David Monahan appeals from a cocaine conviction under 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) & 846. He claims that the district court improperly admitted evidence of his prior con-. viction for obstructing justice, which resulted from his threat of unspecified harm to a key witness should the witness testify in the cocaine case. * The court stated that the evidence was admitted to show consciousness of guilt rather than propensity for crime. Monahan refused the court’s offer to give a limiting instruction to the jury. Monahan now argues that under Rule 403 the probative value of this evidence is outweighed by its tendency to cause unfair prejudice.
We disagree. Evidence of threats to witnesses can be relevant to show consciousness of guilt.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). Although some conduct regarded as obstruction of justice may not be probative because it demonstrates only a preference to avoid legal involvement, the act here was not so innocuous. The offensiveness of threatening personal harm to a witness shows that Monahan was willing to take extreme measures to exclude pertinent evidence from the trial. This surpasses in nature and degree any innocent desire to avoid entanglement. The specificity of this conduct implies a knowledge and fear of particular and damaging testimony intimately related to the prosecution at hand-not a generalized distaste for the courtroom. Because the evidence implicated no irrelevant or collateral matters, any “prejudice” that arose did so only because of the evidence’s probative character. Rule 403 is not contravened by evidence that might show only that the defendant is guilty of the crime charged.
See, e.g., United States v. Brashier,
We have no occasion in this case to consider whether a threat that is inflammatory ,• or macabre in content should be excluded7 under Rule 403.
Cf. United States v. McManaman,
Affirmed.
Notes
The government advised us in oral argument that Monahan was tried for obstruction of justice before he was tried for cocaine possession by chance rather than by design.
