The State of Illinois appeals an order granting petitioner James Lilly’s petition for habeas corpus. The district court found that Mr. Lilly had been deprived of effective assistance of appellate counsel because his counsel failed to raise issues concerning a violation of the strictures of
Miranda v. Arizona,
Mr. Lilly was convicted in December 1982 of deviate sexual assault and indecent liberties with a child, and, because of his two prior similar convictions, was sentenced to concurrent sentences of forty and fifteen years. On direct appeal, Mr. Lilly’s appointed counsel challenged only the indecent liberties conviction. Mr. Lilly raised other issues (though not the issues pressed in this case) in a supplemental pro se brief with the state appellate court. In an unpublished order, the Illinois Appellate Court reversed the indecent liberties conviction but affirmed the deviate sexual assault conviction. The Illinois Supreme Court denied Mr. Lilly’s pro se petition for leave to appeal.
In 1987, Mr. Lilly sоught post-conviction relief from the Illinois courts, raising (among others) the issues now before this court. The state appellate court held that Mr. Lilly had waived his ineffective assistance of counsel claims by failing to raise them in his pro se supplemental brief on direct appeal, and, alternatively, that no prejudice had been shown because the trial court’s rulings werе correct. After the Illinois Supreme Court denied leave to appeal, Mr. Lilly sought a writ of habeas corpus from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois. The State’s initial response to the petition explicitly stated that “it would appear that no procedural bar precludes this court from addressing the merits”, and went to the merits of Mr. Lilly’s ineffective аssistance of counsel claims. The district court found that the State had waived any procedural challenge and that Mr. Lilly had received ineffective assistance of counsel on his direct appeal, and so granted the writ and ordered the State to retry Mr. Lilly within 120 days.
The State appeals. Our review is plenary.
Freeman v. Lane,
A. Procedural Default
The State contends that the state appellate court’s finding of waiver precludes federal habeas review. We agree with the district court that the State
*785
waived this argument. Not only did the State initially fail to address the procedural default argument; its answer affirmatively admitted the absence of any procedural bar.
See Wilson v. O’Leary,
We would reach the merits even had the State not waived the issue. As noted above, the state appellate court rejected Mr. Lilly’s post-conviction efforts on the ground that Mr. Lilly waived his new arguments by failing to rаise them in his
pro se
supplemental brief on his direct appeal. While a federal court may not review a decision based on independent and adequate state law grounds,
Harris v. Reed,
B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel trigger the two-step analysis of
Strickland v. Washington,
1. Failure to Raise Miranda Issue
The Miranda issue centers upon an unrecorded post-arrest conversation between Mr. Lilly and Sergeant James Graham. Because Mr. Lilly did not testify at trial, Sgt. Grаham’s testimony constitutes the sole evidence before any court concerning the conversation. Mr. Lilly had been arrested at a hospital on the day of the charged sexual assault on his niece. Sgt. Graham testified that he informed Mr. Lilly of his Miranda rights and that Mr. Lilly nodded affirmatively when asked if he understood them. Sgt. Graham then asked Mr. Lilly if he wished to talk about the deviate sexual assault on his niece, and Mr. Lilly responded, “I guess I don’t have anything to say.” Sgt. Graham asked what was meant by “I guess”, and Mr. Lilly said that he really didn’t know what happened, and that was why he was trying to get help at a hospital. Sgt. Graham asked why Mr. Lilly wanted help, and Mr. Lilly said he wanted help for things he does but does not remember. Sgt. Graham asked what the things are that Mr. Lilly does not remember, and whether the cause cоuld be *786 drinking; Mr. Lilly said no, he didn’t drink. Sgt. Graham asked if it could be from taking pills or the like, and Mr. Lilly said no, he didn’t take pills.
Sgt. Graham then asked about the events with Mr. Lilly’s niece that morning. Mr. Lilly said he remembered that she had been coming to his apartment every morning, but did not recall what had happened that morning. Mr. Lilly added that if his niece said he did that, he must have done it because his niece had no reason tо lie.
Based on that evidence, the Illinois Appellate Court, applying its own standard of review in denying Mr. Lilly’s post-conviction petition, held that:
Following a hearing on the petitioner’s motion to suppress these incriminating statements, the trial court found that the petitioner’s Miranda rights were not violated since he did not affirmatively invoke his right to remain silent.... Here, we find that the court’s dеcision was not manifestly erroneous. The evidence supports the court’s finding that the petitioner’s statement was unclear as to whether he was invoking his Miranda rights.
In granting Mr. Lilly’s habeas petition, the district court found the performance of Mr. Lilly’s appellate counsel to have been defective in two respects, the first of which was the failure to challenge the trial cоurt’s denial of the motion to suppress Mr. Lilly’s post-arrest statements to a police officer. The district court’s analysis began with a finding, based on
Christopher v. State of Florida,
We believe a different analysis is required. The threshold question is not whether today’s law discloses a
Miranda
violation; Mr. Lilly does not seek a writ of habeas corpus on Fourth or Fifth Amendment grounds. Because Mr. Lilly claims a deprivation of his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel, we begin with the initial question posed by
Strickland:
whether, under all the circumstances and under scrutiny highly deferential to counsel, the challenged actions “were outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.”
This analysis must be made in the context of the law as it cоnfronted an Illinois lawyer in 1983. The Sixth Amendment does not require counsel to forecast changes or advances in the law, or to press meritless arguments before a court.
Kurina v. Thieret,
In 1983, no attorney had the benefit of the Eleventh Circuit’s 1987 decision in
Christopher v. State of Florida,
The record discloses that at the hearing on the suppression motion, the prosecution cited
People v. Krueger,
Miranda’s “in any manner” language directs that an assertion of the right to counsel need not be explicit, unequivocal, or made with unmistakable clarity. We do not believe, however, that the Supreme Court intended by this language that every reference to an attorney, no matter how vague, indecisive or ambiguous, should constitute an invocation of the right to counsel.
People v. Krueger,
Krueger
was not the Illinois courts’ first pronouncement on the issue. In 1977, the Illinois Appellate Court had found that a defendant’s statement that she would not make a confession was insufficiently specific to constitute an invocation of the right to halt questioning, and did not require suppressiоn of the defendant’s subsequent confession.
People v. Troutman,
In 1979, the Illinois Appellate Court had recognized that under
Miranda,
and
Michigan v. Mosley,
After
Krueger,
the United States Supreme Court held in
Edwards v. Arizona,
In May 1982, the Illinois Appellate Court decided
People v. Winston,
Mr. Lilly’s appellate brief was filed on July 1, 1983. On March 24, 1983, the Illinois Appellate Court had decided
People v. Smith,
The United States Supreme Court revеrsed Smith’s conviction, noting that when the officers told Smith of his right to have an attorney present during questioning (and before asking whether he wished to speak with them), Smith said, “I’d like to do that.” This statement, the court held, was not equivocal or ambiguous, and could not be rendered ambiguous by the responses to further questioning.
Smith v. Illinois,
Thus, in 1983, Mr. Lilly’s appellate counsel faced a cluster of recent Illinois cases construing
Miranda’s
“in any manner” language as demanding something more than a halting, uncertain suggestion of a desire to remain silent or to have counsel present. Prevailing Illinois law already had considered the United States Supreme Court precedents upon which any further argument could be constructed.
See, e.g., People v. Aldridge,
Because we find that Mr. Lilly has failed to satisfy the “performance” prong of Strickland, we need nоt address the “prejudice” prong. The failure to pursue the Miranda issue did not deprive Mr. Lilly of effective assistance of counsel.
2. Failure to Challenge Exclusion of Evidence
The district court also found ineffective assistance of counsel in the failure to appeal the trial court’s exclusion of the proffered testimony of Gerald Lilly, brother of Mr. Lilly and uncle of the victim. The district court recognized that statе court evidentiary rulings normally are not subject to federal habeas review, but concluded that the testimony’s exclusion violated Mr. Lilly’s Fourteenth Amendment right to a fair trial under
United States v. Agurs,
Federal courts can grant habeas relief only when a violation of federal statutory or constitutiоnal law has occurred.
Haas v. Abrahamson,
In determining whether the exclusion of evidence violated an accused’s constitutional rights, we must examine whether the proffered evidence was relevant, material, and vital to the defense, and whether the exclusion of that evidence was arbitrary.
Lang v. Young,
Error in the exclusion of evidence reaches constitutional magnitude if the excluded evidence creates a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist.
United States v. Agurs,
The state trial court’s discretionary decision to exclude the uncle’s testimony on relevancy grounds did not violate Mr. Lilly’s Fourteenth Amendment right to a fair trial. The failure to appeal that issue did not deprive Mr. Lilly of effective assistance of appellate counsel.
For the foregoing reasons, we Reverse the district court's grant of the writ of habeas corpus and direct the district court to deny the petition for writ of habeas corpus.
