Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
Johnny St. Valentine Brown for years testified as an expert witness for the government in narcotics cases. But it later developed that Brown was something of a con man himself, so much so that he was charged with and pleaded guilty to having committed perjury about his educational background. Among the trials at which he testified, was that of Robert Gale, who was convicted of possession of marijuana and possession of heroin with intent to distribute. Thus we again consider the effects of Brown’s testimony on the adequacy of a trial. Compare, e.g., United States v. Williams,
Gale challenges his convictions under the federal habеas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2255, arguing that the prosecution violated Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S.
The facts of Gale’s case have been set out at length in his direct appeal, United States v. Gale,
Brown, who had no role in the arrest or other events leading to the prosecution, testified as an expert witness on narcotics. He said that he was “presently a narcotics consultant to the Metropolitan Police Department [ (“MPD”) ] in the District of Columbia.” As the prosecutor sought to establish Brown’s qualifications as a narcotics expert, defense counsel said, “I have no objection if he’s seeking to qualify Detective Brown. If he wants to go on, that’s fine, too.” The prosecutor then continued briеfly, establishing that Brown had previously been an active member of the MPD for 26 years, during which, Brown said, he “worked homicide, checking fraud, robbery, prostitution, gambling, and of course my last assignment, which lasted for 22 years, was as a narcotics investigator with the Narcotics and Special Investigations Division [ (“NSID”) ].”
Brown testified that in his 22 years at NSID, hе probably had worked on 1,500 narcotics cases and had become familiar with how heroin and cocaine are packaged, sold, and used in the District of Columbia. Brown did not testify about his educational background (the subject of his false testimony that ultimately led to his perjury convictions) nor about being qualified as an expert in other cases. Without objection from the defense, the court allowed Brown to testify as an expert.
Brown explained generally how cocaine and heroin are packaged and sold in the city, identifying how various items found at the apartment are used. As is relevant to this appeal, Brown dеscribed “what we call a ‘pev’ in the pharmacy world,” which he said was “used to. crush items that are in a rock-hard form. You pulverize it, you break it down into a crystalline or powder form.” He also explained that rubber gloves can be used in the drug preparation process to prevent transferring residue from hand tо mouth. And he testified as
In addition, Brown testified generally about the risks associated with the drug business, including “being ripped off, stuck up or robbed, or the рossibility of the substances being seized by the police.” Because of these risks, he testified, a drug trafficker “would never allow anyone that’s not involved in the business to even be in any way associated, especially if the place where those substances are being prepared, what we call a 'bag-up hоuse,’ is being prepared for distribution purposes.”
The jury found Gale guilty, and he was sentenced to 121 months of incarceration followed by three years of supervised release. We upheld the conviction and sentence. See United States v. Gale,
In his petition under § 2255 Gale argued that the government had violated the Brady rule in two ways. First, he said, it had introduced testimony that it knew or should have known was perjured, specifically various aspects of Brown’s self-identification as an expert. Second, he said the government violated Brady by failing to disclose that Brown had committed perjury in other cases and had lied in a prior application for re-employment at the MPD. Gale also sought discovery “to determine the nature and extent of Brown’s perjury.”
The district court rejected Gale’s petition and denied his request for discovery. We affirm for reasons similar but not identical to those given by the district court.
Gale first contends that his trial was tainted because Brown committed рerjury at that trial. Gale cites three instances: while Brown used the phrase “we in the pharmacy world” (when referring to “what we in the pharmacy world call a ‘pev’"
Under United States v. Agurs,
While Brown did not possess a pharmacy degree, he didn’t claim to: rather, he merely implied an affiliation with “the pharmacy world,” something he undoubtedly had in light of his years of investigating and testifying about the process of making, packaging, and distributing drugs, albeit illegal ones. Nor can we say that
Second, Gale argues that the government committed a Brady violation by failing to advise him of Brown’s prior perjuries and the incomplete information on his job application. Again we assume in Gale’s favor that it is possible to attribute Brown’s knowledge of his past perjury to the prosecutors for Brady purposes. Compare United States v. Brooks,
Whereas the prosecution’s knowing use of false testimony entails a veritable hair trigger for setting aside the conviction (“any reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the judgment of the jury,” see Agurs,
Gale’s arguments do not meet this burden. He has offered no reason to believe that, had the impeachment evidence in question “been disclosed to the defense,” the government would have foolishly charged ahead, blindly offering Brown and exposing itself to his inevitable demolition on cross. Why would it have done so, rather than simply offering another expert? Brown’s expertise was drawn not from his command of some arcane field but from an experience that is widely-shared in urban police forces: he had investigated narcotics cases for many years. Moreover, while the government has argued that it had several narcotics experts available from MPD (and identified one in particular, Sergeant Brennan, who is a 25-year veteran narcotics investigator), Gale has offered nothing suggesting that Brown could not have been replaced with a similarly qualified witness. This case is thus
Gale raises two objections. First, he cites hearsay from news articlеs suggesting that Brown was a particularly charismatic expert witness, and argues that a replacement would have been less effective. We see no reason to credit such hearsay — other defendants are convicted both in the District of Columbia and across the country when experts other than Brown testify. Evеn if Brown had been the “best” expert witness, we have no reason (and no evidence) to believe that the “second best” witness would have been materially inferior. Furthermore, the “charisma” argument on which Gale relies is precisely the type of demeanor evidence that disappears at the time of triаl. See, e.g., United States v. Zeigler,
Second, Gale argues that Brown’s testimony that persons not involved in the drug trade would not be in an apartment used for packaging drugs was particularly damaging to Gale’s defensive claim that he just happened to be present. Gale goes on to suggest — but not affirmatively argue — that only Brown would have been willing to offer such testimony:
His expеrt claim that only those “involved” in the drug business would be present in an apartment containing drugs — which was devastating to Mr. Gale’s defense in this case — seems particularly suspect. The government did not submit any declaration from any other expert expressing agreement with Brown’s testimony in Mr. Gale’s case.
To the extent that Galе is simply arguing that the testimony in question may have been overstated, we assume that to be true. Surely a non-participant might be present in an apartment containing drugs because, for example, the drugs and drug paraphernalia were hidden, or because the non-participant’s presence was momentаry and accidental. But Gale never articulates such an argument, likely because any such overstatement (besides being easily torpedoed on cross) was wholly irrelevant to him — who at the time officers entered had been sleeping in the apartment, which was positively littered with drugs and drug paraphernalia in plain view. See United States v. Gale,
Further, any suggestion that, as a matter of substance, only Brown would give such testimony is plainly untrue. Indeed, in a case now on the court’s docket, a Detective Tyrone Thomas from the MPD provided the following testimony:
Everybody who is a part of that has a role in that drug operation, maybe one*6 of those roles that I mentioned earlier, and that’s to oversee those operations. I mean, it’s — nor would anyone want to go around and just be hanging around a scenario where some large quantities of narcotics are gonna be sold because they’re not gonna want to risk being caught up in a situation like that unless they have some method or role involved in the drug operation.
Just like somebody going to rob a bank, they’re not gonna take a Mend along just for the ride; nor is that friend gonna want to be going to where somebody is gonna rob a bank.
United States v. Bailey, No. 99-164-4, Tr. Vol. VI, 1/26/01, p. 5. (We of course express no opinion as to the permissibility of testimony so formulated.) In light of other experts who have offered substantively similar testimony and Gale’s failure to even allege before argument that the cited testimony was false, we cannot say that Gale has shown a “reasonable probability” of a different result had the government disclosed the potential impeachment evidence against Brown.
Finally, we reject Gale’s argument that the trial court erred in denying his request for further discovery about Brown’s alleged perjury in this and other trials, and materials “reflecting knowledge” of Brown’s perjuries within the government. We review the district court’s denial of this request for abuse of discretion. Bracy v. Gramley,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Gale does not contend that the use of the term "pev” constituted perjury. At trial, Brown stated that a "pev” is a pharmaceutical tool "used to crush items that are in rock-hard form.” While not characterizing this statement as peijury, Gale notes in his reply brief that he has been unable to find a definition of the term. Reply Br. at 9. Our searches have been equally unavailing.
