In his second federal habeas petition, John Russell Thompson alleges that the prosecution introduced victim-impact testimony at his trial for capital murder, in violation of his Eighth Amendment rights as established by the recent Supreme Court
*1081
decision in
Booth v. Maryland,
— U.S. —,
I.
In March 1982, Thompson was convicted for the second time for the murder of Mary Kneupper, and was sentenced to death. The facts of the crime are set forth in this court’s denial of Thompson’s first application for habeas corpus.
See Thompson v. Lynaugh,
Both Mrs. Kneupper’s husband and grandson testified principally about the circumstances of her death. Mr. Kneupper testified that he worked with his wife at the “Pioneer Stor & Lok,” a mini-storage facility in San Antonio, Texas. The front office of this business adjoined an apartment, which served as the Kneuppers’ living quarters. On the afternoon of the murder, they were working in their office when a customer called to request that his locker be opened. Mr. Kneupper then walked to the locker, which was in a distant part of the storage yard. When he returned to the office ten or fifteen minutes later, his wife had been shot. Mr. Kneupper described the layout of the office and their living quarters, the location of his wife when he returned, and his efforts to revive her. In the course of this testimony, he expressed affection for his wife, and stated that she had two daughters and four grandchildren.
Timothy Meyer McCammon testified principally about the layout of his grandparents’ office. In the course of his testimony, he explained that he had visited his grandmother often at her office, and that they were “very close.” He stated that he had identified her body at the morgue, and mentioned the number of her children and grandchildren, as well as the thirty years his grandparents had been married. He said that his grandfather had taken the shooting “very hard.”
II.
Thompson claims that the introduction of this testimony at his trial created a constitutionally unacceptable risk that the jury imposed the death penalty in an arbitrary and capricious manner. He cites
Booth v. Maryland,
- U.S. -,
III.
Thompson’s counsel did not raise any objections at trial to the introduction of the testimony of Mrs. Kneupper’s husband and grandson. The state habeas court has found that this omission constitutes a procedural default under
Armstrong v. State,
In the instant cause, applicant maintains that portions of testimony from two witnesses was admitted in violation of Booth v. Maryland, — U.S. -[107 S.Ct. 2529 ] 41 Crim.L.Rptr. 3273 (1987). We have reviewed the testimony in question and find that it does not amount to a victim impact statement within the prohibition set forth in Booth v. Maryland, supra. Moreover, error, if any, was waived by applicant’s failure timely to object at trial.
Id. (footnote omitted). We must therefore decide whether the state, by denying Thompson’s claim on the merits as well as on the basis of procedural default, has waived the bar of procedural default in federal court.
In
Cook v. Lynaugh,
We conclude, nevertheless, that even when procedural default is the second ground stated for the state court’s decision, review on the merits is barred in federal court. The difference between raising procedural default as the first or the second of two alternative yet equally emphasized grounds of a state court opinion is simply too tenuous a distinction on which to base a federal court’s power to reach the merits of a habeas claim. We therefore do not apply the holding of
Darden v. Wainwright,
Absent a showing of good cause, we must also conclude that Thompson cannot excuse his procedural default.
See Murray v. Carrier,
— U.S. -, -,
For the above reasons, the district court’s judgment is affirmed and Thompson’s request for a stay of execution is denied.
