Court Opinion

ID: 9906759
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-05 01:01:26.84984+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:52:17.721027
License: Public Domain

Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587         Page: 1     Date Filed: 12/04/2023

            United States Court of Appeals
                 for the Fifth Circuit
                                                                         United States Court of Appeals
                                                                                  Fifth Circuit

                                 ____________                                   FILED
                                                                         December 4, 2023
                                  No. 22-30442                             Lyle W. Cayce
                                 ____________                                   Clerk

   United States of America,

                                                              Plaintiff—Appellee,

                                       versus

   Sterling Robinson,

                                            Defendant—Appellant.
                   ______________________________

                   Appeal from the United States District Court
                      for the Eastern District of Louisiana
                            USDC No. 2:20-CR-120-1
                   ______________________________

   Before Smith, Southwick, and Higginson, Circuit Judges.
   Stephen A. Higginson, Circuit Judge:
          Defendant-Appellant Sterling Robinson was convicted by a jury of one
   count of possessing a firearm or ammunition as a convicted felon and one
   count of attempted obstruction of a federal proceeding. He appeals his con-
   victions, raising sufficiency challenges to both convictions, as well as errors
   relating to the evidence admitted at trial, the trial court’s jury instructions,
   and the prosecutor’s remarks in opening and closing arguments. He also ap-
   peals his sentence on the basis that the district court misapprehended its au-
   thority to order that his sentence run concurrently with another federal
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587          Page: 2    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   sentence. We AFFIRM Robinson’s convictions but VACATE his term of
   imprisonment and REMAND for a narrow resentencing as set forth below.
                                          I.
                                         A.
          On March 13, 2020, Candace Anderson arrived at her apartment in
   New Orleans, with her nine-year-old son in the car. When she pulled into her
   parking spot, someone emerged from behind a nearby gate and began
   shooting at her car. Anderson drove to a nearby gas station, where she called
   911.
          She told the 911 operator that her ex-boyfriend Sterling Robinson had
   just shot at her car. Anderson told the operator that she had locked herself
   and her son in a gas-station bathroom and that she believed Robinson had
   followed them to the gas station. She described Robinson as “black, . . .
   brown[]-skinned,” and about 5’2” in height. She said he was last wearing a
   red and white shirt with black jeans. She guessed that the weapon he fired
   was a “forty caliber.”
          About ten to fifteen minutes later, New Orleans Police Department
   (“NOPD”) Officer Kevin Penn arrived on the scene, where his body camera
   captured his conversation with Anderson. Anderson told Officer Penn that
   when she arrived home, her ex-boyfriend was standing on the other side of a
   wooden gate, and when she parked her car, he came from behind the gate and
   began shooting at her car. She reiterated that she fled to the gas station and
   said that, when she exited her car, Robinson was there. Anderson explained
   that they lived together, but that she had broken up with him and “put him
   out” about three days earlier.
          Continuing the interview in the parking lot, Anderson gave more
   details about the shooting, explaining that Robinson shot first at her tires and

                                          2
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587           Page: 3    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

   then, when she backed up to leave and drive off, he continued shooting at the
   car. Anderson also asked Officer Penn if “the place that [she] need[s] to get
   a restraining order from” would be open tomorrow and if he could give her
   the address. While they were talking, Anderson received a call on her cell
   phone from Robinson. Officer Penn told her not to answer it, and she
   declined the call.
          When Anderson saw the bullet holes in the back of her car, Anderson
   said, “Dang, that could’ve went straight through,” and “I can’t believe
   that.” She explained that she had a big speaker in the trunk of the car and
   speculated that it may have stopped the bullets. Anderson took pictures of
   the holes in the back of the car and sent them to Robinson with the message,
   “U trying to kill me.” Robinson responded: “Man I’m crying my heart out
   it to[o] much im about to just kill myself f[or ]r[eal].”
          In another segment of body-camera footage from the gas station,
   Anderson can be heard (but not seen) talking on the phone. She says, “[Y]ou
   could’ve killed me, son. If that speaker wasn’t back there, . . . I’d be dead,
   son, and that’s what you want.” She then raises her voice and says, “You
   trying to kill me!” In response to something Robinson said, Anderson
   threatened to kill Robinson and his children and stated that if Robinson killed
   her parents, she would receive money.
          Officer Penn then drove to Anderson’s apartment where she
   reenacted the shooting, demonstrating how Robinson emerged and shot at
   her car. A crime-scene investigation ultimately documented five nine-
   millimeter caliber casings on the ground, deemed to have been fired from the
   same weapon. Robinson was subsequently arrested.
          On March 17, 2020, four days after the shooting, Robinson called
   Anderson from the Orleans Parish Prison. He told Anderson she needed to
   come to the prison early the next morning, stating, “It ain’t nothing but

                                           3
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587          Page: 4   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   domestic violence and . . . domestic violence aggravated assault with a
   firearm.” Robinson told Anderson that she needed to visit the DA’s Office,
   so that he can get a “cheap” bond and so that the other charges would be
   “throw[n] . . . out.”
          In a phone call later that day, Robinson again pressed Anderson to visit
   the DA’s Office and sign an affidavit, which would ensure he was “straight.”
   Within the hour, Robinson called Anderson a third time, insisting she arrive
   early, so that “[t]hey can hurry up and throw that sh*t out.” He added that
   he needed to get out of prison before the “feds try to . . . pick [it] up too.”
   On a fourth phone call that same night, Robinson said he missed Anderson.
   When Anderson asked why he did something “like that to jeopardize” it,
   Robinson responded, “I don’t know, son. I f**ked up.” Later in the call,
   Robinson once again referenced an affidavit, stating, “Once you fill that
   affidavit out, they gone throw that sh*t out right then and there.” Anderson
   never went to the DA’s office to sign any affidavit.
          While in custody, Robinson was arrested by Jefferson Parish in April
   2020 booked for a murder that occurred in neighboring Jefferson Parish on
   the same night as the shooting of Anderson’s car. Robinson remained in
   continuous physical custody. No evidence of this murder was admitted at
   Robinson’s trial in this case.
          Robinson and Anderson continued to speak on the phone over the
   next several months. On September 22, 2020, Robinson called Anderson not
   from his own jail account but from the account of another incarcerated person
   after Anderson told Robinson that their calls were being recorded. The two
   discussed a meeting Anderson had with the Jefferson Parish District
   Attorney’s Office earlier that day. Anderson relayed that the Jefferson Parish
   DA’s Office knew all about the Orleans Parish shooting and had the 911 call,
   the police report, their text messages, and recordings of their phone calls.

                                         4
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587           Page: 5    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

   Robinson responded that Anderson needed to tell the DA that “what
   happened in Orleans, that wasn’t him, so . . . That’s all you have to tell the
   people.” He continued, “Man, you ain’t telling people I had nothing to do
   with it.” Anderson responded: “I can’t lie and can’t tell the people, them
   people know everything, I’m telling you they know everything.” Later in the
   call, Robinson asked Anderson again about Orleans Parish. Robinson
   prompted, “You told them it was me,” to which Anderson responded,
   “Man, them people not stupid.”
          In another phone call that same evening, Anderson confirmed she told
   the Jefferson Parish DA’s Office that she identified Robinson as the one
   involved in “what happened in Orleans Parish.” When Robinson asked why,
   she responded, “They already know everything.” Later in the conversation,
   after Anderson told Robinson that “they” have the bullets that were
   removed from her car, Robinson again said, “all you had to tell the people
   was, none of that, none of that wasn’t him.” When Anderson stated that she
   had already given three statements and cannot change her story now,
   Robinson disagreed, stating that people take their statements back. In that
   same call, Robinson criticized Anderson for not picking up when he called
   her that morning prior to her meeting with the Jefferson Parish DA’s Office.
   Robinson repeatedly told Anderson that she should have told the DA’s Office
   that she had assumed it was Robinson who shot at her because they got into
   fight earlier, but that she now realized it was not him.
          He continued: “It wasn’t my old man that did this. Come on man,
   that’s all you have to tell the people son . . . [T]hat’s what I was calling this
   morning to let you know, . . . to school you on, son, to let you know who . . .
   You see what I’m saying, huh, hello, Candace?” Anderson told Robinson
   that she did not intend to testify to the grand jury and that she would not turn
   on him. As the call neared its close, Robinson reiterated what he wanted
   Anderson to do: “[I]f they was to bring Orleans Parish up in anything, . . . all

                                          5
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 6   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   you have to do, I’m not talking about what’s going on out there. I don’t know
   what happened out there.”
          On November 5, 2020, a grand jury indicted Robinson on one count
   of possessing a firearm as a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
   § 922(g)(1), and one count of attempting to obstruct justice by getting
   “C.A.” to provide false information about his criminal conduct, in violation
   of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2).
                                         B.
          At trial, the parties stipulated that Robinson had a prior felony
   conviction. The Government presented—over various objections raised by
   the defense and overruled by the judge—the evidence summarized above,
   including the 911 call, the body-camera footage, and the phone calls from
   prison. The Government also presented testimony from, among others, the
   NOPD officer who responded to Anderson’s 911 call; the NOPD crime lab
   technician who collected the shell casings at the scene; an expert who
   confirmed that the casings came from the same firearm; and an ATF agent
   who gave expert testimony that four of the shell casings were manufactured
   in Arkansas and that one was manufactured in Mexico.
          The Government also called Anderson, who did not want to testify,
   and who appeared only because she was under subpoena. Once on the stand,
   Anderson recanted her entire story involving Robinson shooting at her car.
   She acknowledged that she had told the 911 operator and multiple authorities
   that it was Robinson who shot at her, and that she texted Robinson the photo
   of the bullet holes in her car, with the message, “You’re trying to kill me,”
   But she testified that, although someone shot at her car, it was not Robinson.
          Anderson attributed her claimed mistaken identification in part to the
   migraine she was suffering from at the time of the shooting as well as the fact
   that her car windows were tinted and it was dark outside. At the same time,

                                         6
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587            Page: 7   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

   however, she testified that the shooter was too tall to have been Robinson.
   When asked by the Government about the jail call when she told Robinson
   “You should’nt [have] did that,” she denied that she was referring to the
   shooting and said it was instead a reference to an “argument that [they] had
   had a couple days before that.”
          The Government also asked Anderson why she identified Robinson as
   the shooter on the 911 call. Anderson said she was “kind of shaken up”
   because she had just been shot at with her child in the car and had assumed
   that the shooter was Robinson because of their recent argument. On cross-
   examination, Anderson agreed with defense counsel’s assessment that she
   had been “mad and mistaken” when she previously accused Robinson.
          At the close of the Government’s case, Robinson moved for a
   judgment of acquittal on both counts, which the court denied. Robinson did
   not present any evidence. After deliberations, the jury rendered a verdict
   finding Robinson guilty on both counts.
                                         C.
          Robinson was sentenced on July 21, 2022. Judge Fallon imposed a
   sentence of 120 months on count one and 120 months on count two, to run
   consecutively, for a total of 240 months. The court then stated that the
   sentence is to run concurrently with the sentences Robinson will serve in case
   numbers 15-cr-72, Robinson’s previous federal drug-trafficking conviction
   before Judge Jane Milazzo, and S139-2039, a state case. In the other federal
   case, during the time between Robinson’s jury trial and sentencing in this
   case, Judge Milazzo had revoked Robinson’s term of supervised release and
   imposed a prison sentence of twenty-seven months, which she ordered to
   “run consecutively with any sentence imposed under criminal docket 20-
   120,” which is the case before us.

                                          7
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587           Page: 8    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

          During Robinson’s sentencing hearing before Judge Fallon, the
   Government raised the discrepancy between Judge Milazzo’s order that the
   two federal sentences run consecutively with Judge Fallon’s oral order that
   the two run concurrently. In response, Judge Fallon said that “if [Judge
   Milazzo] made it consecutive to mine, I won’t deal with that one” and only
   addressed the state-court sentence, which he ordered to run concurrently
   with the sentence he was imposing. In Robinson’s written judgment, the term
   of imprisonment specifies that it is to run concurrently with the sentence
   imposed in the state case but does not mention the other federal case.
                                          D.
          Robinson timely appealed. First, he challenges the sufficiency of the
   evidence to support his two convictions. Second, he contends that the district
   court reversibly erred by admitting hearsay in the form of the body-camera
   video and jail-call recordings and by failing to instruct the jury on the limited
   use of impeachment evidence. Third, Robinson argues that improper
   remarks by the prosecution warrant a new trial. And finally, he contends that
   his sentence should be vacated and remanded for resentencing because the
   district court erroneously perceived that it was bound by Judge Milazzo’s
   order that the sentences in the two federal cases run consecutively. We
   address each in turn.
                                          II.
          Robinson challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his two
   convictions. Robinson preserved his sufficiency challenges by moving for a
   judgment of acquittal under Rule 29(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal
   Procedure, so this court’s review is de novo. United States v. Johnson, 990 F.3d
   392, 398 (5th Cir. 2021). We must affirm each jury verdict if, “viewing the
   evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and drawing all reasonable
   inferences from the evidence to support the verdict,” a “reasonable trier of

                                          8
Case: 22-30442         Document: 00516988587              Page: 9       Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                          No. 22-30442

   fact could conclude from the evidence that the elements of the offense were
   established beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Valencia, 600 F.3d
   389, 430-31 (5th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). 1
                                                A.
           Robinson first challenges the sufficiency of the Government’s
   evidence to convict him under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) for being a felon in
   possession of a firearm or ammunition. To convict Robinson under
   § 922(g)(1), the Government needed to prove that (1) Robinson was a felon,
   (2) he knew he was a felon, (3) he knowingly possessed a firearm or
   ammunition, and (4) the firearm or ammunition traveled in interstate
   commerce. Johnson, 990 F.3d at 400 (citing Rehaif v. United States, 139 S. Ct.
   2191, 2200 (2019)).
           Three of the four elements are easily satisfied. Robinson stipulated at
   trial that he had a prior felony. This satisfies the first element—that he was a
   felon—as well as the second—that he knew his status. See United States v.
   Kieffer, 991 F.3d 630, 635 (5th Cir. 2021) (“Because [the defendant]
   stipulated to being a felon at trial, there was sufficient evidence to establish

           _____________________
           1
              Although Robinson separately challenges the admissibility of some of the
   evidence the Government presented to support the convictions, the sufficiency challenges
   should be disposed of first, without reference to the evidentiary issues, for double-jeopardy
   purposes. If “the record evidence, including the inadmissible evidence, discloses
   insufficient evidence of guilt,” so as to “entitle the defendant . . . to a judgment of
   acquittal,” United States v. Marshall, 762 F.2d 419, 423 (5th Cir. 1985), then a second trial
   of the defendant is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause, see Burks v. United States, 437
   U.S. 1, 11 (1978). Accordingly, “[i]n conducting a sufficiency review under such
   circumstances, we consider all of the evidence that was before the jury—including [any]
   evidence that was erroneously admitted.” United States v. Miller, 146 F.3d 274, 280 (5th
   Cir. 1998) (emphasis added) (citing Lockhart v. Nelson, 488 U.S. 33 (1988), and Marshall,
   762 F.2d at 419).

                                                9
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587          Page: 10   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   that he knew he was a felon[.]”). As to the fourth element, the Government
   presented testimony from an ATF agent that the casings found at the scene
   of the shooting were manufactured in Arkansas and Mexico and submitted
   an interstate-nexus report to the same effect. Robinson does not dispute the
   sufficiency of the evidence as to any of these three elements.
            Robinson challenges only the third element—his possession of the
   firearm or ammunition—on the basis that the jury could not reasonably find
   that Robinson committed the shooting. Robinson argues that the
   Government’s only evidence pointing to him as the shooter was Anderson’s
   initial identification of Robinson. Because Anderson testified under oath that
   she was mistaken and that Robinson was not the shooter, Robinson argues
   that the jury was precluded from finding him guilty beyond a reasonable
   doubt.
            On close record analysis, we do not disturb the jury’s verdict. The
   Government played for the jury the audio of the 911 call in which Anderson
   unequivocally said that her “boyfriend was just shooting at [her] car,” and
   that he is “armed and dangerous.” Anderson described him as 5’2” and
   wearing a red and white shirt with black jeans. She said his name is Sterling
   Robinson. The Government also played body-camera footage of Anderson’s
   conversation with the responding officer. In the video, she tells the officer
   that her ex-boyfriend shot at her and explains that they had recently broken
   up. The Government published to the jury text messages that Anderson sent
   Robinson shortly after the shooting, containing a picture of the bullet holes
   in her car, with the text, “U trying to kill me.” Robinson’s response was not
   a denial or expression of confusion but instead, “Man I’m crying my heart
   out it[’s] to[o] much im about to just kill myself.” The jury also heard jail-
   call audio from days after the shooting, in which Anderson told Robinson,
   “You shouldn’t [have done] that!” Robinson again did not deny any
   wrongdoing and instead responded, “Man, you know I didn’t mean it though

                                         10
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 11   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   man, come on, you know I didn’t mean that.” In other calls, months after the
   shooting, Robinson told Anderson “I know you ain’t tell them people
   nothing about Orleans Parish,” which is where the shooting happened, and
   lamented that Anderson was not “telling people [he] had nothing to do with
   it.” To this, Anderson responded, “I can’t lie.”
          This evidence is enough for a reasonable jury to conclude that
   Robinson shot at Anderson’s car. While Anderson recanted her accusations
   on the stand, the jury was not required to believe her trial testimony over her
   earlier unequivocal identifications of Robinson. United States v. Huntsberry,
   956 F.3d 270, 279 (5th Cir. 2020) (“We accept ‘all credibility choices and
   reasonable inferences made by the trier of fact which tend to support the
   verdict’ and resolve conflicts in the evidence in favor of the verdict.”
   (citation omitted)).
          Even beyond the jury’s ability to assess Anderson’s demeanor and
   body language, the jury’s decision to disbelieve Anderson’s trial testimony
   finds support in the written record. Even if the jury believed that Anderson’s
   perception of the shooter was compromised because of her migraine and
   tinted windows, she failed to offer a consistent explanation for why she
   named Robinson specifically. She instead equivocated between an anger-
   fueled accusation, and an honest assumption. Most critically, though,
   Anderson had an obvious reason to lie on the stand. Not only did she agree
   on the record that she did not want to testify against someone she has feelings
   for, but indeed the jail calls revealed that Robinson encouraged Anderson at
   length to change her story. The jury was entitled to conclude that Anderson’s

                                         11
Case: 22-30442        Document: 00516988587               Page: 12       Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                          No. 22-30442

   trial testimony was not a belatedly discovered truth but instead a response to
   Robinson’s influence. 2
           Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, there
   was sufficient evidence that Robinson was the shooter, permitting the jury to
   conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Robinson knowingly possessed the
   firearm and ammunition. His § 922(g)(1) sufficiency challenge fails.
                                                B.
           Robinson also challenges the sufficiency of the Government’s
   evidence to convict him of attempting to obstruct justice under 18 U.S.C.
   § 1512(c)(2). The statute penalizes anyone who “corruptly . . . obstructs,
   influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so.” Id.
   Under the statute, an “official proceeding” must be federal in nature but is
   otherwise broadly defined, including any proceeding “before a judge or court
   of the United States” as well as a federal grand jury. 18 U.S.C.
   § 1515(a)(1)(A), (g)(1). Although a proceeding “need not be pending or about
   to be instituted at the time of the offense,” 18 U.S.C. § 1512(f)(1), the
   proceeding “must at least be foreseen, such that the defendant has in
   contemplation some particular official proceeding that he intends his conduct
   would impede or obstruct.” United States v. Delgado, 984 F.3d 435, 452 (5th
   Cir. 2021) (internal quotations and citation omitted). Similarly, there must
   be “some ‘nexus’ between the obstructive act and some official government

           _____________________
           2
             Robinson cites a Sixth Circuit case from 1979, United States v. Orrico, 599 F.2d
   113, 118 (6th Cir. 1979), and a Utah Supreme Court case from 1989, State v. Ramsey, 782
   P.2d 480, 484 (Utah 1989), for the proposition that “courts have held that an
   uncorroborated, out-of-court allegation that is recanted by the declarant at trial is legally
   insufficient to sustain a guilty verdict.” Setting aside that those cases are many decades old
   and from out-of-circuit jurisdictions, they do not resemble Robinson’s case. Here,
   Anderson’s “out-of-court allegation” that Robinson shot at her car is not
   “uncorroborated” for the reasons just described.

                                                12
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 13   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   proceeding.” Id. (citation omitted). Finally, “a person acts ‘corruptly’ under
   the statute when they act ‘knowingly and dishonestly, with specific intent to
   subvert or undermine the due administration of justice.’” Id. (citation
   omitted). This intent can be proven with “circumstantial evidence alone.”
   United States v. Bedoy, 827 F.3d 495, 509 (5th Cir. 2016) (citation omitted).
          To demonstrate “attempt,” the Government must show that the
   defendant specifically intended to commit the underlying crime and took a
   “substantial step” toward committing it. United States v. Howard, 766 F.3d
   414, 419 (5th Cir. 2014) (citation omitted). A “substantial step” is one that
   “strongly corroborates the firmness of the defendant’s criminal intent.” Id.
   It must be “‘more than mere preparation,’ but is ‘less than the last act
   necessary before’ the crime is in fact committed.” Id. (citation omitted).
          The Government’s evidence of Robinson’s attempted obstruction of
   justice consisted of two sets of phone calls from prison: the March 2020 calls
   and the September 2020 calls. In the March calls, Robinson encouraged
   Anderson to go to the D.A.’s office to sign what appears to be a drop-charges
   affidavit, and in the September calls, Robinson explained to Anderson how
   she might change her story. Because we conclude that the September calls
   independently constitute attempted obstruction and support Robinson’s
   § 1512(c) conviction, we do not address the March calls.
          Robinson’s challenges to the sufficiency of the September phone-call
   evidence to support his conviction for attempted obstruction are twofold.
   First, he contends that the September conversations pertained to Anderson’s
   meeting at the Jefferson Parish D.A.’s office, but that no “official
   proceeding,” i.e., federal proceeding, arose from the Jefferson Parish
   investigation. Second, he argues that Robinson’s comments were wholly
   retrospective, as he explained to Anderson what she “should have and could
   have said” in her meeting with Jefferson Parish.

                                         13
Case: 22-30442       Document: 00516988587              Page: 14       Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                         No. 22-30442

           Both arguments, however, cannot be reconciled with the record.
   First, while Robinson is correct that the September calls focused on
   Anderson’s meeting earlier that day with the Jefferson Parish D.A.’s office—
   and that the Jefferson charge (a murder) did not itself become federal—
   Robinson’s obstructive comments on the September calls did not involve the
   Jefferson Parish charges. Instead, Robinson repeatedly asked about, and gave
   Anderson instructions on, the Orleans Parish charges. Importantly, there has
   been no suggestion, at trial or in briefing now, that there was any other
   conduct in Orleans that Robinson might have been addressing. And even if
   there were, the jury could reasonably infer that his obstructive comments
   were about the shooting.
           Accepting the conclusion that Robinson’s comments pertained to
   Orleans, his argument that the Jefferson investigation did not become federal
   falls by the wayside. Obstruction as to Orleans is obstruction as to the
   shooting, which went federal. See Delgado, 984 F.3d at 452 (explaining that
   the defendant need only “‘ha[ve] in contemplation some particular official
   proceeding’ that he intends his conduct would impede or obstruct” (citation
   omitted)). The statute does not require that Robinson specifically apprehend
   or anticipate the federal nature of the proceedings. 3 “‘[N]o state of mind
   need be proved with respect to’ whether the proceeding is federal to prove
   § 1512(c) was violated.” Bedoy, 827 F.3d at 508 (quoting 18 U.S.C.
   § 1512(g)(1)).
           Second, Robinson is mistaken when he argues his comments were
   only retrospective. While Robinson emphasizes that the phone calls
   happened after Anderson’s meeting with the Jefferson Parish D.A., the
           _____________________
           3
              In any case, the jury could have reasonably concluded that Robinson anticipated
   that the shooting would go federal as he made a specific reference to “the feds” picking up
   the charges in the March phone calls.

                                               14
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 15    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   comments were not mere lamentations of what could have been. Instead,
   Robinson repeatedly urged Anderson to change her story. As one example,
   Robinson told Anderson: “all you have to tell them people is, I understand
   everything y’all saying but . . . that wasn’t him, . . . what happened in
   Orleans, that wasn’t him, so . . . what are y’all talking about. That’s all you
   have to tell the people.” A rational factfinder could easily conclude that this
   was forward-looking advice—that is, a substantial step toward corruptly
   influencing proceedings by encouraging Anderson to lie. The same is true for
   another portion of the calls. Robinson told Anderson: “if they was to bring
   Orleans Parish up in anything, . . . all you have to do” is say “I’m not talking
   about what’s going on out there. I don’t know what happened out there.”
   Robinson’s comments are trained on a future plan, telling Anderson that if
   authorities “w[ere] to bring Orleans Parish up,” she should decline to talk
   about it and say she did not know what happened.             Beyond the calls
   themselves, Anderson’s trial testimony itself reinforces the conclusion that
   Robinson was encouraging her to lie for him moving forward. After all, once
   on the stand, she did what Robinson asked: recant her prior statements.
          The September phone calls were sufficient evidence upon which the
   jury could conclude that Robinson attempted to “corruptly . . . obstruct[],
   influence[], or impede[] an[] official proceeding,” 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2),
   namely by encouraging Anderson to lie for him with regard to the shooting in
   Orleans Parish. Robinson’s sufficiency challenge to his conviction on count
   two therefore fails.
                                         III.
          Robinson also argues that the district court erred in admitting (i) the
   body-camera footage and (ii) the audio from the jail calls. He further contends
   (iii) that the district court erred in not giving the jury an instruction on the
   limited use of evidence of prior inconsistent statements.

                                          15
Case: 22-30442        Document: 00516988587              Page: 16       Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                          No. 22-30442

           The government agrees that Robinson preserved his evidentiary
   objections to the body-camera footage, hence this court will review for abuse
   of discretion, subject to a harmless-error analysis. United States v. Noria, 945
   F.3d 847, 853 (5th Cir. 2019) (citation omitted). Similarly, a failure to provide
   a requested jury instruction is reviewed for abuse of discretion, United States
   v. Grant, 683 F.3d 639, 650 (5th Cir. 2012), subject to harmless-error review,
   United States v. Aldawsari, 740 F.3d 1015, 1019 (5th Cir. 2014). On the other
   hand, Robinson has not identified specific preservation of evidentiary
   objection to recorded jail call statements, as we discuss below. 4
                                                A.
           The parties agree that some portion of the body-camera footage is
   admissible for its truth. Specifically, the Government argues, and Robinson
   concedes, that Anderson’s statements identifying Robinson constitute prior
   identifications of someone the declarant perceived earlier, and are therefore
   admissible as non-hearsay under Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(C).
   Rule 801(d) provides that a statement is not hearsay if “[t]he declarant
   testifies and is subject to cross-examination about a prior statement, and the
   statement . . . identifies a person as someone the declarant perceived earlier.”
   Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(C). Anderson testified and was subject to cross-
   examination, so each of her prior statements that Robinson shot at her is
   admissible non-hearsay under this rule. This accounts for the considerable
   material in the body-camera footage.

           _____________________
           4
              In briefing as to standard of review, Robinson directs us to his written objection
   to the body-camera footage, as well as a pre-trial discussion before the district court
   regarding hearsay issues that may exist in both the body camera video and also the audio
   calls. Ultimately, because we conclude that any error in the unrestricted admission of
   specific statements in the audio calls would be harmless, Robinson’s appellate argument as
   to audio statements heard by the jury necessarily would also fail applying procedural default
   and a plain-error standard of review.

                                                16
Case: 22-30442       Document: 00516988587              Page: 17       Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                         No. 22-30442

           As to the remainder of the footage, 5 Robinson’s substantive
   evidentiary arguments on appeal are briefed too imprecisely to permit
   meaningful assessment by this court. Robinson does not proceed through the
   body-camera footage on a statement-specific basis and instead objects to the
   footage wholesale. But the footage collectively lasts for over twenty minutes
   and contains many statements, by different speakers, made under many
   different circumstances. The hearsay character of a statement and/or the
   applicability of a given hearsay exception is necessarily tethered to individual
   statements or categories of statements.
           For instance, when Anderson’s phone lights up because she’s
   receiving a call, she immediately says, “That’s him calling me now.” This
   statement is an admissible present-sense impression because it is a
   description of an event made “made while or immediately after the declarant
   perceived it.” Fed. R. Evid. 803(1). As another example, Anderson’s
   statements made during the fight on the phone (presumably with Robinson)
   qualify as “excited utterance[s],” because they are “statement[s] relating to
   a startling event or condition”—here, the shooting itself and the discovery
   of the bullet holes in her car—“made while [she] was under the stress of
   excitement that it caused.” Fed. R. Evid. 803(2).
           The body-camera footage as a whole, therefore, is not a workable unit
   for appellate argument and analysis. To decide whether the district court
   abused its discretion in admitting the evidence, we would need to proceed
   through the various statements made over the course of twenty minutes of
   video footage and assess whether Robinson has shown an error in each

           _____________________
           5
             Although the district court initially admitted the body-camera footage to refresh
   Anderson’s recollection and for impeachment at the end of trial, the court concluded that
   the footage was admissible for its truth as present-sense impressions and excited
   utterances.

                                               17
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 18   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   statement’s admission at trial. Without party briefing as to the admissibility
   of individual statements, we are unable to find reversible evidentiary error.
          Even if we assume some portion of the body-camera footage were
   inadmissible, it did not have a “substantial and injurious” influence, see
   United States v. Lowery, 135 F.3d 957, 959 (5th Cir. 1998) (citation omitted)
   on the jury’s verdict. The other admissible evidence included the 911 call on
   which Anderson said that Robinson was shooting at her car, Anderson’s text
   messages to Robinson containing a photo of the bullet holes with the caption
   “U trying to kill me,” as well as Anderson’s repeated identifications of
   Robinson as the shooter on the body-camera footage.
          Furthermore, the body-camera footage was cumulative with
   admissible evidence. See El-Mezain, 664 F.3d at 526 (“It is well established
   that error in admitting evidence will be found harmless when the evidence is
   cumulative, meaning that substantial evidence supports the same facts and
   inferences as those in the erroneously admitted evidence.”). For example,
   Robinson objects to Anderson’s statements that her son was in the car, but
   that evidence was cumulative with the 911 call where she said her boyfriend
   was shooting at her car and her nine-year-old son was with her. Robinson also
   objects to Anderson’s statements involving the location of the bullets in the
   car and the notion that Robinson was “trying to harm” her or “trying to kill”
   her, but that evidence was cumulative of Anderson’s text message to
   Robinson containing a photo of the bullets, with the accusation, “U trying to
   kill me.”
          The other material—relating generally to Anderson’s breakup with
   Mr. Robinson, her “feelings” about him, and the “details of their
   relationship”—may have been, as Robinson argues, “irrelevant” and
   “inflammatory,” but that objection sounds in Rule 403, not substantially
   prejudicial hearsay. See El-Mezain, 664 F.3d at 494. Considering the other

                                         18
Case: 22-30442       Document: 00516988587              Page: 19      Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                         No. 22-30442

   substantial evidence that Robinson shot at Anderson’s car, it cannot be
   reasonably said that those statements “had a substantial . . . effect” on the
   jury’s view of Robinson’s guilt of the crime charged, i.e., possession of the
   gun. See Lowery, 135 F.3d at 959 (citation omitted). There is no “reasonable
   possibility that [any] improperly admitted evidence” in the body-camera
   footage “contributed to the conviction.” See El-Mezain, 664 F.3d at 526
   (citation omitted).
           Therefore, if there was any error in the admission of the footage, it
   was harmless.
                                              B.
           Robinson also argues that the district court erred in admitting audio of
   Robinson’s and Anderson’s phone calls from jail. Robinson first objects to
   the admission of Anderson’s statements to Robinson on the March calls that
   he “shouldn’t [have done] that,” and that he “f**ked everybody up.” He
   adds in a parenthetical, but says nothing further about, Anderson’s statement
   to Robinson that she “hopes [he] learns [his] f**king lesson for real.” This
   argument fails because, even if the statements were for some reason
   inadmissible, 6 they are cumulative with Anderson’s other, repeated
   accusations of Robinson, evidence of which was properly admitted via the 911
   call, the text messages, and the body-cam footage of her 801(d)(1)(C) prior
   identifications. See El-Mezain, 664 F.3d at 526; United States v. Hall, 500
   F.3d 439, 444 (5th Cir. 2007).

           _____________________
           6
             Only one of these statements appears to qualify as hearsay: Anderson’s statement
   that Robinson shouldn’t have “[done] that” seems to have been offered for the truth of the
   fact that Robinson did “that,” i.e., the shooting. The other statements do not appear to
   have been offered for their truth.

                                              19
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 20    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

          Robinson also objects to certain statements made on the September
   phone calls. Robinson argues that the district court erred in admitting
   Anderson’s statements about what the Jefferson Parish District Attorney’s
   Office told her. He contends that Anderson’s statements that the authorities
   “already know everything,” “already know what happened in Orleans
   Parish,” and the like, were inadmissible hearsayHe further contends that the
   statements were prejudicial because they implied that the case was “open-
   and-shut.”
          The Government argues, and Robinson does not dispute, that
   Robinson’s statements on the phone calls are admissible non-hearsay as
   statements of a party-opponent. This is correct. See Fed. R. Evid.
   801(d)(2)(A) (providing that a statement is not hearsay if it is “offered
   against an opposing party and . . . was made by the party in an individual . . .
   capacity”).
          The Government further argues that Anderson’s statements on the
   calls are admissible to provide context for what Robinson was saying. We
   agree that when a defendant’s recorded statements are admissible as a party-
   opponent admission under Rule 801(d)(2)(A), an interlocutor’s statements,
   “even if considered hearsay,” are “admissible to put [the defendant’s]
   statements into context.” United States v. Dixon, 132 F.3d 192, 199 (5th Cir.
   1997); see also United States v. Jones, 873 F.3d 482, 496 (5th Cir. 2017) (“[The
   defendant’s] statements during these calls were admissions of a party
   opponent under Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A), and the other call
   participants’ statements were admissible to provide context.”).
          The phone-call transcripts reveal that all of Anderson’s comments
   about Jefferson Parish gave context to Robinson’s questioning and fixation
   on what Anderson told authorities about Orleans Parish, as well as his
   repeated urgings that she should not have told them that he was the culprit.

                                         20
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587           Page: 21   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

   However, the case law that sanctions this practice does not permit the
   interlocutor’s statements to be admitted for their truth. See United States v.
   Gutierrez-Chavez, 842 F.2d 77, 81 (5th Cir. 1988).
          Neither Robinson nor the Government points to a limiting
   instruction, requested or given, restricting use by the jury of Anderson’s
   comments during the jail calls. And, on appeal, Robinson does not argue the
   district court committed reversible error by failing to provide a limiting
   instruction that her audio call statements could only be relied upon for
   context, but instead that Anderson’s comments are inadmissible hearsay. In
   that posture, we assume that the jury improperly may have used Anderson’s
   side of the conversation for the truth of what Jefferson Parish “knew” and
   what evidence they had of Robinson’s guilt, but we hold that any such error
   is harmless. Anderson specifically said that authorities had her text messages
   to Robinson and her prior accusations of Robinson, including on the 911 call.
   The 911 call, the text messages, and Anderson’s other prior accusations of
   Robinson were all properly admitted at trial, meaning that Anderson’s
   statements on the call with Robinson did not “bolster” the Government’s
   case against Robinson to any perceptible degree. Anderson’s statements,
   even if admitted for their truth, are therefore cumulative with the admissible
   evidence, rendering any error harmless. See El-Mezain, 664 F.3d at 526; Hall,
   500 F.3d at 444.
          For these reasons, we find no error in the district court’s admission of
   the jail-call audio and transcripts.
                                          C.
          Robinson also argues that the district court reversibly erred in failing
   to give the jury instruction he requested on the limited use of prior
   inconsistent statements. “A refusal to give a requested instruction is
   reversible error only if the proposed instruction was (1) substantively correct,

                                          21
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587               Page: 22   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                        No. 22-30442

   (2) not substantively covered in the jury charge, and (3) concerned an
   important issue in the trial, such that failure to give the requested instruction
   seriously impaired the presentation of a defense.” United States v. Jones, 132
   F.3d 232, 242 (5th Cir. 1998).
          Robinson’s argument fails on the third prong. Robinson does not
   specify the trial statements he contends should have been subject to the
   requested instruction—that is, evidence that was admitted only for
   impeachment by prior inconsistency. As Robinson elsewhere acknowledges,
   Anderson’s initial statements identifying Robinson were properly admitted
   as substantive evidence under Rule 801(d)(1)(C), which classifies prior
   identifications by the declarant as non-hearsay. In addition, the 911 call was
   fully admissible for its truth as a present-sense impression. Because none of
   Anderson’s prior statements identified for us was admitted as a prior
   inconsistent statement for impeachment only, the requested instruction was
   not only unnecessary, but indeed would have been—as the district court
   observed—“misleading.”
          Accordingly, the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining
   Robinson’s request to give a jury instruction on the limited use of prior
   inconsistent statements.
                                    *        *         *
          For these reasons, Robinson has not shown that the district court
   abused its discretion as to its admission of evidence or its jury instructions.
                                            IV.
          Robinson also argues that the prosecution made improper remarks in
   its opening and closing arguments, warranting a new trial. To prevail on this
   claim, he must make two showings: (1) that the prosecutor made an improper
   remark and (2) prejudice from the remark. United States v. Beaulieu, 973 F.3d

                                            22
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587            Page: 23     Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                      No. 22-30442

   354, 360 (5th Cir. 2020). Robinson concedes that he did not object to these
   remarks in the trial court, meaning that this court reviews only for plain error.
   To establish plain error, Robinson must show an error that was clear and
   obvious and that the error affected his substantial rights. Puckett v. United
   States, 556 U.S. 129, 135 (2009). If he makes such a showing, this court has
   the discretion to correct the error if it seriously affects the “fairness, integrity
   or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” Id. (citations omitted).
          Robinson’s objections to the arguments fall into two general
   categories. First, he argues that the Government appealed to juror passions
   and the need to protect the community from future harm. Robinson
   specifically argues that the Government should not have tasked the jury with
   protecting “the most vulnerable people in our society” from “the most
   dangerous.” He further takes issue with the Government’s statement that
   dropping charges—as Robinson urged Anderson to request—“would allow
   a lie to stand, and you’re not allowed to let a lie stand, not when her little
   boy’s life is in jeopardy.” He contends that the Government improperly told
   the jury that “truth” and “justice” required pursuing the charges.
          The Government did not act improperly in this regard. As to
   Robinson’s dangerousness and the victims’ vulnerability, these were
   permissible characterizations of the trial evidence, which showed that
   Robinson shot at Anderson’s car while her nine-year-old son was inside, and
   then encouraged her to recant her statement to authorities. That Robinson
   “disliked . . . the inferential gloss that the Government chose to put on th[e]
   facts[] cannot be a ground for reversal, in light of attorneys’ ‘wide latitude’
   in crafting their closing arguments.” United States v. Valas, 822 F.3d 228,
   244-45 (5th Cir. 2016) (citation omitted).
          As to “truth,” “justice,” and the juror’s role on behalf of the
   community, this court has explained that “unless calculated to inflame, an

                                           23
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 24    Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   appeal to the jury to act as the conscience of the community is not
   impermissible.” United States v. Brown, 887 F.2d 537, 542 (5th Cir. 1989)
   (cleaned up) (citation omitted). Read in context, the Government’s remarks
   cannot be described as “calculated to inflame.” See id. Indeed, the
   Government’s remarks in this case are more innocuous than other
   prosecutor statements that this court has held to be permissible. For
   example, in United States v. Brown, the prosecutor said—in a drug trial— that
   “drugs are a terrible thing and they are ruining the society,” and “it’s up to
   you to do something about it and that is returning a verdict of guilty on these
   charges.” Id. This court held that even these statements “did not rise to the
   level of an improper law and order appeal.” Id. The argument here was
   milder than that. Robinson has failed to show error in the Government’s
   purportedly inflammatory remarks.
          Second, Robinson argues that the Government referred to facts not in
   evidence. But the Government is permitted to comment on inferences drawn
   from the evidence presented at trial, United States v. Mendoza, 522 F.3d 482,
   491 (5th Cir. 2008), and at least two of the three statements identified by
   Robinson are “reasonable inferences or conclusions that can be drawn from
   th[e] evidence.” Id.
          Robinson first argues that the Government detailed the phone call
   between Anderson and Robinson on the night of the shooting as captured on
   the body-camera video, even though no evidence revealed Robinson’s side of
   the conversation. Robinson is presumably referring to the Government’s
   statement in closing that “those phone calls is where the obstruction starts.
   ‘Don’t call the police. I’ll kill your parents.’ ‘Oh, yeah, you’re going to kill
   my parents? I’m going to kill your kids.’” The latter statement was in
   evidence, but the first statement (“Don’t call the police. I’ll kill your
   parents”) is the Government’s imagining of what Robinson said to Anderson
   on the phone and was not in evidence. Nonetheless, it is a fair inference that

                                         24
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587            Page: 25   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

   Robinson said something to that effect. Anderson said on the phone: “You
   know what? You can kill, you can shoot whoever you want to shoot, son, your
   . . . children gonna die.” She continues, “I don’t give a f**k, like I told you,
   I’m getting money [if] you kill my mama or my dad—kill them.” The
   Government’s inferential gloss—that Robinson threatened to kill
   Anderson’s parents—was permissible based on this evidence.
          Robinson further objects to the Government’s speculation about both
   the meaning and intent behind his statements on the jail phone call
   recordings. Specifically, Robinson argues that the Government improperly
   asserted that Anderson did not want Robinson to know she called the police,
   even though the evidence showed he knew. The phone calls were fully
   available to the jury, so if the Government’s characterization was belied by
   the evidence, the jury could easily reject it.
          Finally, Robinson contends that the Government improperly implied
   that Anderson suffered from a history of abuse unknown to the jury.
   Robinson takes issue with the Government’s statement in opening that
   Anderson “is a vulnerable person who has been through things in life that
   most people wouldn’t be able to comprehend, much less live through and
   keep surviving.” This reference to broader difficulties in Anderson’s life was
   improper. Except for the shooting at issue in this case, the Government did
   not present any evidence of the purportedly incomprehensible things—
   plural—that Anderson had lived through. The jury was, through this
   comment, invited to speculate on some unknown horrors of Anderson’s life.
   Nevertheless, even assuming this remark was improper, it—like all the
   challenged remarks—did not prejudice Robinson.
          Robinson failed to demonstrate prejudice from the Government’s
   arguments, much less an error warranting reversal under plain-error review.
   The “determinative question is whether the prosecutor’s remarks cast

                                          25
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587            Page: 26   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                     No. 22-30442

   serious doubt on the correctness of the jury’s verdict.” Beaulieu, 973 F.3d at
   361 (quoting Mendoza, 522 F.3d at 492). “In answering that question, we may
   consider ‘(1) the magnitude of the prejudicial effect of the statements, (2) the
   efficacy of any cautionary instructions, and (3) the strength of the evidence
   of defendant’s guilt.’” Id. (quoting Mendoza, 522 F.3d at 492).
          Here, all three factors compel the conclusion the remarks did not cast
   serious doubt on the correctness of the jury’s verdict. First, the remarks likely
   had little prejudicial effect. As explained, the Government refrained from
   inflaming juror passions and drew permissible inferences from the trial
   evidence. Second, the district court gave explicit instructions that “the
   questions, statements, objections, and arguments made by the lawyers are
   not evidence,” and that “[t]he function of the lawyer is to point out those
   things that they feel are most significant and are helpful most to their side of
   the case.” The court continued: “In the final analysis, however, members of
   the jury, it is your own recollection and interpretation of the evidence that
   controls in the case. What the lawyers say is not binding upon you.” Jurors
   are presumed to follow instructions. United States v. Skelton, 514 F.3d 433,
   446 (5th Cir. 2008). Finally, as described above, the evidence of Robinson’s
   guilt as to both counts was strong. The likelihood that any improper remarks
   by the Government influenced the jury’s guilty verdicts is very low.
          Accordingly, Robinson is not entitled to a new trial based on the
   Government’s remarks.
                                          V.
          Finally, Robinson argues that his sentence should be vacated and
   remanded for resentencing because the district court misapprehended its
   authority to order that Robinson’s sentence run concurrently with a
   previously imposed federal sentence—a revocation sentence issued by Judge
   Milazzo. Robinson concedes that this issue is subject to plain-error review for

                                          26
Case: 22-30442     Document: 00516988587           Page: 27   Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   trial counsel’s failure to object. The Government agrees, acquiescing to a
   vacatur of Robinson’s sentence and a limited remand.
           Judge Fallon initially announced that Robinson’s sentence would run
   concurrently with the sentence imposed upon his revocation of supervised
   release. But after imposition of the sentence, the Government interjected to
   point out that Judge Milazzo, who had imposed the revocation sentence, had
   ordered the sentences to run consecutively. As a result of this tangled
   presentation, the district court retracted its order, stated that Judge Milazzo
   made the federal sentences consecutive, and ultimately omitted any
   reference to Judge Milazzo’s sentence in the written judgment and instead
   ordered that the sentence in this case run concurrently only with the state
   case.
           As the Government agrees, Judge Milazzo did not have authority to
   order that her sentence run consecutively to the sentence imposed in this
   case. By statute, “if a term of imprisonment is imposed on a defendant who
   is already subject to an undischarged term of imprisonment, the terms may
   run concurrently or consecutively.” 18 U.S.C. § 3584(a). This court has held
   that “§ 3854 does not provide a district court authority to order that its
   sentence run consecutively to an anticipated but not-yet-imposed federal
   sentence,” and moreover that, “as a general principle, one district court has
   no authority to instruct another district court how, for a different offense in
   a different case, it must confect its sentence.” United States v. Quintana-
   Gomez, 521 F.3d 495, 498 (5th Cir. 2008).
           Here, we must correct the district court’s conclusion that it was
   bound by Judge Milazzo’s order that the two federal sentences run
   consecutively. Furthermore, the error affects Robinson’s substantial rights.
   The result of this misapprehension was a retraction of the district court’s
   initial proclamation that the sentence would run concurrently with the other

                                         27
Case: 22-30442      Document: 00516988587          Page: 28     Date Filed: 12/04/2023

                                    No. 22-30442

   federal sentence. Robinson was sentenced to twenty-seven extra months of
   federal prison time by virtue of the mistake.
            We vacate Robinson’s term of imprisonment and remand for the
   limited purpose of clarifying whether Robinson’s prison sentence should run
   consecutively or concurrently with the revocation sentence.
                                           VI.
            The Government presented sufficient evidence upon which a rational
   jury could conclude that Robinson was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of
   violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) and 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2). Moreover,
   Robinson is not entitled to a new trial based on any evidentiary errors, the
   failure to give an impeachment instruction, or any improper remarks by the
   prosecutor. But, as the parties agree, vacatur and remand of Robinson’s
   prison     sentence   is   warranted     considering   the    district   court’s
   misapprehension of its sentencing authority.
            We AFFIRM Robinson’s convictions and VACATE his term of
   imprisonment and REMAND for a narrow resentencing limited to the sole
   issue of whether Robinson’s prison sentence in this case shall run
   concurrently or consecutively with his other federal sentence imposed upon
   revocation of his supervised release.

                                           28