Osvaldo Hernandez and Ricardo Leon were convicted on four counts of a five-count indictment after a trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama. The jury found the defendants guilty of various drug related offenses, including conspiracy to import marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 963; importation of marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 952(a); possession with intent to distribute marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1); and conspiraсy to possess with intent to distribute marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 846. The defendants were found not guilty of violating 21 U.S.C. § 848, the operation of a continuing criminal enterprise. On appeal, Leon, who is Hispanic, urges that the district court erred in overruling as untimely his objection based on
Batson v. Kentucky,
The Batson Claim
Leon contends that the prosecutor exercised her peremptory challenges in a discriminatory fashion in violation of
Bat-
*1288
son.
2
He also asserts that the sixth amendment imposes a “fair cross-section of the community” condition upon the composition of petit juries and that the prosecutor’s exercise of her peremptory challenges resulted in a violation of that requirement.
3
The government first maintains that the district court correctly ruled that Leon waived any objection to the prosecutor’s exercise of her peremptory challenges. Alternatively, the government citеs binding authority in this circuit which would prohibit Leon, an Hispanic, from raising an equal protection claim based upon the exclusion of black persons from the selection of a petit jury.
See United States v. Rodriguez-Cardenas,
*1289 The Evidentiary Issues
Hernandez and Leon next charge that the district court abused its discretion by excluding evidence offered to support their defense of entrapment.
6
Through the testimony of two government agents, Lawrence Winberg and Ernest Jacobsen, and Michael Brown, a prisoner who claimed to have been entrapped but who pleaded guilty to drug trafficking violations, the appellants hoped to expose the inducement tactics allegedly employed generally by government agents in the conduct of Operation Skymaster, a government undercover operation, and specifically by Ellis McKenzie, a confidential source relied upon by the government. Such evidence, they contend, would support their position that the government induced them to commit the offenses charged in the indictment, and they rely upоn Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) and
United States v. Cohen,
Rule 404(b) forbids the admission of evidence of other acts solely to prove the character of a person as a means of showing that he acted in conformity therewith. Such evidence may be admissible, however, “for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparatiоn, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.” Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). In
Cohen,
this court reversed the Cohens’ convictions because “[b]y preventing the introduction of relevant evidence of the prior conduct of an essential government witness, the [district] court deprived the Co-hens from presenting an adequate defense and thus deprived them of a fair trial.”
Cohen,
Here, both Winberg and Jacobsen testified extensively about the government undercover operation. During their testimony, the agents identified the various government operatives and confidential informants involved in Operation Skymaster and in the investigation and arrest of the appellants. They also disclosed the tactics which those operatives and informants employed to infiltrate the drug smuggling business and to gain the trust of the individuals invоlved in the illegal scheme. Both witnesses revealed that the agents and informants in this case, including Ellis McKenzie, had been involved in other similar cases, and they acknowledged that McKenzie had been paid for his efforts. The evidence excluded by the district court as irrelevant was proffered testimony that these agents and informants participated in the capture and arrest of a particular individual, Michael Brown. Such additional evidence would be relevant only if the testimony of Michael Brown was also relevant, that is, if Brown’s testimony bore a special *1290 relevance to a disputed issue and if no other practical means existed to prove the point.
Leon and Hernandez sought to introduce the testimony of Brown as proof that Ellis McKenzie induced them to participate in the drug smuggling venture in the instant case just as he had induced Brown to smuggle marijuana on another occasion. However, though asserting generally that McKenzie “talked me into smuggling” and “hounded me,” Brown failed to point to specific instances or concrete examples of such tactics sufficient to support a finding by the jury that McKenzie actually committed the prior similar act of inducing Brown.
7
That Brown pleaded guilty to certain drug offenses is one fact which supports a contrary conclusion. More important, however, is Brown’s response to questions concerning the enticements and inducements offered by McKenzie. “Well, nothing — he didn’t offer to pay me, if that’s what you mean, no.” ROA Vol. 8 at 1219. “In the Rule 404(b) context, similar act evidence is relevant only if the jury can reasonably conclude that the act occurred and that the [named individual] was the actor.”
Huddleston,
Further, unlike the situation in Cohen where there was evidence of a previous scheme identical to the one for which the defendants are being tried to show that they were ignorant of the instant scheme, Leon and Hernandez offer only general allegations that one individual was “hounded” into violating the law. There was neither specific evidence of how that occurred nor evidence that identical tactics were employed to induce Leon and Hernandez to commit these charged crimes. Absent such specificity and similarity, the manner in which one individual is ensnared by the government on another occasion is simply not relevant to whether these two appellants were likewise induced.
The proffer in this case clearly falls short of bearing a special relevance to the disputed issue of the government’s inducement tactics. That Brown was captured via the government’s undercover operation is not enough to make his testimony, or the testimony of Winberg and Jacobsen, relevant. “ ‘Relevancy is not an inherent characteristic of any item of evidence but exists only as a relation between an item of evidence and a matter properly provable in a case.’ ”
Huddleston,
*1291
The appellants also contend that the district court erred in excluding proffered testimony by an attorney, A1 Pennington, that Agent Winberg lied to him in another case. The court allowed Pennington to express an opinion as to Winberg’s general reputation for veracity but excluded his testimony about the specific instance which formed the basis of that opinion. “Fed.R.Evid. 608(b) prohibits a party from introducing extrinsic evidence of prior misconduct merely to impeach the general credibility of a witness____”
United States v. Calle,
Finally, Leon and Hernandez maintain that the cumulative effеct of the court’s evidentiary rulings violated their sixth amendment right to present a defense. Our review of the record indicates that their attorneys extensively cross-examined the government’s witnesses and presented a vigorous defense. The district court allowed the appellants wide latitude to inquire into the government’s conduct, excluding only that evidence which wаs irrelevant to the issues before the jury. Their allegation to the contrary is without merit. See Calle, supra (no sixth amendment violation where the defense is permitted to elicit sufficient evidence from which the jury can gauge credibility, motive and bias).
The Brady Issue
Leon and Hernandez insist that the government’s loss of and subsequent inability to produce seven audio tapes constitutes a violation of the due process clause as articulated in
Brady v. Maryland,
(1) that the government possessed evidence favorable to the defendant (including impeachment еvidence); (2) that the defendant does not possess the evidence nor could he obtain it himself with any reasonable diligence; (3) that the prosecution suppressed the favorable evidence; and (4) that had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, a reasonable probability exists that the outcome of the proceedings would havе been different.
United States v. Meros,
Here, no
Brady
violation has been established or proved.
Brady
and its progeny apply to evidence
possessed
either by the prosecutor or by someone over whom he has control.
See Meros,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Hernandez and Leon were tried аlong with several other defendants. Counsel for one of the defendants not a party to this appeal initially made the objection. Leon joined in the objection; Hernandez did not.
.
In
Batson,
the Supreme Court of the United States held that a prosecutor’s exclusion of potential jurors from a petit jury based solely upon their membership in the same racial grouр as the defendant violated the equal protection rights of both the excluded venirepersons and the defendant. Though
Batson
involved a constitutional challenge based on the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment, the fifth amendment affords similar protection in cases tried in federal court.
United States v. Dennis,
. Recently, the Supreme Court held that the sixth amendment, which requires that venires be representative of a fair-cross-section of the community, provides no basis for exacting similar imposition upon the make up of petit juries. See
Holland v. Illinois,
493 U.S. -,
. An inquiry into the government’s exercise of its peremptory challenges is initiated by a defendant's timely objection.
Batson,
Here, the jury was selected on September 12, 1988, before Senior District Judge Hand. No transcript of those proceedings is included in the record on appeal. However, at the conclusion of the selection process, the jury, the defendants and most of the defendants’ attorneys reported to another courtroom where Judge Howard, the judge scheduled to preside over the trial, awaited to commence the trial. Two attorneys who represented defendants other than Leon remained in Judge Hand’s cоurtroom to strike juries for other cases in which they were counsel. Primarily because of the absence of these attorneys, Judge Howard excused the trial jurors without administering the oath of duty and instructed them to return the next day for the start of the case. The court then entertained various motions and established certain procedures for the conduct of thе trial. The court instructed the attorneys present not to “bring up any motion that some lawyer who’s not here is interested in.” ROA Vol. 3 at pp. 8-11. The next morning, prior to the administration of the oath and prior to the commencement of the trial, the two attorneys who were not present the day before, joined by Leon, raised the Bat-son objection. The court overruled the objection as untimely.
The record before us does not reflect what transpired either during voir dire or after the selection of the jury. Nor does the record indicate on what day or at what time the unseiected venirepersons were discharged. Without announcing a rule appropriate for all cases, we conclude that under the circumstances of this case the objection was not waived.
.Though a close reading of
Holland v. Illinois, supra,
indicates thаt some justices of the Court might hold that a defendant has standing to make an equal protection challenge where a prosecutor exercises peremptory challenges to exclude venirepersons of a discrete minority
*1289
even though the defendant is not a member of that minority group, that case "does not resolve the question whether a dеfendant of a race different than that of the juror may challenge the race-motivated exclusion of jurors under the constitutional principles that underpin
Batson.” Holland,
493 U.S. at -,
. On appeal, the district court’s evidentiary rulings may be disturbed only where there appears a clear abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Kelly,
.
See Huddleston v. United States,
. The
Brady
rule applies to both impeachment evidence and exculpatory evidence. See
United States v. Bagley,
