                                   FINAL REPORT1


             New Rule 556.13, Amendment of Pa.R.Crim.P. 556.11, and Revision of
             the Comments to Pa.Rs.Crim.P. 502, 513, 516, 517, and 518

             POST-INDICTMENT ARREST WARRANT PROCEDURES



       On November 27, 2018, effective March 1, 2019, upon the recommendation of
the Criminal Procedural Rules Committee, the Court adopted new Rule 556.13
(Procedures Following Execution of Warrant of Arrest Issued Following Indictment),
amended Rule 556.11 ( Proceedings When Case Presented to Grand Jury), and
revised the Comments to Rules 502 (Instituting Proceedings in Court Cases), 513
(Requirements for Issuance; Dissemination of Arrest Warrant Information), 516
(Procedure in Court Cases When Warrant of Arrest is Executed Within Judicial District
of Issuance), 517 (Procedure in Court Cases When Warrant of Arrest is Executed
Outside Judicial District of Issuance), and 518 (Using Advanced Communication
Technology in Court Cases When Warrant of Arrest is Executed Outside Judicial District
of Issuance) to provide procedures when an arrest warrant is issued following an
indictment as provided in Rule 556.11(D)(2).

       The Committee was presented with a question regarding the provision in Rule
556.11(D)(2) that allows for issuance of an arrest warrant for an individual who has not
been arrested previously for the charges contained in the indictment. Specifically, it is
not clear how such an individual would be formally charged or what procedures for post-
indictment arrests should be followed.

       Rule 556.11(D)(2) was included when the grand jury indictment procedures were
revived in 2012. The idea for this type of warrant came up in the context of a case
before the indicting grand jury where the evidence indicates that another individual was
involved in the same criminal activity and there was sufficient evidence being presented
to the grand jury that would allow this new individual to be indicted as a co-defendant



1The Committee's Final Reports should not be confused with the official Committee
Comments to the rules. Also, note that the Supreme Court does not adopt the
Committee's Comments or the contents of the Committee's explanatory Final Reports.



Post-indictment Arrest Warrant Procedures Final Report: 11/27/2018
even though he or she hadn’t been arrested. As noted in the Committee’s Final Report
from that time:

      Paragraph (D)(2) requires the supervising judge to forward a copy of the
      indictment to the clerk of courts, or to issue an arrest warrant if the subject
      of the indictment has not been arrested on the charges contained in the
      indictment. The arrest provision was included because, although
      infrequent, there are times when the indicting grand jury hears evidence
      that reveals there is another individual who has not been charged but who
      is involved in the criminal activity that is the subject of the indicting grand
      jury. The Committee majority agreed the rule should provide a procedure
      to address this situation so the case would not ''fall through the cracks.'' 42
      Pa.B. 4140 (July 7, 2012).

         It appears that more detailed procedures regarding these types of warrants were
not included given that the number of cases that may be presented to an indicting grand
jury, i.e. those that involve witness intimidation concerns, were anticipated to be
relatively few and that the situations where new individuals would be identified during
the grand jury proceedings would be even rarer. However, in light of the inquiry
presented, the Committee decided that these procedures needed to be further defined.

       The Committee agreed that an indictment could be issued against a previously
uncharged defendant if a case has been properly determined to be before an indicting
grand jury due to the possibility of witness intimidation and the grand jury had
determined that there was evidence against that uncharged defendant. The Committee
recognized that this method of initiating a case currently was not recognized by the
rules. In particular, there was a question as to how the cases should be initiated and
whether the indictment might be used as a charging document in lieu of a criminal
complaint.

       The Committee concluded that the method for initiating a case for a defendant
who had not been previously charged but was indicted by grand jury should be, as in
other criminal case, by means of a criminal complaint. However, since the grand jury
procedure takes the place of a preliminary hearing, procedures following the preliminary
arraignment after the warrant had been executed would differ from other criminal cases.
The Committee agreed that the procedures should provide for: (a) the filing of a criminal
complaint prior to the issuance of the arrest warrant by the supervising judge of the
grand jury; and (b) procedures following the arrest of such a defendant including
preliminary arraignment before the supervising judge or president judge’s designee.
Thereafter, the case would proceed to the filing of the information and formal
arraignment.

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        Rule 556.11 (Proceedings when Case Presented to Grand Jury) has been
amended by adding a new paragraph (A)(3) to specifically authorize the grand jury to
indict an individual who was not previously charged in the case that is before the grand
jury. The provision that permits the issuance of an arrest warrant in original paragraph
(D)(2) has been placed in a new paragraph (E) and sets out the procedures to be
followed when such an individual is indicted. Once the attorney for the Commonwealth
receives a copy of the indictment, he or she must file a complaint with the clerk of courts
in the county where the grand jury sits. A request for an arrest warrant must then be
presented to the supervising judge, using the indictment as the affidavit of probable
cause. The supervising judge then must issue the warrant. Comment language has
been added to provide some additional information.

       New Rule 556.13 provides the procedures following the arrest of this new
defendant. The defendant receives a preliminary arraignment before the supervising
judge or another common pleas judge designated by the president judge. Following
preliminary arraignment, the case will proceed as provided in Rule 560, with the filing of
the information, and Rule 571, with formal arraignment. It should be noted that the
Committee believes that any defect regarding the grand jury process, such as raising
objections to the presentation of the case to the grand jury, could be addressed through
a habeas corpus motion to the common pleas court.

       Since these procedures require the filing of a complaint, no new provisions
needed to be added to Rule 502 (Instituting Proceedings in Court Cases) but a cross-
reference to the new procedures in Rules 556.11 and 556.13 has been added to the
Comment. Similarly, a cross-reference to these procedures has been added to the
Comment to Rule 513 (Requirements for Issuance; Dissemination of Arrest Warrant
Information). Additionally, cross-references to the post-execution procedures have
been added to the Comments to Rules 516 (Procedure in Court Cases When Warrant
of Arrest is Executed Within Judicial District of Issuance), 517 (Procedure in Court
Cases When Warrant of Arrest is Executed Outside Judicial District of Issuance), and
518 (Using Advanced Communication Technology in Court Cases When Warrant of
Arrest is Executed Outside Judicial District of Issuance).

        One question raised in the initial inquiry regarded what event triggered the
running of the Rule 600 time limitation when an arrest warrant is issued in this situation.
Since the proposal would require the filing of a complaint in these cases, they would fall
within the parameters of Rule 600 that provides that the filing of the complaint normally
is the event that starts the speedy trial “clock.” A statement clarifying this point has
been added to the Comment to Rule 556.11.

      The Committee also considered the concern that, by failing to show a connection
between the alleged witness intimidation and the specific new defendant, the

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procedures represent an unwarranted departure from the underpinnings of indicting
grand juries. The Committee ultimately concluded that this concern was unfounded.
The current indicting grand jury procedures, particularly as provided in Rules 556 (A)
and 556.2(A)(3), require a showing that the witness intimidation, verified by a judicial
determination, “has occurred, is occurring, or is likely to occur” in the case being
presented to the indicting grand jury. The rules do not require that there be a showing
that the charged defendant is tied to that intimidation. This reflects the practical
consideration that the danger to witnesses may not arise from the defendant but rather
from his or her associates.

        Another concern that the Committee reviewed was that the new procedures
invite the use of “John Doe” indictments to charge unidentified individuals in order to file
charges within the statute of limitations, with the implication that this provision will be
used to initiate charges that go beyond the original case. A clear reading of the
changes to Rule 556.11 indicates that the rule contemplates that the indicted person
must be identified clearly as one having committed the offense that is before the
indicting grand jury. Nonetheless, to clarify further that the indictment must be tied to
the original case, Rule 556.11(A)(3) has been modified to state that the charges against
the new defendant must result from the same criminal conduct or episode that was the
subject of the original referral to the indicting grand jury.




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