Appellant was arrested and charged with assault with intent to kill in connection with an October 1969 shooting incidеnt. He was ordered held without bond by a judge of the Court of General Sessions sitting as a committing magistrate. The mаgistrate did not follow the Bail Agency’s recommendation of release on personal recоgnizance because appellant was alleged to have threatened to kill the comрlaining witness and thus had engaged in the obstruction of justice.
At the bond review hearing before the District Court cоunsel for appellant stressed appellant’s strong community ties, his assurance of employment if released, and his lack of any criminal record. The court interrogated counsel for the government with regard to the allegation of threats against the complaining witness. Counsel represented that friends of appellant had wrongfully entered the apartment of the government’s eye-witness and threatened her to make her call the police to disavow appellant’s guilt in the shooting incident. The court pointed out that the committing magistrate had found that appellant himself had threatened the complaining witness. When counsel for the government could not postively represent that such threats wеre actually made, the court then, and we think quite properly, ordered that the witness be producеd in court the following morning for questions concerning the allegations of threats. The next dáy the government еxcused the failure of the eye-witness to be in court by stating that she was “weary” of the processes in thе case due to the alleged threats and suggested that she appear the following Monday. Counsel for appellant objected to the delay because of the continued incarcerаtion of his client. This objection led the court to deny forthwith appellant’s request for release without any further opportunity for counsel to speak to the motion. This appeal followed.
A trial сourt has the inherent power to revoke a defendant’s bail during the trial if necessary to insure orderly triаl processes. Fernandez v. United States,
In Carbo v. United States,
We are satisfied that courts have the inherent power to confine the defend *492 ant in order to protect future witnessеs at the pretrial stage as well as during trial. Yet this power should be exercised with great care and оnly after a hearing which affords the defendant an ample opportunity to refute the charges that if released he might threaten or cause to be threatened a potential witness or otherwisе unlawfully interfere with the criminal prosecution.
At the hearing before the District Judge the government submitted that аppellant should be held on the basis of “substantiated” charges of threats against witnesses. No hearing wаs held by the court to determine whether there was a genuine basis for the allegation of threats by aрpellant. For cause shown, such as excusable failure of a witness to attend, the District Judge may ordеr a short delay in hearing, but he may not dispense altogether with the requirement for his own determination, after hearing, that the necessities of judicial administration require resort to such an emergency power. If the hearing showed threats by friends of appellant, which is all the government alleged here, a questiоn would arise as to the defendant’s involvement. If his denial of personal complicity were creditеd, the District Judge could not find that his release would interfere with justice, indeed he might be able to restrain thosе who thought they were doing him a good turn. The District Judge could fashion an appropriate order that wоuld suitably condition release, e. g., upon his making efforts to provide such restraint, or otherwise proteсt the government’s interest. In the instant case it was- affirmatively stated by the government that the witnesses are rеceiving police protection and that they have left the Washington area.
The allegation of threats against government witnesses should not have been handled in a summary fashion. We accordingly reverse the order of the District Court and remand the case for further proceedings.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Although Justice Harlаn was referring to Rule 46(a) (1) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the same right to pretrial releаse in a noncapital case obtains under the Bail Reform Act of 1966, 18 U.S.C. § 3146.
. The companion case to
Garbo
was not found- to be an appropriate situation for the denial of release in the exercise of the court’s extraordinary inherent power. Sica v. United States,
