Petitioner, a prisoner at San Quentin, was convicted after a court trial in March 1958 of one count of robbery in the first degree in violation of California Pen.C. 211 and one count of murder in the first degree in violation of California Pen.C. 187. He was sentenced to the state prison for the term prescribed by law, the sentences on each count to run concurrently. A petition for writ of habeas corpus was filed in this Court on February 18, 1965 in which petitioner alleged that at the time of his arrest and interrogation he was not advised of his right to counsel or right to remain silent. Statements made during the interrogation were introduced at petitioner’s trial by the People. This Court issued an order to show cause on February 18,1965 and appointed Arlene Heath, Esq., to represent petitioner in these proceedings. Respondent’s return wаs filed on March 12, 1965. Following the hearing on the order to show cause an evidentiary hearing was ordered for April 29, 1965. After a two day hearing the Court made findings of fact, which will be discussed below, and allowed both parties to file closing briefs. On June 1, 1965 after closing briefs were filed by both parties, the case was submitted for decision.
At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing this Court made the following findings of fact: (1) petitionеr did not at any time after his arrest or during his interrogation make a request for counsel; (2) at no time after his arrest *122 ■or during the subsequent interrogation was petitioner advised of his right to •counsel, his right to remain silent or that any statements made by him could be used against him; (3) there was no evidence of any threats, promises or coercion •of any kind; and (4) the statement made by petitioner to the police during the interrоgation was used against him at his trial.
In Escobedo v. State of Illinois, •
The Court has reviewed the petition, respondent’s return, the memoranda filed by the parties and the Court’s findings •of fact and concludes that the decision in this case depends on the answers to two •questions: (1) Does Escobedo v. State of Illinois, supra, require that petitioner request and be denied the assistance of •counsel at the accusatory stage of the proceedings in order that statements made to the police be excluded at trial? (2) Assuming a request for counsel is not necessary and petitioner has not been advised of his rights under Escobedo, does the constitutional principle announced in that case operate retroactively?
For the reasons to be set forth below this Court concludes that although a request for counsel is not necessary Esco-bedo may not be applied retroactively to affect decisions which became final prior to the date Escobedo was rendered.
Whether the right to counsel at the accusatory stage of the proceedings depends on a request for counsel is a vexing question. Although in Escobedo the accused made the request, that opinion offers no certain guide as to whether the request is necessary. There has been a split of authority on this question. 1 Indeed, the Suрreme Court has denied cer-tiorari in a case where a state court held the request was necessary 2 and in another case where a state court held it was not necessary. 3
In the absence of a definitive answer by the United States Supreme Court, this Court must turn to the decisions of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. In Wright v. Dickson,
“As Justice White pointed out in dissent, it makes no diffеrence whether appellant asked to consult retained counsel or to be provided with the assistance of appointed counsel, nor, indeed, whether he requested counsel at all, except as the latter fact might bear upon waiver.”
This language has not been expressly repudiated by the Court of Appeals. 4 *123 Therefore, this Court concludes that in petitioner’s case his failure to request counsel was not fatal.
A suggested short answer to whether Escobedo is retroactive is that the Supreme Court framed the rule of that case in terms of the Right to Counsel guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments citing Gideon v. Wainwright,
In Walker, petitioner was convicted in 1961 by a Nevada state court of first degree murder. The conviction was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Nevada in November 1962 Walker v. State of Nevada,
“ * * * the courts of Nevada are entitled, in our judgment, to have the first opportunity to consider the problem which has now arisen on account of the decision in Escobedo, which, analyzed in connection with the decision in Gideon v. Wainwright, 1963,372 U.S. 335 ,83 S.Ct. 792 ,9 L.Ed.2d 799 , should, without doubt, operate retroactively in the federal courts to protect a right' which is assured by the Federal Constitution.” (343 F.2d at 47 ).
This decision would seem to foreclose any argument that Escobedo was not intended to opеrate retroactively — at least in this circuit.
The recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in Linkletter v. Walker,
In Linkletter, the Court adopted the premise that the Constitution neither requires nor prohibits retroactive application of new constitutional rules. Link-letter v. Walker, supra,
After a review of the history of search and seizure law the Court concluded that the purpose of the exclusionary rule announced in Mapр was “ * * * to deter the lawless action of the police and to effectively enforce the Fourth Amendment.” Linkletter v. Walker, supra, at 1742. Recognizing that it had given retroactive application to constitutional interpretations of relatively recent vintage [e. g. Griffin v. People of State of Illinois,
In short, if state law enforcement оfficials, in reliance on a long history of Supreme Court decisions, pursue a course of conduct resulting in the admission of evidence at a trial, which the Supreme Court later declares is in violation of the Constitution, and if the evidence acquired as a result of such conduct is unlikely to convict an innocent defendant, a newly announced interpretation of the Constitution will not be applied retroactively.
To what extent are the dictates of Linkletter applicable to Escobedo v. State of Illinois, supra? Although Escobedo purports to be grounded on the Right to Counsel guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, a closer examination reveals that it is unlikely that the Court intended it to be a right to counsel case in the same sense that Gideon v. Wainwright, supra, is. For there is no suggestion in Escobedo that the mere denial of counsel at the accusatory stage, absent the introduction of an incriminating statement elicited as a result of that denial would be grounds for reversal. 5 Since it is unlikely that the mere denial of counsel at the accusatory stage, without more, was intended to have the same effect as denial in a Gideon situation, whether Escobedo should be applied retroactively depends on the applicability of the rationale of Linkletter to the purposes underlying the Escobedo decision.
Manifestly the main purpose of Esco-bedo was to deter the police from abridging a defendant’s constitutional rights in the interrogation room. But in the interrogation room, at the accusatory stage of the proceedings, what did the Supreme Court conceive thе function of an attorney to be?
One function that an attorney can serve in such cases is to protect the defendant from coercion — both psychological and physical. Presence of counsel in the interrogation room would remove any doubt as to the voluntariness of any statements made by the accused. The Court’s holding that the right to
*125
counsel attaches “ * * * when the process shifts frоm investigatory to accusatory — when its focus is on the accused and its
purpose is to elicit a confession”
(emphasis added) (Escobedo v. State of Illinois, supra,
Another function of counsel at the accusatory stage of the proceedings is to advise the defendant how to answer questions and when to remain silent. Even if coercion is absent a defendant cannot be expected to know what answers he gives to his interrogators can be incriminating. See Escobedo v. State of Illinois, supra, at 486,
Finally, even with an intelligent waiver of counsel, Escobedo requires that the defendant be advised of “his absolute constitutional right to remain silent”. Esco-bedo v. State of Illinois, supra, аt 491,
The conclusions that can be drawn from Escobedo are that it was intended as a prophylactic against coerced confessions and confessions, although otherwise voluntary, made in ignorance of the constitutional right to remain silent.
To what extent does the decision in Linkletter compel a similar conclusion in Escobedo? Linkletter appears to prescribe a balancing test for the retroactive application of overruling constitutional decisions: The Court should balance the reliability of evidence acquired as a result of conduct later constitutionally proscribed against the effect of a retroactive application of an overruling constitutional decision on the administration of justice.
Prior to Escobedo the Supreme Court had refused to adopt the rule that a defendant had the right to counsel during the accusatory stage of the proceedings. In 1958 the Supreme Court, in two coerced confession cases, rejected such a rule in Crooker v. State of California,
Prior to Escobedo, law enforcement officials were reasonably entitled to believe that they need not advise an accused of his right to counsel and his right to remain silent at the accusatory stage of the proceedings just as state courts were entitled to rely on Wolf v. People of State of Colorado, supra, and admit illegally seized evidence. To the extent that reliance by law enforcement officials on a body of constitutional law is deemed important by Linkletter, a much stronger case justifying that reliance is made out in a case in which they fail to advise an accused of his rights under Escobedo. For in the illegal search and seizure case *126 law inforeement officials knew their conduct was illegal. Wolf v. People of State of Colorado, supra, did not sanction that conduct. In the interrogation room, on the other hand, there was no reason to think, before Escobedo, that failure to advise an accused of his rights was illegal.
Granting that Escobedo intended to remove any lingering doubts about the voluntariness of confessions elicited in the absence of counsel, nevertheless, wherever a claim of coercion was interposed before Escobedo there were judicial remedies available to the accused. Whatever defects existed in the manner by which courts determined whether confessions were voluntаry prior to Esco-bedo, and whatever defects in those procedures Escobedo intended to cure, the risk is insubstantial that a confession, judicially determined to be voluntary, contributed to the conviction of an innocent defendant. Likewise, in regard to the Supreme Court’s concern that a defendant be advised of his right to remain silent, the risk is insubstantial that an otherwise voluntary confession, made in ignorance of this right, contributed to the conviction of an innocent defendant.
Under these circumstances the prophylactic effect of Escobedo should not be applied retroactively.
6
Such a ruling would thwart rather than further the administration of justice and the integrity of the judicial process. For pre-Escobedo confessions, judicially determined to be voluntary, and, therefore presumably rеliable, would have to be excluded at a subsequent re-trial of a defendant who was not advised of his rights.
7
The passage of time will have dimmed the memory of witnesses; indeed, it is likely that in many cases witnesses will no longer be available. Other evidence may have been destroyed. To apply Escobedo retroactively “does nothing to punish the wrong-doing official [who at the time had no reason to think his cоnduct was illegal] while it may, and likely will, release the wrong-doing defendant. * * * ” Irvine v. People of State of California,
In short, the considerations impelling the Supreme Court to withhold retroactive application of Mapp v. Ohio, supra, аre equally applicable to a pre-Escobedo voluntary confession. Accordingly, this Court concludes that Linkletter v. Walker, supra, compels the conclusion that Es-cobedo v. State of Illinois, supra, does not operate retroactively to affect convictions final before that decision.
The petition for writ of habeas corpus is denied, the order to show cause disсharged and the proceedings herein dismissed. - '
Notes
. See e.g., United States ex rel. Russo v. State of New Jersey (3rd Cir. 1965),
. People v. Hartgraves,
. People v. Dorado, 62 A.C. 350,
. In Nelson v. People,
. See In re Lopez, 62 A.C. 380, 389, N. 12,
. A similar conclusion was reached by the California Supreme Court In re Lopez, 62 A.C. 380,
. In Jackson v. Denno,
