Dеfendant appeals here from his conviction and sentence to imprisonment, after trial by jury below, on fifteen counts of violating section 2554(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 2554(a), which makes it unlawful for any person to sell or give away opium, coca leaves, or any compound, salt, derivative, or preparation thereof, except in pursuance of a written order on a form issued for that purpose by the Secretary оf the Treasury. Defendant is a physician who practiced medicine in Germany for many years beginning in 1921, but, losing his license because of the racial restrictions later enforced there, emigrated to this country in May, 1939, and received his liсense to practice in the State of New York in April, 1941. The unlawful acts of which he was charged and found guilty were the issuance of prescriptions of morphine sulphate, a derivative and preparation of opium, to drug addicts, who applied to him as “patients” for “treatment.” It was the government’s contention at the trial that by such actions defendant removed himself from the protection of § 2554(c) (1) of the statute, which excepts from the general mаndate of § 2554(a) the distribution of drugs “by a physician * * * in the course of his professional practice only.”
Attention of the United States Narcotics Squad was first called to defendant sometime in 1942. During the period from August to November of that year agents of the squad made several trips, with drug addicts who had рreviously acted as informers, to the vicinity of defendant’s office in Queens. The agents thoroughly searched the addicts, gave them marked money, and instructed them to go into defendant’s office complaining of some illness and ask for drugs. Each time the addicts came out with' prescriptions for varying amounts of morphine sulphate and without the marked money. Once an agent himself went in to see defendant, but was unable to dupe him and hence was sent away empty-hаnded. At the trial it was shown that when am addict came in, defendant would briefly ask what was wrong, make a most cursory and unprofessional examination (such as poking once the abdomen of a patient complaining of stomach ulсers to see if there was any pain), and then prescribe morphine sulphate as a virtual panacea for all ills. Finally, on November 10, 1942, three agents went to defendant’s neighborhood with two addict-informers, and followed the usual рrocedure in sending the latter in to defendant’s office. When the addicts emerged without the marked money, but with prescriptions, the agents themselves went to the house, rang the doorbell, and, when defendant answered it, immediately plaсed him under arrest, although they had no warrant.
After thus taking him into custody, the agents went with defendant across his entrance hall into his office, where, upon request, he produced from his desk drawer the marked bills which he had received from the informers. They then asked him where he kept his records, as required by 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 2554(c) (1), showing the patients to whom he had prescribed drugs; and he removed a drawer of cards from a filing cabinet and commenced to look through them. Becoming impatient of the time thus consumed, the agents asked defendant if they could see the cards. As to what transpired thereafter, there was a sharp conflict of testimony at the trial, the three agents testifying that defendant handed the сards over and consented to their inspection, defendant claiming that they were taken over his strenuous objection. But, in any event, the cards were eventually impounded by the agents and never returned to defendant. They revealed that defendant had written over 600 prescriptions for morphine sulphate between June, 1942, and the date of arrest for between 105 and 110 patients; and when agents later tried to check up on the patients listed, they found that the grеater number of the names and addresses were false. At the trial, the cards were one of the cornerstones of the government’s case; and through the information *831 supplied by them the government was able to secure several additional witnesses, beyond the informers, to testify against defendant. Defendant made the usual motion before trial to suppress the cards as evidence, but it never came up for argument; and when counsel for defendant brought the mаtter to the court’s attention during trial, the latter stated that they had been taken with consent and also as an incident to a lawful arrest.
Defendant argues, first, that his acts were merely those of a physician in the course of profеssional employment, and hence within the exception of § 2554(c) (1). But that was a question of fact as to defendant’s good faith for the jury to decide, and it was properly presented to them in the court’s charge. When a licensed physician abuses his professional function by selling or giving away prescriptions for drugs to known addicts, he automatically forfeits the privileges extended to him by § 2554(c) (1) of the statute. United States v. Behrman,
The essential question that remains before us, then, is whether the cards which constituted such damaging evidence against defendant at the trial were taken from his office as the result of an illegal search and seizure within the prohibition of the Fourth Amendment. If they were, then they should have been excluded as evidence under the mandate of the Fifth Amendment. Agnello v. United States,
Initially, there can be no doubt that defendant wаs lawfully arrested, even though the agents possessed no warrant. The law is clear that any person, law enforcement officer or private citizen, can make an arrest where a felony has in fact been committed, and the person making the arrest has probable cause for so believing. United States v. Gowen, 2 Cir.,
Conceding the lawfulness of the arrest, therefore, the crucial issuе arises as to whether the agents could legally have sought and seized the cards as an incident thereto. The mass of seemingly conflicting decisions on the point, which can serve only as a general guide, since each case must be decided on its own facts, Go-Bart Importing Co. v. United States, supra,
Applying these criteria to the present situation, the search can hardly be condemned for covering too broad an area. The controversial cards were within reach of defendant’s desk in the office, which was the essential part of the premises that was being “used for the unlawful purpose.” Being so situated, they were clearly in the “immediate possession and control” of defendant. Marron v. Unitеd States, supra; Go-Bart Importing Co. v. United States, supra; United States v. Lefkowitz, supra. Moreover, the cards were more than mere evidence of the crime. They were the means through which defendant hoped to cover up his illеgal acts, and thus were a vital factor in the criminal enterprise itself. Hence the cards here were at least as much, and probably much more, a part of the crime as were the ledgers, and especially the bills, in Marron v. United States, supra.
In every case of this kind, however, the usefulness of analogies drawn from other cases is limited. See Matthews v. Correa, supra. There is always the ultimate question whether the search seems basically reasonable; it is an undercurrеnt which is felt through all of the decisions, and where a decision against admissibility is made, the facts usually show a search that went
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beyond one made in good faith for the fruits or means of the particular crime. As was stated in the Go-Bart casе, supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
Though we find it unnecessary so to decide, it seems probable that the arrest was lawful also because the crime (which involved for its ultimate consummation the filling of the prescriptions by some druggist) appears to have been committed “in the presence of” the officers. Shettel v. United States,
