This is an appeal from an order entered December 10, 1957, which denied appellant’s motion under 28 U.S.C.A. § 2255 to vacate the sentence imposed upon him in September 1956 under an indictment charging evasion of income taxes in violation of § 145(b) of Internal Revenue Code of 1939 as amended, 26 U.S.C.A. § 145(b). To this indictment the defendant originally pleaded not guilty, but at the close of the Government’s case he changed his plea to guilty. After interrogation, the trial judge accepted the plea as made voluntarily with understanding of the nature of the charge. The sentence imposed was five years imprisonment and a fine of $20,000.00.
The present motion was referred to Judge Holtzoff who had presided at the trial and imposed sentence. The alleged grounds for vacating the sentence are (1) that the defendant was innocent, (2) that he was not adequately represented by counsel at the trial, and (3) that his counsel was denied use of Government records for use in cross examination. As the statute permits, the motion was denied without requiring production of the prisoner at the hearing.
Denial of the motion was plainly correct. After conviction on a plea of guilty validly accepted by the trial judge, the defendant cannot by asserting his innocence obtain a retrial of the facts. As stated in Kercheval v. United States,
