Austin R. Wilkerson appeals his conviction for possessing a firearm as a convicted felon under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), possessing more than five grams of cocaine base with intent to distribute under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), and carrying a firearm in connection with a drug trafficking offense under 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). Wilkerson asserts that the district court erred by admitting prior consistent statements of a government witness in violation of Fed.R.Evid. 106 and the common law, permitting a government witness to interpret one of his post-arrest statements in violation оf Fed.R.Evid. 701, and allowing the prosecutor to improperly vouch for his witnesses in summation and engage in other forms of prosecutorial misconduct. Wilkerson also challenges the sufficiency' of the evidence to establish a nexus between the firearm and interstate commerce, and he argues that his sentence should be remanded pursuant to
United States v. Booker,
— U.S.-, 125- S.Ct. 738,
Boston police officers Tom Joyce and Ed Fleming stopped Wilkerson after he made an illegal U-turn. During the stop; the officers learned he was driving with a suspended license. Officer Joyce asked Wilkerson to step out of the vehicle, but Wilkerson refused. Joyce and Wilkerson struggled for the door while Officer Fleming called for back-up. Wilkerson then drove off and a chase ensued.
The car chase ended when Wilkerson abandoned his vehicle and took off on foot. From about thirty to forty feet away, the officers 1 saw Wilkerson holding his right side around his waist area. Joyce informed his partner, “Eddie, be careful, I think he has a gun.” Joyce then broadcast over the radio, “He’s reaching for his budge,” meaning that Wilkerson was reaching for the waistband area where he thought Wilkerson had a gun. The officers reported that Wilkerson continued to hold his right waist area while they followed him, but thеy did not actually see a gun.
The officers pursued Wilkerson onto Hartwell Street. Officer Joyce testified at trial that he was about sixty feet away when he saw Wilkerson turn into an alley between houses at 11 and 5 Hartwell on the north side of the street. Officer Fleming testified that he had just turned onto Hartwell when he saw the same thing. As Wilkerson turned into the alley, Joyce slowed down and peered down the drive *4 way on the south side of 11 Hartwell, between 11 and 15/17 Hartwell, to see if Wilkerson would come back the opposite way. He did not. When Joyce reached the alley, he saw Wilkerson climbing over a six- or seven-foot-high fence, no longer clutching his waist area. Joyce did not see anything in Wilkerson’s hands or belt as he lowered himself over the fence. Joyce did not attempt to scale the fence, but instead turned around and ran up the driveway. There Joyce saw Wilkerson running west through the backyards toward Cheney Street. Officers from another police unit arrested Wilkerson when they caught him running at a slow jog on Maple Street near Cheney.
After Wilkerson’s arrest, officers were ordered to retrace the route of the foot chase looking for anything he might have discarded. Another officer accompanied by Joyce found a gun and 12.55 grams of crack cocaine in the alley between 11 and 5 Hartwell. The items were described as clean and dry and lying on top of damp, dirty refuse. The gun was cocked, loaded, and ready to be fired. The key factual dispute at trial was whether Wilkerson ran up the alley where the gun and drugs were found, between 5 and 11 Hartwell, or whether he ran up the driveway between 11 and 15/17 Hartwell, which he would have had to pass before reaching the alley.
I.
Both of the evidentiary issues Wilkerson raises on appeal involve testimony about his flight path on Hartwell Street. We first address Federal Rule of Evidence 106 and the common law to determine when prior consistent stаtements may be used to rehabilitate a witness’s credibility.
Officer Fleming testified that he saw Wilkerson turn into the alley between 5 and 11 Hartwell. Defense counsel attempted to impeach Fleming’s credibility on this subject by eliciting testimony that (1) he did not describe the alley in the radio broadcasts he made while chasing Wilkerson, (2) he referred to the alley as a driveway in his police report, and (B) in state grand jury testimony he stated that Wilkerson ran between the second and third houses on Hartwеll, which would be between 15/17 and 11 if counting from the direction in which they ran. Fleming was impeached on other subjects with his federal grand jury testimony, but none concerned Wilkerson’s flight path.
To rehabilitate his credibility, the government asked Officer Fleming on redirect examination, “[A]t any time prior to writing the report or in testifying in this case, did you ever indicate that [Wilkerson] ran up anyplace other than that area between 5 and 11 Hartwell?” He answered no. He was then asked, “[A]t any prior time, writing а report or in your prior testimony, did you indicate that the defendant ran up any location other than this location between 5 and 11 Hartwell?” Again he answered no. Finally he was asked, referring to his federal grand jury testimony, “[D]o you recall what you said in that testimony?” Fleming answered:
A. I testified to the fact that I saw the defendant run on to Hartwell Street and run up an alleyway between two homes on Hartwell Street.
Q. And were you shown two photographs in the grand jury?
A. I was.
Q. And what did you identify those photographs as being?
A. As the alleyway the defendant ran.
Defense counsel objected to this line of questioning. She argued that thе testimony was hearsay and should not be allowed as non-hearsay prior consistent statements under Federal Rule of Evidence *5 801(d)(1)(B) because it was not offered to rebut a charge of recent fabrication. The district court agreed and ruled that Fleming’s testimony could not be admitted under Rule 801. Instead, the court allowed the testimony under Rule 106 \ the rule of completeness. Defense counsel maintained her objection. The district court, sua sponte, gave a limiting instruction directing the jury to consider the testimony only for the officer’s credibility and not for the truth of the statements.
We review the district court’s ruling for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Millan,
In
United States v. Simonelli,
In Simonelli we stated that when prior consistent statements are admitted to rehabilitate a witness, admissibility is “determined by the interplay between the rule of completeness and the common law doctrine about prior сonsistent statements.” Id. at 27. We noted that both the rule of completeness and the common law doctrine allow prior consistent statements when they tend to show that a statement used to impeach a witness is not really inconsistent when understood in its proper context. See id. at 27-28.
The government argues that Officer Fleming’s testimony was properly admitted because it was offered to rebut the impression created by defense counsel’s cross-examination that Officer Fleming hаd given conflicting or uncertain accounts of Wilkerson’s flight path. However,
Si-monelli
makes clear that prior consistent statements must at least have “some rebutting force beyond the mere fact that the witness has repeated on a prior occasion a statement consistent with his trial testimony.”
See id.
at 27 (quoting
United States v. Pierre,
The government argues that any error in admitting the testimony is harm
*6
less. “A non-constitutional evidentiary error is harmless ... so long as it is highly probable that the error did not influence the verdict.”
United States v. Piper,
The government’s case against Wilkerson was strong even without Officer Fleming’s redirect testimony. Wilkerson drove away from the officers, prompting a car chase; Wilkerson abandoned his vehicle and ran from the officers on foot; both officers saw Wilkerson holding his waist area and believed he had a gun; Officer Joyce warned other officers over the police radio that Wilkerson was reaching for his “budge,” a term that conveyed Joyce’s belief that Wilkerson had a gun; Joyce, who followed closer behind Wilkerson during the chase and was the government’s key witness, also testified that he saw Wilkerson run up the alley where the gun and drugs were found; the gun and drugs were clean and dry in an otherwise damp and dirty alley, indicating that they had not been there very long; and shortly after running from the alley where the gun and drugs were found, Wilkerson gave up the chase. The exculpatory evidence Wilkerson presented at trial was minimal and unpersuasive.
Moreover, Officer Fleming’s redirect testimony was not unique and was used only to rehabilitate his credibility. “By definition, prior consistent statements do not consist of new substantive information. Their impаct comes from corroborating other, perhaps less compelling, evidence.”
United States v. Awon,
II.
The second evidentiary issue Wilkerson raises is whether the district court violated Federal Rule of Evidence 701 by allowing a government witness to interpret one of Wilkerson’s post-arrest statements. The decision to admit lay opinion testimony pursuant to Rule 701 is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Tom,
Wilkerson described his route during the foot chase in an interview after his arrest with Boston Police Detective Jeremiah Benton. Detective Benton testified that Wilkerson told him that “he grabbed the tall fence to get up on the small fence.” Over defendant’s objection, Benton testified that he understood the defendant “to mean that he grabbed on to a higher fence to pull himself up on to a lower fence to get over the higher fence.” Detective Benton then illustrated this testimony by pointing to parts of a fence in a photograph of the alley between 11 and 5 Hart-well. In its closing argument, the government asserted that Wilkerson’s post-arrest statement referred to the fence in the back of the alley in which Officers Joyce and Fleming saw the defendant run.
The government argues that this testimony is admissible under Rule 701, which permits the admission of lay opinion testimony only when it is:
(a) rationally based on the perception of the witness,
(b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness’ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue, and
*7 (c) not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.
Fed.R.Evid. 701. Wilkerson argues that the testimony did not meet the requirements of (a) or (b).
The first element of Rule 701 is “the familiаr requirement of first-hand knowledge or observation.” Fed.R.Evid. 701 advisory committee’s note. This court has noted that the requirement is met when the testimony is based on the personal perception of the witness and does not require any irrational leaps of logic for the witness to render the opinion.
See Lynch v. City of Boston,
Wilkerson also argues that the “helpfulness” requirement is not met because the statement itself is clear and the jury had other evidence before it from which it could determine which area Wilkerson was describing. Wilkerson points to several cases holding that the interpretation of clear statements is not helpful to the jury.
See, e.g., United States v. Dicker,
III.
Wilkerson also contends that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct in his closing argument and rebuttal. There was no contemporaneous objection to the closing argument or rebuttal at trial, so we reviеw for plain error.
United States v. Figueroa-Encarnacion,
*8
First, Wilkerson asserts that the government improperly vouched for the credibility of the officers’ testimony by arguing in rebuttal that if the officers wanted to lie they would have made up a better story. “[A] prosecutor improperly vouches for a witness when she places the prestige of her office behind the government’s case by, say, imparting her personal belief in a witness’s veracity or implying that the jury should credit the prosecution’s evidence simply because the government can be trusted.”
United States v. Perez-Ruiz,
The prosecutor also stated several times in rebuttal that the officers “didn’t stretch the truth here” when noting that the officers testified that they saw Wilkerson reach for his budge area but did not testify that they actually saw a gun. With these statements the prosecutor comes closer to the line of imparting his personal belief in the witness’s veracity. However, there is no plain error, since if there is error, it is not clear or obvious and it does not seriously impair the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.
See United States v. Sullivan,
Second, Wilkerson contends that the government improperly shifted the burden of proof to the defendant by arguing that, for the jury to find that Wilkerson went through the driveway and not the alley, they would have to find that Officers Joyce and Fleming did not tell the truth. Wilkerson relies on
United States v. Roberts,
Third, Wilkerson argues that the government impermissibly commented on Wilkerson’s decision not to testify and shifted the burden of proof when he said “there’s no real evidence” that he did not go up the alley and “pretty much nothing” to say that Wilkerson ran up the driveway. A prosecutor’s remarks violate a defendant’s Fifth Amendment guarantee against
*9
self-incrimination if “in the circumstances of the particular case, the language used was manifestly intended or was of such a character that the jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on the failure of the accused to testify.”
United States v. Wihbey,
Fourth, Wilkerson contends that the government misstated the evidence. The prosecutor stated several times that the witnesses saw something “heavy” in Wilkerson’s right hand. He also referred to “the fence” and “that fence” in the alley when discussing Wilkerson’s post-arrest statement, implying that Wilkerson had identified the fence in the alley to Detective Benton and had described pulling himself up it. These misstatements involved reasonable inferences that the prosecutor asked the jury to draw from the facts. They were de minimus and did not stray far enough from the actual testimony to indicate prejudice or bad faith. Moreover, the judge instructed the jury that the lawyers’ assertions were not evidence. The statements did not “so poison[] the well that the trial’s outcome was likely affected.”
See United States v. Morales-Cartagena,
Finally, Wilkerson’s claim that the prosecutor demeaned the defense by calling one of the defense theories a “red herring” is meritless.
See United States v. Bennett,
IV.
Wilkerson contends that evidence that the gun was manufactured outside of Massachusetts in 1918 is insufficient to establish a nexus between the firearm and interstate commerce under § 922(g). He points to the Supreme Court’s decisions in
United States v. Lopez,
V.
Wilkerson argues in a supplemental brief that, in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Booker,
- U.S. -,
Wilkerson satisfies the first two requirements of the
Olano
plain error test because his sentence was imposed under a mandatory Guidelines system.
Id.
at 77. In order to prove the second two requirements, prejudice and fundamental unfairness, Wilkerson need only present a “reasonable indication that the district judge might well have reached a different result under advisory guidelines.”
United States v. Heldeman,
The district judge sentenced Wilkerson to the lowest available sentence under the Guidelines. He repeatedly expressed his concern about disparate treatment between federal and state court sentences in similar cases, but stated that the Guidelines did not permit him to take that disparity into account. This statement of the district judge was in accord with our earlier decision in
United States v. Snyder,
We affirm Wilkerson’s conviction and remand the casе to the district judge for further sentencing proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. “When a writing or recorded statement or part thereof is introduced by a party, an adverse party may require the introduction at that time of any other part or any other writing or recorded statement which ought in fairness to be considered contemporaneously with it.” Fed.R.Evid. 106.
We express no opinion at this time about whether federal-state sentencing disparities may be considered under the post-Booker advisory guidelines.
