Lead Opinion
In this collateral attack under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Clarence Hayes, serving a life sentence for murder, contends that his lawyer during the state proceedings furnished ineffective assistance. He also contends that the state courts made several errors that justify relief. The district court held that the ineffective-assistance claim had been defaulted when Hayes failed to present it to the state’s appellate courts, either on direct appeal or on collateral review, that Hayes is not entitled to relief from that forfeiture, and that the other events of which he complains, if errors at all, were harmless. Hayes v. Carter,
After church one Sunday, Ronald and Marion Nelson, their son Roger, and Roger’s fiancée Sandra Wissink walked across the street toward their cars, parked in the church’s lot. They were intercepted by a man with a gun, who ordered all four into Ronald Nelson’s car and robbed them of their valuables. Five minutes later Donna Van Zanten (the pastor’s wife) and her son
Hayes says that his lawyer butchered the defense by failing to call as alibi witnesses six of Hayes’s relatives who would have testified that he had been home watching a basketball game when the crime was committed. We don’t know why the lawyer decided not to call these witnesses, because Hayes failed to develop this subject. He raised the subject in the circuit court on collateral review but did not supply details (such as affidavits from his relatives and his former lawyer), and then did not mention it on appeal. Instead he argued that his post-conviction counsel in the circuit court had been ineffective (a contention now abandoned). That kind of procedural default blocks federal review; indeed, even if Hayes had presented the point to the appellate court it still would have been forfeited by omission from a request for review by the Supreme Court of Illinois. See O’Sullivan v. Boerckel,
In his opening brief in this court, Hayes contended that Massaro v. United States,
This case '’shows why. By withholding the contention from the state judiciary, Hayes not only deprived it of an opportunity to address the claim (and repair any problem) but also left us with an essentially empty record. We have his allegations but none of the details from the potential witnesses and from his former lawyer that could have put these allegations to the test. Because the shortfall is Hayes’s fault, he could not receive a federal evidentiary hearing under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e). For all we can tell, Hayes asked his trial lawyer not to call the alibi witnesses. Or maybe after interviewing the witnesses counsel concluded that the jurors would see through a story that evinced family solidarity but lacked the ring of truth. Cf. Nix v. Whiteside,
This conclusion, which Hayes essentially conceded by the time of his reply brief, drives him to contend that the default should be excused to avoid a “fundamental miscarriage of justice” — which is to say, the conviction of an innocent person. Factual innocence indeed relieves a petitioner of a procedural default, at least when the error affects the finding of guilt, as opposed to a non-capital sentence. Compare 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2)(B) and Murray v. Carrier,
On Hayes’s view a “miscarriage of justice” occurs whenever a better lawyer might have created a reasonable doubt in one juror’s mind. That can’t be enough (and under the statute isn’t enough); if it were, then every claim of ineffective assistance would show “miscarriage of justice” and the rules of procedural default would be hollow, for to show ineffective assistance on the merits the petitioner must establish that the lawyer’s blunders could have altered the outcome. That’s the prejudice component of Strickland v. Washington,
To demonstrate innocence so convincingly that no reasonable jury could convict, a prisoner must have documentary, biological (DNA), or other powerful evidence: perhaps some non-relative who placed him out of the city, with credit card slips, photographs, and phone logs to back up the claim. See Schlup,
His third claim of trial error is that the jury should not have learned that it took two weeks to apprehend him. A detective went to Hayes’s home and asked a family member (with whom he left his card) to have Hayes give him a call. Unsurprisingly, Hayes did not call. Instead he went missing. He stopped visiting his home. Two weeks later, during a stakeout of a currency exchange that Hayes was known to frequent, he was seen and arrested. This sequence could have been the basis for an inference that flight evinces consciousness of guilt. Because the prosecutor did not make such an argument, however, Hayes now insists that the evidence should not have been admitted. This sounds like a complaint that the prosecutor did not use all of his weapons; how did that injure Hayes? Perhaps because the jurors would draw the inference without the need for argument? But it would have been a sound inference; there is no problem under the federal Constitution, and if (as Hayes insists) the evidence should have been excluded as a matter of Illinois law that is none of our concern. See Estelle v. McGuire,
Finally, Hayes contends that the prosecutor’s comments about the Nelson family were unfairly prejudicial. Hayes says that the jury should not have been told that Ronald was a college professor with a doctorate and that Roger is an ordained minister who had been in a seminary at the time of the crimes. The single paragraph devoted to this issue in Hayes’s brief does not even try to explain why the Constitution prevents a jury from knowing these things; we cannot imagine why it would. The Supreme Court of Illinois deemed the prosecutor’s comments improper under state law but also found the error to be harmless.
Affirmed
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join in the Court’s opinion as to each of petitioner’s claims. While I agree that Hayes has not demonstrated that a “miscarriage of justice” will occur if the procedural default of his ineffective assistance of counsel claim is not excused, I comment separately to underscore what I understand to be the basis of this holding.
Section 2254(e) permits an evidentiary hearing in federal court on a defaulted claim if the facts underlying the claim would be sufficient to establish that but for the alleged constitutional error, “no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.” A court may consider any relevant evidence in making this determination. See Schlup v. Delo,
In support of his petition, Hayes presented the grand jury testimony of six family members. Although each testified to seeing Hayes at home near the time of the crime, none could attest to being in his presence continuously during the relevant period. Hayes did not offer any witness affidavits stating that he could not have left the house during this time or any other evidence that might support a complete alibi defense. The evidence presented simply was insufficient to satisfy petitioner’s burden of establishing that no reasonable factfinder would have found him guilty.
This is not to suggest that eyewitness testimony can never satisfy the “miscarriage of justice” standard. In Schlup, the Supreme Court noted that “trustworthy eyewitness accounts” may be enough.
The majority observes that “it is black letter law that testimony of a single eyewitness suffices for conviction even if 20 bishops testify that the eyewitness is a liar.” Nonetheless, the mere existence of sufficient evidence to convict is not determinative of an actual innocence claim. Schlup,
