Lead Opinion
Opinion by
On Mаy 8, 1957, the appellant, Charles L. Adderley, was indicted for mnrder.
On November 12, 1964, appellant instituted an action in habeas сorpus which was dismissed by the court below. An appeal from that ordеr is now before us.
At the original trial proceedings, wherein the degree of guilt was determined, a written confession given by the appellant tо investigating police officers was introduced into evidence. Thе record does not establish that, before or during the period the confession was obtained, the appellant was warned of his constitutional right to remain silent or advised that he could then have the assistаnce of counsel. It is therefore urged that his confinement is illegal because the conviction and adjudication of guilt were based on constitutionally invalid evidence, i.e., the confession, citing Escobedo v. Illinois,
In the first place, the admission of the confession was harmless and without prejudice, in view of his own trial tеstimony. Further, the right to raise now the constitutional issue has been waived.
Assuming arguendo, that the failure to object at trial to the admission of cоnstitutionally invalid evidence may not in itself preclude a defendant frоm later raising in a collateral proceeding the denial of substаntive constitutional rights (see, Fay v. Noia,
A study of the record is persuasive that the failure to challenge the admissibility of the confession was a deliberate trial tactic. It is readily discernible that it was the considered plan of the defense not to deny the occurrence or appellant’s involvement, but rather, through proof of early and continued drug addiction and a dull-normal level of intelligence on the part of the accused, to convince the court that the crime was
Order affirmed.
Notes
A woman, driving an automobile in a public park in Philadelphia, temрorarily stopped along one of its roadways. Appellant wаs charged with sneaking up alongside of the automobile, striking the driver on thе head with a rock and stealing her pocketbook. She died from the injury inflicted.
In view of the fact that the writ was properly refused as herеin set forth, we have found it unnecessary to consider or discuss the retroactive application of the rule in Mscobedo v. Illinois,
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring Opinion by
1 concur for substantially the same reasons stated in my concurring opinion in Commonwealth ex rel. Pomales v. Myers,
