The defendant, Joseph Doto, often referred to in the record as Joe Adonis, appeals from his conviction by a district judge, a jury trial having been waived, for contempt of a Committee of the United States Senate under 2 U.S.C. § 192 in refusing to answer a question. The Committee was the Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce, generally known as the Ke-iauver Committee, its Chairman being Senator Kefauver of Tennessee. The question was asked of appellant at a public hearing of the Committee in New York City on March 12, 1951; it was as follows: “Now, Mr. Adonis, did you ever make a political contribution to any campaign, state, local or national ?” Appellant’s response was: “I decline to answer that question on the ground that it might tend to incriminate me.” Thereupon various other questions were propounded to him, to many of which he made the same response. He was indicted on sixteen counts, but was convicted only on the first count, that based upon the colloquy just quoted. The other fifteen questions as to which the trial judge sustained the privilege concerned various forms of business dealings with named individuals or concerns, the legitimate occupations in which appellant had engaged during the last five years, whether he had ever given anybody any money to help in a primary fight, and so on. The judge thought that appellant had no fear of a criminal prosecution from the first question, it not being a crime generally to make a political contribution, but that be might properly have such fear as to testimony of business connections in the light of the background, disclosed at earlier hearings, of implications that violations of federal income tax and other criminal statutes might well be charged against him.
Recent decisions of the Supreme Court have served to clarify the circumstances in which resort may be had to the privilege against incrimination of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Thus, a complete statement is found in Hoffman v. United States,
This view the Supreme Court has reiterated lately by rather emphatic and summary reversals of decisions below in United States v. Greenberg,
Applying these principles to the facts of this case we do not see how there can be much doubt that, in the descriptive words of L. Hand, J., United States v. Weisman, 2 Cir.,
In the Second 'Interim Report of Committee, February 18, 1951, appellant was likewise given premier billing as an “underworld character” getting large receipts from gambling operations and as head, with Costello, of one of the “two major crime-syndicates” of the country, infiltrating also into legitimate business. And general corruption and connivance was found at all levels of government — accomplished, inter alia, by contributions to the campaign funds of candidates for political office and, often, by contributions made to both major political parties. Appellant would have been indeed a fool not to have felt the hot breath of pursuit upon him. In fact he had no illusions, for at the start of the hearing on March 12, 1951, and before submitting to interrogation here, he read a lengthy statement, prepared with careful legal help, in which he referred specifically to these charges, stating his conviction that the Committee’s sole purpose was to try to obtain evidence to be used against him in criminal prosecutions, some of which “have already been instigated.”
Against this background it seems impossible to say that the question here asked was innocent of all criminal implications. As appellant’s brief well puts it: “The fact of the contribution would be the first essential to be proven. And admission that the contribution had been made, leaving only the amount in issue'or the purpose in issue, would be a most hazardous admission of half the crime.” There seem literally innumerable statutes defining the other half of the crime: the Corrupt Practices Act, 2 U.S.C. §§ 241-252; the prohibition against campaign contributions exceeding
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$5,000 a year and against bribery and the like generally, 18 U.S.C. §§ 608, 600, 597, 201, as well as the more general proscriptions of racketeering, conspiracy, and use of the mails to defraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1951, 371, 1302, 1342, 241. The scent seems much closer than in other cases upholding the privilege; for instance, the question as to ownership of the Hiss automobile of United States v. Rosen, 2 Cir.,
Reversed.
