Indiana is holding James Higgason prisoner following a burglary conviction in No *205 vember 1985. The court sentenced Higga-son to 25 years’ imprisonment after concluding that he is an habitual offender. Two prior convictions for unrelated felonies require habitual-offender designation in Indiana, and Higgason had three: theft in 1970, theft in 1972, and murder in 1975. Paroled from the murder sentence in 1985, Higgason was back in prison quickly on the burglary charge. On April 14, 1986, Indiana discharged Higgason from the murder sentence. Since then, only the 25-year term for burglary has supported his incarceration.
Higgason has embarked on a program of collateral litigation that illustrates the doctrine of abuse of the writ. See
McCleskey v. Zant,
— U.S. -,
Neither our opinion nor the district court’s mentions the exhaustion problem— concrete rather than potential, for Higga-son had commenced separate challenges to the 1970 theft conviction and the 1975 murder conviction. Two petitions, one in state court and one in federal, sought relief from the 1985 sentence on the ground that the 1970 theft conviction is invalid. Two more petitions, both in federal court, challenged the 1975 murder conviction. When filing these latter petitions in 1991, Higgason did not mention that he was no longer in custody under the murder sentence and that the validity of this conviction was significant only to the extent it had been used to enhance the burglary sentence.
Early in 1991 Higgason had at least five collateral proceedings under way, all necessarily directed to the conviction and sentence for burglary in 1985. Preventing such overlapping litigation is among the objectives of the complete-exhaustion requirement, and channeling all arguments into a single collateral attack is the principal role of the doctrine treating successive petitions as abuses of the writ. Surprisingly, Indiana did not move to dismiss any of the collateral challenges under
McCleskey
or
Rose.
Indeed, not until oral argument did we learn that custody under the 1975 murder conviction ended five years before Higgason filed his two petitions contesting it. The parties’ briefs on appeal read as if Higgason were still serving the sentence imposed in 1975. On discovering that this is not so, we directed the parties to file memoranda concerning the effect of
Maleng v. Cook,
*206
We start with Higgason’s contention that the 1985 sentence is infirm because the 1970 theft conviction is invalid. Higgason pleaded guilty in 1970 and contends that the record does not establish that the judge informed him of his rights to confront his accusers and avoid self-incrimination. See
Boykin v. Alabama,
Because Higgason’s current petition under § 2254 is a successive collateral attack, he needs to establish actual innocence under the approach of
Kuhlmann v. Wilson,
As for the 1975 conviction: Higgason named as respondent his custodian on the 1985 sentence, so the district court had jurisdiction notwithstanding
Maleng.
See
Lowery v. Young,
Indicted on a charge of first degree murder, Higgason pleaded guilty to second degree murder. The indictment charged that Higgason killed A1 Lane with a shotgun.
*207
Indiana law then provided: “Whoever, purposely and maliciously, but without pre-' meditation, kills any human being, is guilty of murder in the second degree”. Ind.Code § 35-1-54-1 (1975). The judge explained these elements to Higgason, who asked for a definition of malice. The judge replied: “Malice can be defined [as] ill will; malice can be inferred from the firing of a gun, the deadly weapon in a manner calculated to produce death.” Later in the proceedings Higgason denied that he intended to slay Lane: “I had no intentions [sic] of killing; there was just a shooting involved- I didn’t intend to kill him.” These statements underlie Higgason’s argument that the record does not establish “strong evidence of actual guilt” that would support conviction despite what he now characterizes as a claim of innocence. See
North Carolina v. Alford,
After Higgason denied intending to kill Lane, the state judge asked some additional questions. We reproduce the exchange:
BY THE COURT: How far away from [Lane] were you when you fired the shotgun?
A. Twenty-five to thirty yards.
BY THE COURT: Did you not know that a shotgun would kill at that distance?
A. Yes.
[The prosecutor]: Your Honor, perhaps the defendant should be questioned as to how many times he fired the shotgun.
BY THE COURT: Did you fire the shotgun more than one time?
A. Yes.
BY THE COURT: How many times did you fire it?
A. Three times.
BY THE COURT: Three times, and how many times did you hit Mr. Lane, if you know?
A. Twice.
BY THE COURT: But you did not intend to kill Mr. Lane. Do you mind telling me what you intended to do? You intended to hurt him, did you not?
A. Right.
BY THE COURT: The intention to shoot another human being with a shotgun, firing the shotgun twice at thirty feet, you indicate—
[Defense counsel]: Thirty yards, twenty to thirty yards.
BY THE COURT: Thirty yards. Certainly indicates a purpose and intent requiring Murder in the Second Degree.
The Supreme Court of Indiana concluded that the judge’s ultimate conclusion is a reasonable inference, and 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) requires us to respect it, too, unless the Constitution commands otherwise.
Henry Alford pleaded guilty to a murder that, he insisted, he did not commit. A federal court issued a writ of habeas corpus, ruling that conviction on a plea of guilty requires an admission of guilt. The Supreme Court disagreed, writing that “[t]he standard was and remains whether the plea represents a voluntary and intelligent choice among the alternative courses of action open to the defendant.”
A state may require its judges to engage in extended colloquies designed to elicit factual support for pleas of guilty. Putting the basis on the record not only helps the defendant make a wise choice but also prevents subsequent litigation in which the defendant denies knowing some vital bit of information. Shortcomings in compliance with such requirements do not entitle prisoners to collateral relief in federal court. On collateral attack, a silent record supports the judgment; the state receives the benefit of a presumption of regularity and all reasonable inferences.
Parke,
— U.S. at -,
BY THE COURT: Did you not know that a shotgun would kill at that distance?
A. Yes.
Higgason treats “yes” as a denial of intent to kill: yes, he did “not know” that the gun would kill. Yet in colloquial speech a “yes” to a “do you not ... ?” acknowledges the main proposition. “Don’t you know that it is dangerous to jump off a cliff?” “Yes” means, “yes, I know this.” “You intended to hurt him, did you not?” “Right” means, “yes, I intended to hurt him.” Cf. Paul Grice, Studies in the Way of Words 26-37 (1989); Geoffrey P. Miller, Pragmatics and the Maxims of Interpretation, 1990 Wis.L.Rev. 1179.
Higgason does not contend that his plea was involuntary. He has not offered to supplement the record with evidence that the ammunition in the shotgun was unlikely to kill at 25 yards, or that he believed the risk of death small. His entire position depends on persuading us that all gaps and ambiguities in the record count against the state. Judgments are presumed valid, however, and Parke emphasizes that one who seeks collateral relief bears a heavy burden. Higgason has not acknowledged, let alone discharged, his burden.
A few closing words about precedent are in order. Counsel for Higgason writes:
This Court has recognized the Alford rule and made clear that a guilty plea accompanied by an assertion of innocence is properly accepted only if the record before the trial judge contains strong evidence of guilt. See, e.g., United States v. Cox,923 F.2d 519 (7th Cir.1991); United States v. Johnson,612 F.2d 305 (7th Cir.1980); United States v. Davis,516 F.2d 574 (7th Cir.1975).
This passage, like the rest of Higgason’s presentation, reflects confusion between necessary and sufficient conditions, and between Rule 11 and the Constitution. “Strong evidence of guilt” may suffice to sustain a conviction on an
Alford
plea, and may be essential under Rule 11, but it is not necessary to comply with the Constitution. In
Cox
the district court declined to accept the plea, deeming the admission of guilt inadequate. We held that the district judge did not abuse his discretion, while adding that accepting the plea would have been an appropriate exercise of discretion.
Affirmed.
