Richard K. Jacquin appeals from the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Jacquin was convicted by a New York state court for driving while intoxicated. His conviction was based in part on a videotape of a performance test. At a pretrial suppression hearing, his counsel objected to the admission of the entire audio portion of the videotape containing questions and answers on the ground that the answers were obtained in violation of Jac-quin’s rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
In the early morning hours of May 6, 1983, a Nassau County police officer observed Jacquin driving his car erratically in Garden City, New York. After pulling Jac-quin over, the odor of alcohol and Jacquin’s difficulty in standing gave the officer ample reason to doubt his sobriety. Jacquin’s statement, “You got a winner here.... I can’t pass no test,” did little to allay the officer’s suspicion.
The officer took Jacquin to the police headquarters’ Central Testing Unit, where Jacquin twice refused to take a breathalyzer test. Without reading a Miranda warning to Jacquin, an officer activated a videotape machine to record everything that Jac-quin did and said while being given a “performance test.” The performance test involved Jacquin’s picking up coins from the floor and putting them on a table, walking a line heel to toe, standing straight with head back, and touching the tip of his nose with his fingertips. These acts were accompanied by various oral interchanges between Jacquin and an officer. Jacquin was required to answer a number of questions, including routine pedigree information. Also among the questions were the following: “How long have you had your driver’s license? ... [KJnowing that your license will be suspended do you still refuse to take the [breathalyzer] test? ... Do you have any injuries? ... Are you diabetic?”
At a suppression hearing on March 22, 1985, defense counsel objected to the admission of all the questions, answers and other interchanges recorded on the videotape on the ground that admission would violate Jacquin’s Miranda rights. The hearing judge asked defense counsel to particularize the statements subject to Miranda rulings, and counsel stated that “[a]ny conversation there beyond refusal” was the object of his Miranda claim. The judge thereafter admitted the videotaped questions and answers in their entirety.
At trial, the videotape was played to the jury without objection by defense counsel. Defense counsel also made no Fifth Amendment-based objection to the admission of a police form with many of the same questions and answers on it. The jury convicted Jacquin of the felony of driving while intoxicated, and he was sentenced to sixty days’ imprisonment, five years’ probation, a $500 fine, and revocation of his driver’s license for one year. Jacquin appealed his conviction to the Appellate Division. On appeal, the state made no claim that Jacquin had failed to preserve his Miranda objection, and the Appellate Division reached the Miranda issue and affirmed on the merits.
Jacquin thereupon petitioned in the Eastern District for a writ of habeas corpus arguing that his impending imprisonment
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violated his federal constitutional rights. Judge Mishler dismissed the petition, holding that Jacquin’s claims were barred under
Wainwright v. Sykes,
Jacquin’s principal argument is that the issue of reviewability is itself a federal question and that the merits of a particular state procedural bar must be examined by federal courts. We disagree. States are free to fashion their procedural rules according to their perception of their own needs. Of course, a state may not create procedural rules that deliberately vitiate federal rights, and a reasonably unanticipated finding of procedural default may satisfy the “cause” requirement of
Wainwright. See Reed v. Ross,
Much of the audio portion of the videotape in the instant case was thus admissible. Some portions may have had both testimonial and demonstrative aspects, however, and might have been subject to a valid Miranda objection. Certainly police cannot be allowed to circumvent Miranda by conducting an interrogation under the guise of a performance test. Nevertheless, the fact that some portions might have been testimonial and implicated Miranda was deemed by the New York Court of Appeals to be irrelevant because Jacquin’s counsel failed to designate the offending portions. Nothing in that ruling intrudes on or impedes the effectuation of Miranda rights. Specificity in an evidentiary objection is also required in federal courts to preserve an issue for appeal. See Fed.R.Evid. 103(a)(1). Moreover, it appears that Jacquin’s counsel was using the Miranda objection as a means of excluding demonstrative as well as testimonial evidence. He was properly concerned with his client’s incriminating performance as demonstrated through the medium of sound. Eliminating only a portion of the audio would have been of little aid to that cause and so he understandably made, and staunchly adhered to, the wholesale objection, despite prodding by the court for a more specific objection. That clearly amounts to a waiver of all narrower claims.
We have examined Jacquin’s remaining claims and find them to be without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
. After Jacquin had been incarcerated for several days, the Appellate Division granted bail. He has remained at liberty under probationary supervision during the pendency of his appeals and the present action.
