On this collateral challenge to the voluntariness of Rogers’s state guilty plea, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, we are asked to apply retroactively the rule announced in Boy-kin v. Alabama,
The voluntary character of the plea in this ease is hardly any longer an issue. Rogers’s Connecticut habeas corpus petition, dated September 12, 1969, and his subsequent federal petition, filed in the District of Connecticut, January 13, 1970, specify two occurrences that allegedly reduce Rogers’s 1965 guilty pleas
1
to less than free, knowing, and voluntary acts. See Machibroda v. United States,
Apart from the inherent incredibility of the first allegation, and the conclusory and fragmentary quality of the second, Rogers was unable to buttress either claim during a full hearing held November 12, 1969 on Rogers’s state habeas corpus petition. Evidence adduced at that hearing amply supports the finding of the state court that his guilty pleas were altogether “freely, understanding^, and voluntarily made,” thus leading to the dismissal of Rogers’s petition. To substantiate the propriety of this conclusion we note that Gilman testified that Rogers fully understood the charges against him, that he was able to discuss them understandingly, and that he entered his pleas voluntarily. Gilman had made a similar statement at the February 2 plea proceeding. Also a state appointed psychiatrist who examined Rogers at Gilman’s request on January 23, 1965 (between Rogers’s arrest and his first guilty plea), reported that Rogers was able to understand the proceedings and cooperate with his counsel. The only smattering of evidence bearing on Rogers’s claims was testimony by Gil-man that he had quite properly informed Rogers at one time that Rogers faced a 75-year sentence if convicted for all six crimes charged against him. Indeed, Rogers himself has never asserted his innocence and he admitted at the state hearing that he would have no defenses
Nonetheless, Rogers urges appropriately that if Boykin v. Alabama,
supra,
applied to the 1965 pleas, we would be required to reverse Rogers’s conviction, because there is no hint in this record that before the trial judge accepted Rogers’s guilty pleas, there was any “affirmative showing” that they were voluntary. The four courts that to our knowledge have passed on this question, however, have all agreed that
Boykin
should apply only to pleas taken after June 2, 1969, the date of that decision. United States ex rel. Hughes v. Rundle,
Each of the familiar trilogy of factors entering into a determination of the appropriateness of retroactivity
vel non,
Stovall v. Denno,
Nor do we believe that retroactivity is appropriate to give effect to the apparent primary objectives of
Boykin,
a factor that we weigh most heavily in our calculation. Desist v. United States,
For reasons closely analogous to those we have relied upon here, the Supreme Court in Halliday v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. On February 2, 1965, Rogers pleaded guilty to kidnapping, injury or risk of injury to a minor child, carrying a weapon in a motor vehicle, and impersonating a police officer. He pleaded not guilty to indecent assault and sodomy. On February 16, Rogers changed his plea to guilty of indecent assault, and prosecution of the sodomy charge was discontinued. All six counts in the information filed against Rogers were founded on a single brutish episode with a small boy.
. We are to examine “(a) the purpose to be served by the new standards, (b) the extent of the reliance by law enforcement authorities on the old standards, and (c) the effect on the administration of justice of a retroactive application of the new standards.”
. In
Halliday,
however, the Court prefaced its analysis by remarking that it would apply the same factors to decide the retroactivity of
McCarthy
as it would if
McCarthy
were a Constitutional decisión.
