Overview
The Jencks Act was enacted by theThe Jencks Act
By the Act, Congress exercised its power to define the rules that should govern this particular area in the trial of criminal cases instead of leaving the matter of lawmaking to the courts. The Act, and not the Supreme Court decision in the ''Jencks'' case, governs the production of statements of government witnesses in a federal criminal trial. The Jencks Act is constitutional as an exercise of congressional power to prescribe rules of procedure for the federal courts. In some instances however, the statute may be overridden by an accused's constitutional right to disclosure of exculpatory evidence. The Jencks Act governs production of statements and reports of prosecution witnesses during federal criminal trials. The Act provides that in any criminal prosecution brought by the United States, no statement or report in the possession of the United States which was made by a government witness or prospective government witness (other than the defendant) shall be the subject ofDefinition
Under the Jencks Act, a "statement" of a prosecution witness is: # A written statement made by the witness and signed or otherwise adopted or approved by him; # A stenographic, mechanical, electrical or other recording, or a transcription of it, which is substantially verbatim recital of an oral statement made by the witness to an agent of the Government and recorded contemporaneously with the making of such oral statement; or # A statement, however taken or recorded, or a transcription of it, made by the witness to a grand jury. If the government does not deliver a witness's Jencks statement to the defendant, the court may strike the witness's testimony or declare a mistrial.18 U.S.C.S. section 3500(d). The Jencks Act has been characterized as intending to assure defendants of their right to confront their accusers under the Sixth Amendment. Its provisions are not a constitutional mandate. Its requirements do not rise to constitutional stature. The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment is not necessarily violated by the government's failure to produce Jencks Act material, but may be violated by preventing the ability to confront government witnesses.Brady material
In '' Brady v. Maryland'' it was ruled that the suppression of evidence favorable to an accused violates due process, irrespective of the good or bad faith of the prosecutor, where such evidence is material to the guilt or punishment of the accused. The failure of the government to produce exculpatory evidence may or may not fall within the confines of the Jencks Act. In some cases, the production of documents must be made at a time prior to that required by the Jencks Act. The Brady rule may require the prosecutor to disclose grand jury testimony prior to trial, if the information is exculpatory, as well as other Brady material. In ''United States v. Anderson'', when Brady material is contained within Jencks Act material disclosure is generally timely if the government complies with the Jencks Act. The Jencks Act applies to statements "in the possession of the United States". This means in the possession of the federal prosecutor. Any information in control of the court reporter or the trial court is not subject to the Jencks Act. The Act does not affect material in control of state, as opposed to federal agencies. It is important that requests made prior to trial which are denied on the basis of a statement by the prosecution that "the material is not in our possession" be reasserted at trial in front of the court. Otherwise, the court will consider the request to have been abandoned.Subpoena of material
The Jencks Act provides that no material shall be subject to subpoena, discovery or inspection until the said witness has testified on direct examination in the trial of the case. In context, the word trial means a judicial proceeding conducted for the purpose of determining the guilt or innocence of a person, and according to the statutory language, the defense is not entitled to production of a witness' statement under the Act after the witness has testified at a preliminary hearing. The bar against compulsory disclosure prior to the testimony of the witness whose statement is sought cannot be circumvented by resort to the Freedom of Information Act, or Rule 16 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. It is left to the discretion of the trial court to determine whether Jencks material can be delivered before trial. This can be done to expedite a trial involving many witnesses. Disclosure of material may be required because of the Brady doctrine. Material may not be excluded from production because it is claimed that it is the "work product" of government lawyers. In a related manner, the production of a final report does not exclude the production of preliminary drafts. Tape recordings of an interview between a government agent and a government witness is producible under the Jencks Act after the witness has testified, if the recording relates to the witness' testimony. Composite drawings made from photographs are not producible. Photographs, if they relate to a witness' statement must be produced. Notes taken by a prosecutor or a law enforcement officer pertaining to an interview with a potential government witness may be subject to production under the Jencks Act if the witness testifies at trial.Oral statements
An oral statement which has never been transcribed in any fashion is not a "statement" within the meaning of the Act. Moreover the Act does not require law enforcement officers to make any record of an interview, nor to submit interview notes to the witness for approval so as to generate a statement which is producible under the Act. Notes that are signed, adopted or approved by the witness are generally subject to subpoena. Those that are not cannot be ordered to be produced. Notes that are only of one word references and short phrases are not producible. Investigator's notes made from memory several days after interviewing a witness are not "verbatim" under the meaning of the Act, and hence not subject to subpoena. On police officer's notes on statements of another were not "statements" within the meaning of the Jencks Act where there was no evidence that such notes were ever approved by the officer or that his words were recorded verbatim. Records of surveillance activities are not Jencks Act statements even though they have been transmitted by one government agent to another. Notes produced during the course of surveillance need not be preserved or produced. A statement by a government witness before a grand jury is producible under Jencks Act to the extent that it relates to the subject matter of the trial testimony. Such a statement is reproducible even though it has not been transcribed.Grand jury information
Although the government is obliged to make a record of all testimony before the grand jury, it is under no obligation to create producible material under the Jencks Act by calling key witnesses before the grand jury. The provision of the Jencks Act relating to disclosure of a witness' grand jury testimony address only disclosure at trial. Pretrial disclosure of such testimony is governed by Rule 6 (e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The Act does not bar the pretrial disclosure of grand jury testimony where requirements of Rule 6 (e) for such disclosure have been met. Sometimes courts will hold an in-camera hearing to determine if the material is relevant under the Act, it is not necessary for the production of documents. It is generally necessary that the defense make a motion for the production of the prior statement of a government witness under the Jencks Act. The motion of the defense for production should be made at the close of the testimony of the witnesses from whom the documents are sought. The request should not be made at the close of the prosecution's case, nor prior to the close of the trial.Pre-trial conference, document production
The identification and production of Jencks Act material may also be addressed at a pretrial conference. It is usual for the defense to receive the material outside the purview of the jury to avoid inference that the material is damaging to the defendant. If the material is not relevant, or helpful for impeachment, defense council may decide not to use it. Requiring production of Jencks material in front of the jury is reversible error. There must be some reason to believe that the documents actually exist. This can be documented when the witness uses the document to testify from, or by testimony that the document exists. The decision whether a document should be produced is made by the trial court and not the prosecution.Determining if the documents should be produced
Once issues concerning the producibility of a requested statement have been raised, it is the duty of the court to conduct some sort of inquiry. This is a question for the court, and not the jury. A trial court's decision of what material must be produced under the Act is subject to review under the "clearly erroneous" standard.Manner of determination
It is within the discretion of the court to determine in the most appropriate manner whether a requested document is a producible statement. To determine whether a document is a statement under the Act, the court may * Conduct a voir dire examination of the declarant on the witness stand. * Conduct a hearing outside the presence of the jury to examine evidence extrinsic to the statement. * Examine the requested document in camera. The act requiresFederal Rule 26.2
The provisions of the Jencks Act have been substantially incorporated into Rule 26.2 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. This is due to the notion that provisions which are purely procedural in nature should appear in the Rules, rather than in Title 18 of the United States Code. Rule 26.2 extends the provisions of the Jencks Act by providing that statements subject to production at trial are not only those of prosecution witnesses, but those of any witness other than the defendant. The Rule does not alter the Jencks Act schedule for production of statements, nor does it relieve a defendant seeking production of Jencks material from the necessity of making a request for production at the trial stage of the proceeding.Other cases involving the Jencks Act
Rosenberg v. United States, 1959
In ''Rosenberg v. United States'', 1959, theUnited States v. Ellenbogen, 1965
In ''United States v. Ellenbogen'', 1965, a prosecution for bribing a purchasing agent of theUnited States v. Borelli, 1964
In ''United States v. Borelli'',''United States v. Borelli'' CA 2 NY 336 F 2nd 376 cert den 379 US 960, 13 L Ed 2 nd 555, 85 S. Ct. 647 an accomplice had testified for the prosecution at the trial of the defendant, it was held that the refusal to permit the production of a letter written by the accomplice to the government, in which he offered his assistance to the government in return for special consideration for himself, was error where such refusal was based on the ground that the letter did not "relate" to the subject matter to which the accomplice had testified. The court said there was no reason why a statement that would support impeachment for bias and interest does not "relate" to the witness' testimony as much as a statement permitting impeachment for faulty memory as was involved in Rosenberg v. United States (see case supra), and that the word "relate" as used in the statute is not limited to factual narrative.References
{{reflist, 30emFurther reading
* Caballero, Raymond. ''McCarthyism vs. Clinton Jencks.'' Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2019. United States federal criminal legislation United States discovery law United States criminal procedure