RICHARD G. STEARNS, District Judge.
Before the court is the government's motion to strike some 64 witnesses noticed for trial, including a number of federal government witnesses subject to Touhy requests. 28 C. F. R. §§ 16.21-16.28. While a defendant has a broad Sixth Amendment right to call witnesses at trial as part of his defense, the right is not absolute. The court has a duty to protect the jury from testimony that is irrelevant, cumulative, or confusing, and the modern Federal Rules, particularly Fed. R. Evid. 403, are intended to enable the court in the discharge of that obligation. For present purposes, I will trust that defendant's counsel, who is not inexperienced, will wisely use the twenty hours of trial time the court has allotted him and not waste time on redundant testimony or clutter the record with irrelevancies that are likely to diminish the defense in the eyes of the jury.
A number of the proposed defense witnesses I recognize are unlikely to be called at trial and are listed perhaps out of an overabundance of caution. The court also notes that counsel has made substantial efforts to reduce the number of witnesses in his more recent July 18 filing.
The court notes that in the revised witness list filed on July 18, 2017, counsel has voluntarily removed two of the FBI agents who are no longer assigned to the Boston FBI office and have been transferred to other jurisdictions. The court will strike the third of these witnesses identified by the government, FBI agent Jeffrey Rolands, who the government represents has since been transferred to Washington, DC. The court also will strike FBI agent Ashley Cox, who the government represents played only a chain of custody role, in the expectation that the government will stipulate that she was the FBI agent who took custody of evidence gathered by the Lawrence police. The court will strike DEA Task Force agent John Maki, as it agrees with the government that his proposed testimony is inadmissible. The court will also strike Joseph Nicholls as an expert witness on the government's undisputed representation that he has never produced an expert report involving any forensic investigation that he may have undertaken. Finally, the court notes counsel's expressed willingness to accept stipulations in lieu of the testimony of witnesses like John Costa and Jana Cante who appear to have played no role in the case other than that of forensic examiners.
The court adds the following note of concern. At the July 12, 2018 hearing on the government's motion, in response to an inquiry from the court, counsel came perilously close to accusing opposing counsel Assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Leavitt (who was listed on the original witness list) of making a knowing false representation to the court.
Had counsel not immediately retracted the brunt of this allegation, the court would have considered it a matter of possible referral to the Board of Bar Overseers. See State v. Island, 894 N.W.2d 804 (Neb. 2017). As AUSA Leavitt was not present to defend himself, the court will note that in its professional dealings with Mr. Leavitt, it has never found him to act with anything but unimpugnable integrity and honesty. The court regrets that what would have been unthinkable, at least in criminal litigation a decade ago — the personalization of adversarial disputes between defense attorneys and prosecutors — seems now to occur with disturbing frequency and is a trend that judges need vigilantly deter.
On a remaining trial matter, if there is an entry on the docket suggesting that the court has allotted a more generous amount of time for case presentation to the government than the defense, the entry is mistaken.
For the foregoing reasons, the government's motion is
SO ORDERED.