Scott v. United States

160 Ct. Cl. 152, 1963 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 35, 1963 WL 8575
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 11, 1963
DocketNo. 372-60
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 Ct. Cl. 152 (Scott v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. United States, 160 Ct. Cl. 152, 1963 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 35, 1963 WL 8575 (cc 1963).

Opinions

Dureee, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff was employed at the Letterkenny Ordnance Depot, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, as a traveling electronic repairer at Nike missile bases. He had the security clearance required for this work and his efficiency ratings were always satisfactory from 1948 until 1959 when he was removed from. Government Service.

In notifying plaintiff of his removal, the Depot Commander stated (finding 12):. .

* * * ’phg generai charge is Unsuitability because of Immoral Conduct. This is of two kinds; sexual misconduct and untruthfulness. With reference to the sexual aspect, your confession which was given in considerable detail was corroborated by a lie detector test and was not given under duress or undue pressure. If the confession is deemed truthful, as we consider it, then your sworn statement denying the confession constitutes moral turpitude and further supports separation action. If the sworn statement denying the confession is, as you claim, truthful, then you have shown yourself to be entirely unsuitable as an employee since you voluntarily made derogatory statements about yourself and other persons which had no basis in fact. * * *

On appeal by plaintiff, his removal was upheld by the Regional Director of the Civil Service Commission, whose decision was affirmed by the Board of Appeals and Review of the Commission.

[154]*154At the trial before a Commissioner of this court plaintiff and a Miss Jane Doe1 both denied having had abnormal sexual relations with one another, and plaintiff denied having had such relations with anyone. The sole evidence of such relations was plaintiff’s sworn statement of March 5, 1959 given to Mr. Denaker, an investigator for the Depot, and his sworn statement of March 17, 1959, given to Denaker and Lt. Col. Morgan, the Provost Marshal, both of which statements he repudiated under oath on March 20, 1959.

There is sharp conflict between the testimony of the two Government investigators and that of plaintiff Scott as to the circumstances under which the two statements Were signed by Scott. The investigators testified that the statements were given voluntarily and without any duress or compulsion. The Trial Commissioner evidently did not credit their testimony, because he found that plaintiff signed the alleged confessions because of undue pressure or because of plaintiff’s service-connected disability.

Plaintiff’s disability was deafness, incurred from a mine explosion in Germany during his combat service in World War II. Even with a hearing aid, he had difficulty in understanding the interrogation. The questions were dictated by the investigators, one of whom admitted he assisted plaintiff from time to time in finding the right words for the answers. There is evidence that the interrogators shouted at plaintiff throughout the interrogation over a total period of four days. By tins time, it is reasonable to conclude that as a result of plaintiff’s disability, he did not fully appreciate what he was signing.

This is particularly true under the methods of the investigators, by which plaintiff’s signature to the purported confession was procured.

Denaker admitted that he interrogated plaintiff for eleven hours relative to sexual relations with Jane Doe. This was on four different occasions, twice at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, and later on two successive days at Letterkenny Ordnance Depot. Defendant admits that the first interro[155]*155gation at Letterkenny lasted for three hours in the morning, and two hours in the afternoon, and on the next day for three and one-half hours in the morning. Plaintiff signed his statement at 3:30 p.m. in the afternoon of the second day. The last one was in the presence of Denaker and Lt. Col. Morgan, the Provost Marshal, both of them interrogating plaintiff.

Denaker first interrogated plaintiff relative to charges the Depot had in contemplation against Miss Doe; there was no intimation that charges against plaintiff were contemplated, although plaintiff was advised prior to the first interview of his rights against self-incrimination.

No counsel was provided plaintiff, although he says he asked to have one. Denaker and Lt. Col. Morgan denied plaintiff had asked for counsel, but the Trial Commissioner did not credit their statements, as we note more fully further on.

At the conclusion of the first interview at Fort Devens, plaintiff was asked if he would submit to a lie detector test. He agreed, and the test was taken the next day. At the conclusion of it the examiner told plaintiff it showed that plaintiff had lied in his first statement to Denaker, in which he had denied abnormal sexual relations with Jane Doe. However, we do not accept this five-minute lie detector examination, taken under the adverse circumstances to which we later refer, as evidence against plaintiff in this case.

The next day Denaker interrogated plaintiff again and this time plaintiff admitted having had abnormal sexual relations . with Jane Doe. This was on March 5, 1959. Later, he was interrogated by Denaker and Lt. Col. Morgan, the Provost Marshal, on March 16 and 17. In his sworn statement of March 17 he again admitted abnormal sexual relations with Jane Doe. Both the March 5 and March 17 statements were repudiated by him under oath on March 20, 1959. In this sworn statement he said, in part:

* * * all statements made and signed against myself and Miss [Jane Doe] are false.. These statements were made under extreme mental pressure, false allegations, and threats of perjury; that I am a disabled veteran and that my nervous set up is such that I cannot stand long interrogations and prolonged pressures; * * *

[156]*156Thus, plaintiff has been found guilty of the charge of abnormal sexual relations with Jane Doe solely on his confessions, given under great pressure, without any corroborating evidence of any real probative value, and in the face of his sworn repudiation of the confessions before the trial and at the trial, and in the face of Jane Doe’s sworn testimony that she had never had abnormal sexual relations with plaintiff.

During a total period of four days, one or both of these investigators was questioning plaintiff in an obvious effort to get him to confess to a heinous criminal offense. During this total period, he was not provided with counsel. He was confronted with the results of an inconclusive lie detector test and threatened with prosecution for perjury. While plaintiff denied any sexual misconduct in the first statement, each statement thereafter became more and more incriminating, until the investigators apparently concluded they had finally accomplished their objective. In summary, plaintiff’s signature to the alleged confession was obtained through a subversion of legally accepted police methods of investigation nlrin to what has sometimes been described as “the third degree.”

The Commissioner saw the witnesses on the stand, he observed their maimer and demeanor, and he is, therefore, in the best position to weigh the credibility of their testimony. Upon review of the record, we adopt his findings which are to the effect that plaintiff either did not know the contents of the statements he signed — because of his disability — or he was induced to sign them due to pressure brought to bear on him too great for him to withstand.

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Related

Charlton v. United States
412 F.2d 390 (Third Circuit, 1969)
Urbina v. United States
180 Ct. Cl. 194 (Court of Claims, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 Ct. Cl. 152, 1963 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 35, 1963 WL 8575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-united-states-cc-1963.