BACKGROUND
We presume awareness of the background of this case and recite only the following details relevant to disposing of the appeal before us. Claiming that he was playing a joke on his friend, Rosmarie Taylor, George St. Helen placed a revolver loaded with one bullet on Taylor’s buttocks and pulled the trigger twice. The bullet was in the second chamber of the revolver, and, on the second trigger-pull, the gun fired, injuring Taylor. Taylor later died in the hospital from surgery-related complications.
On July 23, 1998, after a jury trial, St. Helen was convicted in Westchester County of second degree — depraved indifference — murder and of criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. He was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of twenty years to life and six to twelve years, respectively. On direct appeal, St. Helen challenged the sufficiency of the evidence against him, and the Appellate Division affirmed the conviction on April 29, 2002.
See People v. St. Helen,
The gravamen of this appeal is whether, as the district court concluded, the New York Court of Appeals’ interpretation of depraved indifference murder, under New York Penal Law § 125.25(2), and reckless manslaughter, under New York Penal Law § 125.15(1), has so blurred the distinction between the two crimes that the due process clause of the Federal Constitution is offended because selective enforcement and arbitrary and irrational jury verdicts result.
See Jones v. Keane,
DISCUSSION
On appeal, the State argues that we need not reach the question referenced above because St. Helen failed to raise his constitutional claim in the New York state courts. We agree that St. Helen did not raise the claim in the state courts, and, although he is deemed to have exhausted those claims by procedurally defaulting on them, he has not shown the requisite cause and prejudice that would entitle him to relief. We therefore vacate the judgment of the district court without reaching the merits.
To satisfy the exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b), a petitioner must “alert the state court to the constitutional nature of a claim” but need not “refer[ ][to] chapter and verse [of] the U.S. Constitution.”
Ramirez v. Attorney Gen.,
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St. Helen’s submissions to the Appellate Division challenged the sufficiency of the evidence and argued that the New York Court of Appeals’ interpretation of depraved indifference murder and reckless manslaughter statutes is unworkable. St. Helen’s Appellate Division brief raised only issues of state law; it did - not cite a case, federal or otherwise, containing meaningful constitutional analysis.
Moreover, St. Helen’s brief to the Appellate Division was neither sufficiently specific “to call to mind a specific right protected by the Constitution,” nor did it allege “a pattern of facts that is well within the mainstream of constitutional litigation.”
Ramirez,
To be sure, St. Helen’s petition for leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals argued,
inter alia,
that review was appropriate in light of
Jones v. Keane,
No. 02 Civ. 1804,
Nonetheless, éven if a federal claim has not been presented to the highest state court or preserved in lower state courts under state law, it will be deemed exhausted if it has become procedurally barred under state law.
See Grey v. Hoke,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, and for the foregoing reasons, we reverse.
