The “Invited-Error Bar” and Intrinsic-Evidence Doctrine Reinforced: A Commentary on United States v. Hasan Muhammed (11th Cir. 2025)

The “Invited-Error Bar” and Intrinsic-Evidence Doctrine Reinforced:
A Comprehensive Commentary on United States v. Hasan Muhammed (11th Cir. 2025)

1. Introduction

In United States v. Hasan Muhammed, the Eleventh Circuit revisited two frequently litigated evidence doctrines—invited error and the intrinsic-evidence exception to Federal Rule of Evidence 404(b). The appeal arose from Muhammed’s 2023 trial convictions for (i) failure to file an accurate currency report, and (ii) possession with intent to transfer five or more identification documents. Central to the appeal were the district court’s admission of:

  • A drone video depicting Muhammed’s 2022 flight and arrest after eight years as a fugitive.
  • Cash ($12,291) and a third-party birth certificate found on his person at the time of that arrest.

Muhammed argued that this evidence violated Rule 404(b) and that the jury charge on deliberate ignorance was improper. The Eleventh Circuit affirmed, emphasizing that (1) agreeing to admit evidence constitutes invited error, and (2) flight-and-arrest footage was admissible as intrinsic evidence necessary to complete the crime’s narrative. The panel also upheld the deliberate-ignorance instruction because the defense expressly accepted it and the facts warranted it.

2. Summary of the Judgment

The Court (Jordan, Luck & Anderson, JJ., per curiam) held:

  1. Invited Error Precluded Review. Muhammed’s written notice of “non-opposition” and oral agreement to admission of the cash and birth certificate barred him from challenging their admission on appeal.
  2. Drone Video Admissible as Intrinsic Evidence. The arrest video was “inextricably intertwined” with the charged offenses because it explained Muhammed’s eight-year fugitive status and contextualised his presence at trial.
  3. Flight Evidence Proper. Under United States v. Blakey, flight is admissible to show consciousness of guilt; a limiting instruction mitigated prejudice.
  4. Deliberate-Ignorance Instruction Appropriate. The defense invited any error by assenting to the charge; in any event, facts supported both actual knowledge and deliberate ignorance, rendering the instruction proper and any error harmless.
  5. Convictions Affirmed.

3. Detailed Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

  • United States v. Stone, 139 F.3d 822 (11th Cir. 1998) – Articulates the invited error doctrine; if a party induces a ruling, appellate review is precluded. The Court applied Stone to deny Muhammed’s 404(b) challenge.
  • United States v. Edouard, 485 F.3d 1324 (11th Cir. 2007) – Sets the test for admitting intrinsic evidence: same transaction, necessary to complete the story, or inextricably intertwined. The Court invoked Edouard to deem the drone video intrinsic.
  • United States v. Blakey, 960 F.2d 996 (11th Cir. 1992) – Holds that flight evidence is admissible to demonstrate consciousness of guilt. Provided the principal authority for admitting the drone footage.
  • United States v. Borders, 693 F.2d 1318 (11th Cir. 1982) – Describes the four inferential steps linking flight to guilt. The district court’s limiting instruction mirrored this analytical chain, reducing prejudice.
  • United States v. Silvestri, 409 F.3d 1311 (11th Cir. 2005) – Reaffirmed that accepting a jury instruction waives appellate challenge; cited regarding the deliberate-ignorance charge.
  • United States v. Maitre, 898 F.3d 1151 (11th Cir. 2018), Stone, and Steed – Supply the framework for determining when a deliberate-ignorance instruction is warranted and when any error is harmless.

3.2 Court’s Legal Reasoning

  1. Invited Error Bars Review. By explicitly agreeing to admission of the cash and birth certificate, defense counsel triggered the invited error rule, foreclosing appellate scrutiny. The Court underscored the systemic interest in preventing parties from “sandbagging” trial courts.
  2. Intrinsic Evidence vs. Rule 404(b). The Court side-stepped the typical 404(b) analysis for the drone video by labeling it intrinsic. Key factors:
    • It arose from the same “series of events” precipitated by Muhammed’s failure to appear in 2014.
    • The footage “completed the story” by explaining his reappearance for trial.
    • Without the video, the jury would likely speculate about his eight-year absence, leading to confusion.
  3. Rule 403 Balancing. Even intrinsic evidence must pass Rule 403. The Court maximised probative value (explaining the fugitive period) and minimised unfair prejudice through:
    • A limiting instruction expressly stating that flight, standing alone, did not compel a finding of guilt.
    • Absence of inflammatory references (e.g., no mention of purported pipe bomb materials that were not shown to the jury).
  4. Flight Evidence Framework. Utilising Borders, the district court walked jurors through the inferential steps from flight to guilt, thereby meeting due-process concerns about over-reliance on flight evidence.
  5. Deliberate Ignorance. The evidence allowed a jury to find either actual knowledge (Muhammed directly possessed undeclared cash and fraudulent IDs) or deliberate blindness (intentionally avoiding knowledge of reporting requirements). The Court applied its “both-theories” approach (Maitre) and concluded the instruction was proper; regardless, any error was harmless given the sufficiency of evidence of actual knowledge.

3.3 Potential Impact of the Decision

Although unpublished and therefore non-precedential under 11th Cir. R. 36-2, the opinion is persuasive authority and offers practical guidance in three areas:

  • Trial Strategy Consequences. It powerfully cautions litigants that strategic concessions (e.g., agreeing to admit marginally damaging evidence) can foreclose appellate relief. Defense counsel must weigh the record carefully before stipulating.
  • Use of Technology-Generated Flight Evidence. By blessing drone footage as intrinsic and probative of consciousness of guilt, the Court signals receptivity to modern law-enforcement surveillance technology in evidentiary narratives.
  • Reaffirmation of Intrinsic Evidence Doctrine. Prosecutors may more confidently argue that conduct explaining a defendant’s apprehension, even years later, is “inextricably intertwined”—thereby avoiding the stricter 404(b) tests.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Invited Error. If you tell the judge you want something done, you cannot later complain about it on appeal. Think of it as “you broke it, you bought it.”
  • Rule 404(b) vs. Intrinsic Evidence. 404(b) restricts evidence of a defendant’s other bad acts used solely to show character. But if the act is part of the same story—like the closing chapter of a novel—it is “intrinsic” and bypasses 404(b).
  • Rule 403 Balancing. Even relevant evidence can be excluded if its potential to inflame or mislead jurors considerably outweighs its value. Courts ask: Does the evidence help more than it hurts?
  • Deliberate Ignorance (a/k/a “Willful Blindness”). A defendant cannot escape liability by choosing not to learn facts he strongly suspects. It is akin to placing blinders on oneself to avoid seeing wrongdoing.

5. Conclusion

United States v. Hasan Muhammed reinforces two pivotal trial doctrines. First, invited error is a formidable procedural bar; parties who consent to evidence or instructions effectively waive appellate complaints. Second, the Eleventh Circuit clarified that flight-and-arrest evidence—especially modern drone footage—may qualify as intrinsic, not extrinsic 404(b) evidence, when it completes the story of the charged crime. Combined with a thorough limiting instruction, such evidence can survive Rule 403 scrutiny. Finally, the Court reiterated that a properly supported deliberate-ignorance instruction is permissible and any error is harmless where actual-knowledge evidence is ample. Practitioners should heed this decision when calibrating pre-trial stipulations, evidentiary objections, and jury-instruction strategy, as its teachings will inevitably echo in future criminal litigation within and beyond the Eleventh Circuit.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

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