Jeffrey Ferguson was convicted .and sentenced to death in state court for the abduction, rape, and murder of Kelli Hall, a seventeen-year-old gas station attendant. The Supreme Court of Missouri affirmed the conviction and sentenсe and the denial of state post-conviction relief.
State v. Ferguson,
I. The Youngblood Issue.
Kelli Hall worked at a service station in Saint Charles, Missоuri. Hall’s frozen, naked body was discovered on a nearby farm three weeks after a witness saw a man resembling Ferguson forcing her into a truck identical to Ferguson’s vehicle outside the service station on the night she disappeared. An autоpsy revealed that Hall had been raped before she was strangled to death. Ferguson and his friend, Kenneth Ousley, were seen with Ferguson’s truck across the street from the service station shortly before Hall was abducted. During the days following Hall’s disаppearance, Ferguson and Ousley tried to sell three of her rings. Ferguson warned a potential purchaser that the rings were “very hot,” and he told another friend not to tell anyone he was in Saint Charles on the night of the abduction. He also asked a body shop to repaint his vehicle because the police were looking for it.
Laboratory tests .showed that semen found inside Hall came from a person with Ferguson’s blood type, DNA found in a semen stain on Hall’s coat mаtched Ferguson’s, and fibers found on Hall’s clothing were “indistinguishable” from the carpeting in Ferguson’s truck. A blonde hair matching Hall’s was found on Ousley’s shoe, and a pubic hair indistinguishable from Ousley’s was found on Hall’s socks. Hall’s body was found partially obscured by steel pаrtitions that could not have been moved by one man.
Ferguson and Ousley were charged with first degree murder. Ousley, who later pleaded guilty and received a life sentence,
Ferguson filed a petition for state post-conviction relief that included a claim -that the prosecution failed to disclose unspecified exculpatory еvidence in violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
The Supreme Court of Missouri consolidated Ferguson’s direct and post-conviction appeals and upheld his conviction and sentence. On the surveillance tape issue, thе Court rejected Ferguson’s
Brady
claim because it was not alleged with sufficient specificity in the post-conviction motion, Ferguson, failed to show that the videotape evidence was exculpatory, and no prejudice resulted. Thе Court. rejected on two grounds the related claim that the State, by losing or destroying the videotape, had violated the discovery order permitting Ferguson’s post-conviction counsel to view the videotape. First, the Court explainеd, Ferguson was not entitled to discovery on a
Brady
claim that “was not actionable from the start.” Second, the videotape was lost or destroyed by the time Ferguson requested its disclosure, and “[ajbsent a showing of bad faith on the part of the police or prosecutor, the failure to preserve even potentially useful evidence does not 'constitute a denial of due process.
Arizona v. Youngblood,
In the district "court, Ferguson asserted that
Youngblood
rather than
Brady
provides the relevant féderal constitutional rule governing the State’s loss or dеstruction of the videotape. In
Youngblood,
the Supreme Court declined to extend the prosecutor’s absolute duty under
Brady
to produce materially exculpatory evidence to cases where the State failed to preserve evidence that was only “potentially useful” at trial. Rather, the Court held “that unless a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police, failure to preserve potentially useful evidence does not constitute a deniаl of due process of law.”
On appeal, Ferguson abandons his Brady claim and argues that he is entitled to habeas relief, or at least an evidentiary hearing, under Youngblood. 2 We disagree. Youngblood stated the applicable constitutional principle when potentially useful evidence is lost or destroyed .before trial. Here, uncontroverted evidence established that the surveillance videotape existed until long after the trial. Thus, the videotape was evidence undiscovered by the defense, not evidence unavailable to the defense. Various post-conviction claims may be available to a defendant in this situation, but they are not Youngblood claims. For example, if the videotape was materially exculpatory, Ferguson has a post-conviction claim that the prosecution violated its absolute duty undеr Brady to disclose such evidence in its possession. Ferguson raised that claim in state court, and initially in the district court, but has abandoned it on appeal. , Alternatively, if Ferguson’s trial counsel should have discovered the videotape priоr to trial, for example by interviewing the service station manager, that could give rise to an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. But no such claim was raised in state court, even though Ferguson asserted countless other ineffec-five assistance claims. Finally, Ferguson could have argued that the videotape was newly discovered evidence warranting a new trial under state law, an argument not made to the state post-conviction court.
In these cirсumstances, reviewing the state court decision under the deferential standard enacted by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, it is apparent that the Supreme Court of Missouri’s application of
Youngblood
did not result in a decision “thаt was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
see Johnston v. Luebbers,
II. The Crawford Issue.
At trial, Ferguson’s friend Michael Thompson testified that, after Hall’s disappearance, Ousley asked Thompson whether he knew “where to get either money or cocaine” for two of Hall’s rings. When Thompson asked Ousley where the rings
While this appeal was pending, the Supreme Court decided
Crawford v. Washington,
We then expanded Ferguson’s certificate of appealability “to include the Sixth Amendment confrontation issue in light of ...
Crawford.”
However, in a subsequent decision, we held that “co-conspirator statements are nontestimonial.”
United States v. Reyes,
Applying the Supreme Court’s pre-
Crawford
decisions to this nontestimonial hearsay issue, we reject Ferguson’s Confrontation Clause claim for the reasons stated by the Supreme Court of Missouri and by the district court. The Supreme Court’s discussion in
Crawford
raises some doubt whether the
Roberts
reliability analysis remains good law when applying the Confrontation Clause to nontestimonial hearsay.
See
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The HONORABLE CATHERINE D. PERRY, United States District Judgé for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. Respondent argues for the first time on appeal, without citation to relevant authority, that Ferguson “cannot allege that the Missouri Suрreme Court improperly applied
Youngblood
when petitioner did not raise, or even cite,
Youngblood
to the Missouri Supreme Court.” This contention — in effect a claim of procedural bar — is without merit. The Supreme Court of Missouri no doubt recognized that
Brady
and
Youngblood
both involve, in the Supreme Court’s words, "what might loosely bе called the area of constitutionally guaranteed access to evidence,”
Youngblood
,
. We have noted that
Crawford
does not appear to fall within the narrow exceptions to non-retroactivity under
Teague v. Lane,
