On May 3, 1963, the day after his father was found dead, petitioner J. Loyd Parker, Jr. confessed to the killing,
1
and on May 17, 1963 he was indicted for murder. The principal issues from the inception of the proceedings were Parker’s sanity at the time of the act and his competency to stand trial. Pursuant to an agreement between counsel, a hearing was held at which Parker was found incompetent to be tried and was committed to Rusk State Hospital until he recovered his sanity. In February 1969, after spending six years in Rusk, he was released; and on May 19, 1969 a jury found that he was competent to be tried. In June 1969, represented by retained counsel, Parker was convicted by another jury of premeditated murder and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment. At the June trial the prosecution, somewhat surprisingly, put on a brief case of circumstantial evidence linking Parker to commission of the crime.
2
Although Parker’s attorneys had been ready with witnesses, they elected not to present an insanity defense and thus avoid potentially damaging rebuttal evidence they knew to be in possession of the State. After an affirmance of his conviction by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals,
Parker urges thirteen contentions before us. Three of them revolve around his bare factual allegation that he did not receive credit on his 1969 sentence
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for the six years spent at Rusk State Hospital after the 1963 jury found him incompetent to be tried. He alleges that this disallowance violated (1) his due process rights,
3
and (2) his right not to be twice punished for the same offense,
see
Wright v. Maryland Penitentiary,
Assuming arguendo, that detention and treatment at Rusk can be equated with punitive custody or punishment, this circuit distinguishes between credit for pre and post-sentence custody. Thus, in Robinson v. Beto,
In federal cases in which the sentence imposed plus time spent in pre-sentence custody totals less than the maximum for the offense, there is a conclusive presumption that the sentencing judge gave credit for the pre-sentence custody.
See, e. g.,
Bryans v. Blackwell,
Another set of arguments concerns the fact that no jury has ever re
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solved the question of Parker’s sanity at the time of the offense. Relying on the testimony of the 1963 district attorney that he believed Parker insane at the time of offense and the fact that several psychiatrists were willing to testify to this, Parker asserts numerous constitutional errors. He alleges that his retained counsel’s failure to submit this issue either to the competency hearing jury
5
or to the convicting jury, coupled with the fact that the prosecutors and the trial judge knew “of the defense and yet did nothing to see that it was submitted to either jury,” deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel both in 1963 and 1969. Additionally, he argues that the fact that the sanity issue was not submitted at the 1963 competency hearing of itself was a denial of due process.
6
and that it denied him due process for the state to allow a conviction “knowing” of his insanity. As to the ineffective assistance claims,
7
the state habeas judge’s findings that the decisions not to submit the sanity issue to either jury were legitimate tactical ones made by competent attorneys are fully supported by the record,
see
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), and are in full compliance with our “reasonably likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance” standards.
8
See
Herring v. Estelle,
Parker further asserts that the trial judge’s denial of bail coupled
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with the prosecutor’s pretrial assertion that the state would seek the death penalty if Parker challenged this denial by way of habeas corpus, operated to deprive him of his Eighth Amendment right to be free from excessive bail, and to deny him due process. The prosecutor’s conduct, which gave the judge’s ruling a macabre finality, might raise constitutional questions if presented to us in the proper context. However in the absence of • any allegation of prejudice
9
other than increased pretrial custody, we hold that both issues are now moot.
10
Parker is now confined by virtue of a conviction in no way tainted by these alleged illegalities.
See, e. g.,
Smith v. Warden,
Parker next argues that the state obtained a crucial correction in the statement of Julian Morales by use of Parker’s admittedly invalid confession, and consequently truthful testimony from Morales was proscribed by the so-called “fruit of the poisoned tree” principle of Silverthorne Lumber Co. v. United States,
There can be no doubt that the
Silverthorne
principle, announced in a search and seizure context, is applicable to a suppressed confession case, Harrison v. United States,
It is also clear that he decided to purge himself after he had consulted a lawyer for advice, the lawyer had told him to tell the truth, and had brought Morales to the courthouse for that purpose. Morales’ reaction to the initial police inquiry may have been that he should avoid all involvement with his employer’s death, even at the cost of perjury. Obviously, he had second thoughts. Can we say that the pressure of the confession must have dominated Morales’ conscience to cause him to change his story? In this outer reach of the exclusionary rule, we decline Parker’s invitation to speculate on the imponderables of human will and motivation,
see
Smith and Bowden v. United States,
Finally, Parker contends that “the unlawful confession irreversibly tainted the entire trial.” Since we have rejected his argument that the illegality of the confession requires the suppression of Morales’ testimony, and since the confession was never introduced into evidence, we reject this argument also.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Parker’s confession was later suppressed by the trial judge.
. The major part of this evidence was provided by the testimony of Julian Morales, long time Parker family gardener. He testified that he heard two shots, saw petitioner Parker exit the house and drive away in Ms Cadillac, and that he then observed Mr. Parker, Sr. lying prone on the kitchen floor. The other evidence tended to link Parker, Jr. with the purchase of a gun similar to the one that was used to kill his father. The murder weapon was never found.
. He grounds this argument on the rationale of North Carolina v. Pearce,
. The equal protection argument is that it is arbitrary and unreasonable for Texas to require credit for post-conviction time spent in a mental institution, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Code Orim.Pro. 46.01 § 8, but deny credit for preconviction time spent in such an institution, Tex.Code Orim.Pro. 46.02 § 10.
. His attorneys had first indicated by written notice an intention to present both the sanity at the time of the crime and competency to be tried issues, but later decided only to present the competency to stand trial issue.
. He also argues that failure to present the issue of his sanity at the time of offense at the 1963 hearing denied him any chance of acquittal at that hearing and resulted in the 1969 trial violating his rights against double jeopardy. We reject this argument. It involves a fundamental misconception of the meaning of a competency determination and the function of a competency hearing. Since there is no possibility of conviction for the substantive offense, jeopardy does not attach at such a hearing.
. We reject Parker’s contention that he was denied counsel of his choice at the 1969 trial because the state habeas judge’s finding that his request for different counsel was made purely to obtain a continuance is fully supported by the record,
see
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) ; United States v. Carter,
. We avoid any determination of whether the prosecutor’s and trial judge’s knowledge of the possibility of an insanity defense was sufficient state action to bind the State of Texas to the actions of retained counsel.
. Parker’s attorneys at his 1969 trial testified at the habeas hearing that they were in no way handicapped because Parker was not released on bail.
. For the same reason, we reject Parker’s argument that the trial judge denied him due process by incorrectly stating that he would lose credit for the time spent at Rusk if he secured bail.
. In Silverthorne, supra, the court stated the policy behind the rule as follows:
The essence of a provision forbidding the acquisition of evidence in a certain way is that not merely evidence so acquired shall not be used before the Court but that it shall not be used at all.
. The specific reasons for the trial judge’s denial of Parker’s motion to suppress Morales’ testimony are unclear in the record of the proceedings in the trial court. They are
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not clarified in the opinion of the state habeas hearing judge. However, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals apparently adopted what has become known as the “inevitable discovery rule” in its opinion.
Bee
Annotation, 43 A.L.K.3d 385, 404 (1972). The Supreme Court has never approved this rule and application of the rule in this circuit was rejected in United States v. Castellana,
