The issue on this appeal is whether a state court defendant’s constitutional right to confront the witnesses against him was violated by the trial court’s permitting a principal witness to testify without removing her dark sunglasses. Hector Morales appeals from the November 17, 2000, judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (John G. Koeltl, District Judge) denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus to challenge his conviction for first-degree manslaughter and criminal use of a firearm. We conclude that the state courts did not unreasonably apply clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States, and we therefore affirm.
Background
Sometime after midnight on a June evening in 1991, Toñita Sanchez, who would become one of two key witnesses in Morales’s trial, was leaning out of her first-floor apartment window in the Bronx, ten feet above the sidewalk, engaged in conversation with her friends, Jaime Padilla and Tommy Villanueva, who were on the street below. The area was illuminated by a street light and light from Sanchez’s apartment building. As Sanchez would later testify, Morales, whom she recognized, walked up to Villanueva and said ‘You are the one” (or words to that effect), pulled out a gun, and as Villanueva was running away, shot him once in the back. Villa-nueva continued to run, then collapsed in *57 the street, and died. After the shooting, Padilla, who knew Morales well and who became the other key witness, started running away, and then, seeing no one behind him, ran back to the apartment building to get a gun from a friend. Padilla testified that he was going to shoot petitioner, but could not find him. The next time Padilla saw Morales was when he picked him out of a lineup.
Morales was charged with two counts of murder and related charges. The prosecution’s case rested primarily on the eyewitness testimony of Sanchez and Padilla. A first trial ended in a mistrial, when the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict.
The sunglasses episode. Before Sanchez testified at the second trial, the prosecutor informed the state court trial judge that the witness wanted to wear her sunglasses while testifying, as she had done at the first trial. Defense counsel objected. The trial judge initially ruled against allowing her to wear the sunglasses. After Sanchez was sworn in as a witness, the following colloquy ensued:
THE COURT: Okay Miss Sanchez, I’ve advised Mr. Racolin [the prosecutor] that although I understand that you’re somewhat nervous and shy and that you prefer to wear those sunglasses[,] that it is not proper for you to testify. I don’t believe and it does not provide the defendant with adequate opportunity to examine] you and it does not provide the jurors with the opportunity to evaluate your credibility, if they can’t see your eyes. So I’m going to require you to take those sunglasses off during your testimony. You understand that?
THE WITNESS: I’m not going to take them off.
THE COURT: Pardon me?
THE WITNESS: I’m not going to take them off.
THE COURT: Well, Miss Sanchez, I don’t mean to be unsympathetic in any[ ]way but you’re in a court of law now and I’m the Judge.
THE WITNESS: Well and I’m the witness.
Sanchez remained intransigent, and after two recesses and extensive colloquy with counsel, the trial judge relented and permitted her to testify with her sunglasses on.
The trial judge acknowledged that the sunglasses were “dark,” and that “you can’t see through them,” presumably referring to the inability of anyone in the courtroom to see the witness’s eyes. He noted that the witness exhibited a “great fear” as evidenced by the fact that she was willing to risk imprisonment for disobeying the Court’s order, and he found her fear justified in light of the defendant’s prior record and the presence in the courtroom of his friends. He concluded that however “partially” the defendant’s right to confrontation would be infringed was outweighed by the necessity of having her provide critical testimony in a serious case.
The jury found Morales guilty of first-degree manslaughter and first-degree criminal use of a firearm, and he was sentenced to concurrent terms of 12)£ to 25 years in prison. The Appellate Division affirmed the conviction,
People v. Morales,
Morales filed a petition for habeas corpus, which the District Court denied. The Court concluded that no clearly established Supreme Court law had interpreted the right of confrontation to preclude a witness from testifying with minimal disguise, and that the state trial judge had made a sufficient case-specific justification for permitting Sanchez to wear sunglasses.
Morales v. Artuz,
No. 98 CIV. 6558(JGK),
Discussion
The standard for review of state court determinations in federal habeas corpus proceedings is provided by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), which states that a writ of habe-as corpus
shall not be granted ... unless the adjudication of the claim—
(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.
See also Williams v. Taylor,
There can be no question that the right of a defendant to confront the witnesses against him has been clearly established in decisions of the Supreme Court,
e.g., Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
These two precedents clearly establish that where the defendant and witness are physically separated, “a defendant’s right to confront accusatory witnesses may be satisfied absent a physical, face-to-face confrontation at trial only where denial of such confrontation is necessary to further an important public policy and only where the reliability of the testimony is otherwise assured.”
Craig,
In considering whether the right of confrontation was denied, we note the sometimes varying rationales that the Supreme Court has given concerning that right. In
Van Arsdall,
the Court said that “[t]he main and essential purpose of confrontation is to secure for the opponent the opportunity of cross-examination.”
With respect to the value of a face-to-face encounter, the Court has emphasized different virtues. In
Coy,
the Court noted the importance of having the
witness
look directly at the
defendant
when providing accusatory testimony. “The phrase still persists, ‘Look me in the eye and say that.’ ”
Coy,
On the other hand, writing for the majority in
Coy,
Justice Scalia recalled the Court’s statement in
Kirby v. United States,
To the extent that the Supreme Court’s “established law” of confrontation seeks to assure cross-examination and an opportunity for the
witness
to see the
defendant,
Sanchez’s sunglasses created no impairment. On the other hand, to the extent that the right assures an opportunity for the defendant and especially the jurors to see the witness’s eyes in order to consider her demeanor as an aid to assessing her credibility, some impairment occurred. Seeing a witness’s eyes has sometimes been explicitly mentioned as of value in assessing credibility.
See, e.g., Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The obscured view of the witness’s eyes, however, resulted in only a minimal impairment of the jurors’ opportunity to as *61 sess her credibility. Even if we accept the idea, grounded perhaps more on tradition than on empirical data, 3 that demeanor is a useful basis for assessing credibility, 4 the jurors had an entirely unimpaired opportunity to assess the delivery of Sanchez’s testimony, notice any evident nervousness, and observe her body language. Most im *62 portant, they had a full opportunity to combine these fully observable aspects of demeanor with their consideration of the substance of her testimony, assessing her opportunity to observe, the consistency of her account, any hostile motive, and all the other traditional bases for evaluating testimony. 5 All that was lacking was the jury’s ability to discern whatever might have been indicated by the movement of her eyes. 6
In sum, we doubt that permitting Sanchez to testify behind dark sunglasses was contrary to constitutional law established by the Supreme Court, but even if the law of the Confrontation Clause, as established by the Supreme Court, is, as the Appellant contends, a generalized right to face-to-face confrontation, the state courts did not make an unreasonable application of such law.
Conclusion
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. In considering, upon rehearing in banc, whether courtroom closure during a police officer's testimony violated a defendant's constitutional right to a public trial, members of our Court have expressed various views on the alternative of having the witness testify with sufficient disguise to conceal the witness's identity.
Compare Ayala v. Speckard,
. Seeing a person's eyes has also been deemed of value in contexts other than the witness stand, such as assessing:
(a) reasonable suspicion for a
Terry
stop,
see United States v. Vasquez,
(b) inebriation,
Fersner v. Prince George’s County,
(c) narcotics use,
United States v. Carter,
(d) grounds for a peremptory challenge of a juror,
United States v. Hendrieth,
(e) a defendant at sentencing,
Del Piano v. United States,
(f) the credibility of a person being questioned by a police officer,
Craig v. Singletary,
(g) the reliability of an identification of a defendant,
United States ex rel. Geralds v. Deegan,
. See Jeremy A. Blumenthal, A Wipe of the Hands, a Lick of the Lips: The Validity of Demeanor Evidence in Assessing Witness Credibility, 72 Neb. L.Rev. 1157, 1163 (1993) ("Social science had produced overwhelming evidence refuting the ability of people to identify that a witness is lying when the witness is actually being deceptive. Yet jurists persist in the fallacious belief-unfounded yet attributed to common sense-that this ability exists.”); Olin Guy Wellborn III, Demeanor, 76 Cornell L.Rev. 1075, 1075 (1991) ("According to the empirical evidence, ordinary people cannot make effective use of demeanor in deciding whether to believe a witness. On the contrary, there is some evidence that the observation of demeanor diminishes rather than enhances the accuracy of credibility judgments.”); see also I. Daniel Stewart, Jr., Perception, Memory, and Hearsay: A Criticism of Present Law and The Proposed Federal Rules of Evidence, 1970 Utah L.Rev. 1, 23 ("Although highly regarded by the judges and attorneys, the value of demeanor evidence as a means of determining testimonial reliability has yet to be demonstrated factually.”).
. "Tradition has it that the trier of facts can better evaluate credibility by observing the witness on the stand. Although doubt has been cast on this proposition, and it has proved all but impossible to articulate what the trier of facts looks for, the tradition nonetheless endures.” Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger,
Weinstein’s Federal Evidence
§ 802.02[2][b], at 802-8 (Joseph M. McLaughlin ed., 2d ed.2001). The “tradition” has its renowned supporters,
e.g., Dyer v. MacDougall,
I question whether the respect given to our findings of fact based on the demeanour of the witnesses is always deserved. I doubt my own ability, and sometimes that of other judges, to discern from a witness’s demean-our, or the tone of his voice, whether he is *62 telling the truth. He speaks hesitantly. Is it (he mark of a cautious man, whose statements are for that reason to be respected, or is he taking time to fabricate? Is the emphatic witness putting on an act to deceive me, or is he speaking from the fullness of his heart, knowing that he is right? Is he likely to be more truthful if he looks me straight in the face than if he casts his eyes on the ground, perhaps from shyness or a natural timidity? For my part I rely on these considerations as little as I can help.
Sir Brian MacKenna,
Discretion,
Irish Jurist 1, 10 (1974),
quoted in Garland v. Secretary of Health and Human Services,
. See Wellborn, supra note 3, at 1104-05 ("To the extent that people can detect lying or erroneous beliefs in another, they do so primarily by paying close attention to the content of what the other says, not by observing facial expression, posture, tone of voice, or other nonverbal behavior.”).
. In an early English trial, the complaint that the witness was not looking at the defendant, presumably preventing the defendant from seeing the witness’s eyes, precipitated the following exchange:
The defendant: “I beg your lordships that he may look me in the face.... I desire the letter of the law, which says my accuser shall come face to face.” The Court: "My lord [the defendant Earl of Stafford], you do see the witness; that is enough for face to face.”
Earl of Stafford's Trial, 7 How. St. Tr. 1293, 1341 (1680), quoted in 5 Wigmore on Evidence § 1399, at 200 n. 2 (Chadbourn rev.1974).
