"Compaction is not needed"...i disagree with that statement. i'm guessing that phi could possibly be 45 if not well compacted, but there are other considerations that should be given. i wouldn't use 45 degrees and then just disregard the void spaces, settlement potential, migration of fines, etc. since the material was not densified. i've seen so many problems result from not densifying crushed stone. i might use 45 but i would require that it be densified in thin layers just like structural fill.
on one building that the owner asked us to look in to why everything was cracking, we cored several holes in the floor slab. one core was located about 10 feet behind the cast in place wall. the core drop about 6 inches. since i couldn't really see down in there, i stuck my camera down in to the hole and took pictures all the way around. the subgrade under the slab right near the wall had settled at least a foot. the wall was backfilled with #57 stone that was dumped in with a trackhoe bucket and not densified. the entire area was in a cut so the underlying soils were not related to the problem as far as we can tell based on the boring data we had at the site. the wall itself had zero cracks on the face. it all looked to be due to the crushed stone backfill behind the wall settling out over about 3-5 years.