James Barber was convicted in the County Court, Westchester County, of Murder in the Second Degree, Arson and Grand Larceny. The judgment of conviction was affirmed by the Appellate Division, Second Department,
People v. Barber,
Barber petitions for a writ of habeas corpus on the grounds that: (1) the admission of certain testimony violated his right to confront the witnesses against him; (2) the jury instructions on reasonable doubt were constitutionally defective; (3) the delay in bringing him to trial violated his constitutional right to a speedy trial; and (4) extra-record information and misleading remarks in the State’s appellate brief deprived him of due process.
The State answers that: (1) Barber waived his right to federal habeas review because in his petition for certiorari to the United States Supreme Court he failed to raise certain of the claims presented here; (2) Barber waived his claim under the Confrontation Clause by his failure to make an objection on that basis at trial; (3) the jury instructions were proper; (4) the delay in bringing Barber to trial was not the State’s fault; and (5) the State’s brief to the Appellate Division was proper.
1. The Petition for Certiorari
The State’s contention that Barber waived certain claims by not raising
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them in his petition for certiorari is without merit. In the first place, a habeas petitioner is not required to present any claims to the United States Supreme Court prior to filing a petition for habeas corpus. Secondly, the waiver doctrine of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
2. The Confrontation Clause Claim
Barber claims that the introduction of certain testimony at trial violated his right to confront the witnesses against him. The most significant item of testimony to which Barber objects is the testimony of the victim’s friend that the victim had told her that she was “very, very afraid” of Barber. At trial, counsel objected on grounds of hearsay. The objection was overruled on the basis that the statement was not offered for its truth but only as evidence of the victim’s state of mind. (Transcript at 179).
The State contends that the confrontation claim was waived because Barber objected to the admission of the evidence only on grounds of hearsay.
New York takes a “stringent” approach to the contemporaneous objection rule,
People v. Jones,
Barber contends that an objection on grounds of hearsay is “sufficiently specific to focus attention” upon a confrontation clause claim.
See People v. Jones, supra.
We disagree. As the New York cases cited above demonstrate, New York requires that objections at trial be specific. While there is substantial overlap between the evidentiary rules of hearsay and the constitutional right of confrontation, the two doctrines are not identical.
See Ohio v. Roberts,
Finally, Barber’s contention that the State may not argue waiver before this Court because it did not make a similar argument before the Appellate Division is without merit. There is no requirement that the State “exhaust” issues before state appellate courts as a condition of presenting them to a federal habeas court.
Washington v. Harris,
However, in the instant action, the State’s brief to the Appellate Division does not discuss the confrontation claim at all. The State’s failure to argue that a claim has been waived, in the context in which the claim is not discussed at all, is entirely different from Washington, in which the State defended the claim on the merits at the Appellate Division, without arguing waiver, and then defended against the claim on waiver grounds in federal court.
Our conclusion that Barber has waived his right to present his confrontation claim in this habeas proceeding should not be taken as an endorsement of the ruling of the trial court. To the contrary, we see no basis for the trial court’s ruling that the statement was admitted only for the light it cast on the victim’s state of mind. The fact that the victim feared the defendant would not appear relevant unless it were true that the defendant had given her reason to fear him.
Since Barber has shown neither cause nor prejudice for his failure to make a proper objection to the admission of the evidence, the Confrontation Clause claim may not be considered.
3. The Speedy Trial Claim
Barber contends that the nearly two-year delay between his arraignment and his trial constitutes a violation of his constitutional right to a speedy trial. The State answers that the delay was Barber’s fault because more than eighteen months pre-trial time was consumed by Article 78 proceedings initiated by Barber to appeal a ruling of the trial court allowing the State access to certain evidence.
In
Barker v. Wingo,
The length of the delay in
Barker,
over five years, was described by the Supreme Court as “extraordinary” and “presumptively prejudicial.”
Id.
at 533, 530,
The reason for the delay, the time necessary to conduct a hearing and deliver a ruling on the motion, does not appear to have been chargeable to the prosecution, but rather seems to be a function of the unfortunate congestion of court dockets. The Court in
Barker
stated that “[a] more neutral reason such as ... overcrowded courts should be weighted less heavily but nevertheless should be considered since the ultimate responsibility for such circumstances must rest with the government rather than with the defendant.”
Id.
at 531,
With respect to the third factor, Barber’s assertion of his right, we noted that Barber not only filed a pro se motion for a speedy trial, but also filed a complaint with the Bar Association Grievance Committee concerning the delay. We view Barber’s conduct as constituting a strong assertion of his right to a speedy trial.
The final factor, prejudice to the defendant, encompasses both the anxiety and concern of the defendant and the impairment of his defense.
Id.
at 532,
Balancing the four factors discussed above, we conclude that Barber’s right to a speedy trial was not violated. Although the delay was substantial, and although Barber pursued his right to a speedy trial during the delay, the fact that his defense was not impaired is critical. Although we recognize that the speedy trial provision of the Constitution is aimed at protecting against the anxiety of pre-trial incarceration as well as possible impairment of the defense, we do not believe that where, as here, the delay was not extraordinary and the reasons for the delay are not attributable to an intent to hamper the defense or even to prosecutorial negligence, the anxiety and concern of the defendant alone is not sufficient to warrant a finding that the requirement of a speedy trial has been violated. Moreover, the prejudice inherent in pre-trial delay is at least to some extent vitiated (in a case in which a defendant’s defense was not impaired but in which he is ultimately convicted) by the ordinary practice of the state courts in crediting the imposed sentence for time served pre-trial.
Accordingly, the claim based on the right to a speedy trial is denied.
4. The State’s Brief to the Appellate Division
Barber contends that his right to due process was violated by prejudicial statements in the State’s brief to the Appellate Division. In particular, Barber complains that the brief contained a discussion of his confession to a clergyman, which the trial court has held inadmissible.
Barber is correct that there appears to be no substantial justification for the State to have included the confession in its appellate brief. However, the confession was not the focus of the brief: it appeared in a footnote on the thirteenth page. More importantly, Barber’s argument implies that there is a danger that the judges of the Appellate Division were unable to consider the legal questions raised by the appeal without being swayed by their knowledge of the confession. The suggestion is without merit: the state courts are as capable as the federal courts of disregarding prejudicial but irrelevant facts when adjudicating legal questions.
The remainder of Barber’s contentions concerning the appellate brief consist of claimed exaggerations on the State’s part in its characterization of the trial record. Having reviewed the briefs and the trial transcript, we conclude that none of the claimed exaggerations rises to the level of a due process violation.
5. The Reasonable Doubt Charge
Barber contends that the charge to the jury on reasonable doubt was defective in that the trial court instructed that:
“A reasonable doubt can be said to be such a doubt for which a reasonable man or woman of reasonable intelligence can give some good reason for entertaining if called upon to give such a reason.”
(Transcript at 937). Barber also asserts that the jury should not have been instructed that a reasonable doubt must be based on a “sound” reason. (Transcript at 1063).
Both of the instructions to which Barber objects have been upheld by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. See
United States v. Davis,
Accordingly, the charge on reasonable doubt is not constitutionally defective.
For the reasons stated above, Barber’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is denied.
*1297 A certificate of probable cause is granted as to the confrontation and speedy trial claims.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Although the point is not raised by Barber, we note that New York does not deem the rights assured by the Confrontation Clause to be so fundamental as to be unwaivable. See
People v. Qualls,
