Lead Opinion
delivered the -opinion of the Court.
This is another in the long line of cases presenting the question whether a confession was properly admitted into evidence under the Fourteenth' Amendment. As in all such cases, we are forced to resolve a conflict between two fundamental interests of society; its interest in prompt and efficient law enforcement, and’its interest in preventing the rights of its individual members from being abridged by unconstitutional methods of lаw enforcement.
The State’s evidence reveals the following: Petitioner Vincent Joseph Spano is a derivative citizen of this country, having been born in Messina, Italy. He was 25 years old at the time of the shooting in questiоn and had graduated from junior high school. He had a record of regular employment. The shooting took place on January 22,1957.
On that day, petitioner was drinking in a bar. The decedent, a former professional boxer weighing almost 200 pounds who had fought in Madison Square Garden, took some of petitioner’s money from the bar. Petitioner followed him out of the bar to recover it. A fight ensued, with the decedent knocking petitioner down and then kicking him in the head three or four times. Shock from the force of these blows caused petitioner to vomit. After •the bartender applied some ice to his head, petitioner left the bar, walked to his apartment; secured a gun, and walked eight or nine blocks to a candy store where, the decedent was frequently to be found. He entered the store in which decedent, threе friends of decedent, at least two of whom were ex-convicts, and a. boy who was supervising the store were present. He fired five shots, two of which entered the decedent’s body, causing his death. The boy was the only eyewitness; the three friends of decedent did not see the person who.fired the shot. Petitioner then disappeared for the next week or so.
On February 1, 1957, the.Bronx County Grand Jury returned an indictment for first-dеgree murder against petitioner'. Accordingly, a bench warrant was issued for his arrest, commanding that he be forthwith brought beforé the court to answer the indictment, or, if the court had adjourned for the term, that he be delivered into the
On February 3, 1957, petitioner called one Gaspar Bruno,.a close friend of 8 or 10 years’ standing who had attended school with him. Bruno was a fledgling police officer, having at that time not yet finished attending police academy. According to Bruno’s testimony, petitioner told;him “that he took a terrific beating, that the deceased hurt him real bad and he dropped him a couple of times and he was dazed; he didn’t, know what he was doing and that he went and shot at him.” Petitioner told Bruno.that he intended to get a lawyer and give himself up. Bruno relayed this informatiоn to his superiors.
The following day, February 4, at 7:10 p. m., petitioner, accompanied by counsel, surrendered himself to the authorities in front of th& Bronx County Building, where both the office of the Assistant District Attorney who ultimately prosecuted, his case and the courtroom in which he was ultimately tried were located. His attorney had cautioned him to answer n» questions, and left him in the custody of the officers. He was promptly taken to the office of the Assistant District Attorney, and at 7:15 p. m. the questioning began, being conducted by Assistant District Attorney Goldsmith, Lt. Gannon, Detectives Farrell, Lehrer and Motta, and Sgt. Clarke. The record reveals that the questioning was both persistent and continuous. Petitioner, in accordance with his attorney’s instructions, steadfastly refused to answer. Detective Motta testified: “He refused to talk to me.”, “He just looked up to the ceiling and refused to talk to me.” Detective Farrell testified:
“Q. And you started to interrogate him?
“A. That is right.
“Q.: What did he say?
*318 “A. He said 'you would have to see my attorney. I tell you nothing but my name.’
"Q. Did you continue to examine him?
“A. Verbally, yes, sir.”
He asked.one officer, Detective Ciccone, if he could speak to his attorney, but that request was denied. Detective Ciccone testified that he could not find the attorney’s name in the telephone book.
At 12:15 a. m. on the morning of February 5, after five hours of questioning in which it beсame evident that petitioner was following his attorney’s instructions, on the Assistant District Attorney’s orders petitioner was transferred to the 46th Squad, Ryer Avenue Police Station. The Assistant District Attorney also went to the police station and to some extent continued to participate in the interrogation.. Petitioner arrived at 12:30 and questioning was resumed at 12:40. The character of the questioning is revealed by the testimony of Detective Farrell:'
“Q. Who did you leave him in the room with?
“A. With Detective Lehrer and Sergeant Clarke came in and Mr. Goldsmith came in or Inspector Halk came in. It was back, and forth. People just came in, spoke a few words to the defendant or they listened a few minutes and they left.”
But petitioner persisted in his refusal to answer, and again requested permission to see his attorney, this time from Detective Lehrer. His request was again deniеd.
It was then that those in .charge of the investigation decided that petitioner’s close friend, Bruno, could be of
But this was not the end. At 4:30 a. m. three detectives took petitioner to Police Headquarters in Manhattan. On the way they attempted to find the bridge from which petitioner said he had thrown the murder weapon. They crossed • the Triborough Bridge into Manhattan, arriving at Police Headquarters at 5 a. m., a,nd left Manhattan for the Bronx at 5:40 a. m. via the Willis Avenue Bridge. When petitioner recognized neither bridge as the one from which he had thrown the weapon, they reentered Manhattan via the Third Avenue Bridge, which petitioner stated was the right one, and then returned to
Court opened at 10 a. ,m. that morning, and. petitioner was arraigned at. 10:15..
At the trial, the confession was introduced in evidence over appropriate objections. The jury was instructed that it could rely pri it only if it was found to be voluntary. The jury-returned а guilty, verdict arid-petitioner was sentenced to death. The New York Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction over three dissents, 4 N. Y. 2d 256, 173 N Y. S. 2d 793,
Petitioner’s, first contention is that his absolute right to counsel in a capital case, Powell v. Alabama,
The abhorrence of society to the use of involuntary confessions does not turn alone on their inherent untrustworthiness. It also turns on the deep-rooted -feeling that the police must obey the law while enforcing the law; that in the end life and liberty can be "as much endangered
Petitioner was a foreign-born young man of 25 with no past history of law violation or of subjection to official interrogation, at least insofar as the record shows. He
The use of Bruno, characterized-in this Court by counsel for the State as a “childhood, friend” of petitioner’s, is another factor which deserves mention in the totality of the situation. Bruno’s was the one face visible to • petitioner in which' he could put some trust. There was a bond of friendship between them going back a decade into adolescence. It was with this material that the officers felt that they could overcome petitioner’s will. They instructed Bruno falsely to state that petitioner’s telephone call had gotten him into trouble, that his job was in jeopardy, and that loss of his job would be disastrous to his three children, his wife and his unborn child. And Bruno played this part of a worried father, harried by his superiors, in not one, but four different acts', the final one lasting an hour. Cf. Leyra v. Denno,
“An open foe may prove a curse,
But a pretended friend is worse,”
and he yielded to his false friend’s entreaties.
.We conclude that petitioner’s will was overborne by official pressure, fatigue and sympathy falsely aroused, after considering all the facts in their post-indictment setting.
The State suggests, however, that we are not free to reverse this conviction, since there is sufficient other evidence in the record, from which the jury might have found guilt, relying on Stein v. New York,
Reversed.
Notes
How this could be So when the attorney’s name, Tobias Russo, was concededly in the telephone book does not appear. The trial judge sustained objections by the Assistant District Attorney to questions.designed tó delve into this mystery.
E. g., Cicenia v. Lagay,
Medical reports from New York City’s Fordham Hospital introduced by defendant showed that he had suffered a cerebral concussion in 1955. He was described by a private physician in 1951 as “an extremely nervous tense individual who is emotionally unstable and maladjusted,” and was found’ unacceptable for military ’service in 1951, primarily because of “Psychiatric disorder.” He failed the Atmy’s AFQT-1 intelligence test’. His mother had been in mental hospitals on three sepаrate occasions.'
His mame'is sometimes spelled “Hawks.”
Although each- is referred to separately in the record, it may be -that Detectives Lehrer and Leira are the same person.
Lisenba v. California,
Concurrence Opinion
While I join the opinion of thе Court, I add what-for me is an even more important ground of decision.
We have often divided on whether state authorities may question a suspect for hours on end when he has no lawyer present and when he has demanded that he have the benefit of legal advice. See Crooker v. California,
“during perhaps the most critical period of the proceedings against these defendants, that is to say, from the time of their arraignment until the beginning of their trial, when consultation, thoroughgoing investigation and preparation were vitally important, the defendants did not have the aid of counsel in any real sense, although they were as much entitled to such aid.during that period as at the trial itself.”
Depriving a person, formally charged with a crime, of counsel during the period prior to trial may be more damаging than denial of counsel during the trial itself.
We do not have here mere suspects who are being secretly interrogated by the police as in Crooker v. California, supra, nor witnesses who are being questioned in secret administrative or judicial proceedings as in In re Groban,
“. , . the denial of opportunity for appointed counsel' to confer, to consult' with the accused and to prepare his defense, could convert the appointment of counsel into a sham and nothing more than a formal comрliance with the Constitution’s requirement that an accused be given the assistance of counsel.”
I join with Judges Desmond, Fuld, and Van Voorhis of the New York Court of Appeals (4 N. Y. 2d 256, 266, 173 N. Y. S. 2d 793, 801,
Concurrence Opinion
While I concur in the opinion of the Court, it is. my view that the absence of counsel when this confession was elicited was alone enough to render it inadmissible under the Fourteenth Amendment. '
Under our system of justice an indictment is supposed to be followed by an. arraignment and a trial. At every stage in those proceedings the accused has an absolute right to a lawyer’s help if the case is one in which a death sentence mаy be imposed. Powell v. Alabama,
' What followed the petitioner’s surrender in this case was not arraignment in a court of law, but an all-night inquisition in a prosecutor’s office, a police station, and an automobile. Throughout the night the petitioner repeatedly asked to be allоwed to send for his lawyer, and his requests were repeatedly denied. He finally was induced to make a confession. That confession was used to secure a verdict sending him to the electric chair.
Our-Constitution guarantees the assistance of counsel to a man on trial for his life in-an orderly courtroom, presided over by a judge, open to the public, and protected by all the:procedural safeguards of the law. Surely a Constitution which promises that much can vouchsafe no less to the same man under midnight inquisition in the squad room of a police station.
