- After pleading guilty in 1961 to a charge of violating the Dyer Act, 18 U.S.C.A. § 2312, Robert W. Fisher was sentenced to a three-year term in the United States Penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia. Less than seven months later he moved in the District Court to vacate the sentence. The motion asserted that he was mentally incompetent at the time of his arraignment and trial and that his mental condition, which he describes as “depressive mania, kleptomania and schizophrenia acute,” was such that he was unable to comprehend the nature of the proceedings, to assist counsel in his defense, or to enter an intelligent plea to the indictment. 1
The District Court dismissed the motion without a hearing on the ground that it conclusively appeared that Fisher was entitled to no relief under 28 U.S. C.A. § 2255 and that his remedy, if any, was provided by 18 U.S.C.A. § 4245. On this appeal, we hold that the District Court was in error. While it is true this this ruling is, as the United States Attorney argues, in accord with an earlier decision of this court, Cason v. United States,
The Government nevertheless insists that the facts alleged are insufficient to warrant a hearing. It is true that bald assertions of insanity, unsubstantiated by a recital of credible facts, would justify dismissal without further proceedings. 4 But while it does not appear that there has ever been a legal adjudication of Fisher's mental status, the papers filed with his motion offer a confirmed history of mental illness. Copies of official correspondence from the Department of the Army and the Chief Medical Officer of the Atlanta Penitentiary indicate that Fisher was discharged from military service in 1943, after six months of psychiatric study and treatment, by reason of “psychoneurosis, anxiety type, severe.” It further appears that Fisher has been afflicted in recent years by a spinal disorder, for which he was hospitalized in 1958. This malady, when coupled with the disclosed fact that he also suffers from pre-existing conditions of the heart, lungs, stomach, throat, and thyroid, may pose an aggravating factor bearing on his present mental condition. Then too, the transcript of his trial discloses that just before sentence was imposed counsel informed the judge that his client had been unable to recall the acts with which he was charged. In the words of his lawyer, “Fisher is unstable.”
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The record before us is sketchy, but we think that it furnishes sufficient factual basis to require full exploration by the District Court. Reference is made to Meadows v. United States,
Reversed and remanded for a hearing.
Notes
. Fisher’s motion, prepared and filed pro se, alleged in greater detail “that he did not intelligently comprehend the nature and consequences of the judicial proceedings that he was subjected to and that he was unable and incapable of assisting in his defense of the accusations because of his severe mental infirmities; that his severe mental infirmities rendered him completely incompetent to stand trial, or to have waived his constitutional rights to trial by jury, or to have presented mitigating facts to the court, that his moral and mental faculties were, and are, so completely impaired and deranged that he was, and is, incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong; * * * that he may have been physically present at the sentencing proceedings and waiver of his constitutional rights but he was mentally absent because of his mental and moral defects; that his mental and moral defects were, and are, the only cause of his criminal acts and behavior. * * * Petitioner does not remember whether or not he violated any laws or perpetrated the crimes for which he was ultimately convicted nor whether he was or was not in the court’s room on October 25, 1961.”
. Section 4245 provides, as follows;
“Whenever the Director of the Bureau of Prisons shall certify that a person convicted of an offense against the United States has been examined by the board of examiners * * * and that there is probable cause to believe that such person was mentally incompetent at the time of his trial, provided the issue of mental incompetency was not raised and determined before or during said tidal, the Attorney General shall transmit the report of the board of examiners and the certificate of the Director of the Bureau of Prisons to the clerk of the district court wherein the conviction was had. Whereupon the court shall hold a hearing to determine the mental competency of the accused * * *. If the court shall find that the accused was mentally incompetent at the time of his trial, the court shall vacate the judgment of conviction and grant a new trial.”
Thus the relief provided is quite similar to that which may be obtained by motion under § 2255, but there is a fundamental difference as to the manner in which the two statutes may be invoked. Unlike § 2255, a proceeding under § 4245 is not
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initiated by the prisoner bimself. The nature of the remedy compels the conclusion that the latter procedure “is primarily meant to safeguard the rights of such insane prisoners as are not competent enough to seek * * * judicial assistance in their own behalf, by requiring an official of the United States to bring to the attention of the trial court all cases in which a miscarriage of justice may have occurred due to the inability of the accused properly to defend himself at his trial.” Gregori v. United States,
. United States v. McNicholas,
. A hearing was ordered in Nelms v. United States,
