United States of America Ex Rel. Vincent Cerullo v. Hon. Harold W. Follette, as Warden of Green Haven Prison, Stormville, New York

416 F.2d 156, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10575
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 1969
Docket33381_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 416 F.2d 156 (United States of America Ex Rel. Vincent Cerullo v. Hon. Harold W. Follette, as Warden of Green Haven Prison, Stormville, New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America Ex Rel. Vincent Cerullo v. Hon. Harold W. Follette, as Warden of Green Haven Prison, Stormville, New York, 416 F.2d 156, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10575 (2d Cir. 1969).

Opinion

WYATT, District Judge:

The Warden of Green Haven Prison appeals from an order of Judge Tyler granting an application of Vincent Cerullo for a writ of habeas corpus. Cerullo is serving a sentence for first degree robbery and other offenses imposed after a jury verdict in a trial in the New York Supreme Court for Nassau County. A co-defendant at the trial, Carmine Moccio, was convicted of the same offenses.

There have been extensive proceedings in the state courts, the District Court and in this Court — all involving the claim by Cerullo that two statements admitted against him at trial were involuntary because coerced by police beatings. When the matter was last before this Court on an appeal by Cerullo, it was remanded “for a full hearing” (393 F.2d 879). Judge Tyler had that hearing (the second hearing before him) after which he filed an opinion, the gist of which was that he had a “smidgin of doubt” whether the confessions were involuntary and that the “smidgin * * * is sufficient to create a reasonable doubt and to require * * * that Cerullo’s conviction be set aside” (294 F.Supp. at 1289-1290).

After considering the substantial new evidence produced before Judge Tyler and after making a detailed study of the entire record, which is now adequate, we are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that there were no police beatings and that the two statements of Cerullo were voluntary. We have the definite and firm conviction on the entire evidence that Judge Tyler’s contrary conclusion is mistaken. United States ex rel. Bloeth v. Denno, 313 F.2d 364 (2 Cir.1963), cert. denied 372 U.S. 978, 83 S.Ct. 1112, 10 L.Ed.2d 143 (1963); United States v. United States Gypsum Co., 333 U.S. 364, 395, 68 S.Ct. 525, 92 L.Ed. 746 (1948). The order below must therefore be reversed. While so doing, we recognize that Judge Tyler was undoubtedly led into error because doubts (from an incomplete record) as to the treatment given Cerullo by the police were too strongly expressed in the earlier opinion of this Court.

The procedural history of the matter in the state and federal courts is set out in our earlier opinion and need not be repeated.

The single issue is whether the police beat Cerullo until he signed the two statements.

*158 The Testimony of Cerullo

Cerullo testified at his trial on this subject and on nothing else. Cerullo swore that while going from one police station to another, he was handcuffed with his hands behind his back and that a detective hit him in the head with a black heavy object so hard that he lost consciousness and had to be taken from the car when they reached the second police station; that within a few minutes he was handcuffed to a chair for one or two hours while detectives took turns punching his chest and stomach with their fists; that a telephone book was then put on his head and a detective hit it on top many times with a hard and heavy object; that pains went right down his spine; that the detectives kept asking him “to sign” and he kept denying everything; that he was screaming with pain; that more detectives came in, “all big fellows”; that four of them now spreadeagled him on the floor, stepping on his arms and legs to hold him down while four others took turns hitting him with black jacks; that “they were asking me to sign papers all night. They had a stack of them”; that he couldn’t tell “if it took ten minutes or ten hours”; that he was then handcuffed to the chair again; that he was then spreadeagled on the floor again; that he was then put with a number of other men in a line-up; that they then arched his back over a chair, and, while one held his feet, others for “quite a while” kept punching his stomach and chest with their fists; that he continued to scream; that finally he said “I’ll sign anything * * * Stop, I can’t take it any more”; that he then signed the statements, not reading anything; that he does not remember whether the pages he signed were blank or had been filled in; that when he signed the time was about 1 p. m. on October 4; and that they left the station house about 20 or 30 minutes later.

At trial, counsel for Moccio contended that his statements also were involuntary because the result of police beatings; Moccio did not testify. We are told that since the decision here on appeal, Moccio has applied for a writ of habeas corpus to the District Court for the Eastern District of New York.

Cerullo, although present at both hearings before Judge Tyler, did not testify at either of the hearings and has never testified in the district court to his claim; he rests on his testimony at trial in the state court.

The only evidence which might arguably support the claim is certain testimony of Dr. Yivona, the prison physician in Nassau County. This testimony was given at the state court trial, since which and before any hearing in the district court, Dr. Vivona died. The testimony of Dr. Vivona to a considerable extent influenced the earlier decision of this Court to direct a full hearing.

Before discussing the effect on Cerullo’s claim of the evidence received at the second hearing before Judge Tyler, it is well to set out chronologically certain facts established by the evidence as a whole, largely from the police officers and (aside from the issue with Cerullo and Moccio as to the beatings) not substantially contradicted.

The Chronology

On September 21, 1962, several men robbed a home in Nassau County, after tieing up the elderly widow whose home it was.

About 6 p. m. on Wednesday, October 3, 1962, Quinn, a state parole officer, talked to Moccio at his sister’s house in Brooklyn and under a parole violator warrant took him into custody. Quinn told Moccio that, according to the Parole Board’s information, he was not in fact working for his supposed employer and that this was a parole violation. A few minutes later, three detectives of the Nassau County Police Department came on the scene. Moccio was then taken to a station house in Hewlett, Nassau County.

At the station house, Moccio was taken to the squad office on the second floor and was questioned. At the begin *159 ning Moccio denied knowing anything about the robbery. He was then told that the victim had identified him from a photograph as one of the robbers and that she would be brought in to face him directly. Moccio then said he would tell about it and, as an officer typed it out in the same room, Moccio told his story. The statement was finished about 9 p. m., Moccio read it, said it was true and signed it. This statement implicated Cerullo, Paul DeFiore and two others.

Quinn, the state parole officer, stayed in the station house until about 2 a. m. on October 4, 1962, and was in and out of the room where Moccio was being questioned.

Based on information supplied by Moccio, the police found in Far Rockaway the truck which the robbers had used. They got a tow about midnight and started for the station house in Hewlett; they must have arrived shortly before 1 a. m. on October 4.

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Bluebook (online)
416 F.2d 156, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-ex-rel-vincent-cerullo-v-hon-harold-w-ca2-1969.