Pеtitioner Gordon Stanley, an Ohio prisoner, appeals from the judgment of the district court dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. On appeal, the issues are (1) whether Ohio’s involuntary manslaughter statute, O.R.C. § 2903.04, contains a constitutionally satisfactory element of mental culpability, and (2) whether the trial jury was correctly instructed аs to that element of the case. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I.
On February 26,1988, in Chillicothe, Ohio, Raymond J. Pack, the superintendent of a vocational school, died as a result of petitioner’s crashing his automobile into the automobile in which Pack was a passenger. The evidence shows that petitioner had been closely fоllowing another vehicle operating at the posted speed limit of 35 mph. Suddenly, however, petitioner swerved across the double yellow line that forbids passing along that section of Kopp Street and accelerated past the vehicle ahead of him. At a high rate of speed, estimated by an expert at 52 mph, petitiоner collided with the vehicle in which Pack was riding, spinning it 360 degrees and knocking it up onto the sidewalk. That vehicle, operated by Mrs. Pack, had just entered Kopp Street from a side street.
Petitioner Stanley was charged with involuntary manslaughter and aggravated vehicular homicide. As clarified by a bill of particulars, the involuntary manslaughter count charged petitioner with proximately causing the death of Raymond Pack while committing or attempting to commit any of four misdemeanors; viz., speeding in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.21, reckless operation of a motor vehicle in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.20, operating a motor vehicle without reasonable control in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.202, and crossing a double yеllow line in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.31. The first three offenses are classified as misdemeanors under Ohio law, the fourth as a minor misdemeanor.
The jury convicted petitioner of involuntary manslaughter and vehicular homicide, the lesser included offense of aggravated vehicular homicide. The trial court sentenced petitioner Stanley to incarсeration for between two and ten years. The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction on direct appeal, and the Ohio Supreme Court denied petitioner’s motion for leave to appeal. Petitioner then brought this habeas action in the district court contending that his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process of law had been violated in that he was convicted of a felony that did not contain as one of its elements a culpable mental state. The district court entered judgment for defendant Warden Melody Turner, and this timely appeal followed.
II.
We review a district court’s ruling on a petition for habeas corpus de novo but with complete defеrence to such of the state court’s findings of fact as are supported by the evidence.
Lundy v. Campbell,
Petitioner argues that the Ohio involuntary manslaughter statute violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment unless it is construed to include the element of mens rea or some element of criminal intent that requires proof of a culрable mental state beyond strict liability. On its face, O.R.C. § 2903.04(B) does not specify a particular culpable mental state as an element of the crime. It provides:
*402 No person shall cause the death of another as a proximate result of the offender’s committing or attempting to commit a misdemeanor.
There is no doubt but that Ohio, in enacting this law, elected to define involuntary manslaughter in terms of death caused by predicate offenses, thus intentionally rejecting the option of defining involuntary manslaughter in terms of reckless conduct. '
As relevant to our inquiry, involuntary manslaughter at common law was an unexcused, unintentional homicide resulting from the commission of a criminal act nоt amounting to a felony nor naturally tending to cause death or great bodily harm. Clark & Marshall, Crimes (1952) 353-354, Section 262. Essentially, that common-law unlawful act manslaughter concept was carried forward in Ohio’s statutory treatment of involuntary manslaughter until the adoption of the new criminal code in 1974.
When the new criminal code was introduced in the Ohio General Assembly, it included a reckless homicide provision as a substitute for the former statute which had punished conduct without reference to a specific culpable mental state. However, as the result of the legislative process, the reckless homicide provision was dropped in favor of a section retaining traditional unlawful act manslaughter concepts, in the form of the present involuntary manslaughter. statute. Goldsmith, Involuntary Manslaughter: Review and Commentary on Ohio Law (1979), 40 Ohio St.L.J. 569.
State v. Losey,
In accordance with these principles, the trial court charged the jury that petitioner might be convicted of involuntary manslaughter if he “caused the death of Raymond J. Pack as a proximatе result of committing one or more” of the misdemeanors specified in the indictment. J.A. 300. The court then properly defined the four underlying misdemeanors. Petitioner argues that this interpretation of the statute was deficient because it failed to instruct the jury that some level of criminal intent, i.e., something more than strict liability for committing a traffic misdemeanor, was required for conviction. Only one of the underlying misdemeanors, reckless operation of a motor vehicle (O.R.C. § 4511.20), contains such a level of criminal intent, and petitioner therefore contends that his conviction violates the Due Process Clause because it might rest on a jury finding that he was not guilty of reckless operation of а motor vehicle and was guilty only of speeding, crossing the double yellow line, or operating his vehicle without reasonable control. In essence, then, his argument is that misdemeanors for which a person may be strictly liable cannot support a conviction for involuntary manslaughter.
In support of this position, petitioner relies on
Morissette v. United States,
a century-old but accelerating tendency, discernible both here and in England, to call into existence new duties and crimes which disregard any ingredient of intent. ... Traffic of velocities, volumes and varieties unheard of came to subject the wayfarer to intolerable casualty risks if owners and drivers were not to observe new cares and uniformities of conduct.... Such dangers have engendered increasingly numerous and detailed regulations which heighten the duties of those in control of particular industries, trades, properties or activities that affect public health, safety or welfare.
Id.
at 253-54,
While such offenses do not threaten the security of the state in the manner of treason, they may be regarded as offenses against its authority, for their occurrence impairs the еfficiency of controls deemed essential to the social order as presently constituted. In this respect, whatever the intent of the violator, the injury is the same, and the consequences are injurious or not according to fortuity. Hence, legislation applicable to such offenses, as a matter of policy, does not sрecify intent as a necessary element. The accused, if he does not will the violation, usually is in a position to prevent it with no more care than society might reasonably expect and no more exertion than it might reasonably exact from one who assumed his responsibilities.
Id.
at 256,
Petitioner’s argument, of course, is that if the underlying misdemeanоrs are safety statutes properly devoid of any element of criminal intent, then importing their intent into the involuntary manslaughter statute by means of the familiar principle of transferred intent results in the importation of no intent whatever. In petitioner’s view, the outcome of this process is a felony statute that lacks
any
element of criminal intent or mental culpability. In a number of cases, the Supreme Court has approved federal penal statutes that punished conduct without regard to the offender’s mental culpability or criminal intent. In
United States v. Freed,
a regulatory measure in the interest of the public safety, which may well be premised on the theory that one would hardly be surprised to learn that possession of hand grenades is not an innocent act. They are highly dangerous offensive weapons, no less dangerous than the narcotics involved in United States v. Balint,258 U.S. 250 , 254,42 S.Ct. 301 , 303,66 L.Ed. 604 [(1922)], where a defendant was convicted of sale of narcotics against his claim that he did nоt know the drugs were covered by a federal act.
Id.
The distinction between
Freed
and a case like
Lambert v. California,
In
Lambert,
the defendant could not rationally have been presumed to know of the extraordinary registration requirement imposed by the city, and in
Morissette
the defendant could not be presumed to know that the government jealously guarded title to what appeared to be heaps of scrap bomb casings on lands hunted by the public. In
Freed,
however, defendant should have known that possession of hand grenades was likely to be regulated because grenades are “major weapons” unusual to the public.
On the other hand, where a criminal statute prohibits and punishes conduct not innocent or innocuous in itself, the criminal intent element may be dispensed with if the criminal statute is designed for the protection of the public health and safety and if it has no common law background that included a particular criminal intent. Because citizеns are presumed to know the ordinary traffic safety laws and that violating them is dangerous and wrong, Ohio’s involuntary manslaughter statute, as applied in this case, is based on the obviously wrongful and blameworthy conduct of violating traffic safety laws. Accordingly, it is not the kind of statute that requires a formally stated criminal intent element in order to comport with the Due Process Clause.
It is also possible to view the statute as one that does contain an appropriate element of criminal intent. We recognize that
Anglo-American law has developed several identifiable and analytically distinct levels of intent, e.g., negligence, recklessness, knowledge, and purpose. To determine the mental element required for conviction, each material element of the offense must be examined and the determination made what level of intent Congress intended the Government to prove, taking into account constitutional considerations as well as the common-law background, if any, of the crime involved.
Freed,
Most extensive inroads upon the requirement of intention, however, are offenses of negligence, such as involuntary manslaughter or criminal negligence and the whole range of crimes arising from omission of duty.
Morissette,
Petitioner’s reliance on
United States v. Wulff,
We are of the opinion that in order for one to be convicted of a felony under the MBTA [Migratory Bird Treaty Act], a crime unknown to the common law which cаrries a substantial penalty, Congress must require the prosecution to prove the defendant acted with some degree of scien-ter. Otherwise, a person acting with a completely innocent state of mind could be subjected to a severe penalty and grave damage to his reputation.
Id. at 1125 (emphasis added). Wulff obviously falls into the class of cases like Lambert, in which the defendant has no warning that his acts might be illegal. By contrast, petitioner in the present case is charged with knowledge of the traffic safety laws.
Petitioner’s reliance on
United States v. Renner,
Finally, the trial court properly instructed the jury that petitioner could be convicted only if the evidence showed beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioner “caused the death of Raymond J. Pack as a proximate result of committing one or more of the following traffic оffenses: One, Speeding, two, Reckless Operation, three, Operating a Motor Vehicle without Reasonable Control and four, a violation of Section 4511.31 of the Ohio Law entitled Hazardous Zones.” J.A. 300-01. Because the crime of involuntary manslaughter is a crime of transferred intent under Ohio law,
Losey,
III.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district cоurt dismissing petitioner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The mental element of crime is known by many different terms.
[C]ourts of various jurisdictions, and for the purposes of different offenses, have devised working formulae, if not scientific ones, for the instruction of juries around such terms as “felonious intent,” "criminal intent,” "malice aforethought," "guilty knowledge,” "fraudulеnt intent,” "wilfulness,” "scienter," to denote guilty knowledge, or “mens rea," to signify an evil purpose or mental culpability. By use or combination of these various tokens, they have sought to protect those who were not blameworthy in mind from conviction of infamous common-law crimes.
Morissette,
. This rule does not obtain in cases involving less serious infractions of regulatory statutes. A defendant may be held strictly liable for such conduct. See United States v. Brandt, 111 F.2d 955 (6th Cir.1983) (per curiam) (holding hunters may be convicted for hunting over a baited field although they had no knowledge of the baiting).
