United States v. Begay , 550 F. App'x 604 ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                       FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    December 19, 2013
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.                                                     No. 12-2202
    (D.C. No. 1:11-CR-00900-BB-1)
    STANTON BEGAY,                                          (D.N.M.)
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    Before GORSUCH and BALDOCK, Circuit Judges, and JACKSON, District
    Judge. **
    A jury convicted Defendant Stanton Begay of kidnapping and aggravated
    sexual abuse of a child in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 1201
    (a)(2) and 2241(c). The
    Court will refer to this child as “AP.” The district court sentenced Defendant to 50
    years’ imprisonment for each offense, to be served concurrently. Defendant now
    *
    After examining appellant’s brief and the appellate record, this panel has
    determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the
    determination of this appeal. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(a)(2) and 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G).
    The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument. Furthermore, this
    order and judgment is not binding precedent except under the doctrines of law of the
    case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its
    persuasive value consistent with Fed. R.App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
    **
    Honorable R. Brooke Jackson, United States District Judge for the District
    of Colorado, sitting by designation.
    challenges his conviction, arguing the district court erroneously: (1) indicated to the
    jury that AP was credible; (2) included an “unbalanced” jury instruction undermining
    Defendant’s theory that the prosecution coached AP; and (3) allowed the prosecution
    to appeal to broader societal issues and sympathies in its closing argument.
    Defendant contends these errors, taken individually or cumulatively, require reversal.
    Exercising jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    , we affirm the district court.
    I.
    This case concerns a late 2010 encounter between Defendant and AP, a
    paraplegic girl who was 15 years old at the time. In the indictment, the grand jury
    charged that Defendant, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1201
    (a)(2), “did willfully and
    unlawfully kidnap, abduct, seize, confine and carry away [AP], and did hold her to
    commit an aggravated sexual assault upon her.”         The grand jury also charged
    Defendant with violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 2241
    (c) “by using threats of serious bodily
    injury or force [to] unlawfully and knowingly engage in and attempt to engage in
    sexual acts with [AP] . . . who had attained the age of twelve (12) but had not then
    attained the age of sixteen (16) years, and who is at least four (4) years younger than
    the defendant.” The sexual acts, the grand jury charged, “consisted of contact, by
    penetration, however slight, of [AP’s] vulva by the penis of the defendant and
    penetration of [AP]’s mouth by the penis of the defendant.” See 
    18 U.S.C. § 2246
    (2)
    (defining “sexual act”). Defendant and AP are Navajo, and the incident occurred on
    the Navajo Nation in Prewitt, New Mexico. Thus, the charges were also brought
    2
    under the Indian Major Crimes Act, which requires federal prosecution of any Indian
    who, within Indian country, kidnaps any person or assaults a minor under 16 years
    of age. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 1153
    (a). At the end of a four-day trial, the jury returned
    guilty verdicts on both counts. After sentencing, Defendant timely appealed.
    II.
    Defendant’s first argument concerns statements the district court made to AP
    during her testimony at trial. While on the stand, AP answered a number of the
    prosecutor’s specific questions about the encounter by saying, “I don’t remember.”
    At one point, after AP did not answer a question verbally, the prosecutor told AP she
    needed “to answer the question one way or the other, or let us know that you don’t
    remember.” Moments later, the district court interjected:
    [AP], this is probably scary for you. You’ve got a lot of strangers
    looking at you, and it’s a formal setting. Why don’t you just try to tell
    us what you remember? Could you do that, do you think? Tell us what
    you remember about that afternoon. And if we need to ask questions,
    maybe, or whatever, we’ll go back and ask some other questions. But
    just tell us what you remember.
    In response to a later objection that the prosecutor was leading, the court stated:
    Try not to suggest it. I don’t want—just tell us what happened, [AP],
    what happened that day. I know it’s difficult perhaps to describe
    something that’s intimate. But just tell us what happened. And then
    maybe your lawyer will go back and ask questions if she needs to.
    What do you remember about that?
    Defendant did not contemporaneously object to these comments or to the court’s
    subsequent variations of the statement “just tell us what happened.” At a bench
    3
    conference prior to a break in proceedings, however, his counsel said:
    Your Honor, I believe some of the comments the Court made could be
    construed as to believe that my client is guilty, like you said it’s hard
    to talk about something that’s intimate to [AP]. I ask that you regive
    the instruction that nothing you said or do is meant to express your
    opinion as to what a verdict should be, as well as you can add on the
    “Don’t discuss it until the evidence is in.” I will make a motion for a
    mistrial. But on the off chance the Court denies that, I would request
    the instruction as the alternative, Your Honor.
    Immediately after the bench conference, the court instructed the jury not to “reach
    any conclusions until you’ve heard all of the evidence,” and that “nothing that I may
    say or do during the course of the trial is intended by me to indicate, or should be
    taken by you to indicate, what your verdict should be.” Defendant renewed his
    motion for a mistrial after the break; the court denied it.
    Defendant argues the district court should have granted a mistrial because the
    court conveyed to the jury belief in AP’s credibility. “We review a district court’s
    refusal to grant a mistrial for abuse of discretion.” United States v. Martinez, 
    455 F.3d 1127
    , 1129 (10th Cir. 2006) (quoting United States v. Stiger, 
    413 F.3d 1185
    ,
    1194 (10th Cir. 2005)). We review a court’s comments on the evidence for an abuse
    of discretion, as well. See Massey v. United States, 
    358 F.2d 782
    , 787 (10th Cir.
    1966). Defendant separates this argument into four subparts.
    First, Defendant asserts, the court put itself “squarely in the government’s
    camp” by urging AP to testify when she was having “great difficulty” talking about
    the incident. We disagree. AP’s testimony fills up nearly fifty pages of the record
    4
    before the court’s first disputed intervention, indicating she was not reluctant to
    testify, generally speaking.   She did, however, have difficulty answering very
    specific questions about the encounter at the core of the case. After AP answered “I
    don’t remember” to several pinpoint queries, the court intervened. The transcript
    considered as a whole indicates the court was not so much concerned with getting
    AP to testify—again, she gave no indication she was not a willing witness—as it was
    with finding the most efficient way for her to do so. The court made this plain
    during a short recess before it intervened when it told the prosecution, “And you
    might—just as a suggestion, just ask her what she remembers about that day. Things
    might go a little more quickly. She doesn’t seem to be able to focus in on the
    questions.” (emphasis added). In other words, the court thought asking AP open-
    ended questions about the encounter would be more efficient than asking hyper-
    specific questions.   When the prosecution continued to ask specific questions,
    producing the same results, the court stepped in. The court acted well within its
    discretion. As we have stated, under the Canons of Judicial Ethics federal judges
    have an “obligation to be industrious, prompt, and efficient” in the dispatch of their
    business. United States v. Baer, 
    575 F.2d 1295
    , 1301 (10th Cir. 1978).
    Furthermore, the court’s decision to intervene for efficiency did not
    improperly convey to the jury the court was “in the government’s camp.” For all the
    court and the jury knew at the time, AP might have proceeded to exonerate
    Defendant. Finally, even if the court’s statements could be interpreted as “urging”
    5
    or “encouraging” AP to testify, Defendant provides no case law mandating reversal.
    And for good reason. The Supreme Court has stated that the “policy of the law must
    be to encourage testimony.” Yates v. United States, 
    355 U.S. 66
    , 73 (1957).
    On a similar note, Defendant contends the district court’s repeated exhorting
    of AP to “tell us what happened” or “tell us what you remember” improperly
    informed the jury the court thought AP was telling the truth and undermined
    Defendant’s argument that AP was lying. We again disagree. The presiding judge
    at a trial may comment on, analyze, and dissect evidence. United States v. Nickl,
    
    427 F.3d 1286
    , 1293 (10th Cir. 2005). The judge may not, however, distort or add
    to the evidence, nor is he allowed to “assume the role of a witness” or “comment
    directly on the ultimate factual issue to be decided by the jury” 
    Id.
     (citations
    omitted). A trial judge “should not become an advocate and argue the case for either
    side.” United States v. Chanthadara, 
    230 F.3d 1237
    , 1249 (10th Cir. 2000) (citation
    omitted). Here, the district court did not become an advocate for the prosecution by
    merely asking AP to “tell us what you remember” or “what happened,” as these
    phrases are merely different ways of saying “tell us the truth.” In no way could
    anyone construe the court as commenting directly on the underlying veracity of her
    testimony, much less the ultimate factual issue in the case.       After all, if AP
    proceeded to lie, she most certainly was not testifying to “what happened” or “what
    she remembered,” as the district court requested. Indeed, in his very own brief
    Defendant uses a nearly identical phrase as a synonym for telling the truth. See
    6
    Def’s Op. Br. at 29 (“[AP] was having a hard time [testifying] because she was
    trying to remember the story she told to the forensic interviewer, not what really
    happened.” (emphasis added)).
    Furthermore, Defendant provides no case law indicating such innocuous
    language from a judge is improper, much less error deserving of a mistrial. To the
    contrary, our decision in United States v. Jackson, 
    482 F.2d 1167
     (10th Cir. 1973),
    counsels the opposite. In Jackson the district court actually stated the witness was
    “apparently . . . trying to tell the truth.” 
    Id. at 1175
    . Despite this open declaration
    of credibility, we concluded if “any unfairness resulted from the comment, such
    unfairness was sufficiently removed by the trial court’s” immediate and unequivocal
    instruction to “the jury that they were the sole judges of the witnesses’ credibility
    and thus they were not bound by the court’s comment.” 
    Id.
     at 1175–76. If the
    statement in Jackson did not merit a new trial, the statements here most certainly do
    not, especially since the court issued a similar cautionary instruction to the jury at
    Defendant’s request. 1
    1
    While he does not mention Jackson, Defendant does cite a number of cases
    in support of his argument for a mistrial. These cases are distinguishable. See, e.g.,
    Chanthadara, 
    230 F.3d at
    1251–54 (trial court made a “sweeping denunciation of Mr.
    Chanthadara’s defense”); United States v. Blanchard, 
    542 F.3d 1133
    , 1144–54 (7th
    Cir. 2008) (trial court allowed prosecution to introduce the court’s own prior
    “judicial testimony” denouncing witness as “deceptive” and “less than credible”);
    United States v. Filani, 
    74 F.3d 378
    , 385–87 (2d Cir. 1996) (trial court
    “inappropriately intruded as an advocate during trial” by substantively challenging
    defendant’s testimony over a dozen times and by interfering “repeatedly with the
    (continued...)
    7
    Defendant next asserts the district court mentioned in open court a number of
    explanations for AP’s reluctance to testify, all of which communicated to the jury the
    court’s belief in AP and conflicted with Defendant’s theory that AP was lying—e.g.
    “this is probably scary”; “a lot of strangers [are] looking at you”; “it’s a formal
    setting”; “it’s difficult perhaps to describe something that’s intimate.” Yet again,
    we disagree, for the same reasons discussed above. That is, AP did not show a
    general reluctance to testify, and none of the court’s statements conveyed a belief in
    AP’s credibility. For example, testifying in court can be a difficult and scary
    experience regardless of whether one is telling the truth. Indeed, a strong argument
    can be made that taking the stand intending to fabricate an entire story is much more
    difficult and scary. As to the district court’s insinuation that something “intimate”
    occurred, an expert testified at trial that sperm found on the t-shirt worn by AP
    during the encounter matched Defendant’s DNA. The probability that the sperm
    came from someone other than Defendant, the expert testified, was 1 in 1.2 trillion.
    Defendant also told the FBI he had touched AP’s pubic hair, a confession played in
    court. As such, any argument that nothing intimate at all had occurred is absurd, and
    the court was well within its discretion to use this term. 2 Moreover, the district
    1
    (...continued)
    defense counsel’s cross-examination of witnesses”).
    2
    At trial, defense counsel argued the court’s use of “intimate” was not
    appropriate because the jury did not have to accept Defendant’s FBI admission as
    true, given the questionable circumstances of the interrogation. Even so, this in no
    (continued...)
    8
    court’s use of the term in no way invalidated Defendant’s primary defense, which
    was that he used no force and issued no threats.
    Finally, Defendant argues the district court’s ameliorating instruction to the
    jury did not alleviate the prejudice because the court’s earlier interventions were just
    “too powerful.” The district court, Defendant contends, pronounced “on the
    credibility of a key government witness,” placing a “very heavy fist [] on the scales
    of justice, tipping the balance firmly in the government’s favor.” Def’s Op. Br. at
    38 (quoting United States v. Blanchard, 
    542 F.3d 1133
    , 1151–52 (7th Cir. 2008)).
    As we stated above, the court’s contested statements did no such thing; indeed, they
    were not errors at all. Defendant’s first argument fails in its entirety.
    III.
    Defendant’s second argument concerns a jury instruction the district court
    gave in relation to AP’s testimony.          At trial, defense counsel attempted to
    demonstrate that the prosecution coached AP.           While AP admitted on cross-
    examination to meeting with the prosecution four or five times, the only thing she
    testified to being told was that it was okay to cry if she felt like crying. On re-direct,
    she testified no one told her specifically what to say or what to emphasize, other than
    2
    (...continued)
    way addresses the compelling DNA evidence, which Defendant himself
    acknowledges “strongly supports the notion that [AP] and Mr. Begay engaged in
    sexual conduct.” Def’s Op. Br. at 33; see also id. at 46 (“[T]he DNA evidence
    strongly indicated [AP] and Mr. Begay engaged in sexual conduct.”).
    9
    that she needed “[t]o tell the truth.” In its closing argument, defense counsel
    provided roughly three bases for the assertion that AP had been coached: first, AP
    could not have on her own come up with several phrases she used—for example,
    “That was the day that changed my life”; second, AP’s numerous pre-trial meetings
    with the prosecution indicated she “knew what the questions were going to be”;
    third, the prosecutor’s leading questions and refreshing of AP’s memory were just
    an extension of prior coaching.
    Prior to closing arguments, the district court gave the jury the following
    instruction, which the prosecution had proposed: “An attorney has the right to
    interview a witness for the purpose of learning what testimony the witness will give.
    The fact that the witness has talked to an attorney does not reflect adversely on the
    truth of such testimony.” Defense counsel objected in writing that this instruction
    was ambiguous and an “incorrect statement of law” because “talking to or refusing
    to talk to an attorney can show the bias of a witness.” He later added at a bench
    conference that the instruction was not a pattern Tenth Circuit instruction, it was an
    incomplete statement of the law, and the gist of the instruction was contained in the
    other instructions.
    “We review de novo whether a district court’s jury instructions correctly stated
    the governing law.” Pratt v. Petelin, 
    733 F.3d 1006
    , 1009 (10th Cir. 2013). On
    appeal, however, Defendant does not argue the instruction was an incorrect statement
    of law. Rather, he contends the instruction was not “balanced”; that is, it embraced
    10
    the prosecution’s narrative over the defense theory that the prosecution coached AP.
    We review this type of argument—that which contests “a district court’s decision to
    give a particular jury instruction”—for abuse of discretion. Ryan Dev. Co. v. Ind.
    Lumbermens Mut. Ins. Co., 
    711 F.3d 1165
    , 1171 (10th Cir. 2013) (citation omitted).
    When a party fails to object to an instruction, however, or when it objects on a
    different basis than argued on appeal, we review for plain error only. See Fed. R.
    Crim. P. 30(d); United States v. Knight, 
    659 F.3d 1285
    , 1287 (10th Cir. 2011).
    Here, the Government argues for plain error review because Defendant did not
    object at trial to the instruction’s lack of balance. In reply, Defendant contends his
    trial objections center around the same argument he is making now, which is that the
    instruction improperly “eviscerated his contention that the coaching of [AP] called
    [her] credibility into question.” This is a thorny question. On the one hand, the
    Government is correct that Defendant never mentioned a lack of balance before the
    district court. Neither did Defendant propose an additional instruction or language
    to add any balance. On the other hand, Defendant did argue that the instruction was
    an “incomplete statement of law,” which in this context seems to convey roughly the
    same idea as unbalanced—that is, the instruction did not sufficiently explain the area
    of law, disfavoring one side in particular. Regardless, we need not decide this issue
    because, giving Defendant the benefit of the doubt, the district court’s inclusion of
    the instruction was not even an abuse of discretion.
    A district court’s “decision is an abuse of discretion only if it is ‘arbitrary,
    11
    capricious, whimsical, or manifestly unreasonable.’” United States v. Combs, 
    267 F.3d 1167
    , 1176 (10th Cir. 2001) (citation omitted). Defendant in essence asks us
    to find the inclusion of a correct statement of law to be arbitrary, capricious,
    whimsical, or manifestly unreasonable. Such a request leaves Defendant with quite
    a hill to climb. In an attempt to summit this lofty peak, however, Defendant cites
    only one case explicitly dealing with “unbalanced” jury instructions. 3 See United
    States v. Dove, 
    916 F.2d 41
     (2d Cir. 1990). As Dove does not come from the Tenth
    Circuit or the Supreme Court, the district court probably cannot have abused its
    discretion by not following it. Regardless, Dove is easily distinguishable.
    In Dove, the Second Circuit reversed a district court because it issued two
    unbalanced instructions in a bank robbery trial. The first instruction involved
    identifying the defendant. At trial, two witnesses to the robbery testified the robber
    was not in the courtroom, even though they had both tentatively identified the
    defendant in a photo lineup. 4 The court then instructed the jury as follows:
    The government has the burden of proving [the defendant’s] identity as
    the perpetrator beyond a reasonable doubt. In this connection, it is not
    essential that a witness be able to identify a defendant in open Court or
    be free from doubt as to the correctness of her identification of the
    3
    Defendant cites several other cases, but none of them explicitly discuss
    unbalanced instructions or are otherwise on point. For example, the Fifth Circuit in
    United States v. McCracken, 
    488 F.2d 406
    , 414 (5th Cir. 1974), dealt with
    “repetitious” instructions, not unbalanced ones. Moreover, the Fifth Circuit
    eventually upheld the disputed instructions, which does not help Defendant here.
    4
    Interestingly, one witness even “pointed to a member of the jury as the
    individual who looked most like the robber.” Id. at 43.
    12
    defendant by other means. However, if you are not convinced beyond
    a reasonable doubt that the defendant was the person who committed
    the crime, you must find him not guilty.
    Id. at 44. The Second Circuit held this instruction “was unbalanced because it
    instructed the jury as to how the witnesses’ inability to identify the defendant in the
    courtroom might bear on guilt without indicating how this rather significant evidence
    might bear on innocence.” Id. at 45. The second instruction involved direct and
    circumstantial evidence. The court erred in explaining the difference between the
    two, the Second Circuit held, by using a hypothetical that assumed guilt and “merely
    instructed how to look for evidence of that guilt.” Id. at 46.
    Dove is first distinguishable because the defendant in Dove asked for (and was
    denied) additional language that would balance the first disputed instruction, id. at
    44, whereas Defendant Begay did not propose any additional language. Second, and
    most significantly, the Second Circuit in Dove emphasized multiple times its holding
    was based on the “unusual” facts of the case—facts that are not present here. For
    example, the Second Circuit noted that “[v]irtually all of the circumstantial evidence
    pointed towards the possibility of innocence.”         Id. at 46.    And a “criminal
    defendant,” the Second Circuit held, “is entitled to instructions relating to his theory
    of defense, for which there is some foundation in the proof . . . .” Id. at 47 (emphasis
    added); see also Pratt, 733 F.3d at 1009 (“[A] party is entitled to an instruction on
    his theory of the case if it is supported by competent evidence.”). Here, Defendant
    provided only speculation to support his assertion that the prosecution coached AP.
    13
    AP, on the other hand, testified the prosecution never told her anything specific to
    say in court; rather, she was instructed again and again to “tell the truth.” Thus, the
    court would not have been required to balance this instruction, even under Dove.5
    The instruction was undisputedly a correct statement of law and the court’s decision
    to include it was not arbitrary, capricious, whimsical, or manifestly unreasonable.
    IV.
    Defendant’s third argument on appeal concerns statements a prosecutor made
    during the rebuttal portion of closing arguments.       The Assistant United States
    Attorney (AUSA) began her opening statement by saying, “They walk among us,
    people like Stanton Begay, people who take. They take from the vulnerable; they
    take from the weak. . . . They take without remorse.” Defense counsel objected that
    this was not a factual opening statement, and the court sustained the objection,
    instructing the AUSA to limit comments to the evidence. Despite this, the same
    AUSA began her closing rebuttal by saying, “When we began this trial, I told you
    this case was about people who walk among us, who take from others, who take from
    the vulnerable, who take from the weak, and who take without remorse.” Defense
    counsel again objected, arguing this was “a play to sympathy and prejudice . . . to
    5
    Furthermore, we note the instruction did not foreclose Defendant from
    arguing that AP was coached. All the instruction said was that the “fact that the
    witness has talked to an attorney does not reflect adversely on the truth of such
    testimony.” (emphasis added). Nothing prohibited Defendant from asserting in
    closing that AP had done more than merely “talk” to the prosecution and that the
    instruction did not require the jury to find no coaching had occurred.
    14
    societal woes, not to the evidence of this case.” Without explanation, the court
    overruled the objection. Defendant did not move for a mistrial.
    Defendant argues the “people who walk among us” rebuttal remarks
    constituted prosecutorial misconduct. When a defendant objects to a prosecutor’s
    remark but does not move for a mistrial, and when the district court overrules the
    objection—as occurred here—our standard of review for prosecutorial misconduct
    is de novo. See United States v. Taylor, 
    514 F.3d 1092
    , 1095–97 (10th Cir. 2008)
    (citing United States v. Pulido-Jacobo, 
    377 F.3d 1124
    , 1134 (10th Cir. 2004)). De
    novo review in this context consists of a two-step process. Pulido-Jacobo, 
    377 F.3d at 1134
    . First, we determine whether the prosecutor acted improperly; second, we
    determine whether the error was “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted); see also United States v. Ramirez, 
    63 F.3d 937
    , 944 (10th Cir. 1995).
    We assume without deciding that the AUSA’s rebuttal statements were
    improper. We hold, however, that they were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    In United States v. Rogers, 
    556 F.3d 1130
     (10th Cir. 2009), a prosecutor commented
    during closing argument on the “overall damage to the community inflicted by the
    drugs and prostitution at the hotel” where police apprehended the defendant. 
    Id. at 1143
    . Prosecutors, we stated, “are not permitted to incite the passions of the jury by
    suggesting they can act as the ‘community conscience’ to society’s problems.” 
    Id.
    Assuming the prosecutor’s narrative was improper, however, we found the error was
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt for the following reasons:
    15
    First, as we have already discussed, the Government presented a very
    strong case against Defendant. Second, the large majority of the
    prosecutor’s closing argument is supported in the record . . . . Third,
    the jury was properly instructed that closing arguments are not
    evidence. Finally, the prosecutor’s narrative was a small piece of a
    lengthy closing argument, and was simply not egregious enough ‘to
    influence the jury to convict on grounds other than the evidence
    presented.’
    
    Id.
     (internal citations omitted).
    Rogers controls here. First, the prosecution “presented a very strong case
    against Defendant.” AP testified Defendant trapped her and forced himself on her
    sexually. Sperm matching Defendant’s DNA was found on AP’s shirt. A subsequent
    medical exam revealed bruises on AP’s left jaw and right neck. Three out of four
    vaginal swabs from AP tested positive for blood. Defendant initially lied to the FBI
    about sexual contact with AP; he later admitted he had touched AP’s pubic hair.
    Theresa Vigil, a nurse, testified that AP called her the night of the incident, upset,
    scared, and crying, and told Vigil that Defendant “made me suck his dick.” The
    Court could go on. 6 Second, Defendant objects to nothing else in the closing
    argument, nor does anything appear objectionable. And while the district court
    inexplicably did not sustain Defendant’s only objection, the AUSA still immediately
    moved on and stuck to the facts of the case for the remainder of her rebuttal. She
    6
    This is not to say Defendant’s defense was weak. Rather, Defendant
    vociferously argued, among other things, that AP was not credible and that a forcible
    rape occurring in a small trailer home without alerting multiple persons present was
    implausible. This does not change, however, the compelling nature of the evidence
    the prosecution put forth.
    16
    said no more about the “people who walk among us” or anything remotely similar,
    nor did the prosecution discuss broader societal issues in its primary closing
    argument. Finally, the district court properly instructed the jury beforehand “that
    closing arguments are not evidence.” We will not overturn a jury’s verdict based on
    this error, which was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 7
    AFFIRMED.
    Entered for the Court,
    Bobby R. Baldock
    United States Circuit Judge
    7
    Defendant also argues we should reverse his conviction because of
    cumulative error. For cumulative error, we ask whether the “cumulative effect of
    two or more individually harmless errors has the potential to prejudice a defendant
    to the same extent as a single reversible error.” United States v. Rosario Fuentez,
    
    231 F.3d 700
    , 709 (10th Cir. 2000) (citation omitted). Here, the district court
    committed only one error, at most. Thus, cumulative error is an impossibility.
    17