At Whitе’s trial in the New Hampshire Superior Court for Cheshire County in February, 1963, the State was allowed over objection to introduce testimony by the Sheriff of Cheshire County and the County Attorney of incriminating statements volunteered to them by White while he was in their custody after indictments had been returned against him for kidnapping, aggravated assault and robbery. White was found guilty by a jury and sentenced. Judgment of convictiоn and sentence was affirmed on appeal. State v. White,
The incriminating statements perhaps amounting to a confession which were admitted in evidence were made during an automobile trip with the officers following an extradition proceeding in Vermont, where White had been arrested, to Keene, the county seat of Cheshire County, New Hampshire, where he was arraignеd on the indictments the following morning. Although White had been represented by court-appointed counsel in the extradition proceeding in Vermont, at the time of the trip he did not have and had not requested counsel in the criminal proceeding pending against him in New Hampshire.
The court below after an evidentiary hearing as directed by this court on a previous appeal, White v. Hancock, 1 Cir.,
McLeod was indicted on October 3, 1960, for first degrеe murder. Eight days later, on October 11th, before he had procured counsel or the court had appointed counsel for him, he voluntarily made an oral confession to a deputy sheriff and an assistant prosecuting attorney while he was riding around with the officers in an automobile looking for the gun used in the holdup. Testimony of the oral confession was admitted over objectiоn at McLeod’s trial by jury. He was found guilty and sentenced to life.
The Supreme Court of Ohio summarily dismissed McLeod’s appeal as of right “for the reason that no debatable constitutional question is involved.” State of Ohio v. McLeod,
The Supreme Court of Ohio wrote an opinion on this remand in which it distinguished McLeod from Massiah on the facts, pointing out that McLeod, unlike Massiah, had not been interrogated by the officers, nor had the officers practiced any decеption on him. Two justices dissented. They thought that by the remand the Supreme Court of the United States meant to give the Supreme Court of Ohio an opportunity to reverse on Massiah. And they also pointed оut that McLeod was not arraigned until October 14, when counsel was assigned to him, and that this delay in his arraignment violated Ohio statutory law. Certiorari was again granted and this time the Supreme Court without oрinion reversed on Massiah as appears above.
Massiah, when he was out on bail after indictment and after he had retained counsel, was deliberately and designedly interrogated in the absence of his counsel by a codefendant who, unknown to Massiah, had agreed to cooperate with government agents and had been prompted and instructed by them as to the course the interrogation should take. The conversation between the codefendants was electronically monitored by government agents in a car near by. In holding evidence of incriminatory statements made by Massiah in the course of his conversation With his supposed ally and friend constitutionally inadmissible at his trial the Court at page 207 of 377 U.S., page 1203 of 84 S.Ct. said: “All that we hold is that the defendant’s own incriminating statements, obtainеd by federal agents under the circumstances here disclosed (italics supplied), could not constitution *482 ally be used by the prosecution as evidence against Mm at his trial.”
This language as in State of Ohio v. McLeod,
The action of the Court in McLeod v. Ohio,
The question remains whether the rule of Massiah applies retroactively to the case at bar.
The date of McLeod’s trial does not appear in the reports. But the precise date is not important for obviously he must have been tried at some time between October 14, 1960, when he wаs arraigned, and June 20, 1962, when the Supreme Court of Ohio dismissed his appeal for want of a debatable constitutional question, and thus his trial must have taken place at least approximatеly two years before May 18, 1964, when
Massiah
was decided. On that daté, however, McLeod’s case had not become “final” in the sense of that word as used in Linkletter v. Walker,
We are not unaware that in two circuits
Massiah
has been held to apply only prospectively. In Unitеd States ex rel. Romano v. Fay,
Affirmed.
Notes
. White, as this court pointed out in its previous opinion, supra, was “no novice.” White at the time was 58 years old and had been in trouble with the law sincе he was 14 or 15. As an adult he had served substantial sentences in the state prisons of Minnesota, New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts, always on pleas *481 of guilty, sometimes entered after consultаtion with court-appointed counsel and sometimes not. He had also been sentenced a number of times in Massachusetts and Vermont for a variety of minor offenses. Moreover, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire in its opinion on White’s original petition for habeas corpus, which White elected to prosecute pro se, described White as having “no small degree of education” and as “possessed of a keen mind and an unusual knowledge, especially for a layman, of criminal law and its most recent developments.”
. White admitted talking about, his ease in the course of the automobile trip but denied making the incriminating statements аttributed to him by the officers. He said that he only initiated conversation with the officers in an attempt to make what he called a “deal” with respect to recommendation for sentence if he pleaded guilty.
. In
Linlcletter
the Court held that the exclusionary rule of Mapp v. Ohio,
. The second and full opinion of the Supreme Court of Ohio was handed down on December 29, 1964.
