The defendants, Jesse Thomas Lee, Charles Sutton, Jr., and Paul Sutton, were convicted of violating 18 U.S.C. § 371 by conspiring to rob The Peoples’ Bank of Chesapeake, in Chesapeake, Virginia. They sought a new trial on the ground that the government failed to disclose that the testimony of its key witness was induced by threats of an F.B.I. agent, invoking fundamental fairness concepts enunciated in
Giglio v. United States,
The district court viewed the motion as one based upon recantation of testimony given by a witness, and, citing
United States v. Williams,
I.
Jesse Thomas Lee and Paul Wilbert Sutton spent many of the daylight hours of June 19, 1975, in and out and around a trailer-type branch bank of The Peoples’ Bank of Chesapeake at the corner of Volvo Parkway and Battlefield Boulevard in Chesapeake, Virginia. Jesse entered the bank about 11 a.m. seeking directions to Volvo. He was remembered because (a) he did not know whether he wanted to go to the Volvo plant or to the Volvo office, (b) his hands were trembling, (c) it was a warm day and he was wearing a knitted wool cap similar to those worn on watch in the Navy in bad weather, and (d) he was six feet five inches tall.
Jesse came back about 1:30 p.m. but stayed out of the bank while his companion, Paul, not quite so tall, entered the bank and asked to change a $5 bill. Paul was remembered because (a) he was with Jesse, who had been noticed previously, and (b) when the teller offered him five $1 bills, he asked instead for a roll of dimes.
*1241 Jesse and Paul walked away from the bank together, then entered an old light green Lincoln Continental driven by another person. When the tellers stepped out on the porch of the bank to better observe their departure, the driver of the car sped away quickly.
Jesse and Paul came back to the bank about 4 p.m. — this time in a light green Chevy Nova II owned by key witness Redus Cannon and driven by defendant Charles Sutton, Jr. Charles let Jesse and Paul out of the car immediately behind the bank and pulled into a nearby parking lot no more than 20 feet from FBI Agent Smith. After eyeballing the agent for perhaps ten seconds, Charles Sutton, Jr., left the parking lot fast, but not before Agent Smith got his license tag number. At this point, Agent Smith decided it would be best to stop what he verily believed was about to become a bank robbery, and thereupon apprehended and arrested Paul and Jesse as they were walking toward the bank. Jesse had in his pocket a loaded Baretta automatic pistol. Paul had on a black nylon stocking beneath his wool knit hat and a folded white plastic bag tucked in his sock. Charles Sutton, Jr., the driver, who had sped away, also was wearing a woolen knit hat.
All three defendants were charged and convicted of conspiring to rob the bank despite their testimonial defense that they were seeking employment that day at the Volvo office located close to the branch bank. What turned the government’s circumstantial case into an overwhelming one was the direct testimony of Redus Cannon. He testified that the defendants borrowed his car that day to go “stick up a place.” And the prosecutor supported Cannon’s veracity by falsely assuring the jury “no one threatened Cannon.” 2 At a post-trial hearing, F.B.I. Agent Smith testified that in his first interview with Witness Cannon he accused him of driving Paul and Jesse in the Nova II and letting them out behind the bank, but that when he made the accusation he knew Cannon was not the driver. Smith said he made the accusation “as an inducement to him (Cannon) to give us the complete story.” Smith agreed that such a false accusation could possibly have some intimidating effect.
Smith also testified that he “may have said something ... to the effect that: ‘if I come into court, Cannon, and testify that you’re the one that drove the car and you testify against me, the question will have to come down to the jury as to which one they’re going to believe.’ ” Asked whether that would not have been a statement calculated to intimidate Cannon, Agent Smith responded, “if you want to use that word,” and later agreed that such a statement could possibly be viewed as “calculated to intimidate someone.”
II.
United States v. Agurs,
- U.S. -,
Agurs,
on the other hand, may be viewed as a “discovery” case. Neither a threat to prosecute nor a promise of leniency was involved. Instead, there was the rather typical contention that the government possessed information unknown to the defendant which it should have produced,
i.e.,
evidence of a prior criminal record and violent disposition of the deceased. In an opinion by Mr. Justice Stevens, the Court concluded that, since in
Agurs
there was no prosecutorial misconduct and no reason to question the veracity of any of the prosecution witnesses, the test of any reasonable likelihood that the jury verdict could have been affected was not applicable.
Agurs, supra,
at-,
In
Boone v. Paderick,
The government contends, however, that there is no reasonable likelihood that the verdict would have been affected because of the following testimony elicited from Cannon on cross-examination in the presence of the jury:
Q. Did they tell you that you could probably be indicted or arrested for attempted bank robbery?
*1243 A. Did they tell me—
Q. Did they tell you that at FBI Headquarters?
A. Possible.
Q. Possible. Were you scared?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did they say that if you gave them a statement that things would go better for you or anything to that effect?
A. Yes, sir.
We agree that the foregoing admission by Cannon ameliorates the probable effect of disclosure to the jury of Smith’s threat. We are also aware that “[i]f the suppression of evidence results in constitutional error, it is because of the character of the evidence, not the character of the prosecutor.”
Agurs, supra,
at -,
Viewing the record as a whole, we conclude that the jury’s verdict might have been different had it known of Cannon’s apprehension that he might be put to trial as an active perpetrator. Because the jury was incorrectly assured that Cannon had not been threatened, and because Smith’s threat may reasonably be viewed as impugning Cannon’s veracity, and because the case was otherwise wholly circumstantial, we conclude the government’s failure to disclose Smith’s effort to induce (or coerce) Cannon’s testimony was fundamentally unfair and in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Williams and Johnson exemplify the standards appropriate for considering motions for new trials based on recantation by a prosecution witness or newly discovered evidence from a neutral source, and do not speak to the question of the government’s duty to disclose under the doctrine of fundamental fairness.
. The record does not suggest the prosecutor then knew of Agent Smith’s threat, and we accept that he did not. Thus, we do not impugn his personal integrity. But legally what Smith knew must be imputed to the prosecutor.
Giglio
v.
United States,
The police are also part of the prosecution, and the taint on the trial is no less if they, rather than the State’s Attorney, were guilty of the nondisclosure.
. Mr. Justice Stevens characterized as most “severe” the burden upon a defendant who seeks a new trial because of newly discovered evidence from a neutral source. Such a petitioner must demonstrate that the “newly discovered evidence probably would have resulted in an acquittal.”
United States v. Agurs,
- U.S. -,
