Petitioner Robert Wayne Lambert was tried and convicted in Oklahoma twice for the first-degree murders of Laura Lee Sanders and Michael Houghton. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) rejected numerous objections to affirm his second convictions and associated death sentences.
Lambert v. State,
I
Lambert’s initial murder conviction, on a general verdict encompassing both malice-aforethought and felony murder, was reversed on appeal because he had been charged solely with malice-aforethought murder and had conducted his defense accordingly, to his demonstrable prejudice.
Lambert v. State,
On remand, the State elected to charge both forms of first-degree murder. Lambert was retried and again found guilty under a general verdict. He argued that double jeopardy should have barred his trial on the felony-murder charges, citing the established rule that a final judgment of conviction on a lesser-included offense (here, the predicate felony affirmed on Lambert’s first appeal) precludes subsequent prosecution for a greater offense (the felony-murder charges),
see Brown v. Ohio,
On habeas review, the district court concluded that Lambert “ha[d] not demonstrated that the OCCA’s rejection of his double jeopardy challenge was contrary to [or] an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent.”
Lambert,
II
As our summary of Lambert’s appeal before the OCCA reflects, this ease involves the intersection of two distinct and potentially opposing principles. On the one hand, a defendant cannot be prosecuted for a greater offense following his conviction for a lesser-included offense. *1263 Thus, leaving aside the unified character of the prosecution here, Lambert’s conviction on the predicate felony charge, affirmed by the OCCA on his first direct appeal, would have precluded his subsequent prosecution for felony murder. On the other hand, the State may retry a defendant who remains in “continuing jeopardy” after his conviction has been reversed on appeal for trial error. Thus, leaving aside Lambert’s affirmed conviction on the lesser-included felony charge, the State could have retried him following the reversal of his initial murder convictions. This case essentially requires a choice between the two principles: did Lambert’s lesser-included felony conviction preclude the felony-murder retrial otherwise permitted by the continuing-jeopardy principle, or did Lambert’s continuing jeopardy on the felony-murder charge override the prohibition on successive prosecution of greater and lesser-included offenses?
This habeas proceeding is governed by the deferential review standards set out in § 2254(d), which, when factual determinations are not at issue or in dispute, turn conclusively on the presence or absence of Supreme Court precedent clearly establishing the legal right on which the petitioner’s claim is premised. As we recently summarized:
Our review of a petition for writ of habeas corpus is governed by the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”). If the state court adjudicated the claim on the merits, a petitioner is entitled to habeas relief only if he can establish that the decision was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)....
In ascertaining whether the law is clearly established, we review Supreme Court holdings extant when the state court conviction became final.... Federal courts may no longer extract clearly established law from the general legal principles developed in factually distinct contexts. Finally, whether the law is dearly established is dispositive of the § 2254(d)(1) analysis. Specifically, only if we determine that the law is dearly established do we inquire whether the state court decision is either contrary to or an unreasonable application of that law.
Fairchild v. Workman,
Lambert has not cited, nor have we found, any Supreme Court authority clearly establishing the proper reconciliation of the competing double-jeopardy principles at issue here. Under the AEDPA standards set out above, that is fatal to his claim. Unless and until the Supreme Court decides that retrial following the reversal of a conviction is barred when a lesser-included offense conviction is simultaneously affirmed, habeas relief on this basis is unavailable, and it is not the province of this court to resolve the issue here. But, just to buttress our dispositive holding that Lambert’s claim was not clearly established, we note that the Ninth Circuit rejected precisely the same claim in a recent direct criminal appeal. After an extensive analysis that acknowledged the lack of controlling Supreme Court precedent and looked to relevant circuit authority, the court held that the continuing-jeopardy principle permitted retrial on felony-murder charges despite the concomitant affirmance of the underlying felony convictions.
See United States v. Jose,
Ill
Lambert advances another, related argument in support of his double-jeopardy *1264 claim. He contends that, after affirming his murder convictions on his second direct appeal, the OCCA acted improperly by curing the resultant multiple-punishment problem (joint conviction of greater and lesser-included offenses) by sua sponte directing the dismissal of the predicate felony conviction affirmed on his first appeal. He insists that the only curative action left to the OCCA at that point was to reverse his felony-murder convictions instead. This argument fails as well.
After reversing Lambert’s murder conviction on his first appeal, the OCCA indicated that, should the State successfully retry him for felony murder, the trial court was to abrogate any lesser-included felony conviction.
Lambert,
Lambert argues that the OCCA lacked jurisdiction to abrogate the felony conviction because it had been affirmed on his first appeal. The OCCA rejected this argument, explaining that it had “specifically retained jurisdiction over the underlying felony” in connection with its earlier remand.
Lambert,
Appellant’s limited request for a certificate of appealability is GRANTED and the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The habeas proceeding was stayed for a lengthy period of time, during which Lambert secured a reduction of his death sentences to life without parole by demonstrating mental retardation under
Atkins v. Virginia,
. Because the general murder verdict made it impossible to tell whether Lambert’s convictions were for felony murder or malice-aforethought murder, the OCCA treated them as based on the former for purposes of assessing and remedying any double-jeopardy claims,
Lambert,
. We have recognized this point, explicitly or implicitly, in a number of unpublished decisions.
See, e.g., Elston v. Roberts,
