This сase reaches us on appeal from denial of relief after evidentiary hearing sought by a petition for habeas corpus lodged in the United States District Court for the District of. Kansas. After duly exhausting his state remedies, 1 appellant Brown brought before the court below multiple claims of federal constitutional error in the state court proceedings leading to his internment: a) admission into evidence of a confession involuntarily made, coupled with b) the failure to provide him with counsеl at the initial stages of the proceedings against him; c) admission of evidence obtained pursuant to an illegal search and seizure; d) failure to record the рrosecutor’s closing argument wherein prejudicial comment was levied against him; e) exclusion of blacks from the jury; and f) suppression of favorable medical evidence by the state. Brown has also urged on appeal the invalidity of certain pretrial identification procedures. We conclude that the lower сourt’s denial of relief was proper.
On March 25, 1964, Brown was tried by jury and convicted on two robbery counts, two burglary, and one forcible rape. After his motion for new trial was overruled, Brown was sentenced to four consecutive 15-year terms and, with the Kansas habitual criminal statute properly invoked, received a life sentence on the fifth count. The trial court had explored the asserted involuntariness of a confession obtained from Brown in a closed hearing held at the beginning of the trial. Brown’s testimony was taken on the issue, as well as that of the two detectives who had interrogated him. The two arresting officers later testified at trial, and that partial transcript was available below. The convictions were affirmed in State v. Brown,
*308 In the instant case, the lower court heard testimony of appellant and the former prosecutor who had represented the state in Brown’s trial. After also independently reviewing the transcript of the hearing on voluntariness of the confession and the partial transcript of the state’s opening statеment and testimony of Brown and the arresting officers, the court from the bench made detailed findings against appellant, concluded that the state court determinаtions on identical issues were supported by the record, and subsequently formalized these findings and conclusions in a journal entry.
Because the substance of all but onе of Brown’s allegations in state and federal court has always turned on conflicting testimony, our review does not extend to a reevaluation of conflicting evidence or credibility of witnesses as reflected in the findings.
E. g.,
Linebarger v. State, 10 Cir.,
Brown alleged that his confession was coerced by both physical abuse and the threatened arrest of his family. Although no one finding below or in the state review was directed to the allegation of threats against the family, the record discloses unrefuted testimony of an arresting officer that Brown had implicated his brother in one crime and warrants were then issued for the entire family, which was questioned. Without more from Brown, this allegation reaches no higher than an evaluation of сonflicting testimony, on the whole resolved against Brown within the lower court’s attention to all claims of coercion.
We find more problematical the relatеd issue of denial of the right to counsel during the time Brown was booked before a local justice of the peace when the rape victim identified him as her assailant and during the interrogation when the confession was secured. First Brown postulates that the retroactivity bar of Johnson v. New Jersey,
Secondly, Brown claims that,
Miranda
aside, he was entitled to counsel during the booking and interrogation proceedings, and again he asserts an equal protection right resting this time on Griffin v. Illinois,
Next, the incidence of prejudicial comment in the state’s closing аrgument developed to no more than a conflict in testimony between appellant and the then prosecutor resolved unfavorably to Brown, and the court below correctly ruled that in these circumstances there was no error in the state’s failure to record the prosecutor’s summation.
See
Linebarger v. State,
supra,
We uphold the lower court’s finding that there was no suppression of evidence. The subject reports consisted of two doctors’ examination of the cоmplainant rape victim, and revealed no medical evidence of the alleged attack. Witness Smith, who had represented the state against appellant, unequivocally testified that the existence of the reports was known to defense counsel, that they had been made available to counsel and werе mentioned by counsel in his opening statement but not later produced. 3
Appellate counsel also contends that Brown was denied constitutional safeguards during сertain pretrial identification procedures to which he was subjected after arrest. This issue is presented for the first time in this court and is thus both improper for and incаpable of review. Johnson v. Patterson, 10 Cir.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The court found that tiie state remedies were exhausted because the sentencing court failed to respond to аppellant’s motion attacking sentence properly filed pursuant to Kan.Stat.Ann. § 60-1507 (1964). At hearing below the state produced a journal entry indicating that the state court had summarily denied relief. However, the lower court had already conducted a full evidentiary hearing on appellant’s allegations and proceeded to its completion.
. See note 1 supra.
