ORDER
Aug. 2, 1994
Thе petition for rehearing by the panel is denied. The suggestion for rehearing en banc is denied.
The letter to Chief Judge Arnold requesting appointment of Judge Heaney as a special master has been referred to the panel, is considered as a motion for appointment of a special master, and is denied.
The сourt of its own motion withdraws and vacates the opinion filed on June 29, 1994, and substitutes the opinion attached to this order.
Edward V. Lawrence appeals from the order of the district court 1 dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1988). The district court determined that Lawrence failed to demonstrаte that the ineffective assistance of trial counsel prejudiced him. We affirm.
A St. Louis County Circuit Court jury convicted Lawrence of capital murder and murder in the first degree. These convictions followed the investigation of two shooting deaths in an apartment building on August 11, 1983. According to witnesses, three men entered an apartment and shоt the three people inside, killing two of them. The men then fled in a red or burgundy Oldsmobile which one witness observed had the license number JTE-952, the number later determined to be registered to Lawrence’s mother’s 1977 red Oldsmobile. Witnesses identified Lawrence as one of the three men. Lawrence received a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for fifty years for capital murder and a consecutive life imprisonment sentence for murder in the first degree. The convictions were affirmed on direct appeal.
State v. Lawrence,
Lawrence then filed a request for post-conviction relief pursuant to Missouri Supreme Court Rule 27.26.
3
He alleged ineffectiveness of his trial counsel, basing the request on his trial counsel’s failure to interview several potential witnesses who allegedly would have corroborated Lawrence’s alibi on the evening of the murders. Lawrence and his trial counsel, but none of the potential witnesses, testified at the Rule 27.26 hearing. Based on the evidence before it, the trial court concluded that Lawrence’s counsel rendered constitutionally effective assistance, and denied Lawrence’s request for relief. The Missouri Court of Appeals affirmed.
Lawrence v. State,
Lawrence then filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal court, once again asserting ineffective assistance of his trial counsel. After refusing to hold an evi-dentiary hearing or to appoint post-conviction counsel, the district court adopted the report and recommendation of the magistrate judge that relief be denied. Lawrence appealed, and this court held that Lawrence’s trial counsel was constitutiоnally deficient in failing to pursue Lawrence’s alibi defense.
Lawrence v. Armontrout,
I.
We first consider the State’s argument that Lawrence’s ineffective assistance claim is procedurally barred. The State contends that since Lawrence presented no alibi witnesses at his Rule 27.26 evidentiary hearing to support his ineffective assistance claim, he cannot bring a habeas petition based on the testimony these witnesses could have given.
We explicitly decided this issue in favor of Lawrence in
Lawrence I,
holding that his failure to have the witnesses testify did not amount to a procedural defаult.
We have stated on numerous occasions that when the Supreme Court has spoken on an issue, our earlier cases to the contrary must not be followed.
See, e.g., Liberty Mut.,
II.
A habeas petitioner seeking relief based on ineffective assistance of counsel must show: (1) his counsel’s assistance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness in that counsel failed to еxercise the customary skill and diligence that a reasonably competent attorney would use under similar circumstances; and (2) that this deficient performance prejudiced his defense.
Strickland,
Ineffective assistance сlaims present mixed questions of fact and law.
Porter v. Lockhart,
In order to show prejudice, Lawrence must show that “counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.”
Strickland,
Twelve witnesses testified, either in person or by affidavit, at Lawrence’s evidentiary hearing. Lawrence primarily relies on three of these — Brenda Buie, Felicia Longstreet Dixon and Yvonne Pillow — each of whom offered testimony relevant to Lawrence’s alibi defense. Lawrence sought to establish through these witnesses’ testimony that he was playing cards on the evening of the offense. The remaining witnesses offered additional testimony which purported to undermine the State’s case against Lawrence.
Thus, these three witnesses, if believed by the jury, would have established Lawrence’s alibi defense. Nonetheless, the magistrate judge found that Lawrence had not demonstrated prejudice from the failure of his trial counsel to present these witnesses. We briefly consider the testimony of Lawrence’s alibi witnesses and the magistrate judge’s reasons for discounting it.
*667 Brenda Buie testified that she remembered playing cards with Lawrence, Betty Buie (now deceased) and Dixon during the relevant time period on the evening of the murders. Brenda Buie could not, however, recall any other details about the evening. Dixon’s testimony was even more vaguе. Dixon stated that she remembers playing cards with Brenda Buie, Betty Buie and Lawrence during the summer of 1983, but does not specifically remember playing on the night in question. Lawrence’s mother, Yvonne Pillow, also testified. She stated that she owned an automobile like the one which witnesses identified as being used in the offense and being driven by Lawrence. According to Pillow, Lawrence did not live with her, did not have keys to the car, and could not have used it on the evening in question because Pillow owned a second vehicle which would have been parked behind it that evening. She admitted, however, that she did not specifically check to see if the car was there that evening.
The magistrate judge rejected the testimony of Lawrence’s alibi witnesses, concluding that their testimony was insufficient to meet the prejudice standard of Strickland. In particular, the magistrate judge found Buie’s testimony not credible and her recollection of the evening “poor at best.” Dixon’s testimony “neither corroborated nor denied” Buie’s account. Similarly, the magistrate judge did not construe Pillow’s statements as refuting the testimony of the eyewitnesses who identified the car, the license number and Lawrence. Furthermore, the magistrate judge referred to Pillow’s failure to present this testimony during the Rule 27.26 hearing, at which she testified. The magistrate judge also found it significant that Pillow attended every day of her son’s trial but made no effort to alert Lawrence’s trial counsel of this information.
The district court conducted a de novo review of the magistrate judge’s report. The district court recognized that some pre-
Strickland
decisions by this court counsel against judging the credibility of witnesses in a habeas proceeding, and thus the court specifically declined to judge the credibility of the witnesses.
See McQueen v. Swenson,
The district court concluded, based on the totality of the evidence, that the evidence of Lawrence’s guilt was substantial, and Lawrence had not affirmatively proven that there was a reasonable probability that had his counsel interviewed and called the alibi witnesses, Lawrence would have been acquitted. Further, the court concluded that Lawrence had not shown that his trial was fundamentally unfair, or the result was not reliable. The court then adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation.
Lawrence argues that the rejection of his witnesses’ testimony violates the teachings of
McQueen
and
Thomas.
These cases hold that “[petitioner's proof of prejudice should not be defeated by the district court’s low opinion of the credibility of relevant and admissible testimony.”
Thomas,
*668 Taking the unaffected findings as a given, and taking due account of the effect of the errors on the remaining findings, a court making the prejudice inquiry must ask if the defendant has met the burden of showing that the decision reached would reasonably likely have been different absent the errors.
Strickland,
To the extent that
McQueen
and
Thomas
might suggest a different standard, they have necessarily have been superseded by the Supreme Court’s later statements in
Strickland.
However, the basic insight of those earlier cases — that the role of a federal court considering a habeas petition is not to predict the hypothetical outcome of a future trial — remains good law.
Chambers v. Armontrout,
“It is Lawrence’s burden to affirmatively prove that there is a reasonable probability that, had his trial counsel interviewed and called the alibi witnesses, he would have been acquitted.”
Lawrence II,
For example, the State introduced testimony of three different witnesses who identified Lawrence as being at the scene of the crime on the evening in question. One of these witnesses saw Lawrence from only five feet away. Another of the witnesses memorized the license number of the car used in the crimе, and stated that he had “no doubt” about his identification of the car, later determined to be owned by Pillow. In light of this testimony and the other evidence introduced by the State, we do not believe there is a reasonable probability that the result would have been different, and that Lawrence would have been acquitted if his alibi witnesses tеstified at trial.
See Cuevas v. Henderson,
Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Donald J. Stohr, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. For a detailed discussion of the facts underlying Lawrence's convictions,
see Lawrence,
. Rule 27.26 was repealed and replaced by Rule 29.15, effective January 1, 1988.
