*274 ORDER
On three days, April 18, April 26 and May 29, 2007 this Court heard witness testimony in support of the defendant’s motion to admit certain hearsay statements and conversations of now-deceased Dianikqua Johnson. After considering the submitted testimony, the Court concludes that Ms. Johnson’s written statement 1 is admissible, but that her conversations with attorneys Artin Coloian and Judith Cro-well are inadmissible. 2 Additionally, the Court will deny in part and grant in part defendant’s motion in limine to preclude evidence under Rule 404(b).
Rule 804(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Evidence “makes statements against penal interest offered to exculpate a criminal defendant inadmissible ‘unless corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement))]’ ”
United States v. Amerson,
Here; although a close call, the Court concludes that corroborating circumstances sufficiently establish the trustworthiness of Ms. Johnson’s written statement such that it is admissible under Rule 804(b)(3). Ms. Johnson consistently asserted that she was responsible for the drugs and made statements to that effect to at least four different people under different circumstances.
See Morales,
There is some circumstantial evidence indicating that Ms. Johnson was the defendant’s girlfriend (although it is far from conclusive) suggesting that her effort to take responsibility could have been motivated by her desire to ensure that he did not go to prison. But this potential motivation to lie is mitigated, at least in part, by the known risk she faced in making the statement. Ms. Johnson was keenly aware that making such a public, inculpatory statement would subject her to criminal liability.
See United States v. Innamorati
Moreover, the circumstances in which Ms. Johnson made the bulk of her inculpa-tory statements, especially those to attorneys Coloian and Crowell, suggest that she was telling the truth because, for these, there was no motivation to lie. These statements were made within the attorney-client privilege and were therefore undis-coverable and confidential. These statements were, therefore, not “bare testimony” designed to exculpate a co-defendant,
see United States v. Zirpolo,
Of
course, it may be the case that Ms. Johnson so vociferously sought to take responsibility for the drugs because she did not want to see her purported boyfriend, the defendant, go to prison; or it might even be the case that the defendant successfully persuaded her to “take the fall” as it were for his misdeeds. But, the government is “free to argue this matter to the jury; evaluation of this sort is what juries are for.”
United States v. Seeley,
It remains to determine whether Ms. Johnson’s statements made during her conversations with her attorneys is admissible under the “residual exception” of Rule 807. This rule is “to be used only rarely, and in exceptional circumstances and applies only when certain exceptional guarantees of trustworthiness exist and when high degrees of probativeness and necessity are present.”
United States v. Wright,
Finally, the Court will DENY in part and GRANT in part the defendant’s motion in limine to exclude evidence of the defendant’s prior drug dealing. At issue is the defendant’s July 29, 2005 arrest, his February 17, 1999 conviction for criminal sale of a controlled substance and his December 8, 1995, and April 3, 1995 convictions for criminal possession of a controlled substance. The government seeks to admit this evidence under Rule 404(b) for the purpose of proving intent and knowledge.
“[W]hen charges of drug trafficking are involved., the admission of evidence of prior narcotics involvement to prove knowledge and intent” under 404(b) is permissible, subject, of course, to Rule 403.
United States v. Manning,
Nevertheless, allowing the government to introduce evidence relating to the 2005 arrest would be too prejudicial, in violation of Rule 403, and cumulative. Many outstanding issues are still unresolved regarding that arrest (not yet a conviction), and allowing introduction of evidence surrounding this event would cause undue prejudice and delay, while supplying only marginal relevance on the issue of the defendant’s knowledge and intent. The defendant’s motion to preclude use of the 2005 arrest as evidence in this trial is GRANTED.
Notes
. The Court ruled during the course of the hearing that the statement was indeed Ms. Johnson’s based on expert handwriting analysis testimony.
. In a previous order the Court concluded, after an in camera examination of these attorneys, that the attorney-client privilege must give way to the defendant's due process rights.
. During the course of this hearing, the defendant moved to expand his motion to allow into evidence the statements of Ms. Johnson to her attorneys. Ms. Johnson's statements made during her conversations with her attorneys, however, are inadmissible under this rule because they were not made against her penal interest.
See Revels v. Diguglielmo,
