In United States ex rel. Pugach v. Mancusi,
At the hearing below, Pugach narrowed the grounds of his attack to six: illegal eavesdropping, coerced admissions, prosecutorial misconduct, denial of the right to act as his own counsel, ineompetency of trial counsel, and the admission of a co-defendant’s unredacted confession. On appeal he raises several other claims, including bias on the part of the district judge. We have considered all these contentions and can add nothing useful to Judge Pollack’s opinion with respect to most of them; those contentions not specifically passed on by him are without merit. We therefore limit our brief comments to the issue of coerced admissions, see
Pugach contends that the use in evidence of admissions he made to two former suspects acting at the instance of the police violated his Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights. We need consider only his Fifth Amendment claim. See
A second conversation occurred in Pugach’s automobile. Pugach invited one of the two men into his car and the $10,000 demand was repeated. Pugach demanded assurance that he would not be approached in the future, sought proof that the man had inculpatory information (some of which was furnished), and inquired as to the cost of having his confederates in the crime put out of the way. Testimony with respect *1075 to the above was given at trial. The district court found that the entry into the car was by Pugach’s invitation and that no violence, Pugach’s protests to the contrary notwithstanding, was visited upon him.
Judge Pollack denied on the merits the claim that the admissions elicited from Pugach during the above course of events violated his Fifth Amendment rights, without reaching the questions of waiver, through failure to object to the reception of the evidence at the trial,
Pugach’s contention that the admission in evidence during trial of his co-defendant’s confession—eoneededly inculpatory of Pugach—violated his right of confrontation, Bruton v. United States,
It is difficult to conceive of any fuller opportunity that might have been afforded petitioner to cross-examine and contradict the co-defendant’s extra-judicial statements or a more favorable result that might have been obtained.
Although when Judge Pollack handed down his decision, this Circuit did “not appear to have as yet considered whether
Bruton
applies where the co-defendant testifies at trial,”
Affirmed.
Notes
. An appendix to the opinion of the district court shows that Pugach had brought five pre-conviction and twenty-six post-conviction attacks in federal and state courts.
