For a brief time, Shawntell Curry and various others made it their business to rob various establishments in Illinois and Wisconsin. Charged and convicted of con *765 spiring unlawfully to interfere with commerce through these robberies in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1951 (and a related gun charge), Curry has appealed. His reasons for urging reversal of his conviction include allegedly erroneous evidentiary rulings, jury instructions, a supposedly suggestive lineup, and the sufficiency of the evidence. Finding no error in any of these respects, we affirm.
I
On May 13, 1997, a grand jury returned a six-count indictment against Curry for charges arising out of the following robberies: the Bell Federal Bank in Home-wood, Illinois on Sеptember 16, 1996; the M & I Bank in Oregon, Wisconsin on January 27, 1997; the Budgetel Motel in Matteson, Illinois on February 20, 1997; and the First Savings Bank of Hedgewisch in Lynwood, Illinois on February 21, 1997. The indictment also included Curry’s alleged co-conspirators, Allan S. Brown, Charles Curry (the defendant’s brother), John Q. Pulley, and LaTonya Wilder. The indictment charged that Curry organized the hеists and, as necessary, recruited others to assist him, as follows: Curry robbed Bell Federal on his own; he and Pulley together robbed M & I; Curry, Pulley, and Charles Curry robbed the Budgetel Motel; and Curry, Brown, and Wilder participated in the First Savings robbery.
Brown, Charles Curry, Pulley, and Wilder chose to plead guilty and to cooperate with the government, while Curry opted for a trial. There, his erstwhile colleagues Brown, Charles Curry, and Wilder lived up to their bargain with the prosecutors and testified about the robberies and Curry’s leading role in them. A number of other witnesses supported their accounts. Among them was Lettie Williams, the Budgetel desk clerk on duty at the time of the robbery. Williams testified that an individual she identified as Curry approached her wearing a baseball cap with a ski mask rolled up under the cap. Initially, she believed that Curry wanted a room. As she was looking at him straight in the face and handing him a registration card, a gun fell from his sleeve onto the counter. Curry quickly pulled the ski mask down over his face and proceeded to rob the motel. Williams later identified Curry three times: from a police photo spread on the day of the robbery, from a lineup one month later, and in court. Rae Williams-Anderson, Curry’s cousin, also testified. She recalled that Curry and Pulley arrived unexpectedly at her apartment, located less than half a block from the M & I Bank, on the morning of January 27, 1997. Based upon the way Curry and Pulley looked when they left, Williams-Anderson identified them as the two robbers depicted in photos taken by the bank’s surveillance cameras. The jury convicted Curry of five of the six counts against him — that is, everything excеpt the Bell Federal robbery. The court sentenced him to 295 months in prison.
II
Curry’s first argument is a now-futile attempt to take advantage of the Tenth Circuit’s now-vacated opinion in
United States v. Singleton,
Using a slight variant on
Singleton,
Curry also argues that the government’s use of testimony offered pursuant to a plea bargain is “so sevеrely infected with the unnatural incentives to fabricate”
*766
that it violates the protections of the Due Process Clause. Although we did not specifically address this argument in
Condon,
it was rejected in the case on which the
Condon
court relied,
United States v. Barrett, 505 F.2d
1091, 1102-03 (7th Cir.1974). Furthermore, in keeping with the Supreme Court’s implicit position that the practice of plea bargaining is consistent with due process, seе,
e.g., Giglio v. United States,
Ill
Curry’s next thrust is against the district court’s decision to admit -certain statements into evidence under thе co-conspirator exception to the hearsay rule. See Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). Our review of these rulings is for plain error only, as Curry failed.to object to them at trial. Rule 801(d)(2)(E) provides that an out-of-court statement made by a co-conspirator is not hearsay if the district court determines, by a preponderаnce of the evidence, that the declarant and the defendant were involved in an existing conspiracy and that the statement was made during and in furtherance of that conspiracy. See,
e.g., United States v. Godinez,
Curry points to two specific bits •of testimony that he claims were erroneously admitted: first, Charles Curry’s description of what Pulley had told him about the M & I heist, and second, Wilder’s testimony that Pulley had told her he and Curry “had hit some licks before” (by which, according to Wilder, Pulley meant they had committed some robberies) and it was “easy.” Curry does not challenge the district court’s determination that he and Pulley were involved in a conspiracy at the timе the statements were made. Instead, he argues that the two statements were merely offhand comments that were not made to further the scheme.- As a matter of theory, it is true that “mere idle chatter, narrative declarations, and superfluous casual remarks” are not statements made in furtherance of a conspiracy.
Id.,
citing
United States v. Johnson,
IV
Curry also believes that the court committed prejudicial error when it allowed the jury to learn about Pulley’s guilty plea. But, just as in
United States v. Lindemann,
Under the applicable abuse of discretion standard of review for this kind of evidentiary ruling, see
United States v. Gibson,
We find the distinction unpersuasive. To the contrary, it will be common in conspiracy cases that a cooperating witness’s testimony will help the government obtain more than one conviction (through guilty pleas or otherwise). That is enough to create the multiple' “chips” to which Lindemann referred. In addition, Wilder’s history of successful cooperation was relevant evidence under the standards of Federal Rule of Evidence 402 because the fact that she had cooрerated against Pulley, who then pleaded guilty, made it more probable that she was telling the truth about Curry. Although Curry does not argue that the evidence, although relevant, should be excluded because it is overly prejudicial, see Fed.R.Evid. 403, we note that the district court addressed concerns about prejudice by instructing the jury that they could consider Pulley’s guilty plea, along with the other evidence, in evaluating Wilder’s credibility. Although it might have been more judicious to give an instruction along the lines of that given in Lindemann — that the jury was not to consider Pulley’s guilty plea as substantive evidence of Curry’s guilt — there was no abuse of discretion in the court’s failure tо do so.
In any event, even if the district court did abuse its discretion in admitting the challenged evidence, any error was harmless. The evidence against Curry was overwhelming, and there were a host of corroborating witnesses whose testimony would have helped the jury to evaluate Wilder’s credibility.
V
Curry also criticizes the jury instructions defining direct and circumstantial evidence, which he maintains improperly biased the jury against him. Because he failed to object to the instructions at trial, our review is again for plain error.
United States v. Miller,
The district court gave the Seventh Circuit Committee Pattern Jury Instruction 3.02, which reads as follows:
Direct evidence is the testimony of a person who claims to have personal knowledge of the commission of the crime which has been charged, such as an eyewitness. Circumstantial evidence is the proof of a chain of facts and circumstances which tend to show whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty. The law makes no distinction between the weight to be given either direct or circumstantial evidence.
*768 Curry believes that the definition of direct evidence suggested to the jury that “direct evidence can point in only one direction: personal knowledge of the commission of the crime.” Second, he maintains that the description of circumstantial evidence “subtly undermines the presumption of innocence by framing the question as between two equal proposition-'whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty’when in fact, of course, the propositions are entirely unequal before the law because the defendant is presumed innocent.”
We disagree. The instruction did not misstate the law or mislead the jury. See
United States v. Menting,
VI
Curry next challenges the district court’s rеfusal to suppress Lettie Williams’ identification of him in the police lineup, which he believes was unduly suggestive and created a serious likelihood of misiden-tification. Curry also seeks exclusion of the in-court identification made by Williams, presumably because it was tainted by the improper lineup. The standard of review for decisions refusing to suppress an identification has been expressed both as
de novo
and as clear error in recent opinions. See
United States v. Newman,
There is a well-known two-step procedure for evaluating a challenge to identification testimony. First, the defendant must show that the identification procedure employed was unreasonably suggestive. If it was, the identification is still 'admissible so long as, given the totality of the circumstances, the testimony was reliable despite the suggestive procedure.
Funches,
Curry argues that the lineup was suggestive because he was the shortest of the suspects (and, as a rеsult, his numbered chest card hung lower than the others, drawing the witness’s eye to him), he was much less bulky, and he had a less round face; An examination of a photograph of the lineup shows six men who
*769
appear to be close in age, of the same race, with similar hair styles and facial hair, and wearing identical baggy сlothing. Curry does not have a slighter build or a more distinctly shaped face than the others. He is the shortest by several inches (though his chest card does not hang the lowest), but we have held that a similar difference in height does not render a lineup unreasonably suggestive. See
Funches,
Even if the lineup was suggestive, Williams’s identification of Curry was reliable. Williams testified that she looked Curry straight in the faсe as he stood across the counter from her. Although she had only a short time to view him before he pulled the ski mask down, she saw him at close range with a presumably high degree of attention, at least at the moment the gun dropped from his sleeve. She identified him on three different occasions, the first only a fеw hours after the robbery, and each time with great certainty.
VII
Last, Curry argues that his conviction was not supported by sufficient evidence. This court will reverse a conviction on this ground only if, after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, it concludes that no rational trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Saunders,
We therefore Affirm the judgment of the district court.
