Petitioner Lockett’s writ of Habeas Corpus was granted on May 4, 1978, on the ground that because the Illinois trial court had become bound at the plea hearing by the agreement entered into between the prosecutor and Lockett, the trial court’s failure to inform Lockett of the mandatory parole term required that the parole term be vacated, pursuant to our decision in
United States ex rel. Baker
v.
Finkbeiner,
The threshold issue, however, is one of exhaustion of. remedies. Lockett’s petition
*117
makes clear that he had tried no state remedies of any sort before he filed his petition for Habeas in the district court. We recently held that on the
Baker
issue of the trial court’s failure to advise of mandatory parole terms, exhaustion of Illinois state remedies was not futile.
United States
ex rel.
Williams
v.
Morris,
The Fourth and Fifth Circuits have said that a State may waive the exhaustion requirement, on the theory that
[s]ince the exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2254 “is not a jurisdictional concept but simply a flexible matter of comity,” [citation omitted] we think the federal courts may in the interest of justice and expedition accept waiver of exhaustion by the state. [Citations omitted.]
Jenkins v. Fitzberger,
On the other hand, the First, Second, Third and Eighth Circuits have said that:
The doctrine of exhaustion based on sensitive respect for the capacity of a coordinate judicial system, is not a matter for waiver by counsel.
Needel v. Scafati,
Exhaustion . . . serves an interest not of state prosecutors but of state courts. It follows, therefore, that the state court interest which underlies the exhaustion requirement of § 2254(b) cannot be conceded or waived by state prosecutors — for the state court interest in having “an initial ‘opportunity to pass upon and correct’ ‘alleged violations of its prisoners’ federal rights’ ” [citations omitted] is simply not an interest that state prosecutors have been empowered to yield.
United States
ex rel.
Trantino v. Hatrack,
The Second Circuit has said that “[w]e do not consider that the statutory requirement of exhaustion of state remedies can be waived by the State.”
United States
ex rel.
Sostre v. Festa,
We conclude that there is no bar to our raising the issue of exhaustion on our own, although it has not been raised by the State either in the district court or in the briefs on appeal. The exhaustion requirement is now statutorily codified.
Pitchess v. Davis,
Notes
. In
Parker
v.
Comstock,
