Habeas Petitioner Alton Clarke appeals the district court’s decision denying him relief, under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, from his Massachusetts convictions for kidnapping and rape. Clarke argues that 1) the Commonwealth unconstitutionally used the fact that he invoked his right to remain silent during a police interrogation against him at trial; and 2) Clarke’s retrial, following two earlier trials on similar charges, violated double jeopardy. We reject these arguments and, having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2253, we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, see
Brewer v. Marshall,
Several weeks later, the victim “recognized and identified Clarke as the man who raped her when, by chance, she ran into him at Boston City Hospital. After a chase by [the victim’s] boyfriend and hospital security guards, Clarke was apprehended and taken into custody by Boston Police officers.” Id.
At the time of his arrest, Clarke told police that he knew the woman who lived at 22 Skyview Lane, but that he had never taken another woman there and he had never seen the woman who was now accusing him of rape. At trial, however, Clarke testified instead that he met the victim at a club and she propositioned him, offering sex for money. According to Clarke, he accepted the offer, paid the woman half of their agreed-upon fee, and drove her to 22 Skyview Lane, where he knew the owner would not be at home. Clarke testified that, once they got to the house, he was unable to pay the rest of the agreed-upon fee and the woman, therefore, threatened to accuse Clarke of rape.
B. Procedural background
1. State proceedings
The Commonwealth tried Clarke three times.
a. First trial, occurring in January 1997
Massachusetts initially charged Clarke with five offenses: “assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, kidnapping, and three counts of aggravated rape, one count for each different form of penetration. Clarke’s first trial ... resulted in a mistrial when the jury failed to reach a unanimous verdict.” Id.
b. Second trial, occurring in August 1997
“Clarke was retried in August, 1997, on the same charges.”
Id.
The jury convicted him of kidnapping and two counts of the lesser included offense of rape.
See id.
at 201. The jury acquitted Clarke of the aggravated portion of the rape charges, as well as the charge of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and the third rape count.
See id.
at 201. On direct appeal, however, the Massachusetts Appeals Court reversed Clarke’s three convictions and remanded his case for another trial, after concluding the Commonwealth had improperly used Clarke’s post-Mi
randa
silence against him at trial.
See Commonwealth v. Clarke,
c. Third trial, occurring in August 2001
Clarke’s third trial, the one at issue here, occurred in August 2001. The Commonwealth, this time, tried Clarke only on two charges of rape and one count of kidnapping. See Clarke, 585 F.Supp.2d at *140 201. The third jury convicted Clarke of all three offenses, and the court sentenced Clarke to twelve years in prison. See id. According to Clarke, that sentence was later reduced to “eight to ten years.” (Aplt. Br. at 4 n. 1.)
On direct appeal, the Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed Clarke’s convictions,
Commonwealth v. Clarke,
2. Federal habeas proceedings
In March 2006, Clarke filed his federal habeas petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court denied relief, but granted Clarke a certificate of appeal-ability (“COA”), see 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c), on the claims he is currently pursuing on appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Whether the Commonwealth used Clarke’s invocation of his right to remain silent during a police interrogation against him at trial
1. Standard of review
Because the Massachusetts Appeals Court addressed and rejected the merits of this claim,
see Clarke,
adjudication of the claim—
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). This court reviews the district court’s decision to deny § 2254 relief
de novo. See John v. Russo,
2. Merits
The Government may not use at trial the fact that a defendant, after receiving Miranda
1
warnings, invoked his right to remain silent.
See Anderson v. Charles,
Clarke contends that at trial the Commonwealth, in three ways, improperly used at trial the fact that he invoked his right to remain silent during an interrogation.
*141 a. Detective Gavin’s testimony
Clarke first argues that the Commonwealth improperly used his post-Mi randa silence during its direct examination of Detective Donna Gavin. Gavin testified that when she interviewed Clarke, following his arrest, Clarke told her that he had never seen the victim before and that he had never brought any female guest to 22 Skyview Lane. Gavin asked Clarke how it was, then, that the victim could describe the home located at 22 Skyview Lane. But, before Gavin could explain to the jury Clarke’s answer to that question, the court sustained defense counsel’s objection because it was in response to that question that Clarke invoked his right to remain silent. Gavin then testified simply that the interview had ended shortly thereafter.
The Massachusetts Appeals Court rejected Clarke’s claim that Detective Gavin’s direct testimony amounted to improper use of his invoking his right to remain silent at the post-arrest interview because the trial court sustained the objection and Gavin never answered the question.
See Clarke,
b. Cross-examination of Clarke
Clarke next argues that the prosecutor improperly used Clarke’s post-Mi randa silence while cross-examining him. On direct examination, Clarke testified, contrary to Detective Gavin, that he told the detective that he had once brought a prostitute to 22 Skyview Lane and that when he could not pay her, she threatened to accuse him of rape. During cross-examination, the following exchange occurred:
Q. It’s your testimony-
A. It’s my testimony today before the jurors that I did told [Detective Gavin] I brought someone, a guest, a prostitute, at 22 Skyview Lane.
Q. Sir, isn’t it true that you told Detective Gavin that you never brought anyone to Skyview Lane, right sir?
A. Totally impossible.
Q. And sir, when she asked you, she asked you, didn’t she, sir, how the woman would know the inside and outside of that house, right?
[Defense Counsel]: Objection
THE COURT: Sustained.
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, may I be heard at sidebar?
THE COURT: No, you may not. Sustained. Move on, let’s go.
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, may I be heard at side bar?
THE COURT: No, you may not.
Q. You were asked about the description of the house, correct, Mr. Clarke? [Defense attorney]: Objection.
THE COURT: Sustained.
Q. Sir, you’d agree with me that Detective Gavin wouldn’t have asked that question if you had said that you had brought someone to Skyview Lane, right, Mr. Clarke?
[Defense Attorney]: Objection.
THE COURT: Sustained.
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, may I be heard at side bar?
THE COURT: No, you may not. Let’s move on.
Q. You’d agree, sir, that that question wouldn’t make any sense, right, sir?
[Defense Attorney]: Objection.
THE COURT: Sustained.
Q. You’d agree, sir, that Detective Gavin would have no reason to ask you about how she would be able to describe *142 the inside and outside of the house if you had told her that you brought someone in that house, right, Mr. Clarke?
[Defense Attorney]: Objection.
THE COURT: Sustained.
Q. And Detective Gavin asked you that question, didn’t she, Mr. Clarke?
[Defense Attorney]: Objection.
THE COURT: Sustained.
(Tr. v. II at 278-80.) Later in the cross-examination, the prosecutor asked: “When you knew, sir, that mistaken identity would not work” as a defense, “isn’t that when you said ... she was a prostitute?” (Id. at 293.) The trial court sustained defense counsel’s objection and ordered the “lj]ury [to] disregard the last question.” (Id.)
The Massachusetts Appeals Court held this cross-examination did not amount to improper use of Clarke’s
post-Miranda
silence, again because the trial court had sustained defense counsel’s objections to all of those questions “and the jury consequently never heard the answer or that it was the defendant, not Detective Gavin, who terminated the interview.”
Clarke,
The Government might improperly “use” a defendant’s
post-Miranda
silence simply by posing questions to a witness, even where the witness does not answer.
See Ellen v. Brady,
The prosecutor’s questions did not directly or indirectly suggest that Clarke might have invoked his right to remain silent. And the trial court prevented any response from Clarke from which jurors might have inferred that he invoked that right. In addition, both before and after trial, the court instructed jurors generally to disregard questions and evidence to which an objection had been sustained.
See Greer,
c. Closing argument
Lastly, Clarke asserts that comments the prosecutor made during her closing argument amounted to improper use of Clarke’s post -Miranda silence. The prosecutor argued, in closing, that Clarke
needs to explain to you today why he said to Detective Gavin when Detective Gavin said to him, “Did you ever see that woman before?” “No, I’ve never seen her before.” “Did you ever take a woman to 22 Skyview Lane?” “No, I never took a woman to 22 Skyview Lane.” But think about it, ladies and gentlemen, why would Detective Gavin then ask, why would she say, “Well, if you never took a woman to 22 Skyview Lane and you don’t know this woman, *143 how come she can describe the inside and outside of that house?” Why would she ask that, that wouldn’t make sense.
(Tr. v. Ill at 30.)
The Massachusetts Appeals Court held that “there was nothing improper about the prosecutor’s arguing to the jury that the story the defendant gave to the detective prior to ending the interview was inconsistent with his trial testimony.”
Clarke,
B. Whether the jury’s verdict in the second trial precluded Clarke’s third trial on the two rape offenses
At his
second
trial, the jury acquitted Clarke of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, one count of rape, and the aggravated element of all three rape charges, but convicted him of kidnapping and two counts of rape.
See Clarke,
1. Whether double jeopardy barred Clarke’s third trial on any of the rape charges
Clarke’s first theory is that the Double Jeopardy Clause precluded the Commonwealth from retrying him on any of the three rape charges.
a. Procedural default
The district court held that for federal habeas purposes Clarke had procedurally defaulted this claim by failing to raise it in the state trial court.
See Clarke,
b. Standard of review
Because the state appellate court addressed and rejected Clarke’s double-jeopardy claim on its merits, this court “shall not” grant Clarke habeas relief unless the state appellate court’s “adjudication of the claim” was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established Supreme Court precedent, or was an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the state-court proceeding. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
c. Merits
Following the reversal of the results of Clarke’s second trial, the Commonwealth was free to retry him on the offenses for which he had previously been convicted-kidnapping and two rapes-but could not retry him on the offenses on which the second jury had acquitted-assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, aggravated rape, and a third rape.
See Lockhart v. Nelson,
The Massachusetts Appeals Court rejected that argument
see Clarke,
[L]et me first tell you what the Commonwealth’s theory is. The Commonwealth is going forward alleging aggravated rape, three counts of aggravated rape, first by penetration by the defendant, the defendant’s penis into [the victim’s] vagina; second, oral penetration of the defendant’s penis into her mouth; and, third, penetration into her vagina by a gun. Those are the three indictments for aggravated rape.
(D. Ct. Doc. 11, attachment 1, supp. app. at 1.) Because the jury acquitted Clarke of the third rape count, the state appellate court determined that the second jury acquitted Clarke of the rape involving penetration with the gun,
Clarke,
As an alternative theory for habeas relief, Clarke argues that his trial attorney was constitutionally ineffective for failing to raise this double-jeopardy argument be
*145
fore or during his third trial. To succeed on such a claim, Clarke must establish both that his trial counsel’s performance was deficient and that that deficiency prejudiced his defense.
See Strickland v. Washington,
2. Whether principles of collateral estoppel precluded the Commonwealth, during Clarke’s third trial, from introducing evidence that Clarke had a gun
Clarke’s final theory for habeas relief is that, if it was clear that the jury at his second trial acquitted him of rape by penetrating the victim with a gun, then the Commonwealth was collaterally estopped from presenting at his third trial evidence that he had a gun.
a. Exhaustion
While collateral estoppel is still an “element in the Double Jeopardy Clause,” such an argument is distinct from the core concept of Double Jeopardy.
See United States v. Marino,
b. Merits
Because Clarke never raised his collateral-estoppel claim in the state court, our review is
de novo. See Marino,
Collateral estoppel, in the criminal context, “means simply that when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.”
Ashe v. Swenson,
*146
The jury at his third trial, in convicting Clarke of kidnapping and two rape counts, did not necessarily have to find that Clarke had a gun.
See Bies,
Here, in the third trial, Clarke was charged with one count of kidnapping and two counts of rape. None of those counts required proof that Clarke had or used a gun. Thus, there is no double jeopardy problem, even assuming the jury in the second trial determined that Clarke did not use a gun during these crimes.
Nevertheless, evidence that Clarke used a gun was still relevant evidence to help explain how Clarke was able to force the victim into his car and to compel her to submit to his sexual demands. Even reading the second verdict as Clarke argues, all that can be determined from the second verdict is that the jury found the government had failed to prove the existence of a gun “beyond a reasonable doubt.” But that is not the test for the introduction of relevant evidence in the third trial; that only requires that the evidence be probative — that it tends to explain or strengthen or make an asserted act more likely than not to be true. Clarke never objected to the introduction of this evidence on the grounds that it was not relevant.
See Dowling,
*147
This case is similar to
Dowling,
in which the Supreme Court held that the prosecution could present evidence of a prior robbery, of which the defendant had already been acquitted, as evidence of other crimes or bad acts under Fed.R.Evid. 404(b).
See
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision denying Clark habeas relief.
Notes
.
Miranda v. Arizona,
. In making this observation, the First Circuit cited, e.g.,
Hill v. Turpin,
. Prior to his third trial, Clarke did file a motion to dismiss the indictment, raising a different double-jeopardy argument — that, because the prosecutor's actions during the second trial were taken in an attempt to goad Clarke into moving for a mistrial, double jeopardy precluded his retrial on the offenses on which the second jury convicted Clarke.
See Clarke,
. In applying collateral estoppel in a criminal context where, as here, the jury issued a general verdict, we must “examine the record of the prior proceeding” to determine what the prior jury necessarily found.
Ashe,
"If a judgment does not depend on a given determination, relitigation of that determination is not precluded”; "[a] determination ranks as necessary or essential only when the final outcome hinges on it.”
Bies, 129
S.Ct. at 2152. The district court, in denying habeas relief, held that Clarke had failed to show that his second jury found that he had no gun, suggesting that, even in light of the acquittals, the jury still would not necessarily have had to find that Clarke had no gun.
See Clarke,
