Pеtitioner-appellant Kent A. Siegfriedt seeks appellate review of an order of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts dismissing his application for habeas relief. See 28 U.S.C. § 2241-2254 (1988). The issue presented on appeal is nominal in the classic sense. We must determine whether the admission at trial of an unavailable witness’s tape-recorded testimony, originally adduced at a probable cause hearing, violated the defendant’s constitutional rights because the witness testified under a pseudonym. Finding no constitutional shortfall, we affirm.
I.
Background
Because the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) has painstakingly traced the lay оf the land,
see Commonwealth v. Siegfriedt,
*16 Siegfriedt was charged with arson. At the probable cause hearing, an individual known as Christopher Martel maintained under oath that Siegfriedt forewarned him of the fire and accurately predicted its approximate time of outbreak. After Martel withstood cross-examination at the hands of petitioner’s counsel, the court found probable guilt.
By the time petitioner’s case was reached for trial, Martel’s whereabouts were a mystery. A diligent search failed to locate him but revealed a previously unknown fact: although the witness had gone by the name of Christopher Martel, his true name was Albert Ciccarelli, Jr. The presiding judge nevertheless admitted Martel/Ciccarelli’s tape-recorded testimony, originally delivered at thе probable cause hearing, into evidence at petitioner’s trial. 1 Thereafter, the judge allowed petitioner to impeach the declarant’s credibility. To that end, petitioner called two witnesses, including Martel/Cicearelli’s brother, who testified anent the declarant’s parlous reputation for vеracity.
The jury found Siegfriedt guilty. The SJC affirmed the conviction. Siegfriedt then sought habeas redress. The federal district court spurned his application but issued a certificate of probable cause under 28 U.S.C. § 2253. This appeal ensued.
II.
Standard of Review
Petitioner contends here, as he contended unsuccessfully below, that his constitutional rights were abridged when the state court admitted Martel/Ciccarelli’s pri- or recorded testimony into evidence. This contention evokes a mixed question of law and fact. Under the presently prevailing standard, “mixed” constitutional questions are subject to plenary review in federal habeas proceedings.
See Chakouian v. Moran,
III.
Analysis
A
The Confrontation Clause ensures a criminal defendant the right “to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const, amend. VI. This guarantee applies to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Pointer v. Texas,
Former testimony in the same case generally comes within a recognized hearsay exception if the declarant is unavailable and the party resisting the proffer has had a “complete and adequate opportunity to cross-examine.”
California v. Green,
The petitioner claims that, because Martel/Ciccarelli testified under an adopted name at the probable cause hearing, the opportunity for cross-examination was inadequate as a matter of law. This claim derives from the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Smith v. Illinois,
Petitioner interprets
Smith
as spawning a bright-line rule — a rule which mandates that, whatever nuances may be supplied by the surrounding circumstances, testimony given under an apocryphal name can never be admitted over objection in a criminal trial. But, this interpretation effectively ignores the Court’s instruction that society’s interest in accurate factfinding is to be regarded as an important factor in Confrontation Clause inquiries.
See Bourjaily,
Even before
Bourjaily
we held that
Smith’s
guiding principle, insofar as it concerns a witness’s current address, “is not, like a rule of plane geometry, absolute.”
McGrath v. Vinzant,
The long and short of it is that the
Smith
standard has a core purpose: to prevent a criminal conviction based on the testimony of a witness who remains “a mere shadow” in the dеfendant’s mind.
McGrath,
Against this backdrop, it is readily apparent that all pseudonyms are not equal in the eyes of the Confrontation Clause. Rather, courts must gauge the pull of Smith in any given case by the degree to which its rationale applies. Sometimes, as in Smith itself, a witness’s use of a fictitious name will transform him into a wraith and thereby thwart the efficacy of cross-examination. Other times, the use of a fictitious name will be no more than a mere curiosity, possessing no constitutional significance. 3
B
The case at hand is at a substantial remove from Smith. In Smith, unlike here, the witness adoрted a pseudonym for the sole purpose of testifying. In Smith, unlike here, the defendant did not know the witness’s true identity before the jury returned its verdict. In Smith, unlike here, the witness’s anonymity was the direct result of government contrivance. We find these distinctions more than sufficient to propel this case out of Smith’s precedential orbit.
1.In this situation, the name under which the witnеss testified (Christopher Martel) was not some passing cognominal fancy assumed solely for the purpose of the judicial proceeding and bearing no relation to the witness’s life outside the courthouse. To the contrary, this was a name the witness had clasped to his bosom and made his own. He held himself out to the wоrld as Christopher Martel; he was identifiable in Siegfriedt’s community by that name; and he was known by that name at his own address — an address which he accurately recounted in the course of his testimony. Thus, Martel/Ciccarelli was not some incorporeal apparition — as was his ostensible counterpart in Smith — but a flesh- and-blood human being easily placed within his relevant context.
2. At the probable cause hearing, petitioner was able effectively to question the declarant qua Martel. Moreover, because petitioner discovered the witness’s true name prior to trial, he was able effectively to investigate and impеach the declarant qua Ciccarelli. He took full advantage of both these opportunities, in the first instance through lengthy cross-examination and in the latter instance by calling witnesses to debunk the declarant’s reputation for truthfulness. The goals of
Smith’s
guiding principle — placing the witness in his proper setting and putting his crеdibility to a fair test — were satisfied.
See generally United States v. McLaughlin,
3. In Smith, the defense failed to learn the witness’s true name and address because government actors — the prosecutor and the judge — combined to bloсk its access to the witness, thereby restricting the scope of cross-examination. Here, however, there is no suggestion that the State knew of Martel/Ciccarelli's hidden identity at the time of the preliminary hearing or that the presiding judge sustained objec *19 tions or otherwise imposed any Smith-related scope restriction on cross-examination. That the cross-examination conducted by petitioner’s attorney failed to reveal Martel/Ciccarelli’s birth name was not in any way attributable to official conduct.
We believe that this distinction is significant because “the Confrontation Clause guarantees an
opportunity
for effective cross-examination, not cross-examination that is effective in whatever way, and to whatever extent, the defense might wish.”
Delaware v. Fensterer,
4. When this case is judged by the totality-of-the-eircumstances test that proper application of the Smith principle requires, it readily passes constitutional muster. 5 We hold, therefore, that Martel/Ciccarelli’s use of an alias at the probable cause hearing did not, without more, render that testimony inadmissible at a later proceeding in the same case.
C
Once the
Smith
hurdle is cleared, this case unquestionably meets the
Roberts
criteria. Apart from Martel/Ciccarelli’s unique brand of name-dropping, there is no basis for any suggestion that the defense's opportunity for cross-examination was incomplete or inadequate. The witness testified under oath, before a judge, and in the same case. A verbatim record of the proceedings was contemporaneously made. The defendant was represented by counsel. His аttorney was permitted to cross-examine without undue restriction. Under these circumstances, we find that the state court appropriately classified the tape recording within the hearsay exception for prior testimony of an unavailable declarant.
See Green,
IV.
Conclusion
We need go no further. With Juliet we ask “What’s in a name?” and with her we conclude “[t]hat which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” W. Shakespeare,
Romeo and Juliet,
Act II, Sc. ii. Though the State’s witness had one legal name, he was not made a phantom to the defense merely because he testified at the preliminary hearing under a name he had assumed some time previously. The complete and adequate opportunity for cross-examination which prevailed at the first hearing, the defense’s subsequent opportunity, once armed with knowledge of the witness’s birth name, to put his credibility to the test at trial, and the utter absence of State action limiting the scope of the defense’s cross-questioning, combine to bring the earlier testimony well within a firmly rooted
*20
hearsay exception.
6
The Confrontation Clause was satisfied in petitioner’s case.
See generally Maryland v. Craig,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Siegfriedt’s first trial resulted in a hung jury. We refеr here, and below, only to the second trial, at which petitioner was found guilty.
. The Court recently cast doubt upon the admissibility of prior testimony in criminal cases absent a concrete showing of the declarant’s unavailability.
See White v. Illinois,
- U.S. -,
. Petitioner’s insistence upon a bright-line rule, slavishly followed, could produce a bizarre anomaly. One cаn easily envision circumstances in which a witness testifying under his birth name might present a much more spectral figure than if he or she testified under an adopted name. For example, the appellations Issur Danielovitch Demsky, Betty Joan Perske, and Marion Michael Morrison will probably be of less assistance in placing the affected individuals in their proper settings than their screen names (Kirk Douglas, Lauren Bacall, and John Wayne, respectively).
. The
Roberts
Court indicated that an exception might lie for extraordinary cases in which defense counsel provided ineffective assistance at the earlier hearing.
See Roberts,
. Although we deem the three main points of divergence between this case and Smith, see text supra, to be important, we emphasize that Smith must be applied in a case-specific fashion, having in mind the entire array of circumstances that attend the testimonial proffer in any given situation. We do not, therefore, assign decretory significance to any single distinguishing factor.
. We note in passing that, even apart from whether this evidence fell within a firmly rooted hearsay exception, the Confrontation Clause would be satisfied so long as the totality of the circumstances evinced the requisite guarantees of trustworthiness.
See Wright,
