This case centers around a stabbing incident involving three young cousins living in the same household. Appellant, James Ford, was unconstitutionally denied the opportunity to cross-examine one of the witnesses (his cousin Warren Washington) to show bias or, more specifically, motive to lie. We therefore must reverse.
I.
Ford lived in the same household with Warren and Reymonte Washington, cousins to each other and to Ford. The stabbing took place in the nighttime in the third-floor bedroom where Warren and Reymonte were sleeping. (Ford normally also slept in that bedroom, although that night he had said he was going to sleep in a front room.) Reymonte’s sister Veronica was in an adjoining bedroom. Reymonte *1125 testified that when he was awakened by Warren’s yelling, he saw Ford stabbing Warren with a kitchen knife his aunt, Betty, Ford’s mother, had recently purchased. He later realized that he too had been stabbed, apparently in his sleep before he was awakened. (No one actually witnessed Reymonte being stabbed, although unquestionably he had been wounded by someone.) Warren himself testified that Ford stabbed him. Veronica testified that she was awakened by screaming coming from the bedroom, and that when she went there the door opened, Warren ran out, and she saw Ford in the room with the kitchen knife. Betty Ford also arrived at the same time, but she did not testify at trial. 1
Ford was charged with two counts of assault with intent to kill, one against Warren Washington and one against Reymonte Washington. He was acquitted on the charged counts and on the lesser-included offense of assault with a dangerous weapon against Reymonte. He was convicted only of assault with a dangerous weapon against Warren.
II.
During the government’s direct examination of Warren, the court entertained an extensive colloquy about whether, and to what extent, the defense could cross-examine Warren to show bias. 2 Ford’s counsel at this point spelled out her bias theory, in detail. 3 Essentially it was that although Warren knew the stabbing was by someone other than Ford, or, at the very least, was less sure than his trial testimony indicated that Ford was the attacker, he had named Ford as the culprit in his (Warren’s) self-interest and self-protection. More specifically the bias theory had two elements. First, if Warren had admitted or opened up the possibility that the assailants were outside intruders, “he would have also to confess to extensive drug usage, drug dealing, stealing and other things he is trying to cover up.” Second, he was afraid to name the actual assailants because he feared further retaliation from them. Ford’s counsel requested permission from the trial court to cross-examine Warren about the following facts (which if denied she was prepared to prove by extrinsic testimony): 1) Warren’s extensive drug use and drug dealing, including undercutting other dealers; 2) Warren’s indebtedness incurred to procure drugs, including stealing from the household and from others; 3) people coming to the house, unannounced, demanding money that Warren owed, and making threats against family members; 4) people getting into the house during the night (because Warren didn’t lock up properly) and taking things in satisfaction of Warren’s drug-related debts; 5) threats made outside the house, both against Warren’s mother and against Warren in the courthouse elevator. 4
We deal here with a difficult interaction of three somewhat competing doctrines. We have a claim of bias, as to which cross-examination is “always rele
*1126
vant” and is protected by constitutional considerations.
Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
The government argues that
Rogers
and
Beale
control this case. But here the defense wanted to use this type of evidence specifically to show that Warren was a biased witness. The Supreme Court has established that the refusal to allow
any
questioning about facts indicative of bias from which the jury could reasonably draw adverse inferences of reliability is an error of constitutional dimension, violating the defendant’s rights secured by the Confrontation Clause.
Delaware v. Van Arsdall, supra,
The trial court ruled here that counsel could question Warren, as permitted by Rogers, about the last time he took cocaine before the incident “and whether there were any effects from that ingestion still present at the time of the event.” It also ruled that Warren could be questioned about “whether he is lying when he says that his cousin, Mr. Ford, did it; whether he really knows who the perpetrator was, questions along those lines.” However, beyond these permitted questions, 5 the court essentially ruled that counsel could not make any inquiry about other drug use and drug dealing. Moreover, in response to defense counsel’s request for clarification of the ruling, the court ruled that counsel could not ask about any indebtedness or threats even if no mention were made of their tie-in to drug use. 6 Thus, the court effectively disallowed any questioning related to Warren Washington’s motive to lie, i.e., to point his finger at Ford. 7
Nor can we say that, had bias cross-examination of Warren been allowed, the verdict would have been the same beyond a reasonable doubt, and thus the error constitutionally harmless.
Delaware v. Van Arsdall, supra,
This is not to say that appellant was necessarily entitled to undertake the full range of the cross-examination and eviden-tiary submission set forth in his proffer. The Supreme Court made clear in Van Arsdall:
[TJrial judges retain wide latitude insofar as the Confrontation Clause is concerned to impose reasonable limits on such cross-examination based on concerns about, among other things, harassment, prejudice, confusion of the issues, the witness’ safety, or interrogation that is repetitive or only marginally relevant. And as we observed earlier this Term, “the Confrontation Clause guarantees an opportunity for effective cross-examination, not cross-examination that is effective in whatever way, and to whatever extent, the defense might wish.” Delaware v. Fensterer,474 U.S. 15 , 20 [106 S.Ct. 292 , 295,88 L.Ed.2d 15 ] (1985) {per curiam) (emphasis in original).
Delaware v. Van Arsdall, supra,
We have likewise recognized the discretionary role of the trial court in controlling bias cross-examination.
See, e.g., Washington v. United States,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Veronica testified that Ford said to his mother, "No don’t nobody love me, let me kill myself,” and then dropped the knife on the bed.
. Although the bias is not claimed to be a personal bias for or against a party, a "motive to lie" plainly falls within the bias doctrine.
Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
. The government argues that Ford’s proffers were inadequate. We disagree. The trial court itself stated, with reference to the similar proffers, made later at trial, of extrinsic proof of these circumstances, that Ford’s counsel had “done an admirable job of capsulating what she indicated she would have put on_” Ford’s counsel proffered myriad facts to ‘"support a genuine belief that [Warren was] biased in the manner asserted,”
Jones v. United States,
.In a letter to this court supplementing his brief, Ford corrected his initial claim before us that these proffers were specifically of threats which occurred prior to the stabbing, as opposed to during the five-month period between the stabbing and the trial.
. Warren testified that he had smoked marijuana earlier that evening and had used cocaine two or three days earlier. He said he was still “somewhat high” from the marijuana at the time of the stabbing but that it did not affect his vision or memory. He denied that he was covering up for anyone because he was afraid about what would happen if he told the truth.
. It appears quite clear that the court’s rulings were based on its reading of the Rogers case as establishing that a witness’ involvement with drugs, outside their direct impact on relevant perceptions, is “an area that is pretty well forbidden." The court banned all mention of the threats and indebtedness in response to the government’s argument that they would inevitably be tied to drug use by the questions permitted regarding Warren’s use of drugs near the time of the stabbing. See note 5, supra.
.Direct questions about whether Warren was lying or covering up for somebody could in no way reveal his
motive
for doing so.
See Davis v. Alaska,
. For example, he testified that after he awoke, a minute or so passed before he realized he had been stabbed twice in the abdomen, during which time he bent over to turn on the light and otherwise had been active. He said that this was his first time sleeping in that particular bedroom in almost a year and that he had been sleeping "very soundly" and was "pretty groggy” when he woke up. Veronica testified that when, at the house, the driver of the ambulance which took the victims to the hospital asked Reymonte what happened and "who did this,” Reymonte and Warren both said "I don’t know.”
. The request was for a photograph of the outside of the home, which showed the location of the bedroom window.
