Fajeriak v. State

520 P.2d 795, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 342
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1974
Docket1761
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 520 P.2d 795 (Fajeriak v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fajeriak v. State, 520 P.2d 795, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 342 (Ala. 1974).

Opinion

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

Appellant George Fajeriak was convicted of first degree murder in 1966. He appeals from the summary dismissal of his application for post-conviction relief.

On November 7, 1964 Anthony Rizzo was murdered; his body was found on the tidal mudflats of Turnagain Arm two days later. George Fajeriak was arrested soon afterward, and a jury subsequently found him guilty of first degree murder. His conviction was affirmed by this court. 1 In 1970 appellant instituted an application for post-conviction relief pursuant to Criminal Rule 35, 2 and the public defender was ap *798 pointed to represent him. After a host of motions, pleadings, and affidavits, relief was denied on May 31, 1972 without holding an evidentiary hearing. This appeal was brought shortly thereafter.

Criminal Rule 35 (g) (3) sets forth the applicable standard for appraising motions for summary disposition in post-conviction relief proceedings:

The court may grant a motion by either party for summary disposition of the application when it appears from the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions and agreements of fact, together with any affidavits submitted, that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Although this standard differs but slightly from the rule governing the summary dismissal of petitions for post-conviction relief in the federal courts, 3 Criminal Rule 35(g)(3) does enjoy the advantage of providing an orderly procedure for the expeditious disposition of non-meritorious applications for post-conviction relief without the necessity of holding a full evidentiary hearing. 4 We thus must decide whether any of Fajeriak’s four substantive allegations present a “genuine issue of material fact” so as to require an evidentiary hearing.

I. EAVESDROPPING UPON ATTORNEY-CLIENT COMMUNICATIONS

The appellant surrendered to police on November 11, 1965 upon learning that he was being sought in connection with Anthony Rizzo’s murder. Unable to post bail, he remained incarcerated until at least January 3, 1966. On November 22, Fajer-iak wrote Superior Court Judge Ralph E. Moody (to whom the case had been assigned) to complain that the jail authorities were electronically monitoring his conversations with his attorney. 5 Considerable evidence substantiating this charge was adduced at the hearing on a motion by Fa-jeriak’s newly-appointed attorney, Stanley McCutcheon, to compel the jail authorities to permit him to interview his client in privacy. 6 According to McCutcheon, a number of attorneys had known of the existence of a concealed microphone in the jail conference room for several years. 7 Mc- *799 Cutcheon stated that it was his practice to short out the device during conferences with his own incarcerated clients, while another prominent Anchorage attorney covered it with books. He disclosed to the court that the Anchorage Times had recently published an exposé of the “bug”, replete with a picture of the device and an admission by the Chief of Police that inmate-attorney communications had in fact been monitored on previous occasions. The outcome of this hearing was a blanket order directing the Chief of Correctional Institutions for the State of Alaska to make available to all inmates facilities for private and confidential consultations with their attorneys. The trial court did not, however, attempt to determine whether, as Fajeriak had claimed in his letter, the state had already eavesdropped on appellant’s confidential attorney-client communications.

Appellant alleged these facts specifically and by reference to the record in his application for post-conviction relief and in an affidavit filed with this court. The state concedes on appeal that the application, in conjunction with the supplementary affidavit, presents grounds for requiring the holding of an evidentiary hearing, and we agree. We further so hold based on the application itself, without reference to the affidavit. 8 According to Criminal Rule 35(g)(3), summary disposition of an application for post-conviction relief is appropriate only when it appears that “there is no genuine issue of material fact”. Far from discrediting appellant’s allegations, the record strongly tends to corroborate them, and we find that “a genuine issue” within the meaning of Criminal Rule 35(g)(3) has therefore been raised. Further, there can be little doubt that this unresolved factual issue is legally “material”, for interceptions of attorney-client communications have long been held violative of due process of law 9 and of the right to the effective assistance of counsel. 10 As the United States Court of Appeals for. the District of Columbia wrote in Coplon v. United States: 11

[The fifth and sixth] Amendments guarantee to persons accused of crime the right privately to consult with counsel both before and during trial. This is a fundamental right which cannot be abridged, interfered with, or infringed in any manner. The prosecution is not entitled to have a representative present to hear the conversations of accused and counsel. 12

The spectacle of the state spying on attorney-client communications of persons placed in its custody offends even the least refined notions of fundamental fairness and due process of law, and if it took place we find it reprehensible. Such a practice subjects the accused to having confidential information conveyed to, and possibly utilized by, an unfriendly entity. Of constitutionally'greater import, it defeats the sixth amendment right to consult privately with *800 counsel, and it affords the state an opportunity to circumvent the defendant’s fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination. 13 The devastating impact of exposure of confidential information to the prosecution similarly impinges on the right to effective assistance of counsel in defending against criminal charges. 14

If appellant’s allegations are true, then his conviction was unconstitutionally obtained, and he will be entitled to relief pursuant to Criminal Rule 35(b) as we shall delineate below. This case must therefore be remanded to the superior court to determine, after a full evidentiary hearing, whether Fajeriak’s conferences with his attorney between November 11th and November 19th were electronically monitored.

II. INTIMIDATION OF WITNESSES

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Bluebook (online)
520 P.2d 795, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fajeriak-v-state-alaska-1974.