Opinion by
Pennsylvania decisions have long recognized that in criminal trials the prosecution is not absolutely bound
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to call to the stand all available and material eyewitnesses.
Commonwealth ex rel. Sprangle v. Maroney,
trial, unless the defense is able or should have been able to procure the witness unaided.
Commonwealth v. Giacobbe,
Appellant, Melvin Carter, was indicted for felonL ous possession and . sale of narcotic drugs in January, 1966. At a jury trial in February, 1966 the prosecution’s principal witness was Norton Wilder, .a Philadelphia policeman. Wilder testified that, while acting as undercover agent on October 18, 1965, he was introduced to Carter by an informer and that appellant sold to the informer in Wilder’s presence and for Wilder $86 worth of heroin. LaForrest Russell, an agent for the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, testified that, while sitting in a car parked a half block away, he observed Wilder, appellant and the informer in conversation at the time and place of the alleged sale. Russell stated that although he was unable to see the narcotics transaction, he did recognize Carter. Between October 18, 1965 and appellant’s arrest on December 15, 1965 neither Wilder nor Russell had further contact with appellant as far as the record shows. Thus the identification of appellant by both witnesses was based solely on a single meeting.
During the cross-examination of Officer Wilder, appellant’s attorney asked him to disclose the name of the informant. An objection to this question by the prosecutor was sustained by the trial judge. Following the close of the Commonwealth’s case, the defense moved to have the case dismissed because of the failure of the Commonwealth to provide the defense with the informant’s name. This motion was denied.
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The defense consisted solely of appellant’s claim of mistaken identity, i.e., that Carter had not sold narcotics during the time in question and had never met Officer Wilder prior to his arrest. The trial court called the attention of the jurors to the “unexplained absence of a material witness” and charged them that they might “infer that if he were called and did take the witness stand that he would not testify in such a manner as to help the Commonwealth’s case.” The jury, however, returned a verdict of guilty and appellant was sentenced to five to ten years imprisonment. After the filing and denial of post-trial motions, the conviction was appealed to the Superior Court. That court, with Judges Jacobs and Hoffman dissenting, affirmed the conviction,
Commonwealth v. Carter,
In his brief on appeal, appellant relies chiefly on the rule, stated above, requiring the prosecution to provide the defense with the names and whereabouts of all materia] eyewitnesses and on
Roviaro v. United States,
It is readily apparent that the first two of the above circumstances in Roviaro make the testimony of the informer there more material to the defense in that case than in the instant one and that the latter two make the testimony less so. Thus a close analytical comparison of the facts of each case seems unlikely to yield a clear suggestion as to how the instant case should be decided were Roviaro controlling law. Far more significant to our consideration, we believe, are *59 the following statements by the Supreme Court of the United States of the principle under which Roviwro was decided: “A further limitation on the applicability of the privilege arises from the fundamental requirements of fairness. Where the disclosure of an informer’s identity, or of the contents of his communication, is relevant and helpful to the defense of an accused, or is essential to a fair determination of a cause, the privilege must give way. In these situations the trial court may require disclosure and, if the Government withholds the information, dismiss the action. . . .
“We believe that no fixed rule with respect to disclosure is justifiable. The problem is one that calls for balancing the public interest in protecting the flow of information against the individual’s right to prepare his defense. Whether a proper balance renders nondisclosure erroneous must depend on the particular circumstances of each case, taking into consideration the crime charged, the possible defenses, the possible significance of the informer’s testimony, and other relevant factors.” (Footnotes omitted.)
Those aspects of the
Roviwro
test which concern the value of the informer’s testimony to the accused point clearly toward reversal of the appellant’s conviction. Thus, it may hardly be gainsaid that disclosure of the informer’s identity would be “relevant and helpful to the defense.” Similarly, in light of the limited opportunity which Officer Wilder and Agent Russell had to observe the narcotics seller in the transaction alleged and in light of the questionable reliability of such identification evidence based on a single observation,
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cf.
United States v. Wade,
In an able and exceptionally literate brief, the Commonwealth seeks to distinguish Boviaro and to show that law enforcement experience, especially that since the decision in Boviaro in 1957, justifies an extremely restrictive reading of the case and of our established Pennsylvania rule. We shall consider each of these arguments in some detail.
In our view the only significant distinction between
Boviaro
and the instant case upon which the Commonwealth relies- is the fact that in the instant case the informer was not the only eyewitness to the entire transaction whereas in
Boviaro
he was. The Commonwealth argues that the significance of this distinction is substantiated by three lower federal court decisions interpreting
Boviaro: United States v. Coke,
The other distinctions relied upon by the Commonwealth are: (1) that Carter, unlike Roviaro, failed to show what the relevance and helpfulness of the informer’s testimony would be; (2) that “the issue of entrapment, so important to the holding of Roviaro was never at issue here”; and (3) that any prejudice caused to Carter by the failure to disclose the informer’s identity was cured by the jury charge concerning the absence of a material witness, whereas no such charge was given in Roviaro. As to the first asserted distinction, we believe that the Commonwealth is simply wrong in its conclusion that informer’s testimony in Carter need not be deemed as relevant and helpful as that in Roviaro. Indeed, since Carter took the witness stand and established the nature of his defense, whereas the nature of Roviaro’s defense was left open to conjecture, we believe that the relevance and helpfulness of the testimony sought by appellant was clearer than that sought by Roviaro. The fact that entrapment was a possible defense in Roviaro and not here hardly seems to us to have a bearing on the materiality of the informer’s testimony; the Commonwealth’s brief fails to explain why a defense of entrapment, as opposed to one of mistaken identity, more clearly requires the revelation of all available and material eyewitness testimony. Finally, in our judgment, the jury instruction here falls pitifully short of being an adequate substitute for the testimony of the informer. This conclusion is strongly supported by the absence from similar federal and state decisions of any suggestion that the prejudice of nondisclosure of an informer may be so cured. For, given the widespread recognition by courts that nondisclosure of the identity of informers is of immense value to law enforcement authorities in the successful prosecution of many *63 types of crime, we have little doubt that substitution of a corrective instruction for nondisclosure would long ago have become standard practice in cases like the instant one if indeed it comported with requirements of fair trial.
More troublesome than the Commonwealth’s attempt to distinguish Roviaro from the instant case, is its policy argument in favor of the maximum restriction of the disclosure rule. Relying in part on the report of President Johnson’s Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, “The Challenge of Crime in a Free Society”, the Commonwealth insists that the use of informers is a virtually indispensable adjunct to the enforcement of the narcotics laws. This, it is argued, is because narcotics offenses are “consensual”, i.e., crimes in which the “victim” is a willing participant, and in which, therefore, no person is likely to initiate a police investigation as is the victim or the family of a victim of murder, rape or robbery. Thus it is only someone involved in the narcotics traffic, as an addict or otherwise, who is able to provide enforcement authorities the initial information without which they would be helpless. Disclosure of the identity of an informer, not only terminates his usefulness to police, the Commonwealth continues, but also inhibits other individuals from becoming informers, because of the retribution often visited on disclosed informers by their criminal associates. This fact combined with the other difficulties of enforcing the narcotics laws, concludes the Commonwealth, requires a broader privilege to withhold disclosure of an eyewitness informer in narcotics trials than would normally obtain.
The defect in this argument of the Commonwealth is that it overlooks one fact of overwhelming importance. That fact is the complete lack of justification for reducing the stringency of fair-trial safeguards for *64 certain defendants merely because of the type of crime with which they are charged. Because of this lack of justification, we find it impossible to accept the contention that the peculiar problems surrounding enforcement of the narcotics laws should play a part in our determination of the scope of the prosecution’s duty to disclose to the defense the identity of material eyewitnesses having knowledge of facts crucial to guilt or innocence. 8
Finally, it is- urged that disclosure should not be required because it will in no event aid the defendant. This is true, contends the Commonwealth, bécause informers themselves are invariably addicts or persons with provable criminal backgrounds, and thus their testimony can be completely discredited before the trier of fact. We do not believe, however, that our notions of jurisprudence permit the prosecution to be the arbiter of the value to the defense of the testimony of a prospective witness. Under an adversary system of justice, each side is deemed uniquely suited to determine whether the testimony of a particular witness will advance its cause.
Judgment reversed and a new trial granted.
Notes
Accord,
Commonwealth v. Garnett,
Accord,
Commonwealth v. Cramer,
supra note 1; 25 Temple L.Q. 344, 347 (1952). Compare
Commonwealth v. Drew,
Although under the laws of many jurisdictions the prosecu-, tion is in certain circumstances privileged to refrain from disclosing the identity of its informers in criminal trials, see Annot.,
Roviaro
involved the reversal of a conviction under federal law; the decision was an exercise of the United States Supreme Court’s supervisory power over federal courts, rather than a constitutional ruling. See
McCray v. Illinois,
The adherence of the Supreme Court to this formulation of the rule was substantially reaffirmed in
McCray
v.
Illinois,
In addition, the nondisclosure ruling in
Golee
was based in part on the defense’s procedural default. It should also be noted
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that the appellant’s conviction in
Oohe
was reversed and hence its discussion of the nondisclosure rule is dictum. In
United States v. Russ,
Writing for the majority of the California Supreme Court, which has decided a relatively large number of disclosure cases, Chief Justice Traynor indicated that the mere fact that an alleged narcotics sale was made to the informer is sufficient to require disclosure of his identity,
People v. McShann,
Compare
McCray v. Illinois,
