Willie Lee Kirksey appeals from a judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Whitman Knapp, Judge), entered September 8, 1981, denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus to challenge his state court conviction for the murder of three people. Kirksey contends on appeal that his conviction was obtained in violation of his constitutional rights because the prosecutor referred in summation to a co-defendant’s confession that implicated Kirksey, because the prosecutor’s summation was inflammatory, and because the evidence included a reference to an uncharged fourth murder. We affirm the denial of habeas corpus relief since the facts surrounding the first contention do not establish a constitutional violation and Kirksey has not exhausted state court remedies with respect to the second and third points.
Kirksey and a co-defendant, Thomas Felton, were convicted in the New York Supreme Court (Bronx County) of second-degree murder and related robbery and burglary offenses and sentenced to concurrent terms of 25 years to life. Kirksey’s conviction was affirmed without opinion by the Appellate Division,
People v. Kirksey,
The State seeks to uphold the judgment denying habeas corpus relief on the ground that Kirksey has failed to exhaust state court remedies with respect to all three of his contentions. We are satisfied, however, that exhaustion has occurred with respect to the first point, which is that the prosecutor’s summation denied Kirksey his constitutional right to confront his accusers by urging Kirksey’s conviction on the basis of Felton’s confession. The heading of Point I of Kirksey’s brief in the Appellate Division plainly states, “The confession of a co-defendant was used against defendant at his trial in violation of his right under the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution to confront his accusers.” While a portion of the argument concerns an alleged error in the trial court’s charge concerning the limited use of Felton’s confession (a point not raised on this appeal), the balance concerns the prosecutor’s summation and specifically alleges that it is “impermissible for the prosecutor to wrongfully use a co-defendant’s confession as evidence to obtain a conviction in violation of the Sixth Amendment.” The state court brief fully alerted the Appellate Division to the federal nature of Kirksey’s attack on the prosecutor’s use of Felton’s confession and afforded that Court a “fair opportunity,”
Picard v. Connor,
Exhaustion has not occurred, however, with respect to Kirksey’s remaining contentions. In complaining to the Appellate Division that the prosecutor’s summation contained inflammatory passages and that the evidence contained reference to an uncharged fourth murder, Kirksey’s brief makes no explicit reference to any provision of the Constitution,
see Wilson v. Fogg,
On the merits of the one claim that has been exhausted, Kirksey’s complaint about the prosecutor’s use of Felton’s confession is unavailing. The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment is not violated by the admission at a joint trial of a co-defendant’s confession that interlocks with a confession of a defendant.
Parker v. Randolph,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The remark, which should not have been made, referred to one of the murder victims as a woman “who[se] muffled sounds you will hear if you do not after considering the evidence return a verdict of conviction against these defendants.” The judge promptly instructed the jury to disregard the remark. While excessively emotional appeals seem to recur despite condemnations from federal and state courts,
see United States v. Modica,
. The interlocking confession rule has been questioned, though applied, in this Circuit,
United States ex rel. Ortiz v. Fritz,
