Mark Kilmartin appeals from the district court’s 2 denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition. We affirm.
I.
Kilmartin was convicted on a charge of first-degree sodomy following his sexual contact with an eleven-year-old boy and was sentenced to life imprisonment. The Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction.
See State v. Kilmartin,
On appeal from the denial of federal habe-as relief, Kilmartin contends that the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury that age and marital status were necessary elements of statutory sodomy and by instructing the jury that forcible compulsion was a necessary element. He also contends that the trial court erred when it questioned prospective jurors outside his presence.
II.
Kilmartin alleges as error a discrepancy between the information and one of the instructions submitted to the jury. The information charged Kilmartin with having “deviate sexual intercourse with [M.J.S.], to whom [Kilmartin] was not married and who was less than fourteen years old, without the consent of [M.J.S.].”
Kilmartin,
As to Count I, if you find and believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt: First, that on or about March 17, 1991, in the County of Clay, State of Missouri, [Kilmartin] placed his hand on the penis of [M.J.S.], and
Second, that such conduct constituted deviate sexual intercourse, and Third, that [Kilmartin] did so without the consent of [M.J.S.] by the use of forcible compulsion, and
Fourth, that [Kilmartin] knew he was engaging in the conduct described in paragraph First without the consent of [M.J.S.] by forcible compulsion, then you will find [Kilmartin] guilty under Count I of forcible sodomy.
Kilmartin,
The discrepancy between the charge and the jury instruction was not contested by Kilmartin in his state court appeal. The Missouri Court of Appeals reviewed the discrepancy sua sponte for plain error, however, and found no manifest injustice.
See Kilmartin,
The State argues that plain error review at the state appellate level does not remedy the procedural default caused by Kil-martin’s failure to challenge the discrepancy in his initial appeal. The district court agreed and refused to review the issue. There is a “decisional split within our Circuit on whether plain-error review by a state appellate court waives a procedural default by a habeas petitioner, allowing collateral review by this Court.”
Mack v. Caspari,
Although the instruction did not require a finding that M.J.S. was under the age of fourteen or that Kilmartin and M.J.S. were not married, these elements of the offense were undisputed. The jury specifically found that Kilmartin had initiated sexual contact with M.J.S., and Kilmartin does not claim (nor could he) that he and M.J.S. were lawfully married. Neither does he dispute that M.J.S. was eleven years old at the time of the incident. Thus, we agree with the Missouri Court of Appeals that the omission of the elements of age and marital status from the challenged instruction did not result in manifest injustice.
Likewise, the erroneous inclusion of the elements of forcible compulsion and lack of consent, which imposed upon the state a higher burden to gain a conviction than that required by Missouri law, did not result in manifest injustice.
See Kilmartin,
III.
Kilmartin’s second claim of error is that the trial court erred by failing to allow his presence at a bench conference with several potential jurors. During the voir dire, the trial judge asked potential jurors if any of them would like to speak with him privately. Six venirepersons accepted this invitation. Kilmartin’s counsel was present during each venireperson’s conversation with the judge.
Although a criminal defendant has a constitutional right to attend and to participate in his trial,
United States v. Gagnon,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Ortrie D. Smith, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
