OPINION AND ORDER
The petitioner, Leroy Padgett, after a June, 1965 jury trial, was convicted of second degree murder. Post-trial motions were filed and denied, but no appeal was taken. Padgett subsequently filed a petition under the Post Conviction Hearing Act alleging only that the trial court erred in allowing the introduction into evidence of a statement obtained in the absence of counsel at a time when representation was constitutionally required. Post-conviction counsel was appointed, an evidentiary hearing held and relief denied. In a thorough and careful opinion, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania affirmed the denial of post conviction relief. Commonwealth v. Padgett,
The present petition raises three central questions,
first,
did the police interrogation of petitioner in the absence of counsel violate the standards of Escobedo v. Illinois,
I.
At the outset, it is clear that because petitioner’s trial took place after the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Escobedo v. Illinois,
supra,
the standards of
Escobedo
are applicable to the present case. Virgin Islands v. Lovell,
Here the challenged statement is alleged to have been taken under circumstances violative of the Sixth Amendment standards of
Escobedo,
rather than the Fifth Amendment standards of
Miranda.
But there is no rational or persuasive basis to limit
Harris
to statements taken in violation of
Miranda.
As the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania noted in its opinion in Commonwealth v. Padgett,
supra, Miranda
and
Escobedo
“were crafted from the same constitutional fabric and were designed to effectuate the same purposes.”
3
(
II.
As a second, alternative ground of decision, I find that the admission of the statement taken by the police, even without regard to Harris v. New York, supra, was harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt. Chapman v. California, supra. Whether the admission of the statement was harmless error was exhaustively considered by the Supreme *44 Court of Pennsylvania. I have reviewed the state record and find that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was fully justified in concluding that the admission of petitioner’s statement was harmless error under federal constitutional standards.
Notes
. Since petitioner’s state trial occurred before the date of the U. S. Supreme Court’s decision in Miranda v. Arizona,
. Brief of the District Attorney, p. 6.
. In its opinion, filed prior to the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Harris, supra, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court proceeded from this premise to con-elude that any use of a statement taken in violation of Escobedo or Miranda was constitutionally impermissible. This conclusion has of course been undermined by Harris.
