OPINION
On Junе 16, 1967, petitioner shot and killed Michael Descartes. The next day he left for California (and then Mexico), and he did not return to New York until some months later.
On July 24, 1967, petitioner was indicted by a New York County grand jury for first-degree murder. A federal arrest warrant was issued for him on December 1, 1967, for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for murder.
On April 18, 1968, in Queens County, New York, petitioner was arrested by FBI Agent Donald E. Bullard pursuant to the federal warrant. He was warned of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona,
Lopez did not know at the time that he had already been indicted. He evidently assumed, or hoped, that he would be charged with no more than manslaughter. Agent Bullard, knowing of the outstanding indictment for first-degree murder, did not report this information to petitioner. 1
Lopez agreed to give a statement to the federal agents. He stated that he had been going with Nancy Soba but they had fought and parted. On the night of the shooting, Lopez went to an “after hours” club at the Shelton Towers *1052 Hotel. He stated that he knew that Nancy Soba often went there but that he did not know she would be there that night. Miss Soba was there, and Lopez was conversing with her when Descartes came up to them and started an argument. Fearing that Descartes was going to attack him, Lopez drеw his gun and hit Descartes on the head with it. Lopez stated that Descartes then reached for his pocket and, thinking he was going for his gun, Lopez shot him. He then ran downstairs and went to his apartment, where he took the gun apart. The next day, according to the statement reported by Agent Bullard, Lopez drove to the Triborough Bridge and threw pieces of the gun into the water. Later that morning, Lopez said, he left for California accompanied by Carmen Virruet, with whom he had been living for some months.
Lopez was then brought to this courthouse and taken before a commissioner. The commissioner dismissеd the federal charge and turned him over to the state authorities. He was brought to the office of an assistant district attorney, who informed him that he had been indicted for first-degree murder. Lopez exhibited shock upon hearing this, saying he had thought the charge would be manslaughter. He was then given his Miranda warnings onсe more, and he again said that he would make an oral statement but not a written one.
Following a pretrial evidentiary hearing on the admissibility of petitioner’s statements, Supreme Court Justice Joseph A. Martinis held that the statement to FBI Agent Bullard was admissible because “the defendant intelligently understоod the warnings and knowingly expressed this waiver of his constitutional rights.” He held inadmissible the statement made to the assistant district attorney, ruling that “defendant intelligently understood the warnings but did not meaningfully and expressly waive his rights.”
At petitioner’s trial, the main prosecution witness — the only eyewitness — -was Nancy Soba, who statеd that she had lived with petitioner intermittently from April 1964 to September 1966; that on the night of the killing, she (with others, including Descartes) first encountered petitioner at a bar, where he threatened to kill her if she did not love him any longer; that petitioner had then left, vowing to return soon. Shortly after 3:30 a. m., she continued, she and Descartes, with others, were having a drink at the Shelton Towers club when petitioner reappeared. Petitioner ordered her out; Descartes intervened; Lopez drew a pistol and struck Descartes with it. As Descartes reached for his bloodied head, she continued, petitioner shot him in the chest, and then, as she tried to hold the victim, petitioner shot him again, in the head. Miss Soba recounted other details after the shooting, including petitioner’s threat to kill her, that further buttressed the case for the prosecution.
Lena Gaytan, a member of the party with Nancy Soba, testified thаt she had been in the ladies’ room when she heard two shots fired and that she encountered Nancy upon emerging, then saw petitioner backing down a hallway and waving a gun. Her testimony partly corroborated, partly differed from, Miss Soba’s.
Carmen Virruet reported petitioner’s return home in the early morning hours of June 16. She testified he told her then he had shot a man who had been with Nancy Soba when petitioner ordered her to leave the club. According to her, petitioner said the victim had started to protest or threaten, had been hit on the head by petitioner, had made motions pеtitioner construed as reaching for a gun, and had then been shot by petitioner.
The prosecution also proved that parts of a dismantled gun taken from petitioner’s apartment were from the murder weapon, contrary to petitioner’s statement to Agent Bullard about throwing it off a bridge. Thе evidence for the state concluded with Agent Bullard’s account of that statement in full.
Except for one other witness whose testimony was not of great consequence, *1053 the petitioner’s testimony for himself was the defense. Petitioner admitted the shooting, but claimed self-defense. He swore that Descartes had been with another man that night in a bar; that both of them had threatened him on prior occasions ; that he had known Descartes as a seller of drugs, who carried a gun. He reported that in the minutes preceding the shooting it was Nancy who had approached him, entreating him to take her home with him; that Descartes came over, intervened, threatened and struck petitioner. Then, petitioner swore, he had drawn his gun and struck Descartes, whereupon another man, summoned to help by Descartes, came toward them. Nancy shrieked for Descartes to kill petitiоner. Descartes reached inside his coat. Then, petitioner said, he fired. Other details further contradicted the account given by Nancy Soba as well as his reported statements to Carmen Virruet and Agent Bullard.
The jury, on January 23, 1969, found petitioner guilty of murder in the second degree, and he was sentenced to a term of from 25 years to life in prison. The Appellate Division affirmed without opinion,
The affirmance without opinion was in turn affirmed by a 4-3 vote in the New York Court of Appeals, with the Judges of the State’s highest court dividing on the issue (the use of the statement to Agent Bullard after indictment) which is now befоre this court.
In his opinion for the Court of Appeals majority, Judge Bergan wrote that petitioner, before giving his statement to the FBI, had been “advised of his right to counsel and his right to remain silent and that any statements made could be used against him. He expressly waived-those rights in a written document which he signed.”
Dissenting for himself, Chief Judge Fuld and Judge Burke, Judge Breitel wrote that the majority’s ruling “backtracks on [the Court of Appeals own] principle to the effect that a defendant in a pending criminal action is entitled to the advice of a lawyer аnd that the right may not be waived except in the presence and with the acquiescence of counsel.”
Id.
at 26,
“Whatever vitality a waiver rule might have under the Miranda doctrine, other considerations require a сontrary rule in the area of postarraignment and postindictment interrogation. After criminal action is begun, it is no longer a general inquiry into an unsolved crime but rather a form of pretrial discovery; it is no longer a suspect who is being interrogated but the accused; the interest in affording the poliсe an opportunity to carry on investigatory interrogation for purposes of reaching a decision to charge and in what degree is diminished. In short, the defendant is the all but irrevocable target and the preparation for his trial has begun.”
The dissenters would have reversed and ordered a nеw trial excluding the statements testified to by FBI Agent Bullard “because obtained in a pending criminal action in the absence of counsel and
*1054
without counsel's consent.”
Id.
at 29,
This court holds that the conclusion of the dissent in the New York Court of Appeals must be adopted as a matter of federal constitutional law— specifically, that petitioner’s right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment, as it embodies or “incorporates” the right to counsel under the Sixth, was violated by Agent Bullard’s testimony reporting petitioner’s post-indictment interrogation and resulting statements.
There is no question that the basic principle of Massiah v. United States,
Not questioning that, the State argues that Lopez waived this protection when, after the brisk ritual of warnings tendered orally and in writing, he signed a “Miranda waiver” (though he refused thereafter to sign anything else). There are widе fissures in this argument.
First, assuming the
Massiah
protection may be waived, which is still a debatable question,
3
the casual and relatively perfunctory invitation to a Miranda-style waiver is insufficient. When an indictment has come down, riveting tightly the critical right to counsel, a waiver o,f that right requires the clearest and most explicit exрlanation and understanding of what is being given up. There is no longer the possibility — and the law enforcement justification — that a mere suspect may win his freedom on the spot by “clearing up a few things.” Cf. United States v. Drummond,
Furthermore, if a swift and uncounseled waiver could ever be allowed, the one here would remain ineffectual. The State •relies, of course, upon what it must show to have been “an intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right”
*1055
—and, specifically, “an
intelligent
waiver of the right to counsel * * Johnson v. Zerbst,
With deference to the New York Court of Appeals majority, it does not seem a sufficient rejoinder to say Agent Bullard was not guilty of “willful concealment.” Here, as in other contexts, reliance upon the “subjective gоod faith” of law enforcers would have the intolerable effect of leaving the safeguards of the Constitution to the vague, variable and partisan “discretion of the police.” Beck v. Ohio,
Finally, the State argues that if there was error, it was harmless. The contention was not attempted in the state courts, where it is not unfamiliar, e. g., People v. Miles,
The petition is granted. Petitioner will be released within 60 days unless he is granted a new trial during that period.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. This statement reflects what is explicit in the opinion of the New York Court of Appeals though there is room for an argument that the evidentiary recоrd is slightly ambiguous. Lopez clearly took the position that he was not told. Bullard said he “did not recall” whether he had mentioned the indictment. But it is undisputed now that the account given by the New York Court of Appeals is to be accepted as correct for our purposes.
. We put to one sidе cases where a person under indictment volunteers, without solicitation, the incriminating information. E. g., United States v. Accardi,
supra;
United States v. DeLoy,
. See United States v. Massimo,
. Arguing liis proof that petitioner had lied, the prosecutor developed the shifts from the statements reported by Carmen Virruet (Vicky) to those reported by Agent Bullard to petitioner’s testimony at the trial. He stressed as “the most important thing” the omission from petitioner’s out-of-court statements of the assertion at trial that Nancy Soba had yelled at a climactic moment.: “Kill him [Lopez], kill him, his gun is jammed.”
