Petitioner Theodore Bacon brought a two count petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Respondent Richard DeRobertis, Warden at Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois, where Bacon is incarcerated, won summary judgment below on both counts. Judge Milton Shadur’s memorandum opinions granting summary judgment appear at
In Count I, Bacon alleged that prosecutorial misconduct before the state grand jury which indicted him for murder rendered his conviction void. Before the grand jury, the prosecutor referred to the victim’s death as a “murder.” Also, the prosecutor failed to present the grand jury with evidence that Bacon claims was exculpatory. We join in Judge Shadur’s assumption that “habeas review may be available to remedy due process violations committed in the course of state grand jury proceedings.”
In Count II, Bacon claimed that his constitutional rights were violated by the state trial court’s failure to give a lesser included offense instruction. Together with the following observations, we adopt Judge Shadur’s opinion on Count II,
Therefore, the denial of the writ of habe-as corpus is affirmed.
Notes
. There may be situations in which constitutional violations in the state grand jury system are serious enough to warrant federal habeas corpus relief regardless of the effect of the violations on a subsequent trial. For example, in
Rose
v.
Mitchell,
