Appellant, a youthful indigent, was convicted of robbing a District of Columbia bank in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a). This case has been here before, 1 and we have also previously considered the conviction of the co-defendant with whom he was tried. 2 Before us now are appellant’s contentions that illegally obtained oral and written confessions, as well as certain illegally obtained physical evidence, were used against him at his trial.
I.
According to police testimony, appellant was arrested at about 9:00 P.M. on a weekday evening, September 26, 1961, inside a motion picture theater in Fort Worth, where he was sitting with his wife and infant child. The arresting officers — two F.B.I. agents assisted by two local policemen — informed him of the outstanding federal arrest warrant under which they were acting, and he readily admitted he was the man sought. 3 Immediately after the arrest, the agents put appellant and his wife and child in a police vehicle and drove to the home of her mother where the wife and child were left. Continuing on in the car, the officers drove a few blocks *965 and then parked on the street under a street lamp. The officers gave appellant their own substitute for a magistrate’s advice as to his rights, and proceeded to interview him concerning the crime for which the warrant had issued. Within a few minutes, according to police testimony given at trial, appellant confessed to the crime in general terms.
During this interview, according to the arresting officers, appellant voluntarily stated to them that there was a sum of money at his parents’ home, the proceeds of the robbery. Immediately thereafter the four officers took appellant to that house where the group entered two bedrooms. While the police held him by the belt, according to their own testimony, appellant uncovered from their hidden caches a number of items, including $2,083.00 in currency and a toy pistol. The seized items were taken by the officers and used against appellant at trial; a number of bills were found to have serial numbers identical with money stolen from the bank, and the toy gun was also connected to the holdup.
After the recovery of the evidence in appellant’s parents’ home, the F.B.I. agents brought him to local police headquarters. There, according to the agents, he voluntarily signed an extensive written confession covering the crime in some detail. Appellant was not brought before a magistrate until the next afternoon.
As noted in our prior opinion: “The Government’s and appellant’s versions of the relevant facts — as developed in the pre-trial documents and trial testimony —were diametrically opposed. * * * Appellant * * * testified that he was ‘grabbed ... in the back of [his] pants,’ threatened with physical violence, slapped in the face when he refused to confess orally, and tricked or beaten into signing the written confession ; moreover, he denied consenting to the ‘search’ of his mother’s home.”
II.
The law requires an arresting officer to bring an accused before a magistrate “as quickly as possible.” Mallory v. United States,
*966
A basic purpose of Rule 5(a), F.R.Cr.P., is to make certain that a person arrested is advised
by a judicial officer
of his constitutional right to counsel and of his privilege against self-incrimination “without unnecessary delay.” If the police detain an accused “until he ha[s] confessed,” and only then, “when any judicial caution ha[s] lost its purpose, * * * arraign him,” Mallory v. United States,
supra,
III.
Applying this standard, appellant’s first confession must be excluded. Appellant’s statements were not spontaneous admissions made immediately on arrival at a police station, while awaiting booking. Compare Naples v. United States,
supra,
Ordinarily, arrest is the culmination, ,iiot the beginning, of police investigation. Under our adversary system confessions, including those obtained after the accused has been advised of his rights by the police, are not the normal proofs upon which convictions are obtained.
6
Secret extra-judicial examination to produce damning evidence cannot be allowed to render useless or unavailing the right to; “a trial ‘in an orderly courtroom, presided over by a judge, open to the public, and protected by all the procedural safeguards of the law.’ ” Massiah v. United States,
supra,
The physical evidence recovered from the home of appellant’s parents must also be excluded. After arrest, an accused is not to be taken by the police to some location where he can be used to develop Government evidence of guilt. This court has so decided with respect to using an accused to re-enact the crime. Naples v. United States,
supra;
Watson v. United States,
The Government suggests that prompt recovery of the money was necessary to prevent its being removed by appellant’s wife, who knew of his arrest. This argument goes to the reasonableness of an immediate search of the parents’ home, without a warrant, by one or more of the four arresting officers, or other available police. But it could not authorize delaying appellant’s presentment to take him to that home, and to use him to recover the items from their hidden storage places in the bedrooms. The currency and toy pistol were thus things “of evidentiary value which the public authorities have caused [the accused] to yield to them during illegal detention.” Bynum v. United States,
The physical objects are excludable for another reason. The police were able to find the objects only because the appellant, during a period of illegal delay, told them of the location of the evidence. Like the narcotics in Wong Sun v. United States,
The written confession must also be excluded. Bringing appellant to a detective office at the local police headquarters for him to give a statement of the crime, instead of bringing him to a magistrate for presentment, is exactly what
Mallory
condemned.
IV.
The Government suggests that appellant consented to the police delay and to the securing of the evidence from his parents’ home. But, as this court said in Judd v. United States,
“ * * * [S]ueh a waiver or consent must be proved by clear and positive testimony, and it must be established that there was no duress or coercion, actual or implied. Amos v. United States,255 U.S. 313 ,41 S.Ct. 266 ,65 L.Ed. 654 ; United States v. Kelih, D.C.S.D.Ill.1921,272 F. 484 . The Government must show a consent that is ‘unequivocal and specific’ (Karwicki v. United States, 4 Cir.,55 F.2d 225 , 226), ‘freely and intelligently given.’ Kovach v. United States, 6 Cir.,53 F.2d 639 . Thus ‘invitations’ to enter one’s house, extended to armed officers of the law who demand entrance, are usually to be considered as invitations secured by force. United States v. Marquette, D.C.N.D.Cal. 1920,271 F. 120 . A like view has *968 been taken where an officer displays his badge and declares that he has come to make a search (United States v. Slusser, D.C.S.D.Ohio 1921,270 F. 818 ), even where the householder replies ‘AH right.’ United States v. Marra, D.C.W.D.N.Y.1930,40 F.2d 271 . A finding of consent in such circumstances has been held to be ‘unfounded in reason’. Herter v. United States, 9 Cir.,27 F.2d 521 . Intimidation and duress are almost necessarily implicit in such situations ; if the Government alleges their absence, it has the burden of convincing the court that they are in fact absent.
“This burden on the Government is particularly heavy in cases where the individual is under arrest. Nonresistance to the orders or suggestions of the police is not infrequent in such a situation; true consent, free of fear or pressure, is not so readily to be found. United States v. Novero, D.C.,58 F.Supp. 275 ; United States v. McCunn, D.C.S.D.N.Y.1930,40 F.2d 295 . In fact, the circumstances of the defendant’s plight may be such as to make any claim of actual consent ‘not in accordance with human experience’, and explainable only on the basis of ‘physical or moral compulsion’. Ray v. United States, 5 Cir.,84 F.2d 654 , 656.”
Moreover, when dealing with an arrested person “during a period of unnecessary delay within the meaning of Rule 5,” courts look with great suspicion on “evidence that a so-called ‘willing’ but unwarned and uncounselled accused” consented voluntarily to cooperate with the police. Naples v. United States,
supra,
Here the evidence of consent is both weak and contradicted. Whether, absent the opportunity for independent legal advice, there can ever be said to be a truly voluntary and intelligent waiver of the right to prompt presentment after arrest — a right basic to our system of criminal justice — the evidence before us falls far short of establishing that any such waiver occurred here.
V.
There is a separate and independent ground which requires reversal here. During appellant Greenwell’s trial with his co-defendant Seals, Seals’ confession was admitted in evidence. On Seals’ separate appeal this court held that “it was error to allow [Seals’] confession, obtained as a result of the unnecessary delay in arraigning him, to be put before the jury.” Seals v. United States,
supra
Note 2,
It is true that, at trial, Green-well’s name was deleted from his co-defendant’s confession, and “named person” or the like substituted, as the strict rule of our cases requires wherever deletion is possible. Kramer v. United States,
We conclude that the admission of Seals’ confession, since it was improper as to Seals, justifies the retrial of his co-defendant, Greenwell, in a proceeding in which this confession does not reach the jury,
8
Jones, Short and Jones v. United States,
supra
Note 5, slip opinion pp. 7-10. See Anderson v. United States,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Greenwell
v.
United
States,
115
U.S.App.D.C. 44,
The District Court, on remand, has decided that the error in denying the subpoenas was harmless. Thus we have on this proceeding, subsequent to remand, only the original record. As we decide this case on other grounds, including the grounds hitherto reserved, we do not reach the question of the prejudice caused by failing to grant the subpoenas.
. Seals v. United States,
. Identity being established, the police had no further occasion to determine if he was the man sought, compare Heideman v. United States,
. See Jackson v. Denno,
. After arrest, “[tike
newt step
in the proceeding is to arraign the arrested person before a judicial officer
as quielcly as possible
so that he may be advised of his rights and so that the issue of probable cause may be
promptly
determined.” Mallory v. United States,
supra,
. “The Constitution does not contemplate that prisoners shall be dependent upon government agents for legal counsel and aid, however conscientious and able those agents may be.” Von Moltke v. Gillies,
. The Government cites Delli Paoli v. United States,
. The Government claims that the effect of Seals’ confession on Greenwell was harmless, since even without it there was ample evidence against him. But “[w]e are not concerned here with whether there was sufficient evidence on which the [appellant] could have been convicted without the evidence complained of. The question is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the evidence complained of might have contributed to the conviction.” Fahy v. Connecticut,
