Aрpellants Clifford and Kathelyn Miller were convicted of mail fraud, under 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and for conspiring to defraud the United States by filing a false social security claim in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 286. Clifford Miller also was convicted of possessing a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C., § 1202(a) Appendix. Appellants were tried separately, but their cases are consolidated for this direct appeal since they raise the same central issue.
They claim that most of the evidence admitted against them at trial was discovered by the government only because it had access to Clifford’s diary, which this court held to be inadmissible in
United States v. Miller,
I. Jurisdiction
Before we reach thе substantive issues in this case, we must dispose of a jurisdictional problem presented only by Clifford Miller’s appeal. His notice of appeal was stamped February 17, 1981, a date past the Rule 4(b) deadline mandated by the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. Normally, this would preclude our jurisdiction, but appellant claims that he filed his notice on February 12, which was timely under the rule.
The mistake occurred, according to appellant’s affidavit from the Clerk of the District Court, El Paso Division, because the clerk failed to stamp the notice before she forwarded it to the Pecos Division. February 17 apparently is the date upon which Pecos officials received the notice. The government does not deny appellant’s explanation for the untimely stamp.
The Supreme Court has held that the “Clerk’s receipt of the notice of appeal within the 30-day period” satisfies the filing requirements, for civil appeals, even if the notice is not actually “stamped” or “filed” until after the deadline.
J. Parissi v. Telechron, Inc.,
II. Background of Evidentiary Claim
Finding it reasonable for officer Maxwell to move the Millers’ car off the road, this court held the pistol admissible since it was in plain view of the officer. Id. at 1099. The rifle found in the back seat was also admissible because Clifford volunteered its location and gave permission for the officers to run an NCIC check on it. Because the diary was held inadmissible, none of those involved in its seizure were allowed to testify as to Miller’s true identity under the “fruit of the poisonous tree” doctrine, though they could testify about the arrest and identify him in court as the person arrested. Id. at 1101. The government was allowed to prove Clifford’s identity by any evidence unconnected with the search of the portfolio and the examination of the diary.
Most importantly, this court held Clifford’s confession to Inspector Clemmons, eight days after the discovery of the diary, admissible under
Brown v. Illinois,
III. Was the Testimony Tainted Fruit of the Poisonous Tree?
This court’s prior decision in
Miller
considered the admissibility of evidence obtained pursuant to a search of appellants’ car on the night of November 18, 1977. Appellants were stopped,by officers Greer and Maxwell of the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) at a routine license and vehicle registration checkpoint adjacent to a border patrol checkpoint outside of Marfa, Texas. The diary, which was discovered during the search, narrated appellants’ elaborate fraud insurance scheme. Since the details of both the search and the fraudulent conduct are set out fully in our previous decision,
see Miller, supra,
A.
The testimony of Officers Greer and Maxwell
— Appellants object to the testimony of Greer and Maxwell regarding the circumstances of thе arrest and their identification of Clifford Miller as the person arrested. Their complaint completely ignores a specific holding in our previous decision, which allows those persons involved in the seizure of the diary to testify about the details of the arrest and to identify Miller in court as the person arrested.
Miller, supra,
B. The testimony of Postal Inspector Clemmons — Inspector Clemmons did not see the diary оr know of its existence, though he was aware of the facts gathered from its use. He interviewed Clifford Miller eight days after the search and obtained from him a signed statement, which indicated that the statement was voluntary and given with full knowledge of Miller’s consti *995 tutional rights. At trial, Inspector Clemmons related what Miller had described to him about Miller’s fake death in Mexico, his subsequent insurance scam, and his wife’s participation. As noted already, this court has held the statement to Inspector Clemmons admissible as “an intervening act of free will” that purged any taint accruing from the original seizure of the diary. Id. at 1103. Since the inspector’s testimony is based on Miller’s confession, and not on the diary, it would be inconsistent for this court to exclude Clemmons’ testimony as a fruit of the tainted diary.
C. The testimony of other witnesses connected with the fraudulent scheme —Several witnesses for the government were contacted after the scam became known to the pоlice. 2 Appellants argue that investigators could not have discovered these witnesses without exploiting the diary-
In asking whether the evidence falls within the general exclusionary bar against use of the fruits of an unlawful search, our inquiry must focus on whether the testimony “ ‘has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.’ ”
Wong Sun v. United States,
*996
United States v. Ceccolini, supra,
provides the most helpful analysis for judging attenuation. In
Ceccolini,
a police officer improperly discovered some gambling slips inside an envelope after he had entered the defendant’s shop to visit Hennessey, an employee. Hennessey later testified against Ceccolini in his trial for perjury. Ceccolini moved to suppress Hennessey’s testimony as the fruit of the illegal search of the envelope. Although the logical connection between the illegal discovery and Hennessey’s testimony was undisputed, the Supreme Court refused to adopt a
per se
rule, emphasizing the difference between live testimony and physical evidence.
Applying this test to the case at hand, it seems clear that all of these witnesses would have come forward to testify if they had known of the fraud. It was to their advantage to testify since they were representatives of organizations that were either direct victims or unknowing facilitators of appellant’s fraud. There is no evidence that investigators used the diary itself in questioning the witnesses, or that the witnesses even knew of its existence.
See id.
at 279,
Balancing the social cost of exclusion against any deterrence to be gained, we admit that exclusion of the testimony possibly would encourage law enforcement officers to procure a warrant before intruding into an object as private as a person’s diary. And, unlike the officer who found the gambling slips in
Ceccolini,
the officers here must have intended to find something incriminating when they opened the portfolio and read the diary since they knew Cliffоrd was lying about his name and since they knew the rifle was stolen.
Cf. Ceccolini, supra,
The penalties visited upon the government must “bear some relation to the purposes which the law is to serve.”
Id.
It would be anomolous for this court to admit Miller’s confession, finding that its exclusion would have no deterrent effect, аnd then bar the use of live, voluntary testimony obtained perhaps months after the search and the confession and having, in some instances, no direct relationship to either the diary or those who knew of its existence.
See Brookins, supra,
We also hold that the testimony is admissible under the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule. The availability of Clifford’s confession makes this exception the most appropriate doctrine to apply to these facts. The Supreme Court recognized the inevitable discovery exception in
Brewer v. Williams, supra,
Approving the inevitable discovery exception in
United States v. Brookins, supra,
this court apparently limited its application, at least on the facts of that case, by requiring two factors in addition to a “reasonable probability” that the evidence would have been discovered from other than a tainted
*997
source.
United States v. Fitzharris,
United States v. DeSimone,
Where the police have access to two sources containing the same information, and one is tainted while the other is lawful, it would be absurd for this court not to find that the testimony produced at trial, which stemmed indirectly from the tainted source, was inevitably discoverable apart from reliance on the unlawful source. In short, we hold the testimony admissible under two exceptions to the exclusionary rule: first, it was sufficiently attenuated from the seizure of the diary to be free from taint; and second, investigators certainly could have discovered substantially the same. evidence even if they had not had access to the diary.
IV. Did the Admission of the Confession Against Kathelyn Violate Bruton ?
Appellant Kathelyn Miller claims that the trial court erred in allowing Inspector Clemmons to testify at trial about the statement he obtained from Clifford bеcause it violated her Sixth Amendment
*998
right to confrontation as interpreted by the Supreme Court in
Bruton v. United States,
The cases relied on by appellant do not support her position. In
United States v. Morales,
More importantly, however, even if we assume that Clifford’s statement was a critical part of the government’s case, the jury nevertheless could have construed it favorably to the defense. Clifford stated that appellant was unaware that he had faked his death in Mexico and that she continued to believe he • was dead for two or three months after she returned to the United States. Clifford also stated that he told his wife she could either file the insurance forms “or he would appear sometime during the night and pick up the children and take them back to Mexico.”
Miller, supra,
*999 V. Did the Trial Court Abuse Its Discretion in Refusing to Strike Two Jurors?
The final point of error raised in these consolidated appeals concerns the failure of the trial court to grant two challenges for cause made by Clifford Miller. Since appellant was tried after his wife, he was concerned that the publicity surrounding her trial would infect the partiality of jurors in his trial. Thus, he asked the court to question seventeen members of thе jury panel individually. The court complied. After questioning, appellant sought to strike nine jurors for cause. The court granted four of these challenges. Of the remaining five jurors, appellant struck four by exercising his peremptory challenges. Thus, only one objectionable juror actually served on the jury, and appellant does not object to the refusal to strike that juror on this appeal. He objects to the trial court’s refusal to strike for cause two jurors who did not serve on the jury.
A reviewing court cannot disturb the decision of the trial court on the impartiality of a juror absent an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Salinas,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm appellants’ convictions.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Ward, supra,
the district clerk was on vacation, and though nоtice was received on time, it was not stamped till after expiration of the appeal deadline.
. Clifford objects to the following witnesses: Earl McLaughlin, an employee of the Social Security Administration, Jerry Franklin, vice-president of Franklin National Bank where Kathelyn Miller cashed her checks from Standard Insurance, Dennis McFarland, аn employee of Standard Insurance, Albert F. Kreitsick and William E. Robinson, who are both employed by Mutual of New York Insurance Company, and Wayne Taylor, an investigating officer who also obtained a confession from Clifford Miller. Kathelyn objects to the testimony of Greer, Maxwell, Robinson, Franklin, McLaughlin, Joe McNulty, an attorney for Standard Insurance, and John Dougherty, an employee of Mutual.
Since these witnesses are connected to the diary in substantially the same wаy, we will consider their testimony as a whole with two exceptions: Robinson and Taylor. We note here that the prosecution obtained the testimony of William Robinson because of a chance conversation between Officer Maxwell and Robinson on the eve of trial. The diary, therefore, did not “lead” to Robinson’s testimony. Robinson, a former welfare officer, was able to identify Clifford Miller based on his contact with Miller in the years prior to his “death.” This court has hеld that Miller’s identity could be proved from sources unconnected with the search of the diary.
Miller, supra,
. We do not address the independent source argument because the government admits, at least in the case of Clifford Miller, that the leads to the witnesses were developed in fact from information found in the diary.
. Since this court previously has refused to treat theological connection between Clifford’s statement to Inspector Clemmons and the seizure of the diary as undeniable, this panel is precluded from reconsidering that issue, and contrary to appellants’ request, we decline to comment on the correctness of the prior opinion.
. The only “lead” that possibly could satisfy the first requirement of Brookins is the lawful arrest of Clifford Miller, which could have led to the discovery, of his true identity and his fraudulent conduct. Since his arrest and the seizure of the diary were contemporaneous, however, we cannot treat his arrest as a lead possessed by the police prior to the illegal seizure of the diary. What makes the discovery of trial testimony “inevitable,” in this сase, is not the arrest, but Clifford’s confession.
. Appellant raised this issue for the first time during oral argument. Rule 28(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure has been interpreted to require all issues to be set out in brief, and the failure to comply will result in waiver of the issue. E.g.,
Bray v. Director, Office of Worker's Compensation,
. The Supreme Court noted in
Parker v. Randolph,
