OPINION
Dаle R. Hurd petitions for a writ of habeas corpus following his first-degree murder conviction in California state court and resulting life sentence without the possibility of parole. At trial, the state court allowed the prosecution to present Hurd’s refusal to reenact the shooting of his wife during police interrogation as affirmative evidence of his guilt. The California Court of Appeal affirmed Hurd’s conviction and held that the admission as evidence of Hurd’s refusal to perform a reenactment was not in violation of
Miranda v. Arizona,
I
On March 3, 1995, Hurd was convicted of the first degree murder of his wife, Beatrice (“Bea”), following a second trial by jury. Hurd’s first trial resulted in a hung jury and a mistrial. The jury in Hurd’s second trial found that Hurd carried out the murder of his wife for financial gain, a special circumstance making Hurd eligible for a sentence of death or life without the possibility of parole under section 190.2 of the California Penal Code. The jury also found that Hurd used a firearm in the commission of a felony, adding a mandatory consecutive sentence of up to ten years under section 12022.5 of the California Penal Code. Based on these findings, the trial court sentenced Hurd to a term of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, plus a consecutive term of four years.
*1083 Hurd appealed his cоnviction to the California Court of Appeal, which affirmed the trial court. Hurd petitioned the Supreme Court of California and the Supreme Court of the United States for review. Both courts denied his petitions. On October 28, 1999, Hurd petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. On November 20, 2007, the district court denied that petition. Hurd appeals.
A
Hurd and Bea had been married for eight years at the time of her death in April 1993. In March 1993, Bea separated from Hurd and sought the counsel of an attornеy. Bea’s attorney estimated that Hurd would owe her between $2,800 and $3,300 per month in alimony upon their divorce. At that time, Hurd earned $8,593 per month. On April 1, 1993, Bea served Hurd with divorce papers.
On April 16, 1993, Bea took their two children, aged four and eight, to Hurd’s house, where the children spent the night. The next morning, Bea arrived to pick up the children and brought with her a stack of typed papers. Bea was upstairs with Hurd when their son, downstairs, heard a shot. Bea, crying, walked down the stairs before collapsing. Hurd descended the stairs behind her and took their son outside. Hurd rеentered the house and called 911. An ambulance arrived and took Bea to the hospital, where she died from a single bullet wound to the chest.
Investigation showed that the shot was fired from a distance of one to six inches. The bullet entered Bea’s chest from left to right, front to back, at a 35- to 40-degree downward angle. Bea’s face and scalp had abrasions and bruises apparently suffered before her death.
Hurd testified that when Bea arrived at his house on the day of the incident, Bea expressed concern over possible rioting following the pending verdict in the second Rodney King trial. 1 Hurd told Bea that he would let her borrow his firearm and show her how to operate it. Standing in front of Bea, Hurd attempted, with difficulty, to load a round into the firearm. Hurd testified that as he lowered the firearm to inspect it, it accidentally discharged.
B
Police arrived at Hurd’s house and found him sitting motionless near the front entrance, next to Bea. Police took Hurd into custody and informed him of his Miranda rights. Hurd expressed his willingness to talk without an attorney present, and Detective Carr began questioning him.
After Hurd rеcounted his version of the facts, Carr asked Hurd to submit to a polygraph examination. Carr assured Hurd that, if the polygraph showed that *1084 Hurd was being truthful, the police department would end its investigation of him. Hurd declined to undergo the polygraph exam and explained that he believed them to be unreliable. Carr replied, “I think you don’t want to take one because you murdered your wife.” Carr then repeatedly suggested that Hurd take a polygraph. Hurd maintained that he would not.
Carr next asked Hurd to demonstrate how the shooting occurred. Hurd refusеd to reenact the shooting. Carr continued to question Hurd about the chain of events and again asked Hurd to demonstrate. When Hurd declined, Carr suggested that Hurd either take a polygraph or demonstrate what happened. Hurd refused, and Carr suggested that Hurd would go to jail for being uncooperative. Carr’s supervisor, Detective Straky, entered the room and explained that the District Attorney would not think much of Hurd’s refusals to cooperate.
Carr and Straky continued to ask Hurd to demonstrate how the shooting took place, and Hurd сontinued to refuse. The detectives suggested that a judge and jury would find his lack of cooperation unreasonable. Through the remainder of the questioning, Straky and Carr asked for a reenactment several more times, with Hurd refusing each time.
C
Before trial, Hurd moved to suppress statements made at his interrogation as involuntary based on the investigating detectives’ multiple false promises of leniency for cooperation, false assurances, and coercive statements. Hurd argued that the voluntariness of the interrogation ended when Carr threatened to jail Hurd if he refused to submit to a polygraph examination. Hurd further argued that his repeated refusals to submit to a polygraph or reenact the shooting were invocations of his constitutional right to remain silent and that his responses to that line of questioning were therefore inadmissible. The trial court denied Hurd’s motion, concluding that Hurd did not effectively invoke the protections of the Fifth Amendment because he offered responses and explanations instead of flat refusals. Throughout Hurd’s trial, the proseсution referred to Hurd’s refusal to reenact the shooting as affirmative evidence of his guilt. In his opening statement, the prosecutor played the tape of Hurd’s interrogation and counted the number of times he refused to demonstrate the shooting. The prosecutor referred to Hurd’s refusals again while presenting his case-in-chief and during his closing argument.
At trial, the prosecution also relied on testimony from several witnesses regarding Bea’s prior statements detailing instances of physical abuse in her marriage. The court instructed the jury that this testimony “was admitted solely for the purpose of showing Bea Hurd’s state of mind” and that it should not be considered for any other purpose. The court also instructed the jury that evidence of past crimes “may not be considered ... to prove that [Hurd] is a person of bad character or that he has a disposition to commit crimes” and that it “may be considered ... only for the limited purpose of determining if it tends to show the existence of the intent which is a necessary element of the crime charged.” The court further instructed thаt evidence of past crimes must be weighed “in the same manner ... as all other evidence in the case.”
II
We review de novo a district court’s denial of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
Christian v. Frank,
A state court decision is contrary to federal law if it “applies a rule that contradicts the governing law as set forth” by the Supreme Court or reaches a different result on a “materially indistinguishable” set of facts.
Williams v. Taylor,
Ill
Hurd argues that he is entitled to habe-as relief on three separate bases. We first address Hurd’s argument that the state trial court improperly admitted as evidence his refusal to reenact the shooting in violation of his Fifth Amendment rights as determined by the Supreme Court in
Miranda v. Arizona,
A
1
In
Miranda,
the Supreme Court decided several consolidated cases in which criminal suspects had been held in police custody and interrogated without being advised of their right to remain silent.
The Court also indicated that a suspect may rely on his right to remain silent selectively: “The mere fact that [the suspect] may have answеred some questions or volunteered some statements on his own does not deprive him of the right to refrain from answering any further inquiries until he has consulted with
*1086
an attorney and thereafter consents to be questioned.”
Id.
at 445,
The Court further developed its Fifth Amendment jurisprudence in
Doyle,
another group of consolidated cases. In
Doyle,
each of the defendants had been arrested and informed of his
Miranda
rights.
Next, the Court decided
Anderson v. Charles,
a case in which a criminal defendant had been arrested while driving a stolen car.
Recently, the Supreme Court decided
Berghuis v. Thompkins,
a case in which a criminal defendant was arrested on suspicion of having committed a shooting. - U.S. -,
Here, the California Court of Appeal held, “A defendant has no right to remain silent selectively. Once a defendant elects to speak after receiving a
Miranda
warning, his or her refusal to answer questions may be used for im-
*1087
peaehment purposes absent any indication that the refusal was an invocation of
Miranda
rights.”
3
People v. Hurd,
The California Court of Appeal’s
Miranda
and
Doyle
analysis is incorrect.
4
The Supreme Court has clearly established that, after receiving
Miranda
warnings, a suspect may invoke his right to silence at any time during questioning and that his silence cannot be used against him at trial, even for impeachment.
See Doyle,
The Court’s opinion in
Michigan v. Mosley,
decided before
Doyle,
also does not change our analysis. In
Mosley,
the Court held that police may question a suspect about a crime after that suspect has indicated his unwillingness to answer questions about a different, unrelated crime.
*1088
Furthermore, the Supreme Court’s decision in
Thompkins
does not alter its holdings in
Miranda
or
Doyle. Thompkins
makes clear that a criminal defendant must affirmatively and unambiguously invoke his right to remain silent if he wishes to cut off police interrogation.
See
The Court of Appeal’s opinion further conflicts with circuit precedent, which we review as persuasive authority. The Ninth Circuit holds that clearly established law allows a suspect to refuse to be interviewed in a particular manner even if he has already waived that right with respect to the subject matter of the interrogation.
See Arnold v. Runnels,
The state court therefore incorrectly read and applied the law as clearly established by the Supreme Court in
Miranda
and
Doyle.
Still, we may only grant habe-as relief under the “unreasonable application” test if the state court’s application of law was not only incorrect, but also objectively unreasonablе.
Williams,
2
As clearly established federal law prohibits the use of a criminal defendant’s
post-Miranda
silence against him in court, a reasonable application of the law requires the government to establish that Hurd either waived his right to remain silent or never effectively invoked it.
See Arnold,
The government first argues thаt the above statements cannot be invocations of
Miranda
under clearly established federal law because they are not unambiguous.
See Thompkins,
The government next argues that
Doyle
does not apply to this case because the interrogating officers told Hurd that the jury would not look favorably on his refusal to cooperate, abrogating
Miranda
by suggesting that his refusals would be used in court.
6
Officers cannot make a suspect’s constitutiоnally protected silence admissible by issuing warnings or threats. A suspect’s right to silence is based in the Fifth Amendment, not in an individual officer’s promises or lack thereof.
Dickerson,
The government’s final argument is that Hurd’s refusals to perform the demonstration were not actually refusals because he offered explanations instead of simply saying “no.” This argument fails. The Ninth Circuit has already held that clearly established law allows a suspect to invoke his right to silence through an explanatory refusal.
See United States v. Bushyhead,
The California Court of Appeal incorrectly and unreasonably applied clearly established law. Still, Hurd is not entitled to habeas relief if the error was harmless.
B
Doyle
error does not entitle a petitioner to habeas relief unless the error “had sub
*1090
stantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
When the prosecutor’s impermissible argument comments on a defendant’s
post-Miranda
silence, the court attempts to determine not “whether the jury would have decided the same way even in the absence of the error,” but “whether the error influenced the jury.”
Arnold,
In
Brecht,
the Supreme Court held that
Doyle
error did not influence the jury because the prosecution’s references to the defendant’s post
-Miranda
silence were infrequent, comprising fewer than two pages of the 900-page trial transcript.
See
Here, the prosecutor’s comments on Hurd’s silence were extensive and stressed an inference of guilt to the jury. Unlike Brecht, the prosecutor specifically emphasized Hurd’s post-Miranda silence in his opening statement and closing argument. In his opening statement, the prosecutor said:
One thing — and I’m going to play the tape for this in particular — you need to listen to on the tape is a number of times Detective Carr asked [Hurd] to demonstrate how the shooting occurred, to stand up and to demonstrate it. And you will listen to the fact that the defendant says, “I will not do a demonstration.” And you can count the times that he refuses.
The prosecutor again suggested that the jury make an inference of guilt based on Hurd’s silence in his closing argument:
Now, the one thing that I wanted to make reference to, and I asked Mr. Hurd this question, and if you want to count the times which I did, Carr and Straky on nine separate occasions asked that — the defendant to demonstrate how the shooting occurred.... And on nine separate occasions the dеfendant refused to do a demonstration, and the response was it wasn’t crystal clear. And in court he’s told you that there is a dream-like quality as to what occurred, and that he still won’t or can’t — and I suggest won’t — do a demonstration.
The government argues that the prosecution’s references to Hurd’s silence were attempts to impeach Hurd’s credibility, but, as shown above, the prosecutor made particular reference to Hurd’s silence to imply guilt. Because the prosecutor repeatedly stressed Hurd’s silence to the jury as evidence of his guilt, we cannot say with fair assurance that this evidence did
*1091
not substantially influence the jury.
Cf. Arnold,
Also, the other evidence suggesting Hurd’s guilt is not extensive. Unlike in
Brecht,
the evidence suggesting Hurd’s guilt consists entirely of testimonial evidence — expert testimony suggested that the physical evidence was not inconsistent with Hurd’s version of events. In contrast, the defendant’s testimony in
Brecht
was directly contradicted by the physical evidence.
Brecht,
IV
Because the California courts unreasonably applied the law as clearly established by the Supreme Court, and we conclude that the error was not harmless, we reverse the decision of the district court. We direct that a writ of habeas corpus issue, requiring the State of California to release Hurd from custody, unless the state elects to retry Hurd within a reasonable period of time to be determined by the district court.
REVERSED and REMANDED with directions.
Notes
. On April 29, 1992, four white Los Angeles police officers were acquitted of assaulting Rodney King, a black mаn, despite a widely publicized videotape of them tasing him, kicking him and repeatedly striking him with their batons. After the verdict was announced, riots erupted throughout the city, eventually causing over $1 billion in property damage and leaving more than 50 people dead with over 4,000 injured and 12,000 arrested. See Staff of the L.A. Times, Understanding the Riots: Los Angeles Before and After the Rodney King Case (1996). Three months later, a federal grand jury indicted the same officers on federal civil rights charges. Robert Reinhold, U.S. Jury Indicts 4 Police Officers in King Beating, N.Y. Times, August 6, 1992. On April 17, 1993, the jury announced its verdict convicting two of the four officers. Seth Mydans, Verdict in Los Angeles; 2 of 4 Officers Found Guilty in Los Angeles Beating, N.Y. Times, April 18, 1993. In the days leading up to this verdict, the city braced itself for riots similar to those of 1992. Id.
. The Court later explained that this procedural safeguard is, in fact, a constitutional rule that cannot be superseded by statute.
See Dickerson v. United States,
. The court did not address the fact that this case deals not only with the prosecution’s use of Hurd's silence for impeachment purposes, but also with the prosecution’s use of Hurd’s silence in its opening and throughout its casein-chief.
. Because the state court correctly identified the governing law, we rely on "unreasonable application” analysis.
See Bell,
.The state trial court concluded that Hurd’s refusal to demonstrate the shooting of his wife was not protected by the Fifth Amendment because Hurd claimed that he could not reenact the shooting instead of saying that he could but would not reenact the shooting. The Constitution makes no such distinction.
. Though the issue is not before the court and we do not decide it, the coercive nature of these threats calls into serious question the voluntariness of any of the suspect's following statements.
