MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This is a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought pursuant to 28 U.S. C. § 2254. For the reasons stated below, the court denies the petition in its entirety.
On February 4, 1983, a jury in the New York Supreme Court, Nassau County, convicted petitioner of burglary in the first degree and burglary in the second degree. He was sentenced as a second violent felony offender to consecutive prison terms of 10 to 20 years and 5 to 10 years, respectively. On July 23, 1984, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, Second Department, unanimously affirmed the judgment of conviction without opinion.
People v. Holmes,
On March 13,1985, this court dismissed a petition essentially identical to this one
1
for failure to exhaust state court remedies as required under
Picard v. Connor,
On November 22, 1985, the judge who presided over the trial, County Judge Richard C. Delin, denied petitioner’s motion, pursuant to N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law § 440.10
The refiled petition alleges that
1) the state trial court’s denial of petitioner’s motion for severance of the offenses charged in his indictment violated his right to a fair trial guaranteed by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment;
2) that the trial court should have suppressed certain evidence obtained when the state illegally and unlawfully detained him without arraigning him, in violation of the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments;
3) that his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to a fair trial were violated by the introduction of expert testimony concerning a comparison of blood found at one of the burglarized residences with a sample of petitioner’s blood;
4) that the imposition of consecutive prison sentences upon him violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment; and
5) that appellate counsel’s failure to raise any federal constitutional objections to the admissibility of the blood type analysis (see Claim 3, supra) prejudiced his attempts to win habeas relief and thereby denied him of his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel.
FACTS
The following facts are undisputed.
At about 4:00 a.m. on August 25, 1981, Ms. Ann Buller of 572 Dartmouth Street in Westbury awoke in her ground floor bedroom to the sound of her dogs barking. She managed to quiet them down, and then went to the bathroom located on the same floor.
At 4:30 a.m., her neighbor, Ms. Eleanor Franklin of 579 Dartmouth Street (located diagonally across the street from Ms. Bul-ler’s house) awoke to the sound of her own dog barking. She followed the dog downstairs to the kitchen where she discovered that a screen window over the kitchen sink had been cut and that the back door was open. Shortly thereafter, her son, Mr. John Franklin, also went downstairs to investigate. There, he observed a man he had never seen before walk from the living room to the front door, which was near the base of the stairs. The stranger turned, looked at Mr. Franklin, pointed a small handgun at him and said, “Get back up the stairs or I’ll blow your head off.” The intruder left, and Mr. Franklin called the police.
Meanwhile, across the street, Ms. Buller, upon returning to her bedroom, noticed the lights burning in the Franklin house and a police car parked outside, and dashed over in her robe.
The police at the Franklins’ had discovered that the hole in the screen was only a foot or two from the back doorknob, and that small pieces of blood-stained green tissue paper — unlike any tissue paper in the Franklin residence — were embedded in the ragged edges of the cut screen. Other blood stains were found on the outside of the house, the windowsill, and the back doorknob.
One of the police officers, Detective Vincent Donnelly, escorted Ms. Buller home at about 6:00 a.m. and then returned to the Franklin house. When Ms. Buller turned on her kitchen light, she saw that the pane of glass next to the doorknob in the back door had been smashed out, and that the back door was open. Ms. Buller ran back to the Franklin house to get the police.
Upon examining the Buller house, the police recovered a piece of blood-stained glass from the floor near the back door. They found that the hallways and mould-ings around Ms. Buller’s bedroom door were blood-stained, and they followed a trail of bloodstains up the stairs to a bath
On September 18, 1981, at 5:30 a.m., petitioner was arrested for burglarizing a residence at 170 Henry Street in Westbury. He was brought to the Third Precinct House at about 7:40 a.m., where he was read his Miranda rights. When questioned about a healing cut on his wrist, he claimed to have sustained it at the Wilfred Academy, a hairdressing school. He also consented to a police search of his aunt’s house, where he resided, and to withdrawal of a blood sample. At 6:13 p.m., Mr. John Franklin identified him in a lineup as the man who had ordered him upstairs at gunpoint on August 25. Petitioner was arraigned the next morning at 9:00 a.m.
1. CLAIM ONE (DENIAL OF SEVERANCE MOTION)
Petitioner claims that the state trial court’s denial of his motion for severance of the offenses in his indictment violated his right to a fair trial under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
As stated above, petitioner was tried and convicted on counts of burglary in the first and second degrees, for the burglaries of the Franklin and Buller residences, respectively. Prior to trial, the state court denied petitioner’s motion to sever the two counts, holding that neither the state statutory provisions governing such severances (N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law. § 200.20(2) and (3)) nor the “interest of justice” required granting the motion. 2
Petitioner claims that the denial of severance forced him to waive his right to testify concerning one of the counts of the indictment in order to preserve his right to remain silent as to the other count. He does not describe the testimony he would have given, or how his inability to so testify prejudiced him; in fact, he does not even specify which count he would have testified about.
The court in
Alvarez v. Wainwright,
In seeking habeas relief, petitioner claimed that he had wanted to testify as to the larceny of a firearm and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle charges, but did not want to testify as to any of the manslaughter charges. The Fifth Circuit, affirming the district court’s denial of the habeas petition, held that “[severance is not mandatory simply because a defendant indicates that he wishes to testify on some counts but not on others.”
[N]o need for a severance exists until the defendant makes a convincing showing that he has both important testimony to give concerning one count and strong need to refrain from testifying on the other. In making such a showing, it is essential that the defendant present enough information — regarding the nature of the testimony he wishes to give on one count and his reason for not wishing to testify on the other — to satisfy the court that the claim of prejudice is genuine and to enable it intelligently to weigh the considerations of “economy and expedition in judicial administration” against the defendant’s interest in having a free choice with respect to testifying.
Id.
(quoting
Baker v. United States,
Here, petitioner has not offered any information “regarding the nature of the testimony he wish[ed] to give on one count and his reason for not wishing to testify on the other”. Id. Therefore, the court cannot evaluate whether denial of his severance motion prejudiced his defense and his claim must be denied. 5
Other grounds support this determination as well.
1) Under federal and New York law, a trial judge has discretion to permit joinder of two or more counts having the same legal character if evidence of the defendant’s commission of any one of the counts would be admissible to prove his commission of the other counts.
Alejandro v.
Here, evidence regarding the Buller burglary would have been admissible in a separate trial regarding the Franklin burglary, and vice versa. The robberies were linked in time and place, and by police testimony concerning such physical evidence as the green tissue paper and the bloodstains. Indeed, it is hard to imagine how Ms. Buller could have provided the jury with “the complete picture of what transpired” on the night her home was burglarized without also referring to the Franklin burglary. Id.
2) The federal habeas courts also have upheld joinder of state criminal offenses which “arose out of a single sequence of acts and arose at or about the same time.”
Bourgeois v. Whitley,
In discussing the same point on the co-defendant’s appeal, the [New Jersey] Appellate Division noted that the two robberies were clearly part of a common plan or scheme, evidenced by the fact that after the first robbery the money was hidden and defendants immediately committed the second robbery.... The record of the trial shows that five prosecution witnesses were essential to the proof of both robberies, that the robberies were committed within an hour of each other, that both targets were liquor stores, and that the same gun was used.
Id. (citation omitted).
Here, too, one crime occurred immediately after the other, and, as discussed
supra,
the witnesses’ testimony would have been admissible at separate trials of either count. Clearly, the two burglaries “arose out of a single sequence of acts and arose at or about the same time,”
Bourgeois,
Accordingly, petitioner’s first claim is denied, with prejudice.
II. CLAIM TWO (DELAY BETWEEN ARREST AND ARRAIGNMENT)
Petitioner claims that delay in arraigning him “was tantamount to an illegal and unlawful detention” and resulted in the acquisition of incriminating evidence by coercion and/or by. forestalling the petitioner’s right to assistance of counsel. Pet.Br. at 7. Petitioner asserts that the trial court erred by refusing to suppress the items of evidence obtained by the state during this period of unlawful detention — consisting of certain oral statements to the police (which petitioner fails to specifically identify), the blood sample, and the lineup identification.
1) To the extent that the claim is premised upon failure to suppress evidence obtained due to the “illegal and unlawful detention” of petitioner, this court cannot consider it.
6
The United States Supreme
The federal courts have approved New York’s procedure for litigating Fourth Amendment claims, embodied in N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law § 710.10
et seq.
(McKinney 1984 & Supp.1988), as being facially adequate.
Gates,
Here there was no “unconscionable breakdown” in the process provided by N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law § 710.10
et seq.
(McKinney 1984 & Supp.1988). Petitioner availed himself of that process, and his motion to suppress was denied in a written opinion dated December 20, 1982 (reproduced in State’s Br. at 11-16) which leaves no doubt that the trial court “conducted a ‘reasoned method of inquiry into relevant questions of fact and law,’ ”
Shaw,
2) To the extent that petitioner’s second claim rests on alleged violations of the Fifth Amendment, it must be rejected because it is procedurally barred.
At best, petitioner only has a Fifth Amendment claim as to the statements he made on the morning of September 18, 1981, but not as to the blood sample or the lineup identification. The Fifth Amendment is only concerned with self-incrimination by acts of a testimonial or communicative nature.
Schmerber v. California,
Moreover, to the extent that federal habeas courts have even considered the constitutionality of delaying arraignment of state defendants, they have only done so as part of a Fifth Amendment based analysis of the voluntariness of confessions. Thus, delay in arraigning a state defendant is not, in itself, a constitutional violation,
7
but is at most a factor to be weighed in determining whether or not, viewed in the totality of the circumstances, an incriminating statement was the product of police coercion.
United States ex rel. Wade v. Jackson,
Petitioner is barred from raising the issue of the voluntariness of his statements to the police, however, because he did not raise that issue on his direct state court appeal.
8
Defendant-Appellant’s Brief at
Thus, to the extent that petitioner’s second claim is based on an alleged violation of the Fifth Amendment, it must be denied, with prejudice.
3) Finally, if the claim is viewed as resting on an alleged violation of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, it must be rejected. It has already been shown that state delay in arraigning an arrested person does not in itself justify habeas relief, except insofar as it contributes to a finding that defendant’s inculpatory statements were the product of coercion. Moreover, the right to counsel only comes into existence “at or after the initiation of adversary judicial criminal proceedings — whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment.”
Kirby v. Illinois,
Accordingly, whether petitioner’s second claim is viewed as based on an alleged violation of the Fourth, Fifth or Sixth Amendments, it must be denied, with prejudice.
III. CLAIM THREE (ADMISSION OF EXPERT TESTIMONY CONCERNING BLOOD ANALYSIS)
Petitioner’s third claim is that his Sixth and Fourteenth rights to a fair trial
Assuming
arguendo
that admission of the blood analysis was error under state law — which does not appear to be the case —such error is not cognizable in federal habeas actions unless it rose to such a level that it deprived petitioner’s trial of “fundamental fairness” or violated a specific constitutional protection.
Matlock v. Rose,
Because petitioner’s third claim does not allege a violation of any federal constitutional right, it must be denied, with prejudice.
IV. CLAIM IV (EXCESSIVE SENTENCE)
Petitioner claims that the imposition of consecutive prison sentences upon him violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment. He asserts that concurrent sentences should have been imposed, instead.
At the conclusion of his trial, he was convicted of burglary in the second degree (a class C felony under N.Y.Penal Law [“Penal Law”] § 140.25 (McKinney 1988)) and burglary in the first degree (a class B felony under Penal Law § 140.30), the sentences to run consecutively as authorized by Penal Law § 70.25(1). Because petitioner was a second violent felony offender, 11 he could have received consecutive terms of 12½ to 25 years and 7½ to 15 years, pursuant to Penal Law § 70.04(3)(a), (c) and (4). Instead, he received consecutive terms of 10 to 20 years and 5 to 10 years. Thus, under New York law, petitioner could have been exposed to as much as 40 years in jail; under the sentences he actually received, his maximum possible stay in jail is 25 years.
Moreover, petitioner has not made any showing that his sentence is disproportionate to his crime. Under
Solem v. Helm,
objective criteria, including (i) the gravity of- the offense and the harshness of the penalty; (ii) the sentences imposed on other criminals in the same jurisdiction; and (iii) the sentences imposed for commission of the same crime in other jurisdictions.
Petitioner has not even addressed these factors. The gravity of the offenses cannot be denied: on August 25,1981, petitioner committed two separate nighttime burglaries of occupied family residences, and pointed a gun at a resident who confronted him during one of the crimes. Petitioner has not shown that the penalty imposed on him is harsher than that imposed on other criminals in New York, or that other jurisdictions impose lighter sentences.
V. Claim V (Ineffective Assistance of Appellate Counsel)
Petitioner contends that appellate counsel’s failure to raise any federal constitutional objection to the admissibility of the blood type analysis (see discussion of Claim III, supra) prejudiced his attempts to win habeas relief, presumably because this court previously dismissed his petition for failure to exhaust this claim. Since the court has concluded that no federal constitutional objection could have been raised, petitioner’s ineffective assistance claim necessarily fails and must be denied, with prejudice.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the petition for a writ of habeas corpus is denied in its entirety, with prejudice. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253, petitioner’s application for a certificate of probable cause is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The new petition contains an additional claim alleging ineffectiveness of appellate counsel. Specifically, petitioner claims that appellate counsel’s failure to raise any federal constitutional objection to expert testimony regarding blood analysis prejudiced petitioner by causing this court to dismiss the first habeas petition on exhaustion grounds. The State half-heartedly argues that this claim was never exhausted because a New York Court of Appeals decision, handed down
after
petitioner had already raised the issue with the trial court in his motion to vacate the judgment, requires such claims to be brought in the appellate tribunal by means of the common law writ of error coram nobis.
People v. Bachert,
. People v. Holmes, Ind. No. 53454 (Nassau Co. Ct., Jan. 3, 1983) (Dillon, J.), annexed as Exhibit H to Respondents’ Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Petitioner’s Pro Se Application for a Writ of Habeas Corpus ["State’s Brief’].
This court is not bound by the state court’s finding regarding the "interests of justice.”
See Panzavecchia v. Wainwright,
. Other federal courts have held that a state trial court's denial of a motion to sever the counts of an indictment can rise to the level of a constitutional violation where it renders the trial fundamentally unfair.
See Tribbitt v. Wainwright,
However, the court’s research has disclosed only one case in which a federal habeas petitioner succeeded with the claim that a state court’s denial of a severance of counts rendered the trial fundamentally unfair.
See Panzavecchia v. Wainwright,
This court rejects decisions (such as
Madden v. Fogg,
However, the court notes that even those courts which agree that misjoinder of offenses
can
be unconstitutional differ regarding the standard for assessing such claims.
Compare Alejandro,
. Fed.R.Crim.P. 14 states, in relevant part:
If it appears that a defendant or the government is prejudiced by a joinder of offenses ... in an indictment or information ... the court may order an election or separate trials of counts ... or provide whatever other relief justice requires.
. One federal habeas court has rejected all claims such as petitioner’s
per se
as
never
representing a constitutional violation.
Conte v. Cardwell,
. The
pro se
habeas petition states as the second ground for relief that “[p]etitioner's 5th, 6th and 14th Amends., rights [sic] were violated by the use of inadmissible evidence at trial.” Habeas Petition at 5. In support of this claim, the petition alleges that "[petitioner’s 5th, 6th and
Also within the ambit of the Fourth Amendment, and therefore unreviewable, is petitioner’s claim, raised only implicitly in his brief, that the police should not have detained him while investigating whether he burglarized homes other than the one in which he was found and arrested (i.e., the Buller and Franklin residences).
. As a state prisoner, petitioner cannot avail himself of the so-called
"McNabb-Mallory "
rule. In
McNabb v. United States,
. In the course of making his “delayed arraignment" claim, petitioner also asserts that he never "unequivocally” waived his right to counsel. Petitioner’s brief also implies, but never actually asserts, that he may have been intoxicated when he waived his right to counsel, so that the waiver was not made voluntarily. Finally, petitioner asserts that while being unlawfully detained without arraignment, he told his sister to retain an attorney. However, he does not claim that he made such a request to the police.
. Petitioner is also barred from raising the issue on a state coram nobis motion. N.Y.Crim.P0roc.Law § 440.10(2)(c) (McKinney 1983 & Supp.1988).
. Moreover, petitioner has not pointed to a single incriminating statement which should have been suppressed because it was made by him during the period of allegedly unlawful detainment. On appeal, he conceded that the unlawful detainment did not commence until 9:30 a.m. on September 18, 1981. Defendant-Appellant’s Br. at 9, 11-12. Yet his brief to this court refers to only two statements made on that day: (1) his statement, made prior to 9:30 a.m., that he cut his wrist at the Wilfred Academy; and (2) his denial of any involvement in the burglaries, made around noon that day. The former statement cannot be the fruit of an unlawful, coercive delay, since, as petitioner conceded, the delay had not yet begun. The latter statement is not at all incriminating and therefore does not implicate the Fifth Amendment. (Petitioner challenges no statements made on the following day, September 19, and in any event, the state court suppressed those statements.)
Petitioner’s failure to indicate which of his statements should have been suppressed not only dooms his substantive Fifth Amendment claim, but also represents a failure to satisfy the "prejudice” prong of the “cause-and-prejudice” standard adopted in
Wainwright v. Sykes,
. In 1977, petitioner was convicted of robbing a woman of $70 at shotgun-point and then beating her.
