OPINION AND ORDER
Jоse Fong, an inmate at the Clinton Correctional Facility, petitions for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, arguing that the Allen charge issued to the jury during his trial deprived him of his constitutional rights to a fair trial and due process. The petition will be granted.
BACKGROUND
Only facts relevant to the present petition will be recited here.
Jose Fong (“Fong” or “petitioner”) is currently serving a sentence of six and one-half to thirteen years’ imprisonment stemming from his 2003 conviction for distribution of a controlled substance.
See People v. Fong,
On February 26, 2003, Fong proceeded to trial in the New York State Supreme Court, New York County, before the Honorable Edward McLaughlin and a jury. At trial, petitioner’s counsel argued that the government had not presented sufficient evidence tying Fong to the crime. Specifically, petitioner’s counsel argued that the government had not met its burden of proof as a result of, inter alia, (1) “the absence of pre[-]recorded buy money” on Fong at the time of Fong’s arrest (Tr. 389); (2) the police officers’ failure to record the facts of the transaction and arrest contemрoraneously (id. 392-94); (3) the failure to preserve certain evidence (id. 398); and (4) the differences between the radioed description of the dealer and Fong’s actual appearance (id. 393-96).
On March 3, 2003, after summations and the initial jury charge, the jury began deliberations. Approximately an hour and a half after starting deliberations, the jury requested and received a read back of some testimony, and began deliberating again at 12:55 p.m. (Id. 449-50.) Approximately two hours later, the jurors sent out a note stating, “[w]e the jurors request guidance. Four jurors believe he’s not guilty the rest believe he’s guilty.” (Id. 450.) By then, three hours had passed since the beginning of deliberations, including a lunch break and fifty minutes of read-back testimony.
At sidebar, defense counsel requested that “a mild
Allen
charge be given,” and asked the judge to instruct the jurors that “they should not compromise their convictions but at the same time they should listen to their fellow jurors and they should go back there and try to reach a unanimous verdict.”
(Id.
451.)
See Allen v. United States,
The trial court then instructed the jury as follows:
Let posterity not know what it is you’re talking about. “We the jury request guidance. Four jurors believe he’s not guilty the rest believe he’s guilty[.]” What do you want from me? You’re the jury. We bring you, we assemble you for the sole purpose of getting a decision. If you didn’t want to be here, if you think this is a decision beyond your capacity to reach, you shouldn’t have allowed yourself to be sworn as jurors. The point of this process is to reach a verdict[. Tjhat’s essentially not as difficult as it may seem because it’s not a situation where one side has to do one thing and another side has to do another thing and it gets real confusing.
Any criminal trial is about whether the prosecution meets a burden of proof. When I gave to one group I believe that analogy about the strength test in a carnival, in a state fair about the prosecutor having the mallet, paying his money [so] to speak, taking his chances, swinging to try to drive the metal device, the ball, the metal device up to ring the bell.
In any case that’s what a criminal trial is about. And you folks have to sit there and mentally try to man[a]ge from your assessment of the evidence, did the bell ring or not. Something happened in this case. They rang the bell or they didn’t. It was not a non event. You can’t just say oops, we can’t decide this. For five hundred years in England, W[ Jales, Ireland, Scotland, America and other places with juries, they got a burden of proof. Things happen and then the only entity in creation who can say whether the bell has rung is the jury in the case so the guidance is go through whatever you need to go through to reach the verdict. You have to go over since it’s a credibility assessment that you have to make, go through the things that I alerted you to regarding a human being[’]s credibility. If what I alerted you to by way of the tests and the standard and the considerations is helpful, that’s fine, use that.
If in your own lives you use other things to decide whether or not you’re being lied to or whether somebody is being accurate or truthful, use those things. The focus is on whether the prosecutor has met his burden of proof.
The decision has to be based on the record of this case. I don’t have a magnifying glass or an ear piece. I don’t know what is going on in there but if somebody is talking about things that weren’t testified to, it couldn’t be that way because or let me tell you how it really is, forget that remember the part of the charge that a Judge gives a jury, is the record of this case.
What is [sic] the record of this case, supported? What are the natural and logical things that the testimony in this case supports? That doesn’t mean you have to accept anything because it was said. You’ve got an absolute right to say I don’t believe that, I don’t believe this, or I don’t believe anything but if you are talking about things that are not in the record in the testimony then you’re probably not doing what you’re suppose[d] to be doing.
So that was the guidance. Step in. Continue deliberations. We await your verdict.
(Id. 453-56.)
At 3:00 p.m., after the jury retired again to deliberate, defense counsel alerted the judge that he had an objection, to which the judge responded, “I bet. What is it?” *647 (Id. 456.) Defense counsel explained his objection to the “last part” of the charge, when the court “start[ed] talking about the record. I believe the word record was stated at least three times.” (Id.) The judge responded, “I hope to have said it a half a dozen times if I fell short of my goal, I apologize.” (Id.) Defense counsel explained that the charge directly attacked his argument in summation relating to the lack of evidence in the record tying petitioner to the crime. The judge conceded that “any neutral reading of your summation did have quite a lot to do about what’s not in the record,” but warned counsel that “I don’t think it’s a good idea for me to bring [the jurors] back out and say if you think I was talking about a summation forget about it.” (Id.) Defense counsel agreed, saying, “I don’t know what I could formulate to ameliorate the harm that you just caused so I think that my objection should stand and I think the appropriate relief would be a mistrial.” (Id. 457-58.) The motion was denied.
Some 25 minutes after the supplemental charge, at approximately 3:25 p.m., the jury sent another note requesting a read back of the “description of Fong’s clothes” given by two prosecution witnesses. (Id. 459.) The court reporter read back the requested testimony, and at approximately 4:05 p.m., the jury again retired to continue deliberations. (Id. 460.) Ten minutes later, at approximately 4:15 p.m., the jury returned a verdict of guilty. (Dannelly Decl. Ex. B at 22.)
Fong appealed his conviction, contending, inter alia, that the trial court’s supplemental chаrge was unconstitutionally coercive. On March 10, 2005, the Appellate Division affirmed Fong’s conviction.
Fong,
On May 31, 2005, the New Yоrk Court of Appeals denied leave to appeal.
People v. Fong,
DISCUSSION
Respondent makes two principal arguments in response to this petition. First, respondent argues that petitioner waived any potential objection to the alleged coer-civeness of the instant Allen charge because he did not comply with New York’s contemporaneous objection rule. Alternatively, respondent argues that, even if petitioner’s claim is not procedurally barred, it should be denied because the Allen charge in this case was not unconstitutionally coercive. Both arguments are unpersuasive. 2
1. Contemporaneous Objection Rule
First, respondent argues that petitioner’s Allen charge claim is barred by an adequate and independent state procedural ground. Specifically, respondent argues that “counsel never notified the [trial] court that he had any objection to the charge on coerciveness grounds,” and therefore thаt New York’s “contemporaneous objection” rule bars appellate review of petitioner’s Allen charge claim. (Resp. Mem. 4.) See N.Y.Crim. Proc. L. § 470.05(2). Petitioner counters that “the Appellate Division’s ruling that petitioner’s challenge to the Allen charge was unpre-served did not constitute a state law ground that was adequate to support the judgment” because the Appellate Division’s application of the contemporaneous objection rule was “improper.” (Pet. Mem. 12.) The Court agrees with petitioner.
A federal court may not grant habeas relief where a state court’s denial of a claim rests on an independent and adequate state law ground, including failure to follow a state procedural rule requiring such a claim to be raised in a certain manner lest the defendant forfeit that claim.
Coleman v. Thompson,
New York’s contemporaneous objection rule requires a party to register a protest to a ruling or instruction “at the time of such ruling or instructiоn or at any subsequent time when the court had an opportunity of effectively changing the
*649
same.” N.Y.Crim. Proc. L. § 470.05(2). However, the rule does not require that a party repeatedly object to an adverse instruction after it is given, nor does the rule require that a party make an express objection to the instruction to preserve the objection. Instead, the rule provides that “a party who without success has
either expressly or impliedly
sought or requested a particular ... instruction, is deemed to have thereby protested the court’s ultimate ... failure to ... instruct accordingly sufficiently to raise a question of law with respect to such ... failure
regardless of luhether any actual protest thereto was registered.” Id.
(emphasis added);
see Cotto,
A state court’s finding of procedural default rests on an inadequate procedural ground where the record demonstrates that counsel did, in fact, comply with the contemporaneous objection rule.
See McRae v. New York,
A. Compliance with Contemporaneous Objection Rule
A fair reading of the record reveals that petitioner complied with the contemporaneous objection rule. When the jury indicated that it was deadlocked, defense counsel requested that the court give a “mild Allen charge” with “[l]anguage to the effect that [the jurors] should not compromise their convictions.” (Tr. 451 (emphasis added).) Although respondent concedes that “when a defendant requests a jury charge, and the trial court either fails to rule upon the request or declines to give the instruction^] he is deemed to have” complied with the contemporaneous objection rule, he argues that the trial court actually issued the “mild Allen charge” as requested, and that petitioner’s request therefore cannot be considered a contemporaneous objection. (Resp. Mem. 10.) However, petitioner argues that the trial record “clearly demonstrates that petitioner requested a mild Allen charge with specific language and that the court did not include that language, or any comparable instruction.” (Pet. Reply 4 n. 2 (citations omitted).)
Petitioner is correct. Contrary to respondent’s argument, the trial court did not issue a
mild Allen
charge. Instead, as the Appellate Division noted “with dismay,” the trial judge “framed his own impromptu
Allen
charge, ... including remarks that ... seemed to imply that the
*650
jurors were failing in their duties and to attempt to shame them into reaching a verdict.”
Moreover, as noted by the Appellate Division, the
Allen
charge given in this case was substantially similar to the rejected charge in
Aponte,
further indicating that the instant
Allen
charge is not properly characterized as “mild.” In
Aponte,
the Court of Appeals found that a substantially similar
Allen
charge deprived the defendant of his right to a fair trial because it “coerce[d] jurors with untoward pressure.”
Furthermore, petitioner’s request identified particular language that the court failed to include in the instant charge. “When the court asked defense counsel to “summarize” his position with respect to the potential
Allen
charge, defense counsel specifically requested “[ljanguage to the effect that [the jurors] should not comрromise their convictions but at the same time they should listen to their fellow jurors ....” (Tr. 451.) No such language was included in the
Allen
charge given by the court. Therefore, defense counsel “made his position known to the court,” and the court subsequently rejected that position.
Cotto,
Thus, the relevant inquiry is whether petitioner was required to repeat his request for a “mild
Allen
charge” or language reminding the jury not to “compromise their convictions,” or to otherwise object to the charge as given by the trial court to satisfy the contemporaneous objection rule. Although respondent concedes that the contemporaneous objection rule is satisfied whenever a defendant requests a specific jury charge but that request is declined, respondent nonetheless argues that “[w]here a trial court ... ‘fails to deliver the charge as requested, the requesting party has an obligation to draw the error to the Judge’s attention.’ ” (Resp. Mem. 10, quoting
People v. Whalen,
Respondent’s argument is unavailing. As an initial matter, the cases that respondent cites in support of this assertion are inapt.
(Id.,
citing
People v. Carpió,
39
*651
A.D.3d 433,
Moreover, it is well established that, under § 470.05(2), a party that has requested certain relief and been denied that relief does not need to make additional protests to preserve its objection.
Cot-to,
Respondent further argues that a party’s contemporaneous challenge to an
Allen
charge on specific grounds fails to preserve an alternate challenge raised on appeal. (Resp. Mem. 13, citing
People v. Melendez,
Respondent cites
People v. Hoke,
Contrary to respondent’s argument, petitioner’s argument on appeal, and in this Court, that the charge as given was unduly coercive is not a different argument than the request for a “mild” charge with specific language reminding jurors not to compromise their convictions. It is the very same argument. Any trial judge knows that the danger inherent in Allen charges is the risk of pressuring a jury to reach a verdict by suggesting that the dissenting jurors should go along with the majority. The request for a “mild” charge with balancing cautionary language is precisely a request for a non-coercive сharge, and the vice in failing to include the language requested is precisely that its omission renders the charge coercive. Petitioner is not here raising a new argument that was not fairly presented to the trial court; he is, rather, objecting to the charge given because the failure to charge substantially as petitioner requested made the charge constitutionally defective.
Thus, petitioner complied with the contemporaneous objection rule, and his Allen charge claim is not procedurally barred.
B. Adequacy of the State Law Ground
Even if petitioner had not literally complied with the contemporaneous
*653
objection rule, the rule would not bar petitioner’s
Allen
charge claim here. In deciding whether a state law ground is “adequate,”
3
the Supreme Court has established the following considerations: (1) whether the alleged procedural violation was actually relied on in the trial court, and whether perfect compliance with the state rule would have changed the trial court’s decision; (2) whether state case law indicated that compliance with the rule was demanded in the specific circumstances presented; and (3) whether petitioner had substantially complied with the rule given “the realities of trial” and, therefore, whether demanding perfect compliance with the rule would serve a legitimate governmental interest.
Lee,
First, although the first
Lee
factor is not as relevant in the case of contemporaneous objection as in other cases of procedural bars “because the lack of a contemporaneous objection would not, almost by definition, be mentioned by the trial court,” this factor weighs in petitioner’s favor, as “the trial court was certainly aware of defense counsel’s desire” for a softer
Allen
charge containing specific language, but decided not to include one.
Cotto,
Moreover, even if defense counsel had specifically objected to the
Allen
charge on coerciveness grounds after the trial judge issued the charge, it is unlikely that such an objection would have had any effect on the trial. After counsel requested the
Allen
charge, the trial judge outlined his intended supplemental instruction, which included language that defense counsel objected to as an unfair characterization of his closing argument. (Tr. 451-53.) The trial judge responded to counsel’s concerns, stating that “having been gracious enough to explain to you what I was thinking about doing, I choose at least not at this time to do it.”
(Id.
453.) Instead, the trial judge gave the instant charge, after which defense counsel objected and moved for a mistrial.
(Id.
457.) In response to defense counsel’s objection regarding the court’s language, the trial judge stated, “I don’t think it’s a good idea for me to bring them back out” to correct any possible error in the supplemental charge.
(Id.)
*654
Although defense counsel’s
post-Allen
charge objection was made with respect to the references to defense counsel’s summation in the charge, and not to the coer-civeness of the instruction, the trial judge’s reaction to counsel’s post-charge objеction — including the judge’s professed hostility toward any further charging of the jury — demonstrates that even “if defense counsel had repeated” his initial request for a “mild
Allen
charge,” his request would have been denied.
Cotto,
The second
Lee
factor also weighs in favor of petitioner. Evenhanded application of a state procedural rule is determined by “look[ing] to the statute and caselaw interpreting New York’s statutory preservation rule in criminal proceedings.”
Id.
at 243. New York courts have not consistently applied the contemporaneous objection rule to bar appellate review where a party does not repeat his request for a particular jury instruction after he has already requested, and been denied, that instruction. Instead, as discussed above, under'both the explicit terms of the contemporaneous objection statute and the case law interpreting it, repeated objections are not necessary once an instruction has been requested and denied.
Id.
at 244-45;
Mezon,
Indeed, even if petitioner had not made an initial request for a “mild
Allen
charge,” New York state courts have not evenhandedly applied the contemporaneous objection rule to bar review of
Allen
charge challenges even where counsel made no requests for a particular instruction or did not object to the given instruction
at all.
The Appellate Division retains, and has often exercised, discretionary power to review unpreserved challenges to jury charges generally,
see
N.Y.Crim. Proc. § 470.15, and has done so where such review serves the “interest of justiee.”
Id.
at (6);
see People v. Williams,
Finally, even assuming arguendo that petitioner did not
literally
comply with the contemporaneous objection rule, it is clear that petitioner at a minimum
substantially
complied with the rule, thereby satisfying the third
Cotto
factor.
Moreover, in determining whether petitioner substantially complied with the contemporaneous objection rule, the Court must consider whether further compliance was practical “given the realities of trial.”
Accordingly, petitioner’s Allen charge claim is not barred by the contemporaneous objection rule, and may be reviewed by this Court.
II. The Allen Charge
A. Standard of Review
Next, respondent argues that, even if “th[e] Court determines that the state finding that petitioner failed to preserve [the Allen charge] claim is not sufficient to bar this Court from considering it, it should afford ... deference to the Appellate Division’s clearly articulated alternate holding” that the “Allen charge, under the circumstances here, was not coercive.” (Rеsp. Mem. 16.) Petitioner counters that “[t]he government’s contention that the district court should treat the Appellate Division’s decision as a ruling on the merits is contradicted by the plain language of the Appellate Division’s opinion.” (Pet. Reply 4.) The Court agrees.
The standard for federal habeas review hinges on whether petitioner’s federal claim was previously adjudicated on the merits in state court, or denied by the state court on other grounds. If the claim
*656
has been adjudicated on the merits, the state court’s decisions should be reviewed under a deferential standard, by which the state court’s decision may be rejected only if it constitutes an “unreasonable” application of Supreme Court law. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). However, “[b]y its terms, § 2254(d) requires such deference only with respect to a state-court adjudication on the merits, not to a disposition on a procedural, or other, ground.”
Miranda v. Bennett,
The state court in this case found that petitioner “failed to preserve his argument that the court’s
Allen
charge was coercive,” and “decline[d]” to' review the
Allen
charge claim itself “in the interest of justice.”
Although determining whether a state court rejected a federal claim on its merits appears at first blush to be a straightforward inquiry, like so many procedural aspects of habeas corpus law, this inquiry has been complicated by a host of arguably conflicting Second Circuit and Supreme Court decisions.
See Shih Wei Su v. Fi-lion,
Respondent relies on inapposite case law for its contention that deference is appropriate here. For example, respondent argues that “when a federal court holds that a state court’s procedural default finding is not adequate and independent to support the state judgment, ... deference applies to the state decision” if the state court also disposed of the federal claim on federal law grounds. (Resp. Mem. 17, citing
Jones v. Stinson,
Nor is the Court persuaded by respondent’s reliance on the Circuit’s recent decision in
Jimenez.
In
Jimenez,
the Circuit found that, “when examining the basis of a state court’s adjudication of a federal claim, a federal habeas court” should consider several factors, including “the face of the state-court opinion” and “whether the state court was aware of [the] procedural bar.”
Id.,
citing
Coleman v. Thompson,
Respondent is correct that, under
Jimenez,
“a state court’s rejection of a federal claim as ‘either unpreserved for appellate review or without merit’ ” should be afforded deference, “regardless of background circumstances.”
Finally, respondent suggests that failure to defer to the state court decision here would “deprive state courts of all deference merely because [the court’s] primary procedural holding is found insufficient to bar habeas review.” (Resp. Mem. 17.) According to respondent, this result is neither required by the law, “nor would such a rule further” the purpose of habeas relief.
(Id.)
However, in this case, the state court’s holding was based on state procedural law — not just “primarily],” but completely. Thus, the Court’s decision does not “deprive state courts of all deference” because there is nothing in the state court decision for the Court to defer to. Moreover, where a state court has not relied on federal law in rejecting a federal claim, the application of a deferential standard to the state court’s determination would undermine, and not further, the purpose of ha-beas review. Where “a state court disposes of a federal claim on the merits,” the purpose of habeas review is “to ensure that the state court has correctly applied federal law,”
Mateo v. Fishkill Corr. Facility,
No. CV-04-3420,
Accordingly, the Court will review petitioner’s Allen charge claim de novo.
B. Undue Coercion
Petitioner argues that the
Allen
charge given by the trial court was unconstitutionally coercive because it “ ‘both obligate[d] jurors to convince one another that one view was superior to another ... [and] fail[ed] to remind those jurors not to relinquish their own conscientiously held beliefs.’ ” (Pet. Mem. 27-28, quoting
Smalls v. Batista,
Generally, the propriety of a state trial court’s jury instructiоns is a matter of state law that does not raise a federal constitutional question.
See Estelle v. McGuire,
*659
Thus, although trial courts have significant discretion in determining the appropriate answer to a jury question, the court’s answer may not deprive the defendant of a constitutional right,
see Ortiz v. Artuz,
Although there is no precise test for determining when an
Allen
charge is ■ unduly coercive, and a habeas court must consider the charge “ ‘in its context and under all the circumstances’ ” in deciding whether it was unconstitutionally coercive,
Spears,
First, “a necessary component of any Allen-type charge requires the trial judge to admonish the jurors not to surrender their own conscientiously held beliefs.”
Second, an
Allen
charge is also unconstitutionally coercive when it “obligate[s] jurors to convince one another that one view was superior to another.”
The trial judge acknowledged that the charge could have been interpreted as biased against the defense
(id.
457), but recommended against giving a corrective instruction
(id.).
Thus, although the trial court did not explicitly favor one side in the charge, it acknowledged post-charge that the supplemental instruction could have been interpreted as favoring the prosecution, but failed to do anything to correct this perceived bias, thereby implicitly encouraging the jurors to return a prosecution verdict. Regardless of whether a corrective instruction would have been appropriate under the circumstances, the combination of the failure of the trial judge to remind the jurors not to relinquish their conscientiously held beliefs, the potential bias of the instruction, and the fact that the jury was deadlocked eight to four in favor of a guilty verdict, establishes that the
Allen
charge here did not simply pressure the jury into reaching
a
verdict, but “obligated [the] jurors to convince one another” — specifically, the minority jurors— to reach a
prosecution
verdict.
Smalls,
In order to shield himself from this clearly applicable precedent, respondent argues that the instant
Allen
charge did include the type of cautionary language alluded to in
Spears,
when the trial judge instructed that the jurors shouldn’t “talk[ ] about things that weren’t testified to,” and that “in evaluating the trial evidence jurors had ‘an absolute right to say, I don’t believe this or I don’t believe anything.’ ” (Resp. Mem. 22, quoting Tr. 455-56.) Respondent argues that this is the type of “cautionary language” that is required to satisfy due process. This argument is unpersuasive. The judge’s instruction not to “talk[ ] about things that weren’t testified to” was not an admonition to the jurors not to relinquish their conscientiously held beliefs, but instead merely a warning that the jurors should not discuss anything other than those facts established in the record.
5
Moreover, the judge’s reference to the jurors’ “absolute right to say, I don’t believe this or I don’t believe anything,” taken “in the context” of the rest of the charge as it must be,
Lowenfield,
Respondent also argues that, even if the trial judge did not instruct the jurors not to abandon their conscientiously held beliefs in order to reach a verdict, the “initial jury charge” included such language, thereby vitiating the need for such language in the
Allen
charge. (Resp. Mem. 22.) Respondent cites no case law in support of his argument, presumably because none could be found. Instead, it is well established that such language must be included
in the Allen charge itself
in order to render the charge non-coercive.
See Smalls,
Finally, respondent argues that, regardless of whether the instant
Allen
charge would have been unconstitutionally coercive under
Smalls,
the Circuit in
Spears
modified its holding in
Smalls
in such a way as to render the instant charge non-coercive under federal law. Respondent’s argument is unavailing.
Spears
did not modify
Smalls;
indeed, the
Spears
court specifically held that “[t]his Court did not create any new rule in
Smalls
that would replace the Supreme Court’s standard in
Lowenfield
that an
Allen
charge must be evaluated ‘in its context and under all the circumstances,’ ” and proceeded to apply those same “standards” to the
Allen
charge at issue in that case.
As support for his argument that Spears modified Smalls, respondent argues that the Allen charge in Spears was found to be non-coercive, while the Allen charge in Smalls was found to be coercive. Respon *662 dent misunderstands Spears — the Circuit found the Allen charge in Spears to be non-coercive, not because it applied a different test than was applied in Smalls, but because the charge did not include the type of language prohibited by Smalls. Conversely, the instant Allen charge satisfies the Smalls test, and is distinguishable from the one in Spears. 6
First, the
Allen
charge given by the
Spears
trial court was unquestionably the sort of “mild” charge that defense counsel sought in this case.
7
The
Spears
instruction simply reminded the jury that they had not been deliberating very long, and asked the jury simply to “attempt to reach a verdict if that is possible,” language the Second Circuit specifically cited and highlighted in affirming the denial of habeas corpus.
Finally, whereas in
Spears,
after the supplemental charge was given, “[t]he jury continued deliberating for the rest of the day, resuming the following morning, and was unable to reach a verdict with respect to Spears’s co-defendant,”
id.
at 207, in this case, a verdict was returned the same afternoon; indeed, the jury deliberated for only around thirty minutes before returning a guilty verdict.
8
While the lack of a precipitous verdict in
Spears
weighed
*663
against a coerciveness finding in that case,
Thus, federal law mandates habeas relief in this case. However, even assuming ar-guendo that the instant
Allen
charge does not entirely satisfy the
Smalls
test, habeas relief is still warranted here. The requirements laid out by
Smalls
constitute the minimum required for an
Allen
charge to be upheld — an
Allen
charge that features the two characteristics identified in
Smalls
is necessarily coercive; however, the absence of those specific defects does not insulate an
Allen
charge from a finding coercion. Instead, as previously noted, a habeas court must consider the charge “ ‘in its context and under all the circumstances’ ” in deciding whether it was unconstitutionally coercive.
Spears,
In determining whether the
Allen
charge was coercive under the totality of the circumstances presented here, the Court finds the New York Court of Appeals’s decision in
Aponte
persuasive. In
Aponte,
the Court of Appeals affirmed the Appellate Division’s reversal of petitioner’s conviction on the basis that the trial court’s
Allen
charge: “(1) overemphasized the need to get a result, (2) suggested that the jurors were failing in their duty, (3) stressed that ‘[sjomething happened’ in the case, (4) presented jurors with the prospect of prolonged deliberations, and (5) failed to caution jurors not to surrender their conscientiously held beliefs.”
The Appellate Division’s conclusion that the Allen charge in this case was “less prejudicial” than that given by the same judge and rejected by the Aponte court as unconstitutionally coercive, Fong, 791 NY.S.2d at 54, cannot be supported. The charges in the two cases are substantially identical in the relevant respects. The instant Allen charge exhibited all of the same flaws that mandated reversal in Aponte. With respect to the first two factors listed by the Aponte court as establishing coerciveness, respondent does not even attempt to distinguish the Aponte charge from the instant charge. The instant Allen charge clearly “overemphasized the need to get a result” by stating *664 that “you folks have to sit there and mentally try to man[a]ge [a verdict] from your assessment of the evidence,” without suggesting the possibility that a verdict may not be reached in the case. (Tr. 454.) When a judge tells a jury that “You can’t just say, oops, we can’t decide this,” and that “the guidance is go through whatever you need to go through to reach the verdict” (Tr. 454-55; emphasis added), a finding of coercion is unavoidable: the jury has been expressly ordered to reach a verdict at all costs (“go through whatever you need to go through”) and that a failure to reach agreement is unacceptable (“you can’t say ... we can’t decide this”).
Moreover, the trial court did not merely “suggest[ ]” that the jurors were failing in their duties — it admonished them, directly and harshly attacking their capacity to fulfill their role as jurors: “Let posterity not know what it is you’re talking about .... What do you want from me? If you didn’t want to be here, if you think this is a deсision beyond your capacity to reach, you shouldn’t have allowed yourself to be sworn as jurors.”
(Id.
453-54.) Both the
Aponte
court and the Appellate Division correctly found that “shampng]” of the jurors is an improperly coercive tactic which forces the jurors to choose between returning a verdict, regardless of their personal beliefs, and risking repeated embarrassment and criticism from the judge.
Aponte,
Respondent’s attempt to distinguish the instant
Allen
charge from the
Aponte
charge with respect to the third and fourth factors is unavailing. Although respondent concedes that, “[tjhough in both cases, the court compared a criminal trial to a carnival game in which, using a mallet, the People either ‘rang the bell or they didn’t,’ ” respondent argues that here, the court stated that it was using “the strength test example as an ‘analogy’ to describe the prosecution’s burden of proof,” which respondent suggests distinguishes the instant
Allen
charge from the one given in
Aponte.
(Resp. Mem. 21, quoting Tr. 453-54.) But the
Aponte
court nowhere indicated that the “ring the bell” analogy would be appropriate if it was used only in reference to the prosecution’s burden of proof as suggested by respondent; instead, the
Aponte
court found that language to be coercive because it indicated that “[s]omething happened” in that case, and that the case was “not a nonevent.”
Next, respondent argues that, “here, unlike in
Aponte,
the court in no way threatened the jury with the possibility of prolonged deliberations,” and therefore, the fourth
Aponte
factor does not apply to this case. (Resp. Mem. 21.) But this factor actually militates more strongly in favor of Fong than it did in favor of the petitioner in
Aponte.
In
Aponte,
the trial court instructed the jurors that “[w]hether there is in this case the rare occurrence of a jury unable to resolve a case is not a factual decision .... We are nowhere near at the point where I would begin to consider the possibility that you folks might not be able to resolve this case.”
Furthermore, with respect to the fifth factor, it has already been established that the instant charge “failed to caution jurors not to surrender their conscientiously held beliefs.”
Finally, like the Appellate Division, the Court notes “with some dismay,” 16
*666
A.D.3d 179,
Our judicial system provides jurors with an awesome responsibility, placing a defendant’s liberty in the hands of jurors who are “by design, better suited than courts to evaluating and giving effect to the complex societal and moral considerations that inform the selection of publicly acceptable criminal punishments.”
Atkins v. Virginia.
Since the last words the jury heard from the trial judge in this case improperly coerced the jury to reach a verdict, and undermined the willingness of jurors with conscientious doubts about guilt to adhere to their views, petitioner was denied a fair trial.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, Fong’s writ of habeas corpus is granted and petitioner’s conviction for Criminal Sale of a Controlled Substance in the Third Degree is vacated. The State of New York may, at its option, re-try petitioner on this count within ninety (90) days of this Opinion and Order. The Clerk of the Court is directed tо close this case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Fong’s original petition also included a claim that the trial court improperly allowed *648 police testimony about drug sale practices. The Court previously denied that claim as meritless.- (Order of Feb. 28, 2007, at 3.)
. There is no dispute that the instant petition is timely, as it was filed within one year of the date that petitioner's conviction became final. See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1). In addition, there is no dispute that, by presenting his Allen charge claim to the Appellate Division and in his application for leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals, petitioner also exhausted this claim in state court. See Daye v. Attorney General, 696 F.2d 186, 191 (2d Cir.1982) (en banc).
. Petitioner does not dispute that the state contemporaneous objection rule is “independent” of the merits of the federal claim.
.
See, e.g., Smalls,
. Indeed, this language is somewhat ambiguous, and could reasonably be understood by jurors in an incorrect way: while jurors are properly instructed not to speculate or consider “facts” outside the record, it is perfectly legitimate for jurors to discuss “things that weren’t testified to” in the sense of pointing out the absence of evidence as a factor that could raise a reasonable doubt — particularly in light of defense counsel's summation in this case.
. The full text of the supplemental charge at issue in Spears is as follows:
The answer to that one is that you have just barely begun your deliberations. We spent a good deal of time in selecting the jury and hearing the testimony. Please give it your full attention. I have a very strong feeling that you should be able to reach a verdict. [Following an objection, the court added:] Members of the jury, there has been an objection by counsel to my statement that a lot of time and money has been expended on this case. That shouldn’t be part of your consideration. What you should consider is what the facts are with the idea, with an attempt to reach a verdict if that be possible. Based on the very few hours that you have deliberated, I tell you that it’s far too premature at this point to send such a note. Please continue your deliberations with a view toward arriving at a verdict if that's possible.
. Indeed, it is not especially clear that the
Spears
charge is properly characterized as an
Allen
charge at all. When a jury returns a “deadlock” note after so short a period of deliberations, under circumstances suggesting that the jury has essentially reported an initial vote and has not yet begun, thoughtful trial judges frequently advise the jury, as did the court in
Spears,
that "you have just barely begun your deliberations,” and that such a conclusion is "premature.”
.Respondent argues that the jury deliberated "for more than an hour [after the Allen charge] before returning its verdict.” (Resp. Mem. 22.) The record belies respondent’s assertion. After the issuance of the Allen charge, the jury retired to deliberate at 3:00 p.m. (Tr. 456.) At 3:25 p.m., the jury requested a read-back of the detectives’ testimony. (Dannelly Decl. Ex. B at 22, citing "Supreme Court file [3:25 p.m. juror note]”.) Deliberations did not resume until 4:05 p.m. (Tr. 460), and just ten minutes later, the jury indicated that it had reached a verdict. Thus, contrary to respondent’s representation, the jury actually deliberated for approximately half an hour after receiving the Allen charge before reaching a verdict.
. Indeed, at least one court that was presented with the same time span between the issuance of the
Allen
charge and the return of the verdict as that presented here found that the short duration of the jury’s deliberations weighed in favor of a coerciveness determination.
See Cartagena,
. Indeed, the only consideration that weighs against a coerciveness finding in this case is that, after the
Allen
charge was issued, the jury requested, and received, a read-back of witness testimony.
See, e.g., Gonzalez,
Any further consideration the jurors might have given to the evidence in this cаse after the Allen charge was issued was extremely cursory. As discussed supra, the jurors only deliberated for approximately half an hour after the Allen charge was issued, and for only ten additional minutes after the testimony was read back. Thus, the jury’s consideration of the read-back testimony was extremely brief — even though the actual read-back lasted almost an hour — and does not definitively reflect any further in-depth consideration of the evidence after the Allen charge was issued.
Furthermore, the jury's consideration of the evidence
post-Allen
charge was potentially tainted by the trial judge’s failure to remind the jurors of the government’s burden of proof. Several circuits have held that an
Allen
charge should include a specific reminder to the jury as to the government’s burden of proof so as not to "tip the scales toward” a verdict. 1 Leonard B. Sand, et ah, Modern Federal Jury Instructions, Inst. 9-11 at 9-46.
See United States v. McElhiney,
Conversely, in this case, it is unclear whether the jury was aware of its obligation to find that the government had met its burden of proof. The jury note that precipitated the instant
Allen
charge stated, "[flour jurors believe he’s not guilty the rest believe he’s guilty.” (Tr. 450.) In response to the indication by the jury that certain jurors "believe[d]” in defendant’s guilt, it would have been reasonable for the trial court to remind the jurors that they could only find in favor of the government, not simply if they "believe[d]” in defendant’s guilt, but if they held such a belief beyond any reasonable doubt. Thus, in order to “safeguard against coercion,” the trial court should have "again call[ed] the jury’s attention to the presumption of innocence, the burden of proof, and the requirement that guilt must be established beyond a reasonable doubt.”
McElhiney,
.
See Brown v. Greene,
No. 06 Civ. 4824,
