MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Earl Allen (“Allen”) originally advanced four grounds for relief in his 28 U.S.C.
*563
§ 2254 (“Section- 2254”) petition for a writ of habeas corpus. This Court’s “Opinion I, ”
After
Payne
was decided by that Court (
Now Allen has tendered a “First Amended Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus,” 2 asserting two “causes” for such failure:
1. Allen’s attorneys were unaware of the State’s Attorney’s de facto policy of using peremptory challenges for the systematic exclusion of minorities from the jury.
2. Allen lacked resources to compile and analyze the statistics necessary to show such systematic exclusion over a period of time, as required by Swain v. Alabama,380 U.S. 202 ,85 S.Ct. 824 ,13 L.Ed.2d 759 (1965).
Respondent contends those two reasons are not sufficient cause for Allen’s failure to have tendered any evidence at all. This Court agrees.
As to the first asserted ground, for nearly a decade before Allen’s April 1979 trial Illinois courts had clearly applied
Swain
to charges of improper jury selection, without distinguishing between the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments.
3
People v. Butler,
1. Counsel might have been granted a continuance to garner evidence on systematic exclusion.
2. Counsel might have made an offer of proof and proceeded with the trial. At that point the State might have been forced to operate at its peril, with an ultimate acquittal serving to terminate Allen’s exposure and an ultimate convic *564 tion being subject to constitutional attack.
Allen’s counsel however did
not
tender the issue to the state trial judge. As
Engle v. Isaac,
Where the basis of a constitutional claim is available, and other defense counsel have perceived and litigated that claim, the demands of comity and finality counsel against labeling alleged unawareness of the objection as cause for a procedural default.
Thus Allen fails on the “cause” branch of the cause-and-prejudice requirement.
As for Allen’s second current contention, all that would have been required to preserve the improper jury selection issue for appeal was some showing, even by counsel’s statements if need be, that over a period of time the State had systematically excluded minorities from the jury panel. See
People v. Brown,
One matter remains. Allen’s Amended Petition seeks to assert a claim based on the reasoning of
McCray v. Abrams,
Conclusion
Allen is granted leave to file his Amended Petition (simply to complete the record). In accordance with Rule 4 following Section 2254, the petition is dismissed.
Notes
. Since Opinion II issued, our Court of Appeals has held in
Weber v. Israel,
. In addition the Amended Petition proposes to drop the "United States ex rel.” portion of the caption and to name two new respondents, the Warden of the Menard Correctional Center and the Attorney General of Illinois, in place of Hardy. Though leave to file the Amended Petition is granted, this order retains the original case name to avoid confusion.
. This Court of course recognizes the anomaly inherent in speaking of the Sixth Amendment as though distinct from the Fourteenth, where (as here) we deal with state actors. But the common (albeit imprecise) usage, referring to the Bill of Rights provision as though directly applicable, is both convenient and meaningful in this case. As Opinion II observed,
