It is a rare case in which a district court grants a state prisoner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, and it is equally rare that federal appellate courts find this relief warranted. The Administrative Office of the United States Courts reported, for example, that in the twelve-month period ending September 30, 1995, a total of 1,062 such petitions were filed in federal district courts in the Seventh Circuit. See Judicial Business of the U.S. Courts: Report of the Director 147, 159 (1995); Memorandum from the Analysis & Reports Branch, Statistics Division, Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts (April 23, 1997). Of that number, the district courts disposed of 986 petitions, granting only 14. A grant rate of about 1.5% hardly indicates a federal judiciary that routinely second-guesses the results reached in state courts. Nonetheless, considerations of finality and comity require us to pay careful attention on appeal to all cases in which the writ is issued, just as the need to respect constitutional limitations and fundamental principles of federal law counsels care in evaluating prisoner appeals.
The district court in Jeffrey Moleterno’s case found that the petition presented one of those rare occasions on which the writ should issue, finding that he had been denied due process of law through inadequate jury instructions on the State’s burden of disproving his affirmative defenses. We conclude, however, that under both the amended version of § 2254(d), which we have found applicable to pending eases in
Lindh v. Murphy,
I
On February 3, 1987, Moletemo fatally shot Timothy Bolger after an altercation that largely took place while both men were driving their cars. See
People v. Moleterno,
At his trial for murder, which took place in December 1987, Moletemo argued that he acted in self-defense, under what is now 720 Ill.Comp.Stat.Ann. 5/7-1 (West 1997), and he raised two forms of the partial affirmative defense of voluntary manslaughter, see 38 Ill.Rev.Stat. 9-2(a)-(b) (voluntary manslaughter based on passion resulting from provocation or based on unreasonable belief in justified use of force), repealed by P.A. 84-1450, § 2 (effective July 1, 1987) (current version at 720 Ill.Comp.Stat.Ann. 5/9-2 (West 1997)). (The new law replaced voluntary
*631
manslaughter with second degree murder and also shifted the burden of proving its mitigating states of mind to the defendant. See 720 Ill.Comp.Stat.Ann. 5/9-2(c) (West 1997). Although the new law states that it applies to homicides occurring after December 31,1986, see
People v. Reddick,
At Moleterno’s trial, the court gave the jury Number 7.02 of the Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, Criminal (2d ed. 1981) (“IPI Criminal”) on the State’s burden of proof on the murder charge, IPI Criminal No. 7.04 on the offense of voluntary manslaughter based on provocation, and IPI Criminal No. 7.06 on the offense of voluntary manslaughter based on an unreasonable belief in a justified use of force. Reflecting the pre-Reddick and prestatutory revision law, both IPI Criminal Nos. 7.04 and 7.06 instructed the jury that the State had the burden of proof on the offense of voluntary manslaughter. The jury convicted Moletemo of first-degree murder, he was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment, and on February 16, 1988, he filed a direct appeal in the state court.
On June 20, 1988, the Illinois Supreme Court decided
Reddick,
in which it held that under 38 Ill.Rev.Stat. 3-2(a) and (b) (now found at 720 Ill.Comp.Stat.Ann. 5/3-2(a)-(b) (West 1997)), IPI Criminal Nos. 7.02, 7.04, and 7.06, taken together, misstated the State’s burden of proof on the question whether a defendant acted under an intense passion or unreasonable belief of justification, where one or more of those theories were offered as a defense to murder charges. 122 IlLDec. at 6,
Moletemo filed his opening brief in the Illinois Appellate Court on September 29, 1988. There he argued only that (1) the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to establish his guilt on the charge of murder, (2) the evidence showed that he was guilty of voluntary manslaughter at most, and (3) the trial court erred “in failing to instruct the jury,
sua sponte,
that the State had the burden of disproving beyond a reasonable doubt his affirmative defenses of self-defense and voluntary manslaughter, based on an unreasonable belief in the need to use deadly force.”
Moleterno I,
The State filed its opposition brief on October 26, 1989. It cast Moleterno’s argument on the jury instructions in terms of
Reddick
and then argued that
Reddick
“had nothing to do with” Moleterno’s case. It also argued that (1) Moletemo was estopped from challenging the jury instructions given at trial because they were the ones submitted by his trial counsel, (2) legaUy, the evidence in Moletemo’s case could not support a finding of voluntary manslaughter because Moletemo
*632
had acted as the aggressor, and (3)
Reddick
should not apply retroactively because it was based solely on a construction of Illinois statutes, citing
People v. Erickson,
The Appellate Court found it unnecessary to decide whether the Reddick issue was properly before it, or whether the Reddick decision should be applied retroactively. It concluded that even if the trial court’s instructions were wrong, the error was harmless:
[t]he trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the State’s burdens of disproving self-defense and voluntary manslaughter ... was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. It was harmless because the evidence of defendant’s guilt of the offense of murder, i.e., of his lack of any belief in the need to use deadly force, was so clear and convincing that the trial result would not have been different with different instructions____ Defendant was not prejudiced by the failure to instruct the jury as contended.
Moleterno I, 145
Ill.Dec. at 91,
After unsuccessfully petitioning the Appellate Court for rehearing, see
People v. Moleterno,
No. 88-546 (Ill.App.Ct. June 28, 1990), and the Illinois Supreme Court, see
People v. Moleterno,
Finally, on March 18, 1994 Moleterno turned to the federal court for reUef under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. His petition raised five claims: (1) that he was denied due process of law because of inadequate jury instructions *633 on the State’s burden of disproving his affirmative defenses, (2) that the defective instructions did not amount to harmless error, (3) that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to present evidence on the victim’s violent nature, (4) that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to obtain the gun, and (5) that the gun was newly discovered evidence warranting a new trial. The district court found that all five claims were properly before it. Although it saw no merit in the last three arguments, it decided that the jury instructions misplaced the burden of proof on the question of a mitigating mental state and that this error in burden of proof violated Moleterno’s right to due process under the United States constitution. Furthermore, the court disagreed with the Illinois Appellate Court’s conclusion that any error in the instructions was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
The district court began its analysis of the jury instruction point by asserting that the “claim [was] reviewable in this federal habeas corpus proceeding because the Illinois courts would have allowed Moletemo to challenge the instructions at trial under a contemporaneous-objection rule,” citing
Falconer v. Lane,
II
The State presents three arguments here, any of which would, if correct, require reversal of the district court’s order. First, the State claims that the court should have found that Moletemo’s jury instruction claim was barred by procedural default, which he failed to overcome with an adequate showing of cause and prejudice. Second, it argues that the Reddick claim did not rise to the level of a federal constitutional violation. Last, it urges us to find, as the Illinois courts did, that any cognizable error that may have occurred was harmless.
It is well established that a prisoner seeking a writ of habeas corpus must exhaust his state remedies. See,
e.g., Rose v. Lundy,
The key question here is whether Moleterno fairly presented his federal contentions to the state court, as he was required to do to preserve his claims under § 2254. See
Duncan v. Henry,
Moleterno points out that this court concluded in
Falconer
that the same jury instructions that the Illinois Supreme Court had found erroneous as a matter of state law in
Reddick
also violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. See
Moletemo’s presentment argument rests primarily on language at the end of his opening brief claiming that the “failure to instruct the jury on the proper allocation of the burden” was “an egregious violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights to due process and the right to a fair trial” and on the cases cited in his reply brief. Even in his reply brief, however, Moleterno did nothing more than quote the statement in
People v. Brooks,
We cannot agree. Since
Verdin,
we have decided a number of cases on the issue of what constitutes fair presentment of the very jury instruction issue that forms the basis of Moletemo’s petition. In
Green v. Peters,
In order to overcome this procedural default, Moleterno would either have to establish cause and prejudice that would excuse it, or show that he fits within the “miscarriage of justice” exception to the cause and prejudice rule. See
Pitsonbarger,
Finally, the “miscarriage of justice” exception to the cause and prejudice standard is not open to Moletemo. This exception requires a colorable claim of actual innocence as well as an allegation of a constitutional wrong. See
Sawyer v. Whitley,
Without an assertion of cause and prejudice, or a colorable claim that Moleterno is “actually” innocent, the petition should have been denied. This follows, as we noted above, whether we apply the amended version of § 2254 or the version that was in effect at the time Moleterno initially filed his petition in federal court. We therefore have no need to address the State’s arguments in the alternative, which challenge the extent to which Reddick identifies an error of federal constitutional magnitude and urge the harmlessness of the error.
The judgment of the district court ordering the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus for petitioner Moletemo is Reversed.
