Early in the morning of September 20, 1980, two men accosted Deborah Carter as she entered her mother’s apartment building in Chicago. They put a knife to her neck, forced her inside, ripped off her wedding rings and gold chains, tied and gagged her with her own clothing, raped her repeatedly over the course of two hours, and after pummeling her with their fists delivered one brutal kick before fleeing. Six days later Deborah Carter, her husband O’Neal Carter, Robert Rockymore (godfather to their children), and Allen Hudson (a friend), visited the Toast of the Town Tavern while searching for the thugs. Deborah Carter espied Harold Wilson and told Hudson that Wilson was one of the assailants. Hudson, an off-duty deputy sheriff, pulled his gun, flashed his badge, and told Wilson to step outside. Wilson accompanied Hudson, Rockymore, and O’Neal Carter to a vacant lot next to the tavern.
While Hudson stood by, O’Neal Carter angrily questioned Wilson. Friends of the Carters arrived from the tavern; the crowd became ugly. Hudson searched Wilson and found a gun in his boot. He turned it over to Rockymore or O’Neal Carter and left to call the police. Although Wilson denied raping Deborah Carter, by the time the police arrived he had named Anthony Dixon as the “other guy”. Naming one’s accomplice while denying a role does not sit
*380
well with juries; Wilson was convicted of rape, deviate sexual assault, and armed robbery. He got 40 years. The appellate court affirmed,
People v. Wilson,
All agree that Hudson prevented Wilson from leaving, that neither Hudson nor anyone else delivered Miranda warnings, and that Hudson gave a gun to either O’Neal Carter or Rockymore. Here agreement ends. At a pretrial hearing, witnesses for the state testified that although the encounter was heated, no threats were made and or force applied. Wilson and his girlfriend testified that he was struck and threatened, and that when he denied raping Deborah Carter or knowing a “Greg”, he was told that he had better start naming his friends. Then, he says, he rattled off the names of several friends, including Tony Dixon. Wilson’s girlfriend ran to fetch his sister, who testified that when she arrived Wilson was lying on the ground surrounded by people hurling questions. Officer Dubois, who took Wilson into custody of the police, testified that when he arrived Wilson was struggling with two men.
At the stationhouse, Dubois gave Wilson Miranda warnings and the two had a brief interchange, no more than five minutes. Wilson remained silent in the face of the accusation that he had raped Deborah Carter. Once again, however, Wilson gave Dixon’s name. Dubois said that “I was interested in knowing the party that was involved with him”, to which Wilson “said Tony was involved”. Dubois asked for the full name; Wilson replied “Anthony Dixon”. Later that day Wilson spoke with Assistant State’s Attorney Gainer. After a fresh set of Miranda warnings, Wilson told Gainer that in the vacant lot he had identified “Tony” as his partner.
Prudently, the prosecutor did not use at trial the statements Wilson made outside the tavern. Officer Dubois testified to Wilson’s identification of Anthony Dixon as his confederate. Gainer did not testify, but the jury was given a stipulation that if called Gainer would have testified “that [Wilson] admitted telling the men who held him ... at the lounge that the ‘other guy’ was Tony Dixon and that he referred to Dixon as his partner.”
The trial judge declined to suppress the statements to Dubois and Gainer, concluding that both were recaps of statements in the vacant lot that were voluntary and, because given in response to private rather than official questioning, not barred by Miranda. The conclusion that O’Neal Carter rather than Hudson did the questioning is one of historical fact, binding under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The judge did not, however, make explicit findings on other disputed matters, such as whether anyone hit or threatened Wilson. As the appellate court described the findings, the trial judge concluded
that the statements made by [Wilson] were neither involuntarily made nor the product of a police-initiated or abetted interrogation and that the complainant’s husband was not acting as an agent of the State in questioning [Wilson].
Although the Constitution applies only to governmental action, making
Miranda
irrelevant to private questioning, the district court held (and we agree) that the encounter in the vacant lot was not private. Hudson, a state actor, arrested Wilson in the name of Illinois, using his gun and badge, and held Wilson against his will. Police may not avoid
Miranda
by delegating the questioning to the victims of the crime or their relatives. Truly private questioning remains private even though it takes place in a jail and the police know that the relative may persuade the suspect
*381
to say something.
United States ex rel. Church v. DeRobertis,
After
Oregon v. Elstad,
First in line stands a jurisdictional question. A person seeking a writ of habeas corpus must obtain a certificate of probable cause in order to appeal from a district court to the court of appeals. 28 U.S.C. § 2253. The certificate is a condition of the court’s jurisdiction.
Joyner v. Parkinson,
Consents under § 636(c)(4) are sufficiently rare that no court has decided whether the petitioner needs a CPC to appeal from magistrate to district judge. We might say that to prevent the “same manner” language from spawning hundreds of nice questions, parties must proceed in
exactly
the same way as on an appeal to the court of appeals; “manner” in § 636(c)(4) incorporates at least some jurisdictional filing rules, because nothing else sets the time limit for filing a notice of appeal from the magistrate’s decision. Although adjustments must be made (the Rules of Appel
*382
late Procedure call for papers to be filed with the clerk of the court of appeals, an insane “manner” for a case under § 636(c)(4)), these should be confined to trivia. See
Adams v. Heckler,
We need not decide. Section 2253 does not set a time limit on obtaining a CPC.
*
Judge Duff issued one after the state flagged the question in its appellate brief. Although this “retroactively” creates jurisdiction, a retroactive effect is not itself sufficient to spoil the broth if, by the time the court decides, jurisdiction has been securely established.
Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain,
— U.S. -,
The only impediment to the belated CPC is that the notice of appeal transferred the case to this court, potentially blocking the district judge from taking steps of any kind.
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.,
Two more preliminary matters: what did the magistrate find?, what is our standard of review? Although Judge Duff posed the question whether the statements to the police and the prosecutor were voluntary, whether the underlying statement was voluntary has independent significance. If the replies to O’Neal Carter’s questions were coerced, the state faces a higher burden than it would if the only problem with the initial questions is Hudson’s failure to deliver
Miranda
warnings. The state judge found the answers voluntary, a disposition the appellate court accepted after deferential review.
Miller v. Fenton,
We held in
United States v. Hawkins,
Sections 636(c)(4) and (5) provide for initial decision by a magistrate, appeal as of right to the district judge, and discretionary review in the court of appeals. The district judge takes the place of the court of appeals. If
de novo
review on voluntariness matters is appropriate, the district court provides that review. We have the case much as the Supreme Court does on certiorari. After two courts have given a fact-bound question close examination, the Supreme Court’s review is deferential. E.g.,
Burger v. Kemp,
The magistrate’s conclusion that the initial interrogation was coercive and the statements involuntary is not clearly mistaken. Wilson was dragged into a vacant lot, surrounded by friends of the victim, and grilled by her enraged husband; the deputy sheriff handed either the husband or a friend a pistol and left the scene. Whether or not he was struck, Wilson was entitled to fear for his life. It follows that the statement to prosecutor Gainer could not be used at trial. Gainer did not conduct an interview distinct from the coerced confession. He instead asked Wilson what he had told the mob, and the answer was laid before the jury. There is a world of difference between
Q: Who was your accomplice?
A: Tony Dixon.
and
Q: While in terror for your life, did you say that Tony Dixon was your accomplice?
A: Yes.
The latter is an indirect way of getting the coerced confession itself into evidence. Even if the statement is voluntary (in the sense that Gainer did not have to pressure Wilson to tell him what transpired in the vacant lot), it has no independent force. *384 Gainer acted as the waystation for the confession to the mob, and the relayed confession is no more admissible than the original.
Magistrate Bucklo thought the judgment could stand because this confession did not add to the (voluntary) statement Wilson made to Dubois. Judge Duff disagreed. The state’s best chance was to persuade us that Magistrate Bucklo is correct — that although the use of an involuntary confession ordinarily cannot be harmless error, the rule of
Chapman v. California,
Circuit Rule 28(f) provides that “[a] reply brief shall be limited to matter in reply.” Harmless error is a ground for reversal, not a reply to Wilson’s arguments. All arguments for reversal must appear in the opening brief, so that the appellee may address them. We have consistently refused to consider arguments withheld until the reply brief.
FTC v. World Travel Vacation Brokers, Inc.,
Because the state will want to use the statements to Dubois if it retries Wilson, we address his contention that these statements too are off limits. It is not at all clear that Wilson has preserved this contention. The district court’s decision allowed the state to retry Wilson and make use of the statements to Dubois. Wilson did not file a notice of appeal, and his submissions concerning these statements are not so much alternative grounds in support of the district court’s judgment as they are arguments for an alteration in his favor. Alteration is impossible without a notice of appeal, which Wilson did not file.
Federal Energy Administration v. Algonquin SNG, Inc.,
No matter. The magistrate concluded that the statements to Dubois were independent of those to O’Neal Carter, the district judge agreed, and we will not disturb this concurrent finding. Dubois removed Wilson from the vacant lot, eliminating the pressure to speak. The chain of events was broken. When he spoke with Dubois after explicitly waiving the entitlements established by
Miranda,
Wilson was under no pressure of any kind. This is not to say that
Miranda
warnings themselves attenuate the effects of coercion;
Elstad
applies only to cases in which the sole defect in the
*385
initial confession was the omission of
Miranda
warnings. Nonetheless,
Elstad
did not question cases holding that wringing an involuntary confession out of a suspect does not perpetually disable him from giving a voluntary statement. E.g.,
Clewis v. Texas,
Affirmed.
Notes
United States ex rel. Kreuther v. Baldwin,
