MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS
Defendant, indicted for firearms violations, has moved to dismiss the indictment on the grounds that the state court conviction that forms the predicate for the pending federal charges was unconstitutionally obtained under the principles of Boykin v. Alabama,
The Government has conceded that the state felony conviction is unconstitutional. The conviction was obtained upon defendant’s plea of guilty. The transcript of the plea proceeding reveals that no inquiry whatever was conducted to ascertain the voluntariness of the plea. Defendant was put to plea and responded, “Guilty.”
While there is no doubt that this transcript would require invalidating the state court conviction on direct appeal, Boykin v. Alabama,
supra,
the Court is not as certain as the Government that a concession of invalidity is required when a conviction thus obtained is attacked collaterally to avoid its use as a predicate for an additional offense.
Boykin
construed the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to impose upon the states at least some of the requirements of Fed.R.Crim.P. 11, as interpreted in McCarthy v. United States,
Halliday
and
Boykin
both involve a plea of guilty entered prior to
McCarthy.
They differ, however, in two respects.
Halliday
was a collateral attack upon a federal conviction;
Boykin
was a direct appeal of a state conviction. It appears that the form of review has significance, at least as to state convictions. Federal convictions can apparently be attacked collaterally, for violation of Rule 11, so long as the conviction occurred after the
McCarthy
decision, see Irizarry v. United States,
In this case, the Government has declined to contest the defendant’s contention that his state court conviction is invalid. It may well be that the circumstances of this defendant’s state court plea would, if explored, indicate a lack of voluntariness, and the Government’s concession may simply reflect a candid assessment of the inevitable outcome of such a hearing. In any event, the concession has been made, and, as a result, the Court granted the Government’s motion to dismiss Counts 1 to 4 of the indictment. The issue thus becomes whether the remaining counts of the indictment are valid.
The Government contends that the false statement charges are valid. Apparently the contention is that a conviction invalid under
Boykin
can be the subject of a false statement within the meaning of § 922(a)(6). Defendant urges that the false statement counts are as invalid as the possession counts, relying on Burgett v. Texas,
Defendant further contends that a conviction unconstitutionally obtained is “infirm from its incipiency,” United States v. Lufman,
The argument that an unconstitutional conviction is void from its inception, as
Lufman
held, and that it cannot be used for any evidentiary purpose, as
Loper
suggests, would be persuasive and dispositive of this motion were it not for a query raised by footnote 11 to the
Lo-per
opinion,
For two reasons, however, the
Loper
footnote cannot salvage the remaining counts of this indictment. Were this defendant tried on the false statement counts, the invalid state court conviction would not be offered merely to impeach
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trial testimony; it would be an indispensable part of the Government’s affirmative case. It would plainly be used to “support guilt” within the meaning of Burgett v. Texas,
supra.
The fact that
Burgett
involved a conviction invalid under Gideon v. Wainwright,
More fundamentally, § 922(a)(6) cannot be construed to penalize the denial of a conviction obtained unconstitutionally. This is not to suggest that every inquiry about an unconstitutional conviction is insulated from adverse consequences. If an unconstitutional conviction can be used to impeach a defendant at trial who falsely denies its existence, as the
Loper
footnote suggests, then, in other contexts, a false denial may also bring adverse consequences. For example, it may well be that a grand jury witness who falsely denies a prior conviction, even though unconstitutionally obtained, violates 18 U.S.C. § 1623, since he blocks the grand jury’s inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the conviction. Such circumstances may well be material to a grand jury’s proper inquiry. Section 922(a)(6), however, does not proscribe false denial of a prior conviction in order to insure full exploration of the surrounding circumstances. The false statement prohibition is in the firearms statute solely as an aid to implementation of the statute’s substantive prohibitions. False denials of prior convictions are penalized to implement the prohibition of possession, purchase, or interstate transportation of a firearm by a convicted felon.
Cf.
Dameron v. United States,
Accordingly, the defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment is granted.
Notes
. It should be noted that “impeach” in this sense means refute specific testimony by contrary evidence, i. e., the fact of the prior conviction, as in Walker v. Follette, supra, rather than impair credibility of the witness by showing him to be a convicted felon, as in Loper v. Beto, supra.
