dissenting in part and concurring in part.
On March 23, 1965, respondent Wade was indicted for robbing a bank; on April 2, he was arrested; and on April 26, the court appointed a lawyer to represent him. *244Fifteen days later, while Wade was still in custody, an FBI agent took him and several other prisoners into a room at the courthouse, directed each to participate in a lineup wearing strips of tape on his face and to speak the words used by the robber at the bank. This was all done in order to let the bank employee witnesses look at Wade for identification purposes. Wade’s lawyer was not notified of or present at the lineup to protect his client’s interests. At Wade’s trial, two bank employees identified him in the courtroom. Wade objected to this testimony, when, on cross-examination, his counsel elicited from these witnesses the fact that they had seen Wade in the lineup. He contended that by forcing him to participate in the lineup, wear strips of tape on his face, and repeat the words used by the robber, all without counsel, the Government had (1) compelled him to be a witness against himself in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and (2) deprived him of the assistance of counsel for his defense in violation of the Sixth Amendment.
The Court in Part I of its opinion rejects Wade’s Fifth Amendment contention. From that I dissent. In Parts II-IV of its opinion, the Court sustains Wade’s claim of denial of right to counsel in the out-of-court lineup, and in that I concur. In Part V, the Court remands the case to the District Court to consider whether the courtroom identification of Wade was the fruit of the illegal lineup, and, if it was, to grant him a new trial unless the court concludes that the courtroom identification was harmless error. I would reverse the Court of Appeals’ reversal of Wade’s conviction, but I would not remand for further proceedings. Since the prosecution did not use the out-of-court lineup identification against Wade at his trial, I believe the conviction should be affirmed.
*245I.
In rejecting Wade’s claim that his privilege against self-incrimination was violated by compelling him to appear in the lineup wearing the tape and uttering the words given him by the police, the Court relies on the recent holding in Schmerber v. California, 384 U. S. 757. In that case the Court held that taking blood from a man’s body against his will in order to convict him of a crime did not compel him to be a witness against himself. I dissented from that holding, 384 U. S., at 773, and still dissent. The Court’s reason for its holding was that the sample of Schmerber’s blood taken in order to convict him of crime was neither “testimonial” nor “communicative” evidence. I think it was both. It seems quite plain to me that the Fifth Amendment’s Self-incrimination Clause was designed to bar the Government from forcing any person to supply proof of his own crime, precisely what Schmerber was forced to do when he was forced to supply his blood. The Government simply took his blood against his will and over his counsel’s protest for the purpose of convicting him of crime. So here, having Wade in its custody awaiting trial to see if he could or would be convicted of crime, the Government forced him to stand in a lineup, wear strips on his face, and speak certain words, in order to make it possible for government witnesses to identify him as a criminal. Had Wade been compelled to utter these or any other words in open court, it is plain that he would have been entitled to a new trial because of having been compelled to be a witness against himself. Being forced by the Government to help convict himself and to supply evidence against himself by talking outside the courtroom is equally violative of his constitutional right not to be compelled to be a witness against himself. Consequently, because of this violation of the Fifth Amend*246ment, and not because of my own personal view that the Government's conduct was “unfair,” “prejudicial,” or “improper,” I would prohibit the prosecution’s use of lineup identification at trial.
II.
I agree with the Court, in large part because of the reasons it gives, that failure to notify Wade’s counsel that Wade was to be put in a lineup by government officers and to be forced to talk and wear tape on his face denied Wade the right to counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment. Once again, my reason for this conclusion is solely the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee that “the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” As this Court’s opinion points out, “[t]he plain wording of this guarantee thus encompasses counsel’s assistance whenever necessary to assure a meaningful 'defence.’ ” And I agree with the Court that a lineup is a “critical stage” of the criminal proceedings against an accused, because it is a stage at which the Government makes use of his custody to obtain crucial evidence against him. Besides counsel’s presence at the lineup being necessary to protect the defendant’s specific constitutional rights to confrontation and the assistance of counsel at the trial itself, the assistance of counsel at the lineup is also necessary to protect the defendant’s in-custody assertion of his privilege against self-incrimination, Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U. S. 436, for, contrary to the Court, I believe that counsel may advise the defendant not to participate in the lineup or to participate only under certain conditions.
I agree with the Court that counsel’s presence at the lineup is necessary to protect the accused’s right to a “fair trial,” only if by “fair trial” the Court means a trial in accordance with the “Law of the Land” as specifically set out in the Constitution. But there are *247implications in the Court’s opinion that by a “fair trial” the Court means a trial which a majority of this Court deems to be “fair” and that a lineup is a “critical stage” only because the Court, now assessing the “innumerable dangers” which inhere in it, thinks it is such. That these implications are justified is evidenced by the Court’s suggestion that “ [legislative or other regulations . . . which eliminate the risks of abuse ... at lineup proceedings . . . may also remove the basis for regarding the stage as ‘critical.’ ” And it is clear from the Court’s opinion in Gilbert v. California, post, p. 263, that it is willing to make the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of right to counsel dependent on the Court’s own view of whether a particular stage of the proceedings — though “critical” in the sense of the prosecution’s gathering of evidence — is “critical” to the Court’s own view of a “fair trial.” I am wholly unwilling to make the specific constitutional right of counsel dependent on judges’ vague and transitory notions of fairness and their equally transitory, though thought to be empirical, assessment of the “risk that. . . counsel’s absence . . . might derogate from ... [a defendant’s] right to a fair trial.” Ante, at 228. See Pointer v. Texas, 380 U. S. 400, 412 (concurring opinion of Goldberg, J.).
III.
I would reverse Wade’s conviction without further ado had the prosecution at trial made use of his lineup identification either in place of courtroom identification or to bolster in a harmful manner crucial courtroom identification. But the prosecution here did neither of these things. After prosecution witnesses under oath identified Wade in the courtroom, it was the defense, and not the prosecution, which brought out the prior lineup identification. While stating that “a per se rule of exclusion of courtroom identification would be unjustified,” the Court, nevertheless, remands this case for “a *248hearing to determine whether the in-court identifications had an independent source,” or were the tainted fruits of the invalidly conducted lineup. From this holding I dissent.
In the first place, even if this Court has power to establish such a rule of evidence, I think the rule fashioned by the Court is unsound. The “tainted fruit” determination required by the Court involves more than considerable difficulty. I think it is practically impossible. How is a witness capable of probing the recesses of his mind to draw a sharp line between a courtroom identification due exclusively to an earlier lineup and a courtroom identification due to memory not based on the lineup? What kind of “clear and convincing evidence” can the prosecution offer to prove upon what particular events memories resulting in an in-court identification rest? How long will trials be delayed while judges turn psychologists to probe the subconscious minds of witnesses? All these questions are posed but not answered by the Court’s opinion. In my view, the Fifth and Sixth. Amendments are satisfied if the prosecution is precluded from using lineup identification as either an alternative to or corroboration of courtroom identification. If the prosecution does neither and its witnesses under oath identify the defendant in the courtroom, then I can find no justification for stopping the trial in midstream to hold a lengthy “tainted fruit” hearing. The fact of and circumstances surrounding a prior lineup identification might be used by the defense to impeach the credibility of the in-court identifications, but not to exclude them completely.
But more important, there is no constitutional provision upon which I can rely that directly or by implication gives this Court power to establish what amounts to a constitutional rule of evidence to govern, not only the Federal Government, but the States in their trial of state *249crimes under state laws in state courts. See Gilbert v. California, supra. The Constitution deliberately reposed in the States very broad power to create and to try crimes according to their own rules and policies. Spencer v. Texas, 385 U. S. 554. Before being deprived of this power, the least that they can ask is that we should be able to point to a federal constitutional provision that either by express language or by necessary implication grants us the power to fashion this novel rule of evidence to govern their criminal trials. Cf. Berger v. New York, ante, p. 70 (Black, J., dissenting). Neither Nardone v. United States, 308 U. S. 338, nor Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U. S. 471, both federal cases and both decided “in other contexts,” supports what the Court demands of the States today.
Perhaps the Court presumes to write this constitutional rule of evidence on the basis of the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause. This is not the time or place to consider that claim. Suffice it for me to say briefly that I find no such authority in the Due Process Clause. It undoubtedly provides that a person must be tried in accordance with the “Law of the Land.” Consequently, it violates due process to try a person in a way prohibited by the Fourth, Fifth, or Sixth Amendments of our written Constitution. But I have never been able to subscribe to the dogma that the Due Process Clause empowers this Court to declare any law, including a rule of evidence, unconstitutional which it believes is contrary to tradition, decency, fundamental justice, or any of the other wide-meaning words used by judges to claim power under the Due Process Clause. See, e. g., Rochin v. California, 342 U. S. 165. I have an abiding idea that if the Framers had wanted to let judges write the Constitution on any such day-to-day beliefs of theirs, they would have said so instead of so carefully defining their grants and prohibitions in a written constitution. *250With no more authority than the Due Process Clause I am wholly unwilling to tell the state or federal courts that the United States Constitution forbids them to allow courtroom identification without the prosecution’s first proving that the identification does not rest in whole or in part on an illegal lineup. Should I do so, I would feel that we are deciding what the Constitution is, not from what it says, but from what we think it would have been wise for the Framers to put in it. That to me would be “judicial activism” at its worst. I would leave the States and Federal Government free to decide their own rules of evidence. That, I believe, is their constitutional prerogative.
I would affirm Wade’s conviction.