After a jury trial before Judge MacMahon Barthelmio Dalli was on May 26, 1969, convicted of selling, receiving and concealing heroin, 21 U.S.C. §§ 173 and 174, and of conspiracy to commit the same, 18 U.S.C. § 371. He was sentenced to concurrent terms of 20 years on each of two counts. The conviction was affirmed by this court. United States v. Dalli,
Appellant’s § 2255 petition seeks in effect to reopen an issue raised and resolved against him after a pretrial suppression hearing in May 1969. Prior to appellant’s trial a full evidentiary hearing was held to determine whether his arrest and the heroin found in his possession at the time of arrest were the fruits of an allegedly illegal state wiretap. The federal government maintained that its investigation and arrest of the appellant were independent of any state investigation or wiretap. Federal agents testified that their interest in appellant was sparked by his frequent visits to the Beauty Trail Hair Parlor, reputedly an emporium for narcotics, located in Brooklyn. Their observations prompted them to check appellant’s telephone record, which disclosed several calls to Thomas Pytel, a man suspected by Canadian authorities to be trafficking in narcotics. Further surveillance of appellant revealed a meeting on September 7, 1968, between appellant and Stanley Simmons, likewise a suspected dealer in narcotics. Several days later federal agents followed appellant and Simmons to a Plattsburg, New York, motel where the two met with Pytel and a Canadian associate to transact some business in narcotics. Dalli and Simmons were arrested shortly after leaving the motel with 11 pounds of heroin in their possession.
At the 1969 pretrial suppression hearing it was disclosed that the New York state police had, pursuant to a New York state court order, been wiretapping the Beauty Trail Hair Parlor during August and September 1968. 1 The government produced the wiretaps and transcripts thereof for inspection by appel *760 lant. Dalli and his co-defendants seized upon only one call as evidence of taint. The call was between Dalli and Simmons, made from the telephone at the Beauty Trail Hair Parlor, in which the two agreed to meet on the evening of September 7, 1968. This was the meeting watched by the federal agents, which occurred several days prior to Dalli’s arrest. The agents, however, testified that they had received no information concerning the September 7th meeting from the state police, that their knowledge of the meeting and their ultimate arrest of appellant resulted solely from their 24-hour surveillance of appellant, and that they did not learn of the wiretaps until much later, shortly before the 1969 hearing. Supporting their version of the case was the testimony of Charles Cassino, then a New York state police lieutenant in charge of the Beauty Trail Hair Parlor wiretaps. Cassino testified that he had passed no wiretap information to the federal agents; indeed, he professed ignorance of the fact that Dalli had spoken with Simmons on an intercepted call. On the basis of this testimony the district court concluded that the federal investigation and arrest of Dalli stood untainted by the state wiretap activities. Thereupon Dalli was tried and convicted.
Three and one half years after his conviction Dalli sought by the present § 2255 petition to overturn the earlier finding that his conviction was untainted, or at least to re-argue its merits, largely on the basis of an affidavit from former lieutenant Cassino. 2 Judge MacMahon, who had presided at the 1969 suppression hearing and trial, dismissed the present petition without an evidentiary hearing. Appellant here urges that it was error to have denied him a hearing. We disagree.
As a recent pronouncement indicates, this court takes a dim view of any summary rejection of a petition for postconviction relief when supported by a
“sufficient
affidavit.” See Taylor v. United States,
Applying these principles, we are satisfied that the Cassino affidavit, which is the crux of the petition, failed to meet this threshold of sufficiency. Most of the affidavit is devoted to evidence already received and considered at the 1969 suppression hearing. When it comes to the key “newly discovered” evidence offered to support the renewed claim that the federal arrest and seizure was tainted by the state wiretap Cassino’s averments are not only vague, indefinite and eonclusory but marbled with hearsay. Thus Cassino states that “ [subsequent to May, 1969, I learned that it was a common practice during the course of this investigation for Investigator Kaynor [of the New York state police] to take the tapes representing the previous day’s eavesdropping and together with Agent John J. O’Brien of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, go to one of these rooms and there review the tapes.” (Emphasis added). This is not only hearsay, but hearsay singularly lacking in specificity. 3 Cassino does not say how or from whom he learned this. His testimony along these lines would be inadmissible at a hearing on Dalli’s petition. There is no indication that the wiretaps or transcripts of them were in fact furnished to the federal officers, much less that this fact would be established by competent evidence.
The other portion of the Cassino affidavit heavily relied upon by appellant is its vague statement to the effect that the Dalli-Simmons meeting of September 7th “persuaded us to seek further eavesdropping assistance, and telephone numbers presently unknown to me located at or near the residence of Dalli were tapped.” Although we cannot confidently say whether this averment is based on hearsay or on Cassino’s personal knowledge, its indefinite form sharply reduces its substantiality. See Townsend v. Sain,
Even if Cassino is correct in his belief that a tap was initiated on Dalli’s home telephone, Cassino is not in a position to aver, and nowhere in his affidavit does he attempt to aver as a matter of personal knowledge that any information from a state wiretap was passed to federal agents. That there was any transmittal of wiretap information was denied under oath by the federal agents who testified at the original hearing. Edward Kaynor, the state police investigator reported by Cassino on the basis of an unidentified source as having passed wiretap information to the federal agents, submitted an affidavit in opposition to the appellant’s motion in which he also denied each such allegation. 4 Moreover, portions of Cassino’s affidavit are specifically contradicted by his prior testimony at trial. 5 Furthermore the credibility of the affidavit was for other reasons open to question. 6 With the obvious deficiencies of the Cassino affidavit viewed against the files and records of the case and in light of the fact that petitioner had already had one hearing on substantially the same claim the trial court did not err in denying the petition without a hearing.
The order below is affirmed.
Notes
. As part of the same effort the home telephone of Ronald Carr, owner of the beauty parlor, was tapped.
. Subsequent to Judge MacMahon’s decision to dismiss, appellant learned of a state court report of wiretaps authorized during the period under question. Appellant believes that this report substantiates certain of Cassino’s statements in his affidavit. We will consider that report as part of the record for this appeal.
. The statement was nonetheless felicitously worded from Cassino’s point of view. He says he learned of the cooperation between Kaynor and O’Brien subsequent to May 1969. May 1969 was of course the time of Cassino’s appearance at the Dalli pretrial hearing where he offered testimony that conflicts with that of the affidavit.
. Although opposing affidavits from the government cannot be deemed part of the records and files of a case for purpose of showing that the petitioner is entitled to no relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, Taylor v. United States,
. At the suppression hearing Cassino testified that he had no knowledge of a conversation between Dalli and Simmons on the wiretap. His affidavit now indicates that he knew of the September 7th conversation between Dalli and Simmons intercepted on the Beauty Trail Hair Parlor phone and that he knew of still another conversation between Dalli and Simmons that he alleges was intercepted on Dalli’s phone.
. Subsequent to his testimony at the 1969 suppression hearing, Cassino was convicted of aiding a racketeering enterprise in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1952 and sentenced to a federal penitentiary. Although this fact, as well as Cassino’s long silence on this wiretap point and his motive now to testify falsely, would not standing alone justify the denial of a hearing, the district judge was entitled to take these circumstances into consideration in deciding whether evidence requiring a hearing had been stated. “The language of the statute [§ 2255] does not strip the district courts of all discretion to exercise their common sense.” Machibroda v. United States,
