Appellant filed a petition for habeas corpus in the district court seeking to reverse his first-degree murder conviction on the ground that incriminating statements taken in violation of his constitutional rights were admitted into evidence at his trial. The district court denied relief because of a failure to exhaust state remedies. 1
When a state prisoner seeks federal habeas relief it is not essential that he have relitigated by state habeas proceedings, or other state post-conviction remedies, federal constitutional questions which were fully developed at his state trial and upon appeal to the highest state court. Hill v. Beto,
The record shows that the federal constitutional issues relied upon in the federal district court were raised at appellant’s trial and upon direct appeal. But we are unable to establish that the Florida appellate court considered those issues in the direct appeal. 2 The only mention of these specific constitutional issues in the report of the opinion is in the court’s list of appellant’s points of error. The only ruling that can be said to relate to these issues is the opening statement in the opinion that no reversible error was committed, and the closing remark that the judge was not in error in his rulings on evidence.
“We find that there is such doubt that [Williams] has exhausted his available State remedies,” Boyer v. City of Orlando,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Pursuant to Hule 18 of the Hules of this Court, this case has been put on the summary calendar for disposition without oral argument.
See
Murphy v. Houma Well Service, 5 Cir. 1969,
. There has been no collateral action in the state court attacking the conviction.
