Opinion by
Robert Dulaney, convicted by a jury of murder in the second degree, appeals from the judgment of sentence of four to fifteen years imprisonment.
The prosecution arose from the fatal stabbing of Leroy Johnson about midnight on a public street in Philadelphia. At trial, the Commonwealth established through the testimony of eyewitnesses that Dulaney and Johnson initially engaged in a verbal argument in a bar; that they then parted and went their separate ways but fortuitously met again a few blocks away where the argument was renewed (this time more heatedly) ; that Dulaney drew a knife and inflicted the fatal stab wound in Johnson’s chest.
The Commonwealth also introduced the testimony of two police officers who stated that following the stabbing they attempted to gain custody of Dulaney by effectuating a voluntary surrender; that twice his parents notified them that Dulaney would submit to arrest at their home but in these instances he failed to appear; that on the third such arranged date, three days after the stabbing, Dulaney was present and taken into custody.
The arresting officers also testified that at the time of the arrest, Dulaney appeared “glassey-eyed” and complained “of not feeling too good” so they escorted him to the Philadelphia General Hospital where a doctor examined him and informed the officers Dulaney was under the influence of narcotics.
Dulaney was then taken to police headquarters where he was immediately given notice of his constitu
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tional rights as required by
Miranda v. Arizona,
Testifying in his own defense at trial, Dulaney said he was a drug addict and Johnson was the collecting agent and strong arm man for a local drug supplier; that the argument which precipitated the stabbing involved a debt Dulaney owed for drugs and he drew the knife only after Johnson threatened him and reached for a gun. During cross-examination the district attorney asked Dulaney if he “acted out of fear or, if you Avant to call it self-defense” why he hadn’t so told the police when he was questioned after his arrest. Subsequently, in his closing argument to the jury the district attorney in part said the folloAving: “Now, I ask you, junkie or no junkie, if you had killed a man in self-defense and an officer, a detective in Homicide Division, and you knew you had been apprehended and this was it, asked you explain the murder of Leroy Johnson, what would you say? What would you say? You’d say ‘Maybe I did it. I did it, but listen, I did it because I was afraid of him. He had a gun .... Honest, Detective, I didn’t mean to kill him. I wouldn’t have killed him, but I was scared . . . .’ You wouldn’t say ‘I stabbed him’ and leave it at that. If there was a reason you stabbed him, you’d want the detective to know from the very, very beginning .... But the first thing you do once the police finally apprehended you and asked, you explain the murder, boy they couldn’t *48 get me to stop talking if they said explain the murder and I had murdered somebody in self-defense, they couldn’t shut me up until I told them every ramification of why I was afraid of him, what abad guy he was, how he was an enforcer for a dope ring. They couldn’t shut me up until I told all that. But all this defendant sand is CI stabbed him’ and we didn’t hear the story of self-defense until five months later. You think about that.” (Emphasis supplied.)
We rule that under the circumstances, the district attorney’s argument commenting upon Dulaney’s exercise of his constitutional right to remain silent when questioned by the police and urging the jury to draw an adverse inference from his exercise of this right constituted prejudicial error and mandates a new trial. We reject the Commonwealth’s position that having waived his right to remain silent in the beginning of the interrogation by admitting the stabbing, Dulaney was then foreclosed from ever asserting the right again. As aptly stated in
Miranda v. Arizona,
supra, “If the individual indicates in any manner, at any time prior to or during questioning, that he wishes to remain silent, the interrogation must cease .... [A]ny statement taken after the person invokes his privilege cannot be other than the product of compulsion, subtle or otherwise.”
The instant situation is distinctly different from that reviewed in
Commonwealth v. Camm,
It must be stressed that we deal here not with the case of a full or detailed statement given to the police, only to be directly contradicted by the accused’s in-court testimony. Instead, we are concerned with the bare admission of perpetration of the physical act with no elaboration whatsoever as to the circumstances. To refuse to present his defense to the police was not only a constitutional right of the accused, but indeed probably an advisable course to take. For the Commonwealth. to use this fair assertion of a constitutional right as an admission of guilt was to fly in the face of the Fifth Amendment and the judicial decisions in execution thereof. See and compare,
Hunt v. Cox,
Judgment reversed and a new trial is ordered.
Notes
See also
United States ex rel. Young v. Follette,
