Kandik was convicted on four counts of counterfeiting. Two related issues are raised on appeal: (1) whether Kandik is entitled to a hearing to enable him to show that certain testimony at trial was tainted by an illegal search and therefore used in violation of the court’s suppression order; and (2) whether Kandik in fact met his burden of showing that the live testimony was tainted. We affirm.
From April to July, 1978, Kandik conspired with Alvin Taber and Michael Norman to print counterfeit money. Kandik lived in Taber’s guest house. In June, 1978, Kandik and Taber equipped the house for printing counterfeit currency. In July Kandik took a week off from his job to print the money.
A year later federal investigators arrested Norman, who negotiated a plea agreement with prosecutors. Taber also cooperated with the investigation in exchange for leniency. During a meeting with the prosecutor and Secret Service investigators, Ta-ber related a conversation with Kandik, in which Kandik had said that he planned to burn the counterfeiting plates and other material at his cabin on Mount Lemon. Later he reported to Taber that he had done so.
Kandik and his attorney met with the prosecutor and a Secret Service agent to discuss a possible plea agreement. While insisting that he was innocent, Kandik said that he might be able to produce the remains of the plates. After the plea negotiations broke down, the prosecutor used the information obtained during the plea negotiations to obtain a search warrant for a cabin owned by Kandik’s parents on Mount Lemon. The ensuing search produced pieces of cloth, paper, and an aluminum plate used to print the counterfeit bills. The district court suppressed the evidence because the warrant was based on information obtained during plea discussions, in violation of Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(6). The court ruled further that the seized evidence could not be used for impeachment or any other purpose at trial.
The Government offered no evidence of the search or its fruits at trial. Four witnesses testified, however, about the plates and the cabin. Taber, who did not know where the cabin was located, related his conversations with Kandik concerning the burning of the plates. Laura Lopez, a coworker, testified that Kandik had spoken of his cabin on Mount Lemon. Debbie Maba-rek, Kandik’s ex-wife, testified that Kan-dik’s parents owned a cabin on the mountain. Finally, Forest Service employee Marquita McCrone verified ownership of the cabin from government records.
Kandik twice sought a hearing before trial to force the Government to prove the testimony of these four witnesses was not tainted by the illegal search. The court denied the motions.
The Government must prove that particular evidence or testimony is not fruit of the poisonous tree, but a defendant has the initial burden of establishing a factual nexus between the illegality and the challenged evidence.
United States v. Allard,
*1336
In
Alderman,
the Court held that an adversary hearing was needed to sift through a large volume of complex factual material, which was itself the fruit of an illegal wiretap search, to determine the existence of taint.
We find that Kandik did not establish any connection or taint between the illegally seized evidence and the testimony in question.
Kandik’s counsel conceded during oral argument that Taber’s testimony was not tainted by the search. The Government knew about Kandik’s statements to Taber before the plea negotiations. Kandik argues, however, that the testimony of the other three witnesses was tainted because they might not have been located but for the search.
We find no merit in the contention. The Government used these witnesses to corroborate Taber’s testimony. Their testimony lends credibility to Taber’s statements concerning his conversations with Kandik, but it does not refer to the plates or the search that led to their seizure. Even without the search it is likely the Government would have used Taber’s testimony and sought the same three corroborative witnesses. It would therefore be admissible under the “inevitable discovery” doctrine suggested in
Brewer v. Williams,
More important, even assuming the search may have been a factor in the investigation and subsequent location of the witnesses, the challenged testimony was so attenuated as to dissipate any taint. The Supreme Court in
United States v. Ceccoli-ni,
AFFIRMED.
