United States v. Warren

373 A.2d 874, 1977 D.C. App. LEXIS 476
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1977
Docket9911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 373 A.2d 874 (United States v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Warren, 373 A.2d 874, 1977 D.C. App. LEXIS 476 (D.C. 1977).

Opinion

YEAGLEY, Associate Judge:

In this government appeal 1 we are asked to determine whether the trial court erred in granting appellee’s motion to dismiss an indictment on the ground that it was based in part on information he had provided the government under a promise of use and derivative use immunity. We cannot disagree with the trial court’s construction of the immunity agreements in question. Because we also conclude its findings are supported by the evidence, we affirm.

The record indicates that in earlier proceedings appellee Warren was tried and *875 convicted in late 1973 of a series of armed rapes which had become known as the “green Vega rape cases.” In the spring of 1974, the government was continuing a two-year-old investigation of a series of unsolved and widely publicized cases collectively known as the “freeway phantom homicides.” Suspecting that a connection existed between the two sets of crimes, the government approached Warren in April 1974 in an attempt to develop him as a source of information and witness with respect to the freeway killings. A series of meetings between the parties beginning on May 1, 1974, resulted in three separate written agreements in which Warren agreed to provide certain information in return for immunity from prosecution.

On May 1,1974, the government proposed an arrangement to appellee under which information would not be used against him so long as it was truthful, complete, accurate, and verifiable through corroboration. Under the proposal, appellee would also testify before a grand jury and in open court, and enter a guilty plea to some lesser offense in the freeway homicides consistent with his own admissions. At that time, Warren indicated his understanding of the arrangement and a willingness to cooperate, but he insisted that the agreement not be reduced to writing, because he did not want to be held strictly accountable for the accuracy of his information until he had time to remember all of the facts and get them straight in his mind. Further meetings were held between the parties on May 9 and 10, and on May 13 appellee finally requested a written agreement. He insisted, and the government agreed, that the proviso that all information be true and accurate be stricken. Two subsequent agreements were reduced to writing on May 16 and June 4 containing essentially the same terms, but they included the condition that appellee’s information be true, complete and accurate.

During the period May 1,1974, to June 4, 1974, appellee cooperated with the government by providing it with limited information with respect to the freeway homicides. The trial court found that on various occasions, he deliberately gave misleading or inaccurate information regarding those offenses. He also made certain statements, however, which were found to be accurate with respect to other unsolved rape cases which apparently he had confused with freeway homicides. In particular, he told the government about his ownership of a white convertible which the trial court said was believed to have been the vehicle involved in the rape offenses charged in the present indictment. While he was recounting what he believed to be the events leading up to a freeway homicide, Warren also made a statement about a man appearing near one crime scene with large barking dogs which the government later recognized as corresponding to a statement made by one of the rape victims in the instant case. Shortly after the final agreement on June 4, 1974, appellee repudiated the arrangement and refused to cooperate further. He was subsequently charged with the armed kidnapping and rapes which are the subject of the instant appeal.

If, after making “a deal” with a potential defendant for information, the government later seeks to avoid the arrangement and to prosecute him, “its decision so to do will come under scrutiny.” United States v. Paiva, 294 F.Supp. 742, 747 (D.D.C.1969). A principal reason for such review is to protect not only the integrity of the plea bargaining system, but also, as in this case, the ability of the prosecutor to obtain vital evidence from an accused implicating others. It would introduce unfairness into the entire process if the government, after striking a bargain, were permitted to avoid its promises to the accused by some strained construction of the agreement in question. See Santobello v. New York, 404 U.S. 257, 92 S.Ct. 495, 30 L.Ed.2d 427 (1971).

With this background we proceed to examine the proceedings had on appellee’s motion to dismiss the indictment.

The conclusions of the trial court with respect to the various agreements may be summarized as follows:

*876 (1) The series of three documents culminating in the writing of June 4,1974 “must be viewed in their totality” as representing the understanding reached on May 1, 1974.

(2) The negotiations prior to the final agreement were directed toward obtaining information from appellee regarding the freeway homicides. It was only with respect to those offenses that the promise of immunity was conditioned upon appellee’s testifying and pleading guilty to a lesser charge.

(3) Appellee failed to perform his part of the agreement as to the freeway homicides and there is no basis for requiring unilateral performance by the government with respect to those offenses.

(4) The government informally promised not to use information supplied by appellee “incidental” to that given in connection with the freeway homicides, so long as that information was also true and accurate.

(5) Notwithstanding appellee’s failure to meet the conditions of the government’s promise regarding freeway homicides, justice requires that the informal promise with respect to the incidental offenses be interpreted as a grant of use and derivative use immunity.

(6) The government did not meet its burden of proving that in bringing the instant prosecution it did not use appellee’s information regarding incidental offenses in some significant way. Such use could conceivably include assistance in focusing the investigation on appellee, or a decision to expand the scope and direction of the investigation, or to initiate prosecution.

The trial court based its decision to dismiss the indictment on extensive findings of fact, which we may not set aside since they are not plainly wrong or without evidence to support them. D.C.Code 1973, § 17-305(a); Matthews v. United States, D.C.App., 335 A.2d 251 (1975). 2

Appellant’s principal contention is that the trial court erroneously concluded “that the Government had promised appellee unconditional immunity from the use and derivative use of all statements relating to crimes other than the freeway phantom murders” (appellant’s brief at 12). We do not agree that the court construed the agreements. as providing for unconditional immunity. Although it distinguished the information provided by appellee with respect to the freeway homicides from that related to so-called “incidental” offenses, the court concluded that immunity from prosecution for either

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Bluebook (online)
373 A.2d 874, 1977 D.C. App. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-warren-dc-1977.