Two men attempted to rob the Spartan Market in San Jose, California, killing an employee. Petitioner was indicted and con-victed of attempted robbery and first degree murder. The California District Court of Appeals upheld petitioner’s conviction. The California Supreme Court denied review.
Petitioner sought habeas corpus, charging various acts of prosecutorial misconduct deprived him of a fair trial. The district court denied the petition. We affirm.
Petitioner’s principal claim is that during trial the prosecutor commented on petitioner’s post-arrest silence in violation of
Doyle v. Ohio,
During cross-examination, the prosecutor asked petitioner if he had said anything about his alibi to the police when he was arrested. Petitioner responded that he had not — because he had not been asked, but mainly because his lawyer had told him not to speak unless the lawyer was present. This exchange violated
Doyle
by eliciting the fact of petitioner’s post-arrest silence, whether or not petitioner had been given the warnings required by
Miranda v. Arizona,
In his closing argument, defense counsel elected to suggest at length various non-inculpatory explanations for petitioner’s failure to disclose his alibi. The prosecutor responded in his rebuttal summation that an adverse inference should be drawn from petitioner’s failure to produce the witnesses who could prove his alibi, but also argued that petitioner’s failure to “tell it all” at the time of arrest undermined petitioner’s credibility. Although petitioner’s counsel did not object, the latter comments were clearly improper under Doyle. 2
The prosecutor’s comments were nonetheless permissible. By electing to dwell on the justifications for petitioner’s silence after arrest, defense counsel opened the door for the prosecutor to suggest contrary inferences.
United States
v.
Helina,
Moreover, the remainder of the evidence precludes doubt about the verdict. Petitioner’s alibi was inconclusive and uncorroborated. His own testimony placed him within a few blocks of the Spartan Market at the time of the murder. It left key periods of time unaccounted for. Although petitioner claimed to have been with several friends at the time of the crime, he called no alibi witnesses. Particularly in light of the extensive alibi corroboration produced at trial by petitioner’s codefendant, the jury could have placed little credence in petitioner’s unsubstantiated account of the evening of the murder, regardless of his failure to tell police then about the alibi. On the other hand, an eyewitness to the shooting confidently identified petitioner as the killer. Clothes matching the precise description of those worn by the killer were found in petitioner’s apartment. A witness testi *1297 fied that petitioner admitted complicity in the crime.
For these reasons, we conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the
Doyle
error “did not contribute to the verdict obtained.”
Chapman v. California, supra,
Petitioner’s remaining points do not warrant extended discussion. The statements of the prosecutor that petitioner interprets as expressions of a personal opinion as to petitioner’s guilt are more reasonably read as permissible comments on the state of the evidence.
United States v. Smith,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We need not consider the state’s contention that
Doyle
should not apply retroactively, since the equivalent of the
Doyle
rule prevailed in both the federal and state courts in California when this case was tried.
See Cockrell v. Oberhauser,
. Petitioner does not explain why his counsel did not object to the prosecutor’s cross-examination and closing argument regarding petitioner’s pretrial silence. The absence of any demonstrated “cause” for this failure to comply with the California contemporaneous objection rule might bar review of petitioner’s federal constitutional claim in this proceeding (Wain
wright
v. Sykes,
. Petitioner also claims two additional Doyle violations. In rebuttal, the government called the arresting officer and asked whether petitioner has made any statement to police following his arrest. Before the witness could answer, defense counsel objected and the objection was sustained. The incident appears to us to have been insignificant.
In his initial summation, the prosecutor referred to petitioner’s failure to “tell somebody” before trial about the witnesses who could have corroborated his alibi. Read in context, the prosecutor’s statement directed attention to petitioner’s failure to subpoena logical alibi witnesses, not to petitioner’s silence when arrested, and was permissible under
Walsh v. United States,
