This appeal presents the question whether the district court properly excluded unstipulated polygraph evidence. We conclude that it did and affirm the judgment of conviction.
I
Juan A. Benavidez-Benavidez (“Benavi-dez”) was arrested, аlong with Blanca Veronica Ruiz-Aguiar, as he tried to enter the United States in a van at the Lukeville, Arizona port of entry. When questioned by customs agents at the primary inspection area, Benavidez stated that he had lost his border crossing card in Mexico and requested directions to the nearest Department of Motor Vehicles to see if he could have his driver’s license reinstated. He denied that he was bringing anything into the country. An agent knocked on the side of the van аnd thought it sounded dense and solid. Upon opening the rear of the van, the agent noticed a sweet perfume or air freshener type smell. After further investigation, the agents discovered seventy-six bundles of marijuana, weighing approximatеly 169 pounds, in the doors and walls of the van.
A customs agent interviewed Benavidez. The interview was not tape recorded and the substance is a matter of dispute. The customs agent testified that Benavidez stated that he had gone to Rocky Point, in Mexico, for his son’s birthday. While in Rocky Point, Benavidez’s wallet was stolen and thus he did not have his green card or driver’s license. The customs agent also testified that Benavidez claimed that he had obtained the van from a church organization that wanted him to drive it to the United States to pick up a load of clothing in Phoenix. In exchange, Benavidez was to keep the van, which was valued at approximately $1,200. The agent testified that he told Benavidez that the story was preposterous and that the defendant eventually admitted that he was aware that the marijuana was in the van and confessed that he had agreed to transport the marijuana to Phoenix for a third party in exchange for recеiving ownership of the van. The defendant denied confessing the crime to the customs agent. He also denied telling the agent that he was to receive ownership of the van as compensation.
Prior to trial, Benavidez took a polygraph examination and sought to introduce the results of the examination at trial, specifically the measured responses of his negative answers to the following questions:
• Did you admit to Agent Cherry that you were knowingly transporting marijuana?
• Did you tell Agent Cherry that you knew there was marijuana in the van when you crossed the border?
• Did you know there was marijuana in the van when you crossed the border into the United States?
In response, pursuant to
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
We review a district court’s decision to exclude expert testimony for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Scholl,
II
The question of admissibility of unstipu-lated polygraph evidence has had a long history in this circuit and around the country. The most prominent national rejection of deception detection evidence was made in
Frye v. United States,
Prior to 1986, evidence of the results of a polygraph examination was potentially admissible.
See United States v. De Betham,
In 1986, we assessed the state of the law and polygraph science and adopted a
per se
rule that unstipulated polygraph evidence “was inadmissible as technical or scientific evidence under Fed.R.Evid. 702
The
per se Brown
rule remained the law of the circuit until the Supreme Court decided
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
Following
Daubert,
the Fifth Circuit concluded that its
per se
rule excluding polygraph evidence had been effectively overruled by the dеcision.
See United States v. Posado,
Thus, with the exception of exclusion of evidence under rule 704(b), our
Cordoba
decisions returned our jurisprudence to its
pre-Broum
state, affording the district court “wide discretion in refusing to admit the testimony.”
Marshall,
Ill
Our historical exegesis is prompted by defendant’s claim of error in this case. In considering the admissibility of the defendant’s proffered evidence, the district court held a searching and thorough hearing. At the conclusion, the court held that the Daubert factors had been met, except for “the requisite general acceptance in the relevant scientific community.” Thus, the court denied admission of the evidence pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 702.
The court also conсluded that admission of the polygraph evidence would be unduly prejudicial and that its probative value was outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, citing the special risk that the jury might give excessive weight to the polyg-rapher’s cоnclusions. Thus, the court held that the polygraph evidence was also inadmissible under Fed.R.Evid. 403. Additionally, the court made a passing reference to the evidence’s inadmissibility under Rule 704(b). 3 -
Benavidez asserts that the district court had no choice but to admit the evidence because the defendant “won” the Daubert hearing and that the district court could not reject the evidence simply because it had not achieved acceptance in the scientific community. Despite defendant’s argument that the district court’s Rule 702 analysis was erroneous because it relied solely on a single Daubert factor, his argument is without merit.
The district court’s exclusion of the polygraph evidence under Fed.R.Evid. 403 is, standing alone, sufficient. As we noted in discussing this very issue a quarter-century ago, “a trial court will rarely abuse its discretion by refusing to admit the evidence, even for a limited purpose and under limited conditions.”
Marshall,
Having found exclusion of the evidence proper under Rule 403, we need not reach the issue of whether the district court also properly excluded the evidence under Rules 702 or 704(b), or improperly credited the government’s polygraph expert. The reason for this is that, unlike other evidentiary exclusions which may bar evidence for one purpose only to have it admitted for another рurpose, exclusion under Rule 403 is absolute. Once the probative value of a piece of evidence is found to be substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, there is no other evidentiary rule that can operаte to make that same evidence admissible. In this way, Rule 403 can be viewed as a gateway, albeit a very wide one, through which all evidence must pass prior to admission at trial. Although a trial court may choose to analyze evidеnce admissibility by assessing the effect of other rules of evidence first, it is under no compulsion to do so. It is equally acceptable to perform a Rule 403 analysis prior to undertaking any other
AFFIRMED
Notes
.
See, e.g., United States v. Givens,
. Following
Cordoba I,
the Supreme Court issued its opinion in
United States v. Scheffer,
. Only one aspect of the polygraph examination in this case was potentially impacted by Rule 704(b): "Did you know there was marijuana in the van when you crossed the border into the United States?” Thus, application of Campos would not have settled the admissibility of all the tendered polygraph evidence in this case.
