Vincent Giordano appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We affirm the district court’s judgment.
In 1977 while Giordano was incarcerated at the Adult Correctional Institution at Cranston, Rhode Island, he requested under Article III of the Interstate Agreement on Detainers, Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 276 App. § 1-1 (hereafter IAD) to be brought to Massachusetts to stand trial on charges pending against him in Massachusetts. On May 4, 1977, he was transported to Massachusetts under the authority of the IAD and placed in the custody of the Franklin County House of Correction at Greenfield. Four days later Giordano, along with four other inmates, was discovered missing. A hole was found in the wall of the jail. On May 10, 1977, Giordano surrendered to the Cranston police. He was returned to Massachusetts and indicted under the provisions of Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 268, § 16 (1981 Supp.), the Commonwealth’s general escape statute.
During the escape trial in Massachusetts Superior Court, the Commonwealth introduced into evidence the IAD form authorizing Giordano’s custody in Massachusetts. The state did not, however, offer any evidence of Giordano’s Rhode Island conviction. In a motion for a directed verdict of acquittal, Giordano argued that the lack of such evidence constituted a failure of proof of an essential element of the crime of escape. The superior court disagreed and *16 denied the motion. He was then convicted and sentenced to a seven to ten year prison term.
On appeal, the Massachusetts Appeals Court rejected Giordano’s argument that the lack of proof of his Rhode Island conviction constituted a fatal flaw in the state’s case.
Commonwealth v. Giordano
(1979)
After the denial of further review by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1980 Mass.Adv.Sh. 135, and of a petition for certiorari by the United States Supreme Court,
Giordano was indicted and convicted under Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 268, § 16 (1981 Supp.).
1
Massachusetts courts have long held that lawfulness of custody is an element of the crime of escape under that statute and its predecessors.
E.g., Commonwealth v. Antonelli,
We think that Giordano misreads the state court’s opinion. The appeals court stated that the IAD form was evidence that Giordano was lawfully held at the Franklin County House of Correction. The court then went on to say,
We think that, so far as the courts of this Commonwealth are concerned, a presumption of regularity attended the circumstances of the defendant’s imprisonment in Rhode Island, cf. Michigan v. Doran,439 U.S. 282 , 289-290 [99 S.Ct. 530 , 535-536,58 L.Ed.2d 521 ] (1978), and considerations of comity, as well as common sense preclude the defendant from testing the lawfulness of his imprison *17 ment in Rhode Island by escaping from custody in Massachusetts.
We do not read this language as stating that the IAD form created a mandatory presumption that the Rhode Island confinement was lawful. By citing
Michigan v. Doran,
the appeals court suggested that it harbored doubts as to the relevance and appropriateness of a Massachusetts court’s inquiring into the legality of the Rhode Island imprisonment. In
Doran
the Supreme Court held that an asylum state could not review whether an extraditing state had probable cause to seek an extradition. Similarly here, it might seem unusual for a Massachusetts court to pass upon the legality of custody in a sister state. The court, therefore, held that the IAD form coupled with the presumption of regularity normally attending official actions satisfied the prosecution’s affirmative case for lawful custody. The presumption of regularity, however, is not a mandatory presumption.
Stearns v. United States,
Given our interpretation of the state court’s opinion, we find little merit in Giordano’s argument that his conviction violated the fourteenth amendment because the state did not introduce evidence of all elements of the offense. Giordano is correct in saying that the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment demands that no person be convicted except upon “evidence necessary to convince a trier of fact beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of every element of the offense.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
Giordano contends, however, that the appeals court decision as to the requirements of the state’s affirmative case violated the Constitution. He concedes that the state could in other cases convict someone for escape merely by showing that they were held pursuant to the IAD but argues that
*18
the court’s interpretation of chapter 268, section 16 in his case was unconstitutional.
3
In support of this contention he relies upon
Bouie v. City of Columbia,
We do not see how
Bouie
is applicable here. Giordano cannot argue that he did not know that the conduct he engaged in was unlawful. He admits that he could have been convicted under another statute, Mass.Gen.Laws ch. 276 App. § 1-5 (1972), and does not deny that the Commonwealth might have proven that he was lawfully imprisoned in Rhode Island. Furthermore, in
Bouie
the Supreme Court relied upon the fact that the state court’s expansive interpretation of the trespassing statute did violence to the statute’s clear meaning and settled precedent. No such argument can be made here.
See United States ex rel. Hardeman v. Wells,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The statute states:
A prisoner who escapes or attempts to escape from any penal institution or from land appurtenant thereto, or from the custody of any officer thereof or while being conveyed to or from any such institution, or fails to return from temporary release granted under the provisions of section ninety A of chapter one hundred twenty-seven, may be pursued and recaptured and shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for not more than ten years or by imprisonment in a jail or house of correction for not more than two and one half years.
. The Massachusetts Appeals Court went on to say,
[Defendant’s] counsel conceded (after the denial of his motion for a directed verdict) that his transfer to Massachusetts under the Interstate Agreement was voluntary (see Art. III[a]), which would operate under Art. III[e], as a consent to custody in Massachusetts and to his return to prison in Rhode Island after final disposition of charges in Massachusetts.
. Giordano also argues that its interpretation of the statute must be incorrect because the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has a specific statute making it unlawful for prisoners held pursuant to the IAD to escape. Mass.Gen. Laws ch. 276 App. § 1-5 (1972). While the appeals court’s interpretation of chapter 268, section 16, makes chapter 276 App., section 1-5 partially superfluous, the question of the statute’s interpretation is one that must be left to the state courts.
