Petitioner Leodis Dortch appeals the order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois denying his petition for writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner was found guilty of murder and attempted armed robbery after a jury trial and sentenced to 28 years’ imprisonment. The Appellate Court of Illinois affirmed the judgment of the trial court,
People v. Dortch,
I.
On September 19, 1979, two men walked into a Church’s Fried Chicken restaurant in Chicago, Illinois, and announced a robbery. One of the robbers fatally wounded an employee and then attempted to open the cash register. When this failed, the two men exited the restaurant. Ethel Collins, a customer in the restaurant at the time, witnessed the murder and testified that she had the opportunity to observe the gunman for approximately three minutes. Upon the arrival of the police аt the crime scene, Collins described the gunman to Detectives Shine and Lazar of the Chicago Police Department.
Approximately four weeks into the investigation, Detectives Shine and Lazar filed a police report concluding that petitioner Dortch was the prime suspect in the murder of the Church’s employee. Based on this report, three Chicago police officers arrested the petitioner in his home on October 17, 1979. Although the police report naming Dortch as the prime suspect was filed four days earlier, no warrant was obtained to effectuate Dortch’s arrest. Within four hours of his arrest, Dortch was placed in a police lineup at the Area Four Homicide Station of the Chicago Police Department, and Ethel Collins identified him as the gunman.
*1340
Prior to trial, Dortch moved to quash his warrantless arrest alleging that he did not consent to the officers’ entry into his home, and there were no exigent circumstances to justify their failure to obtain a warrant prior to effeсtuating the arrest. The trial court found that although there was probable cause to arrest Dortch, exigent circumstances did not exist, and the defendant did not give his consent for the police officers to enter his dwelling without a warrant; thus, under
Payton v. New York,
Dortch also moved to suppress Collins’ lineup identification, the in-court identification and any testimony concerning the lineup identification as the fruit of his illegal arrest. At the outset, the trial court recognized that in some cases the connection between an illegal arrest and evidence derived therefrom can be so remote, suppression of the derivative evidence is not required.
See Brown v. Illinois,
On appeal to the Appellate Court of Illinois, Dortch argued that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the identification evidence and testimony because this evidence was tainted by his illegal arrest. Accepting the trial court’s finding that Dortch’s arrest was illegal, the Illinois appellate court began its analysis by stating the rule that “[n]ot all evidence obtained from illegal searches and seizures in violation of the Fourth Amendment is suppressible.”
Dortch,
“The guiding question ... is ‘whether, granting establishment of the primary illegality, the evidence to which instant objection is made has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.’ ”
Dortch,
At the outset, the Illinois appellate court recognized that unlike Brown, this case did not involve a confession and thus the presence of Miranda warnings was irrelevant. The court next concluded that the temporal proximity between the illegal arrest and the lineup was four hours, as contrasted with two hours in Brown, and that there were no intervening circumstances during that four-hour time period. With regard to the fourth factor, the court stated:
“If police conduct is found to be purposeful and flagrant, then the taint from the illegality is not attenuated or diminished. *1341 This is because the purpose of suppressing evidence is to prevent similar conduct on the part of the police in the future and to deny them any benefit from such conduct. However, in the instant case, the trial court specifically found that Dortch’s arrest was not effected for the purpose of obtaining evidence. The police did not embark on the expedition in the hope that ‘something might turn up.’ ”
Dortch,
In his habeas petition, the petitioner again argues that the court’s failure to suppress the lineup and in-court identifications allegedly tainted by his illegal arrest amounted tо a denial of his due process right to a fair trial. The district court held that petitioner was barred from seeking review of this claim under
Stone v. Powell,
Dortch contends on appeal that
Stone v. Powell
does not bar federal review of his fourth amendment claims because the Illinois courts failed to apply the proper constitutional standards. In support of this argument, Dortch places substantial reliance on
Gamble v. Oklahoma,
The present case is clearly distinguishable from
Gamble.
Here, Dortch presents this court with the same arguments and case law he presented in the Illinois state courts. The petitioner relies almost exclusively on
People v. Sampson,
Moreover, because the
Dortch
and
Sampson
courts employed the same analysis, it becomes clear that the petitioner is attempting to have this court reverse the holding of the Illinois appellate court in
Dortch
solely because he is unhappy with the
result
in this case as opposеd to the constitutional analysis employed to reach that result. We refuse to do so because “[i]t is precisely this type of consideration
Stone v. Powell
precludes.”
Sanders v. Israel,
“Stone thus establishes that state court constitutional holdings, at least in the context of Fourth Amendment questions involving application of the exclusionary rule, are not subject to collateral review merely because the federal courts would decide the issue differently.” 1
This court has also recently stated that “[a] federal habeas corpus petitiоner has ‘fairly presented’ a claim to a state court if he has clearly informed the state court of a factual basis of that claim and has argued to the state court that those facts constituted a violation of the petitioner’s constitutional rights.”
Arrowood v. Clusen,
The petitioner has presented both the Illinois trial court and the Appellate Court of Illinois with a complete factual basis to consider his claim that Collins’ lineup identification should be suppressed as the fruit of his illegal arrest. Both courts сarefully and thoroughly analyzed the facts and applied the proper constitutional ease law to the facts. 2 Because the petitioner’s claims have been considered at length in the Illinois court system, Stone v. Powell mandates that we refuse to reconsider them here. We refuse to consider them and affirm the findings of the district court.
II.
Petitioner next contends that the prosecutor violated his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination by focusing on his election not to testify at trial and his sixth amendment right to counsel and fourteenth amendment right to a fair trial by unfairly attacking the integrity of defense counsel in his closing argument.
At the outset, we dispose of petitioner’s sixth amendment right to counsel claim. The petitioner raises this claim for the first time on appeal to this court. The law is clear that any claim not presented to the district court is waived on appeal.
See Shillcutt v. Gagnon,
This court recently stated the consequenсes of a waiver in state court: “Waiver in state court of a specific issue prevents federal habeas corpus relief based on that same issue absent a showing of cause and prejudice.”
Sotelo v. Indiana State Prison,
A.
With respect to his fifth amendment claim, the petitioner argues that the prosecutor’s remarks made during closing argument were direct comments on petitioner’s failure to testify at trial:
“MR. KAPLAN
[prosecutor]: Now, Mr. Kling [defense counsel] has said a lot of things here and Mr. Kling, if you recall, is the only one who has ever said anything about a clean-shaven person. Mr. Kling likes to testify. He likes to stand up here and tell you things that never came from the witness stand. He told you that Leodis Dortch doesn’t have to testify. I couldn’t even comment on that. I have no way to comment on that but he will stand up and say, Leodis Dortch didn’t testify because, let’s assume he did and say that he was at his house. Mr. Kling likes to testify, because we know that Leodis Dortch was not in his house, he was not in a movie, he was not reading a book. He was shooting a man down on September 19, 1979, but Mr. Kling will testify for his client. Mr. Dortch will not testify. Mr. Kling testifies for him.”
It is well settled that the fifth amendment and 18 U.S.C. § 3481 prohibit a prosecutor from adversely commenting before a jury on a dеfendant’s failure to testify.
See Griffin v. California,
“Here, the inference from the nature of the comments, including disarming comments that the prosecutor ‘couldn’t even comment ... [has] no way to comment’ on the fact that the defendant does not have to testify, is that they were intended to reflect on the accused’s silence or at least were of such a character that the jury would naturally and necessarily take them as such. The commеnts were not isolated but, particularly the references to defense counsel’s ‘testifying’ were made throughout rebuttal closing argument, and the only instruction given which could be considered curative was the standard instruction given at the end of the trial that the fact that the defend *1344 ant did not testify should not be considered in arriving at a verdict.” 4
On appeal, the respondent admits that some of the prosecutor’s remarks constitute direct comment on the petitioner’s failure to testify at trial. 5
Petitioner correctly states that when a constitutional violation is established, the government must demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that the petitioner would have been convicted absent the prosecutor’s alleged unconstitutional remarks.
United States v. Hasting,
The district court found that the evidence against Dortch was overwhelming and despite the impropriety of the prosecutor’s comment, that the fifth amendment violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. In making this finding, the district court focused on Ethel Collins’ unequivocal identification of Dortch and the admission by Dortch to Barbara Stewart that he had shot the man in Church’s Fried Chicken. The petitioner argues thаt the district court erred in finding that the evidence against him was overwhelming for two reasons: the testimony of Barbara Stewart regarding petitioner’s inculpatory statement to her could best be contradicted by petitioner himself; and Ethel Collins’ lineup and in-court identifications of the petitioner and testimony about the lineup were tainted as a result of petitioner’s illegal arrest.
Initially, the petitioner argues that the testimony of Barbara Stewart regarding his inculpatory statement to her was not substantial bеcause the petitioner was the best person to rebut such testimony. In support of this argument, the petitioner cites
United States ex rel. Burke v. Greer,
*1345
The record reflects that substantial direct evidence exists to support a holding that the alleged constitutional error committed by the prosecutor was indeed harmless. Specifically, Collins’ lineup and ineourt identification of the petitioner constitute proof beyond a reasonable doubt that despite the prosecutor’s remarks, the jury would have returned a verdict of guilty. 6
The record establishes that Collins observed the gunmаn shoot the victim from a distance of approximately two feet in a well-lit restaurant. After fatally wounding the victim, the gunman turned and looked directly at Collins. During the next three minutes, Collins had another opportunity to view the gunman while he was attempting to open the cash register. Upon exiting the restaurant, the gunman and his companion looked inward as they walked down the sidewalk. Shortly after the incident Collins provided a description of the gunman to the Chicago police. During the subsequent police investigation, Collins viewed photographs and two lineups in which the petitioner did not participate and in each instance correctly pointed out the lack of the gunman’s picture or presence. However, hours following Dortch’s arrest, he was placed in the third lineup that Collins viewed. At this lineup, Collins identified the petitioner as the gunman. We take cognizance of the fact that Collins did not identify anyone as the gunman in any of the prior lineups. Conversely, she conclusively stated that the petitionеr was the gunman in the first lineup in which he participated. Even if the petitioner had testified, he would have been unable to refute these facts. Furthermore, Barbara Stewart’s testimony regarding the petitioner’s inculpatory statement to her, although insufficient standing alone, serves to corroborate Collins’ identifications of Dortch as the gunman in this case. We agree with the finding of the district court that the evidence against Dortch was overwhelming and that the alleged constitutional error committed by the prоsecutor in closing argument was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
B.
With respect to petitioner’s fourteenth amendment claim, namely that he was denied a fair trial, the petitioner references other statements made by the prosecutor in closing argument: “Mr. Kling [defense counsel] likes to testify”; and “Yesterday we had the biggest snow storm of the season, and today you have seen the biggest snow job in the courtroom.” The petitioner alleges that these statements were insinuations that defense counsel dis *1346 torted the evidence and that defense counsel was a liar.
In evaluating whether the prosecutor’s remarks denied the petitioner his right to a fair trial, “[t]he relevant question is whether the prosecutor’s comments ‘so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.’ ”
Darden v. Wainwright,
“The heart of due process analysis in cases of alleged prosecutorial misconduct is the fairness of the trial when viewed in its entirety, not the culpability of the prosecutor.... The appropriate inquiry, therefore, is not whether the prosecutor’s conduct is conduct which is undesirable, erroneous, or even ‘universally condemned,’ but [whether] it violated some right which was guaranteed to the defendant by the Fourteenth Amendment.”
United States ex rel. Crist v. Lane,
Under this stаndard of review, we agree with the reasoning of the Illinois courts and the district court that when examined in context of the entire record, there is no indication that the remarks referenced above were either so inflammatory or prejudicial to the petitioner’s case that he was deprived of a fair trial.
United States v. Buchbinder,
III.
We hold that the district court properly analyzed the facts of the case and applied the appropriate legal princiрles to those facts. Accordingly, the district court’s denial of Dortch’s petition for writ of habeas corpus is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. It is interesting to note that in
Maxey
this court was presented with the
Gamble
decision, but, as we do here, factually distinguished the
Gamble
analysis.
. Because both Illinois courts found that the lineup identification procedure was not tainted by Dortch’s illegal arrest, it became unnecessary to address the issue of whether the in-court identification was tainted by the lineup identification. We note that even if the Illinois courts had found otherwise, the in-court identification would not necessarily be excluded as tainted by the prior lineup identificаtion.
See United States v. Crews,
. The Act provides: "Any person imprisoned in the penitentiary who asserts that in the proceedings which resulted in his conviction there was a substantial denial of his rights under the Constitution of the United States ... may institute a proceeding under this Article.” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, ¶ 122-1.
. This court has repeatedly held that this type of jury instruction is "ordinarily not sufficient" to cure constitutional errors.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Burke v. Greer,
. The government argues that some of the prosecutor's comments were excusable under the "invited response doctrine.” Under this doctrine, improрer conduct by defense counsel may invite a very limited rebuttal by the prosecution that is acceptable under the circumstances of the case albeit equally improper by objective standards.
See United States v. Young,
Resolution of this question is unnecessary. Assuming for the moment that some of the prosecutor’s remarks were invited, the government admits in its brief that other remarks made in the same context were in violation of Dortch's fifth amendment rights. As we will discuss,
infra,
such a violation triggers a harmless error analysis. In contrast, under the invited response doctrine the focus is "the probable effect the prosecutor's response would have on the jury’s ability to judge the evidence fairly."
Torres,
. As we discussed, supra, the petitioner’s claims that under the fourth amendment this evidence is tainted by his illegal arrest will not be considered by this court. The petitioner had a full and fair opportunity to litigate this claim in the Illinois court system; thus, we are barred by Stone v. Powell from reconsidering the claim on habeas review. The Appellate Court of Illinois was the last state court to review the petitioner’s fourth amendment claim; therefore, that court’s holding that this evidence was properly admitted at trial will stand. We will therefore consider this properly admitted evidence in our determination of whether the evidence against the petitioner was so overwhelming that the prosecutor's constitutional violation was harmless error.
