Lead Opinion
While employed by Wisconsin Armored Transport, Robert Cook hijacked an armored car containing some $260,000 bound for a federally-insured bank. He parked some of
Cook’s objection to the sentence does not occasion much discussion. The guideline for solicitation of murder, U.S.S.G. 2A1.5, sets a base offense level of 28, plus 4 if something of value was offered for the deed. The district judge departed from level 32 to level 34 on account of Cook’s weapons cache. Other provisions of the Sentencing Guidelines provide a two-level increase for weapons possessed in connection with the crime, e.g., § 2B5.1(b)(3), § 2D1.1(b)(1), and omission of such a provision from § 2A1.5 does not reflect a decision by the Sentencing Commission that adjustments are inappropriate. Possession of weapons that can be used to commit the murders was not considered, one way or the other, by the Commission, so a departure on this basis is permissible. Koon v. United States, — U.S. -,
Cook’s more substantial argument concerns the instructions to the jury. Martino received a total of $3,500 for his role in the investigation. After Cook tried to recruit Martino, the FBI asked him to record future negotiations and paid $500 for this service. When Cook later concluded that Martino was aiding the FBI and threatened violent retaliation, agents told him to get out of town quickly and gave him $3,000 for expenses during six weeks’ absence. These payments were brought out at trial, and Cook asked the judge to instruct the jury that Martino’s testimony must be “weighed ... with greater care than the testimony of a witness who is not so motivated.” This is the full instruction he proposed:
The testimony of an informant, someone who provides evidence against someone else for money, or to escape punishment for his own misdeeds or crimes, or for other personal reason or advantage, must be examined and weighed by the jury with greater care than the testimony of a witness who is not so motivated.
Joseph Martino may be considered to be an informant in this case.
The jury must determine whether the informer’s testimony has been affected by self-interest, or by the agreement he has with the government, or by his own interest in the outcome of this case, or by prejudice against the defendant.
The district judge declined to give this instruction for two reasons. First, the judge stated, an informant instruction is appropriate only when the witness has “a need or an interest in escaping punishment for his own misdeeds or crimes.” Martino did not rat on Cook for a combination of money and lenience; instead he was a volunteer eompen-
You are the sole judges of the credibility of the witnesses, and of the weight to be given to the testimony of each of them. In considering the testimony of any witness, you may take into account his or her intelligence, his or her ability and opportunity to observe, his or her age, his or her memory, his or her manner while testifying, any interests, bias, prejudice he or she may have and the reasonableness of his or her testimony considered in light of all the evidence in the ease.
The prosecutor urges us to affirm for both of the district court’s reasons.
We have substantial doubt about the first. Although Cook’s proposed instruction, based on Edward J. Devitt, Charles B. Blackmar, Michael A. Wolff & Kevin F. O’Malley, 1 Federal Jury Practice & Instructions § 15.02 (1992), mentions a motive of escaping punishment, this is the result of combining topics usually handled separately. This circuit’s pattern jury instruction 3.20 (1 Federal Criminal Jury Instructions of the Seventh Circuit) zeroes in on informers:
You have heard testimony that _has received benefits from the government in connection with this case.
You may give his testimony such weight as you feel it deserves, keeping in mind that it must be considered with caution and great care.
Instruction 25 in Pattern Criminal Jury Instructions (Federal Judicial Center 1987) is similar in scope but concentrates the jury’s attention on the reason for being skeptical:
You have heard the testimony of _He has an arrangement with the government under which he gets paid for providing information about criminal activity. The government may present the testimony of such a person. Some people who get paid for providing information about criminal activity are' entirely truthful when testifying. Still, you should consider the testimony of _ with more caution than the testimony of other witnesses. Since he may believe that he will continue to be paid only if he produces evidence of criminal conduct, he may have reason to make up stories or to exaggerate what others did. In deciding whether you believe_’s testimony, you should keep these comments in mind.
What Instruction 3.20, Instruction 25, and the Devitt & Blackmar instruction have in common — and what differentiates them from the general credibility instruction the court gave — is the idea that testimony from witnesses who have been paid for assistance should be received with greater skepticism (“greater care” or “caution and great care” or “more caution”) than the testimony of other witnesses. Cum grano salis follows from payment, and not solely from the prospect of a reduction in exposure to criminal punishment, as the district judge believed. Lower punishment is one coin in which witnesses may be paid, but not the only coin.
The argument for giving an informant instruction appears in the text of the Federal Judicial Center’s version: an informant may invent or exaggerate matters to obtain extra compensation. Greed may afreet not only reports of crime but also reports of threats afterward. Perhaps Martino wanted a paid vacation and attributed threats to Cook in order to get a bankroll. But the argument against giving such an instruction is equally straightforward: the informant’s motive can be spelled out by counsel (if it is not admitted on cross-examination) and considered under the general credibility instruction. Jury instructions should be as short as possible in order to focus jurors’ attention on what really matters. Repetition of things jurors already know may lead them to nod while the judge says something important, or to assume that the instructions contain nothing but bromides. An instruction that does not convey valuable information should not be given. Both Seventh Circuit Instruction 3.20 and Federal Judicial Center Instruction 25
A special instruction about informants implies that their testimony remains less reliable than that of other witnesses even after all arguments pro and con about bias have been considered. Yet why should that be so? Many witnesses in criminal cases are unreliable-they are the defendant’s confederates in crime, or live in the shadows of the law. Many are convicted felons who have demonstrated unwillingness to abide by the law, including the law against perjury. Even victim eyewitnesses may give unreliable testimony, because of the shortcomings of memory, the difficulty of categorizing facial features of other ethnic groups, and the tricks the mind plays on people desperate to pin the blame on someone. See Elizabeth F. Loftus, Eyewitness Testimony: Psychological Research and Legal Thought, 3 Crime and Justice: An Annual Review of Research 105 (1981); Sheri Lynn Johnson, Cross-Racial Identification Errors in Criminal Cases, 69 Cornell L.Rev. 934 (1984) (collecting empirical studies); Stephanie J. Platz & Harmon M. Hoch, Cross-Racial/Ethnic Eyewitness Identification: A Field Study, 18 J. Applied Social Psychology 972 (1988). All testimony poses risks; these differ in source and gravity, and it is difficult to generalize about which kinds of testimony are least reliable. Perhaps the defendant’s own testimony goes in that box; courts used to think it so apt to be self-serving that they did not allow the accused to testify at all. See Ferguson v. Georgia,
Informants are tempted to manufacture or exaggerate evidence of crime, but law enforcement agents, aware of this, try to control them. An informant hired to buy drugs from a suspect will be searched before and after the transaction (to ensure that he has not brought his own drugs or kept the “buy” money). An informant hired to negotiate a criminal transaction often will be wired for sound, as Martino was, and his accounts of unrecorded conversations will be checked against those that were taped. A turncoat (that is, the defendant’s former associate-in-crime who turns state’s evidence) is not monitored in this way and therefore has greater leeway for invention at trial. The turncoat’s reward structure also differs. Like defendants, turncoats see performance on the stand as the key to less time in prison. Compensation contingent on testimony favoring the prosecutor may create pressure to lie that a paid informant such as Martino does not face — for he had been paid in full before trial and did not expect to gain anything by testimony. (He was not a career snitch and did not anticipate a return engagement.)
All of this leads us to conclude that an instruction singling out paid informants’ testimony as especially untrustworthy need not and should not be given as á matter of course. Such an instruction may be appropriate when a particular informant appears to present unusually great risks, which the judge fears the jury might underestimate unless the subject is drawn to its attention. This in turn implies that the decision either to give or to refrain from giving an instruction on the subject is committed to the discretion of the district court, which is bést situated to detect and deal with threats of unreliable testimony, and that appellate review is deferential. The extent to which the informant’s testimony is corroborated is just one of many things a judge sensibly may consider; lack of corroboration may make an instruction more appropriate but does not compel it, when an opportunity for cross-examination has put this point before the jury already. For several decades we have treated the subject in this way, accepting the district judge’s resolution. United States v. Rajewski,
As far as we can make out, this court has never reversed a criminal conviction for failure to give an instruction stating that informants’ testimony should be given special scrutiny. Cook relies particularly on decisions of the ninth circuit holding that the giving of an informant instruction is compulsory. United States v. Bosch,
Nothing the Supreme Court has said makes a special informant instruction obligatory. Only two of its cases bear on the subject. On Lee v. United States,
The use of informers, accessories, accomplices, false friends, or any of the other betrayals which are “dirty business” may raise serious questions of credibility. To the extent that they do, a defendant is entitled to broad latitude to probe credibility by cross-examination and to have the issues submitted to the jury with careful instructions.
■You should carefully scrutinize the testimony given and the circumstances under which each witness has testified, and every matter in evidence which tends to indicate whether the witness is worthy of belief. Consider each witness’ intelligence, his motives, state of mind, his demeanor and manner while on the witness stand. Consider also any relation each witness may bear to either side of the case.... All evidence of a witness whose self-interest is shown from either benefits received, detriments suffered, threats or promises made, or any attitude of the witness which might tend to prompt testimony either favorable or unfavorable to the accused should be considered with caution and weighed with care.
Cook’s attorney had every opportunity to cross-examine Martino'and argue his position under the general credibility instruction. Counsel did not ask for an elaboration of that instruction along the lines of the Hoff a instruction or the FJC’s Instruction 25. The district judge did not abuse his discretion in concluding that Martino’s testimony was not so suspect, or the jury’s task so difficult, that an instruction singling out informants was essential.
Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree that the judgment ought to be affirmed and join the judgment and the opinion of the court. As the opinion states, “the decision either to give or to refrain from giving an instruction on the subject [of testimony by an informant] is committed to the discretion of the district court, which is best situated to detect and deal with threats of unreliable testimony, and that appellate review is deferential.” I write separately because I fear that the majority opinion may be read as sending far too strong a message to the district courts of this circuit that their discretion is more cabined than it has been in the past or as signaling a radical departure from the practice of the past, the precedent of this circuit or, indeed, from the practice throughout most of the United States.
The law of this circuit with respect to this instruction is well established and consistent. The decision whether to give an instruction cautioning the jury with respect to the special difficulties posed by the testimony of an informant is committed to sound discretion of the trial judge. No one else is in a comparable position to make the prudential judgment as to whether such an instruction is appropriate. It is for that reason that our opinions have avoided, consistently, establishing any categorical limitations on the discretion. See, e.g., United States v. Rajewski,
In modern federal criminal practice, the informant defies easy stereotyping. As an undercover gatherer of evidence or information for the government, he may work for the government in a long-term capacity or in only one case. He- may have a great deal at stake in terms of his - own future in the criminal justice system or he may be free of any exposure in that regard. He may be motivated by money, by need for governmental protection or immunity for himself or family members, or by a permutation of these factors. When an informant is testifying for personal gain or advantage rather than for an independent law enforcement purpose, the jury well may need to be cautioned about the potential bias and unreliability of his self-interested testimony.
The Supreme Court, demonstrating the appropriate approach for any federal appellate court, has not been inclined to establish any categorical rules or to suggest any particular characterizations that require that a cautionary instruction be given. See Cool v. United States, 409 U.S. 100, 103,
In United States v. House,
Against this background, I think it would be a serious mistake for the district judges of this circuit to read the court’s opinion today as establishing particular categories of informants whose testimony warrants the instruction and other categories of informants whose testimony does not warrant such a caution. Similarly, I think that the precise text of the instruction, when the trial judge believes that the fairness of the proceedings requires one, ought to be committed to the trial court’s discretion. There no doubt will be cases when a general cautionary instruction about the responsibility of the juror to examine the motivation of witnesses will suffice. In other cases, a more specific instruction pointing out, as the Supreme Court has acknowledged in On Lee, the special difficulties in assessing informant testimony will no doubt be indicated. Categorical imperatives established by appellate judges in advance and imposed on trial judges are entirely inappropriate in such a situation.
The case before us was a close call. The informant presented a complex bundle of characteristics for the trial judge to sort out.
Notes
. U.S. ex rel. Swimley v. Nesbitt,
. In the Tenth Circuit, when an accomplice’s testimony is uncorroborated and a cautionary instruction is not given, it is error per se, even if the testimony is facially consistent. Id. at 888, citing United States v. Owens,
The Ninth Circuit's position is that an informant instruction must be given when the testimony of an informant or accomplice is substantially uncorroborated, United States v. Bosch,
