Dаniel Donlon, a previously convicted felon, appeals his conviction for having unlawfully possessed a firearm. See 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). A basic factual question at trial was whether or not a pistol that police found under a laundry basket belonged to him. His former girlfriend, Sherry Cardo-za, who is now his wife, gave incriminating grand jury testimony. Later, at trial, she invoked the “spousal” privilege against testifying. The district court then admitted her earlier grand jury testimony into evidence. Donlon says that the court could not legally admit that grand jury testimony. We have considered this claim, and the other legal arguments that Donlon makes. We conclude that we must affirm his conviction.
I.
Background
Reading the record in a manner appropriately favorable to the government,
see, e.g., United States v. Torres Lopez,
The Hudson, New Hampshire police deрartment received a call at about 1:30 in the morning on October 31, 1987. The caller, who lived next door to 16-A River Road, said he heard several gunshots inside *652 the house at that address. Two police officers then went to the house. As they approached, Donlon appeared behind the screen door; he seemed drunk; he shouted at them to get off his property. The officers explained why they were there, satisfied themselves he was. not armed, and said they wanted to check the house to make certain no one was hurt. Donlon said he did not want to let them in, but he then opened the door and let the officers inside.
Donlon told the officers he had had an argument with his girlfriend and that he had thrown a beer bottle through a sliding glass door at the rear of the house. He took them to the back, where they saw the door, broken glass, and a bottle. They asked if anyone else was in the house, and Donlon replied that his children were upstairs sleeping.
At that point the officers heard voices upstairs. A man (a friend of Donlon’s) and a woman (the babysitter) came downstairs, the woman crying. The woman went back upstairs and returned with two children. Sherry Cardoza, the children’s mother, phoned. She told one of the officers that she wanted the babysitter and her children taken away from the house and that she would ask her sister-in-law to pick them up. Donlon and his friend also said they wanted to leave. Donlon asked for a ride to a motel. The officers said they would call another police car to take them.
Donlon, accompanied by a police officer, went to the bedroom upstairs to get somе money and clothes. The officer saw an assault rifle hanging behind the bedroom door. ' Soon thereafter, the babysitter, while getting ready to leave, picked up a laundry basket in the living room, where the officers were then standing, and the officers saw a nine-millimeter pistol beneath the basket. One of them took the gun to the car. Donlon asked when he could get it back. The officer replied that hе could have it the next evening if Donlon was sober. Donlon added that he had other guns in the house.
Subsequently, the government discovered that Donlon was a previously convicted felon. It began a grand jury investigation. Sherry Cardoza testified before the grand jury that, on October 31, she and Donlon were living together at 16-A River Road and that Donlon, at that time, had “more than five” guns in the house. The grand jury indicted Donlon on charges of unlawfully possessing eleven guns. The trial court suppressed ten of the eleven guns, as illegally seized. The case-proceeded to trial in respect to the eleventh gun, the nine-millimeter pistol found under the laundry basket. At the trial Donlon claimed that the pistol belonged to a friend, Brian Kelly, who had briefly left the gun in the house. Sherry Cardoza invoked spousal immunity and refused to testify. The court permitted thе government to read her grand jury testimony to the jury. The jury convicted Donlon of unlawfully possessing the pistol.
After his conviction, Donlon failed to appear for sentencing. The court ordered forfeiture of bail (real estate belonging to Donlon’s brother). U.S. Marshals captured Donlon three months later. The court sentenced him, and he now appeals.
II.
The Admission of Grand Jury Testimony
Donlon’s major argument is that the district court could not lawfully admit Sherry Cardoza’s grand jury testimony into evidence. Though the testimony is hearsay, the court admitted it under the authority of Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(5). Rule 804(b) sets forth five categories of testimony that “are not excluded by the hearsay rule if the declarant is unavailable as a witness.” The categories are “(1) Former testimony _ (2) Statement under belief of impending death .... (3) Statement against interest.... (4) Statement of personal or family history .... (5) Other exceptions_” Fed.R.Evid. 804(b). The Rule defines this last category, the “Other exceptions” or “residual” category, as including a
statement not specifically covered by any of the foregoing exceptions but having equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness, if the court determines *653 that (A) the statement is offered as evidence of a material fact; (B) the statement is more probative on the point for which it is offered than any other evidence which the proponent can procure through reаsonable efforts; and (C) the general purposes of these rules and the interests of justice will best be served by admission of the statement into evidence. ...
Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(5). Donlon concedes that Sherry Cardoza was “not available as a witness” and that her grand jury testimony satisfies subconditions (A) and (B); he does not argue that admission of that testimony violated subeondition (C). But, he makes two other arguments against admissibility.
First, Donlon makes an argument that we cast in the following syllogistic form:
Premise one. Exception (1), the exception for “former testimony,” applies to grand jury testimony.
Premise two. Since exception (1) applies, exception (5) cannot apply.
Premise three. Exception (1) applies to “Testimony given as a witness at another hearing of the same or a different proceeding, or in a deposition ...”
but only if
“the party against whom the testimony is now offered ... had an opportunity and similar motive to develop the testimony by direct, cross, or re-direct examination.”
Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(1).
Premise four. Sherry Cardoza’s grand jury testimony does not satisfy the “opportunity for cross-examination” condition.
Conclusion. Sherry Cardoza’s grand jury testimony is not admissible.
Since no party other than the government can examine a witness before a grand jury, this argument, if accepted, would make grand jury testimony inadmissible, no matter how great the need or how strong the guarantees of trustworthiness. It does not surprise us, therefore, that every circuit court that has considered this kind of argument has rejected it and held that the “residual exception,” exception (5), is potentially applicable to grand jury testimony.
See United States v. Fernandez, 892
F.2d 976, 981 (11th Cir.1989),
cert. dismissed sub nom. Recarey v. United States,
—U.S.-,
The argument’s weak points lie in premises one and two. Premise One says that the “fоrmer testimony” exception (exception one, Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(1)) was meant to encompass grand jury proceedings. We do not believe that is so. We concede that its words “testimony ... at a different proceeding,” read literally, would include grand jury proceedings. But, the Rules Advisory Committee, explaining exception one in its Notes, says, “Former testimony does not rely upon some set of circumstances to substitute for oath and cross-examination, since both oath and opportunity to cross-examine were present in fact.” Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(1), advisory committee’s *654 note. It thereby makes clear that exception one was written in respect to those kinds of proceedings for which cross-examination was potentially available; and, grand jury proceedings do not fall within that category.
Premise Two says that the potential applicability of exception one means that exception five (Fed.R.Evid 804(b)(5)) is not available. But, we do not believe that the “potential” availability of one kind of hearsay exception automatically rules out the use of another. After all, normally, hearsay testimony is admissible if it satisfies any one exception. A declaration against penal interest, for examрle, is no less admissible simply because the declarant made the statement while testifying as a witness at an earlier trial (and vice versa). ■ Why must a proponent of such evidence satisfy the special conditions for more than one such exception? Of course, the language of exception (5), the residual exception, insists upon “equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness;” and one might argue that, in the case of a prior proceeding, the only “guarantee” that is the “equivalent” of an opportunity for cross-examination is “an opportunity for cross-examination.” Yet, we do not see why that should be so either, at least in the case of a class of proceeding where there could be no such opportunity, where there seems no special reason for disqualifying thаt class ipso facto from admissibility (where other guarantees of trustworthiness do exist), and where the Rule’s framers indicated no such disqualifying intent. Indeed, the very use of the word “equivalent,” suggesting there must be something special about the guarantee of trustworthiness, offers, in principle, a safeguard against the courts’ use of the residual exception to swallow up the hearsay rule.
Consequently, we shall follow all other circuits that have considered this matter and hold that prior grand jury testimony falls within the category of hearsay to which the exception (5), the residual exception, potentially applies.
Second, Donlon argues that, in this case, there were no such “equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.” We have read the record here, however, in light of other cases in which courts have lawfully admitted evidence under the “residual” hearsay exceptions. We have found that Sherry Cardoza gave the grand jury testimony under oath;
see Boulahanis,
Finally, the record contains other evidence that substantially corroborates the significant portions of Ms. Cardoza’s grand jury testimony. Ms. Cardoza told the grand jury (1) that Donlon was living at 16-A River Road on October 31, and (2) that Donlon had other guns in the house. As to the first statement, Donlon’s lease was in evidence at the trial, as was a statement by his probation officer saying that Donlon said that he lived there between February and Decеmber, along with a statement by a police officer that Donlon ordered the police off the property on that date. As to the second statement, the record contains a statement by a police
*655
officer that Donlon himself said he had other guns in the house. We would describe this corroboration as significant, but far from overwhelming. Of course, were corroborating evidence, by itself, completely convincing, there would rarely be any need to introduce the evidence that it corroborates.
See, e.g., Guinan,
We have said that “[n]o single factor is dispositive on the issue of whether evidence should be admitted under the residual exception. The district judgе must evaluate all of the factors.... ”
Brookover v. Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital,
III.
Other Arguments
We shall discuss Donlon’s remaining аrguments more briefly, simply indicating the basic reasons why we reject them.
1. Donlon argues that the police officers were unlawfully in his house, and consequently the district court should have suppressed as evidence the pistol that they found there. The evidence at the suppression hearing, however, was more than sufficient for the court to find (1) that Donlon, by opening the screen door, effectively gаve his permission to enter, or (2) that the report of gunshots, the presence of a belligerent Donlon, the broken glass and bottle thrown through the back door, the presence of children upstairs, demonstrated “exigent” circumstances authorizing the police officers’ subsequent conduct.
See, e.g., Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
2. Donlon says that the evidence was not sufficient to show, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he possessed the gun. The jury, however, could reasonably credit testimony showing that the police officers found the gun in Donlon’s house, only a few feet from whеre he was standing, that shattered glass and damage to an outside trailer might have been caused by bullets, that Donlon asked the police, when they seized the gun, when
he
could get it back, and that Donlon’s girlfriend said he had both “short” and “long” guns in the house. The jury was free to discredit testimony of Brian Kelly, a friend of Donlon’s, who said the gun was his.
See, e.g., United States v. Torres Lopez,
3. Donlon says that the district court should have permitted him to stipulate to the fact that he was a previously convicted felon. We have held, however, that “even in the face of an offer to stipulate, the government may choose to present evidence on the one felоny necessary to prove the crime charged.”
United States v. Collamore,
4. Donlon says that the district court should not have made a general prospective ruling that, in effect, prevented him from calling a witness, Harold Crosby, Jr. The court ruled that, if Crosby testified, the government could inquire into his use of aliases and his having submitted false information to law enforcement officials. Donlon says that this ruling was too broad. To test the breadth of that ruling, however, Donlon should have called the witness and then objected to specific questions.
See United States v. Nivica,
5. Donlon says that the prosecutor made improper remarks during closing argument:
a. , The first set of challenged remarks consist of statements about Donlon’s friend Kelly. Kelly had said that, on October 31, he, Crosby, and two others were on their way to a bar after target practice, that they stopped at a house that might have been Donlon’s, that Crosby had brought the nine-millimeter pistol into the house and had left it there. The prosecutor, pointing out that Kelly could not provide many details about whаt happened on that day, went over Kelly’s story:
He went in the Tiki Hut and he met Harold Crosby, the defendant’s cousin, and two other unknown males, still unknown .... After they had a couple of drinks, they went into the parking lot and they got into one of the other unknown males’ cars, maybe a Chevy or a Ford, but four doors.... [Ejventually they got off somewhere deep in the woods with the cousin of the defendant and two unknown males.
Donlon says thе use of the term “unknown males” was an effort to make the jury think he should have called them as witnesses, and that it thereby impermissibly shifted the burden of proof.
In our view, to state this argument is to refute it. It strikes us as too farfetched, in context, to believe that the prosecutor was trying to shift the burden of proof. He was more likely pointing out the fact that Kelly had not supplied the names of the two men, thereby suggesting, through thе lack of one more detail, that Kelly was making the story up. That, in our view, is what the jury would think he was doing. In any event, the prosecutor wanted to refer to the two unknown men; we cannot think of a less harmful way to do so.
b. Donlon’s friend, who was in the house on October 31, testified, in direct contradiction to the police officers, that, for example, he did not hear Donlon ask for the gun back or say that he had other guns in the house. The prosecutor asked the jury to consider why the friend had waited nineteen months to come forward with this important exculpatory testimony:
You may want to consider as well why this friend of the defendant’s waited 19 months before telling anyone that he never saw the police take a gun there that night. 19 months. A friend? And 19 months until he said that he never saw the defendant, never heard him say anything to the police officers about that gun.
*657 The prosecutor was implying that the friend was making up this story. Donlon says the prosecutor's comment is a comment on his own, i.e., Donlon’s own, failure to testify. If it were a comment about Donlon’s failure to testify, it should not, of course, have been made. But, we simply do not see how anyone could construe it as a comment about Donlon, rather than a comment about his friend.
6. Donlon says that the court should have set aside the forfeiture of the bail his brother had posted as collateral guaranteeing his appearance at the sentencing hearing.
See, e.g., United States v. Minor,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
