Case o' The Week: Doe, a Discovery Dear - US v. John Doe, Affirmative Defenses, and Discovery
A visiting district judge on a
three-judge panel rejects established Ninth precedent and shifts the burden of
an affirmative defense onto the defendant.
(Albeit, with a little help from the
Supremes . . . .) United States v. John Doe,
2013 WL 363016 (9th Cir. Jan. 31, 2013), decision available here.
Players: Decision by DJ William Smith, joined by Judges Fernandez
and Berzon. Hard-fought case (and important discovery win) by ED Cal AFPD
Carolyn Wiggin.
Facts: “John Doe,” a resident of Mexico,
reached out to the FBI and tried to cooperate about drug cartels, to get his
family to the States. Id. at *1.
Meetings with an agent took place, though the agent disclaimed authorizing Doe
to begin work. Id. at *2.
At the same
time, a Fresno police detective investigated a case that – through Doe – netted
twelve pounds of meth and five kg of cocaine. Id. at *2. When arrested, Doe immediately told the Fresno detective
that he was working for the FBI. Id. The
agent confirmed Doe was being “developed” as an informant but was not currently
working for the FBI. Id.
Doe was
charged federally. At trial he sought a “public authority” instruction that
required the government to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Doe did not believe he was acting as an
informant. Id. at *3. Relying on the
Supreme Court’s decision in Dixon v.
United States, 548 U.S. 1 (2006), the district court denied the instruction.
Doe was convicted. Id. at *3.
Issue(s): In Dixon, the Supreme Court held that “Congress intended the
[defendant] to bear the burden of proving the defense of duress by a preponderance of the evidence.” Id. at *7 (citation omitted) (emphasis added). “The question of whether
Dixon applied to affirmative defenses
other than duress is a matter of first impression in the Ninth Circuit.” Id. at *7.
Held: “[L]ike
Dixon's duress defense, Doe's
common-law affirmative defense of public authority must be proven by a
preponderance of the evidence . . . .The district court was therefore correct in
applying Dixon to Doe's public
authority defense and requiring Doe, and not the government, to bear the burden
of proof.” Id. at *8 (internal
quotations and citations omitted).
Of Note: Doe does not
stand for a “per se rule that the
public authority defense must always be proven by the defendant by a
preponderance of the evidence.” Id.
at *9. The Ninth emphasizes that the question is statute- and case-specific.
Here, the drug statutes at issue had a “knowingly” mens rea element that the public authority defense could not negate.
The outcome might well be different for a specific intent crime. (Though this
might be small solace – precious few federal crimes still have specific intent mens rea requirements, and how would
public authority work in, for example, a federal assault case that requires
specific intent? Maybe “attempt” crimes, with their specific intent mens rea, still give some hope for a Doe distinction).
How to
Use: Something’s fishy with this agent. Phone
records reveal that Doe called him on the eve of this big drug transaction, and
Doe testified that he was working on the sale to help the FBI, yet the agent “didn’t
remember” the phone conversation at trial. Before trial, Doe pushed for
discovery of all information provided by Doe to the FBI, and all records of
communications between Doe and the agent. Id.
at *3. The district court denied the request as overbroad. Id. In a terrific discovery decision, the Ninth flatly reverses
this ruling. Id. at *12. The Court
explains that the discovery requests weren’t overbroad, counters that Doe
couldn’t be expected to be more specific than he was in his request, and
emphasizes (a la Stever) that
evidence is relevant if it has “any
tendency to make the existence” of a material fact more or less probable.” Id. at *13. Though not the primary
holding, Doe’s discovery discussion
is a hidden jewel worthy of heavy citation in discovery litigation.
For Further Reading:
“Prosecutorial practices have contributed to disparities in federal sentencing.”
So says the Sentencing Commission in its new Booker report. For a useful summary of the sure-to-be controversial
tome, see Prof. Berman’s interesting post here.
Image of “Meet
John Doe” movie poster from http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/Poster_-_Meet_John_Doe_01.jpg/220px-Poster_-_Meet_John_Doe_01.jpg
Steven
Kalar, Federal Public Defender N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
.
Labels: Affirmative Defenses, Berzon, Brady, Burden of Proof, Discovery, Fernandez, Giglio, Public Authority Defense, Rule 16
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