This is an appeal from a judgment and order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York entered June 7, 1967, Edward Weinfeld, Judge, denying appellant’s application for a writ of habeas corpus. United States ex rel. Forella v. Follette,
Appellant Forella is confined in the custody of Harold W. Follette, Warden of Green Haven Prison at Stormville, New York, pursuant to a judgment of conviction after a jury trial on charges of burglary and larceny in Westchester County Court on August 15, 1965, Dempsey, J., under concurrent sentences of 7 to 10 and 2% to 5 years imprisonment.
Petitioner was arrested on a bench warrant issued by a magistrate following the filing of an information. He *681 contends that his rights under the Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments were violated when a police officer was permitted to testify upon the trial that petitioner, following his arrest, made oral admissions as to exclusive possession of a car which had been observed at the scene of the burglary for which appellant was convicted.
The testimony as to the oral admissions was not objected to by petitioner’s counsel upon the trial. Appellant allegedly raised the issue in a supplemental
pro se
brief on his appeal to the New York Appellate Division which affirmed his conviction on July 6, 1966. People v. Forella,
The District Court rejected Forella’s application. On the merits, the court held that Escobedo v. State of Illinois,
no claim that petitioner had requested or been denied any attorney; there is no charge of coercive conduct, either physical or mental; there is no allegation of overreaching; there is no challenge as to the voluntariness of his statement. In the circumstances, the fact that the post-arrest statement was made when petitioner was without the assistance of counsel, whatever may be the legal consequences thereof under the law of the State of New York, has no federal constitutional significance. [269 F.Supp. 628 ]
In addition, the court further held that even assuming a constitutional defect in the admission of appellant’s statements made without benefit of counsel after arrest under a bench warrant and information, federal habeas corpus relief is foreclosed by Forella’s failure to make objection upon the trial to the offered admission. Citing People v. McQueen,
We find it unnecessary to explore here the issue of waiver by failure to object 1 for even if no waiver existed *682 the court was correct in holding that petitioner failed to establish his right to relief on the merits.
The trial of petitioner was prior to Miranda v. Arizona, supra, which was held in Johnson v. New Jersey, supra, to be not retroactive.
Appellant would have us read Massiah v. United States,
is used to initiate a felony case in a local criminal court and serves as a basis for a preliminary examination of the felony charge in such court for the purpose of determining whether the defendant should be held thereon for the action of a grand jury. Unlike the misdemeanor “information,” this felony “information” never constitutes the ultimate accusatory instrument upon which the defendant is prosecuted in the higher court, for that is exclusively the function of an indictment.
Proposed New York Criminal Procedure Law, § 50.10, staff comment at 79-80 (1967) [emphasis added].
In Massiah, interrogation of the accused without the benefit- of counsel could not be justified as necessary police investigation to solve a crime after an indictment had been returned, since the latter indicates that a grand jury has found that the State has legally sufficient evidence of probable cause to believe in the accused’s guilt of the crime charged. The information, however, is merely a preliminary accusation indicating that the defendant should be held for a grand jury’s determination of whether he should be brought to trial. Forella was arrested pursuant to a bench warrant which had been issued on the basis of such an information.
Secondly,
Massiah
has not been shown to be applicable to the extent that appellant makes no allegation that the statements made to the patrolman in question were not voluntary. Neither Spano v. New York,
This Court does not view, as Drummond would have us, the absence of counsel at the time admissions are *683 made as inevitably compelling a finding of inadmissibility. * * * We can see no reason rising to constitutional proportions requiring a per se rule barring the police from a reasonable period of privacy with a reasonably intelligent man who has just been placed under arrest and advised of his rights to remain silent and to counsel. * * * It is the “sum total of the circumstances * * * during the time [the accused] was without counsel,” which determines whether there has been a fundamental deprivation of rights. [354 F.2d at 145-146 ] [citations omitted]
Drummond must be held to gov-' ern in the period prior to Miranda. Even though the attention of the police had focussed on Forella, his in custody interrogation was not then barred, and voluntary statements might be used even though the formalities later prescribed in Miranda had not been complied with.
Judgment denying application for writ of habeas corpus affirmed.
Notes
. New York does have a general policy of waiver by failure to object, as Judge Weinfeld held. However, under Section 527 of the New York Code of Criminal Procedure, an intermediate appellate court may:
order a new trial if it is satisfied that the verdict against the prisoner was against the weight of the evidence or against the law, or that justice requires a new trial, whether any exception shall have been taken or not, in the court below.
The New York Court of Appeals has held that the failure to object to the admission of a confession on Sixth Amendment right to counsel grounds does not preclude review of the denial of the constitutional right. People v. Arthur,
This is not to say that New York does not have a forfeiture rule, and that the Appellate Division may not take into account the failure to object in denying relief under Section 527. See People v. McKeithan,
