United States v. Tajeddini ( 1993 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 92-2294

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    HOJATOLLAH TAJEDDINI,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Edward F. Harrington, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    Kenneth J. King, with whom Fenn & King, were on brief for
    ________________ ____________
    appellant.
    Robert W. Iuliano, Assistant United States Attorney, with
    __________________
    whom A. John Papparlardo, United States Attorney, was on brief
    ____________________
    for appellee.


    ____________________

    June 3, 1993
    ____________________
























    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. Defendant and his
    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
    _____________________

    wife, Lori Ann McBride, were indicted on charges of

    conspiracy to import more than 100 grams of a mixture or

    substance containing a detectable amount of heroin (Count

    One), and importation of more than 100 grams of a mixture or

    substance containing a detectable amount of heroin (Count

    Two). Defendant's wife pled guilty prior to trial.

    Defendant went to trial and a jury convicted him on both

    counts.


    I.
    I.

    Prior Proceedings
    Prior Proceedings
    _________________

    This appeal comes to us via a 28 U.S.C. 2255

    petition. After trial, defendant's counsel failed to file a

    notice of appeal. Defendant, acting pro se, filed a series
    ___ __

    of motions in the district court collaterally attacking the

    verdict: a motion for a new trial based on ineffective

    assistance of counsel; a motion for a new trial based on

    newly-discovered evidence; a 2255 petition to vacate, set

    aside or correct sentence; and a motion for return of seized

    property. The district court denied all of defendant's post-

    trial motions, and appeals from the denial of each motion

    were properly filed. We consolidated all the appeals and

    found that no relief was warranted on any of the motions

    except for the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for

    failure to file a notice of appeal. We remanded that issue


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    for determination by the district court. United States v.
    _____________

    Tajeddini, 945 F.2d 458, 470 (1st Cir. 1991), cert. denied,
    _________ _____ ______

    112 S. Ct. 3009 (1992). After a hearing, the district court

    found that because defendant had dismissed his counsel prior

    to the expiration of the appeal period there could be no

    claim for ineffective assistance of counsel. The court went

    on to hold, however, that defendant while proceeding pro se
    ___ __

    had inadvertently failed to file a timely appeal and

    reinstated defendant's right to appeal. It is this appeal

    that we now consider.

    There are three issues before us on appeal:

    (1) whether the prosecutor's closing argument was proper;

    (2) whether the district court erred in denying defendant's

    motion for a continuance prior to the start of trial; and

    (3) whether the district court erred in admitting into

    evidence a statement by defendant.


    II.
    II.

    The Facts
    The Facts
    _________

    We begin by recounting the salient facts as

    disclosed at trial and in a pre-trial suppression hearing.

    Defendant, his wife, and their two children, arrived in

    Boston on October 20, 1988, after a flight from Frankfurt,

    Germany. Because he was a foreign national, defendant was

    first processed by Immigration. His wife and children,

    American citizens, proceeded directly to Customs inspection.


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    After going through Immigration, defendant went to Customs

    where he was interviewed by Inspector Cheryl B. Gaffney.

    Inspector Gaffney asked defendant the standard

    Customs questions: where he had been on the trip, where he

    lived, how long he was gone, and the purpose of his visit.

    In response, defendant stated that he had not travelled to

    Iran at any time during his trip and that he had not been to

    Iran in six or seven years. He also stated that he was

    travelling alone and gave Gaffney his Customs Declaration

    which indicated that he was travelling alone. After the

    interview, defendant was taken by Gaffney and Inspectors

    McGrath and Bird to another room for further questioning and

    a possible search.

    Defendant's wife, Lori Ann McBride, and their two

    children, went to a different Customs line than defendant.

    She was interviewed by Inspector Pacewicz to whom she gave

    her Customs Declaration and her passport and those of her

    children. Following routine procedures for international

    travelers, Pacewicz made a Treasury Enforcement

    Communications System check on McBride to determine if she

    was a fugitive or was being sought by law enforcement

    officials. The check showed that there was an outstanding

    warrant for McBride's arrest in California on a parental







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    kidnapping charge.1 Defendant knew of the outstanding

    warrant against his wife.

    After Inspector Pacewicz learned of the warrant, he

    asked McBride and the children to go to a nearby examination

    table. At about the same time, defendant passed the

    examination table under escort of Inspectors Gaffney, Bird

    and McGrath. According to Pacewicz, McBride became "very

    nervous" on seeing defendant. This prompted Pacewicz to take

    her to a search room other than the one to which defendant

    was being escorted. Almost immediately on entering the room,

    McBride removed five packages from her coat and threw them on

    the table, saying, "I don't know what this is. My husband

    made me carry them, but I know it was something bad." After

    the packages had been thrown on the table, Inspector

    Pacewicz found that the contents tested positive for heroin.

    Sometime later, Special Agent Joseph Desmond of the

    Drug Enforcement Agency ("DEA") came to the Customs area. He

    talked to Inspector Pacewicz and then talked to McBride for

    about fifteen minutes. Desmond then went to interview

    defendant. Before questioning defendant, Desmond advised him

    of his Miranda rights. Defendant said he understood his
    _______

    rights, but did not understand why he or his wife were being


    ____________________

    1. The oldest child of defendant and McBride had been placed
    in the custody of the California Department of Social
    Services by the San Diego County, California, Juvenile Court.
    The arrest warrant was issued after McBride took the child in
    violation of the custody order.

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    held. Desmond then ended his discussion with defendant and

    began processing McBride and making arrangements for their

    two children.

    While so occupied, Desmond was informed that

    defendant wanted to see him. Desmond and defendant then had

    an extended conversation. Defendant told Desmond that he

    obtained the "opium" in Germany from an Iranian named

    Mohammed Ali Karabolout. He said that he was to be paid

    $3,000 if he delivered the opium to one Parviz Parvin in San

    Francisco. Defendant told Desmond that Parvin was a "large

    heroin dealer."2

    Desmond talked to defendant again after his arrest.

    Defendant repeated what he had told him before about where

    and from whom he had obtained the "opium" and how much he was

    to be paid for delivering it. Desmond and defendant then

    discussed carrying out a controlled delivery whereby Parvin

    would be arrested after defendant made the delivery. After

    considering the plan in detail and after consulting with an

    attorney, defendant told Desmond that he did not want to

    participate in the controlled delivery to Parvin.



    ____________________

    2. On direct examination at trial, the defendant testified
    that he had been temporarily in Iran. When he and his family
    left Iran, a friend, George Shalmarez, who had lived in the
    United States, drove them from Iran to Turkey. George asked
    defendant to deliver packages of "cancer medicine" called
    "shireb" to a sick friend, Parviz Parvin, in San Francisco.
    George also told him that Parvin ran a limousine service in
    San Francisco and might give him a job as a driver.

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    The district court held a pre-trial suppression

    hearing on both McBride's and defendant's motions to suppress

    their oral and written statements and certain physical

    evidence. The motions were denied as to defendant, but were

    partially granted as to McBride. After McBride pled guilty,

    the prosecutor moved to admit certain evidence including

    McBride's statement made when she threw the packages of

    contraband onto the table in the Customs examination room.

    The court suppressed McBride's statement and it was not

    mentioned at trial although the Customs inspector described

    her actions.


    III.
    III.

    Analysis
    Analysis
    ________

    Defendant raises three issues on appeal. He first

    challenges parts of the prosecutor's closing argument on the

    following grounds: (1) an impermissible reference to excluded

    evidence; (2) argument of matters based on the prosecutor's

    personal belief and opinion and knowledge of matters not in

    evidence; (3) an attempt to inflame passions or prejudice of

    the jury; and (4) a misrepresentation of defendant's finances

    to suggest a motive for the crime. In addition, defendant

    appeals the district court's denial of his motion for a

    continuance, and the court's decision to admit evidence at

    trial which was not disclosed to defendant until three days

    before trial.


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    A. Prosecutor's Closing Argument
    _____________________________

    Because defendant failed to object at trial to the

    prosecutor's statements made in closing argument, we review

    defendant's claims on appeal under the plain error standard.

    United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 6, 14-15 (1985); United
    _____________ _____ ______

    States v. Rodriguez-Cardona, 924 F.2d 1148, 1154 (1st. Cir.),
    ______ _________________

    cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 54 (1991); Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b)3.
    _____ ______

    The plain error exception is to be used "``sparingly, solely

    in circumstances in which a miscarriage of justice would

    otherwise result.'" Young, 470 U.S. at 15 (quoting United
    _____ ______

    States v. Frady, 456 U.S. at 163 n.14). We consider the
    ______ _____

    prosecutor's statements in the context of the entire trial.

    United States v. Morales-Cartagena, 987 F.2d 849, 854 (1st
    _____________ _________________

    Cir. 1993); United States v. Smith, 982 F.2d 681, 682 (1st
    _____________ _____

    Cir. 1993); Rodriguez-Cardona, 924 F.2d at 1154. Three
    _________________

    significant factors guide our evaluation of whether the trial

    was so tainted by prosecutorial misconduct in argument as to

    constitute plain error: "(1) whether the prosecutor's

    conduct was isolated and/or deliberate; (2) whether the trial

    court gave a strong and explicit cautionary instruction; and

    (3) whether it is likely that any prejudice surviving the

    judge's instruction could have affected the outcome of the


    ____________________

    3. Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b) provides as follows:
    Plain Error. Plain errors or defects
    affecting substantial rights may be
    noticed although they were not brought to
    the attention of the court.

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    case." United States v. Hodge-Balwing, 952 F.2d 607, 610
    ______________ _____________

    (1st Cir. 1991); see also Morales-Cartagena, 987 F.2d at 954.
    ___ ____ _________________

    With these tenets in mind, we address each of defendant's

    allegations of misstatement by the prosecutor to determine

    whether there was error, and then we assess the aggregate

    effect on the trial as a whole.

    1. Alleged Reliance on Evidence Excluded From Trial
    1. Alleged Reliance on Evidence Excluded From Trial
    ________________________________________________

    Defendant claims that the prosecutor's closing

    argument relied on evidence that had been excluded from the

    trial as hearsay. Before trial, the court suppressed

    McBride's statement, made during the Customs examination as

    she emptied packages from her coat onto a table, "I don't

    know what this is. My husband made me carry them, but I know

    it was something bad." The court found that the statement

    was inadmissible hearsay because McBride was available to

    testify, and her knowledge of the contents of the packages

    was being offered to establish defendant's knowledge through

    a statement which was not in furtherance of their alleged

    conspiracy.

    At trial, Customs Inspector Pacewicz, who was in

    the search room with McBride, recounted McBride's actions of

    removing the packages from her coat, and did not mention her

    previously excluded statement. Defendant did not object to

    this testimony and does not now claim that allowing





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    Pacewicz's testimony was error.4 Defendant's complaint is

    with the way the prosecutor used the evidence in closing

    argument. During closing argument, the prosecutor made the

    following references to Inspector Pacewicz's testimony:

    At that time Inspector Pacewicz took
    Lori Ann McBride to another secondary
    search room. As soon as Lori Ann McBride
    entered the secondary search room she
    dumped packages out of her coat.

    I leave it to you, for example, to
    decide what, if anything, that indicates
    about what Lori Ann McBride might have
    thought was in those packages.

    Later in his argument the prosecutor stated:

    You heard how Lori Ann McBride then
    pulled the stuff out of her pockets and
    dumped it on the table. Obviously, very
    nervous, very agitated.

    The Customs Declaration of the
    defendant says he is travelling alone.
    Was there some understanding between Lori
    Ann McBride and the defendant? The
    evidence, I suggest, shows clearly that
    there was.

    We note first that defendant's allegation that the

    prosecutor used suppressed evidence in closing argument is

    wrong. The prosecution fully adhered to the court's order



    ____________________

    4. Defendant may be arguing, by implication, that Inspector
    Pacewicz's testimony about McBride's actions was inadmissible
    hearsay evidence of expressive conduct. Because defendant
    has not directly raised this as an issue on appeal, we deem
    it waived. United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st
    _____________ _______
    Cir.) ("It is not enough merely to mention a possible
    argument in the most skeletal way, leaving the court to do
    counsel's work, create the ossature for the argument, and put
    flesh on its bones."), cert. denied, 494 U.S. 1082 (1990).
    _____ ______

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    excluding McBride's statement. The prosecutor's closing

    argument recounted McBride's actions, not her suppressed

    statement. Inspector Pacewicz also testified to her actions

    and not her statement.

    Defendant alternatively argues that by referring to

    McBride's actions and asking the jury to draw inferences

    based on her actions, the prosecutor was attempting to convey

    the message, expressed by McBride's excluded statement, that

    defendant knew that the packages contained contraband. The

    prosecutor's reference to McBride's actions, defendant

    argues, should have been excluded for the same reason that

    the court excluded her statement.

    The prosecutor's argument was not evidence in the

    trial, as the district court properly instructed the jury.

    Argument necessarily presents a partisan view of the evidence

    admitted at trial. Although the prosecution may not

    interject personal credibility or opinion into argument, the

    prosecutor is entitled, in closing, to ask the jury to draw

    warrantable inferences from the evidence admitted during

    trial. Young, 470 U.S. at 7; United States v. Mount, 896
    _____ _____________ _____

    F.2d 612, 625 (1st Cir. 1990).

    The prosecutor asked the jury to consider "what, if

    anything" McBride's actions indicated about what she thought

    was in the packages which she threw on the table. The

    prosecutor later suggested that McBride's actions and



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    nervousness and defendant's Customs Declaration that he was

    travelling alone indicated an understanding between McBride

    and defendant. The evidence at trial established that

    McBride threw the packages on the table in the Customs

    examination room, that she was nervous during the Customs

    examination, and that defendant claimed to be travelling

    alone. Therefore, the prosecutor asked the jury to draw

    warrantable inferences based upon the evidence at trial. We

    find nothing improper in the prosecutor's reference to

    McBride's actions in closing argument, and therefore we find

    no error.

    2. Argument of Matters Not in Evidence and Personal
    2. Argument of Matters Not in Evidence and Personal
    ________________________________________________
    Opinion
    Opinion
    _______

    Next, defendant asserts impropriety in the

    prosecutor's reference to defendant's decision not to go

    ahead with the controlled delivery in which he had originally

    agreed to participate.5 At trial, defendant testified that

    his decision not to cooperate was motivated by his fear for

    the safety of his wife and family. On cross-examination,

    defendant admitted stating to DEA Agent Desmond in a letter

    that Parvin was "the Al Capone of San Francisco" and that he

    knew Parvin "to be the key of the whole drug supply for



    ____________________

    5. When asked by DEA Agent Desmond to cooperate in a
    controlled delivery of the packages containing heroin to
    Parvin, the intended recipient of the "medicine" in San
    Francisco, defendant initially agreed to participate and then
    changed his mind.

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    California." The defendant continued to maintain his

    innocence, however, claiming that he thought the packages

    contained cancer medicine for Parvin, not heroin. In his

    closing, the prosecutor made the following remarks:

    Why, ladies and gentlemen, would he
    not do it, [the controlled delivery] if
    he was confident that at the other end of
    the road there was someone waiting for
    cancer medicine and not heroin? If in
    fact, someone was waiting there for
    cancer and medicine, he could have proved
    his innocence and surely he knows that in
    that instance he would not have been
    prosecuted.

    In his rebuttal, the prosecutor responded to the

    defendant's closing thus:

    Mr. Boudreau [the defense lawyer] just
    said that I said in my closing argument
    that the defendant would have been
    prosecuted anyway, even if he effected
    the controlled delivery. That was not my
    point. My point was that if the
    defendant is telling the truth, that the
    person at the other end of the line,
    Parvis Parvin, was waiting for medicine,
    he could have proved his innocence by
    effecting the delivery.

    The defendant said he initially agreed
    to do it because he wanted to show that
    the person at the other end of the line
    was waiting for medicine and not heroin.
    Clearly, the defendant could not have
    thought that if he effected the delivery
    and the person was, in fact, waiting for
    medicine and was sick with cancer, that
    he would have been prosecuted.

    I think that, clearly, he would not,
    or clearly he would not have been
    prosecuted if he had proved his innocence
    in that manner.



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    Although he did not object at trial, defendant now

    opposes the prosecutor's statements on two bases: that the

    statements refer to matters not in evidence and that the

    statements assert the personal beliefs of the prosecutor. It

    is improper for a prosecutor, in argument, to refer to or to

    seem to rely on matters not in evidence. Smith, 982 F.2d at
    _____

    683. It is also improper for a prosecutor to insert his own

    credibility or opinions into argument. Id.; Mount, 896 F.2d
    ___ _____

    at 625. Defendant contends that the prosecutor's remarks

    impermissibly suggested that he knew something not introduced

    at trial which determined whether or not defendant would have

    been prosecuted and also interjected his personal opinion

    about defendant's actions.

    The prosecutor may have overstepped the boundaries

    of permissible argument by offering his opinion, "I think

    that, clearly he would not, or clearly he would not have been

    prosecuted if he had proved his innocence in that manner."6

    If so, the transgression does not constitute plain error in

    the context of the trial as a whole. The prosecutor did not

    routinely insert his personal opinion into the argument nor

    do we find that his remark was deliberate. Although the

    court did not give a cautionary instruction, we find that


    ____________________

    6. The prosecutor, apparently, was attempting to make the
    point that defendant refused to cooperate in the controlled
    delivery to Parvin because he knew that the circumstances of
    the delivery would not clear him of the crimes charged and,
    therefore, he would be prosecuted anyway.

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    little, if any, prejudice resulted. The prosecution's

    argument about the implications of defendant's choice not to

    participate in the controlled delivery was merely cumulative

    of other evidence including defendant's confessions, admitted

    at trial and argued in closing, which showed defendant's

    knowledge that the packages contained heroin and not cancer

    medicine. Therefore, the remark was not so severely

    prejudicial as to undermine defendant's substantial rights or

    the fairness of the trial as a whole.

    Defendant also claims that the prosecutor's

    argument as quoted above impermissibly shifted the burden to

    defendant to prove his innocence. We do not agree. Further,

    the court gave a sufficient charge on the presumption of

    innocence to dispel any improper suggestion which the jury

    might have taken from the argument.7

    3. Inflammatory Remarks
    3. Inflammatory Remarks
    ____________________


    ____________________

    7. On the government's burden of proof, the court instructed
    as follows:
    The law presumes a defendant to be
    innocent of a crime. Thus, defendant,
    although accused, begins the trial with a
    clean slate, with no evidence against
    him, and the law permits nothing but
    legal evidence presented before the jury
    to be considered in support of any charge
    against the defendant. So the
    presumption of innocence alone is
    sufficient to acquit a defendant unless
    the jurors are satisfied beyond a
    reasonable doubt of the defendant's guilt
    after a careful and impartial
    consideration of all the evidence in the
    case.

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    Defense counsel argued in closing that defendant's

    failure to hide the packages of contraband in suitcases or in

    hidden compartments indicated his innocence. The prosecutor

    answered in rebuttal as follows:

    Finally, ladies and gentlemen, Mr.
    Boudreau suggests that the defendant, if
    he knew he was smuggling in heroin would
    have found a secret compartment in the
    luggage to carry the heroin. I suggest
    that the defendant did find a secret
    compartment. He found a secret
    compartment in his American wife who he
    thought would not be searched because she
    was an American wife with two small
    children, and that is the secret
    compartment that he found and attempted
    unsuccessfully to use.

    Defendant now argues that the prosecutor's references to

    defendant's American wife were intended to inflame the jury's
    ________

    passions and prejudices against defendant who is Iranian.

    There is no doubt that argument which is intended to appeal

    to emotions rather than to reason is improper. United States
    _____________

    v. Moreno, No. 92-2018, slip op. at 10-11 (1st Cir. May 6,
    ______

    1993); United States v. Johnson, 952 F.2d 565, 574 (1st Cir.
    _____________ _______

    1991), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 58 (1992); United States v.
    _____ ______ ______________

    Giry, 818 F.2d 120, 132-33 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S.
    ____ _____ ______

    855 (1987). That is not the case here, however. Although

    the prosecutor's remarks, taken in isolation, might suggest

    an appeal to the passions of the jury, when his remarks are

    taken in context, any such tactic vanishes. The prosecutor

    was countering the defense by arguing that defendant may have



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    assumed that his American wife would have an easier passage

    through Customs than he would, and used that advantage for

    smuggling the packages of heroin. Further, the court gave

    the following cautionary instruction:

    The fact that the defendant in this
    case is not a citizen of the United
    States and is by birth an Iranian should
    not prejudice you for or against him, but
    he should be treated like any other
    defendant, and your verdicts should be
    based on the evidence that has been
    introduced before you in this case.

    Reading the prosecutor's remarks in context and in light of

    the defense's closing argument, we find no impropriety in the

    statement. If any prejudice was communicated, the court

    cautioned the jury not to allow bias about nationality to

    influence its decision.

    4. Financial Motive for the Crime
    4. Financial Motive for the Crime
    ______________________________

    In response to defendant's claim that he had no

    motive to commit the crime of importing heroin, the

    prosecution argued that defendant, and his family, had only

    $700 when they entered the United States. The amount was

    based upon the combined Customs Declarations of defendant and

    McBride. Defendant admitted that he had been promised $3,000

    if he delivered the contraband to Parvin. The prosecution

    argued that the promised payment provided a financial motive

    for defendant to import the heroin. Defendant now asserts

    that he had $1,456 in traveller's checks with him when he

    entered the United States which the government seized when he


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    was arrested. The government notes that after reviewing their

    files they agree with defendant. Defendant argues that the

    prosecution's imputed financial motive was improper given the

    traveller's checks. Defendant failed to raise the argument

    at trial and failed to mention the traveller's checks during

    his testimony at trial. There is no suggestion that the

    prosecution deliberately misrepresented defendant's financial

    condition. Further, $3,000 remains a financial incentive,

    although perhaps of somewhat less significance. Therefore,

    we find the prosecution's argument of financial motive was

    proper under these circumstances.

    5. No Plain Error
    5. No Plain Error
    ______________

    We have found that the prosecutor's closing

    argument was, for the most part, proper. In the context of

    the entire trial, we find that the aggregate impact of any

    impropriety was minimal and did not cause a miscarriage of

    justice. Therefore, the trial was not marred by plain error.


    B. Denial of Motion for Continuance
    B. Denial of Motion for Continuance
    ________________________________

    The defendant appeals the district court's denial

    of his motion for continuance to allow time in which to

    obtain additional corroborative evidence. We previously

    considered this issue in defendant's appeal from denial of

    his 28 U.S.C. 2255 petition. At that time, defendant

    claimed ineffective assistance of counsel due, in part, to

    his counsel's failure to timely file the motion for


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    continuance. After trial and before the 2255 appeal,

    defendant obtained from Iran a police report of a statement

    by Ali Karabolout, one of the people involved with defendant

    in Iran, which defendant had hoped to present at trial.

    Defendant submitted the police report to this court. We

    reviewed the substance of Karabolout's statement and

    concluded that it was hearsay. We found that Karabolout's

    statement was not against significant penal interest, as it

    was more exculpatory than inculpatory, and that it lacked

    sufficient other indicia of reliability to obligate the

    district court to find that it fell within any exception to

    the hearsay rule. We concluded that the documents from Iran

    were not admissible in evidence and, therefore, late filing

    of the motion for continuance did not prejudice defendant.

    Tajeddini, 945 F.2d at 463-65.
    _________

    Defendant now requests that we reconsider our

    decision on the ground that we previously misunderstood the

    effect of Iranian law on Karabolout which would result from

    his statement to Iranian police. We decline to do so. This

    appeal is, of course, not an appropriate method to move for

    reconsideration of our previous decision. See Fed. R. App.
    ___

    P. 40.8 Further, when a legal issue has been presented to


    ____________________

    8. After our decision and the mandate to the district court
    was issued, the defendant filed several petitions for
    extensions of time to file a motion for rehearing and a
    request for recall of mandate. His petitions and requests
    were denied because he failed to demonstrate any errors in

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    and decided by this court, our decision becomes the law of

    the case in all subsequent proceedings on the same matter.

    United States v. Rivera-Martinez, 931 F.2d 148, 150-52 (1st
    _____________ _______________

    Cir.), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 184 (1991); United States v.
    _____ ______ _____________

    Rosen, 929 F.2d 839, 842 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct.
    _____ _____ ______

    77 (1991); United States v. Latorre, 922 F.2d 1, 9 (1st Cir.
    _____________ _______

    1990), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 217 (1991).
    _____ ______

    A court's determination of foreign law is treated

    as a ruling on a question of law. Fed. R. Crim. Pro. 26.1.

    Although we retain the power to reopen a question of law

    previously decided, it is our practice to do so only in

    extraordinary circumstances such as when "'[(1)] the evidence

    presented in a subsequent trial was substantially different,

    [(2)] controlling authority has since made a contrary

    decision of the law applicable to such issues, or [(3)] the

    decision was clearly erroneous and would work a manifest

    injustice.'" Rivera-Martinez, 931 F.2d at 151 (quoting White
    _______________ _____

    v. Murtha, 377 F.2d 428, 432 (5th Cir. 1967)); see also
    ______ ___ ____

    Morgan v. Burke, 926 F.2d 86, 91 (1st Cir. 1991), cert.
    ______ _____ _____

    denied, 112 S. Ct. 1664 (1992).
    ______

    Extraordinary circumstances do not exist in this

    case. Defendant makes no argument that substantially

    different evidence on this issue was presented at the



    ____________________

    our opinion.


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    district court hearing prior to this appeal, or that

    controlling authority has changed since our prior opinion.

    We are unconvinced by defendant's argument that Iranian law,

    as offered by defendant,9 requires us to change our

    decision on this issue. Therefore, our prior holding that

    Karabolout's statement was inadmissible hearsay was neither

    clearly erroneous nor did it constitute a manifest injustice,

    and there is no reason to disturb it.


    C. Delayed Discovery Disclosure
    C. Delayed Discovery Disclosure
    ____________________________

    Defendant assigns as error the district court's

    decision to allow the government to introduce statements made

    by defendant to Customs inspectors although the statements

    were not disclosed to the defense until three days before

    trial. Defendant claims that the late disclosure of the

    statements violated Fed. R. Crim. P. 16 and was prejudicial

    to his defense. We disagree.






    ____________________

    9. The defendant has submitted a letter from the director of
    the Interests Section of the Islamic Republic of Iran at the
    Embassy of Pakistan which is signed for the director by
    someone else. The letter expresses an opinion, based on a
    letter from defendant's attorney, that the proceedings in
    Iran against Karabolout were only temporarily suspended, and
    that Karabolout may be exposed to criminal or civil penalties
    based on his statement to the Iranian police. Although we
    are not bound by the rules of evidence in considering proof
    of foreign law, the defendant's submission is inadequate to
    inform this court of Iranian law allegedly relevant to this
    matter.

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    Rule 16(a)(1), in the version in effect at the time

    of defendant's trial, required the government to disclose

    certain evidence prior to trial:

    Upon request of a defendant the
    government shall permit the defendant to
    inspect and copy or photograph: any
    relevant written or recorded statements
    made by the defendant, or copies thereof,
    within the possession, custody or control
    of the government, the existence of which
    is known, or by the exercise of due
    diligence may become known, to the
    attorney of the government; the substance
    of any oral statement which the
    government intends to offer in evidence
    at the trial made by the defendant
    whether before or after arrest in
    response to interrogation by any person
    then known by the defendant to be a
    government agent . . . ."

    Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(A); see also U.S. Dist. Ct. Mass.
    ___ ____

    R. 116.1 (Automatic Discovery in Criminal Cases). Rule 16(c)

    imposes a continuing obligation on all parties to disclose

    other evidence or material previously requested and subject

    to the rule. If a party fails to provide discovery as

    required by Rule 16, the district court may impose remedial

    measures or sanctions including prohibiting the violating

    party from introducing the evidence at trial. Fed. R. Crim.

    P. 16(d)(2). In exercising its discretion to control

    discovery rule violations, the district court must inquire

    into the surrounding circumstances to determine whether the

    violating party acted in bad faith. Id.; United States v.
    ___ _____________

    Samalot Perez, 767 F.2d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 1985). Our review of
    _____________



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    a district court's rulings on discovery matters is to

    determine whether the court abused its discretion. United
    ______

    States v. Alvarez, 987 F.2d 77, 85 (1st Cir. 1993). To
    ______ _______

    obtain reversal, the defendant must prove that the district

    court abused its discretion which resulted in prejudice to

    the defense. Alvarez, 987 F.2d at 85; United States v.
    _______ ______________

    Nickens, 955 F.2d 112, 126 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 113 S.
    _______ _____ ______

    Ct. 108 (1992).

    Defendant objects to the government's use of two

    oral statements he made in response to questioning by a

    Customs inspector. Answering routine questions of where he

    was arriving from and with whom he was travelling, defendant

    said that he had not been in Iran for six or seven years and

    that he was travelling alone. Both of those statements were

    false. During a hearing on preliminary matters

    at the beginning of the trial, the district court questioned

    the government as to why the statements were not disclosed to

    defense counsel in a timely manner. The government responded

    that the statements were unknown to them until the day before

    they were disclosed to defense counsel, three days before

    trial. The next day, before testimony began, defense counsel

    asked the court to suppress the statements on the grounds

    that the late disclosure, three days before trial, had







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    prejudiced his opportunity for a suppression hearing.10

    The district court conditionally ruled that the two

    statements were admissible. The court cautioned that if

    testimony during trial showed that there was a basis for

    suppression, he would halt the trial and hold a suppression

    hearing. When the government alerted the court that it was

    about to elicit testimony from Inspector Gaffney about

    defendant's statements, the court directed the government to

    proceed with the questions. Defense counsel objected and the

    court overruled the objection without elaboration.

    On appeal, defendant argues that the late

    disclosure of the statements by the government deprived him

    of an opportunity to attempt to suppress the statements. He

    contends that the statements should have been suppressed

    because he was not given Miranda warnings before the
    _______

    questioning which produced the statements. Defendant's

    theory is that if the inspector who processed McBride through

    Customs became aware of the warrant for her arrest and her

    relationship to defendant before another inspector questioned

    defendant, then there was a basis for detaining defendant and

    he was entitled to Miranda warnings before being questioned.
    _______







    ____________________

    10. A suppression hearing was held before trial on other
    matters.

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    The right to Miranda warnings attaches in a
    _______

    custodial or coercive situation. Oregon v. Elstad, 470 U.S.
    ______ ______

    298, 309 (1985); United States v. Masse, 816 F.2d 805, 809
    _____________ _____

    (1st Cir. 1987). Neither suspicion nor probable cause to

    arrest, without action to restrain the suspect, invoke the

    requirement for Miranda warnings. United States v. McDowell,
    _______ _____________ ________

    918 F.2d 1004, 1008 (1st Cir. 1990); United States v. Mejia,
    _____________ _____

    720 F.2d 1378, 1381 (5th Cir. 1983); United States v. Silva,
    _____________ _____

    715 F.2d 43, 46-48 (2d Cir. 1983). Routine Customs

    questioning does not require Miranda warnings. United States
    _______ _____________

    v. Pratt, 645 F.2d 89, 90-91 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 454
    _____ _____ ______

    U.S. 881 (1981). Even if the circumstances hypothesized by

    defendant had occurred, defendant was not entitled to Miranda
    _______

    warnings before answering routine Customs questions.

    Therefore, the false statements made by defendant in response

    to the Customs inspector's questions were properly admitted

    into evidence.

    There is no question that the statements were

    disclosed to defendant long past the discovery deadline.

    Defendant does not argue that the government acted in bad

    faith, however, and the court's inquiry concerning why the

    government's disclosure was delayed does not reveal evidence

    of bad faith by the government. Defendant has not shown that

    the delay prejudiced his defense by impairing his opportunity

    to suppress the statements. The court heard testimony at



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    trial from the Customs inspectors involved with defendant and

    McBride, and found that a suppression hearing was unnecessary

    before defendant's statements were admitted. Therefore, we

    find no abuse of the court's discretion to control discovery

    violations and no resulting prejudice to the defendant.

    Defendant's request that this issue be remanded to the

    district court for a suppression hearing is denied.

    Affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    _________





































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