This case raises the narrow question whether an evidentiary hearing should have been held on a motion for a new trial. Rohalia Roberts appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, John M. Cannella, J., denying without an evidentiary hearing appellant’s motion for a new trial. For reasons given below, we hold that there should have been a hearing. Accordingly, we remand for that purpose.
Appellant was tried on a two-count indictment charging the unlawful sale of heroin on two occasions. After a one-day trial, Judge Cannella sitting without a jury found appellant guilty. Appellant does not claim that the evidence was insufficient or that the judge committed error during the course of the trial. Appellant argues only that he should have been given a new trial, or at least an evidentiary hearing oh his motion for a new trial, on the grounds that (1) he offered newly discovered, significant evidence and (2) the Government had suppressed vital information before and during the trial. Therefore, we shall summarize only the facts relevant to those issues.
The Government’s case at trial was offered through narcotic agents Jesse A. Spratley, Michael A. Antonelli and (in rebuttal) Jerome M. Weinberg; the latter two were surveilling agents. According to the agents, informant Charles Robinson introduced agent Spratley to appellant and was present while they first negotiated and later consummated sales of heroin by appellant to the agent on July 30, 1964 and on August 3, 1964. Appellant testified in his own behalf; he admitted that the informant, whom he already knew, had introduced the agent to him on July 30. However, Roberts denied that there was any conversation at that time about narcotics or that he had any later meetings that evening or on August 3 with the agent and the informant. As is frequently the case, the judge was thus presented with conflicting versions of what had occurred; he accepted the Government’s. 1
After the guilty verdict on May 10, 1965, Roberts was remanded to Federal Detention Headquarters at West Street in Manhattan. Roberts asserts, and the Government does not deny, that informant Robinson had also recently been confined there following his own conviction on April 27, 1965 for a narcotics violation, and that Robinson had been sent to the Federal Correctional Institution at Danbury, Connecticut a few days before Roberts arrived at West Street. In June 1965, Roberts was sentenced to concurrent five-year prison terms on his two-count conviction; thereafter, he too was sent to Danbury. Later, appellant obtained an affidavit from Robinson supporting appellant’s account of his alleged single meeting with agent Sprat-ley. Appellant timely filed a handwritten notice of appeal in June 1965, and also obtained leave to appeal in forma pauper-is. In October 1965, this court appointed The Legal Aid Society as appellate counsel to represent Roberts; 2 over a year *648 later, on Roberts’s motion, this court remanded the action to the district court to allow Roberts to move there for a new trial. Thereafter, Roberts brought such a motion under Rule 33, Fed.R.Crim.P., which was decided by Judge Cannella in March 1967. The judge found that the motion was “entirely without merit and that no hearing is necessary.” This appeal is from the order denying a new trial.
There were two grounds for the Rule 33 motion in the district court. The first was that Roberts and his trial counsel had attempted to locate Robinson as a possible defense witness before the trial and at trial, but were unable to do so. The affidavit by Robinson corroborating Roberts’s story at trial was offered as newly discovered, significant evidence. The second claim charged suppression of evidence; it emphasized that the Government at the time of trial knew where Robinson was because the Assistant United States Attorney, who tried the case against appellant, had just successfully prosecuted Robinson. Appellant argued that the Government also knew of the defense’s effort to locate Robinson, but said nothing despite a request for the information. One of the moving papers even implied a conscious effort on the part of the Government to remove Robinson from the New York area before the trial started. According to appellant, this amounted to an unconstitutional suppression of evidence. Brady v. State of Maryland,
A review of the record suggests that the only substantial issue before this court is a narrow one. Insofar as the motion for a new trial was based on “newly discovered evidence,” Roberts did not display the requisite due diligence. United States v. Abrams,
However, we are still left with a troublesome issue. The law is clear that when an informant’s testimony is “essential to a fair determination of a cause,” the Government may be required to dis
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close his identity and address, if known. Roviaro v. United States,
The motion for a new trial contained an affidavit of Roberts’s trial counsel in which he swore:
Your deponent has read the minutes of the trial which at page 41 thereof show that I asked the government the whereabouts of the informant and was told that they did not know. The informant would have been a crucial witness for the defendant.
It is also my recollection that I had asked the United States attorney the whereabouts of the informant and he said he did not know.
Page 41 of the minutes referred to above contains the following interchange in the cross-examination of agent Spratley:
Q. So in other words it is your testimony that the informant sat there in the middle while you handed money to this defendant and he handed you this package, this cigarette package [containing heroin] ? A. That is correct.
Q. Is the informant in court today? A. No, he is not.
Q. Do you know where he is? A. No, I do not.
In the opposing affidavit to the motion for a new trial the Assistant United States Attorney who tried this case stated that:
to the best of my knowledge, neither defendant nor his counsel * * * made any formal or informal request or inquiry, either prior to or during the trial, as to Robinson’s whereabouts.
Thus, we are left, as was the district court, with a clear-cut issue of fact raised by defense counsel’s affidavit, anemic though it was. That issue is whether, apart from the cross-examination of Spratley, any inquiry concerning Robinson’s whereabouts was made of any responsible government personnel; if so, the questions remain whether that inquiry alone or in conjunction with the interrogation of Spratley amounted to a sufficient request for the informant’s whereabouts. An evidentiary hearing was required at least for the purpose of deciding these narrow issues, and we are compelled to remand for that purpose.
Moreover, there is another, more subtle, problem presented here. It is whether, given the knowldege that Robinson had just been successfully prosecuted by the Assistant who was also trying appellant’s case, the two questions to Spratley, without more, should be construed as a sufficient request for Robinson’s whereabouts. This was obviously an uncommon situation; it is not usual for the particular government representatives at trial to know that less than two weeks earlier the informant had been convicted in the same court. Under those circumstances, when Roberts’s counsel asked agent Spratley if he knew where Robinson was, it would at least have been wiser for government counsel to approach the bench at an appropriate time to advise the court and defense counsel of the facts. We have recently noted that the Government should not “play it ‘close to the vest’ in administering federal criminal justice,” see United States v. McFarland,
There is no other remaining claim of error. Accordingly, if after an eviden-tiary hearing the district court determines that there was an insufficient request for information concerning the informant’s whereabouts, there will be no need for a new trial and the judgment of conviction may stand. United States v. Gearey,
A final point deserves brief comment. At the time of appellant’s trial, Criminal Rule 33 provided a five-day limitation period for motions for a new trial, unless the motion was based on newly discovered evidence.
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Since the suppression of evidence ground does not fall within that exception, the Government contends that this portion of the motion was not timely made, citing United States v. Vanterpool,
Case remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The judge orally delivered his specific and careful findings at the close of the trial.
. Other counsel represented Roberts at his trial,
. The trial was adjourned from April 26, 1965 to May 3, at the request of Roberts’s trial counsel. On that date, it was marked ready and on May 7 assigned to Judge Cannella.
. In closing, defense counsel suggested that the absence of the informant at trial allowed inferences favorable to defendant.
. The tíme period for a motion on this ground was two years. The Rule’s 5-day period for other motions was amended to 7 days, effective July 1, 1966.
