On triаl to the court without a jury, the defendant-appellant was found guilty of violating the Mann Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2421. He appeals from the judgment imposing sentence.
Defendant was charged in- a seven-count indictment. Four of the counts related to a woman named Davis and the other three to a woman named Whitehurst. On motion of the defendant, the Davis counts were severed from the Whitehurst counts. Later, a jury was waived and the government dismissed all but Count III pertaining to Davis and Count VI рertaining to Whitehurst.
The defendant was arrested on February 7, 1968. A preliminary hearing was held before a United States Commissioner on February 13. The defendant was present with counsel who has continued to represent him at the trials and on this appeal. No continuance was requested. The charge was a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2421 by the separate interstate transportation of Davis and Whitehurst for purposes of prostitution. Davis and Whitehurst each testified and еach was cross-examined by defense counsel. The opportunity for cross-examination was full, complete, and unrestricted.
At the trials, Davis and Whitehurst invoked the Fifth, Amendment protection against self-incrimination and refused to testify. Over objections of the defendant, the district court received in evidence the transcripts of their testimony at the preliminary hearing. Without such testimony, the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction on either count.
The use at trial of testimony received in a preliminary hearing has been considered in several cases. In Motes v. United States,
“The casе before us would be quite a different one had Phillips’ [the witness] statement been taken at a full-fledged hearing at which petitioner had been represented by counsel who had been given a complete and adequate opportunity to cross-examine.”
Douglas v. Alabama,
The Courts of Appeals have held that, in proper circumstancеs, statements made at a preliminary hearing may be received in evidence at a subsequent trial. See Government of the Virgin Islands v. Aquino, 3 Cir.,
In Barber v. Page,
The case before us presents three points. The first is whether the requirement of unavailability is satisfied when the witness is physically present but the testimony is unavailable because of the invocation of the Fifth Amendment privilege. This point was resolved by our recent decision in Mason v. United States, 10 Cir.,
The second point goes to the difference between a preliminary hearing and a trial. At a preliminary hearing, the issue is whether there is probable cause to believе that the accused has committed the offense charged. At a trial, the issue is the guilt or innocence of the defendant. The argument is that because of this fundamental difference the cross-examination of a prosecution witness at a preliminary hearing is less searching into the merits and hencе does not satisfy the demands of the confrontation clause. We believe that the test is the opportunity for full and complete cross-examinаtion rather than the use which is made of that opportunity. At the hearing before the United States Commissioner, the defendant and his counsel were confronted by the witnesses who testified under oath and were subjected, without limitation, to extensive cross-examination. The extent of cross-examination, whethеr at a preliminary hearing or at a trial, is a trial tactic. The manner of use of that trial tactic does not create a constitutional right. To рaraphrase Pointer 1 the statements of the witnesses were made “at a full-fledged hearing” with accused present and represented by counsel who was given “a complete and adequate opportunity to cross-examine.”
■ The third point is that the use of the transcripts does not disclosе the demean- or of the witnesses and thus deprives the trier of the fact of an important indication of credibility. 2 If opportunity to observe demeanor is the controlling factor, then transcripts of testimony at a former trial may not be received. The demeanor problem is the same there as it is with the use of transcripts taken at a preliminary hearing.
In Mattox v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. See
. Here the trials were to the court sitting without a jury. In discussing the demeanor problem, the district court said: “I don’t think we can tell whether a person is telling the truth or telling a falsehood merely by looking at the person. We have to weigh it in the context in which the person is speaking and also in the context of what the other facts that have been adduced are.”
.
Government
of
the Virgin
Islands v. Aquino, 3 Cir.,
