Pеtitioner Hills was convicted in Louisiana state court of aggravated rape. In a 4-3 decision the Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed on direct appeal.
State v. Hills,
The facts are fully described in the opinion оf the Louisiana Supreme Court. On December 3, 1966, about 3:00 a. m., a woman, asleep in her home in Baton Rouge, awakened to find a man in bed with her. He threatened her with what appeared to be a knife, raped her, and left by the front door. Investigation disclosed that the assailant had entered by poking a coat hanger through a rear window and unlatching the back door. At trial the victim identified the petitioner as the rapist. The majority in the Supreme Court considered the identification to bе strong since the victim had “[seen] the rapist clearly, retaining until trial a vivid impression of his facial features.”
A large part of the testimony and trial time was devoted to the alleged related offenses. Sixteen days after the rape, in the early morning hours of December 19, a man broke into a home three blocks from the home of the first victim. He got into bed with a seven-year-old girl, who awakened to find that he had removed her lower clothing. He offеred her money and threatened to kill her if she cried out. She testified that he did not put his hands on her, but blood and seminal stains were found on the sheet. Later that morning the child’s mother discovered muddy foot tracks leading from a rear window. In the child’s room were found an address book belonging to petitioner, as well as a wallet containing his driver’s license and other identifying cards and papers.
The other related offense allegedly committed by the petitioner took place on Novembеr 19, before the rape, in a home six or eight blocks from the rape scene, in the early morning hours. A college student awakened to find a man in her bed, pulling at her covers and fondling her. He threatened her and offered her money for consent to sexual intercourse. She declared she would scream and he fled. A window screen was found to be slit and the front door was ajar. Also, various personal effects were discovered to be missing, including a corduroy coat which had been in the front closet. Neither the girl nor anyone else identified petitioner as the intruder. His asserted connection with this episode was founded on the fact that in mid-December the home of the student was burglarized again, and a pea coat belonging to the student’s brother was stolen from the same closet. Similar methods of entrance and egress were employed on both occasions. Later the pea coat was found in a search of petitioner’s home.
By statute Louisiana permits the prosecution to introduce evidence of related offenses where knowledge or intent is material or where the offense is one of a system. La.Rev.Stat. § 15:446.
2
There was no infirmity, evidentiary or constitutional, in the admission of the evidence concerning the assault on the child. Like the rape charged in the indictment, this incident involved illegal sexual molestation of a female by a male, accompanied by threats. It occurred in the same area of the same city, three blocks away. The dates of the two occurrences were only 16 days apart. In each case the setting chosen from among an infinite range of possibilities was the same, a- victim sleeping in her bed at home. Both intrusions took plaсe during hours of darkness and after midnight. On both occasions the intruder entered by breaking in at the rear of the house. Evidence of the assault on the child was therefore admissible under Louisiana law
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to prove a system or modus operandi tending to identify the petitioner as the rapist.
State v. Lawrence,
The prosecution’s attempt to link Hills with the assault on the college student raises more difficult problems. The Lоuisiana Supreme Court held that the evidence was admitted for a proper purpose, but it did not address the issue of whether the evidence had probative value at all. It is generally held that evidence of a related offense must be еxcluded unless there is a strong showing that the defendant did indeed commit that offense. See, e. g.,
Labiosa v. Gov’t of the Canal Zone,
Given these standards, we believe that the student’s testimony was erroneously admitted. As the dissenters in the Louisiana Supreme Court argued, there was simply not enough evidence that her assailant had been Hills rather than someone else. Thе only nexus between that assault and the petitioner derived from his possession of the pea jacket, plus certain resemblances between the two intrusions at the student’s home. There is some question as to the validity of the search that uncоvered the coat. But, valid search or not, the purported indicators of identity failed by a wide margin to be a clear and convincing demonstration of Hills’ responsibility for the assault on the student. 5 The possibilities of prejudice are obvious.
But our conclusion that the student’s testimony should not have bеen admitted does not automatically support habeas corpus relief. The question before us is not whether the trial court’s ruling would have led to a reversal if Hills had been tried in the federal system. Nor is it sufficient that state evidentiary rules appear to us not to have been followed.
Hackworth
v.
Beto,
We are unаble to conclude that the admission of evidence concerning the assault on the college student was so critical in this limited sense that due process was violated. In
Gephart v. Beto,
*402 The second point on appeal concerns the alleged ineffectiveness of counsel. We agree with the District Court that ineffectiveness was not proved.
Affirmed.
Notes
.
State ex rel Hills v. Henderson,
. Since petitioner’s trial, by a nonretroactive decision, Louisiana has added procedural safeguards to the use of evidence of other crimes.
State v. Prieur,
.
See also
Wharton’s Criminal Evidence § 243 (13th ed. 1972).
But
see State
v. Hicks,
Because the evidence was admissible to prove modus operandi, 'we do not address the Supreme Court’s alternative theory that the evidence was admissible to prove Hills’ intent. That theory was sharply attacked by the dissenters and was discarded by the court in a later decision.
See State v. Moore,
. According to our research no specific standard of proof had been announced by the Louisiana Supreme Court befоre the time of Hills’ trial in 1967. We do not interpret the opinion of the Louisiana court in Hills’ direct appeal as a rejection of the principles set out above, since the court did not even mention the issue we are discussing here.
.The dangеr in the prosecution’s development of this evidence was exacerbated by the sequence of proof. The student was first questioned about the facts of the assault; she was not asked to identify the pea jacket until the very end of her testimony on direct examination. And the testimony of a police officer concerning Hills’ possession of the pea jacket, which was prerequisite to the relevancy of the student’s testimony, was not adduced until after she had left the witness stand.
. A сlaim that an evidentiary ruling deprived a state court defendant of fundamental fairness is cognizable on habeas corpus. In
Barnard v. Henderson,
. Evidence of a similar crime must be relevant to a material fact in issue. The court must weigh the prosecutorial need for the evidence and its probative value against its inherent prejudicial effect.
United States v. Lawrance,
.Thе Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed Hills’ conviction on the ground that admission of the pea coat was harmless error (if erroneous at all). On a suitable record, of course, the harmless error principle is also a proper basis for denial of federal habeas relief. The principle has been invoked where the error at trial was so unimportant that it is clear, beyond reasonable doubt, that no juror was influenced by it,
Chapman v. California,
