The Government appeals two rulings made by the district court preparatory to the retrial of defendant Guy Joseph Duchi after this Court reversed his conviction because illegally seized evidence was admitted at his first trial.
United States v. Duchi,
The detailed facts are irrelevant to the decision on the first issue. Following a package that was being delivered by United Parcel Service, the police decided to enter Duchi’s home without a warrant due to what they perceived to be exigent circumstances. They seized the package which contained cocaine, and large amounts of cash, various items of drug paraphernalia, a weapon, and additional quantities of drugs. This Court held that exigent circumstances did not justify the warrantless entry of the house and that the evidencе seized should have been suppressed.
Search and Seizure
Prior to a contemplated second trial, the Government requested the district court to revisit the search issue under the inevitable discovery doctrine, which had neither been raised nor addressed in the first case. The Government reasons that had the officers not entered the house under а mistaken belief that the warrantless entry was justified by exigent circumstances, then they would have obtained a warrant and discovered precisely the same evidence at a later time. The Government may not advance during a second trial previously unasserted grounds for the admissability of evidence seized in a warrantless search which an appeals court has concluded should have been suppressed on the basis of arguments made at the first trial. Courts of appeal will not reconsider previously decided issues unless substantially different evidence is subsequently discovered or the court determines that the prior decision works a manifest injustice on one of the parties.
Little Earth of the United Tribes v. U.S. Dep’t of Housing & Urban Development,
*393 The “issue” addressed previously is not the particular theory that would support the admission of evidence, but the broader question concerning the admissibility itself. In this case, the issue addressed and decided in Duchi I was whether the search was constitutional, not simply whether exigent circumstances justified the search. If alternative grounds for admission existed, then the Government should have presented those theories in the prior case.
In
Duchi I,
this Court made the scope of its holding clear. “The Government is, of course, free to retry the appellant. It must, however, prove the case against Du-chi without the benefit of the evidence gained from unconstitutionally entering his home.”
Duchi’s Testimony in Companion’s Trial
When the police entered the home, they found both Duchi and his companion, Constance Conrad. The paсkage involved had been addressed to C. Conrad. Both Duchi and Conrad were indicted for various narcotics and firearms offenses. They were initially scheduled to be tried jointly. The district court agreed to sever the cases when Duchi made an affidavit which stated, “If my codefendant, Constance Conrad, has a separate trial after my trial, I definitely will testify at her trial in an exculpatory manner.”
Conrad was brought to trial shortly after the district court found Duchi guilty of the six counts associated with the delivery of the UPS package. As he had promised, he was called without subpoena by counsel for Conrad and testified on Conrad’s behalf. The Government wants to introduce that testimony in Duсhi’s retrial. The district court held the testimony was inadmissible because it had been compelled in violation of Duchi’s Fifth Amendment rights due to certain instructions given to the defendant by the court. We have carefully examined the record in detail and conclude that Du-chi’s testimony was indeed voluntary and can be used against him at a second trial.
Initially, counsel’s questions of Duchi at Conrad’s trial focused on the circumstances of the couple’s meeting and the nature of their relationship. Duchi testified that the couple had lived together for several years but that they had hardly spoken for several months prior to the arrest and that he was often abusive with Conrad and expеcted her to do precisely what he instructed or suffer the consequences.
Counsel then began to ask Duchi about a trip to California, the trip during which Duchi allegedly set up the delivery of cocaine. After Duchi provided several evasive answers to questions concerning the package, counsel approached the issue more directly. “Isn’t it true that you made arrangements with someone to ship a package back from California?” Duchi responded by saying, “I take the Fifth Amendment on that.”
After counsel requested a sidebar and the jury was dismissed, the lawyers began discussing the nature of Duchi’s Fifth Amendment privilege. Conrad’s counsel told the court that his understanding was thаt the Duchi no longer had any Fifth Amendment rights as to those matters involved in the offenses for which he had been convicted. The Government’s attorney and Duchi’s attorney both agreed. The court, however, asked Duchi to step down and confer with his attorney about the scope of the privilege. While Duchi was conferring separately with his attorney, the Court asked the Assistant United States Attorney quizzically, “My understanding of the law is the Fifth Amendment disappeared after conviction?” The Government attorney agreed.
Duchi and his attorney were acutely aware of the problems posed by his testimony. When they returned from their discussion, Duchi’s counsel informed the court that he and his client were concerned that the testimony Duchi was about to give might be used against him in a second trial if they were successful on appeal. The court stated, “I can’t address that concern. My understanding of the Fifth Amendment *394 is after the conviction he no longer has a Fifth Amendment right.” Duchi’s counsel again agreed but suggested that immunity might be granted to Duchi. At this point, Duchi’s attorney and Duchi again stepped to the side and discussed how they would proceed.
When they returned the court for the first time addressed Duchi directly. The judge stated:
THE COURT: It has to be [your] understanding if you are going to be up here and testify, and say that was your cocaine, you are going to have to tell everything you know about it, and if you dоn't I will order you to say that.
After some additional questions from Du-chi the court clarified its position.
THE COURT: Understand me, I am not telling you you have to testify, Mr. Duchi. If you cho[o]se not to testify you don’t have to say another word except about your relationship with Ms. Conrad as you talked to it up to this point in time. If you start talking about that cocaine and you indicate that it was yours and not her’s and she doesn’t know anything about it then the prosecutor has a right to ask you everything else about that cocaine. You can’t pick and cho[o]se what you want to tell us about it.
Duchi’s attorney then informed the court that Duchi intended to testify.
Our reading of the record convinces us that Duchi was told thеse things as to his testifying at Conrad’s trial.
First,
he was told that he did not have to testify at all. He was a voluntary witness, not under subpoena, and nothing on the record suggests that he was told that he had to testify if he did not want to.
Second,
as to any testimony about the cocaine for which he was convicted, he was told two things. First, he was told that if he started to testify about the сocaine, he would have to answer all questions about the transaction. This advice was undoubtedly correct.
See, e.g., Brown v. United States,
Thus it appears the district court correctly informed the witness in direct communication about the proper scope of his Fifth Amendment rights. Although the court mistakenly stated that no privilege exists after conviction, it made these statements during a colloquy with the lawyers. Prior to its direct statements to Duchi, the court made no ruling or deсision and gave Duchi no definitive statement concerning the nature of his rights. The court’s statements to Duchi himself, therefore, did not compel Duchi’s testimony. The court emphasized that Duchi could cut off questioning about the cocaine, where it was, and did not “have to say another word.” Only if Duchi decided to testify about the cocaine delivery would the privilege become inapplicable.
*395 The record thus reveals this situation. Duchi was probably advised by counsel that he had no Fifth Amendment right to refuse to testify about the cocaine for which he was convicted. The witness was advised by the court, however, that he did not have to testify if he did not want to. While a close questiоn it appears to us that the testimony then given by Duchi was not compelled, was voluntary, and its introduction in a subsequent trial would not violate Fifth Amendment principles.
Duchi has suggested another basis for upholding the district court’s decision that is closely akin to the compelled testimony argument. He maintains that he gave testimony at Conrad’s trial as а result of the illegal search and seizure, so the testimony should be suppressed as the “fruit of the poisonous tree.” Conrad had made a motion to suppress the evidence, as had Duchi. As in the Duchi trial, suppression was denied, albeit erroneously. Had the district court properly suppressed the evidence prior to Conrad’s trial, Duchi argues, then charges would never have been brought against Conrad and he would not have been forced to testify on her behalf.
Accepting for the moment the argument that charges would never have been raised against Conrad had the evidence been suppressed, a proposition that is not without doubt, it is clear that Duchi’s testimony is not sufficiently related to the initial illegality to warrant imposition of the exclusionary rule. In
New York v. Harris,
Harris demonstrates that for testimony or evidence to be considered the fruit of an illegal search, it must be directly or indirectly attributable to the constitutional violation. In Harris, even though the illegal entry arrest was a “but for” cause of the later statements in that without the illegal arrest no statements would have been made, it was not the proximate cause of the statements because the statements were not obtained during the unconstitutional entry into the home.
Likеwise, in this case, Duchi’s statements were not the “fruit” of the earlier illegal search. The Government did not exploit its unconstitutional conduct to obtain Duchi’s statements, as that term is used in Wong Sun. Instead, Duchi made a conscious and voluntary choice to aid his girlfriend and co-defendant by testifying in her behalf. Nothing about the illegal search led the Govеrnment to this testimony and the Government did not use an advantage gained by its illegal activity to obtain Duchi’s statements.
Defendant maintains that this case is controlled by the Supreme Court’s holding in
Harrison v. United States,
This case, however, is readily distinguishable from
Harrison.
Duchi took the stand nоt on his own behalf, but on behalf of another individual. The Court in
Harrison
specifically confined its holding to the admission of the testimony given by the defendant during the prosecution of his case.
The Second Circuit came to a similar conclusion in
United States v. Mullens,
In any event, applying the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule here would seem to have no purpose. The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that courts should consider the pоtential deterrent effect on police in determining the point at which the taint from the illegality has become too attenuated to warrant suppression.
United States v. Leon,
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.
