United States v. Alfred Velazquez ( 2021 )


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  •                     FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                        No. 19-50099
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    D.C. No.
    v.                          3:17-cr-03707-
    BAS-1
    ALFRED VELAZQUEZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.                   OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of California
    Cynthia A. Bashant, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted July 8, 2020
    Pasadena, California
    Filed June 23, 2021
    Before: Richard A. Paez and Bridget S. Bade, Circuit
    Judges, and Eric F. Melgren, * District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Paez;
    Dissent by Judge Bade
    *
    The Honorable Eric F. Melgren, United States District Judge for
    the District of Kansas, sitting by designation.
    2                UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    SUMMARY **
    Criminal Law
    The panel vacated a conviction for importing controlled
    substances into the United States, and remanded for a new
    trial, in a case in which the defendant testified he did not
    know the car he was driving contained drugs.
    During closing argument, the prosecutor compared the
    reasonable doubt standard to the confidence one needs to
    “hav[e] a meal” or “travel to . . . court”—without worrying
    about the “possib[ility]” that one will get sick or end up in
    an accident. The panel held that the prosecutor engaged in
    misconduct by trivializing the reasonable doubt standard
    and, as a result, caused the defendant substantial prejudice.
    The panel wrote that the prosecutor’s comments regarding
    the government’s burden of proof diverged significantly
    from what is required at trial, and was troubled by the
    suggestion that reasonable doubt can be compared to an
    “everyday” experience. The panel was not convinced that
    the district court’s providing the correct instruction and
    admonishing the jury earlier during closing argument
    sufficiently neutralized the prejudice. The panel did not
    believe that the evidence demonstrating the defendant’s
    knowledge of the drugs was so overwhelming that the
    prosecutor’s misstatements were harmless.
    Dissenting, Judge Bade agreed that the prosecutor’s
    comments were at best unhelpful, and potentially
    misleading, but wrote that the record overwhelmingly
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It
    has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   3
    establishes that the comments did not affect the verdict and,
    thus, the defendant’s due process rights were not violated.
    COUNSEL
    Carlton F. Gunn (argued), Pasadena, California, for
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Benjamin Holley (argued) and Nicole Ries Fox, Assistant
    United States Attorneys; Daniel E. Zipp, Chief, Appellate
    Section, Criminal Division; Robert S. Brewer, Jr., United
    States Attorney; United States Attorney’s Office, San Diego,
    California; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    4             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    OPINION
    PAEZ, Circuit Judge:
    A jury convicted Alfred Velazquez of importing
    controlled substances into the United States, in violation of
    21 U.S.C. § 960. At trial, Velazquez took the stand and
    testified he did not know the car he was driving contained
    drugs—what is sometimes referred to as the “blind mule”
    defense.
    Velazquez asserts multiple errors at trial, but we need
    focus only on one.          During closing argument, the
    government compared the reasonable doubt standard to the
    confidence one needs to “hav[e] a meal” or “travel to . . .
    court”—without worrying about the “possib[ility]” that one
    will get sick or end up in an accident. Velazquez claims that
    this improper argument, and the district court’s failure to
    cure it, caused him prejudice. We agree. We have
    jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We vacate Velazquez’s
    conviction and remand for a new trial.
    I.
    In July 2017, Velazquez was driving from Mexico into
    the United States when he encountered Customs and Border
    Protection Officer Sean Hanlon at the Otay Mesa Port of
    Entry. Velazquez provided his temporary driver’s license
    and told the officer he was going to the Department of Motor
    Vehicles (DMV) to obtain permanent identification. The
    officer asked Velazquez who owned the car, and Velazquez
    said the car belonged to his cousin.
    Velazquez was sent to secondary inspection. As the
    officer took Velazquez to secondary inspection, he
    understood Velazquez to say: “I don’t know why you’re
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   5
    searching me or bothering me. I’m just going to meet up
    with my mom.” The officer asked Velazquez about his
    earlier statement about going to the DMV. Velazquez
    explained that “he was going to pick up his mom and then
    going to go to the DMV to hang out.”
    The officer searched the car in secondary inspection.
    The officer opened the hood and saw that the engine “was
    heavily tampered.” Velazquez gave the officer permission
    to open the intake manifold, where the officer found two
    packages. Later testing revealed the packages contained
    over 2,000 grams of a mixture and substance containing
    fentanyl and heroin, which was worth almost $150,000.
    Velazquez was arrested, and Department of Homeland
    Security Agent Kevin Day interrogated him. Velazquez
    denied knowing about the drugs.
    A. The Trial
    Velazquez was indicted for importation of fentanyl and
    importation of heroin. Velazquez pled not guilty and
    proceeded to trial.
    1. The Government’s Case-in-Chief
    At trial, the government presented two main witnesses,
    Officer Hanlon and Agent Day. Officer Hanlon—the officer
    who first encountered Velazquez at the port of entry—
    testified about his initial observations of Velazquez. He
    testified that Velazquez “couldn’t maintain eye contact, . . .
    was continuously readjusting in his seat, and . . . his hands
    were shaking when he would hand me documents or his ID.”
    He also testified that the car was very clean and had little
    “personalization.” On cross-examination, however, the
    officer acknowledged that there were several personal items
    6              UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    in the car, such as a CD and “some other personal items” in
    the glove box, a can on the floor, a personal jacket or
    checkered top, a sun visor block in the back of the car, and a
    “shirt or some such thing that[ was] kind of strewn” in the
    back.
    Agent Day—the interviewing agent—also testified. He
    testified about various documents, including registration
    papers showing that the car Velazquez was driving had been
    purchased for $300 two months before he was stopped at the
    border, from a seller identified as “Operadora de Autos.”
    Agent Day also testified about various records showing
    Velazquez had crossed the border over sixty times, with
    about half of the entries resulting in secondary inspections.
    Defense counsel asked Agent Day whether he was aware
    of the concept of “blind mules.” Agent Day explained he
    had heard of blind mules with “magnet loads of marijuana,”
    but “[had] not heard of any hard narcotic blind mules, and
    I’ve not heard of any where the drugs are concealed inside
    the engine.” Agent Day provided additional testimony on
    redirect examination, explaining that blind mules typically
    involve marijuana, usually hidden underneath a vehicle in a
    way that is easily accessible, usually with a GPS monitor
    attached.
    2. Velazquez’s Testimony
    After the government rested its case-in-chief, Velazquez
    testified in his defense. He testified that he had been living
    with his girlfriend, Bella, in Tijuana, Mexico, but would
    frequently travel to the United States to help at his parents’
    nursery and with sales at swap meets. He met Bella through
    her uncle, Juan, who worked at a car wash Velazquez used
    in Tijuana. He also testified that a man named Rayo lived
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                     7
    across the street from Juan and Bella and identified all their
    residences in photographs.
    Velazquez also testified that Bella became distant shortly
    before his arrest and began seeing her former boyfriend
    Emmanuel, whose father was involved “big time” in drugs
    and controlled a large area in Tijuana. Velazquez also heard
    rumors that Juan and Rayo were mixed up in drugs. Bella’s
    father had been the victim of a drug-related murder.
    Velazquez also testified about the car he was driving
    when he was arrested. He said he purchased it for $1,500
    from a man he met through Juan. He testified that he parked
    the car in a parking lot Juan had told him about, and both
    Juan and Rayo knew Velazquez parked the car there. When
    Velazquez helped his parents in the United States, he parked
    the car at their nursery and used their truck for deliveries and
    other business. Bella knew where the nursery was located
    because she had asked Velazquez to send her a photograph
    of the car at the nursery, and the photograph had a “pin
    location” that provided its geographic location.
    Velazquez also testified about the events leading up to
    his arrest. He said that the night before the arrest, he had had
    a fight with Bella, but she later met him at Juan’s house to
    make up. Velazquez spent the night at Juan’s house. The
    next day, Velazquez drove his car to the border to “take care
    of [] things” at the DMV and then head over to his parents’
    house. He clarified that what he meant when he told Officer
    Hanlon about going to the DMV and hanging out with his
    mother was that he was going to the DMV and then going to
    see his mother. He admitted that he lied when he said the
    car belonged to his cousin, but that he did so because border
    officers had confiscated a car his brother had given him just
    8                UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    two weeks earlier. 1 He denied knowing anything about the
    drugs.
    3. Jury Instruction and Closing Argument
    Just before closing argument, the court instructed the
    jury on reasonable doubt. The court stated:
    Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that
    leaves you firmly convinced the defendant is
    guilty. It is not required that the government
    prove guilt beyond all possible doubt. A
    reasonable doubt is a doubt based on reason
    and common sense and is not based purely on
    speculation. It may arise from a careful and
    impartial consideration of all the evidence or
    from a lack of evidence. If after a careful and
    impartial consideration of all the evidence
    you are not convinced beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the defendant is guilty, it is your
    duty to find the defendant not guilty.
    The prosecutor then began his closing argument and
    described the reasonable doubt standard: “Reasonable doubt
    is something that you make decisions about every single
    day.” Defense counsel objected. The district court did not
    sustain or overrule the objection, but it did instruct the jury
    to follow its instruction on reasonable doubt and “not as to
    what any attorney says the standard of reasonable doubt is.”
    1
    Agent Day testified he was “familiar” with this seizure. Velazquez
    gave Agent Day the same reason for lying about the car’s ownership
    during his post-arrest statement, but the district court excluded that
    testimony as hearsay when defense counsel proffered it.
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   9
    The prosecutor then gave more examples of reasonable
    doubt:
    It is something that you do every single day.
    So things like getting up, having a meal.
    You’re firmly convinced that the meal you’re
    going to have is not going to make you sick.
    But it is possible that it might not—that it
    might actually make you sick.
    You got in your car or you travel to the court
    today. It is possible that you may have gotten
    in an accident, but you are firmly convinced
    that—the likelihood that you’ll be able to get
    to court safely.
    During rebuttal, the prosecutor again told the jury that
    reasonable doubt “is something that you use every single day
    in your life.” Defense counsel objected that the prosecutor’s
    argument “diminishes the burden of proof.” This time, the
    district court overruled the objection and did not admonish
    the jury.
    4. Verdict and Judgment
    The jury returned a guilty verdict.       The court
    subsequently sentenced Velazquez to 151 months in prison.
    Velazquez timely appealed.
    II.
    Velazquez contends that, despite the court’s instruction
    regarding reasonable doubt, the prosecutor trivialized the
    standard during closing argument and substantially
    prejudiced him. We agree.
    10             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    A prosecutor’s misstatements of law during closing
    argument provide grounds for reversal. United States v.
    Segna, 
    555 F.2d 226
    , 230–32 (9th Cir. 1977). We will not
    reverse a conviction, however, unless the prosecutor’s
    statements during closing argument “are so gross as
    probably to prejudice the defendant, and the prejudice has
    not been neutralized by the trial judge.” United States v.
    Birges, 
    723 F.2d 666
    , 672 (9th Cir. 1984) (quoting United
    States v. Parker, 
    549 F.2d 1217
    , 1222 (9th Cir. 1977)). To
    show prejudice, “[t]he defendant must show that it is more
    probable than not that the misconduct materially affected the
    verdict.” United States v. Tucker, 
    641 F.3d 1110
    , 1120 (9th
    Cir. 2011) (quoting United States v. Tam, 
    240 F.3d 797
    , 802
    (9th Cir. 2001)); Segna, 
    555 F.2d at 232
    . In close cases,
    however, we will not hesitate to reverse a conviction on the
    basis of a prosecutor’s misstatement of the law, even when
    reviewing for plain error. See Segna, 
    555 F.2d at 230
    –32.
    On multiple occasions, we have reviewed de novo
    whether a challenged prosecutorial comment infringes on a
    defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights. United States v.
    Mikhel, 
    889 F.3d 1003
    , 1060 (9th Cir. 2018) (reviewing de
    novo prosecutor’s comment on defendant’s failure to
    testify); United States v. Inzunza, 
    638 F.3d 1006
    , 1023 (9th
    Cir. 2011) (reviewing de novo prosecutor’s comment on
    failure to call witness); United States v. Reyes, 
    660 F.3d 454
    ,
    461 (9th Cir. 2011); United States v. Perlaza, 
    439 F.3d 1149
    ,
    1169 n.22 (9th Cir. 2006). We recently acknowledged,
    however, potential intra-circuit conflict on the standard of
    review for challenges to prosecutorial comments, suggesting
    that we might instead review the court’s overruling of an
    objection to such comments “for abuse of discretion.”
    United States v. Wijegoonaratna, 
    922 F.3d 983
    , 989 (9th Cir.
    2019) (quoting United States v. Santiago, 
    46 F.3d 885
    , 892
    (9th Cir. 1995)). Nonetheless, even if an intra-circuit
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   11
    conflict exists, “we are not prompted to call for our court to
    revisit the broader issue en banc” because we reach the same
    conclusion under either standard of review. 
    Id.
     (citation and
    brackets omitted); see also Segna, 
    555 F.2d at 230
    –32
    (reversing conviction, even on plain error review, in a close
    case involving a prosecutor’s misstatement of the law).
    Here, we conclude the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by
    trivializing the reasonable doubt standard and, as a result,
    caused Velazquez substantial prejudice.           We further
    conclude that the court failed to neutralize the prejudice.
    In a criminal trial, “no person shall be made to suffer the
    onus of a criminal conviction except upon sufficient proof—
    defined as evidence necessary to convince a trier of fact
    beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of every element
    of the offense.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 316
    (1979). This standard of proof is “indispensable” to our
    criminal justice system and preserves three distinct interests.
    In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364 (1970). First, it protects
    the defendant’s interest in being free from unjustified loss of
    liberty and the stigmatization that results from conviction.
    
    Id. at 363
    . Second, it engenders community confidence in
    the administration of justice by giving “concrete substance”
    to the presumption of innocence. 
    Id. at 363
    –64. Third, it
    ensures “that the moral force of the criminal law [is not]
    diluted by a standard of proof that leaves people in doubt
    whether innocent men are being condemned.” 
    Id. at 364
    .
    Thus, for a jury to convict a defendant under this high burden
    of proof, the jury must “reach a subjective state of near
    certitude of the guilt of the accused.” Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 315
     (emphasis added).
    In the final moments of a trial, the government’s
    principal purpose is to persuade the jury it has met its burden
    to show guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Even against this
    12             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    high burden, however, a prosecutor, as a representative of
    the government, wields considerable influence over a jury.
    See Berger v. United States, 
    295 U.S. 78
    , 88 (1935). With
    this power, a prosecutor can easily mislead the average juror
    into adopting his or her personal view of the law, even when
    that view diverges from the court’s own instruction. See id.;
    see also United States v. Parr-Pla, 
    549 F.2d 660
    , 662 (9th
    Cir. 1977) (per curiam) (“It is the duty of the court, not
    counsel, to advise the jury as to the law . . . .”). Because
    jurors can be swayed by such mischaracterizations, a
    prosecutor must be especially wary of making any comments
    that could, in effect, reduce its burden of proof.
    The prosecutor’s comments here regarding the
    government’s burden of proof diverged significantly from
    what we require in a criminal trial. The prosecutor compared
    the reasonable doubt standard to making decisions like going
    for a drive or eating a meal—with the confidence that things
    will not go awry. Such decisions involve a kind of casual
    judgment that is so ordinary and so mundane that it hardly
    matches our demand for “near certitude” of guilt before
    attaching criminal culpability. See Jackson, 
    443 U.S. at 315
    .
    These decisions do not typically even involve an objective
    calculation of risk, but rather rest on the fallacious comfort
    that because these activities did not result in chaos yesterday,
    they will not today. Such examples are highly inappropriate
    and misleading. See People v. Nguyen, 
    46 Cal. Rptr. 2d 840
    ,
    844–45 (Ct. App. 1995) (holding that prosecutor’s
    statements equating reasonable doubt with decisions like
    getting married or changing lanes while driving were
    improper).
    We are also troubled by the suggestion that reasonable
    doubt can be compared to an “everyday” experience. The
    process of adjudicating guilt is a major and meticulous
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                            13
    undertaking. People do not, “every single day,” bear the
    solemn task of examining evidence and determining an
    accused’s guilt. The comparison—to reflexive, quotidian
    decisions like “getting up,” “having a meal,” and “travel[ing]
    to . . . court”—is flagrant and seriously distorts the
    standard. 2 The government’s analogies reflect an effort—
    even if unintentional—to “reduce [its] burden of proof.” See
    United States v. Henry, 
    545 F.3d 367
    , 383 (6th Cir. 2008)
    (holding that prosecutor’s suggestion to the jurors that the
    decision of whether to convict the defendant was the same
    as deciding whether to recommend their child to take a job
    2
    The examples deployed here are worse and involve less
    deliberation, scrutiny, and advice-seeking than those that have already
    been heavily criticized, such as “choosing a spouse, a job, a place to live,
    and the like.” Victor v. Nebraska, 
    511 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1994) (Ginsburg, J.,
    concurring) (quoting Fed. Jud. Ctr. Pattern Crim. Jury Instr. No. 21
    (1987)). A committee of distinguished federal judges, reporting to the
    Judicial Conference of the United States, had criticized formulations
    containing such examples because they “generally involve a very heavy
    element of uncertainty and risk-taking” and are thus “wholly unlike the
    decisions jurors ought to make in criminal cases.” 
    Id.
     Justice Ginsburg
    echoed these concerns, calling such examples “unhelpful.” 
    Id.
     So have
    we, describing the concerns as “well stated.” United States v. Jaramillo-
    Suarez, 
    950 F.2d 1378
    , 1386 (9th Cir. 1991), as amended on denial of
    reh’g (Dec. 16, 1991). State courts are also in accord with this view.
    See, e.g., Nguyen, 
    46 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 844
    –45; Holmes v. State, 
    972 P.2d 337
    , 343 (Nev. 1998) (“[P]rosecutorial commentary analogizing
    reasonable doubt with major life decisions such as buying a house or
    changing jobs is improper because these decisions involve elements of
    uncertainty and risk-taking and are wholly unlike the kinds of decisions
    that jurors must make in criminal trials.”). Commentators, too. See, e.g.,
    Michael D. Cicchini, Instructing Jurors on Reasonable Doubt: It’s All
    Relative, 8 Cal. L. Rev. Online 72, 74–75 (2017).
    14               UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    with him was improper). District courts in this circuit have
    rightfully admonished such analogies. 3
    The government acknowledges, in a footnote, that courts
    have warned against such analogies to everyday decisions
    because they are “easily susceptible to erroneous
    interpretation.” Gov’t Br. at 57 n.3 (quoting Escobar v.
    Williams, 774 F. App’x 403, 403–04 (9th Cir. 2019)). It
    nonetheless argues that, in context, the prosecutor did not err
    because he also quoted language directly from the court’s
    instruction on the reasonable doubt standard, an instruction
    Velazquez does not contest. That instruction stated, in part,
    that “[p]roof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves
    you firmly convinced the defendant is guilty.” To be sure,
    the prosecutor tracked some of this language and projected
    the instruction on a screen during his closing argument. But
    he also mischaracterized the court’s directive to be “firmly
    convinced” by analogizing it to everyday judgment and
    scrutiny. By doing so, the prosecutor’s comments provided
    the only concrete examples of the cryptic phrase “firm
    conviction,” and, as a result, diluted its meaning. In other
    words, the phrase has less significance when it is equated to
    3
    See, e.g., United States v. Ramos, No. 13-cr-00403, 
    2016 WL 844789
    , at *7–9 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 29, 2016), aff’d in part, vacated in part,
    717 F. App’x 693, 695 (9th Cir. 2017); Horton v. McWean, No. 10-cv-
    6428, 
    2012 WL 6110488
    , at *23 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 5, 2012) (“[The
    prosecutor’s] comparison of the reasonable doubt standard to everyday
    decisions made while crossing a street or stopping at a red light arguably
    trivialized the standard.”), report and recommendation adopted, No. 10-
    cv-6428, 
    2012 WL 6131200
     (C.D. Cal. Dec. 10, 2012); Suy v. Pliler, No.
    02-cv-2765, 
    2007 WL 4200451
    , at *5 (E.D. Cal. Nov. 21, 2007) (“[T]he
    prosecutor’s reference to everyday decisions, such as what grade to give
    a school assignment or whether a motorist is guilty of a traffic violation
    if he exceeds the speed limit, come close to improperly trivializing the
    reasonable doubt standard.”), report and recommendation adopted, No.
    02-cv-02765, 
    2008 WL 496432
     (E.D. Cal. Feb. 21, 2008).
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                           15
    the “everyday” confidence one possesses when deciding to
    drive, get up, or eat a meal. If anything, a reasonable juror
    could read the instruction and believe it was entirely
    compatible with the prosecutor’s characterization of the
    reasonable doubt standard. 4 See Segna, 
    555 F.2d at 230
    –32
    (holding that, although “some of the prosecutor’s
    comments” correctly stated the law, the prosecutor’s
    erroneous statements of law constituted plain error).
    Next, the government argues that even if the prosecutor’s
    statements trivialized the standard, the error was harmless
    because the court clarified for the jury that it was to follow
    the court’s instruction “and not as to what any attorney says
    the standard of reasonable doubt is.” Because the court
    provided the correct instruction and admonished the jury
    earlier during closing argument, the government argues,
    Velazquez suffered no prejudice. 5 We are not convinced
    4
    The dissent argues that defense counsel’s discussion of the
    reasonable doubt standard invited the prosecutor’s comment during
    rebuttal argument. But the invited response doctrine is not implicated
    here because the prosecutor’s initial improper statements preceded
    defense counsel’s argument. See United States v. Weatherspoon,
    
    410 F.3d 1142
    , 1150 (9th Cir. 2005). Perhaps for that reason, the
    government elected not to raise such an argument in its answering brief.
    Nonetheless, “even if any defense statements were somehow viewed as
    opening the door to a prosecutorial response,” the prosecutor’s comment
    “would still be inappropriate because ‘the prosecution is not allowed to
    use improper tactics even in response to similar tactics by the defense.’”
    
    Id.
     (quoting United States v. Sarkisian, 
    197 F.3d 966
    , 990 (9th Cir.
    1999)). “Prosecutors must understand the different—and special—place
    that they occupy in the criminal justice system,” which, “as
    representative of the United States[,] . . . demands the exercise of far
    better restraint and better judgment than was exhibited here.” 
    Id. 5
    The dissent argues in part that the district court neutralized the
    prosecutor’s improper statements by reminding the jury that the lawyers’
    arguments are not evidence. Our concern, however, is not with the
    16                UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    that the court sufficiently “neutralized” the prejudice. See
    Birges, 
    723 F.2d at 672
    ; United States v. Weatherspoon,
    
    410 F.3d 1142
    , 1151 (9th Cir. 2005) (explaining
    prosecutor’s improper statements were prejudicial because
    “the trial was doubly flawed: Objections were [] made by
    defense counsel, and whatever curative statements were
    provided by the district judge were inadequate”). Although
    the district court initially instructed the jury to follow its
    instruction on reasonable doubt and “not as to what any
    attorney says the standard of reasonable doubt is,” the
    prosecutor then provided numerous improper examples that
    served to reduce the government’s burden of proof—all
    without further admonishment. And the district court
    overruled defense counsel’s second objection after the
    prosecutor, during his rebuttal, rehashed an identical
    argument that reasonable doubt was something the jurors
    used “every single day.” See Weatherspoon, 
    410 F.3d at 1151
    . By overruling the objection, the court naturally left
    the jurors with the impression that the prosecutor’s
    comparison of the reasonable doubt standard to an
    “everyday” judgment, and that the specific examples the
    prosecutor furnished, were proper.            Moreover, the
    prosecutor’s distortion of the standard was among the last
    things the jury heard before they began deliberations, further
    exacerbating our concerns. 6 The risk that the jury believed
    that convicting a defendant was akin to, in the prosecutor’s
    words, “getting up,” “having a meal,” or “travel[ing] to . . .
    prosecutor’s characterization of trial evidence, but with his trivialization
    of the reasonable doubt standard.
    6
    For this reason, the government’s citation to United States v. Flores
    is not persuasive, as the district court here did not read the correct
    statement of law “shortly after closing arguments.” See 
    802 F.3d 1028
    ,
    1039 (9th Cir. 2015).
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                            17
    court,” was therefore high. 7 See 
    id. at 1145
    –51 (holding that
    the prosecutor’s improper vouching and other statements
    during closing argument constituted plain error).
    Last, we do not believe that the evidence demonstrating
    Velazquez’s knowledge of the drugs was so overwhelming
    that the prosecutor’s misstatements were harmless. The
    government’s case relied exclusively on circumstantial
    evidence, such as the value, type, and amount of drugs in the
    car; Velazquez’s purported nervousness when he was
    stopped and the inconsistency about where he was headed;
    the lack of personalization in his car; and Velazquez’s
    apparent attempt to distance himself from owning the car.
    None of these facts were uncontroverted or otherwise so
    damning that we are convinced the error was harmless.
    To begin, the argument that the value, type, or amount of
    drugs found in Velazquez’s car would not have been stored
    there without his knowledge is, at best, speculative and has
    no support in the record. The only evidence potentially
    7
    The regular presumption that the jury accepts the law as stated by
    the court, not as stated by counsel, is not determinative here because the
    likely prejudicial effect of the prosecutor’s trivialization of the
    reasonable doubt standard is high. See United States v. Medina
    Casteneda, 
    511 F.3d 1246
    , 1250 (9th Cir. 2008) (explaining on plain
    error review that the presumption was not overcome because the “jury
    never sought clarification of the standard, and the likely prejudicial
    effects of this misstatement of the law on the defendant in the context of
    the extensive closing arguments by both sides and proper jury
    instructions is very low”). The totality of the closing arguments likely
    left the jury with the impression that the prosecutor’s improper
    explanations of the reasonable doubt standard were consistent with the
    court’s instructions. This is particularly true where the court’s final word
    on the issue was to overrule defense counsel’s objection. Further, as
    explained below, the government’s evidence was not so overwhelming
    as to render the error harmless.
    18             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    supporting this view is Agent Day’s testimony about the
    characteristics of blind mules generally, but he had no
    personal knowledge of whether those attributes applied to
    Velazquez’s case in particular.
    Further, as we have recognized, evidence about a
    defendant’s nervousness provides limited objective value
    and does not even create reasonable suspicion to detain a
    person, let alone affirm a conviction. See United States v.
    Chavez-Valenzuela, 
    268 F.3d 719
    , 726 (9th Cir. 2001)
    (“Encounters with police officers are necessarily stressful
    for law-abiders and criminals alike.”), amended, 
    279 F.3d 1062
     (9th Cir. 2002), overruled on other grounds by
    Muehler v. Mena, 
    544 U.S. 93
     (2005); see also United States
    v. Wald, 
    216 F.3d 1222
    , 1227 (10th Cir. 2000) (stating
    evidence of nervousness “is of limited significance” (citation
    omitted)). In a similar vein, the fact that Velazquez initially
    told Officer Hanlon he was going to the DMV, and later told
    him that he was on his way to see his mother, is not an
    inconsistency that necessarily indicates a guilty conscience.
    Additionally, Officer Hanlon’s testimony about the car’s
    lack of personalization was, as discussed above, undercut on
    cross-examination, as Velazquez’s car did contain several
    items that did indicate personalization, such as a CD and
    “some other personal items” in the glove box, a can on the
    floor, a personal jacket or checkered top, a sun visor block
    in the back, and a “shirt or some such thing that[ was] kind
    of strewn” in the back.
    Finally, although Velazquez’s initial decision to lie
    about his cousin owning the car could, on the one hand,
    indicate consciousness of guilt, it was equally consistent
    with his testimony that he was afraid his car would again be
    impounded, just as his other car had been two weeks prior.
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   19
    To be sure, we do not suggest the government had no
    case against Velazquez or that the evidence demonstrating
    his knowledge of the drugs was wholly lacking. But our job
    is not to demonstrate Velazquez’s innocence or eliminate
    any inkling of guilt. Indeed, even if the government has
    presented a “strong circumstantial web of evidence against
    [Velazquez], it was also a case in which, absent the
    constitutionally forbidden comments, honest, fair-minded
    jurors might very well have brought in not-guilty verdicts.”
    Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 25–26 (1967) (citation
    and internal quotation marks omitted); see also Segna,
    
    555 F.2d at 230
    –32 (“Although the evidence was sufficient
    for us to sustain a finding of sanity by the jury, an objective
    review of the record, that is, one that does not view the
    evidence only in the light most favorable to the government
    as the prevailing party, reveals that the issue was extremely
    close.”).
    In sum, the ultimate issue at trial boiled down to whether
    the government proved that Velazquez knew about the drugs
    in his car beyond a reasonable doubt. Reasonable doubt was
    the central theme of his defense. The prosecutor’s
    comments, however, created an unacceptable risk that an
    honest, fair-minded juror would succumb to the prosecutor’s
    personal—rather than constitutional—view of the
    government’s burden of proof to obtain a conviction and
    therefore overlook his or her reasonable doubts. Because the
    evidence demonstrating Velazquez’s knowledge was not
    overwhelming, and the district court failed to neutralize the
    prejudice, we conclude “that it is more probable than not that
    the misconduct materially affected the verdict.” Tucker,
    
    641 F.3d at 1120
     (citation omitted).
    20             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    For the above reasons, we vacate Velazquez’s conviction
    and remand for a new trial. 8
    VACATED and REMANDED.
    BADE, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Alfred Velazquez was arrested at a port of entry as he
    attempted to enter the United States from Mexico with
    nearly four-and-a-half pounds of a mixture or substance
    containing fentanyl and heroin, worth nearly $150,000, in
    two packages concealed in the intake manifold of his car’s
    engine. He was indicted on one count of importing
    controlled substances into the United States, in violation of
    21 U.S.C. §§ 952 and 960. Velazquez presented a “blind
    mule” defense at trial and testified that he did not know the
    drugs were hidden in his car. After a two-day trial, the jury
    returned a guilty verdict in approximately three hours.
    Velazquez argues that his conviction must be vacated
    because the prosecutor violated his due process rights by
    trivializing the reasonable doubt standard during closing
    argument. The majority agrees and concludes that the
    prosecutor’s comments in closing argument were improper
    and caused Velazquez substantial prejudice that the district
    court failed to neutralize. I agree that the prosecutor’s
    comments were, at best, “unhelpful,” Maj. Op. 13 n.2
    (quoting Victor v. Nebraska, 
    511 U.S. 1
    , 24 (1994)
    (Ginsburg, J., concurring)), and potentially misleading. But
    “it ‘is not enough that the prosecutors’ remarks were
    8
    In light of our disposition, we need not address Velazquez’s
    remaining arguments.
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                          21
    undesirable or even universally condemned.’ The relevant
    question is whether the prosecutors’ comments ‘so infected
    the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction
    a denial of due process.’” Darden v. Wainwright, 
    477 U.S. 168
    , 181 (1986) (citations omitted). Here, the record
    overwhelmingly establishes that the prosecutor’s comments
    did not affect the verdict and, thus, Velazquez’s due process
    rights were not violated.
    The majority vacates Velazquez’s conviction, but in
    doing so it overlooks almost the entire trial record and
    erroneously fails to consider the prosecutor’s comments in
    context. See United States v. Young, 
    470 U.S. 1
    , 11 (1985)
    (“[A] criminal conviction is not to be lightly overturned on
    the basis of a prosecutor’s comments standing alone, for the
    statements or conduct must be viewed in context; only by so
    doing can it be determined whether the prosecutor’s conduct
    affected the fairness of the trial.”); see also Boyde v.
    California, 
    494 U.S. 370
    , 385 (1990) (“[T]he arguments of
    counsel, like the instructions of the court, must be judged in
    the context in which they are made.” (citations omitted)).
    Instead, the majority considers only isolated comments
    in the prosecutor’s closing and rebuttal arguments, and it
    presents these comments in a confusing and inaccurate
    manner. 1 The majority disregards defense counsel’s failure
    1
    The majority’s failure to consider the prosecutor’s comments in
    context results in a confusing and inaccurate presentation of what
    occurred at trial. As described in detail below, there are three comments
    at issue. Nonetheless, I identify these three comments at the outset to
    clarify the discussion. First, in his closing argument, the prosecutor
    commented that “[r]easonable doubt is something that you make
    decisions about every single day”; defense counsel objected, and the
    court admonished the jury to follow the instructions on the standard of
    proof, not the attorneys’ arguments. The majority does not suggest that
    22               UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    to object to the comment that it appears to find most
    objectionable and repeatedly quotes in its opinion
    (specifically, the prosecutor’s second comment in his
    closing argument in which he compared being “firmly
    convinced,” the level of certitude needed to convict, to
    routine decisions involving getting up, having a meal, and
    driving). The majority also fails to consider the prosecutor’s
    comments in context with the jury instructions, the court’s
    repeated admonitions to the jury to ignore counsels’
    arguments interpreting the reasonable doubt standard and to
    rely only on the court’s instructions, and defense counsel’s
    closing argument.
    When properly considered in context, the record readily
    establishes that the prosecutor’s comments did not affect the
    verdict. See United States v. Tucker, 
    641 F.3d 1110
    , 1120
    (9th Cir. 2011) (explaining that the defendant must “show
    the court’s admonition failed to mitigate any prejudice from this
    comment. Second, immediately after the court’s admonition in response
    to the first comment, the prosecutor suggested that the jurors engage in
    daily activities—such as getting out of bed, eating, and driving—“firmly
    convinced” that they can perform each task safely. Defense counsel did
    not object to these comments. Third, in his rebuttal argument, the
    prosecutor commented that the reasonable doubt standard “is something
    that you use every single day in your life”; defense counsel objected, and
    the court overruled the objection. Significantly, the majority brushes
    aside Velazquez’s failure to object to the second comment and any
    import that may have on the standard of review. United States v. Tam,
    
    240 F.3d 797
    , 802 (9th Cir. 2001) (“We review claims of prosecutorial
    misconduct for plain error when the defendant did not object at trial, and
    for abuse of discretion when the district court denied an objection to
    closing argument.” (citation omitted)); see also United States v. Tucker,
    
    641 F.3d 1110
    , 1120 (9th Cir. 2011) (same). Even assuming Velazquez
    properly preserved review of each comment, his claim still fails because
    he cannot show that “it is more probable than not that the misconduct
    materially affected the verdict.” Tam, 
    240 F.3d at 802
     (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                  23
    that it is more probable than not that the misconduct
    materially affected the verdict” (citation omitted)). And the
    record shows that the district court appropriately neutralized
    any potential prejudice. 
    Id. at 1122
    ; see also United States
    v. Birges, 
    723 F.2d 666
    , 672 (9th Cir. 1984) (“Improprieties
    in counsel’s arguments to the jury do not constitute
    reversible error unless they are so gross as probably to
    prejudice the defendant, and the prejudice has not been
    neutralized by the trial judge.” (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted)). Thus, the majority’s conclusions cannot
    withstand a proper review of the record. I respectfully
    dissent.
    I.
    When reviewing a claim that improper argument
    violated a defendant’s due process rights, the “remarks must
    be examined within the context of the trial to determine
    whether the prosecutor’s behavior amounted to prejudicial
    error. In other words, the [c]ourt must consider the probable
    effect the prosecutor’s [comments] would have on the jury’s
    ability to judge the evidence fairly.” Young, 
    470 U.S. at 12
    .
    We have identified several relevant factors to consider “[i]n
    determining whether a comment rendered a trial
    constitutionally unfair.” Hein v. Sullivan, 
    601 F.3d 897
    ,
    912–13 (9th Cir. 2010). These factors include “whether the
    comment misstated the evidence, whether the judge
    admonished the jury to disregard the comment, whether the
    comment was invited by defense counsel in its summation,
    whether defense counsel had an adequate opportunity to
    rebut the comment, the prominence of the comment in the
    context of the entire trial and the weight of the evidence.”
    
    Id.
     (citing Darden, 
    477 U.S. at 182
    ). Here, applying these
    factors and examining the prosecutor’s comments in the
    24             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    context of the trial readily establishes that Velazquez was not
    prejudiced by these comments.
    A.
    As an initial matter, the majority acknowledges that the
    district court properly instructed the jury on the reasonable
    doubt standard, but it ignores the rest of the court’s
    instructions. This is a crucial omission because we
    “assume[] that the jury listened to and followed the trial
    judge’s instructions.” United States v. Wells, 
    879 F.3d 900
    ,
    937 (9th Cir. 2018) (citations omitted). And “[t]he jury is
    regularly presumed to accept the law as stated by the court,
    not as stated by counsel.” United States v. Medina
    Casteneda, 
    511 F.3d 1246
    , 1250 (9th Cir. 2008) (citation
    omitted).      Therefore, we cannot conclude that the
    prosecutor’s statements were prejudicial without
    considering the district court’s instructions to the jury.
    During the preliminary instructions, the district court
    repeatedly stated that the government must prove its case
    beyond a reasonable doubt and explained to the jury that
    “statements and arguments of the attorneys” are not
    evidence. Defense counsel then reiterated these points for
    the jury in his opening statement; he told the jurors
    repeatedly that the government must prove Velazquez’s guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt, and defined reasonable doubt by
    stating: “In other words, the prosecutor has to eliminate all
    reasonable or logical possibilities that Mr. Velazquez is
    innocent. That’s the burden of proof.”
    Before counsel’s closing arguments, the district court
    again instructed the jurors and told them: “You will have as
    many copies as you want of these instructions back in your
    jury room . . . . You’ll each have a chance to take a look at
    them back in the jury room if you need to go back and
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   25
    consult anything.” The court repeatedly stated that the
    government had the burden of proof to establish Velazquez’s
    guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and accurately defined the
    reasonable doubt standard, stating in part:
    Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that
    leaves you firmly convinced the defendant is
    guilty. It is not required that the government
    prove guilt beyond all possible doubt. A
    reasonable doubt is a doubt based on reason
    and common sense and is not based purely on
    speculation. It may arise from a careful and
    impartial consideration of all the evidence or
    from a lack of evidence.
    The court again instructed the jury that “statements,
    objections, and arguments by the lawyers are not evidence,”
    and reiterated that “what the lawyers have said in their
    opening statements, will say in their closing arguments, and
    at other times is to help you interpret the evidence, but it is
    not evidence.”
    After closing arguments, the court gave the jurors final
    instructions before excusing them to deliberate, and in those
    instructions, it again stated that the government must prove
    its case beyond a reasonable doubt, that the verdict must be
    based “only on the evidence received in this case and on
    these instructions,” and again told the jurors that it would
    send the written instructions to the jury room. Thus, the
    record demonstrates that the district court appropriately
    instructed the jury, the district court admonished the jury not
    to consider the attorneys’ arguments as evidence, and further
    explained that the verdict could only be based on the
    evidence and the instructions.
    26             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    B.
    The majority omits and mischaracterizes crucial details
    from the record that make it difficult, if not impossible, to
    properly gauge the prejudicial effect of the prosecutor’s
    comments. Reviewing the prosecutor’s comments, defense
    counsel’s comments, the objections to those comments, and
    how the court responded in the context of the entirety of
    closing arguments makes it abundantly clear that it is not
    “more probable than not” that the prosecutor’s comments
    “materially affected the verdict.” See Tucker, 
    641 F.3d at 1120, 1122
     (citation omitted).
    During the prosecutor’s closing argument, he stated once
    that the jurors applied the concept of reasonable doubt as part
    of “everyday” decision-making. The prosecutor stated that
    “[r]easonable doubt is something that you make decisions
    about every single day.” Defense counsel objected, stating:
    “That misstates the standard of reasonable doubt. Improper
    argument.” In response, the court admonished the jurors,
    stating: “[Y]ou will follow my instruction as to reasonable
    doubt and not as to what any attorney says the standard of
    reasonable doubt is. I instructed you on what the standard
    for reasonable doubt is, and you should follow that
    instruction.”
    The prosecutor then continued his explanation of
    reasonable doubt, suggesting that the jurors engage in daily
    activities—such as getting out of bed, eating, and driving—
    “firmly convinced” that they can perform each task safely.
    The majority quotes this portion of the prosecutor’s
    argument in its opinion, and it appears that it is this portion
    the majority finds most prejudicial. But the majority fails to
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                           27
    place this comment in context and omits that defense counsel
    did not object to this comment. 2
    The prosecutor concluded his discussion of reasonable
    doubt by stating: “The idea here is that it’s all about
    reasonable doubt. Not proof beyond all possible doubt.”
    The prosecutor’s comments on the reasonable doubt
    standard, in their entirety including the objection, the court’s
    response, and the comparison to daily activities, comprised
    one minute at the beginning of his thirty-five-minute closing
    argument. For the next thirty-two minutes, the prosecutor
    summarized and argued the evidence.
    The majority concludes that the district court’s
    admonition in response to the objection to the prosecutor’s
    description of reasonable doubt did not “sufficiently
    ‘neutralize[]’ the prejudice,” Maj. Op. 15–16 (quoting
    Birges, 
    723 F.2d at 672
    ; United States v. Weatherspoon,
    2
    Without distinguishing the comments to which defense counsel
    objected from comments to which he did not object, the majority
    suggests that there may be an intra-circuit conflict on the appropriate
    standard of review: de novo or abuse of discretion. But the majority
    concludes the result is the same under either standard and so it does not
    resolve this issue. However, the case that the majority cites to suggest
    that such a conflict exists, United States v. Wijegoonaratna, states that
    “[w]e usually review for abuse of discretion a district court’s overruling
    of an objection to prosecutorial misconduct.” 
    922 F.3d 983
    , 989 (9th
    Cir. 2019) (citations omitted). There, the court noted that the defendant
    suggested de novo review might apply and cited United States v. Perlaza,
    
    439 F.3d 1149
    , 1169 n.22 (9th Cir. 2006), where the court reviewed de
    novo whether a closing argument constituted prosecutorial misconduct.
    Wijegoonaratna, 922 F.3d at 988–89. But the court concluded that
    “Perlaza appears to have mistaken the standard of review” because it
    cited United States v. Santiago, 
    46 F.3d 885
    , 892 (9th Cir. 1995), “where
    we reviewed ‘the court’s overruling of the objection’ to the prosecutor’s
    comments at trial ‘for abuse of discretion.’” Wijegoonaratna, 922 F.3d
    at 989.
    28             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    
    410 F.3d 1142
    , 1151 (9th Cir. 2005)), because the prosecutor
    “provided numerous improper examples” that reduced the
    government’s burden of proof, “all without further
    admonishment.” Maj. Op. 16. But this description of the
    court’s response to the closing argument distorts what
    occurred. As set forth above, defense counsel did not object
    to the prosecutor’s comment giving examples—getting out
    of bed, eating, and driving—which the prosecutor listed
    immediately after the court’s admonition that the jury should
    follow its instructions and not follow “what any attorney
    says the standard of reasonable doubt is.”
    Apparently, the majority is suggesting that the district
    court should have sua sponte admonished the jury again—a
    few moments after its previous admonition—that it should
    not follow the attorneys’ arguments on reasonable doubt.
    This is an absurd and legally unsupported standard to
    determine whether a district court’s admonitions neutralized
    any prejudice from improper arguments. Instead, under
    Hein, the district court’s admonition should be considered as
    a factor that mitigated any prejudice from the prosecutor’s
    comment because “the judge admonished the jury to
    disregard the comment.” 
    601 F.3d at 912
    .
    Moreover, “prosecutorial misrepresentations . . . are not
    to be judged as having the same force as an instruction from
    the court.” Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 384
    –85. Therefore,
    “[o]rdinarily, a cautionary instruction is presumed to have
    cured prejudicial impact.” Dubria v. Smith, 
    224 F.3d 995
    ,
    1002 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc) (citation omitted); see United
    States v. Davis, 
    932 F.2d 752
    , 761 (9th Cir. 1991). In
    response to the only objection in this one-minute segment of
    the prosecutor’s closing argument, the district court properly
    admonished the jury and reminded the jurors of the
    instructions on the reasonable doubt standard, which they
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                    29
    had heard multiple times and which they would take with
    them in written form into the jury room. Thus, the record
    establishes that the district court appropriately neutralized
    any prejudice from the prosecutor’s comment and did not err
    by not sua sponte offering a second admonition a few
    seconds later.
    Defense counsel also addressed the reasonable doubt
    standard in his closing argument.        But unlike the
    prosecutor’s argument, which addressed the reasonable
    doubt standard for one minute, defense counsel devoted
    about twenty minutes, of his forty-six minute closing
    argument, to his explanation of the reasonable doubt
    standard. Thus, defense counsel’s lengthy argument on the
    reasonable doubt standard is another factor that mitigates
    any prejudice from the prosecutor’s comment because
    “defense counsel had an adequate opportunity to rebut the
    comment.” Hein, 
    601 F.3d at 912
     (citation omitted).
    In his closing argument, defense counsel stated that
    when the reasonable doubt instruction states that the
    government is not required to prove guilt “beyond all
    possible doubt,” that means “they don’t need to prove
    beyond any imaginary doubt or any fantasy.” He also stated
    that if the jurors, “using reason or logic could believe that
    reasonable doubt might be true, that equals reasonable
    doubt.” The prosecutor objected to both statements. The
    district court did not rule on the first objection, but instead
    again admonished the jurors that they should not follow the
    attorneys’ interpretations of the reasonable doubt standard.
    The district court stated: “[A]s I cautioned you before, the
    lawyers will have argument as to how you should interpret
    this, but the law that I gave you is the law that you should
    follow and not what the attorneys argue it to be.” The district
    court overruled the second objection, stating:             “It’s
    30             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    argument. The attorneys are simply arguing how you should
    interpret the law, but you should follow the law as I instruct
    you.”
    Two minutes later, defense counsel reiterated his
    interpretation of reasonable doubt, again telling the jurors
    that “when we’re talking about beyond all reasonable doubt,
    we’re not talking about fantasy. We’re not talking about
    fanciful doubt.” The prosecutor did not object, and the
    district court did not sua sponte admonish the jurors to
    follow its instructions on reasonable doubt, just as it did not
    sua sponte admonish the jurors after unobjected-to
    comments in the prosecutor’s closing argument.
    The defense attorney also described at length an incident
    from the 1980s in which someone tampered with Tylenol by
    putting cyanide in the pill bottles, which resulted in the
    deaths of several people. He further stated that the
    manufacturer recalled the pills and created a tamper-evident
    seal “to eliminate any and all reasons that we would have to
    doubt the safety of their product.” Defense counsel then
    compared the government’s case to the 1980s Tylenol bottle
    (without the tamper-evident seal) and told the jury: “If
    you’re going to hesitate to take one of those pills, you have
    reasonable doubt.” Thus, defense counsel likened the
    reasonable doubt standard to the absolute certainty of safety
    a person would need to have before ingesting a pill possibly
    containing a deadly poison. But the prosecutor did not
    object, and again, the district court did not sua sponte
    admonish the jurors to follow the court’s instructions, not the
    attorneys’ arguments.
    At the beginning of his fourteen-minute rebuttal
    argument, after defense counsel’s argument, the prosecutor
    stated that reasonable doubt is “not proof beyond all possible
    doubt,” and reiterated—without example or elaboration—
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                     31
    that each juror uses the reasonable doubt standard “every
    single day in your life.” Defense counsel objected that the
    statement “diminishes the burden of proof. It’s improper
    government argument.” But this time the court simply
    responded, “Overruled.” The prosecutor went on to argue
    the evidence for the next twelve minutes.
    The prosecutor’s comment in rebuttal appears to have
    been prompted by Velazquez’s closing argument, which
    further reduces the likelihood that the comment had a
    prejudicial effect. “[T]he propriety of the prosecutor’s
    remarks must be judged in relation to what would constitute
    a fair response to the remarks of defense counsel.” United
    States v. Lopez-Alvarez, 
    970 F.2d 583
    , 597 (9th Cir. 1992)
    (citation omitted); see Darden, 
    477 U.S. at 182
    –83.
    Therefore, the prosecutor’s comment in rebuttal must be
    viewed in context with defense counsel’s poisoned pill
    illustration and suggestion that a juror’s hesitation to convict
    equates to reasonable doubt.
    Immediately after the court overruled defense counsel’s
    objection, the prosecutor stated that “[i]t is not to be based
    purely on speculation. The pills, the bottle, all of that, has
    nothing to do with the [c]ourt’s instruction to you regarding
    the standard for reasonable doubt.” And both immediately
    before and after the comment that the jurors apply
    reasonable doubt “every single day,” the prosecutor argued
    that defense counsel was trying to define reasonable doubt
    “where it becomes impossible for the United States to
    reach,” and to “[r]aise it so high that the United States can’t
    meet it.” Thus, it appears that the prosecutor’s comment was
    intended to refute defense counsel’s suggestion that
    hesitation alone, or lack of absolute certainty, is sufficient to
    support a not guilty verdict. Therefore, the record
    demonstrates that the prosecutor’s comment in rebuttal was
    32                UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    a fair response to defense counsel’s argument, which
    mitigates any potential prejudice from the prosecutor’s
    comment. 3 Hein, 
    601 F.3d at 912
     (explaining that “whether
    the comment was invited by defense counsel in its
    summation” is a factor in determining whether a comment
    resulted in a denial of due process).
    The majority nevertheless concludes that “[b]y
    overruling [defendant’s] objection” to the prosecutor’s
    comment in his rebuttal argument that jurors apply
    reasonable doubt every day, the district court conveyed to
    the jury that “the prosecutor’s comparison of the reasonable
    doubt standard to an ‘everyday’ judgment, and . . . the
    specific examples the prosecutor furnished, were proper.”
    Maj. Op. 16. Of course, the first problem with this
    conclusion is that the prosecutor did not furnish any specific
    examples in his rebuttal argument and so the district court
    was not overruling an objection to the prosecutor giving
    specific examples. Therefore, it is difficult to see how the
    court’s response to this objection would leave “the jurors
    with the impression” that specific examples—that were
    stated without objection nearly an hour-and-forty minutes
    3
    The majority appears to suggest that defense counsel’s comments
    are not relevant to our analysis because the prosecutor made an improper
    comment before defense counsel’s closing argument. But the majority
    does not limit its prejudice analysis to the prosecutor’s initial comments;
    instead, the majority’s analysis relies heavily on the prosecutor’s
    comment in his rebuttal argument, which of course responded to defense
    counsel’s closing argument. Moreover, in Weatherspoon, the case the
    majority cites to suggest we should not consider defense counsel’s
    comments, we explained that we must “undertake a contextual review of
    prosecutorial misconduct” in light of “the entire trial.” 
    410 F.3d at 1150
    –
    51 (citing Young, 
    470 U.S. at 12, 16
    ).
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                   33
    earlier during the prosecutor’s closing argument—were
    proper.
    The majority further confuses the record by asserting that
    “the prosecutor’s distortion of the standard was among the
    last things the jury heard before they began deliberations,
    further exacerbating our concerns. The risk that the jury
    believed that convicting a defendant was akin to, in the
    prosecutor’s words, ‘getting up,’ ‘having a meal,’ or
    ‘travel[ing] to . . . court,’ was therefore high.” Maj. Op. 16–
    17 (alteration in original) (footnote omitted). But the
    prosecutor’s comment in which he gave the everyday
    examples that the majority references was not “among the
    last things the jury heard before they began deliberations.”
    Maj. Op. 16. Rather, the prosecutor offered these examples
    at the beginning of his closing argument, before defense
    counsel’s closing argument, before his rebuttal argument,
    and before the court’s final instructions—two hours before
    the court excused the jury to deliberate.
    And the prosecutor’s comment in rebuttal, suggesting
    that the standard for “firmly convinced” is something the
    jurors use every day, was also not “among the last things the
    jury heard before they began deliberations.” Maj. Op. 16.
    Instead, the jurors heard an additional twelve minutes of
    rebuttal argument and six minutes of final instructions, and
    therefore the jurors heard this comment nearly twenty
    minutes before they were excused to begin deliberations.
    Moreover, in the final instructions, which were the last
    thing the jurors heard before deliberations, the court again
    reminded the jurors that they “must base [their] verdict only
    on the evidence received in this case and on these
    34                UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    instructions.” 4 Thus, the majority’s inaccurate recitation of
    the record is a fundamental flaw in its analysis, as these
    inaccuracies obfuscate what effect—if any—the
    prosecutor’s statements had on the jury.
    C.
    Beyond these misstatements of the record, the majority
    also ignores the district court’s treatment of objections
    throughout both attorneys’ closing arguments and the
    different weight given to the court’s instructions and the
    attorneys’ arguments. See Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 384
    (“[A]rguments of counsel generally carry less weight with a
    jury than do instructions from the court. The former are
    usually billed in advance to the jury as matters of argument,
    not evidence, and are likely viewed as the statements of
    advocates; the latter, we have often recognized, are viewed
    as definitive and binding statements of the law.” (citations
    omitted)).
    4
    The majority suggests that my reference to the district court’s
    instruction that the lawyers’ arguments are not evidence is misguided
    because the “concern” here “is not with the prosecutor’s characterization
    of trial evidence, but with his trivialization of the reasonable doubt
    standard.” Maj. Op. 15 n.5. Although that instruction is relevant to the
    prejudice analysis, it is not the only (or even the primary) reason I
    conclude that the district court properly neutralized any prejudice. See
    United States v. Koon, 
    34 F.3d 1416
    , 1445 (9th Cir. 1994) (stating that
    instructing jury “to rely only on the evidence introduced at trial” and that
    “argument is not evidence . . . dilute[s] the potential prejudice arising
    from improper statements” (citations omitted)), rev’d in part on other
    grounds, 
    518 U.S. 81
     (1996). Instead, as described throughout this
    dissent, I conclude that the district court neutralized any prejudice arising
    from the prosecutor’s comments by properly instructing the jury on the
    reasonable doubt standard and by repeatedly admonishing the jury that
    it must apply the court’s instructions on the reasonable doubt standard,
    not counsel’s arguments.
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                          35
    A complete review of the district court’s responses to the
    objections conclusively establishes that the jurors would not
    have concluded that, because the court overruled an
    objection, the prosecutor’s comment in his rebuttal argument
    was proper. Instead, the record establishes that the district
    court responded to objections by repeatedly admonishing the
    jurors that the attorneys were making arguments, but the
    jurors should follow the court’s instructions and their
    recollection of the evidence. 5
    During the prosecutor’s closing argument, after
    objecting to the prosecutor’s comment on the reasonable
    doubt standard, defense counsel made two additional
    objections. In each objection, defense counsel asserted that
    the prosecutor’s arguments assumed facts that were not in
    evidence. The district court sustained the first objection, but
    did not rule on the second objection and instead reminded
    the jurors that they were “the judge of what the testimony
    was and the attorneys’ statements are not evidence.”
    The prosecutor also made objections to defense
    counsel’s closing argument, beyond his two objections to
    defense counsel’s statements defining reasonable doubt.
    The prosecutor objected twice that defense counsel’s
    argument misstated testimony. The court overruled both
    objections and admonished the jurors, stating: “I will remind
    you again that the evidence is as you remember it to be, not
    5
    Defense counsel objected three times in the prosecutor’s closing
    argument, the prosecutor objected six times in defense counsel’s closing
    argument, and defense counsel objected twice in the prosecutor’s
    rebuttal argument. In response, the district court sustained only one
    objection, admonished the jurors to follow the instructions and their
    recollection of the evidence but did not otherwise rule on three
    objections, overruled three objections and admonished the jury to follow
    the instructions, and finally, overruled four objections without comment.
    36             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    as the lawyers represent it to be,” and “you’ll rely on the
    evidence as you remember it.”
    The prosecutor also objected, without stating a basis, to
    defense counsel’s argument that the government presented
    testimony about the dangerousness of fentanyl “to persuade
    [the jury], to prejudice [the jury], to convict Mr. Velazquez
    from an emotional point of view.” The district court
    overruled the objection without comment. The prosecutor
    also objected that defense counsel misstated the law by
    arguing that the prosecutor had the power to file an
    indictment and was the most powerful person in the room.
    Again, the district court overruled the objection without
    comment. Given the court’s many admonishments about the
    nature of the attorneys’ arguments, it would be absurd to
    suggest that, by overruling these objections, the district court
    was conveying to the jurors that the government was trying
    to convince them to return a guilty verdict based on their
    emotions, rather than the evidence, or that the court agreed
    that the prosecutor was the most powerful person in the
    room.
    During the prosecutor’s rebuttal argument, in addition to
    objecting to the prosecutor’s comment on reasonable doubt,
    defense counsel objected that the prosecutor’s argument
    assumed facts not in evidence. The court overruled the
    objection without comment. Again, given the court’s
    repeated admonitions in response to earlier objections, it
    would be unreasonable to conclude that, by overruling the
    objection, the court was suggesting that the jury should
    accept the prosecutor’s characterization of the facts.
    The record conclusively establishes that the district court
    appropriately instructed the jury and reinforced those
    instructions with repeated admonitions that the jurors should
    follow the court’s instructions and their recollection of the
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                    37
    evidence, not the attorneys’ arguments. When the objections
    and the court’s responses are considered in context, the
    record unambiguously refutes the majority’s conclusion that
    the district court failed to neutralize any prejudice from the
    prosecutor’s comment in rebuttal by overruling an objection.
    D.
    Given that both sides made arguably hyperbolic and
    inaccurate statements about the standard of proof and that
    the court repeatedly admonished the jury to follow only its
    instruction, not the attorneys’ arguments, it is highly unlikely
    that the prosecutor’s and defense counsel’s comments on the
    reasonable doubt standard influenced the jurors’ review of
    the evidence.       See Lopez-Alvarez, 
    970 F.2d at 598
    (concluding that “any prejudice which might have resulted
    from the [prosecutor’s] comments was ‘neutralized by the
    trial judge’ when he instructed the jury that ‘[t]he lawyers’
    statements are not evidence’” (second alteration in original)
    (citation omitted)).
    Critically, the majority fails to consider the prosecutor’s
    comments in the context of the entire trial, including the
    district court’s repeated admonitions to the jury to follow its
    instructions on the reasonable doubt standard. The majority
    does not explain how Velazquez overcame the presumption
    that the jury followed these admonitions. See Medina
    Casteneda, 
    511 F.3d at 1250
    . Instead, it cites Weatherspoon
    to support its assertion that “whatever curative statements
    were provided by the district judge were inadequate.” Maj.
    Op. 16 (quoting 
    410 F.3d at 1151
    ). But Weatherspoon
    provides scant support for the majority’s argument.
    In that case, the prosecutor repeatedly vouched for
    government witnesses and encouraged the jury to convict the
    defendant to protect the community. See Weatherspoon,
    38             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    
    410 F.3d at 1146
    . However, the description of the
    proceedings does not state that the district court ever
    admonished the jury to ignore the prosecutor’s comments.
    See 
    id. at 1151
    ; see also 
    id. at 1155
    –70 (Trott, J., concurring
    in part and dissenting in part) (describing relevant portions
    of each side’s closing arguments and the court’s rulings on
    objections). By contrast, here, the court explicitly and
    repeatedly admonished the jury to follow its instructions on
    the reasonable doubt standard, not counsels’ arguments.
    We must presume that the jury followed the court’s
    instructions and admonitions as there is no evidence that it
    did not. See United States v. Flores, 
    802 F.3d 1028
    , 1040
    (9th Cir. 2015) (stating that the court presumes the jury
    followed the instructions when determining whether the
    defendant was guilty); Medina Casteneda, 
    511 F.3d at 1250
    (“The jury is regularly presumed to accept the law as stated
    by the court, not as stated by counsel.” (citation omitted)).
    As we explained in Medina Casteneda, the presumption that
    the jury followed the court’s instructions is not overcome
    when “there is no evidence that the jury was confused by the
    proof beyond a reasonable doubt standard” and it “never
    sought clarification of the standard” and, therefore, “the
    likely prejudicial effects of [a] misstatement of the law on
    the defendant in the context of the extensive closing
    arguments by both sides and proper jury instructions is very
    low.” 
    Id.
     Because Velazquez has not rebutted this
    presumption, he has not shown that it is “more probable than
    not that the misconduct materially affected the verdict.”
    Tucker, 
    641 F.3d at 1120
     (quoting Tam, 
    240 F.3d at 802
    ).
    II.
    To determine whether the prosecutor’s comments
    “infected the trial with unfairness,” we may also consider
    “the prominence of the comment in the context of the entire
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                    39
    trial and the weight of the evidence.” Hein, 
    601 F.3d at 912
    –
    13 (citation omitted). Here, the prosecutor’s comments
    comprised about ninety seconds of the hour-and-forty
    minutes of closing arguments from both attorneys. These
    arguments followed a two-day trial, during which five
    witnesses testified, including Velazquez, and forty-two
    exhibits were admitted into evidence. Thus, the prosecutor’s
    comments were not prominent in the context of the entire
    trial and were not likely to have affected the jury’s ability to
    weigh the evidence fairly.
    Moreover, the evidence against Velazquez was
    overwhelming. There is no dispute that Velazquez was
    attempting to enter the United States with a large amount of
    fentanyl and heroin concealed in the engine of his car. He
    did not challenge these facts. Instead, Velazquez presented
    a “blind mule” defense at trial and testified that he did not
    know the drugs were hidden in his car. Specifically,
    Velazquez testified about his girlfriend Bella, who lived in
    Tijuana, her uncle Juan, her neighbor Rayo, and her ex-
    boyfriend Emmanuel, and that he had heard rumors that they
    were involved in drugs. He also testified that Bella, Juan,
    Rayo, and Emmanuel knew where he parked his car in
    Tijuana, and Bella knew where he parked his car in the
    United States.
    But Velazquez’s testimony was uncorroborated. He did
    not provide the last names, addresses, or telephone numbers
    of Bella, Juan, Rayo, or Emmanuel, and as the prosecutor
    argued to the jury, “[t]he only evidence that these people
    exist came from the defendant.” The prosecutor further
    argued that the defendant was not credible, in part, because
    he did not present any evidence to support his blind mule
    defense until he testified. The prosecutor stated: “The
    defendant on the day of arrest said nothing to [the agents].
    40             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    He admits that. All these people involved in narcotics
    trafficking surrounding the defendant. He says nothing.”
    In a similar case in which the defendant was
    apprehended crossing the border with drugs in her car and
    claimed that they were planted without her knowledge, we
    described the evidence of the defendant’s guilt as
    “overwhelming,” Flores, 802 F.3d at 1038, and
    characterized the uncorroborated blind mule defense as
    “highly suspect,” id. at 1039. Indeed, while the defendant in
    Flores presented a theory at trial on how she believed the
    drugs were planted, we emphasized that the defendant failed
    to mention any of the details behind her theory to agents and
    that she failed to “take[] even basic steps to . . . corroborate
    her story,” just as Velazquez failed to do here. Id. at 1038–
    39. As in Flores, in this case “the government was free to
    ask the jury to disbelieve” the defendant. See id. at 1035.
    The majority, however, does “not believe that the
    evidence demonstrating Velazquez’s knowledge of the
    drugs was so overwhelming that the prosecutor’s
    misstatements were harmless.” Maj. Op. 17. The majority
    then asserts that “[t]he government’s case relied exclusively
    on circumstantial evidence,” including the value, type, and
    amount of drugs in Velazquez’s car, his nervousness, his
    inconsistent statements about his destination, the lack of
    personalization in his car, and his false statements to agents
    about the ownership of the car. Maj. Op. 17. But the
    majority’s characterization of the strength of the evidence
    overlooks the most critical evidence at the trial: Velazquez’s
    testimony.
    As the majority states, “the ultimate issue at trial boiled
    down to whether the government proved that Velazquez
    knew about the drugs in his car beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Maj. Op. 19. And Velazquez made his credibility the central
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                     41
    issue in the trial. The district court instructed the jury on the
    factors it could consider when deciding which witness
    testimony to believe or not believe, and Velazquez has not
    argued that there were any errors in those instructions. The
    court instructed the jury that it could consider, among other
    factors, “the witness’ interest in the outcome of the case,”
    “the witness’ bias or prejudice, if any,” and “the
    reasonableness of the witness’ testimony in light of all the
    evidence.” See Flores, 802 F.3d at 1038–39.
    At the end of his direct examination, defense counsel
    elicited the following testimony from Velazquez:
    Q. Okay. Alfred, did anybody pay you to
    move a load of drugs across the border
    that day?
    A. No, sir.
    Q. Okay. Did you have any idea that
    somebody had put drugs in that car?
    A. No, sir.
    Q. If you had known that there [were] drugs
    in that car, would you have crossed it?
    A. I wouldn’t do that.
    Q. And are you telling us the absolute truth
    today?
    A. Yes, sir.
    If the jury had accepted this testimony, it would have found
    him not guilty and rejected the government’s arguments to
    the contrary. Velazquez declared unequivocally that he did
    42             UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ
    not know that drugs were in his car and that he was telling
    the “absolute truth.” If the jury had accepted this testimony,
    regardless of any circumstantial evidence the government
    presented about whether the defendant appeared nervous, or
    his statements about his destination or the car ownership, it
    would have acquitted him.
    But from the guilty verdict, we must conclude that the
    jury did not find Velazquez credible, and it rejected his
    testimony. There is nothing in the record that suggests that
    the jury did not understand its task in evaluating the
    credibility of testimony or the court’s instructions. Thus, it
    is very unlikely that the attorneys’ conflicting arguments on
    the reasonable doubt standard, including the prosecutor’s
    comments, had any effect on whether the jury believed
    Velazquez. Therefore, the record supports only one
    conclusion—it is not likely that the prosecutor’s comments
    affected the verdict.
    III.
    The majority opinion erroneously concludes that the
    prosecutor’s isolated comments on the reasonable doubt
    standard during his closing and rebuttal arguments
    prejudiced Velazquez. But the majority fails to consider
    these statements in context, including the district court’s
    instructions, its repeated admonitions that the jury must
    follow the instructions—not the attorneys’ arguments,
    defense counsel’s arguments on reasonable doubt, and the
    overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt. Instead, the
    majority’s conclusions are based on an inaccurate and
    incomplete statement of the record.
    Nothing in the record suggests that the jurors ignored the
    district court’s repeated admonitions to follow its
    instructions on reasonable doubt, and in the absence of
    UNITED STATES V. VELAZQUEZ                 43
    evidence to the contrary, we must presume that they
    followed the court’s instructions. And nothing in the record
    suggests that the prosecutor’s statements affected the
    verdict. Therefore, I cannot conclude that the trial was so
    unfair that Velazquez’s due process rights were violated. I
    respectfully dissent.