Filed: Sep. 28, 2012
Latest Update: Mar. 26, 2017
Summary: 11-772-cr United States v. White 1 2 3 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 4 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 5 6 August Term, 2011 7 8 (Argued: February 17, 2012 Decided: August 30, 2012 Amended September 28, 2012) 9 10 Docket No. 11-772-cr 11 12 13 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 14 15 Appellee, 16 17 – v. – 18 19 LANCE WHITE, 20 21 Defendant-Appellant. 22 23 24 Before: JACOBS, Chief Judge, CALABRESI and POOLER, Circuit Judges. 25 26 Lance White appeals from his conviction for possession of a weapon by a person 27
Summary: 11-772-cr United States v. White 1 2 3 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 4 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 5 6 August Term, 2011 7 8 (Argued: February 17, 2012 Decided: August 30, 2012 Amended September 28, 2012) 9 10 Docket No. 11-772-cr 11 12 13 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 14 15 Appellee, 16 17 – v. – 18 19 LANCE WHITE, 20 21 Defendant-Appellant. 22 23 24 Before: JACOBS, Chief Judge, CALABRESI and POOLER, Circuit Judges. 25 26 Lance White appeals from his conviction for possession of a weapon by a person 27 ..
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11-772-cr
United States v. White
1
2
3 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
4 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
5
6 August Term, 2011
7
8 (Argued: February 17, 2012 Decided: August 30, 2012 Amended September 28, 2012)
9
10 Docket No. 11-772-cr
11
12
13 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
14
15 Appellee,
16
17 – v. –
18
19 LANCE WHITE,
20
21 Defendant-Appellant.
22
23
24 Before: JACOBS, Chief Judge, CALABRESI and POOLER, Circuit Judges.
25
26 Lance White appeals from his conviction for possession of a weapon by a person
27 previously convicted of a felony. He argues, inter alia, that the district court (Garaufis, J.)
28 improperly (a) excluded evidence that the Government initially charged the other occupants
29 of the vehicle in which he was traveling with possession of the firearm that the Government
30 claimed was found on his person; and (b) improperly limited cross-examination of a
31 Government witness at trial by barring White’s use of a prior adverse credibility finding in a
32 similar but unrelated case. We conclude that the district court’s evidentiary rulings were
33 erroneous and that the errors were not harmless. We therefore VACATE the judgment of
34 conviction and REMAND the case to the district court for a new trial.
35 Chief Judge JACOBS dissents in a separate opinion.
36 DAVID A. LEWIS, Federal Defenders of New York,
37 New York, N.Y., for Defendant-Appellant.
38
39 ALI KAZEMI, Assistant United States Attorney (Emily
40 Berger, Assistant United States Attorney, on the brief), for
1
1 Loretta E. Lynch, United States Attorney for the Eastern
2 District of New York, Brooklyn, N.Y., for Appellee.
3
4
5
6 CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:
7 Defendant-Appellant Lance White was convicted, after a jury trial, of being a felon
8 in possession of a firearm. He was sentenced to 235 months’ imprisonment and five years’
9 supervised release. The testimony at trial established that White was traveling in a minivan
10 with four women on the day of his arrest. During a stop and frisk, one firearm was allegedly
11 recovered from White’s pocket and two firearms were recovered from the purse of one of
12 the other occupants of the vehicle. The defense’s strategy at trial was to seek to demonstrate
13 that the first of these firearms was found in the vehicle and not on White’s person.
14 At trial, the district court excluded two crucial pieces of evidence. First, the court
15 excluded evidence that the four women traveling in the same minivan as White were
16 initially charged with possession of the gun allegedly found on White’s person. The court,
17 relying on case law established outside our circuit, concluded that the Government’s
18 charging decisions are never proper subjects for cross-examination or argument. We
19 disagree and reject such a categorical bar on the admissibility of charging decisions. We
20 hold that district courts may not presumptively exclude evidence of the Government’s
21 charging decisions without an inquiry into its relevance and probative value to the
22 respective case. Here, we conclude that the evidence was not only relevant to White’s
23 defense, but also highly probative as to the credibility of testimony provided by the officers
24 involved.
25 The court also excluded evidence of a prior judicial finding that discredited the
26 testimony of a Government witness. When it did this, the court did not have the benefit of
2
1 our decision in United States v. Cedeño,
644 F.3d 79, 82-83, (2d Cir.), cert. denied,
132 S. Ct.
2 325 (2011), which set out seven non-exhaustive factors for courts to consider in determining
3 the probity and relevance of a prior incident in which a court has criticized a witness’s
4 testimony as unworthy of belief. In the instant case, these factors weigh in favor of
5 admissibility. We disagree with the district court’s conclusion that the prior adverse
6 credibility finding was not probative of the witness’s veracity. Evidence that might lead a
7 jury to conclude that the officer was willing to lie in a similar case in order to secure a
8 criminal conviction is both relevant and probative. This is particularly so because, in the
9 case before us, White’s defense centered on proving that the same detective and other
10 officers lied about finding a weapon on his person.
11 Finally, neither of these errors was harmless. The excluded evidence spoke directly to
12 a critical element of the Government’s case and its exclusion prevented White from
13 presenting a complete defense. Accordingly, the judgment of conviction of the district court
14 is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
15 I. BACKGROUND
16 On August 6, 2008, acting on information provided by a confidential informant, a
17 joint task force of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) and the New York City
18 Police Department (“NYPD”) stopped a maroon minivan in Queens, New York. The
19 minivan was occupied by Lance White and four women. A search of the vehicle resulted in
20 the recovery of three firearms, one of which was allegedly found in White’s right front
21 pocket. White was indicted for possession of a firearm by a person previously convicted of a
22 felony, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
23
3
1 A. Pretrial Motions
2 1. Other Occupants
3 Prior to trial, the Government moved to bar evidence relating to the arrests, charging
4 decisions, and subsequent case histories of the four women arrested with White. At the time
5 of White’s arrest, law enforcement officials recovered three firearmsone allegedly from
6 White’s pocket, and two from a purse belonging to one of the other occupants of the
7 vehicle, Shatisha Jennings. All five individuals were arrested and charged on the same day
8 in state court with possession of all three firearms. The State District Attorney’s Office later
9 dismissed all charges against three women and White (who had been charged federally). As
10 of December 1, 2009, just Jennings, the owner of the purse, remained charged by the state.
11 She was charged with possession only of the two firearms recovered from her purse.
12 Moving to exclude the evidence, the Government argued that the case histories of
13 the four women were irrelevant since there is a presumption under New York law that any
14 passenger in a vehicle is “in possession” of any weapon found there. It argued, therefore,
15 that admitting evidence about the arrests and pending charges would raise confusing and
16 complex issues, including an explanation of constructive possession under New York law.
17 The Government also contended that the evidence would invite speculation by the jury
18 about the status of the other individuals’ cases. Defense counsel, in response, pressed the
19 relevance of the evidence, asserting that the arrests and charging decisions increased the
20 likelihood that the firearm allegedly found on White’s person was instead possessed by the
21 other occupants or physically in the vehicle generally. The defense also noted that New
22 York Penal Law § 265.15(3) contains an exception to the constructive possession provision
23 that applies to firearms found on the person of one of the occupants of a vehicle. In view of
4
1 this exception, defense counsel argued that if the firearm had actually been recovered from
2 White’s pocket, charging the other occupants with possession of that same weapon would
3 have been improper under New York law.
4 The district court granted the Government’s motion, concluding that the
5 Government’s charging decisions were irrelevant to the question of whether White
6 possessed a firearm. United States v. White, No. 08-CR-0682 (NGG),
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
7 113147, at *5 (E.D.N.Y. Dec. 4, 2009). Further, the court found that even if the charging
8 decisions were relevant or could be considered, “the probative value of such evidence [was]
9 substantially outweighed by the danger of confusing or misleading [the] jury,” as it would
10 “invite a trial within a trial on the intricacies of the New York State Penal Code and the
11 cases of other individuals.” Id. at *5-*6.
12 Following the district court’s ruling, White filed a “Motion for Clarification,”
13 seeking to introduce a “Request for Laboratory Examination Report” relating to the charges
14 against Jennings (the purse owning occupant). On the report, in a box labeled “Briefly
15 Describe Case,” the following was stated: “AT T/P/O DEFT WAS FOUND TO BE IN
16 POSSESSION OF 3 LOADED FIREARMS.” Defense counsel argued that this statement
17 was a “factual observation” by at least one of the officers that Jennings physically possessed
18 all three firearms recovered from the minivan, including the firearm allegedly recovered
19 from White’s pocket.
20 In opposition, the Government presented a document with respect to White, which
21 contained the identical language: “AT T/P/O DEFT WAS FOUND TO BE IN
22 POSSESSION OF 3 LOADED FIREARMS.” The Government also presented printouts of
23 “Complaint Report” forms for all five individuals arrested on August 6, 2008. The form for
5
1 each of these individuals stated in a text box labeled “Details” that “AT T/P/O DEFT
2 WAS FOUND IN POSSESSION OF THREE LOADED FIREARMS.”1
3 The court held that the similarity in the phrasing on all the forms indicated that the
4 statements were charging decisions as opposed to factual observations by the officers, and
5 noted that “[i]n this context, possession [was] a legal term of art rather than a factual
6 observation.” App. 23.2 On that basis, the court denied White’s motion. App. 23.
7 2. Impeachment Evidence
8 The Government also moved to preclude cross-examination of a Government
9 witness, Detective Paul Herrmann, regarding testimony Herrmann had given before District
10 Judge Frederick Block in an unrelated case, United States v. Goines,
604 F. Supp. 2d 533
11 (E.D.N.Y. 2009). In Goines, a case charging the defendant with illegal possession of a
12 weapon, Herrmann testified at a suppression hearing about a street encounter with the
13 defendant that led to the seizure of a firearm. In granting the defendant’s motion to suppress
14 the gun and ammunition seized in that case, Judge Block found that certain aspects of
15 Herrmann’s testimony were not worthy of belief.3 In the present case, the Government, as
16 part of its motion to limit cross-examination, argued that though Judge Block had
1
In this respect, we note that under New York law, it would have been perfectly appropriate to charge White
with possession of three loaded firearms even if none were found on his person, so long as they were not found
on the person of any other passenger in the minivan.
2
References to “App.” refer to the Appendix submitted by Defendant-Appellant White.
3
Specifically, Judge Block found that: (1) “If Herrmann had seen Goines flicking what appeared to be a
marijuana cigarette to the ground, this, in combination with the foregoing, could well have given rise to
reasonable suspicion. However, in light of the conflicting evidence, the Court cannot credit that Herrmann
made such an observation”; (2) “Similarly, while it certainly could have added to Herrmann’s suspicion if
Goines had hurried away without recovering his ID card, the Court cannot credit this aspect of Herrmann’s
testimony”; (3) “The Court does not credit Herrmann’s testimony that Goines broke into a run”; (4) “The
Court does not credit that . . . Goines swung at Herrmann’s face”; (5) “Further, the Court cannot credit
Herrmann’s testimony that during the struggle, Goines voluntarily uttered the phrase ‘It was just weed’”;
(6) “Nor can the Court credit Herrmann’s testimony that, after passively resisting for a while, Goines feigned
submission, then tumbled over a guardrail with one of Herrmann’s fellow officers and began kicking and
punching.” Goines, 604 F. Supp. 2d at 540-44.
6
1 discredited some portions of Herrmann’s testimony, he had also found some of that
2 testimony credible. Defense counsel, in response, argued that the prior adverse credibility
3 finding was admissible on cross-examination under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 608(b),
4 which permits inquiry into specific instances of the conduct of a witness that are probative
5 of truthfulness or untruthfulness.
6 The district court granted the Government’s motion, precluding cross-examination
7 by the defense about the Goines case. Applying the factors enumerated in United States v.
8 Cruz,
894 F.2d 41 (2d Cir. 1990), the court concluded that Judge Block had made no finding
9 of Herrmann’s “general veracity” and the case was “entirely unrelated” to White’s. White,
10
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *9. In addition, because of the “complex nature” of
11 Judge Block’s findings, the court noted that it would be difficult to allow the questioning
12 “without delving into the details of the facts and history” of the Goines case, or the specific
13 instances in which Judge Block had credited and discredited Detective Herrmann. Id. at *10.
14 The court “decline[d] to invite such distraction and confusion of the jury resulting from
15 considerations that [were] far afield from the actual issues in the case.” Id.
16 B. Trial Proceedings
17 At trial, the Government introduced testimony from several of the officers who were
18 present during White’s arrest. The main Government witness was Herrmann, a junior
19 member of the NYPD Major Case Unit. Herrmann testified that, as part of a joint FBI-
20 NYPD investigation, he and his partners learned that White would be traveling in a maroon
21 minivan near 155th Street and 115th Drive in Jamaica, Queens. Herrmann and Lieutenant
22 Sandro Rizzotti were traveling in an unmarked car driven by Sergeant Frank Guarino. The
23 other members of the team traveled in two unmarked police cars.
7
1 After stopping the minivan, Herrmann and Rizzotti walked to the passenger side of
2 the van while Guarino approached the driver, “engaged [her] in conversation,” and asked
3 her to get out of the vehicle. App. 59. Herrmann testified that he heard Guarino tell White
4 “in the back [seat] to stop moving around.” App. 59. Herrmann “then opened up the sliding
5 door to the passenger side and asked [White] to show [him] his hands and step out of the
6 vehicle.” App. 59. Rizzotti similarly testified that it was “[r]ight after” Guarino directed the
7 driver out of the minivan that he said, “[Y]ou stop with your hands,” and that it was “[a]t
8 that point,” not at some later time, that Herrmann opened the passenger door. App. 129.
9 Certain portions of Herrmann’s testimony were inconsistent. While, on direct
10 examination, Herrmann did not testify that White had been talking on a cell phone before
11 he was frisked, on cross examination, he acknowledged that White had been on a cell phone
12 “briefly.” App. 85. Defense counsel also questioned him about whether Guarino had told
13 White to stop talking on the phone. Herrmann initially testified that he did not remember
14 any of this, but after his recollection was refreshed with a previous affidavit, he recalled that
15 White was talking on a cell phone while Guarino was talking to the driver, and that
16 Guarino told White to stop speaking on the phone. Herrmann denied that it was the motion
17 of White putting away the phone that caused him to open the back door of the minivan.
18 Instead, Herrmann testified that he opened the car door after White put away the phone,
19 when Guarino subsequently told White to stop moving. Herrmann admitted, however, that
20 he had stated in a prior sworn affidavit “Sergeant Guarino then told the defendant in sum
21 and substance to stop moving around in the back of the mini van, [and] the defendant stated
22 that he was putting away his cellular phone.” App. 88.
8
1 After White stepped out of the minivan, Herrmann frisked White. Herrmann
2 testified that while frisking White, he felt a firearm in the right front pocket of White’s jeans
3 and shouted “hot lunch,” code words that White was carrying a firearm. App. 61. Rizzotti
4 testified that when he heard the words “hot lunch,” he was standing behind White and
5 handcuffed him. App. 131. Herrmann further stated that after White was handcuffed, he
6 (Herrmann) removed a “Cobra, .380 caliber handgun,” “[s]ilver with a black handle,”
7 “loaded with seven bullets” from White’s pocket. App. 61, 68, 118-19. Rizzotti and Federal
8 Agent Kieran Smith testified that they observed Herrmann take the gun from White’s
9 pocket. App. 131, 148-49.
10 Herrmann, again, faltered in his account of the search, however. He first testified
11 that he also retrieved White’s cell phone from White’s pocket. When asked if he had taken
12 White’s wallet from his back left pocket, he said he could not “recall where [he] got it
13 from.” App. 88. He then testified that he was not sure whether White had a wallet and
14 added that the “only thing [he] recovered was the firearm.” App. 89. He did not “recall”
15 recovering a cell phone, keys, or a wallet from White. App. 89.
16 Herrmann further testified that, after recovering the firearm from White’s pocket, he
17 went around to the driver’s side of the minivan and “observed a gray canvas bag that had a
18 firearm inside of it.” App. 70. He searched the bag and “found another firearm.” App. 71.
19 On cross-examination, Herrmann acknowledged a prior sworn affidavit stating that
20 Guarino had searched the minivan and told Herrmann that he “found a revolver inside the
21 purse lying on the rear seat.” App. 100. Rizzotti testified that two firearms were recovered
22 from the interior of the vehicle, but testified that he had no personal knowledge of how this
23 came about. Smith testified that Guarino noticed a handbag on the driver’s side of the rear
9
1 seat and alerted Smith and Herrmann to the presence of two firearms in the purse, after
2 which Herrmann recovered the guns. In Smith’s prior sworn affidavit, he made no mention
3 of the recovery of a second gun, but explained that he might not have been asked what
4 firearms were found at the scene, where they were found, or whether there was a second
5 gun.
6 During the cross-examination of Herrmann, in response to the testimony that two
7 firearms were found in the purse at the scene, the defense sought to introduce impeachment
8 evidence in the form of a portion of the Government’s memorandum of law on an earlier
9 suppression motion. That memorandum stated that “[t]he purse was . . . taken to the
10 precinct, at which time an additional handgun was recovered from inside the purse.” App.
11 288. Defense counsel offered this statement as an admission by a party opponent pursuant
12 to Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2). The Government, in opposition, argued that because
13 the statement was an attorney-drafted summary of the statements of three different officers,
14 it was not admissible, as a prior inconsistent statement, to impeach Herrmann. The
15 Government also noted that if the court admitted the document, the main prosecutor in the
16 case would be required to take the stand to explain his basis for what were his statements.
17 The court said that it did not want to “open the door to that” and ruled that the authority
18 provided by the defense to support introduction of the evidence did not go “to the issue of
19 courts admitting contents of memoranda that are submitted to the court by counsel.” Gov’t
20 App. 268-69.4
21
4
References to “Gov’t App.” refer to the Appendix submitted by the Government.
10
1 C. Jury Charge, Deliberations, Verdict, and Sentencing
2 The trial lasted one day. At the charge conference, the defense objected to the district
3 court’s proposed charge, which described the statutory purpose of 18 U.S.C. § 922. The
4 court overruled the objection. White then requested that the district court omit two
5 references to the word “violent” in the proposed language and the court granted the
6 objection. The charge, therefore, read as follows:
7 Congress was of the view that the ease with which certain persons were able to
8 acquire firearms was a significant factor in the prevalence of crime in the United
9 States, and that federal control over gun dealers and restriction of the distribution of
10 firearms would be helpful to state and local authorities in meeting this problem.
11 Accordingly, [it] passed a series of laws designed to give support to federal, state[,]
12 and local law enforcement officials in combating crime.
13
14 In your role as jurors, you are not to be concerned with the wisdom or the policy of
15 these laws. If in fact a violation has occurred, the law should be enforced. In general,
16 these laws include provisions which prohibit certain categories of people from
17 possessing or receiving firearms which were shipped in interstate commerce[,] and
18 requires any person in the business of dealing in firearms to be licensed.
19
20 The government contends that the defendant was within the class of people
21 prohibited from possessing firearms shipped in interstate commerce because he had
22 been convicted of a crime punishable by a term of imprisonment of more than one
23 year.
24
25 App. 179-80.
26 After one day of deliberations, the jury sent a note asking, “What happens if we
27 cannot reach a verdict?” App. 202. The court, in response, refused to give the Government’s
28 requested Allen charge and instead asked the jury to continue deliberating. The following
29 day, the jury found White guilty of possession of a weapon by a person previously convicted
30 of a felony.
31 At sentencing, the parties agreed that White faced a fifteen-year statutory minimum
32 sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1), and a Guidelines
33 range of 188 to 235 months’ imprisonment. After hearing argument from counsel on the 18
11
1 U.S.C. § 3553(a) factors, the court asked White if he had anything to say prior to
2 sentencing. White made a statement. The court then noted that it had received letters from
3 White’s family and acknowledged White’s difficult childhood. It reviewed White’s criminal
4 record and disciplinary infractions while in state and federal custody. Specifically, the court
5 recounted nine disciplinary infractions in state prison and five charges, including one
6 instance of fighting with another person since White’s incarceration at the Metropolitan
7 Detention Center. After the court reiterated the seriousness of a gun crime, it asked White if
8 he was ready to be sentenced. White asked, “Sir, can I explain any of this situations that
9 you was talking about?” App. 234. The court responded, “You’ll have your opportunity in
10 the circuit court on appeal. You had your opportunity to speak, sir.” App. 234. The court
11 then imposed a sentence of 235 months’ incarceration (the top of the Guidelines range), five
12 years of supervised release, on specified conditions, and a $100 special assessment.
13 II. DISCUSSION
14 We review evidentiary rulings, including a trial court’s decision to limit the scope of
15 cross-examination, for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Figueroa,
548 F.3d 222, 226
16 (2d Cir. 2008). “To find such abuse, we must conclude that the trial judge’s evidentiary
17 rulings were arbitrary and irrational.” United States v. Paulino,
445 F.3d 211, 217 (2d Cir.
18 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). But a district court also abuses its discretion
19 “when (1) its decision rests on an error of law (such as application of the wrong legal
20 principle) or a clearly erroneous factual finding, or (2) its decisionthough not necessarily
21 the product of a legal error or a clearly erroneous factual findingcannot be located within
22 the range of permissible decisions.” Figueroa, 548 F.3d at 226 (internal quotation marks
23 omitted). Even if a reviewing court finds error, a new trial is not required if the error was
12
1 harmless. Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
475 U.S. 673, 684 (1986). “An erroneous ruling on the
2 admissibility of evidence is harmless if the appellate court can conclude with fair assurance
3 that the evidence did not substantially influence the jury.” United States v. Jackson,
301 F.3d
4 59, 65 (2d Cir. 2002) (internal quotation marks omitted), abrogated on other grounds by
5 Chambers v. United States,
555 U.S. 122 (2009).
6 The district court did not consider whether the charging documents or prior
7 credibility findings are inadmissible hearsay, and the parties have not addressed that issue
8 on appeal. We therefore have no occasion to decide hearsay questions, and nothing in this
9 opinion forecloses the district court from considering hearsay objections to this evidence (or
10 any other evidence) at re-trial.
11 A. Evidence of the Arrests and Charging Decisions of the Other Occupants
12 Following a search of the minivan, all five individuals traveling in the vehicle were
13 arrested and charged with possession of all three firearms recovered—the two firearms
14 found in Jennings’ purse and the one allegedly found in White’s pocket. The Queens
15 District Attorney subsequently dropped the charges against all defendants except Jennings,
16 who was charged with possession of the two weapons found in her purse. White was
17 charged federally, in the instant case, with possession of the firearm allegedly recovered
18 from his pocket. White argues that the district court erred in excluding evidence regarding
19 the arrests and charging decisions of the other occupants of the vehicle. We agree.
20 At trial, Appellant sought to admit evidence relating to the arrests, charging
21 decisions, and subsequent case histories of the other occupants of the vehicle to contradict
22 the officers’ testimony that one of the firearms was found in White’s pocket. White
23 submitted that, if the gun had actually been recovered from his person, none of the other
13
1 individuals would have been charged with possession of that particular gun. The
2 Government, moving to preclude this evidence, argued that the discovery of the firearms in
3 the minivan permitted the arrests and charging of all passengers present in the vehicle
4 because “[t]he presence in an automobile . . . of any firearm . . . is presumptive evidence of
5 its possession by all persons occupying such automobile at the time such weapon . . . is
6 found.” N.Y. Penal Law § 265.15(3) (the “constructive possession provision”). Appellant, in
7 response, pointed out that New York Penal Law § 265.15(3) contains an important and
8 pertinent exception to the constructive possession provision: that the provision does not
9 extend to a weapon found on the person of one of the occupants. See N.Y. Penal Law
10 § 265.15(3). White argued, therefore, that even if discovery of firearms in the vehicle
11 permitted the arrests and charging of the other occupants of the vehicle, they could not
12 properly have been charged with possession of all three firearms, and specifically, not the
13 one allegedly found in his pocket. It follows, he contended, that the charges made of the
14 other occupants constituted evidence that no firearm was, in fact, found in his pocket.
15 The district court ruled against White, holding that “[w]hile a defendant is entitled to
16 cross-examine Government witnesses as to inconsistent statements, the Government’s
17 charging decisions are not proper subjects for cross-examination and argument.” White,
18
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *5 (internal quotation marks omitted). Relying on United
19 States v. Carneglia, No. 08-CR-0076 (JBW),
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8450, at *1 (E.D.N.Y.
20 Jan. 27, 2009) and United States v. Re,
401 F.3d 828, 832 (7th Cir. 2005), the court reasoned
21 that “[t]he particular charging choices of government agents may rely upon a variety of
22 considerations, and those decisions regarding one individual do not necessarily speak to the
14
1 separate issue of another individual’s guilt or innocence.” Id. We do not agree that such a
2 categorical rule should be applied to the admissibility of charging decisions.
3 In a criminal case “‘[t]he accused may introduce any legal evidence tending to prove
4 that another person may have committed the crime with which the defendant is charged.’”
5 Holmes v. South Carolina,
547 U.S. 319, 327 (2006) (quoting 40A Am. Jur. 2d, Homicide § 286
6 (1999)). While such evidence “may be excluded where it does not sufficiently connect the
7 other person to the crime,” it cannot be said that evidence of the Government’s charging
8 decisions, in all cases, “is speculative or remote, or does not tend to prove or disprove a
9 material fact in issue at . . . trial.” Id. (quoting 40A Am. Jur. 2d, Homicide § 286 (1999)).
10 Such an all or nothing approach undermines the longstanding principle that “the
11 Constitution guarantees criminal defendants a meaningful opportunity to present a complete
12 defense.” Crane v. Kentucky,
476 U.S. 683, 690 (1986) (internal quotation marks omitted).
13 Indeed, this guarantee would be an empty one if, in view of prosecutorial charging
14 discretion, we barred evidence of charging decisions in all instances with no regard for its
15 reliability or relevance.
16 Particularly when the evidence is central to the defendant’s claim of innocence, we
17 find that categorical exclusion “infringe[s] upon a weighty interest of the accused,” United
18 States v. Scheffer,
523 U.S. 303, 308 (1998), and threatens “the right of the accused to require
19 the prosecution’s case to survive the crucible of meaningful adversarial testing,” United States
20 v. Cronic,
466 U.S. 648, 656 (1984). We hold, therefore, that the Government’s charging
21 decisions may be proper subjects for cross-examination and argument if otherwise
22 admissible. In so holding, we emphasize that we are not creating a per se rule of admissibility
23 for charging decisions. We do not in any way intend to tie the hands of district judges
15
1 evaluating such evidence in the first instance. We simply reject an inflexible approach that
2 evidence of the Government’s charging decisions is never admissible by a criminal
3 defendant. District courts may not automatically exclude such evidence without an inquiry
4 into its relevance and probative value. The district court in this case, therefore, committed
5 legal error when it ruled categorically that “the government’s charging decisions are not
6 proper subjects for cross-examination and argument.” White,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
7 113147, at *5.
8 The court also erred by holding, in the alternative, that the evidence was “not
9 relevant to the question of whether [Appellant] White possessed a firearm,” and might
10 confuse or mislead the jury. Id. at *5-*6. Evidence is relevant when “it has any tendency to
11 make a fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence,” Fed. R. Evid.
12 401,5 and, unless an exception applies, all “[r]elevant evidence is admissible,” Fed. R. Evid.
13 402. Under this “very low standard,” United States v. Al-Moayad,
545 F.3d 139, 176 (2d Cir.
14 2008), evidence that the other occupants of the vehicle were charged with possession of the
15 firearm allegedly found in White’s pocket was plainly relevant to the question of possession.
16 These charging decisions might very well cause a jury to doubt the officers’
17 testimony that they recovered the firearm at issue from White’s person. White was charged
18 with being a felon-in-possession of a firearm, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). To
19 establish a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), the Government must prove: (1) that the
20 defendant was previously convicted of a felony, (2) that the defendant knowingly possessed
5
Since White’s trial, the Federal Rules of Evidence have been amended. The Advisory Committee Notes
indicate that “[t]hese changes are intended to be stylistic only. There is no intent to change any result in any
ruling on evidence admissibility.” Fed. R. Evid. 401 advisory committee’s note. See also Fed. R. Evid. 402
advisory committee’s note (same); Fed. R. Evid. 403 advisory committee’s note (same); Fed. R. Evid. 608
advisory committee’s note (same). “Our analysis would thus be identical under either version of the Rule[s].”
United States v. Scott,
677 F.3d 72, 77 n.4 (2d Cir. 2012)
16
1 a firearm, and (3) that the defendant possessed the firearm in or affecting interstate
2 commerce. See 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The only significant issue at trial was whether White
3 possessed a firearm, and, more specifically, whether the jury would believe the officers’
4 claim that one was recovered from his front pocket. As White argued below, under New
5 York law, “[t]he presence in an automobile . . . of any firearm . . . is presumptive evidence
6 of its possession by all persons occupying such automobile at the time such weapon . . . is
7 found, except . . . if such weapon . . . is found upon the person of one of the occupants
8 therein.” N.Y. Penal Law § 265.15(3) (emphasis added). In light of this provision, the
9 Government’s decision to charge all passengers traveling in the vehicle with possession of
10 all firearms recovered on that day supports White’s theory that none of the firearms was
11 found on his person and discredits the officers’ testimony to the contrary.
12 The fact that White’s theory requires a “chain of complex reasoning,” White, 2009
13 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *6, does not mean that it is not relevant. For, as we have
14 expressly stated: “[t]he length of the chain of inferences necessary to connect the evidence
15 with the ultimate fact to be proved . . . does not render the evidence irrelevant.” United States
16 v. Ravich,
421 F.2d 1196, 1204 n.10 (2d Cir. 1970) (Friendly, J.). We find, therefore, that
17 evidence of the Government’s charging decisions was relevant to the issue of possession at
18 trial; the decisions were probative of White’s innocence and were central to his defense.
19 Assuming evidence is relevant, it may still be excluded “if its probative value is
20 substantially outweighed by a danger of one or more of the following: unfair prejudice,
21 confusing the issues, misleading the jury, undue delay, wasting time, or needlessly
22 presenting cumulative evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 403. In conducting this analysis, the district
23 court also erred. First, and crucial to its Rule 403 error, is the district court’s initial
17
1 categorical determination that it could not admit evidence of the Government’s charging
2 decisions. While the district court concluded, in the alternative, that “the probative value of
3 such evidence” was “substantially outweighed by the danger of confusing or misleading the
4 jury,” White,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *5-*6, its prior finding that charging
5 decisions are not proper subjects for cross-examination obviated the need for such balancing
6 and cast doubt as to the balancing made. In other words, the Rule 403 inquiry was tainted
7 by the court’s prior per se ruling regarding charging decisions. Moreover, by concluding that
8 the evidence was not relevant at all, the court effectively assigned it little or no probative
9 value, thereby shifting the Rule 403 balancing test considerably in the Government’s favor.
10 In its initial ruling, the court already determined that it would exclude the evidence.
11 But Rule 403 favors admissibility: evidence is only excluded when its probative value is
12 substantially outweighed by the prejudice of jury confusion. The probative value of the
13 Government’s charging decisions here is high—White’s defense centered on discrediting the
14 officers’ testimony that a firearm was found in his pocket and evidence of the Government’s
15 charging decisions was crucial to proving that theory. Under the circumstances, we
16 conclude that any potential for jury confusion does not substantially outweigh the probative
17 value of the evidence.6
18 For these reasons, the district court’s exclusion of the Government’s charging
19 decisions constituted manifest error.
20
6
The dissenting opinion objects to our doing the 403 balancing ourselves and suggests that more facts may
come in that would lead a district court to balance with a different result. Should the Government retry White
and should more data come in on the various factors as to which we found error, we wish to make clear that
there is nothing in the majority opinion that precludes the trial court from making that balance anew on the
basis of the facts then before that court.
18
1 B. Cross Examination of Herrmann Regarding Goines Case
2 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 608(b):
3 Except for a criminal conviction under Rule 609, extrinsic evidence is not
4 admissible to prove specific instances of a witness’s conduct in order to attack
5 or support the witness’s character for truthfulness. But the court may, on
6 cross-examination, allow them to be inquired into if they are probative of the
7 character for truthfulness or untruthfulness of:
8
9 (1) the witness
10
11 Fed. R. Evid. 608(b)(1). In applying this rule, “[w]hile a district court may impose
12 ‘reasonable limits’ on cross-examination to protect against, e.g., harassment, prejudice,
13 confusion, and waste, it must also give wide latitude to a defendant in a criminal case to
14 cross-examine government witnesses.” Cedeño, 644 F.3d at 82 (internal citation omitted). “A
15 trial judge abuses his discretion in curtailing cross-examination of a government witness
16 when the curtailment denies the jury sufficient information to make a discriminating
17 appraisal of the particular witness’s possible motives for testifying falsely in favor of the
18 government.” United States v. Blanco,
861 F.2d 773, 781 (2d Cir. 1988) (internal quotation
19 marks omitted).
20 We have long held that a witness can be cross-examined based on “prior occasions
21 when his testimony in other cases had been criticized by [a] court as unworthy of belief.”
22 United States v. Terry,
702 F.2d 299, 316 (2d Cir. 1983). Pursuant to Rule 608(b), White
23 wanted to cross-examine Herrmann with respect to Judge Block’s credibility findings in
24 Goines. Defense counsel sought to inquire “whether [Herrmann] previously gave
25 testimony . . . under oath, in another federal gun possession case, and whether the judge in
26 that case refused to credit six different aspects of [that] testimony.” App. 257. The
27 Government, in response, argued that the determinations by Judge Block were neither
19
1 relevant nor sufficiently probative of truthfulness to outweigh the danger of unfair prejudice
2 or confusion of the issues.
3 Finding for the Government, the district court analyzed two issues discussed in Cruz,
4 894 F.2d at 43. The court determined that since “Judge Block’s finding was not a finding on
5 Detective Herrmann’s general veracity, and the case [was] entirely unrelated to [White’s
6 case],” the Cruz factors weighed against admission. White,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147,
7 at *9. In addition, noting that Judge Block’s decision was “a detailed and complex
8 reconstruction of events, cobbled together from various testimonial accounts of Detective
9 Her[r]mann and the defendant in that case,” the court found that “the inconsistencies relied
10 upon in crediting some testimony and not others may have resulted from a combination of
11 passage of time, confusion, [and] lack of first-hand knowledge, rather than merely the
12 veracity of the witness.” Id. at *9-*10. Finally, the court noted that “[b]ecause of the
13 complex nature of the findings in Goines, it would be difficult for the attorneys in this case to
14 provide the jury with a straightforward account of what Judge Block found,” and “so
15 decline[d] to invite such distraction and confusion of the jury resulting from considerations
16 that [were] far afield from the actual issues in [White’s] case.” Id. at *10.
17 In Cruz, we concluded that a prior adverse credibility finding by a federal judge was
18 not relevant to the credibility of that same witness in a later proceeding because (a) the judge
19 had not found a general lack of veracity on the part of the witness, and (b) there was no
20 connection between the subject matter of the two cases. 894 F.2d at 43. More recently, in
21 Cedeño, which was decided after the district’s ruling in the case before us, we noted that
22 “Cruz . . . did not purport to set out a rigid two-part test.” 644 F.3d at 82. We explained that
23 while “Cruz held that consideration of these two factors was sufficient to avoid a finding of
20
1 abuse of discretion on the particular facts of that case only[,] it did not hold that
2 consideration of these two factors [was] sufficient to avoid such a finding in all cases.” Id.
3 Concluding that the district court in Cedeño “erred in limiting its analysis to the two factors
4 discussed in Cruz without considering other factors affecting the probity and relevancy of a
5 prior court’s finding that a witness had lied,” id. at 83, we articulated seven non-exhaustive
6 factors for courts to consider in determining the probity and relevance of a prior incident in
7 which a court has criticized a witness’s testimony as unworthy of belief: (1) “whether the
8 prior judicial finding addressed the witness’s veracity in that specific case or generally”; (2)
9 “whether the two sets of testimony involved similar subject matter”; (3) “whether the lie
10 was under oath in a judicial proceeding or was made in a less formal context”; (4) “whether
11 the lie was about a matter that was significant”; (5) “how much time had elapsed since the
12 lie was told and whether there had been any intervening credibility determination regarding
13 the witness”; (6) “the apparent motive for the lie and whether a similar motive existed in the
14 current proceeding”; and (7) “whether the witness offered an explanation for the lie and, if
15 so, whether the explanation was plausible,” id. at 82-83.
16 White argues that the district court, like the lower court in Cedeño, erred in
17 considering only the two Cruz factors. The Government demurs, arguing that Cedeño is
18 entirely inapplicable because it involved a finding that the witness had previously lied:
19 specifically, the Government claims that while Judge Block found certain aspects of
20 Herrmann’s testimony not credible, he did not expressly find that Herrmann had lied and
21 hence Cruz, and not Cedeño, applies. We reject this distinction. A finding that a witness is
22 not credible is not fundamentally different from a finding that the witness lied. It often just
23 reflects a fact finder’s desire to use more gentle language. Nothing, moreover, suggests that
21
1 Cedeño is limited to explicit findings that a witness lied. The instant case, therefore, is
2 controlled by our decision in Cedeño.
3 In Cedeño, we noted that Cruz did not set out a rigid two-part test. Instead, we
4 articulated a non-exhaustive list of factors that bear on the admissibility of prior credibility
5 findings.7 It appears that the district court, which did not have the benefit of Cedeño at the
6 time of its ruling, made the same mistake that we identified as error in Cedeño when it
7 limited its inquiry to the two Cruz factors. Following Cruz, the district court concluded that
8 “Judge Block’s finding was not a finding on Detective Herrmann’s general veracity, and the
9 case is entirely unrelated to this one.” White,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *9; see also
10 id. at *8-*9 (“Courts in the circuit have interpreted Cruz to mean that, in determining
11 whether to admit a prior credibility determination, a district court has discretion to consider
12 whether or not the finding in question is a general conclusion about the witness’s veracity
13 and whether or not there is a connection between the subject matter of the witness’s
14 testimony in the two cases.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
15 Significantly, the additional factors we identified in Cedeño weigh strongly in favor of
16 admissibility here. First, Herrmann’s testimony was made under oath in a judicial
17 proceeding. Second, his testimony plainly involved an important matter: at issue in Goines
18 was whether a firearm and ammunition seized by law enforcement officials should be
19 suppressed. Third, the suppression hearing in Goines took place on February 26, 2009, just
20 months before White’s trial on December 14, 2009. Fourth, in attempting to secure a
21 conviction, the motive for Herrmann’s discredited testimony in Goines is identical to his
7
Following Cedeño, we reaffirm the principle that district courts are not constrained by any rigid test when
considering the admissibility of prior adverse credibility findings. Though not sufficient in the instant case, we
leave open the possibility that in certain cases, consideration of only the two Cruz factors might be appropriate
and support an evidentiary ruling.
22
1 purported motive in the instant case. Finally, Herrmann offered no explanation for the
2 previous inconsistencies in his testimony.
3 Guided by Cedeño, we have little trouble concluding that Judge Block’s prior
4 credibility finding against Herrmann was relevant and highly probative in this case. The
5 defendant in Goines, like White, was charged with possession of a firearm. The district court
6 in that case unequivocally discredited Herrmann’s testimony; it concluded that it could not
7 “credit” some of Herrmann’s testimony and that portions of Herrmann’s testimony
8 “conflict[ed] with his earlier testimony.” Goines, 604 F. Supp. 2d at 541. The district court
9 even suggested that Herrmann himself had recanted certain aspects of his testimony. See id.
10 at 542 (“The Court does not credit Herrmann’s testimony that Goines broke into a run; this
11 testimony is contradicted not only by Goines’s testimony at the evidentiary hearing, but also
12 by Herrmann’s own testimony at the parole hearing and his eventual acknowledgment at
13 the evidentiary hearing that Goines did not have time to run away before he was tackled.”)
14 (internal citation omitted). Further, the court implied that Herrmann had lied in a state-
15 court criminal complaint with respect to the same incident. See id. at 543 (“The Court does
16 not credit that Goines ‘punch[ed]’ Herrmann, as Herrmann stated in the state-court criminal
17 complaint, or that Goines swung at Herrmann’s face, as Herrmann testified at the
18 evidentiary hearing.”) (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted). These credibility
19 judgments are plainly probative of Herrmann’s veracity and could affect a jury’s
20 determination as to his willingness to lie to secure a criminal conviction. Moreover, they are
21 particularly relevant in the case before us where the crux of the defense was that Herrmann
22 lied about finding a weapon in White’s pocket instead of elsewhere in the vehicle.
23
1 We find the district court’s conclusion to the contrary erroneous. The district court
2 noted that while Judge Block discredited certain aspects of Herrmann’s testimony, he relied
3 on other portions. In that vein, the court opined that the inconsistencies in Herrmann’s
4 testimony could have been because of passage of time, confusion, or lack of first-hand
5 knowledge. We agree with White that this reading of Goines is “insupportable.” Pet’rs Br.
6 28. Judge Block did not attribute any such innocent explanation to Herrmann’s discredited
7 testimony. He instead repeatedly emphasized that he could not credit the testimony,
8 portions of which Herrmann himself was forced to disavow on cross-examination. In
9 choosing to excuse Herrmann’s discredited testimony by ascribing blameless reasons and
10 explanations to it, without even a hint from the Goines court in support of such explanations,
11 the district court clearly erred.
12 Moreover, the district court’s fear that admitting the evidence would confuse the jury
13 because it would require the attorneys to delve into the facts and history of the Goines case is
14 misplaced. The district court retained the authority to “impose ‘reasonable limits’ on cross-
15 examination to protect against, e.g., harassment, prejudice, confusion, and waste.” Cedeño,
16 644 F.3d at 82 (quoting Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. at 679). Furthermore, and dispositively, the
17 defense simply sought to inquire “whether [Herrmann] previously gave testimony . . . under
18 oath, in another federal gun possession case, and whether the judge in that case refused to
19 credit six different aspects of [that] testimony.” App. 257. It did not seek to delve into the
20 facts of the Goines case or inquire about the specific instances when Herrmann’s testimony
21 was discredited. The Government could have asked the opposite: whether the Goines court
22 also relied on some aspects of Herrmann’s testimony. This line of questioning would have
23 given White the “wide latitude” that should be afforded to criminal defendants when cross-
24
1 examining a Government witness, Cedeño, 644 F.3d at 82 (internal quotation marks
2 omitted), while allaying the district court’s fear that the evidence would “invite . . .
3 distraction and confusion of the jury,” White,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *10.
4 To the extent the district court’s consideration of jury confusion was targeted at the
5 Rule 403 analysis, we also disagree that any such jury confusion would substantially
6 outweigh the probative value of Judge Block’s adverse credibility finding. The district court
7 characterized the prior credibility finding as “far afield from the actual issues in the case.”
8 White,
2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113147, at *10. We disagree; for the reasons discussed above,
9 Herrmann’s prior testimony was both probative and relevant in the instant case. In starting
10 out by deeming the evidence insufficiently probative of the witness’s credibility to be
11 admitted, the court below effectively made a true Rule 403 balancing impossible.8
12 We conclude that the district court’s decision to exclude the prior adverse credibility
13 finding with respect to officer Herrmann cannot be located within the range of permissible
14 decisions.
15 C. Harmless Error
16 Even manifest errors in the admission of evidence do not justify the reversal of a
17 conviction if, in light of all the circumstances, the errors are harmless. The district court’s
18 errors in this case, however, were far from harmless. The excluded evidence spoke directly
19 to a critical element of the Government’s case and its exclusion prevented White from
20 presenting a complete defense. See Wray v. Johnson,
202 F.3d 515, 526 (2d Cir. 2000) (noting
21 that in assessing harmlessness it is important to consider whether the error “bore ‘on an
22 issue that [was] plainly critical to the jury’s decision’” (quoting Hynes v. Coughlin, 79 F.3d
8
See supra note 6.
25
1 285, 291 (2d Cir. 1996))). The sole disputed issue at trial was whether White possessed a
2 firearm: The Government’s case centered on the officers’ claim that one was recovered from
3 White’s front pocket and White set out to show that none of the firearms seized on that day
4 were found on his person. White’s success at trial, therefore, hinged on his ability to
5 undermine the testimony of the law enforcement officers. Evidence that the Government
6 charged the other occupants of the vehicle with possession of the firearm that it claimed was
7 found on White’s person tended to do just that. In addition, evidence that Herrmann’s
8 testimony under oath in a similar criminal proceeding was discredited by a district judge
9 casts doubt on his testimony on that very issue in the instant case. Herrmann’s testimony in
10 this case, moreover, was inconsistent on some matters: he wavered on whether White had
11 been talking on a cell phone before he was frisked, he could not recall whether he retrieved
12 White’s cell phone during the frisk or whether he recovered a wallet or keys from White’s
13 pocket, and his testimony at trial regarding recovery of the other firearms conflicted with a
14 prior sworn affidavit. Admission of the adverse credibility finding in Goines, therefore, might
15 well have further undermined Herrmann’s testimony in the eyes of the jury.
16 We do not discount the strength of the Government’s case. The Government notes
17 that in addition to Herrmann’s testimony, it presented the testimony of two other officers
18 whose accounts of the stop and frisk were consistent with Herrmann’s in all material
19 respects. Herrmann testified that he personally recovered a “Cobra, .380 caliber handgun,”
20 “[s]ilver with a black handle,” from White’s “right front pants pocket.” App. 61, 118-19.
21 Rizzotti similarly testified that he observed Herrmann recover a “silver automatic with a
22 black handle” from White’s “front right pocket,” App. 131, and Smith, who was standing
23 approximately three feet away from White at the time, observed Herrmann remove a “silver
26
1 pistol” from White’s “right front waist area,” App. 148-49. This, however, does not render
2 the district court’s errors harmless. It is certainly possible that the jury, if presented with
3 reasons to doubt Herrmann’s testimony, might similarly have questioned the testimony of
4 the other officers. This is especially so, moreover, since these officers also provided
5 testimony at trial that was somewhat inconsistent with prior sworn affidavits. Additionally,
6 admission of the Government’s charging decisions on the day of the stop, which could be
7 read by a jury as conflicting with the account of the stop by all the officers, might have given
8 the jury further reason to pause.
9 In sum, in a classic case of competing stories, the jury was not presented with a
10 comprehensive picture. On the record before us, we cannot conclude “with fair assurance”
11 that district court’s erroneous exclusion of the two pieces of evidence at issue “did not
12 substantially influence the jury.” Jackson, 301 F.3d at 65. Accordingly, we find that the
13 district court’s errors were reversible.
14 D. Remaining Arguments
15 White also argues that the district court (1) erred in excluding a “Request for
16 Laboratory Examination Report,” (2) erred in precluding the admission of a legal
17 memorandum submitted by the Government to impeach a Government witnesses, (3) erred
18 in giving the jury a charge on the statutory purpose of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), and (4) committed
19 sentencing error by not allowing him to respond to certain statements prior to the
20 imposition of sentence. In light of our findings above, we decline to consider the merits of
21 these arguments.
22
23
27
1 III. CONCLUSION
2 For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of conviction of the district court is
3 VACATED and the case is REMANDED for a new trial.
28
DENNIS JACOBS, Chief Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. While I am inclined to agree
that the admissibility of charging decisions may not be
suitable for a rule of categorical exclusion and that the
admissibility of adverse credibility findings in prior cases
has been the subject of new law, I conclude:
A. With respect to the charging decisions, I would
affirm on the district court’s alternative ruling that the
probative value of such evidence in this case was
substantially outweighed by the danger of confusing or
misleading the jury; and in that way, I would avoid the
vexed question that the majority opinion embraces.
B. As to the testimony of Detective Herrmann in a
prior case, I agree with the majority opinion that the
district court’s analysis should have considered the seven
factors in Cedeño. But I would remand for the district
judge to make that ruling in the first instance and in the
ordinary course, subject to the usual appellate review for
abuse of discretion.
Moreover, as the majority opinion observes, hearsay
problems abound in this case; yet, since neither party
raised these issues on appeal, the Court has not decided
whether the charging documents or the prior credibility
findings are admissible hearsay. The majority’s explicit
recognition of that circumstance affords the district court
a needed latitude on appeal, and prevents the opinion from
being misread or overread.
A.
The majority opinion holds that there should be no
categorical exclusion of charging documents from evidence.
Maybe; but, in any event, this holding does little harm
because trial judges would virtually always exclude such
evidence for multiple and sound reasons. In my view, Judge
Garaufis did not abuse his discretion in excluding the
charging documents in this case.
In a nutshell, there were five people in one car with
three guns. Under New York law, all five were in
constructive possession of all three guns except for any gun
“found upon the person.” See N.Y. Penal Law § 265.15(3)(a).
A New York charging document charged all occupants with
possession of all three guns. The state charge against
White was dismissed, and White was charged in federal court
with possessing one gun (on his person). He was convicted
of that charge. White wanted to argue that if the gun had
2
been on his person, the drafter of the state charging
document would not have charged the other occupants with
possessing it--assuming of course that the drafter
understood that nuance of New York law.
The majority finds error in the district court’s
apparent ruling that charging documents are categorically
excluded from evidence. However, the district court
prudently went on to find, in the alternative, that the
“probative value” of the charging document would be
“substantially outweighed by the danger of confusing or
misleading [the] jury.” White, 2009 U.S. Dist. Lexis
113147, at *6. That seems to me an unexceptionable
observation.
The majority rejects that finding on the extraordinary
ground that the district court’s “prior finding that
charging decisions are not proper subjects for cross-
examination obviated the need for such balancing and cast
doubt as to the balancing made. In other words, the Rule
403 inquiry was tainted . . . .” Op. at 17. I cannot agree
that an alternative ground for an evidentiary ruling must be
disregarded as “tainted” by a legal error (if there is one)
in another cited ground for the ruling.
3
The majority goes on to do the balancing itself, and
does a bad job of it, for several reasons.
First, the majority does not explain why we should not
remand to the district court (by vacatur or under our
Jacobson procedure) for it to do the balancing, now that we
are all enlightened as to the law. See generally United
States v. Jacobson,
15 F.3d 19, 22 (2d Cir. 1994).
Second, in this case, the danger of confusing or
misleading the jury is great: the underlying principles of
New York law are complex; “possession” of a firearm is (as
the district judge pointed out) “a legal term of art rather
than a factual observation,” App. 23; the charging documents
are steeped in hearsay; and explication would likely require
testimony by state and federal prosecutors.
Third, the Rule 403 inquiry involves facts not before
this Court. “The length of the chain of inferences necessary
to connect the evidence with the ultimate fact to be proved
necessarily lessens the probative value of the evidence, and
may therefore render it more susceptible to exclusion as
unduly confusing, prejudicial, or time-consuming . . . .”
Ravich, 421 F.2d at 1204 n.10. The majority takes no
account of the “length of the chain” connecting [i] the
4
charges filed against the four women with [ii] the police
officers’ observations. Were the charging decisions
recommended by the police who made the direct observations?
If not, what was the communication between the arresting
officers and the individual who made the decisions? At a
minimum, the question of admissibility should be remanded to
the district court so that it can inquire into these issues,
and any others that may bear on the balancing.
Fourth, the seeming breadth of the majority opinion may
be expected to do harms in other cases. When there are
several charging documents, and several defendants, the jury
will be dealing with a variorum edition of the indictment.
Charging documents may not have been drafted with the
expectation that they would be final or authoritative. And
drafts of charging documents may become the subject of
motions under Brady v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83 (1963), Giglio
v. United States,
405 U.S. 150 (1972), or 18 U.S.C. § 3500.
This is a can of worms.
B.
The second issue decided by the majority opinion
concerns the relevance and probative value of findings in a
5
prior unrelated case, in which the trial judge declined to
credit certain testimony by a police officer. White wanted
to use the earlier findings to cross-examine the police
witness against him. The issue framed by the majority is
whether this was “[e]vidence that might lead a jury to
conclude that the officer was willing to lie in a similar
case in order to secure a criminal conviction.” Op. at 3.
The district judge relied on then-current precedent to rule
that such evidence must be excluded because the prior
finding “was not a finding on [the officer’s] general
veracity, and the [prior] case is entirely unrelated to this
one.” White, 2009 U.S. Dist. Lexis 113147, at *9. As the
majority opinion explains, those considerations became two
of seven (non-exhaustive) considerations listed in the
later-decided case of Cedeño.
So it would seem obvious that if this evidentiary
ruling makes a difference, the proper disposition is to
remand (either by vacatur or under our Jacobson procedure),
for the district court to apply the seven-plus factors of
Cedeño.
As Cedeño makes clear, whether a witness “was willing
to lie in a similar case” is a finding with several
6
component fact issues. Was the case similar? I am inclined
to think so, and I would so decide if I were the district
judge (which I am not). Was there a general finding as to
veracity in the prior case? As the district court found,
there was not. Were the statements that were not credited
made as willing lies? That is a question that should be
confided to the district court, which can supplement the
transcript of the prior case with live testimony from the
police officer. The district court found that the judge in
Goines credited parts of the officer’s testimony and
discredited other parts, and that the discredited parts
could have been deficient by reason of “a combination of
passage of time, confusion, [and] lack of first-hand
knowledge.” White, 2009 U.S. Dist. Lexis 113147, at *9-10;
see also Zaman v. Mukasey,
514 F.3d 233, 237 (2d Cir. 2008)
(per curiam) (emphasizing that a factfinder may “note[]
problems with parts of [a party’s] story that go to the
[party’s] credibility” without “mak[ing] the ultimate
conclusion that the entirety of the testimony suffers from a
lack of credibility”). On remand, the district judge could
amplify those findings in light of Cedeño, review the Goines
transcripts in order to make a more fine-grained set of
7
findings, and elicit from the police officer an explanation
for the inconsistencies noted by the Goines court that (as
the majority opinion emphasizes) is absent from the record.
Instead, the majority (again) conducts its own
evidentiary analysis, making findings as to the Cedeño
factors and concluding that they “weigh strongly in favor of
admissibility.” Op. at 22. The majority suggests that
“should more data come in on the various factors,” the trial
court is free to conduct the evidentiary balancing “anew.”
Op. at 24 n.6. But it is the trial court--in the first
instance--that should make findings on the Cedeño factors
and conduct the evidentiary balancing. This Court’s role is
to review the balancing, not to conduct it.1
1
In performing the trial court’s role, the majority
discounts “the district court’s fear that admitting the
evidence would confuse the jury.” Op. at 23. The majority
opinion posits that the defense “simply sought” to ask a
single question on cross-examination, Op. at 24: “whether
[the officer] previously gave testimony . . . under oath, in
another federal gun possession case, and whether the judge
in that case refused to credit six different aspects of his
testimony.” App. 257. But the question becomes a lot less
simple when one considers that the prosecution would then
get to conduct redirect, and it might in fairness be
afforded the opportunity to set out the facts of Goines and
elicit explanations from the police witness. See United
States v. Diaz,
176 F.3d 52, 80 (2d Cir. 1999) (“The scope
of redirect examination is a matter entrusted to a trial
judge’s broad discretion.”).
8
In short, now that we have clarified the law (as the
majority opinion undertakes to do), I would remand for the
district court to apply it.
9