MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Petitioner seeks by habeas corpus in this Court to prevent his imminent retrial for serious criminal offenses in the Superior Court of the District of Cоlumbia. His claim is that a retrial is prohibited by the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution which provides that no person shall be “twice in jeopardy of lifе or limb” for the same offense. Petitioner has fully exhausted his remedies through the District of Columbia Courts without success.
United States
v.
Sedgwick,
At the outset, the United States challenges this Court’s jurisdiction. The United States Court of Appeals for this Circuit had held in
Palmore v. Sup. Ct. of District of Columbia,
Our decision today is not concerned with the scope of the habeas corpus statute as authority for litigating constitutional claims generаlly. We do reaffirm that the exclusionary rule is a judicially created remedy rather than a personal constitutional right . . . . Supra, n. 37.
Thus habeas based on a court-made suppression rule is sharply distinguished from habeas based on violation of a basic right, such as protection against double jeopardy. If there is to be a further erosion of the Great Writ, that decision must be explicitly made and, indeed, can only be made by the Supreme Court. Petitioner is on bond and hence in custody for purposes of habeas,
United States ex rel. Russo v. Superior Ct. of N.J.,
*388 During petitioner’s trial, after selection of the jury and presentation of a substantial amоunt of the prosecution’s evidence, the Assistant U. S. Attorney in charge of the prosecution revealed that among his papers was a highly significant police report which had not been disclosed to the defense. The report noted that immediately aftеr the offense another person, whose precise, identity was not known, had been boasting in a neighborhood bar that he had cоmmitted the crime. This lead had been only superficially investigated and obviously could not be run down when it surfaced at trial.
Petitioner moved to dismiss, claiming he was entitled to pretrial disclosure of the report under
Brady v. Maryland,
The Distriсt of Columbia Court of Appeals ruled that the police report was not covered by Brady and approved a second triаl. Whether or not this determination is correct, resolution of the Brady issue is not necessary or particularly relevant to the determination of the present petition.
A trial judge may not declare a mistrial over defendant’s objections unless mistrial is a “manifest necessity” to meet the “ends of public justice.”
United States v. Dinitz,
The Government argues that the manifest necessity standard should not apply in this case. It maintains that by requesting dismissal the defendant consented to the lesser ruling of mistrial as well. It is clear from the record that in asking for dismissal the defendant was sеeking a termination of all proceedings against him. He objected to a mistrial precisely because it would not lead to suсh a final termination. The contention that the request for dismissal necessarily included a request for mistrial has no merit.
In the present situatiоn it is clear that defendant objected to mistrial and *389 stated that if a mistrial were declared the double jeopardy issue would be raised. The trial judge’s justifiable concern that the prosecution had apparently withheld crucial information, although not maliciously, is understandable. Other remedies existed and it was not proper to abort the trial by terminating it over defendant’s objection. There was no manifest necessity. The second trial shall not take place. The writ shall issue and the defendant shall be released.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
Obviously manifest necessity also exists where a trial ends in a hung jury.
United States v. Perez,
