Federal Circuits, D.C. Cir. (February 23, 1982)
Docket number: 81-2350,81-2383
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Code of Federal Regulations - Title 28: Judicial Administration - 28 CFR 500.1 - Definitions.
U.S. Supreme Court - Estelle v. Smith, 451 U.S. 454 (1981)
U.S. Supreme Court - Hudson v. Palmer, 468 U.S. 517 (1984)
Michael W. Farrell, Asst. U. S. Atty., Washington, D. C., with whom Charles F. C. Ruff, U. S. Atty., Washington, D. C., at the time briefs were filed, John A. Terry, Roger M. Adelman and Marc B. Tucker, Asst. U. S. Attys., Washington, D. C., were on brief for appellant.
Gregory B. Craig, Washington, D. C., with whom Vincent J. Fuller, Judith A. Miller and Lon S. Babby, Washington, D. C., were on brief for appellee.Before ROBINSON, Chief Judge, and WRIGHT and WALD, Circuit Judges.Opinion PER CURIAM.PER CURIAM:On March 30, 1981, the President of the United States, his Press Secretary, a Secret Service agent, and a Metropolitan Police Department officer were shot in an assassination attempt in front of the Hilton Hotel in Washington, D.C. A suspect, John W. Hinckley, Jr., was apprehended on the scene and taken into custody. Hinckley has been charged with three federal1 and five District of Columbia offenses.2 In a pretrial ruling,3 the district court suppressed certain evidence that it found had been obtained in violation of the constitutional protections against compelled self-incrimination4 and unreasonable searches and seizures.5 The government brought this expedited appeal, and argues that the district court erred in its factual findings and legal conclusions, and in the alternative, that even if the evidence was obtained in an unconstitutional manner, it should be usable at trial under certain novel theories6 advanced by the government attorneys.The appeal concerns two separate incidents,7 one of which occurred the day of Hinckley's arrest and the other some months later while he was a pretrial detainee undergoing mental evaluation at the Federal Correctional Institution in Butner, North Carolina (Butner). On the day of his arrest, Hinckley was held in custody first by the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia (MPD) and later by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. No misconduct by the local police has been alleged.8 When the FBI assumed jurisdiction over the case and took custody of Hinckley, however, two federal agents-after advising Hinckley of his right to counsel and his right to remain silent, and despite the fact that Hinckley had asked to confer with an attorney before answering questions-nevertheless questioned him for approximately one-half hour before he had an opportunity to consult with his attorney.9 Hinckley's request, under clearly established law, precluded any interrogation until he had the opportunity to confer with counsel.10 The violation of this right-recognized by the Supreme Court fifteen years ago in Miranda v. Arizona11 and recently reaffirmed by the entire Court in Edwards v. Arizona12-caused the district court to suppress all evidence obtained during this interview.13 The district court's suppression order extended not only to the information obtained during the questioning, but also to testimony by the agents regarding Hinckley's demeanor during the session.14The second incident involved in this appeal concerns the reading of Hinckley's personal papers by prison guards during a routine search of his cell for contraband. Several sheets of almost illegible handwritten notes bearing on alleged criminal activity were seized by prison authorities during a search for contraband, and subsequently turned over to federal officials investigating the case.15 The government attempted to justify the reading of Hinckley's papers as necessary in light of legitimate concerns for his safety and the needs of prison security.16 The district court determined, however, that the guards had never been instructed by any official at Butner to read Hinckley's papers,17 and that this fact, in combination with the overall circumstances of Hinckley's confinement, made the action of the guards constitutionally impermissible.18The district court also rejected the government's argument that the reading of Hinckley's notes was justified by the "plain view" doctrine.19 The government asserted that, in the course of an entirely proper search for contraband, a guard's eyes were caught by the words "prison," "life sentence," and "cooperation with the Justice Department"20 on the folded sheaf of papers; that those words, happened upon in plain view, properly triggered the guard's concern that Hinckley might be contemplating suicide; that this concern justified reading further; and that the further reading revealed evidence of possible additional criminal conduct. Given this chain of events, the government argues that the entire contents of the document should be admissible under the plain view doctrine.21 The district court did not accept this "almost-plain-view" doctrine; indeed, it found the chain of events broken at the first link because-in the district court's view-far from arousing fears of suicide, the words noticed should, if anything, have alerted the guard that the papers related to Hinckley's case and thus should not be read.22On appeal, the district court's conclusions of law are not binding on this court; we are free to draw our own legal conclusions, and it is indeed "the duty of the appellate court to decide whether the correct rule of law has been applied to the facts found."23 As to factual matters, however, we must abide by the district court's findings unless they are clearly erroneous.24With this background, we turn to the government's arguments on appeal, which are in large part the same as those made before the district court. For the reasons set forth in our analysis below, we do not find them sufficiently persuasive to overturn the district court's suppression order.25I. THE Miranda ISSUEWe examine first the admissibility of statements made by Hinckley26 during the 25-minute "background" interview conducted by federal agents after he had asserted his right to speak with an attorney. The government argues primarily that this questioning did not constitute impermissible "interrogation."A. Factual Background1. Metropolitan Police CustodyImmediately following the attempted assassination of the President, Hinckley was arrested and taken to MPD Headquarters in the custody of Secret Service agents and D.C. police. The group arrived at headquarters at 2:40 p. m.27 At MPD Headquarters Hinckley was read the Miranda warnings, first by Secret Service Agent Dennis McCarthy and later by Detective Arthur Myers of the D.C. police force. Hinckley was then taken to the Homicide Squad Office where Detective Myers again advised him of his Miranda rights from an official police advice-of-rights form (PD-47).28The reverse side of the PD-47 form contained four waiver questions to which Hinckley could give written responses. Hinckley wrote "yes" in response to (1) whether he had read his rights and (2) whether he understood his rights. However, in response to the third question, whether he wished to answer any questions, Hinckley answered orally: "I don't know. I'm not sure; I think I ought to talk to Joe Bates," explaining that Bates was his father's attorney in Dallas, Texas. In response to the fourth question, whether he was willing to answer questions without an attorney present, Hinckley again responded verbally: "I want to talk to you, but first I want to talk to Joe Bates."29Hinckley signed the PD-47 form at 3:10 p. m. He remained in the custody of the MPD until about 4:50 p. m., during which time he provided information necessary for police department booking and processing activities.30 During this time, the police made efforts to contact the attorney he had requested, and Detective Myers assured Hinckley that such efforts were underway.2. FBI CustodyThe D.C. police were notified around 4:00 p. m. that the FBI would assume jurisdiction over the case because of the involvement of the President. At 4:50 p. m., two FBI agents-Henry Ragle and George Chimel-placed Hinckley under arrest for violation of the Presidential Assassination Statute. At roughly the same time, Detective Myers told the two agents that Hinckley had already asked for an attorney; that he did not want to make a statement without a lawyer present; and that the MPD was attempting to locate the attorney requested.31 Secret Service Agent McCarthy also told the FBI that Hinckley had stated that he did not wish to make any statement until he had consulted with an attorney.32Hinckley was taken to the FBI Washington Field Office at approximately 5:15 p. m. Upon arrival, he was advised of his Miranda rights through an FBI "Advice of Rights Form."33 Although Hinckley signed his name below the waiver provision on the form, it was clearly understood, and the government does not here dispute, that Hinckley did not agree to waive his right not to answer questions or give a statement before consulting counsel.34 Hinckley said at this time that he would answer questions35 but that he would like first to speak with his parents, and supplied their phone number. Around the same time, Agent Chimel told Hinckley that the attorney he requested had been contacted and had recommended that Hinckley retain Vincent Fuller, a Washington attorney. These events all took place before 6:00 p. m.36The FBI then attempted to contact Hinckley's parents. However, the record does not show that any effort was made to contact Fuller during this period.37 At 6:30 p. m., another attorney, Stuart Johnson, who had been alerted by a federal magistrate that he might be appointed to serve as counsel in an anticipated appearance of the accused, called the FBI office. He identified himself and sought access to Hinckley, but, according to his report, the agent he spoke with hung up on his inquiry. He persisted, and placed a call to an Assistant United States Attorney who told him to contact Fuller. When Fuller could not be reached, Johnson again called and talked to an Assistant United States Attorney. At 6:53 p. m., his request for access to Hinckley was finally granted and a car dispatched to bring him to the FBI field office.38 Johnson arrived at 7:28 p. m., after first having been formally designated to serve as counsel to Hinckley by the federal magistrate.3. The Suppressed StatementsAt 7:00 p. m., Agent Stephen Colo of the Secret Service and Agent Ragle of the FBI approached Hinckley and asked him to respond to certain "background" questions. In response to this inquiry, Hinckley stated that he would answer questions39 except for those about the period after his arrival in Washington, D.C. The "background" information secured over the next 25 minutes thus covered Hinckley's life up until his arrival in Washington.40In response to questioning, Hinckley provided information about: his name, date of birth, place of birth, height, weight, and hair and eye color; his criminal record and social security number; his parents' names, address, and phone number; his father's employment; his brother's name, age, address, and employment; his sister's name, age, address, and children; and the name of his defense lawyer. Hinckley also answered questions about his marital status, his "closest friend" (he responded that he had none), his military service, his automobile make and tag number, his educational background, and his employment history.In response to further questioning,41 he discussed his activities over the preceding year, describing his erratic travel patterns, including the names, rough dates, and partial addresses of the hotels he had stayed at during this time, and describing how he had travelled between them. He also provided information about his medical problems, the treatments he had received for his thyroid condition, his consumption of valium, his psychiatric treatment (including the use of biofeedback), his lack of a sense of direction, and his relationship with his parents.Hinckley then said that he wanted to stop the interview, and renewed his request for an attorney. However, after one FBI agent left the room and another replaced him, Secret Service Agent Colo asked additional questions. Specifically, he asked whether Hinckley had a "girlfriend"; Hinckley said that she really wasn't a "girlfriend," and that it was a one-sided relationship. Asked about a telephone number found in his wallet, Hinckley responded that it was the Yale dormitory number of Jodie Foster, a well-known actress. Hinckley stated that he had talked to Ms. Foster two or three times, that she was courteous, that he had taped the conversations, and that the tapes were in a suitcase in a D.C. hotel. At this point, 7:25 p. m., the interview ended. Three minutes later, the court-appointed attorney arrived at the FBI field office.B. Analysis1. Miranda's Per Se Rule Against InterrogationIn determining an arrestee's fifth amendment rights, the Supreme Court has established a bright line for law enforcement officers: "If the individual states that he wants an attorney, the interrogation must cease until an attorney is present."42 As the Court has emphasized, Miranda created a "rigid rule that an accused's request for an attorney is per se an invocation of his Fifth Amendment rights, requiring that all interrogation cease."43 Thus, if a defendant "indicates in any manner and at any stage of the process that he wishes to consult with an attorney before speaking there can be no questioning."44 And, only last Term, the Court reaffirmed the continuing vitality of these proscriptions. In Edwards v. Arizona,45 the Court stated that "an accused, ... having expressed his desire to deal with the police only through counsel, is not subject to further interrogation by the authorities until counsel has been made available to him, unless the accused himself initiates further communication, exchanges or conversations with the police."46In this case it is undisputed that, once in custody, Hinckley stated that he wanted an attorney. Moreover, he did not initiate further communication, but rather only responded to police-initiated questioning undertaken in the face of Hinckley's expressed desire to remain silent until he had an attorney. The government attempts to bring the questioning here outside the scope of Miranda, but its arguments in this respect run afoul of both the facts and the applicable law.2. The Questioning in this Case is not Analogous to a Booking ProcedureThe government argues that virtually all of the questioning that took place between 7:00 and 7:25 p. m. falls outside the scope of Miranda's per se rule because it was merely part of "standard processing procedures" and was "essentially administrative."47 Indeed, the government analogizes the questioning to the collection of routine booking data by MPD Detective Myers immediately following the arrest.48 Without here deciding whether, or under what circumstances, routine or administrative questions might be permissible despite an unfulfilled request for counsel,49 we disagree-as did the district court50- with the government's innocuous characterization of the questioning that took place.To begin with, the FBI does not customarily "book" defendants.51 More importantly, the interview in this case bears little resemblance to a typical precinct booking. The standard booking process is "a predominantly clerical procedure, performed immediately or soon after the suspect is delivered to the precinct or district station"; its primary function is "record-keeping."52 The 25-minute interview of Hinckley by FBI and Secret Service agents, conducted five hours after he was first taken into custody, bore none of the indicia of a clerical operation. A true "booking" had been conducted at MPD headquarters, and this information was available to the federal agents. And we think it worthy of note that instead of immediately gathering record-keeping data after assuming jurisdiction over the case, the FBI and the Secret Service respected Hinckley's right to remain silent for over an hour before initiating the subsequent wide-ranging inquiry. In contrast, once Hinckley had requested counsel, MPD Detective Myers stopped his interrogation but immediately began the Police Department's routine processing questions.53Significantly, testimony from the interviewing agents themselves demonstrates a clear investigatory purpose behind the questioning, rather than the "booking" analogy asserted in court. According to Secret Service Agent Colo, the questioning of Hinckley paralleled the standard interview of persons being investigated for threats against the President and other Secret Service protectees.54 Such questioning is undertaken to determine if protectees are in danger, to discover if others are involved in an attempted assassination, and "to get the feeling of who this individual is."55 The inquiries necessarily cover a vast territory since the goal is to determine the degree of danger a suspect poses to those the Secret Service protects.56 Similarly, the FBI agent who conducted the interview admitted that he wanted to find out if Hinckley had acted alone or in concert with others.573. The Questioning Here Was an InterrogationIntertwined with the government's "booking" analogy, but analytically separable from it, is the argument that although the incident here involved express questions, those questions were not designed to elicit an incriminating response and the interview is thus outside the scope of Miranda's requirement. A "core virtue of Miranda," however, is the "rigidity" and precision of its prophylactic rules.58 The government's approach would greatly undermine this precision by carving out a massive exception for the far-ranging "background" interview conducted in this case. We think it ill-advised to depart so sweepingly from Miranda's per se rule.Our conclusion fully accords with Rhode Island v. Innis,59 in which the Supreme Court adopted a two-pronged standard for defining custodial interrogation: (T)he Miranda safeguards come into play whenever a person in custody is subjected to either express questioning or its functional equivalent. That is to say, the term "interrogation" under Miranda refers not only to express questioning, but also to any words or actions on the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.60The Court elaborated that by " 'incriminating response' we refer to any response-whether inculpatory or exculpatory-that the prosecution may seek to introduce at trial."61Applying this standard, the district court found it unnecessary to look beyond the first prong of the Innis doctrine since it determined that Hinckley had been subjected to "express questioning."62 The government proposes63 a different reading of Innis, however, and argues that "interrogation" does not include even express questioning when it is "not reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response." We need not decide the correctness of this interpretation,64 for even under such an approach we think it clear that the agents here were knowingly attempting to elicit "incriminating" responses, and reasonably likely to do so.The federal agents who conducted the "background" interview of Hinckley would naturally have been aware of the likelihood that he would present an insanity defense.65 Hinckley's psychological condition at the time of the shooting has predictably become the focus of the case. Because most details about an individual's background are relevant to a determination of sanity,66 a systematic "background" interview necessarily elicits responses that the prosecution might want to introduce at trial.67 Even more significantly, the agents' observations about Hinckley's demeanor during the interview are potentially a key ingredient of the government's rebuttal of the accused's insanity defense. Indeed, as the government itself argued to the district court, the agents are "prime lay witnesses" on the insanity issue; their testimony is "critical"; the government needs a foundation for the agents' demeanor testimony based on "the various statements" of the defendant during this period; and medical testimony after the fact may be less persuasive to a jury than immediate, on-the-scene observations by lay witnesses.68Thus, where the mental state of an arrestee looms as a likely issue, we can only conclude that a systematic, 25-minute "background" interview was designed to elicit "incriminating" responses as defined in Innis. As a result, even under the government's view that interrogation covers express questions only when they are designed to elicit an incriminating response-a view that we do not here adopt, but discuss only for the sake of argument-we agree with the district court that Hinckley was subjected to a "custodial interrogation" in violation of Miranda.The government has argued, as a fallback position, that even if the bulk of the 25-minute interview was contrary to Miranda, a discrete segment at the beginning consisting of only very basic identifying questions should be admissible.69 Presumably, the government thereby hopes to allow its agents to offer demeanor testimony based on the permissible segment of the interview. We cannot accept the government's view of the divisibility of the interviewing process in this case. First, it is not clear that the record supports recognition of a discrete segment of basic questions at the outset of the interview.70 More importantly, all of the questioning had an investigatory purpose and, in the circumstances of this case, was likely to elicit responses or at least resulting demeanor testimony that the government could use at trial. We do not see any reason to sort out which questions might otherwise have been permissible under other circumstances, and we can discern no principle for admitting certain "background" questions but not others.71 Nor do we see how the demeanor testimony of the agents can be divided into observations of demeanor based on permissible, as opposed to impermissible, questioning. Here, the entire 25-minute interview process violated Miranda, and the taint therefore pervades the whole process. We, of course, do not decide whether in other cases severability might be possible.II. THE SEARCH AND SEIZURE ISSUEWe next examine the admissibility of the handwritten document seized from Hinckley's cell. The district court concluded that this paper was read and confiscated in violation of the fourth amendment's guarantee that "(t)he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated ....72 Certain "trigger words" in the paper in question allegedly attracted the attention of a correctional officer as he sifted through Hinckley's papers in a search for contraband.73 The government contends that it was reasonable for the officer, having seen these "trigger words," to read through the document; and reasonable again for prison officials later to seize the document based on the knowledge of its contents thus obtained. We disagree, and affirm the district court in its holding that the officer "had no basis for unfolding the document and reading it in its entirety."74 Accordingly, we uphold the district court's judgment that the document must be suppressed.75A. Factual BackgroundHinckley was transferred to the Federal Correctional Institution at Butner, North Carolina, on April 2, 1981 to undergo psychiatric evaluation. Formidable security measures were instituted during Hinckley's stay there: he was held in solitary confinement,76 kept under round-the-clock supervision,77 personally checked by guards every fifteen minutes,78 accompanied by three officers every time he left a secured area,79 restricted in his access to prison personnel,80 and even prohibited from receiving mail except from designated individuals.81 Upon arrival, he was advised by the Manager of the Mental Health Unit, Jesse James, that his cell would be frequently searched, primarily for "items with which he could harm himself,"82 and that his mail (except for attorney-client mail and correspondence with certain officials) would be read.83 In May, after Hinckley ingested a large quantity of medication in an apparent suicide attempt, the security measures were further intensified. Searches were increased to twice daily,84 and he was transferred to a cell where he could be continually observed through a window in an adjoining guard station.85Under continual observation, in solitary confinement, and with knowledge that all his personal correspondence would be read, Hinckley's exclusive outlet for private expression was his writing. He maintained a diary86 and wrote notes on pads provided by the prison authorities.87 Some of the correctional officers assigned to guard him read these papers during the cell searches-which were conducted in Hinckley's absence-although they had not been instructed to do so by anyone at Butner.88 During a contraband search on Thursday, July 23, 1981, while correctional officer Donald Meece was looking through the contents of an unmarked envelope Hinckley had placed on an extra bed he normally used to store reading materials, correspondence, and personal writings,89 the officer's eye was caught by certain "trigger words" on folded sheets of personal notes. As a result of these "trigger words," Meece skimmed the complete document and showed it to Officer Elmer Stone, who was assisting the search.90 Stone read the document, replaced it in the envelope, and reported the matter to their supervisor, James.91The next day, Stone conducted the morning cell search with Officer Ronald Graham. Stone again read the document and then showed it to Graham.92 The two reported on the contents of the document to Captain Paul Hungerford, who ordered the papers copied and replaced while Hinckley was at the gym.93 Hungerford testified that he took precautions to conceal the search and seizure from Hinckley because he expected that if Hinckley knew about it, he would be "bent out of shape" and would present a problem over the weekend when staff was at a minimum.94On Monday, July 27, Hungerford met with the acting warden, and they decided to contact the Federal Bureau of Investigation.95 That afternoon, Hungerford and an FBI agent seized the document and Hinckley's diary,96 and left a receipt for Hinckley indicating that "contraband" had been seized.B. AnalysisThe Supreme Court has not yet decided the extent to which convicted prisoners or pretrial detainees97 are protected by the fourth amendment.98 Courts of appeals, however, relying generally on Supreme Court precedent in related areas, have ruled that prisoners retain some remnant of fourth amendment rights consistent with the legitimate demands of prison security.99 The district court adopted this premise, and we agree. Other constitutional rights, once regarded as forfeited upon incarceration, have been recognized by the Supreme Court as surviving in some form in a prison atmosphere: "though his rights may be diminished by the needs and exigencies of the institutional environment, a prisoner is not wholly stripped of constitutional protections when he is imprisoned .... There is no iron curtain drawn between the Constitution and the prisons of this country."100 The fourth amendment by its very terms envisions an accommodation between the right to privacy and the circumstances in which that right is asserted: "analysis under the Fourth Amendment is always 'the reasonableness in all the circumstances of the particular governmental invasion of a citizen's personal security.' "101 Reasonableness in turn depends " 'on a balance between the public interest and the individual's right to personal security free from arbitrary interference.' "102 There is, therefore, no inherent conflict between the fourth amendment's requirements and the realties of institutional confinement. Rather, the preeminent value underlying the fourth amendment, the right to freedom from arbitrary interference with privacy, must and can be recognized even in a detention context. "The fourth amendment was adopted in reaction to the issuance of general warrants that gave government agents unfettered discretion to conduct searches and to seize property, thereby placing 'the liberty of every man in the hands of every petty officer.' "103 Although "(p)rison administrators ... should be accorded wide-ranging deference in the adoption and execution of policies and practices that in their judgment are needed to preserve internal order and discipline and to maintain institutional security,"104 that discretion should and must be corralled by the fourth amendment's prohibition of arbitrary invasions of privacy.Proceeding on that premise, the district court held that "the residuum of Fourth Amendment protection afforded Hinckley as a pretrial detainee exceeded that recognized by the Butner officers in their search of his cell."105 Analyzing Hinckley's right to privacy in his personal notes, the court considered both Hinckley's subjective expectation of privacy and the objective reasonableness of his interest in security from their search and seizure. The court found that Hinckley had taken the only precautions available to him to preserve the confidentiality of his papers: he folded them and placed them in a large envelope with personal letters and his attorney-client materials.106 Further, Hinckley had never been informed that his personal papers would be read. Nevertheless, his guards, on their own initiative, engaged in an "indiscriminate search and reading" of these papers.107 Objectively, the court determined that such conduct was unreasonable.108 Because the guards were not acting in accord with an established institutional practice or policy that such reading was necessary to maintain institutional or inmate security, there was no reasoned, principled decision by the prison administration entitled to deference. Instead, a serious invasion of Hinckley's right to privacy in his own papers was perpetrated by individual officers unguided by prison rules or even the instructions of their superiors.The government contends, however, that even if the routine reading of Hinckley's papers was not proper, the reading and seizure of the specific document involved in this appeal was reasonable under the circumstances because, while sorting through papers during an authorized search for contraband, Officer Meece saw words that triggered an institutional need for further investigation.109 We do not doubt that it may be entirely reasonable for individual officers to act on their own initiative to ensure internal security if they perceive circumstances requiring immediate response;110 nor do we deny that the "plain view" doctrine might authorize a seizure and further reading, if, in the course of sifting through papers, an officer noticed words that indicated a crime in planning or danger to the inmate or others.111 But the facts in this case, as found by the district court, do not fit either pattern. The district court found that the phrases in Hinckley's papers that captured the attention of Officer Meece "neither suggested a threat of criminal activity" nor implicated " 'special considerations peculiar to the penal system.' "112 Officer Meece's testimony is pivotal because it was he alone who first discovered and read the document. All subsequent readings and interest in the paper flowed from information initially provided by Meece. The only words that Meece firmly remembers having seen before he read the entire document are "prison," "life sentence," and "cooperation with the Justice Department."113 These words, as the district court found, are hardly of a nature that suggests an imminent or even remote threat to security, particularly in view of the extraordinary security measures already in place. There was thus no readily discernible reason that justifies the subsequent reading of the entire document by the individual officers.III. ADMISSIBILITY OF EVIDENCE TO REBUT THE INSANITY DEFENSEWe turn finally to the government's contention that, even if the evidence that is the subject of this appeal was obtained in violation of Hinckley's constitutional rights, its use should be permitted at trial for what the government styles a limited purpose-namely, to rebut the insanity defense on which Hinckley is expected to rely. As we noted at the outset, the government's arguments in this regard are novel; they strain logic and have no foundation in law, and we consequently reject them.114The government urges, to begin with, that the exclusionary rule applies only when the government seeks to use evidence to prove the basic elements of a crime. Reasoning broadly that because insanity is an affirmative defense, and proof of sanity is therefore not part of the prosecution's case-in-chief,115 the government asserts that illegally obtained evidence can be used generally to rebut an insanity defense without jeopardizing constitutional principles.116 The government stresses the inherently difficult nature of an insanity defense determination, and the concomitant need of the court to consider all available evidence on the issue.Although it is true that in certain limited situations the Supreme Court has allowed the use of illegally obtained evidence for purposes collateral to direct proof of guilt,117 an extension of such rulings to encompass the government's theory here would do wholesale violence to the rationale of these decisions and the underlying purposes of the fourth and fifth amendments. With respect to the fifth amendment, we cannot accept the government's contention that Miranda's deterrence rationale is adequately satisfied if the government is prohibited from using the illegally obtained evidence in its "case-in-chief" in a case of this kind. At the least, such a contention surely does not comport with reality in the world of an FBI or Secret Service agent. We are not confronted here with the typical police officer, but rather with the special concerns of highly trained agents whose job it is to prevent and investigate assassination attempts on major political figures. Such agents, we can assume, are fully aware of the critical importance of their demeanor testimony about a suspect arrested in the course of an attempted or actual assassination. And, ironically, the very broad scope of evidence that may be relevant to an insanity defense-cited by the government as a reason to dispense with Miranda's protections-will serve to enhance the possibility that any retreat from those protections will be abused. We thus find no reason for countenancing a broad exception to the Supreme Court's clearly enunciated policy against the use of tainted evidence simply because that evidence will be used to counter an insanity defense.Were we to curtail the exclusionary rule in the drastic manner the government urges, we would provide little or no deterrence of constitutional violations against defendants whose sanity is the principal issue in the case. The government would be able, under the guise of rebuttal, to use any illegally obtained evidence relevant to the principal issue in the case-insanity.The government's final argument for admission is based on a "testimony-by-proxy" theory. According to its view, if in the course of an insanity plea the defense puts forth testimony by expert witnesses on the defendant's mental state, that testimony is tantamount to the defendant taking the stand himself. Since it has been held permissible to use illegally obtained evidence to impeach testimony by the defendant, the government argues that it should also be possible to use the same testimony to rebut the expert psychiatric witnesses. In our view this theory cuts too wide a swath. Although it is indeed true that if a defendant takes the stand and testifies in a manner contradicted by illegally obtained evidence, that evidence can be used for the limited purpose of impeachment,118 there is as yet no basis in law for converting this limited exception into a general license to use illegally obtained evidence for rebuttal purposes.119 And if there were, the government does not adequately explain why it would single out the insanity defense for application of the testimony-by-proxy theory. All defense testimony is in a sense testimony by proxy, yet the government concedes that it would not seek to apply its rebuttal theory to an alibi or other affirmative defenses. We can find no reason for such a distinction.For the foregoing reasons, the portions of the district court's order herein appealed areAffirmed. 1 These are (1) attempted assassination of the President of the United States, 18 U.S.C. § 1751(c) (1976); (2) assault on a federal officer (in this case, a United States Secret Service agent), id. § 111; and (3) use of a firearm in the commission of a federal offense, id. § 924(c) 2 These are (1) attempt to kill the President, 22 D.C.Code Ann. §§ 501, 3202 (1981); (2) assault with intent to kill, id. §§ 502, 505(b), 3204; (3) assault with a dangerous weapon, id.; (4) assault on a public officer, id.; and (5) carrying a pistol without a license, id. § 3204 3 United States v. Hinckley, 525 F.Supp. 1342 (Order) (D.D.C.1981), Joint Appendix (J.App.) 354 U.S.Const. amend. V.5 U.S.Const. amend. IV. 6 See notes 114-19 and accompanying text infra 7 Other issues decided by the district court are not before us on this appeal 8 See United States v. Hinckley, 529 F.Supp. 520 at 521-22 (Amended Statement of Reasons) (D.D.C.1982), J.App. 39 9 United States v. Hinckley, 525 F.Supp. 1342 at 1352-1354 (Memorandum Opinion) (D.D.C.1981), J.App. 15-18 10 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 474-75, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 1627-28, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966); Edwards v. Arizona, 451 U.S. 477, 101 S.Ct. 1880, 1884, 68 L.Ed.2d 378 (1981) 11 Supra note 10 12 Supra note 10 13 Memorandum Opinion, supra note 9, at 1356-58, J.App. 21-24 14 Amended Statement of Reasons, supra note 8, at 521-22, J.App. 39. We note that the prosecution has a number of other sources of demeanor testimony-for example, testimony by MPD officers regarding Hinckley's demeanor during the booking process at police headquarters. We also note that, should Hinckley testify at trial about his statements or demeanor during the interim period, in a manner contradicted by the agents' observations, their otherwise suppressed testimony could be admitted for the limited purpose of impeachment. See notes 118-19 and accompanying text infra 15 Memorandum Opinion, supra note 9, at 1359, J.App. 28 16 Id. at 1361, J.App. 31 17 Id. at 1361-62, J.App. 32-33 18 Id. at 1360-63, J.App. 29-34 19 See generally Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 91 S.Ct. 2022, 29 L.Ed.2d 564 (1971); In re: Search Warrant Dated July 4, 1977, for Premises at 2125 S Street Northwest, Washington, D.C., 667 F.2d 117 at 121-122 (separate opinion of Wald, J.) (D.C.Cir.1981); S. Saltzburg, American Criminal Procedure 208-09 (1980) 20 Deposition of Donald Meece at 11 (Oct. 20, 1981) 21 This theory, sketched in the district court's Memorandum Opinion, supra note 9, at 1362-63, J.App. 33-34, is described more fully in the government's brief on appeal. Brief for Appellant 30-31 n.40 22 Memorandum Opinion, supra note 9, at 1362-63, J.App. 33-34 23 Campana Corp. v. Harrison,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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