*250 On Remand from the Supreme Court of the United States
I.
This cause has been remanded to us by the Supreme Court _ U.S. _,
II.
On remand, Petitioner Hill urges us to apply Clemons to affirm his petition. In addition, he asserts a claim, previously unaddressed by this court, that the state trial court erred in refusing to charge the jury on lesser included offenses.
A. Clemons
Hill asserts that Clemons is fully applicable to his case and requires us to affirm his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The Attorney General of the State of Mississippi argues that the precedent of this Circuit forecloses the application of Clemons to this case. The Attorney General is correct.
Panels of the Fifth Circuit twice have ruled that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Clemons
constitutes a new rule of law under
Teague v. Lane,
B. Lesser Included Offense Instruction
1. Background
Hill urges us to consider his claim that the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury in the guilt phase of his trial that it could convict him of the lesser included offenses of simple murder or manslaughter. He asserts this failure violated the eighth amendment and the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment.
See Beck v. Alabama,
2. Proceedings
In the guilt phase of his trial, Hill requested that the jury be instructed on the lesser included offenses of simple murder and manslaughter. The trial court refused *251 to give these instructions. Hill asserts that this refusal constitutes reversible constitutional error under Beck and Cordova. He is mistaken.
In order for a defendant in a capital trial to be constitutionally entitled to instruction on a lesser included offense, he must show that a “rational juror, given all the facts, [could acquit him] of capital murder and [convict] him of a lesser included offense.”
Cordova,
Instructions D-9 and D-10 would have authorized the jury to convict Hill of murder or manslaughter. Instruction D-8-A gives the form of verdict for such lesser included offenses.
The circuit judge refused these instructions. No error was committed by the trial judge’s refusal to grant these instructions.
The testimony of Gregory Tucker made out a case of a planned and preconceived robbery by Hill, Milam, and himself, in which Hill was leader and chief actor.
After hijacking the truck, Hill marched Watkins off into the edge of the woods where his body was later found, and shot him in the back of the head. Tucker heard several shots. As Hill was taking Watkins from the truck to the woods, Tucker heard Watkins begging for his life.
Counsel now argues the robbery took place before the murder. Of course, the record reveals the murder took place during the execution of the robbery. Furthermore, as we stated in Pickle v. State,345 So.2d 623 (Miss.1977):
If the crime of capital murder could not be sustained unless the homicide occurred during the actual attack upon a victim or during the actual burglary, kidnapping, arson or robbery, such could be an inducement for an assailant to kill his victim after the commission of the first crime in order to silence her/him as a witness. The rule stated in the foregoing cases is the more reasonable, and we hold that where the two crimes are connected in a chain of events and occur as part of the res gestae, the crime of capital murder is sustained. Id. at 626-27.
Hill v. State,
We find no factual or legal error in the Mississippi court’s analyses which are fully supported by the adequate record in this case. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). There was no constitutional error in the state trial court's denial of lesser included offense instructions.
III.
We reinstate our previous judgment.
Hill v. Black,
