Case Information
*1 Before TJOFLAT, BIRCH and MARCUS [*] , Circuit Judges.
BIRCH, Circuit Judge:
This diversity case requires us to parse the often conflicting and confusing concepts of malice as they have evolved in Georgia's libel laws. After instructing the jury on the applicable law and receiving a subsequent request to define "malicious defamation," the district court instructed the jury that before the plaintiff-appellant could recover for libel he had to show that the defendant-appellee made a "statement deliberately calculated to injure." We REVERSE the district court on this issue and REMAND this case for a new trial.
This appeal also presents a number of evidentiary questions, most notably whether specific instances of misconduct are admissible to prove character under Federal Rule of Evidence 405(b) in an action for libel under Georgia law. The plaintiff-appellant challenges the district court's decision to admit character evidence pursuant to Rule 405(b), as well аs its decision to exclude *2 evidence under Federal Rule of Evidence 403 on the grounds that its prejudicial effect substantially outweighed its relevance. Although these evidentiary issues are not dispositive given our decision to reverse the district court on the grounds mentioned above, they may well arise at a second trial. Accordingly, we discuss these and a number of additional questions raised in the parties' briefs in an effort to guide the district court and the parties at retrial.
BACKGROUND
On December 21, 1988, Pan Am Flight 103 exploded in mid-flight over Lockerbie, Scotland, causing the death of everyone on board. A terrorist's bomb was then, and is now, widely suspected to be the source of that explosion. On April 20, 1992, defendant-appellee, Time, Inc. ("Time"), published a cover story entitled "The Untold Story of Pan Am 103." The article purported to debunk the then-prevailing theory that the government of Lybia had sponsored the attack on Pan Am 103. Instead, the аrticle posited that a Palestinian group, with connections to Syrian drug traffickers, had targeted Pan Am 103 to eliminate several of the passengers who were members of a United States counter terrorism team attempting to rescue United States hostages in Lebanon. The article claims that these passengers had discovered an unsavory, covert relationship between the Syrian drug traffickers and a unit of the United States Central Intelligence Agency and intended to expose it upon their return to the United States.
The article further stated that an American agent, David Lovejoy, had become a double agent and had leaked information regarding the team's travel plans to forces hostile to the United States. The article included a photograph of a man identified by the following caption:
David Lovejoy, a reported double agent for the U.S. and Iran, is alleged to have told Iranian оfficials that McKee [one of the U.S. agents] was booked on Flight 103.
See Schafer R. Excerpt 1, Exh. A at 31. The article went on to imply that the information Lovejoy disclosed to hostile forces led to the attack on Pan Am 103.
The photograph in question apparently became associated with the Pam Am 103 bombing in connection with a civil case filed by the families of the Pan Am 103 victims. The families' law suit claimed that Pan Am had failed to take adequate security precautions to prevent the bombing. One of Pan Am's lawyers in that case, James Shaughnessy, filed a sworn affidavit that contained a variety of assertions about the attack that he hoped to explore through discovery in the Pan Am litigation. Shaughnessy's affidavit alleged that unnamed sources had identified Lovejoy, the double agent whose treachery facilitated the attack on Pan Am 103, as the man in an attached photograph. The man in the photograph, however, is Michael Schafer, the plaintiff-appellant in this case. Time's article, therefore, erroneously identified Schafer, then working in his family's janitorial business in Austell, Georgia, both as a traitor to the United States government and a player in the bombing of Pan Am 103. [1]
Upon discovering his picture in the magazine, Schafer demanded and eventually received a retraction from Time. Schafer filed suit against Time, making claims under Georgia's libel laws. A jury returned a verdict in Time's favor, finding no liability for the error. After filing a motion for a new trial, which the district court denied, Schafer filed this timely appeal. Schafer challenges a number of the district court's evidentiary rulings as well as the court's recharge to the jury on the *4 definition of "malicious" under Georgia's libel statute. He also challenges both the district court's refusal to instruct the jury that the republication of a libelous depiction constitutes libel under Georgia law and the court's deсision not to charge the jury on Georgia's retraction statute.
DISCUSSION
I. Jury Instructions
A. The District Court's Recharge on the Issue of Malice
After trial, the court instructed the jury on the elements of libel under Georgia law. The instructions included a recitation of Georgia's statutory definition of libel:
[A] libel is a false and malicious defamation of another expressed in print, writing, pictures or signs, tending to injure the reputation of the person and exposing him to public hatred, contempt or ridicule.
R26 at 1534 (quoting O.C.G.A. § 51-5-1(a)) (emphasis added). The instructions proceeded to explain the various elements of libel and correctly instructed the jury that it need find, by a preponderance of the evidence, only that Time failed to exercise ordinary care in ascertaining whether the information it published was true or false before it could find in Schafer's favor.
After describing these elements, the district court instructed the jury on the plaintiff's claims for compensatory and punitive damages. One of Schafer's theories for compensatory damages allowed the jury to presume damages but required a clear and convincing showing of "actual malice." The court instructed the jury that:
A publication is made with actual malice if it is made with knowledge that it is false or with reckless disregard of whether it is false or not. In order to demonstrate actual malice, the plaintiff must demonstrate more than just negligence by a preponderance of the evidence. He must prove by clear and convincing evidence that the challenged libel was made by the defendant with knowledge that such statements were false or that the defendant acted with reckless disregard of their falsity. Reckless disregard is a high degree of defendant's awareness of the probable falsity of the statements made.
Id. at 1539. The court also instructed the jury that it could not award punitive damages against Time unless it found "actual malice" as defined above.
The instructions, thereforе, referred to the concept of malice in two different contexts: first, to describe the character of the defamatory statement and, second, to describe the lack of care the defendant employed in ascertaining the truth of the statement at issue. Consequently, the jury found itself in some confusion as to the use of malice in the instructions and asked the trial court to explain its use in Georgia's statutory definition of libel. The district court answered the jury by attempting to distinguish a "malicious statement" from the concept of "actual malice" as it appeared in the instructions on damages.
Malicious, as used in this particular paragraph ..., is not the same as the term actual malice, which is defined for you in connection with Mr. Schafer's claim that injury to his reputation should be presumed. Instead, as used here, it, along with the word false that precedes it, describes the character of a defаmation that is libelous. It denotes statements deliberately calculated to injure. In all actions for defamation, this type of malice may be inferred from the character of the charge but it may be rebutted by proof.
Id. at 1569-70 (emphasis added). After receiving this instruction, the jury resumed its deliberations and returned a verdict within the hour, deciding that Time was not liable to Schafer for libel. Schafer contends that the district court's re-charge, particularly the phrase "deliberately calculated to injure," misled the jury by improperly requiring them to find that Time actually intended to injure Schafer by publishing the photograph in order to find liability. [2]
*6
The trial court took the wording of its recharge to the jury directly from our decision in
Straw v. Chase Revel, Inc.,
Although the
Straw
decision correctly states the law in Georgia, we acknowledge that it does
so in a confusing manner. The confusion arises because a private plaintiff may recover for libel
under Georgia law without proving an intentional tort.
See Triangle Publications, Inc. v. Chumley,
was false or published it with a reckless disregard of whether it was false or not. Straw, 813 F.2d at 361.
have addressed the question have held that a private figure plaintiff may recover for defamation on a showing of negligence on the part of the speaker or writer.") (emphasis added). Any language demanding a calculation to injure appears to conflict with this negligence standard by suggesting that the plaintiff must show that the defendant, motivated by some ill-will or "intentional hostility," actually sought or intended to injure the plaintiff.
As the
Straw
court explained in a footnote, however, there is no such conflict in the law
because the term malicious modifies only the statement at issue; the defendant's subjective state of
mind or intentions towards the plaintiff are irrelevant at this point in the jury's analysis.
See Straw,
Moreover, only by rejecting the notion that the use of the word "malicious" in section 51-5-1
requires a showing that the defendant intended to harm the plaintiff, can we reconcile the language
in
Straw
with our subsequent decision in
Simon v. Shearson Lehman Bros., Inc.,
Unfortunately, our use of the phrase "deliberately calculated to injure" to define "malicious" as it appears in section 51-5-1, in Straw and Simon, has tended to obfuscate rather than clarify Georgia law on this issue. The natural and plain connotation of the phrase "deliberately calculated to injure" suggests that the jury must find that the defendant subjectively intended to injure the plaintiff as a prerequisite for liability. Withоut the benefit of the attendant explanations and limitations described at length above, the definition is incomplete and misleading. The trial court's *9 instruction to the jury in this case, although literally accurate, in the context presented here, failed to properly guide the jury in its deliberations and likely resulted in a legally misguided verdict.
Our review of a district court's charges to the jury is deferential, and the trial judge is
entitled to wide discretion over the style and wording employed as long as the instructions
accurately reflect the law.
See Carter v. DecisionOne Corp.,
As noted above, there can be no doubt that the trial court's instructions on this issue were
faithful to the lаnguage of our opinion in
Straw.
Nevertheless, as that language, standing alone
without lengthy explanation, carries with it a powerful tendency to mislead and confuse even those
experienced in the law of libel, we cannot say that the charge, as modified by the re-charge,
adequately focused the jury's attention on the proper factual issue. As the Georgia Court of Appeals
recently observed in a similar libel case, an instruction " "which confuses the issues in the case and
injects into the case issues not made by the pleadings or the evidence is presumptively harmful to
the losing party.' "
Davis v. Shavers,
B. Refusal to Instruct the Jury on Republication
Next, Schafer challenges the district court's decision not to include his proposed instruction
that the unprivileged republication of a libelous statement may constitute libel under Georgia law.
We review a district court's refusal to include a requested jury instruction for an abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Condon,
A defendant's republication of a libelous statement is a tort under Georgia law, "independent
and separate from the first publication."
Peacock v. Retail Credit Co.,
302 F.Supp. 418, 421
(N.D.Ga.1969),
aff'd,
Georgia's statutes provide an affirmative defense of privilege when the libel defendant's
statement constitutes a "fair and honest" report of judicial bodies or court proceedings.
See
O.C.G.A. § 51-5-7(5 & 6);
Atlanta Journal Co. v. Doyal,
An inquiry into negligence requires the jury to determine whether the defendant acted
reasonably under the circumstances. The source of a particular piece of information is relevant to
the facts and circumstances that confront a defendant that republishеs information in the regular
course of its business. Similarly, the steps that such a defendant took to verify the identity of the
*12
man in the photograph are similarly relevant to the question of negligence.
See Stange v. Cox Enter.,
Moreover, Schafer's contention that the jury was unaware of the fact that a republication of a libelous statement could itself constitute libel is unsupportable. As Time points out, the district court instructed the jury that publication of the defamatory statement was an element of the charge. The very fact that the court submitted this case to the jury and asked it to decide whether Time's republication of the photograph made it liable to Schafer for libel demonstrates the jury could not have been misled into accepting the source of the photograph as a complete defense. As a result, we see no error in the district court's decision not to include Schafer's requested charge. C. Refusal to Instruct on Georgia's Retraction Statute
Finally, Schafer argues that the trial court erred by failing to include language instructing the jury on Georgia's retraction statute. The statute in question, O.C.G.A. § 51-5-11, permits a libel defendant to limit its potential liability by printing a retraction that conforms with several *13 enumerated requirements. The parties agree that Time's correction, printed over a month after Schafer gave written demand for a retraction, did not comply with section 51-5-11(b)(1).
Schafer argues that the court should have instructed the jury that the statute sets out the
minimum requirements for a legally sufficient retraction. This argument, however, contradicts the
plain language of Georgia's statute. Section 51-5-11 allows a libel defendant the option of limiting
its liability for compensatory and punitive damages by adhering to a number of specific conditions.
Time's failure to avail itself of the statute's protection did not make its efforts at correction "legally
insufficient" either in the sense that the jury could not consider a noncompliant correction as it
relates to the issues before it on the libel charge, or in the sense that such a correction gave rise to
some form of liability,
see e.g., McFarlane v. Sheridan Square Press, Inc.,
As a result, section 51-5-11 had no bearing on the issues before the jury, and the court
correctly declined to include an instruction on the statute.
Cf. Davis,
II Evidentiary Issues
Schafer also argues that the district court committed reversible error by permitting Time's
counsel to question Schafer regarding a number of "specific acts of misconduct" during
cross-examination and by excluding from evidence a memorandum discussing the credibility of
*15
Time's sources for the Pan Am 103 article. We review the district court's legal decision to apply a
particular rule of evidence
de novo
but its decision to admit or exclude particular evidence under that
rule for an abuse of discretion.
Cf. Carmichael v. Samyang Tire, Inc.,
Evidence of a person's character is viewed with some suspicion under the law and generally is disfavored in the Federal Rules of Evidence. See Fed.R.Evid. 404 (character evidence generally inadmissible to prove conforming conduct). In an action for defamation or libel, however, the issue of the plaintiff's reputation and character scarcely can be avoided because the plaintiff typically seeks to recover compensation for damage to his or her reputation. Even in such cases, however, the rules of evidence prescribe particular methods for broaching the issue of character. See Fed.R.Evid. 405 ("Methods of Proving Character").
Before trial, the district court instructed the partiеs that Time would not be permitted to introduce and explore a number of specific acts and events in Schafer's life as they were irrelevant to the issues before the jury. At that time, however, the district court warned both parties that the court would revisit the character issue to the extent that particular acts and events were shown to be relevant to the question of damages or how Schafer's picture might have become associated with the Pan Am case. During the course of the trial, the district court made a preliminary ruling permitting Time to explore selective incidents and acts in Schafer's background but excluding evidence of others. Specifically, the district court ruled that Time would be permitted to question Schafer about a felony conviction, a possible violation of his subsequent parole, convictions for driving under the *16 influence, an arrest for writing a bad check, failure to file tаx returns, failure to pay alimony and child support, and evidence concerning Schafer's efforts to change his name and social security number. [9] Schafer attacks the district court's ruling and argues that these specific acts were inadmissible.
The Federal Rules of Evidence detail the circumstances under which character evidence is admissible and the methods available for presenting such evidence. In all cases in which character evidence is admissible a party may offer reputation or opinion testimony on the issue of a person's character. See Fed. R. Evid. 405(a). [10] Only in cases in which a person's character is "an essential element of a charge, claim or defense," however, may a party offer evidence of specific instances of conduct. See Fed.R.Evid. 405(b). [11]
*17
Character evidence does not constitute an "essential element" of a claim or charge unless
it alters the rights аnd liabilities of the parties under the substantive law.
See United States v. Keiser
,
Fed.R.Evid. 405, adv. comm. note. As the Keiser court noted, this inquiry is a legal rather than factual one, see Keiser, 57 F.3d at 856 n. 20, and as a result, our review of the district court's decision on this matter is de novo. Id. at 852 n. 6.
plaintiff's character an issue under the substantive law.
See Ajouelo v. Auto-Soler Co.,
61 Ga.App.
216,
Accordingly, we find no error in Time's exploration of these and other issues of character
during its cross-examination of Schafer. To the extent that Time strayed from the specific issues of
character enumerated in the district court's preliminary ruling, including Time's questions regarding
Schafer's work for
Soldier of Fortune
magazine,
[15]
Time's questions fell within the scope of Federal
Rules of Evidence 405(a) and 608(b).
[16]
We cannot say that the district court's decisions on these
matters rose to the level of an abuse of discretion, nor can we say that Schafer suffered a "substantial
prejudicial effect."
See Rodman,
B. Exclusion of the Pondisco Memorandum
*20 Next, Schafer attacks the district court's decision to exclude from evidence a July 22, 1992 memorandum prepared by Robert Pondisco, Time's Public Affairs Director. The memorandum discusses some of the repercussions of Time's publication of the Pan Am 103 story and addresses a number of charges that the sources for the article obviously were unreliable. Significantly, the memorandum does not mention the photograph at issue in this case but confines its observations to the general outlines of Time's story. Schafer argues that the district court should have admitted the memorandum into evidence. Alternatively, he argues that the district court erred by refusing to allow Schafer's expert witness tо discuss the memorandum to reveal the factual basis of his testimony. [17]
The district court noted that the memorandum contained hearsay and excluded the
memorandum after finding that prejudice substantially outweighed the document's marginal
relevance. Federal Rule of Evidence 401 sets out the standard for determining whether evidence is
relevant to an issue before the court;
[18]
Federal Rule of Evidence 403 governs the decision to exclude
*21
relevant evidence when "its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
prejudice"
[19]
. We review the district court's exclusion of this evidence under Rule 403 for a clear
abuse of discretion.
[20]
See United States v. Gilliard,
Schafer correctly points out that the memorandum establishes that the article was controversial at Time before it was published, that the sources for the story may not have been credible, and that Time's publication of the report may have violated internаl policies and procedures. The memorandum, however, does not mention Time's decision to publish the particular photograph at issue or its efforts to verify the identity of the man pictured in that photograph. As a result, the memorandum was of marginal relevance to Schafer's claims. Evidence that tends to show the general thrust of the article was false and lacked credibility has virtually no direct impact on Schafer's theory of the case. Schafer's claim for libel arose out of Time's publication of his photograph in connection with an alleged plot to destroy Pan Am 103 and kill hundreds of innocent travelers. Even if Time's theory of the attack had been correct in every other detail, Schafer's claim for libel would remain intact because the article incorrectly identified him as David Lovejoy—an *22 alleged participant in that conspiracy. The only tangential relevanсe the memorandum had to the issues before the court on Schafer's claims, therefore, depended on an inference that the problems described in the memorandum extended to Time's measures to verify the identity of the man in the offending picture. Although we cannot dismiss the memorandum as completely irrelevant, neither can we fault the district court for giving it little weight.
Moreover, the potential for prejudice from such a memorandum is plain. Schafer sought to use the memorandum to show that Time's publication of the entire article constituted a lapse in judgment and professional standards in the hope that the jury would attribute the same lack of care to Time's decision to publish his photograph. The district court correctly concluded that such a tactic could mislead the jury and confuse the issues before them. Accordingly, we discern no abuse of discretion in the district court's decision to exсlude the Pondisco memorandum under Rule 403.
Schafer also argues that even if the district court correctly excluded the Pondisco memorandum on the foregoing grounds, the memorandum should have been admitted to provide the factual basis for the testimony of Schafer's expert witness. Edward Diamond testified on Schafer's behalf regarding Time's decision to publish the Pan Am 103 article. In particular, Diamond discussed a number of problems and issues that should have led Time to delay its publication of the story or forego its publication altogether. Diamond also discussed some reasons why Time should not have published Schafer's photograph in connection with the story. Schafer contends that the Pondisco memorandum provided at least some of the factual basis for Diamond's testimony and *23 correctly notes that, in some circumstances, Federal Rule of Evidence 703 permits an expert to rely on facts or data thаt would not be admissible at trial. [22] As we have explained, however:
Rule 703 ... is not an open door to all inadmissible evidence disguised as expert opinion. Although experts are sometimes allowed to refer to [inadmissible] ... evidence as a basis for their testimony, such [inadmissible evidence] ... must be the type of evidence reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in forming opinions or inferences on the subject.
United States v. Scrima,
CONCLUSION
Schafer asks that we reverse the district court's evidentiary rulings and correct its instructions to the jury. We find no error in the district court's decision to admit specific instances of conduct to prove character under Federal Rule of Evidence 405(b) and its decision to exclude the Pondisco memorandum under Federal Rule of Evidence Rule 403. We also discern no error in the district court's refusal either to give Schafer's proposed instruction on republication of libel or to charge the jury on Georgia's retraction statute. We hold, however, that the district court's re-charge to the jury in the context of this case was in error and that this error raised a substantial likelihood that the jury misapprehended the law as it deliberated on the merits of the case. We, therefore, reverse the jury's verdict in Time's favor and remand for a new trial in accordance with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
[*] Honorable Stanley Marcus was a U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida sitting by designation as a member of this panel when this appeal was argued and taken under submission. On November 24, 1997, he took the oath of office as a United States Circuit Judge of the Eleventh Circuit.
[1] The record in this case provides no definitive explanation of how Shaughnessy obtained Schafer's picture or how Schafer became identified as David Lovejoy. At trial, Schafer speculated that Lester Coleman, named as a source in the Time article, provided the picture to Pan Am's team of investigators and lawyers. Schafer worked with Coleman in Beirut, Lebanon in 1985, when they were both employed by the Christian Broadcast Network, and testified that he provided Coleman with a number of pictures of himself in the course of his employment there.
[2] Schafer's appeal is limited to the trial court's response to the jury's question.
See
App. Reply
Br. at 3. Despite Time's disingenuous statements to the сontrary, Schafer did not waive this issue
on appeal either by suggesting the contested language to the district court or by failing to make
his objection known to the district court. In this case, during a discussion of the issue at hand,
the district judge began to discuss a particularly relevant case and one of Schafer's lawyers
responded that the case was
Straw v. Chase-Revel, Inc. See
R26 at 1562. Although rules of
procedure occasionally have the unfortunate result of serving as "traps for the unwary,"
see
United States v. Pool,
[4] The district court noted precisely this point below: "The law of defamation is by any test confusing and precious little has been done by the courts, trial or appellate, to fix understandable instructions." R13-134 at 2 n. 1.
[5] As a result, we decline to address the merits of Schafer's related but undeveloped suggestion
that an instruction on the issue of malice is misplaced when the plaintiff has shown libel
per se.
Compare Rosanova v. Playboy Enter., Inc.,
[6] Schafer makes a curious argument that Time's attempt to rely on the privilege defense, which
is one of "confession and avoidance" somehow amounts to an admission of libel. Although
resort to the privilege defense constitutes "admission of publication and bona fide,"it does not
constitute an admission of liability.
See Auer v. Black,
[7] In pertinent part, the statute provides: (b) In any such action, the defendant may allege and give proof of the following matters as applicable: (1) (A) That the matter alleged to have been published and to be libelous was published without malice; (B) That the defendant, in a regular issue of the newspaper or other publication in question, within seven days after receiving written demand, or in the next regular issue of the newspaper or other publication following receipt of the demand if the next regular issue was not published within seven days after receiving the demand, corrected and retracted the allegedly libelous statement in as conspicuous and public a manner as that in which the alleged libelous statement was published.... .... (c) Upon proof of the facts specified in paragraph (1) ... the plaintiff shall not be entitled to any punitive damages and the defendant shall be liable only to pay actual damages.... O.C.G.A. § 51-5-11.
[8] Schafer correctly points out that a number of courts have discussed a refusal to retract or a
defendant's publication of a retraction in bad faith as evidence of actual malice.
See Augusta
Chronicle Publ'g Co. v. Arrington,
[9] Schafer changed his name from Michael Franks at the age of 32 when he discovered that he had never legally been adopted. See R21 at 4-5. The issue was relevant at trial because "Michael Franks" was one of Lovejoy's purported aliases.
[10] Rule 405 provides the following methods for introducing character evidence: (a) Reputation or opinion. In all cases in which evidence of character or a trait of character of a person is admissible, proof may be made by testimony as to reputatiоn or by testimony in the form of an opinion. On cross-examination, inquiry is allowable into relevant specific instances of conduct. (b) Specific instances of conduct. In cases in which character or a trait of character of a person is an essential element of a charge, claim, or defense, proof may also be made of specific instances of that person's conduct. Fed.R.Evid. 405.
[11] The advisory committee notes to Rule 405 provide some insight as to the rule's limitations on the use of specific acts to prove character: Of the three methods of proving character provided by the rule, evidence of specific instances of conduct is the most convincing. At the same time it possesses the greatest capacity to arouse prejudice, to confuse, to surprise, and to consume time. Consequently the rule confines the use of evidence of this kind tо
[13] Schafer's argument that this analysis puts "the horse before the cart" because Rule 404
governs the question of whether character evidence is admissible is unavailing. Rule 404 forbids
the use of character evidence to prove "action in conformity therewith on a particular occasion,"
or as the advisory committee's notes describe it, the "circumstantial" use of character evidence.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 404(a) adv. comm. notes. Rule 404 does not bar the admission of character
evidence when character or a particular character trait is actually at issue.
Id.
Rule 404 permits
the character evidence in dispute here, and Rule 405 governs the acceptable methods for
introducing it.
For the sake of completing the analysis, however, we note that even though
evidence of specific acts is admissible to prove character in a libel case under Rule
405(b), a district court must still determine whether such acts pass muster under Federal
Rule of Evidence 401 (relevance) and Federal Rule of Evidence 403 (prejudice).
See
United States v. Barry,
[14] Schafer cites
Butts v. Curtis Publ'g Co.,
[15] It strikes us that the district court could have permitted Time to challenge Schafer's direct testimony about his travels and work history without reference to the name of this particular publication, the variable to which Schafer apparently attaches prejudice. Given the parties' failure to suggest such an option, however, we cannot find that the district court abused its discretion in this matter.
[16] Rule 405(a) permits cross examination regarding specific instances of conduct when character evidence is admissible. Rule 608(b) permits cross-examination regarding specific instances of conduct to attack the credibility of a witness.
[17] We decline to address Schafer's contention that the district court should have permitted
Schafer to use the memorandum to cross-examine Time's witnesses and impeach their
credibility. Schafer has not pointed us to anything in the record that suggests that Schafer
requested an opportunity to use the Pondisco memorandum for this purpose or that the district
court denied any such request.
See
R25 at 1266-67 (Time's expert witness claimed no reliance
on the memorandum when cross-examined by Schafer pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 705); R23 at
961-1001 (direct and cross-examination of John Stacks, reflecting no mention of the Pondisco
memorandum). Ordinarily, we will not consider objections made for the first time on appeal.
See United States v. Prichett,
[18] The rule provides: "Relevant evidence" means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it wоuld be without the evidence. Fed.R.Evid. 401.
[19] Rule 403 provides: Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence. Fed.R.Evid. 403.
[20] Since we find that the district court did not clearly abuse its discretion by excluding the memorandum under Rule 403, we need not address the parties' arguments regarding the several levels of hearsay present in the document.
[21] In fact, the damage to Schafer, incorrectly identified as David Lovejoy because of the photograph, would no doubt have been much more severe if the rest of the article had turned out to be accurate.
[22] Rule 703 provides: The facts or data in the particular case upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may be those perсeived by or made known to the expert at or before the hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field in forming opinions or inferences upon the subject, the facts or data need not be admissible in evidence. Fed.R.Evid. 703.
[23] Moreover, we are at a loss to identify how Schafer may have suffered any substantial prejudice from the district court's ruling on this matter. Diamond's only attempt to rely on the Pondisco memorandum during cross-examination came when Time's counsel questioned him about his earlier assertion that a London newspaper had published an article making similar allegations regarding the bombing of Pan Am 103 and had been forced to retract the story. Diamond actually held up the offending memorandum as a source for this piece of information before Time's counsel could object. See R20 at 729-30. As a result, Schafer's contention that this isolated incident could have led the jury to believe that Diamond was drawing his opinions from "thin air" is unpersuasive.
