Appellant Benjamin Zacarías and his co-defendant, William Delgado, were convicted of receiving stolen property (“RSP”) and unauthorized use of a vehicle (“UUV”). 1 Zacarías contends on appeal that the trial court erred by allowing the indictment against him to be constructively amended, and by permitting the government to rely on hearsay testimony to establish ownership of the vehicle. We affirm.
I
In the early morning hours of February 10, 2003, Officer Jeffrey Newbold saw appellant driving a black four-door Honda, bearing Massachusetts license plates, at a “very high rate of speed” along Riggs Road, Northeast. Seated in the passenger seat was another man, later identified as William Delgado. Officer Newbold and his partner, Officer Abdul Harim, pulled appellant over and asked him for his driver’s license, registration, and proof of insurance.
After identifying himself as “John Bol-son,” appellant told the officers that he had forgotten his driver’s license and that the car belonged to a friend. As appellant searched the glove compartment for the registration, Officer Harim noticed that the car’s ignition had been “totally ripped out.” The officers promptly arrested appellant and Mr. Delgado. A fingerprint check later established that appellant’s true name was Benjamin Zacarías.
The car, registered to Robert Lanning of Massachusetts, was in the possession of his daughter, Rebecca Lanning, who lived in the District of Columbia. 2 On the morning of February 10, after receiving a call from the police, Ms. Lanning checked outside her apartment in Northwest Washington, where she had parked the night before, and discovered that the car was missing. She so advised the police. Ms. Lanning had given neither appellant nor Mr. Delgado permission to take the car.
Appellant testified that he did not steal the car or know that it had been stolen. He said that on the evening of February 9, his friend José Luis Muñoz Otero drove him to a party in Langley Park, Maryland, which Mr. Delgado also attended. At the party appellant was talking with another friend, Iris Vasquez, until an acquaintance known as “Poncho” interrupted them. When appellant asked for a ride, Poncho agreed to lend appellant his car. Later, Poncho started the engine, but appellant said he was standing too far from the car to notice how he did it. Appellant testified that “nothing was broken” inside the car, but he acknowledged that it was dark, and he noticed only that a black scarf was covering the car’s ignition. 3
Three defense witnesses corroborated portions of appellant’s testimony. Mr. Muñoz testified that he picked up appellant and drove him to Langley Park on February 9. Ms. Vasquez recalled attending a party in February where she talked with appellant off and on throughout the night. Mr. Delgado testified that at the *86 party appellant told him that a Mend had lent him the car. Mr. Delgado did not notice anything amiss with the ignition, but he too saw the black scarf covering the steering column. He also confirmed appellant’s account of the juvenile passenger.
II
Both of appellant’s arguments on appeal relate to the ownership of the stolen car. He contends that the government constructively amended the indictment, which named Rebecca Lanning as the car’s owner, when it proved at trial that Robert Lanning was the actual owner. Appellant also argues that the government established Mr. Lanning’s ownership through his daughter’s inadmissible hearsay testimony.
A. The Alleged Constructive Amendment
A defendant cannot “be convicted on the basis of facts not found by, and perhaps not even presented to, the grand jury which indicted him.”
Russell v. United States,
When, as in this case, an objection to an inconsistency between the allegations in the indictment and the eventual proof at trial has been adequately preserved, this court has stated that a constructive amendment mandates “reversal
per se ...
without the need for any showing of prejudice.”
Carter v. United States,
Before trial, the government notified the court and defense counsel that Robert Lanning was the car’s true owner, but that it had decided not to seek a new indictment because the name of the actual owner was mere “surplusage”; that is, it was not an essential element of any of the charged offenses, and Rebecca Lanning in any event had a “property interest” in the stolen car. Defense counsel argued that the name of the owner was a basic element of UUV and RSP, but the court disagreed and overruled his objection to the government’s proof of ownership.
The case law in this jurisdiction distinguishing a variance from a constructive amendment is quite clear. Given that case law, we are not persuaded that the discrepancy here amounted to a constructive amendment. “An
amendment
of the indictment occurs when the charging terms of the indictment are altered, either literally or in effect, by prosecutor or court after the grand jury has last passed upon them. A
variance
occurs when the charging terms of the indictment are left unaltered, but the evidence offered at trial proves facts materially different from those alleged in the indictment.”
Gaither v. United States,
134 U.S.App. D.C. 154, 164,
We hold that the evidence showing that the owner of the car was someone other than the person named in the indictment was only a variance and that it was not fatal. In a UUV case, the government must prove that the defendant took a vehicle “without the consent of the owner or some other person empowered to consent on the owner’s behalf.”
Agnew v. United States,
Appellant contends nevertheless that the fact that the inconsistency between the indictment and the proof at trial does not involve an essential element of the charges does not by itself prevent the change from amounting to a constructive amendment. To support this contention, appellant relies on
Wooley,
in which the defendant was indicted for possessing heroin, but the trial evidence established that he actually possessed cocaine. Appellant’s reliance on
Wooley
is misguided. In that case we held that an indictment had been constructively amended because there were critical statutory distinctions between the two types of controlled substances which a later revised indictment disregarded. The type of drug named in the initial indictment, while not an element of the crime, influenced the manner of drug testing undertaken by the police and the sentences that could apply in the event of conviction.
See Wooley,
Because the change in the named owner was merely a variance, and not a constructive amendment, appellant must demonstrate prejudice.
See Pace,
Moreover, since a UUV prosecution requires only that the government prove that the vehicle was used without the consent of “the owner or some other person empowered to consent on the owner’s behalf,”
Agnew,
Although the grand jury may not have known that Robert Lanning was the car’s true owner, ample evidence at trial (inelud-ing Rebecca Lanning’s testimony) could permit a reasonable trier of fact to conclude that appellant used the car without authorization. Both Ms. Lanning and Officer Newbold identified the car from photographs, and Ms. Lanning further identified it by its license number and by certain stickers in the window. Given these facts, along with the circumstances surrounding appellant’s arrest while driving the car (including, in particular, the “ripped out” ignition), a jury could reasonably find that Rebecca Lanning, as the true owner’s daughter, enjoyed a possessory interest in the car and that neither she nor her father authorized appellant’s use of the vehicle.
See Powell v. United States,
135 U.S.App. D.C. 254, 257,
Appellant’s claim of constructive amendment, properly interpreted as a permissible variance, fails because he has not shown prejudice. He is not at risk of being tried twice for the same offense, and he has not shown that his defense would have been any different if there had been no variance.
B. Evidence of Ownership
Appellant argues that Rebecca Lanning’s testimony about her father’s ownership of the car, to which he objected in the trial court, was inadmissible hearsay. We find no error.
We have often recognized that the trial court “is entrusted with broad discretion to determine the substance, form, and quantum of evidence which is to be presented to a jury.”
(William) Johnson v. United States,
At trial, the prosecutor asked Rebecca Lanning, “Do you know who the registered owner of the car is?” Defense counsel objected. After the court said, “Overruled,” Ms. Lanning answered, “My father.” 8 Appellant now argues that “the reason Rebecca Lanning believed her father legally owned the car is simply because that is what he told her.” A non-owner of a “titled object” such as a car, he contends (without any citation of authority), cannot “testify as to who actually does legally own the property without ... repeating information that he has gathered from some other source — either from a report made by another person or from information contained in a legal document.” That is not necessarily true. Ms. Lanning, as the owner’s daughter, was in a position to observe conduct and events that would impart personal knowledge of the fact that the car belonged to her father. As the government points out, it is quite possible, for example, that she was present when her father purchased the car or that she researched its ownership for insurance purposes.
But we need not engage in such suppositions or assumptions. It is enough to conclude that appellant’s hearsay challenge to Ms. Lanning’s testimony is based entirely on speculation and conjecture, and that he has therefore failed to establish that it was hearsay at all. Ms. Lanning was never asked how she knew that the car belonged to her father, and thus there is no basis to believe that her only source of that information was what her father told her. Indeed, her knowledge of the car’s ownership may well have been based on the most probable scenario of non-assertive conduct — her father’s routine exercise of dominion and control over a vehicle that he owned and permitted his daughter to use at his pleasure. Even if the record established (which it does not) that her testimony was hearsay, its admission would be harmless because the car was indisputably in her possession, and appellant did not claim that he had her permission, or her father’s, to use it. We note that Ms. Lan-ning testified affirmatively that she never gave either appellant or Mr. Delgado permission to use the car. Defense counsel did not object to this testimony, nor would any objection have been valid, because the testimony went directly to whether Ms. Lanning, as “some other person empowered to consent on the owner’s behalf,” 9 had authorized its use by appellant. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion, and committed no error of law, in allowing Ms. Lanning to testify that her father was the registered owner of the car.
The judgment of conviction is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Mr. Zacarías and Mr. Delgado were also indicted for destruction of property and first-degree theft, but the jury acquitted them of those charges.
. The indictment stated that the car was the "property of Rebecca Lanning.”
.Appellant also stated that an unidentified fifteen-year-old friend of Poncho who rode with him and Mr. Delgado actually stole the car, but he was released by the police after they learned he was a juvenile.
. We have also found a constructive amendment when "the jury convicted the defendant of a different offense
legally understood
from that presented to the grand jury.”
Wooley,
. We have also held in two recent cases that if a claim of constructive amendment was not preserved in the trial court, reversal is not required unless the appellant can demonstrate plain error.
(Danny) Johnson v. United States,
. Similarly, appellant relies on
Stirone,
in which the defendant’s conviction was overturned because the indictment alleged illegal interference with shipments of sand and the evidence at trial established illegal interference with shipments of steel. The Supreme Court held in
Stirone
that the government had effectively broadened the possible basis for conviction beyond that presented in the indictment.
See
. At oral argument, the government informed us that it usually names the owner in a UUV indictment simply to forestall any need for a bill of particulars.
. Actually, it is not entirely clear that the objection was based on a claim of hearsay. When the prosecutor asked Ms. Lanning if she knew who the registered owner of the car was, she started to reply but was interrupted by defense counsel, who said simply, "Objection, Your Honor.” The word “hearsay” was never mentioned, either by counsel or by the court. We assume nevertheless, for the sake of argument, that counsel’s objection was sufficient to preserve the hearsay claim that appellant now argues on appeal.
.
Agnew,
