After a bench trial, a Nebraska state court convicted Roosevelt Partee of being a felon in possession of a firearm. He was sentenced to twenty to fifty years in prison as an habitual criminal based upon two prior second-degree murder convictions.
See
Neb. Rev.Stat. § 29-2221. He appealed, arguing that a 1970 Arkansas murder conviction should not have been used to enhance his sentence because there was no proof that his guilty plea complied with
Boykin v. Alabama,
Partee then commenced this federal habe-as corpus proceeding. The district court assumed that Partee’s Boykin claim is procedurally defaulted, held that use of a plea-based conviction to enhance Partee’s sentence without proof of Boykin compliance is a fundamental miscarriage of justice excusing procedural default, and granted the writ. The State appeals.
Prior to oral argument, a panel of this court held in
Narcisse v. Dahm,
We have substantial doubt that Partee’s claim is procedurally defaulted, as the district court assumed. Partee appears to have adequately presented the
Boykin
issue on direct appeal, and the Nebraska Supreme Court decided it on the merits. Nonetheless, we need not remand for further exploration of this issue. In
Custis v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
The district denied Partee’s other habeas claims, and he did not cross appeal. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded with instructions that Partee’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus be denied.
