Since a violation of the Federal Kidnapping Act, 18 U.S.C. §
1201, may be punishable by death if the victim was not liberated
unharmed and if the jury so recommends, petitioner's prosecution
for a violation of that Act by information, instead of indictment,
violated Rule 7(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure,
which provides that "An offense which may be punishable by death
shall be prosecuted by indictment," and his conviction was invalid
-- even though he waived indictment and it was not alleged or
proved that the victim was harmed. Pp.
360 U. S.
2-10.
(a) The statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1201, creates the single offense of
transporting a kidnapping victim across state lines, which may be
punished by death if sufficient evidence of harm to the victim is
introduced at the trial, and such an offense must be prosecuted by
indictment. Pp.
360 U. S. 8-9.
(b) The substantial safeguards to the accused provided by the
requirement that such an offense be prosecuted by indictment cannot
be eradicated on the theory that noncompliance is a mere technical
departure from the rules. P.
360 U. S. 9.
(c) Under Rule 7(a), the United States Attorney did not have
authority to file an information in this case, and the waivers made
by petitioner were not binding, and did not confer power on the
convicting court to hear the case. P.
360 U. S. 10.
250 F.2d 842 reversed.
Page 360 U. S. 2
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner seeks relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 from his
conviction and sentence for violation of the Federal Kidnapping
Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1201. Briefly, the kidnapping charge grew out of
the following facts: Petitioner, a young man of twenty-six, and two
seventeen-year-old boys, while in custody under state charges,
escaped from a Florida jail on November 12, 1949. They were almost
immediately pursued by men and bloodhounds through swampy everglade
terrain. On November 14, 1949, they allegedly preempted an
automobile and seized its owner forcing him to accompany them into
the State of Alabama, where they released the victim without
harming him and subsequently abandoned the car. On November 18,
1949, the defendants were arrested by federal authorities in a
hiding place under the floor of a building. Petitioner claimed that
he was weak from lack of food and sleep, and that his back had been
injured in the course of the escape. The defendants were taken
promptly before the United States Commissioner, where they were
charged with transporting a kidnapping victim across state
boundaries.
On the following day, petitioner was interviewed at length by a
government agent concerning both the kidnapping offense and his
prior record. There was a conflict in the evidence concerning what
transpired at this interview. The petitioner testified that he was
promised leniency if he would plead guilty, and that he was
assured
Page 360 U. S. 3
that the juveniles would be given no more than four years'
imprisonment if they pleaded guilty. The Government offered
evidence to the effect that no promises were made. In any event, on
Monday morning, November 21, 1949, petitioner and his codefendants
were brought by the government agent to the office of the United
States Attorney, where a discussion ensued concerning waivers of
indictments, counsel, and venue, and pleas of guilty to an
information which the United States Attorney proposed to file.
While that conference was proceeding, the government agent who
had previously interviewed petitioner had a private out-of-court
audience and conference with the district judge in his chambers at
which, in the absence of the defendants, he discussed the
contemplated proceedings with the judge and informed him about the
alleged kidnapping offense and other alleged crimes of petitioner.
Soon thereafter, and, in the words of the Court of Appeals,
"[a]fter the judge's mind had become thoroughly conditioned by
this interview with, and the disclosures made to him by, [the
government agent] regarding the defendants,"
there followed in open court "a stilted and formal colloquy
consisting of brief and didactic statements by the judge" that the
defendants could have a lawyer if they wished, and could have their
cases submitted to a grand jury. 238 F.2d 925, 927, n. 5. The
defendants, including petitioner, stated that they did not wish to
have an attorney and were willing to waive indictment and be
prosecuted under an information to be filed by the prosecutor. The
information was immediately filed, and the defendants waived
counsel and venue. [
Footnote 1]
They then immediately
Page 360 U. S. 4
pleaded guilty to the information and stated that they wanted to
be sentenced promptly, before their parents knew of their
predicaments. The judge then sentenced petitioner to thirty years
in the penitentiary and the two seventeen-year-old accomplices to
fifteen years each. No appeals were taken. [
Footnote 2]
Because of these precipitous and telescoped proceedings, the
case has had a long and troublesome history in the Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit. It has been three times before that court.
Soon after the sentence was imposed, petitioner filed his initial
application under § 2255 to vacate the judgment. The application
was denied without a hearing, and no appeal was taken. In March,
1954, petitioner filed a second, similar application, which was
likewise denied without a hearing, but, on appeal the Court of
Appeals determined that petitioner's allegations required a
hearing.
Smith v. United States, 223 F.2d 750. After the
hearing was held, the District Court again dismissed the
application. 137 F. Supp. 222. Again the Court of Appeals reversed,
this time finding that petitioner had been deprived of due process
by the summary manner in which the Government had proceeded
Page 360 U. S. 5
against him. [
Footnote 3]
Smith v. United States, 238 F.2d 925, 930. First, the
court remanded the cause "with directions to grant the motion, to
set aside the conviction and sentence, and to proceed further and
not inconsistently" with the opinion. 238 F.2d, at 931. On
rehearing, however, the court modified its directions as
follows:
"The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded with
directions to set aside the conviction and sentence and to proceed
further and not inconsistently herewith, including, if the district
judge is of the opinion that the ends of justice require it,
permitting the defendant to withdraw his waiver of counsel and his
plea of guilty and to stand trial."
240 F.2d 347. On the remanded proceedings, the District Court
resentenced petitioner, but refused him permission to withdraw his
waivers and guilty plea. The Court of Appeals
Page 360 U. S. 6
affirmed this decision, Smith v. United States, 250 F.2d 842,
over the dissent of Judge Rives, who believed that the court's
action in setting aside the conviction on justified due process
grounds necessarily required the vacation of the plea of guilty.
250 F.2d 842, 843-844. He also dissented on the ground that
kidnapping under 18 U.S.C. § 1201 is a capital offense, which,
pursuant to the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 7(a),
requires prosecution by indictment regardless of a defendant's
waiver, and that prosecution by information in the instant
proceeding had not conferred on the convicting court jurisdiction
to try petitioner's case. We granted certiorari because of the due
process and statutory questions raised. 357 U.S. 904. But, in view
of our belief that the indictment point is dispositive of the case
in petitioner's favor, we find it unnecessary to reach the due
process questions presented.
The precise question at issue, therefore, is whether
petitioner's alleged violation of the Kidnapping Act had to be
prosecuted by indictment. A number of statutory and constitutional
provisions and the information charging petitioner are relevant to
this inquiry. The Fifth Amendment provides in part that
"[n]o person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise
infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand
Jury,"
except in cases not pertinent here. But the command of the
Amendment may be waived under certain circumstances, [
Footnote 4] and the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure, Rule 7(a), provide as follows:
"An offense which
may be punished by death
shall
be prosecuted by indictment. An offense which may be punished
by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year or at hard labor
shall be prosecuted by
Page 360 U. S. 7
indictment or, if indictment is waived, it may be prosecuted by
information. Any other offense may be prosecuted by indictment or
by information. An information may be filed without leave of
court."
(Emphasis added.) These enactments become particularly pertinent
in view of the language of 18 U.S.C. § 1201, the statute under
which petitioner was convicted, which provides in part that:
"(a) Whoever knowingly transports in interstate . . . commerce,
any person who has been unlawfully . . . kidnapped . . . shall be
punished (1) by death if the kidnapped person has not been
liberated unharmed, and if the verdict of the jury shall so
recommend, or (2) by imprisonment for any term of years or for
life, if the death penalty is not imposed."
The charging part of the information against petitioner stated
that he
"did knowingly transport in interstate commerce . . . a person,
to-wit, Alan W. Spearman, Jr., who had been unlawfully seized,
kidnapped, abducted, and carried away and held for the safe conduct
of the three defendants. . . ."
The charge did not state whether Spearman was released harmed or
unharmed.
It has been held by two Courts of Appeals that indictments
similar in terms to the charge here were sufficient to support
capital punishments despite the absence of allegations that the
kidnapping victims were released harmed.
United States v.
Parrino, 180 F.2d 613;
Robinson v. United States, 144
F.2d 392.
Cf. United States v. Parker, 103 F.2d 857.
Petitioner contends that these holdings dispose of his case because
they make clear that the statute creates a single offense of
kidnapping which may be punished by death if the prosecution, at
trial, shows that the victim was released in a harmed
condition.
Page 360 U. S. 8
The Government claims, however, that whether a specific
kidnapping constitutes a capital offense requires examination of
the evidence to determine whether the victim was released harmed or
unharmed; in other words, that the statute creates two offenses:
kidnapping without harm, which is punishable by a term of years,
and kidnapping with harm, which is punishable by death. Further,
the Government contends that the mere filing of an information by
the United States Attorney eliminated the capital element of the
crime.
The Courts of Appeals which have been concerned with the statute
have uniformly construed it to create the single offense of
transporting a kidnapping victim across state lines. We agree with
this construction. Under the statute, that offense is punishable by
death if certain proof is introduced at trial. When an accused is
charged, as here, with transporting a kidnapping victim across
state lines, he is charged and will be tried for an offense which
may be punished by death. Although the imposition of that penalty
will depend on whether sufficient proof of harm is introduced
during the trial, that circumstance does not alter the fact that
the offense itself is one which may be punished by death, and thus
must be prosecuted by indictment. In other words, when the offense
as charged is sufficiently broad to justify a capital verdict, the
trial must proceed on that basis even though the evidence later
establishes that such a verdict cannot be sustained because the
victim was released unharmed. It is neither procedurally correct
nor practical to await the conclusion of the evidence to determine
whether the accused is being prosecuted for a capital offense. For
the trial judge must make informed decisions prior to trial which
will depend on whether the offense may be so punished. He must
decide, among other things, whether the accused has the right to
obtain a list of veniremen and government witnesses, 18 U.S.C. §
3432,
Page 360 U. S. 9
whether venue is properly set, 18 U.S.C. § 3235, whether the
accused has the benefit of twenty, rather than ten, peremptory
challenges, Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 24 (b),
whether indictment, rather than information, is necessary, Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 7, and who may bail the accused.
18 U.S.C. § 3141.
This Court has, in recent years, upheld many convictions in the
face of questions concerning the sufficiency of the charging
papers. Convictions are no longer reversed because of minor and
technical deficiencies which did not prejudice the accused.
E.g., Hagner v. United States, 285 U.
S. 427;
Wims v. United States, 341 U. S.
97;
United States v. Debrow, 346 U.
S. 374. This has been a salutary development in the
criminal law. But the substantial safeguards to those charged with
serious crimes cannot be eradicated under the guise of technical
departures from the rules. The use of indictments in all cases
warranting serious punishment was the rule at common law.
Ex
parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 417;
Mackin v. United States, 117 U. S. 348. The
Fifth Amendment made the rule mandatory in federal prosecutions in
recognition of the fact that the intervention of a grand jury was a
substantial safeguard against oppressive and arbitrary proceedings.
Ex parte Bain, 121 U. S. 1;
Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S. 43;
Toth v. Quarles, 350 U. S. 11,
350 U. S. 16.
Rule 7(a) recognizes that this safeguard may be waived, but only in
those proceedings which are noncapital. To construe the provisions
of the Rule loosely to permit the use of informations where, as
here, the charge states a capital offense would do violence to that
Rule, and would make vulnerable to summary treatment those accused
of one of our most serious crimes. We cannot do this in view of the
traditional canon of construction which calls for the strict
interpretation of criminal statutes and rules in favor of
defendants where substantial rights are involved.
Page 360 U. S. 10
It is urged that this result will fail to protect substantial
rights of defendants in other cases. We see no merit in that
contention, particularly where the opposite conclusion would
deprive defendants of the protection of a grand jury indictment as
required by the Constitution and Rule 7(a). Under our holding,
there is no reason to believe that a defendant in a case such as
this would be surprised on his trial by any possible trickery of
the prosecution. If there is no allegation of harm in the
indictment, the discovery proceedings afforded in capital cases and
the provisions of Rule 7(f) authorizing bills of particulars will
enable the defendant to acquaint himself with the scope of the
trial and the criminal transaction to be proved. It is further
suggested that it might be in the interests of the defendant to
have the benefit of the speed that can be mustered by the filing of
an information instead of an indictment. While justice should be
administered with dispatch, the essential ingredient is orderly
expedition, and not mere speed. It is well to note that, in this
very case, the inordinate speed that was generated through the
filing of the information caused many of the difficulties which led
the court below to conclude that petitioner had been deprived of
due process of law. Moreover, if, contrary to sound judicial
administration in our federal system, arrest and incarceration are
followed by inordinate delay prior to indictment, a defendant may,
under appropriate circumstances, invoke the protection of the Sixth
Amendment.
Under our view of Rule 7(a), the United States Attorney did not
have authority to file an information in this case, and the waivers
made by petitioner were not binding, and did not confer power on
the convicting court to hear the case.
Cf. Ex parte Wilson,
supra. The judgment and conviction are reversed, and the case
is remanded to the District Court with instructions to dismiss the
information.
It is so ordered.
Page 360 U. S. 11
[
Footnote 1]
18 U.S.C. § 3235 provides:
"The trial of offenses punishable with death shall be had in the
county where the offense was committed, where that can be done
without great inconvenience."
The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 18, provide:
"Except as otherwise permitted by statute or by these rules, the
prosecution shall be had in a district in which the offense was
committed, but if the district consists of two or more divisions,
the trial shall be had in a division in which the offense was
committed."
The offense of which petitioner was accused was committed in
Dothan, Alabama, which was within the Southern Division of the
District Court. The proceedings against petitioner were held in
Montgomery, Alabama, which is located in another county in Alabama
in the Northern Division of that court.
[
Footnote 2]
This left petitioner with a substantial sentence still pending
in Florida under the charge for which he was in custody when he
escaped. In addition, petitioner was apparently still in jeopardy
of state prosecution for escaping.
[
Footnote 3]
The Court of Appeals stated, at 238 F.2d 930:
"When it comes to the controlling question, however, which the
motion presents, whether, under the undisputed facts, the defendant
was denied due process in the taking of waivers and plea, and the
imposition of sentence the matter stands quite differently, and
because it is clear that it was not accorded to him, the judgment
appealed from must be reversed."
"This is so, because, considering the inordinate speed, the
incontinent haste, with which the defendants were brought up for
hearing and the trial moved on apace, the fact that the government
prosecuting agent and the district judge, before the defendant had
made any waivers or pleaded in the cause, conferred privately in
chambers with regard to defendants' guilt and the punishment to be
imposed therefor, in connection with both what was said and done
and what was left unsaid and undone by the judge in taking the
waivers and the plea and sentencing the defendant, we are left in
no doubt that the movant was not accorded, but was denied, due
process, and that the judgment against, and sentence imposed upon
him may not stand."
[
Footnote 4]
Barkman v. Sanford, 162 F.2d 592;
United States v.
Gill. 55 F.2d
399.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, with whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE
STEWART join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Johnny Ray Smith, presently an inmate of Alcatraz, began his
career of crime as a juvenile. Soon thereafter, he escaped from the
Federal Correctional Institution at Tallahassee, Florida. At age
26, he had twice been convicted of violations of the Dyer Act, 18
U.S.C. § 2312, was serving 25 years in a Florida prison for armed
robbery, and had seriously wounded an officer while fleeing from
the scene of the latter crime. He, with two juvenile inmates,
escaped the Florida prison, burglarized a house, stole a shotgun,
and allegedly kidnapped Alan W. Spearman, Jr., at shotgun point,
while the latter was sitting in his company's automobile. They
forced Spearman to accompany them in the car across the Florida
line into Alabama. There, after the release of Spearman, they
abandoned the car and were later arrested in their hiding place
under a building. Each admitted guilt and asked for a speedy trial.
Smith advised the United States Commissioner, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the prosecutor, and the district judge that he did
not want a lawyer; he waived indictment and venue, pleaded guilty
to an information charging kidnapping, and threw himself on the
mercy of the court in these words:
"Well, your Honor, I would like for you to take under
consideration that there was no viciousness in connection with this
abduction of this boy. We were nice to him, and did not harm him
any way, and we wanted transportation, and did not harm him any at
all."
Smith received a 30-year sentence; the juveniles 15 years each.
He was sent to Alcatraz, and from there has prosecuted a series of
motions under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, appearing twice to testify in the
District Court of Florida.
Page 360 U. S. 12
The Court of Appeals has considered his case three times, and he
is now here attacking his sentence on two points: (1) can a
kidnapping charge, where the kidnapped person is released unharmed,
be prosecuted by information; and, (2) is due process violated when
the trial judge, before a guilty plea is entered and outside the
presence of the accused or his counsel, confers with an FBI agent
concerning the facts of the charge and the prior record of the
accused? The Court, without reaching the second question, says that
kidnapping can be prosecuted only by indictment, and that a charge
in the general words of the statute is sufficient.
In attempting to do what it believes to be a great right, the
Court in reality does a great wrong to the administration of
justice. The most serious result is that the Court's procedure
allows the United States Attorney to secure an indictment for a
capital offense without the grand jury's knowing that he is doing
so. This deprives kidnapping defendants of the very protection of
the Fifth Amendment that the Court professes to be enforcing. The
Court also clouds the meaning of Rule 7(b) as to waiver of
indictment by carving noncapital kidnapping offenses out of its
specific permissive terms.
Both the Fifth Amendment and Rule 7(a) require capital offenses
to be prosecuted by indictment. Kidnapping is not such an offense
unless "the kidnapped person has not been liberated unharmed." 18
U.S.C. § 1201(a). It is reasonable to say that, before one can be
prosecuted for the capital offense, he must be charged with it,
namely, kidnapping where "the kidnapped person has not been
liberated unharmed." To do otherwise does not place him on notice
of the offense for which he is to be tried. The Court, however,
holds that § 1201(a) creates a "single offense . . . [which] is
punishable by death if certain proof is introduced at trial." It
reasons that this makes every kidnapping a capital case
requiring
Page 360 U. S. 13
grand jury action. But it does not require that the grand jury
consider whether "the kidnapped person has not been liberated
unharmed" and so allege in the indictment. Thus, the grand jury is
deprived of any knowledge of the element of the offense that makes
it capital. Hence, a grand jury in complete ignorance of the facts
as to harm suffered by the victim at the time of release is
required to return an indictment which will support the death
penalty if proof of such harm is shown at the trial. This puts the
law as to capital cases into the hands of the prosecutor, not the
grand jury, where both the Fifth Amendment and Rule 7(a) have
lodged it. Nor does it strengthen the grand jury, to use the words
of the Court, as a "substantial safeguard against oppressive and
arbitrary proceedings." On the contrary, the Court's reference to
discovery proceedings after indictment as a means for acquainting a
defendant "with the scope of the trial and the criminal transaction
to be proved" clearly shows the fallacy of its position. The grand
jury should have this information before it returns a capital
charge -- otherwise, none should exist under the indictment. By
this reasoning, the Court deprives the defendant of the safeguard
of proper grand jury proceedings as required by the Constitution in
capital cases.
Moreover, as the Court says,
"[i]t is neither procedurally correct nor practical to await the
conclusion of the evidence to determine whether the accused is
being prosecuted for a capital offense."
Despite this language, the opinion requires just that, since it
does not compel the indictment to charge "a capital offense." I
would require capital kidnapping cases to be prosecuted by
indictment charging specifically that the kidnapped person was not
liberated unharmed.
Turning to the procedural point under Rule 7(a) and (b), we
should remember it was this Court that adopted these Rules of
Criminal Procedure, certified them to the
Page 360 U. S. 14
Congress, which added its sanction, and then promulgated them.
They are simple and clear. Rule 7(a) provides that an offense
"which may" be punished by death must begin by indictment, while a
noncapital offense may be prosecuted by information if indictment
is waived. Rule 7(b) repeats that an offense "which may" receive a
sentence for a term of years "may be" begun by information
"if the defendant, after he has been advised of the nature of
the charge and of his rights, waives in open court prosecution by
indictment."
In filing the information under the Kidnapping Act, the
Government foreclose itself from seeking the death penalty. The
Fifth Amendment, as well as Rule 7(a), would prevent it from
reneging on this bargain. The only possible sentence would
therefore be one for a term of years. Moreover, Smith knew this
full well, as is shown by his own testimony. Not only had the
United States Attorney so advised, but the United States
Commissioner and the district judge had clearly told Smith of the
law in the matter. His request at sentencing points up his
understanding thereof. The record also indicates that the
requirements of Rule 7(b) were scrupulously followed.
The Court, however, superimposes a new rule in kidnapping cases
by requiring that they be begun only by indictment. This deprives
such defendants not only of the beneficent provisions of Rule 7(b),
but subjects them to greater jeopardy in that the United States
Attorney may insist on the death penalty at trial. This leaves open
for play all of the evils that flesh is heir to, including the
ambitions or disfavor of the prosecutor, the animosity of the
victim or his malingerings from the kidnapping, as well as other
postindictment speculations. In rural districts where the grand
jury only meets twice a year, it would also place considerable
hardship on a
Page 360 U. S. 15
defendant waiting for a grand jury to be empaneled. [
Footnote 2/1] He receives no credit for the
time so served, and puts the Federal Government to the expense of
incarceration in the local jail on a
per diem basis. Nor
would the calling of a special grand jury solve the problem. It
would not only be very expensive to the Government, but burdensome
to those called to serve, likewise taking the time of the court
from other pressing matters, either in its own district or in
others that suffer from congested dockets. On the other hand,
following Rule 7(b) would fully protect society. The defendant
would be on notice of the charge against him, and would receive the
full enjoyment of all of his rights. [
Footnote 2/2] And, finally, the prosecutor would not be
able, at his whim, to superinduce the death penalty on an otherwise
noncapital case. In short, justice would be done.
It is true that three Courts of Appeals have passed on this
statute. However, none of those cases is dispositive of the issue
here. In
Robinson v. United States, 144 F.2d 392, 396, the
indictment alleged that the accused did "beat, injure, bruise and
harm [Mrs. Stoll] . . . and did not liberate her unharmed." It is,
therefore, entirely inapposite, since the indictment specifically
alleged a capital offense.
United States v. Parker, 103
F.2d 857, in
Page 360 U. S. 16
construing the then § 40 of the Judicial Code requiring trial of
capital cases to be "had in the county where the offense was
committed, where that can be done without great inconvenience,"
only decided that the application for change of venue was addressed
to the sound discretion of the court, which "was not abused." It
specifically held that
"[w]hether such averments [that the victim had been released in
a harmed condition] were necessary [in the indictment] to support a
demand for the imposition of the death penalty we need not decide.
. . ."
Id. at 861. The court concluded that, "since the
evidence taken at the trial established that he was liberated . . .
in a sound and unharmed condition,"
ibid., the case, in
any event, was not one in which the death penalty could be imposed.
The last case mentioned by the majority is
United States v.
Parrino, 180 F.2d 613. That case involved the statute of
limitations, and the issue involved here was not, as the court
said, "relevant to . . . whether the second indictment was found in
time."
Id. at 615. The Government contended that, if the
case was "capital," the indictment might be returned at any time.
The court held that there was no information in the record as to
the condition of the victim at the time of his release. Although it
agreed with the Government
"that it was not necessary to allege that the victim was not
released 'unharmed' in order that the jury might recommend the
death penalty,"
it held that
"the accused has to be adequately advised of it [released
harmed], since the jury must pass upon it, [and that] it will be
enough if he gets the information in season from any source."
Ibid. Certainly the case is not dispositive of the
issue here. In fact, it supports the proposition that "the accused
must be adequately advised . . . in season" if the Government
claims the victim was released "harmed." I say that "adequately
advised in season" would be certain only if
Page 360 U. S. 17
such an allegation was made in the indictment. Whether, from a
technical standpoint, that makes two offenses of the crime of
"kidnapping" is therefore not material. In my view, it does create
two such offenses (1) where the kidnapped person has not been
released unharmed, and (2) where he has been liberated unharmed. In
either event, we should follow the mandate of the Fifth Amendment
and Rule 7 and, under our power of supervision over federal courts,
require in the future such procedural safeguards as are outlined
herein.
This brings me to the second contention. I shall discuss the
facts briefly. The "inordinate speed" which the Court says was
present here was not generated by the Government, but by the
petitioner himself. The record clearly shows his anxiety to have
the case concluded, and fails to indicate any objection on his part
to the immediate imposition of sentence. The disposition of cases
on information and plea in four to five days, as occurred here, is
normal in the federal system. I therefore put no credence in this
claim. However, the record does indicate that, at the instance of
an Assistant United States Attorney, a Special Agent of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation called upon the trial judge in his chambers
and talked at some length about Smith's background, as well as his
connection with the kidnapping. This was before Smith had signed
any waivers or entered any plea. Neither Smith nor anyone
representing him was present at the interview. The record shows
this contact not to have been covertly made, for, at the time of
sentence, the trial judge in open court told Smith that it had
occurred. I do not reach the due process contention, for it appears
to me that our duty of supervision over the administration of
justice in the federal courts,
McNabb v. United States,
318 U. S. 332
(1943), requires reversal because of this interview. In a criminal
case, such a private conference
Page 360 U. S. 18
must be deemed presumptively prejudicial where, in violation of
Fed.Rules Crim.Proc., 32(c)(1), [
Footnote 2/3] it was conducted prior to the plea.
For these reasons, I would reverse the judgment with
instructions that Smith be allowed to withdraw his guilty plea and
stand trial on the information.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Court says that "a defendant may, under appropriate
circumstances, invoke the protection of the Sixth Amendment" where
"arrest and incarceration are followed by inordinate delay prior to
indictment . . . ." Such has never been the case heretofore where
capital cases are held awaiting the statutory meeting of the next
grand jury. This strange doctrine can only cause additional
confusion in the effective enforcement of the kidnapping
statute.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court, in holding that proceeding by information, "would
deprive defendants of the protection of a grand jury indictment as
required by the Constitution and Rule 7(a)," overlooks the fact
that neither the Constitution nor that Rule requires kidnapping to
be charged by indictment where the victim is released unharmed.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Rule 32(c)(1), Fed.Rules Crim.Proc., provides:
"(c) Presentence Investigation"
"(1)
When Made. The probation service of the court
shall make a presentence investigation and report to the court
before the imposition of sentence or the granting of probation
unless the court otherwise directs. The report shall not be
submitted to the court or its contents disclosed to anyone unless
the defendant has pleaded guilty or has been found guilty."