JOSE E. MARTINEZ, District Judge.
Defendants Guillermo Delgado and Gabriel Delgado want the Court to conclusively determine, before trial and before hearing testimony on the issue, that the United States will not be able to sufficiently authenticate recordings made by Nelson Salazar, an alleged co-conspirator who has pled guilty to participating in health care fraud. Accordingly, they have filed a motion [ECF No. 114] to exclude all of those recordings. United States District Judge Jose E. Martinez referred [ECF No. 119] that motion to me. The United States filed a response [ECF No. 117] and Defendants filed a reply [ECF No. 130].
For the reasons outlined below, the Undersigned
In effect, Defendants
In response, the United States makes an equally confident prognostication. It predicts an ability to establish at trial the authenticity of the recordings in question through Salazar's testimony. It cites case law for the rule that a witness with knowledge — i.e., someone who participated in the conversations — may authenticate the recordings so that they are admissible in evidence. See generally United States v. Lanzon, 639 F.3d 1293, 1301 (11th Cir. 2011) (no error in admitting transcripts of instant messages derived from online conversations copied and pasted into a Microsoft Word document, which was then saved to a floppy disc, where the conversations were printed in hard copy form as transcripts). See also United States v. Gadson, 763 F.3d 1189, 1203-04 (9th Cir. 2014) (affirming admissibility of phone calls made by prisoners from jail); United States v. Albert, 595 F.2d 283, 290 (5th Cir. 1979) (rejecting authenticity challenge to admissibility of tape).
Neither the Government nor the Defendants have cited testimony (from Salazar, or anyone else, for that matter) to support their positions. Instead, as noted above, they assert arguments based on their assumptions about Salazar's trial testimony.
But the Undersigned cannot
Who knows?
At this point, no one knows. All we have are hunches and hopeful forecasts. The motion is therefore premature.
Although the United States has not responded to the allegation that Salazar did not completely record all conversations, Defendants have not cited any authority to support the implicit argument that all recordings would always be inadmissible if portions were omitted.
Similarly, some of Defendants' prophetic arguments, even if true, might not mean that the recordings are inadmissible. For example, Defendants emphasize that Salazar was turned loose to record whomever he wanted, whenever he wanted, without adequate supervision or monitoring. And they focus on the alleged fact that Salazar retained the recordings for several days before turning them over. But they have not cited legal authority to support the notion that these circumstances compel an order excluding the evidence. It may be that the circumstances relate more to the weight of the evidence, rather than to the threshold issue of admissibility.
Moreover, Defendants have filed other motions which might affect the substantive outcome of this motion. For example, they have filed two motions to compel [ECF Nos. 112; 120] which seek, among other items, information about the circumstances under which these undercover recordings were made. The Undersigned has not yet ruled on those two motions (which Judge Martinez also referred to the Undersigned), but, in their reply, the Defendants implicitly recognize that their motion may be premature. In fact, their reply ends with this conclusion: "Accordingly, Defendants request that if their motions to compel are granted, the Court
It is, of course, entirely possible that the United States will produce additional discovery, either voluntarily or in response to an order compelling production, which might shed some light on whether the Government can meet its burden to sufficiently authenticate the tapes. See United States v. Brown, 587 F.3d 1082, 1093 (11thCir. 2009) (trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting into evidence a copy of an audio recording of a drug transaction authenticated by the law enforcement agent who heard the original conversation as it was being recorded). It is equally possible, and perhaps even more likely, that the admissibility ruling will, as is more typical, be made at trial, based on Salazar's testimony (and perhaps the testimony of others).
Given the absence of actual testimony and both sides' penchant for proffering predictions, the Undersigned cannot simply pick which side's forecast is correct and use that selection as the basis for a ruling granting or denying the motion. In the Undersigned's view, that would be tantamount to an impermissible version of judicial fortune-telling.
The Undersigned