Petitioner-appellant, an inmate of the Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Walpole, appeals from the district court’s reaffirmance of its prior denial of a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.
Appellant and two codefendants were convicted of armed robbery while masked and breaking and entering in the nighttime with intent to commit a felony. Their convictions were affirmed by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in an extensive opinion that examined in detail all of petitioner-appellant’s assignments of error.
Commonwealth v. Flynn et al.,
Mass.,
After reconsidering, pursuant' to our order, appellant’s motion for an evidentiary hearing on his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the district court reaffirmed its previous dismissal. Appellant contends this was improper. The essence of his claim is that since the magistrate’s initial report recommended dismissal, the district court could not fulfill its obligation to exercise independent judgment unless it held an evidentiary hearing. However, this claim must fail. There was no reason for the judge to hold an evidentiary hearing in this case as there was no evidence to be taken. The existence of the magistrate’s prior recommendation to deny appellant habeas corpus relief does not preclude the district judge from making an independent assessment. Our concern for maintaining the district judge in the central decision-making role does not lead us to hold that a magistrate may never include a recommendation in his report. “In connection with the preliminary review of whether or not to propose that the District Judge hold an evidentiary hearing, . . . Magistrates may receive the state court record and all affidavits, stipulations and other documents Magistrates are prohibited only from conducting the actual evidentiary hearings.”
Wingo v. Wedding, supra
at 473,
Petitioner-appellant also raises on appeal the fact that the district court did not have available the trial transcript from the state court. We note that the absence of the record of state court proceedings might be troublesome in certain cases. This lack would generally affect the ability of the district court to make an independent assessment of whether the “state factual determinations [are] . . . fairly supported by the record,”
Townsend v. Sain,
Affirmed.
