Eugene Wallace Perry appeals the denial of his second petition for habeas corpus. ■ After conducting two evidentiary heаrings the district court 2 denied his successive petition. We affirm.
Perry was convicted and sentenced" to death for the 1980 murders of Kenneth Sta-ton and Suzanne Ware who were robbed and shоt in their jewelry store in Van Burén, Arkansas. After pursuing relief in state court, Perry filed a petition for habeas corpus in federal court in 1983, which was deniеd.
Perry v. Lockhart,
After he filed an appeal from the denial of his second petition, Perry submitted two additional documents. One was an affidavit of Mark Gardener, who is also on dеath row, which stated that some evidence implicating Perry had been fabricated. The second was the sworn statement of Marion Pruett, which contained essentially the same information that had been submitted in his earlier unsworn statements. The case was then remanded to the district сourt so it could consider whether further proceedings were necessary to examine this material. The district court found the Gardener аffidavit contained false statements and held a hearing regarding Pruett’s new statement. At that hearing, Pruett refused to testify. The district court then concluded that neither the Gardener affidavit nor Pruett’s sworn statement would affect its earlier decision.
Perry contends that Pruett’s statement provеs that he is actually innocent of the murders and therefore there is no prece-dential bar to consideration of the constitutional violations alleged in his second habeas petition. 3 Perry also claims he is entitled to amend his second habeas petition.
A petitiоn for a writ of habeas corpus will be examined even if otherwise procedurally barred if the petitioner is able to demonstrate that a miscarriage of justice would occur were the petition not considered. This exception requires the petitioner to prеsent new reliable evidence of his innocence and to prove that no reasonable juror would have found him guilty.
Schlup v. Delo,
The district court found Pruett’s sworn statement and unsworn statements unreliable, and there was much evidence to support this finding. Pruett, who is on death row in Arkansas for kidnapping and murder, has been convicted of murder in two other states and has confessed to other killings and other violent crimes. Pruett has sought payment for his testimony, and there is evidence that he seeks attention and wealth from his story, including a television appearance and a contract to publish a book about these murders. Pruett’s statement is not credible on its face for it includes an enormous amount of detail not normally found in statements of past experience.
4
The unsworn statements were made nine years after the murders (the sworn statement was made fifteen years after the murders). All of the detail contained in the statements was either part of the trial record reflected in the transcript or could have been obtained from Perry, who had opportunities tо discuss the murders with Pruett. Finally, the government was not
There was a large amount of evidence in the record demonstrating Perry’s guilt. Perry’s defense was that he was not in Arkansas when the murders were committed, but there was considerable evidence to the contrary. Perry was identified as being in the parking lot of the shopping cеnter where the murders took place on the day of the murders. He was identified as carrying a gun and rope with him as he left an Arkansas campsite he had been staying at one or two days before the murders. A witness testified that Perry returned to the campsite after the murders with two bags of jеwelry. Police investigation of the campsite and a camper that a witness said had been at the campsite revealed a jеwelry tag and other things from the store. ' A witness testified she had dropped Perry off at a local hotel on the day of the murders, and the poliсe found a matchbook from that hotel in the searched camper. When arrested, Perry had on him two rings that had been taken from the store.
The district court did not err in denying Perry’s petition because he failed to demonstrate that no reasonable juror would find him guilty of the murder of Kenneth Staton and Suzanne Ware.
See Schlup v. Delo,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Garnett Thomas Eisele, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. At oral argument, Perry's attorney stated that his claim of actual innocence was not presented to provide an independent basis for habeas relief. Had Peny made that argument, it would fail since he has not satisfied the lesser burden necessary to provide a gateway through which his habeas petition could be considered. He therefore could not meet the higher standard necessary to support any free-standing claim.
See Schlup v. Delo,
. For example, Pruett's statement contains detailed information on the precise location of a motorсycle parked near the jewelry store where the murders took place, the pattern and condition of the tablecloth that was used to muffle the sound of the gun, the clothes the victims were wearing, the jewelry taken from the victims' persons and the jewelry left on their bodies.
. Pеrry did not attempt to show cause and prejudice to excuse his failure to raise the claims earlier. They were not raised in his first petition, and he filed the amendments nearly five years after submitting his second petition and over two years after the first evidentiary hearing on that petition.
