OPINION
This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed by Thomas W. Tucker, an inmate of Southern Michigan Prison, serving a twenty to forty-year sentence for the crime of rape following conviction by a jury in a Michigan State Court. He has exhausted all available state remedies.
On April 19, 1966, Marion Corey was found tied, gagged and partially disrobed in her home by a friend, Luther White. She had been severely beaten and was incoherent. She was 43 years old and lived alone. She has never recalled what happened to her and has never identified the petitioner or anyone else as her assailant.
When White arrived, he discovered a dog inside the house. Later the dog was seen outside the house. Police followed it to petitioner’s house where it curled up on the porch. Questioning of the neighbors revealed that the dog belonged to petitioner and his parents who lived in the house. On the basis of this information, petitioner was picked up by police.
When petitioner was taken to police headquarters, scratches were observed on his face and blood was found on his clothing. He told the police that the scratches and blood were caused by a goose that he had killed. At trial his work foreman testified that petitioner had told him the same story. However, there was testimony that tests conducted on the blood stains on his clothing indicated that it was human blood.
Petitioner was interrogated by the police after his arrest. Although they warned him that he had the right to remain silent, they omitted any statement of his right to court-appointed counsel. During the interrogation, petitioner stated that at the time of the crime he was with a friend, Robert Henderson. The police attempted to confirm this alibi and contacted Henderson who told police that he was not with petitioner at the time in question. In fact, Henderson told police that when petitioner came to his house later in the day of April 19, his face was covered with scratches. When Henderson inquired of petitioner “if he got hold of a wild one or something,” petitioner replied, “Something like that.” Henderson waited a few minutes and asked petitioner who it was. Petitioner responded that it was “some woman lived the next block over. She is a widow woman — in her thirties or something.”
On the trial of the case, the statements made by defendant to the police were not admitted because they were held to have been taken in violation of Miranda v. Arizona,
Petitioner now raises an issue thus far not considered by the Supreme Court, namely, does the introduction by the prosecution in its case in chief of testimony of a third person which is admittedly the fruit of an illegally obi/ tained statement by the petitioner, vioC late petitioner’s /’Fifth) Amendment rights? Reluctantly,- wel hold that it does and that, therefore, the writ must be granted.
What we are essentially deciding in this case is whether or not the exclusionary rule shall be extended to cases of this kind. Beginning with Silverthorne Lumber Company, Inc. v. United States,
The essence of a provision forbidding the acquisition of evidence in a certain way is that not merely evidence so acquired shall not be used before the Court, but that it shall not be used at all. Of course this does not mean that the facts thus obtained 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 in the way proposed.
This rule was expanded in Wong Sun v. United States,
In United States v. Wade,
In a situation involving the Fifth Amendment, the Supreme Court has. held that testimony of an accused could not be introduced at a subsequent trial where the testimony at the first trial was induced by use of accused’s confession taken in violation of thej) Fifth Amendment. Thus, in Harrison v. United States,
We have no occasion in this ease to canvass the complex and varied problems that arise when the trial testimony of a witness other than the accused is challenged as “the evidentiary product of the poisoned tree.”
The case described in the footnote is precisely the case before this Court.
On the basis of these cases, this Court finds that the testimony of Henderson should have been, excluded from petitioner Tucker’s ,_tria| We find no distinction between the value placed upon the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments. Thus, if testimonial. fruits of violation of the íFourtW^and , Sixth Amendments may not be introduced into evidence at ’trial; testimonial fruits obtained from violations of Fifth Amendment rights should also be inadmissible.
We are aware that the Supreme Court has indicated in the case of Harris v. New York,
The purpose of the exclusionary rule of course is to deter illegal police conduct and to prevent the acquisition of evidence through the violation of a defendant’s constitutional rights. Justice White argued in his dissent in Harrison that the Miranda rule excluding all statements procured in custody without adequate warning is so clear and so strong that no additional deterrent was necessary under the facts of that case. It could be argued in our case that no officer would chance violating Miranda in the hope of obtaining leads to other inculpatory evidence.
But we are not impressed with this argument. Whatever the motivation of a government agent in failing to warn a defendant, the government should not be allowed to benefit from the violation of the defendant’s rights.
We note that the defendant’s statement to the police which led to the discovery of Henderson was basically exculpatory in nature. In fact, it constituted an alibi that the police were duty bound to investigate. Nevertheless, both exculpatory and inculpatory statements are covered by
Miranda, 384
U.S. at 476-477,
Of course, the statements excluded in Wong Sun and Harrison were those of the defendants whose rights were violated. But in Wade and Gilbert the testimony excluded was that of third persons. Thus the fact that a third person’s testimony as opposed to petitioner’s testimony is at issue is not significant. The testimony is no less the result of the illegal interrogation merely because it was made by a third party. J
Having determined that the testimony in question was inadmissible at petitioner’s trial, we must nevertheless consider whether or not this error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
*270
Chapman v. California,
For these reasons, it is hereby ordered that the writ be and is hereby granted and petitioner shall be released from custody within ninety (90) days from this date unless a new trial is commenced within that time.
