The respondent, Stevenson, was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death in the Common Pleas Court of Cabell County, West Virginia. The conviction was affirmed on appeal by the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.
State
v.
Stevenson,
At Stevenson’s trial Officer Coleman testified for the State that he, and two other police officers, arrested the defendant and took him to the Atlantic Sea Food Store to show him the badly mutilated body of the victim. On cross-examination Coleman stated that the defendant strongly resisted efforts to confront him with the still undisturbed scene of the crime inside the building. Another of the officers gave the defendant a choice between entering the store or explaining what he knew about the crime. Coleman testified that the defendant then admitted committing the crime. At the conclusion of this testimony the defensé moved to strike the oral confession of guilt because it “does not comply with the rules covering the introduction of a confession in that he was not’ warned that any statement he made may and would be. used against him or any of the other requirements on- entering of a..confession.” This motion was overruled without comment and without a hearing on voluntariness. Subsequent motions to exclude the testi *45 mony of the other two officers in respect to the same challenged admission of guilt were similarly overruled without comment. After this confession was thrice admitted, the defendant took the stand in his own defense . and denied ever having made the admission to the officers.
• Relying on this denial, the State Supreme Court of Appeals ruled that no preliminary examination was required in this case and that the confession was voluntary.
The practice in West Virginia, when an objection to a confession is interposed, is to hold a preliminary hearing out of the presence of the jury at which the trial judge fully determines the coercion issue.
State
v.
Vance,
. Hence we agree with the Court of Appeals that the writ should issue. Bui it does not follow that the State is required to order a new trial. As we held in
Jackson, supra,
where a state defendant has not been given an adequate hearing upon the voluntariness of his confession, he is entitled to a hearing in the state courts under appropriate procedures and standards designed to insure a full and adequate resolution, of this issue. “A state defendant should have the opportunity to have all issues which may be determinative of his guilt tried by a state judge or a state jury under appropriate state procedures
*46
which conform to the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Rogers
v.
Richmond,
Notes
The respondent’s motion to dispense with the printing of the brief in opposition is granted.
