Petitioner was tried and convicted of armed robbery in the Superior Court of Massachusetts in March 1964 and is presently serving his sentence of 15-25 years. During that trial, after petitioner had testified on his own behalf, the prosecutor offered evidence of five prior convictions to impeach petitioner’s credibility, three of which were the product of trials where petitioner neither had nor waived the assistance of legal counsel. Petitioner’s appeal from the district court’s denial of a writ of habeas corpus presents three issues concerning the use of these three “uncounseled” convictions: whether the rule of Burgett v. Texas,
I.
The
Burgett
rule is founded on the Court’s decision in Gideon v. Wainwright,
We conclude that the
Burgett
rule against use of uneounseled convictions “to prove guilt” was intended to prohibit their use “to impeach credibility”, for the obvious purpose and likely effect of impeaching the defendant’s credibility is to imply, if not prove, guilt. Even if such prohibition was not originally contemplated, we fail to discern any distinction which would allow such invalid convictions to be used to impeach credibility. The absence of counsel impairs the reliability of such convictions just as much when used to impeach as when used as direct proof of guilt. Moreover, such use compounds the original denial of the constitutional right just as surely as does use “to prove guilt or enhance punishment”. Finally, defendant’s privilege to testify or not to testify — Griffin v. California,
*1030 II.
Our discussion of the scope of the
Burgett
rule foreshadows our view of its retroactivity. Gideon v. Wainwright,
supra,
the progenitor of
Burgett,
has been made retroactive because of the likely unreliability of any uncounseled conviction. Desist v. United States,
In
Desist,
the Court set forth and discussed the three factors relevant to the question of retroactivity. Obviously the purpose of
Burgett
was to prevent the use of possibly unreliable convictions obtained at a trial whose fairness is constitutionally suspect. Secondly, while there had undoubtedly been reliance on a different rule, the importance of counsel at a criminal trial had been recognized in the 1930’s and established unanimously in
1963
— see
generally
Gideon v. Wainwright,
supra
— a relevant factor in assessing retroactivity.
E. g.,
Berger v. California,
III.
We move now to the question whether the improper admission of three invalid convictions can be considered “harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt” in the circumstances of this case. A preliminary question, however, concerns the propriety of any such discussion: some of the language in Burgett,
Petitioner was tried together with one Bowlen. Theofilopoulos testified that the two defendants entered his neighborhood variety store about 6:30 p. m. on August 17, 1963, with guns drawn, and robbed him, his cash register, and two customers. This testimony was completely corroborated by two eyewitnesses who identified both defendants as the robbers. Subsequent testimony revealed that petitioner had been arrested on the following day for several motor vehicle violations and been found with $1700 in his possession, and that Theofilopoulos had come to the station house and identified petitioner as one of the robbers. Theofilopoulos also told the police, prior to his arrival at the station, that one of the stolen bills had a “76” penciled on it; such a bill was among petitioner’s $1700. Three other persons testified concerning petitioner’s activities before and after the alleged robbery, providing circumstantial evidence tending to establish petitioner’s involvement in a robbery. The prosecution rested.
Petitioner’s witnesses sought to impeach the prosecution witnesses, by revealing a prior conviction of Theofilopoulos for being present in a room unlawfully used for gaming and some contradictory statements concerning the amount of money taken from him. Petitioner then took the stand to tell his version of the events of August 17. He and Bowlen entered the variety store around 5:00 p. m. to install five illegal telephones for an illegal gambling operation and to collect an illegal gambling debt. When Theofilopoulos refused to pay, a fight ensued, which petitioner and Bowlen won rather handily before fleeing, without taking any money. Petitioner offered a plausible but unsubstantiated story to explain the $1700 in cash in his possession. Importantly, petitioner admitted being with Bowlen throughout the times in question on August 17.
On cross-examination, the prosecution offered evidence of five prior convictions against petitioner, the three earliest and least serious ones having been obtained when petitioner neither had nor had waived the assistance of counsel. 4 Two of these convictions were admitted over petitioner’s objection, with the admonition then and later that they were to be considered only in considering petitioner’s credibility.
Petitioner then called to the stand two prosecution witnesses who had not been called by the prosecution. Neither could *1032 definitely identify petitioner as one of the robbers, but each testified that he had witnessed an armed robbery at Theofilopoulos’ variety store at 6:30 p. m. on August 17, and each identified Bowlen as one of the two robbers. Bowlen then took the stand to offer a version similar to petitioner’s account; cross-examination revealed three valid robbery convictions against Bowlen.
The case was submitted to the jury a week after the trial began. After some six hours deliberation, a verdict of guilty was returned against both defendants.
Viewing all the evidence summarized above, and reported by the district court in more complete detail, we are satisfied that the error of admitting the three uncounseled convictions for purposes of impeachment was “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt”. Three witnesses positively identified petitioner as one of the robbers; five so identified Bowlen, whom petitioner admitted having been with throughout the times in question. The quantum of direct evidence against petitioner was as great as in Harrington v. California,
Petitioner on appeal makes much of the district court’s statement that the question before the jury in this case was “whether the entire case of the prosecution was fabricated or whether the entire defense was fabricated”. As the district court’s opinion makes clear, and we agree, petitioner’s credibility was so severely impaired by his own testimony, the testimony of some of the witnesses he called to the stand, and by the proper admission of two more recent felony convictions, that the effect of the three lesser convictions was surely inconsequential.
IV.
Petitioner’s remaining contentions concerning his arrest and the police seizure of the $1700 at the station house can be easily resolved. The validity of his arrest has never been presented to any Massachusetts court, thus precluding federal court consideration thereof. Needel v. Scafati,
Assuming that the arrest was valid, the police had the right to conduct a thorough search of his person at the station house. United States v. DeLeo,
These contacts led the police to Theofilopoulos, who identified petitioner as one of the robbers and mentioned the distinctive markings on the bill. Since the police at this point had proper custody of the money and now had reason to suspect that it was stolen, we discern no objection to the fact that it was shown to Theofilopoulos to determine whether the “76” marking which he had mentioned, which appeared on one of the bills taken from petitioner, was indeed the marking which Theofilopoulos had affixed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Gilday sought to object to the introduction of two of the three counsel-less convictions, seemingly on that very ground, but was cut off. Hence we need not decide in this ease whether, at least post-Gideon., a defendant represented by counsel should have anticipated Burgett, and could fairly be charged, if he failed to object, with waiver in eases where the prior counsel-less conviction is used only collaterally. It must be borne in mind, however, that a defendant must generally know if he was not represented by counsel, whereas the prosecution, in ob taining records of convictions from other courts, in all probability does not.
. In discussing the potential adverse effects of a criminal conviction, the Court in Sibron v. New York,
. Williams v. Coiner,
. The convictions were as follows: (1) on February 14, 1955, attempted theft of a handbag, resulting in a sentence of 4 to 5 years at Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole, (2) on February 14, 1955, while armed with a rifle, robbery from the person of a different individual of $40, resulting in a 10 to 20 year sentence at the same institution, (3) on March 20, 1954, assault and battery, in the second District Court of Essex at Amesbury, Massachusetts, with a sentence of 3 months, suspended, and probation for one year, (4) on August 5, 1953, in Municipal Court for the City of Duluth, Minnesota, carrying concealed weapons, resulting in a sentence of 30 days at the County Jail and weapon ordered confiscated, and (5) on September 12, 1951, in Court of Common Pleas, Greene County, Ohio, breaking and entering into a sporting goods store in the nighttime and stealing certain pistols, shotguns, revolvers and miscellaneous sporting goods of value of $2060, at Fairborn, Ohio, resulting in a ' sentence of probation for one year. Petitioner had the assistance of counsel in (1) and (2).
