Defendant Roger Branson was convicted by a jury of knowingly passing counterfeit money under 18 U.S.C. § 472. He appeals this conviction on the grounds his constitutional rights were violated by several references the prosecution made to his silence during his interrogation after being read the Miranda warning. We agree that the prosecutor should not have so used Bran-son’s protected silence and, therefore, we reverse.
Branson purchased a money order with three $100 bills and one $20 bill. These bills proved to be counterfeit. When he was traced from the money order and interrogated by the Secret Service, Branson admitted having given the bills, but he denied knowing they were counterfeit. He refused to answer when asked where he had obtained the bills. When he was later arrested, and after being read his Miranda rights, he remained silent when asked to divulge the source of the bills. He did not testify at his trial.
The prosecutor tried to prove Branson “knowingly” gave the bills by repeatedly bringing to the jury’s attention the fact that Branson did not tell the Secret Service the source of the funds. 1 Branson did not object to this use of his silence at the trial because any such objection only would have compounded the prejudice against him.
This failure of Branson’s to object to the comments requires us to find a “plain error” in the proceedings below before we review. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b). Branson urges that the prosecutor’s comments clearly referred to his silence during his interrogation after being read the
Miranda
warnings, and, therefore, the comments violated his constitutional rights to silence. The government submits that Branson waived his Fifth Amendment rights by answering some questions, and his failure to respond to one question did not constitute a revocation of that waiver. Therefore, the prosecutor's comments were proper, and Branson’s rights were not violated. The government relies on
United States v. Lorenzo,
In Lorenzo, the defendant told a full exculpatory story in the middle of which he refused to answer one question but then resumed talking with the officers. We stated that the Ninth Circuit recognizes both total and selective revocations of a waiver of Miranda rights, but that Lorenzo could not be said to have revoked any waiver in light of the willingness with which he began to talk and continued to do so after failing to answer a single question.
*754
These facts distinguish
Lorenzo
from the instant appeal. Branson offered no exculpatory story and did not resume talking when asked the source of the bills. The arresting officer testified he knew Branson “didn’t want to talk to us concerning the investigation at that point.” “Total revocation, of course, requires only that the individual indicate in some manner that he wishes to remain silent.”
United States v. Lorenzo,
Our holding in
Scarborough v. Arizona,
The government further argues that even if the prosecutor’s misconduct violated Branson’s constitutional rights, the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt and did not contribute to the verdict.
Chapman v. California,
When the jury had been deliberating about two hours, they sent a note to the district judge asking if they could base their decision on Branson’s silence when asked the source of the money. The judge replied that they could base the decision on any evidence they thought relevant. The reasonable inference is that the consideration of Branson’s silence did contribute to the verdict, and it was, therefore, not harmless.
Further, the note served to put the trial judge on notice as to the effect of the prosecutorial misconduct, and it gave the trial court an opportunity to correct the plain error. The court failed to do so. In
United States v. Segna,
Therefore, since there was a plain error which affected substantial rights and directly contributed to Branson’s conviction, we REVERSE and REMAND for a new trial.
Notes
. During the examination of Secret Service Agent Adams, the prosecution asked:
Q: Did he remember where he had received the three one hundred dollar bills and the one twenty dollar bill which he used to buy the October 13th money order?
A: I don’t think he wanted to respond to that.
During redirect examination on the same witness, the prosecutor asked:
Q: ... you just testified that people can innocently pass counterfeit bills, is that correct?
A: That’s correct.
Q: Isn't it also true that when an innocent person passes a counterfeit bill he’s more than willing to say where it came from?
[Defense counsel]: Objection.
During the government’s closing argument, the prosecutor said:
Now, even assuming that he isn’t somehow associating with known conspirators, wouldn't an honest person, an innocent person have said to the Secret Service, hey, I didn’t know this was counterfeit, I just got it somehow---- [A]gain, would a [sic] honest, innocent person refuse to cooperate to the extent that Mr. Branson did? ... He claims he didn’t know they were counterfeit. Yet he refused to cooperate with the Secret Service and tell them where he received those bills____ Well, if he is such an innocent victim ... why didn’t he say so? Why didn't he say, oh my boss did it, he is trying to get me or something. Why didn’t he just say that? ... To argue that the defendant is a victim of his employer’s illegal activity clearly ignores the fact that he refused to say where he got the bills.
