Sаntiago Herrera was shot and killed in 1998. He was a casualty of a conflict between the Latin Kings (Herrera’s gang) and La Familia about what in antitrust law would be called exclusive retail sales territories. Zebulon Robinson, who had been negotiating to purchase marijuana from Herrera, saw the murder and at trial identified as the shooter Edward Murillo, one of three members of La Familia who had approached Herrera and proclaimed that La Familia owned the territory. Robinson’s word was of uncertain reliability — he had been engaged in an illegal drug transaction, his recollection of events changed over time, and, worse, he had taken the murder weapon to a friend to hide, though he testified that the assassin had tossed him the gun while fleeing. So the prosecutor wanted additional evidence. The state called Luis Murillo, Edward’s brother. But Luis refused to testify, even after receiving immunity from prosecution and being held in contempt for his intransigence. With Luis unavailable, the prosecutor offered — and the judge admitted, ovеr an objection based on the Constitution’s confrontation clause — a statement that Luis had made during custodial interrogation six days after Herrera’s death.
Luis told the police a series of lies. First he denied being anywhere near the murder. He had been with his girlfriend at the time, Luis asserted. An officer checked out the story (or pretended to) аnd told Luis that his alibi did not hold up. *788 Moreover, the officer said, a Crime Stoppers tip had placed Luis at the scene. Luis then said that he had indeed been nearby and had seen the perpetrators running away, but that he had nothing to do with the crime. During the interrogation Luis became increasingly upset and nervous, breaking into tears when the officеrs refused to accept his version of events. After still more attempts at evasion, Luis stated that he had seen his brother Edward approach Herrera and pull the trigger. Luis signed an affidavit to that effect. But Luis denied being one of the triad who had approached Herrera; how he could have seen the events so clearly, if he hаd not been part of the delegation, he did not reveal. (Luis said in his statement and affidavit that Robinson was the third member of the group; Robinson testified that Luis was the third.)
The jury convicted Edward of first degree murder and two firearms offenses. He was sentenced to life imprisonment. Wisconsin’s intermediate appellate court affirmed, rejecting his argument under the confrontation clause, see
Wisconsin’s judiciary used the framework of
Ohio v. Roberts,
If this question were to arise today, the governing decision would be
Crawford v. Washington,
The parties debate whether
Crawford
applies retroactively under
Teague v. Lane,
There
is
a provision for giving effect to retroactive legal changes, but it lies in § 2244(b)(2)(A) and depends on the Supreme Court’s own declaration that its decision meets the
Teague
standard. See, e.g.,
Tyler v. Cain,
Teague
and its successors say that a new rule of constitutional law is retroactive on collateral attack only if it places certain conduct beyond the reach of the criminal law (that is, establishes that the defendant’s acts were not subject to punishment) or if it establishes one of the rare “watershed rules of criminal procedure implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.”
O'Dell v. Netherland,
It is obvious to us — as it was to a prior panel, see
Owens v. Frank,
Whether
Crawford
adopts a fundamental rule essential to a fair and accurate trial is a subject that we pretermitted in
Owens.
Like the second, sixth, and tenth circuits (and Judge Wallace in
Bockting),
we think the answer a straightforward “no.” The Supreme Court has not identified
any
decision, other than
Gideon v. Wainwright,
Indeed, it would be a close question whether Crawford helps or hinders accurate decisionmaking. Live testimony is preferable to affidavits and transcribed confessions, because cross-examination can probe its weaknesses, but recorded testimony may be better than silence, when death or incapacity or threats or loyalty to onе’s confederates keep witnesses off the stand. The point of Crawford is not that only live testimony is reliable, but that the sixth amendment gives the accused a right to insist on live testimony, whether that demand promotes or frustrates accuracy. Like the self-incrimination clause and other provisions in the Bill of Rights, the confrontation clause can be invokеd to prevent the conviction of persons who are guilty in fact. What Crawford holds is that defendants enjoy this right even when *791 the hearsay is trustworthy. This is not an indispensable innocence-protecting decision that must be applied retroactively to criminal prosecutions that have already been finally resolved on direct review.
There is another way to see the point. Violation of a truly vital rulе of criminal procedure, such as entitlement to counsel (the holding of Gideon) leads to reversal without inquiry into harmless error. See
United States v. Cronic,
Let us return, then, to how the Court understood and applied the
Roberts
framework in
Lilly.
Virginia charged Benjamin Lilly with homicide. The evidence against him included a statement by his brother Mark, who (like Luis Murillo) refused to testify at trial. Mark’s statement conceded that he had participated in the crime by helping to steal the gun that Benjamin used in the slaying, and that he had been present when Benjamin shot the victim. The statement was to this extent against Mark’s penal interest. Mark went on, however, to say that Benjamin had committed the murdеr without his encouragement or approval. This portion of the statement exculpated Mark at Benjamin’s expense, and the Court held that it could not be used against Benjamin. (We refer to Justice Stevens’s opinion as that of “the Court.” Because Justices Scalia and Thomas proposed to exclude statements such as Mark’s categorically, the position that was to prevail in
Crawford,
the plurality opinion joined by Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer was the most narrow ground of decision and hence constitutes the holding. See
Marks v. United States,
The Court first concluded that declarations against penal interest given during custodial interrogation (as opposed to, say, declarations during and in furtherance of a conspiracy) may be introduced by, but not against, an accused.
That left the question whether Mark’s statement could be used nonetheless on the ground that its self-inculpatory portions demonstrated its truthfulness. The Court held not,
Everything the Court said about Mark’s statement in
Lilly
is true of Luis’s statement too. The portion exculpating the declarant (and inculpating the accused) is not a declaration against penal interest, and at all events declarations made during custodial interrogation cannot be used against an accused. A statement, made during interrogation and blaming someone else, also is too unreliable to supply the “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness” that until
Crawford
could have supported admissibility. To the extent there is any difference between Mark Lilly’s statement and Luis Murillo’s, Luis’s is the less reliable, because he did not inculpate himself in
any
fashion; Luis professed to hаve had nothing to do with the murder. If the confrontation clause forbade Virginia to use Mark Lilly’s statement, how could it allow Wisconsin to use Luis Murillo’s? The state court’s decision is contrary to
Lilly
because it “confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision of [the Supreme Court] and nonetheless arrives at a result different from [that] precedent.”
Williams,
To the extent that it discussed the specifics of this situation, Wisconsin’s appellate court thought that Luis Murillo’s statement was more reliable than Mark Lilly’s “because Mark was up to his neck in criminal involvement” (
Wisconsin’s “social interest” exception to the hearsay rule is itself unsupported by any data of which we are aware; the state has not cited any, either in this litigation or in the decisions creating the exception. Gang members may boast about their criminal exploits, or may adopt a code under which they routinely testify (or confess) falsely in order to throw the police off the scent and then refuse to follow through at trial, exactly as Luis did. In such a subculture false allegations of criminality, far from being shameful, are normal. We need not pursue this subject, however. This unusual exception to the hearsay doctrine cannot support the use of confessions and affidavits when the long-established, and better supported, penal-interest exception does not.
Was the error harmless under
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Affirmed.
