Legal Research AI

United States v. Brien

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1995-07-14
Citations: 59 F.3d 274
Copy Citations
34 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
July 14, 1995
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-1840

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       NICHOLAS BRIEN,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET
                                     ERRATA SHEET

The  opinion of  this court  issued  on July  11, 1995  is  hereby
amended as follows:

On the cover sheet:  "*  Of the District of  Northern California,"
should be changed to "* Of the Northern District of California,".


                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-1840

                        UNITED STATES,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                       NICHOLAS BRIEN,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                

                                         

                            Before

                    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     
                    Lynch, Circuit Judge,
                                                    
            and Schwarzer,* Senior District Judge.
                                                             

                                         

James  L.  Sultan  with whom  Rankin  & Sultan  was  on brief  for
                                                          
appellant.
Christopher F. Bator, Assistant United States Attorney, with  whom
                                
Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, was on brief for appellee.
                       

                                         

                        July 11, 1995
                                         
             

* Of the District of Northern California, sitting by designation.


     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  On August 31, 1993, a grand jury
                                      

indicted  Nicholas Brien for armed bank robbery, 18 U.S.C.   

2113(a),  (d),  and carrying  a  firearm  during a  crime  of

violence, id.   924(c)(1).   In April 1994, a  jury convicted
                         

Brien  of the former offense,  and he was  later sentenced to

204  months in  prison.   He  now appeals,  raising important

issues   concerning   (1)  expert   evidence   on  eyewitness

identification  and  (2) courtroom  identification procedure.

As background, we briefly summarize the evidence and do so in

the light most favorable to the government.  United States v.
                                                                      

Torres-Maldonado, 14  F.3d 95, 100 (1st  Cir.), cert. denied,
                                                                        

115 S. Ct. 193 (1994).

     According  to the  government's evidence,  Brien and  an

accomplice entered the Family  Bank in Dracut, Massachusetts,

on June  3, 1993.  Brien, armed  with a gun, confronted three

tellers and  collected money  from two of  them.  He  and his

accomplice  then fled with  over $4,000  in a  bag containing

(unknown to them)  an explodable  red dye pack.   Before  and

after the robbery,  Brien stayed  for several  days with  his

girlfriend  at the  Avalon  Motel  in Saugus,  Massachusetts.

There, on June 4, an employee found some of the stolen money-

-identified by serial numbers and red dye--in a trash  barrel

outside Brien's room.

     Brien was caught on July  15, 1993.  On August  6, 1993,

Brien  was  identified from  a  photo  array  by  three  bank

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tellers,  including  two  of   those  whom  he  had  directly

confronted.   All three testified to this effect at trial and

identified  Brien  in  the  courtroom.    Two  of  the  hotel

employees also identified Brien from a photo array as the man

who had stayed at the hotel and also identified him at trial.

The  employee who  had  found the  dye-stained money  outside

Brien's room testified to this effect.

     Given the array  of eyewitnesses,  it is  understandable

that Brien  does not  now challenge  the  sufficiency of  the

evidence, but the nature of his defense at trial is pertinent

to  the claims he  does raise on  appeal.  His  defense was a

claim  of mistaken  identity, based  in part  on inconsistent

descriptions  that  the tellers  had  given  of the  robbers'

physical characteristics after the event.  Brien also offered

testimony of one teller who was unable to pick Brien out from

the  photo  array  and from  a  customer  who  picked out  an

individual other than Brien from the photo array.

     1.    Brien's  first  claim on  appeal  concerns  expert

testimony.   Prior to trial, Brien sought an in limine ruling
                                                                  

permitting testimony  from Alexander  Yarmey, a  professor of

psychology,  as  an  expert  witness  on  the  weaknesses  of

eyewitness  identification.  The one-paragraph description in

the motion  indicated that  Yarmey would  testify as  to "the

factors that  affect memory, image  retention and retrieval,"

and it provided  a few sentences of detail.   The trial judge

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asked  for  a proffer  of testimony;  Brien then  submitted a

three-page  statement signed  by counsel,  somewhat enlarging

upon   the description.

     The next  day the  court  denied the  motion in  limine,
                                                                        

stating  that the proffer was too general and did not satisfy

the  foundational  requirements  for expert  testimony  under

Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 113 S. Ct. 2786
                                                        

(1993).   The  court  made clear  that,  if the  motion  were

renewed, the  court wanted  not the attorney's  statement but

"testimony of the  [expert] under  oath with  respect to  the

proposed foundation evidence."  In due course Yarmey filed an

eight-page affidavit, which provided  about 11 paragraphs  of

substantive opinion.  

     In  his  affidavit  Yarmey  disclaimed  any  ability  to

determine if a particular witness is credible or  accurate in

making an identification.  But he set forth three elements of

memory--observation,   retention  and   retrieval;  described

pertinent  factors that  can undermine those  elements (e.g.,
                                                                        

the  stress of being confronted with a gun; the delay between

the event  and later  identification); and drew  attention to

certain other sources  that may create or  compound errors in

identification    (e.g.,    reinforcement   through    police
                                   

questioning;  disparities in appearance  that distinguish the

suspect from others in a line-up or array).

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     Most of Yarmey's statements  were general and but  a few

related directly  to facts in this case.  We set forth in the

margin  Yarmey's  most  detailed  comment  on  the  evidence,

responding to the question, "What is [your] opinion about the

suggestiveness  of the  photospreads  used  in  this  case?"1

Neither  the affidavit  nor any  other submission  by Brien's

counsel  purported  to set  forth  in  detail the  scientific

foundations  for  any of  Yarmey's  premises  or conclusions,

although Yarmey referred once to "the literature" documenting

the  phenomenon of  "consistent  error" (i.e.,  multiple mis-
                                                         

identification based on a common source of error).

     Two days  later the  district judge  ruled that  "in the

exercise of  whatever scope  of  discretion I  have," he  was

excluding the  testimony.  The  judge expressed a  variety of

concerns  about  the   basis  for  assumptions  in   Yarmey's

testimony and  about "the  fit and usefulness  and misleading

qualities"  of the testimony.  The judge stressed that he was

not excluding expert testimony  on identification as a matter

of law.   He also   noted the risks  of confronting the  jury

                    
                                

     1"The  particular  male  photospread  in  this  instance
(because it depicts several people of a light complexion) was
of lesser reliability because witnesses could eliminate those
people who do not  fit the dark or medium complexion, which I
understand that  they observed.   This, in  itself, indicates
suggestiveness because  of  the quality  of the  photographs.
The female photospread is also suggestive because only  a few
of the photographs reflect women with any makeup or earrings,
which I understand at least one of the witnesses observed."

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with  battles of  experts  on areas  within the  common-sense

competence of jurors.

     The   issue   of    expert   testimony   on   eyewitness

identification is an important  and recurring one, and behind

it  lie issues  even  more fundamental:  what factors  should

control the  admission of  such testimony, how  much latitude

does  the trial judge have  in resolving the  issue, and what

formulas  or rules constrain the decision.  In a recent case,

we  described the  pertinent  Federal Rules  of Evidence  but

decided the case on its facts and declined to go  very far in

laying  down general rules.   United States v.  Shay, No. 93-
                                                                

2141, June 22, 1995, slip op. 13-15.  This case bears out the

wisdom of that caution.

     Broadly  speaking, the  expert  testimony  in this  case

involved a  credibility determination  within the ken  of the

ordinary  judge and  juror--unlike, say,  DNA identification.

But  Fed.   R.  Evid.   702  permits  expert   evidence  that

"assist[s]"  the jury; and quite possibly an expert such as a

psychologist familiar with identification problems could give

the  jury  background  information  about  the  mechanism  of

memory, types  of errors, error rates,  and other information

not commonly possessed by the jury--information that may even

be at odds with what a judge or juror might expect.

     But  helpfulness  is  a  matter of  degree,  and  expert

evidence  involves  costs  and  risks--too  obvious  to  need

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recounting--that distinguish it from lay evidence about "what

happened   here."      Daubert   itself,   recalibrating  the
                                          

longstanding threshold requirement that the trial judge  find

expert  evidence  to be  reliable, is  but  one facet  of the

difference  in   treatment.     Indeed,  trial  judges   have

traditionally  been  afforded  wide discretion  to  admit  or

exclude expert evidence.  E.g., Hamling v. United States, 418
                                                                    

U.S. 87, 108  (1974).   But discretion is  not carte  blanche
                                                                         

and,  in some  areas,  prior law  has  been modified  by  the

Federal Rules of Evidence.  

     In all events, for a range of reasons, trial courts have

long  hesitated   to  admit  expert  evidence  purporting  to

identify flaws  in eyewitness  identification:   for example,

courts have said  that the jury could  decide the credibility

issues  itself; that experts in  this area are  not much help

and  largely offer rather  obvious generalities;  that trials

would be  prolonged  by battles  of  experts; and  that  such

testimony  created   undue  opportunity  for   confusing  and

misleading the  jury.   Appeals courts have  generally upheld

rulings  excluding  such  evidence. E.g.,  United  States  v.
                                                                     

Fosher, 590 F.2d 381,  382 (1st Cir. 1979); United  States v.
                                                                      

Purham, 725 F.2d 450 (8th Cir. 1984).
                  

     Quite recently,  several  circuits have  suggested  that

such evidence  warrants a  more hospitable reception.   E.g.,
                                                                        

United States  v.  Rincon,  28 F.3d  921  (9th  Cir.),  cert.
                                                                         

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denied,  115 S. Ct. 605 (1994); United States v. Stevens, 935
                                                                    

F.2d 1380 (3rd Cir.  1991).  There is more  expert literature

on  the  subject,  more  experts  pressing  to  testify,  and

possibly   more   skepticism   about   the   reliability   of

eyewitnesses.   E.g., Loftus and Doyle, Eyewitness Testimony:
                                                                         

Civil and Criminal (2d ed. 1992).  It may be that a door once
                              

largely shut is now somewhat ajar.

     We are unwilling to adopt a blanket  rule that qualified

expert testimony on  eyewitness identification must routinely

be  admitted or  excluded.   Our  Fosher  decision is  not  a
                                                    

general  bar to such testimony; that case upheld an exclusion

as  within "the broad discretion allowed a trial court."  590

F.2d  at 382.    But  trial  courts  are  likely  to  educate

themselves,  and us,  by taking  these proffers  one by  one.

Obvious concerns  are the reliability and  helpfulness of the

proposed expert testimony, the  importance and the quality of

the  eyewitness  evidence it  addresses,  and  any threat  of

confusion, misleading of the jury, or unnecessary delay.

     In this case, we sustain the  district court's ruling on

the  ground that the district  judge made clear  his need for

some proffer  of data  or literature underlying  the expert's

assumptions   and  conclusions,   and  the   defense  offered

practically nothing, despite repeated opportunities to do so.

In  our view, this procedure  was justified both  in order to

determine reliability under Daubert and to allow the judge to
                                               

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gauge whether the testimony  would be helpful to the  jury or

would  confuse or mislead instead.   Nor is  there any reason

offered why Yarmey could not  have supplied this foundation. 

     Brien argues that the expert literature casting doubt on

eyewitness  evidence  is now  so  well  established that  the

courts  should take  judicial  notice of  it.   But  Yarmey's

testimony   does  not   concern  a   single  long-established

scientific principle such as whether radar can measure speed.

Rather, Yarmey offered a  set of assertions whose helpfulness

and reliability in this case depended  on what lay underneath

them.    To  say  that eyewitnesses  under  stress  sometimes

misidentify tells the jury  almost nothing beyond what common

sense and  argument would supply; almost  everything turns on

degree, data, comparable conditions, and other specifics.

     If presented with a fair sample of the  underlying data,

the district  court might  have decided  (as the trial  judge

here offered to consider) that some of the warnings were best

reflected   in  instructions;  that  other  portions  of  the

proposed testimony were reliable  and helpful; and that still

other  portions failed one or  both of these  criteria or met

them  but   were  outweighed   by  confusion   or  misleading

character.  Daubert, as well as common prudence, entitled the
                               

judge to require such underlying information, and the failure

to provide  it  supplies  an  adequate basis  for  the  trial

court's decision to reject the proffer.

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     There is nothing  to Brien's  alternative argument  that

Fed. R.  Evid.  705  entitled  Yarmey  to  offer  the  expert

testimony  without disclosing  the  underlying data,  leaving

that to be developed by cross-examination.  Rule 705  relates

to  the presentation of testimony at trial and, even then, is

subject to  the  supervision  of  the trial  judge  to  avoid

unfairness.  The rule does not impair--indeed, has nothing to

do with--the trial judge's  right to insist that he or she be

given  the underlying information by proffer as an aid to the

preliminary ruling on admissibility.

     2.  Brien's next  claim of error raises an  issue which,

if  anything, is  even  more significant  to  the conduct  of

criminal trials.   Every viewer of trials,  or even Hollywood

depictions of them, is familiar  with the routine practice by

which an eyewitness to  the crime takes the stand,  points to

the defendant  sitting at  counsel table, and  identifies the

defendant  as the one who  committed the crime.   Here, Brien

complains  of the  alleged  refusal of  the  trial judge  "to

permit  [instead]   non-suggestive  courtroom  identification

procedures."

     Prior  to trial  Brien's trial  counsel, who  appears to

have provided Brien with  an energetic and inventive defense,

began  by   moving  (with  notice  to   the  government)  for

permission  to have  the  defendant seated  in the  spectator

section  of  the   courtroom  during  the  trial;  and  by  a

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contemporaneous  motion (filed  ex  parte),  Brien's  counsel
                                                     

asked  leave  to  salt  the  audience  with  "three  or  four

individuals  of  the same  general  description  as the  bank

robber  . . . ."   Shortly before picking the jury, the trial

judge,  on March 28, addressed both motions in open court, as

follows:

     First,  the court  said that  the proposal  to  salt the

audience  opened  the  way  to "the  reverse  of  an improper

identification  procedure"  by  the government,  noting  that

Brien's proposal would allow him to bring in anyone including

an  identical  twin.    Second,  the  court  ruled  that  the

defendant could  sit "anywhere in the  courtroom," subject to

limitations required by security; but the court said it could

"have a  problem" with  the defendant switching  positions at

will from counsel table  to audience.  Third, the  court said

that  it  would  not  permit  ex  parte  submissions  on  the
                                                   

identification  procedure but  would  allow argument  by both

sides.

     Defense  counsel  said that  he  wanted  to discuss  the

matter with Brien  himself.  Two days later,  Brien's counsel

renewed  (not ex  parte)  his original  request  to bring  in
                                   

spectators  similar in  description  to the  bank robber  but

offered  no  details  that  might have  allayed  the  concern

expressed  by the trial judge.   On March  31, shortly before

opening argument, defense  counsel asked the court to rule on

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the  renewed  motion,   amending  his   earlier  request   by

indicating that Brien might choose to sit at counsel table if

the motion to bring in selected spectators were denied.  

     The trial judge then said in part:

     I  do not write blank  checks and sign  them.  Now,
     that's  what you're  asking me  to do  . .  . here.
     You're not disclosing to me anything about what are
     the arrangements that you've set up, how you expect
     to  handle it,  and  I am  not  going to  give  you
     complete authority to do it any way you want to and
     give you an  advance ruling that it's  permissible.
     As I've  said to you yesterday,  there are problems
     here.  You're very  close to the edge, it  seems to
     me,  of   some  problems  about  whether   you  are
     undertaking to proceed in  a way that will  tend to
     mislead witnesses . . . .

The  court then denied the  motion.  Defense  counsel made no

effort to provide any further details of his proposal.

     On  appeal,  Brien's  appellate  counsel  has  made  the

obvious   attack   on  the   usual   practice  of   courtroom

identification  of the  defendant  while  seated  at  counsel

table;  and he has cited  us to several  Second Circuit cases

suggesting that that court might favor a defendant who sought

a  more  balanced  form  of  courtroom  identification  where

identification was  a  contested issue,  the defendant  moved

pretrial for  a courtroom  line-up, and  the witness did  not

pick the defendant out in a fair out-of-court lineup prior to

trial.  E.g., United States v. Sebetich, 776 F.2d 412 (1985),
                                                   

cert. denied, 484 U.S. 1017 (1988).   These conditions, Brien
                        

says, were met in this case.

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     If Brien had  presented the court  with a detailed  plan

for a fair in-court  line-up, and the court had  rejected the

plan without  a plausible justification, then  on the present

facts we  think that a significant issue  would be presented.

But Brien's  motion is  not within a  country mile of  such a

proposal.   As  the trial  court sensibly  explained, Brien's

plan left room for a scenario fully capable of misleading the

jury.   To alter the standard practice,  it was up to Brien's

counsel to propose a plan that would guard against unfairness

to  either side.   This,  despite ample  invitations, Brien's

counsel declined to do.

     This refusal  may well  have been an  entirely justified

trial tactic.  If  counsel feared that a fairly  staged court

room line-up  would still likely result  in identification of

Brien  as  the  robber,  the  line-up  would  strengthen  the

credibility   of  the   witnesses  and   undermine  counsel's

misidentification argument to the jury.   But whether or  not

counsel  sought  an advantage  and  retreated  when none  was

offered, the  trial judge  was within his  discretion--and we

think eminently right--in refusing  to endorse what the trial

judge properly described as a blank check.

     3.   Four additional rather compact claims  of error are

urged  by  Brien (e.g.,  that  the  trial court  should  have
                                  

granted a requested continuance).  The government's answering

brief  provides on the surface  an ample response  to each of

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the  four claims; Brien's reply brief makes no effort to meet

the  responses.  Appraising the four claims on the merits, we

do not think  that any of them  warrants separate discussion.

In each instance the trial judge handled the matter properly,

the  issue is not close, and no significant legal question is

presented.

     By  contrast,  the first  two  issues  in the  case--the

expert  evidence and courtroom  identification--do raise very

difficult  questions  that have  been  ably  briefed on  both

sides.   But  the difficulty  of these  issues, taken  in the

abstract, confirms the wisdom  of the trial judge's approach:

outlining  his  legitimate  concerns  to  counsel,  providing

opportunities  for  those  concerns   to  be  addressed,  and

(ultimately)  insisting  on  justifications  grounded  in the

particulars of the case.

     Affirmed.
                          

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