Paul W. Grimm, United States District Judge.
Defendant Caleb Andrew Bailey was charged with multiple counts including illegal possession of machine guns, receipt and possession of unregistered short-barrel rifles, receipt and possession of unregistered destructive devices, production and attempted production of child pornography, possession of child pornography, and witness tampering. Revised Second Superseding Indictment, ECF No. 88-2. Prior to trial, the Government filed a motion in limine, in which it sought a pretrial ruling precluding Bailey from "eliciting on cross-examination of law enforcement agents certain potentially exculpatory statements Bailey made during his [recorded] interviews with law enforcement on May 5, 2016." Gov. Mot. 1, ECF No. 62. In a nutshell, the Government argued that anything Bailey told the agents during his recorded interview
On May 12, 2017, I held a telephonic hearing with counsel during which I advised that without knowing the specific portions of Bailey's statements that the Government intended to introduce, I was not able to issue a definitive pretrial ruling on the record pursuant to Fed. R. Evid. 103(b), but I nonetheless gave them guidance regarding the approach I would take at trial. I also told them that I planned to issue a written opinion to memorialize my thinking because the issues raised by the Government are recurring in nature, and there is a scarcity of helpful decisional authority in this circuit to guide courts and counsel in resolving the sometimes complicated issues the Government's Motion raises. This Memorandum Opinion provides that guidance.
Whether the defendant in a criminal trial may compel the Government to introduce his exculpatory statements at the same time that it introduces his inculpatory ones implicates a number of evidentiary rules, including Rules 102 (which instructs judges to interpret the rules of evidence in order to insure fairness, ascertain the truth, and to secure a just determination), 106 (the so-called "rule of completeness"), 401 (relevance), 403 (probative value versus danger of unfair prejudice or confusion); 611(a) (court control over the examination of witnesses and presentation of evidence); and 802 (the rule against admissibility of hearsay, and its exceptions). But where the inculpatory statements given by the defendant to the government were not written or recorded, common-law principles of evidence also apply. As will be seen, although there is no shortage of case law and treatise analysis on this subject, the law is far from settled, and courts and commentators have reached starkly different results by applying a variety of approaches, resulting in an evidentiary landscape that is unclear.
It is not my aim in this opinion to untangle the many nuances of the Gordian knot raised by the Government's Motion, but rather to identify the key elements that a court should examine to make an appropriate ruling, consistent with the Rules of Evidence and the still-viable common law.
The relationship between Rule 106 and the common-law doctrine of completeness has been explained by one respected evidence treatise this way:
21A Charles Alan Wright & Kenneth W. Graham, Jr., Federal Practice and Procedure: Evidence § 5072 (2d ed. 2005) (footnotes omitted).
The back-and-forth presentation of evidence in a criminal case usually works fairly smoothly, but problems arise when one party's artful phrasing of a question calls for a response that is technically accurate, but incomplete, altering the meaning of the original statement. A classic example is when the prosecutor elicits from a law-enforcement witness that, when the defendant was interviewed in connection with a homicide investigation, he admitted that he owned the gun used to commit the murder but omits that the defendant also said that he sold the gun three months before the shooting. Quoting the defendant out of context presents a misleading picture for the jury. In such circumstances, if the defendant is required to wait until his case in chief, or even until cross examination, to put his statement to the government witness in its proper context, it might be too late to counteract the impression left with the jury that the defendant, having admitted to owing the murder weapon, was the one who shot the victim.
"The common law responded to these abuses of the adversary system by a limited restriction on party control of the cases that ... [is called] `the completeness doctrine.'" 21A Wright & Graham, supra, § 5072. Wigmore's description of the rule of completeness was that "[i]n evidencing the tenor of an utterance material or relevant, made in words, whether written or oral in original or in copy, the whole of the utterance on a single topic or transaction must be taken together." Id. (quoting John Henry Wigmore, Code of Evidence 371 (3d ed. 1941)). The influential Field Code codified the common law rule of completeness in this manner:
Id. (quoting N.Y. Commissioners on Practice and Pleading, Code of Civil Procedure § 1687, at 704-05 (1850)).
A careful reader will notice straightaway that in its common-law and early-code-law expression, the doctrine of completeness encompassed conversations and other spoken utterances (as well as acts) that had not been memorialized in writing or recorded. Another important feature of the common-law doctrine of completeness was that it allowed the introduction of otherwise inadmissible evidence to give proper context to the incomplete and misleading evidence offered by the original proponent. Id. § 5072 ("Thus, the opponent can introduce what would otherwise be hearsay to complete a truncated statement offered by the proponent." (citing Crawford v. United States, 212 U.S. 183, 201, 29 S.Ct. 260, 53 S.Ct. 465 (1909))). Less clear was whether the party seeking to complete the record regarding what was said in a writing
The common-law doctrine of completeness has been partially codified by Fed. R. Evid. 106. Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey, 488 U.S. 153, 171-72, 109 S.Ct. 439, 102 L.Ed.2d 445 (1988) ("The Federal Rules of Evidence have partially codified the doctrine of completeness in Rule 106."); United States v. Wilkerson, 84 F.3d 692, 696 (4th Cir. 1996) ("The common-law doctrine of completeness has been partially codified in Rule 106 of the Federal Rules of Evidence."). Rule 106 states:
Fed. R. Evid. 106 (emphasis added). The italicized words highlight several important features of Rule 106. First, it applies only to writings and recorded statements, not to conversations or other oral statements that have not been memorialized in some written or recorded form (hence, Rule 106 only partially incorporates the common law rule). Second, when the Rule applies, it permits the party against whom the incomplete information has been introduced to require the introduction of completing information at the same time (the so called "acceleration clause"). Third, the rule only requires the introduction of the completing information when fairness requires that it be considered at the same time as the incomplete information.
The Advisory Committee Note to Rule 106 states:
Fed. R. Evid. 106 advisory committee's note to 1972 proposed rules (citation omitted). Conspicuously absent from the Rule or the Advisory Note is any indication of whether completing information can be admitted under Rule 106 even if otherwise inadmissible (for example, because it is hearsay).
In the absence of guidance from the Rule or the Committee, courts and commentators have been left to answer these questions on their own, with conflicting results. For example, some courts have held that evidence that would be inadmissible if offered independently cannot be used for completeness purposes under Rule 106. See, e.g., United States v. Hassan, 742 F.3d 104, 134-35 (4th Cir. 2014) (holding that district court did not abuse its discretion by excluding defendant's exculpatory statements under Rule 106 because they were inadmissible hearsay); United States v. Mitchell, 502 F.3d 931, 965 n.9 (9th Cir. 2007) ("Rule 106 applies only to written and recorded statements, not unrecorded oral confessions, and Rule 106 does not render admissible otherwise inadmissible hearsay."); United States v. Guevara, 277 F.3d 111, 127 (2d Cir. 2001) ("Rule 106 does not `render admissible evidence that is otherwise inadmissible.'" (quoting United States v. Terry, 702 F.2d 299, 315 (2d Cir. 1983))), overruled on other grounds as recognized in United States v. Doe, 297 F.3d 76, 90 n.16 (2d Cir. 2002); United States v. Ortega, 203 F.3d 675, 682-83 (9th Cir. 2000) (holding that Rule 106 would not allow defendant's exculpatory statements because they were inadmissible hearsay); United States Football League v. Nat'l Football League, 842 F.2d 1335, 1375-76 (2d Cir. 1988) ("The doctrine of completeness does not compel admission of otherwise inadmissible hearsay evidence." (citation omitted)); United States v. Wilkerson, 84 F.3d 692, 696 (4th Cir. 1996) (holding that the government was entitled to introduce the defendant's inculpatory statements as admissions under Rule 801(d)(2)(A), but that the defendant could not introduce exculpatory portions under Rule 106 because they would be inadmissible hearsay).
What is concerning about many of the cases that have restricted Rule 106 to evidence that is independently admissible is the ease with which they have done so without any real consideration of the common-law history of the doctrine of completeness (which did not limit completing evidence to that which was independently admissible), its purpose to guard against abuses of the adversary system, or the harm that can result from letting one party (for example, the government in a criminal case) have an unfair advantage over another by creating a misleading impression in the minds of the jury that is, as a practical matter, uncorrectable. This hardly lives up to the aspirations of Rule 102 that the rules of evidence should be construed to the "end of ascertaining the truth and securing a just determination."
But not all courts have been so quick to restrict Rule 106 to independently admissible evidence, even at the expense of fairness. In United States v. Sutton, 801 F.2d 1346 (D.C. Cir. 1986), the court rejected the notion that only admissible evidence could be used to complete the record under Rule 106. Its analysis is worth quoting at length:
Id. at 1368-69 (footnotes omitted); see also United States v. Harvey, 653 F.3d 388, 394-95 (6th Cir. 2011) (affirming decision of district court to admit under the rule of completeness recordings that the court previously had ruled inadmissible on their own); United States v. Bucci, 525 F.3d 116, 133 (1st Cir. 2008) ("[O]ur case law unambiguously establishes that the rule of completeness may be invoked to facilitate the introduction of otherwise inadmissible evidence."); United States v. Gravely, 840 F.2d 1156, 1163 (4th Cir. 1988) ("The cross-designated portions, while perhaps not admissible standing alone, are admissible as a remainder of a recorded statement. Fed. R. Evid. 106 allows an adverse party to introduce any other part of a writing or recorded statement which ought in fairness be considered contemporaneously. The rule simply speaks the obvious notion that parties should not be able to lift selected portions out of context."); United States v. LeFevour, 798 F.2d 977, 980-82 (7th Cir. 1986) ("If otherwise inadmissible evidence is necessary to correct a misleading impression, then either it is admissible for this limited purpose by force of Rule 106 ... or, if it is inadmissible... the misleading evidence must be excluded too."); United States v. Green, 694 F.Supp. 107, 110 (E.D. Pa. 1988) (noting with approval the D.C. Circuit's holding that Rule 106 permits introduction of evidence that is otherwise inadmissible), aff'd, 875 F.2d 312 (3d Cir. 1989).
Perhaps courts' willingness to restrict the use of Rule 106 to admissible evidence reflects the same concern expressed by the Department of Justice when it objected to the revision of the rule in 2002 to permit
To begin with, Rule 106 should never come into play unless misleading evidence has been introduced that requires clarification or explanation — otherwise there is no unfairness that needs correction. Wilkerson, 84 F.3d at 696 ("Thus, the rule of completeness ... would not appl[y] ... where there was no partially introduced conversation that needed clarification or explanation."). And, judges need not take at face value exaggerated claims that a partially introduced statement requires completion unless it can be shown with some precision just how the incomplete evidence is taken out of context. The Seventh Circuit has identified a four-part test to determine when this has happened:
United States v. Velasco, 953 F.2d 1467, 1474-75 (7th Cir. 1992) (citations omitted).
A respected evidence treatise also has identified a series of factors that help courts identify when the fairness requirement of Rule 106 has been met. They include: (1) Is the proffered evidence taken out of context (does what is missing change the meaning of what was introduced)? (2) Does the lack of context make the evidence misleading (does the admitted evidence "invite" or "permit" a false premise)? (3) Can the misleading impression be dispelled by other means (for example, by instructing the jury not to draw the misleading inference, or by permitting introduction of completing evidence at a later time, such as during cross examination or the defense case, so as not to interrupt the presentation of the prosecution's case)? (4) How much evidence is needed to dispel misleading effects (lawyers should be precise in identifying the information actually needed to correct the misleading impression created by the incomplete evidence, and judges should be skeptical about allowing expansive introduction
Consideration of these factors should be sufficient for any careful judge to determine whether (and if so, how much) completeness is required by Rule 106, and eliminate much of the concern expressed by those who resist the idea of permitting inadmissible evidence to complete the record when fairness legitimately requires it. Unfortunately, to date few cases (especially those that hold that inadmissible information may not be used for completion purposes) have taken the opportunity to do so.
A final vexing issue raised (but not answered) by Rule 106 and the enigmatic language of the Advisory Committee Note is what courts should do with regard to oral statements or conversations that have not been memorialized by a writing or recording — particularly when the unwritten or unrecorded statement is the defendant's confession to a law-enforcement officer. On its face, Rule 106 is limited to "writings" and "recorded statements," and the Advisory Committee Note states that for (unnamed) "practical reasons" the rule does not apply to conversations. Fed. R. Civ. P. 106 & advisory committee's note to 1972 proposed rules. Many courts have taken this to mean that in a criminal case, the prosecution may elicit a law-enforcement officer's testimony about inculpatory statements made by the defendant because they are admissible under Rule 801(d)(2)(A) as admissions. But they have also held that, during cross examination of the officer, the defendant may not elicit non-inculpatory statements the defendant made during the same interview because (a) Rule 106 does not apply to oral statements and (b) even if it did, the defendant's exculpatory statements (even if necessary to dispel the misleading, out-of-context impression left by the officer's direct examination) are inadmissible hearsay. See, e.g., Ortega, 203 F.3d at 682-83 ("Even if the rule of completeness did apply, exclusion of Ortega's exculpatory statements was proper because these statements would still have constituted inadmissible hearsay."); Wilkerson, 84 F.3d at 696 (holding that Rule 106 did not apply to unrecorded conversation between
While the "practical reasons" why oral conversations are excluded from Rule 106 undoubtedly include the need to avoid "he said, she said" disputes about the content of an unrecorded or unwritten statement, those concerns do not justify creating an environment in which the prosecution may be able to introduce the defendant's out-of-context inculpatory oral statements, but where the defendant is powerless to do anything at that time because Rule 106 does not reach oral statements. And if there is legitimate concern about the difficulty in establishing what was said in oral conversations, the factors described above provide a judge with the analytical tools to determine whether to allow the evidence during the proponent's case or thereafter during cross examination or during the adversary's case in chief on a case by case basis. A blanket rule of prohibition is unwarranted, and invites abuse. Moreover, if the content of some oral statements are disputed and difficult to prove, others are not — because they have been summarized (for example, in a FBI agent's form 302 summary of the defendant's confession), or because they were witnessed by enough people to assure that what was actually said can be established with sufficient certainty.
But there is an even more fundamental reason why court decisions that hold that Rule 106 does not apply to oral statements or conversations should not prevent a party from completing the record (at the time the misleading evidence is introduced or thereafter during cross examination or the opposing party's own case) to prevent abuse of the adversary system when a proponent introduces a misleadingly incomplete part of a conversation or oral confession. The reason is that, as the Supreme Court itself appears to have recognized, Rule 106 only partially codifies the common law doctrine of completeness, and for situations beyond the reach of Rule 106, the common law still applies.
Further, to the extent that the common-law doctrine of completeness (which allowed even inadmissible evidence to be introduced to dispel misleading evidence of written, recorded and oral statements) applies to oral statements or conversations, commentators have recognized that, when necessary to avoid the prejudice created by introduction of misleading characterization of oral statements, inadmissible evidence
2 Michael H. Graham, Handbook of Federal Evidence § 106:2 (7th ed. 2012) (footnotes omitted); see also Broun, supra, § 56 ("It is sometimes stated that the additional material may be introduced only if it is otherwise admissible. However, as a categorical rule, that statement is unsound. In particular, the statement is sometimes inaccurate as applied to hearsay law. At least when the other passage of the writing or statement is so closely connected to the part the proponent contemplates introducing that it furnishes essential context for that party, the passage becomes admissible on a nonhearsay theory." (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted)); 1 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 1:43 (4th ed. 2013) ("Rule 106 does not say whether additional statements (or parts) may be admitted when necessary to provide context if they would otherwise be excludable under other rules, such as the hearsay doctrine.... It seems that hearsay objections should not block use of a related statement ... when it is needed to provide context for statements already admitted. Thus a statement should be admissible if it is needed to provide context under Rule 106 and to prevent misleading use of related statements even if the statement would otherwise be excludable hearsay...."); 1 Stephen A. Saltzburg et al., Federal Rules of Evidence Manual § 106.02[3] (11th ed. 2015) ("[Rule 106] does not on its face state that hearsay is admissible. This has led some courts to hold that Rule 106 operates solely as a timing device, affecting the order of proof — it does not make admissible what would otherwise be excluded. We believe these rulings are misguided and contrary to the completeness principle embodied in Rule 106. A party should not be able to admit an incomplete statement that gives an unfair impression, and then object on hearsay grounds to completing statements that would rectify the unfairness.").
Courts, too, have found the means to rectify abuses of the adversary system caused by incomplete or misleading renditions of oral statements by resorting to Fed. R. Evid. 611(a), which provides, in relevant part:
The evidence commentators agree. 1 Broun, supra, § 56, at 394 n.7 (observing that while Rule 106 only applies to writings and recordings, "[n]evertheless, the trial judge appears to have the same power to require the introduction of [the] remainder of oral conversations under Federal and Revised Uniform Rule of Evidence (1974) 611(a)"); 2 Graham, supra, § 106:2 ("Under unusual circumstances, the court may require the proponent to introduce contemporaneously other parts of oral conversation pursuant to the general authority of the court to control the mode and order of interrogating witnesses and presentation of evidence [Rule 611(a)]."); 1 Mueller & Kirkpatrick, supra, § 1:43 ("It seems that basic notions of relevancy embodied in Rule 401, coupled with the principle in Rule 403 that evidence can be excluded if it is misleading or overly prejudicial, both complemented by the power of trial judges acknowledged in Rule 611 to `exercise reasonable control' of the presentation of evidence in order to aid in `determining the truth,' provide ample basis to apply the completeness principle more broadly. Hence courts can indeed apply essentially the same principle to proof of oral statements, even if they were not recorded or written down, and in cases where they are recorded or written down but the proponent has chosen to prove them by other means, such as testimonial accounts."); Saltzburg et al., supra, § 106.02[2] ("While Rule 106 by its terms applies only to writings and recordings, the principle of completeness embodied in the rule has been applied to testimony about oral statements as well (such as a police officer's selective rendition of a defendant's oral statement). Whether this is mandated by Rule 106 or by Rule 611 is unimportant. The important
Finally, Fed. R. Evid. 403 should not be overlooked when considering the implications of the rule of completeness as it relates to writings, recordings, and oral statements. Rule 403 states:
Even in circuits (such as the Fourth Circuit) that seem to limit Rule 106 to written or recorded statements and that do not appear to allow the introduction of evidence under the rule of completeness to rectify the unfairness caused by the introduction of a misleadingly incomplete description of the content of a writing, recording, or oral statement unless it is independently admissible, Hassan, 742 F.3d at 134-35; Wilkerson, 84 F.3d at 696, a trial court is not powerless to address an abuse of the adversary system. If allowing a government witness to testify only to a defendant's inculpatory statements, without being subject to cross examination about the exculpatory portions of the same statement (because they are not independently admissible) would leave the jury with a misleading understanding of the defendant's statement to the extent that it would cause unfair prejudice, the court may give the government a choice: either allow cross examination to provide a complete picture of what the defendant said; or exclude the testimony of the incomplete portion of the statement.
Rule 403 should not be used in this manner, however, unless the testimony regarding the defendant's statement is unfairly incomplete, when measured by the factors discussed above. And, if a defendant seeks to introduce excluded portions of his statement (either during cross examination or in his own case) in order to complete the record, the same factors should be used by the court to ensure that only what is actually necessary to dispel the misleading impression is permitted.
So, what lessons may be drawn from this discussion? First, the rule of completeness, like its common-law predecessor, is more than just an obscure procedural rule governing the timing of the introduction of writings and recordings. It is tied to the very purpose of the adversary system, which allows the parties to strike blows that are hard but not unfair. The adversary system finds its most important application in the trial of a criminal case. The government has nearly unlimited resources to investigate and bring charges.
If a prosecutor introduces an incomplete version of the defendant's written or oral statement to the investigating officers by eliciting only the inculpatory portions, while leaving out exculpatory ones that, in fairness, would paint a more complete picture and dispel a misleading impression that the jury may have reached having heard only the incomplete portions, then the defendant is at a serious disadvantage. If he is unable to introduce the parts of his statement that the government omitted at the same time that the incomplete version is presented to the jury (or instead very shortly thereafter on cross examination, or even later during his own case) because the court rules that the omitted parts are inadmissible hearsay or (if the statement was an oral one) that Rule 106 is inapplicable to oral statements, then he has only two remaining options: (1) allow the misleading version to stand unchallenged; or (2) waive his rights against self-incrimination and testify — but only after the government has completed its case. This is a high price to pay to correct misleading information. If one accepts, as the language of the Rule requires, that Rule 106 may only be invoked in the first place to correct an unfair presentation of incomplete information, then construing Rule 106 the way that many courts have done countenances an abuse of the adversary system that the common-law rule of completeness was designed to prevent. That is why the better-reasoned cases have held that, where necessary to redress an unfairly incomplete rendition of a written, recorded or oral statement, evidence that would otherwise be inadmissible may be introduced.
Second, the goal of Rule 106 and the common-law rule of completeness is to level the playing field, not tilt it in favor of the defendant. For that reason, it should only come into play when it is clear that the incomplete version of a written, recorded or oral statement is unfairly misleading. And only information that is essential to dispel the misleading impression should be admitted. This is especially true if, as the better-reasoned cases have concluded, inadmissible evidence may be used for this purpose. For this reason, judges have an obligation to carefully examine both the assertedly misleading information and the proffered completing information to insure that the evidence that was introduced requires clarification or explanation, and the proffered evidence is essential to clarify or explain. Careful consideration of the factors that courts and commentators have developed will allow a judge to strike the right balance, and offset any concern about the use of inadmissible evidence where necessary to correct unfairly incomplete evidence. See supra, § II.A.2.
Third, there is little persuasive justification for not applying the same principles to oral statements that Rule 106 applies to written or recorded ones. A misleading oral statement is no less unfair that a written one. And the cases that have allowed the use of Rule 611(a) to achieve this result seem better reasoned than the ones that have not. See supra, § II.B.2. Similarly, it seems ill-advised to conclude, as some courts have done, that only admissible evidence
Finally, if a trial court is compelled by reason of the governing circuit authority to restrict Rule 106 to writings and recorded statements (and precluded from using Rule 611(a) to adopt the protections of Rule 106 for oral statements), or is prevented from admitting inadmissible evidence when necessary to dispel an unfairly misleading version of a written or oral statement introduced by the prosecutor, the court should carefully consider Rule 403. See supra, § II.B.3. If the incomplete version offered by the government would cause unfair prejudice to the defendant, or tend to mislead the jury, then the court — unable because of restrictions imposed by circuit authority to redress the prejudice — should prevent the government from introducing the unfairly misleading evidence to the jury.
The ultimate conclusions that I reach in light of the foregoing discussion are: