This appeal from the dismissal without prejudice by Judge Foley in the Northern District of New York of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus presents the question whether the petitioner should be required to exhaust state remedies as to both of the constitutional claims asserted by his petition. We have concluded that the claims are so related that he should, and we affirm the dismissal without prejudice.
Petitioner, then a boy of fourteen, confessed after being taken into custody by Albany police on March 15, 1947 to the killing of a nine-year-old boy. Indicted for first degree murder, and represented by Daniel J. Dugan, Esq., a former judge of the Children’s Court, he pleaded guilty to second degree murder on June 30, 1947, having turned fifteen, and was sentenced to imprisonment for from twenty years to life. He sought federal habeas corpus in the Northern District of New York in 1962, claiming that his confession was coerced under the standards of Gallegos v. State of Colorado, 370
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U.S. 49,
The present petition, brought in the Western District of New York and transferred to the Northern District pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241(d), joined to the claim that petitioner’s confession was coerced a claim that N.Y.Pen.Law, McKinney’s Consol. Laws, c. 40, § 2186 as it existed in 1947, under which a child under sixteen could be tried for murder but not for lesser included degrees of homicide, see People v. Murch,
The newly raised issues of the voluntariness of petitioner’s plea of guilty and the validity of the statutory scheme under which he would have been tried for murder would necessarily affect the consideration of the coerced confession claim, because a voluntary guilty plea entered on advice of counsel is a waiver of all non-jurisdictional defects in any prior stage of the proceedings. E. g., United States ex rel. Martin v. Fay,
Affirmed.
