Lead Opinion
BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FORESTER, D. J., joined. ROGERS, J. (p. 547), delivered a separate concurring opinion.
OPINION
Defendant Kenneth Timothy Dixon, Sr. is charged with attempted bank extortion in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a). Prior to trial, the district court held an eviden-tiary hearing on the admissibility of testimony by three prosecution witnesses: Dixon’s son, Kenneth Timothy Dixon, Jr., whom we refer to as “Dixon, Jr.,” and Dixon’s former wives, Kathy Alexander and Penny Weems. Each witness was to testify at trial that, in their respective lay opinions, the suspect depicted in a photograph taken by a bank surveillance camera during the attempted extortion was, in fact, Dixon. The district court excluded this identification testimony, as well as testimony by Weems concerning incriminating statements that Dixon allegedly made to Weems’s father. The United States appeals these evidentiary rulings.
On January 15, 2002, a man entered the mail room of an AmSouth Bank carrying a FedEx box that contained an extortion note. Surveillance photographs were taken of the man and the package. Defendant Dixon eventually surfaced as a suspect in the crime. During the course of the investigation, Dixon, Jr., Alexander and Weems indicated to law enforcement officers that the individual depicted in the surveillance photograph resembled defendant Dixon. Dixon denied being the person in the photograph, but admitted it looked like him.
The district court held a pretrial hearing on the admissibility of the identification testimony of Dixon, Jr., Alexander and Weems. During the hearing, Dixon, Jr. testified that he had no doubt that the person depicted in the surveillance photograph was his father, defendant Dixon. Dixon, Jr. indicated that he saw his father around Christmas of 2001 and that he may have also seen him in January 2002. When asked whether his father tended to “change his appearance” or whether “he look[ed] the same all the time,” Dixon, Jr. testified that he “[l]ooks the same to me.” Upon further questioning by counsel for the United States, Dixon, Jr. indicated that he does not pay attention to his father’s hair style, facial hair or weight. The district court explicitly asked Dixon, Jr., “[W]hen you were asked about ... and shown those [surveillance] photos in April of ’03, did you at that time remember what your father looked like in January of ’02, in terms of facial hair, weight, hair style, hair color?” J.A. 86. Dixon, Jr. answered, “No, ma'am. I just — it had looked like my dad. I just — the picture looked like my dad. I can’t — I don’t distinctly remember what he looked like at that time.”
Kathy Alexander, one of Dixon’s former wives, testified at the hearing that she was “100 percent” certain that the individual depicted in the photograph was Dixon. When asked why she was so certain, she answered, “The way that he carried himself, the shape of his face. He had on sunglasses that were familiar to me, because I purchased them for him. That’s about it.” Alexander indicated that she had lived on and off with Dixon from 1998 to 2001 and last saw him in October 2001, approximately three months prior to the offense. She also indicated that during the period from 1998 to 2001, Dixon had changed his “haircut, facial hair, beard, moustache, goatee.” However, she stated that she had no reason to believe that Dixon had changed his appearance during the period from 2001, when she last saw him, to 2003, when she identified him in the surveillance photograph. Additionally, when asked by the district court, “Does [Dixon] look pretty much the same as he looked in the surveillance photo?,” Alexander answered, “Yes. Except in the surveillance photo his hair is slicked back a little bit more, like he used gel or something.”
Penny Weems, who had been married twice to Dixon and had a daughter with him, also testified at the hearing. She stated that the person depicted in the photograph “looked like” Dixon. Weems estimated that she had seen Dixon approximately twice a month in 2001 and 2002. She. could not say with any certainty, however, what Dixon looked like in January 2002; she knew nothing about his hair style or facial appearance at that time. She testified that Dixon sometimes changed the way he looked by changing the length of his hair or the color of his beard.
Weems also testified about matters bearing on her potential bias against Dixon. For example, she acknowledged that she had accused Dixon of physically and mentally abusing her during their mar
In addition to testifying about the identity of the man depicted in the surveillance photograph, Weems also testified about a conversation she had with Dixon at her house on May 31, 2003. Weems testified that she told Dixon about a conversation that she had previously had with her father, Carroll Duke, in which Duke told her that Dixon made certain statements to him that were incriminating in nature — specifically, that (1) Dixon asked Duke if Dixon could get away with something if he changed his hair or disguised himself; and (2) Dixon mentioned extortion at AmSouth Bank and $250,000. According to Weems, upon hearing this information, Dixon “lost the color in his face.” Notably, counsel for the United States admitted that it would not call Duke as a witness because “he’s done 180 degrees, for whatever reason, and does not recall those things.” In an apparent attempt to avoid potential hearsay problems, counsel for the United States indicated that it was offering Weems’s testimony only for Dixon’s reaction to the information that Weems relayed to him — i.e., that he lost the color in his face — rather than for the truth of any matter asserted.
After the hearing, the district court issued an oral ruling excluding the identification testimony of Dixon, Jr., Alexander and Weems. In a subsequent written ruling, the district court also excluded, pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 403, Weems’s testimony concerning the conversation she had with Dixon about the incriminating statements that he allegedly made to Duke. The United States filed this appeal challenging the foregoing evidentia-ry rulings by the district court.
II.
A district court’s evidentiary rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion. United States v. Wagner,
A. Identification Testimony
1. Kenneth Dixon, Jr. and Kathy Alexander
The district court excluded the proposed identification testimony of Dixon, Jr. and Alexander on the ground that their testimony would not assist the jury in determining whether the individual depicted in the photograph was, in fact, Dixon. The United States argues that the district court’s exclusion of this testimony amounts to an abuse of discretion.
In Pierce, a case cited by both parties, the Eleventh Circuit listed the following factors as relevant tó the analysis: (1) the witness’s general level of familiarity with the defendant’s appearance; (2) the witness’s familiarity with the defendant’s appearance at the time the surveillance photograph was taken or when the defendant was dressed in a manner similar to the individual depicted in the photograph; (3) whether the defendant had disguised his appearance at the time of the offense; and (4) whether the defendant had altered his appearance prior to trial. Id. at 774-75 (citations omitted); see also Farnsworth,
Other important factors are the degree of clarity of the surveillance photograph and the quality and completeness with which the subject is depicted in the photograph. Lay opinion identification testimony is more likely to be admissible, for example, where the surveillance photograph is of poor or grainy quality, or where it shows only a partial view of the subject. See, e.g., United States v. Jackman,
Application of the foregoing factors to the facts of this case reveals that the district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the .lay opinion identification testimony of Dixon, Jr. and Alexander. Although both witnesses were indisputably familiar with Dixon’s general appearance, the remaining factors weigh in favor of excluding their testimony. For example, the district court found that the evidence failed to establish that either Dixon, Jr. or Alexander was familiar with Dixon’s ap
2. Penny Weems
The district court excluded Penny Weems’s identification testimony on a different ground — i.e., that there were important areas of potential bias that could not be explored on cross-examination without bringing in highly prejudicial information concerning Dixon, such as his alleged spousal abuse and nonpayment of child support, and the effect of his actions on their daughter. In excluding Weems’s identification testimony, the district court relied primarily upon the authority of United States v. Calhoun,
The United States argues that the Calhoun case is not controlling here because it has been limited by subsequent Sixth Circuit cases such as United States v. Maddox,
B. Weems’s Testimony Concerniny Her Conversation With Dixon
The United States also argues that the district court abused its discretion in excluding, pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 403, Weems’s testimony about
III.
For these reasons, the district court’s evidentiary rulings are AFFIRMED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur based on the particularly strong deference we properly accord discretionary evidentiary decisions made by the district court. In my view, a decision by the district court to admit the identification testimony of Dixon Jr., Alexander, and Weems would clearly have been within the district court’s discretion, and our decision today is not to the contrary.
The district court’s decision to exclude the testimony of Dixon Jr. and Alexander, in particular, tests the outer bounds of our deference. Someone who has lived with a defendant has presumably seen him in myriad contexts — asleep and awake, tired and energetic, happy and sad, angry and peaceful, morning and evening, etc., etc. Such a person is presumptively better able to identify the defendant in a photo than a juror who is comparing the photo with a one-time live view of the defendant.
In excluding the testimony, the district court relied on testimony by Dixon Jr. and Alexander that Dixon “looks the same” now as he did before'or during the period of the crime. Yet it is only natural that a person who has lived with a defendant, and become familiar with his many' faces, would consider all the faces to be permutations of the same familiar figure, and testify that the person has not changed. To exclude such evidence disregards such a commonsense explanation.
I would have been much -more comfortable affirming the admission of the Dixon Jr. and, Alexander identifications. However, affirmance is warranted when we accord the serious deference that is proper when we review discretionary evidentiary decisions of a district court, especially when those decisions are based in part on live testimony of the challenged witnéssi
