On Fеbruary 12, 1975, defendant Bobby Joe Duke was convicted by a jury on a criminal information charging possession of marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844. Defendant appeals from that conviction, enumerating as error: (1) the refusal of the trial court to dismiss for prosecution’s unnecessary delay in seeking an indictment; (2) an improper instruction to the jury, shifting the burden of proof to the defendant; and (3) the trial judge’s elicitation of a verdict of guilty from a reluctant juror.
Pertinent facts in this case are аs follows. On March 4, 1974, defendant Duke, a prisoner at the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary, was seated at a table in the visiting room with his wife. At that time, Odell Rich, a guard whose job was to control contraband in the visiting room, observed defendant put his right hand in the fly of his pants. Rich then conveyed defendant to the hospital where Dr. Alderete, director of the penitentiary hospital, made X-rays of the defendant which indicated the presence of a foreign object in the latter’s rectum. Defendant denied the presence of an object, claiming that the X-ray could be explained by his history of a fractured vertebra. Later, however, defendant passed a vial containing three grams of marijuana. On the day following the incident in the visitors’ room, defendant *388 was placed in administrative segregation, where he remained for thirty-five days.
On January 6, 1975, approximately ten months after the offense, a criminal information was filed against defendant for possession of marijuаna. Trial began on February 10, 1975 and a jury verdict of guilty was returned on February 12, 1975.
I. Prosecution’s Delay in Seeking In dictment—
Defendant contends that the government’s delay of ten months from the time the offense was committed until an information was filed handicapped him in his preparation of a defense and violated his right to a speedy trial as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. Specifically, the defense argues that on the date of the incident in the visitors’ room, defendant was temporarily insane as a result of withdrawal from morphine, a drug to which he allegedly was addicted, and that, accordingly, he was not responsible for his actions. The defense bolsters its argument by medical testimony indicating that all evidence of withdrawal is gone by the fifth day after deprivation of the drug. Therefore, according to this argument, by not indicting him quickly, the government failed to alert the defendant of the need to obtain an attorney and to gather evidence of his medical incapacity due to drug withdrawal. Because of this delay all evidence upon which a temporary insanity defense could be based was forever lost and defendant’s defense was irreparably prejudiced.
In analyzing a speedy trial argument, the applicable cases can be classified into two groups: pre-accusation delay
1
and post-accusation delay.
United States v. Marion,
Barker v. Wingo,
In examining defendant’s Sixth Amendment claim, it is important to determine at the outset whether the actual prejudice test of Marion or the balancing test of Barker is appropriate. Obviously, the Marion test, requiring a showing of actual prejudice and intentional prosecutorial delay, is a harder test for claimants to meet than the more flexible balancing test of Barker. Not surprisingly, defendant argues that the Barker test is applicable in this case. The key in determining which test to apply rests on the question whether defendant was an “accused” during the ten-month delay in question.
Defendant argues that placement of him in administrative segregation for thirty-five days constituted an arrest, thereby rendering him an accused, subject to the Barker balancing test on delay. We cannot accept the argument that administrative segregation of a prisoner is equivalent to his arrest. First, we note the language in Marion explaining why arrest is á significant event triggering the protection of the Sixth Amendment:
. Arrest is a public act that mаy seriously interfere with the defendant’s liberty, whether he is free on bail or not, and that may disrupt his employment, drain his financial resources, curtail his associations, subject him to public obloquy, and create anxiety in him, his family and his friends. So viewed, it is readily understandable that it is either a formal indictment or information or else the actual restraints imposed by arrest and holding to answer a criminal charge that engage the particular protections of the speedy trial provision of the Sixth Amendment. Id.404 U.S. at 320 ,92 S.Ct. at 463 ,30 L.Ed.2d at 478-79 . (Emphasis added.)
Obviously, administrative segregation does not contain those incidents associated in
Marion
with arrest; that is, administrative segregation of a prisoner does not “disrupt his employment, drain his financial resources, curtail his associations, subject him to public obloquy,” etc.
2
In addition,
Marion
speaks of the “actual restraints imposed by arrest
and
holding to answer a criminal charge” as engaging the protection of the speedy trial provision of the Sixth Amendment.
Id.
at 320,
More importantly, we do not hold administrative segregation to constitute an arrest because of what we consider to be the essential nature of that act.
4
That is, administrative segregation is an internal disciplinary means of classifying prisoners, utilized under the almost total discretion of prison officials, and subject to the interference of the courts only in a case of wide abuse оf that discretion.
Royal
v.
Clark,
Having determined that administrative segregation of a prisoner is an internal disciplinary measure that is totally independent from the criminal proсesses of arrest and prosecution, we hold that administrative segregation alone of the defendant did not render him an “accused.” Because he was not an accused during the alleged delay, defendant’s claim must be judged under the
Marion
standard, which requires a showing of actual prejudice and intentional delay. Under that test, we find defendant’s claim that he was denied a speedy trial to be without merit. The defense nowhere alleges that the prosecutor intentionally delayed for the purpose of tactical advantage in seeking an indictment or information against the defendant. In addition, defendant certainly did not suffer the actual prejudice that
Marion
requires to be shown. He argues that delay in seeking information against him prevented him from gaining evidence that he was undergoing drug withdrawal in that the symptoms of such withdrawal disappear within five days from the time drug use stops. Yet, if we accept defendant’s argument, we would be effectively imposing a five-day period from the commission of the offense by which the prosecutor must seek an indictment. Obviously, waiting five days from the time of the offense to seek an indictment does not constitute
*391
an unreasonable delay by prosecution. In addition, defendant had several opportunities during the time he was allegedly suffering withdrawal pains to request aid from medical personnel, but never sought relief. This conduct, atypical of the behavior one could expect from a drug addict withdrawing from drugs, coupled with the fact that none of the prison and medical personnel observed any withdrawal symptoms from defendant during this time, compels us to believe that his claims of prejudice are speculative at best. See,
United States v. McGough,
II. Charge to Jury—
The trial judge included in his charge to the jury one statement that defendant now alleges constitutes reversible error:
It is reasonable to infer that a person ordinarily intends the natural and probable consequences of acts knowingly done or knowingly omitted. So, unless the contrary appears from the evidence, you, the jury, may draw the inference that the accused intended all the consequences that one standing in like circumstances and possessing like knowledge could reasonably have expected to result from any act knowingly done or knowingly omitted by the accused. (Emphasis added.)
While the defense attorney entered no objection at the time of the charge, he now argues that this stаtement constitutes plain error, under Fed.R.Crim.P., 52(b), and requires reversal.
The charge in question has been the subject of much attention in this court. We first examined it in
Mann v. United States,
We have since encountered the
Mann
charge, as it is popularly known, on several occasions. We carved our first exception to the
Mann
rule in
Helms v. United States,
We encounter the next significant interpretation of the
Mann
rule in
United States v. Jenkins,
Next, in
United States v. Wilkinson,
Mann did not hold that the offensive sentences created incurable error. The holding there is broader:
“It is not our holding that every charge using the word ‘presumption’ is reversible error. We do hold that it is error to give a charge in a criminal case of this nature, the overall effect of which is to place a burden upon the defendant to produce evidence to overcome a presumption of guilt.” Mann v. United States, supra, at 410 . [I]t is well-established that the fairness and accuracy of a jury charge is to be read and tested as a whole, and not by a single isolated sentence or remark. . . . [A]ny decision as to whether asserted “burden-shifting” language is so prejudicial as to necessitate reversal must to some extent turn upon the type of case and nature of the evidence which has been presented to the jury. . . . We decline now, as we did in Jenkins, to place this case squarely in either a Mann -subjective or Helms -objective category. However, we do note that here the jurors were not reduced solely to prеsuming intent as they were in Mann and Driscoll . . . . Here, if they chose to accept it, they were presented with undisputed evidence that Wilkinson made admissions indicating he knew certain invoices were fraudulent . . To paraphrase Mann, in a criminal case of this nature, the overall effect of the charge did not place a burden upon the defendant to produce evidence to overcome a presumption of guilt. United States v. Wilkinson, at 732-33. (Emphasis added.)
Finally, in
United States v. Durham,
After a thorough examination of the facts and charge given in this case, we hold that in light of Jenkins, Wilkinson, and Durham, the use of the Mann charge does not here constitute reversible error. Aware that a “jury charge is to be read and tested as a whole, and not by a single isolated sentence,” Wilkinson, supra at 732, we note that the trial judge included within his charge several statements that properly placed the bur *393 den of proof on the government. These curative statements include the charge that the law presumes a defendant to be innocent of crime, that the presumption of innocence alone is sufficient to acquit the defendant unless the jury is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt, that the burden is always upon the government to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the burden never shifts to a defendant, either to call any witnesses or to produce any evidence. (Emphasis added.) These same statements were included in the charges in Jenkins, Wilkinson, and Durham and, in each of these cases, were mentioned as factors in the court’s decision not to reverse the conviction on the basis of the Mann charge.
Important to our decision today is an examination of “the type of case and nature of thе evidence which has been presented to the jury.”
United States v. Wilkinson, supra
at 733. The defendant here was prosecuted for a violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844 which provides in pertinent part that it shall be unlawful for any person knowingly or intentionally to possess a controlled substance unless the controlled substance was obtained under circumstances not here present. At trial, the defendant took the stand and conceded that he consciously picked up the vial and observed that it contained marijuana.
7
In our view, the defendant at that point conceded the elements of the crime. His attorney had already withdrawn an insanity defense; after establishing that the substance in the vial was a “controlled substance,” the only element left to be proved was whether the defendant “knowingly or intentionally” possessed the substance. The term “knowingly” has been defined as “purposeful, intentional, as distinguished from accidental or inadvertent.”
Fromberg v. Thornhill,
While we do not find it necessary to reverse this particular case, we emphasize that the Mann charge has beеn declared to constitute error many times since the Mann decision was handed down in 1963. Why trial judges continue to maintain this charge in their repertoire is a mystery to us. We cannot too strongly admonish them to discontinue its use immediately. The charge suggested in Wilkinson, supra at 733, should be an acceptable substitute.
III. Elicitation of Verdict from Jury-
Defendant also assigns as error the action of the trial judge in encourag *394 ing unanimity after a negative response by a juror during the poll of the jury. The following colloquy occurred during the poll of the jury:
THE CLERK: Thank you. You may be seated. Mrs. Láveme P. Grey. Was the verdict as published your verdict?
MRS. GREY: No. But then—
THE CLERK: Is it now your verdict?
MRS. GREY: Yes.
THE COURT: Wait a minute. Did you agree to the verdict?
MRS. GREY: But he said was it first my — my first — ■
THE COURT: Okay. Ask her the question again.
THE CLERK: Was the verdict as published, as I read it, your verdict?
MRS. GREY: Yes.
THE CLERK: Is it now your verdict?
MRS. GREY: Yes.
Counsel for the defendant objected to acceptance of the verdict under these circumstances, after which the court again addressed the juror in question:
THE COURT: I understand the answer of the juror to indicate that at some stages in the proceedings she had a different opinion and may have voted differently.
Now I will ask you. Was the verdict at the time of the final vote, final deliberation, the final verdict; was it your verdict and did you concur in it?
MRS. GREY: Yes.
THE .COURT: Do you now concur in it?
MRS. GREY: Yes.
THE COURT: All right.
Defendant cites
United States v. Sexton,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The term previously used for this group of cases was pre-indictment delay. In
Dillingham v. United States, 423
U.S.
64,
. Of course, we are aware that the Supreme Court has held that merely because an individual charged with a criminal offense is serving a prison term for another offense does not mean that the individual forfeits his right to a speedy trial for the pending charge.
Moore v. Arizona,
. Indeed, in both
Strunk, supra,
and
Moore, supra,
in which it articulated the requirement of a speedy trial for an individual incarcerated for another offense, the Supreme Court spoke in terms of the protection afforded an “accused” or one аgainst whom “charges are pending.” For example, in
Strunk,
the Court stated, “[A] prolonged delay may subject the
accused
to an emotional stress that can be presumed to result in the ordinary person from uncertainties in the prospect of facing public trial or of receiving a sentence longer than, or consecutive to, the one he is presently serving . .” (emphasis added).
. See
Gravitt v. United States,
. The curative provision given by the trial judge in Jenkins, supra, reads as follows:
Unless otherwise instructed, in determining the issue as to intent, the jury is entitled to consider any statements made and acts done or omitted by the accused, and all facts and circumstances in evidence in the case which may aid in determination of state of mind.
But the jury will always bear in mind that the law never imposes upon a defendant in a criminal case the burden or duty of calling any witnesses or producing any evidence. United States v. Jenkins,442 F.2d at 438 .
. Another factor in оur decision not to reverse was the applicability of Heims to the facts in Durham.
. Defendant testified as follows:
BY MR. HENRY:
Q Describe your state of mine at that time when you — at the exact moment you saw that vial.
A Well, when I saw — when I saw it, I knew, I mean, it was something, I didn’t know exactly what it was, and I picked it up, and I looked at it.
Q Have you seen that sort of vial before?
A Well, I guess probably I have. Looked like a plastic or glass type vial to me. I don’t really know what it was.
Q And in your mind did you think it contained narcotics?
A Yes, sir. It looked like — when I looked at it, it looked like it was marijuana. I didn’t know for sure what it was, but that’s what it looked like.
MR. HENRY: Nothing further.
