United States ex rel. Rivers v. Myers

384 F.2d 737
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 1967
DocketNos. 15376, 15377
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 384 F.2d 737 (United States ex rel. Rivers v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Rivers v. Myers, 384 F.2d 737 (3d Cir. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FORMAN, Circuit Judge.

These cases involve appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania granting in part the petition of George Lee Rivers for a writ of habeas corpus. In No. 15377, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania appeals from that part of the order implementing the District Court’s holding that two confessions given by the petitioner were unconstitutionally obtained. In No. 15376, the relator appeals from that part of the order based on the District Court’s finding that the relator was not incompetent to enter a guilty plea or to understand and assist in the sentencing proceedings against him in 1957. The background of this case, including extensive prior litigation, is detailed in the District Court’s opinion, reported at 240 F.Supp. 39 (1965).

The offense for which the relator is presently incarcerated and under sentence of death is the fatal shooting of the proprietor of a Philadelphia pharmacy during the course of a robbery on March 26, 1957. Rivers pleaded guilty to a charge of murder, and his two confessions, which portrayed him as the lookout man for two accomplices, Cater and Williams, were used in a proceeding to determine the degree of murder and the penalty.

The lines of analysis and characterization of events in the present case are shaped by a crucial constant factor — the psychological makeup of the relator. At the time of the commission of the crime and the confession, Rivers had just reached the chronological age of eighteen. During his twelve years in school, the highest level he attained was the second term of the second grade. Thereafter he was assigned to a special class for orthogenic backward pupils where he remained until 1955 when he was placed in the Boone Disciplinary School. He left the school system in March 1956, about a year before the crime, after having passed the age of compulsory attendance. Intelligence tests administered showed an I.Q. of 69 recorded in 1947; 75 in 1955; and in 1959, two years after the crime, 77 (verbal 69, 91 performance), though one psychiatrist testified that his I.Q. could have been lower than 77 in 1957.

[739]*739Rivers has been examined by at least four psychiatrically trained physicians, whose findings are in accord in significant respects. As a result of an examination made on June 5, 1957, Dr. Andrew Mallín reported in part as follows:

“From the psychiatric standpoint he is emotionally dull, blunted, and very slow in speech. * * * Delusions and hallucinations are present. * * * He has had visions of his dead grandfather since about the age of 13. * * * Orientation is good, but memory is defective; he cannot give the date of the homicide and cannot give other details of his life. Intelligence and reasoning are impaired. * * * Judgment and insight are impaired.
“Diagnosis: Mental deficiency with psychosis, moderately severe, chronic.
“Conclusions and recommendations: This man is psychotic and moderately mentally defective, probably a low grade moron. He is very susceptible and easily led by others.”

Dr. John G. Torney, who examined the relator in September 1959 at the Eastern State Penitentiary, described Rivers’s condition “at the present time” as sociopathic rather than psychotic, and found no mnemonic defects. He agreed, however, that petitioner’s “reflective abilities are at a defective level,” and stated that psychological testing indicated “a highly impulsive individual whose behavior is governed chiefly by immediate need and desire to the exclusion of rational consideration,” and that he could be “easily led.”

Dr. Silas L. Warner, who also examined the relator in 1959, testified that he had “a very limited capacity to think. * * * He is limited in considering all the factors that go into certain acts. He is not capable of bringing together all the necessary knowledge to make a proper decision,” and that he was of a class of persons “highly suggestible and lead-able.”

Dr. Jonas B. Robitscher, who saw the relator approximately once a month during an 18 month period in 1961 through 1963 as a consulting psychiatrist at Graterford Prison described his observation of Rivers as evincing a course of

“obsessive thinking, rumination, great depression, great anxiety * * * nausea and vomiting, even when the prisoner was on tranquillizers * * * tremor * * * paranoid trends, and later more serious symptoms appeared, hysterical laughter, jaw cracking, and * * * inappropriate emotional response, all of which indicated to me that this was a person with extremely grave psychological problems.”

Dr. Robitscher further testified that he believed that the relator had been incompetent to aid counsel and enter a guilty plea in 1957.

The opinion of the District Court was written at a time when the retroactivity and implications of the decision in Escobedo v. State of Illinois1 were in doubt. The District Judge held that if Escobedo were directly applicable, neither confession would be admissible because of a denial of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, but that if he were incorrect in assuming its applicability, the second of two confessions given would nevertheless be inadmissible “under the facts of this case” without specifying the grounds for this conclusion. The Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in Johnson v. State of New Jersey 2 precludes retroactive application of the Escobedo rule. We believe, however, in accord with the District Court’s conclusion that the use of the second confession was violative of the Fifth Amendment.

Rivers was arrested at about 5.00 p. m. on March 27, 1957, the day following the [740]*740homicide, and was taken to Homicide Division Headquarters at City Hall in Philadelphia, arriving at approximately 6:00 p. m. Questioning began a few minutes thereafter and continued until approximately 9:30 p. m., when the police began taking a formal written statement from the relator which was completed in about three hours.3 No transcript of the questioning prior to 9:30 p. m. appears to have been made, and the formal written statement consists of questions put by the interrogating detective and the answers of the relator thereto. In the early part of the statement, the interrogator is recorded as having warned that anything said by the relator “will be used for or against you” at the time of trial. There is no evidence that the petitioner had been advised of his constitutional rights to remain silent or to his right to counsel.

After the completion of the statement, the relator was processed and “slated” by the police and was placed in the “central cell room” at about 1:20 a. m. of March 28,1957. At about 9:30 a. m. of that day Rivers, unrepresented by counsel, was taken from his cell for a preliminary hearing before a magistrate in City Hall. The Commonwealth, however, requested that the hearing be continued, and accordingly Rivers was held for a further hearing a week later on April 4, 1957. It does not appear that during the hearing Rivers was informed by the magistrate of his rights. After the hearing, instead of being sent to the County Prison, Rivers was returned to the custody of the police.4

Rivers was interrogated upon his return, and at about 2:10 p. m. the police began the elicitation of a second written statement, which was completed at about 4:55 p. m.

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