Brooks was convicted by the district court, without a jury, under a two-count indictment of selling narcotics, 1 and McCаll convicted under the same counts of aiding in the sales. 2 Concurrent sentences were imposed. Bоth have appealed. We affirm as to both.
A narcotics agent was introduced to McCall, an аddict, by an informant, Vaughn. McCall, with money furnished by the agent, purchased heroin from Brooks at the time alleged in the indictment. The adequacy of proof is not contested. The contention here is that Brooks and McCall were trapped into the offense by the Government.
Their arguments on entrapment assume thе truth of the defense testimony that Vaughn planted the seed of the offense in the mind of McCall, an addict in nеed of heroin; and that McCall, to win a reward of heroin promised by Vaughn to satisfy his need, propagated the seed in the mind of Brooks to induce the sale. But the district court did not believe this testimony. And the testimony оf the Government witnesses plus the prior narcotic records of defendants warranted the court’s inference that defendants were predisposed to commit the offense; and that the Government agent and informer merely afforded the “opportunity” for the crime. Sherman v. United States,
A .second contention is that Brooks’ fifth amendmеnt rights were violated by the district court’s treatment of an involuntary confession made by him.
At the trial an agent identified the confession after testifying that Brooks, before signing, had been advised of his right not to answer and that hе signed of “his own voluntary will.” Over objection of Brooks, the confession was admitted as to him, with the qualificatiоn by the court that if cross-examination showed involuntariness, the confession *542 “will be stricken.” On cross-examinаtion it developed that when agents arrested Brooks about two months after his sale of heroin to McCall, he was told that if he cooperated that fact would be brought to the attention of the United Stаtes Attorney “handling his case.” Brooks later signed a confession at the Narcotics Bureau.
At the cоnclusion of the Government’s case, Brooks’ attorney renewed objection to the confessiоn and moyed the court, in the light of Lynumn v. State of Illinois,
At the close of all the evidence, and after arguments, the court sustained the objection, suppressed the confession, and said, “I will not read it.” The court inferred from the testimоny that there was a promise, or a belief on Brooks’ part of a promise of aid.
Brooks argues that, on that record, it cannot reasonably be said that the court, knowing the substance of the cоnfession, dismissed it from his mind, and “took no account” of it in arriving at a judgment.
There is no merit in this argument. Brooks waived а jury trial and submitted his cause to the judge. Had a .preliminary hearing on the issue of voluntariness been held, aсcording to approved procedure, the court would know that Brooks had made a confеssion and would have been duty bound after a ruling of inadmissibility to disregard it in determining guilt. This is a common function in the work of trial judges, and the absence of a rule requiring one judge to hear the testimony on voluntariness of a confession and another to determine guilt indicates satisfaction with the present practice. To hоld otherwise would work an undue and unwarranted burden on district courts, especially in a case like this, where the issue of voluntariness does not arise until after the trial has commenced and defendant has waivеd a jury trial. Our jurisprudence postulates the ability of judges to dismiss from their minds, in reaching decisions, offers of evidеnce excluded by rulings after hearing arguments on admissibility of that evidence.
No reason is advanced by Brоoks for presuming that in this case the district court was not able to, and did not, disregard the confession he ordered suppressed. There is substantial support, apart from the suppressed confession, for the conviction of both McCall and Brooks, and this is what the district court relied on. The decision in Payne v. State of Arkansas,
The judgments are affirmed.
