This is an appeal from the denial of a petition for habeas corpus. Petitioner Kenneth Duane Roy challenges his state court convictions of robbery and first-degree murder for aiding and abetting a felony murder. He contends the state trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury on the specific intent that is a necessary element of aiding and abetting under California law. The district court agreed, but held the error harmless. A divided panel of this court affirmed. We granted en banc review, and now reverse.
I.
A.
Petitioner Kenneth Duane Roy and his friend Jesse McHargue met Archie Mannix and James Clark outside a liquor store in Gridley, California. The four began drinking beer. Several hours later, a Gridley police officer saw Mannix’s truck narrowly miss a utility pole as it backed up in the store’s parking lot. The officer stopped the truck and called another officer to assist. Mannix and Clark were both intoxicated. McHargue and Roy appeared to be sober, but neither had a driver’s license. The officers told the men not to drive the truck and left. Two hours later, the truck was gone. The officers found it nose down in a ditch, with the bodies of Clark and Mannix nearby. Both had been stabbed. Mannix, whose body was partially submerged in the ditch, had drowned. Both were partially stripped and their pockets turned out. Mannix’s wallet and papers were scattered on the ground. The officers located Roy and McHargue at a nearby restaurant, their clothes wet and muddy. Each was carrying a buck knife. Each had some of Mannix’s property in his possession. Roy told police the killings occurred after McHar-gue lost control of the truck while making a turn, the truck went into the ditch, and Clark became angry and struck Roy. According to Roy, a fight ensued, Roy against Clark and McHargue against Mannix. Roy stabbed Clark and killed him.
Roy was charged with two counts of murder and two counts of robbery. At trial, *865 Marie Smart testified she was driving home when she saw the track in the ditch and stopped to offer assistance. Two men were standing over Mannix, who was lying on the ground and appeared to be hurt. McHargue told her help, had been summoned. A pathologist testified that Mannix’s fatal stab wound could have been made by either McHargue’s or Roy’s knife. Roy’s knife bore traces of blood that could have come from either Roy or Mannix but not from Clark.
William Hudspeth, a jailhouse informant, testified Roy told Hudspeth that Roy and McHargue planned to take Clark and Mannix to the country, rob and kill them, and steal the pickup truck. McHargue had trouble subduing Mannix and Roy came to McHar-gue’s aid, pulling Mannix away, stabbing Mannix and holding his head under water until he was dead. According to Hudspeth, Roy and McHargue then took the truck and drove back toward Gridley.
Another jailhouse informant, Sidney Hall, testified Roy told him that after the track went into the ditch, Clark hit Roy with a stick. A fight followed, and Roy stabbed Clark. Roy saw McHargue was “getting the worst of it” in his fight with Mannix, and “went over to help” McHargue.
The state took the murder case to the jury on two theories, arguing Roy was guilty of first-degree murder (1) because the killings were premeditated and (2) because they were committed during the course of a felony, the robbery of Clark and Mannix. The jury found Roy guilty of second-degree murder of Clark and made a “special circumstance” finding, for purposes of sentencing, that Roy had used a knife to kill Clark. The jury acquitted Roy of robbing Clark. The jury found Roy guilty of robbery and first-degree murder of Mannix, with a “special circumstance” finding that Roy had not used a knife to kill Mannix. Roy challenges his convictions of robbery and first-degree murder of Mannix.
B.
The jury’s decision to convict Roy of second-degree murder of Clark indicates the jury rejected the state’s theory that the defendants planned the crime. The jury also rejected the state’s contention that Roy stabbed Mannix by finding Roy did not use a knife against Mannix. Thus Roy’s conviction of first-degree murder of Mannix necessarily reflected a conclusion by the jury that Roy was guilty of felony murder of Mannix in the course of aiding and abetting the robbery of Mannix by McHargue.
The jury was given an aiding and abetting instruction which stated that “[a] person aids and abets the commission of a crime if, with knowledge of the unlawful purpose of the perpetrator of the crime, he aids, promotes, encourages or instigates by act or advice the commission of such crime.” This instruction allowed the jury to convict Roy if he provided “knowing aid”-that is, if he knew of McHar-gue’s intention to rob Mannix and took some action that had the effect of furthering the robbery. After Roy’s case was tried, the California Supreme Court held in
People v. Beeman,
On direct appeal, Roy contended the state trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury on the specific intent element of aiding and abetting identified in
Beeman.
The California court of appéal concluded error had occurred but was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The California Supreme Court denied relief on collateral review, and Roy then filed this federal habeas petition raising the
Beeman
issue. In denying the petition, the district court held the omission from the instruction of the specific intent requirement was error, but agreed with the state courts
*866
that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because “[n]o rational juror could find that Roy aided McHargue, knowing what McHargue’s purpose was, without also finding that Roy intended to aid McHargue in his purpose.” A divided panel of this court affirmed.
Roy v. Gomez,
II.
We have held that omission of the specific intent element from jury instructions in the trial of a charge of aiding and abetting under California law deprives the defendant of his constitutional right to have a jury find the existence of each element of the charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Martinez v. Borg,
A.
To determine whether the
Beeman
error was harmless, we apply the analysis developed by Justice Scalia in his concurring opinion in
Carella v. California,
Carella
involved a conclusive presumption that relieved the state of its burden of proof with regard to the intent element of embezzlement. Justice Scalia explained that use of such a presumption could be harmless only in the “rare situations” when the reviewing court could be confident that the error played no part in the jury’s verdict.
Carella,
Pointing to our recent
en banc
decision in
United States v. Gaudin,
Roy argues we may no longer apply harmless error analysis to
Beeman
error. In
Gaudin,
the district court instructed the jury that an element of the crime was established as a matter of law. We held that “such an error cannot be harmless.”
United States v. Gaudin,
The error in
Gaudin
differs in a crucial respect from omission of an element of the crime from jury instructions. When a court instructs the jury that an element of the crime has been established as a matter of law, proof of that element of the crime is removed from the jury’s purview. Failure to mention an element of the crime, in contrast, does not “completely remove[ ]” from the jury’s consideration the evidence relating to that element; it simply fails to alert the jurors they must consider it.
See Gaudin,
28
*867
F.3d at 951;
United States v. Whitmore,
B.
On the record in this case, we cannot be certain the jury necessarily found beyond a reasonable doubt that Roy intended to facilitate MeHargue’s robbery of Mannix, as required under
Carella
and
Martinez
before the instructional error can be treated as harmless.
See Carella,
The testimony of the two jail informers, Hudspeth and Hall, indicates Roy realized McHargue was “getting the worst of it” in his fight with Mannix, and went to McHar-gue’s assistance. From this evidence, the jury could have found Roy’s intent was not to help McHargue rob Mannix but to prevent Mannix from defeating McHargue. Alternately, the jury could have found that although Roy realized McHargue was trying to rob Mannix, and in fact aided McHargue by keeping Clark from going to Mannix’s aid, Roy did not intend that result. 6
It was for the jury, not the judges who have reviewed the case, to determine which interpretation of the evidence was correct. We are not free to evaluate the evidence and postulate what the jury would have found had it been properly instructed. “[T]he question is not whether guilt may be spelt out of a record, but whether guilt
has been found by a jury
according to the procedure and standards appropriate for criminal trials.”
Carella,
C.
The state argues relief is not warranted because Roy has not shown the error had a substantial or injurious effect on the jury’s verdict, as required when the error is raised in collateral proceedings.
See Brecht v. Abrahamson,
On direct appeal, relief is granted for constitutional error unless the state demonstrates the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Chapman v. California,
We are unable to conclude under
Carella
that the jury necessarily found the missing element; if this case were before us on direct review, the error would not be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, our analysis would be at an end, and we would be required to reverse the conviction. Because this case reaches us on habeas, however, we must determine whether reversal is required under the
Brecht/O’Neal
line of cases. We believe it is. When the reviewing court is unable to conclude the jury necessarily found an element that was omitted from the instructions, it is unable to gauge the effect of the error on the jury’s verdict. In this situation, a conscientious judge can only be “in grave doubt as to the harmlessness of the error,”
O’Neal,
— U.S. at-,
III.
Roy’s due process rights were violated when he was convicted under an aiding and abetting instruction that omitted California’s requirement that the defendant have the specific intent to assist in the commission of the crime. Because a rational jury could have found Roy’s actions had the effect of assisting McHargue in the robbery of Mannix, but Roy did not intend his actions to have that effect, we are unable to say the jury necessarily found the required intent. Under Carella, Brecht, and O’Neal, we cannot say the violation of Roy’s due process rights was harmless error.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
WALLACE, Circuit Judge, with whom Circuit Judges CYNTHIA HOLCOMB *869 HALL and RYMER join, concurring and dissenting:
I agree with the majority that omitting or misdescribing an element of an offense is subject to harmless-error review. However, I cannot agree either with the method of harmless-error analysis the majority employs or with its conclusion that the error was harmful. I respectfully dissent.
I
The majority holds that whenever a jury instruction contains an element that has been misdescribed or omitted and the jury did not actually find the facts supporting the missing element, a judge can never know whether the error had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict” as required by
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
I agree with the majority that
Brecht’s
less onerous standard completely supplants Chapman’s harmless-error test when we review collaterally. Maj. op. at 868;
Brecht,
Brecht
explicitly requires us to apply its standard of review to determine “whether habeas relief must be granted because of constitutional error of the trial type.”
Brecht,
We must also apply
Brecht
rather than the
Carella
concurrence because doing so would be faithful to the Court’s insistence that a “less onerous harmless-error standard on ha-beas promotes the considerations underlying our habeas jurisprudence.”
Id.
at 623,
*870 The strict Carella concurrence standard, of course, asks not whether there is a “reasonable probability that trial error contributed to the verdict,” but whether a rational jury necessarily found certain facts. The Carella concurrence explained that Chapman’s “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” standard may not substitute a judge’s findings for a rational jury’s findings. Under the Carella concurrence, an error may be harmful on direct review even if there is a reasonable probability, or a strong probability, or a near-certain probability that the error had absolutely no effect on the outcome. But the Supreme Court has told us that in these situations we may not disturb state convictions collaterally. Simply put, I would not hold, as the majority does, that “society has grievously wronged” every habeas corpus petitioner whose trial contains error that is harmful under the Carella concurrence.
I have even more difficulty following the majority’s attempt to blend
Carella, Brecht, and O’Neal. See
maj. op. at 867-68. By first applying the stricter approach in
Carel-la,
the opinion eliminates the effect of
Brecht’s
“less onerous standard” of review.
Brecht,
I cannot understand how we can know that the “unusual” and “narrow” circumstance in
O’Neal,
— U.S. at-,-,
In addition, the majority creates inter-circuit conflict by refusing to apply
Brecht
instead of the
Carella
concurrence when reviewing collaterally jury instruction errors.
See Libby v. Duval,
II
I would therefore apply the standard set forth in Brecht and ask whether the district court’s failure to include specific intent in the aiding and abetting robbery jury instruction had a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict. The majority searched the record and contends that a rational jury could have found that Roy assisted MeHar-gue in the robbery of Mannix, but also could have found that Roy did not intend his ac *871 tions to have that effect. Maj. op. at 867, 868-69. However, given the evidence that the jury actually heard, this latter possibility does not establish the substantial and injurious effect that Brecht requires.
The jury found Roy guilty of second degree murder of Clark, guilty of aiding and abetting the robbery of Mannix by McHar-gue, and guilty of the felony murder of Man-nix, with robbery as the underlying felony. The aiding and abetting instruction actually given required the jury to find that Roy aided in the commission of the robbery offense by McHargue. The instruction also required the jury to find that when Roy provided this aid, he did so with the actual knowledge of McHargue’s unlawful purpose. Given what the jury actually found and the evidence in the record supporting Roy’s specific intent to further the robbery, I would hold the Beeman error harmless under Brecht. The error did not have a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict.
I certainly do not have the grave doubt that the majority holds I necessarily must. Roy admitted stabbing Clark. Mannix’s shirtless body was found submerged in water under his truck. Mannix died either from being stabbed or drowned. Mannix’s wallet was found with one dollar in it. Upon his arrest, Roy’s pants were wet from the calf down. Police found $170 and Mannix’s wristwatch among Roy’s possessions. Roy told Hall that he “helped” McHargue when McHargue and Mannix were fighting. Hud-speth testified that Roy admitted a plan to rob Clark and Mannix and admitted robbing both. Hall testified that Roy admitted helping McHargue with Mannix. From this I would conclude that there is not even a reasonable probability that Roy did not assist McHargue with the intent to further the robbery of Mannix. Therefore, Roy’s habeas corpus petition should be denied.
Notes
. According to
Beeman,
an appropriate aiding and abetting instruction would tell the jury that a person aids and abets the commission of a crime when he, "acting with (1) knowledge of the unlawful purpose of the perpetrator, and (2) the intent or purpose of committing, encouraging or facilitating the commission of the offense, (3) by act or advice aids, promotes, encourages or instigates, the commission of the crime.”
Beeman,
. Decisions prior to
Martinez,
while not framed in terms of
Carella,
nonetheless applied essentially the same analysis to
Beeman
error.
See Leavitt v. Vasquez,
. To the extent prior cases equate these two distinct situations, such cases are disapproved.
Hove,
. The instructional error in this case may be described either as the omission of an element (specific intent) or as the misdescription of an element (intent). In fact, we have sometimes characterized a
Beeman
error as omission of an element,
see Martinez,
. Refusal to impose a rule of per se reversal comports with earlier holdings that omission of an element is harmless if the element is not at issue in the case,
see Hart,
. Roy suggested other plausible alternative findings we need not set out here.
. The state court’s determination that the error was harmless does not affect our analysis. Whether an error is harmless is not a factual determination entitled to the statutory presumption of correctness under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Lawson v. Borg,
