Appellant Tony Chun-Ho Szeto appeals the judgment of the district court denying his petition for habeas corpus. We affirm.
Szeto had been convicted by jury trial in a California state court of being an accessory to a felony and possession of a sawed-off shotgun. On direct appeal his conviction was reversed by the state Court of Appeal, principally on the ground that accomplice testimony against him had not been sufficiently corroborated. The Supreme Court of California granted hearing and affirmed the conviction.
People v. Szeto,
As set forth in the Supreme Court opinion, the charges against Szeto arose out of the 1977 “Golden Dragon Massacre” when members of a Chinese youth gang “entered a crowded restaurant in San Francisco’s Chinatown and opened fire on the patrons, intending to revenge themselves on members of two rival Chinese youth gangs * * * but instead killing and wounding innocent bystanders.”
Szeto then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court. He set forth four claims: (1) that the admission of hearsay evidence had prejudiced him; (2) *1341 that his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination had been violated; (3) that the prosecution had concealed its knowledge that a chief witness had committed perjury; and (4) that accomplice testimony had not been sufficiently corroborated under California Penal Code § 1111.
The third claim had not been exhausted. Szeto had filed a supplemental brief in the California Supreme Court in which, for the first time, he*contended that the prosecution knew that its witness, Chester Yu, had committed perjury when he testified that the homicidal attack had been planned by Sai Ying Lee, a gang member and close friend of Szeto’s, rather than by Yu’s brother, Tom. The California Supreme Court declined to consider this claim because it was outside the record. Szeto did not seek habeas corpus or other relief in state court although the writ is available in California where the prosecution has introduced false evidence substantially material to a defendant’s guilt or punishment. Cal.Penal Code § 1473 (West 1982);
In re Hall,
Since Szeto had failed to exhaust available state remedies, the district court held that it was required to dismiss the petition for habeas corpus.
Rose v. Lundy,
We read
Rose
v.
Lundy
as requiring dismissal of the entire petition without reaching the merits of any of its claims where exhausted and unexhausted claims are combined.
We believe that it is in the interest of comity as well as of orderly procedure to require that petitioner return to the district court. First, abandonment in the federal habeas corpus forum of issues which were not presented to the state courts is a serious choice, for the petitioner who abandons an unresolved issue may “risk forfeiting [later] consideration of his unexhausted claims [by the] federal court.”
Rose v. Lundy,
Accordingly, we remand to the district court so that Szeto may resubmit or amend his petition so that it contains only exhausted claims. If on remand Szeto chooses neither to amend his old petition nor to submit a new petition containing only exhausted claims, the district court shall dismiss the action entirely but without prejudice. Sze-to may thereafter, if he be so advised, seek to present his unexhausted claim in state court.
REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
