Petitioner-appellant Daniel J. Curtis, a state prisoner serving a life sentence for second-degree murder, challenges the constitutionality of his conviction. He asseverates that three occurrences — the absence of counsel when the trial judge delivered a supplementary jury instruction, the fact that the supplementary instruction impermissibly shifted the burden of proof, and the trial *3 court’s refusal to immunize a potential defense witness — abridged his constitutional rights. The district court declined to issue a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A Suffolk County (Massachusetts) jury convicted the petitioner of second-degree murder on December 30, 1980, and the trial judge sentenced him to life imprisonment. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) turned down the petitioner’s initial appeal, in which he argued that the trial court had transgressed his rights to due process and compulsory process under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments when it refused to immunize a prospective defense witness.
See Commonwealth v. Curtis,
On April 12, 1995, the petitioner docketed an application for habeas relief in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, naming as respondents various state officials (who, for ease in reference, we refer to as “the Commonwealth”). In due course, the district court wrote a thoughtful opinion in which it refused to issue the writ. See Curtis v. Duval, Civ. No. 95-10758-DPW (D.Mass. July 11, 1996) (unpublished). This appeal followed.
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
We sketch the evidence relevant to this appeal, referring readers who hunger for greater detail to the SJC’s fuller accounts.
See Curtis II,
On the evening of July 14, 1980, Michael Robinson was severely beaten in a confrontation between a group of East Boston youths and a number of sailors. He died eight days later from head injuries.
The origin of the fracas is obscure. Its genesis apparently lies in an encounter between Lenny Curtis, the petitioner’s brother, and four black sailors who were lounging outside the perimeter fence of an East Boston shipyard. Witnesses gave conflicting testimony about what transpired. Lenny Curtis testified that one of the sailors struck him when he rebuffed a request for a cigarette. A sailor testified that Lenny Curtis strolled by them unmolested but gave them “hard looks.”
In any event, when Lenny Curtis spotted his friend, Eddie Colon, riding a bicycle, he told Colon to scat and “get my two brothers.” Word of the brewing storm spread. Soon the four black sailors were joined by several white sailors, including Robinson, while between twelve and twenty East Boston youths assembled in apparent opposition. Some of the youths reportedly hurled racial epithets.
When the petitioner arrived at the scene by car, someone told him that the sailors had assaulted his brother. A full-scale brawl erupted soon thereafter. Witnesses disagreed over the petitioner’s role. According to some accounts, the sailors fled from the youths. On this version, Robinson either tripped or was pushed to the ground. Seaman Webb testified that he saw the petitioner hit a supine Robinson over the head with a baseball bat three times. Other witnesses testified that there were multiple assailants.
Lenny Curtis told a very different story. He said that when his brother approached Robinson, Robinson swung a bottle at him. The petitioner ducked, punched Robinson, and then backed away as Robinson fell to the ground. Lenny Curtis stated that he saw three or four other persons attack Robinson with bats and sticks as Robinson lay prostrate (whereupon the Curtis brothers skedaddled).
III.STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254(d) (Supp.1997), became law on April 24, 1996— after the petitioner filed his habeas petition
*4
but before the district court acted upon it. Although the AEDPA alters the standard of review governing the issuance of writs of habeas corpus, the Supreme Court has determined that the AEDPA does not apply to habeas petitions which were pending when the AEDPA became law.
See Lindh v. Murphy,
— U.S. -, -,
IV. THE MERITS
We turn now to the three claims that are before us. We discuss them seriatim.
A. Deprivation of Counsel.
The basic facts pertinent to the petitioner’s argument that he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel are as follows. The petitioner’s trial wound down on December 29, 1980. On that date, final arguments were made and the trial court charged the jury. Deliberations began the next morning. At 2:00 p.m. on December 30, the trial judge conducted a chambers conference. He stated at the outset that he had tried unsuccessfully to locate the petitioner’s attorney for at least twenty minutes.
At 3:14 p.m., notwithstanding that the missing lawyer still had not surfaced, the judge ordered the jury returned to the courtroom and, acting sua sponte, gave a supplementary instruction anent the lesser included offense of manslaughter. 1 The jury found the petitioner guilty of second-degree murder at 3:55 p.m.
The petitioner’s paramount claim is that the judge’s actions deprived him of counsel at a critical stage of the proceedings. He cites
United States v. Cronic,
Cronic
and its progeny do indeed stand for the proposition that the actual or constructive denial of counsel at a critical stage of a criminal trial constitutes prejudice per se and thus invalidates a defendant’s conviction.
See Perry v. Leeke,
The petitioner is also correct when he asserts that recalling the jury for supplementary instructions after deliberations are underway is a critical stage of a criminal trial.
See Rogers v. United States,
In a habeas proceeding, however, special protocols prevail. Under one such protocol, “new constitutional rules of criminal procedure will not be applicable to those eases which have become final before the new rules are announced.”
Teague v. Lane,
Although this protocol would seem to have a bearing on the disposition of Curtis’ habeas petition, there is a procedural glitch. The Commonwealth has not explicitly relied on
Teague,
and the district court decided the issue on other grounds. Moreover, the
Teague
paradigm is not jurisdictional in the sense that a court is obliged to raise the point on its own initiative.
See Collins v. Youngblood,
Withal, an appellate court possesses the authority to raise the
Teague
issue on its own initiative if it believes that doing so will further the ends of justice.
See Caspari v. Bohlen,
To apply the paradigm of nonretroaetivity required by
Teague,
we must determine when the petitioner’s conviction became final and “whether a state court considering [the petitioner’s] claim at the time his conviction became final would have felt compelled by existing precedent to conclude that the rule [he] seeks was required by the Constitution.”
Saffle v. Parks,
The petitioner’s conviction became final in 1983. Accordingly, the threshold question is whether a state court, at that time, would have felt compelled to adopt the Cronic principle that a deprivation of counsel during a critical stage amounts to prejudice per se and thus mandates automatic reversal. We think not.
We acknowledge that by 1983 it long had been established that the Sixth Amendment right to assistance of counsel attaches at all critical stages of the prosecution.
See, e.g., Simmons v. United States,
We harmonize this dissonance by concluding that the
Chapman
Court was referring to
*6
a wholesale denial of counsel, whereas the
Gilbert
Court was referring to a short-term, localized denial of counsel. This interpretation receives a measure of confirmation from subsequent opinions in which the Court conducted, or ordered lower courts to conduct, harmless error analysis in response to an isolated deprivation of counsel at a critical stage of a criminal trial, yet refused to countenance such analysis when the right was denied throughout the proceedings in their entirety.
Compare Moore v. Illinois,
Any residual doubt about whether a state court judge would have felt propelled to presage Cronic’s prejudice per se principle is purged by
United States v. Morrison,
Given the weight and direction of these precedents, we do not believe that a state court in 1983 would have felt that Sixth Amendment jurisprudence compelled the adoption of the principle established a year later by the Supreme Court’s opinion in Cronic. Consequently, we conclude that Cronic announced a “new rule” as that term is understood in the Teague context.
Since the Cronic principle does not fall into either of the Teague exceptions, the petitioner’s position erodes. The principle does not place any conduct beyond the power of the state to regulate, and it does not implicate the fundamental fairness or accuracy of a criminal proceeding. Thus, under Teague, the petitioner is not entitled to rely on the principle announced in Cronic.
We turn, therefore, to the petitioner’s contention that he was actually prejudiced due to the transitory absence of his lawyer. Before launching into this examination, we are constrained to note that for six years no one intimately involved in the petitioner’s trial apparently thought that counsel’s absence during the supplementary instruction had been injurious enough to mention on direct review or more coeval collateral review. Although this observation is by no means dispositive, it does provide useful information as to the contemporaneous perception of prejudice as we today inquire into possible harmfulness.
On collateral review, the standard for harmless error analysis, which derives from
Kotteakos v. United States,
To determine whether the Sixth Amendment violation had a substantial or injurious effect, we focus primarily on the fruit of that violation: the supplementary instruction as given. The petitioner argues that the instruction was harmful for three related reasons: the trial court’s supplementary charge was unconstitutional; the flawed instruction improperly induced the jury’s verdict; and counsel’s absence deprived the petitioner of any opportunity to influence the wording of the instruction. Finding none of these plaints persuasive, we hold the error to have been benign.
The petitioner’s first complaint need not detain us. We explain fully in Part IV(B), *7 infra, why the supplementary instruction conformed with the applicable legal norms, and it would be pleonastic to rehearse that discussion here. It suffices to say at this juncture that the petitioner was not prejudiced on this account.
This conclusion also dooms the petitioner’s second contention. As long as the instruction passes muster from a legal standpoint, the fact that it may have helped to persuade the jury is unremarkable.
See United States v. Nichols,
This leaves us with the last argument. Citing
Parent,
the petitioner claims that he was undone by his attorney’s absence because, whether or not the supplementary instruction was correct, he missed the opportunity to persuade the judge that some different language might have been more appropriate.
See Parent,
In this case, all roads lead to Rome. Because of the nonretroaetivity paradigm, the brief deprivation of counsel which occurred at trial some seventeen years ago, while lamentable, does not constitute a lever that can be used on collateral review to overturn the petitioner’s conviction.
B. Supplementary Jury Instruction.
Due process requires that the government prove every element of a criminal offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Francis v. Franklin,
[A] reviewing court must first determine whether a reasonable juror would have interpreted the challenged portion of the instruction as creating a mandatory presumption. If so, the court must then consider whether other parts of the charge clarified the ill-advised language with the result that a reasonable factfinder would not have understood the instruction to create an unconstitutional presumption. Finally, if the court determines that the charge as a whole left the jurors with an impermissible impression, the court must proceed to evaluate the harmlessness vel non of the error.
Id.
at 595 (citing
Hill v. Maloney,
We will assume here that Lenny Curtis’ testimony that Robinson initiated the fracas by swinging a bottle at the petitioner provided a basis for a claim of self-defense. Under Massachusetts law,
*8 once the issue of self-defense has been fairly raised, the jury should [be] instructed on the legal consequences of using manifestly disproportionate violence in the supposed exercise of the right of self-defense. If the jury [conclude] that [the defendant] had the right to use force to defend himself but that the force used was excessive ... they would [be] warranted in finding [the defendant] guilty only of manslaughter.
Commonwealth v. Johnson,
The petitioner posits that the court’s supplemental jury instruction, quoted supra note 1, unconstitutionally shifted the burden to him to prove self-defense by telling the jurors in effect that they must believe Lenny Curtis’ testimony in order to return a manslaughter verdict. We disagree with this assessment.
We start with the first prong of the three-pronged test. Although this supplementary instruction is not artfully phrased, we believe that no reasonable juror would interpret it as creating a mandatory presumption. To the contrary, we agree with the district court that a reasonable juror probably would have understood this instruction as clarifying the circumstances which would, if proved beyond a reasonable doubt by the prosecution, warrant a manslaughter conviction.
The second prong of the test also favors the Commonwealth. On whole-record review, it seems highly likely that any prospect of confusion vis-a-vis the supplementary instruction vanishes when the instruction is considered in conjunction with the main charge. During the main charge the superi- or court judge explicated Massachusetts law clearly, accurately, and succinctly, telling the jury, inter alia, that “the defendant does not have to convince you that he acted in self-defense. The Commonwealth has to convince you that he did not, or that he used excessive force.” In addition, the judge cautioned the jury that:
[I]f I refer to any of the evidence, it will be by way of example only in order to make the law a little easier for you to understand and to apply, and I in no way intend or infer that you are to give any more weight, place any more importance, and more credibility on a particular piece of evidence that I may mention in the course of the charge than on all the other evidence in the case.
In light of these instructions, we believe that a reasonable juror would have understood that, through the supplementary instruction, the trial court sought merely to facilitate the jury’s understanding of the applicable law. 3
The petitioner also objects to another portion of the supplementary charge: a portion which linked a manslaughter verdict for him to one for his codefendant, Giglio (another East Boston youth convicted of second-degree murder). In particular, he complains about the statement: “If there is any manslaughter verdict in the Giglio case there has to be two of them.” 4
The vice in this statement, the petitioner says, is that it led the jury to believe that, in order to be found guilty of the lesser included offense, Curtis had the burden to prove that Giglio too was guilty only of manslaughter.
The petitioner’s contention tortures the trial court’s statement and distorts its meaning. This portion of the supplementary charge states that in order to find Giglio guilty of
*9
manslaughter, the jury must first find Curtis guilty of manslaughter.
See Curtis II,
To say more would be supererogatory. Because we discern no constitutional error in the trial court’s supplementary jury instruction, we reject the petitioner’s second claim.
C. Refusal to Grant Immunity.
At trial, the petitioner attempted to call as a defense witness Joseph DeDominicis, one of the youths present during the brawl. De-Dominicis refused to testify on Fifth Amendment grounds. The petitioner asked the court to immunize the witness, alleging that DeDominicis would then testify that he saw a person named Muzzone standing over the victim with a bat in his hand.
5
The prosecution opposed the grant of immunity, asserting that it would interfere with an ongoing grand jury investigation. The trial court declined the request and the SJC affirmed.
See Curtis I,
The petitioner’s claim that he was entitled to DeDominicis’ immunized testimony encompasses both the “effective defense” theory— which draws its essence from the Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process— and the “prosecutorial misconduct” theory— which draws its essence from the Fourteenth Amendment right to due process.
See United States v. Angiulo,
The effective defense theory originated in the Third Circuit.
See Government of the Virgin Islands v. Smith,
Notwithstanding the Third Circuit’s pronouncement, the effective defense theory has been roundly rejected by other courts, most of which have agreed that the power to grant immunity properly belongs to the Executive Branch.
See, e.g., United States v. Quintan-illa,
The prosecutorial misconduct theory fares no better here. That theory is grounded in the notion that “the due process clause [constrains] the prosecutor to a certain extent in her decision to grant or not to grant immunity.”
Angiulo,
Neither of these circumstances obtain here. The petitioner does not argue,
*10
and there is no evidence to suggest, that the prosecutor sought to silence DeDominicis through harassment or intimidation. And although the petitioner does argue that the prosecution intended to withhold exculpatory-evidence from the jury, this argument comprises sheer speculation. On this record, we cannot peer behind the prosecution’s plausible assertion of a legitimate interest in keeping the way clear for a possible future prosecution of DeDominicis.
See Mackey,
V. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. We have inspected the petitioner’s asseverational array and found it wanting. There is no sound basis for granting a writ of habeas corpus.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The supplementary instruction stated in pertinent part:
Now in case you are wondering about the manslaughter, remember that I told you that the only set of facts, if you believe them, that would warrant a manslaughter verdict would be the instance that I recalled to your mind if one of the witnesses — I think it was Curtis’ brother testified that the sailor was the aggressor, that is, that he swung a bottle at Mr. Curtis first, and that, then, if Curtis used what you feel was unreasonable force in defending himself that it would warrant a verdict of manslaughter against Curtis.
. This case is unlike
Rogers v. United States,
where the jury returned a verdict five minutes after the court replied affirmatively (without consulting counsel) to a question from the jury about whether it would accept a particular verdict.
See
. Since we do not believe that there is any appreciable risk that the supplementary charge confused the jurors or left them with an incorrect impression, the third prong of the Anderson test need not concern us.
. This portion of the supplementary charge addressed the use of excessive force in self-defense by the petitioner:
I told you that if you find that happened, and that Giglio was helping him defend himself and used excessive force, but that it was the bat, not a bottle that caused the death, there could be a manslaughter verdict in the case of Giglio only if there is a manslaughter verdict in the case against Curtis, that is, the idea of the joint enterprise being that Giglio would have been aiding Curtis' self-defense effort, and then if Curtis used excessive force and was found guilty of manslaughter, then Giglio could also be found guilty of manslaughter. But if there is any manslaughter verdict in the Giglio case there has to be two of them.
. We note that this testimony, even if credited, would not have been wholly exculpatory; some witnesses testified that they saw two batsmen.
. To be sure, we added in
Mackey
that an occasional exception perhaps "might exist upon very extreme facts.”
Mackey,
