Alton Robert Fairchild was convicted of twice violating the Dyer Act, 18 U.S. C. § 2313. 1 He now complains (1) that the evidence presented was insufficient to support a jury finding that he knew that the cars which he had received were stolen, (2) that the trial court committed error when it allowed the jury to hear testimony that he stood silent after he had been read his Miranda 2 warnings and (3) that plain error was committed when the United States Attorney, in his summation, made a comment which implied that Fairchild’s failure to make a statement after his arrest showed that he had knowledge that the cars were hot.
In September of 1972, FBI Agent Is-raelson received information from a confidential informant that a Mr. Alton Robert Fairchild was in possession of a stolen 1972 Cadillac Eldorado. The informant also gave Israelson a Dallas telephone number at which Fairchild could be reached. Using the criss-cross index Israelson discovered the address of the telephone and proceeded there. When a young lady emerged he followed her to a Dallas motel. There he saw, parked next to a Ford LTD, a Cadillac fitting the description provided by his informant. He called in the license and vehicle identification numbers of the Cadillac and confirmed that it was, indeed, a stolen vehicle. A check also revealed that the Ford was registered to a Mr. Alton Robert Fairchild. At this point Agent Israelson contacted Detective Hobbs of the Dallas Police Department and brought him in on the case. Israelson and Hobbs put the Cadillac under surveillance. Eventually four people emerged from the motel, entered the Cadillac and drove to an apartment complex outside the Dallas city limits. The four were later identified as Mr. Fair-child, Dr. John Heisler and two women friends of theirs. At the apartment complex Mr. Fairchild and his companions were observed looking into a 1971 Buick Electra. 3 A check revealed that this Buick, like the Cadillac, was a stolen vehicle. After looking at the Buick the four returned to the Cadillac and drove towards Dallas. As soon as they entered the city limits they were stopped by Detective Hobbs. Dr. Heisler, who *1381 was driving the Cadillac, explained that he was buying the car through Mr. Fairchild from a man named Ferguson. He denied that either he or Fairchild had knowledge that the car was stolen. Fairchild told essentially the same story —that he had purchased the ear from Ferguson and was selling it to Heisler —and produced papers which purported to show that he was in legitimate possession of the Eldorado. Unfortunately for him, some of the papers matched the Cadillac, some matched a Buick and none convinced Hobbs of his bona fides. The occupants of the Cadillac were placed under arrest and taken to a Dallas police station. There Mr. Fairchild was read his Miranda rights.
Knowledge that a vehicle received or concealed was stolen is a necessary element of the crime defined by 18 U.S.C. § 2313. E.g., United States v. Bryant,
By his own testimony, Fairchild admitted that he had dealt with Ferguson on two separate occasions. 5 Both times the cars which came into Fairchild’s possession proved to have been stolen. Twice Fairchild agreed to transfer Cadillac Eldorados to Dr. Heisler at prices well below their market value. At all times the papers on the cars which Fair-child came to possess were, to put it mildly, in a state of disarray. Not one official document indicated that any of the cars ever belonged to a Mr. Ferguson. 6 Furthermore, in helping Dr. Heisler arrange for financing of the first Cadillac, Fairchild, in the presence of a notary, signed the name “Russell Sullivan” to an affidavit. This was the name under which that car had been registered in Alabama prior to Heisler’s registering it in Texas.
Since Fairchild has been found guilty, we must, in examining its sufficiency, view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government. Glasser v. United States,
During the trial, the prosecutor, over defense objection, was allowed to elicit from a government witness, Detective Hobbs, the fact that Fairchild had refused to make a statement after he had been read his Miranda rights. The admission of this testimony was, according to Fairchild, error. The government now seeks to sustain the admission of Hobbs’ revelation on two grounds. First, it argues that Fairchild’s silence was admissible for impeachment purposes. Second, it points out that it was Fairchild himself who opened the door for Hobbs’ testimony.
We have serious doubts that Fairchild’s silence following his arrest and following the receipt of his
Miranda
warnings was admissible for impeachment purposes. It is true that when Fairchild became a witness he subjected himself to impeachment for, as is the case with any other witness, the credibility of a defendant who takes the witness stand and of his testimony is open to legitimate attack. The attack on the defendant-witness and his testimony may, of course, take the form of impeachment by prior inconsistent act. We have held that, in extreme cases, silence following
Miranda
warnings can be the type of act which is inconsistent with certain exculpatory trial testimony. In such cases evidence of the silence is admissible. United States v. Ramirez,
*1383
Miranda
establishes that the prosecution may not use as a part of its case in chief a criminal defendant’s silence following his arrest and warning. This evidence, even though it might be relevant and probative, is normally excluded. But it is important to note that it is excluded for the purpose of protecting certain rights of the defendant. It is not excluded so that the defendant may freely and falsely create the impression that he has cooperated with the police when, in fact, he has not. After getting Agent Israelson to admit that his client had no previous criminal history and had voluntarily provided handwriting samples, Fairchild’s counsel attempted to create this impression when he asked, “During the period of time that this investigation has been going on, to your knowledge has Mr. Fairchild cooperated fully with the FBI and U. S. Attorney’s office in responding with anything that you all wanted?” Having thus raised the question of his cooperation with the law enforcement authorities, Fairchild opened the door to a full and not just a selective development of that subject. United States v. Paquet,
In his closing argument the prosecutor made the following comment:
But one thing is for sure, Mr. Alton Robert Fairchild wouldn’t say a thing. He was confronted right out there with this proposition .... He was confronted right out there with the proposition that nothing matches up — silence. He wouldn’t even tell them where he lived. They had to drag it out of him. Now, why is that? It’s because he knew what was going on, ladies and gentlemen.
We agree with Mr. Fairchild that this comment is a reference to his silence following his arrest and following his Miranda warnings. We also agree that this comment is an attempt to utilize his silence as direct evidence that he knew that the vehicles which he received were stolen. Since Fairchild’s silence was admissible only for the purpose of rebutting the impression that he had actively cooperated with the police, this comment should have been excluded and a corrective instruction should have been given. *1384 However, at the time that the comment was made no objection to it was raised. ■Thus, we are at liberty to take notice of the trial judge’s error in failing to exclude the comment and in failing to give a corrective instruction only if it was plain error. F.R.Crim.P. 52(b).
Courts have struggled valiantly to define plain error, see 3 Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure, Criminal § 856, 372-373 (1969), but the fact remains that “the ultimate decision whether or not to take notice of an error not raised below must depend on the facts of the particular case.” United States v. Morales,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Initially, a four-count indictment was brought against Mr. Fairchild. Count 1 charged him with interstate transportation of a stolen vehicle, a Cadillac Eldorado, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2312. Count 2 charged him with receiving and concealing the same vehicle in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2313. Counts 3 and 4 accused him of receiving and concealing two stolen Buick Electras. At the close of evidence verdicts of acquittal were directed on counts 1 and 4.
. Miranda v. Arizona,
. In a later check of the apartment complex parking lot Israelson found a second stolen Buick. This vehicle was the basis for count 4 of the indictment against Fairchild, one of the counts on which a verdict of acquittal was directed.
. Usually tlie presumption is phrased as applicable to recently stolen goods.
. Prior to the incident under discussion Fairchild, according to his own testimony, had assisted Dr. Heisler in purchasing a Cadillac from B'erguson. We shall refer to this automobile as the first Cadillac. Mira-hile dietu, it turned out to be a stolen vehicle.
. Both Fairchild and Heisler testified that the first Cadillac was a car which belonged to Mr. Ferguson but which he wished to unload quickly and for cash because he was getting a divorce. The other cars were supposedly obtained by Ferguson from a bankruptcy proceeding in Alabama.
. Other circuits luive disagreed witli us. United States v. Anderson,
. We recognize that some may argue that the exercise of a constitutional privilege may not be considered evidence of lack of cooperation. We would point out, however, that defense counsel was obviously trying to create the impression that Fairchild actively cooperated with the police in order to build up his client in the eyes of the jury (and possibly to counteract the presumption that the unexplained possession of recently stolen' goods implies guilty knowledge). Thus, the question is not whether the exercise of a constitutional privilege to remain silent is, in the abstract, evidence of lack of cooperation but whether it refutes an inference of active cooperation. We believe that it does.
. Having, as it does, a lingering fragrance of rebuttal: “ . . . confronted right out there with the proposition that nothing matches up . . . .” may well refer to Fairchild’s attempt to justify himself on the spot with title papers which did not tally in full with the Eldorado.
