Mefford v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary

270 F. Supp. 745, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8730
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1967
DocketCiv. No. 17742
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 270 F. Supp. 745 (Mefford v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mefford v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary, 270 F. Supp. 745, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8730 (D. Md. 1967).

Opinion

THOMSEN, Chief Judge.

On July 13, 1962, petitioner (Mefford) was found guilty in the Circuit Court for Harford County by Judge Day and Judge Harlan,1 sitting without a jury, of murder in the first degree, robbery and robbery with a deadly weapon, and thereafter was sentenced to death for the murder and to imprisonment on the robbery counts. A codefendant (Blackburn) was tried separately, was convicted and received the same sentences. Their convictions were affirmed on appeal, in an opinion which discussed at length the admissibility of confessions given by the respective defendants. Mefford v. State, 235 Md. 497, 201 A.2d 824 (1964).

In a proceeding under the Maryland Post Conviction Procedure Act (PCPA), [746]*746at which Judge Menchine presided, Mefford raised again the admissibility of his confession and several other points not pressed here. Judge Menchine held a hearing and filed a written opinion denying relief, which was adopted by the Court of Appeals. Mefford v. Warden, 243 Md. 696, 221 A.2d 906 (1966).

Mefford then filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus in this Court. At the hearing thereon, his counsel, with his approval, stated that he was pressing only the contention that Mefford’s constitutional rights were violated by the admission in evidence of his confession, given to the State Police, which Mefford claims was involuntary under “the standards of voluntariness which had begun to evolve long prior to [the] decisions in Miranda and Escobedo”. Davis v. State of North Carolina, 384 U.S. 737, 740, 86 S.Ct. 1761, 16 L.Ed.2d 895 (1966).

The Joint Record Extract filed in the Court of Appeals on the original appeal (which the parties agree contains all material portions of the testimony and other proceedings at Mefford’s trial in Harford County), a transcript of the testimony at the PCPA hearing, and the opinions of the State Courts, were presented to this Court.

Counsel for Mefford said that he was willing to submit his case on the record as a whole. Counsel for respondent argued that the record as a whole fairly supports the factual determination of the State Courts that the confession was voluntary, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254(d) (8), as added by PL 89-711, 80 Stat. 1105, November 2, 1966, but stated that if this Court did not agree, he wished to produce as witnesses the Baltimore County police officers mentioned in the evidence whose testimony had not theretofore been taken. At the PCPA hearing Mefford had complained because his trial counsel had not insisted that those officers be produced at the trial, when the State offered to produce them and the trial judges felt that their testimony was not necessary.2 Mefford’s trial counsel had asked that Detective White be produced and had examined him, but did not ask that the other Baltimore County officers be produced. Nor were those officers called by either side at the PCPA hearing. Because the case involves a death sentence, and because two Judges of the Court of Appeals dissented (albeit without opinion) from the affirmance of the conviction, this Court felt that all available evidence which either side might wish to present should be in the record. This Court agreed, however, to consider first whether the record as a whole fairly supports the factual determination of the State Courts. Accordingly, respondent first called the Baltimore County police officers, and Mefford then called several witnesses and testified himself. This order of procedure was preferred by Mefford and his counsel. Hatem was later called as a witness by respondent, particularly to contradict certain testimony of Mrs. Mefford.

The facts of the murder and robbery for which Mefford was convicted and the evidence other than his confession tending to prove him guilty were succinctly stated by Judge Hammond, speaking for the Court of Appeals, as follows:

“In the early morning hours of Sunday, March 4, 1962, one Snider, who was tending a gasoline service station on Route 40 at Joppa in Harford County was robbed at gun point by two men of some $103 of the station owner’s money. The men left and soon after one of them returned and shot Snider in the head. He died several hours later. Not long after the shooting he said he had been held up and robbed by two men, one with reddish bushy hair and the other with [747]*747dark hair. He did not recognize the men.
“ * * * The State proved at each trial that a cartridge case and a spent bullet which were found at the scene of the crime had been fired from a .32 calibre Savage pistol owned by Mefford, and by him turned over to the police, as well as that Mefford owned a 1955 red Chevrolet hardtop car with automatic transmission, and that such a car had been seen along Route 40 north of Baltimore during the late night of March 3 and the early morning of March 4, with its two male occupants surveying gasoline stations, and that within minutes of the time of the holdup the car had been observed on Route 40 heading towards Joppa.” 235 Md. at 501-502, 201 A.2d at 825.

The Court of Appeals held that “the confessions of Mefford (which we find to have been properly admitted), considered with the proof of the corpus delicti and the facts that Mefford’s pistol was used to shoot Snider, his motive for the shooting (feared recognition by Snider) and the presence of a car like Mefford’s near the scene at the time of the shooting, certainly properly permitted the triers of fact to have been persuaded, as they were, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Mefford was one of the two guilty men.” 235 Md. at 504, 201 A.2d at 826.

The Court of Appeals noted: “It was brought out also in each trial that on April 16, 1962, a filling station on Route 40 at Chesaco, in Baltimore County, had been robbed by men who. used the techniques used by the robbers at the station at Route 40 and Joppa. The State police who were investigating the Joppa case and the Baltimore County police assigned to the Chesaco case began to cooperate in an effort to solve both crimes, believing them to have been committed by the same individuals.” 235 Md. at 502, 201 A.2d at 825.

The testimony at the hearing in this Court showed that some time before February 17, 1961, there had also been a robbery in Baltimore County at Van’s Shell Service Station on Route 40 at Middle River Road, while Mefford was an employee of that station; that another employee had been “roughed up” by the robbers, but Mefford had not; and that Mefford had been suspected of complicity in that robbery and had been held and questioned by the Baltimore County Police for about 72 hours beginning on February 17, 1961. The evidence here further showed that Mefford had been advised by his brother-in-law, an experienced criminal, that he had a right to a lawyer, and that he was not required to say anything.

The Court of Appeals noted that “Mefford’s claim on the inadmissibility of his confessions is that he was illegally arrested and illegally detained and was denied the right to call his family or a lawyer.” 235 Md. at 504, 201 A.2d at 826. The Court of Appeals stated the trial evidence on that point as follows:

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Related

Frederick Mefford v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary
413 F.2d 439 (Fourth Circuit, 1969)
Blackburn v. Copinger
300 F. Supp. 1127 (D. Maryland, 1969)
Cunningham v. State
231 A.2d 501 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
270 F. Supp. 745, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mefford-v-warden-maryland-penitentiary-mdd-1967.