After a business relationship between Brian Lea and National By-Products (“NBP”) went bad, pesticides from Lea’s strawberry business were dumped onto NBP’s dead farm animals (“deadstock”). When an anonymous letter informed NBP that its deadstock, which had been rendered and sold as animal food, had been contaminated, the company was forced to shut down its Berlin, Wisconsin plant and engage in a massive recall. On September 14, 1999, Lea was indicted and charged as the saboteur. At trial, Lea claimed innocence, contending that Barry Werch, a former NBP employee, was the actual culprit. To that end, Lea sought to introduce evidence of a polygraph examination which Werch had “failed,” as well as “incriminating” statements made by Werch to his wife. The district court did not allow these pieces of evidence to be admitted. On April 13, 2000, the jury found Lea guilty of dumping the pesticides. Lea was sentenced to 36 months imprisonment, a year of supervised release, and ordered to pay $2.2 million in restitution. Lea now appeals, arguing that the district court erred in excluding evidence of Werch’s polygraph examination and marital communications. He further asserts that these eiTors of exclusion operated to violate his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the decisions of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Up until the time of his conviction, Brian Lea was an entrepreneur dealing in animal remains. Lea owned and operated a mink ranch, an enterprise that sold meat to alligator farms and greyhound kennels, a deadstock pickup and removal business, an animal hide business, and a trucking business to transport his products. Lea also had concerns unrelated to animal carcasses, including a strawberry business. From 1991 through 1996, Lea had various dealings with NBP, a national corporation involved in the rendering business. NBP produced animal food and feed additives in the form of liquid fat and dry meat meal by processing otherwise wasted materials such as used restaurant grease, deadstock, and unused material from meat packing plants (“offal”). Lea and NBP developed a symbiotic relationship, whereby Lea sold his deadstock to NBP’s Berlin, Wisconsin plant, and in return was leased space at that location to process his chicken offal into mink food.
The relationship between Lea and NBP began to deteriorate in August of 1996, when NBP stopped leasing Lea space in its Berlin plant to process his chicken offal. In response, Lea ceased to vend his offal and collected deadstock to NBP, and instead marketed his products to a competitor of NBP. In order to recoup the raw materials lost by Lea’s actions, NBP created its own deadstock collection business. NBP aggressively competed with Lea for deadstock, hiring Lea’s drivers, conducting promotions to attract business, and paying for deadstock — -a frowned-upon tactic in the deadstock removal field. The competition upset Lea and took a heavy toll on him financially, eventually resulting in his filing for bankruptcy.
In the early winter of 1996, Lea informed his employee, Jason Haynes, that *636 he had dumped pesticides from his strawberry business into a NBP offal and dead-stock trailer in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Lea stated that his “only mistake” was that he had dropped his flashlight between the loading dock and the trailer and could not retrieve it. That flashlight, which was eventually recovered by NBP employees, was identified as the model of flashlight that had been purchased by Lea’s company in November of 1996. Lea also showed Haynes a letter he intended to send to the Berlin Police Department, detailing the act of contamination.
On December 28, 1996, the Berlin Police Department received an anonymous letter from a supposed former NBP employee recounting an act of sabotage against the NBP Berlin plant. Enclosed with the letter was a sample of the contaminant used by the perpetrator. Upon notification of the contamination, NBP stopped delivery of its products. When testing of those products revealed that pesticide contamination had in fact occurred, NBP shut down its plant and began a massive recall. According to NBP’s chief financial officer, the shutdown and recall cost NBP and its insurer over $2.5 million.
For obvious reasons, the investigation into the contamination initially focused on former NBP employees. On January 15, 1997, one such individual, Barry Werch was questioned by the United States Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) agent handling the matter. In that interview, Werch described the working conditions at NBP, relating that maggots crawled from the ceiling of the NBP plant. According to the agent, during the course of that interview Werch provided contradictory statements regarding his knowledge of when the tampering had taken place and his feelings towards NBP. The following day, Werch agreed to take a polygraph examination. Special Agent Robert West conducted the test, wherein Werch was asked whether he had put pesticides into NBP’s raw materials and whether he had mailed the aforementioned letter to the Berlin Police Department. Based on Werch’s responses, West classified Werch as “deception indicated,” meaning that Werch had scored a minus three on at least one of the questions. 1 Under normal circumstances, West conducts a post-examination interview with the testee in order to ascertain the basis for the deception. However, an angered Werch did not allow the post-instrument phase of the test to proceed, as he stormed out of the testing room.
On May 14, 1997, a second letter was received by the Berlin Police Department in which the author claimed responsibility for an additional contamination of NBP materials. That message warned that “a very major finished product contamination will occur on July or August so the world can see the putrid conditions that exist there at that time when the maggots crawl the walls and ceilings and the stench is so bad that you can cut it with a knife.” Because Werch had mentioned maggots crawling on the walls during his first interview with the FDA agent, and because of similar statements which Werch had made to his then spouse, the agents considered him as a possible author of the letter.
Nonetheless, as the investigation proceeded, the authorities began to focus on Lea as a suspect. The pesticides used in the contamination were tied to Lea (via his strawberry business), as were the letters *637 claiming responsibility for the acts. On September 14, 1999, Lea was indicted by a grand jury in the Eastern District of Wisconsin and charged with two counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1365(b). Count One of the indictment alleged that in December of 1996, Lea had caused serious injury to NBP by tainting “animal by-products, which were intended as a component of animal food and which affected interstate commerce.” Count Two charged that in mid-1997, Lea had caused serious injury to NBP by tainting restaurant grease, which was to be utilized by the company in making animal food.
At trial, Lea sought to defend himself by submitting evidence of third-party (Werch) culpability. Lea submitted a request to the court to call West to testify as to the results of Werch’s polygraph examination. The district court conducted a telephone hearing with West, and thereafter, in a written order dated April 6, 2000, denied Lea’s request. In its decision, the court noted that “the defense [had] failed to establish the reliability of West’s opinion resulting from his polygraph examination of Werch.” Specifically, the court focused on the fact that West could only speculate as to the accuracy of the polygraph examination he had performed, and could not state whether there were any known statistics on the accuracy rate of the methodology employed in examining Werch.
On April 11, Lea called Heidi Werch, Barry Werch’s ex-wife, to testify. Lea sought to question Heidi regarding a conversation she had with her husband during their marriage. According to Lea, Barry Werch had complained to his wife about the working conditions at NBP and specifically about the presence of maggots in the plant. Lea had hoped to have this testimony introduced to connect Barry Werch to the May 1997 letter, and thus bolster his third-party culpability defense. However, Barry Werch invoked the marital communications privilege, and the district court did not allow Heidi Werch to answer Lea’s questions.
Two days later, on April 13, 2000, the jury returned a verdict of guilty against Lea on Count One and not guilty on Count Two. Thereafter, Lea filed a motion for judgment of acquittal. On July 28, 2000, the district court orally denied Lea’s motion, and sentenced him to 36 months incarceration, followed by one year of supervised release. Lea was further ordered to pay a special assessment of .$100 and restitution of $2.2 million. Lea now appeals the evidentiary rulings of the district court. Besides contending that the results of the polygraph examination were incorrectly excluded and that the marital communications privilege was incorrectly applied, he propounds that these errors operated to violate his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Admissibility Op Polygraph Examination Results
As stated above, Lea filed a pretrial motion seeking permission to call Agent West to testify as to the results of Werch’s polygraph examination. On April 6, 2000, the district court conducted a telephone hearing with West in order to determine whether West’s testimony was admissible consistent with the gatekeeping test enunciated in
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
On appeal, Lea asserts multiple foundations for considering the district court’s exclusion of West’s testimony to be in error. First, Lea contends that the district court incorrectly analyzed the admissibility question by proceeding under a Dau-bert framework, as the Seventh Circuit has articulated that such inquiries are to be handled under a Rule 403 balancing of probative value versus prejudicial effect. Alternatively, Lea posits that if a Daubert examination was appropriate, the district court’s application of the Daubert gatek-eeping test was unsound. We begin by examining the appropriate method for determining the admissibility of polygraph evidence.
As the Supreme Court has noted, “there is simply no consensus that polygraph evidence is rehable. To this day, the scientific community remains extremely polarized about the reliability of polygraph techniques.”
United States v. Scheffer,
Building on the language in
Robbins,
Lea suggests that the Seventh Circuit has determined that he detector examinations should not be excluded because of reliabili
*639
ty concerns. Rather, he argues that only the concerns listed in 403 can serve as reasons for exclusion. An examination of Seventh Circuit case law does suggest that we have progressed farther than other courts in allowing the admission of polygraph evidence.
4
Yet, despite the veracity of Lea’s contention regarding the applicability of 403, a district court need not abandon its reservations regarding the -reliability of polygraph, procedures. In
United States v. Dietrich,
we noted that while the decision whether to admit polygraph evidence was left to the discretion of the district court, district judges often excluded such evidence “because doubts about the probative value
and
reliability of this evidence” outweighed any rationale for admission.
While our recent case law has not explicitly retained the notion that reliability concerns can factor into the admissibility decision, we note that Rule 403 allows for the exclusion of otherwise relevant evidence if the probative value is “substantially outweighed by the danger of ... misleading the jury.” As Justice Thomas’s majority opinion in
Scheffer
noted, “[a] fundamental premise of our criminal trial system is that ‘the jury is the lie detector.’ ”
Consistent with the above analysis, in
United States v. Taylor,
we found that a district court had not abused its discretion in excluding evidence of a polygraph examination because it determined that the expert’s application of the technique in the case was not reliable.
We read the district court in this case to have proceeded in a similar vein. While the district court did repeatedly reference its obligation under Daubert, it not *640 ed that it was required “to engage in a delicate balancing of many factors including probative value, prejudicial effect, confusion of the issues, misleading the jury, and undue delay.” Against that backdrop, the district court focused on the known or potential rate of error. Looking towards Daubert as a guide, the court was concerned with West’s inability to conclusively provide the accuracy rates for the polygraph examination he conducted. More troubling to the court were the facts that West was (1) unaware as to whether there were any known statistics on the accuracy rate of the test he had given, and (2) unable to complete his examination of Werch and determine why it was that he had considered Werch “deception indicated.” 5 These factors reduced the reliability of West’s opinion, tipping the balance under Rule 403 in favor of exclusion.
As stated above, we afford district courts a great deal of discretion in deciding whether to admit polygraph evidence.
See Olson,
*641 B. Applicability Of The Marital Communications Privilege
On January 30, 1997, Heidi Werch met with Agent Hejny of the FDA. Hejny questioned Heidi as to whether Barry Werch had ever spoken ill of NBP. Heidi recalled to the agent that one day during the course of their marriage, Barry had returned home quite upset. Barry informed Heidi that a grinder at the plant had broken down and that he had been required to go in and fix it. While inside the grinder, Barry said, there were maggots dropping all over him.
At trial, Lea sought to call Heidi to testify to the statements made by Barry concerning the maggots at the NBP plant. Lea attempted to introduce the testimony to bolster his claim that Barry Werch was the author of the May 14th letter — -which likewise referenced maggots at the plant— and thus the culpable party. However, Barry Werch’s counsel invoked the marital communications privilege, and the court instructed Heidi not to respond to any of Lea’s questions. Lea argues on appeal that the decision of the district court to allow Barry Werch to invoke that privilege was in error. Lea asserts that Barry Werch waived the privilege during an interview with the FDA, wherein he mentioned maggots at the NBP plant.
In a criminal trial, the availability of any privilege is “governed by the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the Courts of the United States in the light of reason and experience.” Fed.R.Evid. 501;
United States v. Byrd,
Once again, special deference is given to the evidentiary rulings of the district court. Thus, we will not reverse such rulings unless the decision of the district court constituted an abuse of its discretion.
United States v. Lofton,
C. Opportunity To Present A Defense
Apart from the evidentiary challenges discussed above, Lea argues that the Constitution mandates that both the testimonies of Agent West and Heidi Werch should have been admitted. Specifically, Lea asserts that the district court’s decisions to exclude that evidence constitutes a violation of Lea’s Sixth Amendment right to present a defense.
We begin by noting that the right of a defendant to present evidence is grounded in the Sixth Amendment, and stands on no lesser footing than the other Sixth Amendment rights.
See Taylor v. Illinois,
The evidence that Lea argues should have been introduced in keeping with the Sixth Amendment right to present a defense is evidence which we have already determined is in one instance “privileged” and in the other “inadmissible under standard rules of evidence.”
See Taylor,
III. CONCLUSION
The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding West’s testimony regarding Werch’s polygraph examination. Likewise, the court did not err in finding that the marital communications privilege had been properly invoked. Furthermore, these decisions did not constitute impermissible restrictions on Lea’s Sixth Amendment right to present a defense. For the foregoing reasons, we AffiRM the decision of the district court.
Notes
. During a hearing on the matter, West did not have his files with him and could not recall on which question Werch had received the minus three score. However, he stated that to be considered "deception indicated” for the entire examination, which Werch was, one must receive a minus three score on at least one question.
. Rule 403 reads as follows:
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 consideration of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
. Recent cases from both the Supreme Court as well as this Circuit have examined the literature on the issue of the accuracy and reliability of polygraph examinations.
See Scheffer, 523
U.S. at 309,
. While this Court would allow a district court to admit polygraph evidence if it complied with Rule 403, other federal circuits and states have maintained a
per se
ban on the admissibility of such evidence.
See, e.g., Unit
ed
States v. Sanchez,
. West could not even inform the court as to which question(s) Werch had received the score required to be considered "deception indicated.”
. Because we have determined that the district court properly excluded the evidence pursuant to Rule 403, we need not address Lea's contention that the district court's application of
Daubert
was unsound. However, we note in passing that it would not have been error had the district court conducted a full
Daubert
analysis of West’s testimony. We undertake a
de novo
review of whether the district court properly applied
Daubert. See United States v. Brumley,
As for the examination conducted by the district court, it is evident that it could be considered an appropriate
Daubert
analysis. A district court is not required to consider all of the guideposts outlined in
Daubert
when making an admissibility ruling.
Ancho v. Pentek Corp.,
. Lea’s entire argument that Barry Werch waived the marital communications privilege
*642
is two sentences long and does not reference any relevant case law. As we noted in
United Slates
v.
Andreas,
such perfunctory and underdeveloped arguments are themselves waived.
. Notwithstanding the above discussion, we note that if any error existed, it would be considered harmless.
See Lofton,
