Appellant Cohen challenges his conviction under 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846 (1970) for conspiring to distribute illegal drugs on the following grounds: (1) evidence obtained by the government through a court-ordered wiretap should have been suppressed; (2) the prosecution failed to prove him sane beyond a reasonable doubt; (3) the court erred in requiring him to waive his physician-patient privilege and name all his treating physicians and psychiatrists; (4) the court violated his privilege against self-incrimination by ordering him to submit to examination by two psychiatrists selected by the government after he announced his intention of relying on an insanity defense and denied his right to counsel by refusing his request to have an attorney present during the examination; and (5) the court erred in replacing a disqualified juror with an alternate after the jury had been instructed to leave the courtroom to begin deliberations. Finding these contentions without merit, we affirm.
I. Wiretap
Appellant claims that the court should have suppressed tape recordings and transcripts of those recordings obtained through a court-ordered wiretap because contrary to federal
1
and state statute
2
the wiretap authorization was neither supported by probable cause nor sufficiently limited in purpose and duration, and the recordings obtained through the wiretap were not immediately made available to the issuing judge upon termination of the wiretap. These contentions are without merit. First, the affidavit, which relies partly on the affiant’s firsthand knowledge and partly on information provided by a confidential informant, supplies sufficient facts to satisfy the statutory requirement of probable cause, as defined in
Aguilar v. Texas,
a pragmatic approach has been taken with respect to the particularity requirement [after surveying cases]. A specific crime or a specific series of related crimes must be identified. Although the nature and type of the anticipated conversations must be described, the actual content need not and cannot be stated since the conversations have not yet taken place at the time the application is made and it is virtually impossible for an applicant to predict exactly what will be said concerning a specific crime.
The order must be broad enough to allow interception of any statements concerning a specified pattern ofcrime. In determining whether the order and application are sufficiently particular, the papers as a whole must be considered, including especially those portions which recite facts intended to establish probable cause.
We have carefully reviewed all the applications. We are satisfied that none of them disclosed an improper intention on the part of the applicant to secure a roving commission.
United States v. Tortorello,
shall continue until communications are intercepted which reveal the details of the scheme which have been used to violate the [state laws], and the participants and nature of the conspiracy involved therein, or for a period of 30 days from the date of this order, whichever is earlier,” fulfills the statutory requirement that an order be limited to the period necessary to achieve the objective of the authorization but in no event longer than thirty days. Finally, although the authorizing judge received the tapes of the wiretapped conversations five weeks after termination of the wiretap when the tapes had been transcribed, instead of immediately as required by statute, the parties stipulated to facts showing chain of custody and a lack of alteration of the tapes. Although the better procedure would have been to deliver the tapes immediately to the judge and have him release them for transcription, in view of the proof about both custody and the absence of tampering, we find no violation.
See United States
v.
Sklaroff,
II. Proof of Sanity
Defendant insists that the prosecution failed to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt. Although there was conflicting expert testimony and some lay testimony pointed to appellant’s history of mental problems,
3
defendant’s expert psychiatrist testified that the kind of disorder suffered by defendant was subject to periods of time when the accused could “appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct and conform to the requirements of the law,” which satisfies this circuit’s definition of sanity.
See Blake v. United States,
III. Waiver of Physician-Patient Privilege
Before trial the defense attorney announced that he intended to argue for an insanity defense and to use certain psychiatrists as witnesses, but as trial approached he was unable to obtain reports from those doctors pursuant to the court’s order for reciprocal discovery. The court required appellant to execute a waiver of any physician-client privilege he might have because appellant’s psychiatrists would not deal directly with the prosecution for fear of violating a Florida statute
5
recognizing a patient-psychiatrist privilege, even though the
IV. Compelled Psychiatric Examination
Appellant argues first, that since insanity negates an element of the crime, the lower court’s order forcing him to submit to an examination by psychiatrists selected by the government to determine his sanity at the time of the commission of the crime violated his privilege against self-incrimination and second, that he was entitled to an attorney during the examination. This circuit has often recognized a district court’s inherent authority to admit psychiatric testimony about a defendant’s mental condition at the time of the commission of the offense based on information obtained at an examination ordered pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 4244 (1970) to determine the accused’s capacity to stand trial,
9
although we have never reached the issue of whether a defendant’s privilege against self-incrimination is violated per se by a court-ordered psychiatric examination solely to determine the accused’s mental condition at the time of the commission of the offense. Several other circuits have rejected this unconstitutionality-per-se argument on various grounds,
10
while one has indicated approval of it.
11
Relying on a balancing test,
12
we choose to follow the former line of cases and permit compelled psychiatric examinations when a defendant has raised the insanity defense. Since any statement about the offense itself could be suppressed,
13
a rule forbidding compelled examinations would prevent
Likewise, we reject appellant’s claim of a constitutional right to have an attorney present at. the psychiatric examination since that might defeat the purpose of the examination 15 and since the examination is not the kind of critical stage at which assistance of counsel is needed or even useful. 16 There would be no need for counsel to instruct the accused not to answer questions for fear of factual self-incrimination, for any such matter is subject to suppression; and interference with the examination by counsel on other grounds would be improper.
V. Juror Substitution
Immediately after the district judge completed his instructions and ordered the jury to retire, attorney for appellant’s co-defendant objected that one juror had slept during instructions. The court recalled the jury, which had been kept waiting in a hallway outside the courtroom, questioned the “sleeping juror,” and replaced him with an alternate. Appellant insists that this procedure violated Rule 24(c), Fed.R.Crim.P., which permits replacement of disqualified jurors with alternates “prior to the time the jury retires to consider its verdict.” Appellant’s interpretation is- too formalistic. Although the jury had been ordered to retire, it had not yet done so because the jurors had never begun their deliberations. We find no violation of the rule.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 2518(3), (4)(c), (5), (8)(a) (1970).
. Fla.Stat. § 934.09(3), (4)(c), (5), (7) (1973).
. Several lay witnesses described appellant’s childhood mental problems, and at least one testified that appellant was not rational during the month that he committed the offense.
. See
United States v. McCracken,
. Fla.Stat. § 90.242 (Supp.1975).
. Id. § (3)(b).
. Rule 16 was amended, effective December 1, 1975, to provide greater discovery to both prosecution and defense. Trial in this case was governed by the pre-1975 rule.
. See note 7 supra.
.
See, e. g., United States v. McCracken,
.
United States v. Albright,
.
United States v. Alvarez,
.
Accord, United States v. Bohle,
. As other circuits have done.
See, e. g., United States v. Bohle,
.
See United States v. Albright,
.
Accord, United States v. Bohle,
.
See United States v. Baird,
