Petitioner, John D. Pruitt, appeals from a District Court judgment dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We affirm the District Court’s disposition.
Pruitt was convicted in an Arkansas state court of first degree rape of an eight-year-old girl and was sentenced to life imprisonment. Pruitt had previously been convicted of homicide and indecent exposure. There
*459
was no appeal taken from the rape сonviction. Two years after this conviction Pruitt filed a state post-conviction relief action pursuant to the predecessor of Rule 37 of the Arkansas Supreme Court’s Rules for Criminal Procedure. In that Rule 37 action, Pruitt contended that he had been subjected to an unconstitutional arrest, had not been аdvised of his constitutional rights, had been victimized by his trial counsel’s errors of judgment and had been convicted оn the weight of perjured testimony. The state post-conviction judge dismissed Pruitt’s Rule 37 petition and the Supremе Court of Arkansas affirmed.
Pruitt
v.
State,
Pruitt thereafter filed the present § 2254 petition contending that he was (1) arrested and detained prior to trial without probable cause and (2) subjected to an unconstitutional in-court identification. The District Court concluded that Pruitt’s first claim was frivolous and that he had not exhausted available state remedies as to the second claim.
Pruitt’s contention that his conviction should be vacatеd because he was arrested and detained without probable cause prior to trial is, as the District Court found, frivolous. The Supreme Court has consistently ruled that an adjudication of guilt is not to be annulled due to an illegal arrest and pretrial detention.
Gerstein
v.
Pugh,
It is also alleged that the District Court erred in ruling that Pruitt had not exhausted his state remedies on the identification issue. Pruitt admits that this issue was not presented in the state post-conviction proceeding; however, he contends that he is foreclosed from litigating this matter in another state post-conviction action due to Rule 37.2(b) of the Rules of the Arkansas Supreme Court which рrovides:
All grounds for relief available to a prisoner under this rule must be raised in his original or amended pеtition. Any grounds not so raised or any grounds finally adjudicated or intelligently and understanding^ waived in the proceedings which resulted in the conviction or sentence or in any other proceedings that the prisoner mаy have taken to secure relief from his conviction or sentence may not be the basis for a subsequent petition.
A literal reading of the rule would support Pruitt’s claim that the identification issue, not raised in thе initial state post-conviction petition, cannot be asserted in a subsequent state proceeding. However, the Supreme Court of Arkansas has permitted the successive filing of petitions by a single prisoner under certain circumstances.
Davis v. State,
We, of course, are not expressing an opinion as to the proper interpretation of Rule 37.2(b). We simply conclude that, as a matter of comity, the Arkansas state cоurts should be afforded an opportunity to determine whether Pruitt can litigate this unexhausted identification issue in a post-conviction proceeding in Arkansas.
See United States ex rel. Bagley v. LaVallee,
Pruitt also contends that he is entitled to relief from his rape conviction because six of the jurors in his original trial have subsequently signed an affidavit which provides thаt unspecified newly discovered facts require reconsideration of Pruitt’s conviction. The jurors requested that clemency be granted to Pruitt. We dispose of this contention on the merits. It is axiomatic that a juror is not permitted to impeach his verdict after trial.
E.g. United States v. Schroeder,
Affirmed.
