The United States appeals from a February 6, 1986 Memorandum and Order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, reported at
In the Spring of 1982, Duroyd Manufacturing Co., a corporation wholly owned by appellee John Pimentel, submitted a bid proposal to the Department of Defense for the manufacture of portions of artillery shells, and was awarded a contract which fixed the price on a cost-plus percentage basis. Included in the parts to be manufactured was a steel “column segment”, which was required to be heat treated until it reached a specified degree of hardness. The proposal submitted by Duroyd included an item representing the purported cost of having the heat treatment performed by a subcontractor. As a matter of fact, Mun-dex Metal Corp., the vendor which furnished the steel for the column segment, treated and hardened the steel at no additional cost to Duroyd, and this information was deliberately withheld from the Defense Department. In a letter to Duroyd dated March 2, 1982, Mundex informed Du-royd of its ability to guarantee the specified hardness. On March 19, Mundex wrote Duroyd again at its request, enclosing a “new” March 2 letter which did not contain the information concerning the ability of Mundex to furnish pre-hardened steel. It was the “new” March 2 letter that Duroyd submitted to the Department of Defense. It is the original March 2 letter and the covering letter of March 19 whose suppression has given rise to this appeal. Because appellees have been indicted for falsifying and concealing material facts from, and making false and fraudulent statements to, the Defense Department, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1001 and 1002, the foregoing letters are an important part of the Government’s case.
There can be no question concerning the Defense Department auditor’s right to examine these letters in the course of his audit.
See Bowsher v. Merck & Co.,
Despite its finding of inevitable discovery, the district court held that the Government could not introduce the letters as evidence on the trial. The Government then asked the court to reconsider its holding in the light of
Nix v. Williams,
Appellees then asked the district court to reconsider its finding of inevitable discovery, and the court, through a sua sponte misinterpretation of 10 U.S.C. § 2306(f)(1), held that the incriminating letters would not inevitably have been discovered. Section 2306(f)(1)(A) requires a prime contractor or any subcontractor to furnish cost or pricing data and to certify to its accuracy “prior to the award of any negotiated prime contract under this title where [as in Duroyd’s case] the price is expected to exceed $500,000.” Section 2306(f)(1)(C) imposes the same requirements “prior to the award of a subcontract at any tier, where the prime contractor and each higher tier subcontractor have been required to furnish such a certificate, if the price of such subcontract is expected to exceed $500,000.” Apparently overlooking the provisions of subdivision (A) and its application to the instant case, the district court held:
Under the law, Duroyd was required to submit to the DoD or to keep in its files any information relating to subcontract purchases that totalled $500,000 or more. Duroyd purchased the metal from Mun-dex Metals for less than that amount. Thus, the auditor did not have the right to demand copies of these vendor quotes, and Duroyd did not have the obligation under the contract to provide them to him.
The district court then concluded, “Thus, the entire criminal investigation and prosecution are among the fruits of the illegal search.”
We hold, as we are permitted to do,
see Inwood Laboratories, Inc. v. Ives Laboratories, Inc.,
When the Supreme Court, in
Nix v. Williams, supra,
Chief Justice Burger, writing for the Court majority in
Nix,
pointed out that every Federal Court of Appeals had already endorsed the inevitable discovery doctrine.
In
Romero,
after DEA officers stopped a van which they suspected contained marijuana, one of the officers searched a defendant and removed a bag of marijuana from his pocket. This, the court held, “transgressed the permissible limits of a
Terry
pat-down search for weapons.”
Other courts have expressly or implicitly interpreted
Nix
in the same manner.
See, e.g., United States v. Silvestri,
There is a difference among the Circuits, however, concerning whether application of the inevitable discovery exception hinges on the existence of an alternate line of investigation that is being actively sought or pursued at the time of the government misconduct. Judge Bownes, who wrote the opinion in
Silvestri, supra,
held that, rather than setting up an “inflexible ‘ongoing’ test”, the “analysis [should] focus on the questions of independence and inevitability and remain flexible enough to handle the many different fact patterns which will be presented.”
The orders directing suppression of the Mundex letters are reversed.
Notes
. We are uncomfortable with the district court’s description of the Mundex letters as the "poisonous tree”. The unlawful seizure is the poisonous tree; the letters are the “fruits" of the seizure.
See United States v. Leon,
