Convicted of bank robbery and sentenced to 65 months’ imprisonment, Edwin Acox presents a single appellate argument: that two employees of the bank should not have been allowed to identify him, because they saw a photo array that “was so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentiflcation.”
Simmons v. United States,
Plain error is the standard for appellate review of issues that have been forfeited; arguments that have been waived are not reviewable оn the plain-error or any other standard. See
United States v. Olano,
It often takes evidence from psychology and statistics to decide whether a photo spread or lineup is “unduly suggestive” and, if so, whether the suggestiveness is “irreparable.” See
United States v. Williams,
Now it is true that Rulе 12(e) uses “waiver” in an unusual way. Normally waiver in criminal procedure means an intentional relinquishment of a known right. See
Johnson v. Zerbst,
Lawyers sometimes attempt to get around Rule 12(e) by asking the court of appeals to find “good cause” on its own. That’s not a sound procedure, for two reasons. First, the existence of good cause may depend on facts that are not in the record, such as why counsel failed to make a pretrial motion. A court of appeals is limited to thе record built in the district court, so arguments that depend on extra-record information have no prospect of success. Second, even when the record contains the essential information, whether the circumstances add up to “good сause” is a question committed to the district court’s discretion. Appellate review of “good cause” decisions is deferential, see
Bracy v. Gramley,
A defendant can’t convert deferential appellate review into a
de novo
appellate decision by the expedient of failing to present his arguments to the district court at all; that omission should make appellate review harder, not more readily available. A handful of opinions in this circuit make what appear to be
de novo
appellate decisions on the good-cause question. See
United States v. Bright,
A conclusion that the good-cause decision is committed to the district court rather than the court of appeals need not preclude all possibility of relief when trial counsel never tries to show good cause. A court of appeals still may inquire whether, if a motion for relief had been made and denied, the district court would have abused its discretion in concluding that the defense lacked good cause. Acox’s appellate lawyer made an argument along those lines (though not in that precise language) by contending that Aeox’s trial lawyer furnished ineffective assistance by failing to make a pretrial motion to suppress the identifications. But appellate counsel withdrew this contention via the reply brief, and for good reason.
Because the record does
not show why
counsel did not make a pretrial motion to suppress, it would be impossible to evaluate the deficient-рerformance part of the formula in
Strickland v. Washington,
Counsel does not contend that problems in the photo array themselves amount to “gоod cause.” That would conflate procedural requirements with the merits. Appellate counsel says that the deficiencies in the photo array are evident on cursory inspection. But if that is so (and we do not express an opinion on the subject), it shows the absence of “good cause”; counsel had no plausible reason to reserve the objection for trial.
But this leaves no argument for good cause, let alone an argument that the district court would have abused its discretion by finding the absence оf good cause had a motion to set aside the waiver been made. So, in addition to withdrawing the ineffective-assistance argument, Acox’s reply brief contends that in-court testimony may be reviewed despite Rule 12(e). Acox’s lawyer objected to the prosecutor’s questions asking the witnesses who they had identified in the photo spreads. Although trial counsel did not try to demonstrate “irreparable misidentification” he came close enough, his appellate lawyer contends, that plain-error rеview should be available.
This line of argument rests on a belief that an objection to testimony on the witness stand is not a “motion to suppress evidence” within the scope of Rule 12(b)(3)(C). Acox does not offer a definition of that critical term, however, or cite any decision that defines it in a way helpful to his position. (He does cite several decisions that ignore the subject and engage in plain-error review, likely because the prosecutor did not bring Rule 12(b)(3)(C) and (e) to the court’s attention, but assumptions attributable to oversight differ from holdings.) The term “motion to suppress” covers efforts to invoke the exclusionary rule, or the
Miranda
doctrine, or the many other constitutional and statutory rules that keep probative evidence out of the trial record. A defendant
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who does not file a pretrial motion to suppress evidence under the fourth amendment’s exclusionary rule could not later make a mid-trial motion to exclude testimony about the seized evidence, on the ground that a “motion to suppress” refers only to the physical evidence and not to testimony about that evidence. The exclusionary rule covers “fruit of the poisonous tree” (see
Wong Sun v. United States,
Although the Rules of Criminal Procedure do not define “motion to suppress”, the phrase may be given meaning by thinking about what it is not: a motion under a Rule of Evidence. An objection based on those rules may be made during trial. Fed.R.Evid. 103(a)(1). A request for a decision under the Rules of Evidence may be made before trial (lawyers often call these “motions in limine”). If the issue is definitively resolved before trial, an objection at trial is unnecessary. See Rule 103(a) hanging paragraph;
Wilson v. Williams,
Objections
outside
the Rules of Evidence properly may be called “motions to supprеss”. Cf.
Jones v. United States,
This means that an effort to prevent the witnesses from testifying about their pretrial identifications (or for that matter to prevent witnesses from directly identifying a person in court) is a “motion to suppress”. Accord,
United States v. Gomez-Benabe,
*734
If the prosecution’s use of evidence derived from an illegal seizure or linеup could not have been anticipated, the surprise would supply “good cause” for the purpose of Rule 12(e). But Acox does not contend that his lawyer was startled by the identification evidence or had any other reason to wait until mid-trial to ask for its exclusion. The only “cause” adverted to in this court is the possibility that Acox’s trial lawyer furnished ineffective assistance. If so — and deciding whether counsel’s services were beneath the constitutional floor requires consideration of what counsеl did, as well as what he omitted, see
Williams v. Lemmon,
Affirmed.
