Lead Opinion
OPINION
Marvel Johnson Prinee-Oyibo appeals his conviction on one count of travel document fraud. Prior to trial, the Government moved in limine to exclude both the results of Prince-Oyibo’s polygraph examination, and evidence that he suffered persecution as a Christian in his predominantly Muslim home country of Nigeria. During the course of the jury trial, the district court granted both portions of the Government’s motion, thereby excluding both the polygraph evidence and the evidence of persecution. In his appeal, Prinee-Oyibo asserts that the evidentiary exclusions constitute reversible error. For the reasons stated below, we disagree and affirm.
I.
Prinee-Oyibo arrived at Dulles International Airport after a flight from Lagos, Nigeria, by way of Amsterdam, on October 26, 2001. At border control, he presented his Nigerian passport, with an enclosed United States non-immigrant B1/B2 tourist type visa foil stamp, to Immigration and Naturalization Service Inspector Warren Blair. Inspector Blair had reservations concerning the authenticity of the visa and referred Prinee-Oyibo to secondary inspection for further investigation. The secondary inspector found additional problems with the visa and determined that it was not genuine.
On October 29, 2001, Prinee-Oyibo was arrested and was charged by criminal complaint with travel document fraud, to wit, that he “did knowingly use, and attempt to use, a false, forged, counterfeited and al
During Prince-Oyibo’s January 30, 2002, jury trial, the Government presented the testimony of forensics examiner Lurline Trizna. Examiner Trizna concluded that, while the passport was genuine and unaltered and the visa was genuine when issued, various subtle abnormalities indicated that the visa had subsequently been altered. At the conclusion of Examiner Trizna’s testimony, the Government introduced a State Department document showing that Prince-Oyibo’s visa foil had originally been issued to a Nigerian woman.
At trial, Prince-Oyibo did not challenge the Government’s contention that his visa had been altered. Rather, his defense was that he “never intended to get a fraudulent visa”; that his failure to realize the visa had been altered was reasonable; and that his ignorance of the proper procedure for obtaining a visa, coupled with his culture’s practice of “paying officials to do what they are supposed to do,” prevented him from realizing that his visa was “counterfeit, altered, falsely made or otherwise unlawfully obtained.”
Prince-Oyibo took the witness stand at trial to explain the circumstances surrounding his acquisition of the visa. This, he stated, was the first time that he had ever needed a visa. Given his inexperience, he accepted the offer of a friend, Tony Igberi, to assist him. Igberi trav-elled with Prince-Oyibo to Lagos, where they went to the United States embassy and met a man who appeared to be an embassy employee. The purported embassy employee had previously been given certain documentation (Prince-Oyibo’s passport, birth certificate, and bank statements), as well as U.S. $2,045, all of which Prince-Oyibo had brought with him to Lagos. Prince-Oyibo completed a visa application and departed.
Several weeks later, Prince-Oyibo returned to the embassy on the appointed date to receive his visa. An embassy employee handed him both his passport and what he believed to be a legitimate visa. Prince-Oyibo testified that he did not notice any irregularities; nor was he made suspicious by the fact that attainment of the visa had required the payment of such a large sum: he was inexperienced with foreign travel, and, in Nigeria, it is common to have to “tip” officials to do their jobs in a timely fashion. Furthermore, when Prince-Oyibo checked with two airlines (KLM and British Airways) concerning flights to the United States, both airlines indicated that they had confirmed the visa. And when the visa was checked during the Amsterdam stopover of his KLM flight to Dulles, the visa was again confirmed. Thus, Prince-Oyibo testified, when he presented the visa to Inspector Blair, he believed it to be legitimate.
Prior to trial, Prince-Oyibo had taken and passed a polygraph examination regarding whether he knew the visa to be false, altered, counterfeit, or forged. The test, according to the retired FBI forensic polygrapher who administered it, indicated that Prince-Oyibo was truthful when he stated that he did not know that the visa was illegitimate. Before trial, the Government moved in limine to exclude this opinion from evidence, citing our circuit’s per se rule that the results of polygraph tests are inadmissible. On the day of trial, after hearing argument on the Government’s motion to exclude Prince-Oyibo’s polygraph evidence, the court granted the motion.
The sole issue before the jury was whether, “when the defendant used [the] nonimmigrant visa, he knew it was counterfeit, altered, falsely made or otherwise unlawfully obtained” and “did not act because of ignorance, mistake, or accident.”
II.
We review rulings on the admissibility of scientific evidence, such as polygraph test results, for abuse of discretion. United States v. Ruhe,
III.
A.
Prince-Oyibo first contends that the district court’s exclusion of his polygraph evidence constitutes reversible error. Though he recognizes that we have previously held polygraph evidence per se inadmissible, he maintains that recent advances in polygraph testing have rendered it sufficiently reliable for admission under the standard enunciated by the Supreme Court in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Prior to Daubert, this circuit consistently maintained a per se rule that the results of an accused’s or a witness’s polygraph test are not admissible to bolster or undermine credibility.
1. The Impact of Daubert
The Federal Rules of Evidence provide that “[i]f scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.... ” Fed.R.Evid. 702. In Daubert, the Supreme Court made clear that it is the duty of the trial court to perform the gatekeeping function with respect to expert testimony: “the trial judge must ensure that any and all scientific testimony or evidence admitted is not only relevant, but reliable.”
The Daubert Court announced five factors that the trial court may use in assessing the relevancy and reliability of proffered expert testimony: (1) whether the particular scientific theory “can be (and has been) tested”; (2) whether the theory “has been subjected to peer review and publication”; (3) the technique’s “known or potential rate of error”; (4) the “existence and maintenance of standards controlling the technique’s operation”; and (5) whether the technique has achieved “general acceptance” in the relevant scientific or expert community. Id. at 593-94,
Our per se bar on the admission of polygraph evidence pre-dates Daubert. We established our rule pursuant to the “Frye test,” which, until replaced by Dau-
Several of our sister circuits have, in light of the 1993 Daubert decision, reexamined the viability of their similar, pre-exist-ing per se rules against the admission of polygraph evidence. In particular, the Fifth and Ninth Circuits have held that Daubert effectively overturned their respective per se bars. Both now leave the admission or exclusion of such evidence to the discretion of the district courts. See United States v. Cordoba,
At the very least, by reserving the reliability assessment to the district courts, Daubert throws into doubt the viability of our per se rule that the results of an accused’s or a witness’s polygraph test are inadmissible to bolster or undermine credibility. Under one possible interpretation of Daubert, the court below should give Prince-Oyibo the opportunity to present evidence in support of his claim of polygra-phy’s newfound reliability; and, if it is satisfied that polygraphy is indeed today reliable (a matter on which we express no opinion), that court should be free to admit the polygraph test results in evidence. The question remains, however, whether we, as a three-judge panel, are free to adopt such an interpretation today. We turn to that question now.
2. Our Intervening Decisions
This circuit has, subsequent to Dau-bert ’s announcement of the new, multifac-tored test for admissibility of expert testi
Our consideration of the impact of Dau-bert on this Circuit’s per se ban against polygraph evidence is traceable to a suggestion raised in United States v. Toth,
A year later, in Sanchez, we returned to the Toth suggestion, noting that “we recently suggested that it is possible to change our prohibition against polygraph evidence without the approval of the en banc court in light of [Daubert ].”
In Ruhe, we again took note of the Toth suggestion “that a panel could rely upon [Daubert] to alter the circuit’s law on polygraph evidence.”
Although both Ruhe and Sanchez ultimately applied the per se bar, it is nonetheless not immediately clear that either case forecloses the possibility that we, as a panel, might act on the Toth suggestion and rely on the Daubert change of law to alter our circuit’s precedent on polygraph evidence: in Ruhe, the panel did not reject the Toth suggestion outright, but rather sidestepped the suggestion on the ground that the appellant there had not raised it. By contrast, Prince-Oyibo has advanced the Toth argument. And while Sanchez did come closer to simply rejecting the Toth suggestion, it stopped short when it invoked, in the alternative, the doctrine of harmless error. Again by contrast, an error in excluding the polygraph evidence indicating that Prince-Oyibo was telling
These distinctions notwithstanding, we conclude that, to the extent that Dau-bert ’s alteration of the legal landscape threw into doubt the viability of our per se rule against polygraph evidence, Ruhe and Sanchez effectively resolved those doubts in favor of the rule. In each case, we treated our pre-Daubert polygraph decisions as continuing to carry precedential force. See Ruhe,
In sum, while we might otherwise be inclined to hold that Daubert requires a more nuanced evaluation of polygraph evidence than that dictated by the per se rule on which the district court relied, and that the change in law effected by Daubert leaves a mere panel free to acknowledge this requirement, our post-Daubert precedents foreclose our abandonment today of this Circuit’s per se rule. Accordingly, we conclude that only the en banc Court has the authority to consider whether, “[a]fter Daubert, a per se rule is not viable.” Po-sado,
B.
Prince-Oyibo next maintains that his religious persecution was an important part of his defense, in that it tended to explain why he would not question the large sum of money that he had to pay to obtain his visa. As a result, he argues, exclusion of this evidence violated his constitutional right to present a defense. The Government responds that the district court was within its discretion in excluding the evidence of persecution, since the defendant’s fear of persecution was irrelevant to whether Prince-Oyibo intended to use an altered visa to enter the United States.
As the Government correctly notes, a defendant’s right to present a defense is not absolute: criminal defendants do not have a right to present evidence that the district court, in its discretion, deems irrelevant or immaterial. See Taylor v. Illinois,
The only issue that the jury considered was whether Prince-Oyibo actually knew his visa to be “counterfeit, altered, falsely made or otherwise unlawfully obtained.” While testimony on persecution may have been relevant to counter the Government’s proffered “willful blindness” instruction (and, in fact, so the defense argued), this point of potential relevance was mooted by the court’s refusal of that instruction. See supra note 1. Similarly,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the conviction of Marvel Johnson Prince-Oyibo is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The trial court rejected the prosecution’s "willful blindness” instruction on the ground that there was insufficient evidence to justify such an instruction.
. The qualification that polygraph evidence is per se inadmissible only if offered "to bolster or undermine credibility” becomes clear through our pre-Daubert, Council Oil case.
. On remand, the district court in Cordoba held that the proffered polygraph evidence was not admissible under Rule 702, or, alternatively, that it was inadmissible under Rule 403. United States v. Cordoba,
. After the Fifth Circuit's remand in Posado, the district court held that the proffered polygraph evidence was not admissible. As in Cordoba, the district court relied, in the alternative, on Rules 702 and 403. United States v. Ramirez,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
This circuit has never addressed the question of whether our per se rule banning the admission of polygraph evidence to bolster or undermine the credibility of a witness is consistent with the principles concerning the admission of scientific or technical evidence enunciated in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
I
The first seminal case addressing the admissibility of polygraph evidence was Frye v. United States,
£j]ust when a scientific principle or discovery crosses the line between the experimental and demonstrable stages is difficult to define. Somewhere in this twilight zone the evidential force of the principle must be recognized, and while courts will go a long way in admitting expert testimony deduced from a well-recognized scientific principle or discovery, the thing from which the deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs.
Id. Because the systolic blood pressure test had “not yet gained such standing and scientific recognition among physiological and psychological authorities as would justify the courts in admitting expert testi
Frye became the seminal polygraph case and, consequently, over the next five decades, virtually every state and federal court prohibited the admission of polygraph evidence. See generally James R. McCall, Misconceptions and Reevaluation-Polygraph Admissibility After Rock and Daubert, 1996 U. Ill. L.Rev. 363, 366—70 (analyzing Frye and its progeny). In this circuit, post -Frye and pre-Daubert, we concluded in numerous cases that the admission of polygraph evidence to bolster or undermine the credibility of a witness was per se inadmissible. See, e.g., United States v. Chambers,
In Daubert, the Supreme Court held that scientific expert testimony is admissible under Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence
Without question, our per se rule banning the admission of polygraph evidence to bolster or undermine the credibility of a witness is inconsistent with the flexible inquiry assigned to the district court by Daubert; indeed, the majority even impliedly recognizes this fact. Ante at 499 (“At the very least, by reserving the reliability assessment to the district courts, Daubert throws into doubt the viability of our per se rule that the results of an accused’s or a witness’s polygraph test are inadmissible to bolster or undermine credibility.”). To be sure, Daubert and the Federal Rules of Evidence recognize the gatekeeper role of the district court, which is for the specific purpose of screening evidence under Dau-bert and the Federal Rules of Evidence. A per se rule of exclusion does not allow the district court to perform its proper function under Daubert and the Federal Rules of Evidence. Simply put, the proponent of polygraph evidence should be given the opportunity to demonstrate the relevance and the reliability of the evidence before a decision on admissibility is made.
Consistent’with this analysis, numerous courts have recognized that a per se rule
[W]e do not now hold that polygraph examinations are scientifically valid or that they will always assist the trier of fact, in this or any other individual case. We merely remove the obstacle of the per se rule against admissibility, which was based on antiquated concepts about the technical ability of the polygraph and legal precepts that have been expressly overruled by the Supreme Court.
The majority in this case feels compelled to reject Daubert because, in the majority’s view, “our post -Daubert precedents fore-close our abandonment ... of this Circuit’s per se rule.” Ante at 501. However, an examination of these precedents leads inexorably to the conclusion that this court has not addressed, let alone answered, the question of whether our per se rule banning the admission of polygraph evidence to bolster or undermine the credibility of a witness is consistent with the principles concerning the admission of scientific or technical evidence set forth in Daubert.
In United States v. Toth,
On appeal, we noted that the “rule in this Circuif’is “that evidence that an accused or a witness has taken a polygraph test is inadmissible.” Id. We also recognized that our relevant circuit precedent was decided before Daubert and that the Posado court observed that, due to the change in the law effected by Daubert, en banc consideration was not necessary to overturn the Fifth Circuit’s per se rule against admissibility of polygraph evidence. Toth,
A year later, in United States v. Sanchez,
A little over two years later, in United States v. Ruhe,
The above discussion makes it abundantly clear that this court has never addressed, let alone answered, the question of whether -our per se rule banning the admission of polygraph evidence to bolster or undermine the credibility of a witness is consistent with the principles set forth in Daubert. With the issue now squarely before the court, one must conclude, for the reasons set forth above, that our per se rule is not consistent with the principles concerning the admission of scientific or technical evidence outlined in Daubert. Moreover, en banc consideration is not necessary to reach this result because a panel of this court is not at liberty to ignore clear and unequivocal Supreme Court precedent. Ruhe,
The only remaining question concerns harmless error under Rule 52(a). A district court’s evidentiary error is harmless if one can conclude, “ ‘with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error.’ ” United States v. Urbanik,
II
In summary, the district court should have given Prince-Oyibo the opportunity to demonstrate that his proffered polygraph evidence was admissible under Dau-bert. Because, on the record before the court, the exclusion of Prince-Oyibo’s proffered polygraph evidence was not harmless error, Prince-Oyibo’s 18 U.S.C. § 1546(a) conviction should be vacated and the case should be remanded to the district court with instructions to conduct a proper Dau-bert inquiry. If, on remand, the district court concludes that Prince-Oyibo’s proffered polygraph evidence is inadmissible under the principles enunciated in Dau-bert, the district court would be free to reinstate the conviction.
. As noted by the majority, ante at 497-498 n. 2, our per se rule only applies to the admission of polygraph evidence offered to bolster or undermine the credibility of a witness. Cf. A & S Council Oil Co.,
. Under Rule 702, a qualified expert witness may testily "in the form of an opinion or
. Of note, the Posado court also concluded that, because of the change in the law affected by Daubert, an banc consideration was not necessary to overturn that circuit’s per se rule against admissibility of polygraph evidence. Posado,
