Opinion
Defendant Harry Arthur Sharp appeals from convictions for robbery (Pen. Code, § 211) of a bank, a finance company and a wine shop on the grounds he was denied his constitutional right to counsel at a corporeal lineup which took place after he was arrested, charged and had obtained counsel for the bank robbery, but before any formal charges had been filed in the other crimes. We conclude that, under the circumstances presented, evidence of the uncharged offenses obtained at a lineup conducted without notice to and in the absence of his attorney, was obtained in violation of defendant’s right to counsel.
At the time of the robbery of the Pittsburg branch of Crocker Bank on June 24, 1981, defendant was suspected in several other robberies in the Pittsburg-Antioch area. Defendant was arrested for the bank robbery on July 3 and arraigned on July 6, at which time he requested the services of an attorney and was referred to the public defender. Following defendant’s arrest, Pittsburg Police Detective White discussed the possibility of a corporeal lineup with another detective of the Antioch Police Department. The subject also arose in his discussion with a deputy district attorney while they *16 were reviewing the bank robbery complaint, but the deputy district attorney did not advise him to have defendant’s attorney present. Detective White was uncomfortable about conducting the lineup in the absence of or without notice to defendant’s attorney, but he went ahead with it because the deputy district attorney told him to proceed and complete it as soon as possible. Detective White believed a lineup would be much easier to conduct if defendant was in custody, as he then was; he didn’t know how he could obtain defendant’s participation in the lineup if he were not in custody, and the county jail was the only facility in the county capable of accommodating a corporeal lineup.
The lineup was held July 9, 1981, before 17 witnesses, 2 of whom were witnesses to the bank robbery; the rest witnessed other robberies of which defendant was suspected. Defendant’s attorney, who was not notified, was not present to represent him, although defendant complained to the authorities that he wanted his attorney present. The custody sergeant at the jail where the lineup was conducted advised the detectives conducting the lineup that defendant’s attorney should be notified, but left the notification up to them. On the basis of testimony from witnesses at the lineup, the district attorney filed an amended complaint charging defendant with four additional robberies. At the preliminary hearing, and again in the superior court after being held to answer, defendant moved to suppress the lineup identifications. The motion was unopposed and granted as to the bank robbery, but opposed and denied as to the other counts.
Defendant contends the lineup was constitutionally defective under the
Wade/Gilbert
rule and in violation of his right to counsel and, therefore, the trial court committed reversible error in allowing the jury to consider identification testimony stemming therefrom. In
United States
v.
Wade
(1967)
In the instant case, no adversarial proceedings had been initiated against defendant at the time of the lineup for any crimes other than the bank robbery. On that basis the People contend that no right to counsel had yet attached, the lineup was therefore not constitutionally invalid as to the nonbank robberies, and testimony obtained from the lineup relative to those other robberies was admissible at trial. As both defendant and the People have noted,
People
v.
Bustamante
(1981)
The error in the instant case occurred as a result of the contact initiated with the defendant without the express consent of his attorney. An accused person who is represented by counsel cannot be interrogated without the express consent of his or her attorney.
(Brewer
v.
Williams
(1977)
In
People
v.
Boyd, supra,
In the instant case, albeit not involving interrogation, the offenses were related; all counts charged robbery in violation of Penal Code section 211, they occurred in the same general area in the same county, were prosecuted by the same district attorney, charged in the same information and defended by the same public defender’s office. We emphasize again that the prosecution knew defendant was represented, the sergeant at the jail advised the detectives conducting the lineup that defendant’s counsel should be notified and the defendant himself demanded that his attorney be present. Since it is the right to counsel which is in issue, and since that right is not limited to interrogation situations, logic dictates that the Boyd rule is equally applicable to lineups.
Rule 7-103 of the Rules of Professional Conduct provides, in pertinent part: “A member of the State Bar shall not communicate directly or indirectly with a party whom he knows to be represented by counsel upon a subject of controversy, without the express consent of such counsel. . . .” “The rule was designed to permit an attorney to function adequately in his proper role and to prevent the opposing attorney from impeding his performance in such role.”
(Mitton
v.
State Bar
(1969)
A conviction based upon evidence obtained in deprivation of the right to counsel cannot be sustained unless the error is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
(Chapman
v.
California
(1967)
The judgment in count I is affirmed. The judgments in counts IV and V are reversed and remanded.
Low, P. J., and King, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 12, 1984.
Notes
The prosecutor may have relied on
People
v.
Duck Wong, supra,
