Scott Walker filed this habeas petition claiming that the following errors violated his right to due process: requiring him to prove duress by a preponderance of the evidence; failing to instruct the jury on the meaning of recklessness, proof of which negates the duress defense; and instructing the jury to view “accomplice testimony” with distrust. He also claimed that punishing him cumulatively for robbery and two kidnappings, which arose out of the same transaction, violated the double jeopardy clause; and that sentencing him to a lengthy prison term was the equivalent of sentencing him for murder, a charge of which he was acquitted, in violation of his fifth and sixth amendment rights. The district court, adopting the recommendation of the magistrate, denied the petition. We affirm.
FACTS
On May 13, 1981, Walker, along with Dale Willhite and Timothy Hopkins, entered the Anchorage home of Mildred Wa-latka and her son, Herbert Oakley. According to Walker, the group’s intent was to steal a coin collection, which Walker knew to be in the residence. Each of the three codefendants was armed. Walker stated that he was surprised when Oakley answered the door, so as prearranged he feigned car problems, planning to leave without further incident. Walker testified that Hopkins then changed the plan and they remained in the house. It was uncon-troverted that while the burglars were in the house, Willhite drew his gun, and ivory and jewelry were taken.
*472 At gunpoint, Walatka and Oakley were then forced into their own car. With Walker driving, the five went to Walatka’s bank, where she was forced to remove $600 from her account. Again with Walker at the wheel, the burglars took Walatka and Oakley away from the city, where both were shot to death. Walker assisted in hiding the bodies after the homicides.
At trial, Walker claimed that all of his actions after the feigned telephone call in the Walatka residence were motivated by a fear for his own safety and that of the two victims. He testified that he knew Hopkins had killed an accomplice when he “chickened out” in a prior burglary. Walker further testified that they were armed only because Hopkins had said a contract had been taken out on their lives. He denied shooting either Oakley or Walatka, and testified that he intended for them to remain unharmed. Willhite, who was granted immunity in return for testimony against Walker, also testified that Hopkins changed the plan by drawing his gun, and that Willhite feared Hopkins.
Walker was tried on charges of theft, burglary, robbery, two counts of kidnapping, and two counts of murder. At trial, he admitted the theft and burglary charges, and was convicted on both. The jury apparently accepted some, but not all of his controverted testimony, because he was found not guilty on either count of murder, but was convicted of robbery and both counts of kidnapping.
Judge Buckalew sentenced Walker to a cumulative term of 89 years in prison. The Alaska Court of Appeals affirmed in a published opinion,
Walker v. State,
DISCUSSION
I. Duress
Walker contends that by requiring him to prove duress by a preponderance of the evidence, the trial court and the Alaska statute, A.S. 11.81.440(a), impermissibly shifted the burden of proof on intent, in violation of due process. Due process requires that the prosecution prove every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
Patterson v. New York,
Walker argues that an element of the crimes of robbery and kidnapping is “criminal intent,” and that duress is merely the flip side of this element. His argument takes two courses: he argues, first, that under Alaska law, criminal intent is an element of the crimes, and second, that, even if criminal intent is not acknowledged as an element by the Alaska law, due process requires that criminal intent be established by the government. We reject both arguments.
Under Alaska law, a person commits robbery if he uses or threatens to use immediate force with the intent to prevent or overcome resistance to the taking of property or with the intent to compel a person to deliver property. A.S. 11.41.510. A person commits kidnapping if he restrains another with the intent to hold the person for ransom, use the person as a shield, inflict physical injury upon the person, interfere with the performance of a governmental function, or facilitate the commission of a felony. A.S. 11.41.300(a)(1). An alternative provision for the crime of kidnapping defines the crime without reference to a specific intent element. A.S. 11.41.-300(a)(2). Alaska, however, does not require the state to prove a “criminal intent.”
Opinion differs as to whether duress generally prevents the
mens rea
required for criminal culpability.
United States v. Mitchell,
Walker further argues that due process requires that Alaska adopt the view that criminal intent is an element of every crime, and that even if Alaska deems duress to be consistent with specific intent, it is necessarily inconsistent with criminal intent. The Supreme Court, in
Martin v. Ohio,
II. Plain Error Review
Walker alleges two errors in respect to instructions that were not raised to the trial court. We must first address a procedural issue. Walker did not object to the court’s instructions at the trial level, but did raise the issues before the state appellate court. Normally, failure to comply with a state’s contemporaneous objection rule
2
bars habeas review unless the petitioner can show cause for the failure and actual prejudice flowing from the error.
Wainwright v. Sykes,
The Alaska Court of Appeals in
Walker,
The Supreme Court has touched on this issue in dicta. In
Engle v. Isaac,
Moreover, Ninth Circuit precedent may be read to compel this result. In
Huffman v. Ricketts,
we reviewed the habeas claim of a petitioner who had not made a contemporaneous objection to a jury instruction in an Arizona trial.
In any event, we conclude that the purpose of the cause and prejudice determination permits us to consider a claim on federal habeas that has been reviewed by a state appellate court on the merits for plain error. Although applying a different standard of review than it would on direct appeal, a state appellate court reviewing for plain error reaches the merits of a petitioner’s claim. 4 Our policy of providing an opportunity for state courts to correct constitutional errors before a petitioner may seek relief in federal court permits us to review for error where the state court has in fact undertaken such review. No disrespect of the state court conviction may be implied from a review that a state appellate court itself has undertaken.
III. Trial Judge’s Instruction on Credibility
The Alaska Court of Appeals clearly reviewed one of the two instructional errors on the merits even though it had not been raised in the trial court — Walker’s claim that the trial court’s instruction to view an accomplice’s testimony with “distrust,” coupled with its instruction that Walker may be found to be an accomplice, violated his fifth and sixth amendment rights by improperly commenting on Walker’s credibility. The court reviewed the instructions as to which error was claimed, the testimony that had been adduced at trial to which the instructions related and the interrelationship of other instructions. In reaching
*475
its conclusion that there was no plain error, the court conducted a review on the merits, which effectively lifted the state’s procedural bar to review. We therefore reach the merits and hold there was no error. The instruction on accomplice testimony was followed immediately by an instruction that accomplice testimony must be corroborated. Through that instruction, the court explained to the jury that the reason for treating accomplice testimony in a more circumspect manner was that an accomplice may shift the blame onto others to avoid facing liability for his own misdeeds. The main testimony against Walker at trial was provided by Willhite. We find that the instructions clearly referred to Willhite’s testimony rather than that of Walker.
Walker,
IV. Failure to Define Recklessness
It is not so clear to us that the other claimed error was reviewed on the merits by the Alaska Court of Appeals. Walker alleged that the court’s failure to define recklessness, proof of which prevents a defendant from using duress as a defense, violated due process. What the Alaska court said was:
“We have previously concluded that a trial court’s failure to define the term ‘recklessly’ was not plain error in Williams v. State,648 P.2d 603 , 608 (Alaska App.1982). We said: ‘The meaning of “recklessly” is well within the comprehension of the average juror and the code definition appears to be a common sense definition of the term. We do not find that the failure to define the term “recklessly” constituted plain error [Footnotes omitted.] We see no reason to depart from that holding. We find no error.’ ”
Id.
829, 830. Whether this analysis should be treated as a review “on the merits”,
see Huffman v. Ricketts,
or a refusal to review,
see Moreau v. State,
On the merits we find that the failure to define criminal recklessness did not cause Walker to be “in custody in violation of the constitution, or laws, or treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254. “The burden of demonstrating that an erroneous instruction was so prejudicial that it will support a collateral attack on the constitutional validity of a state court’s judgment is even greater than the showing required to establish plain error on direct appeal.”
Henderson v. Kibbe,
Moreover, although the omission may have been erroneous, Walker is not entitled to federal habeas relief unless “the ailing
*476
instruction by itself so infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates due process.”
Cupp v. Naughten,
V. Double Jeopardy
Walker contends that the court’s imposition of consecutive sentences for the two kidnappings and one robbery arising out of the same transaction violated double jeopardy. A state may punish separate offenses arising out of the same transaction without violating the double jeopardy clause.
Albernaz v. United States,
VI. Sentencing
Walker maintains that his total sentence of 89-years’ imprisonment for his convictions for kidnapping, robbery, burglary, and theft, is excessive, and that the reason for its length is that the trial judge believed he was guilty of murder. He asserts that the total sentence violates his fifth and sixth amendment rights.
At the time of sentencing, the trial judge stated, “I agree with ... the State’s position ... [that] you are guilty of murder.” He then stated, “I don’t propose to criticize or argue with the jury’s verdict. They looked at it and they made their decision and I accept their decision.” The trial judge also said that Walker “must have been aware these people were going on their last ride,” and that he had a “little different perception” from Walker’s that Walker did not intend for the people to be killed.
The state appellate court and the district court found that the trial judge did not rely on the facts surrounding the murder in determining Walker’s sentence. We do not address this factual issue because we conclude that the trial judge could properly rely on this information.
Sentencing courts must have wide latitude in their decisions as to punishment.
Brothers v. Dowdle,
*477
The due process clause prohibits a trial judge from enhancing a sentence based on materially false or unreliable information,
United States v. Messer,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Walker relies on a line of Ninth Circuit cases beginning with
United States v. Hearst,
. Alaska requires a contemporaneous objection to trial errors,
see, e.g., Owens v. State,
. We requested additional briefing on this issue and have been assisted by the able and scholarly briefs filed by counsel lor both parties.
. To the extent
Phillips v. Lane,
. In
Moreau v. State,
. AS. 11.81.900(a)(3) defines criminal recklessness in relevant part:
[A] person acts "recklessly” with respect to a ... circumstance described by a provision of law defining an offense when the person is aware of and consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the ... circumstance exists; the risk must be of such a nature and degree that disregard of it constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation....
. Robbery requires taking property without right, A.S. 11.41.510 and kidnapping requires restraining another person, A.S. 11.41.300.
. Walker was sentenced to 40 years for each of the two kidnapping convictions, 6 years for the robbery, 2 years for burglary, and 1 year for theft, all consecutive, for a total of 89-years’ imprisonment. The crime of kidnapping carries a sentence of between 5- and 99-years’ imprisonment. A.S. 12.55.125(b).
