UNITED STATES V. NOBLES
422 U.S. 225 (1975)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This is an appeal from a conviction of Nobles (D) in a trial where
the defense was not allowed to call its investigator as a witness when defense counsel
refused to display a copy of the investigator's report to the prosecution.
FACTS: Nobles (D) was tried and convicted on charges arising from an armed robbery of a
bank. The strongest evidence was the identification testimony of two witnesses, a bank
teller and a salesman who was in the bank during the robbery. D offered an alibi but his
strongest defense centered around attempts to discredit these eyewitnesses. D's efforts to
impeach them gave rise to the events that led to this decision. An investigator for the
defense interviewed both witnesses and preserved the essence of those conversations in a
written report. When the witnesses testified D's counsel relied on the report in conducting
their cross-examination. Counsel asked the bank teller whether he recalled having told the
investigator that he had seen only the back of the man he identified as D. The witness
replied that he did not remember making such a statement. He was allowed, despite D's
initial objection, to refresh his recollection by referring to a portion of the
investigator's report. The prosecutor also was allowed to see the relevant portion of the
report. The witness thereafter testified that although the report indicated that he told the
investigator he had seen only respondent's back, he in fact had seen more than that and
continued to insist that D was the bank robber. D's counsel twice inquired whether the
second witness told the investigator that 'all blacks looked alike' to him, and in each
instance the witness denied having made such a statement. The prosecution again sought
inspection of the relevant portion of the investigator's report, and D's counsel again
objected. The court declined to order disclosure at that time, but ruled that it would be
required if the investigator testified as to the witnesses' alleged statements from the
witness stand. The court further advised that it would examine the investigator's report in
camera and would excise all reference to matters not relevant to the precise statements at
issue. D called the investigator as a defense witness. The court reiterated that a copy of
the report, inspected and edited in camera, would have to be submitted to Government counsel
at the completion of the investigator's impeachment testimony. D's counsel stated that he
did not intend to produce the report. The court ruled that the investigator would not be
allowed to testify about his interviews with the witnesses. The Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit considered it reversible error; the Fifth Amendment prohibited the disclosure
condition imposed in this case. The court further held that Fed. Rule Crim. Proc. 16, while
framed exclusively in terms of pretrial discovery, precluded prosecutorial discovery at
trial as well. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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