This is аn appeal regarding habeas corpus relief granted in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Petitioner was convicted and sentenced in the Massachusetts Superior Court for, inter alia, two counts of armed robbery. The district court, 586 F.Supp 1369, set aside the conviction and sentence on one of these counts as violative of the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment, and the Commonwealth now appeals from that order.
The facts are as follows. On October 19, 1976, petitioner John Tarrant accosted Judith Van Sprewenburg as she was leaving the apartment house where she lived to go to work. He forced her, at knifepoint, to reenter the ground floor foyer of the building and there demanded money. She opened her purse and gave him approximately $13. Petitioner then, with knife still in hand, demanded to be taken to her apartment, which was on the second floor. Ms. Van Sprewenburg complied, unlocking the inner foyer door and leading pеtitioner upstairs to her apartment. Once inside, petitioner looked around the apartment, locked Ms. Van Sprewenburg in her bathroom, and took various personal effects before leaving.
Petitioner was arrested and was indicted by a Massachusetts grand jury for four different offenses based on the events of October 19. The indictments charged him with armed robbery of the $13, armed robbery of the personal effects taken from the apartment, armed assault in a dwelling, and unlawful confinement оf another. Pri- or to trial, petitioner’s counsel filed a motion to dismiss one of the armed robbery indictments on the ground that the armed robbery indictments were duplicitous. The Suffolk Superior Court denied the motion *461 and a jury found petitioner guilty on all four indictments.
On each of the armed robbery indictments and on the indictment charging armed assault in a dwelling petitioner was sentenced to ten to fifteen years’ imprisonment, to be served concurrently. On the unlawful confinement conviction, petitioner was sentenced to five to ten years, to be served concurrently with the other three sentences.
1
Petitioner’s convictions were affirmed by the Massachusetts Appeals Court,
Commonwealth v. Tarrant (I),
Petitioner sought a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 alleging, among other things, that he was convicted twice for the same offense in violation of the fifth and fourteenth amendments. He contended that his forcible taking of the money in the foyer, and his subsequent stealing of other property in the victim’s second floor apartment, constituted but one crime of armed robbery, and that his conviction on two indictments of armed robbery therefore constituted double punishment. 3 The case Was referred to a United States Magistrate who recommended that the petition be denied in its entirety. Petitioner filed timely objections to the report and recommendations.
After a non-evidentiary hearing, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts ordered that thе conviction and sentence for armed robbery of the personal effects taken from the apartment be vacated but denied all other requested relief. The state custodian filed a timely notice of appeal from so much of the order as allowed the petition in part. It also sought and was granted a stay pending appeal of the order vacating the conviction and sentence. 4
The central issue in this appeal is whether the district court had the authority tо reject the state court's interpretation of state law and to decide that the incidents of October 19 constituted one offense of armed robbery for double jeopardy purposes. 5
The Massachusetts Appeals Court held that the petitioner’s convictions on the armed robbery indictments were not duplicitous. In so holding, the court rejected petitioner’s argument that the Supreme Judicial Court’s interpretation of the armed robbery statute, Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 265,
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§ 17,
6
in
Commonwealth v. Levia,
In
Levia,
the Supreme Judicial Court held that a judge had properly imposed consecutive sentences on a defendant convicted of two indictments of armed robbery because, by placing two employees of a store in fear and taking from each victim in the same episode money belonging to the store, he had committed two offenses of armed robbery. The court stated that “[i]n light of the emphasis that the General Court and this court have placed on the assault element of the crime of robbery, we conclude that the ‘offense’ is against the person assaulted, and not against the entity that owns or possesses the property taken.”
Id.
at 351,
The Mаssachusetts Appeals Court rejected this reasoning, concluding “[tjhere is nothing in
Commonwealth v. Levia ...
which requires the conclusion that the defendant’s acts, first in the foyer'and then in the victim’s apartment, were discrete parts of a single robbery.”
Tarrant (I),
Although the taking of the victim’s money and property happened during a continuous period, the offenses occurred in two different places and under different circumstances. While no one but the ■ defendant and the victim were in the foyer at the time of the robbery, the foyer, unlike the victim’s apartment, was accessible to the public. The victim testified that she was afraid while she was in the foyer and that she became more frightened in her apartment. “The essence of robbery is the exertion of force, actual or constructive, against another in other to take personal property ... from the protection which the person of that other affords.” Commonwealth v. Weiner,255 Mass. 506 , 509,152 N.E. 359 (1926). Commonwealth v. Levia, 385 Mass, at 348,431 N.E.2d 928 . These two offenses are not “so closely related in fact as to constitute in substance but a Singlе crime.” Commonwealth v. St. Pierre,377 Mass. 650 , 662-663,387 N.E.2d 1135 (1979).
The district court, in evaluating petitioner’s habeas challenge to the state court’s conclusion, acknowledged that “[wjhether a particular course of conduct involves one or more distinct offenses under a statute is a matter of legislative choice” and that “[a] state court’s interpretation of a state’s criminal statute is binding on a federal court.” It held, however, that it could not agree with the state court’s ruling and further, that it was not bound by the decision of the Massachusetts Appeals Court in this case. It explained,
[the appeals court] did not purport to decide whether the state legislature intended that activities such as petitioner’s should be punished as two armed robberies under the statute. Rather, it ruled simply that the petitioner had committed two armed robberies under the statute as it had been interpreted by the Supreme Judicial Court. This Court may review such a ruling. See Brown v. Ohio, 432 U.S. [161] at 169 & n. 8 [97 S.Ct. 2221 at 2227 & n. 8,53 L.Ed.2d 187 (1977)].
Petitioner reads the district court to mean that while it could not second guess the state legislature or, it seems, the state courts, in defining an “offense” or “unit of prosecution,” it could oversee the application of the definition of the offense to the facts of a particular case. He thus con- *463 eludes that the federal court rightfully intervened in the present action because “[t]he Massachusetts Appeals Court, in affirming petitioner’s multiple armed robbery convictions, misapplied the clear rule established by the state statute as interpreted in the state’s case law.” (Emphasis added.)
Petitioner’s distinction bеtween a state court’s interpretation of a state law and its application of that law is, in our view, unworkable. All would agree in this case that the
legislature
could constitutionally have explicitly defined the “unit of prosecution” for armed robbery so that petitioner’s actions would constitute two or more offenses.
See Bell v. United States,
We think any attempted distinction between “interpretation” and “application” is elusive, unsupported by any authority, and would be, as a practical matter, impossible to implement. Any timе a state statute did not explicitly address the specific facts at issue, the state court’s “application” of state law, however derived, would be subject to review in federal courts. Were we to accept this distinction, federal courts would be asked to draw this exceedingly fine line and to review many state court “applications” of state law that have heretofore been left to state court review. This would place an increased burden on the federal cоurts, would create a conflict between the two court systems and would not, insofar as we can see, serve any recognized need or ameliorate any noteworthy source of injustice.
Having rejected this approach, we proceed to several related arguments.
The district court did not ground its authority to reject the state court’s determination on petitioner’s applieation/interpre-tation distinction. Although the court ultimately concluded that the state court misread state law, its explanation for exercising review over the state court’s ruling was that the state court was not really construing the statute at all, but was simply relying on its own judgment, as informed by Massachusetts precedent.
There is' some precedent for this reasoning in one case decided by the Supreme Court,
Brown v. Ohio,
Indeed, it seems to us that the district court misread the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s opinion, perhaps because its re-script set out the court’s analysis in an abbreviated fashion. The cases that the state court cited indicate that the сourt recognized the centrality of legislative intent in resolving double jeopardy issues.
See Commonwealth v. Gurney,
13 Mass. App. 391, 401,
The facts of this case also distinguish it from Brown. We find nothing shocking or unreasonable in a finding that the armed robbery statute, which the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court held to be primarily concerned with assaults against the person, should be construed to be twice violatеd when a victim is twice forced, under threat of death, to yield different personal effects, in different locations, at discrete times, and under circumstances that posed different degrees of threat to the victim’s personal safety. Thus we hold that the district court erred in disregarding the state court’s interpretation of state law.
A final issue is petitioner’s argument that because the applicable “unit of prosecution” for armed robbery is ambiguous in this case, due process requires that the distriсt court apply the “rule of lenity” to resolve the ambiguity in petitioner’s favor.
Recent Supreme Court decisions in the multiple punishment area of double jeopardy analysis have been subject to differing interpretations. The customary view is that in all except perhaps isolated situations,
e.g., Brown v. Ohio,
The other view, whiсh the petitioner advances, is that the double jeopardy clause creates a constitutional presumption against finding that the domestic law prescribes multiple punishment. Unless, therefore, it can be shown that the legislature “clear[ly] and unmistakabl[y]” intended the “unit of prosecution” to be read narrowly,
see Iannelli v. United States,
We are unconvinced that the Court’s recent double jeopardy decisions impose upon the states a constitutional presumption that
*466
lenity should prevail in the face of any ambiguity as to state legislative intent. The Supreme Court has consistently spoken of the “rule of lenity” in the context of federal statutory construction.
See Bifulco v. United States,
Finally, petitioners contend that because the legislative history is “ambiguous” on the question of multiple punishment, we should apply the rule of lenity so as not to allow consecutive sentencеs in this situation. Last Term in Bifulco v. United States,447 U.S. 381 [100 S.Ct. 2247 ,65 L.Ed.2d 205 ] (1980), we recognized that the rule of lenity is a principle of statutory construction which applies not only to interpretations of the substantive ambit of criminal prohibitions, but also to the penalties they impose. Quoting Ladner v. United States,358 U.S. 169 , 178 [79 S.Ct. 209 , 214,3 L.Ed.2d 199 ] (1958), we stated: “ ‘This policy of lenity means that the Court will not interpret a federal criminal statute so as to increase the penalty that it places on an individual when such an interpretation can be based on no more than a guess as to what Congress intended.’ ”447 U.S. at 387 [100 S.Ct. at 2252 ]. We emphasized that the “tоuchstone” of the rule of lenity “is statutory ambiguity.” And we stated: “Where Congress has manifested its intention, we may not manufacture ambiguity in order to defeat that intent.” Ibid. Lenity thus serves only as an aid for resolving an ambiguity; it is not to be used to beget one. The rule comes into operation “at the end of the process of construing what Congress has expressed, not at the beginning as an overriding consideration of being lenient to wrongdoers.” Callanan v. United States, supra [364 U.S.] at 596 [81 S.Ct. at 326 ].
*467 That part of the district court’s order of May 15, 1984 vacating petitioner’s conviсtion and sentence on indictment 05942 is reversed.
Notes
. All four sentences were to be served after expiration of sentences that petitioner was then serving.
. All parties agree that petitioner’s claims have been exhausted in the state courts.
. The double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment provides three separate protections: "It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal. It protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. And it protects against multiple punishments for the same offense.”
North Carolina v. Pearce,
. The district court denied petitioner’s request for a certificate of probable cause to appeal the ’ remainder of the order and this cоurt also refused to permit that aspect of petitioner’s appeal.
. Respondent also would argue before us that the district court abused its discretion by failing to invoke the concurrent sentence doctrine. This argument was not raised below and it is too late to raise it now on appeal.
Johnston v. Holiday Inns, Inc.,
. Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 265, § 17 (Armed robbery; punishment) reads in relevant part as follows:
Whoever, being armed with a dangerous weapon, assaults another and robs, steals or takes from his person money or other property which may be the subject of larceny shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for life or for any term of years____
. The Court intimated in
Whalen v. United States,
The Fifth Amendment guarantee against double jeopardy embodies in this respect simply one aspect of the basic principle that within our federal constitutional framework the legislative power, including the power to define criminal offenses and to prescribe the punishments to be imposed upon those found guilty of them, resides wholly with the Congress. See United States v. Wiltberger,5 Wheat. 76 , 95 [5 L.Ed. 37 ]; United States v. Hudson & Goodwin,7 Cranch 32 , 34 [3 L.Ed. 259 ]. If a federal court exceeds its own authority by imposing multiple punishments not authorized by Congress, it violates not only the specific guarantee against double jeopardy, but also the constitutional principle of separation of-powers in a manner that trenches particularly harshly on individual liberty.
Id.
at 689,
. The district court itself did not engage in an explicit analysis of the legislative intent underlying the armed robbery statute. It merely examined the facts, decided that the assault was continuous, and "rule[d] that, under the reading of the armed robbery statute set out in Levia, the state violated petitioner’s rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause.”
. Petitioner's alleged constitutional "rule of lenity” is a corollary to the requirement that double punishment cases be decided by reference to legislative intent. The Court, however, has questioned whether state courts are bound to the legislative intent methodology,
see
note 7,
supra
(because federal courts’ authority to impose punishments not authorized by Congress is circumscribed by the separation of powers doctrine, a doctrine not mandatory on the states, it is questionable whether a state court’s imposition of double punishment that was not authorized by the state legislature, would be federally reviewable under the double jeopardy clausе, as applied through the fourteenth amendment). Similarly, one might question whether the "rule of lenity,” even if it were found to be part of the federal double jeopardy guarantee, is such an "integral” part of the fifth amendment as to apply to the states through the fourteenth
*467
amendment.
Crist v. Bretz,
