Petitioner Duane Gilbert appeals from a district court judgment denying habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The Kentucky Supreme Court had previously upheld Gilbert’s convictions on two counts of robbery, one count of kidnapping and one count of rape. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
At 1:00 P.M. on April 2, 1976, an armed robber confronted Janie Watson, who was working at the Foto Fair store in Gardiner Lane Shopping Center located in Louisville, Kentucky. The robber instructed Watson to take a bag of money to his car. She complied but refused to enter the vehicle. As the robber drove away, Watson observed the license plate number and then called the police.
*823 Detective O’Brien investigated and discovered that the license plate was registered to a car belonging to Carolyn Jones on Lake Storm Street. O’Brien went to the Lake Storm address but the ear was not present. O’Brien then canvassed the neighborhood and learned that the petitioner lived with Jones. Having obtained this information, O’Brien prepared a photo array and presented it to Watson. She identified the petitioner as the robber.
Meanwhile, another Foto Fair store in Louisville was robbed at 2:40 P.M. on April 2, 1976. After taking money the assailant ordered a female employee into the front seat of his car. The assailant drove the employee to a secluded wooded area and raped her. At 3:30 P.M., the victim appeared both disrobed and crying hysterically at a nearby home. The home owner called the police. The victim subsequently identified the petitioner’s photograph.
The police returned to the Lake Storm address without a warrant sometime after 4:30 P.M. They entered and arrested the petitioner, who was in the shower. A gun and money were discovered lying on a table.
At trial, the following colloquy occurred during direct examination between the prosecutor and the arresting officer:
Q: Did you place him under arrest?
A: Yes, sir, we did, and advised him of his constitutional rights at that time.
Q: Did he make any statements to you?
A: No, sir, he didn’t.
The petitioner did not object to either question or answer. During final argument, the prosecutor argued for the maximum sentence and referred to the availability of parole. The petitioner did not object to either of these statements.
The petitioner also moved for a directed acquittal on the kidnapping charge because of insufficient evidence and because KRS § 509.050 precluded a kidnapping conviction. The motion for directed acquittal was denied. The Kentucky Supreme Court also rejected the argument that KRS § 509.050 precluded a conviction for kidnapping under the facts of this case.
See Gilbert v. Commonwealth,
On this appeal, the petitioner makes the following arguments: (1) the Kentucky courts neither afforded him a full and fair opportunity to litigate the validity of the arrest and search at the Lake Storm address nor decided the Fourth Amendment issue correctly, (2) the prosecutor violated
Doyle v. Ohio,
II.
Gilbert initially contends that the arrest and search at the Lake Storm address were invalid under
Payton v. New York,
Despite the retroactivity of
Payton,
federal review of Gilbert’s Fourth Amendment challenge to the arrest and subsequent search is barred if the state provided a full and fair opportunity to litigate the claim.
Stone v. Powell,
The petitioner does not claim that the state failed to provide a mechanism by which Fourth Amendment claims could be
*824
raised. Moreover, the Kentucky Supreme Court’s opinion in
Gilbert v. Commonwealth,
Gilbert contends that the Kentucky Supreme Court egregiously misapplied
Pay-ton
and that this court, like the Tenth Circuit in
Gamble,
should reach the merits. We disagree. This court in
Riley
declined to adopt that portion of
Gamble
permitting federal review of egregious substantive errors committed by state courts on Fourth Amendment claims.
Gilbert’s second claim is that the prosecutor violated
Doyle v. Ohio
when he asked the arresting officer on direct examination whether Gilbert had made any statement after receiving the
Miranda
warnings. Since the petitioner did not object, however, he must demonstrate cause and prejudice,
see, e.g., Wainwright v. Sykes,
The record shows that the state argued both the merits of the
Doyle
claim and Gilbert’s procedural default in its brief before the Kentucky Supreme Court. In its
Gilbert
opinion, the Kentucky Supreme Court did not discuss the
Doyle
problem. Instead the Court rejected Gilbert’s
Doyle
claim and certain other claims with the words, “the other assertions of error are without merit.”
This court has held that the use of the word “merit” in such a conclusory denial of .a claim does not indicate whether the state court reached the merits, relied upon the procedural default or did both.
See Raper v. Mintzes,
if the prosecutor argued in the alternative, the federal court may assume that the state court did not rely solely on the merits unless it says so. [Citation omitted.]
Id.
In that situation, the procedural default bars consideration of the habeas petitioner’s claim unless cause and prejudice is shown.
See Hockenbury v. Sowders,
We acknowledge that if the recent decision of this court in
Meeks v. Bergen,
*825 The conceptual problem underlying the Meeks opinion is reflected in the following language:
Where, as here, the state has argued in the alternative, Raper teaches that the federal courts may assume that the state court did not rely solely upon either the merits or the procedural grounds.
[Emphasis supplied.]
It should have made no difference in
Meeks
that the Michigan courts sometimes review the merits of defendants’ claims despite the presence of procedural defaults.
Gilbert’s third claim is that the prosecutor’s statements urging the jury to impose the maximum sentence, and referring to the availability of parole, rendered the entire trial fundamentally unfair.
See, e.g., Stumbo v. Seabold,
Gilbert counters that despite his failure to object to the prosecutor’s comments, the cause and prejudice test does not apply and this court may review the prosecutor’s comments for plain error.
See Cook v. Bordenkircher,
Gilbert’s fourth claim is that KRS § 509.050 precluded a conviction for kid *826 napping. The Kentucky Supreme Court held otherwise, however, in Gilbert. Since the construction of KRS § 509.050 is purely a question of state law, the Kentucky Supreme Court’s decision is binding on this court.
Finally, Gilbert contends that viewing the evidence on the kidnapping charge in the light most favorable to the government, no rational fact-finder could have found the evidence sufficient to support a conclusion of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Jackson v. Virginia,
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
