Charged with murder, Harry Aleman bribed Judge Frank Wilson (of the Circuit Court of Cook County) to secure an acquittal. Wilson committed suicide in 1990 on learning that news of this and other corruption had reached federal investigators. Already in prison on unrelated federal convictions, see
United States v. DiDomenico,
During closing argument, the prosecutor twice alluded to the fact that Ale-man had not testified. According to the prosecutor, Aleman was “the only one in this room who didn’t come on this witness stand and talk about accepting responsibility” as others involved in the shooting had done. Aleman’s lawyer objected, and the judge sustained the objection. Later, when discussing evidence that three shots had been heard (though only two bullets struck Billy Logan, the victim), the prosecutor asked the jury to infer that Aleman had fired three times: “either he shot at the dog or he shot at Bobby Lowe, or even perhaps ... [he shot] again at Billy Logan and missed. We don’t know. Harry Ale-man knows. We don’t know.” Aleman’s lawyer did not object to this statement. The court instructed the jury that Aleman was not required to testify and that his decision not to do so “must not be considered by you in any way in arriving at your verdict.” This instruction shows the gap between what happened in Aleman’s trial and what happened in
Griffin v. California,
Without citing
Griffin, Robinson, Miller,
or
Portuondo,
or discussing the significance of defense counsel’s decision not to object to the prosecutor’s second statement, the state’s appellate court condemned the prosecutor’s argument as misconduct.
What Aleman now argues is that, because the state appellate court did not explicitly hold that the prosecutor’s comments were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt — the right standard for evaluating on direct appeal claims of constitutional errors, see
Chapman v. California,
Aleman’s premise is that if a state court renders a decision contrary to, or unreasonably applying, federal law, then the prisoner is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus. This is not, however, what § 2254(d) says. It begins: “An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless ” certain things are true. (The emphasis in this quotation is ours.) Unless the adjudication “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law”, collateral relief “shall not be granted”. If the state court’s opinion was unreasonable — or if the state judiciary did not address the constitutional claim, despite an opportunity to do so — then § 2254(d) no longer applies. A prisoner still must establish an entitlement to the relief he seeks, and it is § 2254(a), not § 2254(d), that sets the standard: the court issues “a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court only on the ground that he is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” Whether a given prisoner’s custody violates the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States depends, first, on whether all substantive rules have been respected (the merit of the claim) and, second, on whether any error caused the custody. That is where Brecht’s harmless-error doctrine enters; a harmless error did not play a causal role and thus does not justify collateral relief. Nothing in the aedpa suggests that it is appropriate to issue writs of habeas corpus even though any error of federal law that may have occurred did not affect the outcome.
Twice since the aedpa’s enactment the Supreme Court has used the
Brecht
standard on collateral review. See
Early v. Packer,
— U.S. -, -,
Here the sequence of analysis matters not at all. The state’s court of appeals did not mention Chapman because it apparently did not think that the federal Constitution had been violated. It applied a state-law standard of harmlessness to what it saw as an error of state law by the prosecutor. Given the trial judge’s anti-inference instruction, this is an appropriate perspective. Even if the instruction were deemed inadequate, and even if the prosecutor’s argument were treated as an implied request to use Aleman’s silence as substantive evidence against him, that fleeting argument was so peripheral to this trial that no substantial and injurious result came to pass. We are confident that the jury convicted Aleman based on the evidence actually introduced, not on speculations about the significance of missing testimony. Thus Aleman’s custody does not violate the federal Constitution, see § 2254(a), and he is not entitled to collateral relief.
Aleman presents arguments about issues in addition to the one identified in the certificate of appealability. Like the district judge, we conclude that none of these is substantial, so we decline his request to expand the certificate.
AFFIRMED
