ORDER STAYING EXECUTION
The court has before it an application for a stay of execution filed on behalf of a prisoner at San Quentin State Prison. Execution by the administration of lethal gas is scheduled for March 5, 1969.
In his petition for a writ of habeas corpus petitioner alleges, inter alia, deprivations of constitutionally protected rights in that (1) he was sentenced to death upon a jury determination ungoverned and unguided by any legal standards, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution; (2) the imposition of the death penalty in petitioner’s case would inflict a cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution; and (3) the jury that recommended or imposed the sentence of death
The merits of petitioner’s third claim, 3 above, which appears to come within the purview of Witherspoon v. Illinois,
These claims were presented to and rejected by the Supreme Court of California in In re Anderson, supra, and therefore with respect to these claims petitioner’s state remedies are effectively exhausted within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b). E. g., Evans v. Cunningham,
Unless petitioner’s execution is stayed, he may be put to death before the Supreme Court of the United States reaches a decision in Boykin and Maxwell cases and before the stamp of finality has been placed on these issues raised in Talbot v. California, supra. In this regard, the court is mindful that any decision favorable to the petitioners in these causes is likely to be made retroactive by that Court. Compare Witherspoon v. Illinois, supra,
Under these circumstances and in line with a prior decision of this court, Hill v. Nelson, supra, it would be inappropriate for this court to proceed to decide the merits of these questions until the Supreme Court of the United States has acted, and the court, in the exercise of its discretion, declines to do so.
Further, this court as the voice of justice in an orderly and humane society, concludes that there would be a
Now, therefore,
It is ordered that the execution and enforcement of the sentence of death imposed upon the petitioner be, and the same is hereby, stayed pending the disposition of the petition for writ of habeas corpus on file herein (which petition has by previous order of this court been consolidated for decision with Hill v. Nelson, D.C.,
