OPINION
Petitioner Chamar Avery was convicted in Michigan state court of second degree murder. After exhausting his state appeals, Avery petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. The district court granted his petition, holding that Avery was deprived of his right to effective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to investigate and interview potential alibi witnesses and that the Michigan Court of Appeals’s conclusion to the contrary was objectively unreasonable. We agree and AFFIRM the district court’s well-reasoned judgment.
I.
The facts appear in detail in the district court opinion,
Avery v. Prelesnik,
Following his conviction, Avery appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals, which remanded the case for post-conviction proceedings. The trial court held an eviden-tiary hearing on the issue of whether Avery’s counsel was ineffective for failing to present an alibi defense at trial. At the hearing, Lankford, Avery, Crimes, and Crimes’s friend, Darius Boyd, testified. After those witnesses testified, the judge ruled from the bench that Avery was not denied effective assistance of counsel, finding that Lankford made “cogent decisions ... and the way he conducted himself was more than adequate, was very good.” The judge characterized Crimes’s and Boyd’s testimony that they were with Avery at the time of the murder to be “incredibly inconsistent on some basic times and facts.” Though she did not explicitly analyze Crimes’s testimony, she found Boyd’s to be “totally incredible,” suggesting “a manufacturing of testimony.”
Avery appealed, and the Michigan Court of Appeals rejected his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, concluding that “counsel made a valid strategical decision not to present [an alibi] defense because the information [Lankford] obtained did not provide defendant with an alibi for the time of the crime.”
People v. Avery,
Avery filed a petition for a writ of habe-as corpus in federal district court. A magistrate judge issued a report recommending the writ be granted, which the district court adopted in November 2007. It found that Lankford’s investigatory efforts were deficient, and that Avery suffered prejudice in his trial as a result.
Avery,
II.
We review a district court’s decision regarding a habeas petitioner’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel
de novo. Higgins v. Renico,
Under the “contrary to” clause, a federal court may grant habeas if the state court arrived at a conclusion opposite to one reached by the Supreme Court on a question of law, or if the state court decided a case differently than the Supreme Court on materially indistinguishable facts.
Boykin v. Webb,
III.
Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel have two parts: “A petitioner must show that counsel’s performance was deficient, and that the deficiency prejudiced the defense.”
Wiggins v. Smith,
A. Failure to Investigate as Deficient Performance
Avery argues that his trial counsel’s efforts to investigate potential alibi witnesses in preparation for trial were deficient. Strickland instructs:
[Strategic choices made after less than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation. In other words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary. In any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.
Here, Lankford made at least some attempt to contact the alibi witnesses whose names Avery had provided him: He sent an investigator to Crimes Auto and Towing, where Avery had told Lankford he could contact potential alibi witnesses; the investigator met with La-Velle Crimes (Damar Crimes’s brother), who reported that Avery had left his car for repairs and departed with Damar Crimes to visit someone on Ardmore Street, returning at approximately 9:15 or 9:30 that evening; Lankford believed the investigator had left information on how to contact Lankford; and Lankford testified that he instructed the investigator to attempt to follow-up over the phone and in person. These efforts satisfied the Michigan Court of Appeals, which concluded that Lankford “adequately investigated” Avery’s potential alibi witnesses and that he “made a valid strategical decision not to present such a defense because the information he obtained did not provide defendant with an alibi for the time of the crime.”
People v. Avery,
But we believe that Lankford’s investigation was far “less than complete.”
See
*438
Strickland,
The State, nevertheless, argues that Lankford “had inadequate information on which to base an alibi defense, not through lack of investigation but because of inconsistent accounts of the events on the evening of the murder.” But the limitations on Lankford’s investigation rendered it impossible for him to have made a “strategic choice” not to have Damar Crimes or Darius Boyd testify because he had no idea what they would have said. There is no reason based on “professional judgment” why Lankford would not have pursued speaking to Damar Crimes. The district court correctly concluded that “Lankford was under a duty to reasonably investigate, which entails, at the bare minimum, asking for Damar’s phone number or address and reasonably attempting to contact him.” Id. The district court also correctly observed, this does not mean that Lank-ford was under an obligation to actually track down Damar Crimes, only that he put in a reasonable effort to do so. For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s decision that the Michigan Court of Appeals unreasonably applied Strickland in deferring to Lankford’s decision to end his less than complete investigation.
B. Prejudice from Failure to Investigate
To satisfy
Strickland’s
prejudice prong, Avery must demonstrate that with effective assistance of counsel, the result of his trial would have been different with a “probability sufficient to undermine the confidence in the outcome.”
Because the Michigan Court of Appeals found Lankford’s efforts to be sufficient, it did not analyze whether Avery suffered prejudice. Similarly, the trial court that conducted the post-conviction evidentiary hearing found that Lankford provided effective assistance of counsel. Though the judge presiding over the hearing observed, “I can’t say that this would have resulted in a different result at all,” we do not find in the record evidence that the trial court seriously engaged in a complete
Strickland
prejudice analysis, which requires a court to “consider the totality of the evidence before the judge or jury.”
Id.
Thus, here, as in
Rompilla v. Beard,
*439
Avery’s claim involves alibi witness testimony that the trial jury did not have before it. To evaluate a claim of prejudice, the court must assess how reasonable jurors would react to the additional alibi testimony had it been presented. In this case, the state judge presiding over the post-conviction evidentiary hearing, describing herself as the “the factfinder,” found Boyd’s testimony to be “totally incredible” and to suggest “manufacturing testimony.” We do not denigrate the role of the factfinder in judging credibility when we review a record in hindsight, but evaluation of the credibility of alibi witnesses is “exactly the task to be performed by a rational jury,”
see Matthews v. Abramajtys,
Moreover,
Strickland
instructs that “a verdict or conclusion only weakly supported by the record is more likely to have been affected by errors than one with overwhelming record support.”
Id.
Thus, the availability of willing alibi witnesses must also be considered in light of the otherwise flimsy evidence supporting Avery’s conviction.
See Strickland,
In sum, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that potential alibi witnesses coupled with an otherwise weak case renders the failure to investigate the testimony sufficient to “undermine confidence” in the outcome of the jury verdict. We do not ask whether Avery was ultimately innocent, but, rather, whether he was deprived a reasonable shot of acquittal. Here, the jury was deprived of the right to hear testimony that could have supplied such “reasonable doubt.”
CONCLUSION
Because the Michigan Court of Appeals’s application of Strickland standard was unreasonable, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of Avery’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
