Quigg appeals the denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Petitioner Gary Quigg was convicted by a Montana state court of the first-degree murder of Billings businessman Lee Robbins in April 1969. Robbins was shot and killed on the night of April 8, 1968, in an unpopulated area near the Billings airport in what apparently began as an armed robbery. Officers found no physical evidence at the scene. The car which Robbins had been driving was found early the next morning in a downtown Billings parking lot.
The rather strong facts pointing circumstantially to the guilt of Quigg are set forth exhaustively in the opinion of the Montana Supreme Court, infra. We summarize only the salient features. Robbins died from two gunshot wounds to the head which were inflicted by .22 caliber bullets. A .22 caliber pistol which Robbins had kept in his car was missing after the robbery. Quigg was first suspected of involvement in August 1968, when bullets which had killed a guard dog in an unrelated burglary of a bar were compared with the bullets which had killed Robbins. Investigators determined that the same gun which had been used in the Robbins homicide had been used in the bar robbery. The gun used in the bar robbery was eventually traced to Quigg.
Quigg’s first trial in January 1969, resulted in a hung jury. Upon retrial in April 1969, Quigg was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. The prosecution relied upon a chain of circumstantial evidence in pursuing Quigg’s conviction. It apparently was Quigg’s custom to go to the Billings airport on certain evenings at around 10:00 p. m. to pick up a friend who worked there. Robbins’ body was discovered at 10:50 p. m. on the evening of the murder. Other evidence established that Quigg was in possession of a number of pills shortly after the robbery which conceivably could have been taken from Robbins, a legitimate drug salesman, and that Quigg also was in possession of a large amount of cash at about the same time. Quigg’s possession of the murder weapon was also stressed.
Quigg offered an explanation at trial for possession of the pistol. Quigg testified that he had discovered the gun in a paper sack in a parking lot after observing two men who might have been Indians put the sack down after arguing. Though Quigg could not remember the exact date when he discovered the gun, his testimony indicated that he might have found the pistol the same week that Robbins was murdered. Quigg also emphasized at trial the lack of any leg cast fragments, either at the scene of the murder or in Robbins’ car. Quigg was wearing a full leg cast at the time of the murder.
After his conviction, Quigg prosecuted an unsuccessful appeal to the Montana Supreme Court
(State v. Quigg,
II. ISSUES ON APPEAL
Quigg raises three issues on appeal from denial of his federal habeas corpus petition:
(1) Whether the prosecution’s inquiry during his state trial into his failure to give an exculpatory story to police officers now justifies granting habeas corpus relief;
(2) Whether the giving of an aiding and abetting instruction at the state trial was unconstitutionally prejudicial;
(3) Whether the state court’s refusal to reopen the trial on the basis of newly-discovered evidence justifies federal habeas corpus relief.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The district court below held an evidentiary hearing to evaluate Quigg’s claim for relief. Its findings may not be overturned unless we find them to be “clearly erroneous.”
Greenfield v. Gunn,
IV. SILENCE AS TO ALIBI
In a criminal prosecution, it is an error of constitutional proportions to admit evidence that a defendant chose to exercise the right to remain silent after arrest.
Doyle v. Ohio,
During its cross-examination of Quigg at the second trial, the prosecution probed Quigg’s story of discovering the .22 caliber pistol in a sack. Quigg was first asked whether he had told various acquaintances of finding the gun in the sack, and Quigg responded that he had not. The prosecutor then posed the following question:
“Q. And you didn’t tell the police when you were arrested about seeing these Indians put the sack in the lot?
“A. No, I didn’t.”
(Trial Tr. 638, C.R. 66). 1
Quigg’s counsel did not object to the question. There was no direct evidence presented below whether the prosecution mentioned Quigg’s response during closing argument. 2 After hearing brief and inconclusive evidence on the issue, the court found that the prosecution had not commented to the jury on Quigg’s failure to relate his explanation of how he came to possess the gun to the police. The court further held that the question was harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt. 3 We agree.
In
Anderson v. Nelson,
*1111 The finding of the court below that Quigg’s response was not stressed to the jury as a basis for conviction was not clearly erroneous. Accordingly, we find that under the Anderson standards, the single question on Quigg’s post-arrest silence was, by itself, harmless. Defense counsel neither objected nor requested a curative instruction, 4 and evidence of Quigg’s guilt was substantial. The court did not err in refusing to grant habeas corpus relief on this issue.
V. AIDING AND ABETTING INSTRUCTION
At Quigg’s second trial, the court gave a jury instruction on aiding and abetting. No one other than Quigg was charged with the murder of Lee Robbins. Quigg objects to the giving of the instruction on two grounds. He argues first that the court failed to define properly the terms “aiding” and “abetting.” His second point is that evidence of the participation of others in the Robbins murder was so lacking that the giving of the instruction amounted to a violation of due process. 5
We dispose of Quigg’s first contention quickly. An allegedly erroneous jury instruction will support a collateral attack on a judgment of conviction only where the instruction “by itself so infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process.”
Cupp v. Naughten,
With regard to Quigg’s second contention, that the instruction should not have been given at all, our decision in
Carothers v. Rhay,
Clearly, the state’s predominant theory at the second trial was that Quigg, acting alone, had robbed and murdered Robbins, and then driven Robbins’ car back into downtown Billings, where he abandoned it in a parking lot. No other individual was named as a potential accomplice or principal. On the other hand, evidence was presented to the jury which at least raised an inference that others participated in the crime.
*1112 According to the testimony of a witness who spoke with Robbins at the airport shortly before his death, Robbins reported that he had been followed to the airport by a couple of men with whom he had nearly had an accident. A motel clerk with whom Robbins had spoken before going to the airport said that Robbins had been concerned because he had almost been run into by a car driven by “two drunken Indians,” and they might “come after him.” Other testimony established that a fingerprint had been lifted from Robbins’ car which could not be matched with those of either Robbins or Quigg, and that Quigg was overheard talking with a friend shortly after the murder about “getting rid of something.”
While the evidence of accomplice participation was far from overwhelming, the evidentiary foundation for the challenged instruction was not so thin as to amount to a due process violation. In view of the record as a whole, habeas corpus relief was not erroneously denied on this issue.
VI. NEWLY-DISCOVERED EVIDENCE
Quigg’s final argument is that he was denied due process when the state trial court refused to reopen the trial for newly-discovered evidence after the jury had begun deliberations. The evidence consisted of prospective testimony from a witness who allegedly saw a man drive Robbins’ car into a downtown Billings parking lot on the night of the murder, exit the car before it caine to a full stop, and leave the lot hurriedly. The driver did not match the description of Gary Quigg. The testimony of a second witness essentially would have corroborated this story.
The mere existence of newly-discovered evidence does not constitute grounds for federal habeas corpus relief unless the evidence bears upon the constitutionality of the petitioner’s detention.
Townsend v. Sain,
In finding that the evidence submitted did not warrant habeas corpus relief, the district judge applied a standard of whether the new evidence would probably produce an acquittal, citing
Shuler v. Wainwright,
We find that the district court did not err in concluding that the introduction of the proposed evidence would not probably have produced an acquittal. The 'testimony would not have ruled out Quigg’s participation in the murder, but would merely have suggested that Quigg did not drive the car back to Billings, or that Quigg had been dropped off at some other point by the driver before the car was abandoned. Strong circumstantial evidence of Quigg’s guilt would have been left uncontradicted, such as his possession of the murder weapon, his opportunity to commit the crime, and his possession of the pills and the cash. We cannot say that the court’s evaluation of this testimony was clearly erroneous.
VII. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the court below is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Portions of the transcript of Quigg’s state trial were transmitted to this court as part of the clerk’s record on appeal. Citation is made both to the trial transcript and to the page designation in the clerk’s record.
. Closing arguments apparently were not transcribed.
. We find it unnecessary to consider the retroactive effect of
Doyle
in this case. The equivalent of the
Doyle
rule has prevailed in this circuit since
Fowle v. United States,
. We decline to apply the contemporaneous objection rule of
Wainwright v. Sykes,
. Quigg has also asked that the writ issue on the basis of some apparent confusion among the members of the Montana Supreme Court when the issue of the aiding and abetting instruction was presented on appeal. As a result of that confusion, Quigg contends that the question was never considered by the Court, and that we should reverse for that reason alone. Quigg, however, cites no authority for the proposition that such failure constitutes grounds for federal habeas corpus relief. We have found none, and see no persuasive reason to extend relief on such a ground in this case.
. Court’s Instruction No. 27 read:
“You are instructed that all persons concerned in the commission of a crime, and whether they directly commit the act constituting the offense, or aided and abetted in its commission, are principals in any crime so committed. However, there is no inference whatsoever intended by the court as to the guilt or innocence of the Defendant by the giving of this instruction, for that is solely and exclusively the duty of the jury to so decide.”
