On his plea of guilty to a charge of robbing a federally insured bank (Section 2113(a) and (d) Title 18, United States Code) Maurice Anton Kienlen was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment subject to parole under 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a) (2). His post-sentence motion to withdraw the guilty plea was denied by the sentencing judge. On appeal we affirmed, but left oрen the question of
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whether he had relied on erroneous advice of appointed counsel as to the test in this circuit for mental responsibility.
1
Kienlen v. United States,
The jury was unable to agree in the first trial. Thе second trial, the one now being reviewed, resulted in a guilty verdict. Apparently in both trials the Wion test of criminal responsibility was properly submitted to the jury and no quеstion in this regard is raised.
The first issue on appeal deals with the propriety of permitting a physician engaged in the general practice of medicinе to give his opinion as to Kienlen’s mental capacity under the Wion standard for mental responsibility. We know, of course, that competency of a witnеss to give an opinion concerning a matter of expertise lies largely within the trial court’s discretion and will not be set aside on appeal in the absence of a clear showing of abuse. Cf. United States v. Wainwright,
The general practitioner in our case testified that in the course of his practice he had frequently made preliminary diagnoses of mental illness, and as a member of the local mental health board, had worked closely with a psychiatrist-consultant а few hours each week. He was acquainted with Kienlen professionally and socially and was present with Kienlen shortly prior to Kienlen’s arrest the day of the robbery and into the early morning hours of the next day.
On this predicate he was permitted to express his opinion that at the time he observed Kienlen he was not suffering from any “mental illness or defect”; knew what he was doing; and was capable of controlling his conduct. There was other like testimony by a qualified psychiatrist based on the Wion rule justifying submission of this issue to the jury. We find no error in the admission of the challenged testimony.
The next issue involves the admission of inculpatory statements made to enforcement agents in the early morning hours following Kienlen’s arrest. This admission is challenged on the basis that Kienlen was not informed of his right to have counsеl present during the interrogation as required by Miranda v. Arizona,
It is true, as the government suggests, that under our decision in Bond v. United States,
Kienlen was arrested on December 9, 1965 and originally pleaded guilty and was sentenced on May 27, 1966. On May 25, 1967, the sentence was affirmed by this court. Kienlеn v. United States, supra. After vacation of the sentence by the trial court under Rule 32(d), he was tried and convicted in April, 1968. This question is now settled by Jenkins v. Delaware,
The final question hаs also now been authoritatively settled. In North Carolina v. Pearce,
On his original guilty plea, Kienlen was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment subject to parole under 18 U.S.C. § 4208 (a) (2). On the jury verdict, the judge imposed a sentence of 18 years. In imposing this sentence the trial judge, as if anticipating Pearce, observed:
“I certainly gained the impression [at the trial] and came to believe and now believe, and largely this is from the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses, his mother and his former wife, that this defendant is a brutal, assaultive type, that this information, if I had known it — I don’t want to say that there wasn’t any indication of that in the earlier pre-sentence report, but to read something in a cold pre-sentenсe report and to hear the witness, one by deposition and the other testifying from the stand, together with all of the other information that has come to me since the original sentence was imposed, I have come to the conclusion that the sentence imposed on May 27, 1966 * * * was a lesser sentence thаn this defendant deserved, so the sentence to be imposed today will be a greater sentence.”
*560 After a brief colloquy, he further noted, “I want it clearly undеrstood that what I have said with respect to increasing the sentence or, rather, imposing a more severe sentence than I had before, is not to be taken by anyone as punishment for the exercise of constitutional rights by this defendant.”
In our judgment, this meets the Pearce standard. Naturally, the statement that the trial judge was not penalizing the defendant for exercising his constitutional right to appeal is not conclusive. But it is indicative of the sentencing climate. The decisiоn was clear and rational. Finding this sentence altogether compatible with Pearce, we need not consider the possible retro-activity of Pearce. See Moon v. Maryland, cert. granted
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The court appointed counsel advised Kienlen that the test was the M’Naughten Rule rather than that of Wion v. United States,
