FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ON NET
CONDENSED DECISION –SUPREME COURT
OF THE UNITED STATES
Arthur
L. CROMWELL vs. State of MARYLAND
No.
2397 Fall 2023 Term
Argued
October 12, 2023 - Decided March 10, 2024
Unanimous opinion
by Martinez, Chief Justice – This case appears before this Court by writ of
certiorari issued to the Court of Appeals of Maryland to review its decision in
Cromwell v. State, 567 Md. 889, 107
A.3d 223 (2022). Cromwell contends his
Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination was violated when his own
electronically recorded memories were used in court against him...[procedural
history omitted].
I
Petitioner
Arthur Cromwell was the president and head scientist at the Brain-Machine
Interface Corporation (“BMIC”) in Rockville ,
Maryland . After billions of dollars of federal and
state grants and other funds as well as hundreds of man-years from many
brilliant persons, BMIC developed a method to “off-load” a person’s memories
and, perhaps, very personality onto an extremely complex optical storage
device. This memory could be kept stored
and, perhaps, “re-installed” into another, cloned brain. See New York Times, “Digital Immortality
Invented?” at A-1, February 5, 2021.
As
with all breath-taking discoveries, there were questions about costs. Specifically, allegations arose that BMIC had
used test animals from small mammals to chimpanzees in any number of gruesome
and fatal experiments which had not been disclosed on grant applications as
required by law. The Maryland Office of
Special Prosecutor executed an otherwise valid search warrant on March 23, 2021
and seized, among other items, the complete data storage of Petitioner Cromwell
– in essence, a copy of his memories.
The
State of Maryland indicted Petitioner Cromwell
on fifty-two counts of felony aggravated animal cruelty, Ann. Code of Md. , Crim. Law Art.,
sec. 10-606 (2020 Ed). Cromwell moved to
exclude his memories from trial, arguing such evidence violated the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution. His motion
was denied; he was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County of all counts, and sentenced to
five consecutive years incarceration on each count. All subsequent state appeals were denied, and
Cromwell sought relief with this Court.
Cromwell
contends he would not have been convicted absent the use of his memories, as there
were no documents remaining in existence concerning the experiments and no
other testimony was elicited. The
Attorney General of Maryland, before us in oral argument, concedes Cromwell’s
memories were pivotal, but contends there was no error.
II
The
Fifth Amendment provides, in relevant part, that “No person shall be compelled
in any criminal case to be a witness against himself...” Cromwell argues that when his memories were
played as evidence, he was essentially compelled to be a witness. Maryland
contends such evidence was no different than the production of records and
diaries which a defendant maintains.
The
restriction against compelled self-incrimination is an ancient one in our law,
having been brought by the Puritans to America , in response to their
experiences with the oath ex-officio...[historical
review omitted]. Cromwell argues use of
his own memories is “monstrous,” relying in part on language from one of the
most famous cases in existence at the time of the drafting of the Constitution. See Entwick
v. Carrington, 19 Howell’s State Trials 1029 (1765)(Lord Camden, J.)(“Has a
secretary of state a right to see all a man’s private [papers]? This would be monstrous indeed!”). In Boyd
v. United States, 116 U.S. 616 (1886), we rejected use of a diary as a
violation of the Fifth Amendment, calling it a person’s “dearest
property.” Are his memories, Cromwell
asks, any less valuable?
The
Attorney General replies, quite naturally, that we have successively eliminated
or narrowed the privilege in Boyd. See,
e.g, Couch v. United States, 409 U.S. 322 (1973)(no privilege when handed
to a third person); Fisher v. United
States, 425 U.S. 391 (1976)(producing documents not ‘testimonial’). Quoting Fisher,
the Attorney General argues “[s]everal of Boyd’s
express or implicit declarations have not stood the test of time.” Fisher,
supra at 407. Mechanically applying
our post-Boyd cases would seem to
make a result clear: using Cromwell’s own memories against him does not violate
the Fifth Amendment.
Such a conclusion
seems repugnant to the very idea of a “private inner sanctum of individual
feeling and thought” the Fifth Amendment was designed to protect. Bellis
v. United States , 417 U.S.
85, 19 (1974). These are not gambling
sheets. These are not tax returns. These are the very memories from Petitioner Cromwell’s brain. If the privilege against self-incrimination,
a bedrock fundamental right, is to mean anything
in this “Brave New World” of “brain
copying” and “memory downloads,” than the thoughts and memories of an
individual – regardless of whether they are stored in silicon, photons or messy
old proteins – must be protected. Any
subsequent language narrowing or eliminating Boyd is hereby repudiated.
It was a violation of the privilege against self-incrimination for
Cromwell’s memories to be seized and admitted at trial.
III
For
the foregoing reasons, the decision of the Court of Appeals of Maryland is REVERSED,
the conviction of Petitioner Cromwell is VACATED and the matter is remanded for
proceedings consistent with this opinion.