U.S.
Supreme Court
GARRITY v. NEW JERSEY, 385 U.S.
493 (1967)
385 U.S. 493
GARRITY ET AL. v. NEW JERSEY.
APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW JERSEY.
No. 13.
Argued November 10, 1966.
Decided January 16, 1967.
Appellants,
police officers in certain New
Jersey boroughs, were questioned
during the course of a state
investigation concerning alleged
traffic ticket "fixing."
Each officer was first warned
that: anything he said might
be used against him in a state
criminal proceeding; he could
refuse to answer if the disclosure
would tend to incriminate him;
if he refused to answer he would
be subject to removal from office.
The officers' answers to the
questions were used over their
objections in subsequent prosecutions,
which resulted in their convictions.
The State Supreme Court on appeal
upheld the convictions despite
the claim that the statements
of the officers were coerced
by reason of the fact that if
they refused to answer they
could, under the New Jersey
forfeiture-of-office statute,
lose their positions. That statute
provides that a public employee
shall be removed from office
if he refuses to testify or
answer any material question
before any commission or body
which has the right to inquire
about matters relating to his
office or employment on the
ground that his answer may incriminate
him. On the ground that the
only real issue in the case
was the voluntariness of the
statements, the State Supreme
Court declined to pass upon
the constitutionality of the
statute, though the statute
was considered relevant for
the bearing it had on the voluntary
character of the statements
used to convict the officers.
The officers appealed to this
Court under 28 U.S.C. 1257 (2)
and the question of jurisdiction
was postponed to a hearing on
the merits. Held:
1. The forfeiture-of-office
statute is too tangentially
involved to satisfy the requirements
of 28 U.S.C. 1257 (2). The only
bearing it had was whether,
valid or not, the choice between
being discharged under it for
refusal to answer and self-incrimination
rendered the statements products
of coercion. The appeal is dismissed,
the papers are treated as a
petition for certiorari, and
certiorari is granted. Pp. 495-496.
2.
The threat of removal from public
office under the forfeiture-of-office
statute to induce the petitioners
to forgo the privilege against
self-incrimination secured by
the Fourteenth Amendment rendered
the resulting statements involuntary
and therefore inadmissible in
the state criminal proceedings.
Pp. 496-500. [385 U.S. 493,
494]
(a)
The choice given petitioners
either to forfeit their jobs
or to incriminate themselves
constituted coercion. Pp. 496-498.
(b)
Whether there was a "waiver"
is a federal question. P. 498.
(c)
Where the choice is "between
the rock and the whirlpool"
(Frost Trucking Co. v. Railroad
Comm'n, 271 U.S. 583, 593 ),
the decision to "waive"
one or the other is made under
duress. P. 498.
Appeal
dismissed and certiorari granted;
44 N. J. 209, 207 A. 2d 689;
44 N. J. 259, 208 A. 2d 146,
reversed.
Daniel L. O'Connor argued the
cause for appellants. With him
on the brief was Eugene Gressman.
Alan
B. Handler, First Assistant
Attorney General of New Jersey,
argued the cause for appellee.
With him on the brief were Arthur
J. Sills, Attorney General,
and Norman Heine.
MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the
opinion of the Court.
Appellants
were police officers in certain
New Jersey boroughs. The Supreme
Court of New Jersey ordered
that alleged irregularities
in handling cases in the municipal
courts of those boroughs be
investigated by the Attorney
General, invested him with broad
powers of inquiry and investigation,
and directed him to make a report
to the court. The matters investigated
concerned alleged fixing of
traffic tickets.
Before
being questioned, each appellant
was warned (1) that anything
he said might be used against
him in any state criminal proceeding;
(2) that he had the privilege
to refuse to answer if the disclosure
would tend to incriminate him;
but (3) that if he refused to
answer he would be subject to
removal from office. 1 [385
U.S. 493, 495]
Appellants
answered the questions. No immunity
was granted, as there is no
immunity statute applicable
in these circumstances. Over
their objections, some of the
answers given were used in subsequent
prosecutions for conspiracy
to obstruct the administration
of the traffic laws. Appellants
were convicted and their convictions
were sustained over their protests
that their statements were coerced,
2 by reason of the fact that,
if they refused to answer, they
could lose their positions with
the police department. See 44
N. J. 209, 207 A. 2d 689, 44
N. J. 259, 208 A. 2d 146.
We
postponed the question of jurisdiction
to a hearing on the merits.
383 U.S. 941 . The statute whose
validity was sought to be "drawn
in question," 28 U.S.C.
1257 (2), was the forfeiture
statute. 3 But the New [385
U.S. 493, 496] Jersey Supreme
Court refused to reach that
question (44 N. J., at 223,
207 A. 2d, at 697), deeming
the voluntariness of the statements
as the only issue presented.
Id., at 220-222, 207 A. 2d,
at 695-696. The statute is therefore
too tangentially involved to
satisfy 28 U.S.C. 1257 (2),
for the only bearing it had
was whether, valid or not, the
fear of being discharged under
it for refusal to answer on
the one hand and the fear of
self-incrimination on the other
was "a choice between the
rock and the whirlpool"
4 which made the statements
products of coercion in violation
of the Fourteenth Amendment.
We therefore dismiss the appeal,
treat the papers as a petition
for certiorari (28 U.S.C. 2103),
grant the petition and proceed
to the merits.
We
agree with the New Jersey Supreme
Court that the forfeiture-of-office
statute is relevant here only
for the bearing it has on the
voluntary character of the statements
used to convict petitioners
in their criminal prosecutions.
The
choice imposed on petitioners
was one between self-incrimination
or job forfeiture. Coercion
that vitiates a confession under
Chambers v. Florida, 309 U.S.
227 , and related cases can
be "mental as well as physical";
"the blood of the accused
is not the only hallmark of
an unconstitutional inquisition."
Blackburn v. Alabama, 361 U.S.
199, 206 . Subtle pressures
(Leyra v. Denno, 347 U.S. 556
; Haynes v. Washington, 373
U.S. 503 ) may be as telling
as coarse and vulgar ones. The
question is whether the accused
was deprived of his "free
choice to admit, to deny, or
to refuse to answer." Lisenba
v. California, 314 U.S. 219,
241 .
We
adhere to Boyd v. United States,
116 U.S. 616 , a civil forfeiture
action against property. A statute
offered [385 U.S. 493, 497]
the owner an election between
producing a document or forfeiture
of the goods at issue in the
proceeding. This was held to
be a form of compulsion in violation
of both the Fifth Amendment
and the Fourth Amendment. Id.,
at 634-635. It is that principle
that we adhere to and apply
in Spevack v. Klein, post, p.
511.
The
choice given petitioners was
either to forfeit their jobs
or to incriminate themselves.
The option to lose their means
of livelihood or to pay the
penalty of self-incrimination
is the antithesis of free choice
to speak out or to remain silent.
That practice, like interrogation
practices we reviewed in Miranda
v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 464
-465, is "likely to exert
such pressure upon an individual
as to disable him from making
a free and rational choice."
We think the statements were
infected by the coercion 5 inherent
in this scheme of questioning
[385 U.S. 493, 498] and cannot
be sustained as voluntary under
our prior decisions.
It
is said that there was a "waiver."
That, however, is a federal
question for us to decide. Union
Pac. R. R. Co. v. Pub. Service
Comm., 248 U.S. 67, 69 -70;
Stevens v. Marks, 383 U.S. 234,
243 -244. The Court in Union
Pac. R. R. Co. v. Pub. Service
Comm., supra, in speaking of
a certificate exacted under
protest and in violation of
the Commerce Clause, said:
"Were it otherwise, as
conduct under duress involves
a choice, it always would be
possible for a State to impose
an unconstitutional burden by
the threat of penalties worse
than it in case of a failure
to accept it, and then to declare
the acceptance voluntary . .
. ." Id., at 70.
Where
the choice is "between
the rock and the whirlpool,"
duress is inherent in deciding
to "waive" one or
the other.
"It
always is for the interest of
a party under duress to choose
the lesser of two evils. But
the fact that a choice was made
according to interest does not
exclude duress. It is the characteristic
of duress properly so called."
Ibid. [385 U.S. 493, 499]
In
that case appellant paid under
protest. In these cases also,
though petitioners succumbed
to compulsion, they preserved
their objections, raising them
at the earliest possible point.
Cf. Abie State Bank v. Bryan,
282 U.S. 765, 776 . The cases
are therefore quite different
from the situation where one
who is anxious to make a clean
breast of the whole affair volunteers
the information.
Mr. Justice Holmes in McAuliffe
v. New Bedford, 155 Mass. 216,
29 N. E. 517, stated a dictum
on which New Jersey heavily
relies:
"The petitioner may have
a constitutional right to talk
politics, but he has no constitutional
right to be a policeman. There
are few employments for hire
in which the servant does not
agree to suspend his constitutional
right of free speech, as well
as of idleness, by the implied
terms of his contract. The servant
cannot complain, as he takes
the employment on the terms
which are offered him. On the
same principle, the city may
impose any reasonable condition
upon holding offices within
its control." Id., at 220,
29 N. E., at 517-518.
The
question in this case, however,
is not cognizable in those terms.
Our question is whether a State,
contrary to the requirement
of the Fourteenth Amendment,
can use the threat of discharge
to secure incriminatory evidence
against an employee.
We held in Slochower v. Board
of Education, 350 U.S. 551 ,
that a public school teacher
could not be discharged merely
because he had invoked the Fifth
Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination when questioned
by a congressional committee:
"The privilege against
self-incrimination would be
reduced to a hollow mockery
if its exercise could be taken
as equivalent either to a confession
of [385 U.S. 493, 500] guilt
or a conclusive presumption
of perjury. . . . The privilege
serves to protect the innocent
who otherwise might be ensnared
by ambiguous circumstances."
Id., at 557-558.
We
conclude that policemen, like
teachers and lawyers, are not
relegated to a watered-down
version of constitutional rights.
There are rights of constitutional
stature whose exercise a State
may not condition by the exaction
of a price. Engaging in interstate
commerce is one. Western Union
Tel. Co. v. Kansas, 216 U.S.
1 . Resort to the federal courts
in diversity of citizenship
cases is another. Terral v.
Burke Constr. Co., 257 U.S.
529 . Assertion of a First Amendment
right is still another. Lovell
v. City of Griffin, 303 U.S.
444 ; Murdock v. Pennsylvania,
319 U.S. 105 ; Thomas v. Collins,
323 U.S. 516 ; Lamont v. Postmaster
General, 381 U.S. 301, 305 -306.
The imposition of a burden on
the exercise of a Twenty-fourth
Amendment right is also banned.
Harman v. Forssenius, 380 U.S.
528 . We now hold the protection
of the individual under the
Fourteenth Amendment against
coerced statements prohibits
use in subsequent criminal proceedings
of statements obtained under
threat of removal from office,
and that it extends to all,
whether they are policemen or
other members of our body politic.
Reversed.
[For
dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE
WHITE, see post, p. 530.]
Footnotes
[ Footnote 1 ] "Any person
holding or who has held any
elective or appointive public
office, position or employment
(whether state, county or municipal),
who refuses to testify upon
matters relating to the office,
position or employment in any
criminal proceeding wherein
he is a defendant or is called
as a witness on behalf of the
prosecution, [385 U.S. 493,
495] upon the ground that his
answer may tend to incriminate
him or compel him to be a witness
against himself or refuses to
waive immunity when called by
a grand jury to testify thereon
or who willfully refuses or
fails to appear before any court,
commission or body of this state
which has the right to inquire
under oath upon matters relating
to the office, position or employment
of such person or who, having
been sworn, refuses to testify
or to answer any material question
upon the ground that his answer
may tend to incriminate him
or compel him to be a witness
against himself, shall, if holding
elective or public office, position
or employment, be removed therefrom
or shall thereby forfeit his
office, position or employment
and any vested or future right
of tenure or pension granted
to him by any law of this state
provided the inquiry relates
to a matter which occurred or
arose within the preceding five
years. Any person so forfeiting
his office, position or employment
shall not thereafter be eligible
for election or appointment
to any public office, position
or employment in this state."
N. J. Rev. Stat. 2A:81-17.1
(Supp. 1965).
[
Footnote 2 ] At the trial the
court excused the jury and conducted
a hearing to determine whether,
inter alia, the statements were
voluntary. The State offered
witnesses who testified as to
the manner in which the statements
were taken; the appellants did
not testify at that hearing.
The court held the statements
to be voluntary.
[ Footnote 3 ] N. 1, supra.
[ Footnote 4 ] Stevens v. Marks,
383 U.S. 234, 243 , quoting
from Frost Trucking Co. v. Railroad
Comm'n, 271 U.S. 583, 593 .
[ Footnote 5 ] Cf. Lamm, The
5th Amendment and Its Equivalent
in Jewish Law, 17 Decalogue
Jour. 1 (Jan.-Feb. 1967):
"It should be pointed out,
at the very outset, that the
Halakhah does not distinguish
between voluntary and forced
confessions, for reasons which
will be discussed later. And
it is here that one of the basic
differences between Constitutional
and Talmudic Law arises. According
to the Constitution, a man cannot
be compelled to testify against
himself. The provision against
self-incrimination is a privilege
of which a citizen may or may
not avail himself, as he wishes.
The Halakhah, however, does
not permit self-incriminating
testimony. It is inadmissible,
even if voluntarily offered.
Confession, in other than a
religious context, or financial
cases completely free from any
traces of criminality, is simply
not an instrument of the Law.
The issue, then, is not compulsion,
but the whole idea of legal
confession.
.
. . . .
"The
Halakhah, then, is obviously
concerned with protecting the
confessant from his own aberrations
which manifest themselves, either
as completely fabricated confessions,
or as exaggerations of the real
facts. . . . While certainly
not all, or even most criminal
confessions are directly attributable,
in whole or part, to the Death
Instinct, the Halakhah is sufficiently
concerned with the minority
[385 U.S. 493, 498] of instances,
where such is the case, to disqualify
all criminal confessions and
to discard confession as a legal
instrument. Its function is
to ensure the total victory
of the Life Instinct over its
omnipresent antagonist. Such
are the conclusions to be drawn
from Maimonides' interpretation
of the Halakhah's equivalent
of the Fifth Amendment.
"In
summary, therefore, the Constitutional
ruling on self-incrimination
concerns only forced confessions,
and its restricted character
is a result of its historical
evolution as a civilized protest
against the use of torture in
extorting confessions. The Halakhie
ruling, however, is much broader
and discards confessions in
toto, and this because of its
psychological insight and its
concern for saving man from
his own destructive inclinations."
Id., at 10, 12.
MR.
JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE
CLARK and MR. JUSTICE STEWART
join, dissenting.
The majority opinion here and
the plurality opinion in Spevack
v. Klein, post, p. 511, stem
from fundamental misconceptions
about the logic and necessities
of the [385 U.S. 493, 501] constitutional
privilege against self-incrimination.
I fear that these opinions will
seriously and quite needlessly
hinder the protection of other
important public values. I must
dissent here, as I do in Spevack.
The
majority employs a curious mixture
of doctrines to invalidate these
convictions, and I confess to
difficulty in perceiving the
intended relationships among
the various segments of its
opinion. I gather that the majority
believes that the possibility
that these policemen might have
been discharged had they refused
to provide information pertinent
to their public responsibilities
is an impermissible "condition"
imposed by New Jersey upon petitioners'
privilege against self-incrimination.
From this premise the majority
draws the conclusion that the
statements obtained from petitioners
after a warning that discharge
was possible were inadmissible.
Evidently recognizing the weakness
of its conclusion, the majority
attempts to bring to its support
illustrations from the lengthy
series of cases in which this
Court, in light of all the relevant
circumstances, has adjudged
the voluntariness in fact of
statements obtained from accused
persons.
The
majority is apparently engaged
in the delicate task of riding
two unruly horses at once: it
is presumably arguing simultaneously
that the statements were involuntary
as a matter of fact, in the
same fashion that the statements
in Chambers v. Florida, 309
U.S. 227 , and Haynes v. Washington,
373 U.S. 503 , were thought
to be involuntary, and that
the statements were inadmissible
as a matter of law, on the premise
that they were products of an
impermissible condition imposed
on the constitutional privilege.
These are very different contentions
and require separate replies,
but in my opinion both contentions
are plainly mistaken, for reasons
that follow. [385 U.S. 493,
502]
I.
I
turn first to the suggestion
that these statements were involuntary
in fact. An assessment of the
voluntariness of the various
statements in issue here requires
a more comprehensive examination
of the pertinent circumstances
than the majority has undertaken.
The
petitioners were at all material
times policemen in the boroughs
of Bellmawr and Barrington,
New Jersey. Garrity was Bellmawr's
chief of police and Virtue one
of its police officers; Holroyd,
Elwell, and Murray were police
officers in Barrington. Another
defendant below, Mrs. Naglee,
the clerk of Bellmawr's municipal
court, has since died. In June
1961 the New Jersey Supreme
Court sua sponte directed the
State's Attorney General to
investigate reports of traffic
ticket fixing in Bellmawr and
Barrington. Subsequent investigations
produced evidence that the petitioners,
in separate conspiracies, had
falsified municipal court records,
altered traffic tickets, and
diverted moneys produced from
bail and fines to unauthorized
purposes. In the course of these
investigations the State obtained
two sworn statements from each
of the petitioners; portions
of those statements were admitted
at trial. The petitioners were
convicted in two separate trials
of conspiracy to obstruct the
proper administration of the
state motor traffic laws, the
cases being now consolidated
for purposes of our review.
The Supreme Court of New Jersey
affirmed all the convictions.
The
first statements were taken
from the petitioners by the
State's Deputy Attorney General
in August and November 1961.
All of the usual indicia of
duress are wholly absent. As
the state court noted, there
was "no physical coercion,
no overbearing tactics of psychological
persuasion, no lengthy incommunicado
detention, or efforts to humiliate
or ridicule the defendants."
44 N. J. [385 U.S. 493, 503]
209, 220, 207 A. 2d 689, 695.
The state court found no evidence
that any of the petitioners
were reluctant to offer statements,
and concluded that the interrogations
were conducted with a "high
degree of civility and restraint."
Ibid.
These
conclusions are fully substantiated
by the record. The statements
of the Bellmawr petitioners
were taken in a room in the
local firehouse, for which Chief
Garrity himself had made arrangements.
None of the petitioners were
in custody before or after the
depositions were taken; each
apparently continued to pursue
his ordinary duties as a public
official of the community. The
statements were recorded by
a court stenographer, who testified
that he witnessed no indications
of unwillingness or even significant
hesitation on the part of any
of the petitioners. The Bellmawr
petitioners did not have counsel
present, but the Deputy Attorney
General testified without contradiction
that Garrity had informed him
as they strolled between Garrity's
office and the firehouse that
he had arranged for counsel,
but thought that none would
be required at that stage. The
interrogations were not excessively
lengthy, and reasonable efforts
were made to assure the physical
comfort of the witnesses. Mrs.
Naglee, the clerk of the Bellmawr
municipal court, who was known
to suffer from a heart ailment,
was assured that questioning
would cease if she felt any
discomfort.
The
circumstances in which the depositions
of the Barrington petitioners
were taken are less certain,
for the New Jersey Supreme Court
found that there was an informal
agreement at the Barrington
trial that the defendants would
argue simply that the possibility
of dismissal made the statements
"involuntary as a matter
of law." The defense did
not contend that the statements
were the result of physical
or mental coercion, or that
the wills of the Barrington
petitioners were overborne.
Accordingly, the State was never
obliged to offer evidence [385
U.S. 493, 504] of the voluntariness
in fact of the statements. We
are, however, informed that
the three Barrington petitioners
had counsel present as their
depositions were taken. Insofar
as the majority suggests that
the Barrington statements are
involuntary in fact, in the
fashion of Chambers or Haynes,
it has introduced a factual
contention never urged by the
Barrington petitioners and never
considered by the courts of
New Jersey.
As
interrogation commenced, each
of the petitioners was sworn,
carefully informed that he need
not give any information, reminded
that any information given might
be used in a subsequent criminal
prosecution, and warned that
as a police officer he was subject
to a proceeding to discharge
him if he failed to provide
information relevant to his
public responsibilities. The
cautionary statements varied
slightly, but all, except that
given to Mrs. Naglee, included
each of the three warnings.
1 Mrs. Naglee was [385 U.S.
493, 505] not told that she
could be removed from her position
at the court if she failed to
give information pertinent to
the discharge of her duties.
All of the petitioners consented
to give statements, none displayed
any significant hesitation,
and none suggested that the
decision to offer information
was motivated by the possibility
of discharge.
A
second statement was obtained
from each of the petitioners
in September and December 1962.
These statements were not materially
different in content or circumstances
from the first. The only significant
distinction was that the interrogator
did not advert even obliquely
to any possibility of dismissal.
All the petitioners were cautioned
that they were entitled to remain
silent, and there was no evidence
whatever of physical or mental
coercion.
All
of the petitioners testified
at trial, and gave evidence
essentially consistent with
the statements taken from them.
At a preliminary hearing conducted
at the Bellmawr trial to determine
the voluntariness of the statements,
the Bellmawr petitioners offered
no evidence beyond proof of
the warning given them.
The
standards employed by the Court
to assess the voluntariness
of an accused's statements have
reflected a number of values,
and thus have emphasized a variety
of factual criteria. The criteria
employed have included threats
of imminent danger, Payne v.
Arkansas, 356 U.S. 560 , physical
deprivations, Reck v. Pate,
367 U.S. 433 , repeated or extended
interrogation, Chambers v. Florida,
309 U.S. 227 , limits on access
to counsel or friends, Crooker
v. California, 357 U.S. 433
, length and illegality of detention
under state law, Haynes v. Washington,
373 U.S. 503 , individual weakness
or incapacity, Lynumn v. Illinois,
372 U.S. 528 , and the adequacy
of warnings of constitutional
rights, Davis v. North Carolina,
384 U.S. 737 . Whatever the
criteria employed, the duty
of the Court has been "to
examine the entire [385 U.S.
493, 506] record," and
thereby to determine whether
the accused's will "was
overborne by the sustained pressures
upon him." Davis v. North
Carolina, 384 U.S. 737, 741
, 739.
It
would be difficult to imagine
interrogations to which these
criteria of duress were more
completely inapplicable, or
in which the requirements which
have subsequently been imposed
by this Court on police questioning
were more thoroughly satisfied.
Each of the petitioners received
a complete and explicit reminder
of his constitutional privilege.
Three of the petitioners had
counsel present; at least a
fourth had consulted counsel
but freely determined that his
presence was unnecessary. These
petitioners were not in any
fashion "swept from familiar
surroundings into police custody,
surrounded by antagonistic forces,
and subjected to the techniques
of persuasion . . . ."
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S.
436, 461 . I think it manifest
that, under the standards developed
by this Court to assess voluntariness,
there is no basis for saying
that any of these statements
were made involuntarily.
II.
The issue remaining is whether
the statements were inadmissible
because they were "involuntary
as a matter of law," in
that they were given after a
warning that New Jersey policemen
may be discharged for failure
to provide information pertinent
to their public responsibilities.
What is really involved on this
score, however, is not in truth
a question of "voluntariness"
at all, but rather whether the
condition imposed by the State
on the exercise of the privilege
against self-incrimination,
namely dismissal from office,
in this instance serves in itself
to render the statements inadmissible.
Absent evidence of involuntariness
in fact, the admissibility of
these statements thus hinges
on the validity of the consequence
which the State acknowledged
might have resulted if the statements
had not been given. If the consequence
is [385 U.S. 493, 507] constitutionally
permissible, there can surely
be no objection if the State
cautions the witness that it
may follow if he remains silent.
If both the consequence and
the warning are constitutionally
permissible, a witness is obliged,
in order to prevent the use
of his statements against him
in a criminal prosecution, to
prove under the standards established
since Brown v. Mississippi,
297 U.S. 278 , that as a matter
of fact the statements were
involuntarily made. The central
issues here are therefore identical
to those presented in Spevack
v. Klein, supra: whether consequences
may properly be permitted to
result to a claimant after his
invocation of the constitutional
privilege, and if so, whether
the consequence in question
is permissible. For reasons
which I have stated in Spevack
v. Klein, in my view nothing
in the logic or purposes of
the privilege demands that all
consequences which may result
from a witness' silence be forbidden
merely because that silence
is privileged. The validity
of a consequence depends both
upon the hazards, if any, it
presents to the integrity of
the privilege and upon the urgency
of the public interests it is
designed to protect.
It
can hardly be denied that New
Jersey is permitted by the Constitution
to establish reasonable qualifications
and standards of conduct for
its public employees. Nor can
it be said that it is arbitrary
or unreasonable for New Jersey
to insist that its employees
furnish the appropriate authorities
with information pertinent to
their employment. Cf. Beilan
v. Board of Education, 357 U.S.
399 ; Slochower v. Board of
Education, 350 U.S. 551 . Finally,
it is surely plain that New
Jersey may in particular require
its employees to assist in the
prevention and detection of
unlawful activities by officers
of the state government. The
urgency of these requirements
is the more obvious here, where
the conduct in question is that
of officials directly entrusted
with the administration of justice.
The importance for our systems
of justice [385 U.S. 493, 508]
of the integrity of local police
forces can scarcely be exaggerated.
Thus, it need only be recalled
that this Court itself has often
intervened in state criminal
prosecutions precisely on the
ground that this might encourage
high standards of police behavior.
See, e. g., Ashcraft v. Tennessee,
322 U.S. 143 ; Miranda v. Arizona,
supra. It must be concluded,
therefore, that the sanction
at issue here is reasonably
calculated to serve the most
basic interests of the citizens
of New Jersey.
The
final question is the hazard,
if any, which this sanction
presents to the constitutional
privilege. The purposes for
which, and the circumstances
in which, an officer's discharge
might be ordered under New Jersey
law plainly may vary. It is
of course possible that discharge
might in a given case be predicated
on an imputation of guilt drawn
from the use of the privilege,
as was thought by this Court
to have occurred in Slochower
v. Board of Education, supra.
But from our vantage point,
it would be quite improper to
assume that New Jersey will
employ these procedures for
purposes other than to assess
in good faith an employee's
continued fitness for public
employment. This Court, when
a state procedure for investigating
the loyalty and fitness of public
employees might result either
in the Slochower situation or
in an assessment in good faith
of an employee, has until today
consistently paused to examine
the actual circumstances of
each case. Beilan v. Board of
Education, supra; Nelson v.
Los Angeles County, 362 U.S.
1 . I am unable to see any justification
for the majority's abandonment
of that process; it is well
calculated both to protect the
essential purposes of the privilege
and to guarantee the most generous
opportunities for the pursuit
of other public values. The
majority's broad prohibition,
on the other hand, extends the
scope of the privilege beyond
its essential purposes, and
seriously hampers the protection
of other important values. Despite
the majority's [385 U.S. 493,
509] disclaimer, it is quite
plain that the logic of its
prohibitory rule would in this
situation prevent the discharge
of these policemen. It would
therefore entirely forbid a
sanction which presents, at
least on its face, no hazard
to the purposes of the constitutional
privilege, and which may reasonably
be expected to serve important
public interests. We are not
entitled to assume that discharges
will be used either to vindicate
impermissible inferences of
guilt or to penalize privileged
silence, but must instead presume
that this procedure is only
intended and will only be used
to establish and enforce standards
of conduct for public employees.
2 As such, it does not minimize
or endanger the petitioners'
constitutional privilege against
self-incrimination. 3 [385 U.S.
493, 510]
I
would therefore conclude that
the sanction provided by the
State is constitutionally permissible.
From this, it surely follows
that the warning given of the
possibility of discharge is
constitutionally unobjectionable.
Given the constitutionality
both of the sanction and of
the warning of its application,
the petitioners would be constitutionally
entitled to exclude the use
of their statements as evidence
in a criminal prosecution against
them only if it is found that
the statements were, when given,
involuntary in fact. For the
reasons stated above, I cannot
agree that these statements
were involuntary in fact.
I
would affirm the judgments of
the Supreme Court of New Jersey.
[ Footnote 1 ] The warning given
to Chief Garrity is typical.
"I want to advise you that
anything you say must be said
of your own free will and accord
without any threats or promises
or coercion, and anything you
say may be, of course, used
against you or any other person
in any subsequent criminal proceedings
in the courts of our state.
"You do have, under our
law, as you probably know, a
privilege to refuse to make
any disclosure which may tend
to incriminate you. If you make
a disclosure with knowledge
of this right or privilege,
voluntarily, you thereby waive
that right or privilege in relation
to any other questions which
I might put to you relevant
to such disclosure in this investigation.
"This
right or privilege which you
have is somewhat limited to
the extent that you as a police
officer under the laws of our
state, may be subjected to a
proceeding to have you removed
from office if you refuse to
answer a question put to you
under oath pertaining to your
office or your function within
that office. It doesn't mean,
however, you can't exercise
the right. You do have the right."
A.
"No, I will cooperate."
Q. "Understanding this,
are you willing to proceed at
this time and answer any questions?"
A.
"Yes."
[ Footnote 2 ] The legislative
history of N. J. Rev. Stat.
2A:81-17.1 provides nothing
which clearly indicates the
purposes of the statute, beyond
what is to be inferred from
its face. In any event, the
New Jersey Supreme Court noted
below that the State would be
entitled, even without the statutory
authorization, to discharge
state employees who declined
to provide information relevant
to their official responsibilities.
There is therefore nothing to
which this Court could properly
now look to forecast the purposes
for which or circumstances in
which New Jersey might discharge
those who have invoked the constitutional
privilege.
[ Footnote 3 ] The late Judge
Jerome Frank thus once noted,
in the course of a spirited
defense of the privilege, that
it would be entirely permissible
to discharge police officers
who decline, on grounds of the
privilege, to disclose information
pertinent to their public responsibilities.
Judge Frank quoted the following
with approval:
"`Duty required them to
answer. Privilege permitted
them to refuse to answer. They
chose to exercise the privilege,
but the exercise of such privilege
was wholly inconsistent with
their duty as police officers.
They claim that they had a constitutional
right to refuse to answer under
the circumstances, but . . .
they had no constitutional right
to remain police officers in
the face of their clear violation
of the duty imposed upon them.'
Christal v. Police Commission
of San Francisco." Citing
33 Cal. App. 2d 564, 92 P.2d
416. (Emphasis added by Judge
Frank.) United States v. Field,
193 F.2d 92, 106 (separate opinion).
[385 U.S. 493, 511]