A state court jury convicted Herbert W. Harris of forcible rape, assault, burglary, robbery, armed criminal action, and exhibiting a deadly weapon in a threаtening manner. The jury recommended sentences to-talling 105 years plus life imprisonment, and the trial court ordered the sentences to run consecutively. In this 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus action, Harris raises a number of contentions attacking his conviction and sentence. The district court denied Harris relief, аnd we affirm.
The facts controlling the issues Harris raises are not complicated. Harris and the State engaged in plea bargain negotiations, but reached an impasse. Late in the afternoon on the first day of Harris’s trial, Harris’s attorney and the prosecution completed jury selection. The trial judge ex *740 cused the jury and scheduled the trial to begin the following morning. Before the trial judge left the courthouse, however, Harris had a change of heart and decided to accept the State’s offer to plead guilty and receive a twenty year sentence. Harris’s attorney and the prosecutor asked the judge to return to the bench and take Harris’s plea. The judge returned to the bench, but he refused to accept the plea agreement. Instead, the judge told Harris he would accept a plea with a twenty-five year sentence. Harris did not respond. When the judge asked Harris why hе waited until after a jury had been selected to accept the State’s offer, Harris replied, “I think I can beat this.” The judge then told Harris, “If there’s a plea tomorrow morning, I will not take less than thirty years.”
The following morning, before the trial began, the judge gave Harris several opportunities to plead guilty without being bound to the plea if he considered the resulting sentence too long. The judge never indicated he would impose a thirty year sentence оr refuse to consider a lesser period. Harris did not pursue the judge’s open-ended invitation to enter a guilty plea. Harris neither inquired whether the judge wоuld consider a sentence less than thirty years, nor offered to plead guilty with a twenty-five year sentence, nor asked the judge to reconsider the twеnty-year plea agreement. Rather, Harris made it clear he did not wish to plead guilty and would not consider any plea bargain unless the State first madе a new offer and obtained the judge’s assent to the offer’s terms. The State did not wish to extend any new offers, so the trial proceeded. The jury found Harris guilty on all counts.
Harris first contends he received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel because his attorney failed to appeal the trial judge’s refusal to recuse himself from presiding over Harris’s trial. The Supreme Court’s
Strickland v. Washington,
Although Harris contends the trial judge’s refusal to disqualify himself “infected” the trial, Harris has failed to show either actual or presumed bias by the trial judge rising to the level of a cоnstitutional violation.
See Dyas v. Lockhart,
In his second contention, Harris repeats his claim of bias by the trial judge. Harris contends he is entitled to be resen-tenced because thе judge “vindictively punished” him with an “astronomical sentence” for going to trial instead of pleading guilty and accepting a twenty-five year sentence. We disagree.
*741
A trial judge cannot punish a defendant for exercising the constitutional right to a jury trial.
United States v. Carter,
Harris next contends the trial judge effectively prevented him from entering a guilty plea in retaliation for invoking his right to a trial. Harris concedes he has no constitutional right to insist the trial judge accept his guilty plea or the plеa agreement he had reached with the State.
Santobello v. New York,
Finally, Harris contends he rеceived ineffective assistance of counsel because his trial attorney “failed to object and take appropriate action [when] the trial judge[ ] participated] in the plea bargaining process.” Appellant’s Brief at 33. Again, this contention is without merit. The trial judge could properly reject the plea agreement Harris had with the State and the judge did not abuse his discretion in doing so.
Santobello,
We have considеred Harris’s remaining contentions and conclude they do not merit discussion. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of Harris’s application for a writ of habeas corpus.
