Circuit Justice.
Applicant seeks to stay the mandate of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit under which a writ of habeas corpus would issue unless the State of California grants respondent Robert Mata a new trial on the charge of murder. See
Mata
v.
Sumner,
In 1972 respondent, then a prisoner at a medium-security *1303 prison in Tehachapi, Cal., was charged with the murder of another prisoner, Leonard Arias. While investigating the murder, prison officials showed two prisoners who had witnessed the killing a series of photographic arrays containing pictures of respondent and his two alleged accomplices. Without recounting the details of each display, see id., at 755-757, it suffices to say that the two witnesses eventually selected respondent’s photograph from the arrays and subsequently identified him at trial as one of the persons involved in the killing.
On direct appeal from his conviction, respondent challenged the pretrial identification procedures and claimed they tainted the subsequent in-court identifications. The California Court of Appeal rejected this challenge, finding that there had been “no showing of influence by the investigating officers; that the witnesses had an adequate opportunity to view the crime; and that their descriptions [were] accurate.” App. to Pet. for Cert. C-4 — C-5. The California courts also rejected respondent’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which petition similarly challenged the identification procedures employed by prison officials.
On respondent’s subsequent petition for a federal writ of habeas corpus, the District Court concluded that, although “irregularities occurred in the pre-trial photographic identification” of respondent, those irregularities “did not so taint the in-court identifications ... as to establish a constitutional violation. . . .” Id., at D-3.
A divided panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed. In evaluating the admissibility of the in-court identifications, the majority of the Court of Appeals employed a “two-part approach.” First, it considered whether photographic identification, as opposed to a lineup, was necessary under the circumstances. It answered this inquiry in the negative. Second, the majority inquired “whether there was a very substantial likelihood of irreparable *1304 misiden tification ’ ’ due to the less-than-ideal procedures employed. It answered this inquiry in the affirmative. In summarizing this latter holding, the court clearly indicated that it considered the feasibility of a lineup a significant factor in its determination:
“Based upon the lack of necessity [for a photographic array], the diversion of the witnesses’ attention at the time the crime was committed, the hazy and very general description of the appellant [by one of the witnesses], and the inescapable focusing of attention upon the [respondent] by the investigating authorities, we are driven to the conclusion that the photographic identification procedure was so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentifieation.”611 F. 2d, at 759 .
In his petition for a writ of certiorari, applicant contends that the majority of the Court of Appeals gave undue weight to the failure of the prison officials to employ a lineup as opposed to a photographic array in the present case. To the extent that the Court of Appeals did overturn respondent’s conviction because it believed that “less suggestive” procedures were available, I believe that its decision ignores this Court’s indication in
Manson
v.
Braithwaite,
*1305
Two arguments offered by respondent merit brief mention. First, respondent asserts that the Court of Appeals’ “two-part approach” incorporates the necessity of a challenged procedure only in determining whether that procedure, although suggestive, was nevertheless constitutionally permissible given the exigencies of the situation. A close reading of the appellate court’s opinion, however, belies that interpretation, and demonstrates instead that the court considered the availability of less suggestive procedures an “important factor” in determining the reliability of the procedures actually employed. See
In this case the Court of Appeals rejected the uniform conclusion, of several state courts and another federal court that the identification procedures employed here were not so suggestive as to taint the witnesses’ in-court identification of respondent. Given the tension between the analysis employed by the majority of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in this case and our decisions in
Manson, supra,
and
*1306
Neil, supra,
and given the apparent conflict between the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in this case and the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in
Oidley, supra,
I have decided to grant applicant’s request for an order staying the mandate in
Mata
v.
Sumner
(the present case),
Accordingly, the application for the stay of mandate of the United States Court of Appeals in this case is
Granted.
