UNITED STATES оf America, Appellee, v. Jeffrey R. MacDONALD, Appellant.
No. 79-5253.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued June 9, 1982. Decided Aug. 16, 1982.
Certiorari Denied Jan. 10, 1983. See 103 S.Ct. 726.
In summary, I believe it is an abuse of discretion to award attorney‘s fees against the Virginia Court for not doing that which it was not alleged to have done; for not doing that which it was not proved to have done; for not doing that which, as against plaintiffs, it could not have done; and for not doing that which, in practice, it rarely does. Such an award would do nothing to further the purposes of
§ 1988 to encourage “private attorney general” suits. Rather, an award against the Virginia court in its so-called enforcement role, based upon the record in this case, would simply be a determination that the fee should be paid by the Virginia court without regard to the justice of the case. 505 F.Supp. at 829.
For the past three years this suit has bеen nothing but an effort by the plaintiff‘s attorneys to establish a theory upon which they could collect a fee. In the spring of 1979 the last possible impediment to gathering the information and publishing the Attorney‘s Directory for Arlington County was removed. However, when this case was argued in November 1981 the directory had not been printed or distributed. As a result of numerous questions by the court to the attorneys for Consumers Union, the information has been gathered and the directory published. A copy of the directory was forwarded to this court on June 15, 1982. It contains the names of 78 attorneys in Arlington, Virginia. This action has made three trips to the United States Supreme Court, and is presently on its way back to the Supreme Court, all to produce 78 names.
I would affirm the district court‘s finding that special circumstances rendered a fee award unjust as against the Virginia Statе Bar for the reasons set forth in the district court‘s opinion.
I am concerned by and dissent from footnote No. 2 of the majority opinion of this court which seems to indicate that the attorneys are entitled to fees for all services rendered, even those services in pursuing an invalid theory of the law. The district court was very careful to state that the attorney‘s fees would be “for services of its counsel in this action in so far as such services were performed to prevent the enforcement of the Rule.” It is obvious from the record that these attorneys did not even consider enforcement until this case was almost concluded and then had the matter of enforcement called to their attention by the United States Supreme Court. I am uncertain in reading the majority opinion as to whether the attorney‘s fees shall be restricted to prevention of enforcement of the Rule or whether the attorneys are to be compensated for all services performed from the beginning of this litigation.
I would remand the case to the district court with instructions to expand the record and determine whether the Virginia Court ever exercised its direct enforcement role.
Ralph S. Spritzer, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa., Bernard L. Segal (Wendy P. Rouder, San Francisco, Cal., Michael J. Malley, Phoenix, Ariz., Wade M. Smith, Raleigh, N.C., on brief), for appellant.
John F. De Pue and Brian M. Murtagh, Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C. (Samuel T. Currin, U. S. Atty., James Blackburn,
Before BRYAN, Senior Circuit Judge, MURNAGHAN and SPROUSE, Circuit Judges.
ALBERT V. BRYAN, Senior Circuit Judge:
In United States v. MacDonald, — U.S. —, 102 S.Ct. 1497, 71 L.Ed.2d 696 (1982), the Supreme Court reversed our holding1 that appellant‘s Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial was abridged by the Government‘s delay in obtaining the indictment. On remand, we now speak to MacDonald‘s remaining advancements of error. See id. at — n.4, 102 S.Ct. at 1500 n.4. Since the Supreme Court‘s opinion scrupulously chronicles both the facts of record and the protracted history of the case, see id. at —, 102 S.Ct. at 1499-1500, we forego repetitious narration.
I. Due Process
Our first concern is the accused‘s grievance that the two-year interval between the termination of the military proceedings and the grand jury‘s convocation2 amounted to a denial of constitutionally-guaranteed due process. Laggardness in prosecuting a criminal charge rightfully exposes the Government to censure. Still, not every delay is of Constitutional moment. Indeed, we conclude that the instant hiatus, although objectionable, falls short of Constitutional injury.
To maintain this challenge, MacDonald must initially identify prejudice ascribable to the two-year gаp. While a
In this regard, we write mindful of Supreme Court guidance peculiarly applicable here. While it did not decide this question, six Justices commented on the nature of and reasons for the delay in indicting MacDonald. For the Court, Chief Justice Burger concluded:
Plainly the indictment of an accused—perhaps even more so the indictment of a physician—for the heinous and brutal murder of his pregnant wife and two small children is not a matter to be hastily arrived at either by the prosecution authorities or by a grand jury. The devastating consequences to an accused person from the very fact of such an indictment is a matter which responsible prosecutors must weigh carefully. The care obviously given the matter by the Justice Department is certainly not any indication of bad faith or deliberate delay.
— U.S. at — n.12, 102 S.Ct. at 1503 n.12. See also id. at —, 102 S.Ct. at 1503 (Stevens, J., concurring). We think this conclusive of the Lovasco test and fatal to the appellant‘s
II. Psychiatric Character Testimony
MacDonald presses, too, that the trial court was at fault in rejecting tendered expert psychiatric character testimony. See
that irrespective of the admissibility of the proffered evidence under Rules 404 and 405. F.R.E., the probative value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues and misleading the jury . . . .
485 F.Supp. 1087 at 1096-97; see
At the outset, we must recall that the appraisal of the probative and prejudicial value of evidence under
III. Pajama Top Demonstration
We next analyze appellant‘s contention that the trial court erred in allowing the Government to demonstrate the similarity between the pattern of puncture holes in his pajama top and the pattern of icepick wounds in his wife‘s chest. The top was found draped over Mrs. MacDonald‘s chest when the authorities first arrived at the crime scene;8 it was soaked with the victim‘s blood and, among other breaks in the fabric,9 contained 48 round punctures. MacDonald has insisted that the shirt was damaged when, after it was pulled over his head in a scuffle and became entangled about his hands, he used it to fend off blows from an icepick wielded by the same assailants he avers murdered his family. According to his version of the incident, he placed the nightshirt on his wife‘s chest when he regained consciousness and discovered her body.
Suspicious of this story, the prosecution theorized that he intentionally placed the pajama top on his wife‘s body to disguise the fact that her blood had stained it in his fatal attack on her. Consistent with this hypothesis and the defendant‘s alleged maiming of the bodies to give the appearance of a massacre, the Government postu-
The defense contends that allowing the jury to view this exhibition was error, urging that the prejudicial impact of this demonstration far outweighed its probative value. See
Our task, however, is not to decide this dispute. As with the District Court‘s refusal to admit expert psychiatric testimony on the issue of Dr. MacDonald‘s personality, our inquiry now is, baldly, only whether that Court abused its discretion by finding this demonstration more probative than prejudicial. See part II supra. We think the District Court‘s decision that this evidence was not unduly prejudicial was acceptable. See United States v. Baller, 519 F.2d 463, 466 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1019, 96 S.Ct. 456, 46 L.Ed.2d 391 (1975). We therefore do not think its ruling was an abuse of discretion.11
IV. The Rock Report
Next, MacDonald argues the District Court erred when it refused to allow into evidence the findings and conclusions of Colonel Warren V. Rock, the investigating officer designated by the Army in 1970 to determine whether probable cause existed to prosecute MacDonald.12 Principally, MacDonald argues the report was admissible as a public record under
Under
MacDonald contends that thеse attributes place the Rock report squarely within
Although
In Cox v. Babcock & Wilcox Co., 471 F.2d 13 (4th Cir. 1972), we indicated that the admission of evaluative public records was discretionary with the trial court. Citing the dissent from the denial of rehearing in Smith v. Universal Services, Inc., 454 F.2d 154, 160 (Dyer, J., dissenting), we said that a trial judge‘s decision to reject an EEOC investigative report was unassailable. As Smith made clеar, such reports at times suffer from an undue risk of prejudice. To the extent they contain credibility determinations, they tend to undermine the exclusive province of the jury.
Such reasoning upholds the presiding judge‘s disallowance of Colonel Rock‘s findings and conclusions. While the Court properly could have admitted the evidence, we do not question the ruling of declination. The ultimate query to the jury in this case was whether defendant committed the crimes charged. Nowhere has appellant shown that this report would have helped towards an answer to this question. Indeed, its admission would have tended to perplex, in that it likely would have distracted the jury‘s attention from its task of ascertaining guilt or innocence to a second-guessing of the Government‘s conduct of the murder investigation. There is no question that MacDonald was free to call any witnesses who testified in the
V. The Stoeckley Witnesses
Finally, appellant lays fault to the District Court‘s exercise of discretion in excluding the testimony of seven witnesses, all of whom would have testified to various inculpatory comments or statements assertedly made by Helena Stoeckley. The exclusion of this evidence, charges MacDonald, was error in that it abridged appellant‘s
A
Since the commission of the crimes in February 1970, MacDonald has maintained that he and his family all were victims of a bizarre cult attack. He claims that the perpetrators included three men and a woman wearing a floppy hat, having blond hair, and wearing boots. The woman, he says, was Helena Stoeckley.
At trial, Stoeckley testified that although her hair was brown in color, she owned a blond wig at the time of the crimes. She further said that she owned a floppy hat and boots. Although her recollection of events on the evening of February 16 and during the early morning hours of February 17 was, at best, hazy, she recalls not wearing the blond wig. However, she admitted to burning the wig and discarding the boots two days later.
Because of this faulty memory, appellant sought to introduce a series of inculpatory statements through other witnesses. In this proffer to the District Court, in the absence of the jury, it was shown that these witnesses would give evidence substantially as follows:
- Robert A. Brisentine, an Army investigator assigned to the homicides, interviewed Stoeckley April 23 and 24, 1971, approximately 14 months after the crime. Stoeckley told him she was present during the murders, but did not think that she had taken part. She offered to divulge the participants and provide more details, but wanted immunity from prosecution. Subsequently, she said she had “said too much.”
- James Gaddis, an officer of the Nashville Police Department, revealed that Stoeckley had confessed her belief that she was involved in the crimes in the fall of 1970. She also said that she knew others who were involved.
- P. E. Beasley, a former detective with the Fayetteville Police Department, explained that Stoeckley had been a reliable drug informant for several years prior to the murders. On the morning of February 18, 1970, a day after the fateful events, she told Beasley, in responsе to his accusation that she matched MacDonald‘s description of the female intruder, “[i]n my mind, it seems I saw this thing happen . . . I was heavy on mescaline.” Beasley also said that he observed funeral wreaths in the yard of Stoeckley‘s home. He added that she had told him she was mourning the MacDonalds.
- Jane Zillioux, a Nashville neighbor of Stoeckley throughout the fall of 1970, said that Stoeckley had confided to her that she could not return to Fayetteville because she was involved in murders there. She further confessed that the victims were a woman and two small children and that she had disposed of the clothes she had been wearing to sever her connection with the crimes.
- Charles Underhill, another Nashville acquaintance, testified that Stoeckley told him “they killed her and the two children.”
- William Posey, a neighbor of Stoeckley in Fayettеville, testified that Stoeckley told him a few days after the slayings that she didn‘t kill anyone herself, but did hold a light while the crime was in progress. She also confided to him that she was spotted by a policeman leaving the house.
- Wendy Rouder, one of MacDonald‘s lawyers, testified that two days after Stoeckley had testified she could not remember anything about the night of the crime, she told Rouder “I still think I could have been there that night.” Stoeckley also feared she would not be able to live with the guilt if MacDonald were convicted. Finally, she recalled standing by the couch in the MacDonald apartment holding a candle “only—you know—it wasn‘t dripping wax; it was dripping blood.”
After all of these individuals had testified without the presence of the jury, the District Court excluded the evidence. It ruled the statements inadmissible hearsay because untrustworthy. In addition, the Court rejected MacDonald‘s attempt to use the statements as impeachment on the grounds that it was not impeachment, properly so called, and in any event, was excludible under
B
Relying on Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 93 S.Ct. 1038, 35 L.Ed.2d 297 (1973), MacDonald complains that the exclusion of the testimony of these seven “Stoeckley witnesses” deprived him of due process. He also maintains that
Chambers involved an appeal of a criminal conviction obtained after the refusal of the trial court to permit defendant to introduce the testimony of three witnesses who would have said that one Gable MacDonald admitted to each witness that he was guilty of the murder charged to Chambers. The Mississippi courts excluded the testimony оn the ground that it was hearsay and not admissible under any exception recognized in that State. Particularly, Mississippi did not recognize statements against one‘s penal interest as an exception to the general hearsay prohibition.
The Supreme Court reasoned that enforcement of this hearsay rule denied Chambers’ due process. In so concluding, it found sufficient indications of trustworthiness in the circumstances of MacDonald‘s admissions. For example, the evidence disclosed that each of the three witnesses was a close associate of MacDonald and that MacDonald had made the damaging remarks spontaneously. In addition, they were corroborated by other facts—a sworn (although subsequently repudiated) confession by MacDonald, testimony of an eyewitness putting MacDonald at the crime scene, proof that MacDonald owned a gun similar to the weapon used, and evidence that he was seen with the gun just after the shooting—giving credence to the asserted veracity of the hearsay. Finally, the Court noted that MacDonald was present and available for the prosecution to call to the stand if it so chose. In circumstances “where constitutional rights directly affecting the ascertainment of guilt are implicated, the hearsay rule may not be applied mechanistically to defeat the ends of justice.” Id. at 302, 93 S.Ct. at 1049.
This ruling, in large measure, is codified for Federal Courts in
at the time of its making [it was] so far contrary to the declarant‘s pecuniary or proprietary interest, оr so far tended to subject him to civil or criminal liability, or to render invalid a claim by him against another, that a reasonable man in his position would not have made the statement unless he believed it to be true. A statement tending to expose the declarant to criminal liability and offered to exculpate the accused is not admissible unless corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement.
We have no difficulty in agreeing with appellant that declarant Stoeckley was unavailable14 and that her statements, if true, clearly would be against her penal interest. The question remains, however, whether the “corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement[s].”
As corroborating circumstances, MacDonald adverts to the fact that Stoeckley owned and regularly wore boots, a blond wig, and a floppy hat, thus permitting her to fit the description of the female assailant described by defendant. In addition, defendant argues that Stoeckley had no motive to fabricate; that each admission was consistent with the others; that, for the most part, her declarations were spontaneous and to close associates; that at the time of their making, she was (and is) still subject to criminal liability, and in making these statements, she recognized this fact; that she cannot account for her whereabouts on the night of the crime; and that her mourning the deaths evinces a consciousness of guilt. The District Court, by contrast, concluded the declarations were untrustworthy because Stoeckley‘s pattern of remarks in admitting and denying complicity rendered her hopelessly unreliable, and because her pervasive involvement with narcotic drugs, and her admissions that she was under the virtually continual influence of the drugs when these statements were made further manifested unreliability.
As with other of these evidentiary objections, our role in reviewing decisions at nisi prius construing
It is to be recalled that
At bottom, the sticking point here, as recognized by the District Court, is the fundamental problem of trustworthiness. While MacDonald is able to point to a number of corroborating circumstances, he does not demonstrate, finally, that they make Stoeckley‘s alleged declaration trustworthy. Her apparent longstanding drug habits made her an inherently unreliable witness. Moreover, her vacillation about whether or not she remembered anything at all about the night of crime lends force to the view that everything she has said and done in this regard was a product of her drug addiction. Given the declarant‘s “pathetic” appearance, our conviction is that the District Court was not in error in adjudging that defendant failed to carry his burden under
C
Failing to establish the truth of the proffered Stoeckley declarations, MacDonald
The Court, we believe, properly used
VI
At end, MacDonald asserts that the evidence, even when taken most favorably for the prosecution, does not justify the finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 62, 62 S.Ct. 457, 86 L.Ed. 680 (1942). Our canvass of the record, however, gives ample warrant for the verdict. With no merit in any issue on this appeal, the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Affirmed.
MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge, concurring:
On the discretion of the district judge, the opinion of Judge Bryan rests. On the present state of the law as it applies to the particular case before us, I find myself, albeit not without substantial misgiving, obliged to concur.
Nevertheless, I perceive a useful purpose for future cases in addressing one troubling aspect. It is evident that a basis may be erected for finding the hearsay statements of Helena Stoeckley untrustworthy. Given the wide discretion vested in the trial judge, we should not fault Judge Dupree to the extent of reversing.1 Nevertheless, in view of the issues involved, and the virtually unique aspects of the surrounding circumstances, had I been the trial judge, I would have exercised the wide discretion conferred on him to allow the testimony to come in. My preference derives from my belief that, if the jury may be trusted with ultimate resolution of the factual issues, it should not be denied the opportunity of obtaining a rounded picture, necessary for resolution of the large questions, by the withholding of collateral testimony consistent with and basic to the defendant‘s principal exculpatory contention. If such evidence was not persuasive, which is what the government essentially contends in saying that it was untrustworthy, the jury, with very great probability, would not have been misled by it.
In deciding whether a statement against interest should be admitted under the exception to the hearsay rule, the court must determine whether the “corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement.”
been clearly within the competence of the witness to observe, without a demonstrable intention or disposition to prevaricate. See United States v. Atkins, 558 F.2d 133, 135-136 (3d Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 929, 98 S.Ct. 416, 54 L.Ed.2d 289 (1977). There the district judge had excluded an overheard acknowledgment of guilt by someone other than the defendant because the witness was a minor, who had not completed high school, was unemployed, and was on welfare. The allegedly overheard conversation occurred outside a bar on a crowded street corner and was deemed unreliable by the district judge. In reversing, the Third Circuit emphasized that immediately after the witness overheard the declarant confess murder she saw parts of a rifle or shotgun in his car trunk, promptly told the story to the victim‘s family and accompanied them to the police station.
Credibility can be established in various ways. Considerations include the circumstances surrounding the statements, United States v. Atkins, supra, and the absence of motivation on the part of the declarant to fabricate, United States v. Thomas, 571 F.2d 285, 290 (5th Cir. 1978) (“... the possibility of fabrication which is the rationale of the corroboration requirement, is slight. Weeks had no motive to falsify,” he being a co-defendant who had pleaded not guilty). Another factor deserving recognition is that of the general societal frame of reference. The latter can provide increased support for the believability of statements such as the ones now at issue. The likelihood of the truth of a seemingly outrageous story grows when an appreciation of current events is applied to the known facts and circumstances of a given case.
The defense of a marauding, drug-crazed purposeless group of homicidal maniacs is one which, absent the events surrounding the behavior of Charles Manson and the excruciating horror of the indescribably base murder of Sharon Tate, would have been dismissed as so incredible as to merit no serious attention. All that changed with the advent of Manson. Thereafter the possibility of such an occurrence, while still macabre, was considerably enhanсed. The
It should be emphasized that the condition on admissibility of corroborating circumstanсes indicating trustworthiness represents an accommodation between concern about third party confessions and their high potential for fabrication, on the one hand, and awareness of the enhancement of reliability flowing from the exposure to punishment for crime for the confessing declarant, on the other. Notes of the Advisory Committee on the Proposed Federal Rules of Evidence. Rule 804(b) Exception (3): “The requirement of corroboration should be construed in a manner [so] as to effectuate its purpose of circumventing fabrication.” The reason prompting Congress to add the corroboration provision to
The rеcord in the case satisfies me that, among the possible motivations leading to the statements of Helena Stoeckley, fabrication was not a likely one. The matter of what constitutes corroborating circumstances which clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement was left for judicial (i.e. case-by-case) development. 11 Moore‘s Federal Practice § 804.06(3)[2], at VIII-281. “It is clear that the standard for corroboration must not be too high.”
Weinstein additionally has this to say:
The court should only ask for sufficient corroboration to “clearly” permit a reasonable man to beliеve that the statement might have been made in good faith and that it could be true. If, for example, the proof is undisputed that the person confessing to a shooting could not have been at the scene of the crime because he was in prison, it will be excluded. But if there is evidence that he was near the scene and had some motive or background connecting him with the crime that should suffice.
For all those considerations, my view is that the testimony should have been admitted. But it would read out of the law the concept of trial court discretion were courts of appeals to label as “abuse of discretion” any action by a district court with which the appellate court disagrees. Accordingly, I do not regard it proper to dissent.
I conclude with the observation that the сase provokes a strong uneasiness in me. The crimes were base and horrid, and whoever committed them richly deserves severe punishment. As Judge Bryan has pointed out, the evidence was sufficient to sustain the findings of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Still, the way in which a finding of guilt is reached is, in our enduring system of law, at least as important as the finding of guilt itself. I believe MacDonald would have had a fairer trial if the Stoeckley related testimony had been admitted. In the end, however, I am not prepared to find an abuse of discretion by the district court, and so concur.
Notes
[T]he case was a sensational, drawn-out one, both hotly contested and bristling with difficult issues. The district judge‘s handling of the heavy demands placed on him was admirable.
632 F.2d at 260.That it is recognized and accepted by reputable specialists in the field of forensic psychiatry that certain personality/emotional configurations are identifiable in human beings which, because of the mental disorders involved, are indicative of a capability or disposition to certain types of anti-social conduct, including the commission of homicides involving extreme brutality to one‘s own spouse and small children and other crimes of violence; and that, conversely, other personality/emotional configurations are identifiable which are inconsistent with such anti-social behavior.
That based on his psychiatric examination of the defendant, it is his opinion of the character of Dr. MacDonald that the defendant was and is a man who is not given to extraordinary violent outbursts of physical violence against his wife and children; that he was and is an emotionally normal, mentally stable man, neither evasive nor apparently untruthful about the significant events of his life, including the murders of his family, who did not possess the type of personality/emotional configuration that would be consistent with and/or manifests this type of murderous assault on his wife and small children.
See 485 F.Supp. at 1094.If character is defined as the kind of person one is, then account must be taken of the varying ways of arriving at that estimate. These may range from the opinion of the employer who has found the man honest to the opinion of the psychiatrist based upon examination and testing.
This statement, however, merely manifests that, in the opinion of the Advisory Committee, expert psychiatric testimony would be relevant evidеnce of one‘s personality. If the District Court determines that the prejudicial impact of such evidence exceeds its probative value, however,Rather than drawing this distinction, however, we hold that Chambers and
