Petitioner is a state prisoner who is serving a sentence of 15 to 35 years imposed upon him by the County Court of Suffolk County, New York, upon his conviction in 1963 of the crimes of rape, attempted robbery, grand larceny and possession and use of a dangerous weapon. In November 1969 he filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the District Court for the Southern District of New York claiming that his right to a fair trial guaranteed him by the Fourteenth Amendment was violated when he was cross-examined about his convictions in two prior cases in which he allegedly was not represented by counsel. *168 Before this cross-examination was permitted, petitioner, testifying in his own defense, had stated on direct examination that he had never been convicted of a crime.
Judge Mansfield considered it unnecessary to determine the question of fact as to whether petitioner had been represented by counsel in the prior cases. He assumed this fact in petitioner’s favor and went on to hold, without a hearing, that under the circumstances, petitioner’s constitutional rights had not been violated. On February 27, 1970, he denied the petition with an opinion reported in
The proceedings in petitioner’s case which have transpired up to this point may be briefly summarized. Petitioner was indicted in late 1962. He was convicted by a jury verdict in the County Court on February 19, 1963, and sentenced on March 29, 1963. The Appellate Division held his appeal in abeyance pending a hearing in the County Court on the voluntariness of petitioner’s confession, a hearing made necessary by Jackson v. Denno,
Thereafter petitioner raised his present claim by a petition for a writ of error coram nobis in the state court. This petition was denied, the denial was affirmed by the Appellate Division, People v. Walker,
The crimes of which petitioner was convicted were lurid. The prosecution’s chief witness was a woman who testified that on October 4, 1962, while she was driving home alone at night on Long Island, she stopped for a red light in the town of Islip. She testified that petitioner, a man whom she had never seen before, forced himself into the car, threatened her with a knife, struck her and demanded her money. Not content with that, petitioner, according to the witness’ testimony, took over the wheel of the car and drove the car away with the witness in it. He struck her again several times and eventually raped her.
Petitioner’s testimony at the trial was at direct variance to that of the prosecution’s witness. He denied the threats and the assault and, among other things, testified that he and the witness were well acquainted, that they had had sexual relations several times before October 4, 1962, and that their relations on that night were entirely voluntary.
It is thus apparent that credibility was a highly important issue. Apparently in an effort to bolster his, petitioner testified on direct examination that he had never been convicted of a crime. On cross-examination he was asked about a conviction in Pennsylvania in 1956. After some temporizing, he admitted the conviction, which he said was “nothing serious.” It involved a firearm in some manner which was never satisfactorily explained. It is described in petitioner’s brief as a “firearms violation.” The prosecutor went on to inquire about another conviction in New Jersey in 1958. Petitioner admitted that he had been convicted of disorderly conduct and fined $250.
The records of these convictions were not offered in evidence, but the prosecutor referred to them briefly in his summation. As far as the record discloses,
*169
no contention was made by petitioner at the trial that he had not been represented by counsel in these earlier encounters with the law. This is not surprising, for Gideon v. Wainwright,
In Walder v. United States,
“It is one thing to say that the Government cannot make an affirmative use of evidence unlawfully obtained. It is quite another to say that the defendant can turn the illegal method by which evidence in the Government’s possession was obtained to his own advantage, and provide himself with a shield against contradiction of his untruths.”
Some years later, the Supreme Court decided Burgett v. Texas,
It may be noted, as the district court pointed out, that Burgett did not involve the use by the prosecution of illegal evidence to rebut a false statement made by defendant on the witness stand. The prior convictions in Burgett were alleged in the indictment and were offered as part of the government’s direct case, for the purpose of enhancing punishment.
Shortly after
Burgett,
however, this court was called upon to determine the propriety of the government’s use of illegal evidence to rebut a false statement by defendant. In United States v. Fox,
In Walder, defendant’s false testimony was given on direct examination. In Fox, it was elicited on cross. In Wald-er, the testimony related to a collateral matter. In Fox, it arguably related to the crime in question. These distinctions are admittedly fine. Nevertheless, this court, while expressing no view as to the continued viability of Walder, was unwilling to extend the doctrine of that case beyond its precise facts.
Since
Fox
was decided, and also since the district court’s decision in the present case, the situation has changed. On February 24, 1971, the Supreme Court decided Harris v. New York,
“The shield provided by Miranda cannot be perverted into a license to use perjury by way of a defense, free from the risk of confrontation with prior inconsistent utterances.”
Harris controls the disposition of the present case, as does Walder also, for the factual pattern here is more akin to that in Walder than in Harris. It can make no difference that the constitutional infirmity in Harris and in Walder was a violation of Miranda whereas here it was a violation of Gideon. The principle is the same in either event. If a defendant testifies, he puts his credibility in issue. If he lies in the course of his testimony, he lays himself open to attack by means of illegal evidence which otherwise the prosecution could not use against him. It follows that the district court correctly decided that petitioner’s rights to a fair trial had not been infringed.
We wish to express our gratitude to Harvey Kurzweil, Esq., assigned counsel, for his able briefs and argument on petitioner’s behalf.
The order is affirmed.
Notes
. Tlie rule in Gideon v. Wainwright is retroactive and therefore applies in this case. See, Doughty v. Maxwell,
