UNITED STATES of America ex rel. Anthony HALL, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Michael LANE, Director, Department of Corrections, James
Thieret, Warden, Menard Correctional Center, Neil
F. Hartigan, Attorney General,
Respondents-Appellees.
No. 85-1594.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 5, 1986.
Decided Oct. 22, 1986.
Mary Elizabeth Uetz, Law Student, Prof. Thomas Broden, Legal Aid & Defender Assoc., Notre Dame Law School, Notre Dame, Ind., for petitioner-appellant.
Mark L. Rotert, Asst. Atty. Gen., Chicago, Ill., for respondents-appellees.
Before FLAUM and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges, and SWYGERT, Sеnior Circuit Judge.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge.
While in jail awaiting trial in one case, Anthony Hall was required to appear in a line-up as a suspect in a second case. He challenges his conviction in the second case, arguing that the trial court should have suppressed the identification made at the line-uр because the prison authorities refused to allow him to have his attorney from the first case present. The district court denied his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Because the government had not begun the "prosecution" against Hall in the second case at the time of thе line-up, we conclude that he had no Sixth Amendment right to counsel and that the identification evidence was admissible. We therefore affirm.
* On November 25, 1980, Anthony Hall was arrested on charges of attempted robbery and unlawful restraint. He was placed in the Cook County Jail. Hall was representеd at the arraignment and preliminary hearing on these charges by a private lawyer, Robert Romanoff. A Cook County grand jury indicted Hall on these charges on December 15, 1980.
On December 16, while he was in jail awaiting trial, the jail authorities informed Hall that he was required to participate in a linе-up as a suspect in a second, unrelated case. Hall requested permission to contact his lawyer. The jail authorities denied his request. However, an assistant state's attorney, believing that Hall was represented by the public defender's office, contacted that office. Thеy did not furnish counsel. Following the line-up, after being given permission, Hall contacted Romanoff.
Immediately after the line-up, the complainant in the second case identified Hall as her assailant. Three days later, the Cook County grand jury indicted Hall in this case, charging him with armed robbery, armed viоlence, and attempted rape. A trial on these charges was held in Cook County Circuit Court in March, 1981.
Prior to the start of the trial, Hall's counsel moved to suppress the line-up identification and any in-court identification based upon it. The court denied this motion and the evidence was later admitted. Following the trial, the jury found Hall guilty on all counts. The trial judge sentenced him to 40 years in prison on the armed robbery and armed violence charges, to run concurrently. He entered no sentence on the attempted rape charge.
Hall appealed his conviction tо the Illinois Appellate Court, which affirmed his armed robbery and armed violence convictions, but vacated the attempted rape judgment because, under Illinois law, that crime is a predicate offense for the armed violence conviction. People v. Hall,
Hall then petitioned the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Seс. 2254, seeking a writ of habeas corpus based on the claimed Sixth Amendment violation. The District Court dismissed the petition. Hall thereupon filed an appeal with this court.II
At oral argument, the government observed that jail authorities and prosecutors would be "well advised" to allow a prisoner in Anthony Hall's position to contact his lawyer. We agree. "The government should make every effort when defendants are in custody to hold line-up identifications with the presence of counsel." United States v. Gidley,
Had the jail authorities granted Hall's request to contact his lawyer, or had the assistant state's attorney taken a moment to determine who was representing Hall, much needless litigation would have been avoided. The question for this court, however, is not what the jail authorities or the assistant state's attorney should have done. The question for this court is whether their actions rise to the level of a constitutional violation requiring this court to grant appellant's petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Under the facts of this case, we cannot say that they do.
The Sixth Amendment, "made obligatory upon the states by the Fourteenth Amendment," Gideon v. Wainwright,
In arguing that the Sixth Amendment should apply to all line-ups, the appellant correctly observes that these proceedings are, indeed, "critical." A line-up is fraught with the possibility of prejudice. "The vagaries of eyewitness identification are well-known." United States v. Wade,
It is not enough, however, for appellant to prove that, in retrospect, a pre-trial event such as a line-up was a potentially-prejudicial "critical еvent" that may ultimately have led to his conviction. Rather, appellant must prove that, at the time it was conducted, the procedure was a "critical stage of the prosecution," United States v. Wade,
The Supreme Court has not spoken with one voice in defining which events constitute the stаrting points in the prosecution. It is settled that five specific "adversary judicial criminal procedures"--a formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment--are always starting points. See Kirby v. Illinois,
Even if the Sixth Amendment right to counsel may sometimes vest at a line-up prior to the initiation of formal judicial proceedings, however, appellant is clearly wrong in suggesting that it always does so. Unlike the five adversary judicial procedures enunciated in Kirby, a line-up is not always a part of the prosecution. The state may lawfully take a suspect into custody before it has enough evidence to bring formal charges. Henry v. United States,
Appellant next argues that "something more" is provided by the fact that Anthony Hall had already been indicted, and was in jail awaiting trial, for another crime. We do not see how this fact, standing in isolation, changes the analysis. "The fact [that appellаnt] was in custody for an unrelated offense at the time of the line-up has no bearing on the issue here ... since the government had not 'committed itself to prosecute' [appellant] for this offense at the time of the line-up...." United States v. Tyler,
On December 16, 1980, the date of the line-up, the State of Illinois had become Anthony Hall's adversary in the first case. However, there is no reason to believe that the state's reasoned decision to seek Hall's conviction on these charges translated into a desire to seek his conviction in the second case, which involved whоlly unrelated charges about which the state was still gathering evidence. While appellant might well have a Sixth Amendment claim if the state had begun judicial proceedings in the first case in order to hold him in custody while it built its case against him in the second case, that simply did not occur here.5
Appеllant's final argument is that, by not extending the right to counsel in this case, we are giving the state an incentive to delay the initiation of formal judicial proceedings in order to deprive defendants of their right to counsel. We disagree. In deciding this case, we have not felt compelled to adоpt a "bright line" test concerning when the right to counsel vests. "We do not believe ... that by simply delaying the occurrence of an arraignment or preliminary hearing ... the state can in effect suspend the right to counsel until it has neatly tied its case together and obtained, unmonitored, the desired line-up identifications." United States ex rel. Burton v. Cuyler,
Under the Sixth Amendment, the right to counsel may apply where, prior to initiation of judicial proceedings, a suspect had, in reality, "become the accused." Escobedo v. Illinois,
Notwithstanding the above, under the facts of this case there is "no evidence of an attempt by the police to vitiate [appellant's] right to counsel at the line-up by deliberately delaying commencement of adversary proceedings." United States ex rel. Burbank v. Warden, Illinois State Penitentiary,
Appellаnt notes, in passing, that the Due Process Clause bars identifications that are suggestive and have the potential to mislead. This, of course, is correct. See supra n. 2. Even if we were to construe this as an allegation of error, however, we could not pass on it because apрellant did not raise the issue in the proceedings below. See Craft v. Board of Trustees,
The decision of the district court is, therefore, AFFIRMED.
Notes
For these reasons, the Supreme Court has held that the Sixth Amendment requires that, following the initiation of formal "adversary judicial criminal proceedings," the state must always allow a suspect to have the assistance of counsel. Wade,
The fact that a line-up held before the start of a prosecution may have as much prejudicial effect at trial as a line-up held after the prosecution has begun is somewhat troubling. However, from the moment an individual is taken into custody by the police, the possibility of grave prejudice exists. The right to counsel, while an important safeguard, is not the only one. The Fifth Amendment provides considerable protection against such prejudice. The police may not--overtly or subtly--coerce an individual into verbally incriminating himself. Seе, e.g., Miranda v. Arizona,
The plurality in Kirby found that, because none of these events had occurred, the petitioner did not have a right to counsel at a police station "showup." The dissenters would have found a right to counsel notwithstanding the fact that the state had not yet initiated adversarial judicial proceedings. See id.
Our decision in Rodgers v. Lincoln Towing Service,
We also find it constitutionally insignificant that Hall sought the assistance of his previously retained, private counsel. "The Sixth Amendment's intended function is not to wrap a protective cloak around the attorney-client relationship...." Moran v. Burbine.
