J. B. Smithey was convicted in Mississippi County Circuit Court of public servant bribery in violation of Section 41-2703 (Ark. Stat. Ann. 1977 Repl.) He was sentenced to serve five years in the state penitentiary. His appeal raises three issues. First, he argues that the trial court should not have allowed the State to introduce tape recordings of conversations between himself and H. P. Cash or himself and John Cash. Second, he argues that the information filed against him in using the word “conspire” allowed the State to use evidence against him which otherwise would have been inadmissible. Third, Smithey argues that the testimony of a police officer who overheard statements made by him with the use of radio transmission should not have been admitted at the trial.
The testimony introduced at the trial tended to show that in August, 1978, H. P. Cash was charged with two felonies in Mississippi County. After his arrest, H. P. Cash went to see a deputy prosecutor and agreed to cooperate for a lenient sentence. He was told to keep in touch with the local authorities and help whenever he could. Sometime later, H. P. Cash was told by Smithey that what Cash needed was a “fixer.” Smithey explained that Cash needed to go see “the man” and Smithey could arrange it. Smithey explained to H. P. Cash that “the man” was Henry Swift, who at that time was deputy prosecuting attorney for the Osceola District of Mississippi County, Arkansas. Several days after the meeting with Smithey, H. P. Cash returned to the grocery store and was told that “the man” wanted $25,000 to go along with the arrangement that H. P. Cash had already made with the deputy prosecutor in another county.
Later after entering a plea of not guilty, Cash was advised by Swift to go see Smithey who would tell him what to do. Subsequently, H. P. Cash went to see the deputy prosecutor for Crittenden County and told him of the conversations with Smithey and Swift. The deputy prosecutor called in police officers who made arrangements to place a microphone on Cash and in his truck. Following other conversations between Cash and Smithey, it was agreed that $10,000 would be paid in November, 1978, and $15,000 in January, 1979.
Subsequently, H. P. Cash changed his plea to guilty was sentenced and placed in jail. John Cash went to see Henry Swift and asked why H. P. Cash was placed in jail. Swift told John Cash not to worry that he, Swift, would have him out the next day. A microphone was placed on John Cash’s body by the state police and he went to the defendant’s store. The defendnat told John Cash that he, Smithey, would speak to Henry Swift to find out what was going on. John Cash offered $5,000 then and the defendant replied that would help. This conversation was recorded and the tape admitted into evidence at the trial.
Several days later there was another meeting at the defendant’s store. John Cash had a microphone placed on his body again and the conversation between him and the defendant was recorded. During this conversation, the defendant told John Cash to bring $5,000 in a sack to the store. Before going to the store, John Cash called Henry Swift on a phone that was tapped. He asked Swift if dealing with the defendant was all right. Swift assured him it was, and said to go ahead and arrange for the $5,000. He said he would go easy on the rest until he could get H. P. Cash paroled into John Cash’s custody. John Cash, with a microphone on his body, went to the store and handed the defendant the sack which the defendant put on a counter behind him. Moments later the state police came into the grocery store, arrested the defendant and picked up the cash.
The defendant claims that the tape recordings of conversations between himself and John and H. P. Cash should be suppressed as having been obtained in violation of his right against unreasonable search and seizure as guaranteed in the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and in support of this claim, he relies on Katz v. United States,
The question of electronic eavesdropping was again presented in United States v. White,
One contemplating illegal activities must realize the risk that his companions may be reporting to the police. If he sufficiently doubts their trustworthiness the association will very probably end or never materialize. But if he has no doubts, or allays them, or risks what doubt he has, the risk is his. In terms of what his course will be, what he will or will not do or say, we are unpersuaded that he would distinguish between probable informers on one hand and probable informers with transmitters on the other (p. 752).
We believe that White states the rule to be followed and that the testimony of H. P. Cash, John Cash and the police officers concerning tape recorded conversations with the defendant and the recordings and transcripts were properly admitted by the trial court. When Smithey chose to have conversations with H. P. and John Cash, he had no constitutional right to protection of these conversations under the circumstances. Our state constitution requires no different result. See Kerr and Pinnell v. State,
The defendant further claims that there was not a proper foundation laid by the testimony of the police officer who heard conversations between the defendant, H. P. Cash or John Cash as well as conversations between Henry Swift and H. P. Cash or John Cash to introduce the recordings and transcripts. The defendant urges that since this evidence is not admissible, then there is not sufficient further evidence to sustain a verdict in the case. The testimony of the police officer in each case where a tape recording of conversations was admitted into evidence shows that he was physically present and observed the informant who had the microphone on his body in the presence of the one whose testimony was recordded and admitted into evidence. He also testified that a video tape recorder was used to visually record the movements of the speakers whose conversation was recorded. He testified that in each case he overheard the conversation transmitted electronically and simultaneously observed the action of the speakers, and that upon his review of the audio tapes found that they were the same as what he had heard at the time the conversations occurred. In addition, H. P. Cash and John Cash both testified that they had listened to the tape recordings and had reviewed the transcript of the conversation and the voices were recognizable to them as those of the defendant and Henry Swift. Uniform Rules of Evidence, Rule 901, Ark. Stat. Ann. § 28-1001 (1979) Repl.) states that authentication or identification is satisfied by the presentation of evidence sufficient to support a-finding that the matter in question is what its proponent claims. By way of illustration it indicates that the identification of a voice whether heard firsthand or through mechanical or electronic transmission or recording may be based upon opinion upon hearing the voice at the time under circumstances connecting it with the alleged speaker. In the recent case of Williamson and Morris v. State,
The defendant also complains that the use of the word “conspire” without a specific charge of criminal conspiracy, permitted the State broader reign to offer testimony which it contended would show overt acts o r statements made in connection with the conspiracy. In following this argument to its logical conclusion, the defnendant argues that without using the word “conspire” the State would not have the same broad latitude in introducing evidence as it did in using that word in the information.
The argument calls into question the applicability of Uniform Rules of Evidence Rule 801(d)(2)(v), Ark. Stat. Ann. § 28-1001 (Repl. 1979). That rule provides that testimony about an out of court statement by a co-conspirator of a party during the course and furtherance of a conspiracy is not hearsay. Actually, it was irrelevant whether the State used “conspire” or not. Our uniform rules are based upon the federal rules of evidence and therefore cases interpreting the federal rules are helpful in analysis of the Arkansas rules. The federal cases make clear that there need not be a conspiracy count in the indictment to make the provisions of Rule 801 applicable. In United States v. Coppola,
Finally, the defendant claims that the only evidence that would connect him with the crime of public servant bribery comes from his co-conspirators or accomplices, H. P. and John Cash. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 43-2116 (1977 Repl.) provides:
A conviction cannot be had in any case of felony upon the testimony of an accomplice unless corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corrobation is not sufficient if it merely shows that the offense was committed, and the circumstances thereof.
The evidence introduced by the State other than testimony of an accomplice included the statements by the defendant which were recorded and the recordings and transcripts introduced into evidence; the testimony of the prosecutor concerning statements made by Henry Swift to H. P. Cash in his presence advising Cash to go see the defendant; the testimony of an employee of the telephone company concerning various phone calls between the defendant and Henry Swift; the video tape recordings of various meetings between H. P. Cash and the defendant and John Cash and the defendant; the testimony by the police officers upon the arrest of defendant and finding the money near the defendant and the tape recordings of that conversation; the still photographs of various meetings between H. P. Cash and the defendant and John Cash and the defendant; and the recorded phone calls and conversations between H. P. Cash and Swift and John Cash and Swift. This evidence and other circumstantial evidence in the record corroborate the direct testimony of H. P. Cash and John Cash.
We find no reversible error in the record of the trial and therefore affirm the judgment.
