MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Defendants have been indicted for allegedly engaging in various illegal trading practices in the soybean pit of the Chicago Board of Trade. Before the court are the motions of defendants Dempsey, Nowak, Bergstrom, Mittlestadt, Fetchenhier, and Ashman to suppress certain statements made to the FBI or to an Assistant United States Attorney. Defendants seek to suppress these potentially incriminating statements on the grounds that the statements were made involuntarily and that they were taken in violation of defendants’ Miranda rights. In addition, those defendants who were visited by an Assistant United States Attorney argue that their statements should be suppressed because the Assistant U.S. Attorney violated Disciplinary Rule 7-104(a)(2) of the Illinois Code of Professional Responsibility. For the following reasons, these defendants are granted a hearing, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3501, at which the court will hear evidence as to the voluntariness of defendants’ statements and as to whether defendants’ Miranda rights were violated. Defendants are not entitled to a hearing on the issue of whether the Assistant U.S. Attorney violated DR 7-104(a)(2), as the court finds that such a violation would not be grounds for suppression even if it were found to exist.
I. VOLUNTARINESS OF STATEMENTS AND ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF MIRANDA RIGHTS
The motions to suppress of defendants Dempsey, Nowak, Bergstrom, Mittlestadt, Fetchenhier, and Ashman all concern statements made by these defendants to representatives of the government on January 17th, 18th, or 19th of 1989. All defendants
*1297
were visited by an Assistant U.S. Attorney along with FBI agents, except Ashman, who was visited only by FBI agents. Each defendant was interviewed separately but the interviews were apparently conducted in the same way. Defendants’ main objections to the government’s tactics are the same — that the interviews were conducted late at night or early in the morning, and that defendants were coerced into making statements with threats of criminal penalties. All the defendants argue that the circumstances of the visits and these threats render their statements involuntary, and that the statements were improperly taken because the government failed to advise defendants of their constitutional rights, as required by
Miranda v. Arizona,
Under 18 U.S.C. § 3501, the court is to decide whether a confession was given voluntarily and is thus admissible in evidence. We will make such a determination after a hearing in which we will hear evidence on the voluntariness of the statements. At the hearing, we will also hear evidence on the issue of whether the statements were obtained in violation of the defendants’
Miranda
rights. A hearing is necessary on the voluntariness of the statements because, while “the ultimate issue of the voluntariness of a confession is a legal question,”
United States v. Hawkins,
The hearings will proceed in the following manner. Defendants will each receive a separate hearing. Each side may call witnesses with knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the statements, except that the defendants may not call the Assistant United States Attorney who conducted the interviews. Whether a prosecuting attorney should be allowed to testify at a pretrial suppression hearing is within the informed discretion of the trial judge.
United States v. Johnston,
Defendants in this case would be unable to demonstrate a “compelling and legitimate need” for the testimony of the Assistant United States Attorney who interviewed them. Several other persons are available to testify as to the interviews and surrounding circumstances, including the FBI agents and defendants themselves. At their suppression hearings, defendants will not be allowed to call the Assistant United States Attorney. For a more detailed discussion of this issue, see Judge Hart’s opinion of January 22, 1990, in the
Bailin
(Yen Pit) case.
United States v. Bailin,
No. 89 CR 668, slip op.,
II. VIOLATIONS OF ETHICAL STANDARDS
In addition to the arguments discussed in Part I of this opinion, all of these six defendants, except Ashman, argue that their statements should be suppressed because, in obtaining the statements, Assistant U.S. Attorney Raphaelson violated Disciplinary Rule 7-104(a)(2) of the Illinois Code of Professional Responsibility (“DR 7-104(a)(2)”). This rule prohibits an attorney from giving advice to a person who is not represented by an attorney, other than advice to secure counsel, if that person’s interests are, or have a reasonable possibility of being, in conflict with the interests of *1298 the attorney’s client. DR 7-104(a)(2). Defendants contend that Assistant U.S. Attorney Raphaelson violated this rule by giving them, among other advice, the following pieces of legal advice: that they had committed felonies; that it was in their best interest to cooperate; and that if they did not cooperate they could face jail terms- and forfeiture of all their assets. We decline to hold a hearing on, or to decide, whether Mr. Raphaelson violated DR 7-104(a)(2). We find that, even if such a violation did occur, it would not be grounds for suppressing defendants’ statements. In Part I we decided to hold a hearing on the issues of the voluntariness of defendants’ statements, and whether their Miranda rights were violated, because these issues required us to make certain factual determinations. A hearing on possible violations of the Illinois Code of Professional Conduct is not necessary because the only question we reach, the question of whether suppression is appropriate, is purely a question of law.
The law is unclear, particularly in the Seventh Circuit, on the question of whether a court should exercise its “supervisory powers” to suppress evidence gained through a violation of a disciplinary rule. Defendants have identified authority from other circuits which supports the suppression of evidence, in certain circumstances, where a disciplinary rule has been violated.
See United States v. Hammad, 858 F.2d
834, 840-42 (2d Cir.1988);
United States v. Killian,
We do not need to express an opinion on whether suppression is generally appropriate, under Seventh Circuit law, where government attorneys violate a disciplinary rule. In accordance with Judge Shadur’s decision in
United States v. Scarpelli,
While we expressly decline to decide whether the government attorney violated DR 7-104(a)(2) in this case, we note that the law is unclear on whether his conduct violated this rule. There is some doubt as to whether DR 7-104(a)(2) even applies to government attorneys, because, while DR 7-104(a)(l) has been applied in criminal cases, DR 7-104(a)(2) has not.
But Cf. United States v. Springer,
III. CONCLUSION
The court grants defendants Dempsey, Nowak, Bergstrom, Mittlestadt, Fetchenhier, and Ashman a hearing at which the court will hear evidence on the voluntariness of their statements and on the question of whether the statements were obtained in violation of defendants’ Miranda rights. Defendants may not call the Assistant U.S. Attorney as a witness at this hearing. Defendants are not entitled to a hearing on the question of whether the government attorney violated the Illinois Code of Professional Responsibility.
