OPINION
This case is on remand from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit which reversed defendant’s conviction.
United States v.
Massey,
FACTS
Around 8:30 on the morning of September 24, 1975, Massey telephoned the F.B.I. office at Ocala, Florida. He told an agent that he had information concerning a conspiracy, in which he had been recruited to participate, to assassinate President Ford and Senator Kennedy. At Massey’s suggestion, he and the agent met at the Oklawaha Bridge about one-half hour later. Massey drove a white panel truck. Massey revealed his true identity, said he had worked at a Super Test service station in the area, and discussed some details about the assassination conspiracy. He said that he had been contacted in June by a white male, in his fifties, who offered Massey an opportunity to make a large amount of money. At the man’s directions, Massey quit his job at the gas station, returned to his mother’s home in Royston, Georgia, and separated from his wife. He awaited further instructions. Massey said that during the first week of July an unidentified man called and instructed him to go to a certain truck stop in Fair Play, South Carolina, at 11:00 P. M. that night. Massey met the caller and two of them drove to a wooded area where they met four other white men. They told Massey that they were mercenaries training for guerilla activities in Central or South America. During the month of July Massey repeatedly met with the men to train. The sessions lasted for several days at a time and were at various locations in South Carolina and Georgia. Massey stated that he eventually discovered that the real purpose of the group was to assassinate President Ford and Senator Kennedy-
At the meeting at the Oklawaha bridge, Massey indicated that he was expected to meet one member of the group near Atlanta, on the morning of September 26. Massey requested $5,000 to continue his contact with the .group and to assist the F.B.I. The agent told Massey that he did not have authority to agree to the payment and would have to contact his superiors in Jacksonville. The agent told Massey to call him about 1:30 that afternoon.
Massey called back at 1:00 P. M. and arranged for a second meeting at a truck stop near Ocala. At the meeting the agent agreed to pay Massey $5,000 for his aid if *848 Massey would submit to a polygraph test first. Massey refused. The agent then advised Massey that if his statements were untrue he could be guilty of making false statements to a government agency, and if the statements were true, he could be guilty of conspiring to assassinate the President. Massey agreed to telephone his decision to the agent by 3:30 P. M.
At 3:30 P. M. Massey called the agent, refused again to take a polygraph test, said he would remain in the Ocala area but would not disclose his location, and declared that he would call the agent at 8:30 A. M. the next day. At 7:45 that night Massey was arrested.
When Massey was arrested, he was given the Miranda warnings. At the F.B.I. office he refused to sign an advice and waiver-of-rights form. The F.B.I. agents tried several times to interrogate Massey, but he repeatedly indicated that he wished to consult a lawyer. The agents ceased their attempts at interrogation. Massey engaged in small talk only. The agents took him to the Marion County Jail where he spent the night.
About 6:30 A. M., the following day, two F.B.I. agents transported Massey to Jacksonville for an initial appearance before the United States Magistrate. Before the start of the trip, Massey was again given the Miranda warnings. En route to Jacksonville, the F.B.I. agents questioned Massey about the veracity of his statements, but Massey declined to discuss the plot until he could talk with a lawyer.
The agents arrived in Jacksonville with Massey around 8:30 A. M. They took him to an F.B.I. office, not a detention cell. Massey remained there more than three hours, awaiting an initial appearance before the Magistrate. During that time, a Secret Service agent gave Massey the Miranda warnings. Massey refused to sign a waiver or to discuss the plot until he had conferred with a lawyer. Nonetheless, Massey did make some statements to the Secret Service agent.
Finally, one of the F.B.I. agents who accompanied Massey to Jacksonville, and was present when he spoke to the Secret Service agent, again attempted to interrogate Massey. Massey again refused to sign the waiver-of-rights form. The F.B.I. agent assured Massey, however, that he only wanted to question him about his itinerary, not about the plot. Massey then signed the waiver-of-rights form and furnished information which “provided the government with the details as to [Massey’s] whereabouts during the time of the alleged plot and with witnesses who had seen [Massey] during this time.”
United States
v.
Massey,
LAW
I. Statements to Secret Service Agent
When Massey was arrested, he indicated that he wanted to consult with a lawyer before answering any questions. During the trip from Ocala to Jacksonville the following morning, Massey again declined to talk with an F.B.I. agent without first consulting a lawyer. When he arrived in Jacksonville, rather than being placed in a detention cell, Massey was taken to an F.B.I. office where a Secret Service agent conducted a basic, background-information interview. Massey did not object to the background-information questioning. In the Fifth Circuit, as well as in several other circuits, such routine gathering of background, biographical information is not interrogation which must be preceded by the
Miranda
warnings.
United States v. Grant,
The Secret Service agent then gave Massey the
Miranda
warnings, but Massey “refused to sign a waiver” or to discuss the purported plot to assassinate President Ford and Senator Kennedy “until he had
*849
talked with an attorney.”
United States v. Massey,
“Massey said that the F.B.I. had nothing to worry about, that when he was in a bar in Ocala, he overheard an unidentified drunk talking about a plot to assassinate President Ford and Senator Kennedy. He felt that the F.B.I. had over-reacted to his story.” Id. at 306.
In making those statements, Massey changed his story from an earlier account given to the F.B.I. agent at the Oklawaha Bridge near Ocala.
The question presented is whether the statements made by Massey to the Secret Service agent should be suppressed as involuntarily stated while being deprived of the right to counsel.
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals declared that Massey’s statements. to the Secret Service agent were spontaneous, voluntary, and apparently “not the result of interrogation or indirect attempts to gain information.”
Id.
at 306. Consequently, those statements were not the product of any Fifth Amendment violation and are properly admissible under the guidelines of
Miranda v. Arizona,
Massey relies on a recent Supreme Court decision,
Brewer v. Williams,
The Supreme Court expressly held that, under the circumstances of
Brewer v. Williams, supra,
the defendant had not, without notice to his counsel, waived his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The Court emphasized that the government must meet a strict standard of proof to demonstrate a waiver of the right to counsel, and that the courts will “indulge in every reasonable presumption against waiver.”
Id.
at 403 of
“The Court of Appeals did not hold, nor do we, that under the circumstances of this case Williams could not, without notice to counsel, have waived his rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. It only held, as do we, that he did not.” Id. at 406,97 S.Ct. at 1243 ,51 L.Ed.2d at 441 .
*850
There is, in other words, no automatic, per se violation of the Sixth Amendment whenever a defendant in custody makes incriminating statements to law enforcement authorities, without the presence of counsel.
United States v. Brown,
For example, in
United States v. Williams,
In
United States v. Vasquez,
In
Smith v. United States,
*851
Likewise, in
United States
v.
Cavallino,
“Waiver by a defendant of his constitutional right to consult with or to have an attorney present does not require an express statement or disavowal. Waiver may be inferred from the language, acts, conduct and demeanor of a defendant.” Id. at 1204.
Finally, in
United States v. Zamarripa,
“ . . . need not assume any particular form; it may be made in writing on a printed format or it may be made orally by replying to questions ... A valid waiver of rights does not require an express declaration to that effect . .; nor does lack of such a declaration necessarily indicate a defendant’s desire to remain silent . . . . The validity of a waiver is to be determined from all of the surrounding circumstances. .
“When the circumstances indicate that a defendant knew of his right to remain silent and to have counsel, yet intelligently waived that right by voluntarily answering questions, his refusal to sign a written waiver does not render a confession or an incriminating statement inadmissible.” Id. at 981.
In the present case, Massey had been repeatedly informed of his rights to remain silent and to have the assistance of counsel. He demonstrated his understanding of those rights by repeatedly refusing to discuss the details of the alleged assassination plot until he could consult with a lawyer. Notwithstanding that understanding, and in the clear face of an admonition that he need not talk about anything until he consulted a lawyer, Massey chose to offer his remarks about the lack of any real reason for government authorities to worry about an assassination plot. Those statements, knowingly and voluntarily made with an understanding of his rights, constituted a waiver by Massey of his right to confer with counsel before making them. They are therefore properly admissible and should not be suppressed.
II. Tainted Evidence from Unlawful Leads
Because the F.B.I. agents did not scrupulously honor Massey's repeated assertion, while in custody, of his right to counsel and his right to remain silent,
Michigan v. Mosley,
Now, Massey seeks to have excluded and suppressed all of the evidence, testimonial *852 and nontestimonial, that was obtained from leads supplied by those incriminating statements. He argues that such indirect evidence is the tainted fruit from the poisonous tree of his unlawfully obtained admissions to the F.B.I. The issue presented is whether any or all of the government’s testimonial and nontestimonial evidence must be excluded as the tainted, indirect fruit of the F.B.I.’s coercive interrogation and denial of Massey’s right to counsel.
A. Exclusionary Rule and the “Tainted Fruit of the Poisonous Tree” Doctrine.
The origin of the exclusionary rule is
Weeks v. United States,
In
Silverthorne Lumber Co. v. United States,
“ . . . not merely [that] evidence so acquired shall not be used before the court, but that it shall not be used at all.” Id. at 392,40 S.Ct. at 183 ,64 L.Ed. at 321 .
Although the evidence that the government subpoenaed was the same material original
*853
ly seized unlawfully, the court premised its decision on
Flagg v. United States,
Finally, in
Wong Sun v. United States,
The taintedness test is not a hypothetical one of possibilities: “but for” the unlawful acquisition of the direct evidence, the indirect evidence would not have been obtained. Instead, the test is an actual one: did in fact the government use the illegally acquired direct evidence to obtain the indirect evidence? Was in fact the causal connection between the indirect evidence and the unlawful seizure of the direct evidence unavoidable?
Wong Sun v. United States,
B. Fifth Amendment and the Exclusionary Rule.
The cases which mark the origin and development of the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine involved violations of the Fourth Amendment guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures. The primary purposes of the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine have been (1) to deter law enforcement officers from unreasonable searches and seizures, and (2) to protect the integrity of the judiciary from the effects of unlawful government conduct.
Brown v. Illinois,
The Fifth Amendment, however, provides an independent basis for application of the exclusionary rule: incriminating statements involuntarily made must be excluded.
Brown v. Illinois,
While the Fourth Amendment prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures, and the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination are intimately related, and are to some extent overlapping, the scope of the exclusionary doctrine under the Fourth Amendment is far greater than under the Fifth Amendment.
Brown v. Illinois,
C. Fifth Amendment and the “Tainted Fruit of the Poisonous Tree” Doctrine.
In
Michigan v. Tucker,
The Supreme Court has not applied that doctrine to indirect testimonial evidence of third persons, or to the indirect, nontestimonial evidence resulting from a defendant’s incriminating statements obtained in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The Court has, however, squarely confronted the issue of using the indirect, testimonial evidence of a defendant himself, when that testimony stems from an earlier, involuntary confession.
1. Indirect Testimonial Evidence: The Accused's.
In
Harrison v. United States,
“. . . the same principle that prohibits the use of confessions so procured also prohibits the use of any testimony impelled thereby — the fruit of the poisonous tree, to invoke a timeworn metaphor.” Id. at 222,88 S.Ct. at 2010 ,20 L.Ed.2d at 1051 .
The Court employed the actuality test of that doctrine, inquiring why the defendant decided to testify at his first trial.
“If he did so in order to overcome the impact of confessions illegally obtained and hence improperly introduced, then his testimony was tainted by the same illegality that rendered the confessions themselves inadmissible.” Id. at 223,88 S.Ct. at 2010 ,20 L.Ed.2d at 1052 .
The government did not meet its burden to show that the defendant’s first-trial testimony had been obtained by one of the two purgative exceptions, rather than as the induced result of the involuntary and unlawfully used confessions.
Id.
at 225 and n. 12, 226,
The Courts of Appeals have also applied the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine to a defendant’s own testimonial evidence indirectly obtained from earlier, involuntary admissions. The application of that doctrine in such cases has not been automatic or per se; rather, it has depended on an analysis of the total circumstances of each case.
Gilpin v. United States,
Similarly, the Fifth Circuit has used the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine to exclude subsequent incriminating statements. In
Harney v. United States,
“. . . between on the one hand the earlier unconstitutional conduct (and the statement which is a product thereof . .) and on the other hand the statement made later.” Id. at 589.
The confession obtained by the F.B.I. agent was an additional tainted fruit of the coercive activity of the local police, Id. at 589-90; and the causal effect of that activity, together with the confessions induced, prevented the taint from being dissipated. Id. at 590.
Gilpin v. United States,
These three cases illustrate that, where there is unlawful, coercive interrogation by a group of law enforcement officers, resulting in confessions or admissions by a defendant, and where lawful interrogation by different authorities follow, producing additional incriminating statements by the defendant, despite the second, lawful interrogation, the later admissions or confessions are infected by the same taint that pervades the earlier, illegally elicited statements. In those cases where courts have admitted a defendant’s incriminating statements made after earlier, involuntary confessions, the courts have found that the second exception to the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine applied: any indirect causal connection had become so attenuated that the taint was dissipated, or no causal relationship ever existed.
Tanner v. Vincent,
2. Indirect Testimonial Evidence: Third Persons’.
In discussing the purpose of the exclusionary doctrine, in
Michigan v. Tucker, supra,
the Supreme Court stated: “In a proper case this rationale would seem applicable to the Fifth Amendment context as well.”
In
Parker v. Estelle,
“There can be no doubt that the Silverthome principle, announced in a search and seizure context, is applicable to a suppressed confession case, Harrison v. United States, . . . ; or that its exclusionary effect applies not only to tangible evidence but also to the testimony of witnesses.” Id. at 629.
The Court employed both the actual use test, and the two exceptions, of the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree analysis.
Id.; United States v. Houltin,
The Second Circuit similarly used the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree analysis in
United States v. Nagelberg,
3. Indirect Nontestimonial Evidence.
In
Orozco v. Texas,
“. . . the use of these admissions obtained in the absence of the required warnings was a flat violation of the Self-' Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment . . .” Id. at 326,89 S.Ct. at 1096 ,22 L.Ed.2d at 314 .
The Court, however, said nothing about the admissibility of the ballistics test and weapon in the event of retrial.
The Court of Appeals, in
Parker v. Estelle,
The Fifth Circuit’s lack of doubt in
Parker v. Estelle, supra,
and later lack of decision in
Null
v.
Wainwright, supra,
can therefore be consistently harmonized. On the one hand, where, as the Supreme Court found in
Harrison v. United States, supra,
there is a genuine violation of the Fifth Amendment, the exclusionary doctrine should apply to the tainted fruit of both testimonial and tangible evidence.
Parker v. Estelle,
D. Sixth Amendment, the Exclusionary Rule, and the “Tainted Fruit of the Poisonous Tree” Doctrine.
If there were ever any doubt before
8
Brewer v. Williams,
The most enlightening recent decision on the issue of a Sixth Amendment violation and tainted indirect evidence is
United States ex rel. Hudson v. Cannon,
The specific question presented by the habeas corpus petition was whether the indirect, third-person testimonial evidence of the accomplices could be the tainted fruit of a constitutional violation. If so, the petitioner raised claims that were both cognizable and remediable under a federal court’s habeas corpus jurisdiction; and he should have been allowed an opportunity to prove his claims. If not, then denial of the petition, and dismissal of the case without a hearing was proper. The Seventh Circuit followed the Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Michigan v. Tucker, supra,
that (1) the
Miranda
warnings are not constitutional guarantees, but procedural safeguards to enforce constitutional rights; and (2) the failure to apprise a defendant of the
Miranda
warnings should not result in the exclusion of direct testimonial evidence where the admissions were voluntarily made, without any infringement of Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights.
*862 III. Conclusion.
In the present case, the Fifth Circuit has ruled that Massey’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, and Sixth Amendment right to counsel were violated while he was in custody.
United States v. Massey,
This case is the inverse of the situation in
Michigan v. Tucker, supra.
Although adequate
Miranda
warnings were given perfunctorily, Massey’s constitutional rights, which those warnings were intended to protect, were actually infringed. This case is the extension beyond
Michigan v. Mosley, supra,
to the unlawful situation described in that decision.
Because of the infringement of those constitutional rights, the Fifth Circuit ruled that the direct evidence, Massey’s own admissions, must be excluded.
United States v. Massey,
This Court must now decide whether to follow the Seventh Circuit and apply the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine to the indirect testimonial and nontestimonial evidence derived from Massey’s involuntary admissions. The violation of Massey’s Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights by the F.B.I. agent was not only genuine, it was flagrant and egregious. The Court therefore holds that the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine should, and does, apply: all indirect evidence, testimonial and tangible, acquired from Massey’s admissions must be excluded as the tainted fruit of the disregard of his Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights. The burden of proof is on the government to show that any of the indirect evidence which it might wish to use qualifies under one of the two cathartic exceptions: (1) obtained from an independent source, or (2) the causal effect is so attenuated that the resultant taint has been dispelled.
The government concedes that the testimony of James Staudacher was obtained solely from the information in Massey’s unlawfully elicited admissions. It is tainted and must be excluded.
When Massey met with the F.B.I. agent at the Oklawaha Bridge, on the morning of September 25, 1975, he was not in custody or under any form of restraint. At that time, he revealed his name, the gas station where he had worked, and the name and address of his mother, in Georgia. That information, obtained voluntarily and prior to any form of custody, is free from the taint of later illegal conduct by the *863 F.B.I. because it was derived from an independent source. From the location of Massey’s employment, the F.B.I. contacted his employer and the employer’s wife, who provided testimony at trial concerning Massey’s travels in Mississippi and Alabama during August, 1975. From the name and address of Massey’s mother, the F.B.I. interviewed her in Royston, Georgia. She provided the name of one of Massey’s friends who testified at trial concerning Massey’s whereabouts during part of July, 1975. He in turn furnished the name of another of Massey’s friends. That friend also testified briefly at trial about Massey’s presence in Georgia during part of the 1975 summer. Massey’s brother-in-law, who was discovered through information obtained from Massey’s mother and employer, also testified briefly. Finally, one of Massey’s former co-workers at the gas station testified that Massey told him about a plot to assassinate President Ford and Senator Kennedy.
It is clear to the Court that this third-person testimonial evidence was obtained from sources independent of Massey’s own involuntary admissions. Hence, it is purged of the taint that would require its exclusion if it had been gained only indirectly from the coerced admissions. The Court holds that the testimony of these third persons need not be excluded as tainted by the illegal conduct of the F.B.I. agent when Massey was in custody.
Similarly, the nontestimonial, physical evidence acquired from the inventory search of Massey’s van should not be excluded. Such inventory searches of motor vehicles, where the vehicle remains intact and is not dismantled, are justified in order to protect the accused’s property, to protect the law enforcement officers from liability for that property, and to protect the law enforcement authorities from potential danger.
South Dakota v. Opperman,
Notes
. Before
Weeks v. United States,
. Plainly, the contempt by Frederick W. Silverthome was considered by the court to be civil in nature because it was conditional in character, with the primary purpose being to secure compliance, not to punish or vindicate.
Shillitani v. United States,
. The first exception was stated by Mr. Justice Holmes in
Silverthorne Lumber Company v. United States,
“ . . . the facts thus obtained [do not] become sacred and inaccessible. If knowledge of them is gained from an independent source they may be proved like any others
There are some decisions that purport to find a third exception to the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine: the inevitable discovery rule. That exception would allow indirect evidence to be introduced, notwithstanding its derivative connection to the excluded direct evidence resulting from unconstitutional conduct by law enforcement officers, if it were inevitable that such indirect evidence would have been discovered and acquired from an independent source in any event.
United States v. Ceccolini,
The Seventh Circuit expressly endorsed the inevitable discovery rule as a third exception to the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine, even though the facts satisfied the independent source exception as well.
United States ex rel. Owens
v.
Twomey,
Likewise, while an inevitable discovery approach was employed in
United States v. Seohnlein,
Finally, the district court in
United States v. Griffin,
“ . . . the evidence sought to be introduced would have been available to the government regardless of the illegality with respect to [the defendant] . .
Id.
at 185. Nevertheless, the Sixth Circuit has not articulated or approved the inevitable discovery rule as an exception to the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine. The Eighth Circuit has intentionally avoided the question.
United States v. Kelly,
Nonetheless, the inevitable discovery rule is aberrant and unorthodox. First, the United States Supreme Court has never announced or approved such an exception,
Parker v. Estelle,
Second, apart from one anomalous deviation,
Gissendanner v. Wainwright,
. Third, an inevitable discovery exception would alter the test of whether indirect evidence is tainted, or purged of taint. The test would become a hypothetical, instead of an actual, one: regardless of the government’s actual use of the illegally obtained direct evidence, so long as it is arguable that the government, had it made the effort, would have inevitably discovered the indirect evidence from an independent source, the indirect evidence would be considered free of taint and therefore admissible. Such a result is contrary to the overwhelming body of decisional law that the taintedness test is actual, not hypothetical. See e. g,, cases cited in text
infra,
and the discussion in
United States ex rel. Roberts v. Ternullo,
Furthermore, the hypothetical test, which the inevitable discovery rule invokes, results in the final burden under that rule being borne by the defendant. The government need only claim that, despite its failure to actually do so, if it had pursued its investigation, the discovery of the indirect evidence would have been inevitable. Under an inevitable discovery exception, the defendant must negate that claim and demonstrate that the only way the government could have acquired the indirect evidence was by means of the illegally obtained direct evidence.
See Rice v. Wolff,
. The Third Circuit employed a clear and convincing evidence standard in Government of Virgin Islands v. Gereau, 502 F.2d 914, 929 (3d Cir. 1974). Nevertheless, the overwhelming decisional law holds that the government’s burden of demonstrating an exception to the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine is satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence.
.
Fahy v. Connecticut,
. Mr. Justice Brennan believes that the Court already decided that the tainted fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine applies when the
Miranda
warnings are not given or are defective.
*857
He believes that the Court so decided nascently in
Miranda v. Arizona,
. The Supreme Court, in
Stone v. Powell,
.
See, e. g., Escobedo v. Illinois,
