OPINION
Appellant, Mary Jo Rowe, was tried by jury and convicted of Escape From a Penal Institution (21 O.S. Supp.1986, § 443), in Oklahoma County District Court, Case No. CRF-87-407, before the Honorable Jack Parr, District Judge. The jury set punishment at seven (7) years imprisonment. Judgment and sentence was imposed accordingly. We affirm.
Appellant escaped from the Mabel Bas-sett Correctional Center in Oklahoma City sometime between 12:45 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. on January 25, 1987. Appellant was apprehended in Moore, Oklahoma, in early March, 1987.
Appellant first claims the trial court erred in failing to determine the voluntariness of her confession before submitting it to the jury as required by Jackson v. Denno,
a new hearing on the voluntariness issue, in either the federal or state courts, merely because he can point to shortcomings in the procedures used to decide the issue of voluntariness in the state courts. Our decisions make clear that he must also show that his version of events, if true, would require the conclusion that his confession was involuntary.
Procunier v. Atchley,
Appellant next contends her confession was inadmissible because police officers questioned appellant two and one-half hours after reading her Miranda warnings, without repeating such warnings. We reject this contention for the reasons given in Hammer,
The judgment and sentence is AFFIRMED.
