Chаrged with killing his wife in their guffolk County home, the defendant pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. After his indictment and arraignment, at which he was represented by counsel, the defendant was examined, without notice to his attorney or to the court, by a psychiatrist retained by the prosecution. Based, in part, on the results of that examination, hе was convicted of murder
Shortly after his wife had been murdered, by being struck in the head with a fireplace poker and stabbed several times in the neck with a carving fork, the defendant was arrested in his home by three police officers. It was the testimony of оne of them, received over objection,, that, when they sought to question the defendant, he told them that ‘ ‘ I refuse to talk until my lawyer gets here. ’ ’ He was then taken into custody and charged with the crime; as already noted, he interposed a plea of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. While the defendant was in jail, awaiting the results of a сourt-ordered examination into his competency to stand trial, the District Attorney retained a Dr. David Abrahamsen to conduct an examination into his sanity. It was his opiniоn that the defendant was a malingerer who was only ‘
Following his conviction, the defendant took an appеal in which he urged (1) that Dr. Abrahamsen’s examination, conducted without court permission or the consent, or even the knowledge, of his attorney, violated his right to counsel and his privilege against self incrimination and (2) that it was error to permit the police officer to testify that, when questioned, the defendant refused to talk until his lawyer arrivеd. The Appellate Division accepted the first of these arguments unanimously. Noting that Dr. Abrahamsen was not a court appointed expert but, rather, an agent оf the prosecution, it held that the rules prohibiting postindictment interrogation of a defendant in the absence of counsel were applicable to his exаmination by a doctor (31 A D 2d, at p. 840). In a separate concurring opinion, Justice Hopkins wrote that he also considered it error for the trial judge to have pеrmitted the police officer to testify that the defendant refused to answer questions.
It has long been the rule in this State that, once a criminal proceeding has formally commenced, the accused has an absolute constitutional and statutory right to the assistance of counsel at every stage of the proceеding, particularly during
Although the Waterman and Di Biasi decisions would seem, on their face, to render the testimony of Dr. Abrahamsen inadmissible, the District Attorney contends that an exception to this rule should be made where the persоn conducting the secret examination of the defendant is a psychiatrist who is concerned solely with the defendant’s mental competency and not with his guilt or innoсence of the act charged. In support of this argument, he relies upon a recent decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (United States v. Baird,
The rationale underlying the decision in the Baird case was that a psychiatrist, although he questions the defendant in the course of an examination, is not concerned with the truth or falsity of his statements but only with the statements themselves, as indicia of mental capacity. As long as the psychiatrist’s testimony was limited to his conclusions, and did not reveal any incriminatory mаtter contained in the defendant's statements, the court reasoned, “ there was no recognizable self-incrimination problem ” and, hence, no need to require the presence of counsel (
The importance of this distinction may not be overestimated. Indeed, it was implicitly recognized in the Baird case (
The inherent danger of a secret examination, such as was conducted in the present case, becomes patent when we realize that a mental examination necessarily requires the use of probing questioning by a skilled practitioner and may even involve hypnоsis and drugs which reduce the subject’s will power. If no one is aware that such an examination has occurred, there is no way to insure that the information so obtained will bе used solely for its legitimate purpose and not as an improper means of procuring leads, as a source, in other words, of incriminatory evidence. Certаinly, the mere fact that the questioner is a psychiatrist, and not a police officer or criminal investigator, furnishes no sufficient guarantee that the defendant’s self incrimination privilege will be respected. In the
Moreover, the trial court committed reversible error when it allowed the police officer, over objection and without limiting instructions, to testify that the defendant, on being questioned about the crime, asserted his cоnstitutional right to the assistance of counsel. When this evidence was first presented to the jury, as a part of the People’s main case, its only apparent рurpose was to create an inference of consciousness of guilt. Its use for such purpose was impermissible. (See, e.g., People v. Bianculli, 9 N Y 2d 468, 472; People v. Travato,
The protections which the Constitution affords to a person charged with crime apply, in full measure, to all criminal defendants, including those who rely upon a defense of insanity. To sanction the surreptitious examination of such a defendant, or to allow his insistence upon his constitutional rights to be used against him, would seriously imрair the value of those protections.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Judges Burke, Scileppi, Bergan, Breitel, Jasen and Gibson concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. The Government psychiatrist in the Baird, case happened to he the same Dr. Ahrahamsen who testified against this defendant.
