Carlos Luna appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Luna, a former Boston police officer, was convicted of perjury and filing false reports. The background events are complicated,
see Commonwealth v. Lewin,
In February 1988 Luna applied for a search warrant for a Dorchester apartment, claiming in an affidavit attached to the application that a confidential informant had told him that a short Hispanic male had been distributing cocaine from the premises. Luna also claimed that he had purchased cocaine at the apartment from a Hispanic male on February 15 and 16, 1988. In the ensuing raid, a police officer named Sherman Griffiths was shot by someone inside the apartment. Albert Lewin, a tall black man, was arrested and charged with Griffiths’ murder.
Luna’s search warrant affidavit was materially false. The drug purchases on February 15 and 16, 1988, had been made respectively by two
other
confidential informants — not by Luna and not in his presence. Further, the informant who had initially tipped off the police to the drug activity at the apartment had not reported to Luna, as Luna had claimed in the affidavit, but had instead reported to another officer who then passed the information along to Luna. Finally, Luna had also said in the search warrant affidavit that he had witnessed unusual foot traffic going to the apartment and had witnessed other trans
Nevertheless, at a probable cause hearing following Lewin’s arrest, Luna testified in accordance with the lies in the search warrant affidavit. He also submitted police reports describing the February 15 and 16 drug purchases he had allegedly made. When a state court ordered Luna to reveal his supposed original informant, Luna made up a name and physical description; and when ordered to produce the informant, Luna and others engaged in a spurious search, in the course of which Luna filed further false reports.
In due course the indictment against Lewin was dismissed for failure to produce the informant, a potentially exculpatory witness. At the hearing prior to the dismissal, Luna had told additional lies consistent with his search warrant affidavit and his subsequent false identification of the informant. Then, through an anonymous tip, the prosecutor learned the name of the informant who had in fact made the February 15 drug purchase and asked for reinstatement of the indictment. The state court asked the prosecutor to try to obtain affidavits from Luna and other officers.
During early March 1989, Luna met a number of times with Mark Sullivan, retained as Luna’s private counsel at his union’s expense. On March 12,1989, Luna executed an affidavit admitting
inter alia
that he had lied in the search warrant affidavit, that the information contained in the search warrant affidavit did not reflect his personal knowledge, but rather “the collective knowledge of the police squad members[,] and that he had substituted himself as the drug purchaser [in the search warrant affidavit] in order to protect the informants.”
Luna v. Massachusetts,
Meanwhile, Luna was indicted in state court on charges of perjury and filing false reports and was convicted in June 1991 on multiple counts of each offense. He was sentenced to five years’ probation, conditioned on his resigning from the police force. A motion for a new trial was denied, and the SJC affirmed Luna’s conviction.
Commonwealth v. Luna,
The first claim is that Luna’s second affidavit, admitting to the falsity of his original affidavit, was a coerced confession improperly admitted at his trial for perjury and false reporting. Luna suggests that he was ordered to file the affidavit by the judge in the Lewin case; and, with
Whether the confession was inadmissible under Massachusetts law was the subject of dispute at trial and on review in the SJC. Massachusetts law is friendly to such claims in a number of respects: it puts the burden on the Commonwealth to prove voluntariness beyond a reasonable doubt, allows the defendant two bites at the apple by giving the issue separately to the trial judge and the jury, and treats as coercion pressure exerted by private parties as well as by official action.
Commonwealth v. Allen,
In the state case against Luna, the trial judge refused to suppress the second affidavit, the jury may or may not have considered it after making its own judgment about undue pressure, and the SJC ruled that there was no legal error.
Commonwealth v. Luna,
The state court judge said he wanted an affidavit from Luna but made clear that he understood that Luna could invoke his privilege against self-incrimination; thus, the judge did not require Luna to file the affidavit. Whether Luna’s own counsel properly advised him about the privilege, or told Luna that others would be unhappy if he thwarted the Lewin prosecution, is irrelevant: under federal law, only coercion resulting from
official
action — court orders, police pressure, state law — invalidates a confession.
Colorado v. Connelly,
Luna’s private attorney was not acting as a governmental official, nor (so far as the evidence shows) at the behest of officials, when he counseled Luna. Apparently Sullivan had earlier worked in the prosecutor’s office and his wife still worked there; but neither circumstance made Sullivan a state actor at the time he advised Luna.
2
Massachusetts was free to exclude the affidavit on grounds of private coercion, but, whether or not it properly applied its own law, admitting the affidavit did not violate the federal constitution. The fact that Sullivan was not a state actor also disposes of Luna’s contention that he did not voluntarily waive his Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination — a waiver of a defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights is only involuntary if it resulted from official coercion.
Connelly,
Luna says that the admission of the confession was contrary to
Garrity v. New Jersey,
Luna’s second claim of error on this appeal relates to his own testimony at his trial. At trial Luna’s affidavit was admitted by the judge as voluntary but subject to the caveat (required under state law) that the jury should disregard the affidavit if the jury itself found the statement involuntary (again, under the defendant-friendly state law standard). During its deliberations, the jury asked whether if it did find the confession involuntary, it could still consider Luna’s trial testimony about the affidavit — some of which had been inculpatory.
Over Luna’s objection, the trial judge told the jury that it could still consider his trial testimony. On appeal in this court, Luna says that this was constitutional error, citing
Harrison v. United States,
The premise of
Harrison
was that the original confession (actually several confessions,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although Luna’s probation has expired, the habeas action was filed before this occurred.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 2241(c), 2254(b) (2000) (only people "in custody” may file a federal habeas petition);
Spencer v. Kemna,
523 U.S.
1,
7,
. Sullivan's wife apparently attended two of Luna’s meetings with Sullivan; in addition, it was she who typed up the affidavit in which Luna admitted that he had lied. However, Luna does not assert that Sullivan’s wife put any pressure on him whatsoever to file the affidavit.
.
See Dwan v. City of Boston,
