United States v. Duane Dale Big Eagle, No. 11-3754 (8th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseDefendant was convicted of conspiracy to commit bribery of an Indian tribal official, and aiding and abetting a bribery involving an agent of an Indian tribal government. Defendant raised evidentiary challenges on appeal. The court held that the district court did not plainly err in determining that evidence relating to uncharged bribery activity was "intrinsic" to the charged conspiracy and therefore admissible notwithstanding the government's failure to give defendant pretrial notice of its intent to use this evidence. Given the substantial evidence of defendant's guilt, and defendant's failure to object and his decision to rehash the same testimony on cross-examination, the court concluded that defendant was not sufficiently prejudiced by the admission of the testimony at issue for the court to exercise its discretion to recognize plain error, if any existed. Accordingly, the court affirmed the judgment.
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Court Description: Criminal case - Criminal case. Evidence of uncharged bribery activity was intrinsic to the charged conspiracy and admissible notwithstanding the government's failure to give defendant pretrial notice of its intent to use the evidence; where defendant declined the government's pretrial offer of a limiting instruction on certain testimony, he waived his right to challenge the admission of the evidence to the extent any unfair prejudice from its admission could have been alleviated by a curative instruction.
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