Respondent-appellant Sally B. Johnson, Superintendent of the Orleans Correctional Facility, appeals from a judgment entered January 18, 1996, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Kimba-Wood,
Judge,
granting the writ of habeas corpus to petitioner-appellee John Lyons. Petitioner was convicted in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Bronx County,
Judge
Bonnie Wittner presiding, of attempted murder in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. He was sentenced to serve an indeterminate term of from eight and one-third to twenty-five years’ imprisonment. Following affirmance of that conviction by the New York Appellate Division, First Department,
People v. Lyons,
I
Facts
On January 2, 1989, Lyons and another man, Kevin Moore, were involved in an argument that took place in a crowd in the Bronx. Lyons and Moore are both young African-American males and were both wearing black leather jackets on that day. All parties agree, that at a certain point-in the dispute Moore spoke to Lyons, following which the latter went to Moore’s apartment and *501 emerged carrying a gun. Confusion arose. Three shots were fired in the resulting melee, two of which hit José Quiles.
Three prosecution witnesses, Rosik Fer-rara, Rodney Poole, and Quiles, stated at trial that petitioner' fired the gun at Quiles. Ferrara knew Moore quite well, but witnessed the shooting from her apartment window across the street. Poole had never met either Lyons or Moore, and did not come forward to identify the former as the shooter until two days prior to trial — over a year after the events. When asked at trial how he was able to identify Lyons as the perpetrator, Poole stated that “the most descriptive thing” about the man who pulled the trigger was that he was wearing gold fronts, i.e., removable gold caps, on his four front teeth. Although Quiles, the victim, stated that he had seen petitioner holding a gun just before he was shot, he was unable to identify the perpetrator to the police in either of his first two interviews, and testified that because his back was turned during the shooting he could not see his assailant’s face.
Two defense witnesses testified that Kevin Moore, not John Lyons, fired the gun. Petitioner testified on his own behalf that Moore had asked him to get the gun from Moore’s apartment, that he had accordingly retrieved the gun, and had handed the gun to Moore, who then fired it at Quiles. Petitioner’s girlfriend, Michelle Pantojas, likewise testified that Lyons handed the gun to Moore and that it was Moore who shot Quiles. She further stated that there was little difference in physical build between Moore and Lyons. Pantojas had known both men for several months before the shooting, and witnessed the events from the street comer.
The same three witnesses for the prosecution stated that Lyons was the only person at the scene of the crime wearing gold fronts on his four front teeth. In contrast, Lyons testified that both he and Kevin Moore were wearing four gold fronts on the day of the shooting. 1 During voir dire, Moore confirmed petitioner’s testimony by admitting that he owned four gold fronts and had been wearing them on January 2, 1989. 2 The defense attorney asked Moore whether he would plead the Fifth Amendment if asked to testify that he had been wearing the fronts during the shooting; Moore replied that he would do so.
Petitioner asserted on appeal and on habe-as review that the trial court erred in three respects. First, the court refused to allow the defense to display Kevin Moore, wearing gold fronts, to the jury. The court initially ruled that Moore’s exhibition was impermissible because, as a federal prisoner, he could not be present in the jury’s deliberation room and thus could not be marked as an exhibit. After defense counsel offered to submit a photograph of Moore for use during the deliberation stage, the court ruled that a live display of Moore was not relevant because all of the witnesses were familiar with both men and, thus, identification was not disputed. The court stated that it would permit a photograph of Moore without gold fronts to be admitted; defense counsel declined. Second, the trial court ruled that it would permit Moore to claim his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination rather than repeat his voir dire testimony that he owned gold fronts and had worn them during the shooting. Judge Wittner found that Moore had not waived his Fifth Amendment rights in voir dire because he had not realized that his statements were self-incriminatory. Third, the court held that New York law precluded admission of Moore’s voir dire testimony as hearsay evidence. The jury, therefore, never heard any evidence supporting Lyons’s and Pantojas’s testimony that Kevin Moore wore gold fronts on the day of the crime and was the actual perpetrator.
II
District Court Granting of Habeas
Lyons’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus asserts that his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial was infringed by the trial
*502
court’s errors. The district court granted the petition on January 10, 1996, finding that the trial court had committed error in two respects: first, in denying the defense’s request to display Kevin Moore, wearing gold fronts, to the jury; and, second, in holding that Moore’s
voir dire
testimony was inadmissible hearsay.
See Lyons,
The district court also found that the standard of review enunciated by the Supreme Court in
Chapman v. California,
The district court also found, however, that even under the
Brecht
standard, the trial court’s error in failing to display Moore to the jury and refusing to admit his
voir dire
*503
testimony was not harmless.
Lyons,
Ill
Discussion
We agree with the district court that Lyons ought to have been permitted to exhibit Moore wearing his gold fronts. Because we find that the trial court’s failure to permit a display of Moore was harmful constitutional error, we do not address whether the district court correctly ruled that New York hearsay exceptions would permit admission of Moore’s voir dire statements.
The state trial court erred in ruling that the display of Moore would be inadmissible for lack of relevance. As the state concedes in its briefs, Judge Wittner was incorrect in her finding that all of the witnesses knew both Moore and Lyons and that no issue of misidentification existed. On the contrary, one of the state’s eyewitnesses, Poole, was unfamiliar with both Moore and Lyons, and the identifications made by other witnesses for the prosecution were disputed by petitioner on grounds which were far from frivolous. The testimony of both Lyons and Pantojas, asserting that Moore was wearing gold fronts when the shooting took place and that he, not Lyons, fired the gun, establishes beyond peradventure the relevance of other evidence going to misidentification. A physical display of Moore wearing gold fronts was relevant and ought to have been admitted.
Furthermore, the trial court’s offer to admit a photograph of Moore did not correct the error. As the district court noted, a photo could not possibly provide the jury with enough information to assess the likelihood that the prosecution witnesses misidentified Lyons. Only a physical comparison of Lyons wearing his gold fronts and Kevin Moore with his gold fronts would permit the jury thoroughly and accurately to determine how similar Moore’s general build and facial characteristics were to Lyons’s. On a matter bearing directly upon the ultimate question of innocence, the defendant was entitled to have the jury view the physical traits of the two men in order to both discount the testimony of the prosecution’s witnesses and support the defense witnesses’ testimony that Moore fired the shots.
Having decided that the trial court committed error, we turn to the matter of the standard of harmless error review. Although we note that this court has previously held that, for reasons of federalism and comity,
Brecht
is the proper standard to apply whenever a federal court reviews a conviction on habeas petition rather than on direct review,
see Bentley v. Scully,
It is quite possible that, after physically comparing the two men both wearing gold fronts, the jury would have decided that all three prosecution witnesses mistakenly identified Lyons as the shooter. None of the *504 identifications was beyond reproach. Fer-rara was some distance away from the scene, arguably too far away to make a positive identification between two young African-American men wearing black leather jackets. Her testimony might very well have lost credibility had the jury been permitted to view the relative statures of the two men and assess for itself whether her identification was reliable at that distance. Poole’s identification supports only the guilt of a man wearing gold fronts, who might just as well have been Moore as Lyons. If the jury saw that Moore in gold fronts bore a strong resemblance to Lyons, it could easily have believed Lyons’s and Pantojas’s testimony that Moore wore gold fronts during the shooting and that Poole (who had never met either man before that day) confused the two men. Likewise Quiles’s identification, which must have been based purely upon stature and elothing given that he did not see his assailant’s face, would also be undermined by a jury finding that Moore and Lyons physically resembled each other. In short, had the jury been permitted to view the two men, it could have found that Moore, not Lyons, shot Quiles.
The issue of misidentification is absolutely fundamental to a criminal trial. Although this case seems to be solidly built upon the identification of three eyewitnesses, this court has noted on more than one occasion that eyewitness testimony is often highly inaccurate. We have stated that:
[t]here can be no reasonable doubt that inaccurate eyewitness testimony may be one of the most prejudicial features of a criminal trial....
... Because the intrinsic unreliability of eyewitness identifications is so often compounded with the distorting effects of the natural suggestion to the witness that the person on trial is the guilty one, it is no exaggeration to venture that ‘[t]he influence of improper suggestion upon identifying witnesses probably accounts for more miscarriages of justice than any other single factor — perhaps it is responsible for more such errors than all other factors combined.’
Kampshoff v. Smith,
More broadly, however, petitioner has shown that his inability to have his defense of innocence and misidentification substantiated by a jury’s comparison of his physical appearance with that of the man who two eyewitnesses attested was the actual perpetrator had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict” as required by the more deferential Brecht standard. The jury could not have reached its verdict without believing the prosecution’s witnesses, whose testimony would have been significantly weakened by the display of Moore in his gold fronts. Pantojas’s and Lyons’s own testimony would have been likewise bolstered. The exclusion of Moore’s display clearly had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence” in this case.
Conclusion
We find that the trial court’s error was not harmless, and affirm the district court’s grant of the writ of habeas corpus. The ease is remanded to that court for entry of a revised judgment ordering Lyons’s release unless the state promptly affords him a new trial.
Notes
. Pantojas, however, testified that only Moore, and not petitioner, was wearing gold fronts that day.
. Moore was wearing the same gold fronts when he made his
voir dire
statements.
See Lyons v. Johnson,
. The district court agreed with the trial court that Moore had not waived his Fifth Amendment rights by making his admissions in
voir dire. Lyons,
. The state argues on appeal that the exception for declarations against penal interest was not applicable in this situation because Moore was not aware at the time he made his statements that they were against his penal interest, and that the exception for statements made in a prior proceeding did not apply because
voir dire
is a concurrent, internal proceeding rather than a prior proceeding.
See Lyons,
. Although
Brecht
implied that the burden of proof is placed upon the defendant, the Supreme Court later clarified in
O’Neal v.
McAninch, - U.S. -,-,
For the sake of precision, if not brevity, we also address a very recent holding of the Court relating to the
Brecht
standard. In
Brecht,
the Court stated that certain " ‘ "structural defects in the constitution of the trial mechanism ... defy analysis by 'harmless error’ standards.” ’ ”
Brecht,
