MEMORANDUM OPINION
Petitioner is presently incarcerated in the Illinois State Penitentiary following
Petitioner appealed his conviction to the Illinois Appellate Court and that Court affirmed. People v. Mayfield,
Petitioner requests this Court to review his incarceration and to grant his petition for habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241 et seq. Finding that petitioner had exhausted his state remedies on the assertion of unlawful search and seizure, this Court ordered respondent Frank J. Pate, Warden, by his attorney, William J. Scott, to answer a rule to show cause why a writ of habeas corpus should not issue.
Respondent contends and the Court agrees that the thrust of petitioner’s argument is that the search warrants sworn to and executed by the informant were “secured under a fictitious name.” See, People v. Mayfield,
Without examining the merits of the State’s position, this Court is of the opinion that, even if the Pugh case was precisely on point, petitioner still could not prevail because that holding is without retroactive application. Petitioner’s trial was concluded in June, 1964. The Pugh decision was rendered by the Seventh Circuit on July 1, 1968. Therefore, unless that decision is to be retroactively applied, no constitutional question here exists.
This question has been previously considered by a member of this Court in United States of America ex rel. William Smith v. Pate,
He held:
The Pugh decision is directed at police procedure in procuring search warrants and does not affect “the very integrity of the fact finding process,” nor does it avert “the clear danger of convicting the innocent.” Therefore, the Pugh doctrine should not be retroactively applied. The petitioner’s constitutional rights were not violated under the Illinois decisions applicable prior to Pugh. See People v. Mack,12 Ill.2d 151 ,145 N.E.2d 609 (1957, Memo. Opin. pp. 4, 5).
We agree with Judge Robson’s conclusions.
In Johnson v. New Jersey,
The rule affected “the very integrity of the fact finding process” and*43 “averted the clear danger of convicting the innocent.” (supra, at 727,86 S.Ct. at 1778 )
Based on these criteria, various Supreme Court rulings on constitutional rights have or have not been held retroactive. The Mapp rule, Mapp v. Ohio,
In the Johnson case, supra,
In the instant case, petitioner May-field relies upon a decision which did not run to the very integrity of the fact finding process. Pugh suggests that the constitutional requirement of an oath or affirmation would be eroded if fictitious oaths were permitted. It was held in that case that the statutory mandate that the affiant’s name should be stated could not be fulfilled by a false name and in future warrants obtained by use of fictitious names will be invalid. The use of incriminating evidence obtained on such a warrant in a trial prior to Pugh, however, neither affects the integrity of the fact finding process nor risks conviction of the innocent.
Whether or not any constitutional rule of criminal procedure improves or detracts from the acquisition of facts is necessarily a matter of degree. Probabilities are involved as are considerations of the extent to which other safeguards are available to insure the integrity of the truth seeking process. Warrant procedures, although historically imperfect, have always been subject to scrutiny. The fact that an affiant has signed a fictitious name cannot run, in the historical context of the fourth amendment, to the basic question of whether or not probable cause existed. Therefore, application of the doctrine of retroactivity is inappropriate here.
Petitioner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus must be denied. This Court affirms the position taken in the Smith case, supra, and reaffirms the principle that only in those instances where the very essence of the truth seeking process is endangered, or there is a clear danger of convicting the innocent, should a new holding be retroactively applied.
Accordingly, an appropriate order will enter.
