Lead Opinion
In 1992 Kevin Rice was convicted in the Circuit Court of Cook County of possession of heroin with intent to deliver and sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment. His state court remedies exhausted, Rice petitioned the federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He now appeals the court’s denial of, his habeas petition, arguing that he is entitled to post-conviction relief based on the Illinois Supreme Court’s unreasonable application of Chambers v. Mississippi,
I. BACKGROUND
In 1989 two Chicago police officers, Robert Drozd and Michael Cronin, observed a car with tinted windows drive by their unmarked police car traveling 40 miles-per-hour in a 30 miles-per-hour speed zone. The officers pulled the speeding car over, and Drozd approached the vehicle on thе driver’s side. Through the car’s open window, Officer Drozd saw the driver, petitioner Rice, hand a brown paper bag to the passenger, Raymond Pugh; Drozd then watched Pugh stuff the bag down the front of his pants. Believing the bag to contain a weapon, Drozd ordered Pugh out of the car and conducted a pat-down search. Drozd recovered the bag and found what appeared to be an illegal substance inside (lab tests later showed that'the bag contained 103 grams of heroin). Drozd placed Pugh under arrest and told Officer Cronin about the transfer of the bag; Cronin then arrested Rice.
Before Rice and Pugh were tried, Pugh moved to quash his arrest and suppress evidence obtained from Drozd’s search. At the suppression hearing, Pugh testified that he had placed the paper bag containing the heroin down his pants two hours before he and Rice were stopped by Officers Drozd and Cronin. Pugh also stated that he had kept the bag in his pants at all times until Drozd discovered it during the pat-down search. At Rice and Pugh’s trial, Officer Drozd testified that as he approached the stopped car he saw Rice hand Pugh the paper bag and watched Pugh put thе bag down his pants. Rice denied handling the bag or the heroin and called Pugh to testify that he put the bag down his pants two hours earlier. When Pugh asserted his fifth amendment privilege, Rice moved to admit Pugh’s statements from the suppression hearing. The trial judge denied the motion, ruling that Pugh’s paper bag testimony was inadmissible hearsay because the issues presented at the suppression hearing werе not similar enough to the ones at trial to ensure that the State had a meaningful opportunity to cross-examine Pugh.
The jury ultimately convicted Rice of possession with intent to deliver heroin,
The Illinois appellate court held that Pugh’s statements at the suppression hearing were statements against his penal interest and should have been admitted as an exception to hearsay. Rice,
The Illinois high court disagreed, holding that the trial court’s exclusion of Pugh’s former testimony was proper under the state’s evidentiary rules and did not deny Rice a fair trial under the rule announced in Chambers. Rice,
Rice timely filed his application for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, tendering six separate grounds for relief. See Rice v. Bowen, No. 00 C 3997,
II. Discussion
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), a habeas petitioner like Rice whose claim was adjudicated on the merits in state court is not entitled to relief unless he can demonstrate that the state court’s decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or ... was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidencе presented in the State court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); Price v. Vincent, — U.S. ——, -,
Before we decide the reasonableness of the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in this case, we note that we will not decide whether Pugh’s suppression hearing testimony was in fаct reliable enough to be admitted into evidence at Rice’s trial. Our doing so would usurp the role of the state courts in determining the admissibility of evidence at trial under state law, which we are not permitted to do under AEDPA. See Krenke,
Chambers informs us that “where constitutional rights directly affecting the ascertainment of guilt are implicated, the hearsay rule may not be applied mechanistically to defeat the ends of justice.” Id.,
Our review of the record in this case leads us to conclude that the disagreement among the Illinois state courts concerning the reliability of Pugh’s statement, and the necessity for its admission at Rice’s trial
The Illinois courts’ dispute over the Chambers’ factors reveals that reasonable minds can differ as to the proper application of the law to the facts of Rice’s case. Ultimately, this is all that we need to recognize and defer to in deciding whether to grant Rice’s request for habeas relief. For even if the Illinois Supreme Court’s application of Chambers was not unassailable, as shown by the contrary inferences drawn by the Illinois appellate court using the same law and the same facts, by the same logic it also was not unreasonable. Chambers instructs courts to avoid mechanically applying evidentiary rules wherе such application would result in the exclusion of critical evidence and the violation of a criminal defendant’s due process rights. We cannot conclude that the Illinois Supreme Court unreasonably applied this principle of law to its analysis of Pugh’s excluded hearsay testimony and the impact of the excluded testimony on Rice’s constitutional right to a fair trial.
III. Conclusion
Thе Illinois Supreme Court’s decision upholding the trial court’s exclusion of certain hearsay testimony from Rice’s trial did not involve an unreasonable application of Chambers v. Mississippi and therefore does not justify habeas relief in federal court. The district court’s denial of Rice’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is AFFIRMED.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The U.S. Supreme Court held in Chambers v. Mississippi,
A police officer testified that he saw Kevin Rice hand Raymond Pugh a bag later discovered to contain heroin. On the basis of this testimony — and nothing else — Rice was convicted in an Illinois state court of possession of an illegal drug and sentenced to a long term in prison. At a pretrial hearing on his motion to suppress the evidence consisting of the heroin, Pugh testified that Rice had not handed him the bag; that he had had it on his person for hours. At trial, Rice wanted to call Pugh as a witness; but Pugh, invoking his right not to be compelled to incriminate himself, refused to testify. So Rice sought to introduce in evidence the part of the transcript of the suppression hearing that recorded Pugh’s testimony, testimony that if believed would exonerate Rice of the charge of possession. This was refused. The state supreme court’s reasons for upholding the refusal were that Pugh’s testimony was not corroborated and that thе state had not had an opportunity to cross-examine him fully at the suppression hearing. People v. Rice,
When as in this case a person who has evidence to offer is not available to testify, testimony that he gave in another proceeding is admissible if the opposing party, in this case the state, “had an opportunity and similar motive to develop the testimony by direct, cross, or redirect examination” in that proceeding. Fed.R.Evid. 804(b)(1). I am quoting from the Federal Rules of Evidence and they of course do not govern trials in state courts, but the formulation is standard and Illinois law (though common law rather than codified) is essentially the same. See People v. Rice, supra,
This is one of the solidest exceptions to the hearsay rule, see Ohio v. Roberts,
Had Pugh’s testimony at the suppression hearing been believed, the motion to suppress the drug evidence would have been granted. The only evidence of prоbable cause to seize the drugs was the testimony of the police officer who claimed to have seen Pugh hand them to Rice, and his testimony would have been totally discredited had Pugh been believed. So the state had every incentive to cross-examine Pugh about his relations with Rice and any other circumstance that might make him less credible. And not only the incentive, but the right. As remarked in People v. Rice, under Illinois law cross-examination even at a preliminary hearing to determine probable cause for a search or seizure is not limited to the scope of the direct examination but includes “such further interrogation as necessary to show interest, bias, prejudice, or motive of the witness, to the extent that these factors are relevant to the question of рrobable cause.”
It is not as if the Illinois court had found that the prosecutor at the suppression hearing in fact lacked an incentive to cross-examine Pugh fully. Rather, the court automatically equated a difference in issues to a difference in incentives to cross-examine. Here is the key passagе in the opinion: “[T]he question presented at codefendant’s suppression hearing dealt with whether Officer Drozd saw codefend-ant [i.e., Pugh] tuck a brown paper bag into his pants after defendant’s car was stopped, giving the officer probable cause to search codefendant. The focus of the cross-examination of codefendant at the suppressiоn hearing therefore was the conduct of codefendant just prior to the search, his self-interest in testifying falsely at the suppression hearing, and the issues presented by the motion to suppress. At trial however, the State’s focus would be on the guilt or innocence of defendant — a much different issue than that presented at the suppression hearing- — -and any motive codefendаnt might have in making exculpatory statements on behalf of defendant.” Id. at 1086,
The court based the exclusion of rеliable evidence essential to give a criminal defendant a crack at acquittal on an irrational ground, the “different issues” ground that as I have just explained was irrelevant to the pertinence and reliability of Pugh’s evidence. Because the state supreme court’s application of Chambers was unreasonable and the error not a harmless one, as in the otherwise rather similar case of People v. Hawthorne,
