On December 4, 1974, the petitioner in this habeas corpus proceeding, Norman J. Clark, was tried and convicted by a jury in a Louisiana state court for the distribution of heroin in violation of La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 40:966 (West 1977). Less than a month earlier, his first trial on the same charge had resulted in a mistrial when the jury was unable to reach a verdict.
The transaction upon which Clark’s conviction was based involved five persons: Clark, his sister Carolyn Clark, Special Agent Bernard Harry of the Drug Enforcement Administration, and two informants, Emmanual Stewart and Calvin Clark (no relation to petitioner). Special Agent Harry testified at trial that, while acting in an undercover capacity, he and the two informants went to Carolyn Clark’s home to purchase narcotics. Petitioner answered the door and in the course of a subsequent conversation stated that his sister had heroin he had given her. After the terms of a sale were discussed with Carolyn and a price of $104 tentatively agreed upon, she looked at the petitioner, who nodded his head. She then left the room and returned with nine packets of heroin, which she gave to Calvin Clark for the $104.
Neither of the informants testified at trial; a New Orleans police officer testi *533 fied at petitioner’s first trial that the informants had been sent to Florida with spending money and at government expense through the combined efforts of state and federal officials. The officer further testified that it had been his suggestion to send the informants out of Louisiana despite the fact that he knew a subpoena had been issued to compel the informants to testify at the petitioner’s first trial. 1
Petitioner’s conviction was affirmed by the Louisiana Supreme Court,
In
Lockett
the same twp informants who are involved in this case participated with
*534
government undercover officers in the purchase of heroin from the defendant. The defendant’s efforts to subpoena the informants were unsuccessful because of the previously described conduct of the government in sending them to Florida. This court held that “the deliberate concealment of a named eyewitness whose testimony would admittedly be material constitutes a prima facie deprivation of due process.”
At the evidentiary hearing held in this case, informant Stewart’s testimony corroborated that of Special Agent Harry at petitioner’s trial. Informant Calvin Clark, however, testified that petitioner was not in the room when the heroin was purchased from Carolyn Clark. Nevertheless, the magistrate recommended that the writ of habeas corpus be denied. This recommendation was based on the magistrate’s determination that Stewart was a credible witness, while Calvin Clark was not.
According to the magistrate, Calvin Clark would not have testified at trial as he did at the evidentiary hearing. This conclusion was based on the fact that Calvin Clark recently had been incarcerated in the same prison where the petitioner is serving his life term; thus, the magistrate reasoned that Calvin Clark, fearing retribution for his role in aiding the government in its undercover narcotics investigations, testified untruthfully at the evidentiary hearing. In sum, the magistrate found that Stewart was a credible witness whose testimony would not have helped petitioner; that Calvin Clark was not a credible witness; that his evidentiary hearing testimony was a recent fabrication; that he would have testified similarly to Special Agent Harry if he had been called to testify at petitioner’s trial; and, consequently, that the jury’s verdict would not have been affected had the informants testified at petitioner’s trial.
■ Based on these findings of fact, the magistrate recommended that petitioner’s application for a writ of habeas corpus be dismissed. The district court adopted the magistrate’s findings and recommendation and ordered the petition dismissed. Petitioner then brought this appeal; we remand and direct the district court to issue the writ, unless Louisiana elects to retry petitioner promptly.
While the magistrate may have been correct in finding that Calvin Clark is not a credible witness,
2
this determination was not one for him to make, and it certainly is not one for this court to make. Petitioner received a life sentence for his conviction for distributing heroin; eyewitnesses to the transaction upon which his conviction was based were made unavailable to testify at petitioner’s jury trial by the government despite its knowledge that the witnesses had been subpoenaed to testify at petitioner’s first trial. As we held in
Lockett,
such conduct by the government “constitutes a prima facie deprivation of due process.”
*535
Under
Chapman v. California,
No one knows how Calvin Clark would have testified had he been available to testify at petitioner’s trial. Further, no one knows whether the jury’s verdict would have been affected had Calvin Clark testified at the trial in a manner consistent with the testimony he gave at the evidentiary hearing. Petitioner’s constitutional right to due process was flagrantly violated by the government’s conduct in making Calvin Clark, a material eyewitness to the transaction upon which petitioner was convicted, unavailable to testify despite its knowledge that petitioner had subpoenaed him. Where, as here, the missing witness comes forth with testimony that exculpates petitioner, the conviction cannot be allowed to stand on the basis of a magistrate’s findings that the witness was not credible and that his testimony was a recent fabrication.
REMANDED.
Notes
. The informants were not subpoenaed to testify at petitioner’s second trial; further, at the second trial petitioner made no objections or motions to the trial court concerning the government’s actions in making the informants unavailable for trial. This failure to raise the issue in a timely fashion, however, does not preclude review of petitioner’s claim on the merits in habeas corpus proceedings in either the Louisiana state courts or in federal court.
While Louisiana does have a contemporaneous objection rule, La.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 841 (West 1966) (amended 1974), the Official Revision Comment to that rule provides that “certain rights are so basic that they can be raised for the first time ... in an application for a writ of habeas corpus (Art. 362).” Petitioner’s claim is essentially that, because of the government’s conduct, he was convicted without due process of law. Article 362(9) of the La.Code of Crim.Pro. expressly authorizes habeas corpus relief for persons convicted without due process of law. Thus, the state trial court, which addressed the merits of petitioner’s habeas claim in an unpublished opinion, properly did so even though the Louisiana Supreme Court previously had declined to reach the merits of that claim when petitioner raised it for the first time on direct appeal from his conviction.
Petitioner’s failure to subpoena the informants for the second trial raises a second, somewhat more difficult issue. In response to petitioner’s application for federal habeas relief on the unavailability-of-the-informants issue, the government originally argued that petitioner decided, as a matter of trial tactics, not to subpoena the informants to testify at the second trial. According to the government, the informants’ testimony would have been adverse to petitioner, who thus decided to stress their absence from trial rather than try to secure their presence. While the fact that petitioner’s first trial resulted in a hung jury provides a basis for arguing that, with respect to the informants’ testimony, petitioner decided to leave well enough alone, we are not convinced that petitioner’s failure to subpoena the informants was a matter of trial strategy. Subpoenas issued to the informants for petitioner’s first trial, originally scheduled for September 23, 1974, were returned unserved. Petitioner then secured a continuance until November 14, 1974, and new subpoenas were again unsuccessfully issued to the informants. The second trial was held just 20 days after the first trial, a fact that supports petitioner’s argument that the informants were not subpoenaed merely because such an effort would have been futile. Further, the government’s argument assumes that the informants would have testified adversely to petitioner. This assumption is questionable in light of both Calvin Clark’s subsequent testimony, discussed
infra,
and the fact that the informants’ state-compelled absence from the reach of the subpoenas at least raises the suspicion that they would not have corroborated the state’s version of the case.
See Lockett v. Blackburn,
. On April 5, 1978, Calvin Clark signed an affidavit in which he “categorically denie[d]” that he would have testified favorably to petitioner at petitioner’s trial. Rather, “[i]f he had been called to testify, his testimony would have corroborated the testimony of the other State’s witnesses, as it did in every other ‘Operation Checkmate’ [the 1974 narcotics investigation in New Orleans] case, in which he, in fact, testified.” The reliability of this affidavit testimony is questionable because it concededly was provided after Calvin Clark had contacted the New Orleans District Attorney’s Office for assistance in having charges connected with a subsequent arrest dropped.
. Our conclusion that the due process violation involved in this case was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt so as to constitute harmless constitutional error under Chapman is strengthened by the fact that petitioner’s first trial ended in a hung jury, thus indicating the existence of some degree of doubt as to petitioner’s involvement in the transaction for which he was convicted. Further, the Responsive Verdicts form given to the jury in petitioner’s second trial indicates that two of the twelve jurors voted to find the petitioner not guilty. Under Louisiana law, if one of the other ten jurors had voted not guilty, a guilty verdict could not have been rendered. La.Const. art. 1, § 17; La.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 40:964, Schedule I, subd. B. (amended 1977), 40:966 (amended 1979) (West 1977).
