Petitioner appeals from an order of the district court denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Petitioner asserts that the district court applied an incorrect legal standard for reviewing his claims, and that it erroneously refused to grant his petition. We affirm.
Petitioner was convicted in Massachusetts State Court on 13 counts, including murder and armed robbery stemming from a bank robbery on August 27, 1965, and the resulting slaying of a bank teller. Three co-defendants pleaded guilty. Petitioner’s defense consistently has been that only these three men were involved in the crime. Some witnesses testified that they saw only three men at the site of the crime; but other witnesses stated that they saw four men. Furthermore, a bank teller identified the petitioner as the person who shot the murder victim. The petitioner was convicted, and his conviction was upheld by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
Commonwealth v. Subilosky,
*9
Petitioner then began the process of seeking post-conviction remedies. His first line of attack focused on the admission at trial of four uncounselled prior convictions used to impeach his trial testimony.
1
Without having raised this claim in the state Supreme Judicial Court and without having raised it in any state post-conviction procedures, he filed a habeas petition in federal court. After we dismissed his habeas petition for failure to exhaust state remedies,
Subilosky
v.
Commonwealth,
Obviously unsatisfied with this result, petitioner filed a motion for a new trial in state court. The petitioner asserted that the motion should be granted because newly discovered evidence showed that he was innocent. The petitioner submitted four affidavits in support of his motion. The motion judge heard petitioner testify that he did not participate in the robbery. The judge then ruled that he would not accept the affidavits as evidence, but granted a three week continuance so that the petitioner could present live testimony from the affiants. Two of the affiants, including one of the petitioner’s accomplices, testified at the hearing. The judge found that the evidence was neither newly discovered nor credible, and denied the motion for a new trial. This denial was affirmed on appeal.
Commonwealth v. Subilosky,
We start, as did the district court, by noting that federal habeas relief is available only to review constitutional error.
Salemme v. Ristaino,
*10 Applying these principles to the particular facts of this case, we conclude that the motion judge did not commit an error of constitutional magnitude by denying the motion for a new trial. All affiants were known to the petitioner at the time of the trial, and were available as witnesses. The evidence consists of blanket denials of guilt together with impeachment of statements made at trial by, among others, petitioner and a now deceased witness. The motion judge ruled that this evidence was neither newly discovered nor credible. We not only fail to find constitutional error but we fail to detect any error whatsoever.
The petitioner also claims that the motion court violated his right to due process by failing to accept the affidavits into evidence. We have recently held that “[tjhe writ of habeas corpus ordinarily will not lie solely to correct alleged errors in evidentiary rulings.”
Allen v. Snow,
Petitioner’s final argument is that he was denied due process by the state court’s refusal to grant him a new trial. He alleges that his continued confinement, based on insufficient and unreliable evidence, violates the Constitution. We have already found that the evidence against petitioner was “impressive.”
Subilosky v. Moore,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In
Burgett v. Texas,
. Petitioner urges us to apply a stricter standard in this case. He argues that the introduction of his uncounselled convictions so infected the fairness of his trial that all reviews of his conviction must account for this constitutional error. Thus petitioner argues that we hypothesize a trial at which his allegedly newly discovered evidence was introduced. According to petitioner, we should then determine whether the admission of the uncounselled conviction was harmless in the context of this hypothetical trial.
We reject petitioner’s creative argument. The harmless constitutional error doctrine only requires “the beneficiary of a constitutional error to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the verdict obtained.”
Chapman v. California,
