Kansas v. Ventris , 129 S. Ct. 1841 ( 2009 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2008                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U. S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF KANSAS
    No. 07–1356. Argued January 21, 2009—Decided April 29, 2009
    Respondent Donnie Ray Ventris and Rhonda Theel were charged with
    murder and other crimes. Prior to trial, an informant planted in
    Ventris’s cell heard him admit to shooting and robbing the victim, but
    Ventris testified at trial that Theel committed the crimes. When the
    State sought to call the informant to testify to his contradictory
    statement, Ventris objected. The State conceded that Ventris’s Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel had likely been violated, but argued that
    the statement was admissible for impeachment purposes. The trial
    court allowed the testimony. The jury convicted Ventris of aggra
    vated burglary and aggravated robbery. Reversing, the Kansas Su
    preme Court held that the informant’s statements were not admissi
    ble for any reason, including impeachment.
    Held: Ventris’s statement to the informant, concededly elicited in viola
    tion of the Sixth Amendment, was admissible to impeach his incon
    sistent testimony at trial. Pp. 3–7.
    (a) Whether a confession that was not admissible in the prosecu
    tion’s case in chief nonetheless can be admitted for impeachment
    purposes depends on the nature of the constitutional guarantee vio
    lated. The Fifth Amendment guarantee against compelled self
    incrimination is violated by introducing a coerced confession at trial,
    whether by way of impeachment or otherwise. New Jersey v. Por
    tash, 
    440 U. S. 450
    , 458–459. But for the Fourth Amendment guar
    antee against unreasonable searches or seizures, where exclusion
    comes by way of deterrent sanction rather than to avoid violation of
    the substantive guarantee, admissibility is determined by an exclu
    sionary-rule balancing test. See Walder v. United States, 
    347 U. S. 62
    , 65. The same is true for violations of the Fifth and Sixth
    Amendment prophylactic rules forbidding certain pretrial police con
    duct. See, e.g., Harris v. New York, 
    401 U. S. 222
    , 225–226. The core
    2                          KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    Syllabus
    of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is a trial right, but the right
    covers pretrial interrogations to ensure that police manipulation does
    not deprive the defendant of “ ‘effective representation by counsel at
    the only stage when legal aid and advice would help him.’ ” Massiah
    v. United States, 
    377 U. S. 201
    , 204. This right to be free of uncoun
    seled interrogation is infringed at the time of the interrogation, not
    when it is admitted into evidence. It is that deprivation that de
    mands the remedy of exclusion from the prosecution’s case in chief.
    Pp. 3–6.
    (b) The interests safeguarded by excluding tainted evidence for im
    peachment purposes are “outweighed by the need to prevent perjury
    and to assure the integrity of the trial process.” Stone v. Powell, 
    428 U. S. 465
    , 488. Once the defendant testifies inconsistently, denying
    the prosecution “the traditional truth-testing devices of the adversary
    process,” Harris, 
    supra, at 225
    , is a high price to pay for vindicating
    the right to counsel at the prior stage. On the other hand, preventing
    impeachment use of statements taken in violation of Massiah would
    add little appreciable deterrence for officers, who have an incentive to
    comply with the Constitution, since statements lawfully obtained can
    be used for all purposes, not simply impeachment. In every other
    context, this Court has held that tainted evidence is admissible for
    impeachment. See, e.g., Oregon v. Hass, 
    420 U. S. 714
    , 723. No dis
    tinction here alters that balance. Pp. 6–7.
    
    285 Kan. 595
    , 
    176 P. 3d 920
    , reversed and remanded.
    SCALIA, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS,
    C. J., and KENNEDY, SOUTER, THOMAS, BREYER, and ALITO, JJ., joined.
    STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which GINSBURG, J., joined.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                              1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–1356
    _________________
    KANSAS, PETITIONER v. DONNIE RAY VENTRIS
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    KANSAS
    [April 29, 2009]
    JUSTICE SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
    We address in this case the question whether a defen
    dant’s incriminating statement to a jailhouse informant,
    concededly elicited in violation of Sixth Amendment stric
    tures, is admissible at trial to impeach the defendant’s
    conflicting statement.
    I
    In the early hours of January 7, 2004, after two days of
    no sleep and some drug use, Rhonda Theel and respondent
    Donnie Ray Ventris reached an ill-conceived agreement to
    confront Ernest Hicks in his home. The couple testified
    that the aim of the visit was simply to investigate rumors
    that Hicks abused children, but the couple may have been
    inspired by the potential for financial gain: Theel had
    recently learned that Hicks carried large amounts of cash.
    The encounter did not end well. One or both of the pair
    shot and killed Hicks with shots from a .38-caliber re
    volver, and the companions drove off in Hicks’s truck with
    approximately $300 of his money and his cell phone. On
    receiving a tip from two friends of the couple who had
    helped transport them to Hicks’s home, officers arrested
    Ventris and Theel and charged them with various crimes,
    2                    KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    Opinion of the Court
    chief among them murder and aggravated robbery. The
    State dropped the murder charge against Theel in ex
    change for her guilty plea to the robbery charge and her
    testimony identifying Ventris as the shooter.
    Prior to trial, officers planted an informant in Ventris’s
    holding cell, instructing him to “keep [his] ear open and
    listen” for incriminating statements. App. 146. According
    to the informant, in response to his statement that Ventris
    appeared to have “something more serious weighing in on
    his mind,” Ventris divulged that “[h]e’d shot this man in
    his head and in his chest” and taken “his keys, his wallet,
    about $350.00, and . . . a vehicle.” Id., at 154, 150.
    At trial, Ventris took the stand and blamed the robbery
    and shooting entirely on Theel. The government sought to
    call the informant, to testify to Ventris’s prior contradic
    tory statement; Ventris objected. The State conceded that
    there was “probably a violation” of Ventris’s Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel but nonetheless argued that
    the statement was admissible for impeachment purposes
    because the violation “doesn’t give the Defendant . . . a
    license to just get on the stand and lie.” Id., at 143. The
    trial court agreed and allowed the informant’s testimony,
    but instructed the jury to “consider with caution” all tes
    timony given in exchange for benefits from the State. Id.,
    at 30. The jury ultimately acquitted Ventris of felony
    murder and misdemeanor theft but returned a guilty
    verdict on the aggravated burglary and aggravated rob
    bery counts.
    The Kansas Supreme Court reversed the conviction,
    holding that “[o]nce a criminal prosecution has com
    menced, the defendant’s statements made to an under
    cover informant surreptitiously acting as an agent for the
    State are not admissible at trial for any reason, including
    the impeachment of the defendant’s testimony.” 
    285 Kan. 595
    , 606, 
    176 P. 3d 920
    , 928 (2008).            Chief Justice
    McFarland dissented, id., at 611, 
    176 P. 3d, at 930
    . We
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            3
    Opinion of the Court
    granted the State’s petition for certiorari, 554 U. S. ___
    (2008).
    II
    The Sixth Amendment, applied to the States through
    the Fourteenth Amendment, guarantees that “[i]n all
    criminal prosecutions, the accused shall . . . have the
    Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” The core of this
    right has historically been, and remains today, “the oppor
    tunity for a defendant to consult with an attorney and to
    have him investigate the case and prepare a defense for
    trial.” Michigan v. Harvey, 
    494 U. S. 344
    , 348 (1990). We
    have held, however, that the right extends to having
    counsel present at various pretrial “critical” interactions
    between the defendant and the State, United States v.
    Wade, 
    388 U. S. 218
    , 224 (1967), including the deliberate
    elicitation by law enforcement officers (and their agents) of
    statements pertaining to the charge, Massiah v. United
    States, 
    377 U. S. 201
    , 206 (1964). The State has conceded
    throughout these proceedings that Ventris’s confession
    was taken in violation of Massiah’s dictates and was
    therefore not admissible in the prosecution’s case in chief.
    Without affirming that this concession was necessary, see
    Kuhlmann v. Wilson, 
    477 U. S. 436
    , 459–460 (1986), we
    accept it as the law of the case. The only question we
    answer today is whether the State must bear the addi
    tional consequence of inability to counter Ventris’s contra
    dictory testimony by placing the informant on the stand.
    A
    Whether otherwise excluded evidence can be admitted
    for purposes of impeachment depends upon the nature of
    the constitutional guarantee that is violated. Sometimes
    that explicitly mandates exclusion from trial, and some
    times it does not. The Fifth Amendment guarantees that
    no person shall be compelled to give evidence against
    himself, and so is violated whenever a truly coerced con
    4                    KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    Opinion of the Court
    fession is introduced at trial, whether by way of impeach
    ment or otherwise. New Jersey v. Portash, 
    440 U. S. 450
    ,
    458–459 (1979). The Fourth Amendment, on the other
    hand, guarantees that no person shall be subjected to
    unreasonable searches or seizures, and says nothing about
    excluding their fruits from evidence; exclusion comes by
    way of deterrent sanction rather than to avoid violation of
    the substantive guarantee. Inadmissibility has not been
    automatic, therefore, but we have instead applied an
    exclusionary-rule balancing test. See Walder v. United
    States, 
    347 U. S. 62
    , 65 (1954). The same is true for viola
    tions of the Fifth and Sixth Amendment prophylactic rules
    forbidding certain pretrial police conduct. See Harris v.
    New York, 
    401 U. S. 222
    , 225–226 (1971); Harvey, 
    supra,
    at 348–350.
    Respondent argues that the Sixth Amendment’s right to
    counsel is a “right an accused is to enjoy a[t] trial.” Brief
    for Respondent 11. The core of the right to counsel is
    indeed a trial right, ensuring that the prosecution’s case is
    subjected to “the crucible of meaningful adversarial test
    ing.” United States v. Cronic, 
    466 U. S. 648
    , 656 (1984).
    See also Powell v. Alabama, 
    287 U. S. 45
    , 57–58 (1932).
    But our opinions under the Sixth Amendment, as under
    the Fifth, have held that the right covers pretrial interro
    gations to ensure that police manipulation does not render
    counsel entirely impotent—depriving the defendant of
    “ ‘effective representation by counsel at the only stage
    when legal aid and advice would help him.’ ” Massiah,
    supra, at 204 (quoting Spano v. New York, 
    360 U. S. 315
    ,
    326 (1959) (Douglas, J., concurring)). See also Miranda v.
    Arizona, 
    384 U. S. 436
    , 468–469 (1966).
    Our opinion in Massiah, to be sure, was equivocal on
    what precisely constituted the violation. It quoted various
    authorities indicating that the violation occurred at the
    moment of the postindictment interrogation because such
    questioning “ ‘contravenes the basic dictates of fairness in
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            5
    Opinion of the Court
    the conduct of criminal causes.’ ” 
    377 U. S., at 205
     (quot
    ing People v. Waterman, 9 N. Y. 2d 561, 565, 
    175 N. E. 2d 445
    , 448 (1961)). But the opinion later suggested that the
    violation occurred only when the improperly obtained
    evidence was “used against [the defendant] at his trial.”
    
    377 U. S., at
    206–207. That question was irrelevant to the
    decision in Massiah in any event. Now that we are con
    fronted with the question, we conclude that the Massiah
    right is a right to be free of uncounseled interrogation, and
    is infringed at the time of the interrogation. That, we
    think, is when the “Assistance of Counsel” is denied.
    It is illogical to say that the right is not violated until
    trial counsel’s task of opposing conviction has been un
    dermined by the statement’s admission into evidence. A
    defendant is not denied counsel merely because the prose
    cution has been permitted to introduce evidence of guilt—
    even evidence so overwhelming that the attorney’s job of
    gaining an acquittal is rendered impossible. In such
    circumstances the accused continues to enjoy the assis
    tance of counsel; the assistance is simply not worth much.
    The assistance of counsel has been denied, however, at the
    prior critical stage which produced the inculpatory evi
    dence. Our cases acknowledge that reality in holding that
    the stringency of the warnings necessary for a waiver of
    the assistance of counsel varies according to “the useful
    ness of counsel to the accused at the particular [pretrial]
    proceeding.” Patterson v. Illinois, 
    487 U. S. 285
    , 298
    (1988). It is that deprivation which demands a remedy.
    The United States insists that “post-charge deliberate
    elicitation of statements without the defendant’s counsel
    or a valid waiver of counsel is not intrinsically unlawful.”
    Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 17, n. 4. That is
    true when the questioning is unrelated to charged
    crimes—the Sixth Amendment right is “offense specific,”
    McNeil v. Wisconsin, 
    501 U. S. 171
    , 175 (1991). We have
    never said, however, that officers may badger counseled
    6                    KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    Opinion of the Court
    defendants about charged crimes so long as they do not
    use information they gain. The constitutional violation
    occurs when the uncounseled interrogation is conducted.
    B
    This case does not involve, therefore, the prevention of a
    constitutional violation, but rather the scope of the remedy
    for a violation that has already occurred. Our precedents
    make clear that the game of excluding tainted evidence for
    impeachment purposes is not worth the candle. The inter
    ests safeguarded by such exclusion are “outweighed by the
    need to prevent perjury and to assure the integrity of the
    trial process.” Stone v. Powell, 
    428 U. S. 465
    , 488 (1976).
    “It is one thing to say that the Government cannot make
    an affirmative use of evidence unlawfully obtained. It is
    quite another to say that the defendant can . . . provide
    himself with a shield against contradiction of his un
    truths.” Walder, 
    supra, at 65
    . Once the defendant testi
    fies in a way that contradicts prior statements, denying
    the prosecution use of “the traditional truth-testing de
    vices of the adversary process,” Harris, 
    supra, at 225
    , is a
    high price to pay for vindication of the right to counsel at
    the prior stage.
    On the other side of the scale, preventing impeachment
    use of statements taken in violation of Massiah would add
    little appreciable deterrence. Officers have significant
    incentive to ensure that they and their informants comply
    with the Constitution’s demands, since statements law
    fully obtained can be used for all purposes rather than
    simply for impeachment. And the ex ante probability that
    evidence gained in violation of Massiah would be of use for
    impeachment is exceedingly small. An investigator would
    have to anticipate both that the defendant would choose to
    testify at trial (an unusual occurrence to begin with) and
    that he would testify inconsistently despite the admissibil
    ity of his prior statement for impeachment. Not likely to
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                   7
    Opinion of the Court
    happen—or at least not likely enough to risk squandering
    the opportunity of using a properly obtained statement for
    the prosecution’s case in chief.
    In any event, even if “the officer may be said to have
    little to lose and perhaps something to gain by way of
    possibly uncovering impeachment material,” we have
    multiple times rejected the argument that this “specula
    tive possibility” can trump the costs of allowing perjurious
    statements to go unchallenged. Oregon v. Hass, 
    420 U. S. 714
    , 723 (1975). We have held in every other context that
    tainted evidence—evidence whose very introduction does
    not constitute the constitutional violation, but whose
    obtaining was constitutionally invalid—is admissible for
    impeachment. See ibid.; Walder, 
    347 U. S., at 65
    ; Harris,
    
    401 U. S., at 226
    ; Harvey, 
    494 U. S., at 348
    . We see no
    distinction that would alter the balance here.*
    *    *    *
    We hold that the informant’s testimony, concededly
    elicited in violation of the Sixth Amendment, was admis
    sible to challenge Ventris’s inconsistent testimony at trial.
    The judgment of the Kansas Supreme Court is reversed,
    and the case is remanded for further proceedings not
    inconsistent with this opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    ——————
    * Respondent’s amicus insists that jailhouse snitches are so inher
    ently unreliable that this Court should craft a broader exclusionary
    rule for uncorroborated statements obtained by that means. Brief for
    National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers 25–26. Our legal
    system, however, is built on the premise that it is the province of the
    jury to weigh the credibility of competing witnesses, and we have long
    purported to avoid “establish[ing] this Court as a rule-making organ for
    the promulgation of state rules of criminal procedure.” Spencer v.
    Texas, 
    385 U. S. 554
    , 564 (1967). It would be especially inappropriate
    to fabricate such a rule in this case, where it appears the jury took to
    heart the trial judge’s cautionary instruction on the unreliability of
    rewarded informant testimony by acquitting Ventris of felony murder.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)       1
    STEVENS, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–1356
    _________________
    KANSAS, PETITIONER v. DONNIE RAY VENTRIS
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    KANSAS
    [April 29, 2009]
    JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG joins,
    dissenting.
    In Michigan v. Harvey, 
    494 U. S. 344
     (1990), the Court
    held that a statement obtained from a defendant in viola
    tion of the Sixth Amendment could be used to impeach his
    testimony at trial. As I explained in a dissent joined by
    three other Members of the Court, that holding eroded the
    principle that “those who are entrusted with the power of
    government have the same duty to respect and obey the
    law as the ordinary citizen.” 
    Id., at 369
    . It was my view
    then, as it is now, that “the Sixth Amendment is violated
    when the fruits of the State’s impermissible encounter
    with the represented defendant are used for impeachment
    just as it is when the fruits are used in the prosecutor’s
    case in chief.” 
    Id., at 355
    .
    In this case, the State has conceded that it violated the
    Sixth Amendment as interpreted in Massiah v. United
    States, 
    377 U. S. 201
    , 206 (1964), when it used a jailhouse
    informant to elicit a statement from the defendant. No
    Miranda warnings were given to the defendant,1 nor was
    he otherwise alerted to the fact that he was speaking to a
    state agent. Even though the jury apparently did not
    credit the informant’s testimony, the Kansas Supreme
    Court correctly concluded that the prosecution should not
    ——————
    1 See   Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U. S. 436
     (1966).
    2                    KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    STEVENS, J., dissenting
    be allowed to exploit its pretrial constitutional violation
    during the trial itself. The Kansas Court’s judgment
    should be affirmed.
    This Court’s contrary holding relies on the view that a
    defendant’s pretrial right to counsel is merely “prophylac
    tic” in nature. See ante, at 4. The majority argues that
    any violation of this prophylactic right occurs solely at the
    time the State subjects a counseled defendant to an un
    counseled interrogation, not when the fruits of the encoun
    ter are used against the defendant at trial. Ante, at 5.
    This reasoning is deeply flawed.
    The pretrial right to counsel is not ancillary to, or of
    lesser importance than, the right to rely on counsel at
    trial. The Sixth Amendment grants the right to counsel
    “[i]n all criminal prosecutions,” and we have long recog
    nized that the right applies in periods before trial com
    mences, see United States v. Wade, 
    388 U. S. 218
    , 224
    (1967). We have never endorsed the notion that the pre
    trial right to counsel stands at the periphery of the Sixth
    Amendment. To the contrary, we have explained that the
    pretrial period is “perhaps the most critical period of the
    proceedings” during which a defendant “requires the
    guiding hand of counsel.” Powell v. Alabama, 
    287 U. S. 45
    , 57, 69 (1932); see Maine v. Moulton, 
    474 U. S. 159
    , 176
    (1985) (recognizing the defendant’s “right to rely on coun
    sel as a ‘medium’ between him and the State” in all critical
    stages of prosecution). Placing the prophylactic label on a
    core Sixth Amendment right mischaracterizes the sweep
    of the constitutional guarantee.
    Treating the State’s actions in this case as a violation of
    a prophylactic right, the Court concludes that introducing
    the illegally obtained evidence at trial does not itself
    violate the Constitution. I strongly disagree. While the
    constitutional breach began at the time of interrogation,
    the State’s use of that evidence at trial compounded the
    violation. The logic that compels the exclusion of the
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                     3
    STEVENS, J., dissenting
    evidence during the State’s case in chief extends to any
    attempt by the State to rely on the evidence, even for
    impeachment. The use of ill-gotten evidence during any
    phase of criminal prosecution does damage to the adver
    sarial process—the fairness of which the Sixth Amend
    ment was designed to protect. See Strickland v. Washing
    ton, 
    466 U. S. 668
    , 685 (1984); see also Adams v. United
    States ex rel. McCann, 
    317 U. S. 269
    , 276 (1942) (“[The]
    procedural devices rooted in experience were written into
    the Bill of Rights not as abstract rubrics in an elegant code
    but in order to assure fairness and justice before any
    person could be deprived of ‘life, liberty, or property’ ”).
    When counsel is excluded from a critical pretrial inter
    action between the defendant and the State, she may be
    unable to effectively counter the potentially devastating,
    and potentially false,2 evidence subsequently introduced at
    trial. Inexplicably, today’s Court refuses to recognize that
    this is a constitutional harm.3 Yet in Massiah, the Court
    forcefully explained that a defendant is “denied the basic
    protections of the [Sixth Amendment] guarantee when
    there [is] used against him at his trial evidence of his own
    incriminating words” that were “deliberately elicited from
    ——————
    2 The likelihood that evidence gathered by self-interested jailhouse
    informants may be false cannot be ignored. See generally Brief for
    National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers as Amicus Curiae.
    Indeed, by deciding to acquit respondent of felony murder, the jury
    seems to have dismissed the informant’s trial testimony as unreliable.
    3 In the majority’s telling, “simply” having counsel whose help is “not
    worth much” is not a Sixth Amendment concern. Ante, at 5. Of course,
    the Court points to no precedent for this stingy view of the Counsel
    Clause, for we have never held that the Sixth Amendment only protects
    a defendant from actual denials of counsel. Indeed our venerable
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel jurisprudence is built on a more
    realistic understanding of what the Constitution guarantees. See
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
     (1984); McMann v. Richard
    son, 
    397 U. S. 759
    , 771, n. 14 (1970) (“[T]he right to counsel is the right
    to the effective assistance of counsel”).
    4                    KANSAS v. VENTRIS
    STEVENS, J., dissenting
    him after he had been indicted and in the absence of coun
    sel.” 
    377 U. S., at 206
    . Sadly, the majority has retreated
    from this robust understanding of the right to counsel.
    Today’s decision is lamentable not only because of its
    flawed underpinnings, but also because it is another occa
    sion in which the Court has privileged the prosecution at
    the expense of the Constitution. Permitting the State to
    cut corners in criminal proceedings taxes the legitimacy of
    the entire criminal process. “The State’s interest in truth
    seeking is congruent with the defendant’s interest in
    representation by counsel, for it is an elementary premise
    of our system of criminal justice ‘that partisan advocacy on
    both sides of a case will best promote the ultimate objec
    tive that the guilty be convicted and the innocent go free.’ ”
    Harvey, 
    494 U. S., at 357
     (STEVENS, J., dissenting) (quot
    ing United States v. Cronic, 
    466 U. S. 648
    , 655 (1984)).
    Although the Court may not be concerned with the use of
    ill-gotten evidence in derogation of the right to counsel, I
    remain convinced that such shabby tactics are intolerable
    in all cases. I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-1356

Citation Numbers: 173 L. Ed. 2d 801, 129 S. Ct. 1841, 556 U.S. 586, 2009 U.S. LEXIS 3299

Judges: Scalia, Stevens, Ginsburg

Filed Date: 4/29/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

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