Claude Griffin, Jr., and Maxon Morgan appeal their convictions of cocaine trafficking. They contend that their Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process was denied when the district court refused to allow them to call a witness before the jury for the sole purpose of having him invoke an invalid privilege against self-incrimination. Because the Sixth Amendment recognizes no such right, we affirm.
I.
In 1993, Claude Griffin, Sr., hatched a plan to import cocaine into the United States with the assistance of his son, Claude Griffin, Jr., Maxon Morgan, and others. The conspiracy was ultimately uncovered and the conspirators indicted. The elder Griffin pleaded guilty and received life imprisonment; the younger Griffin and Morgan received a joint jury trial.
At trial, both defendants denied culpability, seeking to shift blame to the elder Griffin. Claude Griffin, Jr., denied any participation in the conspiracy. He argued that his father’s use of the family home and air conditioning business to set up the importation scheme had unfairly cast suspicion upon him. Morgan did not deny involvement but alleged that Griffin had coerced him into participating in the scheme. He claimed that Griffin had loaned him money for a legitimate business and then used the indebtedness, coupled with threats of personal harms to force him to join the conspiracy.
Both defendants sought to call the elder Griffin as a witness. The trial court, advised
The defendants then requested that the court either place Griffin on the stand so that he could assert his Fifth Amendment privilege before the jury or inform the jury of his refusal to testify. The court denied both requests.
II.
The defendants contend that the Compulsory Process Clause of the Sixth Amendment 2 guarantees them the right to place a witness on the stand for the sole purpose of having him invoke an invalid Fifth Amendment privilege in the jury’s presence. They recognize that we have unambiguously ruled that the Compulsory Process Clause provides no such right with respect to a witness claiming a valid privilege. 3 Their argument rests on distinguishing those witnesses who invoke valid Fifth Amendment privileges from those who invoke the privilege improperly.
In fact, our caselaw suggests that the validity of the witness’s privilege is unimportant. In
Lacouture
we stated that a defendant’s right to compulsory process was “exhausted by [the witness’s] physical availability at court.”
The Sixth Amendment requires that a witness be brought to court, but it does not require that he take the stand after refusing to testify. Id. 4 Once a witness appears in court and refuses to testify, a defendant’s compulsory process rights are exhausted. It is irrelevant whether the witness’s refusal is grounded in a valid Fifth Amendment privilege, an invalid privilege, or something else entirely. 5 The defendants’ Sixth Amendment rights were satisfied as soon as the elder Griffin appeared in court and refused to testify; the court was under no obligation to grant their request to place Griffin on the stand. 6
We explained in
Lacouture
why a district court should be free to prevent a witness from invoking the privilege against self-incrimination before the jury: “[A] claim of
Griffin and Morgan assert that even if they had no right to call the elder Griffin to the stand, the Constitution at least mandates that they be able to call the jury’s attention to his refusal to testify. We rejected this argument in Lacouture, approving an order that defense counsel avoid reference to a reluctant witness’s absence. Id. We did so for the same reasons that led us to conclude that the defendant had no right to call the witness in the jury’s presence. Id. We therefore reject this argument as well.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgments of conviction are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Griffin's life sentence prevented the court from doing anything more to compel him to testify.
. The Compulsory Process Clause of the Sixth Amendment states: "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor....” U.S. Const, amend. VI.
.
United States v. Bolts,
.
See also United States v. Gloria,
.
See In re Bizzard,
. Griffin and Morgan do not assert that the district court erred by concluding that it lacked the discretion to grant their request.
See Lacouture,
.
See also Bowles,
