With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". exculpatory evidence was not discovered by the defendant until after trial, could not have been discovered earlier with due diligence, and is material. See United States v. Frost, 125 F.3d 346, 382 (6th Cir.1997). In particular, Corrado argues that the government had a duty to turn over the transcripts of the grand ju ould have been unable to identify, locate, and interview these individuals through reasonable efforts on his own part. Indeed, it was the defendants’ own recorded conversations that brought these alleged bookmakers and gamblers to the government’s attention in the first place. See id. at 1371 (stating that evidence need not be disclosed under Brady where it would be available to a defendant from another source); Hoke v. Netherlands 92 F.3d 1350, 1355 (4th Cir.1996) (<HOLDING>). Corrado may be correct in stating that

A: holding that the applicant had not demonstrated the government was unable or unwilling to control the perpetrators where he contended that the police failed to investigate his reports but admitted that he did not give the police the names of any suspects because he did not know any specific names and his wife testified that the police investigated the complaints but were ultimately unable to solve the crimes
B: holding that the government was not obligated to turn over the names of three men who had had previous sexual relations with a rape and murder victim where the police themselves learned of these men either from sources with whom the defendants attorney spoke or from persons readily accessible to the defendant
C: holding that case involving evidence such as eyewitness testimony placing the defendant at the scene acknowledgment by the defendant of a dispute with the victim and theft of the victims purse and dna evidence suggesting that the defendant had engaged in sexual relations with the victim could not be deemed entirely circumstantial
D: holding that a defendant must show that the victim had previously been exposed to a sexual act and that the prior sexual act was sufficiently similar to the present sexual act to give the victim the experience and ability to contrive or imagine the molestation charge
B.