JENCKS v. UNITED STATES
No. 23
353 U.S. 657; 77 S. Ct. 1007; 1957 U.S. LEXIS 1623; 1 L. Ed.
2d 1103; 32 Lab. Cas. (CCH) P70,731; 75 Ohio L. Abs. 465; 40 L.R.R.M. 2147
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Lawyers' Edition Display SUMMARY: An officer of a labor union was indicted
on a charge of falsely swearing, in an affidavit filed with the National Labor
Relations Board, that he was not a member of, nor affiliated with, the Communist
Party. At his trial in the United States District Court for the Western District
of Texas he moved for orders directing an inspection of reports made to the FBI
by two government witnesses as to events and activities to which they had
testified at the trial. His motions were denied and he was convicted. His
conviction was affirmed by the
United
States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (226 F2d 540, 553), holding
that the defendant was not entitled to production of these reports, since a
preliminary foundation of inconsistency between the contents of the reports and
the trial testimony of the government witnesses was not laid.
On
certiorari, the United States Supreme Court reversed. In an opinion by Brennan,
J., expressing the views of five of the members of the Court, it was held that
the defendant was entitled to an order directing the government to produce the
reports for his inspection, it being sufficient that they contained statements
of government witnesses relating to the events and activities to which these
witnesses testified at the trial; the practice of producing government documents
to the trial judge for his determination of relevancy and materiality, without
hearing the accused, was disapproved. It was also held that if the government
exercised its privilege to withhold the reports in the public interest, the
criminal action must be dismissed, and that it was for the government and not
for the trial judge, to determine the question of public interest in that
connection.
Burton and Harlan, JJ., in an opinion written by Mr. Justice
Burton, dissented from some of the views expressed in the Court's opinion,
holding that the documents should be produced for the examination of the trial
court to determine their relevancy as well as the applicability of the privilege
claimed by the government. However, the justices concurred in the result on the
ground that the instructions of the trial court on the question of membership in
and affiliation with the Communist Party were defective. Frankfurter, J., who
joined the opinion of the Court, agreed with them on that point.
Clark,
J., dissented from the holding requiring the government to produce the records
for inspection by the defendant or suffer dismissal of the action. He also
expressed the view that the trial court's instructions were sufficient.
Whittaker, J., did not participate.
LEXIS HEADNOTES -
Classified to U.S. Digest Lawyers' Edition:
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §13
accused's right to production of
documents in government's possession. --
Headnote: [1]
Even
though no preliminary foundation of inconsistency between the trial testimony of
government witnesses and reports in possession of the government containing
statements made by these witnesses is laid, the defendant in a criminal case is
entitled to production of these reports for his inspection where a sufficient
foundation is established by the testimony of the witnesses that their reports
were of the events and activities related in their testimony.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §13
of documents in government's possession
-- prerequisites. --
Headnote: [2]
The necessary essentials
of a foundation for an accused's right to the production for inspection of
documents in the government's possession are that his demand is for production
of specific documents containing statements taken from persons or informants
offered by the government as witnesses at the trial, and not for any fishing
expedition on the chance that something impeaching the testimony of the
witnesses may turn up; for production purposes it need only appear that the
evidence is relevant, competent, and outside of any exclusionary rule.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §13
of documents in government's
possession -- in criminal case. --
Headnote: [3]
A defendant
in a criminal case is entitled to the production by the government of documents
containing statements of government witnesses, where the impeachment of their
testimony is singularly important to him, and particularly where the witnesses
admit that they cannot remember what reports were oral and what written and one
of them does not remember their contents.
WITNESSES §99
impeachment -- contradictory statements. --
Headnote: [4]
Statements of a witness recording the events before time dulls his memory
are of particular value for the purpose of impeaching his credibility; a flat
contradiction between his trial testimony and previous statements is not the
only test of inconsistency, the omission from the statements of facts related at
the trial, or a contrast in emphasis upon the same facts, or a different order
of treatment being also relevant.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION
§13
of documents in government's possession -- inconsistent statements. --
Headnote: [5]
A rule which would require, as a prerequisite
to an accused's right to the production of documents in the government's
possession, a preliminary showing that statements of government witnesses
contained therein are inconsistent with their trial testimony is incompatible
with the Supreme Court's standards for the administration of justice in the
federal courts.
CRIMINAL LAW §1
doing justice. --
Headnote: [6]
The interest of the United States in a criminal
prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §13
of documents in government's
possession -- FBI records. --
Headnote: [7]
A defendant
charged with false swearing, in an affidavit filed with the National Labor
Relations Board, that he was not a member of, and was not affiliated with, the
Communist Party is entitled to an order directing the government to produce for
inspection all reports of government witnesses in its possession, written and,
when orally made, as recorded by the FBI, touching the events and activities as
to which they testified at the trial; the defendant is entitled to inspect these
reports to decide whether to use them in his defense.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §13
of documents in government's possession
-- function of trial judge. --
Headnote: [8]
The practice of
producing government documents to the trial judge for his determination of
relevancy and materiality, without hearing the accused, is disapproved;
relevancy and materiality for the purposes of production and inspection, with a
view to use on cross-examination, are established when the reports are shown to
relate to the testimony of the witness; only after inspection of the reports by
the accused must the trial judge determine admissibility, e. g., evidentiary
questions of inconsistency, materiality, and relevancy of the contents and the
method to be employed for the elimination of parts immaterial or irrelevant.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §15
of documents in government's
possession -- privilege. --
Headnote: [9]
The rule that the
protection of vital national interests may militate against public disclosure of
documents in the government's possession has been recognized in civil cases in
which the Supreme Court has considered the statutory authority conferred upon
the head of each of the departments of government to adopt regulations, not
inconsistent with law, for use of records appertaining to his department.
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §15
of documents in government's
possession -- refusal -- dismissal. --
Headnote: [10]
A
federal criminal action must be dismissed when the government, on the grounds of
privilege, elects not to comply with an order to produce, for the accused's
inspection and for admission in evidence, relevant statements or reports in its
possession of government witnesses touching the subject matter of their
testimony at the trial; the burden is the government's, not to be shifted to the
trial judge, to decide whether the public prejudice of allowing the crime to go
unpunished is greater than that attendant upon the possible disclosure of state
secrets and other confidential information in its possession.
APPEAL AND ERROR §1390
discretion of trial court -- evidence. --
Headnote: [11]
In matters relating to the production of
evidence or the scope of cross-examination a large discretion must be allowed
the trial court and its exercise of such discretion should be upheld, in the
absence of a clear showing of prejudicial abuse thereof. [From separate opinion
by Burton and Harlan, JJ.]
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §13
of reports -- determination of motion. --
Headnote: [12]
The appropriate determination of a motion to produce reports made in
connection with the examination of a witness depends upon the significance of
the facts sought to be established, and upon the potential use of the requested
documents in proving those facts. [From separate opinion by Burton and Harlan,
JJ.]
DISCOVERY AND INSPECTION §15
WITNESSES
§70.5
state secrets -- privilege. --
Headnote: [13]
The
government's privileges with respect to state secrets and the identity of
confidential informants require the withholding of evidence not only from the
jury but also from the defendant; when the government is a party, the
preservation of these privileges is dependent upon nondisclosure of the
privileged evidence to the defendant. [From separate opinion by Burton and
Harlan, JJ.]
SEDITION AND SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES §1
TRIAL §298
instructions as to membership in Communist Party. --
Headnote: [14]
The essential element of membership in an
organized group is the desire of an individual to belong to the organization and
a recognition by the organization that it considers him a member; hence it is
error for the trial court to fail to emphasize this element in an instruction to
the jury on the question of membership given at defendant's trial on a charge of
falsely swearing that he was not a member of the Communist Party. [From separate
opinion by Burton and Harlan, JJ., joined on that point by Frankfurter, J.]
SEDITION AND SUBVERSIVE ACTIVITIES §9
TRIAL
§298
instructions as to affiliation with Communist Party. --
Headnote: [15]
Affiliation with the Communist Party requires a
continuing course of conduct on a fairly permanent basis that could not be
abruptly ended without giving at least reasonable cause for the charge of breach
of good faith; hence it is error for the trial court, at defendant's trial for
falsely swearing that he was not affiliated with the Communist Party, to
instruct the jury on "affiliation" by merely saying that affiliation means
something less than membership but more than sympathy. [From separate opinion by
Burton and Harlan, JJ., joined on that point by Frankfurter, J.]
SYLLABUS: Petitioner was
convicted in a Federal District Court of violating
18
U. S. C. § 1001 by filing, under § 9 (h) of the National Labor Relation Act,
as president of a labor union, an affidavit stating falsely that he was not a
member of the Communist Party or affiliated with such Party. Crucial testimony
against him was given by two paid undercover agents for the F. B. I., who stated
on cross-examination that they had made regular oral or written reports to the
F. B. I. on the matters about which they had testified. Petitioner moved for the
production of these reports in court for inspection by the judge with a view to
their possible use by petitioner in impeaching such testimony. His motions were
denied.
Held: Denial of the motions was erroneous, and the conviction
is reversed. Pp. 658-672.
(a) Petitioner was not required to lay a
preliminary foundation for his motion, showing inconsistency between the
contents of [***2] the reports and the testimony of the government
agents, because a sufficient foundation was established by their testimony that
their reports were of the events and activities related in their testimony.
Gordon
v. United States, 344 U.S. 414, distinguished. Pp. 666-668.
(b) Petitioner was entitled to an order directing the Government to
produce for inspection all written reports of the F. B. I. agents in its
possession, and, when orally made, as recorded by the F. B. I., touching the
events and activities as to which they testified at the trial. P. 668.
(c) Petitioner is entitled to inspect the reports to decide whether to
use them in his defense. Pp. 668-669.
(d) The practice of producing
government documents to the trial judge for his determination of relevancy and
materiality, without hearing the accused, is disapproved. P. 669.
(e)
Only after inspection of the reports by the accused, must the trial judge
determine admissibility of the contents and the method to be employed for the
elimination of parts immaterial or irrelevant. P. 669.
(f) Criminal
action must be dismissed when the Government, on the ground of privilege, elects
not to comply with [***3] an order to produce, for the accused's
inspection and for admission in evidence, relevant statements or reports in its
possession of government witnesses touching the subject matter of their
testimony at the trial. Pp. 669-672.
(g) The burden is the Government's,
not to be shifted to the trial judge, to decide whether the public prejudice of
allowing the crime to go unpunished is greater than that attendant upon the
possible disclosure of state secrets and other confidential information in the
Government's possession. P. 672.
COUNSEL: John T. McTernan argued the cause for
petitioner. With him on the brief was Nathan Witt.
John V. Lindsay
argued the cause for the United States. With him on the brief were Solicitor
General Rankin, Assistant Attorney General Tompkins, Clinton B. D. Brown and
Harold D. Koffsky.
JUDGES:
Warren, Black, Frankfurter, Douglas, Burton, Clark, Harlan, Brennan; Whittaker
took no part in the consideration or decision of this case
OPINIONBY: BRENNAN
OPINION: [*658] [**1008]
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
On April 28,
1950, the petitioner, as president of Amalgamated Bayard District Union, Local
890, International Union [***4] of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers,
filed an "Affidavit of Non-Communist Union Officer" with the National Labor
Relations Board, pursuant to § 9 (h) of the National Labor Relations Act. n1 He
has been convicted under a two-count indictment charging that he
[*659] violated
18
U. S. C. § 1001 n2 by falsely swearing in that affidavit that he was not on
April 28, 1950, a member of the Communist Party or affiliated with such Party.
The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed the conviction, n3 and also
an order of the District Court denying the petitioner's motion for a new trial.
n4 This Court granted certiorari. n5
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n1 61 Stat. 143,
146, as amended, 65 Stat. 602,
29
U. S. C. § 159 (h).
Section 9 (h) provides that processes of the
National Labor Relations Board will be unavailable to a labor organization ". .
. unless there is on file with the Board an affidavit executed . . . by each
officer of such labor organization . . . that he is not a member of the
Communist Party or affiliated with such party, and that he does not believe in,
and is not a member of or supports any organization that believes in or teaches,
the overthrow of the United States Government by force or by any illegal or
unconstitutional methods. . . ." [***5]
n2 62 Stat. 749.
n3
226
F.2d 540. n4
226
F.2d 553. n5
350
U.S. 980. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - -
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Two alleged trial errors are presented for
our review. Harvey F. Matusow [**1009] and J. W. Ford, the
Government's principal witnesses, were Communist Party members paid by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation contemporaneously to make oral or written
reports of Communist Party activities in which they participated. They made such
reports to the F. B. I. of activities allegedly participated in by the
petitioner, about which they testified at the trial. Error is asserted in the
denial by the trial judge of the petitioner's motions to direct the Government
to produce these reports for inspection and use in cross-examining Matusow and
Ford. Error is also alleged in the instructions given to the jury on membership,
affiliation, and the credibility of informers. n6
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n6
Because of our disposition of this case, it is unnecessary to consider the
alleged errors in these instructions.
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Former Party members testified that they and the petitioner, as members
of the Communist Party of New Mexico, had been expressly instructed to conceal
their membership and not to carry membership cards. They also testified that the
Party kept no membership records or minutes of membership meetings, and that
such meetings were secretly arranged and clandestinely held. One of the
witnesses said that special care was taken to conceal the Party membership of
members, like the petitioner, [*660] "occupying strategic and
important positions in labor unions and other organizations where public
knowledge of their membership to non-Communists would jeopardize their position
in the organization." Accordingly, the Government did not attempt to prove the
petitioner's alleged membership in the Communist Party on April 28, 1950, with
any direct admissions by the petitioner of membership, by proof of his
compliance with Party membership requirements, or that his name appeared upon a
membership roster, or that he carried a membership card.
The evidence
relied upon by the Government was entirely circumstantial. It consisted of
testimony of conduct of the petitioner from early 1946 through
[***7] October 15, 1949, and of Matusow's testimony concerning
alleged conversations between him and the petitioner at a vacation ranch in July
or August 1950, and concerning a lecture delivered by the petitioner at the
ranch. The Government also attached probative weight to the action of the
petitioner in executing and filing an Affidavit of Non-Communist Union Officer
on October 15, 1949, because of the events surrounding the filing of that
affidavit. The Government bridged the gap between October 15, 1949, and July or
August 1950 with the testimony of Ford that, during that period, the Party took
no disciplinary action against the petitioner for defection or deviation, and
did not replace the petitioner in the Party office which Ford testified the
petitioner held as a member of the Party State Board.
The first alleged
Party activity of the petitioner preceded his union employment. A witness, who
was a Party member in the spring of 1946, testified that, at that time, he and
the petitioner were present at a closed Party meeting at the home of the Party
chairman for Colorado, where the petitioner, a veteran of World War II, led in
urging that veterans who were Party members [***8] spread out
[*661] into several veterans' organizations and not all join the
same one, the better to further Party work.
Later in 1946 the petitioner
was employed by the International Union of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers as
business agent for several local unions in the Silver City-Bayard, New Mexico,
area. It was testified that one of the petitioner's first acts was to meet with
the International Union's then Regional Director for the Southwest, a Communist
Party member, and with the Communist Party organizer for the area, to develop
plans for organizing a Party group within each of those locals, which later
merged to form Amalgamated Local 890 under the petitioner's presidency.
[**1010] J. W. Ford was a member of the Communist Party of
New Mexico from 1946 to September 1950 and, from 1948, was a member of the State
Board and a Party security officer. He said that in 1948 he became a paid
undercover agent for the F. B. I. n7 and reported regularly upon Party
activities and meetings. He testified that the petitioner was also a Party and a
State Board member, and he related in detail occurrences at five closed Party
meetings which he said the petitioner attended.
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n7 From
1948 through 1953, Ford was paid $ 7,025 for his services. Of that sum,
approximately $ 3,325 covered the period to which his testimony related.
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At the first meeting, in August 1948,
Ford said the Party members worked out a plan to support the petitioner's
candidacy for Congress on the ticket of the Progressive Party. At the second
meeting, in February 1949, Ford said that the petitioner and other Communist
Party members were appointed delegates to a meeting of the Mexican-American
Association in Phoenix, Arizona, to further a Party plan to infiltrate that
organization and to use it for the Party's purposes. At the third meeting, in
April 1949, Ford said that the Party's state organization [*662] was
completed, and the petitioner was appointed to the State Board and the Party
leader in the southern half of the State. At the fourth meeting, in May 1949,
Ford said that the petitioner gave a progress report upon his success in
recruiting Party members among labor groups, and offered to use Local 890's
newspaper, "The Union Worker," which he edited, to support issues of Party
interest. At the fifth meeting, in August 1949, Ford said that preparations were
made for another meeting later in that month of the Mexican-American Association
in Albuquerque, and that the delegates, including the petitioner, were
instructed to [***10] give vigorous support to the meeting but to
take care not to make themselves conspicuous in the proceedings.
Ford's
duties as a Party security officer were to keep watch on all Party members and
to report "any particular defections from the Communist philosophy or any
peculiar actions, statements or associations, which would endanger the security
of the Communist Party of the state." If any defection reported by a security
officer were considered important, the member "would be called in and would be
either severely reprimanded or criticized, or disciplined. If he refused to
accept such discipline he would either be suspended or expelled." Ford testified
that, between August 1949 and September 1950, when Ford ceased his activities
with the New Mexico Party, there was no disciplinary action taken against the
petitioner and, to his knowledge, the petitioner was not replaced in his
position on the State Board of the Communist Party.
The events leading
up to the petitioner's execution and filing, on October 15, 1949, of an
Affidavit of Non-Communist Union Officer were testified to by a former
International Union representative, a Communist Party member during 1947 to
1949. [***11] He said that, about 17 [*663] months
before, in May or June 1948, a meeting of Party members, holding offices in
locals of the International Union of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers, was held
in Denver to formulate plans for combatting a movement, led by non-Communists,
to secede from the International Union. He said that the Party members,
including the petitioner, were informed of Party policy not to sign affidavits
required by § 9 (h) of the then recently enacted Taft-Hartley Act. There was no
testimony that that policy changed before October 15, 1949.
The
affidavit was filed shortly before a C. I. O. convention was scheduled to expel
the Mine-Mill International and other unions from its membership. After filing
the affidavit, the petitioner and other Local 890 officers published an article
in "The Union Worker" charging that the contemplated C. I. O.
[**1011] action was part of a program of "right-wing unions . . .
gobbling up chunks of militant unions. . . . Our International Union and its
officers have swallowed a lot of guff, a lot of insults. But that is not the
point. . . . Now that our Union has signed the phony affidavits we can defend
ourselves . . . in case [***12] of raids. We do not fear attack from
that quarter any longer."
Matusow was a member of the Communist Party of
New York and was a paid undercover agent for the F. B. I. before he went to New
Mexico. n8 In July or August 1950, he spent a 10-day vacation on a ranch near
Taos, New Mexico, with the petitioner and a number of other people. He testified
to several conversations with the petitioner there. He said he twice told the
petitioner of his desire to transfer his membership from the New York to the New
Mexico Party, and that on both occasions [*664] the petitioner
applauded the idea and told him, "we can use you out here, we need more active
Party members." On one of these occasions, Matusow said, the petitioner asked
him for suggestions for a lecture the petitioner was preparing for delivery at
the ranch, particularly as to what the New York Communists were doing about the
Stockholm Peace Appeal. Matusow described to the petitioner a "do-day" program
adopted in New York when the Party members were doers, not talkers, and
performed some activity, such as painting signs around a baseball stadium urging
support for the Peace Appeal. He testified that the petitioner
[***13] showed great interest in the idea and said he might bring it
back to his fellow Party members in Silver City.
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n8 Other
activities of Matusow are described in
Communist
Party of the United States v. Subversive Activities Control Board,
351 U.S. 115, and
United
States v. Flynn, 130 F.Supp. 412. - -
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Matusow testified that the petitioner delivered his planned lecture,
informed his audience of the "do-day" idea, praised the Soviet Union's
disarmament plan, referred to the United States as the aggressor in Korea, and
urged all to read the "Daily People's World," identified by Matusow as the "West
Coast Communist Party newspaper." Another witness, an expelled member of
Amalgamated Local 890, testified that petitioner, during 1950, 1951 and 1952,
repeatedly urged at union meetings that the union members read that paper.
Matusow also testified that, in one of their conversations, the
petitioner told him of a program he was developing with leaders of the Mexican
Miners Union to [***14] negotiate simultaneous expiration dates of
collective bargaining agreements, to further a joint action of Mexican and
American workers to cut off production to slow down the Korean War effort.
Matusow also testified that when he told the petitioner that he had joined the
Taos Chapter of the Mexican-American Association, the petitioner told him that
this was proper Communist work because the Association was a key organization,
controlled [*665] by the Party, for Communist activities in New
Mexico and that he, the petitioner, was active in the Association in the Silver
City area. n9
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n9 Matusow recanted as deliberately false
the testimony given by him at the trial. On the basis of this recantation, the
petitioner moved for a new trial, while his appeal from the conviction was
pending, on grounds of newly discovered evidence. After extended hearings, the
District Court denied the motion.
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Ford and Matusow were
subjected to vigorous cross-examination about their employment as informers for
the F. B. I. Ford [***15] testified that in 1948 he went to the F.
B. I. and offered his services, which were accepted. He thereafter regularly
submitted reports to the F. B. I., "sometimes once a week, sometimes once a
month, and at various other times; maybe three or four times a week, depending
on the number of meetings . . . [he] attended and the distance between the
meetings." He said that his reports [**1012] were made immediately
following each meeting, while the events were still fresh in his memory. He
could not recall, however, which reports were oral and which in writing.
The petitioner moved "for an order directing an inspection of reports of
the witness Ford to the Federal Bureau of Investigation dealing with each of the
meetings which he said that he attended with the defendant Jencks in the years
1948 and 1949." The trial judge, without stating reasons, denied the motion.
Matusow, on his cross-examination, testified that he made both oral and
written reports to the F. B. I. on events at the ranch, including his
conversations with the petitioner. The trial judge, again without reasons,
denied the motion to require "the prosecution to produce in Court the reports
submitted to the F. [***16] B. I. by this witness [Matusow]
concerning matters which he saw or [*666] heard at the . . . Ranch
during the period that he was a guest there . . . ." n10
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n10 During the hearings on the motion for a new trial, the petitioner
made several requests for the production of documents in the possession of the
Government, relating to the testimony given. These motions were denied. Because
of our disposition of this case, it is unnecessary to consider these rulings.
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The Government opposed petitioner's motions at the trial
upon the sole ground that a preliminary foundation was not laid of inconsistency
between the contents of the reports and the testimony of Matusow and Ford. The
Court of Appeals rested the affirmance primarily upon that ground. n11
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n11 In upholding the refusal to require the production of
the reports, the Court of Appeals said:
". . . Upon a proper showing
that the Government has possession of such inconsistent statements and the
presence of the other requisite conditions, a person charged with crime would be
permitted to examine and use them. But no such showing was made here . . . ."
226
F.2d, at 552. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes-
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[1]
Both
the trial court and the Court of Appeals erred. We hold that the petitioner was
not required to lay a preliminary foundation of inconsistency, because a
sufficient foundation was established by the testimony of Matusow and Ford that
their reports were of the events and activities related in their testimony.
[2]
The reliance of the Court of Appeals upon
Gordon
v. United States, 344 U.S. 414, is misplaced. It is true that one
fact mentioned in this Court's opinion was that the witness admitted that the
documents involved contradicted his testimony. However, to say that
Gordon held a preliminary showing of inconsistency a prerequisite to an
accused's right to the production for inspection of documents in the
Government's possession, is to misinterpret the Court's opinion. The necessary
essentials of a foundation, emphasized in that opinion, and present
[*667] here, are that "the demand was for production of . . .
specific documents and did not propose any broad or blind fishing
expedition [***18] among documents possessed by the Government
on the chance that something impeaching might turn up. Nor was this a demand for
statements taken from persons or informants not offered as witnesses." (Emphasis
added.)
344
U.S., at 419. We reaffirm and re-emphasize these essentials. "

For
production purposes, it need only appear that the evidence is relevant,
competent, and outside of any exclusionary rule . . . ."
344
U.S., at 420. [3]
The crucial nature of the testimony of
Ford and Matusow to the Government's case is conspicuously apparent. The
impeachment of that testimony was singularly important to the petitioner. The
value of the reports for impeachment purposes was highlighted by the admissions
of both witnesses that they could not remember what reports were oral and what
written, and by Matusow's admission: [**1013] "I don't recall what I
put in my reports two or three years ago, written or oral, I don't know what
they were."
[4]
[***19] Every experienced trial
judge and trial lawyer knows the value for impeaching purposes of statements of
the witness recording the events before time dulls treacherous memory. Flat
contradiction between the witness' testimony and the version of the events given
in his reports is not the only test of inconsistency. The omission from the
reports of facts related at the trial, or a contrast in emphasis upon the same
facts, even a different order of treatment, are also relevant to the
cross-examining process of testing the credibility of a witness' trial
testimony.
[5]
[6]
Requiring the accused first to show
conflict between the reports and the testimony is actually to deny the accused
evidence relevant and material to his defense. The occasion for determining a
conflict cannot arise until [*668] after the witness has testified,
and unless he admits conflict, as in
Gordon, the accused is helpless to
know or discover conflict without inspecting the reports. n12 A requirement of a
showing of conflict would be clearly [***20] incompatible with our
standards for the administration of criminal justice in the federal courts and
must therefore be rejected. For the interest of the United States in a criminal
prosecution ". . . is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be
done. . . ."
Berger
v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88. n13
- - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n12
Cf.
United
States v. Burr, 25 Fed. Cas. 187, wherein Chief Justice
Marshall, when confronted with a request for the inspection of a letter
addressed to the President and in the possession of the attorney for the United
States, stated:
"Now, if a paper be in possession of the opposite party,
what statement of its contents or applicability can be expected from the person
who claims its production, he not precisely knowing its contents? . . .
". . . It is objected that the particular passages of the letter which
are required are not pointed out. But how can this be done while the letter
itself is withheld? . . ."
25
Fed. Cas., at 191. n13
United
States v. Schneiderman, 106 F.Supp. 731; People
v. Dellabonda, 265 Mich. 486, 251 N. W. 594; see Canon 5, American
Bar Association, Canons of Professional Ethics (1947).
- - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***21]
[7]
This Court held in
Goldman
v. United States, 316 U.S. 129, 132, that

the trial
judge had discretion to deny inspection when the witness ". . . does not use his
notes or memoranda [relating to his testimony] in court . . . ." We now hold
that the petitioner was entitled to an order directing the Government to produce
for inspection all reports of Matusow and Ford in its possession, written and,
when orally made, as recorded by the F. B. I., touching the events and
activities as to which they testified at the trial. We hold, further, that the
petitioner is entitled to inspect the reports to decide whether to use them in
his defense. Because only the defense is adequately equipped to determine the
effective use for [*669] purpose of discrediting the Government's
witness and thereby furthering the accused's defense, the defense must initially
be entitled to see them to determine what use may be made of them. Justice
requires no less. n14
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n14 Chief Justice Marshall
also said in
United
States v. Burr, 25 Fed. Cas. 187: "Let it be supposed
that the letter may not contain anything respecting the person now before the
court. Still it may respect a witness material in the case, and become important
by bearing on his testimony. Different representations may have been made by
that witness, or his conduct may have been such as to affect his testimony. In
various modes a paper may bear upon the case, although before the case be opened
its particular application cannot be perceived by the judge. . . ."
25
Fed. Cas., at 191. What is true before the case is opened is equally
true as the case unfolds. The trial judge cannot perceive or determine the
relevancy and materiality of the documents to the defense without hearing
defense argument, after inspection, as to its bearing upon the case.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - [***22]
[**1014]
[8]
The
practice of producing government documents to the trial judge for his
determination of relevancy and materiality, without hearing the accused, is
disapproved. n15 Relevancy and materiality for the purposes of production and
inspection, with a view to use on cross-examination, are established when the
reports are shown to relate to the testimony of the witness. Only after
inspection of the reports by the accused, must the trial judge determine
admissibility
-- e. g., evidentiary questions of inconsistency,
materiality and relevancy -- of the contents and the method to be employed for
the elimination of parts immaterial or irrelevant. See
Gordon
v. United States, 344 U.S., at 418. - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n15 See,
e. g., United
States v. Grayson, 166 F.2d 863, 869; United
States v. Beekman, 155 F.2d 580, 584; United
States v. Ebeling, 146 F.2d 254, 256; United
States v. Cohen, 145 F.2d 82, 92; United
States v. Krulewitch, 145 F.2d 76, 78. - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***23]
In the courts below the Government did not assert
that the reports were privileged against disclosure on grounds of national
security, confidential character of the reports, [*670] public
interest or otherwise. In its brief in this Court, however, the Government
argues that, absent a showing of contradiction, "the rule urged by petitioner .
. . disregards the legitimate interest that each party -- including the
Government -- has in safeguarding the privacy of its files, particularly where
the documents in question were obtained in confidence. Production of such
documents, even to a court, should not be compelled in the absence of a
preliminary showing by the party making the request." The petitioner's counsel,
believing that Court of Appeals' decisions imposed such a qualification,
restricted his motions to a request for production of the reports to the trial
judge for the judge's inspection and determination whether and to what extent
the reports should be made available to the petitioner.
[9]
It is unquestionably true that the protection of vital national interests
may militate against public disclosure [***24] of documents in the
Government's possession. This has been recognized in decisions of this Court in
civil causes where the Court has considered the statutory authority conferred
upon the departments of Government to adopt regulations "not inconsistent with
law, for . . . use . . . of the records, papers . . . appertaining" to his
department. n16 The Attorney General has adopted regulations pursuant to this
authority declaring all Justice Department records confidential and that no
disclosure, including disclosure in response to subpoena, may be made without
his permission. n17
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n16 R. S. § 161,
5
U. S. C. § 22; United
States v. Reynolds, 345 U.S. 1; cf.
Totten
v. United States, 92 U.S. 105. n17 Atty. Gen. Order No.
3229 (1939), 28 CFR, 1946 Supp., § 51.71; Atty. Gen. Order No. 3229, Supp. 2,
Pike & Fischer Admin. Law 2d, Dept. of Justice 1 (1947); Atty. Gen. Order
No. 3229, Rev., 18 Fed. Reg. 1368 (1953).
- - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
But this Court
has [***25] noticed, in
United
States v. Reynolds, 345 U.S. 1, the holdings of the Court of
Appeals [*671] for the Second Circuit n18 that,

in criminal
causes ". . . the Government can invoke its evidentiary privileges only at the
price of letting the defendant go free. The rationale of the criminal cases is
that, since the Government which prosecutes [**1015] an accused also
has the duty to see that justice is done, it is unconscionable to allow it to
undertake prosecution and then invoke its governmental privileges to deprive the
accused of anything which might be material to his defense. . . ."
345
U.S., at 12. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n18
United
States v. Beekman, 155 F.2d 580; United
States v. Andolschek, 142 F.2d 503. - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
In
United
States v. Andolschek, 142 F.2d 503, 506, Judge Learned Hand
said:
". . . While we must accept it as lawful for
[***26] a department of the government to suppress documents, even
when they will help determine controversies between third persons, we cannot
agree that this should include their suppression in a criminal prosecution,
founded upon those very dealings to which the documents relate, and whose
criminality they will, or may, tend to exculpate. So far as they directly touch
the criminal dealings, the prosecution necessarily ends any confidential
character the documents may possess; it must be conducted in the open, and will
lay bare their subject matter. The government must choose; either it must leave
the transactions in the obscurity from which a trial will draw them, or it must
expose them fully. Nor does it seem to us possible to draw any line between
documents whose contents bears directly upon the criminal transactions, and
those which may be only indirectly relevant. Not only would such a distinction
be extremely difficult to apply in practice, but the same reasons which forbid
suppression in one case forbid it in the other, though not, perhaps, quite so
imperatively. . . ."
[*672]
[10]
[***27] We hold that the

criminal
action must be dismissed when the Government, on the ground of privilege, elects
not to comply with an order to produce, for the accused's inspection and for
admission in evidence, relevant statements or reports in its possession of
government witnesses touching the subject matter of their testimony at the
trial. Accord,
Roviaro
v. United States, 353 U.S. 53, 60-61. The burden is the
Government's, not to be shifted to the trial judge, to decide whether the public
prejudice of allowing the crime to go unpunished is greater than that attendant
upon the possible disclosure of state secrets and other confidential information
in the Government's possession.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE
FRANKFURTER joins the opinion of the Court, but deeming that the questions
relating to the instructions to the jury should be dealt with, since a new trial
has been directed, he agrees with the respects in which, and the reasons for
which, MR. JUSTICE BURTON finds them erroneous.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER
took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
CONCURBY: [***28]
BURTON
CONCUR: MR. JUSTICE BURTON,
whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN joins, concurring in the result.
Because of the
importance of this case to the administration of criminal justice in the federal
courts, I believe it appropriate to set forth briefly the different route by
which I reach the same result as does the Court.
Ford and Matusow, as
the Court's opinion indicates, were crucial government witnesses because their
testimony supplied the principal evidence relating to the period immediately
surrounding the filing of petitioner's allegedly false affidavit.
Cross-examination brought out [*673] the fact that each had made
oral or written reports to the Federal Bureau of Investigation relating to the
respective events about which each had testified on direct examination. Having
established that fact, petitioner sought an order requiring the Government to
produce, for inspection by the court, the reports relating to those matters
about which each witness had testified. The [**1016] procedure to be
followed was carefully specified: the court was to determine whether the reports
had evidentiary value for impeachment of the credibility of Ford or Matusow; if
the court [***29] found that they had value for that purpose, it was
then to make them available to petitioner for his use in cross-examination. The
Government opposed each motion on the ground that no showing of contradiction
between the witness' testimony and his reports had been made as required by a
controlling Fifth Circuit decision,
Shelton
v. United States, 205 F.2d 806. Apparently on that ground, the
trial court denied the motions.
Petitioner's requests were limited to a
narrow category of reports dealing with specified meetings and conversations.
The purpose of the requests -- to impeach the credibility of crucial government
witnesses -- was made clear. Petitioner did not ask to inspect the documents
himself; he sought access only to those portions of the reports which the trial
court might determine to have evidentiary value for impeachment purposes, and to
be unprivileged. n1
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 In his brief, petitioner states:
"Petitioner asked only that the reports be produced to the trial
judge so that he could examine them and determine whether they had evidentiary
value for impeachment purposes. Petitioner sought access only to those portions
of the reports having this value. The motion therefore proposed no broad foray
into the government's files and afforded the judge every opportunity to protect
the government's legitimate privilege as to the matters not connected with this
case."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - [***30]
[*674] I agree
that, under such circumstances, it was unnecessary for petitioner to show that
Ford's and Matusow's trial testimony was contradicted in some respect by their
contemporaneous reports. Although some federal courts have required a showing of
contradiction, n2 this Court never has done so. n3 A rule requiring a showing of
contradiction in every case would not serve the ends of justice. I concur,
therefore, in that portion of the Court's opinion holding that petitioner laid a
sufficient foundation for the production of the reports.
- - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n2
Scanlon
v. United States, 223 F.2d 382, 385-386; Shelton
v. United States, 205 F.2d 806, 814-815; Christoffel
v. United States, 91 U. S. App. D. C. 241, 244-247, 200 F.2d 734,
737-ND739, rev'd on other grounds,
345
U.S. 947; D'Aquino
v. United States, 192 F.2d 338, 375; United
States v. De Normand, 149 F.2d 622, 625-626; United
States v. Ebeling, 146 F.2d 254, 257; Little
v. United States, 93 F.2d 401; Arnstein
v. United States, 54 App. D. C. 199, 203, 296 F. 946, 950.
[***31]
n3 In
Gordon
v. United States, 344 U.S. 414, the petitioners had shown that
written statements given to government agents by a key government witness
contradicted the witness' trial testimony. In holding that the trial court erred
in denying petitioners' motion for the production and inspection of these
statements, the Court was deciding that case on its facts. I do not regard it as
establishing a rule that a showing of contradiction is an essential element of
the foundation precedent to production.
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[11]
[12]
I would not, however, replace the inflexible and narrow rule
adopted by the courts below with the broader, but equally rigid rule announced
by the Court. In matters relating to the production of evidence or the scope of
cross-examination, a "large discretion must be allowed the trial judge."
Goldman
v. United States, 316 U.S. 129, 132; Glasser
v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 83; [***32]
Alford
v. United States, 282 U.S. 687, 694. The appropriate determination
of a motion to produce reports made in connection with the examination of a
witness depends upon the significance of the facts sought to be established,
[*675] and upon the potential use of the requested document in
proving those facts. Since that determination depends on "numerous and subtle
considerations difficult to detect or appraise [**1017] from a cold
record . . . ," the trial court's discretion should be upheld in the absence of
a "clear showing of prejudicial abuse of discretion . . . ." Cf.
Michelson
v. United States, 335 U.S. 469, 480. We have so held even when the
documents sought to be produced have been used at the trial for the purpose of
refreshing a witness' recollection.
United
States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 310 U.S. 150, 232-234. When
the documents have not been so used and are sought only to impeach the
credibility of adverse witnesses, and not to prove the facts stated therein, the
same conclusion is even more compelling.
[13]
[***33] The Court goes beyond the request of petitioner that
reports be produced for examination by the trial court and, in effect, seems to
hold that the Government waives any privileges it may have with respect to
documents in its possession by placing the author of those documents on the
witness stand in a criminal prosecution. The Government's privileges with
respect to state secrets and the identity of confidential informants embody
important considerations of public policy. They are peculiar privileges in that
they require the withholding of evidence not only from the jury, but also from
the defendant. See
Roviaro
v. United States, 353 U.S. 53 (identity of informers);
Reynolds
v. United States, 345 U.S. 1 (state secrets). Once the defendant
learns the state secret or the identity of the informer, the underlying basis
for the privilege disappears, and there usually remains little need to conceal
the privileged evidence from the jury. Thus, when the Government is a party, the
preservation of these privileges is dependent upon nondisclosure of the
privileged evidence to the defendant. This makes it [*676] necessary
for the trial court, [***34] before disclosing the privileged
material to the defendant, to pass on the question by examining
in
camera the portions claimed to be privileged. Cf.
Bowman Dairy Co.
v.
United
States, 341 U.S. 214, 221. There is nothing novel or unfair about such
a procedure. According to Wigmore, it is customary.
". .
. it is obviously not for the witness to withhold the documents upon his mere
assertion that they are not relevant or that they are privileged. The question
of Relevancy is never one for the witness to concern himself with; nor is the
applicability of a privilege to be left to his decision. It is his duty to bring
what the Court requires; and the Court can then to its own satisfaction
determine by inspection whether the documents produced are irrelevant or
privileged.
This does not deprive the witness of any rights of privacy,
since the Court's determination is made by its own inspection, without
submitting the documents to the opponent's view . . . ." (Emphasis deleted
and supplied.) VIII Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed. 1940), 117-118.
Numerous
federal decisions have followed this practice with respect to the type of
documents here involved -- contemporaneous [***35] reports made by a
government investigator or informer who later testifies at the trial. n4 This
procedure protects the legitimate public interest in safeguarding executive
files. [**1018] It also respects the interests of justice by
permitting an accused to receive all information [*677] necessary to
his defense. The accused is given an opportunity to argue that the privilege
asserted by the Government is inapplicable and that, even if applicable, his
need for the evidence, under the circumstances of the case, outweighs the
Government's interest in maintaining secrecy. The problem is closely related to
that involved in
Roviaro
v. United States, supra, dealing with the necessity of the
disclosure of an informer's identity in a criminal case. There this Court said:
"No fixed rule with respect to disclosure is justifiable. The
problem is one that calls for balancing the public interest in protecting the
flow of information against the individual's right to prepare his defense.
Whether a proper balance renders nondisclosure erroneous must depend on the
particular circumstances of each case, taking into consideration the crime
charged, [***36] the possible defenses, the possible significance of
the informer's testimony, and other relevant factors."
353
U.S., at 62. The trial judge exercises his discretion with
knowledge of the issues involved in the case, the nature and importance of the
Government's interest in maintaining secrecy, and the defendant's need for
disclosure. By vesting this discretion in the trial judge, the conflicting
interests are balanced, and a just decision is reached in the individual case
without needless sacrifice of important public interests. n5
- -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n4 See,
e. g., United
States v. Coplon, 185 F.2d 629, 638; United
States v. Beekman, 155 F.2d 580, 584; United
States v. Cohen, 145 F.2d 82, 92; United
States v. Krulewitch, 145 F.2d 76, 79; United
States v. Flynn, 130 F.Supp. 412; United
States v. Mesarosh, 116 F.Supp. 345, 350; United
States v. Schneiderman, 106 F.Supp. 731, 735-738. n5
Privileged material sometimes can be excised from the reports without destroying
their value to the defendant. Only when deletion is impracticable is the court
compelled to choose between disclosing the document as a whole and withholding
it completely. Material withheld from the defendant should be sealed as part of
the record so that an appellate court may review the action of the trial court
and correct any abuse of discretion.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - [***37]
[*678] I also disagree with the Court's holding that the
failure to produce the records to petitioner necessitates a new trial.
Petitioner requested only that the records be produced to the trial court. n6 He
is entitled to no more. Whether a new trial is required should depend on the
contents of the requested reports. If the reports contain material that the
trial court finds has evidentiary value to petitioner, a new trial should be
granted in order that petitioner may use it. But if the reports do not contain
contradictory or exculpatory material helpful to petitioner, no possible
prejudice could have resulted from the trial court's denials of petitioner's
motions. n7 Were it not for the fact that I believe the trial court committed
reversible error in instructing the jury with respect to the meaning of
membership and affiliation, I would vacate the judgment below and remand to the
trial court with instructions to examine the reports and to determine, in the
light of the entire record, whether the failure to produce the reports was
prejudicial to petitioner. n8
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n6 See n. 1,
supra. [***38]
n7 Rule 52 (a) of the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure provides:
"Any error, defect, irregularity
or variance which does not affect substantial rights shall be disregarded." See
Lutwak
v. United States, 344 U.S. 604, 619; Kotteakos
v. United States, 328 U.S. 750, 756-777. There are many cases in
which nonproduction of documents has been held to be harmless error. Three
comparatively recent cases, dealing with reports of law-enforcement officers are
United
States v. Sansone, 231 F.2d 887; Montgomery
v. United States, 203 F.2d 887, 893-894; and
Bundy
v. United States, 90 U. S. App. D. C. 12, 193 F.2d 694. n8
The trial court is the appropriate forum to consider the possible prejudicial
effect of the error. See,
e. g., Communist
Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board, 351 U.S. 115; Remmer
v. United States, 347 U.S. 227. - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[**1019] However, I believe the trial court failed to give
the jury sufficient guidance with respect [***39] to the meaning of
the phrases "member of the Communist Party," and [*679] "affiliated
with such party" as they are used in § 9 (h) of the Labor Management Relations
Act, 61 Stat. 146,
29
U. S. C. § 159 (h). The instruction given as to membership was as follows:
"In considering whether or not the defendant was a member of the
Communist Party, you may consider circumstantial evidence, as well as direct.
You may consider whether or not he attended Communist Party meetings, whether or
not he held an office in the Communist Party, whether or not he engaged in other
conduct consistent only with membership in the Communist Party and all other
evidence, either direct or circumstantial, which bears or may bear upon the
question of whether or not he was a member of the Communist Party on April 28,
1950."
[14]
This instruction failed to
emphasize to the jury the essential element of membership in an organized group
-- the desire of an individual to belong to the organization and a recognition
by the organization that it considers him as a member. n9
- - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n9
Fisher
v. United States, 231 F.2d 99, 106-107. See also,
Ocon
v. Guercio, 237 F.2d 177; Baghdasarian
v. United States, 220 F.2d 677; Sigurdson
v. Landon, 215 F.2d 791; Dickhoff
v. Shaughnessy, 142 F.Supp. 535. - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - [***40]
[15]
The instruction on affiliation also was defective. After
quoting dictionary definitions employing synonymous words, the trial court
merely said: "Affiliation . . . means something less than membership but more
than sympathy. Affiliation with the Communist Party may be proved by either
circumstantial or direct evidence, or both." This instruction allowed the jury
to convict petitioner on the basis of acts of intermittent cooperation. It did
not require a continuing course of conduct "on a fairly permanent basis" "that
could not be abruptly ended without [*680] giving at least
reasonable cause for the charge of a breach of good faith." n10
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n10
United
States ex rel. Kettunen v. Reimer, 79 F.2d 315, 317. See also,
Bridges
v. Wixon, 326 U.S. 135; Fisher
v. United States, 231 F.2d 99, 107-108. - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Because of these errors in the instructions, petitioner is entitled
[***41] to a new trial. Accordingly, I concur in the judgment of the
Court.
DISSENTBY: CLARK
DISSENT: MR. JUSTICE CLARK,
dissenting.
The Court holds "that the criminal action must be dismissed
when the Government, on the ground of privilege, elects not to comply with an
order to produce, for the accused's inspection and for admission in evidence,
relevant statements or reports in its possession of government witnesses
touching the subject matter of their testimony at the trial." This fashions a
new rule of evidence which is foreign to our federal jurisprudence. The rule has
always been to the contrary. It seems to me that proper judicial administration
would require that the Court expressly overrule
Goldman
v. United States, 316 U.S. 129, 132 (1942), which is
contra to the rule announced today. But that is not done. That case is
left on the books to haunt lawyers and trial courts in their search for the
proper rule. In
Goldman the Court was unanimous on the issue of
disclosure of documents n1 and refused [**1020] to order produced
"notes and memoranda made by the [federal] agents during the investigation." The
rule announced today has no support [***42] in any of our cases. n2
[*681] Every federal judge and every lawyer of federal experience
knows that it is not the present rule. Even the defense attorneys did not have
the temerity to ask for such a sweeping decision. They only asked that the
documents be delivered to the judge for his determination of whether the
defendant should be permitted to examine them. This is the procedure followed in
some of our circuits. My Brother BURTON has clearly stated in his concurring
opinion the manner in which this procedure works. Perhaps here with a recanting
witness the trial judge should have examined the specific documents called for,
as the defense requested, and if he thought justice required their delivery to
the defense, order such delivery to be made. I would have no objection to this
being done. But as Brother BURTON points out, this would not require a reversal
but merely a vacation of the judgment and a remand to the trial court for that
purpose.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 Though the Court was divided on an issue not
here material, the two dissenting opinions expressed no disagreement whatsoever
on the disclosure issue. [***43]
n2 The opinion cites only
two of our cases for support. The quotations from
Gordon
v. United States, 344 U.S. 414 (1953), an opinion by my late
Brother Jackson, a former Solicitor General and Attorney General, are lifted
entirely out of context. The case holds explicitly that documents must be
produced only after a foundation is laid "showing that the documents were in
existence, were in possession of the Government, were made by the Government's
witness under examination, were contradictory of his present testimony, and that
the contradiction was as to relevant, important and material matters which
directly bore on the main issue being tried: the participation of the accused in
the crime."
Id.,
at 418-419. Likewise,
United
States v. Reynolds, 345 U.S. 1 (1953), by my late Brother
Chief Justice Vinson, approved the refusal of the Government to produce
documents in a tort claims suit. The opinion gave no approval whatever to the
conclusion announced by the majority here. I purposely omitted the reference in
the opinion after the penultimate sentence, "Accord,
Roviaro
v. United States, 353 U.S. 53, 60-61." That case had to do with the
disclosure of a dead informant's name and did not touch on the problem of the
disclosure of government documents.
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- -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - [***44]
Unless the Congress changes the rule announced by the Court today, those
intelligence agencies of our Government engaged in law enforcement may as well
close up shop, for the Court has opened their files to the criminal and thus
afforded him a Roman holiday for rummaging [*682] through
confidential information as well as vital national secrets. This may well be a
reasonable rule in state prosecutions where none of the problems of foreign
relations, espionage, sabotage, subversive activities, counterfeiting, internal
security, national defense, and the like exist, but any person conversant with
federal government activities and problems will quickly recognize that it opens
up a veritable Pandora's box of troubles. And all in the name of justice. For
over eight score years now our federal judicial administration has gotten along
without it and today that administration enjoys the highest rank in the world.
Director J. Edgar Hoover back in 1950 tellingly pointed this out before
a Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Relations of the United States
Senate. Among other things he said, "I have always maintained the view that if
we were to fully discharge the serious [***45] responsibilities
imposed upon us, the confidential character of our files must be inviolate. . .
. Unless we drastically change or circumscribe our procedures, they should not
be disclosed." In describing the files of the Bureau, he continued:
"FBI reports set forth all details secured from a witness. If
those [**1021] details were disclosed, they could become subject to
misinterpretation, they could be quoted out of context, or they could be used to
thwart truth, distort half-truths, and misrepresent facts. The raw material, the
allegations, the details of associations, and compilation of information . . .
are of value to an investigator in the discharge of his duty. These files were
never intended to be used in any other manner and the public interest would not
be served by the disclosure of their contents."
"These files contain
complaints, allegations, facts, and statements of all persons interviewed.
Depending upon the purpose of the investigation, particularly [*683]
in security cases, they contain, not only background data on the individual but
details of his private life . . . the identities of our confidential sources of
information and full details of investigative [***46] techniques. In
short, they consist of a running account of all that transpires.
. . . .
". . . For want of a more apt comparison, our files can be compared to
the notes of a newspaper reporter before he has culled through the printable
material from the unprintable. The files do not consist of proven information
alone. . . . One report may allege crimes of a most despicable type, and the
truth or falsity of these charges may not emerge until several reports are
studied, further investigation made, and the wheat separated from the chaff."
"If spread upon the record, criminals, foreign agents,
subversives, and others would be forewarned and would seek methods to carry out
their activities by avoiding detection and thus defeat the very purposes for
which the FBI was created." Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations on S. Res. 231, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 327-329.
I can add nothing to this graphic expression of the necessity for
the existence of the rule which, until today, kept inviolate investigative
reports.
My Brother BURTON'S concurrence also points up the failure of
the majority to pass upon another important question involved, namely,
[***47] the sufficiency of the trial judge's instructions. The
impact of this failure on him and on my Brother FRANKFURTER was such that they
have announced their own views though the majority never reaches the point. For
myself alone, I believe that [*684] the instructions on the whole
were sufficient. It is unfortunate that the majority does not announce its
position. This is only one of some 10 Communist affidavit cases now pending in
the trial and appellate courts. Unless this case goes as did Gold's, n3 the
question of the sufficiency of instructions will come up in this as well as in
each of the other cases. The Court is sorely divided on this important issue and
proper judicial administration requires that charges as to what constitutes
membership and affiliation in the Communist Party be announced.
-
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n3 In
Gold
v. United States, 352 U.S. 985 (1957), this Court reversed and
remanded the case for a new trial because of official intrusion into the privacy
of the jury. The case was dismissed on oral motion of the Government on May 9,
1957.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - [***48]