Viewing entries tagged
credibility

White Out


United States v. White, No. 11-772-cr (2d Cir. August 30, 2012) (Jacobs, Calabresi, Pooler, CJJ)


Here, a divided circuit panel concluded that two evidentiary errors prejudiced the outcome of Lance White’s felon-in-possession trial. The court vacated the conviction and remanded the case for a new trial.


1. Erroneous Preclusion of Others Arrests and Charging Decisions


The case involved the stop of a minivan that contained White and four women. Officers found three firearms, one supposedly in White’s right front pocket. Two others were recovered from a purse belonging to one of the women, Jennings. Initially, all five individuals were charged in state court with possessing all three guns. Eventually the state dropped all charges against three of the women. For Jennings, the state pursued charges only for the guns in her purse. Over White’s objection, the district court granted the government’s motion to preclude White from introducing evidence of the initial decision to charge all of the women with all of the guns, finding that such evidence was categorically inadmissible.

But the circuit found that this was error.  A criminal defendant has a broad right to introduce evidence “tending to prove that another person may have committed the crime” with which he is charged. Such evidence may include the government’s charging decisions - such decisions “may be proper subjects for cross-examination and argument if otherwise admissible,” although they are not per se admissible. “District courts may not automatically exclude such evidence without an inquiry into its relevance and probative value.” 

Here, the evidence was relevant to whether White possessed a firearm  - “evidence that the other occupants of the vehicle were charged with possession of the firearm allegedly found in White’s pocket was plainly relevant to the question of [his] possession.” Those charging decisions “might very well” have “caus[ed] a jury to doubt the officers’ testimony that they recovered the firearm at issue from White’s person," particularly since this was the only “significant issue at trial.” In

 New York the so-called “ automobile presumption” creates a presumption that all occupants of an automobile possessed a firearm found there, except where the weapon is “found upon the person of one of the occupants.” Thus, that the state originally charged all four women with all of the guns, including the one supposedly found on White’s person supported his theory that “none of the firearms was found on his person” and discredited “the officers’ testimony to the contrary.”

Nor was the district court in rejecting reject this relevant evidence under Rule 403.  Indeed the court’s 403 balancing was fatally skewed by virtue of its holding that such evidence was, per se, not relevant at all. Here, the probative value of the evidence was, in fact, “high” - “crucial to proving” the defense theory. Accordingly, the preclusion was error.

2. Restriction of Cross-Examination


The district court also erred in preventing the defense from cross-examining one of the arresting officers about an adverse credibility finding against him in a different federal felon-in-possession case. The circuit now employs a “non-exhaustive list of factors that bear on the admissibility of prior credibility findings.” The district court here erred by relying on the rigid, two-part test rejected by the circuit’s later precedents. 

Here, the totality of the factors weighed strongly in favor of admissibility. The prior testimony that was found to be false “was made under oath in a judicial proceeding” and “plainly involved an important matter at issue” in the prior case. The prior false testimony took place “just months before White’s trial” and the officer’s motives were the same in both cases - an “attempt[] to secure a conviction.” Finally, the officer gave “no explanation for the previous inconsistencies in his testimony.”  Thus, the prior adverse credibility finding was “relevant and highly probative” here.

3. The Errors Were “Far From” Harmless


Here, the evidence the district court precluded “spoke directly to a critical element of the” government’s case; the preclusion “prevented White from presenting a complete defense.”  This is true even though other officers also claimed that they recovered a gun from White’ pocket. It was “certainly possible” that the jury, “if presented with reasons to doubt” one officer’s testimony “might similarly have questioned the testimony of the” others. 

4. The Dissent


Chief Judge Jacobs dissented on both points. For the charging decision, he believed that the evidence was properly excluded under Rule 403. The “vexing” explanations of state law involved in admitting the evidence might well have confused the jury.  And, while Judge Jacobs agreed that the district court applied an incorrect legal standard to assess the admissibility of the prior credibility finding, he would have ordered a Jacobson remand to allow the district court to apply the right test.

Truman/False Man


United States v. Truman, Sr., No. 11-784-cr (2d Cir. 2012) (Livingston, Lohier, CJJ, Rakoff, DJ)


Jeffrey Truman, Sr., recruited his son, Jeffrey Truman, Jr., to burn down a building that Truman Sr. owned in Oneida, New York.  The was in dire financial straits and the property had a very large insurance policy.

Truman Sr.’s odyssey through the legal system began in state court, where he was tried on arson and fraud charges. That case was dismissed because the state court could not corroborate Jr.’s testimony, as required under state law.

The feds then took up the case, which went to trial after Jr. signed a cooperation agreement. At trial, however, Jr. balked. While he described his own role in setting the fire, he steadfastly refused to implicate his father.  This prompted the government to introduce, over objection, portions of Jr.’s testimony from Sr.’s state court trial, in which Jr. confirmed that his father had asked him to start the fire.

Other evidence against Sr. included evidence that suggested that Sr. had tried to cover up the crime in various ways, and evidence of his financial problems and the degree to which the property was insured.

The defense case included some evidence that Jr. had recanted his testimony against Sr., including an assertion by a lawyer involved in a civil case between Sr. and the insurance company that Jr. had told him that his previous statements “blaming his father” were untrue. 

Sr. testified in his own defense and denied any role in the arson or the insurance fraud. For some reason, the AUSA’s approach to cross-examination was to repeatedly ask him whether other witnesses’ statements at the trial, including those by a police officer, were true or untrue.

Sr. was convicted, but persuaded the district judge to grant his Rule 29 motion, and a conditional new trial under Rule 33(a). The court concluded that Jr.’s testimony was incredible as a matter of law and that the remaining circumstantial evidence was insufficient.  The conditional new trial was based on the court’s conclusions that: (1) that Jr.’s “patently incredible” testimony was an exceptional circumstances that warranted a new trial; (2) it had erred in introducing Jr.’s state court testimony and; (3) the government engaged in prosecutorial misconduct.

On this, the government’s appeal, the circuit reversed. The factors identified by the district court in discrediting Jr. “surely impaired” his credibility but did not render his testimony incredible as a matter of law for the purposes of Rule 29. Morever, the remaining evidence, even absent Jr.’s testimony, was itself legally sufficient.

Nor was there a basis for a new trial. For the same reasons identified above, Jr.’s suspect credibility did not warrant a new trial. In addition, there was no error in admitting Jr.’s state court testimony, which was clearly covered by Fed.R.Evid. 801(d)(1)(A), under which a reluctant trial witness can be impeached with a prior inconsistent statement. Finally, the prosecutorial misconduct -did not warrant a new trial. While it was improper for the government to cross-examine Sr. about whether other witnesses were “liars,” this not prejudicial. The questions were irrelevant to the central issue of Sr.’s own credibility and to the “other compelling evidence of guilt admitted at trial.”