The State of Louisiana has appealed from the district court’s renewed judgment conditioning the grant of habeas corpus relief to Robert A. Edwards on the allowance of an out-of-time appeal. A similar conditional order was entered April 2, 1973. The state took no action following this first order but sought to appeal from the actual issuance of the writ in an order entered November 5, 1973. This court denied it relief on the ground that the April 2, 1973 order was a final judgment and that no appeal had been taken within the time permitted. Our mandate noted, however, that the state was not precluded from petitioning the district court for relief from the April 2, 1973 order under Rule 60(b), Fed.R.Civ.P. We also noted that, if relief was granted, the merits of the matter were open to possible reconsideration under two cases then pending before this court
en banc, Fitzgerald v. Beto,
Edwards is confined by authority of a 25-year sentence for armed robbery imposed by the Criminal District Court for the Parish of Orleans. No direct appeal was taken from this conviction.
In his federal habeas petition appellant alleged that: (1) he was denied a direct appeal by the actions of his privately-retained counsel; (2) he was arrested without probable cause; (3) he was denied effective assistance of counsel prior to and during trial; and (4) the state introduced illegal and prejudicial testimony at his trial. We agree with the district court’s ruling, following a hearing, there that appellee produced insufficient evidence to support any of the latter three contentions.
Relying on our holding in
Arrastia v. United States,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
