Petitioner Marlon Howell contends that the Mississippi courts violated his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution by refusing to require a jury instruction about a lesser included offense in his capital case. He did not, however, raise this claim in the Supreme Court of Mississippi, which unsurprisingly did not address it. As a result, we dismiss the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted.
Petitioner was convicted and sentenced to death for killing Hugh David Pernell. Shortly after 5 a.m. on May 15, 2000, Pernell was delivering newspapers from his car when the occupants of another car motioned for him to stop. The evidence at trial indicated that, when both cars had pulled over, petitioner got out of the trailing car and approached the driver’s side of Pernell’s car. After a brief conversation and perhaps some kind of scuffle, petitioner pulled out a pistol, shot Pernell through the heart, got back in the other ear, and fled the scene. See
On appeal to the State Supreme Court, one of petitioner’s 28 claims of error was the trial court’s failure “to give the defendant an instruction on the offense of simple murder or manslaughter.” App. 39. In that argument, petitioner cited three cases from the State Supreme Court about
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lesser-included-offense instructions, and the only opinion whose original language he quoted was a noncapital case.
Ibid,
(quoting, with modifications,
Conner
v.
State,
Petitioner sought certiorari from this Court, arguing that his death sentence is unconstitutional under that rule of our capital jurisprudence set forth in
Beck
v.
Alabama,
Congress has given this Court the power to review “[f]inal judgments or decrees rendered by the highest court of a State in which a decision could be had ... where any... right ... is
specially set up or claimed
under the Constitution or the treaties or statutes of... the United States.” 28 U. S. C. § 1257(a) (emphasis added). Under that statute and its predecessors, this Court has almost unfailingly refused to consider any federal-law challenge to a state-court decision unless the federal claim “was either addressed by or properly presented to the state court that rendered the decision we have been asked to review.”
Adams
v.
Robertson,
Petitioner’s brief in the State Supreme Court did not properly present his claim as one arising under federal law.
1
In the relevant argument, he did not cite the Constitution or even any cases directly construing it, much less any of this Court’s cases. Instead, he argues that he presented his federal claim by citing
Harveston
v.
State,
Petitioner also contends that he raised his federal claim by implication because the state-law rule on which he relied was “identical,” Tr. of Oral Arg. 17, or “virtually identical,” Brief for Petitioner 17-18, to the constitutional rule articulated in
Beck.
Assuming, without deciding, that identical standards might overcome a petitioner’s failure to identify his claim as federal, Mississippi’s rule regarding lesser-included-offense instructions is not identical to
Beck
— or at least not identical to the Mississippi Supreme Court’s interpretation of
Beck.
Mississippi’s rule applies even when the jury is not choosing only between acquittal and death. The Mississippi Supreme
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Court’s interpretation of
Beck,
on the other hand, holds that case inapplicable where the jury has the additional option of life imprisonment, see
Jackson
v.
State,
Petitioner suggests that we need not treat his failure to present his federal claim in state court as jurisdictional. Reply Brief for Petitioner 4, and n. 1. Notwithstanding the long line of cases clearly stating that the presentation requirement is jurisdictional, see,
e. g., Exxon Corp.
v.
Eagerton,
Accordingly, we dismiss the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
Petitioner argues not that the State Supreme Court actually addressed his federal claim, but rather that it “had an adequate opportunity to address” it. Brief for Petitioner 19.
See,
e. g., Adams
v.
Robertson,
In
Three Affiliated Tribes of Fort Berthold Reservation
v.
Wold Engineering, P. C.,
