Appellant John Robert Dilg was convicted of violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 844(d) and 844(i): conspiracy; transporting explosives in interstate commerce with the intent to damage and destroy a building; attempting maliciously to destroy a building whose activity affected interstate commerce; and 26 U.S.C. §§ 5861(d) and 5861(j): possession of an unregistered destructive device; and transporting in interstate commerce an unregistered destructive device.
On appeal, appellant challenges: (1) denial of a motion for a new trial in which the insanity defense could be raised; (2) admission of a tape recorded conversation to rebut an inference raised by defendant’s proof when the tape was not disclosed prior to trial pursuant to a discovery order; (3) the trial judge’s instruction on accomplice testimony; and (4) the trial judge’s failure to give instructions on the presumption of innocence at the close of arguments when defense counsel objected to the failure and the only instruction on the presumption of innocence was given prior to the jury panel being selected or sworn.
We reach the merits of only the last of the issues raised because reversal of the conviction is required on the basis of that issue alone.
Facts
The basis for appellant’s indictment and convictions on all five counts was an allegation that Dilg, an owner of two night clubs, one in Mobile and the other in Dothan, Alabama, hired the alleged co-conspirators to burn down a competitor’s drinking establishment in Dothan and, when that failed, to plant and explode a bomb in that establishment. An unexploded bomb was discovered in the building, removed and detonated. Fingerprints of one of the alleged co-conspirators were found on the device. Testimony of the alleged fco-conspiratórs connected appellant to the conspiracy. Appellant testified at trial, denying his involvement. During the course of the trial the Assistant U.S. Attorney revealed for the first time that he possessed evidence that the defendant exhibited paranoid behavior, providing the basis for a possible insanity defense. The trial judge ruled that the trial should continue, subject to later proof that defendant had a plausible insanity claim. Four months after the trial and conviction of Dilg, a motion for a new trial was made by his attorney on the basis that there was evidence that Dilg had been insane at the time the act was committed. The motion was denied and this appeal ensued.
Instructions on the Presumption of Innocence
Prior to commencement of the trial of appellant, a jury venire consisting of a sufficient number of persons from which to select juries for two criminal trials, Dilg’s and another which was to follow Dilg’s in the same week, was brought into the courtroom. Before the jury for either case had been selected the judge gave preliminary instructions to the entire venire. At the beginning of those instructions the judge said:
Now, you will hear all of the evidence and determine the facts from that evidence in the light of the law which it is my duty to tell you about before you start deliberating the case. So, don’t try to decide the case until after all of the evidence is before you and until I have instructed you as to the law that binds us all. You will be, if you are selected, sworn to base your verdict upon the evidence that comes to you from the witness stand here and in the light of the law as I state it to you.
Record at 3-4. The court continued:
The indictment is the formal charge against a Defendant. It is not evidence *622 of anything. It is simply a statement of a charge or one or more charges against a defendant, and the defendant is presumed to be innocent until you decide in the final analysis of all of the facts as you find them to be in the light of the law as I give it to you that he is guilty. He is innocent until that time.
Record at 4. The court then proceeded to give the instruction on the government’s burden of proving the case beyond a reasonable doubt.
After these general instructions, the two juries were selected. The one for the Dilg trial remained in the courtroom and the second jury was excused until the time of that trial. The court, prior to swearing in the jurors, gave more preliminary instructions in regard to the crime of conspiracy and other offenses charged in the indictment. No further mention of the presumption of innocence was made.
At the close of the three day trial, immediately subsequent to the delivery of closing arguments by counsel, the court made its final charge to the jury, the charge to which he had referred in the preliminary instructions and for which the jury had been admonished to wait before deciding the guilt or innocence of defendant. After reviewing the elements of the crimes and definitions of certain critical terms, the court referred again to the government’s burden of proof: “Of course, the burden is on the Government, and it is the duty of the Government to prove by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis every circumstance necessary to show that the Defendant is guilty. And unless the Government has done that in this case, it is the duty of the Jury to render a verdict of not guilty.” Record at 494.
The court concluded the instructions with references to the weighing of testimony, his duty to sentence, accomplice testimony, a review of the definition of possession and the need for a unanimous verdict. The jury was then excused and the judge asked the attorneys if they were satisfied with the instructions. Dilg’s counsel, Mr. Haas, responded as follows:
Mr. Haas: I would ask that you charge this Jury on reasonable doubt and the burden of proof, the presumption of innocence here. You may have said something about it earlier—
The Court: Oh, I did. I charged at length on it in the opening because I felt that they needed that at the inception of this case.
Mr. Haas: Well, I am not quarreling. I am sure if Your Honor said you did, you did. I don’t personally remember it right now, but I am sure you did. What I am getting at is, that I always feel like that if the Jury is charged on those basic fundamental principles of law just before they go out, that it is certainly better. And so that they would understand, when all the evidence is in, that that is still true and that the presumption of innocence is a fact, and that what the burden is in this case as contrasted with some case they may have tried in civil court.
The Court: Well, I gave each of the charges you asked for, and one or two of those touched on the subjects, additionally to what I did at the beginning. So, I won’t do that.
Record at 501-02.
Given the above dialogue, there is no question but that counsel adequately objected to the failure to instruct on the presumption of innocence and has reserved that objection for appeal.
See United States v. Nelson,
*623 In his brief appellant argued that he was deprived of a fair trial because the court failed to instruct at the close of the evidence on burden of proof, reasonable doubt and presumption of innocence. At oral argument appellant’s contention apparently was narrowed to the absence of an instruction on the presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt. We will confine our discussion to the issue raised by failure to instruct on the presumption of innocence at the close of the evidence as our disposition of the case is mandated by resolution of that issue alone.
The government argues that any error from the failure to charge on the presumption of innocence at the close of the evidence and after closing arguments was not reversible error. It contends that because the judge gave the presumption of innocence instruction before the voir dire; because the trial, three days in length, in their view was relatively short; because defense counsel referred to the presumption of innocence instruction during closing arguments; and because the judge in his closing instructions gave the instructions on burden of proof and allegedly referred back to his preliminary instructions, the error in not instructing at the close of the evidence was not reversible. The government submits that the jury knew that the presumption of innocence prevailed.
A debate over what the jurors in this case did or did not understand as they retired to the jury room will not resolve the issue before us. Rather a review of the applicable law in this circuit on the appropriate timing of instructions is required to decide whether the error committed warrants reversal.
Preliminarily we look to Fed.R.Crim.P. 30 governing “Instructions.” The rule mandates that “the court shall instruct the jury after the arguments are completed.” In the instant case, the trial judge gave some instructions after the closing arguments but not the instruction on presumption of innocence. Rule 30 makes no exception to the requirement that jury instructions be given after closing arguments and no exception can be inferred, particularly not for the critical instruction here at issue.
See Taylor v. Kentucky,
Before proceeding to the substance of the inquiry we note that appellant need not establish an error of constitutional dimension in order for reversal to be warranted. This is a ease in which a violation of federal rules and procedure is alleged. Thus this case is distinguishable from those which come to the federal courts through the channels of federal habeas corpus proceedings, 28 U.S.C. § 2254,
e.g., Payne v. Smith,
The former Fifth Circuit in
United States v. Thaxton,
A long-standing principle of federal jurisprudence is that a total failure to charge on the presumption of innocence accompanied by a defendant’s objection to such failure requires reversal of a conviction and remand for a new trial without further inquiry.
Coffin v. United States,
In
United States v. Davila-Nater,
Relying primarily on the fact that the trial judge did give the instruction during the trial and did refer back to that instruction in his closing charge, the court found that the jury was instructed sufficiently on the presumption to preclude reversal. 4 Id. at 285.
*625 The facts of the instant case are significantly distinguishable from those in Davila-Nater. First of all, here the court never instructed the jurors, as the jury sworn to decide Dilg’s case, on the presumption of innocence. The potential jurors as members of the entire venire had no sworn legal duty to heed the preliminary instructions of the court given prior to their being sworn as jurors. 5 Thus there is no legal basis to assume that they did follow those instructions. Furthermore, in the course of these preliminary instructions the judge specifically led the venire to believe that he would not actually instruct them on the law by which they were bound until a later time, after all the evidence had been heard. 6 There was no indication that the preliminary instructions were intended as the sole source of any aspect of the law by which the case was to be decided. To make matters worse, at no time during the instructions given at the close of the trial did the judge refer back to the pre-trial instruction given on the presumption of innocence. 7
Appellee contends that the error is non-reversible because, inter alia, the judge did instruct on the burden of proof in the closing charge.
8
The United States Supreme Court consistently has held that an instruction on the government’s burden of proof will not cure the absence of an instruction on the presumption of innocence.
Taylor v. Kentucky,
‘[I]n a criminal case the term [presumption of innocence] does convey a special and perhaps useful hint over and above the other form of the rule about the burden of proof, in that it cautions the jury to put away from their minds all the suspicion that arises from the arrest, the indictment, and the arraignment, and to reach their conclusion solely from the legal evidence adduced. In other words, the rule about burden of proof requires the prosecution by evidence to convince the jury of the accused’s guilt; while the presumption of innocence, too, requires this, but conveys for the jury a special and additional caution (which is perhaps only an implied corollary to the other) to consider, in the material for their belief, nothing but the evidence, i.e., no surmises based on the present situation of the accused. This caution is indeed particularly needed in criminal cases.’ (emphasis the Court’s).
Id., quoting Wigmore.
Appellee also argues that references by defense counsel during his closing argument to the presumption of innocence adequately informed the jury of the presumption. In
United States v. Nelson,
In the final analysis then, since neither giving of instructions on the burden of proof nor references by counsel to the presumption of innocence during closing arguments is sufficient to make the error committed by the trial court nonreversible, “[t]he timing of the court’s action in instructing the jury is the salient factor .... ”
United States v. Thaxton,
In that case the court instructed the jury prior to the introduction of evidence that the presumption of innocence stayed with the defendant only ‘until you have been satisfied that the defendant is guilty.... ’ The trial court refused to give any additional instructions on the continuing effect of the presumption at the close of all the evidence. In reversing Dodson’s conviction, the Fourth Circuit pointed out that under the circumstances the jury might have ignored the presumption of innocence as a matter to be considered along with the evidence when they began their deliberations.... In the present ease, the disputed instruction was given at the conclusion of the evidence and after arguments of counsel. Only the jury deliberation remained.... The instruction as delivered did not deny Thaxton ‘the right to have the jury take [the presumption of innocence] to the jury room with them as the voice of the law ... ’ Merrill v. United States,338 F.2d 763 , 768 (5th Cir.1964), quoting Dodson v. United States, supra,23 F.2d at 403 . (emphasis the court’s).
United States v. Thaxton,
In the instant case, the issue is not merely the continuity of the presumption in the jurors’ minds but indeed whether the jury ever considered the presumption. Not only did, the court fail to give the instruction immediately prior to jury deliberation but in fact gave the instruction only prior to the jury initially being selected and sworn, a full three days before jury deliberation began. In addition, the judge failed to refer back to the pretrial instruction and refused to do so even after defense counsel made a timely objection. These facts, even more than those in Dodson, present a great risk that the jury “ignored the presumption of innocence .... ” Id.
Under these circumstances, the court’s charge “fail[ed] to inform the jury of the purpose and functions of the presumption.”
Id.
at 1073. The jury was not cautioned adequately “ ‘to reach their conclusion solely from the evidence adduced.’ ”
Id.,
quoting Wigmore. We hold, therefore, that Dilg was denied “ ‘the right to have the jury take [the presumption of innocence] to the jury room with them as the voice of the law ...’”
Id.,
quoting
Merrill v. United States,
Notes
. In the en banc decision,
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The case law determining when jeopardy attaches for the purposes of the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment is helpful in analyzing when a particular defendant’s trial actually has begun. No jeopardy attaches in a jury trial until the jury is empanelled and sworn.
Willhauck v. Flanagan,
. In his closing charge, the trial judge in
Davila-Nater
stated: “ ‘As I told you in the beginning, and I will tell you again, in a criminal case there is no obligation of the defendant to prove his innocence.’ ”
. Here the court also said: “[Tjhis is a good place to emphasize that the trial judge should be careful to give the instruction on the presumption of innocence at the close of the case, so as to leave no room for controversy on this subject.” Id. at 285.
. Counsel for defendant, arguing the case on appeal, said at oral argument that he did not take notes at the time the instructions were given because he did not consider that the trial had begun when the voir dire had not yet commenced.
. See text supra at 4, citing Record at 3-4.
. Appellee contends that the court did refer back to the instructions. For this proposition pages of the record are cited which are not supportive of this contention. The closest the trial judge came to referring back to the pre-trial instructions was in saying: “[I]t is my duty to instruct you as to the law that I haven’t already talked to you about that binds us all in any case, particularly in this case.” Record at 489. This does not qualify as a reference back to the presumption of innocence charge given three days before.
. The court at this time stated: “Of course, the burden is on the Government, and it is the duty of the Government to prove by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt and to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis every circumstance necessary to show that the Defendant is guilty. And unless the Government has done that in this case, it is the duty of the Jury to render a verdict of not guilty.” Record at 494.
. In
United States v. Davila-Nater,
. Appellee would have us follow a decision of the new Fifth Circuit,
United States v. Ruppel,
In reaching its result that arguments of appellant’s counsel are a factor to be considered in deciding whether violations of Rule 30 constitute reversible error, the new Fifth Circuit applied the “totality of the circumstances” test set forth in
Kentucky v. Whorton,
We note that even if we were to apply the test of
Ruppel
the result would not differ, for
Ruppel
is also factually distinguishable from the instant case. In
Ruppel
instructions on the presumption of innocence were given after, not before, the jury was sworn and the trial judge specifically asked the jury in his closing charge to recall the presumption of innocence instruction.
United States v. Ruppel,
.
Cf. Babson v. United States,
