MEMORANDUM DECISION
Thеse three habeas corpus petitions have been brought by inmates in Illinois state prisons. Petitioners, who pleaded guilty in their state court criminal prosecutions, contend that the state judges violated petitioners’ Fourteenth Amendment rights by failing tо inform petitioners of a mandatory parole term that would attach to their negotiated sentences. In
United States ex rel. Williams v. Morris,
In
United States ex rel. Baker v. Finkbeiner,
In our earlier
Williams
decision, we relied on
Baker
and held that petitioners, who had not been adequately advised of their mandatory parole, were entitled to habеas corpus relief. As a threshold matter, we decided whether petitioners should be required to exhaust a state remedy as a prerequisite to seeking relief in the federal courts. In
People v. Wills,
[O]ne factor to be considered in determining whether a plea of guilty was voluntarily and intelligently made under constitutional standards, that omission alone is not of recognized constitutional dimensions in the Illinois courts.
The Court of Appeals disagreed with our decision and reversed holding that petitioners had a state remedy. The court reasoned that the mandatory parole issue was not “crystallized” in
Wills
as it was in
Baker,
because the
Wills
court had simply applied the broad
Boykin
standard of voluntariness.
From the foregoing cases, the Court of Appeals perceived a state of development in Illinois law “with strong indications from
McCoy
that hopefully the federal and state courts are tending to agree so that these matters of the constitutional rights of state prisoners may be resolved by state courts without federal interference.”
Petitioners now contend that the Court of Appeals’ expectations have proven to be “misguided.” After the Court of Appeals’ decision, Martha Mills, Esq., counsel for petitioners here, filed with the Illinois Supreme Court a petition for leave to appeal on behalf of another state petitioner, David McCullom. The petition presеnted the mandatory parole issue and, citing the Court of Appeals’ Williams decision, urged the Illinois Supreme Court to resolve the issue of the availability of a state remedy. On October 1, 1979 the Illinois Supreme Court denied the petition for leave to appeal. Petitioners claim that this denial, coupled with the numerous decisions rendered by Illinois appellate courts denying relief, establishes the absence of a state remedy. Respondents argue, however, that the denial of a petition for leave to appeal is equivalent to a denial by the United States Supreme Court of a petition for a writ of certiorari and indicates neither acceptance nor approval of the lower сourt’s decision. Therefore respondents contend that Illinois law now stands in the same position as it did when the Court of Appeals decided Williams.
We agree with petitioners that the attempted exercise of a state remedy would be futile. Whеn we wrote our original decision in this case, we noted that all five appellate districts in Illinois, before the Court of Appeals’
Baker
decision, found no constitutional issue in the failure to warn of a mandatory parole term. Now, with the benefit оf
Baker’s
reasoning, Illinois appellate courts in several decisions have nevertheless found no constitutional issue.
See, e. g. People v. Reese, supra; People v. Irons, supra; People v. Cosey,
The Court of Appeals expressed its bеlief that Illinois law on this issue was in a state of development. If this is true, then we could reasonably expect the Supreme Court to reach the merits of a case in which the issue was squarely presented, especially when the petitionеr before the Supreme Court discusses the Court of Appeals decision and the need for resolution of the conflict between the state and federal courts, which, the record here now shows, was done in the McCullom petition. Thus although the Suprеme Court’s denial of leave to appeal may not indicate the court’s opinion of the merits of the case, we believe that the denial, coupled with the numerous appellate cases finding the failure to warn nonactionable and the denial of leave to appeal in Irons and Reese, indicates that no further development will take place in the Illinois courts with respect to this issue. The Court of Appeals based its hope for eventual agreement between the state and federal courts on cases which skirted the precise issue presented here. When the Illinois Supreme Court refuses to hear a case in which the issue is squarely presented, we can only conclude that the Court of Appeals’ hopes have proven illusory. 3
*779
A contrary holding would require petitioners to continue to seek relief in the state courts, even though the appellate courts have consistently refused to grant relief and the Supreme Court has denied leave to appeal in cases presenting the issue. Such a holding would mean that the law with respect to this issue is in a perpetual state of development, with no real prospect of reaching maturation. We do nоt believe that the Court of Appeals anticipated such a result, nor do we believe that the Court of Appeals wishes petitioners to shuttle back and forth between the federal and state courts, merely to have the appеllate court deny relief and the Supreme Court deny leave to appeal.
See United States ex rel. Williams v. Brantley,
Although many of the cases denying relief were decided prior to
Baker,
the Illinois courts have had sufficient opportunity to interpret and apply the
Baker
holding. Morеover we note that in at least one other constitutional-criminal procedure context, the Illinois Supreme Court has held that it is not bound by any federal court decisions other than those of the Supreme Court.
See People v. Stansberry,
We hold that the denial of leave to appeal in McCullom, when considered with the precedent from the appellate courts, demonstrates anew the futility of a state remedy. Accordingly, judgment will enter expunging petitioners’ mandatory parole terms.
Notes
. In our opinion we had distinguished Wenger, noting that at the time of Wenger’s guilty plea, Rule 402 specifically required a warning as to maximum sentence but did not require the warning as to mandatory parole that Wills would later impose. In light of this distinction and the string of Illinois appellate precedents holding the omission of warnings as to mandatory parole nonactionable, we refused tо require exhaustion on the basis of Wenger.
. The court also cited an unreported decision from the Eleventh Judicial Circuit, People v. Guppey, Docket No. 74 CF 2 (1977), in which an Illinois trial court granted relief for the failure to warn of mandatory parole.
. We also note that thе Illinois Supreme Court has decided that a claim for release for failure to warn of mandatory parole is not cognizable in a writ of habeas corpus.
See Norman v. Elrod,
