Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
A jury found Xavier Brooks guilty of various drug charges in October 1990.
1
About six weeks after that trial, police officer Christie Hoyle, the government’s chief witness, was fatally shot in the apartment of a fellow officer, David Rowland, evidently with her own service revolver. Later (and apparently without knowledge of the shooting), the judge granted a motiоn for a new trial, explaining that he was troubled by discrepancies in the testimony, by behavior of the defendant that seemed not to match that of a competent drug dealer, and by a possibly erroneous admission of evidence. See Order and Memorandum of February 19, 1991 (D.D.C. No. 90-0332). At the second trial, the government offered the transсript of Hoyle’s original testimony under Federal Rule of Evidence 804(b)(1), which allows use of an unavailable witness’s former testimony under some circumstances, and the court admitted it. A second guilty verdict followed. Because the government failed to check pertinent files for information possibly reflecting on Hoyle’s credibility, see
Brady v. Maryland,
* 5ft * * * *
Before the start of the second trial, defense counsel sought either to secure, or to cause the court to examine, any files of the Metropolitan Police Department relating to Hoyle’s death. 2 Understandably, counsel was somewhat vague on what hе expected the files to show, but the gist of his argument was that a police officer shot with her own revolver in the presence of a fellow officer might have had some sort of problem that would bear on her credibility. As Officer Rowland had been present, defense counsel focussed on the possibility of an “Internal Affairs Divisiоn” file on Rowland and his relation to the death. Vernon Gill, General Counsel of the Police Department, attended a preliminary session of court, bringing with him Hoyle’s personnel file. The district judge read the personnel file and declared it free of material undermining Hoyle’s credibility. In addition, Gill represented to the court that there was no Internal Affаirs Division investigation of Hoyle or her death. At the same time, he noted that he had not been asked whether there was a homicide investigation file, and that he had “no knowledge” of any such file but that he presumed one existed. The Assistant U.S. Attorney, inadvertently we assume, recharacterized Gill’s statements *1502 as a denial that there was a “file by the Internal Affairs Division or anything concerning officer Christie Hoyle” (emphasis added). It is plain that Gill did not deny the existence of an Internal Affairs file on Rowland, which might bear on Hoyle’s conduct or character, or the existence of a homicide file on the shooting itself. 3 The assistant’s mischaracterization, however, suggests the presenсe of considerable confusion in the courtroom, confusion that the assistant’s mischaracterization doubtless aggravated.
We need not review the evidence at trial, except to note that Hoyle’s testimony was plainly critical. She said that she purchased crack from Brooks for $40 and that she saw him hide some ziрlock bags containing rock-like substances, bags that other officers later found in the place she identified. Without this evidence, the government had no case against Brooks, as only Hoyle’s testimony linked him to the crack she said she bought from him or to the stash of crack found by the other officers.
Brooks’s claim here raises two threshold issues that this circuit has expressly left open, see
United States v. Kelly,
In resolving these questions, the Supreme Court’s identification of the essence of the Brady rule is of little help:
The heart of the holding in Brady is the prosecution’s suppression of evidence, in the face of a defense production request, where the evidence is favorable to the accused and is material either to guilt or to punishment. Important, then, are (a) suppression by the prosecution after a request by the defense, (b) the evidence’s favorable character for the defense, and (c) the materiality of the evidence.
Moore v. Illinois,
In extending the
Brady
duty to searches for evidence, the 5th Circuit framed thе matter as one of incentives for the government, arguing that without the extension “we would be inviting and placing a premium on conduct unworthy of representatives of the United States Government.”
United States v. Auten,
Of сourse the prosecutor’s own interest in avoiding surprise at trial gives him a
*1503
very considerable incentive to search accessible files for possibly exculpatory evidence, quite independent of
Brady.
Accordingly there is less need for a judicially constructed incentive than in the classic
Brady
situation, where prosecutоrs already possess the information but may have little incentive to divulge it apart from the
Brady
rule itself. We suspect the courts’ willingness to insist on an affirmative duty of inquiry may stem primarily from a sense that an inaccurate conviction based on government failure to turn over an easily turned rock is essentially as offensive as one based on government non-disclosure. See, e.g.,
Calley v. Callaway,
The cases finding a duty to search have involved files maintained by branches of government “closely aligned with the prosecution”,
United States ex rel. Fairman,
The final question, then, is whether the duty to search was triggered here. In some cases, the duty to search flows straight from the nature of the files. In Auten, for example, once the court decided that the Brady duty could ever require prosecutors to seаrch FBI and National Crime Information Center records, it felt no need to explain why that duty applied as to the government’s key witness. Where the file’s link to the case is less clear, the court must also consider whether there was enough of a prospect of exculpatory materials to warrant a search. Here we think there was.
We recognize that the probability is low that any of the police department files will yield information drawing Ms. Hoyle’s credibility into question. She was a victim of a violent death, quite possibly either suicide or homicide, and we cannot embrace the idea that mendacity is materially more common among such victims than among the population at large. Taking this above the range of utter speculation, however, are the presence of a fellow officer, plus the possible use of her service revolver. The combination suggests some link between the death and her work, and thus (by extension) to some trouble connected with her work.
We think it highly relevant that defense counsel pinpointed files that can be searched without difficulty — police investigations into the death of Christie Hoyle. The defendant was not asking the U.S. Attorney’s office to examine some sprawling mass of records; whoever is in charge of the investigation(s) into the Hoyle death should have bеen able very quickly to alert the assistant U.S. Attorney to any findings or clues as to character flaws or behavior that might tend to undermine Hoyle’s testimony.
Studying the cases explicitly inquiring into the necessary degree of notice, we find this closer to the ones finding the duty triggered than to the ones finding the possibility of exculpatory materials purely speculative. The closest case is
United States v. Deutsch, supra,
in which the defendant ‘ argued that the government
*1504
should have checked the personnel file of the key prosecution witness, a Post Office employee. There was a faint suggestion that he was in trouble at work; the employee had given what the court regarded as “evasive” answers on the subject, at first denying any trouble and thеn acknowledging his supervisor’s objection to his personal appearance.
Deutsch,
Other cases sensibly warn against reliance on utter speculation. Thus in
United States v. Navarro,
As has proved true of the other aspects of
Brady
jurisprudence, no formula defining the scope of the duty to search can be expected to yield easily predicted results. Where, as here, howеver, there is an explicit request for an apparently very easy examination, and a non-trivial prospect that the examination might yield material exculpatory information, .we think the prosecution should make the inquiry. As the burden of the proposed examination rises, clearly the likelihood of a pay-off must also rise before the government can be put to the effort. Cf.
Navarro,
On remand, the .district court should require the U.S. Attorney’s office to do what it should have done earlier: to review (or have a suitably responsible person in the Metropolitan Police Department review) any homicide and any Internal Affairs Division files of the Department that may contain material exculpatory information (undermining the credibility of Hoyle, either as a general matter or with special reference to this case). This treatment — a directive to the prosecution to examine the files — accords with the Court’s explanation in
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
In so invoking
Ritchie,
we note that the decision’s provision of a remedy presents a puzzle. The
Ritchie
Court explained that the decision whether information shall be disclosed normally rests in the first instance with the prosecutor, but then without explanation remanded for
in camera
review of the disputed files by the trial judge. We have found no casе interpreting
Ritchie
in the circumstances present here — a need to choose who will search files as yet unsearched by the prosecutors themselves. But we note that
])ost-Ritchie
cases considering demands for
disclosure
*1505
of files to the defense appear to have followed the Court’s words rather than its action, regarding prosecutorial review of possible
Brady
materials as normally sufficient, see, e.g.,
United States v. Presser,
* # # # * *
In addition to his Brady claim, the defendant raises three others, which we can reject briefly. First, he argues that the district court erred in ruling it could not depart downward from the range specified by the sentencing guidelines because of weaknesses in the government’s case. See Transcript of Sentencing, August 16, 1991 at 7-8. We agree with the district judge. If the case has such vulnerabilities that a reasonable jury could not find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, obviously the court must grant a motion for acquittal. But if the evidence withstands that test, we think that to permit departures based only on an individual assessment of the evidence would invite the sort of disсrepancies the guidelines were intended to minimize.
Second, defendant says it was error to admit the original testimony of officer Hoyle. But the evidence satisfies the terms of Rule 804(b)(1), and we can not say the trial court abused the discretion that rule or Rule 403 permits.
Ohio v. Roberts,
Finally, Brooks argues that the district court erred in quashing a subpoena duсes tecum under Fed.R.Crim.P. 17(c), seeking materials related to the investigation of the death of Officer Hoyle. This was not an abuse of discretion, as Brooks was improperly trying to use the subpoena as a discovery tool.
United States v. Nixon,
Jj< & $ * # sje
*1506 In order to permit the district judge to require full compliance with Brady, the case is
Remanded.
Notes
. The charges were distribution of a controllеd substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(C), and possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(l)(B)(iii).
. It was plainly understood that defense counsel was invoking the Brady doctrine; indeed he explicitly linked these colloquies to his previously filed motion for the government to turn over Brady materials.
. Since oral argument the press has run reports that Rowland has been indicted for Hoyle’s murder. See D.C. Officer Charged in Death, WASHINGTON POST, March 24, 1992, at D7.
. A few cases have chosen
in camera
inspection over disclosure to defense counsel, without even mentioning the possibility of prosecutorial review, but these have not involved the sort of
Brady
search at issue here. See, e.g.,
Wagner v. Henman,
