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Jose Martinez
HIGH
As the cases we decided today
involve only the retroactivity of decisions
pending on direct review, it was not necessary
for the court to express an opinion with respect
to habeas corpus petitions. As I read the
court's opinion, this question is carefully left
open until it is squarely presented.
Id. at 716. Until such time
as the Supreme Court may reexamine its opinion
in Allen v. Hardy, we are bound by the Court's
holding that Batson is not to be applied
retroactively to pending federal habeas
petitions. We read the majority decision in
Griffith as leaving undisturbed the holding of
Allen v. Hardy. The Supreme Court specifically
chose to limit the Griffith holding to those
cases "pending on direct review or not yet
final." Id. at 716.
The prosecutor's statement
was not nearly as damaging to High as would have
been the evidence which constitutionally could
have been admitted against him. In the total
trial, therefore, the petitioner was subjected
to less damning attack than the constitution
would have allowed. Any relief granted to the
petitioner on account of the unsupported
statement made by the prosecutor would not have
resulted in eliminating the statement at a
retrial. Were this court to grant the writ, on
retrial the prosecutor could display to the jury
High's boastful statement in its entirety. Thus,
the defendant was not prejudiced by the sequence
of events of which he now complains.
As stated, Judges Godbold and
Anderson do not join in my statement in this
marginal note.
Jose Martinez High, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Frederick J. Head, Warden, Georgia Diagnostic and
Classification Prison,
Respondent-Appellee.