Respondent John Doe has refused to testify before a grand jury investigating alleged organized crime figures, explaining that he was fearful of reprisals against himself and his family and was opposed on principle to providing evidence against others. The district court held respondent in civil contempt and ordered him incarcerated. It found that his proffered explanations failed to provide “just cause” for his recalcitrance, see 28 U.S.C. § 1826(a), and that incarceration was reasonably likely to induce a change of heart. On appeal, respondent now challenges this determination on procedural grounds: he alleges that the district court abridged his right to a meaningful evidentiary hearing by restricting his ability to present live testimony. We disagree and therefore affirm.
I.
In September 1993, in response to a subpoena from the grand jury, respondent indicated that he would refuse to testify. His reasons apparently included a desire not to incriminate himself, for the government thereafter obtained a court order granting him immunity and ordering him to testify. On November 18, respondent was again called before the grand jury. Despite the court order, and despite a government offer to place him in the federal witness protection program, respondent reiterated his refusal to testify. The government thereupon filed the instant petition for contempt.
The district court held three hearings on the matter during the first week of December. Respondent there sought to establish that there was no realistic possibility that he would ever testify, such that his incarceration would be punitive rather than coercive and thus violative of due process. Respondent himself took the stand and so stated, reaffirming that he was fearful of reprisals and that testifying was not “the right thing to do.” This testimony came in response to queries from the court; respondent’s counsel declined an invitation to conduct further examination. Beyond this, respondent sought permission to secure testimony from the following four individuals, for the reasons indicated:
(1) A witness who had earlier appeared before the grand jury and had since entered the witness protection program. It was proffered that this witness was the source of the government’s information about respondent and so could testify as to the need for his testimony, as well as to the dangers posed by the targets of the investigation;
(2) A state trooper, present under subpoena, who likewise could document such dangers;
(3) Another trooper, also under subpoena, who could testify that respondent, following his arrest for a drug offense in 1990, rejected a government offer of leniency in exchange for his cooperation; and
(4) Respondent’s sister, who could explain respondent’s unwillingness ever to jeopardize the safety of his family.
The district court declined to hear such testimony, at least in the first instance. Instead, it directed respondent to submit appropriate affidavits (where feasible) or offers of proof, indicating that it would reconsider the need for five testimony upon review of such submissions. Respondent accordingly filed four affidavits from friends and relatives opining that he would never testify, one from his former attorney describing the events
II.
Respondent’s desire to document the nature and scope of his fears was not necessarily inappropriate to the proceedings below. Of course, it has been widely held that a witness’ fear of reprisal against himself or his family does not constitute just cause for refusing to testify.
See, e.g., Piemonte v. United States,
We need not further explore the applicability of any such “duress” defense, however, for it is apparent that respondent was afforded ample opportunity to adduce evidence with respect thereto. We have noted that, where a civil contemnor is faced with incarceration, “due process has been considered by many courts to require an ‘uninhibited adversary hearing’ where the witness can ‘probe all nonfrivolous defenses to the contempt charge.’ ”
In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Campaigner Publications, Inc.),
Far from constituting an abuse of discretion, the procedure followed by the district court here was abundantly fair. 2 At the first hearing, the court granted respondent’s request for a continuance to permit further preparation. At the second, respondent was permitted to testify without limitation. We note that, to the extent the nature and scope of his fears of reprisal were not fully elucidated, such failure is largely attributable to the fact that respondent’s counsel declined the invitation to conduct further examination. Thereafter, respondent was afforded time to submit affidavits from, or offers of proof regarding, the proposed third-party witnesses and others.
Respondent’s principal contention — that the court erred in preventing such witnesses from taking the stand — fails for several reasons. First, the testimony of relatives concerning respondent’s refusal to jeopardize the safety of his family would have been cumulative — and was, in any event, adequately proffered by way of affidavit. Second, the events surrounding respondent’s 1990 arrest were likewise described in an affidavit. Respondent could have elaborated thereon in his own testimony but did not. We are left to speculate what could have been added by the testimony of the arresting officer.
3
Third, any evidence regarding the necessity for respondent’s testimony before the grand jury would have been irrelevant. There is no requirement that the government show either “that the information it hopes to obtain from Doe is significant [or] that that information is unavailable from other sources.”
Doe,
Finally, prospective testimony as to the danger posed by the targets of the investigation would have been both cumulative and of minimal relevance. The court accepted as an offer of proof counsel’s affidavit and various newspaper articles exploring this issue at length. The government effectively conceded the matter, and the court expressed a readiness to assume it to be true. Yet all this proves to have been largely beside the point in any event, for two reasons. To have any relevance at all in this context, fear of reprisal must be based on more than simply vague, unsubstantiated apprehension. Rather, as the Seventh Circuit has held, such fear must be “genuine” and “reasonable,” as demonstrated by reference to “palpable imminent danger.”
Freligh I,
III.
Finally, we find no error in the substance of the district court’s finding that incarceration will have a realistic possibility of causing respondent to testify. As respondent has not challenged this finding directly, we note only the following. The determination to be made by the district court in this regard “is far removed from traditional fact-finding” — the court “is obliged to look into the future and gauge, not what will happen, but the
prospect
that something will happen.”
In re Parrish,
The court here conducted a careful evaluation of the individual circumstances pertaining to respondent. It properly discounted the claim that respondent (having recently completed a three-year term on the drug offense) was sufficiently familiar with prison life as to render further incarceration non-coercive. Unlike earlier, respondent now carries “the keys of [the] prison in [his] own pocket.”
Hicks v. Feiock,
Affirmed.
Notes
. As the Ninth Circuit has explained:
Were it otherwise, any person involved with a criminal enterprise could point to the possible danger that comes from giving testimony. The more vicious or sophisticated the enterprise, the greater the danger. Thus, grand juries would be deprived of information when they most needed it.
In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Lahey),
. In the related context where contemnors have sought
release
from custody on the ground that incarceration had lost its coercive effect, the Second Circuit has upheld orders reached on the basis of far more abbreviated proceedings.
See Sanchez v. United States,
. To the extent such evidence was intended to buttress his assertion that he would never testify against others as a matter of principle, it was of marginal relevance.
See, e.g., Backiel,
We also note that respondent’s disinclination to turn against his drug confederates in public fashion in 1990 has scant bearing on what actions he might take within the private confines of the grand jury. There has been no suggestion here that the secrecy of the grand jury has been jeopardized.
Compare In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Mallory),
. In
In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Doe),
