Wеsley Tart, captain of a commercial fishing vessel and holder of a federal commercial fishing license, appeals district court orders rejecting various collateral challenges to his state court conviction for landing raw fish without a commercial fishing permit from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. We affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
In November 1986 an officer of the Massachusetts Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Environmental Law Enforcement, while accompanied by an agent of the National Fishery Service, observed Tart’s fishing vessel, “Jeromi,” unloading raw fish at a Gloucester pier. Shortly after the officers identified themselves, Tart acceded to their request for permission to come aboard. When the officers asked to see his federal fishing license and a state fishing permit, Tart said that he did not believe he was required to obtain a state commerciаl fishing permit since he held a federal license. The officers seized Jeromi’s cargo of raw fish under the authority of a Massachusetts statute which provides that “no person shall fish for or take fish for commercial purposes in the coastal waters, or land raw fish, whether frozen or unfrozen, in the commonwealth, for the purpose of sale unless he is a holder of a commercial fishing permit.” Mass.Gen.L. ch. 130, § 80 (1991) (emphasis added). Five days later, the same state fisheries officer, accompanied by a local police officer and another fisheries department agent, once again observed Tart unloading raw fish. Tart was arrested after informing the officers that he had not obtained a Massachusetts commercial fishing permit as instructed.
Following his state court conviction, Tart was sentenced to thirty days, all but seven days suspended, and fined fifty dollars. After Tart’s conviction was affirmed on direct appeal to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”),
see Commonwealth v. Tart,
II
DISCUSSION
A. Procedural Bars to Federal Habeas Review
1. Instruction on Burden of Proof of Licensure
a. Exhaustion of State Remedies
Tart first contends that the district court erroneously dismissed his habeas petition for failure to resort to available state remedies for challenging a state court jury instruction that Tart, rather than the Commonwealth, bore the burden of proof as to *494 whether Tart possessed a valid Massachusetts commercial fishing permit. 1
A federal court may not issue a writ of habeas corpus “unless it appears that the applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the cоurts of the State, or that there is either an absence of available State corrective process or the existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254;
see also Ex parte Royall,
Citing to our decision in
Nadworny v. Fair,
The brief presented to the SJC cited at least two SJC decisions explicitly and prominently predicated on federal constitutional caselaw.
See Commonwealth v. Claudio,
The Commonwealth proposes two bases for disputing the sufficiency of Tart’s presentation to the SJC. First, the facts in both SJC cases, Claudio and Moreira, *495 were so dissimilar from the present case that the SJC was not fairly alerted to their bearing on petitioner’s federal constitutional claim, particularly since both cases concerned state statutes governing the presumptive effect a jury must accord laboratory tests for detecting alcohol and controlled substances, whereas the instant case concerns the burden of proving licen-sure.
We examine the theory underlying petitioner’s constitutional claim in order to determine whether
Claudio
and
Moreira
reasonably should have alerted the SJC to the essential federal constitutional tenets relied on in Tart’s section 2254 petition; namely, the federal due process implications of a defendant’s right to require the State to prove each element of the criminal charge beyond a reasonable doubt,
see In re Winship,
The following Massachusetts statute provided the basis for the state court instruction to the Tart jury:
A defendant in a criminal prosecution, relying for his justification upon a liсense, appointment, admission to practice as an attorney at law, or authority, shall prove the same; and, until so proved, the presumption shall be that he is not so authorized.
Mass.Gen.L. ch. 278, § 7 (1981). Were the lack of a valid state fishing permit an essential “element” of the criminal offense defined in section 80, the presumption prescribed in the Massachusetts statute might indeed be found infirm on federal due process grounds, as were the mandatory presumptions at issue in Claudio and Mor-eira.
Second, the Commonwealth argues that Tart necessarily focused on state law grounds in presenting his earlier claim before the state courts, because the federal cases cited in Claudio and Moreira offered Tart no prospect of prevailing on his federal constitutional claim. The district court apparently concluded that the Massachusetts Constitution is more protective of Tart's duе process rights in the present regard and, further, that it would be permissible under the Federal Constitution to shift the burden of proof so as to require Tart to establish possession of a state fishing permit. 4
The proper inquiry under the exhaustion doctrine focuses on the content of the
petitioner’s presentation
of the claim, with a view to whether the state court fairly was alerted to its federal character and whether the state court was afforded an opportunity to pass on the validity of the federal constitutional grounds underlying the claim. Neither the relative merit of a colorable federal claim vis-a-vis a parallel state law claim, nor the ultimate determination by the state court as to whether the federal theory warrants acceptance, generally provides an accepted basis for triggering the exhaustion doctrine. Further, as the federal easelaw cited in
Claudio
and
Moreira
exemplifies, the precise scope of the States’ power to shift the burden of proof to a criminal defendant remains unsettled under federal constitutional law.
Compare Mullaney v. Wilbur,
b. Preclusive Effect of State Procedural Default
Having concluded that Tart’s entire ha-beas petition was not barred for failure to exhaust state remedies, we turn to consider whether his first habeas claim, based on the above-referenced jury instruction, was properly dismissed. The district court concluded,
inter alia,
that Tart’s failure to assert a contemporaneous challenge to the jury instruction, and the SJC’s decision not to waive the procedural default, constituted an independent state law ground for the SJC’s refusal to grant relief, thus precluding district court consideration of any federal basis for the same claim.
See Wainwright v. Sykes,
The mere fact that a state appellate court engages in a discretionary, and necessarily cursory, review under a “miscarriage of justice” analysis does not in itself indicate that the court has determined to waive an independent state procedural ground for affirming the conviction.
See Puleio v. Vose,
Under the Massachusetts contemporaneous objection rule, an objection to a jury instruction must be made before the jury retires to deliberate.
See
Mass.R.Crim.P. 24(b). The SJC first determined that Tart’s failure to object at trial meant that his jury instruction challenge was entitled to discretionary appellate review only for “miscarriage of justice.”
Tart,
Although relevant to the state exhaustion issue, Tart’s reliance on the fact that his SJC brief cited to state caselaw premised on federal constitutional law is of no avail in the present context, since the SJC decision cited to none of those state cases. There is no indication in the SJC’s discussion of this issue that “the court researched, examined in depth, or intended to rely upon, federal law in the area.”
McCown,
Thus, Tart was required to show “cause” for failure to comply with the Massachusetts contemporaneous objection rule.
Wainwright,
B. The Merits
1. Fourth Amendment Claim
The second habeas claim asserts a fourth amendment violation.
6
Tart argues that the fisheries officers first boarded the Jeromi without a warrant and with no reasonable suspicion justifying a documentation check.
7
The Commonwealth supports the first boarding as either a valid consent search
8
or a reasonable documentation check of a seagoing vessel. The SJC and the district court concluded that the first search was a reasonable administrative inspection in a closely-regulated industry and that the warrant requirement was obviated by reason of the administrative criteria restricting the fisheries officer’s discretion to a mere request for licensure documentation.
See Tart,
The SJC and the district court determined that the documentation check in this case was a valid warrantless administrative search. Massachusetts law provides that state fishing permits “shall be produced for examination upon demand of any authorized person.” 9 Mass.Gen.L. ch. *498 130, § 2. Tart’s claim is based entirely on the officers’ request to be shown a fishing permit. Since the fisheries officers observed raw fish being unloaded from the Jeromi prior to their request to come aboard, and boarded the vessel only to request documentation, Tart’s failure to produce a state fishing permit provided the officers with probable cause to believe Tart had violated section 80 and justified the ensuing seizure.
Under the test set out in
New York v. Burger,
Under the third prong of the
Burger
test, the regulatory statute must (1) alert owners that their premises are “subject to periodic inspections undertaken for specific purposes,”
Burger,
We conclude that section 2, although a tersely phrased authorization to conduct documentation checks, imports sufficient implicit limitations upon the exercise of the fisheries officer’s discretion in the field. Contrary to Tart’s contention, the governing statute need not in all circumstances prescribe exhaustive restrictions limiting the target, time and place of the inspection. For example, in
Burger
the Supreme Court held that the statute there involved placed the owner-defendant on adequate notice as to the
types
of businesses and properties subject to routine inspection.
Id.
at 711,
The rationale underlying the administrative search exception to the warrant requirement recognizes that the significance of the governmental interest at stake may lessen the expectation of privacy to which оperators engaged in certain closely-regulated industries are reasonably entitled. Given the minimally intrusive nature of the documentation inspection in the present case, we conclude that it was not essential that section 2 contain an explicit “checklist” of time and place limitations for con
*499
ducting documentation inspections. In
Burger,
the constitutionality of the statutory scheme was challenged on the ground that the statute limited neither the frequency nor the number of inspections allowed within a fixed period of time. The Court noted that “[w]hile such limitations, or the absence thereof, are
a factor
in an analysis of the adequacy of a particular statute, they are not determinative of the result so long as the statute,
as a whole,
places adequate limits upon the discretion of the inspecting officers.”
Id.
at 711 n. 21,
Considered in the context of the entire regulatory scheme applicable to the commercial fishing industry in the Commonwealth, section 2 cannot be viewed as enabling generalized exploratory inspections typically associated with intrusive administrative inspection schemes. Rather, we think section 2 constrains the exercise of official discretion to the minimum enforcement measures required to assure reasonable compliance with the permitting regulations of Chapter 130.
Cf. id.
at 694 n. 1,
2. Section 80 Preemption
The third habeas claim maintained that section 80, which criminalizes the landing of raw fish in Massachusetts without a commercial fishing permit, is preempted by 46 U.S.C. § 122, which provides that “[n]o vessel belonging to any citizen of the United States, trading from one port within the United States to another port within the United States, or employed in the bank, whale, or other fisheries, shall be subject to tonnage tax or duty, if such vessel be [federally] licensed, registered or enrolled.” 46 U.S.C. § 122 (1987). Since Tart held a federal commercial fishing license, fished beyond Commonwealth territorial waters, and sold no cargo within the Commonwealth, he considers the section 80 permit fee a "tonnage tax or duty,” within the meaning of 46 U.S.C. § 122.
See Transportation Co. v. Parkersburg,
We first identify the federal legislation implicated by the preemption claim. Although he argues on appeal that federal statutes other than section 122 preempt the Commonwealth's fishing permit scheme, including 16 U.S.C. §§ 1801-1882 (1991) (Magnuson Fishery Conservation and Management Act) and 16 U.S.C. § 3371-3378 (1984 & Supp.1991) (Lacey Act Amendments of 1981), Tart developed neither of these arguments in the state trial court. Federal habeas review of those particular preemption claims is therefore precluded. 11 Neither did Tart expressly cite to *500 the federal fishing licensing statute, 46 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12122, but since section 122 expressly protects a federally-licensed, vessel, we address the broader preemptive effect, if any, of both section 122 and sectiоns 12101-12111.
Federal preemption of a state statute typically obtains in any of three scenarios: (1) the federal statute expressly preempts all state regulation of the same subject matter,
see Jones v. Rath Packing Co.,
Tart does not contend that either section 122 or sections 12101-12122 contain an express preemption provision. Neither could he argue thаt federal licensing statutes so pervasively regulate coastal fishing activities as to leave no room for collateral or supplemental regulation by the Commonwealth. Moreover, where federal legislation regulates in an area traditionally occupied by the States, such as the regulation of coastal fishing, a preemptive intent will be inferred only if it is the manifest purpose of Congress.
Douglas v. Seacoast Products, Inc.,
Of course, resource conservation is not the only legitimate purpose served by permissible commercial fishing regulation on the part of the States. The police powers of the State may supplement a federal regulatory scheme as reasonably required for the protection of the health and welfare of the State’s citizens. For example, in
Huron Portland Cement Co. v. City of Detroit,
The mere possession of a federal license, however, does not immunize a ship from the operation of the normal incidents of local police power, not constituting a direct regulation of commerce. Thus, a federally licensed vessel is not, as such, exempt from local pilot-age laws, Cooley v. Board of Wardens of Port of Philadelphia,12 How. 299 [13 L.Ed. 996 ], or local quarantine laws, Morgan’s Steamship Co. v. Louisiana Board of Health [6 S.Ct. 1114 ],118 U.S. 455 [30 L.Ed. 237 ], or local safety inspections, Kelly v. Washington,302 U.S. 1 [58 S.Ct. 87 ,82 L.Ed. 3 ], or the local regulation of wharves and docks, Packet Co. v. Catlettsburg,105 U.S. 559 [26 L.Ed. 1169 ]. Indeed this Court has gone so far as to hold that a state, in the exercise of its police power, may actually *501 seize and pronounce the forfeiture of a vessel “licensed for the coasting trade, under the laws of the United States, while engaged in that trade.” Smith v. Maryland,18 How. 71 , 74 [15 L.Ed. 269 ], The present case obviously does not even approach such an extreme, for the Detroit ordinance ... does not exclude a licensed vessel from the Port of Detroit, nor does it destroy the right of free passage.
Id.
at 447-448,
A federal commercial fishing license entitles the vessel to fish beyоnd State territorial waters, generally unimpeded by state regulation. The federal license allows the vessel to navigate within State territorial waters and to take fish from those waters, subject only to reasonable, nondiscriminatory State regulation designed to conserve fish reserves within State waters. See id. Since the federal licensing statute, 46 U.S.C. §§ 12101-12122, plainly does not occupy the field, but allows for a wide array of supplemental state regulation for furthering resource conservation and public health, Tart bears the heavy burden of demonstrating a direct conflict between the federal and state statutes. As it was not physically impossible for Tart to comply with both regulatory systems, Tart must show that enforcement of section 80 would frustrate the underlying policy of federal licensure.
The legitimate purposes of Mass.Gen.L. ch. 130, § 80, are readily apparent. Section 80’s prohibition against
taking
fish from Commonwealth coastal waters without a state permit is a cоnservation law,
see Barlow v. Wareham,
3. Mens Rea Instruction
Tart claims that his due process rights were violated by the failure to instruct the jury that the Commonwealth was required to establish that Tart had a culpable state of mind and that a reasonable mistake of law as to the applicability of section 80 would preclude conviction. The Commonwealth contends that section 80 establishes a “public welfare” crime, consisting only of forbidden acts or omissions, and therefore is not invalidated by the Legislature’s plain intent to eschеw a
mens rea
element.
See Morissette v. Unit
*502
ed States,
Absent clear evidence of a contrary legislative intent, a criminal statute generally is presumed to include a requirement that the state establish a culpable state of mind on the part of the defendant.
See id.
at 250-51,
Certain recognized factors are considered suggestive of a legislative intent to criminalize conduct as a public welfare offense: 15
[W]here a ... criminal statute omits mention of intent and where it seems to involve what is basically a matter of policy, where the standard imposed is, under the circumstances, reasonable and adherence thereto properly expected of a person, where the penalty is relatively small, where conviction does not gravely besmirch [the reputation], where the statutory crime is not one taken over from the common law, and where [legislative] purpose is supporting, the statute can be construed as one not requiring criminal intent. The elimination of this element is then not violative of the due process clause.
Holdridge v. United States,
First, Tart argues that section 80 articulates no legislative intent to enact a strict liability statute. If a statute establishes a new crime analogous to a criminal offense recognized at common law, but is silent as to the required state of mind, the courts more readily read a
mens rea
requirement into the statute.
See United States v. Ayo-Gonzalez,
As the section 80 offense of landing raw fish without a permit is a regulatory offense not known at common law, legislative silence should not be construed to import a common law mens rea requirement. In addition, most other sections of Chapter 130, defining similar licensing violations, likewise prescribe no state-of-mind requirement. It is especially noteworthy, however, that in section 1 of Chapter 130, the Legislature employed the term “knowingly” to define the state of mind required of a person who “counsels, aids or assists in a violation of any provision of this chapter.” The express requirement of a culpable state of mind in section 1 of Chapter 130 seems to indicate that the Massachusetts Legislature affirmatively intended to dispense with a culpable state-of-mind requirement on the part of a person charged as a principal under section 80.
*503
Second, Tart argues that a reasonable person engaging in the conduct criminalized under section 80 would not be on notice that he was violating the law.
See Lambert,
Finally, Tart offers no support for the contention that strict liability offenses cannot be made punishable by a term of imprisonment.
See Ayo-Gonzalez,
4. Cruel and Unusual Punishment
Tart contends that the imposition of a thirty-day sentence, with all but seven days suspended, constituted cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. We examine the sentence with а view to whether it is grossly disproportionate, considering the seriousness of the offense in relation to the harshness of the punishment.
See Solem v. Helm,
5. Miranda Warnings
Tart’s final argument is that the state fisheries officer’s failure to administer
Miranda
warnings,
see Miranda v. Arizona,
We agree with the SJC’s analysis that a reasonable person in Tart’s position would not have felt constrained during the initial questioning by the fisheries officer. At the time, Tart was on board his own vessel, docked at a pier open to public view, and simply was asked to produce documentation. There was no evidence that the three officers threatened Tart, restrained him, or otherwise engaged in any excessive show of force prior to their request to produce documentation.
See Ortega-Santana,
Ill
CONCLUSION
Although the habеas corpus petition was erroneously dismissed for failure to exhaust available state remedies, the district court correctly dismissed the first habeas claim discussed above, and properly denied the five remaining claims on the merits.
Affirmed.
Notes
.The jury instruction stated, in pertinent part: Under Massachusetts law, any person who is a commercial fisherman before they can land raw fish or any fish on the dock[s] of Massachusetts must have a commercial fishermen’s license or permit. Now, under our law when a person is required to have a license or permit, that person must prove they have it. Therefore, until it is proven, you can draw an inference that the license or permit does not exist. Therefore, and it has to be proved to you beyond a reasonable doubt that the person did not have a commercial license to fish.
. On appeal, Tart indicates that he will abandon the claim presently under discussion should we conclude that it was not exhausted.
. As noted in
Nadwomy,
however, rarely, if ever, is it sufficient to cite to state court precedent where the
defendant
in the cited case relied on federal caselaw, but the state court decision does not rely on the cited federal caselaw.
See id.
at 1098 (citing
Anderson v. Harless,
. The district court distinguished Nadwomy by noting that Tart’s federal constitutional claim was appreciably weaker than his state constitutional claim:
But here I have a problem. Here, it is constitutional for the state to place [the burden of proof on the defendant as to an element of the crime] under the federal constitution, [but] it isn’t under the Massachusetts constitution, we’re very clear on that, but affirmative defenses can be placed by states under the federal constitution on the defendant.
. Recently, the
Wainwright
rationale was reaffirmed in
Coleman v. Thompson,
— U.S. -,
. As a preliminary matter, neither Tart nor the Commonwealth raised the issue in the district court as to whether Tart was afforded a "full and fair opportunity” to present his fourth amendment claim in state court. Absent such an affirmative showing by the petitioner, principles of comity require that federal habeas review of fourth amendment claims be refused.
See Stone v. Powell,
Even in those cases where the federal court might not have reached the same decision on the merits as the state court,
see Palmigiano,
. Tart insists that only his failure to produce a state fishing permit at the time of the first boarding could have provided arguable ground on which the officers might have based a reasonable suspicion of a continuing violation of section 80 at the time of the second boarding five days later. Tart therefore urges that all evidence seized during the second boarding should be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
. Although Tart arguably consented to the boarding of his vessel, the voluntariness of the consent is made somewhat problematic due to a Commonwealth statute which criminalizes a refusal to permit fisheries officers to board a vessel for a documentation check or cargo inspection. See Mass.Gen.L. ch. 90B, § 12, ch. 130, §§ 2, 130.
. Tart contends that section 2 does not by its terms authorize any fisheries officer to make documеntation checks, but merely defines the failure to comply with such a demand as an offense. Considered in the context of the Commonwealth’s overall regulatory scheme as set out in chapter 130, which describes the central role of fisheries officers in the enforcement of fisheries regulations, we conclude that section 2 impliedly authorizes fisheries officers to make routine documentation requests without a war *498 rant. See Mass.Gen.L. ch. 130, §§ 9 ("Any such person or officer may arrest without a warrant any person found violating any provision of this chapter”), 13 (officers empowered to demand inspection of unlawfully-taken fish).
. Tart argues that the Commonwealth subsequently amended its marine fish and fisheries statutes in recognition that the predecessor statutes did not contain sufficient limitations to serve as adequate substitutes for a warrant. See Mass.Gen.L. ch. 130, § 4A. On the contrary, section 4A involves inspections of fishing gear, nets, cargo, and fish holds, and does not purport to limit documentation checks.
. The state trial court memorandum in support of Tart’s motion to dismiss contained but one oblique, isolated reference to section 1801 of the Magnuson Act, advancing only the general proposition that the coastal waters fished by the Jeromi are "extensively regulated” by various federal agencies, and that no state may regulate a federally-licensed vessel engaged in fishing within the Magnuson zone. While the Magnu-son Act does purport to prohibit direct or indirect state regulation of fishing outside the state’s territorial waters, see 16 U.S.C. § 1856(a), Tart even now cites to no specific provision of the Magnuson Act which would prohibit a state from regulating the voluntary decision of a federally-licensed fishing vessel to enter a state port for the purpose of landing raw fish, especially when, as hеreinafter demonstrated, the state regulation promotes a valid public health objective of the state.
*500 Finally, Tart's memorandum before the state trial court made no reference at all to the Lacey Act in its discussion of preemption. The SJC's decision not to address the preemptive effect of these two federal statutes is based explicitly on Tart’s failure to raise these claims in the state trial court. As noted, an unwaived procedural default in the state court bars federal habeas review absent a showing of cause for noncompliance and resulting prejudice.
. Tart was not charged with taking fish from Commonwealth waters.
. The Commonwealth argues that the permit fee is not a "tonnage tax or duty" proscribed by section 122, but is in the nature of a “wharfage fee" to compensate the Commonwealth for the use of public wharves in lаnding fish. Contrary to the Commonwealth’s contention, however, section 80 does not condition the imposition of a permit fee on the type of wharf used by the permittee. Therefore, we are not prepared to characterize the permit fee as a wharfage fee.
.As the SJC noted, Tart was not contractually bound to sell his cargo outside the Commonwealth at the time of the seizure and arrest.
See Tart,
. Although not raised here, a related question is presented where the legislative enactment requires a culpable state of mind but it is unclear whether the requirement extends to all elements of the offense.
See Liparota v. United States,
. Tart contends that
Solem
would require us to consider other sentences of imprisonment imposed for comparable offenses in Massachusetts and other jurisdictions. Although
Solem
remains controlling precedent for eighth amendment challenges to allegedly disproportionatе sentences, its scope continues to undergo Supreme Court definition. In
Harmelin v. Michigan,
— U.S. -,
