Petitioner-appellant Johnny Dean Pyles, a Texas death row inmate convicted of capital murder, appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
While on routine patrol at 12:50 a.m. on June 20, 1982, Officer Charles Mitchell, a deputy sheriff with the Dallas County Sheriffs Department, noticed a beige Jeep in the parking lot of a small convenience store in the city of Sunnyvale. The store was closed. Mitchell used his patrol car’s spotlight to examine the vehicle and the store as he slowly drove past. Mitchell did not see anyone, but a couple in an automobile flashed their high beams as he drove away, and Mitchell stopped. After a conversation with the couple, Mitchell called for -backup and indicated that a white male suspected of criminal activity was in the area of the convenience store. Mitchell then parked behind the Jeep with his high beams and spotlight on the vehicle. Mitchell exited his patrol car and, using a flashlight, inspected all four sides of the convenience store building in search of the suspect. Mitchell did not see anyone and concluded that the store was secure.
Officers Ray Kovar and Dwaine Crain, responding to Mitchell’s request for backup, approached the scene with their emergency lights and siren on, but turned them off when they got within one half to three quarters of a mile of the store. Mitchell heard the backup unit’s siren before the officers turned them off. Kovar and Crain arrived at the scene at approximately 1:00 a.m. After the three officers again secured the building, they began a search of the area.
*989 Mitchell saw Kovar walk around the east side of the building, with- a flashlight in his left hand and his pistol in his right hand. Crain took a shotgun and went to the west side of the building to search there. Mitchell and Crain both heard Kovar tell someone, “Halt, get up.” Then a series of gunshots were fired. Mitchell rán to help Kovar and found him lying face down. Kovar had suffered a bullet wound to the chest from which he later died.
Crain heard Mitchell shout that Kovar was down and called in a report to that effect on his radio to his dispatcher before joining Mitchell. Crain noticed that Kovar’s flashlight was turned on. Two police officers unsuccessfully attempted to resuscitate Ko-var, and several others searched the scene of the shooting but were unable to locate a suspect.
Richard Hart, a reserve deputy sheriff who was called out to assist in the search for the person who killed Officer Kovar, set up surveillance in an unmarked car almost two miles from the scene of the shooting. Around 4:00 a.m., Hart saw a white male, later identified as Johnny Dean Pyles, walking toward him on Collins Road. He immediately radioed a description of Pyles to the dispatcher and then left the car, pointing his flashlight and pistol at Pyles and ordering him to halt. At first, Pyles turned around and took several steps back the way he came. Hart again ordered Pyles to stop, saying, “One more step and that’s it.” Pyles turned around and raised his hands. He told Hart that he was not armed. Hart ordered Pyles to he face down on the road. He noticed that Pyles’s right hand was swollen, and that he was bloody and covered with mud. Hart handcuffed Pyles and placed him in the back seat of the ear lying face down. Hart recited Pyles’s Miranda warnings on the way to the Sunnyvale Substation, and Pyles indicated that he understood his rights.
The magistrate again read Pyles his rights and advised him that he was being charged with capital murder, a crime punishable by life imprisonment or death.. The magistrate asked Pyles if he was in pain and if he wanted to go to the hospital. Pyles did not ask for medical attention and did not complain of being in pain. After a paramedic bandaged and elevated Pyles’s arm, the magistrate asked Pyles if.he was up to talking to the police. 1 Pyles responded affirmatively and the magistrate left for a brief period.
The magistrate returned as Pyles was preparing to sign a statement admitting that he had shot Officer Kovar. The magistrate informed Pyles that he did not have to sign the statement, and, according to the magistrate, Pyles replied, “I might as well, Judge. I did it.” Pyles then signed the statement with his left hand.
Afterward, Sergeant Larry Williams of the Dallas County Sheriffs Office interrogated Pyles. A second statement was prepared based on the conversation between Pyles and Williams, and Pyles signed that statement.
At Pyles’s capital murder trial, the medical examiner testified that the cause of Officer Kovar’s death was a gunshot wound to his chest. A .38 caliber bullet was removed from Kovar’s body. An officer from the Physical Evidence Section of the Sheriffs Office testified about the scene of the shooting. He explained that a .357 magnum pistol was found where Officer Kovar fell. The weapon contained six spent casings. A .38 caliber pistol, found twenty-seven feet from Kovar, contained four spent casings and one empty chamber. Both weapons had been completely emptied by firing.
Pyles testified on his own behalf, explaining that he was not aware at the time of the shooting that Kovar was a police officer. Pyles claimed that he acted in self-defense, firing because he saw a flashlight and a gun pointed at him and heard a voice telling him to halt.
II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On October 14, 1982, Pyles was convicted of capital murder after a seven-week jury *990 trial. On October 15, 1982, after a separate punishment hearing, the jury answered the three special issues presented to them pursuant to the version of article 37.071 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure in effect at the time of Pyles’s trial in the affirmative': The state district court later sentenced Pyles to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Pyles’s conviction and sentence on June 1,1988.
Pyles filed an application for writ of habe-as corpus in state district court on December 5, 1990. On July 15, 1991, the district court entered an order adopting the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law set forth in the state’s response and recommending that the application be denied. On July 19, 1991, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals accepted the district court’s recommendation and denied Pyles’s application.
On July 22, 1991, Pyles filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. An evidentiary hearing was held before a magistrate judge on January 24 and 25, 1996. On January 16, 1997, the magistrate judge entered findings and a recommendation that the petition be denied. After a de novo review, the district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation and denied Pyles’s petition on June 16, 1997. This appeal follows. 2
III. ANALYSIS
Pyles contends that the district court erred in denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus because (1) his conviction was based in part upon extrinsic evidence obtained as a result of a juror’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene, (2) the state knowingly presented false testimony at his trial, and (3) the state withheld exculpatory evidence. We address each of these issues in turn.
A. Juror Misconduct
Pyles contends that his conviction was tainted by juror misconduct because one of the jurors in his ease, Geraldine Sarratt, made an unauthorized visit to the crime scene. In support of his claim, Pyles offers two affidavits from Sarratt. 3 Both affidavits state that, during the guilVinnocenee phase of Pyles’s trial, Sarratt made an unauthorized visit to the scene of the shooting. According to the second affidavit, she made the visit during daylight hours. The affidavits also state that, based on the evidence presented at trial, which included photographs of the crime scene taken during day and night, Sarratt “was not convinced that Johnny was guilty of capital murder.”
Each affidavit contains a description of the manner in which Sarratt perceived the actual crime scene, viewed in person, to differ from the photographs of-the crime scene presented at trial. The first affidavit states:
*991 Because I had questions in my mind, I went to the scene of the crime. The lot was much smaller than I pictured from the trial. Although photos were in evidence with officers testifying about the scene, pictures never tell the whole story. The visit to the scene of the crime helped me decide that if there had been a police car and officers in the lot, that anyone.hiding in the lot would have known a police officer was present.
The second affidavit states:
During the trial, while I was sitting on the jury of Mr. Pyles’ capital murder trial and prior to his conviction, I went to the exact scene of the crime. I went to the scene because the photographs and diagrams presented at trial were inadequate for me to understand the dimensions of the area. Most, if not all, of the photographs introduced during the trial were taken of the building and the lot at night. I went to the scene during the day light hours. At that time, I was able to clearly see the dimensions of the area where the crime occurred. The dimensions of the scene in person were very different than the photographs and diagrams shown to the jury during trial.
Specifically, the lot was much smaller than the photographs and diagrams indicated at trial. Viewing the area in person, I was able to see that Mr. Pyles and the victim were much closer in proximity to each [other] than any of the photographs and diagrams shown to the jury had indicated. My visit to the scene of the crime surprised me because it looked so much different to me than the photographs and diagrams in evidence. It was only after viewing the crime scene for myself, in person, that I decided that if there had been a police car and police officers in the lot, that anyone hiding in the lot would have known a police officer was present.
As the district court observed, a substantial portion of Sarratt’s affidavits are inadmissible as evidence under Rule 606(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence. 4 Rule 606(b) bars juror testimony regarding the following four topics:
(1) the method or arguments of the jury’s deliberations, (2) the effect of any particular thing upon an outcome in the deliberations, (3) the mindset or emotions of any juror during deliberation, and (4) the testifying juror’s own mental process during the deliberations.
United States v. Ortiz,
Post-verdict inquiries into the existence of impermissible extraneous influences on a jury’s deliberations are allowed under appropriate circumstances so that a jury-man may testify to any facts bearing upon the question of the existence of any extraneous influence, although not as to how far that influence operated upon his mind.
Llewellyn v. Stynchcombe,
Pyles concedes that those portions of Sarratt’s affidavits indicating that the evidence at trial failed to convince her that Pyles knew that Kovar was a police officer when he shot him but that she was convinced that this was the case after visiting the scene of the crime are inadmissible under Rule 606(b). He contends, however, that Sarratt’s statements that “[t]he lot was much smaller than [she] pictured from the trial” and that the scene “looked so much different to [her] than the photographs and diagrams in evidence” are admissible for purposes of evaluating his' claim of juror misconduct. These statements by Sarratt are not merely descriptive of the outside influence brought to bear upon her while she served as a juror in Pyles’s trial. Rather, they describe her impression of-that outside influence as compared to the evidence adduced at trial. Specifically, these, statements relate to the mental picture of the crime scene that Sarratt drew from the evidence presented.at trial and the impact that her visit to the crime scene had on that mental picture. Therefore, Sarratt’s statements regarding the manner in which she perceived the crime scene viewed in person to differ from the image of the crime scene that emerged from the evidence presented at trial can have no bearing on our evaluation of Pyles’s claim because such statements constitute impermissible testimony regarding a juror’s “mental processes.” Fed. R. Evid. 606(b). We may consider only those portions of Sarratt’s affidavits which indicate that Sarratt visited the crime scene during daylight hours. We turn now to the issue of whether Sarratt’s alleged visit to the crime scene entitles Pyles to habeas relief.
The Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury, enforceable against the states as a result of incorporation through the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause,
see Duncan v. Louisiana,
Pyles contends that Sarratt’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene entitles him to habeas relief unless the state proves that no reasonable probability exists that Sarratt’s visit influenced the jury. In support of this contention, he relies upon
Remmer v. United States,
In determining whether a constitutional error is subject to harmless'error analysis, the Supreme Court has drawn a distinction between “trial error” and “structural error.” Trial error is error that “‘occur[s] during the presentation of the case to the jury.’ ”
Brecht,
Pyles contends that Sarratt’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene constituted structural error and is therefore not subject to review for harmless error. We reject this contention and conclude that the unauthorized visit to the crime scene by Sarratt is error of a type that is subject to harmless error analysis.
Pyles first argues that, because Sarratt’s visit to the crime scene did not “occur during the presentation of the case to the jury,” it does not fit the Supreme Court’s definition of trial error
5
and therefore is not amenable to harmless error analysis. Pyles’s argument rests upon an oversimplified conception of the Supreme Court’s inquiry into the amenability of particular constitutional error to harmless error analysis. In
Brecht,
the Court described a “spectrum of constitutional errors,” with trial errors — errors amenable to harmless error analysis — at one pole and structural errors — errors that are not amenable to harmless error , analysis and therefore “require[ ] automatic reversal of the conviction because they infect the entire trial process” — at the other.
Brecht,
Pyles next argues that, “[b]ecause Mr. Pyles’ counsel was not present when Mrs.
*994
Sarratt visited the scene, Mr. Pyles was absolutely denied the assistance of counsel.” Pyles notes that the complete denial of the assistance of counsel constitutes structural error, and that the error in this case was structural because it was tantamount to a deprivation of the assistance of counsel.
See Fulminante,
We also note that Pyles’s contention that the juror misconduct at issue here is structural error that does not lend itself to harmless error analysis is inconsistent with his position that he is entitled to'habeas relief unless the state proves that no reasonable possibility exists that the unauthorized visit influenced the jury. As noted earlier, this is the standard applicable in determining whether a criminal defendant is entitled to a new trial on direct appeal based upon the jury’s consideration of extrinsic information.
See Ruggiero,
In
Chapman,
the Court held that, “before a federal constitutional error can be held harmless, the court must be able to declare a belief that it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Id.
at 24,
[t]here is little, if any, difference between our statement in Fahy v. Connecticut about “whether there is a reasonable possibility that the evidence complained of might have contributed to the conviction” and requiring the beneficiary of a constitutional error to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the verdict obtained.
Chapman,
Thus, in arguing that he is entitled to habeas relief unless the state proves that no reasonable possibility exists that Sarratt’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene influenced the jury, Pyles implicitly concedes that the' constitutional error at issue here is sub *995 ject to harmless error analysis because the standard that he asks us to apply is in essence a different way of articulating the Chapman harmless error standard. Pyles in effect asks us to conduct a harmless error analysis of the constitutional error at issue here, albeit under an incorrect standard.
In
Brecht,
the Supreme Court held that the
Chapman
harmless error standard is inapplicable in evaluating constitutional claims presented on collateral review.
See Brecht,
Pyles contends that Sarratt’s visit to the crime scene had a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict “[bjecause the only real dispute at trial was whether Pyles knew [Kovar] was a peace officer at the time he shot.” Pyles’s capital murder conviction depended upon proof that he knew he was shooting a peace officer. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(1) (providing that a person commits capital murder if “the person murders a peace officer ... who is acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty and who the person knows is a peace officer”). Pyles therefore ■ argues that “the physical characteristics of the scene were of primary importance in reaching a verdict.” While we agree that the physical characteristics of the scene were of importance in determining whether Pyles knew that he was shooting a peace officer, we disagree with Pyles’s contention that this fact alone leads inexorably to a conclusion that Sarratt’s visit -to the crime scene had a substantial and injurious effect in determining the jury’s verdict. A great deal of evidence regarding the physical characteristics of the crime scene was admitted at trial. The state introduced nineteen photographs of the crime scene, including photographs taken during daytime and nighttime. Pyles himself testified that the photographs admitted at trial were accurate representations of the scene. Second, the state admitted a detailed diagram of the lot where the shooting took place that included the dimensions of the area. 8 A number of witnesses testified about the crime scene, using the diagram to aid their testimony. The jury thus heard and saw a great deal of evidence regarding the physical characteristics of the crime scene at trial.
Furthermore, while evidence of the physical characteristics of the crime scene
*996
was doubtless important to the jury’s determination of whether Pyles knew he was shooting a peace officer, it was certainly not the
only
type of evidence germane to this determination. The record contains a large amount of other evidence indicating that Pyles knew that he was shooting a police officer. Perhaps most important in this regard is Pyles’s first confession, which included the statement, “I didn’t see the person I shot, but I knew it had to be a police officer.”
9
Pyles’s “own confession [was] probably the most probative and damaging evidence that [could] be admitted against him.”
Bruton v. United States,
In sum, given the sizeable amount of evidence regarding the physical characteristics of the crime scene, including daytime photographs of the area, we conclude that Sar-ratt’s daytime visit to the crime scene was largely duplicative of the evidence presented at trial. Furthermore, the record contains a great deal of evidence unrelated to the physical characteristics of the crime scene that constitutes powerful proof that Pyles knew he was shooting a peace officer. We therefore conclude that Sarratt’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene did not “ha[ve] substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Brecht,
B. Knowing Presentation of Perjured Testimony
Pyles contends that the prosecution knowingly presented false testimony during his trial. “A state denies a criminal defendant due process when it knowingly uses perjured testimony at trial or allows untrue testimony to go uncorreeted.”
Faulder v. Johnson,
During Pyles’s trial, Gary LaCour and Robert Banschenbach, two former cellmates of Pyles, testified as witnesses for the state. LaCour testified that Pyles told him that, on the night of the shooting, “he was trying to burglarize a store and that he saw a police car pull up.” Banschenbach testified that he asked Pyles “did you know that it was a copy [sic] you were shooting at?” and that Pyles responded “Yeah, I knew who he was.”
During its cross-examination of Pyles, the state offered evidence that the phrases, “Kill All Whie [sic] Pig Ploice [sic]” and “Kill Kill Judge DA,” were scratched into the walls of Pyles’s jail cell. Pyles claimed that' the phrases were on the cell wall before his arrival. LaCour testified as a rebuttal witness that he saw Pyles scratching an “L” into one of the phrases. Pyles contends that this *997 testimony was false and that the state knew that it was false before offering it.
The magistrate judge held an evidentiary hearing on Pyles’s claim that the prosecution knowingly presented false testimony. The magistrate judge concluded that LaCour and Bansehenbach testified falsely at Pyles’s trial based upon their invocation of their- Fifth-Amendment privilege against self-incrimination when asked to answer questions relating to the veracity of their trial testimony. 10 However, the magistrate judge went on to determine that he was “unable to conclude that the prosecutors knew Bansehenbach and LaCour were lying.” The magistrate .therefore recommended that the district court deny relief on Pyles’s claim that the prosecution knowingly offered false testimony, and the district court accepted the recommendation.
Pyles acknowledges that we must accept factual determinations, such as the magistrate judge’s conclusion that the prosecutors did not know that Bansehenbach and LaCour were lying, unless they are clearly erroneous.
See Washington v. Johnson,
We have held that “[t]he Fifth Amendment ‘does not forbid adverse inferences against parties to civil actions when they refuse to testify in response to probative evidence offered against them.’ ”
FDIC v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland,
Pyles also offered -an affidavit from LaCour, which states that his “entire testimony was untrue and the state knew it.” *998 The magistrate judge declined to consider this statement in LaCour’s affidavit because it was hearsay. Pyles contends that the portion of LaCour’s statement indicating that the state knew that his testimony was false is admissible under Rule 804(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Evidence as a statement against interest. He argues that the statement potentially subjected LaCour to civil liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Given that Pyles cites no authority in support of this proposition, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in concluding that the statement was not so against LaCour’s interest “that a reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless believing it to be true.” Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(3). 12
Pyles also points to the fact that, at the evidentiary hearing, Winfield Scott, one of the prosecutors involved in Pyles’s trial, testified that he had formed a “suspicion” that the phrases were “probably written by some non-white semi-literate” because some of the phrases contained misspellings and had racial overtones. Scott also provided the following testimony regarding the veracity of LaCour’s testimony:
[T]o this day I don’t know whether [LaC-our’s] testimony is true or false. My only concern was how is it going to impact the jury. I certainly had no,' you know, no way of knowing whether his testimony to this day is true or false.
Pyles contends that this testimony indicates that the prosecution did “not s[eek] out information readily available to it” regarding the truth or falsity of LaCour and Bansehen-bach’s testimony.
United States v. Auten,
On this record, we cannot say that the magistrate judge clearly erred in concluding that the prosecution did not knowingly present false testimony from LaCour and Ban-schenbach. The district court therefore properly denied Pyles’s request for habeas relief on this claim.
C. Withholding Exculpatory Evidence
Pyles finally contends that the government- withheld exculpatory evidence regarding LaCour and Banschenbach’s history as informants and regarding assistance that the state provided LaCour in exchange for his testimony. “The prosecution’s suppression of evidence favorable to the accused violates the Due Process Clause if the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment.”
Kopycinski v. Scott,
*999 [assuming, arguendo, that a harmless-error enquiry were to apply, a Bagley error could not be treated as harmless, since a reasonable probability that, had the evidence-been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different necessarily entails the conclusion that the suppression must have had substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.
Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Pyles first claims that the state failed to disclose the fact that prosecutors had promised LaCour that they would recommend two-year concurrent sentences for his pending burglary convictions. At trial, LaCour testified that the prosecution had agreed to request that his state sentences run concurrently with the federal time that he would be serving as a result of revocation of his federal probation. LaCour testified that he was hoping that he would at least get a deal whereby he would be paroled from state prison as soon as he finished serving his federal sentence, which could have continued for another four years, but that the prosecution had made no specific promise. Several months after Pyles’s trial, Gerald Banks, the lead prosecutor, recommended that LaCour receive concurrent two-year sentences on his pending burglary charges. At the federal evidentiary hearing, Banks testified that he had not withheld any portion of the deal that he had negotiated with LaCour in exchange for his testimony. 14
The magistrate judge concluded that the state had not withheld any information regarding any promises made to LaCour prior to trial, and we cannot say that this factual finding is clearly erroneous. None of the evidence presented at the evidentiary hearing establishes that the state had promised LaCour that it would recommend concurrent two-year sentences on his burglary charges prior to Pyles’s trial. Moreover, even if the state had withheld evidence regarding such a promise, such evidence was immaterial. During cross-examination by Pyles’s counsel, LaCour did not mince words in indicating that self-interest motivated his testimony:
Q: Well, you saw a chance, after you talked to Johnny Pyles and learned that he was tried for capital murder of a police officer, you saw a chance to help yourself out with your problems with the law?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Your [sic] trying to help yourself out in your own problems, aren’t you?
A: Yes, sir. Yeah, no question.
Assuming that the state had promised LaCour a better deal than he indicated at trial,' disclosure of the terms of such a deal would have at best had a marginal negative impact on the jury’s credibility assessment of LaCour. Therefore, “there is [no] reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Bagley,
Pyles also claims that the state withheld evidence of Banschenbach and LaCour’s past informant activities: Specifically, Pyles argues that he established at the evidentiary hearing that prosecutors were aware that Banschenbach had acted as an informant in a state prosecution in Las Vegas. He also argues that he established that LaCour had operated as an informant for various law enforcement agencies, and that the prosecution had actual or constructive knowledge of some of these activities. Banks testified at the federal evidentiary hearing that he did not disclose what information he had regarding the history of LaCour and Banschenbach as informants because he did not consider it exculpatory. Assuming that the state had an obligation to disclose information regarding all of LaCour and Banscheribach’s alleged informant activities, 15 Pyles is not entitled to habeas relief based upon the state’s failure to *1000 produce this evidence because it is not material.
LaCour testified at trial that he was on unadjudicated probation for burglary, was currently incarcerated for two pending burglary charges to which he intended to plead guilty, and had a conviction for bank larceny. He also testified that he is a heroin addict and that he worked as an informant while on federal probation. Additionally, as noted earlier, LaCour acknowledged on cross-examination that his testimony was motivated in part — if not entirely' — by the prospect that he would receive help from prosecutors in obtaining a lenient sentence on his burglary charges. Banschenbach testified that he had prior convictions for robbery, assault, burglary, grand theft, and passing bad checks. During direct examination, the prosecutor acknowledged that Banschenbach had “[b]een rather busy in [his] life of crime.” Furthermore, he testified that he had previously worked as an informant in a county jail. Given the substantial body of impeachment evidence in the trial record against LaCour and Banschenbach, “any incremental impeachment value” that Pyles would have garnered from disclosure of additional informant activities by LaCour and Banschenbach “does not raise a reasonable probability that, had the [information] been disclosed ..., the outcome of the proceeding would have been different.”
Drew v. Collins,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. In his brief, Pyles states, without record citation, that he received no medical attention until after he provided the police with a confession. However, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found that Pyles received the above-described medical treatment prior to signing statements containing his confessions. Pyles does not challenge this factual finding or its entitlement to a presumption of correctness pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (1994)'.
. The district court granted Pyles a certificate of appealability (COA) on August 18, 1997. Prior to the enactment of the Antilerrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, a habeas petitioner was required to obtain a certificate of probable cause (CPC) in order to appeal the district court’s denial of his habeas petition.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2253 (1994). The AEDPA eliminates the CPC requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2253 and substitutes a requirement that a petitioner seeking review of a district court's denial of a petition for federal habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 obtain a COA from a circuit judge. Because Pyles filed his habeas petition before the AEDPA's effective date, he must obtain a CPC rather than a COA.
See United States v. Roberts,
. Pyles presented only the first of the two affidavits to the state courts in connection with his state habeas proceeding. Citing
Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
. Rule 606(b) provides as follows:
Inquiry into validity of verdict or indictment. Upon an inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment, a juror may not testify as to any matter or statement occurring during the course of the jury’s deliberations or to the effect of anything upon that or any other juror’s mind or emotions as influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from the verdict or indictment or concerning the juror's mental processes in connection therewith, except that a juror may testify on the question whether extraneous prejudicial information was improperly brought to the jury's attention or whether any outside influence was improperly brought to bear upon any juror. Nor may a juror’s affidavit dr evidence of any statement by the juror concerning a matter about which the juror would be precluded from testifying be received for these purposes.
Fed. R. Evid. 606(b).
. Sarratt's second affidavit states that she went to the crime scene "during the trial, while [she] was sitting on the jury of Mr. Pyles' capital murder trial and prior to his conviction.” We assume arguendo that Sarratt’s visit to the crime scene does not fit the Supreme Court's definition of trial error.
. Pyles also argues that
Brecht's
more deferential harmless error standard presupposes that the state court reviewing the claim in the first instance applied the
Chapman
standard and concluded that any constitutional error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. He therefore argues that we should apply
Chapman’s
less exacting harmless error standard in this case because, in evaluating his juror misconduct claim, the state court did not indicate that it found Sarratt’s crime scene visit harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. We recently rejected this same argument in
Hogue v. Johnson,
. Pyles contends that we should remand the case to the district court so that it may apply the proper standard of review. However, the district court evaluated Pyles's claim under the standard that he suggests and determined that no reasonable possibility existed that Sarratt’s visit of the crime scene influenced the jury’s verdict. The district court would necessarily reject Pyles’s claim under the "less onerous" harmless error standard that we hold is applicable in evaluating it.
Brecht,
Pyles also contends that remand is warranted because the state contests whether Sarratt ever actually made the visit she claims to have made in her affidavit. Because the state is unwilling to concede that Sarratt made the unauthorized visit to the crime scene, Pyles contends that genuine issues of material fact exist regarding his claim of juror misconduct. However, whether Sarratt made the unauthorized visit to the scene is immaterial because we conclude that, even if she made the visit as she claims, Pyles is nonetheless not entitled to habeas relief. Remand is therefore not warranted on this basis either.
. Many of these photographs and diagrams were not included in the record on appeal. However, Pyles does not contest that the photographs depicted the crime scene during daytime and nighttime. He also does not dispute that the diagram of the lot accurately reflected the scene's dimensions.
. Pyles’s opening brief contains no claim that this confession was involuntary, nor did he challenge its admissibility on any other grounds. His reply brief contains a footnote in which he attempts to challenge the voluntariness of his confession. However, because he failed to raise the issue in his opening brief, Pyles has waived any challenge to the voluntariness of his confession.
See Cinel v. Connick,
. Prior to the evidentiary hearing, LaCour informed the magistrate judge that he intended to invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to any questions about his trial testimony or prior discussions with law enforcement authorities. Both parties agreed that it was unnecessary for LaCour to appear in court for this purpose. The magistrate judge therefore quashed the writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum previously issued to LaC-our.
. Strictly speaking, it is not the case that an affirmative answer to this question would have implied that Bansehenbach lied at trial. Ban-schenbach could have given the prosecutors reason to believe that some of his testimony was inaccurate in a way that would not necessarily imply that he was lying. For example, Ban-schenbach could have told prosecutors that he did not have a good memory or that his recollection was hazy regarding certain details surrounding his interaction with Pyles.
. Pyles also contends that the prosecutors knew that LaCour’s statement that he saw Pyles scratching the incriminating phrases into the wall of his cell was false because they had received a statement from Scottie Cetnar, another cellmate of Pyles, stating that Pyles did not scratch the phrases on the wall. Cetnar stated that the phrases were on the wall before he moved into the cell block. However, the state points out that Pyles was transferred to the cell block on August 10, 1982, LaCour was transferred to the cell block on August 16, 1982, and Cetnar was transferred to the cell block on August 26, 1982. Pyles does not dispute the accuracy of these transfer dates. Thus, the state observes that, because LaCour never specified the date on which he saw Pyles scratching the comments into his cell wall, it is possible that Pyles scratched the phrases into the wall any time between August 16 and 26, 1982.
. It is worth noting that Scott also testified that he wished to have a polygraph performed on LaCour, but was informed that the results would be unreliable because of LaCour’s history of drug use.
. As noted before, Pyles offered LaCour's affidavit as evidence at the evidentiary hearing. The affidavit states that prosecutors had promised LaCour prior to Pyles’s trial that they would recommend concurrent two-year sentences, on his pending burglary convictions. However, it appears that the magistrate judge did not consider this portion of the affidavit because it was not inconsistent with LaCour’s trial testimony and therefore did not constitute a statement against interest. See Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(3).
. The parties dispute (1) whether the prosecution team had actual or constructive knowledge *1000 of some of the informant activities in question and (2) whether some of the informant activities alleged by Pyles ever occurred.
