Thе principal issue raised on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in admitting a hearsay statement of an alleged co-conspirator made after the termination of the conspiracy and not in furtherance thereof. We reverse.
Appellant Smith was cоnvicted by a jury verdict of guilt on three counts involving possession with intent to distribute heroin. Count I charged that appellant and Geraldine Smith on December 2, 1973 possessed with intent to distribute approximately 120 grams of heroin. 1 Count III charged the defendants with conspiracy to distribute the same 120 grаms of heroin. Count II charged the defendants with possession with intent to distribute approximately two grams of heroin on the same date. The court imposed on appellant ten-year concurrent sentences followed by a special parole term on each count.
The evidence discloses that government agents, acting on information supplied by an informant that appellant, in the compаny of his wife, would be arriving by air from California with heroin in their possession, conducted a surveillance at the Des Moines Municipal Airport. After thеir arrival, appellant and his wife were separately searched.
Approximately 1.3 grams of heroin were found in appellant’s briеfcase (Count II). During the search, appellant remarked, “You guys are really thorough. How did you know to search us?” After discovery of the herоin, appellant was placed under arrest.
A separate search was likewise made of Mrs. Smith. During the conduct of the search, Detеctive Wanda Jones detected something located in Mrs. Smith’s underclothing. The detective testified *1247 that at the time she first touched the objeсt, “She [Mrs. Smith] said to me that the package was placed on her by her husband after he told her to make the trip with him.” This statement was admitted over appellant’s objection that the same constituted hearsay. This ruling gives rise to the principal issue now before us.
It is a well-established еxception to the hearsay rule that declarations of one conspirator may be used against another conspirator if thе declaration was made during the course of and in furtherance of the conspiracy charged.
Anderson v. United States,
However, where the hearsay statement was not made in furtherance of the conspiracy because it was made after the objectives of the conspiracy either had failed or had been achieved, it is inadmissible.
Krulewitch v. United States,
We are satisfied that the statement made by the co-conspiratоr wife 3 during the search when the package containing heroin was discovered on her person was not made in furtherance of the conspiracy. It was an exculpatory statement made by the declarant and designed to implicate her husband, the appellant hеrein, as the real culprit. Under these circumstances, the likelihood of reliability of the co-conspirator’s statement disappеars. It was clearly inadmissible under Federal Rules of Evidence. 4
The government cites
United States v. Cox,
For the same and additional reasons we reject the government’s further *1248 contention that the statement was admissible as an excited utterance and a part of the res gestae. 5 We note that initially the government agents took appellant into the men’s rеstroom where he was searched and 1.3 grams of heroin found in his briefcase, after which he was placed under arrest. Thereafter, the agents took Mrs. Smith, who had remained in custody of other agents while appellant was being searched, into an office behind the ticket cоunters where her purse, coat and boots were searched. The agents then left except for Detective Wanda Jones, who then conducted the search of Mrs. Smith’s undergarments which led to the discovery of the package of heroin and the statement by Mrs. Smith implicating hеr husband.
It is obvious that Mrs. Smith had time to reflect and fabricate an exculpatory statement if she desired to do so. We are satisfied that the statement cannot be classified as an excited utterance admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule.
Cf. United States v. Fountain,
We reject the government’s final contention that, since appellant does not take any meaningful exception to his conviction on Count II (pоssession with intent to distribute less than two grams of heroin), we should uphold the conviction and sentence on Count II under the concurrent sentence doctrine.
United States v. Morton,
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. Mathis Lavern Reid was also named as a defendant in each of the thrеe counts, but the government states the charges were dismissed because an informant refused to testify.
. Federal Rules of Evidence now statе that such statements are not hearsay but recognize that the new rule is consistent with previous federal decisions. See Fed.Rules Evid.Rule 801(d)(2)(E) and the Advisory Committee’s Note thereon.
. Appellant challеnges the existence of a conspiracy. We do not reach this issue because of our disposition of this case on other grounds.
. See n.2.
. Thе phrase “res gestae” has been termed a convenient “catch-all” in escaping the hearsay rule of exclusion. Regardless of terminology, “ * * * the individual admissibility situations and the reasoning involved in their solution are the primary considerations.” See Ladd and Carlson, Cases and Materials on Evidence, at 899-903 (1972).
