This habeas corpus appeal arises from David Walker’s February 1998 conviction for kidnapping and first-degree sexual assault while armed. Walker claims that his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him was violated by the exclusion of evidence reflecting the complainant’s motive to falsely accuse him of sexual assault. He also advances an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. The Wisconsin Court of Appeals, seconded by the district court, rejected his arguments and denied his petition. We affirm.
I. Background
A. Trial and Conviction
Lorinda S., the complaining witness, testified at Walker’s trial that she was at home alone with her four children on September'26, 1997, when the defendant unexpectedly arrived at the house. Lorinda knew Walker because he dated her stepsister. Upon entering the house, Walker grabbed Lorinda by the wrists. Lorinda told him to “stop playing,” and he said, “Bitch, I’m not playing.” He grabbed her by the neck, bit her on the cheek, and hit her. He also grabbed a hammer that was sitting on the table and threatened to hit her with it as he said, “You know what I want.” Lorinda told him to stop, but he forced her into the bedroom and ordered her to perform oral sex on him. When she refused, he hit her, then forcibly pulled up her dress. He pulled the crotch of her underwear aside, but was not able to pull them off because she held on to them. Lorinda testified that he rubbed his penis on her vagina and “put his stuff on me.”
Lorinda testified that, during the assault, she told her oldest child, eight-year-old Shontaya B., to call 911, and Shontaya did. Shontaya took the stand at Walker’s trial and confirmed her mother’s story. Shontaya testified that she saw Walker hit, push, and grab her mother while her mother was saying “stop” and telling him to leave. She saw her mother crying and she saw Walker pick up a hammer and try to hit her mother with it. After Walker pushed her mother into the bedroom, Shontaya went upstairs to call 911. The state played a tape of Shontaya’s 911 call for the jury:
Dispatcher: Milwaukee Emergency.
May I help you?
*552 Shontaya: Hello, there’s a man up [sic ] my house. My mother’s crying and I don’t know what to do. She told me to call 911.
Dispatcher: Your mother’s crying?
Shontaya: Yes, and there’s a man over at my house, and I don’t know what he’s doing to her.
Dispatcher: Is that her boyfriend?
Shontaya: No, it’s a man that, it’s a man that I’ve seen, you know ...
Dispatcher: And what’s he doing? Is he arguing?
Shontaya: No, but I’m hearing a lot of bumping and ...
Dispatcher: You’re hearing what?
Shontaya: A lot of bumping.
Dispatcher: Do you think he’s hitting your mother?
Shontaya: Yes.
Dispatcher: Where’s your mother now, inside or out-side?
Shontaya: She’s downstairs.
Dispatcher: What’s your address?
Shontaya: Um, I don’t know, but I’m
Dispatcher: Okay. I show you’re calling from 1830 North 31st.
Shontaya: Okay.
Dispatcher: And you say your mother’s in the lower [sic ] with the man?
Shontaya: Um-hum, and you know he’s telling her to come in the room.
Dispatcher: Okay. And what’s your name?
Shontaya: Shontaya.
Dispatcher: Shontaya?
Shontaya: Um-hum. Shontaya.
Dispatcher: Okay. And this is downstairs, okay?
Shontaya: Okay.
Dispatcher: We’ll get someone out.
Thank you.
Shontaya: You’re welcome.
Tr. 137-38.
After Walker left, Lorinda called 911 and told the dispatcher that Walker had tried to rape her, and that he bit her and tried to hit her with a hammer. She also called her fiancé, Clifton Keeler, who arrived at the house before the police did.
Walker took the stand in his own defense and testified that Lorinda invited him to her house and that they had consensual sex. Walker testified that the mark on Lorinda’s cheek was a “hickey” that he gave her after their sexual encounter.
The parties stipulated to the following evidence, which was presented to the jury: the state crime laboratory found a small amount of semen on the cervical and vaginal swabs and the “Woods light” swab, taken from Lorinda at the hospital in the late afternoon of September 26, 1997, but there was an insufficient amount of semen for further serological analysis. The nurse from the hospital testified that the “Woods light” swab was taken from Lorinda’s right inner thigh and groin. The crime lab report also contained a finding that no semen was identified on the underwear or dress worn by Lorinda, but this was not presented to the jury by stipulation or otherwise.
Based on the foregoing evidence, the jury convicted Walker of kidnapping and first-degree sexual assault while armed, and acquitted him of an intimidation of a victim charge. The presiding circuit judge sentenced Walker to 70 years in prison.
B. Post-Conviction Appeals
Walker subsequently filed for post-conviction relief with the Wisconsin circuit court, arguing, inter alia, that his Confrontation Clause rights were violated by the exclusion of evidence that Lorinda had a motive to falsely accuse him, and that he *553 was denied his right to effective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to introduce the crime lab report finding that no semen was found on Lorinda’s underwear or dress. The Confrontation Clause issue centered on the trial court’s exclusion of evidence that Lorinda’s fiancé, Clifton Keeler, had previously assaulted her on at least four occasions. All four of those incidents were memorialized in police reports. The report of the most recent incident, which occurred on October 23, 1996, approximately eleven months before Walker’s sexual assault, noted that Keeler was jealous because he thought that Lorinda was involved with another man. Walker argued that the evidence was relevant for two purposes: truthfulness and motive. Regarding truthfulness, Walker asserted that this was evidence that Lorinda was lying when she checked the “no” box in response to the question “Hit or threatened in the past year?” on a hospital report related to the incident with Walker. As to motive, Walker maintained that these prior incidents gave Lorinda a possible motive to falsely accuse him of rape and falsely testify that she did not consent to their encounter. Walker’s theory was that Lorinda manufactured the sexual assault story because she feared that Keeler would find out that they had sex and beat her. The trial court excluded the evidence. Citing Wisconsin’s analog of Rule 608(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, the court explained that truthfulness cannot be attacked by specific instances of conduct. In addition, the court concluded that the evidence was not admissible evidence of motive because it was too speculative and therefore not relevant. The court cited the following considerations in support of its conclusion that the evidence was irrelevant: there was no evidence that the prior beatings by Keeler occurred because Lorinda was having consensual sex with someone; there was no evidence that she had ever manufactured a sexual assault to avoid a beating by Keeler; there was a physical assault component connected to the incident with Walker; and Shontaya provided eyewitness testimony that corroborated Lorinda’s account. The court also ruled that any probative value of the evidence was outweighed by the prejudicial effect of the evidence. The post-conviction circuit court summarily affirmed the trial judge’s ruling on the Confrontation Clause issue. On the ineffective assistance issue, the court held that Walker was not prejudiced by his attorney’s failure to introduce the crime lab results.
On July 21, 2000, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals affirmed the lower court’s decision. With regard to the Confrontation Clause issue, the court explained:
The trial court reasoned that the relevance of the October 23, 1996 incident to Lorinda’s motive to fabricate the non-consensual nature of sex with Walker was minimal. The court noted the evidence that- Lorinda called Keeler in tears and told him that Walker had assaulted her, she had her daughter call 911, her daughter witnessed Walker’s physically abusive behavior, and Lorinda had a bite mark on her cheek from Walker. Given this evidence, the trial court could reasonably consider Walker’s theory tying the October 23, 1996 incident to a motive to lie about Walker to be too speculative. The court also expressed a concern about the effect of stereotype, which we understand to mean that the trial court was concerned about the effect on the jury of evidence suggesting that Lorinda had previously had consensual sex with another man besides her fiancé. It is likely that if Walker introduced evidence of the October 23, 1996 incident, whether Lorinda had been involved with another man would become a focus of the trial. That *554 would be irrelevant to the charges against Walker, but distracting and unfairly prejudicial to the State’s case. We conclude that the court could reasonably decide that there was a minimal logical connection between the October 23, 1996 incident with Keeler and Lorin-da’s motive to lie about Walker, and that any probative value the October 23,1996 incident. might have was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
App. 116. The court also rejected the ineffective assistance of counsel claim, reasoning that the lack of semen on Lorinda’s dress and underwear did not necessarily strengthen Walker’s case or undercut Lo-rinda’s testimony.
On June 16, 2001, Walker filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. The court denied the petition on September 3, 2003. Walker’s appointed counsel then filed a motion for relief from judgment under Rule 59(e), asserting manifest error of law. On July 28, 2004, the district court denied the motion. The court held that Walker’s case was distinguishable from controlling Supreme Court precedent on the Confrontation Clause issue and that the asserted error was harmless in any event. The court also concluded that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ application of the prejudice prong of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Strickland v. Washington,
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s decision to deny Walker’s habeas petition
de novo. Searcy v. Jaimet,
B. Confrontation Clause
Walker’s first argument is that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ decision on
*555
his Confrontation Clause challenge was “contrary to” clearly established federal law in that the court confronted facts materially indistinguishable from the Supreme Court’s decision in
Olden v. Kentucky,
The defendant convicted of sodomy appealed his conviction on the basis of the Confrontation Clause.
Id.
At trial, the co-defendants wanted to demonstrate that the complainant had motive to lie by introducing evidence that the complainant was living with her boyfriend at the time of trial.
Id.
This was the same boyfriend who had seen her get out of his half-brother’s friend’s car in an intoxicated state on the night of the incident.
Id.
The trial judge excluded all evidence of the complainant’s living situation and did not allow defense counsel to cross-examine the complainant on the issue even after she claimed on direct examination that she was living with her mother.
Id.
at 230,
The instant case is distinguishable. Given the Olden complainant’s admission that she had been out drinking with the defendants on the night of the incident, her voluntary departure from the bar with the men, her admission that the men dropped her off at her boyfriend’s house after the incident (a gesture that seems unusual in light of her allegations), her boyfriend’s testimony that he saw her get out of the defendant’s car on the night of the incident and his possible suspicion of infidelity, and her continued cohabitation with the boyfriend at the time of trial, the defendants’ theory of the case was plausible and had a factual basis in the evidence. The jury apparently believed so, considering that it *556 acquitted one defendant of kidnapping, rape, and sodomy and acquitted the other of kidnapping and sodomy even in the absence of evidence of the complainant’s cohabitation with her boyfriend at the time of trial. Walker’s defense, on the other hand, was somewhere between absurd and impossible. According to Walker, Lorinda called him over to have sex during the middle of the day while she was watching her four children, all under the age of nine. When Walker appeared, Lorinda shepherded the children into a room and had sex with him. But she did not want her boyfriend to find out about the encounter. To that end, instead of simply never telling her boyfriend about the tryst, she told her daughter to call 911 while she was in the middle of having sex with Walker. Tr. of 911 Call (“[My mother] told me to call 911.”). Lorinda also put on a good show for her children by crying, and Walker got into the act of setting himself up for a false sexual assault charge by hitting Lorinda before they had sex. Id. The foregoing defense, Walker asserts, hinged on his being able to explore the fact that Lorinda was a victim of domestic violence, at least as recently as eleven months before Walker sexually assaulted her. We fail to see the connection between the stale report of domestic violence at the hands of her boyfriend and the farfetched, pre-planned setup of Walker on sexual assault charges. In contrast to Olden where the limitation was “beyond reason” because evidence about the complainant’s relationship had such strong potential to cast doubt on her testimony, the restriction placed on Walker’s cross-examination of Lorinda was well within the trial judge’s wide discretion to impose reasonable limits on cross-examination because it did not have potential to cast doubt on Lorinda’s testimony. We accordingly conclude that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ decision was not contrary to Olden.
Walker also asserts that the reviewing court’s decision was an “unreasonable application” of the principles announced in
Olden, Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
Nor was the state court’s application of the principles discussed in
Davis
objectively unreasonable.
Davis
involved the rob
*557
bery of a large safe from a bar in Anchorage, Alaska.
Davis,
As the foregoing analysis illustrates, rulings on Confrontation Clause issues are very fact-specific and involve case-by-case determinations. At the same time, and perhaps for that very reason, the Confrontation Clause standards are very general, making it difficult to call a state court ruling in this area “objectively unreasonable.” On this point, the Supreme Court’s discussion in Yarborough warrants repeating:
[T]he range of reasonable judgment can depend in part on the nature of the relevant rule. If a legal rule is specific, the range may be narrow. Applications of the rule may be plainly correct or incorrect. Other rules are more general, and their meaning must emerge in application over the course of time. Applying a general standard to a specific case can demand a substantial element of judgment. As a result, evaluating whether a rule application was unreasonable requires considering the rule’s specificity. The more general the rule, the more leeway courts have in reaching outcomes in case by case determination.
Id.
at 664,
In sum, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ ruling on the Confrontation Clause issue was not “contrary to” Olden because Olden involved the exclusion of bias evidence with very strong potential to cast doubt on the complainant’s testimony, and the evidence excluded in this case was remote, without connection to the incident at issue, and devoid of potential to undermine Lo-rinda’s testimony and the prosecution case. Furthermore, the ruling was not an “unreasonable application” of the broad cross-examination principles discussed in Olden, Van Arsdall, and Davis. We accordingly reject Walker’s argument that his writ should be granted due to the state court’s decision on his Confrontation Clause challenge.
C. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Walker also asserts that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals’ decision on his
*558
ineffective assistance of counsel was an unreasonable application of
Strickland v. Washington,
Walker’s challenge centers on the state crime lab findings. The parties stipulated to the fact that a small amount of semen was found on the cervical, vaginal, and inner and groin swabs, but that the amount was insufficient for further sero-logical analysis. Though the crime lab report also contained a finding that no semen was identified on the underwear or dress worn by Lorinda, Walker’s attorney failed to present the finding to the jury. Walker views his attorney’s failure to present that portion of the crime lab report as ineffective assistance of counsel and contends that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals unreasonably applied Strickland in rejecting his claim. We disagree.
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals correctly identified Strickland as the controlling Supreme Court case on the issue and concluded that Walker had not met the prejudice prong of the Strickland test. The court noted that the only testimony as to whether Walker ejaculated was Lorinda’s ambiguous testimony that Walker “put his stuff on me.” Furthermore, the court reasoned that the lack of semen on Lorinda’s dress and underwear did not necessarily strengthen Walker’s case or undercut Lo-rinda’s testimony. We agree with the state court’s analysis and conclusion. Walker did not testify that he ejaculated. Lorin-da’s testimony about Walker’s “stuff’ could reasonably be interpreted as a reference to ejaculation or his penis. Even if she was referring to ejaculation, she did not testify that he ejaculated on her dress and underwear; she testified that he “put his stuff on me,” which may be why a small amount of semen was found on the cervical, vaginal, and inner thigh and groin swabs. Regardless of whether Walker ejaculated and if he did, where the semen landed, it was reasonable for the reviewing court to conclude that Walker’s attorney’s failure to introduce the lack of semen finding did not undermine confidence in the outcome of the proceedings, particularly given the weight of the evidence against Walker.
III. Conclusion
For the above-stated reasons, we AffiRM the district court’s denial of Walker’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
