Working with her husband and eo-eonspir-ator, Lawrence J. Madoeh, the defendant Janice Madoeh participated in a scheme to prepare phony tax returns and receive substantial tax refunds. The couple also made several false declarations and statements under penalty of perjury in their Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceedings. These efforts led to indictments charging violations of 18 U.S.C. § 286 (“Conspiracy to defraud the Government with respect to claims”), § 287 (“False, fictitious or fraudulent claims”), § 152 (“Concealment of assets; false claims”), and § 2 (liability as principal). Janice was convicted after a jury trial, see
United States v. Madoch,
Because we have already described the Madochs’ criminal scheme in Lawrence’s case,
id.
at 762-64, and because those details have little bearing on Janice’s appeal, we move straight to her arguments here. She urges first that the district court deprived her of due process when it did not adequately inform (or confusingly informed) the jury of her “battered wife” theory of duress or coercion. Because trial counsel neither objected to the instructions the court gave nor offered a different instruction on Janice’s behalf, we are limited to plain error review on this point. See
United States v. Maloney,
Prior to the trial, Janice twice underwent court-ordered psychiatric examinations. She filed a pretrial notice indicating her intent to call the examining physicians to testify about her mental state around the time of the alleged offenses and to opine about whether she had the ability “to formulate the necessary specific intent required for the charged offenses.” Her theory was that she was a battered wife who acted out of fear of her husband and thus lacked the requisite specific intent for each count, or alternatively, that she was a victim of duress. The court ruled she could not refer to the theories of coercion or duress at trial because she had not proffered enough evidence on those points.
Cf. United States v. Toney,
This exchange, and the court’s earlier ruling precluding a coercion or duress defense, provided the backdrop for the following jury instruction on knowledge, coercion, and duress:
When the word “knowingly” is used in these instructions, it means that the defendant realized what she was doing and was aware of the nature of her conduct, and did not act through ignorance, mistake or accident. Knowledge may be proven-by the defendant’s conduct, and by all the facts and circumstances surrounding the case. Neither coercion nor duress is a defense in this case because there is no evidence that the defendant reasonably feared that immediate, serious bodily harm or death would be inflicted on her if she did not commit the offenses charged and that she had no reasonable opportunity to avoid injury. However, you may consider evidence of threats and violence in the ease on the question of whether the defendant acted knowingly and intentionally with respect to each crime charged in the indictment.
Although, as we noted, trial counsel d(d not object to this instruction, Janice now argues that it confused or prejudiced the jury and relieved the government of its burden to prove her specific intent to commit the crimes charged. By telling the jury that neither coercion nor duress was a permissible defense, and even highlighting the absence of evidence of a fear of immediate and serious bodily harm, she claims that the court “emasculated” the portion of the instruction on intent and knowledge. What it should have done, in her view, was to have refrained from any comment at all on the coercion and duress issues, rather than go out of its way to tell the jury that those matters were not on the table.
Even accepting the defendant’s proposition that a “negative issue spotting” jury instruction can sometimes obfuscate rather than elucidate matters,
cf. United States v. Allen,
United States v. Dray,
We also decline Janice’s invitation to expand the law relating to battered women’s syndrome in this case. We do not mean to minimize the significance of battered women’s syndrome, or to exclude as a matter of law the possibility that some battered women may be able to prove .either coercion, duress, or inability to form a specific intent. But see
*600
United States v. Willis,
Next, Janice makes two arguments with respect to her
Miranda
rights. First, she argues the district court erred in concluding she was not “in custody” for
Miranda
purposes at the time federal agents executed a search warrant for her home. Based on this pre-trial ruling, the court below found that Janice had no right' to
Miranda
warnings at all, and thus it denied her motion to suppress statements she made to law enforcement agents shortly after they executed the search warrant. Although Janice failed to renew an objection to the admission of these statements at the time the government introduced them at trial, the district court’s clear ruling on Janice’s motion
in limine
is sufficient to preserve the issue for appeal. See
Favala v. Cumberland Eng’g Co.,
The scene Janice paints of the entry of the federal agents into her home is an unpleasant one. The agents served their warrant on her at about 7:00 a.m., when Janice, her husband Larry, her fifteen-year-old daughter Cheryl, and her six-month-old son William were in the house. As the agents rushed into the house, one of them ordered Janice into the kitchen. Another one reached for his gun when she started for the other room to retrieve William. Once she had the baby, she went to the kitchen as instructed, while agents ran through the house yelling. They captured Larry and handcuffed him in the family room. In her affidavit, Janice stated that “[b]efore [the agents] ... took my husband outside, he told me to go to the bank and take out money for his bail, but ... [the agents] said I couldn’t leave the kitchen.” The agents also instructed Janice not to answer the telephone, which rang numerous times while they all sat in the kitchen and the agents questioned her. After some three-and-a-half hours, the agents permitted Janice to get dressed and to go to the bathroom to pump out her breast milk, which she did under the watchful eyes of a female agent. She then had to return to the kitchen for further interrogation. The agents finally left about five or five-and-a-half hours after they arrived. During all of this, Janice was never informed of her rights under Miranda.
*601
The district court concluded that this sequence of events did not add up to “custody” for
Miranda
purposes, because Janice was not formally “under arrest,” because she served the agents coffee and donuts in the kitchen, and because she was permitted to tend to her children. See
United States v. Madoch,
No. 94 CR 246,
For similar reasons, we conclude it was plain error for the district court to have resolved the suppression issue without an evidentiary hearing. It is true that had Janice properly requested an evidentiary hearing, she would have had the burden of making a
prima facie
showing of illegality.
United States v. Randle,
Even though we agree with Janice both that the district court should have given her an evidentiary hearing, and that her
Miranda
rights were violated on the uncontested facts as she portrays them, we still cannot reverse unless we conclude that these errors made a difference to the outcome of the ease. See
Arizona v. Fulminante,
Next, Janice argues that her conviction was based on improper use of privileged communications between her and her husband. The district court allowed the government to introduce tape-recorded conversations made while Larry was talking to her on the telephone from the Metropolitan Correctional Center (“MCC”). It reasoned that her statements would have been covered by the marital communication privilege, see
Wolfle v. United States,
Moving from her conviction to her sentence, Janice argues the district court abused its discretion when it refused (on a motion to reconsider) to grant her a downward departure for “extraordinary family circumstances” under § 5H1.6 of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines. She had two young children who faced hardship from the loss of their mother, as her child psychiatrist emphasized. On the other hand, the record is clear that the district court carefully considered her § 5H1.6 motion and the evidence she submitted, and it chose not to exercise its admitted discretion to order a downward departure. Under these circumstances, where the defendant is not arguing that the sentence was imposed in violation of the law or as the result of an incorrect application of the Guidelines, we have no jurisdiction to review the trial judge’s discretionary decision.
United States v. Yoon,
Last, Janice makes a perfunctory argument that she was denied effective assistance of counsel, in which she merely reiterates in a different guise the arguments we have already considered and rejected. Ordinarily we discourage defendants from raising this point on direct appeal, because it requires us to assess the performance of counsel strictly in light of the record that has already been developed. See
United States v. Young,
We therefore Dismiss the appellant’s appeal on the Sentencing Guidelines issue and Affirm the judgment below in all other respects.
