The district court ordered petitionerappellee’s application for habeas corpus granted unless the State instituted proceedings to retry petitioner within sixty days. Imbler v. Craven,
The identical contention was advanced on petition for rehearing in the district court. It was rejected by the district court with this comment: “[Tjhere is no major dispute as to the basic facts involved in this case. The events that transpired at petitioner’s trial are clear; the only controversy that exists is as to so-called mixed questions of law and fact, and the conclusions of law as to federal questions. While this court gives the state findings of ‘pure’ facts great weight where appropriate, it is not required to adopt them. Townsend v. Sain,
The district court’s comment, so far as it went, accurately defined the court’s obligation under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) to accept as presumptively correct the prior determination by the state court of a “factual issue.”
As the Supreme Court said in Townsend v. Sain,
A close comparison of the opinions of the state court and the federal district court reveals that the court below accepted the “historical-fact determinations” of the state court but reached different conclusions than the state court in applying federal constitutional standards to those facts.
The judgment is affirmed.
The petition for rehearing is denied.
