Bartkus v. Illinois (359 U.S. 121)/Opinion of the Court

Petitioner was tried in the Federal District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on December 18, 1953, for robbery of a federally insured savings and loan association, the General Savings and Loan Association of Cicero, Illinois, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2113, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2113. The case was tried to a jury and resulted in an acquittal. On January 8, 1954, an Illinois grand jury indicted Bartkus. The facts recited in the Illinois indictment were substantially identical to those contained in the prior federal indictment. The Illinois indictment charged that these facts constituted a violation of Illinois Revised Statutes, 1951, c. 38, § 501, a robbery statute. Bartkus was tried and convicted in the Criminal Court of Cook County and was sentenced to life imprisonment under the Illinois Habitual Criminal Statute. Ill.Rev.Stat.1951, c. 38, § 602.

The Illinois trial court considered and rejected petitioner's plea of autrefois acquit. That ruling and other alleged errors were challenged before the Illinois Supreme Court which affirmed the conviction. 7 Ill.2d 138, 130 N.E.2d 187. We granted certiorari because the petition raised a substantial question concerning the application of the Fourteenth Amendment. 352 U.S. 907, 77 S.Ct. 150, 1 L.Ed.2d 116; 352 U.S. 958, 77 S.Ct. 358. On January 6, 1958, the judgment below was affirmed by an equally divided Court. 355 U.S. 281, 78 S.Ct. 336, 2 L.Ed.2d 270. On May 26, 1958, the Court granted a petition for rehearing, vacated the judgment entered January 6, 1958, and restored the case to the calendar for reargument. 356 U.S. 969, 78 S.Ct. 1004, 2 L.Ed.2d 1075.

The state and federal prosecutions were separately conducted. It is true that the agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation who had conducted the investigation on behalf of the Federal Government turned over to the Illinois prosecuting officials all the evidence he had gathered against the petitioner. Concededly, some of that evidence had been gathered after acquittal in the federal court. The only other connection between the two trials is to be found in a suggestion that the federal sentencing of the accomplices who testified against petitioner in both trials was purposely continued by the federal court until after they testified in the state trial. The record establishes that the prosecution was undertaken by state prosecuting officials within their discretionary responsibility and on the basis of evidence that conduct contrary to the penal code of Illinois had occurred within their jurisdiction. It establishes also that federal officials acted in cooperation with state authorities, as is the conventional practice between the two sets of prosecutors throughout the country. It does not support the claim that the State of Illinois in bringing its prosecution was merely a tool of the federal authorities, who thereby avoided the prohibition of the Fifth Amendment against a retrial of a federal prosecution after an acquittal. It does not sustain a conclusion that the state prosecution was a sham and a cover for a federal prosecution, and thereby in essential fact another federal prosecution.

Since the new prosecution was by Illinois, and not by the Federal Government, the claim of unconstitutionality must rest upon the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Prior cases in this Court relating to successive state and federal prosecutions have been concerned with the Fifth Amendment, and the scope of its proscription of second prosecutions by the Federal Government, not with the Fourteenth Amendment's effect on state action. We are now called upon to draw on the considerations which have guided the Court in applying the limitations of the Fourteenth Amendment on state powers. We have held from the beginning and uniformly that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not apply to the States any of the provisions of the first eight amendments as such. The relevant historical materials have been canvassed by this Court and by legal scholars. These materials demonstrate conclusively that Congress and the members of the legislatures of the ratifying States did not contemplate that the Fourteenth Amendment was a short-hand incorporation of the first eight amendments making them applicable as explicit restrictions upon the States.

Evidencing the interpretation by both Congress and the States of the Fourteenth Amendment is a comparison of the constitutions of the ratifying States with the Federal Constitution. Having regard only to the grand jury guarantee of the Fifth Amendment, the criminal jury guarantee of the Sixth Amendment, and the civil jury guarantee of the Seventh Amendment, it is apparent that if the first eight amendments were being applied verbatim to the States, ten of the thirty ratifying States would have impliedly been imposing upon themselves constitutional requirements on vital issues of state policies contrary to those present in their own constitutions. Or, to approach the matter in a different way, they would be covertly altering provisions of their own constitutions in disregard of the amendment procedures required by those constitutions. Five other States would have been undertaking procedures not in conflict with but not required by their constitutions. Thus only one-half, or fifteen, of the ratifying States had constitutions in explicit accord with these provisions of the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Amendments. Of these fifteen, four made alterations in their constitutions by 1875 which brought them into important conflict with one or more of these provisions of the Federal Constitution. One of the States whose constitution had not included any provision on one of the three procedures under investigation adopted a provision in 1890 which was inconsistent with the Federal Constitution. And so by 1890 only eleven of the thirty ratifying States were in explicit accord with these provisions of the first eight amendments to the Federal Constitution. Four were silent as to one or more of the provisions and fifteen were in open conflict with these same provisions.

Similarly imposing evidence of the understanding of the Due Process Clause is supplied by the history of the admission of the twelve States entering the Union after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment. In the case of each, Congress required that the State's constitution be 'not repugnant' to the Constitution of the United States. Not one of the constitutions of the twelve States contains all three of the procedures relating to grand jury, criminal jury, and civil jury. In fact all twelve have provisions obviously different from the requirements of the Fifth Sixth, or Seventh Amendments. And yet, in the case of each admission, either the President of the United States, or Congress, or both have found that the constitution was in conformity with the Enabling Act and the Constitution of the United States. Nor is there warrant to believe that the States in adopting constitutions with the specific purpose of complying with the requisites of admission were in fact evading the demands of the Constitution of the United States.

Surely this compels the conclusion that Congress and the States have always believed that the Due Process Clause brought into play a basis of restrictions upon the States other than the undisclosed incorporation of the original eight amendments. In Hurtado v. People of State of California, 110 U.S. 516, 4 S.Ct. 111, 292, 28 L.Ed. 232, this Court considered due process in its historical setting, reviewed its development as a concept in Anglo-American law from the time of the Magna Carta until the time of the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment and concluded that it was intended to be a flexible concept, responsive to thought and experience-experience which is reflected in a solid body of judicial opinion, all manifesting deep convictions to be unfolded by a process of 'inclusion and exclusion.' Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U.S. 97, 104, 24 L.Ed. 616. Time and again this Court has attempted by general phrases not to define but to indicate the purport of due process and to adumbrate the continuing adjudicatory process in its application. The statement by Mr. Justice Cardozo in Palko v. State of Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319, 58 S.Ct. 149, 82 L.Ed. 288, has especially commended itself and been frequently cited in later opinions. Referring to specific situations, he wrote:

'In these and other situations immunities that are valid as     against the federal government by force of the specific      pledges of particular amendments have been found to be      implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, and thus, through      the Fourteenth Amendment, become valid as against the      states.' 302 U.S. at pages 324-325, 58 S.Ct. at page 151.

About the meaning of due process, in broad perspective unrelated to the first eight amendments, he suggested that it prohibited to the States only those practices 'repugnant to the conscience of mankind.' 302 U.S. at page 323, 58 S.Ct. at page 151. In applying these phrases in Palko, the Court ruled that, while at some point the cruelty of harassment by multiple prosecutions by a State would offend due process, the specific limitation imposed on the Federal Government by the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment did not bind the States.

Decisions of this Court concerning the application of the Due Process Clause reveal the necessary process of balancing relevant and conflicting factors in the judicial application of that Clause. In Chambers v. State of Floriday, 309 U.S. 227, 60 S.Ct. 472, 84 L.Ed. 716, we held that a state conviction of murder was void because it was based upon a confession elicited by applying third-degree methods to the defendant. But we have also held that a second execution necessitated by a mechanical failure in the first attempt was not in violation of due process. State of Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber, 329 U.S. 459, 67 S.Ct. 374, 91 L.Ed. 422. Decisions under the Due Process Clause require close and perceptive inquiry into fundamental principles of our society. The Anglo-American system of law is based not upon transcendental revelation but upon the conscience of society ascertained as best it may be by a tribunal disciplined for the task and environed by the best safeguards for disinterestedness and detachment.

Constitutional challenge to successive state and federal prosecutions based upon the same transaction or conduct is not a new question before the Court though it has now been presented with conspicuous ability. The Fifth Amendment's proscription of double jeopardy has been invoked and rejected in over twenty cases of real or hypothetical successive state and federal prosecution cases before this Court. While United States v. Lanza, 260 U.S. 377, 43 S.Ct. 141, 67 L.Ed. 314, was the first case in which we squarely held valid a federal prosecution arising out of the same facts which had been the basis of a state conviction, the validity of such a prosecution by the Federal Government has not been questioned by this Court since the opinion in Fox v. State of Ohio, 5 How. 410, 12 L.Ed. 213, more than one hundred years ago.

In Fox v. State of Ohio argument was made to the Supreme Court that an Ohio conviction for uttering counterfeit money was invalid. This assertion of invalidity was based in large part upon the argument that since Congress had imposed federal sanctions for the counterfeiting of money, a failure to find that the Supremacy Clause precluded the States from punishing related conduct would expose an individual to double punishment. Mr. Justice Daniel, writing for the Court (with Mr. Justice McLean dissenting), recognized as true that there was a possibility of double punishment, but denied that from this flowed a finding of pre-emption, concluding instead that both the Federal and State Governments retained the power to impose criminal sanctions, the United States because of its interest in protecting the purity of its currency, the States because of their interest in protecting their citizens against fraud.

In some eight state cases decided prior to Fox the courts of seven States had discussed the validity of successive state and federal prosecutions. In three, Missouri, North Carolina, and Virginia it had been said that there would be no plea in bar to prevent the second prosecution Discussions in two cases in South Carolina were in conflict-the earlier opinion expressing belief that there would be a bar, the later, without acknowledging disagreement with the first, denying the availability of a plea in bar. In three other States, Vermont, Massachusetts, and Michigan, courts had stated that a prosecution by one government would bar prosecution by another government of a crime based on the same conduct. The persuasiveness of the Massachusetts and Michigan decisions is somewhat impaired by the precedent upon which they relied in their reasoning. In the Supreme Court case cited in the Massachusetts and Michigan cases, Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat. 1, 5 L.Ed. 19, there is some language to the effect that there would be a bar to a second prosecution by a different government. 5 Wheat. at page 31. But that language by Mr. Justice Washington reflected his belief that the state statute imposed state sanctions for violation of a federal criminal law. 5 Wheat. at page 28. As he viewed the matter, the two trials would not be of similar crimes arising out of the same conduct; they would be of the same crime. Mr. Justice Johnson agreed that if the state courts had become empowered to try the defendant for the federal offense, then such a state trial would bar a federal prosecution. 5 Wheat. at page 35. Thus Houston v. Moore can be cited only for the presence of a bar in a case in which the second trial is for a violation of the very statute whose violation by the same conduct has already been tried in the courts of another government empowered to try that question.

The significance of this historical background of decisions prior to Fox is that it was, taking a position most favorable to advocates of the bars of autrefois acquit and autrefois convict in cases like that before this Court, totally inconclusive. Conflicting opinions concerning the applicability of the plea in bar may manifest conflict in conscience. They certainly do not manifest agreement that to permit successive state and federal prosecutions for different crimes arising from the same acts would be repugnant to those standards of outlawry which offend the conception of due process outlined in Palko. (It is worth noting that Palko sustained a first degree murder conviction returned in a second trial after an appeal by the State from an acquittal of first degree murder.) The early state decisions had clarified the issue by stating the opposing arguments. The process of this Court's response to the Fifth Amendment challenge was begun in Fox v. State of Ohio, continued in United States v. Marigold, 9 How. 560, 13 L.Ed. 257, and was completed in Moore v. People of State of Illinois, 14 How. 13, 14 L.Ed. 306. Mr. Justice Grier, writing for the Court in Moore v. People of State of Illinois, gave definitive statement to the rule which had been evolving:

'An offence, in its legal signification, means the     transgression of a law.' 14 How. at page 19.

'Every citizen of the United States is also a citizen of a     State or territory. He may be said to owe allegiance to two     sovereigns, and may be liable to punishment for an infraction      of the laws of either. The same act may be an offence or     transgression of the laws of both.' 14 How. at page 20.

'That either or both may (if they see fit) punish such an     offender, cannot be doubted. Yet it cannot be truly averred that the offender has been twice punished     for the same offence; but only that by one act he has      committed two offences, for each of which he is justly      punishable. He could not plead the punishment by one in bar     to a conviction by the other.' Ibid.

In a dozen cases decided by this Court between Moore v. People of State of Illinois and United States v. Lanza this Court had occasion to reaffirm the principle first enunciated in Fox v. State of Ohio. Since Lanza the Court has five times repeated the rule that successive state and federal prosecutions are not in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Indeed Mr. Justice Holmes once wrote of this rule that it 'is too plain to need more than statement.' One of the post-Lanza cases, Jerome v. United States, 318 U.S. 101, 63 S.Ct. 483, 87 L.Ed. 640, involved the same federal statute under which Bartkus was indicted and in Jerome this Court recognized that successive state and federal prosecutions were thereby made possible because all States had general robbery statutes. Nonetheless, a unanimous Court, as recently as 1943, accepted as unquestioned constitutional law that such successive prosecutions would not violate the proscription of double jeopardy included in the Fifth Amendment. 318 U.S. at page 105, 63 S.Ct. at page 486.

The lower federal courts have of course been in accord with this Court. Although some can be cited only in that they follow the decisions of this Court, others manifest reflection upon the issues involved and express reasoned approval of the two-sovereignty principle. In United States v. Barnhart, 22 F. 285, the Oregon Circuit Court was presented with a case just the obverse of the present one: the prior trial and acquittal was by a state court; the subsequent trial was by a federal court. The Circuit Court rejected defendant's plea of autrefois acquit, saying that the hardship of the second trial might operate to persuade against the bringing of a subsequent prosecution but could not bar it.

The experience of state courts in dealing with successive prosecutions by different governments is obviously also relevant in considering whether or not the Illinois prosecution of Bartkus violated due process of law. Of the twenty-eight States which have considered the validity of successive state and federal prosecutions as against a challenge of violation of either a state constitutional double-jeopardy provision or a common-law evidentiary rule of autrefois acquit and autrefois convict, twenty-seven have refused to rule that the second prosecution was or would be barred. These States were not bound to follow this Court and its interpretation of the Fifth Amendment. The rules, constitutional, statutory, or common law which bound them, drew upon the same experience as did the Fifth Amendment, but were and are of separate and independent authority.

Not all of the state cases manifest careful reasoning, for in some of them the language concerning double jeopardy is but offhand dictum. But in an array of state cases there may be found full consideration of the arguments supporting and denying a bar to a second prosecution. These courts interpreted their rules as not proscribing a second prosecution where the first was by a different government and for violation of a different statute.

With this body of precedent as irrefutable evidence that state and federal courts have for years refused to bar a second trial even though there had been a prior trial by another government for a similar offense, it would be disregard of a long, unbroken, unquestioned course of impressive adjudication for the Court now to rule that due process compels such a bar. A practical justification for rejecting such a reading of due process also commends itself in aid of this interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment. In Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. 91, 65 S.Ct. 1031, 89 L.Ed. 1495, defendants were tried and convicted in a federal court under federal statutes with maximum sentences of a year and two years respectively. But the state crime there involved was a capital offense. Were the federal prosecution of a comparatively minor offense to prevent state prosecution of so grave an infraction of state law, the result would be a shocking and untoward deprivation of the historic right and obligation of the States to maintain peace and order within their confines. It would be in derogation of our federal system to displace the reserved power of States over state offenses by reason of prosecution of minor federal offenses by federal authorities beyond the control of the States.

Some recent suggestions that the Constitution was in reality a deft device for establishing a centralized government are not only without factual justification but fly in the face of history. It has more accurately been shown that the men who wrote the Constitution as well as the citizens of the member States of the Confederation were fearful of the power of centralized government and sought to limit its power. Mr. Justice Brandeis has written that separation of powers was adopted in the Constitution 'not to promote efficiency but to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power.' Time has not lessened the concern of the Founders in devising a federal system which would likewise be a safeguard against arbitrary government. The greatest self-restraint is necessary when that federal system yields results with which a court is in little sympathy.

The entire history of litigation and contention over the question of the imposition of a bar to a second prosecution by a government other than the one first prosecuting is a manifestation of the evolutionary unfolding of law. Today a number of States have statutes which bar a second prosecution if the defendant has been once tried by another government for a similar offense. A study of the cases under the New York statute, which is typical of these laws, demonstrates that the task of determining when the federal and state statutes are so much alike that a prosecution under the former bars a prosecution under the latter is a difficult one. The proper solution of that problem frequently depends upon a judgment of the gravamen of the state statute. It depends also upon an understanding of the scope of the bar that has been historically granted in the State to prevent successive state prosecutions. Both these problems are ones with which the States are obviously more competent to deal than is this Court. Furthermore, the rules resulting will intimately affect the efforts of a State to develop a rational and just body of criminal law in the protection of its citizens. We ought not to utilize the Fourteenth Amendment to interfere with this development. Finally, experience such as that of New York may give aid to Congress in its consideration of adoption of similar provisions in individual federal criminal statutes or in the federal criminal code.

Precedent, experience, and reason alike support the conclusion that Alfonse Bartkus has not been deprived of due process of law by the State of Illinois.

Affirmed.

"No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a      presentment or indictment  of a Grand Jury *  *  * ."] Sixth Amendment

"In all criminal prosecutions,   the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public

trial, by an impartial jury      *  *  * ." Seventh Amendment

"In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be  preserved *  *  * ."

States Listed in Proclamation of Ratification Kansas.

Silent. See Fairman, p. 101. Bill of Rights, § 10, similar. Bill of Rights, § 5, similar. Maine.

Art. I, § 7, similar. Art. I, § 6, similar. Art. I, § 20, similar. Nevada.

Art. I, § 8, similar. Art. I, § 3, similar. Art. I, § 3, provides for a three-fourths vote of thejury in civil cases. Missouri.

Art. I, § 24, similar. In the Constitution of 1875 it is provided that nine of thetwelve men on the grand jury may indict. Art. II,  § 28.

Art. I, § 18, similar. TheConstitution of 1875 permits juries of less than twelve in courts not of record. Art. II, § 28, and does not specify the limits of the jurisdiction of such courts. Art. I, § 17, similar.The Consitution of 1875 permits juries of less than twelve in courts not of record, Art. II, § 28, and does not specify the limits of the jurisdiction of such courts  Indiana.

Art. VII, § 17: "The General Assembly may modify or abolish the Grand Jury system." See Fairman, p. 106. Art. I, § 13, similar. Art. I, § 20, similar.

Minnesota.

1857.c   Silent. Art. I, § 6, similar. Art. I, § 4, similar. Butin 1890 the constitution  was amended to permit the legislature toprovide for afive-sixths verdict after not less than   six hours debate. Rhode Island.

Art. I, § 7, similar. Art. I, § 10, similar. Art. I, § 15, similar. Wisconsin.

1848.c    Art. I, § 8, similar. In    1870 the constitution was amended to permit prosecutions without a grand jury indictment. Amendments, Art. I. See Fairman, pp. 110-111.

Art. I, § 7, similar. Art. I, § 5, similar. Pennsylvania.

Art. IX, § 10, similar. Art. IX, § 9, similar. Art. IX, § 6, similar. Michigan.

Silent. See Fairman. pp. 115-116. Art. VI, § 28, permits juries of less than twelve in courts not of record. The constitution does not specify the limits of the jurisdiction of       such courts. Art. VI, 27, similar. Massachusetts.

Silent. First Part, Art. XII, restricts jury right to      trial of cases involving   "capital or infamous       punishment." First Part, Art. XV, similar.

"No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury * *  * ."] Sixth Amendment

"In all criminal prosecutions,   the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public

trial, by an impartial jury * *  * ." Seventh Amendment

"In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be  preserved *  *  * ."

States Listed in Proclamation of Ratification Nebraska

1866-67.c Art. I, § 8, similar. The Constitution of 1875 provided that the legislature couldabolish the grand jury system. Art. I, § 10. See Fairman, pp. 123-124. Art. I, § 7, similar. Art. I, § 5, permits legislature to authorize juries of less than twelve in "inferior courts." In the Constitution of 1875 the provision was altered to read in "courts inferior to the district court." Art. I, § 6. County courts, which are such inferior tribunals, were given jurisdiction up to one thousand dollars by the  Constitution of 1875. Art. VI, § 16. See Fairman, pp. 122-123. Iowa.

1857.c Art. I, § 11, similar. An amendment in 1884 permitted prosecutions without indictment.

Art. I, § 10, similar. Art. I, § 9, authorizes juries of less than twelve "in inferior courts." Arkansas.

1868.c Art. I, § 9, similar. Art. I, § 8, similar. Art. I, § 6, similar. Florida.

1868.c Art. I, § 9, similar. Art. I, § 4, similar. Art. I, § 4, similar.

North Carolina.

1868.c Art. I, § 12, similar. Art. I, § 13, similar. Art. I, § 19, may limit theguarantee to "controversiesat law respecting property". South Carolina.

1868.c Art. I, § 19, similar. Art. I, §§ 13, 14, similar. Art. I, § 11, similar. Lousiana

1868.c Title I, Art. 6, permits prosecutions to be begun be indictment or information. See Fairman, p. 127. Title I, Art. 6, similar. In Constitution of     1879 it is provided that where "penalty   is not necessarily imprisonment at hard labor or death" the legislature may provide for a jury of less than twelve. Art. 7. No provision in Bill of Rights. Title IV, Art. 87,indicates that at least up to one hundred dollars no jury trial need be provided.In Constitution of 1879 the legislature is empowered to provide for less than unanimous verdicts. Art. 116. Alabama.

1867.c Art. I, § 10, similar. Art. I, § 8, similar. Art. I, § 13, similar. Georgia.

1868.c Silent. Art. I, § 7, appears to be similar. But Art. V, § 4, cl. 5, states that offenses before a District Judge shall be tried to a jury of seven. Art. V, § 4, cl. 2, defines the jurisdiction of District Courts; they try all crimes not punishable with death or imprisonment in the penitentiary. Art. V, § 13, appears to be similar. But Art. V, § 3, cl. 3, states that the Superior Court can render judgment without jury "in all civil cases founded on contract, where an issuable defence is not filed on oath."

"No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a      presentment or indictment  of a Grand Jury *  *  * ."] Sixth Amendment

"In all criminal prosecutions,   the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public

trial, by an impartial jury      *  *  * ." Seventh Amendment

"In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be  preserved *  *  * ."

States Listed in Proclamation of Ratification Virginia

1864.c Silent. Art. I, § 8, similar. Art. I, § II, similar. Mississippi.

1868.c Art. I, § 31, similar. Art. I, § 7, similar. Art. I, § 12, similar. Texas.

1868.c Art. I, § 8, permits institution of criminal proceedings on indictment orinformation.

Art. I, §§ 8, 12, similar. Art. V, § 16, similar. States Admitted to the Union After the Ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment Colorado.

1876.c Art. II, § 23, provides grand jury shall have only twelve, nine of whom can indict. It also provides that: "The general assembly may change, regulate, or abolish the grand-jury system." Art. II, §§ 16, 23, similar. Art. II, § 23, permits legislature to set the size of the jury at less than twelve.

North Dakota.

indictment for felonies, but also states that the legislature may may abolish the grand-jury system. Art. I, § 7, similar. Art. I, § 7, limits itsguarantee to courts ofrecord, but the delineation of jurisdiction is not clear. Montana.

prosecution by information and provides that if a grand jury be established it shall have seven persons, five of whom can indict. Art. III, § 16, 23. The latter section providesthat in criminal  actions not amounting to a felony a two-  thirds vote is       sufficient to convict. Art. III, § 23, provides for a two-thirds verdict. Furthermore the jury in a Justice's court is composed of not more than six persons. Such courts have jurisdiction up to three hundred dollars. Art. VIII, § 20. South Dakota.

for institution of criminal actions by information or  indictment and permits the  legislature to abolish the grand jury entirely. Art. VI, §§ 6, 7, similar. Art. VI, § 6, permitslegislatre  to provide forthree-fourths vote. Incourts not of record juriesof less than twelve are permitted. Washington

1889.c Art. I, § 25,

sanctions the

use of information

to initiate criminal

proceedings. Art. I, § 21, similar. Art. I, § 21, provides for a  three-fourths verdict in courts of record and for juries of less than twelve in courts not of record. Idaho

1889.c Art. I, § 8, provides for institution of criminal actions by information or indictment. Art. I, § 7, provides that

for misdemeanors a five-sixths verdict can convict. Art. I, § 7, provides for a three-fourths verdict.

"No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a      presentment or indictment  of a Grand Jury *  *  * ."] Sixth Amendment

"In all criminal prosecutions,   the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public

trial, by an impartial jury      *  *  * ." Seventh Amendment

"In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be  preserved *  *  * ."

States Admitted to the Union After the Ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment Wyoming.

1889.c Art. I, § 13, continues grand jury until otherwise provided. Art I, § 9, provides that the grand jury will be composed of twelve, nine of  whom can indict. The legislature is empowered to change or abolish the grand-jury system.

Art. I, § 9, similar. Art. I, § 9, permits the  legislature to establish juries of less than twelve. Utah.

1895.c Art. I, § 13, offers alternatives: the charge may be brought before a committing magistrate and if the accused is held by such magistrate he may be tried on information; the alternative is indictment, but by a grand jury of seven,   five to indict. Art. I, § 10, preserves traditional jury only in capital cases. In other prosecutions, if in courts of general jurisdicition, there shall be a jury of eight; if in courts of inferior jurisdiction, there shall be a jury of four. Art. I, § provides that in courts of general jurisdiction trial shall be to a jury of eight, verdict by three-fourths vote. In courts of inferior jurisdiction trial is to a jury of four, verdict by three-fourths vote. Oklahoma.

1907.c Art. II, § 17, permits prosecution by indictment or information. Art. II § 18, provides that a grand jury, if any, is to be composed of twelve urors, nine needed to indict.

Art. II, § 19, requires      unanimous verdict in  felony cases, but only  three-fourths in trial of other crimes. Inferior courts are established with juries of six. Art. II, § 19, provides for a three-fourths verdict.

Arizona. 1912.ad 1910.c Art. II, § 30, permits initiation of criminal proceedings by either  information or indictment. Art. II, § 23, permits juries of less than twelve in courts not of record. Art. VI, §§ 6, 10, may indicate legislature can vest such courts with     jurisdiction over all misdemeanors. Art. II, § 23, provides that the legislature may establish a three-fourths verdict in courts of record and juries of less than twelve in courts not of record.New Mexico. 1912.ad 1911.c Art, II, § 14, permits initiation of criminal proceedings by either information or indictment. If by indictment, grand jury must have at least twelve jurors; if there are twelve jurors, eight can indict, if more than  twelve, a majority can indict. Art. II, § 14, similar. Art. II, § 12, permits thelegislature to provide for a less-than-unanimous vote. In cases triable by courts lower than the District Courts (Justices of the Peace can be given jurisdiction up to two hundred dollars, Art. VI, § 26), the legislature can establish juries of six. Alaska.

1958.c Art. I, § 8, guarantees grand jury, but the grand jury is of twelve, a majority of whom can indict.

Art. I, § 11, permits legislature to provide for juries of between six and twelve in  courts not of record, and does not specify jurisdictional limits of such courts. Art. I, § 16, provides for a jury only if more than two hundred and fifty dollars is involved. Furthermore, the verdict in such cases is to be by three-fourths vote if the legislature so desires. Mr. Justice BLACK, with whom The CHIEF JUSTICE and Mr. Justice DOUGLAS concur, dissenting.

Petitioner, Bartkus, was indicted in a United States District Court for bank robbery. He was tried by a jury and acquitted. So far as appears the trial was conducted fairly by an able and conscientious judge. Later, Bartkus was indicted in an Illinois state court for the same bank robbery. This time he was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. His acquittal in the federal court would have barred a second trial in any court of the United States because of the provision in the Fifth Amendment that no person shall 'be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.' The Court today rejects Bartkus' contention that his state conviction after a federal acquittal violates the Fourteenth Amendment to our Constitution. I cannot agree.

The Court's holding further limits our already weakened constitutional guarantees against double prosecutions. United States v. Lanza, 260 U.S. 377, 43 S.Ct. 141, 67 L.Ed. 314, decided in 1922, allowed federal conviction and punishment of a man who had been previously convicted and punished for the identical acts by one of our States. Today, for the first time in its history, the Court upholds the statecon viction of a defendant who had been acquitted of the same offense in the federal courts. I would hold that a federal trial following either state acquittal or conviction is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Abbate v. United States, 359 U.S. 187, 79 S.Ct. 666 (dissenting opinion). And, quite apart from whether that clause is as fully binding on the States as it is on the Federal Government, see Adamson v. People of State of California, 332 U.S. 46, 68, 67 S.Ct. 1672, 1684, 91 L.Ed. 1903 (dissenting opinion), I would hold that Bartkus' conviction cannot stand. For I think double prosecutions for the same offense are so contrary to the spirit of our free country that they violate even the prevailing view of the Fourteenth Amendment, expressed in Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319, 58 S.Ct. 149, 82 L.Ed. 288.

The Fourteenth Amendment, this Court said in Palko, does not make all of the specific guarantees of the Bill of Rights applicable to the States. But, the Court noted, some of 'the privileges and immunities' of the Bill of Rights, 'have been taken over * *  * and brought within the Fourteenth Amendment by a process of absorption.' 302 U.S. at page 326, 58 S.Ct. at page 152. The Court indicated that incorporated in due process were those 'principle(s) of justice so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental.' 302 U.S. at page 325, 58 S.Ct. at page 152. It then held that a statute allowing a State to appeal in a criminal case did not violate such fundamental principles. But it expressly left open the question of whether 'the state (could be) permitted after a trial free from error to try the accused over again.' 302 U.S. at page 328, 58 S.Ct. at page 153. That question is substantially before us today.

Fear and abhorrence of governmental power to try people twice for the same conduct is one of the oldest ideas found in western civilization. Its roots run deep into Greek and Roman times. Even in the Dark Ages, when so many other principles of justice were lost, the idea that one trial and one punishment were enough remained alive through the canon law and the teachings of the early Christian writers. By the thirteenth century it seems to have been firmly established in England, where it came to be considered as a 'universal maxim of the common law.' It is not surprising, therefore, that the principle was brought to this country by the earliest settlers as part of their heritage of freedom, and that it has been recognized here as fundamental again and again. Today it is found, in varying forms, not only in the Federal Constitution, but in the jurisprudence or constitutions of every State, as wel as most foreign nations. It has, in fact, been described as a part of all advanced systems of law and as one of those universal principles 'of reason, justice, and conscience, of which Cicero said: 'Nor is it one thing at Rome and another at Athens, one now and another in the future, but among all nations it is the same." While some writers have explained the opposition to double prosecutions by emphasizing the injustice inherent in two punishments for the same Act, and others have stressed the dangers to the innocent from allowing the full power of the state to be brought against them in two trials, the basic and recurring theme has always simply been that it is wrong for a man to 'be brought into Danger for the same Offence more than once.' Few principles have been more deeply 'rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people.'

The Court apparently takes the position that a second trial for the same act is somehow less offensive if one of the trials is conducted by the Federal Government and the other by a State. Looked at from the standpoint of the individual who is being prosecuted, this notion is too subtle for me to grasp. If double punishment is what is feared, it hurts no less for two 'Sovereigns' to inflict it than for one. If danger to the innocent is emphasized, that danger is surely no less when the power of State and Federal Governments is brought to bear on one man in two trials, then when one of these 'Sovereigns' proceeds alone. In each case, inescapably, a man is forced to face danger twice for the same conduct.

The Court, without denying the almost universal abhorrence of such double prosecutions, nevertheless justifies the practice here in the name of 'federalism.' This, it seems to me, is a misuse and desecration of the concept. Our Federal Union was conceived and created 'to establish Justice' and to 'secure the Blessings of Liberty,' not to destroy any of the bulwarks on which both freedom and justice depend. We should, therefore, be suspicious of any supposed 'requirements' of 'federalism' which reult in obliterating ancient safeguards. I have been shown nothing in the history of our Union, in the writings of its Founders, or elsewhere, to indicate that individual rights deemed essential by both State and Nation were to be lost through the combined operations of the two governments. Nor has the Court given any sound reason for thinking that the successful operation of our dual system of government depends in the slightest on the power to try people twice for the same act.

Implicit in the Court's reliance on 'federalism' is the premise that failure to allow double prosecutions would seriously impair law enforcement in both State and Nation. For one jurisdiction might provide minor penalties for acts severely punished by the other and by accepting pleas of guilty shield wrongdoers from justice. I believe this argument fails on several grounds. In the first place it relies on the unwarranted assumption that State and Nation will seek to subvert each other's laws. It has elsewhere been persuasively argued that most civilized nations do not and have not needed the power to try people a second time to protect themselves even when dealing with foreign lands. It is inconceivable to me, as it was to the Constitutional Court of South Carolina in 1816, that 'If this prevails among nations who are strangers to each other, (it could) fail to (prevail) with us who are so intimately bound by political ties.' State v. Antonio, 2 Tread.Const., S.C., 776, 781. Cf. Testa v. Katt, 330 U.S. 386, 67 S.Ct. 810, 91 L.Ed. 967.

The Court's argument also ignores the fact that our Constitution allocates power between local and federal governments in such a way that the basic rights of each can be protected without double trials. The Federal Government is given power to act in limited areas only, but in matters properly within its scope it is supreme. It can retain exclusive control of such matters, or grant the States concurrent power on its own terms. If the States were to subvert federal laws in these areas by imposing inadequate penalties, Congress would have full power to protect the national interest, either by defining the crime to be punished and establishing minimum penalties applicable in both state and federal courts, or by excluding the States altogether. Conversely, in purely local matters the power of the States is supreme and exclusive. State courts can and should, therefore, protect all essentially local interests in one trial without federal interference. Cf. Rutkin v. United States, 343 U.S. 130, 139, 72 S.Ct. 571, 576, 96 L.Ed. 833 (dissenting opinion). In areas, however, where the Constitution has vested power in the Federal Government the States necessarily act only to the extent Congress permits, and it is no infringement on their basic rights if Congress chooses to fix penalties smaller than some of them might wish. In fact, this will rarly occur, for Congress is not likely to use indirect means to limit state power when it could accomplish the same result directly by pre-empting the field.

Ultimately the Court's reliance on federalism amounts to no more than the notion that, somehow, one act becomes two because two jurisdictions are involved. Hawkins, in his Pleas of the Crown, long ago disposed of a similar contention made to justify two trials for the same offense by different counties as 'a mere Fiction or Construction of Law, which shall hardly take Place against a Maxim made in Favour of Life.' It was discarded as a dangerous fiction then, it should be discarded as a dangerous fiction now.

To bolster its argument that successive state and federal prosecutions do not violate basic principles of justice, the Court cites many cases. It begins with eight early state decisions which, it says, 'clarified the issue by stating opposing arguments.' Four of these cases held that prosecution by one government must bar subsequent prosecutions elsewhere. Two of the remaining four refused to hold that concurrent jurisdiction could exist since they feared that such a holding might bring about two trials for the same offense, a result they considered too shocking to tolerate. 'This is against natural justice,' said the North Carolina Superior Court in 1794, 'and therefore I cannot believe it to be law.' The seventh case cited is an inconclusive discussion coming from a State whose highest court had previously stated unequivocally that a bar against double prosecutions would exist. Thus only one of these early state cases actually approves the doctrine the Court today advances, and that approval is in dicta. Significantly, the highest court of the same State later expressed the view that such double trials would virtually never occur in our country.

The Court relies mainly, however, on a later line of decisions starting with Fox v. State of Ohio, 5 How. 410, 12 L.Ed. 213. Most of these, like Fox itself, involved only the question of whether both State and Federal Governments could make the same conduct a crime. Although some, in dicta, admitted the possibility that double prosecutions might result from such concurrent power, others did not discuss the question. Many, especially among the earlier cases, pointed out that double punishment violates the genius of our free country and therefore would never occur. As Chief Justice Taney, on circuit, said in one of them 'Yet in all civilized countries it is recognized as a fundamental principle of justice that a man ought not to be punished twice for the same offence; and, if this pary h ad been punished * *  * in the state tribunal, the court would have left it to be its duty to suspend sentence, and to represent the facts to the president, to give him an opportunity of *  *  * granting a pardon.' While a limited number of cases after Fox are cited in which a double conviction was upheld, in several of these the second court was so troubled by the result that only nominal sentences were imposed. In fact, before United States v. Lanza, 1922, 260 U.S. 377, 43 S.Ct. 141, 67 L.Ed. 314, where this Court upheld and encouraged the practice, the cases of actual double punishment found are so few, in relation to the great mass of criminal cases decided, that one can readily discern an instinctive unwillingness to impose such hardships on defendants.

Despite its exhaustive research, the Court has cited only three cases before Lanza where a new trial after an acquittal was upheld. In one of these, United States v. Barnhart, C.C., 22 F. 285, the state court in which the defendant had been acquitted did not have jurisdiction of the action. The Federal Circuit Court relied on this lack of jurisdiction in allowing a retrial, but made an alternate holding based on the same general arguments used by the Court today. The Barnhart opinion also intimated that the first trial may have been a sham. Sham trials, as well as those by courts without jurisdiction, have been considered by courts and commentators not to be jeopardy, and might therefore not bar subsequent convictions. In the second case cited by the Court, the state conviction followed acquittal by a federal court-martial at a time when, as the state court seemed to recognize, a military tria was thought by many not to be a trial for the purpose of double jeopardy even when both trials were conducted by the same 'Sovereign.' The third case relied on, a 1915 decision from the State of Washington, is the only one of the three where it can fairly be said that a defendant acquitted in a proper jury trial was subsequently tried again by a jury and convicted.

On may, I think infer from the fewness of the cases that retrials after acquittal have been considered particularly obnoxious, worse even, in the eyes of many, than retrials after conviction. I doubt, in fact, if many practices which have been found to violate due process can boast of so little actual support. Yet it is on this meager basis that the Court must ultimately rest its finding that Bartkus' retrial does not violate fundamental principles 'rooted in the traditions and conscience of our peoples.' Nor are these scattered and dubious cases unchallenged, for, balanced against them, we have a firm holding by this Court sustaining an extremely narrow construction of a federal statute in order to make a state acquittal conclusive in the federal courts and thereby avoid the evil approved today. United States v. Mason, 213 U.S. 115, 29 S.Ct. 480, 53 L.Ed. 725. That case, as well as the 'sacred duty * *  * to maintain unimpaired those securities for the personal rights of the individual which have received for ages the sanction of the jurist and the statesman,' Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163, 178, 21 L.Ed. 872, should make us doubly hesitant to encourage so blatant a violation of constitutional policies against double trials by giving an 'illiberal construction * *  * to the words of the fundamental law in which they are embodied.' Ibid.

Since Lanza people have apparently become more accustomed to double trials, once deemed so shocking, just as they might, in time, adjust themselves to all other violations of the Bill of Rights should they be sanctioned by this our t. The Court is therefore able to find a 1943 state case, as well as four federal cases in the last five years, in which a conviction following acquittal was sustained. Thus this practice, which for some 150 years was considered so undesirable that the Court must strain to find examples, is now likely to become a commonplace. For, after today, who will be able to blame a conscientious prosecutor for failing to accept a jury verdict of acquittal when he believes a defendant guilty and knowns that a second try is available in another jurisdiction and that such a second try is approved by the Highest Court in the Land? Inevitably, the victims of such double prosecutions will most often be the poor and the weak in our society, individuals without friends in high places who can influence prosecutors not to try them again. The power to try a second time will be used, as have all similar procedures, to make scapegoats of helpless, political, religious, or racial minorities and those who differ, who do not conform and who resist tyranny. See Chambers v. State of Florida, 309 U.S. 227, 236, 60 S.Ct. 472, 476, 84 L.Ed. 716.

There are some countries that allow the dangerous practice of trying people twice. I am inserting below a recent news item about a man who was tried, convicted, sentenced to prison and then was tried again, convicted and sentenced to death. Similar examples are not hard to find in lands torn by revolution or crushed by dictatorship. I had thought that our constitutional protections embodied in the Double Jeopardy and Due Process Clauses would have barred any such things happening here. Unfortunately, last year's holdings by this Court in Ciucci v. State of Illinois, 356 U.S. 571, 78 S.Ct. 839, 2 L.Ed.2d 983, and Hoag v. State of New Jersey, 356 U.S. 464, 78 S.Ct. 829, 2 L.Ed.2d 913, and today's affirmance of the convictions of Bartkus and Abbate cause me to fear that in an important number of cases it can happen here.

I would reverse.

Mr. Justice BRENNAN, whom the CHIEF JUSTICE and Mr. Justice DOUGLAS join, dissenting.

Bartkus was tried and acquitted in a Federal District Court of robbing a federally insured savings and loan association in Cicero, Illinois. He was indicted for the same robbery by the State of Illinois less than three weeks later, and subsequently convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. The single issue in dispute at both trials was whether Bartkus was the third participant in the robbery along with two self-confessed perpetrators of the crime.

The Government's case against Bartkus on the federal trial rested primarily upon the testimony of two of the robbers, Joseph Cosentino and James Brindis, who confessed their part in the crime and tetif ied that Bartkus was their confederate. The defense was that Bartkus was getting a hair cut in a barber shop several miles away at the time the robbery was committed. The owner of the barber shop, his son and other witnesses placed Bartkus in the shop at the time. The federal jury in acquitting Barkus apparently believed the alibi witnesses and not Cosentino and Brindis.

The federal authorities were highly displeased with the jury's resolution of the conflicting testimony, and the trial judge sharply upbraided the jury for its verdict. See some of his remarks printed in United States v. Vasen, 7 Cir., 222 F.2d 3, 9 10 (dissenting opinion). The federal authorities obviously decided immediately after the trial to make a second try at convicting Bartkus, and since the federal courthouse was barred to them by the Fifth Amendment, they turned to a state prosecution for that purpose. It is clear that federal officers solicited the state indictment, arranged to assure the attendance of key witnesses, unearthed additional evidence to discredit Bartkus and one of his alibi witnesses, and in general prepared and guided the state prosecution. Thus the State's Attorney stated at the state trial: 'I am particularly glad to see a case where the federal authorities came to see the state's attorney.' And Illinois conceded with commendable candor on the oral argument in this Court 'that the federal officers did instigate and guide this state prosecution' and 'actually prepared this case.' Indeed, the State argued the case on the basis that the record showed as a matter of 'fair inference' that the case was one in which 'federal officers bring to the attention of the state prosecuting authority the commission of an act and furnish and provide him with evidence of defendant's guilt.'

I think that the record before us shows that the extent of participation of the federal authorities here constituted this state prosecution actually a second federal prosecution of Bartkus. The federal jury acquitted Bartkus late in December 1953. Early in January 1954 the Assistant United States Attorney who prosecuted the federal case summoned Cosentino to his office. Present also were the FBI agent who had investigated the robbery and the Assistant State's Attorney for Cook County who later prosecuted the state case. The Assistant State's Attorney said to Cosentino, 'Look, we are going to get an indictment in the state court against Bartkus, will you testify against him?' Cosentino agreed that he would. Later Brindis also agreed to testify. Although they pleaded guilty to the federal robbery charge in August 1953, the Federal District Court postponed their sentencing until after they testified against Bartkus at the state trial, which was not held until April 1954. The record does not disclose what sentences were imposed after they testified at the state trial or whether sentences have yet been imposed. Both Cosentino and Brindis were also released on bail pending the state trial, Brindis on his own recognizance.

In January, also, an FBI agent who had been active in the federal prosecution purposefully set about strengthening the proofs which had not sufficed to convict Bartkus on the federal trial. And he frankly admitted that he 'was securing it (information) for the federal government,' although what he gathered had 'gone to the state authorities.' These January efforts of the agent were singularly successful and may well have tipped the scales in favor of conviction. He uncovered a new witness against Bartkus, one Grant Pursel, who had been enlarged on bail pending his sentencing on his plea of guilty to an indictment for violation of the Mann Act, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2421 et seq. Pursel testified that 'about two weeks after the federal trial, in the first part of January,' the FBI agent sought him out to discuss an alleged conversation between Pursel and Bartkus during September 1953 when both were in jail awaiting their respective federal trials. Pursel's testimony at the stae t rial, that Bartkus had told him he participated in the robbery, was obviously very damaging. Yet, indicative of the attitude of the federal officials that this was actually a federal prosecution, the FBI agent arranged no interview between Pursel and any state authority. The first time that Pursel had any contact whatsoever with a state official connected with the case was the morning that he testified. And as in the case of Cosentino and Brindis, Pursel's sentencing was postponed until after he testified against Bartkus at the state trial. Here too the record does not disclose what sentence was imposed or whether any has yet been imposed.

Also within a month after the federal acquittal the FBI agent sought out the operator of the barber shop who had placed Bartkus in his shop at the time of the robbery. The barber testified at both federal and state trials that Bartkus entered his shop before 4 o'clock, about which time the robbery was committed. The agent testified as a rebuttal witness for the State that the barber had told him in January that it might have been after 4:30 o'clock when Bartkus entered the shop. And the significance of the federal participation in this prosecution is further evidenced by the Assistant State's Attorney's motion at the beginning of the trial, which was granted over defense objection, to permit the FBI agent to remain in the courtroom throughout the trial although other witnesses were excluded.

The Court, although not finding such to be the case here apparently acknowledges that under certain circumstances it would be necessary to set aside a state conviction brought about by federal authorities to avoid the prohibition of the Fifth Amendment against a second federal prosecution. Our task is to determine how much the federal authorities must participate in a state prosecution before it so infects the conviction that we must set it aside. The test, I submit, must be fashioned to secure the fundamental protection of the Fifth Amendment 'that the (Federal Government) with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity * *  * .' Green v. United States, 355 U.S. 184, 187, 78 S.Ct. 221, 223, 2 L.Ed.2d 199. Under any test based upon these principles, this conviction cannot stand. In allowing the use of federal resources to bring about this second try at Bartkus, the Court denies Bartkus the protection which the Fifth Amendment assures him. Given the fact that there must always be state officials involved in a state prosecution, I cannot see how there can be more complete federal participation in a state prosecution than there was in this case. I see no escape from the conclusion that this particular state trial was in actuality a second federal prosecution-a second federal try at Bartkus in the guise of a state prosecution. If this state conviction is not overturned, then, as a practical matter, there will be no restraints on the use of state machinery by federal officers to bring what is in effect a second federal prosecution.

To set aside this state conviction because infected with constitutional violations by federal officers implies no condemnation of the state processes as such. The conviction is set aside not because of any infirmities resulting from fault of the State but because it is the product of unconstitutional federal action. I cannot grasp the merit of an argument that protection against federal oppression in the circumstances shown by this record would do violence to the principles of federalism. Of course, cooperation between federal and state authorities in criminal law enforcement is to be desired and encouraged, for cooperative federalism in this field can indeed profit the Nation and the States in improving methods for carrying out the endless fight against crime. But the normal and heathy situation consists of state and federal officers cooperating to apprehend lawbreakers and present the strongest case against them at a single trial, be it state or federal. Cooperation in order to permit the Federal Government to harass the accused so as to deny him his protection under the Fifth Amendment is not to be tolerated as a legitimate requirement of federalism. The lesson of the history which wrought the Fifth Amendment's protection has taught us little if that shield may be shattered by reliance upon the requirements of federalism and state sovereignty to sustain this transparent attempt of the Federal Government to have two tries at convicting Bartkus for the same alleged crime. What happened here was simply that the federal effort which failed in the federal courthouse was renewed a second time in the state courthouse across the street. Not content with the federal jury's resolution of conflicting testimony in Bartkus' favor, the federal officers engineered this second prosecution and on the second try obtained the desired conviction. It is exactly this kind of successive prosecution by federal officers that the Fifth Amendment was intended to prohibit. This Court has declared principles in clearly analogous situations which I think should control here. In Rea v. United States, 350 U.S. 214, 76 S.Ct. 292, 100 L.Ed. 233, the Court held that an injunction should issue against a federal agent's transference of illegally obtained evidence to state authorities for use as the basis of a state charge. If the federal courts have power to defeat a state prosecution by force of their supervision of federal officers, surely the federal courts have power to defeat a state prosecution transparently employed by federal authorities in violation of the Fifth Amendment. In Knapp v. Schweitzer, 357 U.S. 371, 380, 78 S.Ct. 1302, 2 L.Ed.2d 1393, we declared: 'Of course the Federal Government may not take advantage of * *  * the States' autonomy in order to evade the Bill of Rights.' See also Feldman v. United States, 322 U.S. 487, 494, 64 S.Ct. 1082, 1085, 88 L.Ed. 1408; cf. Byars v. United States, 273 U.S. 28, 47 S.Ct. 248, 71 L.Ed. 520. These principles require, I think, that we set aside the state conviction.