Petitioner Patrick Tata, Jr., appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts summarily dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. On appeal, petitioner asserts that the state trial court violated due process by refusing to give the jury a lesser included offense instruction. We affirm.
I
The facts are uncontested. Following a jury trial, Tata was found guilty of trafficking in one hundred grams or more but less than two hundred grams of cocaine in *671 violation of M.G.L. c. 94C § 32E(b)(2). In the course of a lawful search of Tata’s apartment and a nearby hall closet accessible to Tata as an incident of his tenancy, the police lawfully seized 111.82 grams of eighty-six percent pure “rock” cocaine, and associated drug paraphernalia.
At trial, petitioner claimed that he neither possessed nor controlled the cocaine for any purpose whatsoever. Petitioner did attempt to show, however, that he personally consumed as much as two grams of cocaine a week. The court instructed the jury on the charged offense of trafficking in one hundred grams or more of cocaine and on the lesser included offense of simple possession. At the conclusion of the jury charge, Tata objected to the absence of instructions on the lesser included offense of trafficking in less than one hundred grams of cocaine and on the lesser included offense of possession with intent to distribute.
Tata filed an appeal with the Massachusetts Appeals Court which included a due process challenge to the trial court’s refusal to instruct on trafficking in less than one hundred grams of cocaine. Tata contended that the jury, in determining the quantity of cocaine he may have intended to distribute, was entitled to consider how much was intended for personal consumption and to deduct that portion from the total amount seized. The Massachusetts Appeals Court held that Tata’s due process claim was meritless because the Massachusetts statute prohibits the possession of more than one hundred grams of cocaine with intent to distribute any part of it.
Commonwealth v. Tata,
Tata petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on the grounds that his due process rights were violated both by the trial court’s refusal to give the requested lesser included offense instructions and by the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s interpretation of the Massachusetts statute. The district court summarily dismissed the petition on the ground that the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s interpretation of the state statute, see M.G.L. c. 94C § 32E(b)(2), does not violate due process.
II
Although the United States Supreme Court has held that a jury in a capital case must be given an instruction on lesser included noncapital offenses where the evidence warrants such a charge,
see Beck v. Alabama,
We have yet to consider whether the refusal of a lesser included offense instruction in a state court prosecution for a non-capital offense is cognizable in a section 2254 habeas proceeding.
1
We find the reasoning in
Hill,
On the one hand, the “theory underlying th[e] automatic bar to habeas review has not been well articulated,”
Trujillo,
A prudential restriction on federal habeas review in noncapital cases to instances where the failure to give a lesser included offense instruction threatens a fundamental miscarriage of justice accords with general due process standards,
see, e.g., Lisenba v. California,
Even assuming,
arguendo,
that M.G.L. c. 94C § 32E(b)(2) was not violated unless the defendant
intended to distribute
more than one hundred grams of cocaine, the refusal of a lesser included offense instruction did not result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice in these circumstances. Tata was found in immediate proximity to various tools of the narcotics trade, as well as more than one hundred grams of cocaine of such concentration and purity as to be unsuitable for personal consumption without further processing. More importantly, petitioner’s defense at trial was not that he possessed the cocaine for personal use, but that he did not possess the cocaine at all. Under these circumstances it is not entirely clear that a sufficient evidentiary predicate for the requested instruction even existed.
See United States v. Gibson,
There was no fundamental miscarriage of justice. As no fundamental unfairness resulted from the refusal of the trial court to give a lesser included offense instruction, even under petitioner’s interpretation of M.G.L. c. 94C § 32E(b)(2), we need not consider petitioner's remaining contention that the interpretation given the statute by the Massachusetts Appeals Court violates the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.
The district court judgment dismissing the petition for a writ of habeas corpus is affirmed.
Notes
. The question apparently remains open in the Second Circuit,
see Rice v. Hoke,
. "Apparently, it was the risk of an unwarranted conviction where the death penalty is imposed that the Court found intolerable [in
Beck],
That is because 'there is a significant constitutional difference between the death penalty and lesser punishments[.]’ ”
Bagby,
