UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plаintiff-Appellee, v. ABDUL RAIMI MAMAH, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 02-2931
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued January 29, 2003—Decided June 11, 2003
Before COFFEY, EASTERBROOK, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 00 CR 396—Charles P. Kocoras, Chief Judge.
Mamah subsequently flew from Tulsa, Oklahoma, to Chicago to meet Giwa and checked into a hotel. When Giwa arrived at the hotel to buy narcotics from Mamah, she was accompanied by Agent Wilson and several other FBI agents. Because Agent Wilson was apprehensive about allowing Giwa to enter Mamah‘s hotel room alone, Giwa phoned Mamah to request that he meet her in the lobby. When Mamah refused, Agent Wilson left the hotel to obtain a search warrant while Agent John Schulte remained behind to monitor the exits in case Mamah attempted to leave. After an hour, Agent Schulte observed Mamah stеp from an elevator into the lobby and approached him. After identifying himself as an FBI agent, Agent Schulte obtained Mamah‘s consent to search his hotel room. During their search, agents discovered $5000 in currency wrapped in newspaper and a plastic bag containing 300 grams of heroin hidden behind the drapes.
Mamah was arrested and taken to the FBI office in downtown Chicago, where he received Miranda warnings and agreed to an interview. Mamah initially denied knowledge of the heroin recovered from his room but eventually admitted his guilt in a statement that Agent Wilson trаnscribed and Mamah signed.
Part of Mamah‘s defense was his claim that he falsely confessed. Before trial Mamah had moved the court to admit the expert testimony of Dr. Deborah Pellow, аn anthropologist, and Dr. Richard Ofshe, a sociologist. According to Mamah‘s filings, Dr. Pellow, a specialist in the culture of Ghana, would testify that behaviors adopted by Ghanaians in response tо living under a military regime could lead
The district court concluded that the proposed testimony of both Dr. Pellow and Dr. Ofshe was unreliable and thus inadmissible under
At trial Agent Wilson testified that Mamah had received Miranda warnings and then signed a waiver form before dictating his confession. Agent Wilson asserted that he went over the statement with Mamah line by line befоre Mamah signed it. Mamah testified that Agent Wilson had used abusive language during the interview and warned Mamah that he would get life imprisonment and never see his children again unless he cooperаted. According to Mamah, his oral statement did not correspond to the written statement, which, at the agents’ direction, he had signed without reading. Mamah testified that he had no idea how the hеroin came to be in his hotel room.
Mamah argues that excluding the testimony of Dr. Pellow and Dr. Ofshe was tantamount to a statement that social science can never form the basis of expert testimony. We acknowledge that social scientists frequently testify as experts, and their opinions are “an integral part of many cases.” United States v. Hall, 93 F.3d 1337, 1342 (7th Cir. 1996). But whether social science studies сan ever be a proper foundation for an expert‘s opinion is not the issue here. The issue is whether these social science studies, the research of these experts, sufficiently supported the expert opinions Mamah wanted to present to the jury—and they did not. Cf. Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 144 (1997) (“[W]hether animal studies can ever be a proper foundation for an expert‘s opiniоn was not the issue. The issue was whether these experts’ opinions were sufficiently supported by the animal studies on which they purported to rely.“).
Mamah contends that the district court disregardеd Dr. Pellow‘s and Dr. Ofshe‘s impressive educational backgrounds and professional accomplishments in ruling their
It is critical under
Mamah argues that Dr. Pellow would have testified that what he experienced in Ghana predisposed him to manipulation and intimidation during his interrogation by FBI agents. Such an opinion, however, would fall outside the scope of Dr. Pellow‘s work, which concentrates upon Ghanaian culture. Dr. Pellow‘s testimony may have been useful in answering questions about how a repressive mili-
Dr. Pellow‘s expertise is limited to the cultural practices of Ghanaian nationals living in Ghana; she has no basis for extrapolating this conclusion to Mamah, a Ghanaian ex-patriot. Had she offered an empirical study demonstrating that Ghanaian ex-patriots who have lived in the United States for more than ten years are unusually likely to give false confessions, then perhaps she could have established this link. But Dr. Pellow did not have at her disposal sufficient facts and data to support the proposition that Mamah‘s сultural background might have induced him to give a false confession.
Dr. Ofshe‘s testimony was inadmissible for similar reasons. He could testify that false confessions do occur, but he could not establish that Mаmah was interrogated under circumstances that could produce a false confession. Without an indication that Mamah was unusually susceptible to the FBI agents’ methods of interrogatiоn, Dr. Ofshe could not connect his research to the particulars of Mamah‘s case. Had Dr. Ofshe been able to testify that an individual who, like Mamah, is subjected to coercive interrogation tactics on one occasion will give a false confession on a second occasion when he is not subjected to coercive interrogation tactics, then perhaps his proffered testimony would have survived
AFFIRMED.
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—6-11-03
