The issue presented by this case concerns the failure of the Internal Revenue Service (I.R.S.) to follow its own published general procedure, requiring its *8 Special Agents to give certain warnings on initial contacts with taxpayers they are investigating. More precisely, the question is: should the courts exclude evidence obtained from an interview where a Special Agent fails to give the warnings required by that procedure?
After several initial contacts with I.R.S. employees who were not Special Agents, appellee, Alice Leahey, was visited by Special Agents in her own home. Although they identified themselves, they failed to observe the I.R.S. announced procedure of warning her that they were investigating the possibility of criminal tax fraud. At a second visit when the Agents obtained bank statements and books from appellee, they also failed to give any warnings. Appellee was subsequently indicted and arraigned. She filed a motion to suppress the information and books and records obtained by the Special Agents on their two visits to her home. Relying on the general principle that due process requires government agencies to follow their specified procedures and on the Fourth Circuit opinion in United States v. Heffner,
Many courts and commentators have struggled with applying the due process limits on police interrogations to interviews conducted by the I.R.S. I.R.S. investigations differ from those of the police in several ways: they are usually, if not wholly civil, a hybrid civil-criminal investigation; suspects are rarely interrogated while in custody; and the focus is whether or not a crime has been committed as opposed to the normal police problem of identifying the perpetrator of a reported crime. Because of these differences, the rules governing police interrogations do not necessarily apply to interviews conducted by I.R.S. Agents. Although several commentators and a few courts have argued with some persuasiveness that the thrust of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Miranda v. Arizona,
This difficulty of harmonizing noncustodial interviews conducted by I.R.S. Agents with the requirements of due process resulted in “a number of inquiries” to the I.R.S. As a result, the I.R.S. attempted to comply with the Court’s request in
Miranda
for “increasingly effective ways of protecting the rights of the individual while promoting efficient enforcement of our criminal laws.”
*9 On initial contact, Agents are instructed to state, "As a special agent, I have the function of investigating the possibility of criminal tax fraud.” If further investigation is required after preliminary inquiries, the Agent is required to advise the taxpayer of his rights to remain silent and to retain counsel. These procedures were adopted for the specific purpose of insuring “uniformity in protecting the Constitutional rights of all persons.” We face for the first time a case to which this procedure was applicable but not applied.
The government challenges the district court’s reliance on United States v. Heffner,
We consider first the impenetrability of these roadblocks and then search for any positive justification. The major argument advanced for reversal is the distinction, insofar as the applicability of due process rules of fair play are concerned, between adjudicative and investigative proceedings. It is quite true that the precedents relied on in
Heffner, see
n. 3
supra,
as well as other cases,
4
involved adjudicative action by agencies. But the adjudicatory-investigatory dichotomy is a talisman only in the context of an agency hearing. In that context, the distinction is relevant to whether or not the agency is functioning like a court and hence must follow the due process rules that courts follow or whether it is functioning like a legislature and is bound by the lesser restrictions that govern investigative fact-finding. Thus, in Hannah v. Larche,
Here we are faced with the question of the limits which due process imposes on a police agency in the course of a criminal investigation. There can be no doubt that such investigations are subject to due process. As Mr. Justice Frankfurter said, speaking for the Court in McNabb v. United States,
*10
The remaining barriers to our inquiry require less comment. The government cited United States v. Luna (W.D.Tex.),
The government also raises the speetor of endless motions to suppress, and hearings thereon, if we affirm. Yet it cites Cohen v. United States,
What we have said does not answer our question. It merely gives us freedom (to pursue it. We begin our search for \ a rationale by observing that the Court ,/in Miranda, as we have noted, specifi- / cally asked law enforcement agencies to develop better ways of harmonizing the protection of individual rights with efficient enforcement of the law. The Service has tried to do this. We must assume that the publicly announced procedure was arrived at only after painstaking intra-agency assessment. Were we to say that Miranda is the ceiling rather than the floor of the rights of citizens vis-a-vis the government, we would make a mockery of the Miranda invitation.
Beyond this, we see a conjunction of two reasons why due process requires the I.R.S. to follow its announced procedures. The first is that announced in •'the press release itself — the objective of , uniform conduct by all Agents. This is an objective shared by the Service, the public, and the courts. If this self-imposed rule of conduct could be violated without the sanction of judicial exclusion, what would be the result? Of course internal disciplinary measures would be available. But if the case or the culprit were important, and the disobedient officer’s conduct resulted in a conviction, the court playing Pontius Pilate, we suspect that any penalties would be token. Indeed, if evidence obtained from such misconduct were not grounds for objection by defense counsel, or if the case never came to court, we doubt that violations would come to light. The I.R.S. has no great incentive to scrutinize carefully the conduct of interviews by its Agents, if the conduct does not affect the result of the prosecution. Indeed, an Agent’s violation of these procedures in selective cases may benefit the agency. More important, citizens’ faith in the even-handed administration of the laws would be eroded- — just as much as if a municipality applied an ordinance only to a selected group.
Cf.
Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
The second reason is that the I.R.S. press release was deliberately in response to “a number of inquiries” and avowedly for the purpose of “protecting the Con\stitutional rights of persons suspected of criminal tax fraud”. When an agency “goes public” it does not do so lightly. Its obligations increase just as do those of a private corporation. This must be so since inquiry of personal, subjective knowledge of a person affected by a pro *11 cedural dereliction is no more practicable than in the securities field. There is no way of assuring that, once the public announcement has been made, some alert\ taxpayers or their lawyers have not re.-' lied on it.
/■> We do not say that agencies always Violate due process when they fail to ad-There to their procedures. It is important here that the procedure set forth in the news release was an agency wide directive designed to protect taxpayers by setting a clear and uniform standard governing the first contact between a Special Agent and a tax fraud suspect. Our result would have been different if the ! I.R.S. had violated a procedure designed to promote some other agency goal. Thus, if I.R.S. procedures stated that ■ only trained Special Agents were to interview suspects, an interrogation which complied with all other procedures but was conducted by an accountant, would not seem to us to conflict with due process. Such a deviation from I.R.S. procedures would not deprive the person interviewed of protection that was afforded to other taxpayers; his interview would not differ significantly from others except that his questioner would be less adept. Only the efficiency of I.R.S. operations would be harmed. Unlike the situation here, the agency would gain no advantage from the selective unenforcement of its procedures, and the agency would have no disincentive to dis-. cipline the transgressing employee.
We further say that the public announcement of a procedure would not necessarily require exclusion of evidence obtained in violation thereof. For example, a procedure announcing that uniformed officials will conduct criminal investigations would not reasonably induce citizens to engage in criminal activity or to make incriminating statements in the presence of law enforcement officers who are not in uniform. No one has the right to commit a crime, even if misled by the government as to its enforcement methods. No one can complain of the internal authorization of known government interrogators if otherwise not likely to be misled as to the context of the questioning.
Here, however, we have the two factors intersecting: (1) a general guideline, deliberately devised, aiming at accomplishing uniform conduct of officials which affects the post-offense conduct of citizens involvecTnr'a crimlMTinves-. tigation; and (2) an jeqjndly deliberate, public announcement, made in response to inquiries, on which many taxpayers] and their advisors could reasonably and expeetably rely. Under these circumstances we hold that the agency had a duty to conform to its procedure, that citizens have a right to rely on conformance, and. that the courts must enforce both the right and duty.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Duke, Prosecutions for Attempts to Evade Income Tax: A Discordant View of a Procedural Hybrid, 76 Yale D.J. 1 (1966); Hewitt, The Constitutional Rights of the Taxpayer in A Fraud Investigation, 44 Taxes 660 (1966),; Andres. The Right to Counsel in Criminal Tax Investigations Under Escobedo and Miranda: The “Critical Stage”, 53 Iowa L.Rev. 1074 (1968); Note, Extending Miranda to Administrative Investigations, 56 Va.L.Rev. 690 (1970); United States v. Dickerson,
. Taglianetti v. United States,
. United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
. United States ex rel. Brooks v. Clifford,
. IV e there held when a government agency engaged in legislative-like fact-finding, persons affected were not entitled to the same due process rights which would have been available had the agency been engaged in adjudication.
