Steve Camron Perry is an Alabama prison inmate serving a life sentence for murder. He claims that his conviction is invalid, under the Due Process Clause, because the jury that convicted him was denied the opportunity to consider charges against him on the lesser included offenses of manslaughter or criminal negligent homicide. The district court found no due process violation and denied habeas corpus relief. We affirm.
I
The facts of this case are comprehensively set forth in the opinion of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirming Perry’s conviction,
Perry v. State,
Perry was arrested some time later and identified in a lineup as the person who shot the victim. At trial, Perry claimed through several witnesses (Perry did not testify) that he was at home at the time of the shooting. The jury rejected Perry’s alibi and found him guilty as charged.
On appeal to the court of criminal appeals, Perry sought a new trial on the ground,
inter alia,
that the trial judge denied him due process of law by refusing to instruct the jury, as Perry had requested, on the lesser included offenses of manslaughter and criminal negligent homicide. The court of criminal appeals found no error because, in its view, the lesser included offenses had not been adequately supported in the evidence.
Perry,
II
The federal district court relied on
Easter v. Estelle,
Easter’s holding has not been affected by subsequent Supreme Court or Eleventh Circuit jurisprudence.
See Alexander v. McCotter,
Perry suggests that we should distinguish his case from Easter because the defendant in Easter did not request an instruction on a lesser included offense. Perry misreads Easter. Easter did not hold that there is a constitutional right to such an instruction that the defendant there had waived by failing to request the charge. Easter held instead that there is no right under the Due Process Clause to such a charge. Thus a request for such a charge fails to invoke a due process right for the simple reason that the right does not exist.
III
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Bonner
v.
City of Pritchard,
