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United States v. Shay

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1995-06-22
Citations: 57 F.3d 126
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104 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-2141

                          UNITED STATES,

                            Appellee,

                                v.

                         THOMAS A. SHAY,

                      Defendant - Appellant.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

             [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
                                                              

                                           

                              Before

                     Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     

                      Boudin, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

                 and Barbadoro,* District Judge.
                                                         

                                           

     Kathy B. Weinman, by Appointment of the Court, with whom Amy
                                                                           
Baron-Evans, and Dwyer & Collora were on brief for appellant.
                                          
     Frank A. Libby, Jr.,  Assistant United States Attorney, with
                                  
whom  Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and Paul V. Kelly,
                                                                          
Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.

                                           

                          June 22, 1995
                                           

                    
                              

*  Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.


          BARBADORO, District  Judge.  Thomas Shay  Jr. was found
                    BARBADORO, District  Judge
                                              

guilty of conspiracy and  aiding and abetting an attempt  to blow

up his father's car.  In proving its  case, the government relied

in part on  incriminating statements  that Shay Jr.  made to  the

police, the media, and fellow  inmates.  The defendant  responded

by arguing  that his  statements were  unreliable  and should  be

disregarded.  In  this opinion,  we determine  whether the  court

properly prevented the defendant  from supporting his argument by

calling  a psychiatrist to testify that he suffered from a mental

disorder that  causes its  victims  to make  false and  grandiose

statements without regard  to the consequences.   We also address

various other issues that the defendant raises on appeal.

                          I.  BACKGROUND
                                    I.  BACKGROUND
                                                  

A.  The Explosion
          A.  The Explosion
                           

          Two  officers from  the Boston  Police Department  Bomb

Squad were  sent to the  home of  Shay Jr.'s father,  Thomas Shay

Sr., after Shay Sr. informed the police that he  had discovered a

suspicious black  box in his  driveway that had  become dislodged

from  the  undercarriage of  his car.    While the  officers were

examining the  box, it exploded, killing  Officer Jeremiah Hurley

and seriously  wounding Officer Frances  Foley.  Agents  from the

Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco and Firearms, working with the Boston

Police Department, later determined that the box contained two to

three sticks  of repackaged dynamite, a remote control device and

other components necessary  to detonate  the bomb  from a  remote

location.

                               -2-


B.  The Government's Case
          B.  The Government's Case
                                   

          The  government's  trial  theory   was  that  Shay  Jr.

conspired  with a  friend,  Alfred Trenkler,  to kill  Shay Jr.'s

father by  blowing  up  his  car.    In  proving  its  case,  the

government  relied primarily on  several incriminating statements

that  Shay Jr.  made  after the  bombing.   We describe  his most

damaging  statements   to  illustrate  their  importance  to  the

government's case.

          1.  Shortly after  the bombing, Shay Jr. told  a police

officer, "he was sorry about it and wished he could turn back the

hands of time  and make it  not have  happened."  The  government

argued  at trial that this  statement was evidence  of Shay Jr.'s

guilty conscience.

          2.  Shay Jr. told  reporters covering the bombing  that

he  had been questioned about  whether his father  was capable of

constructing a remote control device.  Because the police claimed

that  they  did not  question Shay  Jr.  about the  bomb's remote

control detonator until  after Shay Jr. made  this statement, the

government argued  that the statement demonstrated  that Shay Jr.

had special knowledge  about the bomb that  only a co-conspirator

would possess.

          3.  Shay Jr. gave an interview to a television reporter

in  which  he made  several  statements  concerning the  bombing.

Although  he claimed in the interview that  he was only guilty of

knowing who had built  the bomb after-the-fact, he  admitted that

Trenkler had told him  before the bombing that he  was planning a

                               -3-


"surprise"  for Shay Jr., which turned out  to be the bomb.  Shay

Jr. also acknowledged during the  interview that he had purchased

a toggle switch and an "AA" battery holder that Trenkler had used

in building the bomb.

          4.   Shay Jr.  allegedly told  a fellow  cellmate, "I'm

boom, boom.  Don't  you know me?  You  have to know me.   I'm the

one who  killed the Boston cop."  According to the cellmate, Shay

Jr.  also told  him  that  he and  Trenkler  had  built the  bomb

together and  attached it  to the  undercarriage of  his father's

car. 

          The  government  supported  Shay   Jr.'s  incriminating

statements  about  the  bombing  with other  evidence  that:  (a)

Trenkler and Shay Jr.  were friends who were in  sporadic contact

from 1988 through the fall of 1991; (b) Trenkler had the skill to

construct  the bomb; (c) gray  duct tape consistent  with that in

the  bomb  was  discovered in  a  search  of Trenkler's  parents'

residence; (d) ten days prior to the explosion, someone purchased

a toggle switch and "AA" battery  holder of the same type used in

the bomb from  a Radio  Shack store located  directly across  the

street from where Trenkler was working; (e) Radio Shack's records

listed  the purchaser's  name as  "SAHY," and  his identification

number corresponding  to the  last four  digits of his  telephone

number as "3780," which  was similar to  the last four digits  of

Shay  Sr.'s  home  telephone number,  "7380";  (f)  Shay  Jr. was

strongly  motivated  to  kill  his  father  because  they  had  a

difficult "love-hate" relationship, and Shay Jr. believed that he

                               -4-


would  collect  a  substantial  inheritance if  his  father  were

killed; and (g)  Shay Jr. demonstrated consciousness  of guilt by

fleeing the jurisdiction after he was released on  bail following

his arrest on an unrelated matter.

C.  The Defendant's Case
          C.  The Defendant's Case
                                  

          Shay Jr. responded to  the government's case by arguing

that his statements about  the bombing were unreliable,  that the

rest  of the  evidence failed  to establish  his guilt,  and that

other evidence suggested that  Shay Sr. may have built  the bomb.

His attack on the statements comprised three parts.  First, in an

effort to demonstrate  that he  made the statements  in order  to

fulfill a  compulsive need for  attention even  though they  were

false, the defense elicited testimony from several witnesses that

Shay  Jr.  regularly  told  the  same  grandiose  stories,  often

changing significant  details each time he  told them; repeatedly

sought out the media to talk about the bombing even though it was

not in his interest to do so; made comments concerning the police

investigation  which  were  not  confirmed  by  the  police;  and

expressed abnormal interest in the media attention he received as

a result of his statements.

          Second, the  defense attempted to show  that Shay Jr.'s

many   statements  about   the  bombing   were  conflicting   and

demonstrably wrong  about important details that  would have been

known  by a co-conspirator.   In other words,  as defense counsel

stated in her summation, "[Shay Jr.] may be  trying to talk about

this crime, but  he doesn't make it.   He can't pull it off.   He

                               -5-


doesn't have the  facts right."   To illustrate  this point,  the

defense pointed  to Shay Jr.'s repeated  and incorrect statements

that  the  bomb  contained   C-4  explosive  (or  plastique)  and

batteries purchased from Radio Shack.

          Finally,  the  defense  attempted  to  call  Dr. Robert

Phillips, a psychiatrist, who  was prepared to testify that  Shay

Jr.  suffered   from  a  recognized  mental   disorder  known  as

"pseudologia  fantastica."1    According to  Dr.  Phillips,  this
                    
                              

1  Pseudologia fantastica is categorized as a factitious disorder
in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders  (3d
ed.  1987)   ["DSMIII-R"]  and   is  sometimes  referred   to  as
Munchausen's Disease named  after Baron von Munchausen  who was a
German  storyteller who  wandered the  countryside spinning  tall
tales.

   Pseudologia  fantastica   is  a   variant   of  lying,   often
characterized  as an  extreme  form of  pathological  lying.   R.
Sharrock and  M. Cresswell, Pseudologia Fantastica:  A Case Study
                                                                           
of a Man Charged with Murder, 29 Med. Sci. Law.  323, 323 (1989).
                                      
Unlike  "con-men" whose lying is for the purpose of some material
gain, victims  of this condition present  falsifications that are
"'disproportionate to  any discernable end.'"   Id.  Pseudologues
                                                             
represent fantasies as real  occurrences.  "These fantasies often
involve  dramatic, grandiose, and  exaggerated events consciously
acknowledged as false  by the patient,  yet presented as  truth."
Charles  W. Dithrich,  Pseudologia Fantastica,  Dissociation, and
                                                                           
Potential  Space, in Child  Treatment, 72  Int. J.  Psycho. Anal.
                                               
657, 657 (1991).  "External reality is negated by an enthralling,
seductive  and   exciting  inner  world  in   which  anything  is
possible." Id. at 658.  The gain for the pseudologue could be ego
                        
enhancement or the attention  received as a result of  the story.
Sharrock and Cresswell, supra at 323.   Many lie for no  apparent
                                       
reason, in circumstances where they have nothing to gain from not
telling the truth.  Anne Vaughan, "Believe me - I cannot tell the
truth," The Independent, July 9, 1991, at 13.

   Pseudologues are also  often highly compliant  and suggestible
to misleading information.  Sharrock and Cresswell, supra at 323.
                                                                   
"'They are  often histrionic or  suggestible types who  thrive on
attention  and lie for a  quick high...and don't  worry about the
consequences.'"  Vaughan, supra.  Furthermore, even when they are
                                         
confronted  with  their lies,  many  pseudologues  are unable  to
control their lies.  Id.
                                  

                               -6-


condition caused Shay Jr. to

            spin  out   webs   of  lies   which   are
            ordinarily self-aggrandizing and serve to
            place  him in  the  center of  attention.
            Put otherwise, coping for Mr. Shay, given
            his   personality   structure,    entails
            seeking attention, tailoring his words to
            the audience, creating fantasies in which
            he  is  the central  figure,  and through
            which he attempts  to enlist his audience
            .  .  . .    Mr.  Shay's stories  are  an
            attempt to draw  others into his  fantasy
            world in order  to meet the interpersonal
            needs  which  were  not  met  during  his
            childhood.

          The  district court prevented the defense from offering

this testimony,  concluding that the evidence  should be excluded

pursuant  to Fed.  R. Evid.  702 primarily  because the  jury was

capable of  determining the reliability of  Shay Jr.'s statements

without the testimony.2
                    
                              

   As  noted  by one  doctor, "[i]t  is  quite common  for people
suffering  from pseudologia  fantastica to  turn up  at a  police
station confessing to a crime they did not commit.  Usually these
have  been  high-profile,  well-publicized  cases  such  as  bank
robberies.   'This group of pseudologues loves the excitement and
power  that  helping  the police  brings.    It  makes them  feel
important  and they relish all  the attention and  fame that they
receive from the case...'."  Id.
                                          

2  The court offered the following explanation:

               With respect to the psychiatric expert
            offered by the defendant, as I understand
            that, it  is  offered to  show  that  the
            defendant has an  uncontrollable need  to
            draw  attention to  himself and  will say
            anything  to  satisfy  his  need,  and in
            particular, it is offered to explain away
            his  inculpatory  statement.   Under  702
            expert evidence is  admissible to  assist
            the  jury  to understand  evidence  or to
            determine a fact in issue.  The record in
            this case is replete with the defendant's
            contradictory  statements,  indeed,   his

                               -7-


                         II.  DISCUSSION
                                   II.  DISCUSSION
                                                  

A.   Exclusion of Expert Testimony Concerning the
          A.   Exclusion of Expert Testimony Concerning the
                                                           
     Reliability of Shay Jr.'s Statements
               Reliability of Shay Jr.'s Statements
                                                   

          In   preventing  Dr.  Phillips   from  testifying,  the

district court relied on  its discretionary authority pursuant to

Fed.  R.  Evid. 702  to exclude  expert  testimony that  will not

"assist  the trier  of  fact to  understand  the evidence  or  to

determine a fact in  issue."  Shay Jr. contends that the decision

was based upon  an erroneous  interpretation of Rule  702.3   The
                    
                              

            fantastic ones about  tanks and  bombers,
            and other things.

               Under  these  circumstances, the  jury
            does  not  need  expert evidence  on  the
            issue  of  the  defendant's  credibility.
            And   there  is,  with  respect  to  this
            evidence, the additional danger  that the
            expert   will   go   beyond   the   brief
            references  to -- I  think it's called --
            pseudologiafantastica [sic]  in the areas
            that are  in  fact inadmissible  such  as
            diminished     capacity,     personality,
            deficit, and so on.

               The quintessential question is whether
            the jury will  believe what the defendant
            says,  and on  that question,  given this
            record,   the  jury  does  not  need  any
            additional expert evidence or  any expert
            evidence.   Accordingly, I  will rule out
            the  defendant's  proffer on  that issue,
            and  your objection  is noted  as  is the
            Government's.

3   Shay Jr. also  argues that  the exclusion  of Dr.  Phillips's
testimony  violated  his  Sixth  Amendment  right  to  present  a
complete  defense.   The  Sixth   Amendment's Compulsory  Process
Clause  has been interpreted to entitle a defendant to both "'the
right to the government's assistance in compelling the attendance
of  favorable witnesses at  trial and the  right to  put before a
jury evidence that might  influence the determination of guilt.'"
Taylor   v.  Illinois,   484  U.S.   400,  408   (1988)  (quoting
                               
Pennsylvania  v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39, 56 (1987)).  Nevertheless,
                                  

                               -8-


government  argues  that the  district  court did  not  abuse its

discretion in  excluding the  evidence and  alternatively asserts

that the court was obligated to exclude the  evidence as a matter

of law because it  concerned a credibility question that  was the

jury's exclusive  province  to resolve.   We  first consider  the

government's argument for categorical exclusion.

          1.   Must expert testimony concerning credibility
                    1.   Must expert testimony concerning credibility
               questions be excluded as a matter of law?
                         questions be excluded as a matter of law?

          In arguing  that expert testimony  bearing directly  on

credibility  questions is never admissible, the government relies

on selected  quotations from decisions  in other circuits.   See,
                                                                          

e.g., Bachman v. Leapley, 953 F.2d 440, 441 (8th  Cir. 1992) ("It
                                  

is  the  exclusive   province  of  the  jury  to   determine  the

believability of the  witness . . . [a]n expert  is not permitted

to offer an opinion as to the believability or truthfulness  of a

victim's story.");  United States  v. Benson,  941 F.2d  598, 604
                                                      

(7th  Cir. 1991)  ("[c]redibility  is not  a  proper subject  for

expert  testimony"),  modified, 957  F.2d  301  (7th Cir.  1992);
                                        

United  States  v. Barnard,  490 F.2d  907,  912 (9th  Cir. 1973)
                                    

("[c]redibility, however, is for the  jury - the jury is the  lie

                    
                              

the  right to  present evidence  is not  unlimited.   Chambers v.
                                                                        
Mississippi, 410 U.S.  284, 302  (1973).  "The  accused does  not
                     
have an unfettered right to  offer testimony that is incompetent,
privileged,  or otherwise  inadmissible under  standard rules  of
evidence."   Taylor,  484 U.S. at  410.   We need  not define the
                             
outer limits of  Shay Jr.'s  Sixth Amendment rights  in order  to
decide the present case  because, at least in this  instance, the
Sixth Amendment offers  Shay Jr. no  greater protection than  the
rules of evidence.   See United  States v. Fosher, 590  F.2d 381,
                                                           
384 n.2 (1st  Cir. 1979)  (right to compulsory  process does  not
include the right to adduce properly excluded evidence).

                               -9-


detector in  the courtroom"), cert. denied, 416  U.S. 959 (1974).
                                                    

We  think  the government  makes  too  much of  these  decisions.

Rather than requiring the wholesale exclusion of expert testimony

concerning  credibility issues,  these cases  stand for  the more

limited proposition that an expert's opinion that another witness

is lying or telling the truth is ordinarily inadmissible pursuant

to Rule 702 because the opinion exceeds the scope of the expert's

specialized knowledge and therefore  merely informs the jury that

it  should reach a particular  conclusion.    See, e.g., Bachman,
                                                                          

953 F.2d  at 441; Benson, 941  F.2d at 604-05; cf.  Fed. R. Evid.
                                                            

704 advisory committee's note  (evidence can be excluded pursuant

to Rule 702 if it "would merely tell a jury what result to reach,

somewhat  in the manner of oath-helpers of  an earlier day").  In

the present case, the district court precluded  Dr. Phillips from

testifying rather  than merely limiting his  testimony to matters

that were within the scope of his expertise.  Thus, the decisions

the government cites do not justify the court's ruling.

          The government's position is further undermined  by the

rules  themselves which  recognize that  expert testimony  may be

admitted to  establish a  witness's  character for  truthfulness.

Fed.  R.  Evid.  402  provides  that  all  relevant  evidence  is

admissible unless its exclusion  is required by the Constitution,

an  act  of  Congress,  or another  rule,  and  no constitutional

provision,  law,  or rule  requires  the  automatic exclusion  of

expert  testimony  simply  because  it  concerns   a  credibility

question.    See Margaret  Berger, United  States  v. Scop:   The
                                                                           

                               -10-


Common-Law  Approach to  an  Expert's Opinion  About a  Witness's
                                                                           

Credibility  Still Does Not Work,  55 Brook. L.  Rev. 558, 582-87
                                          

(1989).     Moreover,  Fed.   R.  Evid.  608(a),   governing  the

admissibility  of  opinion   testimony  concerning  a   witness's

character, contemplates that truthful or untruthful character may

be  proved by expert testimony.  The advisory committee's note to

Rule 608(a) references Fed. R. Evid.  405(a), which describes the

acceptable methods  for proving relevant character  traits.  Fed.

R.  Evid. 608  advisory committee's  note.   Rule 405's  advisory

committee's  note,  in  turn,  acknowledges that  expert  opinion

testimony is to  be included within  Rule 405's  scope.  Fed.  R.

Evid. 405(a) advisory committee's  note ("If character is defined

as the kind of  person one is, then account must  be taken of the

varying ways of arriving at  the estimate.  These may range  from

the opinion of  the employer who has found the  man honest to the

opinion   of  the   psychiatrist  based   upon  examination   and

testing.").   Thus, the  Federal Rules of  Evidence permit expert

testimony to be offered in appropriate circumstances to establish

a witness's truthful or untruthful character.4

          The government's  fall-back position  is  that even  if

expert  testimony can  be  used to  prove a  testifying witness's
                    
                              

4   Our decision in United  States v. Kepreos, 759  F.2d 961 (1st
                                                       
Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 901 (1985), is not to the contrary.
                             
Although  we  noted  in  Kepreos  that  "there  is  no indication
                                          
whatsoever  that either  the  draftmen or  Congress  had in  mind
admitting  evidence  of  broad psychological  traits  or clinical
states such as 'repression' or 'dependency'  or the other similar
characteristics . . .  ,"  our observation was  expressly limited
to broad and undefined psychological traits that were at issue in
that case.  Id. at 965.
                         

                               -11-


untruthful character, it cannot be used to attack the reliability

of a defendant's out-of-court statements because the defendant is

a  declarant, not a testifying  witness.  This  argument, too, is

unavailing.  Fed. R. Evid. 806 provides that:

            When a hearsay statement, or  a statement
            defined in Rule 801(d)(2)(C), (D) or (E),
            has  been  admitted   in  evidence,   the
            credibility  of  the  declarant   may  be
            attacked,   and   if  attacked,   may  be
            supported, by  any evidence   which would
            be  admissible  for  those   purposes  if
            declarant had testified as a witness.

Although the rule does not expressly include attempts to attack a

defendant's out-of-court  statements admitted pursuant to Fed. R.

Evid.  801(d)(2)(A),  the  Senate  Judiciary  Committee's  report

concerning the proposed rules states:

            The  committee considered  it unnecessary
            to include statements  contained in  Rule
            801(d)(2)(A) and (B)  - the statement  by
            the   party-opponent   himself   or   the
            statement of which he has  manifested his
            adoption - because the credibility of the
            party-opponent  is  always subject  to an
            attack on his credibility.

S. Rep. No. 1277, 93d  Cong., 2d Sess. (1974).  We agree with the

Seventh  Circuit  Court  of  Appeals that  the  Senate  Judiciary

Committee's report  correctly states the  law.  United  States v.
                                                                        

Dent, 984 F.2d  1453, 1460 (7th Cir.),  cert. denied, 114  S. Ct.
                                                              

(1993).    Thus,   we  reject  the    government's  argument  for

categorical exclusion  and turn  to the district  court's reasons

for excluding the evidence.

          2.   Did the district court properly exclude the
                    2.   Did the district court properly exclude the
               psychiatrist's testimony pursuant to Rule 702?
                         psychiatrist's testimony pursuant to Rule 702?

          A district court's decision  to admit or exclude expert

                               -12-


testimony  is  entitled to  great  deference.   United  States v.
                                                                        

Echeverri,  982 F.2d 675, 680  (1st Cir. 1993);  United States v.
                                                                        

Hoffman,  832 F.2d 1299,  1310 (1st  Cir. 1987).   Thus,  we will
                 

reverse a decision  on this, or  any other evidentiary  question,

only  if: (1)  the  district  court  based  the  decision  on  an

incorrect  legal standard,  see United  States v. Rahm,  993 F.2d
                                                                

1405,  1410 (9th Cir. 1993);  United States v.  Pelullo, 964 F.2d
                                                                 

193, 198  (3d Cir. 1992),  or (2)  we have a  "definite and  firm

conviction that  the court made a clear  error of judgment in the

conclusion  it  reached based  upon  a weighing  of  the relevant

factors."   United States v.  Benavente G mez, 921  F.2d 378, 384
                                                       

(1st  Cir. 1990)  (internal  quotations and  citations  omitted).

Applying this standard, we conclude that the district court erred

in excluding Dr. Phillips's testimony pursuant to Rule 702.

            a.  Rule 702's Requirements
                      a.  Rule 702's Requirements
                                                 

          Rule  702  consists  of   three  distinct  but  related

requirements.  First, a proposed expert witness must be qualified

to  testify  as  an  expert  by  "knowledge,  skill,  experience,

training, or education." Fed. R. Evid. 702; accord United  States
                                                                           

v. Paiva,  892 F.2d  148,  160 (1st  Cir. 1989)  ("a witness  may
                  

qualify as  an expert  on any  one of  [Rule  702's] five  listed

grounds").     Second,  the   expert's  testimony   must  concern

"scientific, technical or other  specialized knowledge."  Fed. R.

Evid. 702;  accord Daubert v. Merrell  Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
                                                                          

113  S. Ct. 2786, 2795  (describing criteria to  be considered in

determining reliability  of scientific testimony).   Finally, the

                               -13-


testimony  must "assist  the  trier  of  fact to  understand  the

evidence or  to determine a fact  in issue."  Fed.  R. Evid. 702;

accord Daubert, 113 S. Ct. at 2795.  Since the district court did
                        

not question  Dr.  Phillips's qualifications  or the  specialized

nature  of  his opinions,  we focus  our  analysis on  Rule 702's

assistance requirement.

          The fundamental  question that  a court must  answer in

determining whether a proposed expert's testimony will assist the

trier  of  fact is  "'[w]hether  the  untrained layman  would  be

qualified to determine intelligently and to the best degree,  the

particular  issue  without  enlightenment  from  those  having  a

specialized  understanding  of  the  subject  matter  involved.'"

United  States  v.  Montas, 41  F.3d  775,  783  (1st Cir.  1994)
                                    

(quoting  Fed. R.  Evid.  702 advisory  committee's note),  cert.
                                                                           

denied,  63 U.S.L.W.  3818 (U.S.  1995); accord United  States v.
                                                                        

Lamattina,  889 F.2d 1191, 1194 (1st Cir. 1989); United States v.
                                                                        

Rivera  Rodr guez, 808  F.2d  886,  888  (1st  Cir.  1986).    In
                           

answering this  question, the court must  first determine whether

the  proposed testimony  is relevant  and fits  the facts  of the

case.5   Daubert, 113  S. Ct. at  2795-96; In Re  Paoli R.R. Yard
                                                                           
                    
                              

5   The concept of "fit"  requires that a valid  connection exist
between the expert's  testimony and a  disputed issue.   Daubert,
                                                                          
113  S.  Ct.  at  2796.    Judge  Becker,  who coined  the  term,
illustrates  the  concept  with  the  following  example.   If  a
plaintiff contends that  he or she  developed cancer after  being
exposed to chemical X  and seeks to support that  contention with
expert testimony  that chemical X  causes cancer in  animals, the
testimony will  not  fit the  facts  of the  case and  should  be
excluded  unless  the  plaintiff   also  offers  reliable  expert
testimony  that  results  observed  in  the  animal  studies  are
transferable to  humans.   In Re Paoli  R.R. Yard PCB  Litig., 35
                                                                       

                               -14-


PCB Litig.,  35  F.3d at  742-43.   The  inquiry  then shifts  to
                    

whether the witness's opinions  are based upon specialized skill,

training, or experience.   Benson, 941 F.2d at 604;  cf. Daubert,
                                                                          

113  S. Ct. at 2796 (relaxation of Fed. R. Evid. 602's first-hand

knowledge requirement  is justified for  expert testimony because

an  "expert's opinion will have a reliable basis in the knowledge

and  experience  of  his  discipline").    Unless  the  witness's

opinions are informed by expertise, they are no more helpful than

the opinions of  a lay witness.   Thus, such  opinions cannot  be

admitted  pursuant to Rule 702  and instead must  comply with the

requirements of Fed. R. Evid.  701 governing the admissibility of

opinion testimony by lay witnesses.  See generally  United States
                                                                           

v. Jackman, 48 F.3d  1, 4-5 (1st Cir. 1995)  (describing standard
                    

for  admissibility of opinion  testimony by  lay witness).   This

circuit  has   not  decided  whether,  after   Daubert,  reliable
                                                                

testimony from a qualified  expert may be deemed  unhelpful under

Rule   702  even  if  these  aspects  of  the  rule's  assistance

requirement  are satisfied.   But cf.  In Re Paoli  R.R. Yard PCB
                                                                           

Litig.,  35  F.3d  at  747  (noting  that  challenges  to  expert
                

testimony as  prejudicial must be  analyzed pursuant to  Rule 403

rather than Rule  702).  We need  not resolve this  question here

because, as  we describe  in detail  below, the district  court's

reasons  for excluding  the evidence  are insufficient  under any

plausible reading of Rule 702.

                    
                              

F.3d 717,  743 (3d  Cir. 1994),  cert.  denied, 115  S. Ct.  1253
                                                        
(1995).

                               -15-


            b.  The District Court's Analysis
                      b.  The District Court's Analysis
                                                       

          Dr.  Phillips was  prepared  to testify  that Shay  Jr.

suffered from a mental disorder that caused him to make grandiose

statements  similar   in  nature  to  the   statements  that  the

government  was seeking to use  against him.   The district court

excluded the  testimony because  it concluded that  the testimony

would  not assist  the jury  in light  of  other evidence  in the

record  concerning  the  reliability of  Shay  Jr.'s  statements.

However,  whether or not the  jury had the  capacity to generally
                                                                           

assess  the reliability of these statements in light of the other

evidence in  the case,  it plainly  was unqualified  to determine

without  assistance the particular issue of  whether Shay Jr. may
                                            

have  made false statements against  his own interests because he

suffered from  a mental disorder.   Common understanding conforms

to the notion that  a person ordinarily does not  make untruthful

inculpatory  statements.   See Fed.  R. Evid.  804(b)(3) advisory
                                        

committee's  note  (statements  against  interest  are especially

reliable  because  "persons  do  not make  statements  which  are

damaging  to themselves  unless satisfied  for good  reasons that

they  are  true").    Dr. Phillips  would  have  testified  that,

contrary to this common sense assumption, Shay Jr.  suffered from

a recognized  mental  disorder  that caused  him  to  make  false

statements even  though they were inconsistent  with his apparent

self-interest.    Thus,  Dr.   Phillips  was  prepared  to  offer

specialized  opinion testimony,  grounded in  his expertise  as a

psychiatrist,  that could  have  "explode[d] common  myths" about

                               -16-


evidence vital to the government's case.  United States v. Moore,
                                                                          

786 F.2d 1308, 1312  (5th Cir. 1986) (citations omitted).   While

the  record contains other evidence  that Shay Jr.  told lies and

boasted  to an unusual degree,  this evidence, standing alone, is

much  less  powerful  than  the psychiatric  testimony  that  Dr.

Phillips  was prepared  to offer.   Moreover,  the court  did not

express any concern that Dr. Phillips was unqualified or that his

testimony  was unreliable because  it concerned some  novel or ad

hoc syndrome.   Under all of  the circumstances, it  was a  clear

error in judgment for the district court to exclude the testimony

under any plausible interpretation of Rule 702.6

          3.  Is a new trial required?
                    3.  Is a new trial required?

          Although a  court  may  not  exclude  expert  testimony

simply because it concerns a credibility question or because non-

expert testimony  was presented  on the  same  issue, it  retains

ample discretion to  exclude or  limit such  testimony for  other

reasons.  Even if expert testimony is admissible pursuant to Rule

702, it  may be disallowed pursuant  to Fed. R. Evid.  403 if its

prejudicial,  misleading,  wasteful,  confusing,   or  cumulative

nature  substantially  outweighs its  probative  value.   As  the
                    
                              

6   The district court  also expressed concern  that Dr. Phillips
should not testify  because he might stray into the impermissible
subject of Shay Jr.'s mental capacity to commit the  crime.  This
concern, essentially that the  testimony might have a prejudicial
effect, must  be addressed pursuant to Rule  403's balancing test
rather  than pursuant  to Rule  702's helpfulness standard.   See
                                                                           
Daubert, 113 S. Ct. at 2798.  Applying Rule 403, we conclude that
                 
the  potential for prejudice cited  by the court  could have been
prevented  by  appropriate  limitations   on  the  scope  of  Dr.
Phillips's  testimony.  Thus, the court's concern cannot serve as
an independent basis for its decision.

                               -17-


Supreme Court recently observed,  "'[e]xpert evidence can be both

powerful  and  quite  misleading  because of  the  difficulty  in

evaluating  it.   Because  of this  risk,  the judge  in weighing

possible prejudice against  probative force under Rule 403 of the

present rules exercises more control  over experts than over  lay

witnesses.'"  Id.  at 2798  (quoting Weinstein, Rule  702 of  the
                                                                           

Federal Rules of Evidence is Sound; It Should Not Be Amended, 138
                                                                      

F.R.D. 631, 632 (1991)).

          The  government  argues  on appeal  that  the  district

court's  decision  should  be  affirmed  because  Dr.  Phillips's

testimony does not  sufficiently fit  the facts of  the case  and

because  the potential  prejudice  resulting from  his  testimony

substantially outweighs its  probative value.   We are unable  to

address these  arguments  on the  present record.   The  district

court  did not hold an  evidentiary hearing on  these issues, nor

did  the court make any findings that would support the exclusion

of  the  evidence  for  the  reasons  cited  by  the  government.

Accordingly, the government's arguments must be addressed, in the

first instance, by  the district court on remand.   See United v.
                                                                        

Streifel,  781 F.2d 953, 958 (1st Cir. 1986), appeal after remand
                                                                           

sub nom, United States v. Quinn, 815 F.2d 156 (1st Cir. 1987).
                                         

          Finally, we note that  if the district court determines

on  remand  that  Dr.  Phillips  should  have been  permitted  to

testify,  the exclusion  of  the testimony  cannot be  considered

"harmless  error."   Although  not  all  erroneous exclusions  of

evidence  are harmful,  where  the exclusion  "results in  actual

                               -18-


prejudice because it  had a substantial  and injurious effect  or

influence  in  determining  the   jury's  verdict,"  reversal  is

required.  United States v. Legarda, 17 F.3d  496, 499 (1st Cir.)
                                             

(internal quotations and citations omitted), cert. denied, 115 S.
                                                                   

Ct. 81 (1994).  Here,  the statements at issue were vital  to the

government's case.7   Moreover,  although the court  allowed Shay

Jr. to  indirectly attack the statements  through other evidence,

he  was deprived of the  opportunity to show  that his statements

were  the unreliable  product  of a  recognized mental  disorder.

Given the  importance of the statements to  the government's case

and  the  severe restriction  placed  on  Shay Jr.'s  ability  to

challenge   them,   we  cannot   say   that   the  exclusion   of

Dr. Phillips's  testimony did  not  substantially  influence  the

jury's verdict.   See id.;  United States v.  Versaint, 849  F.2d
                                                                

827, 832  (3d Cir.  1988) (error  not  harmless where  improperly

excluded evidence went to heart of the defense); United States v.
                                                                        

Ouimette, 753 F.2d 188,  193 (1st Cir. 1985) (error  not harmless
                  

because  excluded  testimony was  "the  core  of the  defendant's

case").

B.   Other Issues
          B.   Other Issues
                           

          Shay Jr. argues  that he is entitled to a new trial for

several additional reasons.  We examine these claims to determine

whether a  new  trial is  warranted irrespective  of whether  the

                    
                              

7    The  district  court  acknowledged  the  importance  of  the
statements to the government's  case at a side bar  conference on
the  fourteenth day of trial  when it observed  that without Shay
Jr.'s statements, "the government would be sunk."

                               -19-


court erred in preventing Shay Jr. from offering expert testimony

to attack his statements.

          1.  Shay Jr.'s communications with his former
                    1.  Shay Jr.'s communications with his former
              attorney
                        attorney

          Shay Jr.'s  former attorney, William  McPhee, testified

as  a defense witness that he received  a copy of the Radio Shack

receipt  from the government  and gave it  to Shay Jr.  in May of

1992, prior  to  Shay  Jr.  making any  statements  about  having

purchased the items from Radio  Shack.  He was also permitted  to

testify that he and Shay  Jr. had several discussions  concerning

the  receipt.  However, Shay  Jr. claims that  the district court

improperly prevented  McPhee from  also testifying that  Shay Jr.

told him  that he had never  seen the Radio  Shack receipt before

May 1992.   We conclude that Shay Jr. has  forfeited his right to

raise  this  contention on  appeal  because the  record  does not

demonstrate  that  he  adequately   informed  the  court  of  the

substance of the excluded evidence.  See Fed. R. Evid. 103(a)(2).
                                                  

          McPhee's proposed testimony raised  several evidentiary

questions that the district court attempted to resolve in advance

of  his  actual  testimony.   Of  particular  concern  to defense

counsel was the  extent to  which the court  would deem  McPhee's

testimony  to result in a waiver of the attorney-client privilege

and open the door to cross-examination as to the substance of the

communications.  In  arguing that the  testimony would not  waive

the privilege, defense counsel repeatedly informed the court that

she did not  propose to ask  McPhee to describe the  substance of

his  conversations with  Shay  Jr.   Further,  in her  voir  dire

                               -20-


examination,  defense  counsel, true  to  her  word, limited  her

inquiry by not questioning McPhee concerning the substance of the

communications.

          McPhee's  testimony before the  jury followed  the path

traveled on voir dire.  After handing McPhee the redacted copy of

the  Radio  Shack  receipt,  defense  counsel  asked  McPhee  the

following questions:

          COUNSEL:  And did  you have  one conversation
          with Mr.  Shay on  [the subject of  the Radio
          Shack Receipt] or more than one conversation?
          WITNESS: I had more than one conversation.
          COUNSEL: Can you tell us 1,2,3,4?
          WITNESS: As many as I could focus Tom in on -
          -
          GOVT: Your honor, I object.
          COURT: You can or can't recall, tell us.
          WITNESS: I  can't recall the exact  number of
          conversations on the  subject I had  with Mr.
          Shay.
          COUNSEL: But the subject of  the conversation
          was --
          GOVT:  Objection   to  the  subject   of  the
          conversation.
          COURT:  I  think  he  already  answered  your
          question,  Ms.  Gertner.  You  may  be  going
          further than you really want to.
          COUNSEL: I want to make sure that the subject
          of the  repeated conversations was  the Radio
          Shack --
          GOVT: Your  honor, I object  to the substance
          of the conversation.
          COURT: But you've already done it.
          COUNSEL: I want to clarify that it was on the
          subject of this document.
          GOVT: Objection.
          COURT: The objection is sustained.

At no point did defense counsel inform the court that she planned

to have  McPhee testify that  Shay Jr. had  told him that  he had

never  seen  the Radio  Shack  receipt before  receiving  it from

McPhee.  To the  contrary, counsel's representations, both before

                               -21-


and during the  testimony, led the  district court to  reasonably

conclude that the additional  testimony defense counsel sought to

elicit  would   only  concern  matters  that   had  already  been

adequately covered.  Accordingly, Shay Jr. forfeited his right to

challenge  the excluded evidence  on appeal by  failing to inform

the court  in a timely  manner of the  substance of  the excluded

evidence.  Fed. R. Evid. 103(a)(2); United States v. Bonneau, 970
                                                                      

F.2d 929,  933 (1st Cir.  1992); Earle  v. Benoit, 850  F.2d 836,
                                                           

847-48 n.13 (1st Cir. 1988).

          2.   The adequacy of the jury instructions
                    2.   The adequacy of the jury instructions

          Shay  Jr.  argues  that  the  district court  committed

reversible error  in failing to  instruct the jury  in accordance

with his  proposed instruction concerning the  reliability of his

statements.    Because Shay  Jr. did  not  object to  the court's

failure to  give the proposed  instruction,8 we review  the issue

for "plain  error."  United States  v. Nason, 9 F.3d  155, 160-61
                                                      

(1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 1331 (1994).
                                       

          Although a defendant  has a right to  an instruction on

his theory of defense if that theory is valid and is supported by

the record, United  States v.  Flores, 968 F.2d  1366, 1367  (1st
                                               

Cir. 1992), he  "has no right to put words  in the judge's mouth.

                    
                              

8  Fed.  R. Crim. P. 30 provides in pertinent part: "No party may
assign as error any  portion of the charge or  omission therefrom
unless  the party  objects  thereto before  the  jury retires  to
consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which that
party  objects and the grounds  of the objection."   Although the
defendant made  several objections to  the charge, none  of those
objections   addressed  the   court's  instructions   on  witness
credibility or the reliability of Shay Jr.'s statements.

                               -22-


So  long  as  the  charge sufficiently  conveys  the  defendant's

theory,  it need not parrot the exact language that the defendant

prefers."   United States  v. McGill, 953  F.2d 10,  12 (1st Cir.
                                              

1992);  accord Nason,  9 F.3d  at 161  (reversible error  only if
                              

instruction was substantially correct,  was not covered in charge

given, and failure to  give it substantially impaired ability  to

present  a defense).  In  the present case,  the district court's

instructions adequately  covered the  general subject  of witness

credibility and the  specific subject of the  reliability of Shay

Jr.'s  statements.     Further,  the  instructions   sufficiently

conveyed  the defendant's  theory that  based on  the defendant's

many contradictory  statements, none of his  statements should be

found  reliable.   Under these  circumstances, it  was  not plain

error for the court to refuse to give the requested instructions.

          3.   Exclusion of expert testimony concerning
                    3.   Exclusion of expert testimony concerning
               diminished capacity
                         diminished capacity

          Shay  Jr.'s  principal trial  theory  was  that he  was

uninvolved  in the  bombing.   Nevertheless, prior  to  trial, he

filed a notice pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 12.2 of his intention

to  offer expert  testimony  on  the  subjects  of  insanity  and

diminished  capacity.   In  later seeking  to obtain  a favorable

ruling  on a  motion in  limine, however,  Shay Jr.  informed the

court that  his "lack of  intent or knowledge  [would not  be] an

issue."   Moreover,  after  the court  denied  his motion  for  a

bifurcated  trial  on  the  issue of  insanity,  defense  counsel

informed the  court that "we  will withdraw  any questions  about

insanity  because I believe quite clearly that it is not possible

                               -23-


to  defend  on  the  merits  and  insanity  at  the  same  time."

Notwithstanding  these  representations,  Shay  Jr.  informed the

court  on the  16th day  of  trial that  he might  seek to  offer

evidence  on the subject of  diminished capacity.  In prohibiting

him from  raising the issue,  the court  found that Shay  Jr. had

withdrawn his  Rule 12.2 notice  and that it would  be "unfair to

the  government  at  this late  date  to  suddenly change  horses

again."  Shay Jr. challenges the court's finding that he withdrew

his  Rule 12.2 notice and therefore contends that the court erred

in  preventing him from offering expert testimony on the issue of

diminished capacity.9

          We  review for  abuse of  discretion the  trial court's

determination that Shay Jr.  withdrew his Rule 12.2 notice.   Cf.
                                                                           

United  States v. Cameron, 907  F.2d 1051, 1057  (11th Cir. 1990)
                                   

(applying abuse of discretion standard to district court decision

not to recognize defendant's  notice under Rule 12).   Since Shay

Jr. informed the court after filing the Rule 12.2 notice that his

knowledge  or intent  would  not  be an  issue  in the  case  and

expressly withdrew his  stated intention to  pursue any issue  of

insanity,  the record  contains  ample support  for the  district

court's  conclusion that Shay Jr. withdrew  his Rule 12.2 notice.
                    
                              

9    We  have  previously   held  that  psychiatric  evidence  of
diminished mental  capacity is  inadmissible to negate  mens rea.
United  States  v. White,  766 F.2d  22,  24-25 (1st  Cir. 1985);
                                  
Kepreos,  759  F.2d  at 964.    Although  we  have more  recently
                 
suggested that we might  be willing to reexamine this  holding in
light of recent  precedents in other  circuits, United States  v.
                                                                       
L pez-Pe a, 912  F.2d 1536, 1541  (1st Cir. 1989),  cert. denied,
                                                                          
501  U.S. 1249 (1991),  we need not  do so here  because we agree
with the trial court that Shay Jr. withdrew his Rule 12.2 notice.

                               -24-


Moreover,  since Shay Jr. did not restate his intention to pursue

a diminished capacity defense until  the trial was well underway,

we  take no issue  with the court's  conclusion that  it would be

unfair  to the government to  allow Shay Jr.  to attempt to offer

evidence on the subject of diminished capacity.   Accordingly, we

determine that the district court did not abuse its discretion in

preventing  Dr.  Phillips  from  testifying  on  the  subject  of

diminished capacity.10

                    
                              

10   Shay Jr.'s argument is  also defective because he  failed to
make  a  timely offer  of proof  with  respect to  his diminished
capacity evidence.   See Fed.  R. Evid. 103(a)(2).   Although  he
                                  
produced  a report from Dr. Phillips, that report did not discuss
the subject  of diminished  capacity.  Moreover,  defense counsel
made no other offer of proof concerning the evidence she proposed
to offer on  the subject.   Accordingly, Shay  Jr. forfeited  his
right  to challenge the evidence on appeal.  Id.; accord Bonneau,
                                                                          
970 F.2d at 933 ("A party may not claim that evidence was wrongly
excluded unless the substance  of the evidence was made  known to
the trial court or the offer was apparent from the context.").

                               -25-


                        III.   CONCLUSION
                                  III.   CONCLUSION
                                                   

          For the reasons described  herein, the case is remanded

to  the district  court for  further proceedings  consistent with

this opinion.11   We retain jurisdiction  to review the  district

court's conclusion as to whether it should permit Dr. Phillips to

testify.

                    
                              

11  In  light of this result,  we need not, at  this point, reach
defendant's sentencing arguments.

                               -26-