Christopher Reckmeyer was charged with running a massive drug
importation and distribution scheme alleged to be a continuing
criminal enterprise (CCE) in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848.
Relying on a portion of the CCE statute that authorizes forfeiture
to the Government of property acquired as a result of drug law
violations, § 853, the indictment sought forfeiture of
specified assets in Reckmeyer's possession. The District Court,
acting pursuant to § 853(e)(1)(A), entered a restraining order
forbidding Reckmeyer from transferring any of the potentially
forfeitable assets. Nonetheless, he transferred $25,000 to
petitioner, a law firm, for preindictment legal services.
Petitioner continued to represent Reckmeyer after his indictment.
Reckmeyer moved to modify the District Court's order to permit him
to use some of the restrained assets to pay petitioner's fees and
to exempt such assets from postconviction forfeiture. However,
before the court ruled on his motion, Reckmeyer entered a plea
agreement with the Government in which,
inter alia, he
agreed to forfeit all of the specified assets. The court then
denied Reckmeyer's motion and, subsequently, entered an order
forfeiting virtually all of his assets to the Government.
Petitioner -- arguing that assets used to pay an attorney are
exempt from forfeiture under § 853 and, if they are not, that
the statute's failure to provide such an exemption renders it
unconstitutional -- filed a petition under § 853(n) seeking an
adjudication of its third-party interest in the forfeited assets.
The District Court granted the relief sought. However, the Court of
Appeals reversed, finding that the statute acknowledged no
exception to its forfeiture requirement, and that the statutory
scheme is constitutional.
Held:
1. For the reasons stated in
United States v. Monsanto,
ante, at
491 U. S.
611-614, whatever discretion § 853(e) does provide
district court judges to refuse to issue pretrial restraining
orders on potentially forfeitable assets, it does not grant them
equitable discretion to allow a defendant to withhold assets to pay
bona fide attorney's fees. Nor does the exercise of judges' §
853(e) discretion "immunize" nonrestrained assets used for
attorney's fees from subsequent forfeiture under § 853(c),
which provides for recapture of forfeitable assets transferred to
third parties. Pp.
491 U. S.
622-623.
Page 491 U. S. 618
2. The forfeiture statute does not impermissibly burden a
defendant's Sixth Amendment right to retain counsel of his choice.
A defendant has no Sixth Amendment right to spend another person's
money for services rendered by an attorney, even if those funds are
the only way that that defendant will be able to retain the
attorney of his choice. Such money, though in his possession, is
not rightfully his. Petitioner's contention that, since the
Government's claim to forfeitable assets rests on a penal statute
that is merely a mechanism for preventing fraudulent conveyances of
the assets, and is not a device for determining true title to
property, the burden the statute places on a defendant's rights
greatly outweighs the Government's interest in forfeiture is
unsound. Section 853(c) reflects the application of the
long-recognized and lawful practice of vesting title to any
forfeitable assets in the hands of the Government at the time of
the criminal act giving rise to forfeiture. Moreover, there is a
strong governmental interest in obtaining full recovery of the
assets, since the assets are deposited in a fund that supports law
enforcement efforts, since the statute allows property to be
recovered by its rightful owners, and since a major purpose behind
forfeiture provisions such as the CCE's is to lessen the economic
power of organized crime and drug enterprises, including the use of
such power to retain private counsel. Pp.
491 U. S.
624-633.
3. The forfeiture statute does not upset the balance of power
between the Government and the accused in a manner contrary to the
Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The Constitution does
not forbid the imposition of an otherwise permissible criminal
sanction, such as forfeiture, merely because, in some cases,
prosecutors may abuse the processes available to them. Such due
process claims are cognizable only in specific cases of
prosecutorial misconduct, which has not been alleged here. Pp.
491 U. S.
633-635.
837 F.2d 637, affirmed.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and O'CONNOR, SCALIA, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
491 U.S. 635.
Page 491 U. S. 619
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are called on to determine whether the federal drug
forfeiture statute includes an exemption for assets that a
defendant wishes to use to pay an attorney who conducted his
defense in the criminal case where forfeiture was sought. Because
we determine that no such exemption exists, we must decide whether
that statute, so interpreted, is consistent with the Fifth and
Sixth Amendments. We hold that it is
I
In January, 1985, Christopher Reckmeyer was charged in a
multicount indictment with running a massive drug importation and
distribution scheme. The scheme was alleged to be a continuing
criminal enterprise (CCE), in violation of 84 Stat. 1265,
as
amended, 21 U.S.C. § 848 (1982 ed., Supp. V). Relying on
a portion of the CCE statute that authorizes forfeiture to the
Government of "property constituting, or derived from . . .
proceeds . . . obtained" from drug law
Page 491 U. S. 620
violations, § 853(a), [
Footnote 1] the indictment sought forfeiture of specified
assets in Reckmeyer's possession. App. 33-40. At this time, the
District Court, acting pursuant to § 853(e)(1) (A), [
Footnote 2] entered a restraining order
forbidding Reckmeyer to transfer any of the listed assets that were
potentially forfeitable.
Sometime earlier, Reckmeyer had retained petitioner, a law firm,
to represent him in the ongoing grand jury investigation which
resulted in the January, 1985, indictments. Notwithstanding the
restraining order, Reckmeyer paid the firm $25,000 for
preindictment legal services a few days after the indictment was
handed down; this sum was placed by petitioner in an escrow
account. Petitioner continued to represent Reckmeyer following the
indictment.
Page 491 U. S. 621
On March 7, 1985, Reckmeyer moved to modify the District Court's
earlier restraining order to permit him to use some of the
restrained assets to pay petitioner's fees; Reckmeyer also sought
to exempt from any postconviction forfeiture order the assets that
he intended to use to pay petitioner. However, one week later,
before the District Court could conduct a hearing on this motion,
Reckmeyer entered a plea agreement with the Government. Under the
agreement, Reckmeyer pleaded guilty to the drug-related CCE charge,
and agreed to forfeit all of the specified assets listed in the
indictment. The day after the Reckmeyer's plea was entered, the
District Court denied his earlier motion to modify the restraining
order, concluding that the plea and forfeiture agreement rendered
irrelevant any further consideration of the propriety of the
court's pretrial restraints. App. 54-55. Subsequently, an order
forfeiting virtually all of the assets in Reckmeyer's possession
was entered by the District Court in conjunction with his
sentencing.
Id. at 57-65.
After this order was entered, petitioner filed a petition under
§ 853(n), which permits third parties with an interest in
forfeited property to ask the sentencing court for an adjudication
of their rights to that property; specifically, § 853(n)
(6)(B) gives a third party who entered into a bona fide transaction
with a defendant a right to make claims against forfeited property
if that third party was "at the time of [the transaction]
reasonably without cause to believe that the [defendant's assets
were] subject to forfeiture."
See also § 853(c).
Petitioner claimed an interest in $170,000 of Reckmeyer's assets
for services it had provided Reckmeyer in conducting his defense;
petitioner also sought the $25,000 being held in the escrow
account, as payment for preindictment legal services. Petitioner
argued alternatively that assets used to pay an attorney were
exempt from forfeiture under § 853, and if not, the failure of
the statute to provide such an exemption rendered it
unconstitutional. The District Court granted petitioner's claim for
a share of the forfeited assets.
Page 491 U. S. 622
A panel of the Fourth Circuit affirmed, finding that -- while
§ 853 contained no statutory provision authorizing the payment
of attorney's fees out of forfeited assets -- the statute's failure
to do so impermissibly infringed a defendant's Sixth Amendment
right to the counsel of his choice.
United States v.
Harvey, 814 F.2d 905 (1987). The Court of Appeals agreed to
hear the case en banc and reversed.
Sub nom. In re Forfeiture
Hearing as to Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered, 837 F.2d 637
(1988). All the judges of the Fourth Circuit agreed that the
language of the CCE statute acknowledged no exception to its
forfeiture requirement that would recognize petitioner's claim to
the forfeited assets. A majority found this statutory scheme
constitutional, 837 F.2d at 642-648; four dissenting judges,
however, agreed with the panel's view that the statute, so
construed, violated the Sixth Amendment,
id. at 651-653
(Phillips, J., dissenting).
Petitioner sought review of the statutory and constitutional
issues raised by the Court of Appeals' holding. We granted
certiorari, 488 U.S. 940 (1988), and now affirm.
II
Petitioner's first submission is that the statutory provision
that authorizes pretrial restraining orders on potentially
forfeitable assets in a defendant's possession, 21 U.S.C. §
853(e) (1982 ed., Supp. V), grants district courts equitable
discretion to determine when such orders should be imposed. This
discretion should be exercised under "traditional equitable
standards," petitioner urges, including a "weigh[ing] of the
equities and competing hardships on the parties"; under this
approach, a court "must invariably strike the balance so as to
allow a defendant [to pay] . . . for bona fide attorneys fees,"
petitioner argues. Brief for Petitioner 8. Petitioner further
submits that, once a district court so exercises its discretion and
fails to freeze assets that a defendant then uses to pay an
attorney, the statute's provision for recapture of
Page 491 U. S. 623
forfeitable assets transferred to third parties, § 853(c),
may not operate on such sums.
Petitioner's argument, as it acknowledges, is based on the view
of the statute expounded by Judge Winter of the Second Circuit in
his concurring opinion in that Court of Appeals' en banc decision,
United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d 1400, 1405-1411
(1988). We reject this interpretation of the statute today in our
decision in
United States v. Monsanto, ante, p.
491 U. S. 600,
which reverses the Second Circuit's holding in that case. As we
explain in our
Monsanto decision,
ante at
491 U. S.
611-614, whatever discretion § 853(e) provides
district court judges to refuse to enter pretrial restraining
orders, it does not extend as far as petitioner urges -- nor does
the exercise of that discretion "immunize" nonrestrained assets
from subsequent forfeiture under § 853(c) if they are
transferred to an attorney to pay legal fees. Thus, for the reasons
provided in our opinion in
Monsanto, we reject
petitioner's statutory claim.
III
We therefore address petitioner's constitutional challenges to
the forfeiture law. [
Footnote
3] Petitioner contends that the statute
Page 491 U. S. 624
infringes on criminal defendants' Sixth Amendment right to
counsel of choice, and upsets the "balance of power" between the
Government and the accused in a manner contrary to the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment. We consider these contentions in
turn.
A
Petitioner's first claim is that the forfeiture law makes
impossible, or at least impermissibly burdens, a defendant's right
"to select and be represented by one's preferred attorney."
Wheat v. United States, 486 U. S. 153,
486 U. S. 159
(1988). Petitioner does not, nor could it defensibly do so, assert
that impecunious defendants have a Sixth Amendment right to choose
their counsel. The Amendment guarantees defendants in criminal
cases the right to adequate representation, but those who do not
have the means to hire their own lawyers have no cognizable
complaint so long as they are adequately represented by attorneys
appointed by the courts. "[A] defendant may not insist on
representation by an attorney he cannot afford."
Wheat,
supra, at
486 U. S. 159.
Petitioner does not dispute these propositions. Nor does the
Government deny that the Sixth Amendment guarantees a defendant the
right to be represented by an otherwise qualified attorney whom
that defendant can afford to hire, or who is willing to represent
the defendant even though he is without
Page 491 U. S. 625
funds. Applying these principles to the statute in question
here, we observe that nothing in § 853 prevents a defendant
from hiring the attorney of his choice or disqualifies any attorney
from serving as a defendant's counsel. Thus, unlike
Wheat,
this case does not involve a situation where the Government has
asked a court to prevent a defendant's chosen counsel from
representing the accused. Instead, petitioner urges that a
violation of the Sixth Amendment arises here because of the
forfeiture, at the instance of the Government, of assets that
defendants intend to use to pay their attorneys.
Even in this sense, of course, the burden the forfeiture law
imposes on a criminal defendant is limited. The forfeiture statute
does not prevent a defendant who has nonforfeitable assets from
retaining any attorney of his choosing. Nor is it necessarily the
case that a defendant who possesses nothing but assets the
Government seeks to have forfeited will be prevented from retaining
counsel of choice. Defendants like Reckmeyer may be able to find
lawyers willing to represent them, hoping that their fees will be
paid in the event of acquittal, or via some other means that a
defendant might come by in the future. The burden placed on
defendants by the forfeiture law is therefore a limited one.
Nonetheless, there will be cases where a defendant will be
unable to retain the attorney of his choice, when that defendant
would have been able to hire that lawyer if he had access to
forfeitable assets and if there was no risk that fees paid by the
defendant to his counsel would later be recouped under §
853(c). [
Footnote 4] It is in
these cases, petitioner argues, that the Sixth Amendment puts
limits on the forfeiture statute.
Page 491 U. S. 626
This submission is untenable. Whatever the full extent of the
Sixth Amendment's protection of one's right to retain counsel of
his choosing, that protection does not go beyond "the individual's
right to spend his own money to obtain the advice and assistance of
. . . counsel."
Walters v. National Assn. of Radiation
Survivors, 473 U. S. 305,
473 U. S. 370
(1985) (STEVENS, J., dissenting). A defendant has no Sixth
Amendment right to spend another person's money for services
rendered by an attorney, even if those funds are the only way that
that defendant will be able to retain the attorney of his choice. A
robbery suspect, for example, has no Sixth Amendment right to use
funds he has stolen from a bank to retain an attorney to defend him
if he is apprehended. The money, though in his possession, is not
rightfully his; the Government does not violate the Sixth Amendment
if it seizes the robbery proceeds and refuses to permit the
defendant to use them to pay for his defense.
"[N]o lawyer, in any case, . . . has the right to . . . accept
stolen property, or . . . ransom money, in payment of a fee. . . .
The privilege to practice law is not a license to steal."
Laska v. United States, 82 F.2d 672, 677 (CA10 1936).
Petitioner appears to concede as much,
see Brief for
Petitioner 40, n. 25, as respondent in
Monsanto clearly
does,
see Brief for Respondent in No. 88-454, pp.
36-37.
Petitioner seeks to distinguish such cases for Sixth Amendment
purposes by arguing that the bank's claim to robbery proceeds rests
on "preexisting property rights," while the Government's claim to
forfeitable assets rests on a "penal statute" which embodies the
"fictive property law concept of . . . relation back," and is
merely "a mechanism for preventing fraudulent conveyances of the
defendant's assets, not . . . a device for determining true title
to property." Brief for Petitioner 40-41. In light of this,
petitioner contends, the burden placed on defendant's Sixth
Amendment rights by the forfeiture statute outweighs the
Government's interest in forfeiture.
Ibid.
Page 491 U. S. 627
The premises of petitioner's constitutional analysis are unsound
in several respects. First, the property rights given the
Government by virtue of the forfeiture statute are more substantial
than petitioner acknowledges. In § 853(c), the so-called
"relation-back" provision, Congress dictated that "[a]ll right,
title and interest in property" obtained by criminals via the
illicit means described in the statute "vests in the United States
upon the commission of the act giving rise to forfeiture." 21
U.S.C. § 853(c) (1982 ed., Supp. V). As Congress observed when
the provision was adopted, this approach, known as the "taint
theory," is one that "has long been recognized in forfeiture
cases," including the decision in
United States v.
Stowell, 133 U. S. 1 (1890).
See S.Rep. No. 98-225, p. 200, and n. 27 (1983). In
Stowell, the Court explained the operation of a similar
forfeiture provision (for violations of the Internal Revenue Code)
as follows:
"As soon as [the possessor of the forfeitable asset committed
the violation] of the internal revenue laws, the forfeiture under
those laws took effect, and (though needing judicial condemnation
to perfect it) operated from that time as a statutory conveyance to
the United States of all the right, title and interest then
remaining in the [possessor], and was as valid and effectual
against all the world as a recorded deed. The right so vested in
the United States could not be defeated or impaired by any
subsequent dealings of the . . . [possessor]."
Stowell, supra, at
133 U. S. 19. In
sum, § 853(c) reflects the application of the long-recognized
and lawful practice of vesting title to any forfeitable assets in
the United States at the time of the criminal act giving rise to
forfeiture. Concluding that Reckmeyer cannot give good title to
such property to petitioner because he did not hold good title is
neither extraordinary or novel. Nor does petitioner claim, as a
general proposition that the relation-back provision is
unconstitutional, or that Congress cannot, as a general matter,
vest title to assets derived from the crime in
Page 491 U. S. 628
the Government as of the date of the criminal act in question.
Petitioner's claim is that whatever part of the assets that is
necessary to pay attorney's fees cannot be subjected to forfeiture.
But given the Government's title to Reckmeyer's assets upon
conviction, to hold that the Sixth Amendment creates some right in
Reckmeyer to alienate such assets, or creates a right on
petitioner's part to receive these assets, would be peculiar.
There is no constitutional principle that gives one person the
right to give another's property to a third party, even where the
person seeking to complete the exchange wishes to do so in order to
exercise a constitutionally protected right. While petitioner and
its supporting
amici attempt to distinguish between the
expenditure of forfeitable assets to exercise one's Sixth Amendment
rights and expenditures in the pursuit of other constitutionally
protected freedoms,
see, e.g., Brief for American Bar
Association as
Amicus Curiae 6, there is no such
distinction between, or hierarchy among, constitutional rights. If
defendants have a right to spend forfeitable assets on attorney's
fees, why not on exercises of the right to speak, practice one's
religion, or travel? The full exercise of these rights, too,
depends in part on one's financial wherewithal, and forfeiture, or
even the threat of forfeiture, may similarly prevent a defendant
from enjoying these rights as fully as he might otherwise.
Nonetheless, we are not about to recognize an antiforfeiture
exception for the exercise of each such right, nor does one exist
for the exercise of Sixth Amendment rights. [
Footnote 5]
Page 491 U. S. 629
Petitioner's "balancing analysis" to the contrary rests
substantially on the view that the Government has only a modest
interest in forfeitable assets that may be used to retain an
attorney. Petitioner takes the position that, in large part, once
assets have been paid over from client to attorney, the principal
ends of forfeiture have been achieved: dispossessing a drug dealer
or racketeer of the proceeds of his wrongdoing.
See Brief
for Petitioner 39;
see also 814 F.2d at 924-925. We think
that this view misses the mark for three reasons.
First, the Government has a pecuniary interest in forfeiture
that goes beyond merely separating a criminal from his ill-gotten
gains; that legitimate interest extends to recovering all
forfeitable assets, for such assets are deposited in a Fund that
supports law enforcement efforts in a variety of important and
useful ways.
See 28 U.S.C. § 524(c), which
establishes the Department of Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund. The
sums of money that can be raised for law enforcement activities
this way are substantial, [
Footnote
6] and the Government's interest in using the profits of crime
to fund these activities should not be discounted.
Second, the statute permits "rightful owners" of forfeited
assets to make claims for forfeited assets before they are retained
by the Government.
See 21 U.S.C. § 853(n)(6)(A). The
Government's interest in winning undiminished forfeiture thus
includes the objective of returning property in full to those
wrongfully deprived or defrauded of it. Where the Government
pursues this restitutionary end, the Government's interest in
forfeiture is virtually indistinguishable from its interest in
returning to a bank the proceeds of a bank robbery, and a
forfeiture defendant's claim of right to use
Page 491 U. S. 630
such assets to hire an attorney, instead of having them returned
to their rightful owners, is no more persuasive than a bank
robber's similar claim.
Finally, as we have recognized previously, a major purpose
motivating congressional adoption and continued refinement of the
racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations (RICO) and CCE
forfeiture provisions has been the desire to lessen the economic
power of organized crime and drug enterprises.
See Russello v.
United States, 464 U. S. 16,
464 U. S. 27-28
(1983). This includes the use of such economic power to retain
private counsel. As the Court of Appeals put it:
"Congress has already underscored the compelling public interest
in stripping criminals such as Reckmeyer of their undeserved
economic power, and part of that undeserved power may be the
ability to command high-priced legal talent."
837 F.2d at 649. The notion that the Government has a legitimate
interest in depriving criminals of economic power, even insofar as
that power is used to retain counsel of choice, may be somewhat
unsettling.
See, e.g., Tr. of Oral Arg. 50-52. But when a
defendant claims that he has suffered some substantial impairment
of his Sixth Amendment rights by virtue of the seizure or
forfeiture of assets in his possession, such a complaint is no more
than the reflection of
"the harsh reality that the quality of a criminal defendant's
representation frequently may turn on his ability to retain the
best counsel money can buy."
Morris v. Slappy, 461 U. S. 1,
461 U. S. 23
(1983) (BRENNAN, J., concurring in result). Again, the Court of
Appeals put it aptly:
"The modern day Jean Valjean must be satisfied with appointed
counsel. Yet the drug merchant claims that his possession of huge
sums of money . . . entitles him to something more. We reject this
contention, and any notion of a constitutional right to use the
proceeds of crime to finance an expensive defense."
837 F.2d at 649. [
Footnote
7]
Page 491 U. S. 631
It is our view that there is a strong governmental interest in
obtaining full recovery of all forfeitable assets, an interest that
overrides any Sixth Amendment interest in permitting criminals to
use assets adjudged forfeitable to pay for their defense.
Otherwise, there would be an interference with a defendant's Sixth
Amendment rights whenever the Government freezes or takes some
property in a defendant's possession before, during, or after a
criminal trial. So-called "jeopardy assessments" -- Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) seizures of assets to secure potential tax
liabilities,
see 26 U.S.C. § 6861 -- may impair a
defendant's ability to retain counsel in a way similar to that
complained of here. Yet these assessments have been upheld against
constitutional attack, [
Footnote
8] and we note that the respondent in
Monsanto
concedes their constitutionality,
see Brief for Respondent
in No. 88-454, p. 37, n. 20. Moreover, petitioner's claim to a
share of the forfeited assets postconviction would suggest that the
Government could never impose a burden on assets within a
defendant's control that could be used to pay a lawyer. [
Footnote 9] Criminal defendants,
however, are not exempted
Page 491 U. S. 632
from federal, state, and local taxation simply because these
financial levies may deprive them of resources that could be used
to hire an attorney.
We therefore reject petitioner's claim of a Sixth Amendment
right of criminal defendants to use assets that are the
Government's -- assets adjudged forfeitable, as Reckmeyer's were --
to pay attorney's fees, merely because those assets are in their
possession. [
Footnote 10]
See also Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S.
613,
Page 491 U. S. 633
which rejects a similar claim with respect to pretrial orders
and assets not yet judged forfeitable.
B
Petitioner's second constitutional claim is that the forfeiture
statute is invalid under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment because it permits the Government to upset the "balance
of forces between the accused and his accuser."
Wardius v.
Oregon, 412 U. S. 470,
412 U. S. 474
(1973). We are not sure that this contention adds anything to
petitioner's Sixth Amendment claim, because, while
"[t]he Constitution guarantees a fair trial through the Due
Process Clauses . . . it defines the basic elements of a fair trial
largely through the several provisions of the Sixth Amendment,"
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.
S. 668,
466 U. S.
684-685 (1984). We have concluded above that the Sixth
Amendment is not offended by the forfeiture provisions at issue
here. Even if, however, the Fifth Amendment provides some added
protection not encompassed in the Sixth Amendment's more specific
provisions, we find petitioner's claim based on the Fifth Amendment
unavailing.
Page 491 U. S. 634
Forfeiture provisions are powerful weapons in the war on crime;
like any such weapons, their impact can be devastating when used
unjustly. But due process claims alleging such abuses are
cognizable only in specific cases of prosecutorial misconduct (and
petitioner has made no such allegation here) or when directed to a
rule that is inherently unconstitutional.
"The fact that the . . . Act might operate unconstitutionally
under some conceivable set of circumstances is insufficient to
render it . . . invalid,"
United States v. Salerno, 481 U.
S. 739,
481 U. S. 745
(1987). Petitioner's claim -- that the power available to
prosecutors under the statute could be abused -- proves too much,
for many tools available to prosecutors can be misused in a way
that violates the rights of innocent persons. As the Court of
Appeals put it, in rejecting this claim when advanced below: "Every
criminal law carries with it the potential for abuse, but a
potential for abuse does not require a finding of facial
invalidity." 837 F.2d at 648.
We rejected a claim similar to petitioner's last Term, in
Wheat v. United States, 486 U. S. 153
(1988). In
Wheat, the petitioner argued that permitting a
court to disqualify a defendant's chosen counsel because of
conflicts of interest -- over that defendant's objection to the
disqualification -- would encourage the Government to "manufacture"
such conflicts to deprive a defendant of his chosen attorney.
Id. at
486 U. S. 163.
While acknowledging that this was possible, we declined to fashion
the
per se constitutional rule petitioner sought in
Wheat, instead observing that "trial courts are
undoubtedly aware of [the] possibility" of abuse, and would have to
"take it into consideration" when dealing with disqualification
motions.
A similar approach should be taken here. The Constitution does
not forbid the imposition of an otherwise permissible criminal
sanction, such as forfeiture, merely because in some cases
prosecutors may abuse the processes available to them,
e.g., by attempting to impose them on persons who should
not be subjected to that punishment.
Cf. 397 U.
S.
Page 491 U. S. 635
United States, 397 U. S. 742,
397 U. S. 751,
and n. 8 (1970). Cases involving particular abuses can be dealt
with individually by the lower courts, when (and if) any such cases
arise.
IV
For the reasons given above, we find that petitioner's statutory
and constitutional challenges to the forfeiture imposed here are
without merit. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
therefore
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The forfeiture statute provides, in relevant part, that any
person convicted of a particular class of criminal offenses
"shall forfeit to the United States, irrespective of any
provision of State law -- "
"(1) any property constituting, or derived from, any proceeds
the person obtained, directly or indirectly, as the result of such
violation;"
"
* * * *"
"The court, in imposing sentence on such person, shall order, in
addition to any other sentence imposed . . . that the person
forfeit to the United States all property described in this
subsection."
21 U.S.C. § 853(a) (1982 ed., Supp. V).
There is no question here that the offenses respondent was
accused of in the indictment fell within the class of crimes
triggering this forfeiture provision.
[
Footnote 2]
The pretrial restraining order provision states that
"[u]pon application of the United States, the court may enter a
restraining order or injunction . . . or take any other action to
preserve the availability of property described in subsection (a)
of [§ 853] for forfeiture under this section -- "
"(A) upon the filing of an indictment or information charging a
violation . . . for which criminal forfeiture may be ordered under
[§ 853] and alleging that the property with respect to which
the order is sought would, in the event of conviction, be subject
to forfeiture under this section."
§ 853(e)(1).
[
Footnote 3]
The United States argues that petitioner lacks
jus
tertii standing to advance Reckmeyer's Sixth Amendment rights.
See Brief for United States 35, and n. 17. Though the
argument is not without force, we conclude that petitioner has the
requisite standing.
When a person or entity seeks standing to advance the
constitutional rights of others, we ask two questions: first, has
the litigant suffered some injury in fact adequate to satisfy
Article III's case-or-controversy requirement, and second, do
prudential considerations which we have identified in our prior
cases point to permitting the litigant to advance the claim?
See Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U. S. 106,
428 U. S. 112
(1976). As to the first inquiry, there can be little doubt that
petitioner's stake in $170,000 of the forfeited assets -- which it
would almost certainly receive if the Sixth Amendment claim it
advances here were vindicated -- is adequate injury-in-fact to meet
the constitutional minimum of Article III standing.
The second inquiry -- the prudential one -- is more difficult.
To answer this question, our cases have looked at three factors:
the relationship of the litigant to the person whose rights are
being asserted, the ability of the person to advance his own
rights, and the impact of the litigation on third-party interests.
See, e.g., Craig v. Boren, 429 U.
S. 190, 196 (1976);
Singleton v. Wulff, supra,
at
428 U. S.
113-118;
Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U.
S. 438,
405 U. S.
443-446 (1972). The second of these three factors
counsels against review here: as
Monsanto, ante, p.
491 U. S. 600,
illustrates, a criminal defendant suffers none of the obstacles
discussed in
Wulff, supra, at
428 U. S.
116-117, to advancing his own constitutional claim. We
think that the first and third factors, however, clearly weigh in
petitioner's favor. The attorney-client relationship between
petitioner and Reckmeyer, like the doctor-patient relationship in
Baird, is one of special consequence, and, like
Baird, it is credibly alleged that the statute at issue
here may "materially impair the ability of" third persons in
Reckmeyer's position to exercise their constitutional rights.
See Baird, supra, at
405 U. S. 445.
Petitioner therefore satisfies our requirements for
jus
tertii standing.
[
Footnote 4]
That section of the statute, which includes the so-called
"relation back" provision, states:
"All right, title, and interest in property described in [§
853] vests in the United States upon the commission of the act
giving rise to forfeiture under this section. Any such property
that is subsequently transferred to a person other than the
defendant may be the subject of a special verdict of forfeiture and
thereafter shall be forfeited to the United States, unless the
transferee establishes"
his entitlement to such property pursuant to § 853(n),
discussed
supra. 21 U.S.C. § 853(c) (1982 ed., Supp.
V).
[
Footnote 5]
It would be particularly odd to recognize the Sixth Amendment as
a defense to forfeiture, because forfeiture is a substantive charge
in the indictment against a defendant. Thus, petitioner asks us to
take the Sixth Amendment's guarantee of counsel "for his defense"
and make that guarantee petitioner's defense to the indictment. We
doubt that the Amendment's guarantees, which are procedural in
nature,
cf. Faretta v. California, 422 U.
S. 806,
422 U. S. 818
(1975), provide such a substantive defense to charges against an
accused.
[
Footnote 6]
For example, just one of the assets which Reckmeyer agreed to
forfeit, a parcel of land known as "Shelburne Glebe,"
see
App. 57 (forfeiture order), was recently sold by federal
authorities for $5.3 million. Washington Post, May 10, 1989, p. D1,
cols. 1-4. The proceeds of the sale will fund federal, state, and
local law enforcement activities.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 7]
We also reject the contention, advanced by
amici, see,
e.g., Brief for American Bar Association as
Amicus
Curiae 20-22, and accepted by some courts considering claims
like petitioner's,
see, e.g., United States v.
Rogers, 602
F. Supp. 1332, 1349-1350 (Colo.1985), that a type of "per se"
ineffective assistance of counsel results -- due to the particular
complexity of RICO or drug-enterprise cases -- when a defendant is
not permitted to use assets in his possession to retain counsel of
choice, and instead must rely on appointed counsel. If such an
argument were accepted, it would bar the trial of indigents charged
with such offenses, because those persons would have to rely on
appointed counsel -- which this view considers
per se
ineffective.
If appointed counsel is ineffective in a particular case, a
defendant has resort to the remedies discussed in
Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U. S. 668
(1984). But we cannot say that the Sixth Amendment's guarantee of
effective assistance of counsel is a guarantee of a privately
retained counsel in every complex case, irrespective of a
defendant's ability to pay.
[
Footnote 8]
See, e.g., Avco Delta Corporation Canada Ltd. v. United
States, 484 F.2d 692 (CA7 1973);
Summers v. United
States, 250 F.2d 132, 133-135 (CA9 1957);
United States v.
Brodson, 241 F.2d 107, 109-111 (CA7 1957) (en banc).
[
Footnote 9]
A myriad of other law enforcement mechanisms operate in a manner
similar to IRS jeopardy assessments, and might also be subjected to
Sixth Amendment invalidation if petitioner's claim were accepted.
See Brickey, Attorneys' Fee Forfeitures, 36 Emory L.J.
761, 770-772 (1987).
[
Footnote 10]
Petitioner advances three additional reasons for invalidating
the forfeiture statute, all of which concern possible ethical
conflicts created for lawyers defending persons facing forfeiture
of assets in their possession.
See Brief for Petitioner
35-37;
see also Brief for the American Bar Association as
Amicus Curiae 17-22.
Petitioner first notes the statute's exemption from forfeiture
of property transferred to a bona fide purchaser who was
"reasonably without cause to believe that the property was subject
to forfeiture." 21 U.S.C. § 853(n)(6)(B). This provision, it
is said, might give an attorney an incentive not to investigate a
defendant's case as fully as possible, so that the lawyer can
invoke it to protect from forfeiture any fees he has received. Yet
given the requirement that any assets which the Government wishes
to have forfeited must be specified in the indictment,
see
Fed.Rule Crim.Proc. 7(c)(2), the only way a lawyer could be a
beneficiary of § 853(n)(6)(B) would be to fail to read the
indictment of his client. In this light, the prospect that a lawyer
might find himself in conflict with his client, by seeking to take
advantage of § 853(n)(6)(B), amounts to very little.
Petitioner itself concedes that such a conflict will, as a
practical matter, never arise: a defendant's "lawyer . . . could
not demonstrate that he was
reasonably without cause to believe
that the property was subject to forfeiture,'" petitioner concludes
at one point. Brief for Petitioner 31.
The second possible conflict arises in plea bargaining:
petitioner posits that a lawyer may advise a client to accept an
agreement entailing a more harsh prison sentence but no forfeiture
-- even where contrary to the client's interests -- in an effort to
preserve the lawyer's fee. Following such a strategy, however,
would surely constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. We see
no reason why our cases such as
Strickland v. Washington,
466 U. S. 668
(1984), are inadequate to deal with any such ineffectiveness where
it arises. In any event, there is no claim that such conduct
occurred here, nor could there be, as Reckmeyer's plea agreement
included forfeiture of virtually every asset in his possession.
Moreover, we rejected a claim similar to this one in
Evans v.
Jeff D., 475 U. S. 717,
475 U. S.
727-728 (1986).
Finally, petitioner argues that the forfeiture statute, in
operation, will create a system akin to "contingency fees" for
defense lawyers: only a defense lawyer who wins acquittal for his
client will be able to collect his fees, and contingent fees in
criminal cases are generally considered unethical.
See ABA
Model Rule of Professional Conduct 1.5(d)(2) (1983); ABA Model Code
of Professional Responsibility DR 2-106(C) (1979). But there is no
indication here that petitioner, or any other firm, has actually
sought to charge a defendant on a contingency basis; rather the
claim is that a law firm's prospect of collecting its fee may turn
on the outcome at trial. This, however, may often be the case in
criminal defense work. Nor is it clear why permitting contingent
fees in criminal cases -- if that is what the forfeiture statute
does -- violates a criminal defendant's Sixth Amendment rights. The
fact that a federal statutory scheme authorizing contingency fees
-- again, if that is what Congress has created in § 853(a
premise we doubt) -- is at odds with model disciplinary rules or
state disciplinary codes hardly renders the federal statute
invalid.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN, JUSTICE MARSHALL,
and JUSTICE STEVENS join, dissenting.
*
Those jurists who have held forth against the result the
majority reaches in these cases have been guided by one core
insight: that it is unseemly and unjust for the Government to
beggar those it prosecutes in order to disable their defense at
trial. The majority trivializes "the burden the forfeiture law
imposes on a criminal defendant."
Caplin & Drysdale,
Chartered v. United States, ante at
491 U. S. 625.
Instead, it should heed the warnings of our district court judges,
whose day-to-day exposure to the criminal trial process enables
them to understand, perhaps far better than we, the devastating
consequences of attorney's fee forfeiture for the integrity of our
adversarial system of justice. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 491 U. S. 636
The criminal forfeiture statute we consider today could have
been interpreted to avoid depriving defendants of the ability to
retain private counsel -- and should have been so interpreted,
given the grave "constitutional and ethical problems" raised by the
forfeiture of funds used to pay legitimate counsel fees.
United
States v. Badalamenti, 614 F.
Supp. 194, 196 (SDNY 1985). But even if Congress in fact
required this substantial incursion on the defendant's choice of
counsel, the Court should have recognized that the Framers stripped
Congress of the power to do so when they added the Sixth Amendment
to our Constitution.
I
The majority acknowledges, as it must, that no language in the
Comprehensive Forfeiture Act of 1984 (Act), ch. 3, 98 Stat. 2040,
as amended, codified in relevant part at 21 U.S.C. §
853
et seq. (1982 ed., Supp. V), expressly provides for
the forfeiture of attorney's fees, and that the legislative history
contains no substantive discussion of the question.
United
States v. Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S.
608-609, and n. 8. [
Footnote
2/2] The fact that
"the legislative history and congressional debates are similarly
silent on the use of forfeitable assets to pay stockbroker's fees,
laundry bills, or country club memberships,"
ante at
491 U. S.
608-609, means nothing, for one cannot believe that
Congress was unaware that interference with the payment of
attorney's fees, unlike interference with these other expenditures,
would raise Sixth Amendment concerns.
See Edward J. DeBartolo
Corp. v. Florida Gulf Coast Building & Construction Trades
Council, 485 U. S. 568,
485 U. S. 575
(1988).
Page 491 U. S. 637
Despite the absence of any indication that Congress intended to
use the forfeiture weapon against legitimate attorney's fees, the
majority -- all the while purporting to "respect" the established
practice of construing a statute to avoid constitutional problems,
Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S. 611 -- contends that it is constrained to
conclude that the Act reaches attorney's fees. The Court cannot
follow its usual practice here, we are told, because this is not a
"close cas[e]" in which "statutory language is ambiguous."
Ibid. The majority finds unambiguous language in §
853(a) of the Act, which provides that, when a defendant is
convicted of certain crimes, the defendant "shall forfeit to the
United States" any property derived from proceeds of the crime or
used to facilitate the crime. I agree that § 853(a) is broad
in language, and is cast in mandatory terms. [
Footnote 2/3] But I do not agree with the majority's
conclusion that the lack of an express exemption for attorney's
fees in § 853(a) makes the Act,
as a whole,
unambiguous.
The majority succeeds in portraying the Act as "unambiguous" by
making light of its most relevant provisions. As Judge Winter
observed, the broad mandatory language of § 853(a) applies by
its terms only to "
any person convicted' of the referenced
crimes." United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d 1400, 1410
(CA2 1988). Because third parties to whom assets have been
transferred in return for services rendered are not "person[s]
convicted," however, forfeiture of property in their possession is
controlled by § 853(c), rather than by § 853(a). Section
853(c) provides:
"Any such property that is subsequently transferred to a person
other than the defendant
may be the subject of a special
verdict of forfeiture and thereafter shall be ordered
forfeited to the United States"
(emphasis added) if the third party fails to satisfy certain
Page 491 U. S. 638
requirements for exemption. Thus, § 853(c) does not, like
§ 853(a), provide that all property defined as forfeitable
under § 853 "must" or "shall" be forfeited: [
Footnote 2/4] forfeitable property held by a third
party presumptively "shall be ordered forfeited" only if it is
included in the special verdict, and its inclusion in the verdict
is discretionary. [
Footnote
2/5]
There is also considerable room for discretion in the language
of § 853(e)(1), which controls the Government's use of
postindictment protective orders to prevent the preconviction
transfer of potentially forfeitable assets to third parties. That
section provides:
"Upon application of the United States, the court
may enter
a restraining order or injunction . . . or take any
Page 491 U. S. 639
other action to preserve the availability of property . . . for
forfeiture under this section . . . upon the filing of an
indictment or information charging a violation . . . for which
criminal forfeiture may be ordered . . . and alleging that the
property with respect to which the order is sought would, in the
event of conviction, be subject to forfeiture under this
section."
(Emphasis added.) The Senate Report makes clear that a district
court may hold a hearing to "consider factors bearing on the
reasonableness of the order sought." S.Rep. No. 98-225, p. 202
(1983). Even if the court chooses to enter an order
ex
parte at the Government's request, it may "modify the order"
if it later proves to be unreasonable.
Id. at 203. In the
course of this process, the court may also consider the
circumstances of any third party whose interests are implicated by
the restraining order.
Id. at 206, n. 42. Thus, the
Government does not have an absolute right to an order preserving
the availability of property by barring its transfer to third
parties. Preconviction injunctive relief is available, but at the
discretion of the district court.
The majority does not deny that §§ 853(c) and
853(e)(1) contain discretionary language. It argues, however, that
the exercise of discretion must be "cabined by the purposes" of the
Act.
Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S. 613.
That proposition, of course, is unassailable: I agree that
discretion created by the Act cannot be used to defeat the purposes
of the Act. The majority errs, however, in taking an overly broad
view of the Act's purposes.
Under the majority's view, the Act aims to preserve the
availability of
all potentially forfeitable property
during the preconviction period, and to achieve the forfeiture of
all such property upon conviction.
Monsanto, ante
at
491 U. S. 613.
This view of the Act's purposes effectively writes all discretion
out of §§ 853(c) and 853(e)(1), because any exercise of
discretion will diminish the Government's postconviction "take."
But a review of the legislative history of the Act demonstrates
that
Page 491 U. S. 640
the Act does not seek forfeiture of property for its own sake
merely to maximize the amount of money the Government collects.
[
Footnote 2/6] The central purposes
of the Act, properly understood, are fully served by an approach to
forfeiture that leaves ample room for the exercise of statutory
discretion.
Congress' most systematic goal for criminal forfeiture was to
prevent the profits of criminal activity from being poured into
future such activity, for "it is through economic power that
[criminal activity] is sustained and grows." Senate Report at
191.
"Congress recognized in its enactment of statutes specifically
addressing organized crime and illegal drugs that the conviction of
individual racketeers and drug dealers would be of only limited
effectiveness if the economic power bases of criminal organizations
or enterprises were left intact, and so included forfeiture
authority designed to strip these offenders and organizations of
their economic power."
Ibid.; see also H.R.Rep. No. 98-845, pt. 1, p. 6 (1984)
(criminal forfeiture statutes are "a bold attempt to attack the
economic base of the criminal activity"). [
Footnote 2/7]
Page 491 U. S. 641
Congress also had a more traditional punitive goal in mind: to
strip convicted criminals of all assets purchased with the proceeds
of their criminal activities. Particularly in the area of drug
trafficking, Congress concluded that crime had become too lucrative
for criminals to be deterred by conventional punishments.
"Drug dealers have been able to accumulate huge fortunes as a
result of their illegal activities. The sad truth is that the
financial penalties for drug dealing are frequently only seen by
dealers as a cost of doing business."
Id. at 2. The image of convicted drug dealers returning
home from their prison terms to all the comforts their criminal
activity can buy is one Congress could not abide. [
Footnote 2/8]
Finally, Congress was acutely aware that defendants, if
unhindered, routinely would defeat the purposes of the Act by
sheltering their assets in order to preserve them for their own
future use and for the continued use of their criminal
organizations. The purpose of § 853(c) is to
"to permit the voiding of certain preconviction transfers and so
close a potential loophole in current law whereby the criminal
forfeiture sanction could be avoided by transfers that were not
'arms' length' transactions."
Senate Report at 200-201.
With these purposes in mind, it becomes clear that a district
court acts within the bounds of its statutory discretion
Page 491 U. S. 642
when it exempts from preconviction restraint and postconviction
forfeiture those assets a defendant needs to retain private counsel
for his criminal trial. Assets used to retain counsel, by
definition, will be unavailable to the defendant or his criminal
organization after trial, even if the defendant is eventually
acquitted.
See Cloud, Government Intrusions Into the
Attorney-Client Relationship: The Impact of Fee Forfeitures on the
Balance of Power in the Adversary System of Criminal Justice, 36
Emory L.J. 817, 832 (1987). Thus, no important and legitimate
purpose is served by employing § 853(c) to require
postconviction forfeiture of funds used for legitimate attorney's
fees, or by employing § 853(e)(1) to bar preconviction payment
of fees. The Government's interests are adequately protected so
long as the district court supervises transfers to the attorney to
make sure they are made in good faith. [
Footnote 2/9]
See Comment, 61 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 124,
138-139 (1986). All that is lost is the Government's power to
punish the defendant before he is convicted. That power is not one
the Act intended to grant. [
Footnote
2/10]
Page 491 U. S. 643
A careful analysis of the language of the Act and its
legislative history thus proves that "a construction of the statute
is fairly possible by which the [constitutional] question may be
avoided."
Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S.
22,
285 U. S. 62
(1932). [
Footnote 2/11] Indeed,
the prudentially preferable construction is also the only one that
gives full effect to the discretionary language in §§
853(c) and 853(e)(1). Thus,
"if anything remains of the canon that statutes capable of
differing interpretations should be construed to avoid
constitutional issues . . . it surely applies here."
United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d at 1409.
Page 491 U. S. 644
II
The majority has decided otherwise, however, and for that reason
is compelled to reach the constitutional issue it could have
avoided. But the majority pauses hardly long enough to acknowledge
"the Sixth Amendment's protection of one's right to retain counsel
of his choosing," let alone to explore its "full extent."
Caplin & Drysdale, ante, at
491 U. S. 626.
Instead,
ante at
491 U. S. 624,
it moves rapidly from the observation that "
[a] defendant may
not insist on representation by an attorney he cannot afford,'"
quoting Wheat v. United States, 486 U.
S. 153, 486 U. S. 159
(1988), to the conclusion that the Government is free to deem the
defendant indigent by declaring his assets "tainted" by criminal
activity the Government has yet to prove. That the majority
implicitly finds the Sixth Amendment right to counsel of choice so
insubstantial that it can be outweighed by a legal fiction
demonstrates, still once again, its "`apparent unawareness of the
function of the independent lawyer as a guardian of our freedom.'"
See id. at 486 U. S. 172
(STEVENS, J., dissenting), quoting Walters v. National Assn. of
Radiation Survivors, 473 U. S. 305,
473 U. S. 371
(1985) (STEVENS, J., dissenting).
A
Over 50 years ago, this Court observed:
"It is hardly necessary to say that the right to counsel being
conceded, a defendant should be afforded a fair opportunity to
secure counsel of his own choice."
Powell v. Alabama, 287 U. S. 45,
287 U. S. 53
(1932). For years, that proposition was settled; the controversial
question was whether the defendant's right to use his own funds to
retain his chosen counsel was the outer limit of the right
protected by the Sixth Amendment.
See, e.g., Chandler v.
Fretag, 348 U. S. 3,
348 U. S. 9
(1954). The Court's subsequent decisions have made clear that an
indigent defendant has the right to appointed counsel,
see,
e.g., 372 U. S.
Page 491 U. S. 645
Wainwright, 372 U. S. 335
(1963), and that the Sixth Amendment guarantees at least minimally
effective assistance of counsel,
see, e.g., Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U. S. 668
(1984). But while court appointment of effective counsel plays a
crucial role in safeguarding the fairness of criminal trials, it
has never defined the outer limits of the Sixth Amendment's
demands. The majority's decision in
Caplin & Drysdale
reveals that it has lost track of the distinct role of the right to
counsel of choice in protecting the integrity of the judicial
process, a role that makes "the right to be represented by
privately retained counsel . . . the primary, preferred component
of the basic right" protected by the Sixth Amendment.
United
States v. Harvey, 814 F.2d 905, 923 (CA4 1987),
rev'd sub
nom. In re Forfeiture Hearing as to Caplin & Drysdale,
Chartered, 837 F.2d 637 (CA4 1988) (en banc).
The right to retain private counsel serves to foster the trust
between attorney and client that is necessary for the attorney to
be a truly effective advocate.
See ABA Standards for
Criminal Justice 4-3.1, p. 4-29 (commentary) (2d ed.1980). Not only
are decisions crucial to the defendant's liberty placed in
counsel's hands,
see Faretta v. California, 422 U.
S. 806 (1975), but the defendant's perception of the
fairness of the process, and his willingness to acquiesce in its
results, depend upon his confidence in his counsel's dedication,
loyalty, and ability.
Cf. Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee
v. McGrath, 341 U. S. 123,
341 U. S.
171-172 (1951) (Frankfurter, J., concurring). When the
Government insists upon the right to choose the defendant's counsel
for him, that relationship of trust is undermined: counsel is too
readily perceived as the Government's agent, rather than his own.
Indeed, when the Court, in
Faretta, held that the Sixth
Amendment prohibits a court from imposing appointed counsel on a
defendant who prefers to represent himself, its decision was
predicated on the insight that "[t]o force a lawyer
Page 491 U. S. 646
on a defendant can only lead him to believe that the law
contrives against him." 422 U.S. at
422 U. S.
834.
The right to retain private counsel also serves to assure some
modicum of equality between the Government and those it chooses to
prosecute. The Government can be expected to "spend vast sums of
money . . . to try defendants accused of crime,"
Gideon v.
Wainwright, 372 U.S. at
372 U. S. 344,
and of course will devote greater resources to complex cases in
which the punitive stakes are high. Precisely for this reason,
"there are few defendants charged with crime, few indeed, who
fail to hire the best lawyers they can get to prepare and present
their defenses."
Ibid. But when the Government provides for appointed
counsel, there is no guarantee that levels of compensation and
staffing will be even average. [
Footnote 2/12] Where cases are complex, trials long,
and stakes high, that problem is exacerbated. "Despite the legal
profession's commitment to
pro bono work,"
United
States v. Bassett, 632 F.
Supp. 1308, 1316 (Md.1986),
aff'd, on other grounds sub
nom. United States v. Harvey, 814 F.2d 905 (CA4 1987), even
the best-intentioned of attorneys may have no choice but to decline
the task of representing defendants in cases for which they will
not receive adequate compensation.
See, e.g., United States v.
Rogers, 602
F. Supp. 1332, 1349 (Colo.1985). Over the long haul, the result
of lowered compensation levels will be that talented attorneys will
"decline to enter criminal practice. . . . This exodus of
talented
Page 491 U. S. 647
attorneys could devastate the criminal defense bar." Winick,
Forfeiture of Attorneys' Fees under RICO and CCE and the Right to
Counsel of Choice: The Constitutional Dilemma and How to Avoid It,
43 U. Miami L.Rev. 765, 781 (1989). Without the defendant's right
to retain private counsel, the Government too readily could defeat
its adversaries simply by outspending them. [
Footnote 2/13]
The right to privately chosen and compensated counsel also
serves broader institutional interests. The "virtual socialization
of criminal defense work in this country" that would be the result
of a widespread abandonment of the right to retain chosen counsel,
Brief for Committees on Criminal Advocacy and Criminal Law of the
Association of the Bar of the City of New York
et al. as
Amici Curiae in No. 88-454, p. 9, too readily would
standardize the provision of criminal defense services and diminish
defense counsel's independence. There is a place in our system of
criminal justice for the maverick and the risk-taker, and for
approaches that might not fit into the structured environment of a
public defender's office, or that might displease a judge whose
preference for nonconfrontational styles of advocacy might
influence the judge's appointment decisions.
See Bazelon,
The Defective Assistance of Counsel, 42 U.Cin.L.Rev. 1, 6-7 (1973);
S. Kadish, S. Schulhofer, & M. Paulsen, Criminal Law and its
Processes 32 (4th ed.1983);
cf. Sacher v. United States,
343 U. S. 1,
343 U. S. 8-9
(1952) ("The nature of the proceedings presupposes, or at least
stimulates, zeal in the opposing lawyers"). There is also a place
for the employment of "specialized defense counsel" for technical
and complex cases,
see United States v. Thier, 801 F.2d
1463, 1476 (CA5 1986) (concurring opinion),
modification not
relevant here, 809 F.2d 249 (1987). The choice of counsel is
the primary means for the defendant to establish the kind of
defense he will put forward.
See
Page 491 U. S. 648
United States v. Laura, 607 F.2d 52, 56 (CA3 1979).
Only a healthy, independent defense bar can be expected to meet the
demands of the varied circumstances faced by criminal defendants
and assure that the interests of the individual defendant are not
unduly "subordinat[ed] . . . to the needs of the system." Bazelon,
42 U. Cin.L.Rev. at 7.
In sum, our chosen system of criminal justice is built upon a
truly equal and adversarial presentation of the case, and upon the
trust that can exist only when counsel is independent of the
Government. Without the right, reasonably exercised, to counsel of
choice, the effectiveness of that system is imperiled.
B
Had it been Congress' express aim to undermine the adversary
system as we know it, it could hardly have found a better engine of
destruction than attorney's fee forfeiture. The main effect of
forfeitures under the Act, of course, will be to deny the defendant
the right to retain counsel, and therefore the right to have his
defense designed and presented by an attorney he has chosen and
trusts. [
Footnote 2/14] If the
Government restrains the defendant's assets before trial, private
counsel will be unwilling to continue, or to take on, the defense.
Even if no restraining order is entered, the possibility of
forfeiture after conviction will itself substantially
Page 491 U. S. 649
diminish the likelihood that private counsel will agree to take
the case. The
"message [to private counsel] is
Do not represent this
defendant or you will lose your fee.' That being the kind of
message lawyers are likely to take seriously, the defendant will
find it difficult or impossible to secure representation."
United States v. Badalamenti, 614 F. Supp. at 196.
The resulting relationship between the defendant and his
court-appointed counsel will likely begin in distrust, and be
exacerbated to the extent that the defendant perceives his
new-found "indigency" as a form of punishment imposed by the
Government in order to weaken his defense. If the defendant had
been represented by private counsel earlier in the proceedings, the
defendant's sense that the Government has stripped him of his
defenses will be sharpened by the concreteness of his loss.
Appointed counsel may be inexperienced and undercompensated and,
for that reason, may not have adequate opportunity or resources to
deal with the special problems presented by what is likely to be a
complex trial. The already scarce resources of a public defender's
office will be stretched to the limit. Facing a lengthy trial
against a better-armed adversary, the temptation to recommend a
guilty plea will be great. The result, if the defendant is
convicted, will be a sense, often well grounded, that justice was
not done.
Even if the defendant finds a private attorney who is "so
foolish, ignorant, beholden or idealistic as to take the business,"
ibid., the attorney-client relationship will be undermined
by the forfeiture statute. Perhaps the attorney will be willing to
violate ethical norms by working on a contingent fee basis in a
criminal case.
See Caplin & Drysdale, ante at
491 U. S. 633,
n. 10. But if he is not -- and we should question the integrity of
any criminal defense attorney who would violate the ethical norms
of the profession by doing so -- the attorney's own interests will
dictate that he remain ignorant of the source of the assets from
which he is paid. Under § 853(c), a
Page 491 U. S. 650
third-party transferee may keep assets if
"the transferee establishes . . . that he is a bona fide
purchaser for value of such property who at the time of purchase
was reasonably without cause to believe that the property was
subject to forfeiture under this section."
The less an attorney knows, the greater the likelihood that he
can claim to have been an "innocent" third party. The attorney's
interest in knowing nothing is directly adverse to his client's
interest in full disclosure. The result of the conflict may be a
less vigorous investigation of the defendant's circumstances,
leading in turn to a failure to recognize or pursue avenues of
inquiry necessary to the defense. Other conflicts of interest are
also likely to develop. The attorney who fears for his fee will be
tempted to make the Government's waiver of fee forfeiture the
sine qua non for any plea agreement, a position which
conflicts with his client's best interests.
See United States
v. Badalamenti, 614 F.Supp. at 196-197;
United States v.
Bassett, 632 F. Supp. at 1316, n. 5.
Perhaps most troubling is the fact that forfeiture statutes
place the Government in the position to exercise an intolerable
degree of power over any private attorney who takes on the task of
representing a defendant in a forfeiture case. The decision whether
to seek a restraining order rests with the prosecution, as does the
decision whether to waive forfeiture upon a plea of guilty or a
conviction at trial. The Government will be ever tempted to use the
forfeiture weapon against a defense attorney who is particularly
talented or aggressive on the client's behalf -- the attorney who
is better than what, in the Government's view, the defendant
deserves. The specter of the Government's selectively excluding
only the most talented defense counsel is a serious threat to the
equality of forces necessary for the adversarial system to perform
at its best.
See United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d at
1404 (concurring opinion);
United States v. Rogers, 602 F.
Supp. at 1347, 1350; Cloud, 36 Emory L.J., at 829. An attorney
whose fees are potentially
Page 491 U. S. 651
subject to forfeiture will be forced to operate in an
environment in which the Government is not only the defendant's
adversary, but also his own.
The long-term effects of the fee forfeiture practice will be to
decimate the private criminal defense bar. As the use of the
forfeiture mechanism expands to new categories of federal crimes
and spreads to the States, only one class of defendants will be
free routinely to retain private counsel: the affluent defendant
accused of a crime that generates no economic gain. As the number
of private clients diminishes, only the most idealistic and the
least skilled of young lawyers will be attracted to the field,
while the remainder seek greener pastures elsewhere.
See
Winick, 43 U. Miami L.Rev. at 781-782.
In short, attorney's fee forfeiture substantially undermines
every interest served by the Sixth Amendment right to chosen
counsel, on the individual and institutional levels, over the
short-term and the long haul.
C
We have recognized that, although there is a "presumption in
favor of [the defendant's] counsel of choice,"
Wheat v. United
States, 486 U.S. at
486 U. S. 158,
486 U. S. 160,
the right to counsel of choice is not absolute. Some substantial
and legitimate governmental interests may require the courts to
disturb the defendant's choice of counsel, as "[w]hen a defendant's
selection of counsel, under the particular facts and circumstances
of a case, gravely imperils the prospect of a fair trial,"
id. at
486 U. S. 166
(MARSHALL, J., dissenting), or threatens to undermine the orderly
disposition of the case,
see Ungar v. Sarafite,
376 U. S. 575,
376 U. S. 589
(1964). But never before today has the Court suggested that the
Government's naked desire to deprive a defendant of "
the best
counsel money can buy,'" Caplin & Drysdale, ante at
491 U. S. 630,
quoting Morris v. Slappy, 461 U. S.
1, 461 U. S. 23
(1983) (BRENNAN, J., opinion concurring in result), is itself a
legitimate Government interest that can justify the
Page 491 U. S. 652
Government's interference with the defendant's right to chosen
counsel -- and for good reason.
"[W]eakening the ability of an accused to defend himself at
trial is an advantage for the government. But it is not a
legitimate government interest that can be used to justify invasion
of a constitutional right."
United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d at 1403 (Feinberg,
C.J., concurring). And the legitimate interests the Government
asserts are extremely weak, far too weak to justify the Act's
substantial erosion of the defendant's Sixth Amendment rights.
The Government claims a property interest in forfeitable assets,
predicated on the relation-back provision, § 853(c), which
employs a legal fiction to grant the Government title in all
forfeitable property as of the date of the crime. The majority
states:
"Permitting a defendant to use assets for his private purposes
that, under this provision, will become the property of the United
States if conviction occurs, cannot be sanctioned."
Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S. 613.
But the Government's insistence that it has a paramount interest in
the defendant's resources
"simply begs the constitutional question, rather than answering
it. Indeed, the ultimate constitutional issue might well be framed
precisely as whether Congress may use this wholly fictive device of
property law to cut off this fundamental right of the accused in a
criminal case. If the right must yield here to countervailing
governmental interests, the relation-back device undoubtedly could
be used to implement the governmental interests, but surely it
cannot serve as a substitute for them."
In re Forfeiture Hearing as to Caplin & Drysdale,
Chartered, 837 F.2d at 652 (dissenting opinion).
Furthermore, the relation-back fiction gives the Government no
property interest whatsoever in the defendant's assets before the
defendant is convicted. In most instances, the assets the
Government attempts to reach by using the forfeiture provisions of
the Act are derivative proceeds of crime, property that was not
itself acquired illegally, but was purchased with the profits of
criminal activity. Prior to conviction,
Page 491 U. S. 653
sole title to such assets -- not merely possession, as is the
case in the majority's bank robbery example,
Caplin &
Drysdale, ante at
491 U. S. 626
-- rests in the defendant; no other party has any present legal
claim to them. [
Footnote 2/15]
Yet it is in the preconviction period that the forfeiture threat
(or the force of a § 853(e)(1) restraining order) deprives the
defendant of use of the assets to retain counsel. The Government's
interest in the assets at the time of their restraint is no more
than an interest in safeguarding fictive property rights, one which
hardly weighs at all against the defendant's formidable Sixth
Amendment right to retain counsel for his defense.
The majority contends, of course, that assets are only
restrained upon a finding of probable cause to believe that the
property ultimately will be proved forfeitable, and that, because
"the Government may restrain persons where there is a finding of
probable cause that the accused has committed a serious offense,"
the Government necessarily has the right to
Page 491 U. S. 654
restrain property the defendant seeks to use to retain counsel
on a showing of probable cause as well.
Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S.
615-616, citing
United States v. Salerno,
481 U. S. 739
(1987). Neither the majority's premise nor its conclusion is well
founded.
Although obtaining a restraining order requires a showing of
probable cause, the practical effects of the threat of forfeiture
are felt long before the indictment stage. Any attorney who is
asked to represent the target of a drug or racketeering
investigation -- or even a routine tax investigation, as the facts
of
Caplin & Drysdale demonstrate -- must think ahead
to the possibility that the defendant's assets will turn out to be
forfeitable. While the defendant is not formally restrained from
using his assets to pay counsel during this period, the reluctance
of any attorney to represent the defendant in the face of the
forfeiture threat effectively strips the defendant of the right to
retain counsel. The threat of forfeiture does its damage long
before the Government must come forward with a showing of probable
cause.
But even if the majority were correct that no defendant is ever
deprived of the right to retain counsel without a showing of
probable cause, the majority's analogy to permissible pretrial
restraints would fail. The Act gives the Government the right to
seek a restraining order solely on the basis of the indictment,
which signifies that there has been a finding of probable cause to
believe that the assets are tainted. When a defendant otherwise is
incarcerated before trial, in contrast, the restraint cannot be
justified by the fact of the indictment alone. In addition, there
must be a showing that other alternatives will not "reasonably
assure the appearance of the person [for trial] and the safety of
any other person and the community." 18 U.S.C. § 3142(e) (1982
ed., Supp. V). No equivalent individualized showing that the
defendant will likely dissipate his assets or fraudulently transfer
them to third parties is necessary under the majority's reading of
§ 853(e)(1). Furthermore, the potential danger resulting
Page 491 U. S. 655
from the failure to restrain assets differs in kind and severity
from the danger faced by the public when a defendant who is
believed to be violent remains at large before trial.
Finally, even if the Government's asserted interests were
entitled to some weight, the manner in which the Government has
chosen to protect them undercuts its position. Under § 853(c),
a third-party transferee may keep assets if he was "reasonably
without cause to believe that the property was subject to
forfeiture." Most legitimate providers of services will meet the
requirements for this statutory exemption. The exception is the
defendant's attorney, who cannot do his job (or at least cannot do
his job well) without asking questions that will reveal the source
of the defendant's assets. It is difficult to put great weight on
the Government's interest in increasing the amount of property
available for forfeiture when the means chosen are so starkly
under-inclusive, and the burdens fall almost exclusively upon the
exercise of a constitutional right. [
Footnote 2/16]
Interests as ephemeral as these should not be permitted to
defeat the defendant's right to the assistance of his chosen
counsel.
III
In my view, the Act as interpreted by the majority is
inconsistent with the intent of Congress, and seriously
undermines
Page 491 U. S. 656
the basic fairness of our criminal justice system. That a
majority of this Court has upheld the constitutionality of the Act
as so interpreted will not deter Congress, I hope, from amending
the Act to make clear that Congress did not intend this result.
This Court has the power to declare the Act constitutional, but it
cannot thereby make it wise.
I dissent.
* [This opinion applies also to No. 88-454,
United States v.
Monsanto, ante, p.
491 U. S.
600.]
[
Footnote 2/1]
See, e.g., United States v. Rogers, 602 F.
Supp. 1332 (Colo. 1985);
United States v.
Badalamenti, 614 F.
Supp. 194 (SDNY 1985);
United States v.
Reckmeyer, 631 F.
Supp. 1191, 1197 (ED Va. 1986),
aff'd, on other grounds sub
nom. United States v. Harvey, 814 F.2d 905 (CA4 1987),
rev'd sub nom. In re Forfeiture Hearing as to Caplin &
Drysdale, Chartered, 837 F.2d 637 (CA4 1988) (en banc);
United States v. Bassett, 632
F. Supp. 1308, 1317 (Md. 1986),
aff'd on other grounds sub
nom. United States v. Harvey, 814 F.2d 905 (CA4 1987);
United States v. Ianniello, 644 F.
Supp. 452 (SDNY 1985);
United States v.
Estevez, 645 F.
Supp. 869 (ED Wis. 1986),
app. dism'd for
untimeliness, 852 F.2d 239 (CA7 1988).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Indeed, the strongest statement on the question is the comment
in the House Report: "Nothing in this section is intended to
interfere with a person's Sixth Amendment right to counsel."
H.R.Rep. No. 98-845, pt. 1, p. 19, n. 1 (1984). Even if the
majority were correct that this statement is "nothing more than an
exhortation for the courts to tread carefully in this delicate
area,"
United States v. Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S. 609,
n. 8, the majority does not explain why it proceeds to ignore
Congress' exhortation to construe the statute to avoid implicating
Sixth Amendment concerns.
[
Footnote 2/3]
As the majority acknowledges, so did Judge Winter, whose
interpretation of the Act Caplin & Drysdale and Monsanto adopt
in their briefs to this Court.
See Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S. 607;
United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d 1400, 1409-1410 (CA2
1988) (en banc) (Winter, J., concurring).
[
Footnote 2/4]
This language differs from the language in Federal Rule of
Criminal Procedure 31(e), which was promulgated in 1972 to provide
procedural rules for Congress' earlier forays into criminal
forfeiture. The Rule provides:
"If the indictment or the information alleges that an interest
or property is subject to criminal forfeiture, a special verdict
shall be returned as to the extent of the interest or
property subject to forfeiture, if any."
(Emphasis added.) Congress' decision to depart from mandatory
language in § 853(c), where it fashioned a special verdict
provision for assets transferred to third parties, is
significant.
[
Footnote 2/5]
That the Act is mandatory in its treatment of forfeiture of
property in the defendant's hands, but not in its treatment of
property transferred to third parties, is consistent with the
distinction between civil forfeiture and criminal forfeiture. The
theory (or, more properly, the fiction) underlying civil forfeiture
is that the property subject to forfeiture is itself tainted by
having been used in an unlawful manner. The right of the Government
to take possession does not depend on the Government's ultimately
convicting the person who used the property in an unlawful way, nor
is it diminished by the innocence or
bona fides of the
party into whose hands the property falls.
See United States v.
Stowell, 133 U. S. 1 (1890).
Criminal forfeiture, in contrast, is penal in nature: it is
predicated on the adjudicated guilt of the defendant, and has
punishment of the defendant as its express purpose.
See
generally Cloud, Forfeiting Defense Attorneys' Fees: Applying
an Institutional Role Theory to Define Individual Constitutional
Rights, 1987 Wis.L.Rev. 1, 18-19. Where the purpose of forfeiture
is to punish the defendant, the Government's penal interests are
weakest when the punishment also burdens third parties.
[
Footnote 2/6]
In adopting this view of the Act, the majority ignores the
Government's concession at oral argument before the en banc Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit that the Act was not enacted as a
revenue-raising measure.
See United States v. Monsanto,
852 F.2d at 1407, and n. 1 (Winter J., concurring). Thus, although
the Government's interest in "using the profits of crime to fund
[law enforcement] activities" should perhaps not be "discounted,"
Caplin & Drysdale, ante at
491 U. S. 629,
it is not dispositive. Nor does Congress' willingness to return
forfeited funds to victims of crime instead of using them for law
enforcement purposes indicate that restitution is a primary goal of
the Act.
See ante at
491 U. S.
629-630. Restitution, in any event, is not a likely
result in the typical case for which the Act was designed: one in
which the property forfeited consists of derivative proceeds of
illegal activity, rather than of stolen property that is readily
traceable to a particular victim.
See Cloud, 1987
Wis.L.Rev. at 20.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The majority contends that
"the desire to lessen the economic power of organized crime and
drug enterprises . . . includes the use of such economic power to
retain private counsel."
Caplin & Drysdale, ante at
491 U. S. 630.
"The notion that the Government has a legitimate interest in
depriving criminals" -- before they are convicted -- "of economic
power, even insofar as that power is used to retain counsel of
choice" is more than just "somewhat unsettling," as the majority
suggests.
Ibid. That notion is constitutionally suspect,
and -- equally important for present purposes -- completely foreign
to Congress' stated goals. The purpose of the relation-back
provision is to assure that assets proved at trial to be the
product of criminal activity cannot be channeled into further
criminal activity -- not to strip defendants of their assets on no
more than a showing of probable cause that they are "tainted."
See United States v. Bassett, 632 F. Supp. at 1316;
Comment, 61 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 124, 139 (1986). For its contrary view,
the majority relies on nothing more than the rhetoric of the en
banc Court of Appeals' majority opinion in
Caplin &
Drysdale.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Congress' desire to maximize punishment, however, cannot be
viewed as a blanket authorization of Government action that
punishes the defendant before he is proved guilty.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Judge Winter noted that the same logic suggests that the
forfeiture of assets the defendant uses to support himself and his
family is unduly harsh, and is not necessary to achieve the goals
of the Act.
United States v. Monsanto, 852 F.2d at 1405.
The majority chides Judge Winter for suggesting that, once it is
established that there is discretion to exclude assets used to pay
attorney's fees and normal living expenses from forfeiture, the
necessary result is that such assets
must be excluded.
Monsanto, ante at
491 U. S. 612-613. I find it exceedingly unlikely that a
district court, instructed that it had the discretion to permit a
defendant to retain counsel, would ever choose not to do so. Normal
equitable considerations, combined with a proper regard for Sixth
Amendment interests, would weigh so strongly in favor of that
result that any "slippage" from permissive to mandatory language on
Judge Winter's part seems to me entirely accurate as a predictive
matter.
[
Footnote 2/10]
The majority states in
Monsanto, ante at 610-
491 U. S. 611,
that another forfeiture statute contemporaneous with the Act
contains "the
precise exemption from forfeiture which
respondent asks us to imply into § 853," and suggests that
this is evidence that "Congress understood what it was doing in
omitting such an exemption" from the Act. This argument is
makeweight. The express exemption to which the majority refers
involves the use of proceeds from publications and other accounts
of a crime to:
"(i) satisfy a money judgment rendered in any court in favor of
a victim of any offense for which such defendant has been
convicted, or a legal representative of such victim; and"
"(ii) pay for legal representation of the defendant in matters
arising from the offense for which such defendant has been
convicted, but no more than 20 percent of the total proceeds
may be so used."
Pub.L. 98-473, § 1406(c)(1)(B), 98 Stat. 2175,
codified
as 18 U.S.C. § 3681(c)(1)(B) (1982 ed., Supp. V)
(emphasis added). When this provision is read in context, it is
clear that it concerns payment of attorney's fees related to
post-conviction civil suits brought against convicted defendants by
their victims. It does not, therefore, constitute the "precise
exemption" sought in these cases. Indeed, the provision cuts
against the result the majority reaches. In light of Congress'
decision to permit a convicted criminal to use wealth he has
obtained by publicizing his crime to hire counsel to resist his
victim's damages claims, it would be bizarre to think that Congress
intended to be more punitive when it comes to a defendant's need
for counsel
prior to conviction, when the defendant's own
liberty is at stake.
[
Footnote 2/11]
For this reason, I need not rely on
NLRB v. Catholic Bishop
of Chicago, 440 U. S. 490,
440 U. S. 500
(1979), in which the Court held that even the broadest statutory
language may be interpreted as excluding cases that would raise
serious constitutional questions, absent a clear expression of an
affirmative intention of Congress to include those cases.
See
also Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Florida Gulf Coast Building &
Construction Trades Council, 485 U. S. 568
(1988). Under the
Catholic Bishop approach, however, there
could be no doubt that "the required 'clearest indication in the
legislative history'" or statutory language is absent here. 485
U.S. at
485 U. S.
578.
[
Footnote 2/12]
"Even in the federal courts under the Criminal Justice Act of
1964, 18 U.S.C. § 3006A, which provides one of the most
generous compensation plans, the rates for appointed counsel . . .
are low by American standards. Consequently, the majority of
persons willing to accept appointments are the young and
inexperienced."
Argersinger v. Hamlin, 407 U. S.
25,
407 U. S. 57, n.
21 (1972) (Powell, J., concurring in result). Indeed, there is
evidence that "Congress did not design [the Criminal Justice Act]
to be compensatory, but merely to reduce financial burdens on
assigned counsel."
See Winick, Forfeiture of Attorneys'
Fees under RICO and CCE and the Right to Counsel of Choice: The
Constitutional Dilemma and How to Avoid It, 43 U.Miami L.Rev. 765,
773, and n. 40 (1989).
[
Footnote 2/13]
That the Government has this power when the defendant is
indigent is unfortunate, but "[i]t is an irrelevancy once
recognized."
United States v. Harvey, 814 F.2d at 923.
[
Footnote 2/14]
There is reason to fear that, in addition to depriving a
defendant of counsel of choice, there will be circumstances in
which the threat of forfeiture will deprive the defendant of
any counsel. If the Government chooses not to restrain
transfers by employing § 853(e)(1), it is likely that the
defendant will not qualify as "indigent" under the Criminal Justice
Act. Potential private counsel will be aware of the threat of
forfeiture, and, as a result, will likely refuse to take the case.
Although it is to be hoped that a solution will be developed for a
defendant who "falls between the cracks" in this manner, there is
no guarantee that accommodation will be made in an orderly fashion,
and that trial preparation will not be substantially delayed
because of the difficulties in securing counsel. For discussions of
this problem,
see United States v. Ianniello, 644 F.Supp.
at 456-457;
United States v. Badalamenti, 614 F. Supp. at
197.
[
Footnote 2/15]
Other analogies the majority and the Government have drawn are
also inapt. We do not deal with contraband, which the Government is
free to seize because the law recognizes no right to possess it.
See One 1958 Plymouth Sedan v. Pennsylvania, 380 U.
S. 693,
380 U. S. 699
(1965). Nor do we deal with instrumentalities of crime, which may
have evidentiary value, and may also traditionally be seized by the
Government and retained even if the defendant is not proved guilty,
unless a party with a rightful claim to the property comes forward
to refute the Government's contention that the property was put to
an unlawful use.
See Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing
Co., 416 U. S. 663,
416 U. S. 679
(1974); Comment, 48 U.Chi.L.Rev. 960, 963-964 (1981). As to the
analogy to "jeopardy assessments" under the Internal Revenue Code,
the Internal Revenue Service in that situation has a legal claim to
the sums at issue at the time of the assessment, based upon
substantive provisions of the Code. Here, in contrast, the
Government's claim will not arise until after conviction. In
addition, even if a jeopardy assessment were to deprive a taxpayer
of the funds necessary to file a challenge to the assessment in the
Tax Court, the proceeding in that court is civil, and the Sixth
Amendment therefore does not apply. I agree with Judge Phillips
when he observes that the constitutionality of a jeopardy
assessment that deprived the defendant of the funds necessary to
hire counsel to ward off a criminal challenge is not to be assumed.
See United States v. Harvey, 814 F.2d at 926.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Certainly criminal defendants
"are not exempted from federal, state, and local taxation simply
because these financial levies may deprive them of resources that
could be used to hire an attorney."
Caplin & Drysdale, ante at
491 U. S.
631-632. The Government's interest in raising revenue
need not stand aside merely because the individual being taxed
would rather spend the money by participating in a constitutionally
protected activity. But I doubt that we would hesitate to reject as
an undue burden on the exercise of a constitutional right a system
that generally exempted personal service transactions from
taxation, but taxed payments to criminal defense attorneys. In such
circumstances, a clear-headed analysis of the Government's action
would likely reveal that burdening the exercise of the defendant's
Sixth Amendment right was not the unfortunate consequence of the
Government's action, but its very purpose.