This case raises, in sharp focus, the breadth of meaning of “discussions” as used in Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e), that holds inadmissible in evidence statements made to a United States Attorney by a defendant, including before indictment, in certain circumstances.
(e) Plea Agreement Procedure.
(1) In General. The attorney for the government and the attorney for the defendant or the defendant when acting pro se may engage in discussions with a view toward reaching an agreement that, upon the entering of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere to a charged offense or to a lesser or related offense, the attorney for the government will do any of the following:
(A) move for dismissal of other charges; or
(B) make a recommendation, or agree not to oppose the defendant’s request, for a particular sentence, with the understanding that such recommendation or request shall not be binding upon the court; or
(C) agree that a specific sentence is the appropriate disposition of the case.
(6) Inadmissibility of Pleas, Offers, and Related Statements. Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, evidence of a plea of guilty, later withdrawn, or a plea of nolo contendere, or of an offer to plead guilty or nolo contendere to the crime charged or any other crime, or of statements made in connection with, and relevant to, any of the foregoing pleas or offers, is not admissible in any civil or criminal proceedings against the person who made the plea or offer. (Emphasis, except in titles, supplied).
Effective December 1, 1980, for subparagraph (6) there was substituted the following,
(6) Inadmissibility of Pleas, Plea Discussions, and Related Statements. Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, evidence of the following is not, in any civil or criminal proceeding, admissible against the defendant who made the plea or was a participant in the plea discussions:
(A) a plea of guilty which was later withdrawn;
(B) a plea of nolo contendere;
(C) any statement made in the course of any proceedings under this rule regarding either of the foregoing pleas; or,
(D) any statement made in the course of plea discussions with an attorney for the government which do not result in a plea of guilty or which result in a plea of guilty later withdrawn. (Emphasis, except in title, supplied).
The question is whether this rule excludes statements made by a defendant (one not yet indicted, but who fell within the rule’s compass) to a United States Attorney, and an investigator, with whom he had a number of conferences, during which time the attorney was openly trying to build a case against defendant’s associates, and, in the attorney’s unexpressed belief, defendant felt, or at least feared, that he, too, would be indicted, and “was trying to get us to agree not to prosecute him, or get us to agree that we would recommend probation or a minimum jail sentence,” but defendant *817 made no such request, and the attorney made no offer. The relevant conversation was as follows.
The attorney told defendant it would be in his best interests to tell candidly and completely. Defendant asked if he cooperated, and gave documentation, “What is going to happen to me?” “My response was along the lines I’m not going to promise you anything. I can’t tell you how we’re going to resolve this thing. The ball is in your court one hundred percent.... He kept wanting to know what would happen to him.”
Q. And your statement to him?
A. No promise would be made. It was solely his decision, voluntary, one hundred percent on his part.
Q. And that would be evaluated at sentencing?
A. In what we would agree to — the idea was, again, that this would be resolved through plea agreement; that his cooperation would be taken into account, and that what we would recommend would be lessened.
Defendant did not testify. The ambiguity (or possible error in transcription) of the last answer, was not pursued. Obviously “would be resolved through plea agreement,” was not correctly put. It was not responsive to anything said before, and, at most, must have meant, “could,” or “would, if there were such,” just as the final clause meant, “would be lessened if there were such.”
We hold this was not a plea discussion within the rule, and that, there being no other obstacles, the court did not err in admitting the conversations.
Courts have long recognized that plea bargaining is essential to the functioning of the criminal justice system. “Properly administered,” the Supreme Court has stated, “it is to be encouraged,”
Santobello v. New York,
The defendant avoids extended pretrial incarceration and the anxieties and uncertainties of a trial; he gains a speedy disposition of his case, the chance to acknowledge his guilt, and a prompt start in realizing whatever potential there may be for rehabilitation. Judges and prosecutors conserve vital and scarce resources.
Id.
But “all of these considerations presuppose fairness in securing agreement between an accused and a prosecutor.”
Santobello,
Before the 1979 amendment, Rule 11(e)(6) made inadmissible any “statements made in connection with, and relevant to” a plea or offer to plea. This language led to decisions such as
United States v. Herman,
Not every court read Rule 11(e)(6) so expansively, and the Fifth Circuit soon abandoned
Herman’s
entirely subjective test. In
United States v. Robertson,
The trial court must apply a two-tiered analysis and determine, first, whether *818 the accused exhibited an actual subjective expectation to negotiate a plea at the time of the discussion, and, second, whether the accused’s expectation was reasonable given the totality of the objective circumstances.
Id.
at 1366.
Robertson’s
two-tiered approach has been adopted in several circuits.
See, e.g., United States v. Grant,
When Congress amended Rule 11(e)(6) in 1979, it had a body of experience to draw on in redrafting the inadmissibility language. As the Advisory Committee notes make clear, it rejected Herman’s subjective interpretation:
The present language is susceptible to interpretation which would make it applicable to a wide variety of statements made under various circumstances other than within the context of those plea discussions authorized by rule 11(e) and intended to be protected by subdivision (e)(6) of the rule.
The pre-amendment language could incorrectly be interpreted to make “an otherwise voluntary admission to law enforcement officials inadmissible merely because it was made in the hope of obtaining leniency by a plea.” The amendment was intended to narrow the scope of the rule and “identif[y] with more precision than the present language the necessary relationship between the statements and the plea or discussion.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(6) Advisory Committee note, 1979 Amendment.
While the amended rule rejects
Herman,
it embraces neither
Robertson’s
two-tiered test nor
Sikora's
multi-factored approach. Most courts have simply applied the plain language of the rule to the facts before them and have had little difficulty identifying the demarcation line between admissible and inadmissible statements. Thus in
United States v. Jorgensen,
In other words, plea discussions means plea discussions. To the extent that
United States v. Serna,
Defendant’s other points have been considered, but only one calls for comment. If the court’s excluding both of two periods from the 70 maximum number of days permitted by the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3161, was error, the prosecution should have been dismissed. The first of these delays was occasioned by virtue of the transfer of the case for trial from Springfield, Massachusetts, to Boston. Section 3161(h)(1)(G) permits excluding the time required for transfer from “another district.” This was not such. We cannot accept the
*819
holding of
United States v. Glasser,
On the other hand, where the government showed that the second claimed period was due to the “absence or unavailability of ... an essential witness,” within § 3161(h)(3), the court’s citing the wrong subsection in so finding was a mere clerical mistake, and this exclusion was proper.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Presumably, it takes two to tango. We do not, however, face the possible question of whether it is a discussion when a might-be-defendant "discusses” the conditions under which he might plead in the presence of a disclaiming, and otherwise mute, audience.
