In December 1986, a Utah jury convicted petitioner-appellant Arden Brett Bullock of three counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child and three counts of sodomy upon a child. The state trial court subsequently sentenced him to a minimum mandatory prison term of fifteen years to life on each sodomy count and nine years to life on each sexual abuse conviction, with the sentences to run concurrently. The Utah Supreme Court upheld Mr. Bullock’s conviction by a three-to-two vote in 1989,
see State v. Bullock,
Over several months in 1996, the magistrate judge held a four-day evidentiary hearing on Mr. Bullock’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Three years later, the magistrate judge issued a 105-page *1041 report and recommendation rejecting all three claims for relief. Despite numerous objections from Mr. Bullock, the district court adopted the report and recommendation, denied Mr. Bullock habeas relief, and rejected Mr. Bullock’s subsequent motion for a certificate of probable cause to appeal his habeas petition to this court.
This appeal followed. We now grant a certificate of appealability for each of the issues Mr.. Bullock raises on appeal and affirm the - denial of habeas relief. In reaching this conclusion, we reemphasize that the ultimate inquiry when deciding whether an attorney performed in a constitutionally deficient manner'is not whether the counsel’s actions can be considered strategic, but whether, under all the circumstances, counsel’s actions may be considered objectively reasonable.
I. Background
The facts of this case have been fully described by the Utah Supreme Court, the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, and the parties’ briefs on appeal. Therefore, we provide only a brief summary of the underlying events.
In 1985, one of Mr. Bullock’s former neighbors in Bountiful, Utah, took her four-year old son to see Dr. Barbara Snow, then clinical director of the Intermountain Sexual Abuse Treatment Center (ISAT), because of inappropriate sexual remarks he had made to two fellow four-year-olds. Mariam Smith, also a former neighbor of Mr. Bullock’s and then ISAT’s overall director, referred the boy to Dr. Snow, a “child therapist with a Ph.D. in social work, who worked with child victims of sexual abuse.” During his second meeting with Dr. Snow, the boy alleged that he had been sexually assaulted by two eight-year-old boys from the neighborhood, one of whom was Mr. Bullock’s son. Eventually, Dr. Snow interviewed the eight-year-old boys, and one alleged that Mr. Bullock had sexually molested him and several other neighborhood children, including Mr. Bullock’s eight-year-old son and twelve-year-old daughter. As word of the alleged abuse spread throughout the neighborhood, other boys were brought to see Dr. Snow, who, with only a few exceptions discussed below, did not record her interviews with the children or otherwise document what occurred during the interview sessions, despite requests from a local police detective and a child psychologist that she do so. During their initial interviews with Dr. Snow, several of the boys denied that they had been abused by Mr. Bullock. Eventually, however, four boys alleged that Mr. Bullock had engaged in criminal sexual acts with them two years earlier, when the boys were six or seven years old. The boys also told Dr. Snow that Mr. Bullock had threatened to harm them, their families, and their pets.
Although Dr. Snow documented few of her interviews, 1 she did conduct two interviews in the presence of state officials. In October 1985, Dr. Snow interviewed one of the boys at the Salt Lake County District Attorney’s Office. Approximately two months later, on December 13, 1985, Dr. Snow met with three of the boys, the three boys’ parents, a Bountiful police detective, and two county attorneys from the Salt Lake County Attorney’s Office. During this meeting, Dr. Snow interviewed “the boys one at a time in front of each other and the other people present.” Two of the children described incidences of abuse that corresponded with what they had previously told Dr. Snow, but one boy, who had been pressured by his father to report the incident, denied that he had been abused.
*1042 Eventually, all four boys were referred to Dr. Ann Tyler, “a psychologist and Executive Director of the Family Support Center, an agency dedicated to the prevention and treatment of child abuse and neglect,” who performed “corroborative assessments” that were designed “to collect sufficient data [so that she could give] an opinion as to whether the boys had been abused.” One of the boys initially told Dr. Tyler that he felt pressured to accuse Mr. Bullock of abuse, informing Dr. Tyler that he accused Mr. Bullock to appease his father, that he could not recall the alleged abuse, and that Dr. Snow had told him he had been abused. Nevertheless, Dr. Tyler, who, unlike Dr. Snow, recorded her interviews, concluded that, in all likelihood, all four boys had been abused.
Utah subsequently charged Mr. Bullock with abusing the boys. A jury tried Mr. Bullock in December 1986, and two attorneys represented Mr. Bullock throughout the proceedings. During the trial, Dr. Snow and Dr. Tyler described their interviews with the boys and recounted the boys’ statements indicating that they have been sexually molested by Mr. Bullock. In addition, Dr. Tyler opined that the boys had been sexually abused. The four boys all testified via videotaped deposition that they had been molested by Mr. Bullock. Several of the boys’ parents described behavioral changes in their children after the alleged abuse occurred but before the meetings with Dr. Snow.
The defense responded to the prosecution’s case by arguing that Dr. Snow planted the allegation of abuse by Mr. Bullock in the boys’ minds. In making their case, Mr. Bullock’s defense attorneys relied, in part, on Dr. Snow’s own statements during trial. Dr. Snow testified, for example, that she was “very aggressive in [her] questioning of children,” that she was “relatively indifferent to what [would] happen to the [alleged] perpetrator,” that she did not approach interview sessions “with an open mind” but as an “ally for the child,” and that she did not see herself as a fact collector like the police. Dr. Snow also testified extensively about her interview techniques, and she acknowledged that she did not record her interviews with the children, take notes during the interviews, or write reports following the interviews. Indeed, Dr. Snow admitted that her “own integrity” was the only way of verifying what had occurred during the interview sessions. Similarly, the defense team emphasized contradictions and inconsistencies in the boys’ testimony, including the fact that one of the boys had retracted an allegation of abuse as being untrue.
The defense attorneys also called three expert psychologists who severely criticized Dr. Snow’s interviewing techniques and asserted that her methods had irreparably tainted not only the boys’ testimony, but their actual recollections of events. In addition, the defense experts challenged Dr. Tyler’s conclusion that the boys had been abused, arguing that the boys had already been contaminated by Dr. Snow by the time Dr. Tyler evaluated them.
Mr. Bullock also took the stand in his own defense, denying any improper behavior toward the boys or any other child. Similarly, his daughter testified and denied that she had been involved in any sexual activity with her father or with any of the boys, as the boys had alleged. She also described her interview with Dr. Snow wherein Dr. Snow attempted to coerce her to admit that she had been sexually abused.
Ultimately, the jury convicted Mr. Bullock of three counts of aggravated sexual assault and three counts of sodomy upon a child, but acquitted him on one charge of aggravated sexual assault and two counts of sodomy upon a child.
*1043 II. Jurisdiction and standard of review
The district court had jurisdiction over Mr. Bullock’s habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Because Mr. Bullock appealed the denial of his habeas petition after the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) became effective, we may only address issues for which a certificate of appealability has been granted.
See id.
§ 2253(c)(1);
Slack v. McDaniel,
However, because Mr. Bullock filed the underlying habeas petition before the enactment of the AEDPA, we apply pre-AEDPA law when reviewing the merits of his habeas petition.
See Tillman v. Cook,
III. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
Mr. Bullock devotes the overwhelming majority of his eighty-six page opening brief to arguing that he received ineffective assistance from his trial counsel, thus violating his rights under the Sixth Amendment. Although Mr. Bullock spends a great deal of time discussing his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, his arguments, at their core, center around his trial attorney’s failure to object to various pieces of evidence introduced by the state during trial. Specifically, Mr. Bullock argues that his trial counsel erred by not trying to exclude as unreliable the children’s hearsay testimony presented through police officers, the children’s parents, and Drs. Snow and Tyler. He also contends that his trial counsel acted ineffectively by not objecting to the children’s direct testimony under Rule 403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. 2
A. Legal Standards
In determining whether a habeas petitioner’s trial counsel acted ineffective
*1044
ly, we apply the general ineffective assistance of counsel standard identified by the Supreme Court in
Strickland v. Washington,
Whether a petitioner’s claim satisfies
Strickland’s
two-part test is a mixed question of law and fact we review de novo.
Boyd v. Ward,
B. Trial Counsel’s Strategy
After hearing testimony from Mr. Bullock’s trial attorneys, the magistrate judge found that Mr. Bullock’s defense team assumed that the children’s direct testimony could not be excluded and believed that the children would come across as highly credible witnesses. Consequently, Mr. Bullock’s attorneys developed their defense around the assumption that the children’s direct testimony would be admitted into evidence and that Mr. Bullock would have to explain why the children would accuse him of sexual abuse. Ultimately, according to the.magistrate judge and the district court, the defense attorneys concluded that, instead of directly attacking the children’s credibility, it would be most effective to argue that the children came to believe they had been abused by Mr. Bullock through (1) their repeated exposure to stories attributing the abuse to Mr. Bullock and (2) Dr. Snow’s aggressive interviewing tactics. As the magistrate judge explained,
In summary, counsel’s theory of the defense was that the children’s stories of molestation by petitioner were the product of improper interview techniques and coercion by Dr. Snow and contamination by their exposure to discussions of the molestation among themselves, their parents, and at the meeting at the county attorney’s office.
“In deciding how best to present th[is] defense, counsel considered different scenarios,” including the exclusion of the children’s hearsay testimony, the magistrate judge found. Eventually, the attorneys reasoned that if the children’s hearsay testimony were excluded from the prosecution’s case in chief, it would ultimately be admitted in the prosecution’s rebuttal case “to rehabilitate the child witnesses’ credibility after the defense had attacked it through the cross-examination of Drs. Snow and Tyler.” Therefore, Mr. Bullock’s trial counsel concluded, according to the magistrate judge and district court, that the hearsay testimony should come in during the “prosecution’s case-in-chief rather than to give the appearance to the jury and the court that they were trying to hide something.” Although the defense team also considered seeking a limiting instruction that would inform the jury that the children’s hearsay statements could *1045 only be considered in “evaluating Dr. Snow’s interview techniques and not for the truth of the matter asserted,” they declined to do so because (1) they wanted to use any favorable hearsay testimony for the truth of the matter asserted and (2) feared the limiting instruction might confuse the jury, particularly if some statements were admitted for the truth of the matter asserted while others were not.
In addition, Mr. Bullock’s trial counsel believed other advantages could be derived from not excluding the children’s hearsay testimony. First, the hearsay statements revealed that the children only suggested that Mr. Bullock had abused them after they had met with Dr. Snow. Second, the hearsay statements demonstrated inconsistencies and contradictions within the children’s allegations and the possibility that outside pressure influenced their stories. 3
Mr. Bullock forthrightly concedes that the “strategy as presented by the Magistrate Judge and the lower court makes sense in the abstract and certainly would insulate [Mr. Bullock’s attorneys] from any claim of ineffectiveness had such decisions been properly made with understanding and information.”
See Strickland,
C. Role of Presumptions in Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Analysis
A threshold issue underlying Mr. Bullock’s ineffective assistance of counsel argument, then, is how trial counsel’s alleged strategy, or lack thereof, influences our analysis under
Strickland’s
*1046
deficient performance prong. As will be discussed below, the overriding question under the first prong of
Strickland
is whether, under all the circumstances, counsel performed in an objectively unreasonable manner. Two presumptions inform our objective reasonableness inquiry. First, we always start the analysis that an attorney acted in an objectively reasonable manner and that an attorney’s challenged conduct
might
have been part of a sound trial strategy. Second, where it is shown that a particular decision was,
in fact,
an adequately informed strategic choice, the presumption that the attorney’s decision was objectively reasonable becomes “virtually unchallengeable.” However, it is important to remember that these presumptions are simply tools that assist us in analyzing
Strickland’s
deficient performance prong and they do not, in and of themselves, answer the ultimate question, which is whether counsel performed in an objectively reasonable manner. So, for example, even though counsel’s strategy was ill-informed and thus does not qualify for the virtually unchallengeable presumption of reasonableness, a court reviewing the record before it might still conclude that counsel performed in an objectively reasonable manner. And, conversely, it is also possible on rare occasions to conclude that counsel’s fully-informed strategic choices were unreasonable if “ ‘the choice was so patently unreasonable that no competent attorney would have made it.’ ”
Phoenix v. Matesanz,
1. General Presumption of Reasonableness
As we have often explained, a petitioner raising an ineffective assistance of counsel claim carries a “heavy burden.”
E.g., Gonzales v. McKune,
Put another way, the Supreme Court has explained, the general presumption of objective reasonableness requires a petitioner to “overcome the presumption that, under all the circumstances, the challenged action
‘might
be considered sound trial strategy.’ ”
Strickland,
2. Presumption of Reasonableness where Attorney Made Adequately Informed Strategic Choice
Beyond the general presumption of objective reasonableness,
Strickland
further presumes that “strategic choices made after thorough investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually unchallengeable.”
3. Ultimate Inquiry into Objective Reasonableness
Strickland’s
presumptions — the presumptions (1) that counsel’s actions were objectively reasonable because they
might
have been part of a sound trial strategy and (2) that actual strategic choices made after thorough investigation are “virtually unchallengeable,”
Strickland,
Consequently, even where an attorney pursued a particular course of action for strategic reasons, courts still consider whether that course of action was objectively reasonable, notwithstanding
Strickland’s
strong presumption in favor of upholding strategic decisions.
See Fisher,
By the same token, an attorney’s unawareness of relevant law at the time he made the challenged decision does not, in and of itself, render the attorney’s performance constitutionally deficient. When discussing
Strickland’s
deficient performance component, for example, we have emphasized that “[t]he - Sixth Amendment does not guarantee an errorless trial, and ‘prevailing professional norms’ do not require perfection at trial.”
Haddock,
In Smith, we found an attorney’s representation “objectively reasonable,” even though the attorney failed to request a lesser-included-offense jury instruction and was “unaware of the availability of the lesser included offense [instruction] and thus necessarily ignorant of the consequences of his conduct.” Id. at 728. We justified this conclusion on “Strickland’s focus on objectively reasonable representation considering all circumstances” and reasoned that “counsel’s representation as a whole should be considered when deter *1049 mining whether the defendant received a fair trial.” 6 Id. As we explained:
We are satisfied that even if Defense Counsel had been aware of the availability of .the lesser included offense [instruction] ..., Counsel’s actual representation would still have been within the range of objectively reasonable representation. Consequently, we are of the view that where counsel’s representation is objectively reasonable under all the circumstances of a case and ensured that the defendant received a fair trial overall, it makes no difference that certain decisions may have been unreasonable or made without a full recognition of the consequences.
Id.
at 729;
see also Chandler,
Certainly, an attorney’s ignorance will affect a court’s ineffective assistance of counsel analysis. An attorney’s demonstrated ignorance of law directly relevant to a decision will eliminate
Strickland’s
presumption that the decision was objectively reasonable because it might have been made for strategic purposes, and it will often prevent the government from claiming that the attorney made an adequately informed strategic choice.
7
See,
*1050
e.g., Williams v. Taylor,
In many cases, a lawyer’s unawareness of relevant law will also result in a finding that counsel performed in an objectively deficient manner.
See, e.g., Kimmelman,
Even where an attorney’s ignorance of relevant law and facts precludes a court from characterizing certain actions as strategic (and therefore presumptively reasonable), however, the pertinent question under the first prong of
Strickland
remains
*1051
whether, after considering all the circumstances of the case, the attorney’s representation was objectively unreasonable.
See Roe,
In summary, whether a counsel’s actions can be considered strategic plays an important role in our analysis of Strickland’s deficient performance prong. As a general matter, we presume that an attorney performed in an objectively reasonable manner because his conduct might be considered part of a sound strategy. Moreover, where it is shown that a challenged action was, in fact, an adequately informed strategic choice, we heighten our presumption of objective reasonableness and presume that the attorney’s decision is nearly unchallengeable. The inapplicability of these presumptions (because, for example, the attorney was ignorant of highly relevant law) does not, however, automatically mean that an attorney’s performance was constitutionally inadequate. Instead, we still ask whether, in light of all the circumstances, the attorney performed in an objectively reasonable manner.
D. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim
With these principles in mind, we consider the specifics of Mr. Bullock’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
1. Children’s Direct Testimony
As outlined earlier, the district court found that Mr. Bullock’s trial attorneys premised much of their trial strategy on the belief that the children’s direct testimony, whether live in the courtroom or, as occurred in this case, through videotape, could not be excluded, and, as presented, would be credible.
On appeal, Mr. Bullock argues, as he did before the district court, that his attorneys performed ineffectively because the children’s direct testimony could have been excluded using Utah Rule of Evidence 403, which, like its federal counterpart, provides that relevant evidence “may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” Utah R. Evid. 403; see Fed.R.Evid. 403. The magistrate judge and the district court both found this argument to be without merit, and we agree with this conclusion.
As Mr. Bullock acknowledges, Utah law existing at the time of his trial deemed the boys legally competent to testify about the alleged abuse: “A child victim of sexual abuse under the age of ten is a competent witness and shall be allowed to testify without prior qualification in any judicial proceeding. The trier of fact shall determine the weight and credibility of the testimony." Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-410. Nonetheless, Mr. Bullock argues that his trial counsel should have invoked Rule 403, which also existed at the time of his trial, and, citing Dr. Snow’s coercive tactics, moved to exclude the children’s testimony as inherently unreliable.
In making this argument, Mr. Bullock relies upon a decision handed down by the Utah Supreme Court five months after his trial,
State v. Fulton,
We find Mr. Bullock’s invocation of
Fulton
unconvincing. When reviewing an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, we must make every effort “to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
Strickland,
In this case, the failure to invoke Rule 403 at the time of Mr. Bullock’s trial was not objectively unreasonable. Section 76-5-410 states unequivocally that children under the age of ten “shall be allowed to testify without prior qualification in any judicial proceeding.” Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-410. Prior to the
Fulton
decision, the provision could have been read as mandating that any credibility questions, which arguably would include the “reliability” of the children’s testimony, be resolved by the jury: “The trier of fact shall determine the weight and credibility of the testimony.”
Id.
In any event,
Fulton
does not unequivocally support Mr. Bullock’s argument. While the Utah Supreme Court noted that the Rule 403
could
be used to exclude inherently unreliable testimony,
Fulton
itself found that the admission of the child’s testimony did not violate Rule 403.
Fulton,
Because we do not believe that Mr. Bullock’s attorneys performed deficiently by not invoking Rule 403, we reject Mr. Bullock’s argument that his trial counsel acted ineffectively by not challenging the boys’ direct testimony under Rule 403.
2. Children’s Hearsay Testimony
Utah law — both as it exists now and as it existed at the time of Mr. Bullock’s trial — permits the admission of “a child victim’s out-of-court statement regarding sexual abuse of that child” in certain circumstances. Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-411(1). Before admitting any hearsay statement, however, the statute requires that “the judge shall determine whether the interest of justice will best be served by admission of that statement.” Id. § 76-5-411(2) (emphasis added). When deciding whether to admit the hearsay testimony, the statute declares that the “judge shall consider the age and maturity of the child, the nature and duration of the abuse, the relationship of the child to the offender, and the reliability of the assertion and of the child.” Id. (emphasis added).
Importantly, a year before Mr. Bullock’s trial, the Utah Supreme Court made clear that state trial courts must assess the reliability of a child’s hearsay statement prior to admitting it into evidence.
See State v. Nelson,
Based on our review of the state trial proceedings, it appears, as Mr. Bullock contends, that at least one of his attorneys, Steven McCaughey, did not fully grasp section 76-5-411’s reliability component and erroneously believed that the children's hearsay statements to Drs. Snow and Tyler would be admitted under any circumstances. 8 Mr. Bullock’s other attorney, Christine Soltis, seemed to acknowledge that in theory the hearsay statements could have been excluded for reliability grounds under section 76-5-411, but explained that she doubted that would occur in practice.
We conclude, however, that a fully informed attorney could have concluded that admitting the hearsay statement was to Mr. Bullock’s strategic advantage and, therefore, that his attorneys’ performance
*1054
was not objectively unreasonable.
See Smith,
In light of these considerations, we reject the hearsay component of Mr. Bullock’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Having rejected both components of Mr. Bullock’s ineffective assistance of counsel argument under the first prong of
Strickland,
we reject his ineffective assistance of counsel claim in its entirety.
Strickland,
IV. Due Process Clause and Confrontation Clause Claims
Beyond his ineffective assistance of counsel arguments, Mr. Bullock raises two additional claims on appeal. First, he alleges that he was “denied federal due process of law when the police permitted Barbara Snow to initially interview the children since she was not a neutral-fact gatherer,” did not record her interviews, and used coercive interviewing tactics that “contaminated” and “shaped” the children’s testimony. Second, he alleges that the children’s videotaped testimony violated his rights under the Confrontation Clause. Mr. Bullock does not cite a single case in his brief to support either argument, and his brief devotes a total of five of its eighty-plus pages to the two arguments. Instead, Mr. Bullock argues that the “space limitation in this appeal” does not allow him to address the issues in detail and directs us to an addendum containing his filings before the district court.
After receiving Mr. Bullock’s opening brief, Utah moved to strike Mr. Bullock’s Due Process Clause and Confrontation Clause arguments on the ground that the legal authority to support them is incorporated in his appellate brief by reference to the briefs he filed in the federal district court. Normally, we will not consider arguments on appeal that simply direct us to filings before the district court.
See Gaines-Tabb v. ICI Explosives USA, Inc.,
A. Due Process
Mr. Bullock’s due process argument has two components, as best we can tell. *1055 First, he contends that the state violated his due process rights by allowing Dr. Snow to ply her questionable interview techniques on the children. Second, in a related argument, he contends Dr. Snow’s failure to record her interviews amounts to state action that failed to preserve potentially exculpatory evidence. We reject both arguments.
1. Unreliability
In advancing his “unreliability” argument, Mr. Bullock argues that his conviction depended upon the testimony (either direct or hearsay) of children who had been subjected to Dr. Snow’s coercive interview tactics. As a factual and legal matter, he asserts, Dr. Snow’s techniques rendered the boys’ testimony inherently unreliable. Because the evidence was not reliable, he further argues, it should not have been admitted during his trial, and because his conviction depended upon this improperly admitted unreliable evidence, he contends, his conviction violates due process.
A habeas petitioner is only entitled to relief, however, for alleged violations of federal rights, not for errors of state law.
See Estelle v. McGuire,
In this case, Snow’s improper interviewing techniques were fully identified, examined, criticized, and interpreted at a trial in which Mr. Bullock was represented by competent counsel. It is clear from the trial record, for instance, that Mr. Bullock’s trial counsel attacked Dr. Snow’s credibility throughout the trial, raised the argument that Dr. Snow implanted the allegations of abuse in the boys’ minds, and elicited expert testimony — including the state’s own expert — condemning Dr. Snow’s interview techniques.
Cf. Chambers,
2. Failure to Record Interviews
The second aspect of Mr. Bullock’s due process claim revolves around Dr. Snow’s *1056 failure to record her interviews with the children. According to Mr. Bullock:
Snow intentionally failed to preserve critical evidence of her initial and subsequent interviews in spite of the fact that she knew such interviews were critically important to both the prosecution and the defense in ascertaining the truth of the allegations she ascribed to the children. In addition, such failure was accomplished in complete bad faith since she had been requested numerous times to do so by the police and by other therapists. Finally, the loss of a record of these initial priceless interviews can never be replaced for Appellant’s defense.
This argument is unavailing.
The Due Process Clause requires police departments to preserve clearly exculpatory evidence in their possession that might not be available to a defendant through other means.
California v. Trombetta,
Turning to the facts of this appeal, it is important to note that because Mr. Bullock can only speculate about the potentially exculpatory nature of the interviews, he must satisfy
Youngblood’s
bad faith requirement, assuming for this appeal that the failure to record an interview is governed by
Youngblood.
9
Youngblood,
Nor does it appear that the police condoned Dr. Snow’s dubious interview techniques. Indeed, detectives specifically requested that Dr. Snow record her interviews, and eventually the police and the prosecutor’s office intervened and ended Dr. Snow’s interviews.
11
At most, then, Mr. Bullock could argue that the police acted negligently in not stopping the unrecorded interviews earlier, but negligence is an insufficient basis for establishing bad faith under
Youngblood. United States v. Bohl,
Consequently, we reject the second component of Mr. Bullock’s due process claim.
B. Confrontation Clause
Mr. Bullock’s Confrontation Clause argument is summarized in his opening brief. Like his Due Process Claim, Mr. Bullock’s Confrontation Clause argument raises two subsidiary issues. First, he alleges that the trial court failed to make statutorily and constitutionally required findings of unavailability and reliability before permitting the children to testify via videotape. Second, and more generally, he contends that his rights under the Confrontation Clause were violated when the trial court admitted the children’s hearsay statements without fulfilling its “independent duty to evaluate the reliability of the hearsay testimony and to make a record of evaluation.”
To the extent Mr. Bullock’s Confrontation Clause argument relies on state law, they must fail.
12
Estelle,
V. Conclusion
The quest for the truth in sexual abuse cases is always difficult, particularly when the prosecution’s case heavily relies upon the testimony of young victims. In this case, Dr. Snow’s disturbing and irresponsible conduct has made this quest especially difficult. We do not know whether Dr. Snow still counsels children or testifies as a prosecution witness in sexual abuse cases; if she does either, we hope that she now follows proper professional and ethical standards.
See, e.g., State v. Hadfield,
However, after carefully reviewing the record on appeal and considering Mr. Bullock’s legal arguments, we conclude that he is not entitled to federal habeas relief. We therefore GRANT a COA on the issues raised by Mr. Bullock and AFFIRM the district court’s denial of relief.
Notes
. Dr. Snow apparently audiotaped one interview with one of the boys.
. Unless otherwise noted, Utah's Rules of Evidence are identical to the Federal Rules of Evidence.
. Dr. Tyler, for example, testified that one victim told her that he felt pressured to assert that Mr. Bullock had abused him and that he did not specifically recall the incidences of abuse. Moreover, Dr. Tyler's testimony revealed that nearly all of the children initially had trouble remembering whether incidences of abuse occurred, with some initially denying altogether that Mr. Bullock had sexually assaulted them.
. At least with regard to the children's hearsay testimony, it is not entirely clear that Mr. Bullock’s claim is factually correct. As will be discussed in the following sections, our review of the record suggests that Mr. Bullock's trial counsel did not know that the children's hearsay statements could be challenged under a Utah statute governing the admission of “a child victims's out-of-court statement regarding sexual abuse of that child.” Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-411(1). However, it is also clear from the record that Mr. Bullock’s trial attorneys did know that, under general evidentiary rules, they could challenge the use of at least some the hearsay evidence, but elected not to do so for strategic reasons. Consequently, at least in regard to the hearsay evidence, we disagree with the notion that Mr. Bullock's attorneys acted in complete ignorance of the possibility of excluding the children’s hearsay statements.
. There is some tension in Mr. Bullock's argument. On the one hand, Mr. Bullock suggests that a fully informed attorney could have employed the strategy that his attorneys used. Later in his brief, however, he seems to retract his earlier concession, arguing that the failure to challenge the children's direct and hearsay statements "is clearly below the standard of competent counsel.” For reasons discussed below, we do not believe that Mr. Bullock's trial attorneys performed in an objectively unreasonable manner.
.
Smith
acknowledged that, "at first blush,” certain language in
Strickland
could be construed as holding that an attorney's conduct is objectively unreasonable where the attorney was “unaware" of the availability of a lesser-included-offense instruction.
Smith,
. Analogously, we have often held that an attorney's failure to present a defense theory or mitigation evidence cannot be considered strategic where that decision was influenced by inadequate preparation and investigation.
Fisher,
. During pretrial proceedings, the prosecuting attorney discussed Nelson and recommended that a hearing be held to establish the reliability of the hearsay statements. The trial court declined to hold such a hearing, but warned the county attorney that before the hearsay testimony could be admitted, it would have to make findings in accordance with section 76-5-411. Mr. Bullock's trial counsel did not respond, and when the hearsay testimony was offered during the ensuing trial, they did not attempt to block it under section 76-5-411, despite Dr. Snows’s disconcerting actions.
. If Dr. Snow had kept notes or otherwise recorded her interviews, then those records would fall clearly within the
Youngblood
parameters (assuming for the moment that Dr. Snow was a police agent).
See Morgan v. Gertz,
. Dr. Snow defended her failure to document the interviews on the ground that recording equipment inhibits children "from bringing] out new information.”
. Under section 1983, "[pjrivate persons, jointly engaged with state officials in the challenged action,” are considered stated actors acting under color of state law.
Dennis v. Sparks,
. As explained earlier, we cannot grant Mr. Bullock relief to the extent that his habeas claims are premised on alleged violations of Utah's evidentiary rules.
See Moore,
. Although
Hawkins
dealt with a situation where an attorney affirmatively stipulated in his client's presence to the admission of hear
*1058
say testimony, the opinion indicated that an attorney could waive Confrontation Clause rights through more implicit actions, such as failing to object or not cross-examine a witness.
