Appellant, Paul Nicholas Kulyk, appeals to this court contesting his 1968 conviction for knowingly transporting in interstate commerce a stolen motor vehicle, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2312. We affirm.
Appellant was аrrested on Saturday, September 16, 1967, at 2:30 in the
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morning as he was exiting the Sylvester, Georgia, V.F.W. Club via the window. The city police took him to the Worth County, Georgia, jail, where he was booked for drunk and disorderly conduct and breaking and entering. On Monday, September 18, appellant was interviewed by John Perry, an officer of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. After Perry had given appellаnt the warnings required by Miranda v. Arizona, 1966,
On March 15, 1968, the United States Marshal went to the Worth County Prison Camp where he officially arrested Kulyk and took him into federal custody. Thereafter an attorney was aрpointed to represent appellant, and on April 17, 1968, the court heard a motion seeking to exclude all admissions made by the appellant to Perry of the G.B.I. and Haggerty of the F.B.I. Thе court heard evidence on the motion on two successive occasions and after careful consideration of all the evidence the motion was denied.
When the eаse was called for trial Ku-lyk, without consultation with his attorney, presented two motions to the court. One requested that he be released on a personal recognizance bond. This wаs overruled. The other requested that appointed counsel be removed and another lawyer appointed to defend Kulyk. The trial court, after some consultation with all pаrties, informed Kulyk that he would dismiss counsel, but would not appoint another lawyer on the eve of trial. The court gave appellant the night to decide whether under the circumstances he still wanted the court appointed attorney dismissed. The next day appellant announced his decision to represent himself without any assistance of counsel and the trial court rеluctantly permitted him to do so.
At the trial both Perry and Haggerty testified that appellant admitted to them that he had stolen the truck and driven it from Virginia to Georgia. Appellant was convicted and received a -maximum sentence of five years.
We first consider appellant’s contentions that his confessions were made during a period of unlawful confinement and were not voluntarily given. He, therefore, asserts that the trial court erred in overruling the motion to suppress and in allowing the use of these incriminating statements at his trial.
The record is anything but clear cоncerning the events which transpired during the first two weeks of Kulyk’s incarceration in the Worth County jail. Evidence produced at the preliminary hearings on the motion to suppress indicates that it was probably at least September 20, 1967, five days after his arrest, before the appellant was brought before a judicial officer and informed of his constitutional rights. Georgia law [Ga. Code Ann. § 27-212 (1967 Supp.)] requires that a person be brought before a magistrate within 48 hours after an arrest without a warrant. It is therefore apparent that appellant’s confession to Perry, threе days after his arrest, was made during a period of illegal detention by the state authorities.
This alone, however, does not make the confession inadmissible. The right under the- federal rules to be promptly taken before a magistrate has not been given constitutional status and
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has not been applied to persons in state custody. Culombe v. Connecticut, 1961,
“The rule excludes confessions when the “working arrangement” includes the illegal detention — in other words —when federal law enforcement officers induce state officers to hold the defendant illegally so that they may secure a confession.” Id. at 344.
Appellant concedes, аs from the record he must, that at the time of arrest no such “working arrangement” existed between the F.B.I. and the Georgia authorities. However, he asserts that as soon as the F.B.I. acted on the state information and found the truck, a “working arrangement” did develop since the F.B.I. “took full advantage of appellant’s confinement by state authorities.” It is true that Agent Haggerty did interview appellant in the Worth County jail on September 25, but this is not the sort of “working arrangement” contemplated by the court in Coppola,
supra,
or in Anderson v. United States, 1943,
Appellant next contends that as soon as the F.B.I. had probable cause to think a federal crime had been committed, appellant should have been taken before a federal commissioner as required by Rule 5(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and that this failure renders appellant’s confessions inadmissible. It is unquestionable that any information obtained from а person in federal custody prior to arraignment is inadmissible under Rule 5(a). Upshaw v. United States, 1948,
Appellant also contends that the confessions were not voluntarily made and were therefore not admissible. The trial judge conducted two hearings on this issue outside the presence of the jury and concluded that the confessions were voluntary. Thereafter, the judge instructed the jury to determine for itself whether the confessions were voluntary, and to disregard them if they found they were not.
This procedure clearly comports with the requirements of Jackson v. Denno, 1963,
Appellant’s last major plaint concerns the trial court’s charge. Appellant argues that reading to the jury the Georgia statutes concerning the permitted period of detention before a person must be taken beforе a magistrate was error. We find this point without merit. Appellant himself introduced these statutes at trial and most of his case was based on the fact that he was illegally detained. Further, we havе carefully examined the charge and find that rather than being prejudicial to the appellant, it was extremely favorable to his case.
We have examined appellant’s other points of error and find them without merit. The holding of the district court is
Affirmed.
