Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca11-13-14048/USCOURTS-ca11-13-14048-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Hafiz Muhammad Sher Ali Khan
Appellant
United States of America
Appellee

Document Text:

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT

________________________

No. 13-14048

________________________

D.C. Docket No. 1:11-cr-20331-RNS-1

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 

 Plaintiff - Appellee,

versus

HAFIZ MUHAMMAD SHER ALI KHAN, 

 Defendant - Appellant.

________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court

for the Southern District of Florida

________________________

(July 23, 2015)

Before TJOFLAT, WILSON and JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judges.

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge: 

This appeal concerns the challenging twenty-nine day trial of Hafiz 

Muhammad Sher Ali Khan. A federal grand jury indicted Khan in 2011 on 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 1 of 50
2

terrorism-related charges. At trial, the Government presented evidence 

demonstrating Khan’s involvement in the transfer of money to members of the 

Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, a foreign terrorist organization also known as the 

Pakistani Taliban.

1

 The jury convicted Khan on all counts: conspiring to provide 

(Count 1), and providing or attempting to provide (Count 3), material support to 

terrorists, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2339A; and conspiring to provide (Count 2), 

and providing or attempting to provide (Count 4), material support to a foreign 

terrorist organization, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2339B. Khan now appeals his 

convictions. After careful review, we affirm. 

I.

Khan was born approximately eighty years ago in the Swat Valley, a region 

of northern Pakistan located near the Afghanistan–Pakistan border. Since 1967, 

Khan has owned a madrassa in his native village.

2 For more than four decades, his

madrassa has taught local children about the Quran and other religious topics. 

Over time, Khan’s madrassa grew. It eventually expanded into a boarding school 

that attracted children from surrounding villages. Most of Khan’s students were 

 1 The Secretary of State designated the Pakistani Taliban as a foreign terrorist 

organization in September 2010. See 75 Fed. Reg. 53,732 (Sept. 1, 2010). It is distinct from the 

Afghan Taliban. For convenience, we use the terms “Pakistani Taliban” and “Taliban” 

interchangeably. 

2 Literally translated from Arabic, “madrassa” means “school”; a madrassa is not 

necessarily a religious school, although it can be. For convenience, we use the terms “madrassa” 

and “school” interchangeably. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 2 of 50
3

poor: none paid the cost of tuition, room, or board. To finance the school’s day-today operations, Khan relied on donations from relatives and others interested in 

helping the madrassa flourish. This was his life’s work. So central is his role as a 

spiritual leader that it is even reflected in his first name—“Hafiz” is a title he 

earned for having memorized the Quran in its entirety. 

But after six decades in Pakistan, Khan decided to leave. He came to the 

United States in 1994 and took up residence in Miami, Florida. He was naturalized 

as an American citizen in 2000. Prior to his arrest in 2011, Khan was an imam at a 

local mosque.

Khan’s absence from Pakistan did not signal his madrassa’s end. Save for a 

period of time in 2009 when the Pakistani government temporarily shut the school 

down for its alleged connections to the Taliban, the madrassa still maintained

operations in the Swat Valley. And Khan remained actively involved. For 

example, he carried on a legal dispute in Pakistan over a parcel of land he sought to 

acquire in the hopes of building an addition to the madrassa. 

He sent money, too. Using local financial institutions, Khan wired money to 

personal bank accounts he kept at the National Bank of Pakistan. He then 

instructed friends and relatives in Pakistan who had access to these accounts to 

distribute the money on his behalf. Sometimes, the remittances would go toward 

financing the madrassa. For instance, Khan wired money to pay the salaries owed 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 3 of 50
4

to the madrassa’s teachers, make repairs to the building, and buy oil to run the 

school’s generator. Other times, the money went to injured or incarcerated Taliban 

fighters. Indeed, evidence admitted against Khan at trial revealed that Khan 

leveraged his relationship with the madrassa to support the Pakistani Taliban. 

While Khan shuffled funds among accounts at home and abroad, the 

Government watched—and listened. The Government’s investigation began in 

late 2007. It produced three types of evidence. First, pursuant to the Foreign 

Intelligence Surveillance Act (“FISA”), 50 U.S.C. §§ 1801 et seq., the Government 

intercepted approximately 35,000 telephone calls between Khan and his friends 

and relatives in Pakistan. Second, the Government employed an informant, who—

posing as a wealthy Taliban sympathizer—ingratiated himself with Khan by

helping Khan run errands and attend medical appointments, all while 

surreptitiously recording their conversations. Third, the Government subpoenaed 

financial records from the banking institutions Khan used to transfer his money 

from the United States to Pakistan. 

In May 2011, Khan was indicted along with five codefendants: two of his 

sons, Irfan Khan and Izhar Khan; his daughter, Amina Khan; his grandson, Alam 

Zeb; and his business associate, Ali Rehman. Ali Rehman, Alam Zeb, and Amina 

Khan—all of whom live in Pakistan—remain untried. Efforts to extradite them to 

the United States failed. The Government dismissed charges against Irfan Khan 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 4 of 50
5

prior to trial, and the District Court acquitted Izhar Khan following the 

Government’s case-in-chief. Hafiz Khan’s case, however, proceeded. Following 

trial, the jury convicted Khan on all counts of the indictment, and the District Court 

sentenced Khan to twenty-five years in prison.3

 

II.

Khan advances three arguments on appeal. First, Khan says the District 

Court abused its discretion by permitting the Government’s translator to add 

certain words, in brackets, to translations of intercepted telephone calls between 

Khan and his contacts in Pakistan. Second, Khan claims the District Court abused 

its discretion by allowing the Government’s first witness at trial, FBI Agent 

Michael Ferlazzo, to testify as an expert witness without the proper notice or 

foundation; by letting Ferlazzo testify as a summary witness; and by limiting the 

scope of Khan’s cross-examination of Ferlazzo. And third, Khan contends the 

District Court abused its discretion by denying a continuance or a mistrial after the 

Internet connection supporting live-video-feed testimony of defense witnesses 

from Pakistan failed.

4

 

 3 Khan was sentenced to 15 years as to Count 1. He was sentenced to 10 years as to each 

of Counts 2, 3, and 4, to run concurrently with each other and consecutively with Count 1.

4 Khan also challenges as legally inadequate the notice provided to him by the 

Government regarding its intent to use against him evidence obtained or derived from electronic 

surveillance. See Doc. 17. Having carefully reviewed the record and the briefs, and with the 

benefit of oral argument on this issue, we reject Khan’s argument without further discussion.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 5 of 50
6

We address each argument in turn.

III.

Khan first argues that the District Court erred by permitting the 

Government’s translator to add bracketed words when translating the FISAintercepted telephone calls between Khan and Khan’s relatives in Pakistan. “We 

review evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion.” United States v. Henderson, 

409 F.3d 1293, 1297 (11th Cir. 2005). “A district court abuses its discretion if it 

applies an incorrect legal standard, follows improper procedures in making the 

determination, or makes findings of fact that are clearly erroneous.” Klay v. 

United Healthgroup, Inc., 376 F.3d 1092, 1096 (11th Cir. 2004) (quotation marks 

omitted).

A.

Khan’s conversations anchored the Government’s case-in-chief, his own 

words serving as powerful evidence of his guilt. After all, the Government’s 

evidence indicated that Khan routinely gave specific instructions that his money be

funneled to aid Taliban fighters. Because Khan spoke in Pashto and Urdu, the 

Government relied on translations performed by FBI-certified linguists to decipher 

Khan’s conversations. 

During discovery, the Government provided the defense with written 

translations of approximately two-hundred telephone calls and forty in-person 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 6 of 50
7

conversations. The defense submitted specific objections to the way in which 

certain recordings were translated; the FBI linguists reviewed the objections, 

accepted some, and rejected others. The parties eventually stipulated “to the 

foundational requirements for admitting the unclassified calls and transcripts” 

while “reserving any non-foundational objections based upon hearsay, relevance 

and the like” and “allowing disputes about the translation of particular words and 

phrases to be aired . . . through cross-examination or witness testimony consistent 

with the rules.” The District Court then entered an order finding that the 

foundation requirements for admitting the transcripts had been met and that they

were not hearsay. 

Soon afterwards—and prior to trial—Khan filed a motion to strike

translations featuring bracketed words, that is, words that were not actually spoken 

during the audio recordings. Khan argued that these insertions improperly 

“invade[d] the province of the jury” because “[w]hen a translator adds in brackets 

what was not heard on the audio [the translator is] assuming what the speaker 

intended to [say] when [the speaker] made a statement.” 5

 

 5 For example, the Government introduced a transcript of a telephone call between Khan 

and his grandson, Alam Zeb. During the call, Khan asked his grandson a question. The 

translation was as follows: “So are these Shagirdan [Taliban] of ours . . . are they doing 

something or not?” Another statement during a phone call between Khan and his son-in-law was 

translated in a similar fashion: “[O]ver there the thing [Army base] is not there, you know. So 

now the Army goes [in] where Talib [Taliban] are or if they have done something earlier, like 

they demolish their houses.” 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 7 of 50
8

The District Court denied Khan’s motion. In so doing, however, it ordered 

the Government “to call a government translator as a witness to explain based upon 

their expertise how the bracketed words were prepared.” 

At trial, the Government moved to enter the transcripts into evidence. The 

defense objected, arguing that the translations were not “fairly and accurately 

transcribed.” Outside the presence of the jury, the District Court overruled the 

objection. The District Court explained:

If somebody doesn’t agree with a translation, then if that translator 

who prepared it is on the stand, as part of your cross-examination you 

could ask them about that. If you want to present a translator to 

contest that you can do that [as well] . . . .

The District Court also reiterated its pretrial order that the Government call a 

translator to explain the significance of the bracketed words. 

In keeping with this directive, the Government called Moazzam Shah, an 

FBI translator who worked on Khan’s case. The Government asked Shah to 

explain why he used brackets in some of his translations. Shah responded that 

“sometimes during the course of translating from one language to another, you 

come across a word that signifies a concept or does not have a direct meaning in 

the target language” and that a literal translation would therefore “mislead an 

 

Other examples include: “Man! I had said this before that they [Taliban] have conducted 

the work in a totally wrong way”; “[S]o the government says [fears thinking], ‘they [Taliban] are 

trying to snatch the Government from us’”; “I tell you, may Allah destroy these pig ones . . . I 

don’t think that their leaders [Taliban] are telling them to do this.” 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 8 of 50
9

English reader.” Shah explained that, in performing the translations, he never 

replaced words that were spoken during the course of the conversation; rather, he 

augmented the literal translation with bracketed words only when he was “onehundred percent confident,” based on the context of the conversation, that the

addition correctly clarified what the speaker meant. 

For example, the word “Shagirdan” in Pashto can mean “student”; it can also 

serve as a “substitute word” for Taliban. Shah testified that he would insert the 

word “Taliban” in brackets following the word “Shagirdan” when he was 

confident, from the context of the conversation, that Shagirdan was used by the 

speakers as a type of “code word.” This frequently occurred during conversations 

about “fighting” and “lying low,” in which case the word “student” would make 

little sense. 

In the Court’s charge to the jury prior to deliberation, the District Court 

instructed the jury as follows: 

Whether the transcripts contain accurate translations of the nonEnglish portions of the recordings in whole or part is for you to 

decide. In considering whether a transcript accurately describes the 

meaning of a conversation, you should consider any testimony 

presented to you regarding how and by whom the transcript was 

made, as well as any testimony disputing the translation of any words 

in the transcript. You may consider the knowledge, training and 

experience of the translator if called as a witness, as well as the nature 

of the conversation and the reasonableness of the translation in light 

of all the evidence in the case. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 9 of 50
10

B.

On appeal, Khan argues that Shah “testif[ied] beyond the scope of an expert” 

by using the bracketed words “to tell the jury what Mr. Khan meant” instead of 

performing a literal, word-for-word translation. As we understand it, this is a 

slightly retooled version of the argument Khan pressed before the District Court—

that Shah “invade[d] the province of the jury” by “telling the jury what Mr. Khan

meant instead of what he said.” 

Khan seems to suggest that only literal, word-for-word translations could 

have been properly admitted against him at trial. Anything more would have

invaded “matters [left] for the trier of fact alone.” Fed. R. Evid. 704(b). We do 

not find this argument persuasive. Shah did what any translator would do: perform 

the act of “rendering from one language . . . to another.” Webster’s Third New 

Int’l Dictionary 2429 (1993). Interpreters and translators engage in a process far

more complex than the “mechanical substitution of words in one language with 

their verbatim equivalent in another”; instead, taking statements in one language 

and expressing them in a different language “requires a continuing exercise of 

judgment and analysis of what is meant or intended to be said by the parties.” 

Fernando Rochin Zazueta, Attorneys Guide to the Use of Court Interpreters, 8 

U.C.D. L. Rev. 471, 472 (1975) (cited with approval in Taniguchi v. Kan Pac.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 10 of 50
11

Saipan, Ltd., ___ U.S. ___, ___, 132 S. Ct. 1997, 2004 n.4, 2005, 182 L. Ed. 2d 

903 (2012) (discussing the distinction between translators and interpreters)); see 

also Am. Translators Ass’n, Translation: Getting It Right: A Guide to Buying 

Translation 22, available at

http://www.atanet.org/publications/Getting_it_right.pdf (“[Translators] are above 

all effective bridges between the languages they work in; they can render the 

message of the original text, with appropriate style and terminology, in their native 

language.”). After all, “[a] word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged, it is 

the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color and content according to 

the circumstances and the time in which it is used.” Towne v. Eisner, 245 U.S. 

418, 425, 38 S. Ct. 158, 159, 62 L. Ed. 372 (1918) (Holmes, J.). For this reason,

courts routinely rely on the expertise of translators and interpreters to transport 

these “living thoughts” from one language to another. 

This is precisely what Shah did when he inserted bracketed words while 

translating the audio recordings. Based on his knowledge of Urdu and Pashto, his 

complete review of the recordings, and his experience and training as an FBIcertified linguist, Shah inserted bracketed words when he was “one-hundred 

percent certain” that the addition of bracketed words would faithfully clarify the 

speaker’s meaning. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 11 of 50
12

As far as we understand it, Khan challenges this process under the guise of 

Rule 704, but that is a poor theory on which to travel, especially given how this 

case was litigated at trial. Khan could have raised a Federal Rule of Evidence 7026

objection to Shah’s qualifications as an expert witness—but he never did. The 

District Court afforded defense counsel wide latitude to vigorously cross-examine 

Shah about how he performed the translations. Furthermore, both the pretrial 

stipulation and the District Court’s instructions during the trial permitted the 

defense to put its own translations into evidence, thereby allowing the jury to make 

the final decision as to which translation it found most credible.7

 See United States 

v. Hogan, 986 F.2d 1364, 1376 (11th Cir. 1993). And more still, the District Court 

explicitly instructed the jury that “[w]hether the transcripts contain accurate 

translations of the non-English portions of the recordings in whole or part is for 

 6 Federal Rule of Evidence 702 permits expert testimony only if “(a) the expert’s 

scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand the 

evidence or to determine a fact in issue; (b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data; (c) 

the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods; and (d) the expert has reliably 

applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case.” 

7 As we have explained, 

It has been said that it is within the discretion of the trial court to allow a 

transcript to be used by the jury to assist the jury as it listens to the tape. . . . We 

believe that the use of a transcript as a guide is analogous to the use of expert 

testimony as a device aiding the jury in understanding other types of real 

evidence. 

United States v. Onori, 535 F.2d 938, 947 (5th Cir. 1976) (citation omitted) (quotation marks 

omitted); see also infra note 9.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 12 of 50
13

you to decide.”8 In fact, we have long sanctioned the type of procedure employed 

by the District Court, as well as the limiting instruction the District Court provided. 

See United States v. Onori, 535 F.2d 938, 948 (5th Cir. 1976).9

 

Defendants who object to the manner in which a translator has performed 

the difficult and delicate task of moving meaning between two languages have a 

number of tools at their disposal—Rule 702, cross-examination, and limiting 

instructions, to name a few. On this record, however, Khan cannot complain that 

Shah improperly testified as to Khan’s ultimate mental culpability. The District 

Court thus did not abuse its discretion in permitting Shah to add bracketed words

when translating Khan’s conversations. 

 8 Khan draws our attention to an exchange during Shah’s second day of testimony when a 

juror indicated that she wanted to personally ask Shah a question about the use of bracketed 

words. Although the District Court recognized that “our rules of procedure don’t allow jurors to 

ask the question of witnesses,” the District Court permitted the question. The juror expressed 

confusion about why, in some of the transcripts, the words “that thing” were followed by a 

bracketed clarification (e.g., “that thing [Army base]”), whereas in other transcripts, the words 

“that thing” were not followed by a bracketed clarification. Shah explained that he omitted 

bracketed clarifications when he could not be certain precisely what “that thing” referred to from 

the context of the conversation: 

When you see anywhere mentioned someone says “that thing” or “this thing” and 

there’s no explanation in the bracket, it means that it could be more than one 

thing, and I’m not sure what exactly it was, and I’m not going to put guesswork 

into the brackets until in my mind I’m certain this is exactly what it means . . . . 

This testimony only bolsters our conclusion that the District Court did not abuse its 

discretion. The District Court went out of its way to ensure the jury understood the logic behind 

Shah’s translation techniques so that, armed with this information, the jury could evaluate Shah’s 

credibility as it saw fit.

9 In Bonner v. City of Pritchard, 661 F.2d 1206 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), we adopted as 

binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit prior to October 1, 1981. Id. at 1209.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 13 of 50
14

IV.

Khan’s next argument is that the District Court abused its discretion in

several rulings it made during the direct and cross-examination of the 

Government’s lead witness, FBI Agent Michael Ferlazzo. 

A.

First, Khan claims the District Court erred by permitting Ferlazzo to testify 

as an expert without the proper notice or foundation. “We review a trial court’s 

evidentiary rulings on the admission of expert witness testimony for abuse of 

discretion.” United States v. Jayyousi, 657 F.3d 1085, 1106 (11th Cir. 2011) 

(quotation marks omitted).

1.

Ferlazzo joined the FBI in late 2009. He was assigned to work in the FBI’s 

counterterrorism branch in Miami, Florida. Ferlazzo became a member of a squad 

that, in his words, “specifically investigates Sunni extremist matters.” Ferlazzo 

brought a wealth of prior experience to his new role as an FBI agent. He graduated 

from the United States Military Academy at West Point, and he served for eightand-a-half years in the United States Army. He was a platoon leader in Iraq from 

2004 to 2005. After he was hired by the FBI, Ferlazzo spent five months at

orientation for newly minted FBI agents, received advanced instruction in 

conducting terrorism investigations, and learned on-the-job from more senior 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 14 of 50
15

agents. At the time of trial, Ferlazzo had worked with the FBI for approximately 

three years and had participated in more than thirty investigations. 

Ferlazzo helped lead the agency’s investigation into Khan, which had begun 

in 2007. As a result, he reviewed transcripts of the FISA-intercepted telephone 

calls between Khan and Khan’s relatives in Pakistan, along with transcripts of the 

in-person conversations between Khan and the Government’s informant. This was 

no simple task. Ferlazzo examined all of the transcripts admitted against Khan at 

trial, which encompassed approximately 136 hours of recorded conversations. 

The Government relied heavily on Ferlazzo’s familiarity with this 

voluminous record. Ferlazzo and the Government’s attorney published select 

transcripts to the jury by reading Khan’s conversations aloud during the 

Government’s case-in-chief. Most of these conversations were cryptic. So, after a 

transcript had been read to the jury, Ferlazzo was often asked to explain the 

meaning of certain words or provide context for the conversation. In short, the 

Government counted on Ferlazzo—based on his role as a lead investigator—to 

help the jury make sense of the evidence. 

For example, during Ferlazzo’s direct examination, the Government asked 

the agent to define various words that might have been unfamiliar to the jury, 

including “Sunni,” “mosque,” “madrassa,” “Quran,” “Urdu,” “Pashto,” the 

“Pakistani Taliban,” “Sharia law,” and “improvised explosive device.” Ferlazzo 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 15 of 50
16

also offered testimony about the history, goals, and methods of the Pakistani 

Taliban. The defense objected to Ferlazzo’s testimony regarding the meaning of 

the terms “Sunni,” “Urdu,” and “Sharia law,” but the District Court permitted 

Ferlazzo to testify about the meaning of all three. Ferlazzo also explained the 

details surrounding two terrorist attacks perpetrated by the Taliban against the 

United States. The defense did not raise an objection. The court then took an 

hour-and-a-half recess. 

After recess but outside the presence of the jury, the defense voiced concern 

about Ferlazzo’s testimony. The following colloquy ensued:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Judge, while you have a moment, I

understood that a lot of the questioning that

was going on here was background for this

witness, but now we’re moving into areas

that are really expert where they’re asking

about specific attacks without providing a

basis for it.

Are we done with that area? Are we going

to move into the facts or are we going to

continue on with this, is the question. If we

are, we’re just going to lay an objection.

PROSECUTOR: Judge, just as noted with the expert, we just

touched on those [topics] briefly. They’re

for an expert for later. 

THE COURT: Okay.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 16 of 50
17

Direct examination continued, and the Government asked Ferlazzo to define 

“Allah,” and “mujahideen.” The defense objected but was overruled. 

The District Court eventually called the lawyers to sidebar to address an 

issue not relevant to this appeal. After it was resolved, the defense again lodged an 

objection to Ferlazzo’s testimony: 

DEFENSE COUNSEL: We’ve just had this agent give

definitions of mujahideen and Sharia

law. There’s expert witnesses who’ve

written books on the definition of

mujahideen. So this agent who has

not been offered as an expert to just 

give definitions but [their] experts are

listed, he’s simply not qualified. 

THE COURT: He may not be as qualified as they

are, but he’s an expert. 

Ferlazzo continued to testify. He defined the terms “apostate,” “Prophet,” “jihad,” 

and “Lashker.” The defense objected to questions about the meaning of “apostate”

and “Lashker” but was overruled. Ferlazzo also identified various Pakistani 

politicians, explained that the word “assembly” can refer to the legislative branch 

of the Pakistani government, and briefly discussed the Iranian Revolution. The 

defense objected to questioning on these topics but was again overruled. 

2.

On appeal, Khan objects—for the first time—to Ferlazzo’s testimony 

regarding the history, goals, and methods of the Pakistani Taliban; the meaning of 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 17 of 50
18

the term “jihad”; and the Pakistani government’s offensive against the Taliban in 

2009.10 Khan reiterates objections made during the trial to Ferlazzo’s testimony 

regarding the terms “Sharia law” and “mujahideen”; the structure of the Pakistani 

government; the Iranian Revolution; and the identity of various Pakistani 

politicians. 

It is undisputed that Ferlazzo was not listed as an expert witness prior to 

trial. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 16(a)(1)(G) (requiring, at the defendant’s request,

pretrial disclosure of expert witnesses and a written summary of their testimony). 

Khan says Ferlazzo nonetheless testified as an expert and that the District Court 

erred in permitting him to do so. See Fed. R. Evid. 702. Not true, the Government 

responds: Ferlazzo actually testified as a lay witness based on his familiarity with 

the Khan investigation and his “extensive review of the transcripts in this case.” 

See Fed. R. Evid. 701.11 

We need not definitely resolve this disagreement. To the extent certain 

aspects of Ferlazzo’s testimony fell outside the Rule 701 rubric, their admission 

was harmless. “[E]videntiary and other nonconstitutional errors do not constitute 

 10 Ferlazzo’s testimony about the 2009 offensive was elicited by defense counsel on 

cross-examination. Because Khan “induced or invited the ruling he now claims was error,” the 

invited-error doctrine bars us from ruling on the merits of this argument. United States v. Love, 

449 F.3d 1154, 1157 (11th Cir. 2006) (per curiam). 

11 Federal Rule of Evidence 701 permits lay testimony that is “(a) rationally based on the 

witness’s perception; (b) helpful to clearly understanding the witness’s testimony or to 

determining a fact in issue; and (c) not based on scientific, technical or other specialized 

knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.”

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 18 of 50
19

grounds for reversal unless there is a reasonable likelihood that they affected the 

defendant’s substantial rights; where an error had no substantial influence on the 

outcome, and sufficient evidence uninfected by error supports the verdict, reversal 

is not warranted.” United States v. Hawkins, 905 F.2d 1489, 1493 (11th Cir. 

1990); Fed. R. Evid. 103(a) (providing that evidentiary errors require reversal only 

when “the error affects a substantial right of the party”); Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a) 

(defining “harmless error” as “[a]ny error, defect, irregularity, or variance that does 

not affect substantial rights”). 

The harmless-error doctrine forecloses Khan’s argument, because both the 

Government and the defense called experts who testified extensively about many 

of the same topics on which Ferlazzo opined. The Government called Khuram 

Iqbal, an expert on the Pakistani Taliban. Like Ferlazzo, Iqbal reviewed the

transcripts of the recorded conversations admitted against Khan. Like Ferlazzo, 

Iqbal testified about the meaning of Sharia law, mujahideen, and jihad. And like 

Ferlazzo, Iqbal discussed the identity of various Pakistani leaders; the structure of 

the Pakistani government; the history, goals, and methods of the Pakistani Taliban; 

and the Iranian Revolution. The defense called its own expert, Anita Weiss, who 

also offered testimony on several of these topics. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 19 of 50
20

Taken together, Ferlazzo, Iqbal, and Weiss’s statements relayed materially 

similar information to the jury.

12 Accordingly, even assuming it was error to 

permit Ferlazzo’s testimony, such error “had no substantial influence on the 

outcome” of the trial. Hawkins, 905 F.2d at 1493. And because “sufficient 

evidence uninfected by error supports the verdict, reversal is not warranted.” Id.

 12 The substantive overlap is striking. Consider the following:

First, Ferlazzo characterized Sharia law as part of the Pakistani Taliban’s goal of 

“replac[ing] the democratic government with an undemocratic process that is more religious, that 

is ruled by religious texts.” Iqbal characterized Sharia law as part of the Pakistani Taliban’s goal 

of “replac[ing] the democratically elected government with caliphate. Caliphate is a concept in 

Islam. It’s a political system of Islam which is in totally contrast [sic] with democracy.” 

Second, Ferlazzo explained that the terms “mujahid” and “mujahideen” can refer to 

“those engaging in violent jihad, fighting.” Iqbal put it this way: “[P]eople who are engaged in 

jihad.” 

Third, Ferlazzo testified that terrorist organizations use the word “jihad” to refer to “using 

violence . . . to obtain [the group’s] goals.” Iqbal, for his part, said that the term jihad can 

“describe the systematic campaign of violence being waged by Pakistani Taliban and their 

affiliated groups.” 

Fourth, Ferlazzo and Weiss both identified Asif Zardari as the then-current president of 

Pakistan. Ferlazzo and Weiss both testified that Nawaz Sharif was the then-former prime 

minister of Pakistan. Ferlazzo also described Pervez Musharraf as a former Pakistani leader and 

army general; Weiss did as well, later explaining that Musharraf overthrew Sharif during a 

military coup d’état and that it was Musharraf who led Pakistan until Zardari’s election in 2008. 

Fifth, Ferlazzo explained that the word “assembly” can serve as a “reference to . . . the 

[Pakistani] legislative branch [which is] akin to our Congress.” As for Iqbal: “Assembly is 

equivalent [to] Congress in the U.S.” 

Sixth, Ferlazzo described the Pakistani Taliban as “a terrorist organization based in 

Pakistan” formed in 2007 and known for “using violence . . . to achieve [its] goals,” which 

include the imposition of Sharia law. Iqbal concurred, testifying that the Pakistani Taliban was 

formed in 2007 and “believes that violence or armed struggle is the only way to establish Sharia 

in Pakistan.” 

Seventh, Ferlazzo and Iqbal both testified that Ayatollah Khomeini led the Iranian 

Revolution. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 20 of 50
21

B.

Second, Khan contends the District Court erred by allowing Ferlazzo to 

testify as a summary witness. Khan raises this argument for the first time on 

appeal, so we review it for plain error. United States v. Smith, 459 F.3d 1276, 

1287 (11th Cir. 2006). “To find plain error, there must be: (1) error, (2) that is 

plain, and (3) that has affected the defendant’s substantial rights.” United States v. 

Edmond, 780 F.3d 1126, 1130 (11th Cir. 2015). 

Citing United States v. Rosado-Perez, 605 F.3d 48 (1st Cir. 2010), Khan 

argues that Agent Ferlazzo “essentially testified as to the contents of the audio in 

summary form.” We disagree.

Of course, “prosecutors should not permit investigators to give overview 

testimony, in which a government witness testifies about the results of a criminal 

investigation, usually including aspects of the investigation the witness did not 

participate in, before the government has presented supporting evidence.” RosadoPerez, 605 F.3d at 55. But that is not what happened here. Instead of jumping the 

gun and asking Agent Ferlazzo to “give overview testimony . . . about the results 

of a criminal investigation,” the prosecution “laid a foundation that [Ferlazzo] had 

personal knowledge” of the recorded conversations because of his role as a lead 

investigator and his review of the admitted transcripts. Id.; cf. Jayyousi, 657 F.3d 

at 1102 (“We have allowed a lay witness to base his opinion testimony on his 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 21 of 50
22

examination of documents even when the witness was not involved in the activity 

about which he testified.”). Only after the proper foundation had been laid—and 

only after the transcripts had been published to the jury—did Ferlazzo offer his 

testimony. See United States v. Atkins, 746 F.3d 590, 601 (5th Cir. 2014) (finding 

no abuse of discretion where a Government agent’s testimony “came only as the 

evidence was presented”). This hardly amounts to “a vice that equates to 

summarizing the Government’s case-in-chief.” Id.

At no point did Agent Ferlazzo testify as a summary witness. The District 

Court thus did not abuse its discretion. 

C.

Third, Khan argues that the District Court erred by limiting the defense’s 

ability to thoroughly cross-examine Agent Ferlazzo. 

The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause provides: “In all criminal 

prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the 

witnesses against him.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. “The main and essential purpose 

of confrontation is to secure for the [defendant] the opportunity of crossexamination.” United States v. Baptista-Rodriguez, 17 F.3d 1354, 1366 (11th Cir. 

1994) (alteration in original) (quotation marks omitted). In the crucible of crossexamination, we vet testimony for its accuracy, weed out perjury, and afford the 

criminal defendant a measure of constitutional dignity. No wonder Wigmore 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 22 of 50
23

famously extolled cross-examination as “the greatest legal engine ever invented for 

the discovery of truth.” 5 John Henry Wigmore, Evidence in Trials at Common 

Law § 1367 (James H. Chadbourne ed., 1974). 

Our circuit has been particularly solicitous of a defendant’s confrontation 

rights when it comes to the Government’s lead witness at trial. United States v. 

Phelps, 733 F.2d 1464, 1472 (11th Cir. 1984) (“Cross-examination of a 

government ‘star’ witness is important, and a presumption favors free crossexamination on possible bias, motive, ability to perceive and remember, and 

general character for truthfulness . . . .” (citations omitted)). That said, the 

Confrontation Clause does not safeguard “cross-examination that is effective in 

whatever way, and to whatever extent, the defense might wish.” Delaware v. 

Fensterer, 474 U.S. 15, 20, 106 S. Ct. 292, 294, 88 L. Ed. 2d 15 (1985) (per 

curiam). District courts “retain wide latitude . . . to impose reasonable limits on

. . . cross-examination based on concerns about, among other things, harassment, 

prejudice, confusion of the issues, the witness’ safety, or interrogation that is 

repetitive or only marginally relevant.” Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 

679, 106 S. Ct. 1431, 1435, 89 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1986); United States v. Maxwell, 579 

F.3d 1282, 1296 (11th Cir. 2009) (“[A] defendant can only cross-examine a 

prosecution witness if the information sought to be elicited [is] relevant.” (second 

alteration in original) (quotation marks omitted)); Baptista-Rodriguez, 17 F.3d at 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 23 of 50
24

1370–71; Phelps, 733 F.2d at 1472. “The test for the Confrontation Clause is 

whether a reasonable jury would have received a significantly different impression 

of the witness’ credibility had counsel pursued the proposed line of crossexamination.” United States v. Garcia, 13 F.3d 1464, 1469 (11th Cir. 1994). We

review for an abuse of discretion Khan’s claims that the District Court erred in 

limiting the scope of his cross-examination. Maxwell, 579 F.3d at 1295.

Khan advances two arguments in this regard. Khan contends the District 

Court should have permitted him to more fully cross-examine Ferlazzo regarding 

(1) the Government’s informant; and (2) an investigative report written by the 

Pakistani police and disclosed to the defense pursuant to Brady v. Maryland, 373 

U.S. 83, 83 S. Ct. 1194, 10 L. Ed. 2d 215 (1963).

1.

We begin with the informant. Neither the Government nor the defense 

called the informant to testify as a witness at trial. Agent Ferlazzo was not one of 

the informant’s handlers, but he nevertheless testified about Khan’s relationship 

with the informant based on his involvement in the investigation. 

a.

Playing the role of a wealthy Taliban sympathizer, the informant curried 

favor with Khan by helping him run errands and attend medical appointments. 

Khan and the informant began communicating at least as early as May 2010: a 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 24 of 50
25

May 6, 2010, intercepted phone call marks the first time Khan mentioned the 

informant during a conversation with a relative in Pakistan. From May to midJune 2010, the informant did not wear a wire.13 The first recorded conversation 

between Khan and the informant admitted at trial took place on June 16, 2010. 

These conversations often involved a discussion of current events where Khan 

would frequently express his support for the Taliban. At some point, the informant

also promised to donate $5,000 to Khan’s madrassa. Khan’s interactions with the 

informant ended in October 2010. 

On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Ferlazzo when the informant 

began working for the FBI. The Government requested a sidebar. The 

Government informed the District Court that Ferlazzo could not testify about 

events between the informant and Khan prior to May 2010. That information, the 

Government contended, was classified pursuant to the Classified Information 

Procedures Act (“CIPA”), 18 U.S.C. app. III §§ 1–16. The District Court 

instructed defense counsel to limit questions about the informant’s relationship 

with Khan to the period from May to October 2010, pending an in camera, ex 

 13 This was standard operating procedure. As Ferlazzo explained, Government 

informants generally do not “start talking about substantive things right away” with potential 

suspects; only when the informant “had developed a relationship with Hafiz Khan” did the FBI 

begin to record their conversations. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 25 of 50
26

parte hearing as prescribed by CIPA.14 The District Court further clarified that 

defense counsel could not ask when the informant began working on Khan’s case. 

The defense complied, continuing the cross-examination and eliciting, among other 

things, that the informant earned $126,000 for his cooperation with the 

Government during the May–October 2010 time frame; that the informant had 

received unemployment compensation before and after working for the FBI; and 

that the informant filed for bankruptcy in 2002.

The next day, following a CIPA hearing, the District Court announced its 

ruling outside the presence of the jury:

THE COURT: I am ruling that any matters relating to the

Confidential Human Source [the informant]

prior to May 2010, may not be inquired

about because they are classified; and

separately, I find that there are no Brady

materials. 

I find that the information is not relevant, is 

hearsay, and because it is hearsay, the 

Government has no obligation to provide 

any Giglio during that time period 

concerning the [informant] . . . .

DEFENSE COUNSEL: That is over defense objection, Judge.

 14 CIPA § 8(c) provides, in pertinent part: “During the examination of a witness in any 

criminal proceeding, the United States may object to any question or line of inquiry that may 

require the witness to disclose classified information . . . . Following such an objection, the court 

shall take such suitable action to determine whether the response is admissible as will safeguard 

against the compromise of any classified information.”

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 26 of 50
27

This issue arose once more when the defense again asked Ferlazzo to discuss 

Khan’s relationship with the informant outside the May–October 2010 time frame:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Agent, are there any other informants

or agents that were investigating Mr.

Khan or his family during the course

of this investigation? 

PROSECUTOR: Objection, Your Honor. Prior rulings. 

THE COURT: Sustained. 

DEFENSE COUNSEL: If there were any other informants or

agents on this case during that time,

you can’t tell us, can you? 

PROSECUTOR: Objection, Your Honor. Prior rulings. 

THE COURT: Sustained. 

b.

Khan presents us with two narrow evidentiary arguments, both of which we 

can resolve with dispatch under the Federal Rules of Evidence.15 

 15 CIPA does not alter the machinery of evidence law. United States v. BaptistaRodriguez, 17 F.3d 1354, 1363 (11th Cir. 1994) (“CIPA does not create new law governing the 

admissibility of evidence.”). Khan makes vague reference to procedural violations of CIPA, but 

his arguments lack merit. For example, Khan suggests that it was improper for the District Court 

to have conducted an in camera, ex parte hearing following the Government’s CIPA-based 

objection during trial. CIPA contemplates such a hearing, and the District Court did not err in 

holding one. United States v. Campa, 529 F.3d 980, 994–95 (11th Cir. 2008); United States v. 

Kilmavicius-Viloria, 144 F.3d 1249, 1261 (9th Cir. 1998) (“[E]x parte, in camera hearings in 

which government counsel participates to the exclusion of defense counsel are part of the process 

that the district court may use in order to decide the relevancy of the information. . . . Such a 

hearing is appropriate if the court has questions about the confidential nature of the information 

or its relevancy.” (citation omitted)). Khan also believes it was error for the District Court to 

prevent him from asking about this information altogether. Instead, Khan says he should have 

been provided with an unclassified summary of the otherwise classified testimony Ferlazzo 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 27 of 50
28

First, Khan tells us he should have been permitted to cross-examine Ferlazzo 

regarding the duration of the unrecorded contacts between him and the informant

prior to May 2010. Khan’s theory appears to be that such information would have 

demonstrated that he made false statements to the informant about sympathizing 

with the Taliban in an attempt to secure the informant’s $5,000 donation to the 

madrassa. 

That is implausible. Whether Ferlazzo testified that Khan and the informant 

maintained a relationship for two weeks or two years does not somehow make it 

more likely that Khan lied to the informant, simply motivated by money. See Fed. 

R. Evid. 401(a) (“Evidence is relevant if it has any tendency to make a fact more or 

less probable than it would be without the evidence.”). Besides, Khan testified 

extensively about his interactions with the informant. And Khan has never made

an entrapment defense. As a result, we cannot say the District Court abused its 

discretion in ruling that cross-examination about such information was irrelevant. 

Second, Khan insists that asking Ferlazzo about the existence of other FBI 

informants had the potential to bolster Khan’s credibility. This line of inquiry 

would have rested beyond the scope of direct examination and would not have 

involved “matters affecting the [testifying] witness’s credibility,” Fed R. Evid. 

 

would have given on cross-examination. Nothing in the text of CIPA necessarily compels this 

result. Khan has not cited to any case—and we cannot find one—requiring the disclosure of an 

unclassified summary under such circumstances.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 28 of 50
29

611(b)—that is, Agent Ferlazzo’s. See Van Ardsdall, 475 U.S. at 680, 106 S. Ct. at 

1436 (“[A] criminal defendant states a violation of the Confrontation Clause by 

showing that he was prohibited from engaging in otherwise appropriate crossexamination designed to show a prototypical form of bias on the part of the witness

. . . .” (emphasis added)). Excluding questions aimed to bolster Khan’s credibility 

during the cross-examination of Ferlazzo was a choice well within the District 

Court’s discretion. 

Alternatively, Khan says the presence of other FBI informants could have 

impeached Ferlazzo’s credibility. Khan has not explained how, other than to 

speculate about a “Rehmit Ghul.” The record does not furnish any details about 

Ghul other than those Khan offered in his testimony: that Ghul encouraged him to 

collaborate with the informant. Ferlazzo testified that he had never heard of Ghul.

It is anyone’s guess how the presence of other informants makes it more or less 

likely that Ferlazzo was aware of Ghul’s existence. We also note that the defense 

never articulated this theory of impeachment before the District Court. In any 

event, we cannot imagine how “a reasonable jury would have received a 

significantly different impression of [Ferlazzo’s] credibility had counsel pursued 

the proposed line of cross-examination.” Garcia, 13 F.3d at 1469. On the record 

before us, we find that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in curtailing

the defense’s cross-examination on this point.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 29 of 50
30

2.

Khan’s second argument concerns a report authored by the Pakistani police

detailing an investigation into Khan’s contacts in Pakistan. In keeping with its 

Brady obligations, prosecutors disclosed excerpts of the report to the defense

during discovery in April 2012. The United States neither requested nor 

participated in the investigation that produced the report, and the record does not 

reveal how the United States came into its possession. 

The report relays various statements Khan’s family members and associates

made to the Pakistani police. These statements typically describe how they spent 

the money Khan wired them from Miami. For example: 

In an interview in Pakistan, Inayatullah stated that his father-in-law, 

Hafiz Khan, sent money from the United States as the share of his 

daughter Husna. Inayatullah stated that he invested the money in a 

chips factory, on purchasing a piece of land on which he built a house 

in Nowshera [a city in Pakistan], and on the medical treatment of his 

wife who is suffering from heart disease. 

Given the material-support charges pending against Khan, the report clearly 

contains exculpatory information; after all, statements therein indicate that Khan’s 

various associates used his money not to aid the Taliban—as the Government 

argued at trial—but rather to purchase land or care for sick relatives, among other 

things. Excerpts of the report disclosed to the defense mention, moreover, that the 

Pakistani police ran a public-records search on Abdul Jamil (Khan’s nephew) and 

Alam Zeb (Khan’s grandson) but found that neither individual maintained ties with

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 30 of 50
31

the Taliban. And in discussing Noor Muhammad (one of Khan’s contacts in 

Pakistan), the report also claimed that “law enforcement advised that no links with 

militants or any proscribed organizations were established during the course of an 

enquiry in Karachi, Pakistan.” 

Although favorable to Khan’s defense, this information far from exonerates 

him—or anyone else, for that matter. Decidedly, the report furnishes no details 

about the nature or extent of the Pakistani police’s on-the-ground investigation: 

who conducted it, why it was conducted, what it entailed. And it does not offer 

any conclusions regarding Khan’s culpability, the credibility of the interviewees, 

their demeanor, or their motives. 

Almost a year after the report’s disclosure, the defense moved midtrial to 

compel the production of the entire, original report. The District Court granted the 

motion in part. It described the Government’s disclosure as “detailed and 

generally complete” but required the Government to release to the defense “three 

brief additional excerpts from the report[] that may constitute Brady material.”16 

But Khan never tried to admit this document into evidence. We suspect this is 

 16 As far as we understand it, Khan’s opening brief suggests that the District Court erred 

in denying this motion. But the District Court did not deny this motion—it granted it in part. To 

the extent Khan argues that the District Court erred in granting the motion only in part, we deem 

the argument waived, because Khan has not supported his assertion with an explanation or 

citation to authorities. United States v. Jernigan, 341 F.3d 1273, 1283 n.8 (11th Cir. 2003) 

(collecting cases); cf. Nixon v. City & Cnty. of Denver, 784 F.3d 1364, 1366 (10th Cir. 2015) 

(“The first task of an appellant is to explain to us why the district court’s decision was wrong.”). 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 31 of 50
32

because the Brady disclosure itself contains several layers of hearsay—what the 

interviewees said, what the Pakistani police report said they said, and what the 

Government’s Brady disclosure said the Pakistani police report said the 

interviewees said—which would have rendered the document inadmissible as 

substantive evidence at trial. See Fed. R. Evid. 802, 805. 

So Khan tried a different tack. Even though the Pakistani report had never 

been discussed, defense counsel sought to cross-examine Ferlazzo about the 

contents of the report. The following exchange ensued:

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Are you aware that the Pakistani

government investigated these people

[Khan’s contacts] and cleared them

from being connected to the Taliban

at all? Are you aware of that? 

FERLAZZO: There was an investigation. Whether

or not they have been cleared is a

different matter. 

DEFENSE COUNSEL: It is your position they haven’t been

cleared? 

FERLAZZO: Who?

DEFENSE COUNSEL: Any of the people who you are

claiming are Taliban in this case that

are connected to Mr. Khan, any of

them. 

FERLAZZO: There are still open indictments in

Pakistan, and to go back to

extradition—

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 32 of 50
33

DEFENSE COUNSEL: There are open indictments? I’m

sorry. I don’t understand that term as

you just said it. Explain that. 

FERLAZZO: FIRs.17

DEFENSE COUNSEL: There are open FIRs in Pakistan? 

FERLAZZO: That’s correct. 

DEFENSE COUNSEL: So we are going back to at least when

Mr. Khan got arrested, May 14, 2011.

From then until now, you are saying

the Pakistani government is still

investigating and they have made no

conclusions. Is that your position?

PROSECUTOR: Your Honor, we are going to need to

have a brief sidebar. 

THE COURT: No. Do you have an objection?

PROSECUTOR: Yes. Relevance. 

THE COURT: Sustained.

DEFENSE COUNSEL: In your investigation, you are aware

that—that Ali Rehman [Khan’s

business associate]was investigated

by the Pakistani government, correct?

 17 In Pakistan, an “FIR,” or “first information report,” is “a written document prepared by 

the police when they receive information about the commission of a cognizable offence.” Centre 

for Peace Development Initiatives in Pakistan, First Information Report: A Guide for Citizens 2, 

available at http://www.nipsa.in/pakistan/resources/first-information-report-a-guide-for-citizenscentre-for-peace-and-development-initiative-2006.html; cf. Barapind v. Enomoto, 360 F.3d 

1061, 1065 (9th Cir. 2004) (describing the first information report in India as “prepared by the 

Head Constable or other authorized officer in the police station having territorial jurisdiction 

over the offense” and “[setting] forth the facts regarding the case and the specific violation of the 

Indian Penal Code and other statutes”). 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 33 of 50
34

PROSECUTOR: Objection, Your Honor. Relevance. 

THE COURT: Sustained.

Khan assigns error to the District Court’s decision to sustain the 

Government’s two relevance-based objections. We are unpersuaded. Before the 

Government objected to this line of questioning, defense counsel’s crossexamination had already established that the Pakistani government investigated 

Khan’s family and business associates and that those individuals had not been 

arrested. This information does not strike us as particularly relevant to begin with,

so the District Court acted well within its discretion in precluding further 

discussion of the repetitive and the marginally relevant. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. at 

679, 106 S. Ct. at 1435. After all, the Pakistani police report was beyond the scope 

of direct examination. See Fed. R. Evid. 611. The report was not in evidence. 

And contrary to what Khan suggests, it offered no conclusions; it simply relayed 

hearsay statements. As a result, the District Court did not abuse its discretion.

V.

We proceed to Khan’s third major argument—that the District Court erred in 

denying him a continuance or a mistrial after the Internet connection supporting 

live video teleconferencing from Pakistan failed midtrial. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 34 of 50
35

A.

To counter the Government’s narrative that he sent money overseas to aid 

the Taliban, Khan sought to procure the testimony of those living in Pakistan to 

whom he wired financial support. In short order, the defense, the prosecution, and 

the District Court found themselves in something of an international quagmire. 

1.

It was June 2012—six months before the start of the trial—when Khan 

moved the District Court for leave to conduct depositions in Pakistan of three of 

his codefendants, Ali Rehman, Amina Khan, and Alam Zeb. These three fugitives 

remained in Pakistan after efforts to extradite them to the United States failed. See 

supra Part I. Khan also moved the District Court for leave to depose one 

unindicted coconspirator and one fact witness, both of whom resided in Pakistan as 

well. Khan argued that these witnesses were unavailable to testify in the United 

States and would provide testimony highly material to his defense. Their 

testimony would, Khan claimed, “[d]ispel misconceptions” about statements Khan 

made during FISA-intercepted telephone calls, “explain how the money sent by 

[Khan] was used,” and “render first-hand accounts of the conditions in Pakistan 

during the time period charged in the indictment.” 

Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 15 offered Khan a mechanism to obtain

their testimony. That rule permits depositions in criminal cases “in order to 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 35 of 50
36

preserve testimony for trial” because of “exceptional circumstances and in the 

interest of justice.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 15(a)(1). Such circumstances exist when (1) 

the witnesses are unavailable to testify at trial, (2) their testimony is material, and 

(3) countervailing factors do not “render taking the deposition[s] unjust to the 

nonmoving party.” United States v. Ramos, 45 F.3d 1519, 1522–23 (11th Cir. 

1995). In his Rule 15 motion, Khan argued that these three factors counseled in 

favor of permitting the depositions to go forward.

The Government opposed the motion. The Government argued that the 

defense had not come forward with enough evidence to support the “exceptional” 

showing required to justify a Rule 15 deposition, particularly one conducted in a 

foreign country. E.g., United States v. Alvarez, 837 F.2d 1024, 1029 (11th Cir. 

1988) (“Foreign deposition testimony, because of the absence of a sanction for 

perjury, is suspect.”). More fundamentally, the Government also sounded 

concerns about the logistical difficulties that would confront both the defense and 

the prosecution if in-person depositions were to be taken on Pakistani soil. 

Complications abounded. For example, the Department of Justice informed 

the United States Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of Florida that the 

proposed Rule 15 depositions required prior approval from the government of 

Pakistan. United States officials attending the depositions, moreover, would need 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 36 of 50
37

to obtain diplomatic passports and Pakistani visas, a process that was estimated to 

take ten to twelve weeks. 

And where, exactly, would these depositions take place? Ordinarily, a 

United States embassy or consulate can host foreign Rule 15 depositions. But 

because Khan sought to depose three of his fugitive codefendants, the United 

States Attorney’s Office informed the District Court that “for security reasons, the 

. . . deponents would not be allowed to enter the U.S. embassy [in Islamabad, 

Pakistan] for any reason, for fear of attack, and to prevent them from observing the 

layout of the Embassy.” If the three proposed deponents did enter the embassy, 

they “would be turned over to Pakistani law enforcement, to be held for possible 

extradition to the United States, pursuant to an Interpol arrest warrant pending 

against them.” 

For these reasons, the depositions would have to be held at a private 

location. But this outcome, the Government argued, would risk endangering any 

American official in attendance, particularly given that “these proposed 

depositions would be of Pakistani Taliban sympathizers, thus making U.S. officials 

associated with these depositions even larger targets for militants . . . .” 

The District Court held two evidentiary hearings on the matter. In response 

to the Government’s suggestion that the defense obtain letters rogatory to secure 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 37 of 50
38

the foreign depositions,18 defense counsel insisted that “we contacted the Pakistani 

Consulate and we do not need letters rogatory. . . . [W]e do not need the assistance 

of the Pakistani government.” By contrast, the Government contended that it had 

advised the defense about how to obtain letters rogatory and that any Rule 15 

depositions would require explicit approval from the government of Pakistan. 

2.

Despite the Government’s misgivings, and in an extraordinary bid to 

safeguard Khan’s right to a fair and full trial, the District Court granted Khan’s 

Rule 15 motion. The District Court found that Khan had established the type of 

“exceptional circumstances” contemplated by Rule 15 but that “due to security 

concerns . . . it would be unjust to require the prosecutors in this case to travel to 

Pakistan to take these depositions.” 

So the District Court fashioned a compromise. In its order, the District 

Court explained that it would accommodate the Government’s security concerns 

 18 The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure require Rule 15 depositions to “be taken and 

filed in the same manner as a deposition in a civil action.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 15(e). The Federal 

Rules of Civil Procedure, in turn, permit depositions to be taken in a foreign country “under a 

letter of request, whether or not captioned a ‘letter rogatory.’” Fed. R. Civ. P. 28(b)(1)(B). 

A “letter rogatory,” or “letter of request,” is “[a] document issued by one court to a 

foreign court, requesting that the foreign court (1) take evidence from a specific person within 

the foreign jurisdiction . . . and (2) return the testimony . . . for use in a pending case.” Black’s 

Law Dictionary 988 (9th ed. 2009); see also 22 C.F.R. § 92.54. The Department of State has 

statutory authority to transmit letters rogatory through diplomatic channels to the appropriate 

foreign tribunal or agency. 28 U.S.C. § 1781(a). Alternatively, 28 U.S.C. § 1781(b)(2) 

empowers the federal courts to transmit such letters. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 38 of 50
39

by having the depositions broadcast live, during trial, and before the jury using 

video-teleconferencing technology. This way, the prosecutors could participate in 

the depositions without traveling to Pakistan, and Khan could present a full defense 

by examining these material witnesses and having them testify about how they 

used the money he sent them. 

The District Court attached several conditions to this arrangement. First, 

the District Court ordered the defense, by December 28, 2012, to submit to the 

Court “evidence . . . showing that the Pakistan government explicitly (a) permits 

these depositions to be held or (b) acknowledges that it is aware of these 

depositions and that no official permission is needed for them to occur.” The 

rationale behind this requirement: “[T]he Court does not want all the preparations 

for the depositions to be laid . . . only to have the depositions fall through at the last 

minute because the Pakistan government will not allow them to occur.” Second, 

the District Court ordered that the depositions be conducted at a facility in 

Islamabad that would support live, encrypted video teleconferencing with three 

cameras, “one showing the witness testifying in Pakistan, one showing the room 

where the deposition is held, and one in the Miami federal courtroom that will 

show the government’s attorney conducting the examination.” Third, the District 

Court required the presence of “one or more Pakistani officials that either alone or 

together are authorized to administer an oath and verify the identity of the 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 39 of 50
40

witnesses.” The District Court scheduled the depositions to begin on February 4, 

2013, from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. “every day—including weekends—until they 

finish.” It stressed that “time is of the essence” and that “[t]here will be no more 

accommodations.” 

On December 20, 2012, the defense submitted evidence of compliance with 

the District Court’s order. This evidence came in the form of an affidavit from a 

Pakistani lawyer, Atif Khan, who was involved in Hafiz Khan’s defense as local 

counsel. In his affidavit, Atif Khan testified that, based on his communications 

with Pakistani government officials, “no . . . permission or lack of permission [to 

conduct the depositions] is obtainable from the Government of Pakistan.” He went 

on to state, however, that “U.S. and state officials participating in depositions in 

Pakistan must first obtain permission from the Government of Pakistan.” 

Clearly, the defense had failed to comply with the District Court’s 

instructions. The defense did not provide evidence that the government of Pakistan 

either approved of the depositions or was affirmatively aware they would take 

place. Instead, the defense submitted a contradictory affidavit of a local lawyer 

offering vague assurances from unnamed Pakistani officials and his “own 

independent research of the local laws.” 

At a pretrial hearing conducted on December 26, 2012, the District Court 

expressed its frustration, describing the affidavit as containing “exactly the kind of 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 40 of 50
41

ambiguity I was trying to avoid.” “I wanted something from the government of 

Pakistan,” the District Court admonished, “not some lawyer who said, ‘I spoke to 

somebody and they told me that.’” Defense counsel countered: “They 

[government of Pakistan officials] made it clear that if the government of Pakistan 

is not a party [to the depositions], they don’t care one way or the other, and they’re 

not going to put anything down saying anything.” For its part, the U.S. Attorney’s 

Office attempted to communicate with Pakistani authorities through a local FBI 

legal attaché, only to confirm what they had been telling the defense and the 

District Court all along—that the Rule 15 depositions would require prior approval 

by the Pakistani government. Prosecutors also tried to send a diplomatic note, 

through the Department of State, to alert Pakistani officials to the depositions. 

When pressed by the District Court, defense counsel stated unequivocally that “no 

one over there [in Pakistan] is going to stop the depositions. If that’s the issue, like 

the Pakistani government is going to march in and shut this thing down, there’s no 

indication of that at all.” 

Not so fast, prosecutors cautioned. The Government continued to voice 

apprehension about the clandestine nature of the depositions; the risk that one or 

more of the deponents—all three of whom were fugitive codefendants in the 

case—could be arrested should they appear to testify; the cost of financing the 

video teleconferencing; and the possibility that American involvement with 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 41 of 50
42

individuals who allegedly maintained ties with the Taliban could cause a 

“diplomatic incident.” But with defense counsel’s assurances in mind, and out of 

an abundance of caution, the District Court ruled that the depositions would

proceed. 

Having already failed once to comply with the District Court’s Rule 15 

order, the defense then upped the ante during the trial itself. On January 23, 

2013—well after trial had already begun—Khan moved to convert six Rule 17 

witnesses19 into Rule 15 deponents, because the witnesses could not successfully 

be brought into the United States to testify at trial. The Government opposed the 

motion, but after the defense provided a detailed recitation of the testimony the 

witnesses would offer, the District Court permitted the Rule 17 witnesses to testify 

from Pakistan.

3.

This extensive pretrial and midtrial wrangling was for naught. The videoteleconferencing technology worked for all of a day, enabling the defense to call 

one witness. On February 12, 2013, in the middle of the defense’s direct 

examination of a second witness, the Internet connection failed, and the federal 

 19 Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 17 provides, in pertinent part: “Upon a defendant’s 

ex parte application, the court must order that a subpoena be issued for a named witness if the 

defendant shows an inability to pay the witness’s fees and the necessity of the witness’s presence 

for an adequate defense. Fed. R. Crim. P. 17(b). 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 42 of 50
43

courtroom in Miami could no longer see or hear the testimony of the Rule 15 

deponents in Pakistan. 

The District Court dismissed the jury to confer with the parties. Defense 

counsel, speaking on a cell phone from Pakistan, reported that Pakistani 

government officials had “suddenly” appeared at the hotel where the depositions 

were taking place and that hotel staff informed him that the internet-protocol

address supporting the live video teleconferencing had been blacklisted by the 

Pakistani Telecommunications Authority. The defense seemed to blame the 

prosecution, who had mentioned the location of the depositions during the crossexamination of the defense’s first Rule 15 deponent. Defense counsel said that 

“[u]p until [the disclosure of the deposition location], we had absolutely no 

interference or contact at all with any of the Pakistani government security 

people.” 20 The District Court responded: 

 20 Although defense counsel seemed to suggest during trial that prosecutors may have 

caused the Internet connection to fail, Khan has not argued since then that the prosecution played 

any role whatsoever in foiling the video-teleconferencing technology. To the contrary, the

evidence indicates that prosecutors went out of their way to help facilitate the Rule 15 

depositions by, among other things, sending a diplomatic note through the Department of State, 

contacting the FBI legal attaché in Pakistan, and assisting the District Court and the defense to 

explore other options when it became clear that taking the depositions in Pakistan was no longer 

viable. 

Khan argues—for the first time in his reply brief—that the Government had an 

affirmative constitutional obligation to assist Khan by obtaining visas or requesting parole for the 

proposed witnesses, including his three fugitive codefendants, so they could testify in the United 

States. But “[a]s we repeatedly have admonished, arguments raised for the first time in a reply 

brief are not properly before a reviewing court.” Herring v. Sec’y, Dept. of Corrs., 397 F.3d 

1338, 1342 (11th Cir. 2005) (alteration omitted) (quotation marks omitted). We therefore 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 43 of 50
44

That suggests to me that we’re trying to do this in a way keeping it 

secret from the Pakistani government and my order originally 

specifically said not only do they have to know about it, but we want 

something back [from them] affirmatively saying that they either 

agree with it or they acknowledge that it can happen and they don’t 

care. 

. . . . [M]y order said I want something from the Pakistani government 

so we don’t waste our time and go through this exercise and have 

something like this happen. 

You told me you couldn’t get something from the government, so I 

again bent over backwards to help you out and I accepted the affidavit 

from your lawyer and said, “Okay, we’ll let it go forward because he 

spoke to somebody in the government.” So it’s totally contrary to the 

purpose of what we’re trying to do here, to say this thing was thwarted 

because the Pakistani government found out the location. It’s 

supposed to be open and notorious to them. 

The District Court brought the jury back into the courtroom, explained that the 

video feed from Pakistan had been lost, and dismissed the jurors for the remainder 

of the afternoon.

Khan moved the following day—February 13, 2013—to relocate the 

depositions to another country. The District Court gave the defense additional time 

to secure nonimmigrant visas for the witnesses to enter the United States or, in the 

alternative, to travel to the United Arab Emirates (“UAE”). The District Court 

scheduled a status conference for February 15, and instructed the defense that any 

remaining depositions had to begin no later than February 19. 

 

decline to consider this constitutional argument, particularly given that Khan’s raising it so late 

on appeal has deprived the Government of an opportunity to brief the issue. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 44 of 50
45

At the February 15 status conference, defense counsel told the District Court

that hotel officials had instructed him to obtain a no-objection certificate (“NOC”) 

from the local authorities to reestablish the Internet connection. The defense 

informed the District Court that efforts to obtain an NOC were in progress and that 

the defense was awaiting one final signature before the Internet connection would 

return. As for obtaining visas to the United States or the UAE, defense counsel 

asserted that he was “trying to explore every option to get this testimony.” 

The prosecution, however, strongly objected to taking the depositions in the 

UAE at the last minute, without that government’s knowledge or consent; doing 

otherwise risked creating “a serious diplomatic incident.” Given the “sensitivity of 

the relationship” between the United States and the UAE, prosecutors cautioned 

that obtaining visas and permission to take deposition testimony “would require 

significant high-level reviews and communications even before a formal request 

would be made.” 

In light of this evidence, the District Court concluded that Rule 15 

depositions in the UAE were “off the table.” It then presented the defense with an 

ultimatum: the defense could continue to make efforts to reestablish the Internet 

connection in Pakistan, but no further continuances would be granted. The trial 

would move forward on February 19. 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 45 of 50
46

On February 19, the defense informed the District Court that it was unable to 

obtain final approval of the NOC. Recognizing that the District Court had already 

ruled it would not grant a continuance, the defense moved for a mistrial. The 

District Court denied the motion orally and in writing:

The Court has done everything possible to accommodate the defense. 

In spite of these efforts, forces beyond the control of the Court have 

prevented these depositions from being able to be concluded. There is 

absolutely no evidence that the Government did anything to thwart 

this process. To the contrary, the evidence is that the Government has 

engaged in only good faith efforts to comply with the Court’s request 

for assistance in this matter. The Court notes that all of these 

problems could have been avoided had the Defendant complied with 

the Court’s initial condition that the Defendant obtain the explicit 

approval of the Pakistani government before the depositions started. 

The District Court also denied as moot Khan’s motion to relocate the Rule 15 

depositions to another country, explaining that “defense counsel chose to try to 

reestablish a live videoconference feed with Islamabad, Pakistan, and take the 

witnesses’ testimony there rather than make arrangements to take the witnesses’ 

testimony in a third country.”21 

B.

1.

Although the denial of a continuance may be “so arbitrary as to violate due 

process,” Ungar v. Sarafite, 376 U.S. 575, 589, 84 S. Ct. 841, 850, 11 L. Ed. 2d 

 21 The defense was never able to obtain visas for the proposed witnesses.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 46 of 50
47

921 (1964), this decision is ordinarily left to the sound discretion of the district 

court. “Trial judges necessarily require a great deal of latitude in scheduling trials. 

Not the least of their problems is that of assembling the witnesses, lawyers, and

jurors at the same place at the same time, and this burden counsels against 

continuances except for compelling reasons.” Morris v. Slappy, 461 U.S. 1, 11, 

103 S. Ct. 1610, 1616, 75 L. Ed. 2d 610 (1983). 

Where, as here, the district court has denied a continuance to obtain 

testimony, we consider four factors in evaluating whether the district court abused 

its discretion: (1) the diligence of the moving party in obtaining the testimony; (2) 

“the probability of obtaining the testimony within a reasonable time”; (3) “the 

specificity with which the defense was able to describe the witness’s expected 

knowledge or testimony”; and (4) the nature of the proffered testimony, that is, 

“the degree to which such testimony was expected to be favorable to the accused,

and the unique or cumulative nature of testimony.” United States v. Wright, 63 

F.3d 1067, 1071 (11th Cir. 1995) (quotation marks omitted).

The first factor—the diligence of the moving party in obtaining the 

testimony—cuts against Khan. From the beginning, defense counsel repeatedly 

assured the District Court that the Rule 15 depositions would not require explicit 

approval from the government of Pakistan. From the beginning, prosecutors 

repeatedly warned the District Court that the Rule 15 depositions would require

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 47 of 50
48

such approval. The Government even offered the defense an alternative: letters 

rogatory. But the defense insisted it did not need letters rogatory either. 

Despite the presence of compelling reasons to deny Khan’s Rule 15 motion, 

the District Court went out of its way to accommodate the defense. To prevent the 

testimony from falling through at the last minute, the District Court ordered the 

defense to submit to the Court “evidence . . . showing that the Pakistan government 

explicitly (a) permits these depositions to be held or (b) acknowledges that it is 

aware of these depositions and that no official permission is needed for them to 

occur.” 

The defense failed to comply with the District Court’s order while still

making a strategic decision to proceed with the depositions in the absence of 

official government of Pakistan approval or acknowledgment. Exacerbating this 

problem, the defense chose, midtrial, to increase its reliance on the foreign 

testimony by moving to convert six of its Rule 17 witnesses into Rule 15 

deponents. The defense ran the risk that, in failing to obtain official approval, the 

depositions would be shut down. And because the defense spent so much time and 

energy securing testimony through live video teleconferencing, it made another

strategic choice: to forgo full consideration of alternative methods of obtaining the 

testimony that may have proven more reliable, such as letters rogatory or 

nonimmigrant visas into the United States or another country. After all, when the 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 48 of 50
49

Internet connection failed, the defense had no viable alternative to the Rule 15 

depositions precisely because it had placed so much stock in a method of testimony 

the District Court and the prosecution had warned about from the get-go. 

The second factor—“the probability of obtaining the testimony within a 

reasonable time”—weighs against Khan as well. Wright, 63 F.3d at 1071. To be 

sure, the defense informed the District Court that it was just one signature away 

from obtaining an NOC and reestablishing the Internet connection. But by the 

time the District Court ruled it would not grant another continuance, approximately

a month had passed since the Government rested its case-in-chief. Throughout the 

course of this litigation, moreover, the defense’s assurances regarding the Pakistan 

depositions had routinely proven inaccurate. And the defense still had not 

produced an official statement from the government of Pakistan, as the District 

Court had long requested. In the face of such overwhelming uncertainty, who 

knows how much longer it would have taken to get the Internet back up and 

running? A day? A week? A month? 

We readily concede that the third and fourth factors—“the specificity with 

which the defense was able to describe the witness’s expected knowledge or 

testimony” and “the degree to which such testimony was expected to be favorable 

to the accused”—point in Khan’s favor. See id. The Rule 15 deponents would 

have offered testimony highly material to Khan’s defense. We do not doubt that 

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 49 of 50
50

defense counsel acted in good faith in attempting to secure that testimony despite 

some very challenging circumstances. But this appeal comes to us in an abuse-ofdiscretion posture, which means we must pay respect to the district court’s on-theground decisions. Indeed, “[t]he abuse of discretion standard of review recognizes 

that for the matter in question there is a range of choice for the district court and so 

long as its decision does not amount to a clear error of judgment we will not 

reverse.” Klay v. United Healthgroup, Inc., 376 F.3d 1092, 1096 (11th Cir. 2004) 

(citation omitted) (quotation marks omitted).

Given that standard, and given the totality of the circumstances, we conclude 

that the District Court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Khan a 

continuance. 

2.

Like the denial of a continuance, the denial of a mistrial is also subject to 

abuse-of-discretion review. United States v. Grzybowicz, 747 F.3d 1296, 1311 

(11th Cir. 2014). For the reasons we have set out above, we also conclude that the 

District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying Khan’s motion for a mistrial.

VI.

Accordingly, we AFFIRM Khan’s convictions.

AFFIRMED.

USCA11 Case: 13-14048 Date Filed: 07/23/2015 Page: 50 of 50