Log Cabin Republicans v. United States of America et al
Filing
194
Opposition Plaintiff's Opposition re: MOTION IN LIMINE to Exclude Certain of Plaintiff's Proposed Exhibits #179 filed by Plaintiff Log Cabin Republicans. (Attachments: #1 Declaration of Dan Woods and Exhs A and B)(Woods, Daniel)
Log Cabin Republicans v. United States of America et al
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DAN WOODS (SBN 78638) FERNANDO AENLLE-ROCHA (SBN 129515) DEVON MYERS (SBN 240031) WHITE & CASE LLP 633 W. Fifth Street, Suite 1900 Los Angeles, CA 90071-2007 Telephone: (213) 620-7700 Facsimile: (213) 452-2329 Email: dwoods@whitecase.com Email: faenlle-rocha@whitecase.com Email: dmyers@whitecase.com Attorneys for Plaintiff Log Cabin Republicans UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA LOG CABIN REPUBLICANS, a nonprofit corporation, Plaintiff, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and ROBERT M. GATES, SECRETARY OF DEFENSE, in his official capacity, Defendants. Case No. CV 04-8425 VAP (Ex) OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS' MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE CERTAIN OF PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED EXHIBITS; DECLARATION OF DAN WOODS; EXHIBITS DATE: June 28, 2010 Time: 2:30 p.m. Place: Courtroom of Judge Phillips
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TABLE OF CONTENTS Page SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT.................................................................................. 1 ARGUMENT.............................................................................................................. 1 I. DEFENDANTS' REQUEST TO EXCLUDE VIRTUALLY ALL PLAINTIFF'S TRIAL EXHIBITS IS PROCEDURALLY AND SUBSTANTIVELY IMPROPER.......................................................... 1 A. Regardless of the Standard of Review, Evidence Pre- and Post-Dating the Enactment of DADT is Relevant to the Due Process Rights of Servicemembers ............................................. 1 Defendants' Compound Motion Violates the Court's June 3 Order Limiting the Number of Motions in Limine .......... 3 Defendants' Motion Is Unnecessary As Evidentiary Issues In This Bench Trial Can Be Decided As Issues Arise ................ 5 The Exhibits Relating to Individual Servicemembers Are Relevant as They Illustrate the Unjustified and Unnecessary Intrusion DADT Represents to Constitutionally Protected Rights ........................................................................................... 7 The So-Called "Contractor Exhibits" Principally Consists of the Defendants' Own Statements and the Remainder Were Either Adopted or Are Otherwise Admissible as Admissions .................................................................................. 9 The Categorization of "Advocacy Exhibits" Is Both False and Illustrates the Misguided Nature of the Exhibit Motion..... 13 The Other Categories of Exhibits Should Be Ruled on During Trial ............................................................................... 15 Log Cabin's Evidence Is Trustworthy and Reliable ................. 16
LOG CABIN'S EXHIBITS ARE ADMISSIBLE AT TRIAL.............. 7 A.
CONCLUSION......................................................................................................... 16
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TABLE OF AUTHORITIES Page(s) FEDERAL CASES Alvord-Polk, Inc. v. F. Schumacher & Co., 37 F.3d 996 (3d Cir. 1994) ................................................................................. 10 Annex Books, Inc. v. City of Indianapolis, 581 F.3d 460 (7th Cir. 2009) ............................................................................ 2, 3 Atl.-Pac. Constr. Co., Inc. v. NLRB, 52 F.3d 260 (9th Cir. 1995) ................................................................................ 15 Banks v. United States, 78 Fed. Cl. 603 (Fed. Cl. 2007).......................................................................... 12 Gibson v. County of Riverside, 181 F. Supp. 2d 1057 (C.D. 2006) ............................................................... 15, 16 McCullen v. Coakley, 573 F. Supp. 2d 382 (D. Mass. 2008)................................................................... 3 McEwen v. City of Norman, 926 F.2d 1539 (10th Cir. 1991) ............................................................................ 5 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd., 454 F. Supp. 2d 966 (C.D. Cal. 2006)................................................................ 10 Morgan v. Plano Independent School District, No. 04-447, 2007 WL 397494 (E.D. Tex. Feb. 1, 2007) ..................................... 3 Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. United States, 73 Fed. Cl. 333 (Fed. Cl. 2006).................................................................... 11, 12 Reid Bros. Logging Co. v. Ketchikan Pulp Co., 699 F.2d 1292 (9th Cir. 1983) ............................................................................ 13 Sperberg v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 529 F.2d 708 (6th Cir. 1975) ................................................................................ 6 United States v. Heller, 551 F.3d 1108 (9th Cir. 2009) .......................................................................... 5, 6 FEDERAL RULES Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(b)(1)(B) .......................................................................................... 6 Fed. R. Civ. P. 26....................................................................................................... 8 Fed. R. Evid. 403 ....................................................................................................... 1 - ii LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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Fed. R. Evid. 801(c)................................................................................................. 15 Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)........................................................................................ 8, 10 Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(C) ................................................................................ 12, 13 Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(A)..................................................................................... 11, 12 Fed. R. Evid. 803(18) .............................................................................................. 14 LOCAL RULES Local Rule 7-6 ........................................................................................................... 7 Local Rule 11-3.9.3 ................................................................................................... 4 Local Rule 11-6 ......................................................................................................... 4 Local Rule 56-1, 2, and 3 .......................................................................................... 4 TREATISES 30B Michael H. Graham, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 7059 (Interim Ed. 2006) .................................................................................. 14
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SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT Defendants' Motion In Limine regarding trial exhibits ("Exhibits Motion") is together with Defendants' other two motions in limine part and parcel of Defendants' continuing, rear-guard action to avoid a trial based on the relevant issues and instead hope the Court will view the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy through a prism devised by Defendants without any basis in law or in fact. While the motion purports to be directed at "certain" of Log Cabin Republicans' ("Log Cabin") proposed trial exhibits, its scope is far broader: in total, through what is effectively several motions in limine camouflaged to appear as one and before the Court has determined what standard of review to employ, what claims will be tried, or considered any evidence or testimony at trial Defendants seek to have the Court exclude, prospectively, 288 exhibits. This, despite the Court's having reminded the parties "that this matter is being tried to the Court," and although Defendants do not claim that any exhibit, much less a category or set of exhibits, should be excluded based on Federal Rule of Evidence 403. For the reasons described below and in the other oppositions to Defendants' in limine motions Log Cabin is filing concurrently, the Court should deny the Exhibits Motion and decide any evidentiary issues regarding the parties' trial exhibits at trial. ARGUMENT DEFENDANTS' REQUEST TO EXCLUDE VIRTUALLY ALL PLAINTIFF'S TRIAL EXHIBITS IS PROCEDURALLY AND SUBSTANTIVELY IMPROPER A. Regardless of the Standard of Review, Evidence Pre- and PostDating the Enactment of DADT is Relevant to the Due Process Rights of Servicemembers Defendants devote several pages in the Exhibits Motion (and the two other motions in limine) to recycling arguments it has raised before to the effect that the -1LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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only evidence the Court should consider regarding the constitutionality of a statute is the evidence considered by Congress at the time of enactment. Log Cabin has already demonstrated, principally in its Opposition to Summary Judgment (pp. 1417), the errors in Defendants' arguments; tomorrow, in its brief pursuant to the Court's Order that the parties address the Witt standard, Log Cabin will refute again and with additional detail the argument. While the Court has already received extensive briefing regarding Defendants' contention (and how it is wrong), two further points are instructive and potentially dispositive with respect to Defendants' Exhibit Motion. First, if the Court elects to apply a higher or "intermediate" standard of review such as that articulated in Witt, that election would negate the vast majority of Defendants' objections to evidence and the principal argument of the Exhibit Motion. That is because where a higher level of scrutiny applies, such as that required by Witt, Defendants must prove, through evidence, a tight fit between the statute and its stated goals. Annex Books, Inc. v. City of Indianapolis, 581 F.3d 460 (7th Cir. 2009), is instructive. In Annex Books, Judge Easterbrook held that when a legislative body (there a municipality) promulgates a regulation subject to intermediate scrutiny, it must marshal evidence supporting the need for the policy. Id. at 462, 464. It is not enough to simply "belittle plaintiffs' evidence." Id. at 464. The case was remanded for an evidentiary hearing. Id. at 467. Annex Books arose out of a first amendment challenge to an ordinance regulating adult book and video stores. It is nonetheless instructive here given the court's application of intermediate scrutiny. The court stated: Indianapolis [assumes] that any empirical study of morals offenses near any kind of adult establishment in any city justifies every possible kind of legal restriction in every city. That might be so if the rational-relation test governed, for then all a court need do is ask whether a sound justification of a law may be imagined. ... But because books (even of the "adult" variety) have a -2LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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constitutional status ... the public benefits of the restrictions must be established by evidence, and not just asserted. The evidence need not be local; Indianapolis is entitled to rely on findings from Milwaukee or Memphis (provided that a suitable effort is made to control for other variables). ... But there must be evidence; lawyers' talk is insufficient. Id. at 463 (citations omitted) (emphasis in original). Second, there is no support in case law for Defendants' broad assertion that "[Log Cabin's] ... use of exhibits[,] regardless of the level of scrutiny employed by the Court, is wholly inappropriate in resolving [Log Cabin's] facial constitutional challenge." (Mot. at 6.) In the section of its brief regarding facial challenges, the government cites just two cases involving evidentiary issues. Neither case holds that the admission of evidence is inappropriate in a facial constitutional context. In one case, Morgan v. Plano Independent School District, No. 04-447, 2007 WL 397494 (E.D. Tex. Feb. 1, 2007), far from ruling that evidence is inadmissible in the context of a facial constitutional challenge, the court concluded that "evidence is relevant to the facial constitutionality of [the challenged regulation]." Id. at *3. The evidentiary ruling Defendants rely on as the basis for its contention that evidence can never be relevant in a facial challenge concerned one paragraph from one affidavit, as to which the Court sustained an objection. Id.1 B. Defendants' Compound Motion Violates the Court's June 3 Order Limiting the Number of Motions in Limine Had Defendants included a Table of Contents (as required by the Local Rules), the compound nature of the Exhibits Motion (which effectively combines at least five motions in one omnibus motion) would be self-evident. Defendants' failure to comply with the local rules and the Court's instructions is standard practice. At the November 16, 2009 hearing, after In the other case cited by Defendants, McCullen v. Coakley, 573 F. Supp. 2d 382, 387 (D. Mass. 2008), the Court noted it was declining the parties' requests to adopt various findings of fact in part because it did "not have a complete record from which to make such findings" because certain additional issues remained to be tried. -3PLAINTIFF'S OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS' MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE CERTAIN OF PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED EXHIBITS
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Defendants violated the local rules for failing to meet and confer, the Court contemplated sanctions and admonished Defendants: "I expect that no matter how much you think you may disagree and be unable, I expect in the future in this case to have full compliance with the spirit as well as the letter of the Local Rule about meet and confer." Tr. of Oral Argument Nov. 16, 2009 at 21:4-6. Despite the Court's warning, Defendants continue to disregard the local rules. For example, Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment violated L.R. 56-1, 2, and 3 because it did not include a statement of uncontroverted facts but rather 12 proposed findings of fact. Further, the purported "conclusions of law" amounted to additional briefing in violation of the 25 page limit of L.R. 11-6. Defendants' footnotes in its moving and reply papers in its Summary Judgment Motion violated the font size requirement and were too small to read. More recently, Defendants' Supplemental Brief filed on June 9, 2010 (Docket No. 172) squeezed inside the page limit by omitting parallel citations to Supreme Court cases, which L.R. 11-3.9.3 requires. And now, true to form, Defendants cram an extra motion into their already bloated motions in limine. Despite the Court's clear instruction in its June 3, 2010 Order that the parties were limited to three motions in limine, Defendants filed three scattershot motions. The Exhibits Motion alone targets, by Defendants' own admission, five categories of documents. These "categories" include a wide swath of sub-categories (e.g., Defendants' first category includes books, book chapters, law review articles and other works; the second category ranges from newspaper articles to polling data; another category purports to be concerned with "documents created by government contractors") but also seeks to exclude documents created by direct employees of Defendants; another category includes "the remainder of [Log Cabin]'s exhibits." (Mot. at 3.) Additionally, Defendants advance at least six separate purported bases for the Exhibits Motion. In their letter dated May 18, 2010, Defendants indicated that they would file at least four motions in limine to exclude: (1) plaintiff's exhibits; (2) plaintiff's -4LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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experts' testimony; (3) plaintiff's deposition designations; and (4) testimony of plaintiff's allegedly late disclosed lay witnesses. (See Ex. A attached to the Declaration of Dan Woods ("Woods Decl.").) Evidently, Defendants could not substantively comply with the Court's limit to three motions in limine, so instead they overfilled each motion to circumvent the Court's Order. Defendants continue to blatantly flaunt their disregard for the Court's rules. Thus, the Exhibits Motion alone is effectively in excess of the Court-ordered limit of three motions per side. The Court could and should deny the Exhibits Motion and/or the other in limine motions on the basis of the Defendants' violation of the Court's Order alone. C. Defendants' Motion Is Unnecessary As Evidentiary Issues In This Bench Trial Can Be Decided As Issues Arise There is no reason and Defendants have articulated none why the Court and the parties could not resolve any evidentiary objections during trial, either witness by witness or exhibit by exhibit. The purpose of in limine motions is to avoid the obviously futile attempt to "unring the bell" when highly prejudicial evidence is offered at trial. McEwen v. City of Norman, 926 F.2d 1539, 1548 (10th Cir. 1991). Obviously, these principles do not apply with the same force in a court trial, as opposed to a jury trial. United States v. Heller, 551 F.3d 1108 (9th Cir. 2009) cert. denied, - U.S. - , 129 S. Ct. 2419, 173 L. Ed. 2d (2009), articulates why motions in limine serve little purpose in bench trials: The term "in limine" means "at the outset." A motion in limine is a procedural mechanism to limit in advance testimony or evidence in a particular area. In the case of a jury trial, a court's ruling "at the outset" gives counsel advance notice of the scope of certain evidence so that admissibility is settled before attempted use of the evidence before the jury. Because the judge rules on this evidentiary motion, in the case of a bench trial, a threshold ruling is generally superfluous. It would be, in effect, "coals to Newcastle," asking the judge to rule in advance on prejudicial evidence so that the judge would not hear the evidence. For logistical and other reasons, pretrial -5LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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evidentiary motions may be appropriate in some cases. But here, once the case became a bench trial, any need for an advance ruling evaporated. A more precise evaluation of evidentiary issues would be a far more appropriate instrument to resolve evidentiary issues rather than the cudgel of Defendants' Exhibit Motion. Orders granting motions in limine "which exclude broad categories of evidence should rarely be employed" and the better practice "is to deal with questions of admissibility of evidence as they arise." Sperberg v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 529 F.2d 708, 712 (6th Cir. 1975). Yet the Exhibit Motion requests that the Court rule on 288 exhibits based on the Defendants' conclusory, unsupported, and glib characterization of the 288 exhibits as falling in five startlingly broad categories. Moreover, the Exhibit Motion provides neither the Court nor Log Cabin with a fair and appropriate basis upon which to consider and respond to the government's evidentiary objections. See Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 7(b)(1)(B) (a motion must "state with particularity the grounds for seeking the order"). For example, the Exhibits Motion seeks the exclusion of a "category" of Plaintiff's exhibits that Defendants call the "Miscellaneous Exhibits," as if that were a defined term. It is not. Defendants do not identify with specificity the "Miscellaneous Exhibits." The first use of the term is on page 15 of the Exhibits Motion; the "Background" section of the Exhibits Motion provide a vague, catch-all description of a category of documents (that may or may not be the "Miscellaneous Exhibits") that consists of "the remainder of [Log Cabin]'s exhibits, such as, among other things, [Log Cabin]'s experts' reports, email exchanges by non-parties, non-party letters, articles, and other documents that do not fall within the other four categories." (Mot. at 3.) Nowhere within the Motion or in Defendants' [Proposed] Order do Defendants identify with any particularity of what this category of Exhibits consists. -6LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
3 Id. at 1111-12 (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added).
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This extreme level of generality is symptomatic of the entire Motion: in 22 pages of briefing, Defendants quote from just 4 of Plaintiff's exhibits. Moreover, the Motion is replete with factual assertions for which the Defendants have provided absolutely no support. See L.R. 7-6 ("Factual contentions involved in any motion . . . shall be presented, heard, and determined upon declarations and other written evidence . . . ."). For example, Defendants make the blanket assertion that the authors of well more than 50 of the Exhibits they seek to exclude -- a group that includes several well-admired academics and at least two people hired by Defendants to conduct research regarding DADT -- are "advocates" who "issue reports to further their political agendas." (Mot. at 18.) In short, the Exhibits Motion is overbroad because it is based on false categorizations and unsupported generalities. It is not the way that the Court should determine the key evidentiary issues. The Court and parties can deal with these isuses in the normal course of the trial. II. LOG CABIN'S EXHIBITS ARE ADMISSIBLE AT TRIAL A. The Exhibits Relating to Individual Servicemembers Are Relevant as They Illustrate the Unjustified and Unnecessary Intrusion DADT Represents to Constitutionally Protected Rights Defendants seek the blanket exclusion of "approximately 50 documents" relating to seven of Log Cabin's proposed trial witnesses, all of whom are former servicemembers who were discharged pursuant to DADT. (According to footnote 8 of Defendants' Exhibit Motion, the relevant exhibits are 40, 41, 110A, 111-129, 131-151, 255, and 256.)2 The Court should decline Defendants' request to exclude these materials. First, Defendants' claim that these materials "were not previously disclosed to defendants" is incorrect. For example, Exhibits 40 and 41 were marked as After reviewing Defendants' objections and the Exhibit Motion, Plaintiff withdraws Exhibits 131, 133, 147, and 148. -7LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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exhibits by Defendants at Alex Nicholson's deposition; Exhibit 110A is a record of Mr. Nicholson's discharge, and was produced to Defendants by Log Cabin during the litigation (Bates # LCR000018-19); and Exhibits 255 and 256 were produced by Defendants. Second, for the reasons explained in Log Cabin's opposition to Defendants' Motion in Limine to Exclude Lay Witness Testimony, Defendants' argument that the remaining exhibits (111-129, and 131-151) should be excluded based on Log Cabin's alleged failure to comply with Rule 26 fails. Moreover, even if Log Cabin's disclosure of certain exhibits relative to the experience of individuals discharged under DADT were untimely, there is no harm or prejudice to Defendants. Log Cabin identified every one of these individuals to Defendants on May 17, 2010, nearly two months before trial. Moreover, Plaintiff immediately offered to make all of these individuals available for deposition, an invitation Defendants disregarded. Every single exhibit proffered by Plaintiff in connection with these witnesses is a government document and therefore has always been in the possession of Defendants. (The exhibits are all either discharge records, evidence relating to a separation proceeding, or performance review or other documents relating to the job performance of the respective individual servicemembers.) Importantly, because these are government documents, they are admissible as party admissions under Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2).3 Most are letters (1) drafted on government letterhead (see Section II.B below), (2) made by government employees in their official capacities, and (3) were directly submitted to the government. For example, there is a letter written by Lt. Colonel Jeffrey B. Kromer on Department of Defense Defendants expand their "fourth" category of documents in footnote 13, which adds exhibits 193, 199, 201, 202, 203, 275, 281, 292, 308, 318, 320, and 355. These documents, with the possible exception of 281, are all government reports and constitute admissions (see Section II.B below). Defendants provide no plausible argument for why documents within their control that they published are somehow inadmissible as late disclosures. These documents are admissible and the Court should not exclude them. -8LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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letterhead in support of Major Almy directed to "All Reviewing Authorities" regarding Major Almy's "character and integrity" and that "he should be retained in the Air Force without prejudice." (Ex. 114.) Another is a letter written on Department of the Air Force letterhead by Major Scott Weenum to "All Reviewing Authorities" that recommends that he "be retained on active duty status." (Ex. 115.) Defendants' generalizations aside, a closer look at the exhibits demonstrates they are reliable, admissible documents. Finally, all of the proposed exhibits are directly relevant to the subject on which these witnesses will testify: the individual circumstances of these six witnesses all of whom were discharged pursuant to DADT despite their exemplary records and, in some cases, evidence from their superior officers who knew firsthand that neither their orientation nor the fact that it was known within their respective units had any effect on morale, unit cohesion, or their individual job performance confirm that DADT is both irrational and an unjustified intrusion into constitutionally protected liberty interests. B. The So-Called "Contractor Exhibits" Principally Consists of the Defendants' Own Statements and the Remainder Were Either Adopted or Are Otherwise Admissible as Admissions Defendants seek the exclusion of at least thirteen exhibits (69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 101, 172, 193, 199, 212, 231, and 290) that they label without providing the Court with any evidence, context, or explanation upon which to evaluate the claim the "Contractor Exhibits." Indeed, Defendants go as far as to say "None of the Contractor Documents contains any evidence that the contractors who created the documents were authorized to speak for the Department of Defense or were entitled to do so within the scope of its agency." This broad-brush statement, however, is a perfect illustration of the dangerous nature of Defendants' facile attempt to exclude virtually all of Log Cabin's exhibits because Defendants' argument elides over a simple, important fact: a great many of these exhibits are on their face the -9LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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Defendants' own statements, marked with their imprimatur, and therefore are not hearsay under FRE 801(d)(2). Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd., 454 F. Supp. 2d 966, 976 (C.D. Cal. 2006) (documents, produced by defendant "that bear [its] trade names, logos, and trademarks are statements by [the defendant], and are admissible as admissions by a party-opponent under Rule 801(d)(2), or alternatively as non-hearsay to show [defendant's] state of mind."). In many cases, the challenged exhibits were published by Defendants after they were reviewed and approved for publication by Defendants. Whether the published report includes a "disclaimer" or not, the published statement is still Defendants' admission. Alvord-Polk, Inc. v. F. Schumacher & Co., 37 F.3d 996, 1005 n.6 (3d Cir. 1994) (admitting articles published by the defendant even though an independent retailer drafted them and included language in the articles that "his views were his own").4 At least nine of the 13 exhibits Defendants seek to exclude are either selfevidently Defendants' own statements or bear the imprimatur of Defendants. For example: · The title page of Exhibit 69 reads: "Comparative International Military Personnel Policies, Gwyn Harries-Jenkins, University of Hull, editor for European Research Office of the U.S. Army, May 1993, U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences" (emphasis added). · The title page of Exhibit 70 reads: "U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences...Perspectives on Organizational Change in the Canadian Forces." · Moreover, the second page of Exhibit 70 indicates that the report was Defendants claim that "several" of these exhibits include "disclaimers" is an exaggeration. Defendants cite a total of 2 such disclaimers (and one of those is found in Exhibit 70, which as demonstrated below was clearly adopted by the U.S. Army Research Institute (see Exhibit 70). - 10 LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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subject to a "technical review" by, among others, Paul A. Gade, who during his deposition as the government's 30(b)(6) witness on foreign militaries' experiences regarding service by openly gay or lesbian servicemembers testified that he has worked at the U.S. Army Research Institute for 35 years. · Similarly, Exhibit 71 is a document written by Mr. Gade i.e., a U.S. Army Research Institute employee and not a "contractor" in which he writes that Exhibit 70 "is a very well written report," notes that Exhibit 70 is "particularly useful," recommends "minor changes" and, ultimately, "recommend[s] that [Exhibit 70] be published as a research report." In other words, far from a "contractor exhibit," Exhibit 71 is both the Army Research Institute's own statement and confirmation of its adoption of and responsibility for Exhibit 70. · Likewise, Exhibit 74 is a Army Research Institute report authored by Mr. Gade, entitled "Research Findings and Issues Concerning Homosexuals in Military Service." · Every page of Exhibit 193 indicates that it is a Defense Manpower Research Center document.5 Thus, for these exhibits the Court need not engage in any analysis of whether Defendants "adopted" these statements; it is self-evident that Defendants made these statements. Most importantly, Defendants' "Contractor" argument fails as a matter of law. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. United States, 73 Fed. Cl. 333, 438 (Fed. Cl. 2006) rev'd in part and remanded on other grounds by 536 F.3d 1282, 1293 (Fed. Cir. 2008). Pacific Gas admitted "Contractor Documents" prepared for the government Similarly, Exhibits 101 (the PERSEREC report), 172, 212, and 231 (a U.S. Army Research Institute report) all bear the imprimatur of the government agency that sponsored the work. - 11 LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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at its request under both Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(A)6 and 801(d)(2)(C). Id. Pacific Gas found the reports to qualify as reports from public offices or agencies under Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(A), "[n]otwithstanding that the contractor documents were created by contractors and not [Department of Energy] employees, to the extent that the contractor documents were indeed records of a public nature `emanating' from DOE, and to the extent that foundation and authenticity of the contractor documents could be established," they were admissible. Id. at 439. This finding was based, in part, on the rationale that the "Contractor Documents" were "`generated or collected by the national government in the course of its public functions.'" Id. (quoting In re Oil Spill by the Amoco Cadiz, 954 F.2d 1279, 1309 (7th Cir. 1992)). Pacific Gas further found the "Contractor Documents" to be admissible as non-hearsay because the government "authorized" their reports by hiring the contractors to perform work for them. Id. at 440. Pacific Gas clarified that "[t]o the extent that such statements in the contractor documents were not consistent with the views of DOE, defendant could elicit that on cross-examination at trial. Such inconsistencies were probative of the contractor documents' weight, not their admissibility." Id. Notably, despite Defendants' boisterous opposition to the admissibility of these exhibits, defense counsel Joshua Gardner was government counsel in Pacific Gas. Nonetheless, Defendants omitted Pacific Gas from their motion and argue in the face of a ruling they helped create. See also Banks v. United States, 78 Fed. Cl. 603, 617 (Fed. Cl. 2007) ("[S]tudies not issued directly by an agency of the United States and instead issued by a private entity hired by the government for the Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(A) provides as a hearsay exception: "Records, reports, statements, or data compilations, in any form, of public offices or agencies, setting forth (A) the activities of the office or agency, or (B) matters observed pursuant to duty imposed by law as to which matters there was a duty to report, excluding, however, in criminal cases matters observed by police officers and other law enforcement personnel, or (C) in civil actions and proceedings and against the Government in criminal cases, factual findings resulting from an investigation made pursuant to authority granted by law, unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness." - 12 LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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PLAINTIFF'S OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS' MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE CERTAIN OF PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED EXHIBITS
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purpose of studying and submitting a report on the erosion at St. Joseph qualify as statements made `by a person authorized by the party to make a statement concerning the subject.'" (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(C))); Reid Bros. Logging Co. v. Ketchikan Pulp Co., 699 F.2d 1292, 1306 (9th Cir. 1983) (admitting report as non-hearsay where it was created by the employee of a shareholder of a parent company because defendant gave author access to its books and records). Here, those documents Defendants wish to call "Contractor Documents" are admissible as a report compiled for a public agency and non-hearsay under 801(d)(2)(C). As in Pacific Gas, Defendants cannot seek exclude the "contractor" documents because they all emanate from the government as it contracted for those reports. Moreover, because Defendants hired the "Contractors" to produce the reports, they authorized them to make those statements. For example, Defendants paid Rand $1.3 million for its reports, including the interim reports (Exs. 193 and 199), and granted Rand employees, as in Reid, access to military facilities (see MacCoun Depo. at 27, 11:17-20). While Defendants likely seek to exclude these "Contractor" documents because their conclusions run contrary to Defendants' purported rationales for enacting DADT, Pacific Gas makes clear that contrary conclusions do not an exclusion make. Rather, the "Contractors'" conclusions go to the weight and not the admissibility of their documents. Defendants cannot sweep under the rug evidence that they do not like when that evidence is their own records and admissions. The Court should deny Defendants' motion for all documents in their "Category Three." C. The Categorization of "Advocacy Exhibits" Is Both False and Illustrates the Misguided Nature of the Exhibit Motion Perhaps Defendants' most regrettable rhetorical device is to group together 72 widely disparate types of exhibits and label them as "Advocacy Exhibits," notwithstanding the fact that several of them are simply academic studies of either DADT or service by homosexuals in the military. Quite simply, Defendants apply - 13 LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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the "advocate" label without any basis to anyone who has studied DADT, whether it be the Palm Center ("a research institute of the University of California, Santa Barbara, committed to sponsoring state-of-the-art scholarship to enhance the quality of public dialogue about critical and controversial issues of the day")7 or virtually every one of Log Cabin's experts including Robert MacCoun (a psychologist and University of California, Berkeley faculty member and, for 7 years a behavioral scientist at The RAND Corporation,8 who has been retained again by the RAND Corporation to study unit cohesion as it relates to service by openly gay and lesbian servicemembers for the benefit of Defendants at the request of the Senate). Indeed, Defendants seek to exclude as "advocacy exhibits" reports that they published. (Exs. 69, 307). In any event, Defendants' attempt to "exclude" en masse the "Advocacy Exhibits" provides further illustration of the Exhibit Motion's overkill. While the documents identified by Defendants in this category may not ultimately be admissible as exhibits, a significant number of them (the reports of Log Cabin's experts, seminal academic works that Log Cabin's experts either rely on or otherwise will be addressing during their live testimony) will be referred to and read from pursuant to FRE 803(18) frequently during the trial. This is why Log Cabin has previously identified these types of documents as falling within the learned treatise exception. (See generally Pl. Response to Def. Evidentiary Objections to Pl.'s Appendix, Docket No. 164.) While a party must lay a foundation with respect to each document, it is a burden that is easily satisfied. 30B Michael H. Graham, Federal Practice and Procedure, §7059 (Interim Ed. 2006). Accordingly, Log Cabin identified these materials for the parties', the Court's, and the witnesses' convenience. The admissibility of each of these exhibits can be dealt with as each arises. http://www.palmcenter.org/about (last visited June 19, 2010). http://www.law.berkeley.edu/php-programs/faculty/facultyProfile.php?facID=239 (last visited June 19, 2010). - 14 LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
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PLAINTIFF'S OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS' MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE CERTAIN OF PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED EXHIBITS
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D.
The Other Categories of Exhibits Should Be Ruled on During Trial
Similarly, Defendants' attempt to exclude at least 21 exhibits it dubs the "Media and Polling Exhibits" is both premature and a waste of the Court's resources. Defendants object to the Polls and Media on hearsay grounds. (Mot. at 11-13.) While this discussion would be more effective if Defendants raised particular arguments to particular documents, Defendants' hearsay argument fails. Log Cabin is not offering the "media" and "polling" to demonstrate the truth of each document. Log Cabin offers the "media" and "polling" exhibits as evidence that DADT is the subject of national attention and discussion and that attitudes towards homosexuals have changed from when Congress enacted DADT. Testimony not offered for the truth of the matter asserted is not hearsay. Fed. R. Evid. 801(c); Atl.-Pac. Constr. Co., Inc. v. NLRB, 52 F.3d 260, 263 (9th Cir. 1995) (affirming admission of testimony regarding conversations employee had with other employees, not for the truth of the matters discussed in the conversations, but "to permit the factfinder to learn the circumstances surrounding the matter"). Consequently, the documents are not, by definition, hearsay and are admissible. At the very least, the "media" and "polling" evidence survives Defendants' haphazard motion in limine. Moreover, on February 19, 2010, the Custodian of Records for the Zogby Poll (Ex. 11), the document that Defendants identify in their motion, authenticated the poll. (See Woods Decl. Ex. B.) Defendants know of this authentication because Log Cabin provided it to them, yet they continue to waste the Court's time by making unsupportable arguments. The authentication supports admissibility because it demonstrates reliability of the document. Further, the document provides a detailed explanation of its methodology. It explains the poll's margin of error, sample size, and weighting. (See Ex. 11 at 2.) Defendants cite Gibson v. County - 15 LOSANGELES 870264 (2K)
PLAINTIFF'S OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS' MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE CERTAIN OF PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED EXHIBITS
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of Riverside, 181 F. Supp. 2d 1057 (C.D. 2006) for the reliability concerns polls raise. Here, unlike Gibson, the Zogby report was not written by an attorney in the case and did not disclose its purpose in conducting the poll. Id. at 1067-68. Thus, contrary to Defendants' assertion, Log Cabin can demonstrate that the Zogby Poll meets the standards of reliability outlined in Gibson. E. Log Cabin's Evidence Is Trustworthy and Reliable Defendants' motions try to muddy the water and to keep the Court from reaching the merits of Log Cabin's claims. At no point do Defendants contest the facts that Log Cabin's evidence supports. Defendants do not argue -- they cannot argue -- that Log Cabin's factual record is misleading or unreliable. There is little risk of prejudice here because the Court will hear the facts. Accordingly, the Court should deny Defendants' motion. CONCLUSION For the reasons stated above, the Court should deny Defendants' Motion in Limine To Exclude Certain of Plaintiff's Proposed Exhibits. Dated: June 22, 2010
DAN WOODS WHITE & CASE LLP /s/ Dan Woods Dan Woods Attorneys for Plaintiff By:
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PLAINTIFF'S OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS' MOTION IN LIMINE TO EXCLUDE CERTAIN OF PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED EXHIBITS
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