MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The defendant, Francisco Dominguez-Mestas is charged with importation of heroin into the United States, in violation of 21 U.S.C. Sections 952, 960 and 963; possession of heroin with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. Section 841(a)(1); and making false statements to federal officers, in violation of 18 U.S.C. Section 1001. In prior proceedings, this court’s determination that the defendant’s offer of proof was insufficient to establish the defense оf duress, was reversed in an unpublished opinion.
See, U.S. v. Dominguez-Mestas,
I. FACTS
On May 10, 1986, the defendant, on foot, entered the United States at the Calexico, California border crossing. After being referred to the secondary baggage inspection area, the defendant made a negative declaration concerning Mexican purchases and stated that the purpose of his visit to Mexico was to visit his mother. The border inspector noticed that the defendant became increasingly nervous; his hands were trembling and he avoided direct eye contact. The defendant was then referred to two private rooms where pat-down searches revealed two packages of heroin concealed in the waistband of his pants. The two packages, together, constituted approximately 173 grams of heroin. The defendant has raised duress as a defense. His proffer follows.
The defendant is a resident alien living in El Monte, California. In early 1986 the defendant borrowed approximately $2,000.00 from an unidentified man, referred to in defense counsel's briefs and *1431 oral аrguments as the “lender”. The money was needed to finance medical care for his ill mother living in Magdalena, Jalisco, Mexico. His mother died on March 6, 1986 and the defendant returned to El Monte, California, the debt unpaid. The defendant claims he was repeatedly contacted by an agent of the lender regarding repayment of the debt. The agent suggested that the defendant could carry drugs from Mеxico into the United States to satisfy his obligation to the lender. The defendant rejected this suggestion.
Sometime after this initial contact, the defendant received a telephone call from his sister, Maria, who lived in Magdalena, Mexico. According to the defendant’s proffer, his sister told him a man came to her house and threatened to kill her and the defendant unless he repaid the debt. For а period of one and one half to two months, the lender’s agent continued to suggest to the defendant that he smuggle drugs to pay off his debt. The defendant asserts he continued to decline. However, on May 10, 1986, the defendant drove to Mexicali, Mexico, to meet with the lender. On the basis of threats made that day by the lender and the lender’s agent, the defendant claims he was forced to transport thе heroin across the border to prevent immediate harm to his sister in Magdalena. Acknowledging the lender’s presence in Mexicali, the defendant claims he was concerned the lender would contact someone in Magdalena to carry out the threat of harm to his sister. The defendant also expressed concerns about the corruption of the Mexican police to explicate his failure to tell the authorities of his predicament.
II. DISCUSSION
The government’s position is that this court should place the burden of persuasion on the defendant to prove his affirmative defense of duress, and the government should not be required to prove the absence of duress beyond a reasonable doubt.
There is no question that Ninth Circuit cases have stated that once a criminal defendant satisfies his burden of production with respect to an affirmative defense such as duress, the burden of proof will shift to the prosecution to prove the absence of duress beyond a reasonable doubt.
See, e.g., U.S. v. Gonsalves,
In
Hearst,
the defendant raised the duress defense, “contending her co-participants compelled her to engage in criminal activity.”
Hearst,
The dictum in that case gains no new force from the repetition by text writers. It is one of misfortunes of the law that ideas become encysted in phrases and thereafter for a long time cease to provoke further analysis.
Hyde v. U.S.,
An even more persuasive reason to depart from
Hearst
is that the dictum erroneously equates the prosecution’s burden of proving the absence of duress with its burden of proving any essential element of the crime charged.
Hearst,
*1433
Therefore, duress does not negate mens rea, whether the crime charged be a general or specific intent crime.
U.S. v. Calfon,
“[T]he Due Process clause of the U.S. Constitution protects the accused against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonаble doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged.”
U.S. v. Winship,
Moreover, placing the burden of proving an affirmative defense on the defendant does not offend accepted notions of justice or violate the Duе Process Clause.
Martin v. Ohio,
Recognizing that the procedural practice espoused in Hearst, and subsequent cases citing Hearst, is dicta, and that the Constitution does not prohibit shifting the burden of persuasion as well as production to the defendant to prove his duress by a preponderance of the evidence, the instant motion presented by the government is granted. The defendant must prove his duress by a preponderance of the evidence; the government is not required to prove the absence of duress beyond a reasonable doubt.
In making this decision, this court is aware of contrary authority in other jurisdictions holding that after a defendant has introduced evidence on all elements of the duress defense the prosecution must rebut the issues of coercion beyond a reasonable doubt.
See, e.g., U.S. v. Falcon,
Perhaps the most formidable obstacle to this court’s ruling is the logic expressed in
U.S. v. Mitchell,
In
Mitchell
the court saw “no reason peculiar to the duress defense warranting departure from the general federal practice that once a criminal defendant satisfies an initial burden of producing sufficient evidence to warrant submission of a substantive defense to the jury, the prosecution must disprove at least an element of the defense beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Mitchell,
An “explicit justification for shifting the burden of persuasion to the defendant is often to ease the prosecutor’s difficulty in disproving facts peculiarly perceived within the defendant’s knowledge.” Jeffries & Stephan, Defenses, Presumptions and Burden of Proof in the Criminal Law, 88 Yale L.J. 1325, 1335 (1979). In the instant case the events surrounding this “immediate” threat of harm giving rise to the defendant’s duress defense all occurred in Mexico. Witnesses to conversations between the defendant, the lender and the lender’s agent on May 10, 1986, are in Mexico; witnesses to previous visit(s) to the defendant’s sister in Magdalena are in Mexico and any evidence is in Mexico. As Mexico is a foreign country and beyond the government’s subpoena power, the government has no access to any witnesses or evidence to disprove the defendant’s duress. Requiring the government in such a situation to prove a negative, i.e., the absence of duress beyond a reasonable doubt, is an almost impossible burden. Accordingly, it appears to be more practical and equitable to have the defendant prove his duress by a preponderаnce of the evidence.
*1435 The practical problem of the unavailability of witnesses and evidence to the prosecution is magnified by the recent increase in drug traffic from Mexico into the United States. Keports provided by the El Paso Intelligence Center regarding seizures of marijuana and cocaine along the Mexican/American border for the. calendar years 1982 through 1987 rеflect a drastic increase in the amount of marijuana and cocaine seized by the U.S. Customs Service from drug traffickers. 5
The requirement of proving a defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is “bottomed on a fundamental value determination of our society that it is far worse to convict an innocent man than to let a guilty man go free.”
Winship,
The social cost of placing the burden on the рrosecution to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is thus an increased risk that the guilty will go free. While it is clear that our society has willingly chosen to bear a substantial burden in order to protect the innocent, it is equally clear that the risk it must bear is not without limits; and Mr. Justice Harlan’s aphorism provides little guidance for determining what those limits are.
Patterson,
The social cost of drug abuse in our country is undeniably devastating. Due Process does not require the prosecution to prove an absence of duress.
Walker v. Endell,
At common law the burden of proving one’s affirmative defenses was on thе defendant.
Martin v. Ohio,
480 U.S. -,
The “procedural” rule from
Davis
was also premised on the assumption that sanity was one of the facts necessary to constitute the crime charged.
Davis,
III. CONCLUSION
Duress does not negate criminal intent. A defendant acting under duress intends to commit a crime but his conduct is excused becausе he has avoided a greater harm. Due Process does not require the prosecution prove the absence of duress. The general federal practice of placing the burden of persuasion on the government once the defendant has satisfied his burden of production regarding an affirmative defense arose from Davis, a case which has since been repudiated by statutе and reinterpreted by the Supreme Court. See, Leland v. Oregon, supra. Recognizing that, upon close scrutiny, the Ninth Circuit cases discussing the burden of proof once duress is raised are dicta, this court can, in good faith, place upon the defendant the burden of proving his duress defense, by a preponderance of the evidence.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In
Guess, Hearst
is cited for the general rule that once a criminal defendant satisfies his burden of prоduction with respect to an affirmative defense such as duress, the prosecution must prove its inapplicability beyond a reasonable doubt. However, the facts presented in
Guess
did
not
require the court to decide whether this general rule applied "not only to affirmative defenses that negate culpability, but also those which ... are apparently designed merely to establish the scoрe of a regulatory scheme.”
Guess,
. See, Perkins, Impelled Perpetration Revisited, 33 Hastings L.J. 403, 411 (1981). ("There is also some authority for the proposition that the acts may be excused if the harm threatened is directed not at the actor, but at members of the actor’s family”.)
. The elements of a duress defense are: (1) an immediate threat of death or serious bodily injury, (2) a well-grounded fear that the threat will be carried out, and (3) no reasonable opportunity to escape the threatened harm.
U.S.
v.
Contento-Pachon,
. “If duress negatived state of mind there would be no rule that intentional killings cannot be excused by duress ... for the threat of harm would negative the defendant's capacity to intend death and so constitute a defense to murder of the intent-to-kill sort.” W. La Fave & A. Scott, Substantive Criminal Law, Section 5.3, p. 615, n. 4 (1986); See, e.g., Cal. Penal Code Section 26 (West Supp.1988) (excusing as criminally incapable "persons (unless the crime be punishable with death) who сommitted the act or made the omission charged under threats or menaces sufficient to show that they had reasonable cause to and did believe their lives would be endangered if they refused ...") (emphasis added); But see, Conn.Gen.Stat. Section 53a-14 (1979); N.Y. Penal Law Section 40.00 (McKinney 1975) (duress can be a defense to any crime.)
. The government has submitted an affidavit of a special agent with the U.S. Customs Service listing the amounts of marijuаna and cocaine seized from 1982 through 1987 as follows:
(a) In 1982, 26,789 kilograms of marijuana and 57.4 kilograms of cocaine.
(b) In 1983, 27,665 kilograms of marijuana and 137.3 kilograms of cocaine.
(c) In 1984, 87,473 kilograms of marijuana and 248.6 kilograms of cocaine.
(d) In 1985, 78,265 kilograms of marijuana and 1,141 kilograms of cocaine.
(e) In 1986, 66,613 kilograms of marijuana and 2,288 kilograms of cocaine.
(f) In 1987, 146,311 kilograms of marijuana and 10,279 kilograms of cocaine.
