Petitioner appeals in forma pauperis from denial without hearing of his petition for writ of habeas cornus in the *69 United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, Stephen W. Brennan, Judge. We conclude that petitioner’s conviction in the New York State courts was obtained through use of a confession not voluntary in nature, in violation of his right under the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States to due process of law, and reverse for issue of the writ.
By the verdict of a jury in the County Court, Kings County, New York, relator was found guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree committed during the commission of a felony. In accordance with New York procedure the jury elected to recommend clemency. The trial court accepted this recommendation and on May 10, 1960, sentenced relator to life imprisonment. The conviction was affirmed by the Appellate Division, Pette, J., dissenting. People v. Everett,
The Supreme Court of the United States denied certiorari, Douglas, J., believing that certiorari should have been granted. Everett v. New York,
Relator then applied, pro se, to the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York for a .writ of habeas corpus. The District Court, Brennan, J., found relator’s confession voluntary and denied his application. It concluded that a hearing was unnecessary and limited its review to the state court record.
The circumstances of Everett’s confession were as follows: On July 3, 1959 one Finoechiaro was found unconscious and bleeding from head wounds near an elevator on the ground floor of a Brooklyn loft building. He died the next day without regaining consciousness. On July 15, 1959 at 10:30 p. m. Everett was taken into custody in the doorway of his home in Brooklyn, where he was living apart, from his wife and children, on the pretext that the arresting officer had a warrant from the Domestic Relations Court because Everett’s children were hungry. No such warrant existed. The officer took Everett upstairs to Everett’s apartment, but refused to allow Everett to use the phone. A squad car was called, and Everett was taken first to Brooklyn East Headquarters then to the 87th Precinct, arriving between 11:30 and midnight. He was placed in a cell, then taken to an interrogation room. His shoes and glasses had been removed and he was fingerprinted and handcuffed. Police returned to his apartment and removed from the apartment some of his clothes. While the continuity of the questioning of Everett is somewhat in dispute, Detective O’Connor started questioning between 11:50 p. m. and 12:30 a. m. and continued at least to between 2:00 and 2:30 a. m. Detectives continued to talk with Everett until 5:30 a. m. when the Assistant District Attorney was called to take Everett’s second confession, completed about 8:00 a. m. without warning of Everett’s rights. The confession had, first been obtained during the questioning by O’Connor, who told Everett that it was an assault and robbery, that Finoechiaro “was not hurt bad” and was downstairs. He represented that the victim was a lit-, tie angry, but O’Connor could control him, that he could speak to him and that. if Everett wanted O’Connor to help him. he had better tell the truth. When Everett continued to deny doing it, O’Connor-
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pretended to go to see Finocchiaro, and on his return told Everett that Finocchiaro said Everett did it and reiterated that unless Everett told the truth O'Connor would not help him. Thereupon, according to O’Connor, Everett confessed to striking and robbing Finocchiaro. Everett’s version was that he was beaten with blackjacks and telephone books, punched in the stomach and kicked and thereafter confessed falsely. Although on a hearing the issue of brutality might be open, Townsend v. Sain,
From the uncontroverted evidence, however, it is established that Everett was arrested illegally, held incommunicado and questioned extensively without counsel or warning of his right to counsel or his right to remain silent, and the confession followed upon deception and false promises of assistance if he should confess. The respondent argues that failure to raise the issue of deception in the criminal trial bars our consideration of the issue. The deception and the promises of help upon confession are plain on the record of the criminal trial, however, and are open to consideration in determining whether the conviction was obtained in violation of Everett’s right to due process of law. Townsend v. Sain, supra,
The judgment must therefore be reversed and remanded with instructions to issue the writ, ordering release of the prisoner unless afforded a new trial within a reasonable time.
