MEMORANDUM OPINION
Defendant in this immigration fraud prosecution seeks to take the deposition of his brother-in-law in the Republic of Jordan pursuant to Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P., on grounds that the brother-in-law would provide material, exculpatory testimony, but refuses to travel to the United States to testify.
For the reasons that follow, defendant’s Rule 15(a) motion must be denied.
I.
Defendant Majed Hajbeh, a citizen of the Republic of Jordan, is a lawful permanent resident of the United States currently residing in Woodbridge, Virginia. He emigrated to the United States from Jordan in January 1993. An indictment returned on August 5, 2003 charges defendant with unlawful possession of an alien registration card procured by fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1546(a). 1 Specifically, the government alleges that defendant submitted an Application for Immigrant *381 Visa and Alien Registration (Application), also known as Optional Form 230, to the United States Embassy in Amman, Jordan on September 3, 1992 that fraudulently indicated that he was single, had never been married, and had no children. 2
In support of its contention that defendant’s immigrant visa was procured by fraud, the government relies on the following documents seized by FBI special agents during a consent search of defendant’s residence in Woodbridge, Virginia:
(1) A Kuwaiti marriage certificate indicating that defendant was married to Najwa Abu Al Hija in Kuwait on June 15,1988.
(2) A Jordanian birth certificate reflecting that defendant and his wife are the parents of Samiya Hajbeh born November 7,1990 in Kuwait.
(3) A divorce declaration deed, written on June 8, 1993 in Jordan and attested to by a religious judge, indicating that defendant divorced Abu Al Hija on May 22,1992. 3
(4) A Jordanian divorce certificate, registered on August 13, 1998, indicating that defendant divorced Abu Al Hija on June 8,1993.
(5)A Jordanian marriage certificate, registered on August 13,1998, indicating that defendant and Abu Al Hija remarried on June 12,1993.
The government claims these documents reflect that defendant was married and had a child at the time he completed and submitted the Application in September 1992, and thus show that defendant included false information on his Application.
Based on the false representations in defendant’s Application, the United States Embassy issued defendant an immigrant visa on September 16, 1992, permitting him to enter the United States and to reside here as a lawful permanent resident. The government further alleges that defendant has resided in the United States since January 9, 1993 in possession of a fraudulently obtained immigrant visa.
For his part, defendant alleges he did not violate 18 U.S.C. § 1546(a) because he did not knowingly subscribe to any false statements in his Application. 4 According *382 to his counsel’s proffer, 5 defendant received assistance in translating and completing the Application from his brother-in-law, Hasan S. Hajibi. Defendant claims he needed this assistance owing to his lack of proficiency in English. 6 He further claims that Mr. Hajibi filled out the Application on his behalf by relying chiefly on an immigration form defendant’s mother submitted in 1986, which indicated that defendant was unmarried and childless. Defendant’s position, then, is that he did not sign or submit the Application knowing it contained false information, but rather that Mr. Hajibi filled out the Application for defendant and included the false information concerning defendant’s marital and parental status based on an outdated 1986 immigration form.
Defendant now moves pursuant to Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P., to depose Mr. Hajibi in Jordan on grounds that Mr. Hajibi resides in Jordan, refuses to travel to the United States to testify, 7 and can provide material and exculpatory testimony.
II.
Although depositions “are disfavored in criminal cases,” 8 Rule 15(a), Fed. R.Crim.P., provides that courts may order such depositions in “exceptional circumstances and in the interest of justice” 9 to “preserve testimony for trial.” 10 While the Rule neither defines nor elucidates the “exceptional circumstances” and “interest of justice” standards, some guidance in this regard is found in the Advisory Committee’s note, which states that a court may permit a party to depose a witness in a criminal case if (a) the witness will be unavailable to testify at trial, (b) the testimony is material to the moving party’s case, and (c) the testimony is necessary to avoid an injustice. 11 This guidance, while helpful, is not sufficiently particularized to be dispositive of specific cases. For example, the guidance leaves unanswered *383 whether exculpatory evidence that is cumulative or merely corroborative of other trial evidence is sufficient to trigger the operation of the Rule. Also unanswered is the question of what circumstances constitute a qualifying unavailability of a witness.
Nor are these questions definitively answered in the caselaw. Authority on the application of Rule 15(a) and the “exceptional circumstances” standard is sparse.
12
Authority from elsewhere is generally consistent with the guidance in the Advisory Committee’s note, but varies somewhat in detail.
13
Courts typically require a party seeking a deposition to establish both that the witness’s testimony is material and that the witness will likely be unavailable to testify at trial.
14
The Second and Tenth Circuits also require the moving party to show that denying the requested deposition will result in a failure of justice, but then provide little explanation as to what a movant must show to establish this element of the test.
See United States v. Cohen,
Whatever test is adopted, analysis properly begins with the question whether the proffered testimony is material. 17 Absent materiality, Rule 15(a) cannot apply. Because neither the Rule nor the Advisory Committee’s note defines materiality, courts have assessed this prong of the “exceptional circumstances” test in a variety of ways, asking, for example, whether the testimony is essential or critical to the defense, 18 exculpatory 19 or capable of negating an element of the government’s case, 20 or is instead cumulative or merely corroborative. 21
Although no Fourth Circuit authority defines materiality in the Rule 15(a) context, materiality is well-defined in the case-law applying
Brady v. Maryland,
These principles, applied to the case at bar, point persuasively to the conclusion that the proffered testimony is not material. The analysis in this regard proceeds on the assumption that Mr. Hajibi, if present at trial, would testify in accordance with defense counsel’s proffer, 25 namely that he, Mr. Hajibi, filled out the Application for defendant because defendant did not speak English and that he, Mr. Hajibi, not defendant, supplied the false answers on the Application. Such testimony is plainly exculpatory for defendant as it serves to negate the requisite knowledge element of the offense. But it is also, at best, cumulative and merely corroborative of testimony that defendant himself is able to offer and hence not material. Thus, defendant can himself testify that because he spoke no English or inadequate English, he asked Mr. Hajibi to fill out the Application for him and that it was Mr. Hajibi, not defendant, who filled out the Application and that it was Mr. Hajibi, not defendant, who supplied the false answers on the Application. Defendant can also add that he did not know that Mr. Hajibi had provided false answers in response to questions in the Application. At best, therefore, even assuming the accuracy and validity of defense counsel’s proffer of Mr. Hajibi’s testimony, that testimony is merely cumulative and corroborative and therefore, not material. 26
Defendant seeks to avoid this result by arguing that although Mr. Hajibi’s testimony is cumulative or corroborative of evidence the defendant himself can offer, he should nonetheless be allowed to depose Mr. Hajibi under Rule 15(a) because otherwise defendant will be compelled to testify in violation of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. 27 While *386 the denial of defendant’s Rule 15(a) motion may certainly serve to encourage defendant to testify, he remains free to choose not to do so. Therefore, he is not, in any relevant sense, “compelled” to testify because his “free -will [is not] overborne.” 28 Put differently, an incentive to testify does not amount to compulsion. In the circumstances, defendant remains entirely free to testify or not as he sees fit.
The absence of materiality ends the analysis as it precludes the application of Rule 15(a). It is therefore unnecessary to consider whether, in the circumstances at bar, defendant has established Mr. Hajibi’s unavailability under Rule 15(a). 29
Accordingly, for the reasons stated, the absence of materiality precludes the operation of Rule 15(a) and defendant’s motion to depose Mr. Hajibi in the Republic of Jordan must be denied.
An appropriate order has issued.
Notes
. This section provides as follows:
Whoever knowingly forges, counterfeits, alters, or falsely makes any immigrant or *381 nonimmigrant visa, permit, border crossing card, alien registration receipt card, or other document prescribed by statute or regulation for entry into or as evidence of authorized stay or employment in the United States, or utters, uses, attempts to use, possesses, obtains, accepts, or receives any such visa, permit, border crossing card, alien registration receipt card, or other document prescribed by statute or regulation for entry into or as evidence of authorized stay or employment in the United States, knowing it to be forged, counterfeited, altered, or falsely made, or to have been procured by means of any false claim or statement, or to have been otherwise procured by fraud or unlawfully obtained... shall be fined under this title... or imprisoned ....
18 U.S.C. § 1546(a).
.Question nine (9) on the Application asked defendant to mark a box to indicate his marital status. The box marked stated defendant was "single (never married).” And "Not Applicable” was the response to question thirteen (13) which asked defendant to list the names, addresses, dates and places of birth of his children.
. The divorce declaration deed is an attestation by a religious judge that defendant divorced his wife and a request for issuance of a divorce certificate to inform defendant's wife of the divorce. This process is called a "resti-tuted divorce.”
. Proof of defendant’s knowledge of the false statements is an element of the charged offense under 18 U.S.C. § 1546(a).
See e.g. United States v. Prince-Oyibo,
. All facts on which defendant relies derive from his counsel’s proffer. Defendant did not file an affidavit of the witness he seeks to depose.
. The government contends that defendant is proficient in English. In support, the government cites defendant’s answer to question thirty (30) on his Application in which he indicated that he could speak, read, and write English.
. Defense counsel concedes that Mr. Hajibi has made no efforts to apply for a passport or visa to obtain permission to travel to the United States; he simply refuses for undisclosed reasons to come to this country.
.
United States v. Drogoul,
. Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P. (“A party may move that a prospective witness be deposed in order to preserve testimony for trial. The court may grant the motion because of exceptional circumstances and in the interest of justice.”).
. Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P.;
see also
Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P. advisory committee's note ("The principal objective is the preservation of evidence for use at trial. It is not to provide a method of pretrial discovery....”);
United States v. Kelley,
. Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P. advisory committee’s note;
see also United States v. Johnson,
. In
United States v. Moussaoui,
.
Compare United States v. Cohen,
.
See, e.g., Cohen,
. See Thomas,
.
See
Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Crim.P. ("The court may grant the motion because of
exceptional circumstances....")
(emphasis added);
see also United States v. Dillman,
.
See Drogoul,
.
See Aggarwal,
.
See Kelley,
.
See Ismaili,
.
See United States v. Gragg,
.
See Brady v. Maryland,
.
See United States v. Leigh,
.
See Love v. Freeman,
. It must also be noted that the absence of any affidavit or witness declaration makes it difficult to assess the materiality of Mr. Haji-bi’s testimony. Without such an affidavit or declaration, it is difficult to determine whether Mr. Hajibi will actually testify as advertised and difficult to know the nature and details of his testimony. Nor is this an inconsequential point in this context; it weakens defendant's position on the motion given that defendant bears the burden of proof to show the "exceptional circumstances” and "interest of justice” required by Rule 15(a).
See Kelley,
.
See supra
note 24;
see also Gragg,
. U.S. Const. Amend. V ("No person shall be... compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself....”).
.
United States v. Washington,
. Were it necessary to reach this issue, the defendant would have to show a “substantial likelihood that the proposed deponent will not testify at trial.”
Drogoul,
