This сase returns to us following a renewed petition for habeas corpus by petitioner Richard D. DiGuglielmo, a New York State (“State”) prisoner, after this Court dismissed his first petition because of his failure to exhaust his state-court remedies.
See DiGuglielmo v. Senkowski,
BACKGROUND
The murder charge against DiGuglielmo was based on his shooting of Charles Campbell following an altercation between Campbell and DiGuglielmo, DiGuglielmo’s father (“Senior”), and DiGuglielmo’s brother-in-law (“Errico”) in front of the father’s delicatessen.
Since it was three against one, Campbell was shortly forced to the ground and beaten repeatedly and severely by the other participants while on the ground. There was evidence that Petitioner hit Campbell twenty times in the face; Senior hit Campbell thirty times, fracturing his right hand in doing so, and according to [one witness], Petitioner clubbеd Campbell’s head with Campbell’s cell phone until the phone, which was an exhibit at trial, became shattered.
Ultimately, Campbell regained his feet and the fighting stopped, although shouting continued among the participants. As Campbell backed away from the fight, Senior grabbed his shirt, pulling him forward until the shirt came off. Campbеll retreated to his car, opened the trunk and removed a metal baseball bat, which he placed on his shoulder in a hitting position. Senior and Errico moved towards Campbell, and Campbell, after backing away for eight or ten feet, pursued by Senior, swung the bat striking Senior in the knee.
DiGuglielmo II, slip op. at 5. DiGuglielmo, an off-duty pоlice officer, then entered the delicatessen and returned with a gun.
Meanwhile, Errico and Senior were moving towards Campbell, and Campbell was backing away while holding the baseball bat.
According to the evidence developed at trial viewed most favorably to the prosecution, suddenly Petitioner сame out of the deli and without identifying himself as a police officer, or giving any word of warning, pointed the pistol at Campbell, and fired three shots ....
Id. at 5-6. DiGuglielmo’s shots hit Campbell in the torso, killing him. See id. at 6.
In support of his justification defense, DiGuglielmo “claimed that Campbell was poised to strike his father in the head with the baseball bat and that he had no time to disarm Campbell or choose a different course of action.”
DiGuglielmo I,
On direct appeal from his conviction, DiGuglielmo argued,
inter alia,
that the trial court’s instructions to the jury erred in describing the applicability of justification with respect to defense of a third person. The Appellate Division rejected this contention, holding that “the court’s justification charge with respect to defense of a third person, when viewed as a whole, adequately conveyed the proper standards to be applied.”
People v. DiGuglielmo,
*134
DiGuglielmo’s first federal habeas petition pursued,
inter alia,
his present challеnges to the trial court’s instructions on justification and the prosecutor’s summation. The district court denied the petition on its merits. On appeal, this Court ruled that the district court should not have reached the merits because DiGuglielmo had not exhausted his state-court remedies.
See DiGuglielmo I,
“[Ajttaching an appellate brief without explicitly alerting the [New York Court of Appeals] to each claim raised does not fairly present such claims for purposes of the exhaustion requirement underlying federal habeas jurisdiction.”
DiGuglielmo I,
Thereafter, DiGuglielmo returned to state court and sought indirect review of his present claims by asserting, in a petition for coram nobis, that his attorney’s failure to refer to them expressly in the request for permission to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals amounted to constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel. That petition was denied on the ground that DiGuglielmo “failed to establish that he was denied the effective assistance of appellate counsel.”
People v. DiGuglielmo,
DISCUSSION
On appeal, DiGuglielmo challenges the district court’s rulings. He also contends, inter alia, that he should be found to have exhausted his claims prior to DiGuglielmo I despite the ruling in that case. Joined by the Legal Aid Society as amicus curiae, he urges this Court either (A) to overrule en banc its prior decisions in such cases as Jordan v. Lefevre and Grey v. Hoke, or (B) to certify to the New York Court of Appeals the question of whether that Court considers the attachment of, or a reference to, a brief submitted to a lower court to be sufficient to constitutе a request to appeal on the basis of all of the arguments made in that prior brief. DiGuglielmo also argues that he has shown cause and prejudice for his procedural default and has shown actual innocence.
The State, while disagreeing with the district court’s view that the trial court’s justification instruction was еrroneous, otherwise defends the district court’s rulings. It also argues that, as held in DiGu-glielmo I, DiGuglielmo failed to exhaust his state-court remedies; that because he *135 can no longer present these claims in state court, they are procedurally barred; and that because DiGuglielmo has failed, to show cause and prejudice with respect to his procedural default, his claims may not be entertained by the federal courts.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the denial of DiGuglielmo’s habeas petition on the grounds, inter alia, that his claims were not properly exhausted and that his procedural default is not excusable because he has not shown adequate cause for the default, or prejudice resulting from it, or actual innocence; that his claims assert errors of state law that are not cognizable in a federal habeas proceeding; and that, even if cognizable, his claims lack merit because any error was harmless.
DiGugliеlmo’s contention that he had exhausted his state-court remedies prior to
DiGuglielmo I
is barred by the law-of-the-case doctrine.
See, e.g., Arizona v. California,
Because DiGuglielmo can no longer obtain state-court review of his present claims on account of his procedural default, those claims are now to be deemed exhausted.
See, e.g., Harris v. Reed,
DiGuglielmo argues that the failure of his attorney to raise the present claims with specificity in the request for leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals constitutes cause. We reject this contention as a matter of law. In order to establish attorney dereliction as cause, a petitioner must meet the standards for showing constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel.
See, e.g., Edwards v. Carpenter,
*136
Further, DiGuglielmo has not satisfied his burden of showing “prejudice,”
i.e.,
a “reasonable probability” that, but for counsel’s failure, “the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Strickland v. Washington,
DiGuglielmo also contends that, even if he has not mеt the cause-and-prejudice test, his procedural default should be excused because he meets the alternative test of “actual[] innocen[ce],”
Murray v. Carrier,
In addition, we note that even if DiGuglielmo’s procedural default had not occurred or were excusable, we would affirm the district court’s denial of his habeas petition on the ground that the petition does not present issues of federal law. We agree with the district court that DiGuglielmo’s contention that the State’s summation, while consistent with the indictment, deviated from its bill of particulars, does not present a federal claim. Likewise, justification is a state-law defense.
See
N.Y. Penal L. § 35.15 (McKinney 1975 & Supp.1987);
Johnson v. Rosemeyer,
DiGuglielmo seeks to distinguish
McGuire
on the ground that it dealt with an alleged error of state law in the admission of evidence, and he argues that this Court’s decision in
Davis v. Strack,
federal courts must of course defer to state-court interpretations of the state’s laws, so long as those interpretations are themselves constitutional .... In other words, our role ... is not to interpret New York’s law of justification, but to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant a justification charge under that law.
In this case, the Appellate Division ruled that, as a whole, the instructions at DiGuglielmo’s trial properly set forth the law of New York. We aré not empowered to second-guess that ruling, and DiGuglielmo has not demonstrated that the instructions deprived him of any defense to which he was entitled under federal law. He has shown no proper basis for federal habeas relief.
Finally, we decline the invitation by DiGuglielmo and amicus curiae to certify to the New York Court of Appeals the exhaustion-related question of whether that Court considers that attaching a lower-court brief to a request for leave to appeal, without explicitly alerting the New York Court of Appeals to each claim of which review is sought, is sufficient to constitute a request for review of all of the arguments made in the lower-court brief. The certification process is designed to seek rulings from the New York Court of Appeals only on questions of law that are “dispositive.” New York Rules of Court § 500.17(a). Given our views discussed *138 above that DiGuglielmo’s habeas claims would fail for lack of merit or for lack of a cognizable federal claim even if they had been exhausted, certification would be inappropriate.
We have considered the contentions of DiGuglielmo and of amicus curiae and have found in them no basis for reversal or other relief. The judgment denying the petition is affirmed.
