The principal question presented by this case is whether two female drug couriers presented sufficient evidence at a pretrial
in limine
hearing to warrant submission of a duress defense to a jury. This procedure was sanctioned in
United States v. Bifield,
Prior to trial the Government mоved to exclude Alicea and Cabezas from presenting evidence supporting a duress defense, claiming that their evidence of duress was insufficient as a matter of law. At the hearing on the motion, Alicea and Cabezas testified that they had gone to Ecuador for a vacation оn December 15,1986, originally planning to stay only one week. While there, they decided to remain a few days longer and cancelled their December 22 return reservations. They missed their first rescheduled flight on December 25, and their second rescheduled flight on December 28 was cancelled. They then arranged a flight to New York, with a stopover in Miami, for January 2, 1987, and arrived at the airport that day two and one-half hours before the flight was scheduled to depart.
According to Alicea and Cabezas, just after they arrived at the airport in Ecuador and were walking toward the terminal, thеy were approached by two men who asked if they were going to New York. When the women did not respond, one man put his hand in his pocket as if he had a gun and pointed it at Alicea. Instructed to do exactly as they were told, Alicea and Cabezas then followed the men into a neаrby Mercedes. The two men pushed the appellants’ heads down so that they could not see where they were going while a third man drove them to a house. Inside the house the women were told to undress and to put on a “girdle,” which was actually a pink body suit and a T-shirt. When one of the men attemрted to strap packages of cocaine to Alicea’s body suit, she resisted. The man who had driven the automobile then forced Alicea into an adjoining room and raped her. Cabezas, who could hear Alicea’s screams from the next room, was told that if she did not comply, she, too, would be raped. The men then *105 taped the packages to the body suits and the women put their clothes back on. One of the men made a telephone call to New York, describing the two women and giving the recipient of the call information about where they lived in New Jersey, having obtained the information by examining the contents of their purses. The man who had looked through the purses singled out a picture of Cabezas’ daughter, threatening that harm would come to her if their demands were not met. The men told the women that someone would be watching them on the airplane and warned them not to try “anything.”
The men then drove them back to the airport, checked them in, escorted them to the security area and left them to board the plane. After going through the metal detection device, appellants waited some twenty minutes before boarding the plane, during which time, out of fear, they did not report their predicament to anyone or try to get rid of the cocaine. They boarded the plane at about noon and sat together. Both Alicea and Cabezas testified that a man seated in their same row, three seats away tоward the middle of the airplane, stared at them constantly, at one point asking them for a match. The women believed that this was the man whom their abductors had said would be watching them. Appellants testified that because they were in constant terror they did not seek assistance from a stеwardess, or even attempt to go to the lavatory during the nine-hour flight (although at some point during the flight Cabezas fell asleep).
During the plane’s scheduled stop in Miami, the women neither split up nor deplaned to seek help. On the plane Alicea was given a Customs declaration to fill in and submit to officials upon arrival in New York, but she wrote no request for help on it. When appellants arrived at Kennedy Airport, the “watcher” followed them off. While he did not stay directly behind them, the women assumed he was near enough to be a threat. Cabezas, an Ecuadorian citizen, was interviewed separately by an Immigration official outside the presence of the “watcher.” Although she asked the official several times to check her passport, Cabezas did not tell the official that she had been forced to carry cocaine into the country.
Cabezas сleared the Customs inspection first, with the “watcher” close behind, according to appellants’ testimony. But when the inspector reached over to assist Alicea, he touched her back and felt something hard. When he asked her what it was, Alicea replied that it was a body cast. The Custоms inspector then took her to a more private area for a secondary search. Cabezas, although she already had been cleared and was free to leave, went with Alicea and also submitted to the search. Inside the secondary search rooms Alicea and Cabezas told the officials how they had been forced to carry cocaine, although neither mentioned the rape. At the hearing Alicea testified that at the time she had been too ashamed to let her family know about the assault. A month later, however, when she discovered that she had become pregnant as a result of it, she arranged to have an abortion at the Metropolitan Correctional Center and confided the incident to a staff psychologist there.
Relying on the testimony of the two women, Judge Platt nevertheless found that they had not overcоme the
Bifield
preclusion test that “[w]here the evidence, even if believed, fails to establish all of the elements of the duress defense, the trial court may rule upon the defense as a matter of law and need not submit it to the jury.”
Bifield,
DISCUSSION
Appellants’ first argument is that
United States v. Bifield
has no application in a case not involving a prison escape. Thus, they claim, the district court’s reliance on the elements of the duress defense catalogued in
Bifield
is “simply wrong.” Rather, their argument runs, the court shоuld have followed
United States v. Mitchell,
A claim of duress and coercion constitutes a legal excuse for criminal conduct when, at the time the conduct occurred, the defendant was subject to actual or threatened force of such a nature as to induce a well-founded fear of impending death or serious bodily harm from which there was no reasonable opportunity to escape other than by engaging in the otherwise unlawful activity.
Appellants cite a Ninth Circuit case,
United States v. Jennell,
The principal issue then is whether those occasions when Alicea and Cabezas were, or could have been, separated from their captors and the “watcher” presented “reasonable opportunities for escape.” Alicea and Cabezas аrgue that this court should follow the Ninth Circuit’s
United States v. Contento-Pachon,
Alicea and Cabezas’ next argument is that the trial judge’s ruling effectively deprived the defеndants of their constitutional right to testify on their own behalf, as recently endorsed in
Rock v. Arkansas,
— U.S. -,
Alicea and Cabezas’ third claim is that in requiring them to present their defense before the Government rested its case, the Government was given unwarranted discovery. But we have recently held that
in limine
motions and rulings are permitted “ ‘pursuant to the district court’s inherent authority to manage the course of trials.’ ”
United States v. Valencia,
Judgment affirmed.
