one: his assertion that the district court erred in instructing the jury that it had a “duty” to find Pierre guilty if it found that the government had proved beyond a reasonable doubt all the essential elements of the crime with which he was charged. We hold that the instruction was proper, and therefore affirm the judgment of conviction.
Background
On October 18, 1990, Metropolitan Police Department drug interdiction unit detectives confronted Pierre at the Greyhound/Trailways bus station in Washington, D.C., and conducted a consent search. After finding 175 vials of cocaine in a false shaving cream can in his luggage, they arrested him. Subsequently, on November 6,1990, the grand jury indicted him for one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine. After an unsuccessful suppression motion, he stood trial. He now appeals from a sentence imposed after a guilty verdict. He assigns as errors the judge’s ruling on the suppression motion, the judge’s failure to give the jury tendered instructions on bias of an expert witness, and the judge’s instruction that if the jury found that the government had proven beyond a reasonable doubt every element of the offense with which Pierre was charged, it was the jury’s “duty” to convict. As to the first two alleged errors, we have given them due consideration but find them to be without merit. Only the third warrants specific discussion.
DISCUSSION
In the relevant portion of the jury instruction, the court charged as follows:
Ladies and gentlemen, every defendant in a criminal case is presumed to be innocent. This presumption of innocence remains with the defendant throughout the trial, unless and until he is proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The burden is upon the government to prove the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This burden of proof never shifts throughout the trial. The law does not require a defendant to prove his innocence, or to produce any evidence. If you find that the government has proven beyond a reasonable doubt every element of the offense with which the defendant is charged, and which I will define for you, it is your duty to find him guilty. On the other hand, if you find the government has failed to prove any element *1357 of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt, then you must find him not guilty.
Trial Tr. (Feb. 12, 1991) at 209-10.
Thus, the court informed the jury that it had as much of an obligation to find the defendant guilty if the government proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt as it did to find Pierre not guilty failing such a showing by the government. The instruction neither directed a guilty verdict nor placed inhibitions on the jury’s right to acquit Pierre.
We recently upheld a district court’s instruction to jurors “that they ‘should’ return a guilty verdict if they found that the government had proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Broxton,
In support of his claim that the district court committed reversible error, appellant cites this Court’s decision in
United States v. Hayward,
In
Billeci v. United States, supra,
we did reverse based on an instruction to the jury that “[i]f you believe from the testimony that the defendants have committed the crime of which they are charged, then you must find a verdict of guilty.”
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that it was proper for the district court to instruct the jury that it had a duty to find appellant guilty if the government proved beyond a reasonable doubt every element of the offense with which he was charged. In sum, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
