The appellant was indicted upon ten counts charging him with refusing to answer questions propounded to him at a hearing of a subcommittee of the Committee on Un-American Activities of the House of Representatives in violation of Title 2 U.S.C.A. § 192. 1 He waived a jury and upon trial by the court was found guilty upon five of the ten counts. He was sentenced to a term of six months upon each count, the sen-fences to be concurrent, and to pay a fine of $250. The imprisonment sentences were suspended and the defendant-appellant was placed on probation.
The hearing out of which these charges arose was held at Seattle, Washington, in the month of June, 1954. The indictment listed in the separate counts questions which Jackins refused to answer. The numbers of the counts and the questions listed in each count, with the verdict on each, appear in the margin. 2
The appeal, insofar as it relates to the finding of guilty on counts 2, 8 and 10 of the indictment, may be quickly disposed of. Since the decision in the court below, the Supreme Court in Quinn v. United States,
The question listed in count 1 was “Will you tell the Committee please, briefly, what your employment record lias been since 1935.” In refusing to .answer that question, as in the case of all the other questions here involved, Jackins invoked his privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment. Jackins was entitled to that privilege if this particular question was “asked in a setting of possible incrimination,” Emspak v. United States, supra,
At the same hearing of the subcommittee at which these questions were .asked of Jackins, other witnesses claiming to be former Communists had named him as having been a “full time functionary” within the Communist Party, identifying him as a “youth leader” and as an organizer of the University branch of the Party. They had testified that he had been expelled from certain labor unions because he was a Communist Party member. It appears from the record also that about 1948, an UnAmerican Activities Committee of the Washington State legislature, known as the Canwell Committee, had received testimony identifying Jackins as a member of the Communist Party. The various witnesses, both before this subcommittee and before the Canwell Committee, had listed Jackins along with other alleged Communists, some of whom had been prosecuted under the Smith Act, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2385.
It is clear that when this question was asked Jackins he was put on notice that he also might be prosecuted under the Smith Act. As stated in Blau v. United States,
To understand the setting in which the question listed in count 9 was asked requires further explanation of the course of the examination as it proceeded before the subcommittee. This question was: “But what is the name of the group” ? 4 It came near the end of the *408 committee’s examination of Jackins. Following his refusal to answer the question as to his employment record since 1935, he also refused on the same ground to state how he was employed in 1948. To the question as to how he was now employed he replied that he was employed as a personal counsellor; that this he had done since approximately 1950 or 1951. He declined to answer questions as to whether he had held positions in certain labor unions in 1948. He declined to answer any question as to membership in the Communist Party. He declined to answer questions as to whether he had been expelled from certain labor unions. He declined to answer any question as to the truth or falsity of testimony of previous witnesses before the committee who had identified him as an active member of the Communist Party.
The committee’s counsel then announced that he had no further questions to ask the witness, and the same thing was indicated by other members of the Committee, whereupon Congressman Clardy took up the questioning. Referring to the witness’ present occupation of “personal counseling” he inquired what that meant and thereupon Jackins gave an extended answer as to the type of work in which he was presently engaged. He said he was acting as an adviser to persons who were suffering emotional distress. 5 Following-that answer the Congressman inquired: “What do you mean by ‘we’? Is this, something originated by the Communist Party as part of its program?” 6 Jackins refused to answer invoking the-same Fifth Amendment privilege. After he had been directed and again refused to answer this question the Congressman asked the question listed in count 8 as follows: “Who are the other-people, then, when you use that word ‘we’ that are associated with you in this movement?” The witness declined to answer for the same reason previously stated. The Congressman then inquired, “Very well, are those that you associate with the persons that have been identified in this proceeding as-members of the Communist Party?”' This also Jackins declined to answer,, and he declined to answer a final question of this Congressman as to the names of the persons with whom he was associated in this activity. Then Congressman Doyle followed with the question which contained the portions specified in count 9. This was: “I have two questions. You are the one that volunteered that your present occupation was working with a group, and in my book that is a waiver of your privilege under the Fifth Amendment. But what is the name of the group?” What we must now determine is wheth *409 -er Jackins’ refusal to answer that question was within the privilege that he claimed.
The Government contends first that the question was a perfectly harmless one and that under the circumstances the witness could have no reasonable ■cause to apprehend danger from a direct answer thereto. In the second place, the Government argues, when Jackins described at length the work in which he was engaged, he waived any right to refuse to answer questions that might thereafter be propounded to him with respect to that occupation or the group to which he there referred; in short, that the answer set forth in footnote 5, supra, constituted a waiver.
It is apparent that the Government’s contention fails to take note of the fact that immediately following the fairly long explanation of his oecupation, the whole setting in which the further questions were made was completely changed by those which followed. The first one of these was “What do you mean by ‘we’? Is this something originated by the Communist Party as part of its program?” The next one was “Are those that you associate with the persons that have been identified in this proceeding as members of the Communist Party?” Finally came the assertion of Mr. Doyle in the first part of the question here involved. “You are the one that volunteered that your present occupation was working with a group, and in my book that is a waiver of your privilege under the Fifth Amendment.” It is clear that by these statements on behalf of the Committee Jackins was forthwith put on notice or given reason to fear that the committee or the Government proposed to delve into the question whether or not the enterprise in which Jackins said he was employed was a branch of the Communist Party and that he was working therein with other members of the Party. Certain it is that this long answer with respect to his occupation did not constitute a waiver for the answer was in no sense or manner incriminating; it contained no admission of guilt; it furnished no proof of crime and so could not be a waiver for the reasons made clear in Arndstein v. McCarthy,
When a witness called before a committee or other hearing body, is told by his interrogators that he is suspected of wrongdoing, or of association with wrongdoers, those accusations are a part of the setting in which must be judged
*410
his right to claim the privilege against self-incrimination. This is abundantly clear from the decisions. In Hoffman v. United States,
In Aiuppa v. United States, 6 Cir.,
All of these cases demonstrate that the action of the committee mem; bers in indicating through their questions the apparent purpose to prove the group referred to by Jackins to be a part of the Communist Party or composed of Communist members justified the witness in fearing that the furnishing of the name of the group as called for by the question in count 9 would tend to incriminate him.
As stated in Hoffman v. United States, supra, “To sustain the privilege, it need only be evident from the implications of the question; in the setting in which it is asked, that a responsive answer to the question or an explanation of why it cannot be answered might be dangerous because injurious disclosure could result.” As that case held, Jackins’ claim of privilege must be sustained since in the setting here described “it was not
‘perfectly
clear, from a careful consideration of all the circumstances in the case, that the witness [was] mistaken, and that the answer(s)
cannot possibly
have such tendency’ to incriminate.”
The judgment is reversed with directions to enter a judgment of acquittal upon all counts.
. See footnote 2, supra.
Notes
. “§ 192. Refusal of witness to testify or produce papers. Every person who having been summoned as a witness by the authority of either House of Congress to give testimony or to produce papers upon any matter under inquiry before either House, or any joint committee established by a joint or concurrent resolution of the two Houses of Congress, or any committee of either House of Congress, willfully makes default, or who, having appeared, refuses to answer any question pertinent to the question under inquiry, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not more than $1,000 nor less than $100 and imprisonment in a common jail for not less than one month nor more than twelve months. As amended June 22, 1938, c. 594, 52 Stat. 942.”
. Count I. Will you tell the committee please, briefly, what your employment record has been since 1935. Guilty.
Count II. How were you employed in 1948. Guilty.
Count III. Did you hold an official position in 1948 or at any time prior thereto, in Local 46 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. Not Guilty.
Oount IV. Were you expelled from Local 46 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers in 1948. Not Guilty.
Oount V. Were you also expelled as business agent of the Building Service Employees’ Union sometime prior to 1948. Not Guilty.
Oount VI. Were you at any time expelled from Lodge 751 of the Aero Mechanics Union. Not Guilty.
Oount VII. Is this (work of personal counseling) something originated by the Communist Party as part of its program. Not Guilty.
Oount VIII. Who are the other people, then, when you used the word “we” that are associated with you in this movement. Guilty.
Oount IX. But what is the name of the group. Guilty.
Oount X. Does the group that you referred to have an office with you in the same office that you work in. Guilty.
. In the Specification of Errors, tlie appellant specified error in his conviction on counts 2 and 8 “for failure of the committee to direct the appellant to answer the question.” Although the specifiea.tion did not refer to the question listed in count 10, we notice the matter as a plain error under Criminal Rule 52(b), 18 U.S.C.A.
. In answering a previous question as to the work in which Jackins was presently engaged, he had used the words “a *408 group of us” who had become interested in emotional problems of individuals. The question referred to the “group” thus mentioned.
. This answer was: “I am working with a very new approach to the problem of individual human beings. We have discovered, a group of us, that apparently anything wrong with an individual human — any limitation on his ability, his enjoyment of life, his ability to be intelligent in any situation — is purely and solely the result of the experiences of hurt which he has endured, including emotional distress, quite as important as experiences of physical pain; that anything less than rational or able about an individual human being can be traced as the literal expression of experiences when he has been hurt, beginning very early and accumulating, and that it is possible in a teamwork relationship for one person’s intelligence as a counselor to be linked with that of the person who is enduring the difficulty or the limitation or the emotional problem — to go back in memory, in effect and, by repetitively seeking out these experiences of hurt, discharging the stored up painful emotion; and in assisting the person to think them through over and over and over again, it is possible to free an individual from the inhibiting effects of the distresses, which have stored up on him during his life. Now this is a very exciting field; the possibilities implicit in it— and we are pioneering in the group with which I work — are amazing.”
. This was the question specified in count
. At page 359 of
