Bоhn appeals from his conviction on three counts of attempted income tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. The district court had jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3231. We have jurisdiction over this timely appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We reverse and remand.
I
From 1978 until 1981, Bohn submitted tax returns in which he disclosed no financial information from which a tax could be cоmputed. Instead, in response to the vast majority of questions posed on the return, he asserted his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination. During this period, he also submitted W-4 forms in which he claimed exemption from income tax withholding.
Bohn was indicted on three counts of attempted tax evasion for failing to pay tax due and owing, failing to file income tax returns, and submitting false W-4 forms. At the pretrial conference, Bohn requested an in camera, ex parte hearing to determine the validity of his fifth amendment claim. The distriсt court refused Bohn’s request.
On the first day of trial, Bohn renewed his request for an in camera, ex parte hearing. The district judge granted Bohn’s request for an in camera hearing. However, the judge concluded that the hearing must either include both Bohn’s counsel and the United States Attorney or be conducted without either attorney present. Bohn’s attorney objected to this procedure.
After a brief recess during which Bohn consulted with his attorney, the district judge conducted an in camera hearing without either counsel to determine the validity of Bohn’s fifth amendment claim. The record of the proceeding was sealed. After the government finished presenting its evidence, the district court ruled that Bohn had no valid fifth amendment claim on his tax returns. Bohn then declined to offеr any evidence and rested his defense. The jury was charged and returned a guilty verdict on all three counts.
Bohn then filed this appeal, and raises several contеntions of error. We first consider Bohn’s argument that the district court’s decision to exclude Bohn’s counsel from the
in camera
hearing violated his sixth amendment right to counsel. We review this question of constitutional law de novo.
United States v. Lucas,
II
We have not yet considered the question whether a defendant has a right to have counsel present at an
in camera
procеeding held to assess the validity of a fifth amendment claim. Our test is clear, however: the sixth amendment is violated whenever “the accused is denied counsel at a critical stage of his trial.”
See, e.g., United States v. Cronic,
“Critical stages of the prosecution include all parts of the prosecution implicating substantial rights of the accused.”
Menefield,
First, if failure to pursue strategies or remedies results in a loss of significant rights, then Sixth Amendment protec *1081 tions attach. Second, where skilled counsel would be useful in helping the acсused understand the legal confrontation, we find that a critical stage exists. Third, the right to counsel applies if the proceeding tests the merits of the accused’s сase.
Applying these factors, we conclude that the
in camera
hearing to assess the validity of Bohn’s fifth amendment claim was a critical stage of the criminal proceeding. The validity of Bohn’s assertion of the fifth amendment wаs the key issue in the entire case. As we observed in
United States v. Neff,
The presence of counsel is especially important where the accused is asserting a fifth amendment privilege. In order to show that his assertion of the privilege is valid under our decision in
Neff,
the accused must “ ‘show that answers to [the questions] might criminate him.’ ”
Neff,
This conclusion is only amplifiеd where, as here, the district court’s decision on the validity of the privilege will determine whether a criminal conviction is possible. This decision clearly “tests the merits of the accused’s case.” Id.
We hold that the in camera proceeding to determine the validity of Bohn’s fifth amendment claim was a critical stage of the prosecution against him. Bohn, therеfore, had a right to have counsel present at the in camera hearing.
III
The parties argue that antecedent to our right to counsel analysis, we must decide whether a district court is required to hold an in camera hearing to address the validity of a fifth amendment claim. We have not yet addressed this issue, and we need not reach out to do so in this case. Since we conclude that the in camera hearing constituted a critical stage of the trial, the issue whether the district judge was required to proceed in this manner is irrelevant to the sixth аmendment analysis.
IV
In its brief, the government asserts that Bohn consented to a hearing without counsel, implicitly suggesting that Bohn waived his right to counsel. But the law is clear that a criminаl defendant’s decision to represent himself “must be made knowingly and intelligently.”
United States v. Balough,
In this сase, the district court informed Bohn that his counsel could not attend the in camera hearing unless the government’s attorney was also present. Although Bohn eventually agreed to рroceed without counsel, this decision was not the result of an affirmative, unequivocal request. To the contrary, Bohn’s counsel specifically objected thаt Bohn was “being put in a situation where [he has] to give up one right to receive another.” Under these circumstances, we cannot conclude that Bohn knowingly and intelligently waived his right to counsel during the in camera hearing.
V
The government argues that even if Bohn was denied his sixth amendment right to counsel, such a denial was harmless error because Bohn has failеd to show any prejudice resulting therefrom. However, both this circuit and the Supreme Court have held that harmless error is inapplicable to cases where a dеfendant is denied the right to have counsel present at a critical stage of the proceedings against him.
See, e.g., Penson v. Ohio,
— U.S. -,
Because we conclude that Bohn was denied his right to counsel in violation of the sixth amendment, we do not address his other contentions of error.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
