Kenneth Hogan appeals the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging seven grounds for relief arising out of his first-degree murder conviction and death sentence in the District Court of Oklahoma County, affirmed by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals. The United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma granted a certificate of appealability, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c) and Fed. R.App. P. 22(b)(1). Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253, we reverse and remand to the district court with instructions to grant the writ on the ground that Hogan was denied his constitutional rights under
Beck v. Alabama,
I
On January 28, 1988, Kenneth Hogan stabbed and cut Lisa Stanley more than twenty times in the throat, head, neck, chest, and back. Approximately three of these stab wounds would have been independently fatal without immediate medical attention. George Stanley, the victim’s husband, found her dead body that evening in the couple’s apartment and called the police. At the crime scene, investigators found evidence of a struggle but no *1301 sign of forced entry and discovered a large butcher knife and red stains that appeared to be blood in the bathroom sink. Hogan confessed to the crime six days later.
Hogan and the victim had been Mends for several years. Although the exact nature of their relationship was disputed at trial, Becky Glenn, Stanley’s close Mend and next-door neighbor, testified that Hogan and the victim were close Mends who saw each other regularly outside of her husband’s presence and without his knowledge during the months leading up to the murder. Hogan’s wife testified that Stanley frequently called Hogan during that same time period. Although Hogan told a police officer during his interrogation that he had thought about having sex with Stanley, there is no evidence on the record that the two were ever intimate.
George Stanley testified at trial that approximately six days before the murder, Hogan visited the Stanleys at their apartment, during which time he boasted of taking a martial arts class in which he was learning how to use a knife to cause fatal injury and displayed a knife he had brought with him. George Stanley testified that after the visit, Lisa stated that Hogan was making her nervous.
On the morning of the murder, George and Lisa Stanley smoked marijuana together between approximately 11:00 and 11:45 A.M., before George left for work. In Hogan’s February 3, 1988, confession to the police, a tape recording of which was played to the jurors, he related the following:
After lying to his wife about going to work, Hogan visited the Stanley home on the early afternoon of January 28, at Stanley’s request, to assist her with a book report she was writing. He and the victim smoked marijuana together. 1 Stanley requested that Hogan steal a stereo for her, but he declined because of burglary charges pending against him. Soon thereafter, the two began to argue. Stanley threw a coat rack down in anger and refused to let Hogan leave the house. Hogan placed his hand over her mouth to quiet her, and she threatened to scream and bang on the apartment walls to alert the neighbors and to tell the police that he had attempted to rape her. Stanley then ran into a bathroom and locked the door. Hogan tried to reason with her, then kicked open the bathroom door and threatened to tell her husband “about the stuff that she’s been doing, that he don’t know that she is doing ... or done.” (IV O.R. at 947 (Tr. of Feb. 3, 1988, Hogan Interview at 3 (at trial, Def.’s Ex. 3, distributed to jury)) (“Hogan Interview”).) Stanley ran towards the front door, but Hogan kicked the door shut and threatened to tell both her husband and her mother about an abortion that she had shortly before her marriage from a sexual encounter with a former boyfriend. Hogan said Stanley then “got a wild look in her eye” and ran to the kitchen. (Hogan Interview at 3.) She returned with a knife and “pushed” the knife at him. As Hogan attempted to grab the knife from her hand, Stanley pulled the knife back and “swung” at Hogan again, cutting him. (Id. at 3.) Hogan seized the knife, and Stanley ran towards the kitchen, where Hogan assumed she was going to get another knife. Hogan claimed he was afraid that Stanley would falsely accuse him of rape to explain his injuries. Hogan chased Stanley and stabbed her repeatedly, ultimately killing her.
Reviewing blood evidence from the crime scene, a police expert concluded that Stanley remained in an upright position during a portion of the stabbing, and that the stabbing began in the kitchen, with the final stabs coming in the living room area. Expert testimony stated that it was not *1302 possible to determine whether blood on a fragment of the knife came from only one person. In his confession, Hogan stated that he killed her “[w]ith the knife she cut me with and it wasn’t ... it was like I wasn’t even there ... just somebody else ... it wasn’t even me ... It was stabbing her and I couldn’t stop him.” (Id. at 4 (ellipses in original).)
Before fleeing the scene, Hogan threw the room’s contents into disarray, hoping to make it appear as though there had been a fight between Stanley and an unknown intruder. He cleaned the wounds Stanley had inflicted on his hand and the butcher knife, left the apartment, and drove to a hospital emergency room for treatment. Hospital staff who admitted him that afternoon testified that he gave conflicting stories about how he was wounded and that he did not appear to be suffering from either an emotional disturbance or from the influence of drugs. - Hogan’s hand wounds had bled profusely and ultimately required treatment by a surgeon. An examining physician testified that Hogan’s wounds were not inconsistent with his grabbing the knife and having it pulled away.
Hogan later asked his wife to lie to the police about his whereabouts on January 28 and the source of his injuries, but she instead informed investigators that he was not home on the day of the murder, that she did not know where he had been that day, and that he had asked her to tell the police that he had been home all day. Bloodstains were found on Hogan’s clothes. On February 3, 1988, the police interviewed Hogan, and during the taped interrogation he ultimately confessed in detail to the killing.
Hogan was convicted and sentenced to death, based on the jury’s finding of the “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel” aggravating circumstance. A divided Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed.. See
Hogan v. State,
II
Because Hogan filed his habeas petition on June 30, 1997, more than a year after the April 24, 1996, effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), the provisions of AEDPA dictate our standard of review for Hogan’s petition.
See Rogers v. Gibson,
with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings 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.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). 2
III
We confront Hogan’s argument that the trial court’s failure to instruct the
*1303
jury on first-degree manslaughter and second-degree murder denied him his constitutional due process rights as defined by
Beck v. Alabama,
A
Beck
held that “a sentence of death [may not] constitutionally be imposed after a jury verdict of guilt of a capital offense, when the jury was not permitted to consider a verdict of guilt of a lesser included non-capital offense, and when the evidence would have supported such a verdict.”
Unlike
Hopkins,
Respondent-appellee argues as a preliminary matter that
Beck
is inapplicable to Oklahoma. Unlike the procedure under review in
Beck,
in which the jury was forced to choose between death and acquittal, Oklahoma’s capital trial procedure “allows a jury to know, during voir dire, that there are three sentencing options for first degree murder: life, life without parole, and death; therefore, the guilt determination is not dependent on the jury’s feeling on whether the defendant deserves death.”
Willingham v. State,
B
In its denial of rehearing on the direct appeal, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals briefly discussed the claim that Hogan was constitutionally entitled to a first-degree manslaughter instruction.
See Hogan I,
The Oklahoma court assumed that a self-defense instruction constitutes a lesser included offense instruction and thus a “third option” in addition to capital murder and acquittal. This assumption is contrary to the meaning of
Beck
and its progeny. Self-defense is not a lesser included offense of a murder charge; rather, if a defendant proves a defense of “perfect” self-defense to a murder charge, “his homicide is justified, and he is guilty of no crime — not murder, not manslaughter, but no crime.” 2 Wayne R. LaFave & Austin W. Scott, Jr.,
Substantive Criminal Law
§ 7.11(a), at 271 (1986). Under Oklahoma law, homicide committed in self-defense
*1305
“[w]hen resisting any attempt to murder [the defendant], or to commit any felony upon him” or in the defendant’s “lawful defense ... when there is a reasonable ground to apprehend design to commit a felony, or do some great personal injury, and imminent danger of such design being accomplished,” is deemed justifiable homicide. Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 733;
see also Camron v. State,
Similarly, the state appellate court’s original conclusion on direct appeal that a manslaughter instruction was not necessary because there was “sufficient evidence” to support a finding of premeditation in the trial record is squarely contrary to the holding of
Beck. Hogan I,
C
Neither the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals’ inquiry as to whether instructing the jury on self-defense 'when a lesser included offense is available and supported by the evidence, nor its finding that there was sufficient evidence to convict appellant of the greater offense, satisfies the constitutional requirements of
Beck
and its progeny. Supreme Court precedent requires that the jury in a capital case be provided, in appropriate 'circumstances, with more than a choice between first-degree murder and acquittal.
See, e.g., Spaziano,
*1306
Under
Beck,
a petitioner is required to establish not only the denial of a lesser included offense instruction, but also that he presented sufficient evidence to warrant such an instruction.
See Beck,
Pursuant to AEDPA, the applicable standard of review depends on whether we characterize an examination of the sufficiency of the evidence for a lesser included offense instruction as a “determination of a factual issue,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1), or a legal conclusion. If the determination of insufficient evidence is a legal conclusion, we are to ask whether it was contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court precedent.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). If, on the other hand, it is a factual determination, we ask whether it represented “an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), and give the state court’s determination a presumption of correctness that can be rebutted only by clear and convincing evidence.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). As we recently noted in
Moore v. Gibson,
Although
Beck
did not establish a clear rule as to the precise quantum of evidence that would warrant an instruction
*1307
on a lesser included offense, the
Beck
Court noted that “[i]n the federal courts, it has long been ‘beyond dispute that the defendant is entitled to an instruction on a lesser included offense if the evidence would permit a jury rationally to find him guilty of the lesser offense and acquit him of the greater.’ ”
Beck,
The relevant portion of Oklahoma’s first-degree manslaughter statute defines the crime as homicide “perpetrated without a design to effect death, and in a heat of passion, but in a cruel and unusual manner, or by means of a dangerous weapon.” Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 711(2).
9
Heat of passion and the lack of design to effect death are related requirements: “[T]he ‘heat of passion must render the mind incapable of forming a design to effect death before the defense of manslaughter is established.’ ”
Allen v. State,
The phrase “a design to effect death” is treated as synonymous with “an intent to kill.”
See, e.g., Smith v. State,
We agree with the district court that the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, on direct appeal, failed “to consider what, if any, evidence supported Hogan’s theory of manslaughter.” Hogan III, No. CIV-97-134-R, at 14. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals stated:
[H]eat of passion alone does not reduce a homicide to manslaughter without adequate provocation. We have held the fatal blow or blows must be the unpremeditated result of the passion aroused. The statement of the defendant plus the facts show that the blows did not come because of any overt acts on the part of the deceased, but came because the defendant believed the reporting of attempted rape, together with his pending burglary charge, would result in his imprisonment.
Hogan I,
Absent, too, is any mention of Hogan’s statement that he thought Stanley was running to the kitchen to retrieve another knife when he began to stab her. Specifically, Hogan told the police the following:
I was putting my coat on ... and she just pushed [the knife] right at me ... I didn’t know what to say, do, or think, I just grabbed the knife ... and it hurt, it hurt, cause when I grabbed it, she pulled it back and she swung at me again and got there, that’s when I just sw [sic] ... just bent it down and it just come right out of her hand and she just ran back toward the kitchen like she was gonna get another one and I, and I just knew that she was gonna tell the Police that I’d tried to rape her, that’s why she cut me and I knew they’d believe her over me cause I, cause I have burglary charges against me....
(Hogan Interview at 3-^1 (ellipses in original).) Under Oklahoma law, homicide in response to a victim’s unprovoked attack with a dangerous weapon may constitute first-degree manslaughter.
See Le,
Furthermore, the confession, along with other testimony introduced at trial, demonstrates that the victim and defendant had a longstanding, close relationship prior to the homicide, and that the defendant was visiting the victim at her request in order to assist her in writing a book report for a class she was taking. There was no evidence introduced at trial that the defendant and victim had ever assaulted each other, or even argued prior to the homicide. Finally, Hogan’s confession alleged Stanley “got a wild look in her eye” immediately prior to attacking him with a knife, and that he and the victim were both consumed by the passion of their argument.
Although Hogan’s confession, along with other evidence in the record, can be read to support a conclusion that Hogan killed Stanley out of his fear of incarceration, it also may be used by a jury to rationally find that Hogan had established adequate provocation and a causal connection between Stanley’s initial attack and the homicide. The confession also may evidence Hogan’s fear that the victim was attempting to get another knife, that his anger and rage arose from the argument that consumed the two close friends, and that he acted before there was any reasonable opportunity for his passion to cool. In conclusion, these elements of Hogan’s confession could lead a reasonable jury to find adequate provocation, heat of passion resulting from fear and terror, causation, and immediacy, so as to warrant a first-degree manslaughter instruction. See
Le,
Hogan’s confession, the central facet of the case against him, also could have led a reasonable jury to conclude that his heat of passion rendered him incapable of forming a design to effect death. Hogan described the killing as follows: “[I]t was like I wasn’t even there ... just somebody else ... it wasn’t even me.... It was stabbing her and I couldn’t stop him.” (Hogan Interview at 4.) In his confession, Hogan also specifically denied intending to kill Stanley: “I didn’t even realize that I’d killed her until the next day, all I knew was my hand hurt and she was dead,” (id.); “I mean I didn’t do it on purpose, I can’t even sleep at night without waking up,” (id.); “I didn’t mean to hurt her,” (id. at 3). While a jury might have disbelieved these statements as self-serving, had it believed them, it could have concluded Hogan’s fear and anger rendered him incapable of forming the requisite intent.
The facts of this case strikingly resemble those of
Williams,
[S]he went through that room that went into her bedroom, which was the short way to the kitchen and I had this pistol right there beside my bed in the bottom drawer and I picked it up thinking that she would probably come back.... [A]nd then I discovered she was using the telephone and I walked over there and I said “Honey don’t call, don’t call. I’ll leave.” And the next thing I saw was something up heré which I thought was a butcher knife and I had the pistol in my left hand. I didn’t have no idea of using it. I was going to try to protect *1310 myself to get out of the house and I wanted to stop her from making the telephone call. So she drew back and swung at me and I threw my right arm to try to ward off the blow and she missed me. I don’t know if she even touched me or not. I just don’t know and I just had the gun down there and I just pulled the trigger and when it went off ... I’ve shot a .45 pistol a lot in training bird dogs to keep them from going gun-shy as a puppy, but in an inclosure I had never heard one and I’ll tell you honestly it’s a terribly loud noise and I just went blank and just stood there just pumping that gun.
Id.
at 336 (ellipsis in original). As in Hogan’s confession, the assailant attempted to leave the scene prior to the homicide but claimed he was barred from doing so by the victim; as in Hogan’s confession, the victim attacked first with a knife; and as in Hogan’s confession, the assailant described the killing itself in distanced, passive terms — “I just went blank and just stood there just pumping that gun,”
id.,
in Williams’s case, and “[I]t was like I wasn’t even there ... just somebody else ... it wasn’t even me.... It was stabbing her and I couldn’t stop him,” in Hogan’s. (Hogan Interview at 4.) Just as Hogan stabbed his victim multiple times, creating three wounds that would have been independently fatal, the defendant in
Williams
shot his wife eight times at close range, and expert testimony at trial stated that any one of five wounds could have independently been fatal.
See Williams,
After reviewing the defendant’s testimony in Williams, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that “[t]he jury might reasonably interpret the evidence to show that the initial firing of the gun was caused by a sudden and unexpected attempt to attack defendant with a pair of scissors and fired by the defendant while in a heat of passion,” and that a jury could have interpreted the defendant’s testimony as proof of a “lack of a premeditated design to effect death.” Id. at 338. Therefore, the Williams Court held that the trial court committed reversible error in failing to give the jury a first-degree manslaughter instruction. Id. at 338-39. In the case before us, a jury could reasonably interpret Hogan’s description of his initial stabbing of Stanley as a response, made in the heat of passion, to her knife attack, based on his belief that, having been disarmed, Stanley was running to the kitchen to obtain another weapon. Under Oklahoma’s own law in Williams, Hogan’s confession constitutes sufficient trial evidence of heat of passion and lack of intent to kill presented at trial to warrant a first-degree manslaughter instruction, and that a reasonable juror could have convicted Hogan of manslaughter and acquitted him of first-degree murder.
The district court, after concluding the state appellate court conducted an incorrect legal analysis of Hogan’s
Beck
claim, nevertheless found the evidence at trial insufficient to support an instruction on a lesser included offense.
See Hogan III,
No. CIV-97-134-R, at 14-15. We disagree. Most significantly, the district court dismissed the contents of Hogan’s confession- — -including its description of the events leading up to the murder and of the murder itself — as mere “self-serving statements” that “are insufficient to support manslaughter instructions.”
Id.
at 15 (citing
Ross v. State,
The district court also erroneously concluded that the multiple stab wounds Hogan inflicted upon Stanley, viewed by themselves, “clearly indicate[] Hogan had a ‘design to effect death,’ ” and that Hogan was therefore not entitled to manslaughter instructions.
Hogan III,
No. CIV-97-134-R, at 16;
see
Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 702 (providing the fact of Killing permits an inference of design to effect death absent reasonable doubt arising from the circumstances). Under OMa-homa law, depending on the evidence as to the totality of the circumstances surrounding the homicide, a defendant may still be eligible for a first-degree manslaughter instruction even where the defendant is alleged to have caused multiple, independently-fatal wounds.
See Williams,
Nevertheless, respondent-appellee argues, under
Darks v. State,
954 P,2d 152 (Okla.Crim.App.1998), that premeditation can be inferred directly from the homicide itself, without considering the circumstances thereof.
11
Cf.
Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 702 (“A design to effect death is inferred from the fact of MUing, unless the circumstances raise a reasonable doubt whether such design existed.”). In
Darks,
As discussed above, despite the circumstantial evidence of intent provided by the nature of the killing, there was also direct testimonial evidence by Hogan that he lacked a design to effect death. Beck requires that where the evidence supports such alternative theories, the jury be presented the option to choose between them, and not only to choose between a capital conviction and acquittal.
Based on our review of the record, we conclude that petitioner-appellant’s constitutional rights were violated by the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury on first-degree manslaughter, despite evidence sufficient to warrant the instruction; that the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals acted contrary to established Supreme Court precedent in its review of Hogan’s Beck claim because of its failure to query whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant a lesser included offense instruction; and that the district court’s conclusion that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the instruction was erroneous.
Hogan himself confessed to committing a reprehensible act of violence. By denying the jury the option to convict him on a lesser, non-capital offense supported by the evidence, thus leaving only a choice between conviction of capital murder and acquittal, Oklahoma may have “encouragefd] the jury to convict for an impermissible reason — its belief that the defendant is guilty of some serious crime and should be punished.”
Beck,
Having reached that conclusion, we decline to consider the other trial-related issues Hogan raises in his appeal — including his claim counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to seek a second-degree murder instruction — because they may not recur in his retrial.
See, e.g., United States v. Torrez-Ortega,
IV
The judgment of the district court denying the writ is reversed. We REVERSE and REMAND to the district court to grant the writ, conditioned upon the retrial of Hogan by the State of Oklahoma.
Notes
. Hogan alleges that the marijuana he and Stanley smoked had been dipped in PCP, but a lest conducted by the medical examiner's office of Stanley’s body revealed no evidence of PCP in her bloodstream. The record contains no evidence to support Hogan’s allegation.
.
Numerous circuits have attempted to elaborate on the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d),
*1303
as amended by AEDPA.
See generally Matteo v. Superintendent,
. "[A] state prisoner seeking federal habeas relief may not prevail on a
Beck
claim as to a lesser included instruction that he or she failed to request at trial.”
Hooks v. Ward,
. Oklahoma at one time employed, although inconsistently, the statutory elements test for determining whether an offense is a lesser included offense of a particular crime, comparing the statutory elements of the lesser offense to those of the greater to determine whether all of them are contained therein.
See Shrum,
. Moreover, even under our rule of deference to state court interpretations of state law,
see Boyd,
. We note that although we cannot resolve this inconsistency, this panel unanimously agrees that the correct approach is to treat a determination of the sufficiency of the evidence for a lesser included offense instruction as a conclusion of law.
See Bryson,
. The Court in
Beck,
. We note that the sufficiency standard for lesser included instructions in Oklahoma,
see
Okla. Stat. tit. 22, § 916, is consistent with the standard cited in
Beck
and adopted by this Circuit.
See Beck,
.By contrast, under Oklahoma law, "[a] person commits murder in the first degree when he unlawfully and with malice aforethought causes the death of another human being. Malice is that deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a human being, which is manifested by external circumstances capable of proof.” Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.7(A). The design to effect death "is inferred from the fact of killing, unless the circumstances raise a reasonable doubt whether such design existed.” Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 702. Moreover, "[a] design to effect death sufficient to constitute murder may be formed instantly before committing the act by which it is carried into execution.” Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 703.
. The fact that a confession may be to some degree self-serving does not deprive a jury of its prerogative to consider that fact in evaluating the credibility of a claim of provocation and passion.
See, e.g., Provo v. State,
. While we are bound to defer to state courts’ “subsidiary interpretations of state law,”
Boyd,
. Our rejection of appellee's urged interpretation is bolstered by the statutory instruction to consider whether accompanying circumstances permit a "reasonable doubt”as to intent to kill. Oída. Stat. tit. 21, § 702.
. A
Beck
error can never be harmless.
See Hopper,
