This is an appeal from an order vacating Alesi’s state court conviction for selling heroin and possessing marihua
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na.
1
His conviction had been affirmed by the California Suрreme Court prior to his seeking federal relief in his habeas petition. (People v. Alesi (1968)
The statements in question arose in the context of an abortive plea bargain. In 1962, Alesi was charged with the offenses for which he was later convicted and with a prior felony. After trial had commenced, the state trial judge called the prosecutor and defense counsel into chаmbers and urged Alesi’s commitment to the California Narcotics Rehabilitation Center, assuming that the prosecutor would be willing to dismiss the prior and that the Center’s Director wоuld accept Alesi for treatment. The district attorney then agreed to dismiss the prior and defense counsel agreed that Alesi would plead guilty to one count of selling heroin. Alesi initially rejected the bargain, claiming that he was innocent, but after defense counsel exerted strong pressure upon him, 2 Alesi relented and entered a guilty plea. Defense counsel had told Alesi that he had to anticipate that the probation officer would insist upon Alesi’s admitting addiction as a condition рrecedent to acceptance at the Center. The probation officer fulfilled defense counsel’s prophecy. Alesi admitted that he had possessed the marihuana and that he was addicted to heroin. He also gave the probation officer his version of the heroin sale.
The Center rejected Alеsi on the ground that he was on parole, and he was returned for sentencing. Alesi moved to vacate his guilty plea, the court vacated the plea upon а finding that it was involuntary, and stated: “If the defendant wants to be placed back in a status quo before he changed his plea, we will do so in every respect.” Upon Alesi’s request, the court also relieved defense counsel of his representation and appointed a new lawyer for him.
Alesi’s second trial before a differеnt judge was held without any pretrial hearing upon the voluntariness issue. Alesi testified in his own defense, and the prosecutor sought to impeach him by questioning him about the statements he had made to the probation officer. Alesi repeatedly asserted that his statements had been made under duress; those assertions were stricken. On redireсt examination defense counsel tried to lay the foundation for the involuntariness claim by bringing out the guilty plea that anteceded the inculpatory statements. The plea of guilty was thus introduced, but defense counsel was not *977 permitted to show the circumstances of the plea.
In upholding the conviction, the California Supreme Court reasoned that Alesi’s damaging admissions were not involuntary because they had been made under “the guiding hand of counsel.” (People v. Alesi,
supra,
The pressure he exerted had been set in motion by the first trial Judge. The trial judge’s active entry into the plea bargaining was well intentioned, but when the move was made, the trial judge did not know the facts that ultimately dоomed the pact. 3 When that judge vacated the plea and tried to restore Alesi to the position he had oceuplied before the plea was taken, the judge recognized that the plea bargaining atmosphere had been coercive. 4 The plea, the challenged statements, and the plea bаrgain are inextricably intertwined.
From the district court’s finding of involuntariness of the statements, it follows that the state court erred in admitting them against Alesi, either directly or by way of imрeachment.
(E.g.,
Haynes v. Washington (1963)
Harris v. New York (1971)
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Alesi’s statements to his prоbation officer included a confession on one charge and incriminating admissions on the other charges. We cannot distinguish an admission from a confession. (Ashcraft v. Tennessee (1946)
We decline appellant’s invitation to return the сase to the California courts before granting relief. We can see no useful purpose in prolonging the litigation and expending even greater quantities of judicial time upon this case. Alesi exhausted his state remedies; he is entitled without further delay to the relief he has won.
The Order vacating the state court’s decision is affirmed.
Notes
. Because Alesi was serving a sentence on a prior conviction, the court did not order Alesi’s immediate release.
. At the hearing to vacate the guilty plea, Alesi’s counsel stated:
“In view of the severity of punishment for a heroin sale with a prior narcotic conviction of any kind, the defendant being an admitted addict, was persuaded and even induced to withdraw his plea оf not guilty, enter his guilty plea on the basis of representations which I made to him, and which were themselves predicated upon conversations which I had with Your Honor аnd the other counsel in chambers.
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“ * * * [T] here was a strong force exerted by me personally on the defendant to withdraw his plea of not guilty and enter his plea of guilty, because I saw the possibility, one, of getting the marijuana case dismissed; two, of avoiding what I thought the probability was of a ten year to life sentence, of which he wоuld have to do ten years; and three, the possibility presented itself that he would be committed to the addiction program over in Riverside County and might be in a position to cure a habit that has up to this point pretty well ruined his life.
“To me it seemed like not only the ideal disposition of the case, but almost a miraculous one and so I did еxert strong pressures.”
. During tlie hearing on Alesi’s motion to vacate his plea, the first trial judge stated:
“However, the possibility of his getting treatment certainly must have been in his mind and сertainly it was in the Court’s mind because in accepting the plea of guilty and in setting aside the prior, it was in the Court’s mind that the community would be benefitted by seeing that this defendant got treatment because the testimony up to the point that I heard it, I think indicated that the main reason for his participating in the transaction was so that he could gеt a small bit of narcotics for his own uses rather than financial gain.
“So perhaps it could be said that the Court’s actions apparently substantially corroborated his hopes or beliefs that lie would get treatment rather than himself a straight prison sentence, and I am free to say I had thoughts along the same line, that is, that he might be aсcepted for treatment, because I did inquire and looked up the law and found that the law would permit his treatment.”
. The court stated:
“[T]he discussions certainly did, with regard to his change of his plea, the discussion certainly did revolve around this question of whether or not, if he changed his plea, he might have a chance to get the treatment program and whatever representations or understanding he may have had were certainly, shall we say, to follow the language of People vs. Gilbert, ‘apparently substantially corroborated by acts or statements of a responsible state official.’ ”
