The sole issue raised by plaintiff on appeal is whether a state criminal defendant is entitled to federal injunctive or declaratory relief under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 from a fourth murder prosecution after three successive convictions over a twelve-year period were each reversed because of constitutionаl infirmities. Finding no bad faith or harassment, a prerequisite for federal intervention in the state proceedings, we affirm the district court’s denial of relief.
Plaintiff was indicted for murder on July 29, 1964. Prior to this time he had been serving a sentence for grand larceny, burglary and rape, which would expire in 1971. On June 15,1964 he escaped from his prison work detail and was captured two days later, after an extensive manhunt, when one of the sheriff’s deputies shot him in the leg.
Beecher was thereafter prosecuted threе times for the murder of a young woman. In each case, a jury found him guilty, but on appeal each conviction was reversed because of constitutional errors. In
Beecher v.
Alabama,
Beecher’s seсond conviction was reversed by the Supreme -Court in
Beecher v. Alabama,
The Alabama Supreme Court reversed the third conviction.
Beecher v. Alabama,
Faced with a fourth prosecution, Bеecher brought this § 1983 action in federal court seeking a declaratory and injunctive bar against further state proceedings. He claimed that another trial wоuld constitute bad faith harassment in violation of his Fourteenth Amendment due process rights, in light of his three previous prosecutions over a twelve-year period during whiсh he has been imprisoned. He argues that the passage of time makes it impossible for him to obtain a fair trial since evidence has been lost, witnesses have died, and other witnesses’ memories have faded.
Both plaintiff and the state agree that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Younger v. Harris,
The unique facts in the instant case do not reflect “bad faith,” “harassment,” or “other extraordinary circumstances” warranting the requested relief. Beecher claims the introduction at his second trial of the confession to the doctor evidenced the state’s bad faith. The confessions introduced at the first two trials were distinct. The circumstances surrounding them were *977 not disputed by the state’s witnessеs until the second trial. The prosecution’s mistaken belief that plaintiff’s confession to the doctor was admissible, even after the Supreme Court’s reversal beсause of the confession to the state investigators, would not amount to bad faith. The third conviction was reversed on a ground which departed from a long line of state cases to the contrary. The record shows that after three jury convictions were set aside on plaintiff’s appeals, the state has continued its efforts to obtain a valid conviction of plaintiff for first degree murder, a crime in which there is a strong public interest in vigorous prosecution.
Plaintiff argues that considering the substantial adverse “impact” of the first three trials, and the resulting imprisonment for five and one-half years beyond the term imposed for prior convictions, a fourth prosecution would constitute “harassment” or “other extraordinary circumstances” justifying relief. To support his argument, plaintiff introduced statistical evidenсe of the average length of incarceration of persons convicted of homicide. The district judge properly found this statistical argument to be “fallаcious” because it included persons guilty of lesser crimes than first degree murder.
Plaintiff also introduced evidence of the unpleasant, crowded prison cоnditions to which he had been subjected. These conditions alone are not the kind of “harassment” or “other extraordinary circumstances” contemplated by Younger as warranting federal interference with a good faith state criminal prosecution.
Plaintiff relies heavily on two prior decisions of this Court in which injunctive relief was granted. Because the issue of bad faith or harassment is a question of fact, depending on the circumstances of the particular case, these cases are clearly distinguishable.
Shaw v. Garrison,
In
Duncan v. Perez,
Plaintiff alleges that he will be denied a fair trial because of the passage of time. There is no evidence in the record, however, that Beecher’s defense will be prejudiced on retrial. If anything, plaintiff’s rather speculative evidence tends to show that the state’s case may be weakеned, since it is the prosecutor’s witnesses that cannot be located or whose memories allegedly have faded.
Accordingly, the district court’s order refusing to interfere with the state prosecution is
AFFIRMED.
