OPINION OF THE COURT
Before and during his state court trial for capital murder, Ambrose Harris was the subject of numerous inflammatory articles in two local newspapers, the Trentonian and the Trenton Times. Ultimately, the court presumed prejudicial pretrial publicity. Harris moved for a change of venue or, in the alternative, for a jury from another county (a “foreign jury”). The trial court adopted the alternative proposal. Harris, who was convicted and unsuccessful in his state court appeal, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the federal district court claiming that the denial of his motion to transfer venue deprived him of his constitutional right to a fair trial. Harris appeals the District Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
I.
Background
Harris was indicted in June 1994 for having murdered Kristin Huggins. 1 Due to the pervasive publicity surrounding the murder and his arrest, Harris moved the *94 trial court to transfer his case from Mercer County, New Jersey, where the crime was committed, to a different venue or, in the alternative, for the impanelment of a foreign jury. More specifically, Harris argued that “a fair trial [could not] be had in Mercer County” because of highly prejudicial pre-trial media coverage by two newspapers — the Trentonian and the Trenton Times — which had a combined circulation in Mercer County of about 130,000. App at 59.
The trial court agreed with Harris that the “likelihood” that the “taint” from these sources would “permeat[e] the trial [could not] be ignored.” App at 60. The trial court took particular note that the “intensity of [the] newspaper coverage [was] complicated by the vengeance-seeking crusade of the Trentonian ” which generated a “stream of invective” that was “constant and prolonged and sensationalized,” App at 60, and which “pander[ed] to its readers’ worst instincts,” App at 59. 2 Therefore, although the trial court denied Harris’s motion for a change of venue, it granted his motion to impanel a foreign jury.
Harris filed an interlocutory appeal to challenge the trial court’s decision to impanel a jury from Hunterdon County, and the State cross-appealed the trial court’s decision to impanel a foreign jury in the first instance, arguing that it was unnecessary. The Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, held that “the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding” that “prejudice [in Mercer County] may be presumed due to pretrial publicity,” and affirmed the trial court’s decision “that th[e] case should be tried before a foreign jury.”
State v. Harris,
On remand, the trial judge decided to impanel jurors from Burlington County, a county contiguous to Mercer County, where the racial demographies generally matched those of Mercer County, and where the combined readership of the
Trentonian
and the
Trenton Times
was only around 22,000, divided fairly evenly between the two.
See State v. Harris,
Harris was convicted and the jury recommended that he be sentenced to death.
Harás II,
Harris next petitioned for post conviction relief, making “multiple claims of ineffective assistance of counsel and assorted other challenges to the validity of his conviction and sentence.”
Harris IV,
Thereafter, Harris filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the New Jersey district court.
See Harris v. Cathel,
Civ. No. 05-4858(AET),
II.
Analysis
Because this case arises from a state court proceeding in which the merits of Harris’s sole claim on appeal were adjudicated, the standards established by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”) apply. See 28 U.S.C. § 2241-2266. Harris is not entitled to a writ of habeas corpus unless the state proceedings “(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.” Id. § 2254(d)(l)-(2). The certificate of appealability granted in this case is limited to the “contrary to” prong.
There has been considerable judicial commentary on the requirements imposed by AEDPA. “A state court decision ... fails the ‘contrary to’ prong of AEDPA if the state court reaches a conclusion opposite to the Supreme Court’s own conclusion on a question of law or decides the case differently where the Supreme Court was confronted by a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
McMullen v. Tennis,
*97
The effect of extensive pretrial publicity has also been the subject of numerous decisions by the courts, including the Supreme Court. This court has noted the Supreme Court’s holdings that ‘“adverse pretrial publicity can create such a presumption of prejudice in a community that the jurors’ claims that they can be impartial should not be believed.’ ”
Flamer v. Delaware,
The Supreme Court has also held that in some circumstances mid-trial publicity and courtroom events can result in a presumption of juror prejudice.
See Estes v. Texas,
The effect of pretrial publicity was also considered in
Rideau v. Louisiana,
From this line of precedents, Harris argues that as a result of the trial court’s finding uncontested on appeal that prejudicial pre-trial publicity by Trenton-based newspapers created a presumption of prejudice in Mercer County jurors, “clearly established federal law, as set forth by the Supreme Court, require[d] that the venue of the trial be moved away from the source of the publicity in order to protect petitioner’s Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial by an impartial jury[.]” Appellant’s Br. at 1. In other words, Harris argues that the Supreme Court cases hold that the only possible remedy for a finding of presumptive prejudice in a community due to pretrial publicity is a change of venue. No Supreme Court decision directly so states and we decline to view this argument as a natural extension of existing precedent.
Harris discounts the relevance of the jurors’ affirmations that they had not been aware of the publicity, either pretrial or midtrial. He refers to the statements in the Supreme Court’s decision in
Irvin v. Dowd,
It is important to recognize what Harris does not argue. To our knowledge, Harris has never argued that there was so much negative pretrial publicity in Burlington County, the residence of the foreign jurors, that prejudice should be presumed. Indeed, the trial court held that Burlington County was not so infected, and the New Jersey Supreme Court approved that holding.
See Harris II,
Nor does Harris argue that the trial court impaneled jurors who were actually biased as a result of the pretrial publicity. Such an argument would in fact be difficult to sustain in light of the New Jersey Supreme Court’s findings on direct appeal that the trial court “took firm steps to ensure that none of those households that received the Trentonian (the newspaper containing the most inflammatory material) would be on this jury,” and that “[a]ny juror who regularly read the Trentonian was effectively subject to elimination for cause in the jury selection process.” Id.
In fact, Harris does not argue that the impaneled jurors were actually biased for any reason, whether due to exposure to publicity before or during the trial or otherwise. In any event, the New Jersey Supreme Court found on direct appeal that “the [trial] court ensured that during the course of the trial most jurors were assembled at the Burlington County Court House and transported directly to the Mercer County Court House with attempts to minimize the exposure to the hawking of papers en route to the court house.” Id. The New Jersey Supreme Court further noted that “whenever [defense counsel] requested [during trial that] the court ... question jurors concerning any prejudicial headlines and accounts, the court did ask the jurors to acknowledge by a show of hands if they had seen or read any news accounts of the trial and that on each of these occasions it received no response.” Id.
Harris’s argument is exclusively based on the trial court’s determination that a presumption of prejudice against him arose as to the inhabitants of Mercer County because of their exposure to pretrial publicity. From that, Harris argues that any foreign jurors impaneled in Mercer County should ipso facto be presumed to be prejudiced. Harris relies on the Supreme Court decisions to argue that the statements by the foreign jurors during voir dire that they could be and were unbiased should be disregarded wholesale as untrustworthy, even when voir dire was conducted within a community with little prejudicial pretrial publicity. He discounts the measures taken by the trial judge to prevent impaneling jurors who were biased and to shield the foreign jurors from being exposed to prejudicial media coverage during trial.
We cannot decide this ease on the basis of the opinions on which Harris depends for his argument that once a court has found that “pretrial publicity in connection with a capital trial ha[s] ... tainted the jury pool ... the defendant [is] entitled as a matter of federal constitutional law to a
*99
change of venue to another county.”
Mu’Min v. Virginia,
The same can be said of the courts of appeals decisions to which Harris cites.
See Gaskin v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr.,
In any event, we cannot decide this case on the basis of any of those authorities because, as we noted at the outset, this case is governed by AEDPA. Harris must show that the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision upholding the use of foreign jurors to ameliorate the effects of the pretrial publicity was contrary to law clearly established by the Supreme Court of the United States. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Even Harris concedes that the Supreme Court has never squarely considered this issue.
A recent decision of the Supreme Court illustrates its deferential approach to the state courts’ decisions, even in the face of what appears to be its doubt about the merits of that decision. In
Renico v. Lett,
— U.S.-,
The Supreme Court reversed and its reasoning is instructive here. It stated that the question “is not whether the trial judge should have declared a mistrial. It is not even whether it was an abuse of discretion for her to have done so-the applicable standard on direct review. The question under AEDPA is instead whether the determination of the Michigan Supreme Court that there was no abuse of discretion was ‘an unreasonable application of ... clearly established Federal law,’ ” and it later explained that the application must be “objectively unreasonable.” Id. (citations omitted). In reversing the Court of Appeals, the Court stated in a *100 footnote, “whether the trial judge was right or wrong is not the pertinent question under AEDPA.” Id. at 1865 n. 3. It noted that the Michigan Supreme Court’s decision, “while not necessarily correct— was not objectively unreasonable.” Id. at 1865-66.
Applying
Lett
to this case, our way is clear. Had Harris requested a change of venue at a federal trial, the federal court likely would have granted it. In fact, even the New Jersey Supreme Court used the opportunity to opine on the need to consider a venue change in the future under similar circumstances.
See Hams II,
I append a statement by Judge Poliak, a member of this panel.
I join the court’s fíne opinion. What is at issue in this profoundly unfortunate case is dictated by this court’s grant of a certificate of appealability instructing counsel to address the question whether the affirmance by the New Jersey Supreme Court of “the trial court’s decision to impanel a foreign jury rather than transfer the case to a different venue in light of the pretrial publicity” orchestrated by the Trentonian 7 constituted what 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) terms “an unreasonable application of[] clearly established Federal law[] as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” Since, as the court notes, Harris does not “argue that the trial court impaneled jurors who were actually biased,” what is at issue is whether any decision or line of decisions of the Supreme Court directs that “transfer to a different venue” should, as a matter of federal constitutional requirement, have been taken as a prophylactic measure, additional to utilizing jurors from another county, to minimize the danger that the pretrial publicity would generate juror bias. The court’s opinion convincingly demonstrates that, thus far, no case decided by the Supreme Court has put in place such a constitutional mandate governing the procedures of state courts. The court rightly observes that “[h]ad Harris requested a change of venue at a federal trial, the federal court likely would have granted it.” I would only add that if, under circumstances comparable to those obtaining at Harris’s trial, a federal trial court were to decline to move the trial to another venue, it is to be hoped, and indeed expected, that a court of appeals would conclude that the trial court’s ruling was an abuse of discretion. But the case before us is a state case, with respect to which we are required to view the state court’s decision through the limiting prism of § 2254(d)(1). And therefore, as the court’s opinion establishes, the District Court’s denial of habeas corpus must be affirmed.
Notes
. The facts of that heinous murder and its investigation were set out in some detail by the New Jersey Supreme Court.
See State v. Harris,
. "The newspaper ran many front-page, invective-filled headlines: 'Ex-Inmate: Suspect is a Loudmouthed Punk,’ 'Huggins Suspect “Would Kill You in a Heartbeat,” ' 'Profile of a Monster: The Man Who Killed Kristin Huggins Committed His First Rape as a Teenager,’ 'From Boy to Beast,’ 'Huggins Slayer Terrorizes Prison,' 'He’s Satan in Disguise.’ Other news accounts discussed [Harris's] pri- or criminal record as well as other crimes he was suspected of committing. An editorialist predicted that death by lethal injection would rid society of 'one of the biggest pieces of human trash ever to blight Trenton streets.’ "
State v. Harris,
. According to the New Jersey Supreme Court: "Dramatically prejudicial headlines were attendant to the guilt-phase deliberations. The
Trentonian
headlines read, 'One Juror Stalls Verdict,’ and 'Battling Harris Jury Draws Public Fire.' A feature story quoted a Trenton resident as expressing the opinion that '[m]ost people figure the jury would think, "We'll have lunch on the county, and we’ll squirt him-this afternoon.” ’ Similar publicity continued during the penalty phase. A headline such as 'Ambrose Eyed in '67 Slay.' An editorial recommended death for Harris. The day after the jury returned its guilt verdict, a front-page photograph of Harris ran over a caption which read, 'So why's this killer smiling? Because he's seen juror No. 7 crying, and he thinks she’ll never go for the death penalty.'”
Harris II,
. The New Jersey Supreme Court found that because of some of the PCR "court’s statements, and the bias, flippancy, and disdain they portray[ed,]” it would "afford no weight to any of its findings or conclusions.”
Harris IV,
. The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a). We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253(a).
. In Groppi, the Court, citing Rideau, stated:
"[o]n at least one occasion this Court has explicitly held that only a change of venue was constitutionally sufficient to assure the kind of impartial jury that is guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.” Groppi,400 U.S. at 510 ,91 S.Ct. 490 (discussing Rideau,373 U.S. at 723 ,83 S.Ct. 1417 ).
. Dissenting in
State v. Harris,
