Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
Walter A. McNeil, the Secretary for the Florida Department of Corrections (“the State”), appeals the district court’s grant of Julio Cesar Bellizia’s 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus petition. The district court granted Bellizia’s § 2254 petition, finding that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for a judgment of acquittal during Bellizia’s trial in state court on the ground that the State failed to prove that Bellizia possessed twenty-eight grams or more of heroin for purposes of applying a twenty-five-year mandatory minimum sentence, as required by
Ross v. State,
I. BACKGROUND
At trial, Bellizia testified that he was approached by two men who threatened to kill his mother and brother unless he helped them transport drugs into the United States. He knew the men were drug traffickers. He swallowed the approximately thirty-three pellets given to him priоr to boarding his flight from Venezuela to Miami, but testified that, while he suspected that they contained drugs, he was not sure of the type or amount. Upon arrival in Miami, Bellizia lost cоnsciousness and was admitted to the hospital where the pellets were discovered and surgically removed.
The criminalist at the Miami-Dade Police Department Crimе Lab tested one pellet, which was found to contain heroin, but did not test the remainder. Instead, she weighed the one pellet containing heroin, assumed the remaining thirty-onе pellets contained heroin of approximately the same weight (9.1 grams each), and concluded, on that basis, that Bellizia possessed a net weight of 291.2 grams of heroin. Based thereupon, Bellizia was convicted of trafficking in twenty-eight grams or more of heroin, and sentenced to the twenty-five-year mandatory minimum. The state trial and аppellate courts affirmed his conviction and sentence, and his pro se Rule 3.850 motions for post-conviction relief were denied.
Bellizia then timely filed the instant § 2254 habeas corpus petition, arguing inter alia that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move for a judgment of acquittal based upon the insufficiency of the State’s evidence pursuant to Ross, and that he was prejudiced due to the erroneous imposition of the twenty-five-year mandatory minimum sentence. The district court reviewed the claim de novo 1 and granted Bellizia’s motion, which the State appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
When reviewing the grant of a § 2254 petition, we review “questions of
*1329
law and mixed questions of law and fact, including ineffective assistance of counsel claims,
de novo,
and review findings of fact for clear error.”
Pardo v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr.,
In this case, Bellizia contends that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective under
Strickland v. Washington,
In
Ross,
the defendant was arrested and charged with trafficking in cocaine after police recovered a brown paper bag, which contained two bundles, that he threw away.
The Third District Court of Appeal reversed the conviction, holding that when a defendant is charged with cocaine trafficking, and the substance suspected to be cocaine is contained in separately wrapped paсkets, the State does not satisfy its burden of proving that the cocaine satisfies the minimum statutory weight by chemically testing only one of the packets and then visually examining the сontents of the remaining packets.
Id.
at 1239-41. The court pointed out that visual examination of untested packets is insufficient to support a conviction because the fact that a packet containing contraband is found among other packets containing a substance of similar appearance is no assuranсe that the other untested packets contain the same contraband as there are a vast number of other chemical compounds that have a similar аppearance.
Id.
at 1239-40. Moreover, a visual examination cannot determine the weight of the suspected contraband.
Id.
at 1240;
see also State v. Clark,
In this case, the district court made factual findings that the substance inside the separately wrapped pellets was “akin to powder drugs,” and thus Ross mandatеd that the State was required to test each of the individually-wrapped pellets in order to meet its burden of proof as to the identity and weight of the alleged heroin. It is undisputed that the State failed to do so. Nonetheless Bellizia was convicted for possessing 28.1 grams of heroin and sentenced to a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment twenty-two years greater than the mandatory minimum sentence of three years that he would have received based upon the weight of the one and only pellet that was аctually weighed. 3
Ross had been the controlling law for many years on the precise issue that Bellizia’s counsel faced. The district court did not err in concluding that “[n]o competent counsel — that is, no counsel that was aware of the law — would have failed to argue that the weight of the heroin allegedly possessed by [Bellizia] was illegally сalculated.” Based on this record, we cannot say that this determination was wrong.
Accordingly, upon review of the record and consideration of the parties’ briеfs, we affirm the district court’s grant of Bellizia’s § 2254 petition for habeas corpus relief.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. While federal courts typically must give deference to state court adjudications of claims in a habeas petition,
see 28
U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), such deference is not required if the state court failed to the address the merits of a claim asserted by the petitioner.
See Davis v. Sec'y for the Dep't of Corr.,
. To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the defеndant must demonstrate both (1) that his counsel’s performance was deficient, i.e. the performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, and (2) that he suffered prejudice as a result of that deficient performance.
Strickland,
. Under Florida law, any person who knowingly brings heroin into Florida is guilty of trafficking in illеgal drugs. Fla. Stat. Ann. § 893.135(l)(c) 1. The mandatory minimum sentence for the amount of heroin in the single pellet tested by the State is three years’ imprisonment, id. § 893.135(l)(c)l.a, as compared to the mandatory minimum of twenty-five years’ imprisonment for the quantity the State attributed to Bellizia but did not test or prove at trial, id. § 893.135(l)(c)l.c.
