Petitioner James Leak and a codefendant, Willie Joyner, were charged in a New York court with having accosted Juan Laureano Alamo in the hallway of his residence in the Bronx, forcing him to the roof of the building at gunpoint, robbing him of his wallet, and then compelling him to admit them to his apartment whence they fled after finding nothing of value. At the trial Alamo identified Leak and Joyner without qualification. Julio Mercado, a 12 year old boy who lived in an apartment adjoining Alamo’s, gave a less positive identification of petitioner. Leak’s counsel testified that two days before giving this evidence Mercado had said that he saw no faces during the robbery.
The summation of Leak’s counsel was naturally devoted to an attack on the credibility of Alamo, in part on the not very impressive ground that he had been malingering that day, and on the reliability of Mercado. In response the prosecutor made remarks, quoted in the margin, which are alleged to have violated Leak’s Fifth Amendment privilege. 1 No objection was made. The judge told the jury:
A defendant in all cases may testify as a witness in his own behalf, but his neglect or failure to testify does not create any presumption against him. That is the law applicable to this case and that is the law which the jury will apply in considering the evidence which has been offered.
Claiming that his Fifth Amendment rights had been violated by the summation, Leak appealed through the hierarchy of New York courts without eliciting an opinion,
Under the mistaken impression that no petition for certiorari had been filed and that the time for doing so had expired before April 28, 1965, when Griffin v. California,
Despite the fact that Leak did file a petition for certiorari on April 1, 1965, which was not denied until October
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11, 1965,
Even in light of
Griffin,
we find no merit in Leak’s contention. Neither the language, the history, nor the policy of the self-incrimination clause affords support for the surprising proposition that in declaring that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself,” the authors of the Bill of Rights intended to prohibit proper advocacy concerning the strength of the prosecution’s case. This is quite different from specific comment on the defendant’s failure to take the stand. The remarks of the prosecutor and the judge in
Griffin
were held to violate the privilege because the California rule permitting them was “in substance a rule of evidence that allows the State the privilege of tendering to the jury for its consideration the failure of the accused to testify.”
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We have examined a great number of cases, almost all of them arising under the federal statute,
2
concerning the extent, if any, to which the prosecutor is forbidden to stress the strength of his own case because the jury may take this to be a comment on the defendant’s failure to testify. We will not i.ndertake to review or even to cite them all, or attempt to reconcile them. One of the earliest, Carlisle v. United States,
It is only objectionable to comment upon the failure of the defendant personally to testify; and if at the close of the whole case any given point stands uncontradicted, such lack of contradiction is a fact, an obvious truth, upon which counsel are entirely at liberty to dwell.
A formula that has become rather a favorite of many courts, including this one, is “Was the language used manifestly intended to be, or was it of such character that the jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on the failure of the accused to testify?” See, e. g., Morrison v. United States,
We would not want this opinion to be taken as issuing any roving commission to prosecutors. Inflections and gestures may have an effect the cold record cannot convey, and trial judges must be alert to prevent abuses of that sort. We hold only that where the prosecutor confines himself to arguing the .strength of his case by stressing the credibility and lack of contradiction of his witnesses, we will not be astute to find in this a veiled comment on the defendant’s failure to testify even if in practical fact, although not in theory, no one else could controvert them.
The court is indebted to Stephen M. Rathkopf, Esq., for an able presentation on Leak’s behalf.
Affirmed.
Notes
. And I say to you broadly, before I go into any further detail, the evidence of Alamo and the young boy stands uncontradicted in this ease. Cross-examination and recross-examination has not shaken Mr. Alamo’s positive unequivocal identification of these two defendant^], and as the state of the evidence is now, they stand positively identified as the two men who perpetrated this crime, uncontradicted, that is the evidence.
Is there any evidence here other than the positive identification by Alamo? And I say this to you, ladies and gentlemen, if you had nothing else in this case but the testimony of Mr. Alamo, I say you are duty bound to convict these two defendants.
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And if you are going to go by the evidence where is there anything to say that Alamo was wrong? "Where? Is there any evidence to contradict his positive identification, and again I repeat, I want you to remember this, that if you had nothing else in this case but the uncontradicted testimony of Alamo consisting of a positive unequivocal identification, if that stands uncontradicted, it is sufficient to warrant a verdict of guilty in this case and I repeat it and I will stand on that.
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And that [Alamo’s identification] stands uneontradieted here and there isn’t the slightest reason given to you for disbelieving Alamo.
. While it is arguable that the protection afforded by the federal statute goes beyond that of the Fifth Amendment, see Griffin v. California,
supra,
. This and the succeeding case slightly altered the formula by saying generally that comment as to noncontradiction was not forbidden and then adding, “This is especially true when the evidence against •a defendant could be contradicted by someone other than himself.”
. The prosecutor noted testimony that a witness had bought home-brew of the defendant and added “Who says he didn’t do it? Who denies — .” This was held permissible since a third party might have been present.
. In
Desmond,
the First Circuit announced a principle, contrary to many of the cases cited, that comment concerning lack of contradiction is improper “[u]nless it is apparent
on the record
that there was someone other than himself whom the defendant could have called.”
