delivered the opinion of the Court.
Wе are called upon for the second time to review affirmance by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit of petitioners’ convictiоns under an indictment for frauds on the revenue. In
Nardone
v.
United States,
Conviction followed a new trial, and “the main question” on the appeal below is the only question open here— namely, “whether the [trial] judge improperly refused to allow the accused to examine the prosecution as to the uses to which it had put the information” which
Nardone
v.
United States, supra,
found to have vitiated the original conviction. Though candidly doubtful of the result it reached, the Circuit Court of Appeals limited the scope of § 605 to the precise circumstances before this Court in the first
Nardone
case, and ruled .that “Congress had not also made incompetent testimony which hаd become accessible by the use of unlawful ‘taps’, for to divulge that information was not to divulge an intercepted telephone talk.”
The issue thus tendered by the Circuit Court of Appeals is the broad one, whether or nof§ 605 merely interdicts the introduction into evidence in a federal trial of intercepted telephone conversations, leaving the prosecution free to make every other use of the proscribed evidence. Plainly, this presents a far-rеaching problem in
Any claim for the exclusion of еvidence logically relevant in criminal prosecutions is heavily handicapped. It must be justified by an over-riding public policy expressed in the Constitution or thе law of the land. In a problem such as that before us now, two opposing concerns must be.harmonized: on the one hand, the stern enforcement of the criminal law; on the other, protection of that realm of privacy left free by Constitution and laws but capable of infringement either through zeal or design. In aсcommodating both thesé concerns, meaning must be given to what Congress has written, even if not in explicit language, so as to effectuate the policy which Congress has formulated.
We are here dealing with specific prohibition of particular methods in obtaining evidence. The result of the holding below is to reduce the scope of § 605 to exclusion of the exact words heard through forbidden interceptions, allowing these interceptions every derivative use that thеy may serve. Such a reading of § 605 would largely stultify the policy which compelled our decision in
Nardone
v.
United States, supra.
That decision was not the product of a merely meticulous reading of technical language. It was the translation into practicality of broad considerations of morality and public well-being. This Court found that the logicаlly relevant proof which Congress had outlawed, it outlawed because “inconsistent with ethical standards and destructive of personal liberty.”
Here, as in the
Silverthorne
case, the facts improperly obtained do not “become sacred and inaccessible. If knowledge of them is gained from an independent source they may be proved like any -others, but the knowledge gained by the Government’s own wrong cannot be used by it” simply because it is used derivatively.
In practice this generalized statement may conceal concrete complexities. Sophisticated argument may prove a causal connection between information obtained through illicit wire-tapping and the Government’s proof. As a matter of good sense, however, such connection may have become so attenuated' as to dissipate the taint. A sensible way of dealing with such a situation — fair to the intendment of § 605, but fair also to the рurposes of the criminal law — ought to be within the reach of experienced trial judges. The burden is, of course, on the accused in the first instance to prove to the trial court’s satisfaction that wire-tapping was unlawfully employed. Once that is established — as was plainly done here — the trial judge must give opportunity, however closely confined, to the accused to prove that a substantial portion of the ease against him was a fruit of the poisonous tree. ' This leaves ample opportunity to the Government to convince the trial court that its proof had an independent origin.
Dispatch in the trial of criminal causes is essential in bringing crime to book*. Therefore, timely steps must be taken to secure judicial determination of claims of ille^ gality on the part of agents of the Government in obtain
We have dealt with this case on the basic issue tendered by the Circuit Court of Appeals and have not indulged in a finicking aрpraisal of the record, either as to the issue of the time limit of the proposed inquiry into the use to which the Government had put its illicit practices, or аs to the existence of independent sources for the Government’s proof. Since the Circuit Court of Appeals did
The judgment must be reversed and remanded to the District Court for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
