OPINION
A state-court jury convicted Vincent Doan of aggravated murder, with one death-penalty specification, and three counts of kidnapping. The court followed the recommendation of the jury and imposed a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the aggravated murder conviction and also imposed a nine-year prison term for the kidnapping convictions. In affirming his conviction, the Ohio Court of Appeals rejected Doan’s claims that the trial court violated his due process rights by utilizing a jury instruction that allegedly reduced the State’s burden of proof, and that the trial court violated Doan’s Confrontation Clause rights by admitting hearsay statements indicating that Doan had physically abused or threatened the victim.
State v. Doan,
No. CA97-12-014,
Doan filed his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition in federal district court in August 2000. Doan had a state postconviction proceeding pending at the time, but because of the Ohio courts’ delay in acting on the petition, the federal district court excused Doan from exhausting the claims that had not been exhausted in Doan’s direct appeal, including claims under
Brady v. Maryland,
I
Doan was convicted of the kidnapping and murdering of his girlfriend, Clarissa Ann (Carrie) Culberson, who disappeared in the overnight hours of August 28-29, 1996. On the evening of August 28, 1996, Culberson was scheduled to play a game in a coed volleyball league. Witnesses saw Doan arrive in his car at the volleyball court and have a verbal dispute with Cul-berson, who refused to go home with him because she needed to drive her friends home, as they had been drinking. At approximately 11:30 p.m. that evening, after Culberson’s game was over and she had returned home, a Culberson neighbor saw her leave in her red Honda CRX. Between 12:30 and 12:45 a.m. on August 29, 1996, Doan’s neighbor, Billie Jo Brown, observed Doan chasing Culberson in Brown’s front yard, with Culberson “asking for help.” Brown observed the red CRX with the driver’s door open. She saw Doan catch Culberson, punch her in the face, and tell her, “ T told you the next time I’d kill you, you fucking bitch.’ ” While Brown was attempting to wake her husband, she heard squealing tires; when she returned to the window, she observed that Culberson, Doan, and Culberson’s car were gone.
At 3:15 a.m. on August 29, 2006, Doan appeared at the home of his half-brother, Tracey Baker. According to Tracey’s ex- *454 wife, Lori Baker, Doan was shirtless and had blood on his chest, arm, and jeans, and according to another witness, Vicki Watkins, Doan was “dirty,” “grungy looking,” and “distraught.” At approximately 3:45 a.m., after Doan had showered, changed clothes, and conversed with Tracey, Doan and Tracey left in Tracey’s truck, carrying with them several garbage bags and a gun. The men returned to Tracey’s house at approximately 6:00 a.m. and attempted to clean up Doan’s clothes and boots that he had left behind. Neither Culberson’s body nor her Honda CRX was ever found.
At trial, multiple witnesses testified that, on many occasions in the months prior to Culberson’s disappearance, Culberson had described to them physical abuse by Doan, and threats that Doan had made on her life and the lives of her family members. Witnesses testified that Culberson had told them that Doan had punched her, dragged her through a bedroom, smashed her face into a steering wheel, held her by the hair after kicking out the window of a car in which she was riding, and picked her up and slammed her against a car trunk.
II
The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2254, placed “a new constraint on the power of a federal habeas court to grant a state prisoner’s application for a writ of habeas corpus with respect to claims adjudicated on the merits in state court.”
Williams v. Taylor,
(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).
“Under the ‘contrary to’ clause, a federal habeas court may grant the writ if the state court arrives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law or if the state court decides a case differently than [the Supreme] Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
Williams,
“Furthermore, state findings of fact are presumed to be correct unless the defendant can rebut the presumption by clear and convincing evidence.”
Baze v. Parker,
A
In his habeas petition, Doan contends that an erroneous jury instruction that referred to a civil “greater weight of the evidence” standard deprived him of the right to have the State prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial court properly defined the “beyond a reasonable doubt” burden of proof by providing the jury with Ohio’s statutory definition of reasonable doubt. See Ohio Rev. Code § 2901.05(D). However, in response to Doan’s counsel’s request for an instruction cautioning jurors about drawing an inference upon an inference, the trial court included the following ancillary instruction in its explanation of direct and circumstantial evidence:
To infer or to make an inference is to reach a reasonable conclusion of fact which you may but you are not required to make from other facts which you find have been established by direct evidence. Whether an inference is made rests entirely with you. You may infer a fact or facts or reach a reasonable conclusion about a fact or facts only from other facts or circumstances that have been proved by the greater weight of the evidence, but you may not infer a fact or facts, or make inferences — or reach a conclusion about a fact or facts from a speculative or remote basis that has not been established by a greater weight of the evidence.
Tr. 3330-31, J.A. 907-08. During deliberations, and at the jury’s request, the trial court re-read to the jury the ancillary instructions concerning direct and circumstantial evidence, including the erroneous instruction cautioning inferences. Although Doan’s counsel objected to the instruction after the court re-read it to the jury, the trial court declined to correct the instruction, in order to avoid drawing the jury’s attention to it.
“To warrant habeas relief, jury instructions must not only have been erroneous, but also, taken as a whole, so infirm that they rendered the entire trial fundamentally unfair.”
Austin v. Bell,
Doan contends that the trial court’s use of the erroneous ancillary instruction created a structural error under Sullivan. According to Doan, the erroneous instruction led the jury to reduce the government’s burden of proof and allowed the government to prove each element of the crime by only a greater weight of the evidence. In addition, if the error was not structural, Doan contends that the error rose to a constitutional level, and was not harmless, contrary to the state court’s holding.
In
Sullivan,
the Supreme Court emphasized that “[t]he prosecution bears the bur
*456
den of proving all elements of the offense charged, and must persuade the factfinder beyond a reasonable doubt of the facts necessary to establish each of those elements.”
Id.
at 277-78,
Subsequent to
Sullivan,
the Supreme Court emphasized that “the Constitution does not require that any particular form of words be used in advising the jury of the government’s burden of proof.”
Victor,
In light of Sullivan and Victor, it cannot be said that the state-court decision affirming Doan’s conviction “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.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Unlike Sullivan, where the trial court improperly defined the “beyond a reasonable doubt” burden of proof, at Doan’s trial, the court properly defined the “beyond a reasonable doubt” burden of proof and only made an error in an ancillary instruction unconnected to the burden of proof. Moreover, the jury was specifically instructed that Doan must be acquitted if the State does not prove each element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Tr. 3329-30, J.A. 906-07. The trial court did not provide the jury with a separate definition of “a greater weight of the evidence,” and only referred to that standard in one instruction, repeated twice. In contrast, the trial court repeated the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard of proof twenty-seven times.
Although Doan places great weight on the fact that the jury asked the court to repeat the erroneous instruction, the jury actually requested the trial court to repeat the ancillary instructions concerning direct and circumstantial evidence, which happened to include the erroneous instruction. Such a circumstance lends meager support to a conclusion that the erroneous ancillary instruction led the jury to apply a “greater weight of the evidence” standard to each element of the offense.
Given that the erroneous instruction must be viewed in the context of the jury instructions as a whole,
Victor,
B
Doan claims that the trial court violated his rights under the Confrontation Clause, U.S. Const, amend. VI, by allowing Cul-berson’s friends and family to testify as to statements made to them by Culberson concerning alleged physical abuse by Doan. Doan contends that admission of the testimony violated his constitutional rights because the Supreme Court has held that testimonial hearsay evidence may not be admitted against a criminal defendant unless the defendant had a prior opportunity to cross-examine the declarant.
See Crawford v. Washington,
While Doan contends that
Crawford
should be applied retroactively to his habe-as petition under
Teague v. Lane,
Notwithstanding the fact that Doan must establish that the state court’s decision was contrary to, or a misapplication of
Roberts,
Doan must also establish that the state court’s decision was contrary to, or a misapplication of,
Crawford.
This is because AEDPA allows a writ of habeas corpus to issue on behalf “of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court only on the ground that he
is in custody in violation of the Constitution
or laws or treaties of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a) (emphasis added). This Court has previously explained that a showing that a state court misapplied
Roberts
is “a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for habeas relief,” because “[t]he goal of the great writ is not to correct the misapplication of overruled precedents.”
Desai v. Booker,
In
Roberts,
the Supreme Court held that a statement made by an out-of-court de-clarant may satisfy the Confrontation Clause in one of two ways: The statement may either fall within a “firmly rooted hearsay exception” or have “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness.”
*458
Subsequent to the date that the district court issued its opinion, the Supreme Court addressed the application of the forfeiture by wrongdoing doctrine to the admissibility of hearsay statements of a murder victim in a defendant’s trial for murder. In
Giles v. California,
— U.S. -,
In light of
Giles,
the district court’s analysis cannot justify denial of Doan’s habeas petition. The district court explicitly stated that “for the statements to be admissible under this exception, the prosecution need
only
prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant is responsible for the declarant’s unavailability.”
Doan v. Voorhies,
Under current Supreme Court precedent, the majority of the statements that Doan alleges were admitted in violation of the Confrontation Clause do not raise Confrontation Clause issues because they are not testimonial. In
Crawford,
the Court found “testimonial” hearsay included “pri- or testimony at a preliminary hearing, before a grand jury, or at a former trial; and to police interrogations.”
Doan contends that
Crawford
and
Davis
stand for the rule that hearsay statements are only nontestimonial, such that the Confrontation Clause does not apply, when they involve an ongoing emergency. We disagree with Doan’s narrow characterization of nontestimonial statements. In
Crawford,
the Supreme Court emphasized that it was not providing a “comprehensive definition” of “testimonial.”
*459
Doan only describes one instance of admitted testimony which could possibly be considered testimonial hearsay. The State presented testimony that Cul-berson filed a charge affidavit against Doan for hitting her with a space heater on the morning of July 28, 1996, and that the affidavit was filed several hours after the event allegedly occurred. However, even if this Court found that the affidavit was both inadmissible hearsay and testimonial, admission of the affidavit was harmless error because Doan has not shown that the error had “substantial and injurious effect in or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
In Doan’s case, the jury’s guilty verdict is “surely unattributable” to the admission of Culberson’s affidavit, even if it was inadmissible testimonial hearsay, because the affidavit was merely cumulative of other evidence admitted against Doan. As the state court of appeals noted:
Culberson told [Doan], in Debbie Cul-berson’s presence, almost immediately after the incident that [Doan] was only concerned about getting in trouble and was making up a story ... That testimony, combined with Debbie Culberson’s personal witnessing of Culberson’s injuries, conveys the gist of the event, i.e., [Doan] caused Culberson, by his violence, to bleed from her head. In addition, [Doan’s] ludicrous explanation of her injury, admissible as á statement of a party-opponent, that Culberson ‘had fallen on a pole’ is more evidence of [Doan] protecting himself.
State v. Doan,
C
Doan claims that the prosecution violated his due process rights by failing to provide him with exculpatory evidence as mandated by
Brady v. Maryland,
373. U.S. 83,
Doan argues that the State violated his constitutional rights by withholding seven pieces, or categories, of evidence from Doan at trial. First, Doan argues that the prosecution failed to disclose several pieces of evidence related to Mitchell Epperson, a jailhouse informant who testified as to incriminating statements that Doan allegedly made to him while the two men were incarcerated at the same detention facility. Epperson testified that he did not receive any consideration or time off his sentence for providing testimony against Doan. However, according to Doan, the prosecution had offered Epperson reward money in exchange for his testimony.
At the time of Doan’s trial, a private reward had been offered in connection with Culberson’s disappearance. Epper-son expressed interest in the reward on several occasions, and the State indicated to him that he would be eligible to receive it. Doan’s trial counsel knew that the reward had been offered, and had even asked to have reward posters removed from around the town before the trial started. Accordingly, the prosecutor’s “failure to disclose” evidence of the reward cannot form the basis of a
Brady
violation.
See Garter v. Bell,
Doan also alleges that the prosecution failed to disclose that it had “rewarded” Epperson by requesting that other jurisdictions not arrest Epperson on outstanding warrants, by having the prosecutor’s investigator testify at Epperson’s sentencing hearing, and by releasing Ep-person early from jail. First, with respect to the State’s request that other jurisdictions not arrest Epperson, Epperson was not aware of this request, thus, the prosecution could not have made the request in exchange for Epperson’s testimony. Second, although a prosecutor’s investigator testified at Epperson’s hearing, Doan does not advance any evidence to suggest that the testimony was favorable to Epperson, or that there was any agreement between the prosecutor’s office and Epperson regarding the testimony. Third, Doan merely speculates, and does not provide any evidence, that Epperson was released from jail early in exchange for his testimony, rather than because of a more typical circumstance such as overcrowding or good behavior.
Even if the Court found that this evidence was wrongly withheld by the prosecution, it does not affect the analysis of the cumulative effect of the evidence on the trial. The jury’s assessment of Epper-son’s credibility is not likely to have been affected by this potentially impeaching evidence because Epperson had already been impeached on his extensive criminal record and drug problems.
The second category of evidence that Doan argues that the prosecution failed to disclose involves several pieces of evidence *461 related to Lori Baker’s testimony that Doan was smeared with blood when he appeared at the Bakers’ house at approximately 3:15 a.m. on August 29, 1996. During interviews with investigators and the assistant prosecutor on November 7, 1996, and on November 12, 1996, Lori did not state that Doan was covered in blood when he appeared at her house. Lori had also made a statement to a detective indicating that she did not know anything about Cul-berson’s disappearance, and a statement to the wife of a sheriffs deputy that Doan had been at her house with blood on him. Thus, Doan contends that “the prosecution failed to disclose a series of self-contradictory statements [Lori] made prior to her trial testimony she gave against Doan.”
Even if some evidence of Lori’s inconsistent statements was withheld by the prosecution, the withholding does not affect the analysis of the cumulative effect of the evidence on the trial. The jury’s assessment of Lori’s credibility is not likely to have been affected by this potentially impeaching evidence because Lori had already testified to making several contradictory statements concerning whether she saw Doan covered in blood. On direct examination, Lori admitted that she had previously given Doan’s trial counsel a false statement under oath concerning her knowledge of Culberson’s disappearance. On cross-examination, Lori admitted that she had lied to the detective. Lori also admitted that she lied in a statement to the assistant prosecutor when she told him that she had not said to another person that she had not seen Doan covered in blood. Finally, Lori admitted to lying to the assistant prosecutor in late October or early November of 1996.
The third piece of evidence that Doan argues that the prosecution failed to disclose is evidence that the State promised witnesses Lori Baker and Vicki Watkins that it would not prosecute them if they implicated Doan in Culberson’s murder. Lori and Watkins met with assistant prosecutor Moyer and Detective Edwards on November 7, 1996. According to Detective Edward’s notes, Moyer “reassured Lori and [Watkins] that they would not be charged unless they flat-out lied to us ... Moyer then pointed out a couple of lies that Lori had already told and she admitted same and that she wouldn’t hold anything back in the future.” While the prosecution must disclose that it has promised a witness that he or she will not be prosecuted in exchange for providing testimony,
Giglio v. United States,
Fourth, Doan argues that the prosecution failed to disclose evidence that Culberson’s neighbor, Billie Jo Brown, had been unable to positively identify Doan from a photo-array as the man she saw assaulting Culberson in her yard, and a statement by Brown, which was inconsistent with her trial testimony as to what type of clothing Culberson’s attacker was wearing. While those statements could have been used by the defense to impeach Brown, any error in. withholding the statements was insignificant. A witness for the defense, Bonnie Davis, corroborated Brown’s testimony that Doan and Culber-son were arguing outside Brown’s house. Doan’s argument that Davis’s testimony was actually inconsistent with Brown’s because Davis testified that Doan and Cul-berson went in separate directions after the argument is not persuasive because both witnesses placed Doan and Culberson having an argument in Brown’s yard. Ac *462 cordingly, any error in disclosing the evidence did not contribute to the cumulative effect of wrongfully withheld evidence because it would not have had a significant impact on the jury’s assessment of Brown’s credibility.
Fifth, Doan argues that the prosecution failed to disclose evidence that Cul-berson had confided to a friend, Mandy Bogan, that she was considering leaving Blanchester. According to Bogan’s statement, Culberson had once confided to her that she had to get away from Doan because of his abuse and that “maybe the only way out was to just leave everything behind and start over.” While this evidence may have supported the defense theory that Culberson left Blanchester on her own, this theory was not plausible. Culberson had no money and had recently rejected offers from her mother and her employer to pay for her relocation. Additionally, Culberson had expressly stated that she did not want to leave Blanchester, and had just enrolled in a nearby nursing school. Accordingly, even if Bogan’s statement had been disclosed to the jury, it would not have had a significant effect on the jury.
Sixth, Doan argues that the prosecution wrongfully failed to disclose statements from two witnesses who claimed to have seen a man and woman generally fitting Doan and Culberson’s descriptions at times that Culberson was already dead according to the prosecution’s theory of the case. The first statement that the prosecution did not disclose was a statement from Christa Lynn Pendleton which indicated, according to Doan, that:
[A]t the time Doan was supposedly covered in blood at his brother’s house, Pendleton saw two people walking on the left hand side of the road far from Baker’s house. Pendleton described the pair as a woman wearing a dark long-sleeved shirt, light colored shorts and long brown hair. The man was wearing a baseball hat and a black shirt. She estimated he was five feet, eleven inches tall and weighed 175-180 pounds.
The second statement that the prosecution did not disclose was a statement from Karrie Donovan, which indicated, according to Doan, that Donovan “was on her way home Friday morning, August 30, 1996, between one and three in the morning, on Hunt Road, when she saw a man and a woman at a junkyard. The woman was slender, wore shorts and had long dark hair. The man was ‘medium build.’ ” We agree with the district court’s analysis of these two statements:
The jury likely would not have found it plausible that two women, who just happen to be friends, would have each seen a woman matching Culberson’s description on successive nights, both times with a man in apparently remote areas near Blanchester, immediately after she disappeared. Furthermore, since the jury obviously rejected the testimony of defense witnesses who claimed to have definitely seen Culberson alive after August 29, it is not likely that the jury would have credited the more general descriptions proffered by Pendleton and Donovan. Moreover, Donovan’s statement would have been at least as incul-patory as it was exculpatory, since it potentially placed Petitioner and Culberson at or near Petitioner’s father’s junkyard, which is on Hunt Road, where the police conducted a search for Culber-son’s body.
Doan v. Voorhies,
Seventh, and finally, Doan argues that the prosecution was required to disclose that the State hypnotized Vicki Watkins to refresh her memory and that the State performed a voice stress analysis on Watkins. Doan argues that it would have been useful to impeach Watkins with evidence that her testimony may have been the product of hypnosis, rather than her actual memory of the events. While this may be true, it has already been discussed that Watkins had been impeached based on her prior inconsistent statements to the police and her failure to come forward earlier with her evidence. Accordingly, the fact of the hypnosis would not have had a significant effect on the jury.
Doan also argues that statements that Watkins made during the hypnosis session could have been used to impeach her. However, these statements concerned the location of Doan’s tattoo and a statement that she thought that her discussion with her sister, Lori Baker, about “parting [Culberson] out” was completely “harebrained.” These statements would not have added impeachment value. With respect to results of the voice stress analysis, it cannot be said that this evidence has impeachment value, because under Ohio law, the results cannot not be used, not even for impeachment purposes, unless both sides agree to their use.
State v. Doan,
No. CA2001-09-030,
In reviewing the evidence that the prosecution did not disclose for materiality, the Court has considered the cumulative effect of the evidence.
Kyles,
AFFIRMED.
