Appellants Buckelew and Jenkins were convicted under 18 U.S.C. § 1343 of using interstate telephone facilities in carrying out a scheme to defraud certain hotel casinos in Las Vegas, Nevada. They were also convicted of conspiring to violate section 1343, as was Judson Drane, whose appeal has been consolidated with theirs.
All three appellants petitioned the district court to set aside their sentences under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, alleging that the following errors occurred at their trial: (1) the trial judge frequently interrupted defense cross-examination with jokes, stories, and personal reminiscences and made prejudicial comments before the jury; (2) none of the foregoing appears in the record because the trial judge ordered the court reporter to omit it, as well as any objections to the matter or to the incompleteness of the record; (3) the trial judge took the jury into his chambers at one point in the trial to show them what a rotary telephone looked like, that evidence being relevant to the case; (4) the trial judge became ill during the proceedings to the point of falling asleep while instructing the jury; and (5) the jury was rushed into a verdict by both the judge and bailiff. Each of these claims receives support from the bystander’s affidavit of one Boydie Morris, who observed the trial but whose identity is not further divulged. Buckelew and Jenkins advance two more claims in their joint motion: first, that the trial judge improperly refused to grant them indigent status during the trial; and, second, that their attorney was incompetent both at trial and on appeal. Both of these claims are supported by an affidavit given by present counsel for Buckelew and Jenkins. In the affidavit counsel states his belief that the section 2255 motion of his clients has merit and that their allegations will be proved by the testimony of various witnesses.
The district court dismissed appellant’s section 2255 motions without an evidentiary hearing. This dismissal was clearly correct with respect to the claims that the jury was rushed into a verdict and that Buckelew and Jenkins were improperly denied indigent status. These issues have already been decided by this court in
United States v. Scallion,
I. Unrecorded Judicial Misconduct.
Unless they amount to constitutional violations, prejudicial comments and conduct by a judge in a federal criminal proceeding are not proper subjects of collateral attack,
see Kaufman v. United States,
The fact that a trial court error is prejudicial to [a] defendant does not ipso facto fasten the taint of partiality, in the Sixth Amendment sense, upon a jury . . If this were true every injudicious remark from the bench, every erroneous admission or exclusion of evidence, every giving of an incorrect instruction or refusal to give a correct instruction, which could be cause for reversal on a direct appeal, would present a constitutional question which could be raised for the first time in a collateral proceeding years after the conviction.
Nor does the fact that a trial court error is prejudicial to [a] defendant necessarily transform an otherwise fair trial into one which offends Fifth Amendment due process. It does not do so unless it has the effect of converting what was otherwise a fair trial into one which is repugnant to an enlightened system of justice.
Vandergrift
v.
United States,
Four claims of judicial misconduct set forth by appellants fail to articulate due-process violations. First, during the trial the judge supposedly told the jury that his bailiff was a sharpshooter and acted as his bodyguard at all times. According to appellants this statement suggested that defendants were dangerous men. Even if the judge did make this statement, we doubt whether the jury interpreted it in the way appellants contend. At any rate, the statement certainly did not render appellants’ trial fundamentally unfair. The second nonconstitutional claim advanced by appellants is that the trial judge was' ill during part of the trial and even fell asleep while instructing the jury. Since we are told no specific error resulting from the trial judge’s alleged physical condition, a due process violation has not been made out. It is not error
-to
be ill.
See United
*519
States v. Boswell,
Constitutional questions are arguably raised by appellants’ remaining claims of judicial impropriety: that the judge often told the jury that the case should not take long to try and that it was a shame that the jury had to sit through such long, drawn-out proceedings; and that the judge said in front of the jury that it was too bad defendants “didn’t swindle a syndicate joint” so the “government wouldn’t have to prosecute them.” The government argues that these remaining claims were also waived by appellants’ failure to raise them on appeal, but we cannot agree. Failure to appeal a constitutional issue is not a bar to relief under section 2255 unless “a
deliberate
choice not to appeal is made by conscious election."
McKnight v. United States,
Deliberate bypass is not, however, the only way in which a defendant can forego the opportunity to raise constitutional issues in habeas corpus proceedings: a failure to follow prescribed procedural rules can likewise foreclose habeas review, absent a showing of both cause for the default and prejudice resulting from it.
Evans v. Maggio,
The procedural default rule has especially clear application to claims of incomplete records, it being appellate counsel’s first duty to settle the record. Such claims are easily made and countenancing them would lead to the result predicted in
Bryan v. United States,
No proceeding, not a single conceivable one, would enjoy the finality that deci-sional law must have to maintain its credence. Indeed, the number of hearings which a wilful affiant could provoke as to a single conviction would be limitless, for each time he could swear that someone at the last preceding hearing suborned false testimony from him or his lawyer or that the judge played false in the performance of his duties.
II. Ineffective Counsel.
Buckelew and Jenkins finally contend that their former counsel, Thomas Robinson, now deceased, inadequately represented them at trial and on appeal because of his poor health. Since he was retained at trial, Robinson’s efforts there are to be evaluated by the standard of competency for retained counsel: whether counsel’s conduct rendered the trial fundamentally unfair or put the court on notice that his clients were not receiving effective legal representation.
Fitzgerald v. Estelle,
We see no reason to disturb the district court’s finding that petitioners received effective legal assistance at their trial, especially since appellants make no adequate allegation of specific prejudice resulting from Robinson’s supposed illness.
See United States v. Gray,
As to the handling of their appeal, appellants again point to no specific error committed by their counsel but merely contend that he was “too old and sick” to represent them. Robinson was not, however, “too old and sick” to file a 46-page original brief, a 14-page reply brief, and a 16-page petition for rehearing, all of which presented cogent legal arguments in a well-written fashion. Accordingly, we also find no merit in appellants’ claim of ineffective legal representation on appeal.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although these cases involve petitions by state prisoners under § 2254, rather than federal prisoners under § 2255, the standard for reviewing trial errors is the same.
See Davis v. United States,
. Compare
United States v. Tanda,
. The only “proof” is that none of the four defense counsel on appeal raised the issue of unrecorded, prejudicial statements by the trial judge, even though they did object to other allegedly biased conduct of the judge that did appear in the record.
See United States v. Scallion,
. Rule 10(e) also provides that “[a]ll other questions as to the form and content of the record shall be presented to the court of appeals.” Thus, appellants could have contested on appeal any resolution of a dispute over the record by the trial court.
