Ellis Tyrone Hart was convicted pursuant to his guilty plea of robbery of mail, money or other property of the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2114 and 2. We affirm the conviction.
Hart initially contends that he was denied effective assistance of counsel because of what Hart characterizes as the district court’s failure to hold an adequate hearing on his motion to appoint new counsel. On January 3, 1977, the day the case was to proceed to trial, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss his appointed counsel on the following grounds: 1) that counsel had failed to file motion concerning jurisdiction, 2) that counsel had refused to appeal any decision made by the district court on certain motions filed by the defendant, and 3) that counsel was not ready to go to trial and had not adequately prepared for trial. During the course of the hearing on the motion, the defendant also stated that he and his counsel had been in disagreement ever since they met. The district court determined that the motions which counsel had refused to file were frivolous, that counsel’s representation had not been ineffective and thus refused to dismiss appointed counsel.
In order to warrant substitution of counsel, the defendant must show justifiable dissatisfaction with his appointed counsel.
See United States v. Young,
The record fully supports the district court’s conclusion that Hart was not denied effective assistance of counsel and that substitution of counsel was unwarranted. Hart’s counsel was not ineffective in failing to file Hart’s jurisdiction motion nor in refusing to appeal the denial of Hart’s other motions. These motions were frivolous beyond any reasonable doubt. The record shows that counsel skillfully handled the defendant’s only colorable pretrial motions relating to a lineup identification and prearraignment delay. There is nothing of record which indicates that counsel did not adequately confer with Hart prior to trial nor that counsel was unprepared to try the case.
We have no quarrel with the proposition, urged by the defendant, that an accused who is forced to stand trial with the assistance of appointed counsel with whom he has become embroiled in an irreconcilable conflict is denied effective assistance of counsel.
See Brown v. Craven, supra,
*164 The defendant also contends that the district court erred in refusing to suppress certain inculpatory custodial statements. Even if we assume that the defendant did not waive this argument by pleading guilty, 2 he is not entitled to reversal on this basis. The district court’s findings that the statements were given voluntarily and intelligently, with full Miranda warnings, are supported by the record. The defendant signed a form stating that he understood his rights. No threats were made to induce the defendant to make the statements.
It is true that the defendant refused to sign a written form waiving his rights. However, as we said in
United States v. Johnson,
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. During the course of the hearing, the court directed the following statement to the defendant Hart:
I’m reading [the motion to dismiss counsel] right now. I’m listening to anything you want to add. You don’t have to put it in any legal language, I know you’re not a lawyer and all that; you just tell me what the problem is and see if we can’t translate it to legal language.
We fail to perceive what else the court could have done under the circumstances.
. The government argues that Hart waived his right to contest all nonjurisdictional errors by pleading guilty.
See McMann v. Richardson,
. Hart also claims that he was suffering from narcotic withdrawal symptoms at the time of the interrogation which rendered his statements involuntary. This claim is speculative and unsupported by the record.
