The present appeal arises from an order by the district court dismissing appellant’s habeas petition for failure to exhaust state remedies. Finding that appellant has satisfied the exhaustion requirement, we reverse.
Appellant was convicted of armed robbery and aggravated battery in a Georgia Superior Court. He appealed his convictions to the Georgia Court of Appeals and raised only one issue: whether the grand and traverse jury pools in Washington County were unconstitutionally composed. The Georgia Court of Appeals rejected appellant’s challenge and affirmed his convictions.
Buck v. State,
Appellant then petitioned the District Court for the Middle District of Georgia for habeas relief. His federal habeas petition again raised but a single ground for relief: *1569 that his convictions were obtained by grand and petit jury panels in which blacks were systematically excluded and which did not represent a fair cross-section of the community. See Record on Appeal at 5. The district court concluded that appellant had not exhausted his state remedies, because he had failed to seek review by the Supreme Court of Georgia of the Georgia Court of Appeals’ decision in his direct appeal and because he failed to appeal the dismissal of his state habeas petition. The district court dismissed appellant’s petition for federal habeas relief for want of exhaustion. We disagree.
First, appellant was not required to seek review in the Georgia Supreme Court of the Georgia Court of Appeals’ affirmance of his conviction as a precondition to seeking federal habeas relief. The state concedes that appellant had no right to appeal the decision of the Georgia Court of Appeals to the Georgia Supreme Court.
See King v. State,
This circuit has held that 28 U.S.C. § 2254 does not require a Florida prisoner to seek review in the Florida Supreme Court of a Florida appellate court’s affirmance of his conviction in order to exhaust state remedies.
Williams v. Wainwright,
The district court also emphasized that appellant failed to seek review of the Georgia Superior Court’s dismissal of his state habeas petition. However, the exhaustion requirement imposed by-28 U.S.C. § 2254 does not require a state prisoner to seek collateral review from the state courts of issues already raised on direct appeal.
Walker v. Zant,
For these reasons, the order of the district court is REVERSED and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
