On August 17, 1959, Elrоy Eugene Person, defendant, pleaded guilty to one count of an indictment charging him with violation of 18 U.S.C. § 500, and in September of that year he was sentenced to the custody of the Attorney General pursuant to the terms of the Federal Youth Corrections Act. [18 U.S.C. § 5017(c)]. He was then committed to the Federal Correctional Institution at Lompoc, California.
In December of 1962 defendant was transferred from Lompoc to the Federal Pre-Release Guidance Center, commonly known as the “half-way house”, with a parole date effective on May 2, 1963.
The officials of the half-way house obtained an outside job for defendant which he was allowed to go to each day, but he was required to return each night.
On January 11, 1963, the defendant was given a five hour night pass so that he could visit his grandmother. He was unaccompanied by any official or other delegate of the Attorney General when he left, but he was to return at 10:30 P. M. that night. While out on this pass defendant visited a restaurant, started drinking beer, and overstayed his leave. Having overstayed his leave he decided not to go back at all.
He was finally arrested on another charge on May 22, 1963. The United States has now filed an indictment against the defendant charging him with violation of the Federal laws which prohibit escape. [18 U.S.C. § 751] . 1
The only real issue in this case is whether or not the defendant escaped from “custody”.
It has been said that the escape section, like other criminal statutes,
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should be given a strict construction in favor of the freedom of the citizen. United Stаtes v. Brown,
Therefore, the true purpose behind this enactment must be ascertained. The legislative history is not too helpful and the question is made the more difficult by the fact that “custody” is a very elastic conсept, which means different things in its many contexts. Thus, it has often been said that a person who is on parole is in custody for many purposes, including the granting of habeas corpus. See e. g., Jones v. Cunningham,
In 30 C.J.S. Escape § 5a a good general definition of custody, for these purposes, is given:
“Custody consists in keeping the prisoner either in actual confinement or surrounded by physical force sufficient to restrain him from going at large or obtaining mоre liberty than the law allows.”
As will appear below, there has been some expansion of this idea, but the root core still retains the notion of some, however slight, physical detention.
This concept of custody comports nicely with the common law theory. Thus, in Steere v. Field, 22 Fed.Cas. 1210 (D.R.I.1822), the defendant was a sheriff who was charged with allowing a man, who was imprisoned for debt, to escape. The question was whether the man was out of the custody of the sheriff. There was no showing that the man had actually left the place of his imprisonment, but he had the power to do so. Justice Story-said, at page 1225 of 22 Fed.Cas.:
“When a prisoner * * * is permitted to act, not merely as a turnkey, but to have the possession and custody of the keys and all the doors,, as well when the goaler is abroad as-at home; and to perform all the' duties of an assistant, without any restraint whatsoever as to his person-either by day or by night, he cannot be justly deemed in any proper sense-of the law to be in custody * * It is not the mere absence of physical' restraint that makes it an escape,, but it is that combined with the voluntary yielding up the right of future custody, so that there can be norecaption, if the prisoner leaves the' limits.”
And in United States v. Hoffman,
If this is so — if custody involves some aspect of physical restraint — the reason for making it a serious crime — a felony— becomes apparent. Very serious consequences are apt to accompany any attempt of a man to escape from physiсal custody. The Supreme Court indicated
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as much in United States v. Brown,
“Escapes and attempted escapes from penal institutions or from official custody present a most serious problem of penal discipline. They are often violent, menacing * * * the lives of guards and custodians, and carry in their wake other crimes attendant upon procuring money, weapons and transportation and upon resisting recapture.”
This also explains why it is just as much ■of a felony if a man has only been imprisoned for a misdemeanor; or if he, as it turns out, was imprisoned under invalid and voidable process; or if he has not even been found guilty of a crime but has been arrested and held for an ■alleged felony, even if the indictment is later quashed or his innocence is pro•elaimed by a jury. See e. g., Godwin v. United Stаtes,
The preclusion of these evils and not ■the punishment of the failure of a physically free man to return to his jailors would seem to be the purpose of section 751. In this respect the status of the ■defendant was much like that of a parolee. He
did
have to return to the half-way bоuse at 10:30 P.M. But then a parolee may have' to live at a certain place, be home at a certain time each night, ask permission to own a car or leave the city, and admit a parole officer into his home at any time. Jones v. Cunningham,
But the Government asserts that the cases which interpret escape statutes have already gone far beyond the bounds of physical custody, and that it would now be an unduly crabbed interpretation to refuse to apply thе statute to the defendant. Therefore, I turn to the cases which have applied 18 U.S.C. § 751.
In Johnson v. United States,
Two other federal cases are cited as lending support to the government’s view, and they will now be discussed.
In Giles v. United States,
“The argument is without force. The statutory term ‘custody,’ as applied, certainly, to the situation of appellant, is not so narrow and restricted. * * * As already observed, it was not in the circumstances of this case essential to custody that thе guard follow the prisoner around and keep him every moment under observation.”
This case is so far from the case at hand that it scarcely requires comment. Here was a man on Alcatraz Island, an island consisting of maybe ten or twelve acres outside of the prison walls. People commonly called it “the rock”, and it was thought to be inescapable. The guards took their eyes off the prisoner and he managed to sneak under the dock and get away. Surely, he was sufficiently within “custody” even if physical custody is required. Despite this, one judge thought that even here sufficient “physical custody” had not been shown. He said there was insufficient evidence to show that anyone remained as the physical custodian of the defendant, and that an interpretation of the statute to mean something other than “physical custody” would be absurd.
Another Ninth Circuit case, relied upon by the Government, is: Tucker v. United States,
“it was not in the circumstances of this case essential to custody that the guard follow the prisoner around and keep him every mоment under observation.”
There may be some superficial resemblance between Tucker and the case now before the Court, in that an armed guard was not present when either defendant escaped. But the dissimilarities are even greater. How can the case of a man who-is being wheеled along on a stretcher by an orderly of a hospital and who is wearing a white gown and handcuffs be compared to the case of a man who is allowed to go about physically unfettered dressed like any other man ?
*987 It is also quite significant that in both Giles and Tucker the court took the trouble to set out a myriad of facts pointing to the control which was being exercised over the person of the defendant. If physical custody were really unimportant such facts would be almost irrelevant.
Thus, no case interpreting 18 U.S.C. § 751; is even close to holding that a person in defendant’s position is in custody.
It is true that the Government has •cited a few state court cases, but they are not binding on this court. In any -event, they are easily disposed of. In •one of the cases the statute involved •expressly declared that the defendant’s acts constituted an escape from custody. Cutter v. Buchanan,
Defendant was not in “custody” within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 751 when he failed to return from his authorized excursiоn into the City of Los Angeles on January 11, 1963, and the court finds him not guilty of a violation of that statute.
Notes
. Title 18, United States Code, section 751, reads:
“Whoever escapes or attempts to escape from the custody of the Attorney General or his authorized representative, or from any institution in which he is confined by direction of the Attorney General, оr from any custody under or by virtue of any process issued under the laws of the United States by any court, judge, or commissioner, or from the custody of an officer or employee of the United States pursuant to lawful arrest, shall, if the custody or confinement is by virtue of an arrest on a charge of felony, or conviction of any offense, be fined not more than $5000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both * * * ” [Under 18 U.S.C. § 1 this is a felony.]
