This is an appeal from the district court’s denial of appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. See District Court Opinion
Gilreath v. Robinson,
The opinion of the district court adequately answers all of Gilreath’s present exceptions; however, the district court did not discuss
Rogers v. Richmond,
Rogers
prohibits a trial judge from relying upon the truthfulness of a confession when deciding whether it should be admitted as a voluntary statement of an accused. A careful reading of the ten pages of the trial transcript in which the judge discussed his findings and his reasons for admitting the confession clearly shows that a belief in the truthfulness of the confession was not a reason for admission. In mentioning that the confession contained facts known only to the accused, the trial judge was not passing upon the credibility of the statement, but was answering the appellant’s claim that at the time of the confession he was in a psychotic state or a condition of complete helplessness where he could do no more than “to parrot back a story that was implanted in his mind by someone else of fantasy.” This is not the reliance upon truth of a confession that is condemned by Justice Frankfurter in
Rogers,
but is a proper inquiry and finding by the trial judge in deciding if a statement is voluntary or is the result of improper interrogation which puts words into the mouth of the accused and overrides his free will. See also
United States v. Kreczmer,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Apparently the superintendent of the Virginia State Penitentiary changed from James P. Mitchell to A.T. Robinson after this suit was filed and before the district court opinion was published.
