Appellant Kilgroe was subpoenaed to testify for the defense in a criminal trial. During the course of cross-examination he made several self-incriminating statements that were later used by the government to convict Kilgroe of fraud. The question presented is whether Kilgroe was entitled to have the court or the prosecutor read him Miranda warnings before he took the stand for the defense.
Facts
Kilgroe, in-house counsel for National Business Printers, was subpoenaed to testify for the defense in the criminal mail fraud prosecution of Albert Clark, another employee of National. Kilgroe testified that in his capacity as National’s counsel he had repeatedly advised defendant Clark that his telemarketing program was neither fraudulent nor illegal. On cross-examination, the Assistant United States Attorney sought to impeach Kilgroe by getting him to admit that he was a participant in the mail fraud scheme, not just a disinterested attorney giving legal advice to Clark. Sure enough, Kilgroe made several incriminating statements disclosing his in-depth involvement in the mail fraud scheme. Defendant Clark was convicted.
Not long thereafter, events turned from bad to worse: Relying on Kilgroe’s incriminating testimony in the Clark trial, the United States Attorney charged him with mail fraud. At trial, the district court admitted, over defense objection, a redacted version of Kilgroe’s testimony in the Clark case. The jury convicted Kilgroe for mail fraud and he was sentenced to thirty months’ imprisonment.
Kilgroe’s only contention is that before he testified in the Clark trial, either the
*804
prosecutor or the court was required, in accordance with
Miranda v. Arizona,
Discussion
“Fidelity to the doctrine announced in
Miranda
requires that it be enforced strictly, but only in those types of situations in which the concerns that powered the decision are implicated.”
Berkemer v. McCarty,
Although the courtroom is the paradigmatic setting for invoking the right against compelled self-incrimination,
4
it is not the type of setting that would justify invoking Miranda’s prophylactic rule. The
Miranda
Court itself recognized that “the compulsion to speak in the isolated setting of the police station may well be greater than in courts or other official investigations, where there are often impartial observers to guard against intimidation or trickery.”
Miranda,
Kilgroe’s claim that he required special protection because he was a putative defendant subjected to high pressure cross-examination is without merit. Cross-examination by a prosecutor, conducted in public and in the presence of both judge and jury, is hardly tantamount to custodial questioning by the police. While it is no doubt a powerful tool, cross-examination lacks the elements of isolation and intimidation associated with custodial police interrogation. That Kilgroe may have been a putative defendant when he testified is beside the point: The
internal
knowledge of a government agent that a witness may have been involved in criminal activity generates no
external
coercion on the witness.
See Anfield,
It is easy to think of Miranda as an expansive shelter against a citizen’s ignorance of his constitutional rights — especially because for the past 25 years the Miranda warning “has been ingrained in the American public,” Ceol, ‘Right to Remain Silent,’ Wash. Times, June 13, 1991, at A3, and “become part of our common awareness.” Caplan, Questioning Miranda, 38 Vand.L.Rev. 1417, 1418 (1985). But the Miranda litany is a palliative only against the unique pressures inherent in custodial interrogation. It is not a judicially crafted civics lesson, to be recited whenever someone might find it useful to hear. Thus, except in the context of custodial interrogation, Miranda leaves the responsibility for keeping a citizen informed of his constitutional rights with the preeminent guardian of those rights: the citizen himself.
Conclusion
The district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A violation of
Miranda
is one of only three exceptions to the general rule "that a witness confronted with questions that the government should reasonably expect to elicit incriminating evidence ordinarily must assert the privilege rather than answer if he desires not to incriminate himself.”
Minnesota v. Murphy,
. "A putative defendant is one against whom the Government already possesses incriminating evidence at the time of his appearance before a tribunal, or upon whom the Government has focused as having committed a crime.”
United States v. Anfield,
. Professor Kamisar explains the
Miranda
dilemma best: "It is the impact on the suspect of the
interplay
between police interrogation
and
police custody — each condition
reinforcing
the pressures and anxieties produced by the other— that, as the
Miranda
Court correctly discerned, makes ‘custodial police interrogation’ so coercive. It is the
combination
of 'custody' and ‘interrogation’ that establishes the 'interrogation environment’ that is 'at odds' with the privilege against self-incrimination and that calls for 'adequate protective devices.’ ” Kamisar, Miranda:
The Case, The Man, and The Players,
82 Mich. L.Rev. 1074, 1077 (1984) (selectively quoting
Miranda,
.Indeed, the clearest roots of the right against compelled self-incrimination stem from assertions of that right by witnesses in court, including Sir Edward Coke's argument that his client had a right against self-incrimination on the charge of unlawful carnal knowledge in the 1589 matrimonial case of Collier v. Collier and John Lilburne’s refusal to incriminate himself before the Star Chamber during his 1637 sedition trial in England. L. Levy, Origins of the Fifth Amendment 221, 271-276 (1986). The philosophical foundations for the right probably originated in ancient Rome, J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States 663 (Rotunda & Nowak ed. 1987), and were best developed by John Lambert, Sir Thomas More and Christopher St. Germain. L. Levy, at 3-5, 64-70.
