The defendant stands indicted in an eight-count indictment for violations of 2 U.S.C.A. § 192, which makes it an offense, under certain circumstances, for a person to refuse to testify before a committee of either house of Congress. More specifically, the indictment charges that the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, of the Committee on Government Operations of the Senate, was conducting hearings, and that defendant appeared as a witness before this subcommittee and was asked questions which were pertinent to the question under inquiry, which she unlawfully refused to answer. Each of the eight counts relates to a separate question. Trial by jury has been waived.
It appears undisputed that defendant appeared before a quorum of this subcommittee pursuant to subpoena, and was duly sworn and interrogated. The transcript of these proceedings consists of eight printed pages. She answered some questions, but refused to answer approximately 29, specifically invoking the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. Among these 29 questions which she refused to answer on this ground are the eight made the basis for the indictment. Her claim of privilege in each case was clear and unequivocal, and she was directed to answer in equally clear and unequivocal language. I find that the questions propounded which werе included in the indictment were pertinent to the question then under inquiry, and that this question was within the purview of the authority of the subcommittee, and had a legislative purpose.
The point for determination, and on this hinges defendant’s guilt or innocence, is whether she was required, under the law, to answer the questions after having refused so to do in relianсe on *669 the Fifth Amendment. The Government concedes that, standing alone, this reliance would offer a complete defense, but claims that she waived her rights under the Fifth Amendment by virtue of an answer she gave to a previous question. That question was as follows:
“If the Communist Party ordered you to sabotage the work you are doing, assuming that we wеre at war with Communist Russia, would you obey those orders or would you refuse to obey them ?”
On that question defendant said she would make a statement. The Chairman agreed that she might, and then she answered as follows:
“I have never engaged in espionage nor sabotage. I am not so engaged. I will not so engage in the future. I am not a spy nor sаboteur * * *»
The issue, therefore, is whether, by giving that answer, she waived her rights, under the Fifth Amendment, to the questions subsequently propounded. These, generally speaking, had to do with whether she had given information about her work to members of the Communist Party, whether she had discussed at a Communist Party meeting classified Government work, whether she received any сlearance before 1947 to work on classified work, whether she did some espionage for the Communist Party seven and one-half years before, the character of work she was doing before 1947, and the city where she worked before her present job.
It is the Government’s contention that these questions come within the areа of her answer above quoted, and having given that general answer, she waived her right to refuse to answer the specific questions thereafter propounded on the ground that they might incriminate her. It is defendant’s contention that her answer, which the Government claims is a waiver, was not incriminating and therefore did not foreclose her from claiming her privilege under the Fifth Amendment to the specific questions involved; in other words, that it did not constitute a waiver.
The answer to these opposing contentions is found, in my opinion, in the decisions of the Supreme Court, which I shall now discuss.
In Arndstein v. McCarthy,
Later, in McCarthy v. Arndstein,
Upon a hearing on the petition and return, the District Court was of opinion that, although in certain answers made without objection, Arndstein had denied that hе had any stocks or bonds in his possession, the conclusion to be drawn from the decision of the Supreme Court in reference to the schedules was that his denials or partial disclosures as a witness did not terminate his privilege so as to deprive him of the right to refuse to testify further about his property, and that he was at liberty to cease disclosures, even though some had been made, when there was just ground to believe the answers might tend to incriminate him. The District Court accordingly sustained the writ and discharged him from custody.
The Supreme Court, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Sanford,
In discussing the question presented, the Court referred to four cases. The first was Brown v. Walker,
After the foregoing reference to thesе cases, the Supreme Court held [
These decisions were again considered by the Supreme Court in the relatively recent case of Rogers v. United States, 1951,
Very recently the quеstion here involved came before the Court of Appeals for this circuit, in Powell v. United States, 1955,
The rule of law, therefore, as announсed by these cases, is that the voluntary answer must be “criminating” to prevent the witness from stopping short and refusing further explanation. The defendant in this case did not testify as to any criminating fact; on the contrary her testimony relied on by the Government as requiring her to answer the questions herein involved were completely non-incriminating in character and, der the autborities above mentioned, she had the right to “stop short” and assert her privilege.
In support of its position, the Government presses on me certain cases, but they are either not in point or do not support its contention.
Among others, it refers to Rogers v. United States, supra (also relied on by defendant) as authority in support of its claim of a waiver. But as above pointed out, this is authority against its position, because the waiver in that case came about by reason of the incriminating testimony previously given by respondent, which is not present here.
The other cases principally relied on by the Government do not relate to a refusal to answer under the Fifth Amendment, but to evidential questions arising when a defendant in a criminal case takes the stand and testifies. Among them is Walder v. United States,
The Government also cited the case of Reagan v. United States,
From this statement, the Gоvernment argues that, if the position of a defendant when he testifies is no different from that of an ordinary witness, the position of an ordinary witness is no different from that of á defendant. But this generalization overlooks the fact that, when a defendant takes the witness stand and testifies, “His waiver is not partial”, and “having once cast aside the cloak of immunity, he may not resume it at will, whenever cross-examination may be inconvenient or embarrassing.” Raffel v. United States, supra [
Two other cases cited by the Government, namely, United States v. Weisman, 2 Cir.,
Having in mind the admonition in the recent case of Emspak v. United States, 1955,
