De Kaplany was granted parole in 1975 after serving
less than 12 years, in a controversial decision marked by accusations
that gruesome post-mortem photographs of Hajna de Kaplany were removed
from his file prior to review by the California State Parole Board. The
parole board then allowed de Kaplany to travel to Taiwan as a medical
missionary. Upon his arrival in Asia, he publicly claimed that the
California state authorities had no jurisdiction over him there, then
dropped out of sight.
He re-surfaced briefly in Munich, Germany in 1980,
where a hospital fired him from a staff position after his crime was
made public there. After that, his whereabouts were a mystery to
California authorities for over 20 years.
The de Kaplany case has often been cited by capital
punishment advocates as a glaring example of parole board leniency. It
should be noted, however, that life without parole was not available as
a sentencing option in 1963 California. Many crime observers at the time
believed that the murder of Hajna de Kaplany was the most horrible
single murder in California — and perhaps in American — history. It is
almost certainly the only murder on record in which acid was used as the
murder weapon, rather than a means of disposal.
540 F.2d 975
Geza
De Kaplany, Petitioner-appellant,
v.
J. J. Enomoto,* Director of California Department
of Corrections,
Respondent-appellee
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
July 9, 1976
Before CHAMBERS, KOELSCH, BROWNING, DUNIWAY, ELY, HUFSTEDLER, WRIGHT,
TRASK, CHOY, GOODWIN, WALLACE and SNEED, Circuit Judges.
SNEED, Circuit Judge:
This case comes before us on appeal from the district
court's denial of de Kaplany's
habeas corpus petition seeking relief from his 1963 state conviction.
The petitioner asserts that his constitutional rights were violated in
four separate respects. The first such respect is that the failure of
the trial court to conduct a hearing on de
Kaplany's competence to stand trial constituted
a denial of due process. The second is that his mental illness
substantially impaired his ability to make a reasoned choice with
respect to whether to plead guilty or not and that as a consequence his
plea of guilty during the "guilt phase"1
was not knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily made. The third
respect in which de Kaplany
alleges his constitutional rights were impaired is that ineffective
counsel deprived him of a fair trial. Finally, he contends that the
massive, pervasive, and prejudicial publicity that attended his
prosecution deprived him of a fair trial.
The district court, after a thorough and
comprehensive hearing, denied the petition in all respects. We affirm
the district court in all respects.2
I. Absence of Hearing On Competency To Stand Trial.
Much of petitioner's effort is directed toward
establishing that prior to judgment in the state proceedings in which he
was convicted the judge conducting such proceedings ought to have
entertained a bona fide doubt about the competency of the petitioner to
stand trial and, in keeping with the teaching of Pate v. Robinson, 383
U.S. 375, 86 S.Ct. 836, 15 L.Ed.2d 815 (1966) and Drope v. Missouri, 420
U.S. 162, 95 S.Ct. 896, 43 L.Ed.2d 103 (1975), should have ordered a
hearing to determine such competency. The evaluation of this contention
requires both a brief description of the petitioner's trial and certain
portions of the evidence presented therein as well as an analysis of the
applicable legal principles.
A. The Trial.
We turn first to the brief description of the trial
and the pertinent evidence. The district court in which this petition
was heard set forth in its opinion a chronology of events which we adopt
and set forth in the margin.3
This chronology reveals that prior to the commencement of jury selection
on January 7, 1963 three psychiatrists appointed by the trial court had
examined the petitioner and that two of them, Drs.
Johnsen and Rappaport, had filed their written reports with the trial
court. Dr. Johnsen's report stated that the
petitioner was "sane at the time of the commission of the alleged crime
and that he is presently sane." Dr. Rappaport
in his report stated that the petitioner was "presently suffering from
no mental illness and is able to cooperate with counsel and to assist
counsel in the preparation and presentation of a rational defense." The
third report, that of Dr. Shoor, was filed on
February 8, 1963 and stated that, while the petitioner displayed "some
suicidal thinking of the obsessional variety," he was "sane now and at
the time of the commission of the alleged offense."
On January 14, 1963, the guilt phase of the
petitioner's trial began. On the second day of the trial, in response to
the prosecution's exhibiting in the courtroom a gruesome morgue
photograph of his slain wife's body, the petitioner jumped to his feet
shouting "No, no, what did you do to her?" He was forcibly restrained
and reseated. The next day petitioner changed his plea to guilty. The
hearing in the district court on this petition contains testimony by
petitioner's attorney in the state trial that the guilty plea was a
vital part of his strategy to preclude a long trial on guilt during
which the jury repeatedly would be confronted with the gruesome nature
of the petitioner's crime. By moving quickly to the sanity phase the
attorney believed the petitioner would be positioned more favorably with
respect to the jury. The habeas hearing also indicates, however, that
the petitioner resisted this strategy for some time although its purpose
was known to him. His resistance sprang from his belief that he was not
guilty because he had not intended to kill his wife. Although he
asserted his resistance was broken by coercion on the part of his
attorney, this was vigorously denied by the attorney and the district
court found that he was not coerced. This finding is adequately
supported by the evidence and is not clearly erroneous.
The state trial court asked petitioner's attorney at
the time of the guilty plea whether he had explained to the petitioner
the nature and consequences of his plea. The attorney said he had. The
trial court, in a manner somewhat less elaborate than is the practice
since Boykin v. Alabama,395 U.S. 238, 89 S.Ct. 1709, 23 L.Ed.2d 274
(1969),4
asked de Kaplany
whether he knew that he had been indicted for murdering his wife,
whether he had discussed the matter with his counsel, and whether he
fully understood the consequences of the change of his plea. To which he
answered responsively, but briefly, "Yes, your Honor", "Yes I did", and
"I do". He was not asked if he understood the change of plea might
subject him to the death penalty. There seems little doubt that he
understood this, however, because his first attorney, who was not his
attorney at trial, had informed him of the possibility of being
sentenced to die.
To summarize, immediately prior to the commencement
of the sanity phase of the trial the state trial court judge confronted
a situation in which (1) the reports of three psychiatrists had been
filed, none of which expressly or impliedly had indicated that the
petitioner was incompetent to stand trial, although none of them
precisely had focused on this issue, (2) an attorney for the petitioner
who apparently believed his client was competent to stand trial, (3) an
outburst in the courtroom as already indicated, (4) a courtroom demeanor
otherwise beyond reproach, and (5) a guilty plea apparently made
voluntarily and understandingly.
Commencing with the sanity phase of the proceedings
the mental condition of de
Kaplany properly became the center of attention. Three defense
psychiatrists, Drs. Zaslow, Lee and Beaton, who
at the request of defense counsel had examined de
Kaplany, testified regarding his mental
condition.
Dr. Zaslow testified that on
the basis of certain standard psychological tests the petitioner was "severely
disturbed" and displayed an "impairment of the conceptual thinking and
use of proper judgment." Dr. Beaton, in
describing the petitioner's "present mental condition," stated that
petitioner was "very seriously ill, psychiatrically, psychologically,"
but that he "knew the difference between right and wrong in the ordinary
sense of intellectually knowing." Dr. Beaton
also stated that in his opinion petitioner was suffering from paranoid
schizophrenia and that petitioner was "not able rationally, logically
and consciously to govern his actions." During Dr.
Beaton's testimony he also expressed the view he suspected the
petitioner had had an "ambivalent relationship with his mother all along,"
and that his mother was a feminine ideal for him and a "somewhat
rejecting woman." At this point, petitioner interrupted and said in a
loud, high voice, "Don't talk like this about my mother."
Dr. Lee, whose testimony was
the most colorful offered by the defense, gave the opinion that the
offense was committed during an acute schizophrenic reaction and that
the petitioner suffered from a multiple personality syndrome. It also
appeared during Dr. Lee's testimony that the
petitioner in 1946 while a citizen and resident of Hungary had been
hospitalized in a neuropsychiatric institution for several weeks.
None of these witnesses expressed an opinion with
respect to petitioner's competence to stand trial and plead guilty.
Their testimony quite understandably was directed to the issue of
responsibility for the crime.
The prosecution's witnesses, Drs.
Johnsen, Rappaport, and Shoor, testified along the lines set forth in
their earlier reports. Dr. Johnsen testified
that petitioner was "sane at the time of the commission of the alleged
crime and that he is presently sane." The testimony of
Dr. Rappaport indicated that petitioner was presently suffering
from no mental illness and was competent to cooperate with counsel and
to assist counsel in the presentation of a rational defense.
Dr. Shoor testified that petitioner displayed "some
suicidal thinking of the obsessional variety," but that he was "sane now
and at the time of the commission of the alleged offense."
The sanity phase of de
Kaplany's state trial came to an end after 28
days when the jury returned a verdict finding him sane at the time of
the commission of the crime. The penalty phase commenced four days later
and transpired without any incidents relevant to this proceeding. On
March 1, 1963, the jury returned a verdict of life imprisonment.
B. The Law.
The petitioner's contention regarding the state trial
court's failure to conduct a hearing to determine his competency to
stand trial rests upon Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375, 86 S.Ct. 836, 15
L.Ed.2d 815 (1966), as applied in Drope v. Missouri, 420 U.S. 162, 95
S.Ct. 896, 43 L.Ed.2d 103 (1975), Tillery v. Eyman, 492 F.2d 1056 (9th
Cir. 1974), and Moore v. United States, 464 F.2d 663 (9th Cir. 1972).
Before turning to examine these authorities the
standard by which competency to stand trial is measured should be stated.
In Dusky v. United States, 362 U.S. 402, 80 S.Ct. 788, 4 L.Ed.2d 824
(1960), the Supreme Court held that the "test must be whether he has
sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable
degree of rational understanding and whether he has a rational as well
as factual understanding of the proceedings against him." Id. An
orientation as to time and place and some recollection of events is not
enough.
In Pate v. Robinson, supra, the Court held that where
the evidence raises a "bona fide doubt" as to a defendant's competence
to stand trial, the trial judge on his own motion must empanel a jury
and conduct a hearing to determine competency to stand trial. In
determining whether the evidence before the trial judge in the state
proceedings in which Robinson was convicted should have entertained such
a "bona fide doubt," the Court reviewed the history of the events of
Robinson's life that it deemed relevant to the issue of Robinson's
competence5
and concluded that this evidence did entitle him to a hearing. The
failure to provide the hearing "deprived Robinson of his constitutional
right to a fair trial." 383 U.S. at 385, 86 S.Ct. at 842. As in Dusky,
the Court emphasized that courtroom demeanor, indicating alertness and
understanding, alone could not be relied upon to establish competency
and justify "ignoring the uncontradicted testimony of Robinson's history
of pronounced irrational behavior." Id. at 385-86, 86 S.Ct. at 842.
In Moore, an appeal from a district court's dismissal
of an application for Section 2255 relief, this court was confronted
with an applicant who had received a psychiatric examination under 18
U.S.C. § 4244. Even though the psychiatrist's report concluded that
Moore was competent to stand trial, it nonetheless consisted of a
recital of "an extensive history of mental illness, including
hospitalizations for psychiatric disorders and repeated suicide attempts."
464 F.2d at 665.6
In the face of this report, in which the psychiatrist's conclusion was
markedly at variance with the body of his report and extensive records
from the Federal Bureau of Prisons, we concluded that these reports "constituted
substantial evidence casting a reasonable doubt upon Moore's competency
to stand trial as a matter of law." Id. at 666.
In describing the principles of Pate v. Robinson we
stated:
"Under the rule of Pate v. Robinson (1966) 383 U.S.
375, 86 S.Ct. 836, 15 L.Ed.2d 815, a due process evidentiary hearing is
constitutionally compelled at any time that there is 'substantial
evidence' that the defendant may be mentally incompetent to stand trial.
'Substantial evidence' is a term of art. 'Evidence' encompasses all
information properly before the court, whether it is in the form of
testimony or exhibits formally admitted or it is in the form of medical
reports or other kinds of reports that have been filed with the court.
Evidence is 'substantial' if it raises a reasonable doubt about the
defendant's competency to stand trial. Once there is such evidence from
any source, there is a doubt that cannot be dispelled by resort to
conflicting evidence. The function of the trial court in applying Pate's
substantial evidence test is not to determine the ultimate issue: Is the
defendant competent to stand trial? It (sic) sole function is to decide
whether there is any evidence which, assuming its truth, raises a
reasonable doubt about the defendant's competency. At any time that such
evidence appears, the trial court sua sponte must order an evidentiary
hearing on the competency issue. It is only after the evidentiary
hearing, applying the usual rules appropriate to trial, that the court
decides the issue of competency of the defendant to stand trial." Id. at
666.
Tillery v. Eyman, 492 F.2d 1056 (9th Cir. 1974),
added nothing new to the Moore's formulation of the Pate standard and
the manner in which it should be applied. Tillery exhibited on frequent
occasions erratic and irrational behavior while in custody and in the
presence of the court. This behavior led one psychiatrist to question
his competency to stand trial while another thought him competent. The
state trial court judge and defense counsel appeared to have doubted
Tillery's competence although a contemplated additional psychiatric
examination appears never to have been made and no evidentiary hearing
was held. Id. at 1057-59. Obviously the failure to hold such a hearing
required that Tillery's petition for habeas corpus be granted.
Before applying these authorities to
de Kaplany's petition
one additional case of this circuit should be mentioned. It is
Laudermilk v. California Department of Corrections, 439 F.2d 1278 (9th
Cir. 1971). In that case a habeas petition was denied by the district
court and in affirming that denial we stated that we did so for the
reasons set forth in People v. Laudermilk, 67 Cal.2d 272, 61 Cal.Rptr.
644, 431 P.2d 228 (1967). In Laudermilk the petitioner had murdered his
wife after suspecting her of infidelity. Pursuant to California law, two
psychiatrists examined Laudermilk and reported inter alia that he had
been found by two or three psychiatric hospitals to be mentally ill "but
not psychotic and not in need of supervision, care and treatment," 61
Cal.Rptr. at 647, 431 P.2d at 231, that he appeared to be able to
understand his situation very well, that his intelligence was average,
and that he was sane when he committed the crime and was presently sane.
Thereafter counsel for Laudermilk moved that criminal proceedings be
suspended on the ground that Laudermilk was not competent to stand trial.
The state trial court denied the motion on the ground that the medical
reports did not lead "even to a suspicion" regarding Laudermilk's
competence but did agree to appoint another psychiatrist to examine him.
Before the third psychiatrist reported the trial
began with the guilt phase and, as in de
Kaplany's trial, aborted quickly with a guilty
plea. In Laudermilk's trial, however, the plea of not guilty by reason
of insanity was also withdrawn and the prosecutor and defendant
stipulated that the court fix the degree of crime as first degree.
Before fixing the penalty the state trial court
received the report of the third psychiatrist as well as that of a
fourth. The report of the third found Laudermilk able to ascertain right
from wrong to assist in his defense but possessing a paranoid
personality. It recommended that he be placed in an adequate psychiatric
facility under the jurisdiction of the penal system. The fourth
psychiatrist's report agreed Laudermilk had a paranoid personality but
was competent to stand trial. Upon Laudermilk's waiver of a jury trial
regarding the penalty and a recommendation of life imprisonment in an
appropriate psychiatric facility by the prosecutor and defense counsel,
the state trial court sentenced Laudermilk to life with the observation
that the prison authorities would be able to determine best where he
should serve his sentence.
Laudermilk appealed his conviction on the ground that
an evidentiary hearing on competence should have been conducted. He
relied particularly on People v. Pennington, 66 Cal.2d 508, 58 Cal.Rptr.
374, 426 P.2d 942 (1967), in which the Supreme Court of California said:
"Pate v. Robinson stands for the proposition that an
accused has a constitutional right to a hearing on present sanity if he
comes forward with substantial evidence that he is incapable, because of
mental illness, of understanding the nature of the proceedings against
him or of assisting in his defense. Once such substantial evidence
appears, a doubt as to the sanity of the accused exists, no matter how
persuasive other evidence testimony of prosecution witnesses or the
court's own observations of the accused may be to the contrary. . . . (W)hen
defendant has come forward with substantial evidence of present mental
incompetence, he is entitled to a section 1368 hearing as a matter of
right under Pate v. Robinson . . . ." Id. at 381, 426 P.2d at 949.
Laudermilk's reliance was premised on the contention
that Pennington required that only evidence indicating incompetence of
the accused to stand trial be marshaled to determine whether it amounted
to substantial evidence of incompetency. As Laudermilk read Pennington,
if such evidence was substantial a hearing was required no matter how
compelling was evidence to the contrary. Despite the fact that the
author of Pennington, Justice Peters, also interpreted it in this
fashion,7
the majority of the Supreme Court of California, after examining all the
pertinent evidence before the trial court, held that Laudermilk "did not
produce substantial evidence of present mental incompetence so that it
could be said that a doubt as to (Laudermilk's) present sanity was
raised in the mind of the trial judge and the latter was compelled to
order that the question as to defendant's sanity be determined by a
trial." 61 Cal.Rptr. at 653, 431 P.2d at 237.
Moreover, the Supreme Court of California indicated
that under Pate and Pennington "more is required to raise a doubt than
mere bizarre actions (citations omitted) or bizarre statements (citations
omitted) or statements of defense counsel that defendant is incapable of
cooperating in his defense (citations omitted) or psychiatric testimony
that defendant is immature, dangerous, psychopathic, or homicidal or
such diagnosis with little reference to defendant's ability to assist in
his own defense. (citations omitted)." Id. And finally it refused to
fragment the report of a psychiatrist focusing only on those features
indicating incompetence when on balance the psychiatrist had concluded
Laudermilk was competent to stand trial. 61 Cal.Rptr. 655, 431 P.2d at
239.
As we did on appeal from the denial of Laudermilk's
habeas petition, we once more approve these views of the Supreme Court
of California. Nor do we regard Moore and Tillery as inconsistent with
this approval. Two sentences in Moore, already set forth above at p.
981, have been advanced by de
Kaplany's counsel in this proceeding to support the view that
this circuit, in effect, has adopted the approach of Justice Peters.
These two are:
"Evidence is 'substantial' if it raises a reasonable
doubt about the defendant's competency to stand trial. Once there is
such evidence from any source, there is a doubt that cannot be dispelled
by resort to conflicting evidence."
We interpret these two sentences to mean nothing more
than that once good faith doubt exists, or should exist, its resolution
requires a hearing. These sentences do not mean that doubt necessarily
exists, and thus a hearing is required, because certain evidence exists
which would create a doubt were it not for other evidence which
precludes doubt. Genuine doubt, not a synthetic or constructive doubt,
is the measuring rod.8
The emergence of genuine doubt in the mind of a trial judge necessarily
is the consequence of his total experience and his evaluation of the
testimony and events of the trial.
Moreover, Pate and Drope teach that appellate review
of a failure to provide a hearing on competence to stand trial is
comprehensive and not limited by either the abuse of discretion or
clearly erroneous standard. The question to be asked by the reviewing
court is whether a reasonable judge, situated as was the trial court
judge whose failure to conduct an evidentiary hearing is being reviewed,
should have experienced doubt with respect to competency to stand trial.
C. The Evaluation.
In applying these principles to the failure of the
state trial court to conduct an evidentiary hearing on
de Kaplany's competency to stand trial
we shall focus on the three phases of his trial. With respect to the
guilt phase we cannot conclude that at anytime during this phase the
state trial court judge should have entertained a good faith doubt
concerning de Kaplany's
competency. The courtroom outburst described above cannot be considered
without also considering the reports of the three psychiatrists, the
apparent belief of defense counsel that his client was competent, and
the demeanor of de Kaplany
prior and subsequent to his outburst. It is important to remember that
the state court at no time was confronted with evidence of a long and
extensive history of irrational behavior and mental illness as in Pate,
Drope, and Moore. Nor was he, as in Tillery, confronted with a
psychiatric report which threw doubt on the defendant's competency to
stand trial. The absence of a good faith doubt as to competency at this
point in the trial was reasonable.
The sanity phase of the petitioner's trial poses a
more difficult issue. Framing the issue favorably to the petitioner, it
is whether the state trial court should not have entertained a good
faith doubt as to competence of petitioner to stand trial in the light
of the evidence introduced by the defense regarding petitioner's sanity
and all other relevant circumstances known to the court. We believe, and
so hold, that he should not have entertained such a good faith doubt.
To support this holding we point out that the
psychiatric testimony favorable to the petitioner presented during the
sanity phase was directed toward his responsibility under the criminal
law for the crime and not to his competency to stand trial. We are not
prepared to assert that in every trial in which the sanity of the
defendant is contested there must exist a good faith doubt which
requires a hearing on competency.9
Of course, where the testimony regarding sanity also suggests
incompetency the trial court must be alert to the possibility of having
to require a hearing on competency. While it may have been the case that
de Kaplany at the time
of his trial was suffering from a mental illness, we cannot say that the
evidence supporting this diagnosis, when placed in its context, which
includes psychiatric testimony suggesting sanity and no mental illness,
was sufficient to generate a good faith doubt about his competence to
stand trial.
We also are aware that during the sanity phase of a
trial the judge may well be reluctant to interrupt those proceedings to
conduct a competency hearing which generally will involve the testimony
of the same psychiatrists presently testifying with respect to sanity of
the defendant. This reluctance must not serve as an excuse to suppress
the emergence of a good faith doubt regarding competence; however, in
reviewing a failure to so interrupt the sanity phase, we must bear in
mind that a trial judge may be interested in hearing as much as he can
before he concludes that he does entertain a good faith doubt.
Little need be said concerning the penalty phase of
the petitioner's trial. Certainly the verdict of sanity, viewed in its
context, does not suggest a good faith doubt as to petitioner's
competence to stand trial. Nor did any event that occurred during this
phase of the trial so suggest.
Thus, we conclude that the district court properly
concluded that the failure of the state trial court to conduct a hearing
on the petitioner's competence to stand trial did not deny him his due
process right to a fair trial.
Validity of Guilty Plea.
The petitioner's contention that his mental illness
substantially impaired his ability to make a reasoned choice with
respect to whether to plead guilty rests on this court's decision in
Sieling v. Eyman, 478 F.2d 211 (9th Cir. 1973). There we held that a
defendant is not competent to plead guilty if a mental illness has
substantially impaired his ability to make a reasoned choice among the
alternatives presented to him and to understand the nature and
consequences of his plea. Id. at 215. Consistent therewith we also held
that trial courts should "assess a defendant's competency with specific
reference to the gravity of the decisions with which the defendant is
faced." Id.
While these holdings have been criticized both for
recognizing a state of semi-competence which permits a trial but denies
a defendant the opportunity to plea bargain, and for providing an
additional ground fraught with psychiatric uncertainties for collateral
attack on guilty pleas,10
we adhere to our position. Moreover, we recognize that at no time did
the state trial court focus its attention specifically on the issue
whether de Kaplany,
assuming he was competent to stand trial, also was competent to take the
serious step of surrendering certain fundamental constitutional rights
by pleading guilty. Under these circumstances in Sieling v. Eyman we
remanded the proceedings to the state court to resolve the question of
competency to plead guilty. We do not believe this form of relief is
always necessary or appropriate.
The hearing before the district court on this
petition was quite thorough with respect to competence to plead guilty.
Somewhat surprisingly, in view of the period of time that has elapsed
since de Kaplany's
trial, several of the psychiatrists who testified at the trial, as well
as petitioner's counsel at the trial, appeared and testified at the
hearing in the district court. As a result of the hearing the district
court concluded:
"Notwithstanding testimony by doctors at the present
habeas corpus hearing concerning their observations of petitioner after
his conviction and during his ultimate imprisonment, and their opinions
based thereon, we cannot say and are unable to find or conclude from the
evidence before us, considered as a whole, that petitioner in fact
lacked the requisite mental capacity to stand trial or that he in fact
lacked the requisite mental capacity to enter his plea of guilty, within
the meaning of the authorities cited, supra. Nor can we say or find that
petitioner's change of plea was involuntary because of coercion by his
attorney or otherwise. It may be noted that, according to the evidence,
petitioner was sufficiently aware, assertive and resistant to pressure
as to dismiss his first attorney and to engage other counsel to try his
case."
We have reviewed the record of the hearing and agree
with this conclusion. Due process does not require another hearing on
this issue nor would any useful purpose be served thereby. Under the
circumstances of this case we believe a retroactive determination of
competency to plead guilty not only is possible but also appropriately
was made by the district court. In expressing this view we do not intend
to suggest that where a retroactive determination is possible a remand
to the state court for such a determination is not usually a proper form
of relief. We only hold that under the circumstances of this case, the
petitioner suffers no deprivation of a constitutional right as a result
of the procedures we have adopted.11
Effectiveness of Counsel.
The petitioner strongly contends that his counsel at
the state trial provided ineffective assistance primarily because he did
not, during the guilt phase of the trial, plead "diminished capacity or
responsibility" (See People v. Gorsham, 51 Cal.2d 716, 336 P.2d 492
(1959); People v. Wells, 33 Cal.2d 330, 202 P.2d 53 (1949)) to the
offense, murder by torture, with which the petitioner was charged. It is
argued that such a plea would have placed upon the prosecution the
burden of proving no diminished capacity or responsibility while the
plea of guilty placed upon the petitioner the burden of establishing
insanity. As previously indicated, petitioner's counsel at the state
court trial in the hearing on this petition contended that he rejected
the plea of diminished capacity and urged a plea of guilty to eliminate
to the extent possible a presentation of evidence during the guilt phase
of the trial which would direct the jury's attention to the many days of
suffering endured by petitioner's wife before she died. Only in this
manner, petitioner's counsel at the state trial argued, could he hope to
save petitioner from a sentence of death.
Petitioner also contends that his counsel at the
state trial was ineffective because he did not ask for a hearing on
petitioner's competence to stand trial. Counsel in the district court
hearing responded by pointing out that he had no reason to doubt the
petitioner's competence to stand trial and that the reports of the
psychiatrists then available to him did not suggest incompetence.
Finally, petitioner contends that his counsel was
ineffective in that he failed to request a change of venue of the trial
to reduce the adverse impact of the publicity surrounding the case. Once
more counsel responded by pointing out that in his opinion a jury
selected from Santa Clara County, which sentenced the petitioner to life
imprisonment, served the interests of the petitioner better than one
from another county. Counsel avers that he believed at the time that
such a verdict was more likely in Santa Clara County than elsewhere.
There has never been a trial, certainly not one as
closely watched as was petitioner's, with respect to which there have
not been arguments between attorneys and others about the strategy
adopted by the opposing counsel. So it is in this case. Moreover, it is
understandable that one who is convicted, even though execution was
avoided, will forever ponder about what might have been had the strategy
been different.
Our task, however, is to measure the conduct of the
petitioner's counsel against the applicable standard. Whether we use the
standard of performance so poor and incompetent as to make the trial a
farce or mockery of justice (United States v. Stern, 519 F.2d 521, 524
(9th Cir. 1975); Wright v. Craven, 412 F.2d 915 (9th Cir. 1969);
Dalrymple v. Wilson, 366 F.2d 183, 185 (9th Cir. 1966)), or of whether
the circumstances show a denial of fundamental fairness (United States
v. Stern, supra, at 525; Mengarelli v. United States, 476 F.2d 617, 619
(9th Cir. 1973); Johnson v. Craven, 432 F.2d 418 (9th Cir. 1970)), or of
lack of effective aid in the preparation and trial of the case lack of
counsel likely to render and rendering reasonably effective assistance (Leano
v. United States, 457 F.2d 1208 (9th Cir. 1972); Brubaker v. Dickson,
310 F.2d 30, 37 (9th Cir. 1962)), the result is the same. Petitioner was
not deprived of the effective assistance of counsel. Thus we need not
choose between these standards.
Effect of Publicity or Right to Fair Trial.
Our holding with respect to the effectiveness of
petitioner's state trial counsel foreshadows our views with respect to
petitioner's contention that massive, pervasive, and prejudicial
publicity prevented him from receiving a fair trial. See Sheppard v.
Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333, 86 S.Ct. 1507, 16 L.Ed.2d 600 (1966). Petitioner
appears to recognize the insubstantiality of this argument by failing to
press it with any vigor either in the hearing in the district court or
in his arguments presented to us. Although the trial of
de Kaplany attracted
considerable attention from the press, radio, and television, we hold
the circumstances surrounding his trial do not reveal the existence of
the chaos and subordination of the judicial process to the demands of
media representatives that existed in Sheppard v. Maxwell.
de Kaplany received a
fair trial.
AFFIRMED.
*****
WALLACE, Circuit Judge (concurring).
I concur briefly. I have no disagreement with most of
my Brother Sneed's opinion; on the contrary, I join in his general
analysis as well as the result. My primary exception is to the
unnecessary en banc approval of our panel decision in Sieling v. Eyman,
478 F.2d 211 (9th Cir. 1973). Judge Sneed has called our attention to
the criticism leveled at the Sieling decision "both for recognizing a
state of semi-competence which permits a trial but denies a defendant
the opportunity to plea bargain, and for providing an additional ground
fraught with psychiatric uncertainties for collateral attack on guilty
pleas . . . ." Majority opinion, p. 985. For those reasons, I believe
Sieling was wrongly decided.
Since the facts of this case actually meet the more
stringent test of Sieling, they also meet a less restrictive standard.
Thus it is unnecessary and, in my judgment, improvident, to give Sieling
en banc approval here. See United States v. Demma, 523 F.2d 981, 987
(9th Cir. 1975) (Wallace, J., concurring and dissenting). Since the
majority has chosen to consider the continuing vitality of Sieling, I
therefore express my view that Sieling should be overruled.
HUFSTEDLER, Circuit Judge, dissenting, with whom
Circuit Judge ELY concurs.
My disagreement with the majority opinion stems not
from its restatement of the rule of Pate v. Robinson (1966) 383 U.S.
375, 86 S.Ct. 836, 15 L.Ed.2d 815, but from the majority's application
of the rule to the facts of this case. I believe that the majority
agrees that in determining whether a state trial court's failure to hold
a hearing on a criminal defendant's competence to stand trial violated
Pate, the district court in a habeas proceeding is confined to the
record before the state trial court made during the course of the state
criminal proceedings anteceding the petitioner's conviction and sentence,
unless the trial court record is not available, accurate, or complete.
A hearing for the purpose of taking evidence on matters that were not
before the state trial court is inappropriate; what was not before the
trial court is irrelevant to the issue of whether what was before the
trial court created a Pate doubt. Thus, testimony at the evidentiary
hearing before the district court from de
Kaplany's lawyer and from psychiatrists about
observations and events that were not part of the record before the
state trial court is irrelevant to the Pate issue before us.
In the state trial the evidence was not specifically
focused on de Kaplany's
competence to stand trial or to plead guilty.
Nevertheless, before the trial was over, a substantial amount of
information had been generated about his competency. The evidence was
conflicting. The doctors called by the prosecution testified that
de Kaplany was legally
sane; the defense doctors said that he was legally insane. The defense
doctors' terminology for their diagnoses varied ("paranoid-schizophrenic,"
"multiple personality" with "acute schizophrenic reaction"), but they
were in agreement that he was suffering from a serious mental disease
when he committed the acts. In the course of the reports and testimony,
some of the doctors referred to de
Kaplany's hospitalization for mental illness in
1946, his family history of mental illness, and his suicide attempt
while he was in jail awaiting trial. Dr. Shoor,
a prosecution witness, observed, as did the defense doctors, that
de Kaplany was
obsessively suicidal, but he concluded, as did the other doctors called
by the prosecution, that de
Kaplany was not suffering from any gross mental disorder, that he
was intelligent, alert and well oriented.
de Kaplany's
demeanor during the trial varied. When the guilt phase of the trial
began on January 14, 1963, he was mute, immobile and withdrawn. On the
second day, the prosecution exhibited a photograph of his nude wife
lying in the morgue. He jumped to his feet and lunged at the photograph
shouting "No, no, what did you do to her?" He was forcibly reseated and
restrained. The following day he changed his plea to guilty.
The trial court asked his defense counsel whether he
had explained the nature and consequences of the change of plea to his
client, and defense counsel answered affirmatively. The trial court then
addressed several perfunctory questions to de
Kaplany, inquiring whether he knew that he had
been indicted for murdering his wife, whether he had discussed the
matter with his counsel, and whether he fully understood the
consequences of his change of plea; de
Kaplany's answers are responsive but very brief:
"Yes, your Honor," "Yes, I did," "I do," "That's correct," and "It is."
The trial court did not pursue any further inquiry in an effort to
elicit fuller responses.
There was some evidence that de
Kaplany was delusional and occasionally
hallucinatory. Moreover, the nature and circumstances of his killing his
wife were sufficiently bizarre that an inference could be drawn that he
was mentally ill, at least at that time. de
Kaplany graduated from medical school in
Hungary in 1951. He earned a Ph.D. in 1954. He completed his residency
at Harvard University, taught anesthesiology at Yale, and was licensed
to practice medicine in four states including California. On August 28,
1962, shortly after de
Kaplany heard that his bride of five weeks had been unfaithful to
him, he bound and gagged her, cut her with a knife, and poured nitric
acid over her nude body. She survived for over a month and died from the
acid burns. The commission of this grisly killing by a person highly
trained in medicine strongly suggests that the perpetrator had sustained
some kind of mental breakdown.
In my view, the evidence indicating doubt about
de Kaplany's
competence was at least as strong, if not stronger, than that in both
Pate v. Robinson, supra, and in Drope v. Missouri (1975) 420 U.S. 162,
95 S.Ct. 896, 43 L.Ed.2d 103, in both of which the Supreme Court held
that a competency hearing was constitutionally compelled. The record is
unlike that in Laudermilk. (Laudermilk v. California Department of
Corrections (9th Cir. 1971) 439 F.2d 1278; People v. Laudermilk (1967)
67 Cal.2d 272, 61 Cal.Rptr. 644, 431 P.2d 228.) In Laudermilk, all four
psychiatrists concluded that Laudermilk was sane at the time of the
offense, able to assist in his defense, and knew the nature and purpose
of the proceedings against him. The only information arguably to the
contrary was his lawyer's conclusory statement that his client could not
assist in his own defense and a "psychiatric impression" by one of the
psychiatrists that Laudermilk had a "paranoid personality," although he
was not "overtly psychotic" and he was competent to stand trial. I agree
with the Laudermilk courts that this evidence was too fragile to create
a Pate doubt.
In de
Kaplany's case, the expert opinion bearing on competence divided
almost evenly. The majority opinion assigns no weight at all to the
expert opinion that de
Kaplany was overtly psychotic. It appears to assume that one set
of psychiatrists' opinions demolished substantial doubt of competency
created by another set of psychiatrists' opinions. In so doing, the
majority improperly undertakes the role, eschewed by the California
Supreme Court, of discarding expert opinion evidence "for mere
psychiatric speculation clearly outside our province." (Laudermilk v.
California Department of Corrections, supra, 61 Cal.Rptr. at 655, 431
P.2d at 239.) Moreover, it discards as readily all of the other evidence
that casts doubt upon his competence.
The totality of evidence raising doubt of
de Kaplany's
competence was at least as substantial as the evidence tending to dispel
doubt. Under these circumstances, the real doubt lingers and it could
not be resolved without a Pate hearing both to determine
de Kaplany's
competence to stand trial and to plead guilty.
I would reverse for Pate error and remand with
directions to grant the writ unless the State afforded
de Kaplany a new trial within a
reasonable time.
*****
1
In 1963 when de
Kaplany was tried, California utilized a
trifurcated trial procedure in capital cases where, as in
de Kaplany's case a
plea of "not guilty by reason of insanity" was joined to a plea of "not
guilty": (1) the guilt phase; (2) the sanity phase (Cal.Penal Code §
1026); and (3) the penalty phase (Cal.Penal Code § 190.1)
2
Subsequent to the district court's hearing denying
this petition, petitioner was granted parole by the California Adult
Authority. This does not moot the case. See Sibron v. New York, 392 U.S.
40, 88 S.Ct. 1889, 20 L.Ed.2d 917 (1968); Pollard v. United States, 352
U.S. 354, 77 S.Ct. 481, 1 L.Ed.2d 393 (1957); United States v. Morgan,
346 U.S. 502, 74 S.Ct. 247, 98 L.Ed. 248 (1954). The status of parolee,
though doubtless preferable to that of prisoner, still subjects
petitioner to a host of regulations and uncertainties for the term of
his parole, including the ever present threat that his parole may be
revoked. See Cal. Penal Code §§ 3053-3056, 3059-3062 (West 1972).
Additionally, a record of a conviction for a serious felony will likely
pose problems for petitioner which can only be solved by a vindication
of his innocence. These considerations bring the case within the rule
stated in United States v. Morgan, supra :
"Although the term has been served, the results of
the conviction may persist. Subsequent convictions may carry heavier
penalties, civil rights may be affected. As the power to remedy an
invalid sentence exists, we think, respondent is entitled to an
opportunity to attempt to show that this conviction was invalid." 346
U.S. at 512-13, 74 S.Ct. at 253.
3
The alleged crime for which petitioner was
subsequently convicted and imprisoned occurred on the evening of August
28, 1962. Petitioner was arrested and placed in custody the same day.
The victim, then petitioner's wife, did not die until September 30, 1962
On August 29, 1962, one day after petitioner's arrest,
Dr. Peschau, a psychiatrist, examined
petitioner in the county jail at the request of the District Attorney of
Santa Clara County.
On October 3, 1962, petitioner was indicted by the
Grand Jury of Santa Clara County and charged with the crime of murder by
torture (Petitioner having allegedly murdered his wife by pouring nitric
acid over her body), in violation of California Penal Code § 187. On
October 11, 1962, petitioner entered two pleas to this charge: (1) not
guilty, and (2) not guilty by reason of insanity.
On October 11, 1962, the trial court appointed three
psychiatrists Drs. Johnsen, Rappaport, and
Shoor, to examine petitioner and investigate his sanity. Pursuant to
said appointment, petitioner was examined by Drs.
Johnsen and Rappaport on October 14, October 31, and November 11, 1962,
and by Dr. Shoor on October 18, October 25, and
October 26, 1962. On November 11, 1962, Drs.
Johnsen and Rappaport filed their written reports with the trial court.
Dr. Shoor filed his report with the court on
February 8, 1962. (sic)
On December 13, December 14, and December 15, 1962,
petitioner was psychiatrically examined by a Dr.
Zaslow at the request of petitioner's defense counsel. On December 20,
1962, again at the request of defense counsel, petitioner was examined
by a Dr. Beaton. On December 27, and December
30, 1962, again at the request of defense counsel, petitioner was
examined by Dr. Lee.
On January 7, 1963, jury selection began and on
January 14, 1963, the guilt phase of petitioner's trial began. Two days
later, on January 16, 1963, petitioner was allowed by the trial judge
after a colloquy between petitioner and the court to change the first of
his pleas from not guilty to guilty.
The 28-day sanity phase of petitioner's trial began
on January 21, 1963, and lasted until February 21, 1963, when the jury
returned a verdict finding petitioner sane at the time of the commission
of the offense.
The penalty phase of the trial began four days later,
on February 25, 1963, and on March 1, 1963, the jury returned a verdict
of life imprisonment. Judgment and sentence were imposed on March 15,
1963.
4
It is well settled that the requirement of making a
record confirming the voluntariness of an accepted guilty plea mandated
by Boykin is not applied retroactively. Moss v. Craven, 427 F.2d 139,
140 (9th Cir. 1970). See also Scranton v. Whealon, 514 F.2d 99, 101 (6th
Cir. 1975); Winford v. Swenson, 517 F.2d 1114, 1117 (8th Cir. 1975).
Those pleas antedating Boykin are constitutionally tested against
whether they were "voluntarily and understandingly given in light of the
totality of the circumstances." Winford v. Swenson, supra at 1117. See
In Re Tahl, 1 Cal.3d 122, 127, 81 Cal.Rptr. 577, 460 P.2d 449 (1969).
Our review of the record convinces us not only that the trial court made
a creditable effort to assure itself that petitioner knowingly and
willingly entered his plea, but also that de
Kaplany was in fact aware of the potential
consequences of his plea and voluntarily accepted them. There is,
therefore, no constitutional infirmity in the manner in which the state
trial court judge accepted petitioner's guilty plea
5
The evidence pointing to possible incompetency came
from several sources and had great cumulative impact. The Supreme Court
noted that "The uncontradicted testimony of four witnesses called by the
defense revealed that Robinson had a long history of disturbed behavior."
383 U.S. at 378, 86 S.Ct. at 838. This history included confinement in a
mental institution following a violent fit in which he kicked a hole in
his mother's bar and tried to jump from a cab carrying him to the
hospital. The medical records at the hospital revealed that he suffered
from frightening hallucinations, and that his behavior suggested
schizophrenia
His irrational periods became even more violent. He
served four years in prison for an episode in which he shot and killed
his 18-month-old son and attempted suicide. Subsequently, he attacked
and seriously injured his mother's brother-in-law, causing her to swear
out a police warrant for his arrest. Finally, he was arrested for the
killing of the woman with whom he was living. This history, coupled with
the testimony of four witnesses that Robinson was insane and the
contention of Robinson's attorney that he was "presently insane," caused
the Supreme Court to conclude that a "bona fide" doubt regarding
Robinson's competency to stand trial should have arisen in the trial
judge's mind.
6
We described the report as follows:
"The psychiatrist's report reveals an extensive
history of mental illness, including hospitalizations for psychiatric
disorders and repeated suicide attempts. During his stay at the Federal
Medical Center, he was 'kept in isolation and developed visual
hallucinations.' In describing Moore's mental condition at the time of
the examination, the psychiatrist said: 'Abnormal mental trends were
manifested by self-destruction, mutilating behavior which occurs under
stressful conditions. . . . He panics and has engaged in dangerous
behavior to himself such as running before gunfire and swallowing razor
blades in an attempt to get into a more protective situation. His mood
swings are wide and rapid from deep depression and to euphoria in a
brief period . . . . His main problem is in sexual identity with fear of
both men and women and this leads to panic. He will continue to act out
both in custodial and psychiatric hospital placements. He feels that he
has nothing to lose and therefore engages in impulsive acting out and
controls the environment through his self-destructive acts.'
"The psychiatrist's diagnosis was that Moore's 'competency
will be subject to periods of impaired judgment during his panic
reactions,' that he has 'deep-seated emotional problems of long duration,'
and 'the prognosis is poor.' He nevertheless concluded that 'Moore is
presently sane and presently able to understand the proceedings taken
against him and to properly assist in his own defense.' The psychiatrist
did not undertake to offer any explanation for his ultimate conclusion."
464 F.2d at 665.
7
See Justice Peters' dissent in Laudermilk, 67 Cal.2d
272, 61 Cal.Rptr. 644, 655, 431 P.2d 228, 239
8
This interpretation of the "substantial evidence"
test is entirely consistent with the California approach exposited in
People v. Laudermilk, supra, and accepted by this court in Laudermilk v.
California Department of Corrections, supra. Far from demanding that the
trial judge accept all evidence indicating incompetency as true, the
California Supreme Court called attention to a situation in which the
trial court should be wary of uncritical acceptance of such evidence. In
regard to basing a finding of a reasonable doubt as to competency on the
contention of counsel for the accused that the defendant was incompetent
to stand trial, the Court said:
"The statement of defendant's counsel . . . made to
the court on the day of trial, while of some significance, in our view
cannot raise the requisite doubt and, even if considered in combination
with other evidence as we discuss infra, is of limited probative value.
. . . (W)hile not discounting statements of counsel in proper cases, we
hesitate to articulate a general rule requiring the trial court to grant
a section 1368 hearing in every instance where defense counsel reports
that his client is . . . unable to discuss the case. Such a rule would
be fraught with risk that the administration of justice would be
thwarted by defendant's refusing to cooperate with their counsel or
feigning incapacity to do so so as to obtain a section 1368 hearing." 61
Cal.Rptr. at 654, 431 P.2d at 238. (Emphasis added).
9
We find it significant that the California Supreme
Court has been similarly unwilling to equate proof of a history of
mental disorders with substantial evidence of incompetency at the time
of trial. In People v. Bievelman, 70 Cal.2d 60, 73 Cal.Rptr. 521, 447
P.2d 913 (1968), it was determined that "substantial evidence" had not
been adduced by a showing of seven occurrences of defendant speaking out
in court and one occasion of audible laughter, psychiatric testimony
that defendant was a narcotics addict and had recently attempted
suicide, and testimony of a second psychiatrist that defendant may have
been suffering from a mental disorder
This case was followed by Monroe v. State Bar of
California, 70 Cal.2d 301, 74 Cal.Rptr. 733, 450 P.2d 53 (1969). It was
there decided that even if the Pate v. Robinson standard applied to
attorney disciplinary hearings, a showing of "substantial evidence" was
not made by the production of evidence that petitioner had had a history
of psychiatric treatment and had been described in a post-trial
psychiatric report as "incapable of assisting in any defensive operation."
In reaching this conclusion the Court dismissed out of hand the
suggestion that prior psychiatric treatment constituted "substantial
evidence," and held that the post-trial report did not address the
fundamental question of whether defendant was competent at the time of
trial because it did not specify either what was meant by "defensive
operation," or whether defendant's period of incapacity included the
time of trial. The Court thus indicated that only evidence having strong
probative impact relevant to the defendant's competence at the time of
trial will require the trial court to conduct sua sponte a hearing on
defendant's competency to stand trial.
People v. Coogler, 71 Cal.2d 153, 77 Cal.Rptr. 790,
454 P.2d 686 (1969), the latest California Supreme Court opinion dealing
with this issue, contains the strongest statement that evidence of
incompetency is not "substantial" unless directed to the defendant's
condition at the time of trial. In that case a psychiatrist testified
that the defendant had frequently experienced "contemporaneous
disassociation reactions," which caused "basic rearrangements of the
mind to the point that there is impairment of consciousness in that
several areas of the mind that are normally available and participate in
mental work are rendered unavailable or are walled off. These parts that
are . . . rendered unavailable are typically those things that have to
do with either a particular set of standards or attitudes or a set of
restrictions or set of controls that normally are effective and
operative." The psychiatrist further testified that defendant had a mild
memory impairment and appeared to be chronically depressed. The
consequence of these mental disorders was that defendant, though "superficially
intact as to his emotional control and intellect," could become "acutely
psychotic." The doctor explained that defendant's psychotic state could
be accompanied by "intellectual impairment involving the ability to
perceive accurately or be aware of what is occurring," or by "impairment
of emotional reactions, either experiencing no feelings or experiencing
excessive feelings," or both. The psychiatrist's testimony indicated
that when the defendant experienced a disassociation reaction he would
encounter difficulty concentrating, and "the slightest sound or sight
would irritate him greatly; at times he enters a state of uncontrollable
rage and becomes destructive of property. When he emerges from one of
these spells he can recollect little or nothing of what has occurred."
The psychiatrist concluded that defendant suffered from either organic
brain damage similar to psychomotor epilepsy, or from a functional
disorder, or from both.
The defendant also offered into evidence the
following: the testimony of a neurologist that the defendant's past
behavior suggested an organic dysfunction of the mental process
involving impairment of intellect and memory; the results of tests
administered by a clinical psychologist which indicated both organic
brain damage and that defendant was a borderline schizophrenic who could
become psychotic for periods of time under stress; and the testimony of
a former chaplain of a prison in which defendant was incarcerated that
defendant had told him that he had spells of rage which he could not
later remember.
Notwithstanding this impressive accumulation of
evidence to the effect that defendant was subject to periods of mental
incapacity, the California Supreme Court declined to hold that the trial
court was required to order a competency hearing on its own motion. As
it said:
"Having reviewed the record, we find no substantial
evidence tending to show that defendant did not understand the nature of
the proceedings against him or was unable to assist in his own defense;
defense counsel does not contend that the trial court should have
ordered a hearing under section 1368. Defendant's alleged mental
disability at the times of the commission of the crimes avowedly stemmed
from a contemporaneous disassociation reaction; the record does not show
that defendant experienced any such reaction during the proceedings
against him." 71 Cal.2d at 168 n. 7, 77 Cal.Rptr. at 799, 454 P.2d at
695.
It is clear from these cases that the California
Supreme Court's "substantial evidence" test requires the evidentiary
showing to be directed to the question of defendant's competency at the
time of trial ; a history of mental disorders, or evidence showing a
present disorder which does not bear on defendant's competency to stand
trial, is not enough.
10
1974 Duke L.J. 149 (1974)
11
In Pate the Supreme Court emphasized the difficulty
of conducting a fair post-conviction hearing on the defendant's
competency at trial. The Court there reasoned that the inability of the
jury to observe the demeanor of the accused, the fact that expert
testimony would have had to have been based solely on the printed
record, and the six-year lapse between the time of trial and the
proposed post-conviction hearing combined to compromise such a hearing
beyond redemption. 383 U.S. at 387, 86 S.Ct. 836. Similar situations
have since been recognized in which considerations like these, which
inevitably cloud hearings held to determine the existence and nature of
past states of mind, have rendered ineffectual retrospective hearings
and thereby necessitated new trials. See Drope v. Missouri, supra at
183, 95 S.Ct. 896; Moore v. United States, supra, at 666-67; Tillery v.
Eyman, supra at 1059. However, even recognizing as we do the
difficulties inherent in nunc pro tunc hearings held for this purpose,
we do not believe that they are necessarily unmanageable. See Nathaniel
v. Estelle, 493 F.2d 794, 798 (5th Cir. 1974); Bruce v. Estelle, 483
F.2d 1031, 1038 (5th Cir. 1973); Lee v. Alabama, 386 F.2d 97, 108 (5th
Cir. 1967) (en banc). The threshold question is whether the
circumstances surrounding the case permit a fair retrospective
determination of the defendant's competency at the time of trial
We conclude that such a determination was possible
here. Although many years passed between the trial and the hearing,
several key expert witnesses whose testimony was featured at the trial
were able to attend the hearing, as was defendant's trial counsel.
Additionally, many pages of expert testimony, prepared for the trial and
addressed to the issue of defendant's competency at the time of trial,
were available at the hearing. In light of the presence of these key
evidentiary items, it is not unreasonable to conclude that a fair
retroactive hearing could be and was conducted.