Rеlator, Harold D. Rogers, a negro with an 8th grade education, presently 48 years old, seeks relief by writ of habeas corpus from a judgment and sentence of death by the Superior Court for New Haven County on a charge of murder in the first degree in the perpetration of a robbery. The judgment was affirmed on appeal, State v. Rogers,
Rogers is the brother of a New Haven policeman. Rogers was arrested in New Haven January 9, 1954 charged with attempted robbery of the Travelers Hotel-on that date. He retained counsel, and on. January 13, 1954 waived examination in New Haven City Court аnd was bound over for trial to the Superior Court, April Term. While he was lodged in New Haven County Jail, on the morning of' January 30, 1954, ballistic tests on a gun-.
The petitioner’s state remedies are exhausted and his action will lie in this court. Brown v. Allen,
Ordinarily, determination of disputed issues of fact by the trial judge and jury are binding upon the Supreme Court in direct review of a state conviction, where there is a dispute as to whether certain alleged coercive acts actually occurred, or where different inferences may be drawn from admitted facts. Lyons v. Oklahoma,
If the confessions were coerced, that is involuntary, it was a constitutional error to admit them into evidence on the quеstion of Rogers’ guilt. Stein v. New York,
Denial of counsel in the preliminary proceedings is not in itself a fatal lack of due process, since defendant was reprеsented by competent counsel on trial and appeal. Utah v. Sullivan, 10 Cir.,
Rogers may be a thoroughly depraved individual, but his execution on a conviction based on confessions obtainеd under the circumstances outlined in this case may well establish a precedent endangering innocent men in the future. Constitutional safeguards would be weakened by a finding that confessions so obtainеd may be considered voluntary and in accord with present concepts of due process of law.
On the writ of habeas corpus heretofore issued, the judgment of conviction may be set aside. If appeal from the judgment herein is taken, relator may be held in the custody of respondents pending decision on appeal. If appeal is not taken relator may be held for retrial within a reasonable time of the charges against him. Form of judgment in accordance herewith may be submitted promptly by counsel for relator.
