Fоllowing a jury trial, petitioner Normand Gagne, and two codefendants were convicted of armed robbery, armed assault with intent to murder, attempted murder, assault and battery on a police officer, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. The Massachusetts Appeals Court reversed the convictions on the basis of errors at trial and remanded for a new trial.
Commonwealth v. Gagnon,
*7 Gagne asserts that he was denied his constitutional right to a fair trial because the prosecutor improperly “vouched” for the credibility of a witness, Officer Petrick. Petitioner also points to other remarks made by the prosecutor during the trial, particularly to statements of personal opinion made by the prosecutor during his closing argument. Defense counsel objected only to the vouching for the credibility of Officer Petrick. Petitioner argues thаt in weighing the impact of the vouching statement, the court must examine the proceedings in their entirety, so that other comments, although unobjected to below, must be considered.
The Commonwealth contends here as it did below, that Gagne failed to exhaust his state remedies as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) and (c). The district сourt found that the improprieties petitioner alleged could not support his claim of a constitutional violation and did not address the exhaustion issue. We agree with respondent that Gagne did not meet his initial obligation of exhausting remedies available to him in the Commonwealth courts and find that no exception applies. Under the applicable law, we must affirm the dismissal on exhaustion principles.
In order for the exhaustion requirement to be met, the petitioner must have fairly presented the substance of his federal ha-beas claim to the state court before seeking federal rеview.
See Anderson v. Harless,
This does not mean that the petitioner must have expressed the theory in precisely the same terms. As we stated in
Dougan v. Ponte,
a petitioner may satisfy the exhaustion requirement by any of thе following methods: (1) citing a specific provision of the Constitution; (2) presenting the substance of a federal constitutional claim in such manner that it likely alerted the state court to the claim’s federal nature; (3) reliance on federal constitutional precedents; and (4) claiming a particulаr right specifically guaranteed by the Constitution.
After examining the extracts from the state court briefs provided us by the parties, we find no reference to any specific provision of the Constitution or to any right specifically guaranteed by the Constitution. The portion of the briefs dealing with prosecutorial misconduct contained only one oblique reference to constitutional rights. In the issue caption, the defendant alleged that he had been denied his “rights to a fair trial and due process of the law.” The only other arguable reference was a repetition of the words “fair trial” within the body of the argument. This does not meet the first or fourth Dougan requirement.
Petitioner also failed to suggest a constitutional claim by the use of federal precedent. Although he cited two federal cases, neither contains an analysis of constitutional law. In both cases, the court of appeals reviewed claims of a prosecutor’s injection of personal opinion into argument pursuant to its supervisory authority over the district court. When a federal appellate court conducts supervisory review, constitutional rights need not be implicated. As the Court observed in
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
In determining whether Gagne presented the substance of his claim in a manner likely to alert the Commonwealth courts tо its “federal nature,” we are faced with a situation nearly identical to
Dougan v. Ponte,
Similarly here, Gagne’s allegation of an unfair trial appeared only briefly in one caption and within the discussion that followed. Petitioner never set forth a constitutional frame of reference. Rather, he buttressed his claim of an unfair trial with a citation to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Rule 3:08, PF 13(b). This could only mean that the argument should be read as an appeal to Massachusetts standards for a fair trial, especially since “ ‘[s]tate court briefs routinely characterize a variety of errоrs as a denial of a fair trial, conveying the thought that the error, simply as a matter of state law, warrants a new trial.’”
Dougan,
The unexplained inclusion of the term “due process of the law” in Gagne’s issue caption, while more than appeared in Doug-an's brief, presented no perceptibly greatеr signal to the Commonwealth courts that federal constitutional claims were implicated. In
Dyer v. Ponte,
There are still further reasons for finding petitioner has failed to exhaust his state remedies. While the focus of Gagne’s unfair trial allegation is the prosecutor’s vouching comment, duly objected to at trial, he urges that in reviewing the impact of this statement, the court must
*9
consider other remarks to which defense counsel never objected. The thrust of his argument is that since a claim of an unfair trial necessitates rеview of the comment in the context of the entire trial,
Donnelly v. DeChristoforo,
First, the argument itself may be foreclosed because defendant did not object at trial.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
But more important to our rеview of the exhaustion issue, it is not at all clear that Gagne presented such a constitutional claim to the Commonwealth courts, although the Massachusetts Appeals Court did consider the remarks in conducting a limited “miscarriage of justice” review authorized by Massachusetts law,
Gagnon,
Moreover, even if we were to treat the habeas petition as setting forth two claims —one alleging that the vouching rеmark alone deprived petitioner of a fair trial, and the other that such remark, in light of the entire proceedings, violated his constitutional rights — and we were to find that he did exhaust his first claim but did not exhaust the second, petitioner’s position would not be improved. The petition would then contain both exhausted and unex-hausted claims and should be dismissed as “mixed.”
See Rose v. Lundy,
A finding that petitioner has failed to exhaust his state remedies, however, does not end the inquiry. A court of appeals is not deprived of jurisdiction to consider the merits of an application for habeas corpus relief because petitiоner has not met this requirement.
Granberry v. Greer,
— U.S. -,
The habeas statute contains two exceptions to the requirement. A petitioner need not exhaust if there is an absence of available state corrective process or circumstances exist which render the process ineffective to protect his rights. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) (1982). The latter situation has been interpreted to mean that the corrective process must be “so clearly deficient as to render futile any effort to obtain relief.”
Duckworth v. Serrano,
*10
Habeas review may also be appropriate despite nonexhaustion if the state fails to raise that defense in the district court and raises it for the first time on appeal. The Supreme Court considered this possibility in
Granberry v. Greer,
holding that the court of appeals was neither required to dismiss for nonexhaustion in the face of the state’s failure to raise the issue below, nor to regard the failure as an absolute waiver.
Granberry,
We are not faced here with a possible waiver. From the outset, the Commonwealth defended on the ground that petitioner had failed to exhaust.
An argument that the principles of
Granberry
could provide the basis for an exception outside of the waiver context, so that exhaustion might be dispensed with whenever, for instance, there has been a clear miscarriage of justice, or the claim was not even colorable, seems to have been disposed of by
Duckworth v. Serrano,
Furthermore, when the state fails to raise the exhaustion issue until a petitioner appeals, there is an important purpose to be served by permitting immediate review in appropriate circumstances. The possibility that the issue will be considered waived discourages the state from making a tacticаl decision to piecemeal its defense, reserving an exhaustion argument for use only if it loses on the merits in the district court.
Granberry,
Other situations may exist in which, even absent waiver, federal court action is proper despite lack of exhaustion. The Supreme Court suggested аs much in
Granberry
by reiterating the view expressed in
Frisbie v. Collins,
While we do not decide here that no other circumstances would warrant immediate review, we find no factual support for an аrgument of “special circumstances” in petitioner’s case. Nor did petitioner press any argument to this effect.
Although we are, under the applicable law, precluded from deciding the case on the merits, we are constrained to state that we agree with the district court that petitioner’s federal constitutional rights were not implicated.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Petitioner’s counsel did not represent petitioner in any of the state court proceedings.
