Anticipating testimony by an Immigration and Naturalization Service inspector that Ruben Fuentes-Cariaga looked nervous when he was stopped at the border and that his nervousness was an important factor in referring him to secondary, Fuentes-Cariaga sought to present evidence by a non-percipient INS inspector that she would not infer consciousness of guilt from a driver’s nervousness, as people crossing the border can be nervous because they see an authority figure — not because they are guilty. The district court refused to admit the proffered testimony, reasoning that it had nothing to do with the observation of Fuentes-Cariaga and that both parties could, in any event, argue the implications of his nervousness to the jury.
Fuentes-Cariaga challenges the court’s ruling on due process and confrontation grounds following his conviction and sentence fоr importing marijuana and possessing marijuana with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 952, and 960. We affirm.
I
Fuentes-Cariaga was driving a car from Mexico into the United States at the Ca-lexico, California Port of Entry about 9:30 p.m. on August 5, 1998. At the primary inspection area, Inspector Jesse Cerón noticed that Fuеntes-Cariaga was wearing a neck brace made of cardboard and gauze; he was trembling, his voice was shaky, and he could not maintain eye contact; and when asked about his neck, said he had been in an accident and also told the inspector that his cousin owned the car. Cerón referred Fuentes-Cariaga to the secondary inspection lot. At secondary, United States Customs Inspector Merced Hernandez lifted the spare tire, shook it, and heard objects bouncing inside. Fuentes-Cariaga was then taken to the security office where a pat-down search revealed no weapons. Meanwhile, a narcotics detector dog alerted to the trunk area of the vehicle, where 39 packages of marijuana were found taped inside the spare tire, rear doors, rear seats, and rear seat rests. An air freshener was hanging from the rearview mirror. The packages had a net weight of almost 110 pounds, or 48.6 kilograms, and were worth about $100,000.
After being placed under arrest and advised of his Miranda rights, Fuentes-Cari-aga told the Customs Special Agent that he had borrowed the car, owned by his cousin, Oscar Munoz, in Mexicali around 7:30 a.m. that morning to drive into the United States to buy diapers which his wife had requested the night before. He said he was going to a Wal-Mart in Calexi-co, California, although Mexicali has a Wal-Mart of its own. The vehicle Fuentes-Cariaga was driving was registered to Gabriel Serafín, not to his cousin.
At trial, Cerón testified that based on all his observations (including that Fuentes-Cariaga was nervous), he referred him to secondary for a possible customs violation. Hernandez testified that nervousness was an important factor in determining whether to send someone to secondary.
Fuentes-Cariaga subpoenaed INS Inspector Frances Carrillo and proffered the transcript of part of the testimony she had given in a previous, unrelated case. In that testimony, Carrillo stated that nervousness at the border does not indicate consciousness of guilt to her because people can be nervous for other reasоns. 1 *1142 The district court quashed the subpoena and excluded the testimony.
Fuentes-Cariaga timely appeals his conviction.
II
As presented by Fuentes-Cariaga, this appeal turns on whether excluding the opinion of a non-percipient INS inspector that she would not personally infer consciousness of guilt from a driver’s nervousness at the bordеr “significantly impaired” his ability to present a defense, thereby infringing his constitutional rights to due process and compulsory process.
2
United States v. Scheffer,
Fuentes-Cariaga argues that because the key issue at trial was whether he knew of the marijuana in the car he was driving, Carrillo’s testimony that drivers can be nervous for a reason other than guilt wаs necessary to rebut testimony by Cerón and Hernandez that a driver’s nervousness at the border is an important factor in determining whether a driver is intentionally importing contraband into the United States. In fact, Cerón and Hernandez did not testify that nervousness is, an important factor in deciding whether a driver is intentiоnally importing contraband; what they testified to was that nervousness was a factor in determining whether to refer a driver to secondary for further inspection. 4 *1143 Nevertheless, we understand Fuentes-Ca-riaga’s point to be that the jury could infer a link between nervousness and guilt from the fact that Cerón made the referral to secondary for further investigation of a possible customs violation in part because Fuentes-Cariaga appeared to be nervous. Thus, in Fuentes-Cariaga’s view, Carrillo’s opinion that nervousness does not always indicate guilt would have tended to make the key issue, of Fuentes-Cariaga’s knowledge of the drugs less probablе than without it.
Fuentes-Cariaga relies heavily on
Washington v. Texas,
Chambers v. Mississippi,
Fuentes-Cariaga further points to
Pettijohn v. Hall,
In sum, the right to present a defense is fundamental, but exclusion of evidence reached constitutional proportions in
Washington
and
Chambers
only because it “significantly undermined fundamental elements of the accused’s defense.”
Scheffer,
Should we conclude that the district court did not commit constitutional error, Fuentes-Cariaga alternatively argues that exclusion of the evidence was not harmless. This argument is not developed enough to address, but in any event as we have explained, Fuentes-Cariaga’s nervousness was itself undisputed and in light of the improbable and untrue stories that he told, Carrillo’s non-percipient opinion about what nervousness alone signifies would not have impacted the verdict.
Accordingly, we conclude that exclusion of proffered testimony by an INS inspector in an unrelated case that she does not believe all nervous people who cross the border are “guilty” but are “just nervous becаuse they see an authority figure, and that’s how they respond” did not violate Fuentes-Cariaga’s rights to due process or to present a defense.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Fuentes-Cariaga's proffer indicates that Carrillo had testified in the unrelated proceeding on direct that the defendant appeared nervous but admitted on cross that she did not note this fact in her written referral report. From the partial transcript provided, it appears that Carrillo then testified:
Q It [that the defendant was nervous] was important enough to tell the jury this morning on direct, wasn’t it?
A Yes.
*1142 Q Bui it wasn't important enough to write it on the rеferral slip on the day in question?
A No, it was not important.
Q Now, when you testified this morning that he was nervous, you wanted the jury to infer a consciousness of guilt by that, didn’t you?
A I just told them what I saw.
Q Well, if you were working at the primary inspection yourself and you saw that someone was nervous, you personally would infer consciousness of guilt from [ ] nervousness, isn't thаt correct?
A No.
Q It’s not correct?
A There's a lot of people who cross the border everyday who are nervous. They have nothing to — they are not guilty. They are just nervous because they see an authority figure, and that’s how they respond.
. The parties dispute whether Carrillo’s testimony was proffered аs an expert or lay opinion, but neither the district court’s decision nor our analysis depends on this distinction.
. Where an expert offers general testimony about an issue within the ken of the jury’s knowledge, it is not an abuse of discretion to exclude such testimony under Rule 702.
See United States v. Rahm,
.On direct examination, Inspector Cerón testified:
Q As you were talking to the defendant on August 5th of 1998, did you notice anything unusual about his behavior?
A He was nervous.
Q And when you say "he was nervous,” what exactly did you see him do?
A His voice was shaky. He was trembling a bit. He gave furtive glances. He was looking north, towards the U.S., into the United States.
sH % % H« sk
Q And based on all of your observаtions on August 5th of 1988, what did you do?
A I decided to refer him to U.S. Customs secondary for a possible customs viola- . tion.
On cross-examination, Inspector Hernandez testified:
Q Now, whether someone is an owner of a vehicle or not that’s an important fact for — in determining whether to send someone over to secondary?
A No.
Q But it is a factor?
A It all depends on the demeanor of the person, if he is acting nervous.
Fuentes-Cariago did not object to this line of inquiry.
