Kevin L. Evans, a prisoner in the custody of the State of Missouri pursuant to a conviction for second degree robbery, appeals from an order of the District Court 1 denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. See Evans v. Lock, No. 97-1005 (W.D.Mo. June 19, 1998). Evans claims that the District Court erred in failing to rule that the state trial court violated his due process rights by allowing the admission of certain identification testimony Evans argues was tainted. We do not reach the merits of Evans’s constitutional claim. Instead, we conclude that any error was harmless given the overwhelming evidence of guilt. We affirm.
We begin with the facts of the crime for which Evans was convicted, as presented in the record. Evans entered a Burger King restaurant shortly before closing time on December 21, 1992, and approached the counter. At the counter, Evans asked Julie Boucher, the cashier, for an employment application. After seeking and receiving permission from Elizabeth Cass, a senior assistant manager, Boucher complied with Evans’s request. Both Cass and Boucher observed Evans take the employment application to a nearby booth.
Shortly thereafter, Evans returned to the counter and handed Boucher a note reading: “Play for change. Just empty the register and no one will get hurt!” Boucher stared at Evans for a minute before realizing that she was being robbed. She then opened the cash register and gave Evans all of the money it contained, a total of $72.00. Evans wished Boucher a “Merry Christmas” and fled. In total, Evans was in the restaurant for seven to ten minutes.
After Evans’s departure, the employees found a partly completed employment application on the counter, near the cash register. The beginning of the defendant’s name, “Kevin L.,” was written on the employment application. The police identified Evans’s fingerprints on the employment application. Cass and Boucher both testified at trial that Evans was the only person to whom they had given an employment application that day. Cass and Boucher also both testified that before Evans entered the restaurant, they had cleared the restaurant of all debris and papers as part of their standard practice in closing for the day. In particular, they testified that no employment applications were laying on the counter when Evans entered the restaurant. From the time he entered the restaurant until the time he fled, Evans was the only customer in the restaurant. Given all of the testimony and physical evidence with regard to the employment application, it is not surprising that in closing argument the prosecution told the jury that it considered the employment application to be the “linchpin” of its case.
The police arrived a short while after the robbery and, soon after obtaining a
In total, the prosecution presented six witnesses at trial — including Cass and Boucher, both of whom identified Evans as the assailant — as well as the employment application bearing Evans’s fingerprints and name. Evans’s attorney cross-examined all of the witnesses and presented a defense of mistaken identity. After hearing the evidence and argument, the jury found Evans guilty of robbery. The trial court denied Evans’s motion for a new trial and sentenced him to twelve years in prison as a prior and persistent offender. Evans appealed his conviction, and it was upheld by the Missouri Court of Appeals.
See State v. Evans,
Evans challenges Boucher’s identification testimony as tainted and unreliable. Evans points out that before Boucher entered the preliminary hearing room, a police officer told her that the accused assailant would be in the hearing room. Evans argues that this statement and the other circumstances of the preliminary hearing were highly suggestive — Evans, as it turned out, was the accused assailant and, as might be expected, was seated at the defense table during his own hearing; he, along with three others in the room (one of whom shared Evans’s race), was dressed in orange prison garb. Evans claims that Boucher’s identification testimony was tainted irretrievably from this moment forward. ,
As an initial matter, we note that Evans, who was represented by counsel, failed to preserve this claim at trial by objecting to the admission of Boucher’s testimony. Evans did, however, raise his claim on direct appeal to the Missouri Court of Appeals, which reviewed for plain error and found none.
See State v. Evans,
No. WD 49602, mem. supplemental order at 6 (Mo.Ct.App. Jan. 21, 1997). We have noted the difficulty of procedural bar analysis in such circumstances.
See Sweet v. Delo,
Accordingly, because we conclude that any error with respect to the inclusion of Boucher’s testimony was harmless, we see no reason to belabor these issues or to reach the constitutionality of the circumstances surrounding Boucher’s identification of Evans.
Cf.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2) (permitting federal court to deny habeas petition on merits notwithstanding applicant’s failure to exhaust state remedies);
Lambrix v. Singletary,
In general, a habeas court will apply the harmless error standard of
Kotteakos v. United States,
The Supreme Court has “repeatedly reaffirmed the principle that an otherwise valid conviction should not be set aside if the reviewing court may confidently say, on the whole record, that the constitutional error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
Here, even assuming arguendo that the admission of Boucher’s identification testimony constitutes constitutional error, given the overwhelming evidence of Evans’s guilt on the record as a whole, we hold that the inclusion of Boucher’s testimony was, at most, harmless error.
The following evidence in the trial record would have amply proved the State’s case beyond a reasonable doubt even without Boucher’s identification testimony: Cass, the assistant manager, whose testimony is not challenged as being tainted, testified'that she saw Evans take an employment application shortly before the robbery; Cass testified that Evans was the only person who had been given an employment application that day and that no employment applications were on the counter before Evans arrived; an employment application bearing Evans’s fingerprints and name was found near the cash register immediately following the robbery; Cass identified Evans as the robber both at a photographic lineup shortly after the robbery and at trial. Accordingly, the question of guilt or innocence is not a close one here. Indeed, Boucher’s identification tes
If an alleged error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, the conviction should be affirmed irrespective of that error. Accordingly, even assuming, without deciding, that admitting Boucher’s testimony constituted constitutional error, given the harmless nature of any such error in the context of this case, we affirm the District Court’s denial of habeas relief.
Notes
. The Honorable Nanette K. Laughrey, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Evans does not challenge the constitutionality of this photographic lineup.
. Evans does not claim that Cass’s identification testimony was tainted.
. Because we conclude that any error here could survive even the strict Chapman harmless error standard, we do not consider whether, under AEDPA, a less stringent standard would apply where, as here, the state court did not expressly review for harmless error.
