delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1957 petitioner, John Wesley Elliott, was convicted of murder in the first degree and was sentenced to death. On direct appeal his conviction was affirmed by this Court on December 19, 1957, in
Elliott v. State,
“(3) that his conviction was obtained by the admission in evidence of a written statement which he made to the police on November 11, 1956, after his indictment on November 8, and which he now claims * * *
(b) was made after indictment, when he was not represented by counsel, and had neither been advised of nor waived his right to counsel.”
Judge Thomsen observed that this contention had never been presented to the Maryland courts, since, at the time of his previous hearings,
Massiah v. United States,
The present petition was filed as the result of Judge Thomsen’s order and on November 18, 1965, a hearing was held before Judge Harold Grady. A stipulation of fаcts was entered into by Elliott, through his counsel and by the respondent through the State’s Attorney for Baltimore City, in which it was admitted that a written statement was taken from Elliott three days after he had been indicted for the crime of murder and that in the statement he admitted shooting the victim, although he attempted to justify the killing as self defense. It was further stipulated that the police officers, before taking the
*630
statement from Elliott, did not advise him of his right to have an attorney appointed to assist him in his defense. At the hearing, at which the petitioner was present, Judge Grady found as a fact that the petitioner had not requested an attorney but ruled that therе were no facts presented which would permit the finding that the petitioner had intentionally relinquished or abandoned the known right to the assistance of counsel, and thus that right had not been waived.
Fay v. Noia,
Massiah
was a federal case in which the defendant had been indicted by a grand jury, had obtained a lawyer and entered a plea of not guilty to the (narcotics) charge upon which he had been indicted. The defendant was out on bail when, by use of a hidden radio transmitter and the cooperation of a codefendant, federal agents deliberately elicitеd incriminating statements from the defendant in the absence of his attorney. Without reaching the Fourth Amendment questions raised by the use of the secret radio transmitter, the Supreme Court held that the use of the statements аgainst the defendant at his trial denied him his constitutional right to the assistance of counsel which is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment in all criminal prosecutions. Although the decision in
Massiah
was a federal case, recent decisions of the Supreme Court have made it clear that the right to assistance of counsel provided in the Sixth Amendment is “made obligatory upon the states by the Four
*631
teenth Amendment,”
Gideon v.
Wainwright,
As the State concedes, the prohibition laid down in the
Massiah
case was meant to apply to the type of police questioning such as that which brought about Elliott’s statement in the present case. Under the
Massiah
test, absent an effective waiver of Sixth Amendment rights, no inculpatory statement which is made by an indicted declаrant will be allowed into evidence against him if such a statement is elicited from the accused when he does not have counsel present. The above interpretation is compelled by the language used in
Massiah,
at page 205 of 377 U. S., wherein Mr. Justice Stewart, speaking for the six member majority of the Court, quotes with approval the following language used in
People v. Waterman, 9
N. Y. 2d 561, 565,
“Any secret interrogation of the defendant, from and after the finding of the indictment, without the protection afforded by the presence of counsel, contravenes the basic dictates of fairness in the conduct of criminal causes and the fundamental rights of persons charged with crime.”
Moreover, in the case of
State v. McLeod,
We come next to the question whether the principle enunciated in
Massiah
should be applied retroactively to cases such as the instant one, which had been finally litigated (no further possibility for direct review by any court) prior to May 18, 1964—the date on which
Massiah
was decided. Our resolution of this question has been made measurably less difficult by the recent (June 20, 1966) decision of the Supreme Court in Johnson
v. New Jersey,
It is to be noted that in Johnson the Supreme Court made the applicаtion of the exclusionary principles of Escobedo and Miranda purely prospective—that is the principles gleaned from either of the cases need only be applied to cases which were commenced after those decisions were announced. However, the Supreme Court left room for broader application in the state courts if they saw fit. To dispose of the instant case we need only decide whether the Massiah rulе should be applied retroactively to cases such as Elliott’s which were final as of the dale the Massiah opinion was rendered. We hold that the Massiah principle is not to be applied to cases which were final as of that date, but we do not decide the question of whether that principle should apply to cases which were then still open to direct review.
In
Davis v. North Carolina,
At the hearing the petitioner also put forth the contention that post conviction relief should be afforded him by virtue of the decision of this Court in
Schowgurow v. State,
Application denied.
Notes
. Among those factors were the facts that (1) Davis was an impoverished Negro with only a third or fourth grаde education; (3) contained on Davis’ arrest sheet was the directive by the police that no one was to be permitted to see the accused and he was not to be permitted to use the telephone; (3) no one other than the police saw the accused during the 16 days of detention and interrogation that preceded his confession; and (4) his diet was extremely limited while in custody and this could well have adversely affected his physical strength and his ability to resist confession.
