In this habeas corpus case the district court held that petitioner’s guilty plea to an enhancement charge constituted a waiver of the constitutional errors he now asserts. We affirm.
Petitioner’s 1968 conviction for murder was reversed because of an improper jury argument.
Kemph v. State,
On appeal from a denial of habeas corpus relief, petitioner claims one conviction was invalid because he was at the time a 20-year old juvenile in Kansas, the state of the conviction. The guilty plea and stipulation prevent petitioner from raising an independent claim relating to the prior conviction.
Tollett v. Henderson,
No claim of ineffective assistance of counsel was presented to the district court, so we do not consider this argument here.
Cf. Lumpkin v. Ricketts,
Petitioner further contends Texas’ enhancement statute, Tex.Penal Code Ann. tit. 3, § 12.42(d) (Vernon 1974), requires that the prior offense be of a “like” character. This claim involves a state’s interpretation of its own statute, and “does not raise a federal constitutional claim cognizable in habeas corpus.”
Stuckey v. Stynchcombe,
AFFIRMED.
