Appellant, Harold Gene MeAnulty, petitioned the district court under 28 U.S. C. § 2255 to vacate a six-year prison sentence which he was serving for theft of property from an interstate shipment in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 659. MeAnulty asserted that the sentencing judge had given explicit consideration to three pri- or felony convictions which were allegedly invalid under Gideon v. Wainwright,
In ruling adversely on the motion, Judge Meredith specifically stated:
In the instant case, this judge (who was the sentencing judge) was and still is of the opinion that regardless of any invalidity or absence of previous convictions, under the facts and circumstances of this case, six years was the appropriate sentence for this conviction which provided for a maximum imprisonment of ten years. Thus, no prior convictions or materially false assumptions enhanced petitioner’s sentence.
In light of this statement, appellant’s reliance on United States v. Tucker,
* * * [T]he respondent’s guilt of that offense [bank robbery] hardly “translates” into an “inescapable” assumption that the trial judge would have imposed a maximum 25-year prison sentence if he had known that the respondent had already been unconstitutionally imprisoned for more than 10 years. It would be equally callous to assume, now that the constitutional invalidity of the respondent’s previous convictions is clear, that the trial judge will upon reconsideration “undoubted *256 ly” impose the same sentence he imposed in 1953. [Id. at 449 n. 8,92 S. Ct. at 592 .]
Here, Judge Meredith has expressly stated that the six-year sentence is appropriate regardless of the invalidity or absence of prior convictions, and thus even if petitioner’s allegations are true, a remand would be pointless.
Notes
. The district court’s opinion is reported at
