delivered the opinion of the court.
Robert F. Stroud was indicted for the killing of Andrew Turner. The indictment embraced the elements constituting murder in the first degree. The homicide took place in the United States prison at Leavenworth, Kansas, where Stroud was a-prisoner and Turner a guard. The record discloses that Stroud killed Turner by stabbing him with a knife which he carried concealed on his person.
Stroud was convicted in May, 1916, of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to be hanged. Upon confession of error by the United States District Attorney the Circuit Court of Appeals reversed this judgment. Stroud was
The case is brought directly to this court because of assignments of error alleged to involve the construction and application of the Constitution of the United States. The argument has taken a wide range. We shall dispose of such assignments of error as we deem necessary to consider in justice to the contentions raised in behalf of the plaintiff in error.
It is alleged that the last trial of the casé had the effect to put the plaintiff in error twice in jeopardy for the same offense in violation of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. From what has already been said it is apparent that the indictment was for murder in the first degree; a single count thereof fully described that offense. Each conviction was for the offense .charged. It is true that upon the second trial the jury added “without capital punishment” to its verdict, and sentence of life imprisonment was imposed. . This recommendation was .because of the right of the jury so to do under § 330 of the Criminal Code, 35 Stat. 1152; 10 U. S. Comp. Stats’.,
The protection afforded by the Constitution is against a second trial for the same offense.
Ex-parte Lange,
It is insisted that the court erred in not granting a change of venue." The plaintiff in error made a motion in the trial court asking such an order. The chief grounds for the application appear to have been that the testimony for the Government in the former trials had been printed and commented upon by the local.press; that the evidence published was only such as the Government had introduced,' and its wide circulation by the medium of the press created prejudice in the minds of the inhabitants of Leav
‘The division in which Leavenworth County is situated consists of fifty counties, and, after hearing these applications, the District Court excluded persons from the jury who were residents of Leavenworth County, and refused to quash the panel upon the grounds alleged. Matters of this sort are addressed to the discretion of the trial judge, and we find nothing in the record to amount to abuse of discretion such as would authorize an appellate court to interfere with the judgment.
Kennon
v.
Gilmer,
Certain jurors were challenged for cause upon the ground that they were in favor of nothing less than capital punishment in cases of conviction- for murder.in the first degree. It may well be that as to one of these jurors, one
Certain letters were offered in evidence at the trial containing expressions lending to establish the guilt of the accused. Thesg letters were written by him after the homicide and while he was an inmate of the penitentiary • at Leavenworth. They were voluntarily written, and under the practice and discipline of the prison were turned over ultimately to the warden, who furnished them to the District Attorney. It appears that at the former trial, as well as the one which resulted in the conviction now under consideration, application was made for a return of .these letters upon the ground that their seizure and use brought them within' principles laid down in
Weeks
v.
United States,
Other objections are raised in the elaborate brief filed in. behalf of the plaintiff in error. We do not find it necessary to discuss them. In view of the gravity of the case they have been examined and considered with care, and we are unable to find that any error was committed to the prejudice of the accused.
Affirmed.
