Jоseph Johnson, an Illinois state prisoner, filed a habeas corpus petition in the federal district court. After reviewing the state court record, the district court deniеd the petition without an evi-dentiary hearing or the appointment of counsel. Petitioner appeals. We affirm.
Petitioner was convicted on April 15, 1965, in the Circuit Court оf Cook County, Illinois, following a jury trial, on charges of burglary and possession of burglary tools. He was sentenced to serve concurrent terms of 10 to 25 years on the burglary cоunt and 1 to 2 years on the possession count, respectively, following a hearing in aggravation and mitigation in which it was learned that petitioner had been previously convicted of auto theft, larceny, assault to commit rape, robbery and burglary. His conviction was affirmed on appeal by the Appellate Court of Illinois, in an extended and well considered opinion by Justice English. ' People v. Johnson, 88 Ill.App. 2d 265,
As best we can understand petitioner’s pro se federal habeas petition, he alleges in substance that his arrest and the subsequent warrantless search of his pеrson and automobile were unlawful, and that the articles seized by the police were improperly admitted in evidence at his trial, and that, as a consequence, the state failed to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The federal district court found “that the record of the case conclusively shows that the search of petitioner and his car was conducted legally,” and “that the alleged errors at trial are insufficient to state a constitutional violation.”
On appeal, рetitioner was ably represented by court-appointed counsel.
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Petitioner first argues that the trial record “was so totally devoid of eviden-tiary support as tо render the conviction for burglary and possession of burglary tools unconstitutional as a denial of due process of law.”
Petitioner admittedly seeks to bring his case within thе pale of Thompson v. Louisville,
It should be stated at the outset that petitioner’s privately retained counsel did not move to suppress the seized аrticles either prior to or during the trial and did not object to their introduction in evidence at the trial. 1 Further, it does not appear that the claim of erroneous admission of such disputed evidence was presented as a ground for petitioner’s motion for a directed verdict at the end of the state’s case, nor was it raised as error on direct review in the Illinois state courts.
Thus, it clearly appears that petitioner has waived any right to now object to the admission of the seized evidence at the trial. His retained trial counsel quite obviously adopted, as a matter of trial strategy, the course of
attempting to show his client’s innocence by calling as witnesses his relatives and friends to explain the presence of the seized articles, which would provide an alibi. Petitioner openly acquiesced in this tactic by providing the names of such witnesses. This was “counsel’s deliberate choice of the strategy [and] would amount to a waiver binding on petitioner * * Henry v. Mississippi,
The effect of granting petitioner’s ha-beas corpus relief under these circumstances would be to provide him an opportunity to now file a motion to suppress evidence after he failed to do so during his trial. Neither law nor reason will support such a change of strategy at this late date. 3 C. A. Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 673, at 115 (1969).
In his opinion on direct appeal, Justice English reviewed in detail the testimony of each witness who testified in the state court trial [
We can only conclude that the evidence admitted at trial provided overwhelming support for the jury’s verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. In adopting this view of the evidentiary record, it is apparent that petitioner may not now claim that there was no evidence whatever in the record to support his convictions. Thompson v. Louisville,
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We, therefore, conclude that the district court did not err in finding no constitutional basis for a denial of due process.
II
Petitioner next contends that his arrest for having “fictitious plates” on his car was unlawful, that the subsequent search and seizure were illegal and that the fruits thereof were tainted аnd should have been excluded from the evidence. He contends that there is no Illinois statute making it a violation to have “fictitious plates” on an automobile. Seе, however, chapter 95%, § 3-703, Illinois Revised Statutes (1969), which declares it a misdemeanor for “any person [to] display upon a vehicle any * * * registration plate * * * not issued fоr such vehicle * * *.”
However, the arresting police officer had learned through a radio contact that petitioner did have license plates registered tо another person and for a car other than his own. Petitioner has never contended he was acting lawfully by displaying the license plates in question. These facts, coupled with the officer’s well founded suspicion that petitioner had been involved in the burglary under investigation, furnished probable cause to arrest petitioner on suspicion of a burglary which had been in progress just a few minutes earlier. We conclude, as a matter of law, from our own analysis of the total surrounding factual situation, that petitioner’s arrest and the subsequent search and seizure were lawful.
Ill
Finally, petitioner asserts that the district court erred in denying his ha-beas corpus petition without a hearing and without appointing counsel. The short answer to this contention is that the district court had the state court record before it (as it is in the record of the instant appeal before us) and determined that it was adequate to show that the searches of petitioner and of his car were conducted legally and that there was no denial of due process.
We conclude that the district court properly complied with the requirements of Townsend v. Sain,
The order of the district court denying petitioner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is in all respects affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. It is true that an objection was made to the introduction of two “Kennedy” half dollars during the trial, but these were not obtained as a direct result of petitioner’s arrest. They were taken from petitioner by a police officer after a brief and limited search of petitioner’s back pants pocket when the officer heard “something jingling” and, for safety reasons, sought to determine its cause.
See
Terry v. Ohio,
