Twenty years ago, when he was seventeen years old, Lorenzo Stone and four other men attempted to rob a bar in Gary, Indiana. During the abortive robbery, Stone shot and killed a bar patron. The robbers fled. Stone was eventually arrested and confessed to participating in the robbery. The State of Indiana charged Stone with felony murder. Despite his confession, Stone pleaded not guilty and stood trial. He was convicted and sentenced to prison for life. The Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the conviction. Stone thereafter pursued posteonvietion relief, first through the state courts and then through this petition to the federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus. Stone alleges he received ineffective assistance of counsel, both at trial and on appeal. We affirm the district court’s denial of the writ.
I.
A. The Crime 1
On the night of February 25, 1976, Stone and four confederates, Elliot James, Rozelle Barber, Ira “Bobo” Rogers, and “Johnny Goon” Williams, set out to rob Mona’s Lounge, a bar in Gary, Indiana. While one stood lookout, the other four entered the bar and announced a holdup, demanding that the patrons get to the floor. At least two of the robbers were armed. One of the bar patrons was also armed and a firelight ensued in which the patron was mortally wounded, although not before he shot and wounded one of the robbers. The robbers then fled.
B. The Investigation
The police obtained from the bar’s patrons general descriptions of the robbers and learned that at least one of the robbers had been shot. Checking at area hospitals, the police discovered that Rogers had been treated for a gunshot wound. That and the descriptions of witnesses confirmed Rogers’ participation in the attempted robbery. The police also determined that Rogers had a criminal record and they were able to identify his known associates. Armed with this information, the police detained Stone along with Rogers’ other associates for questioning. Stone provided a statement in which he claimed only to have been present at Mona’s Lounge. He later confessed to police that he took part in the robbery.
At the time he was arrested, Stone was seventeen. However he told the police he was nineteen. The police confirmed his age against at least one prior arrest report. Believing Stone was an adult, the police questioned him and permitted him to sign a
Miranda
waiver without notifying his parents as required by Indiana law. Prior to the grand jury hearing, the police learned Stone had lied about his age so he would be placed
Following the robbery, John Means, an eyewitness to the robbery, informed the police that he had particularly noticed one of the robbers who was carrying a gun. However, Means was unable to pick Stone’s picture out of a photo array. But at a lineup Means was able to identify Stone. He later again identified Stone at trial.
C. The Trial
The five robbers were jointly indicted. James entered a plea agreement wherein he agreed to testify against the others. The remaining four, including Stone, were tried together. As part of its proof against Stone, the state introduced Stone’s confession, which had references to his confederates redacted. As part of its proof against Williams, Williams’ confession was introduced, likewise redacted to exclude the names of his confederates.
When the state called James to testify against Stone and Williams, he reneged on his plea agreement and refused to implicate his coconspirators as he had done in his plea statement. As a result, the court declared James a hostile witness and permitted the state to cross-examine him. The state thereafter impeached James by introducing his earlier statement in which he had described the botched robbery and the roles the various defendants had played in the robbery. Of particular concern to Stone was James’ statement that as they fled the scene following the firelight, Stone yelled repeatedly: “I think I killed him. I think I killed him.” Pursuant to Indiana rules of evidence, the jury was permitted to consider James’ earlier statement not only for impeachment purposes, but also as substantive evidence against Stone. The jury convicted Stone of felony murder on October 16, 1976, and the court sentenced him to prison for life.
D. Post-Conviction
Stone appealed his conviction to the Indiana State Supreme Court, which considered several allegations of pretrial and trial error in his prosecution. In
Stone v. State,
Having lost on direct appeal, Stone collaterally attacked his conviction in state court, alleging he had received ineffective assistance of counsel.
2
The Indiana Supreme Court eventually rejected Stone’s claims in
Stone v. State,
The court also repudiated Stone’s argument that his trial counsel had been ineffective for failing to challenge the legality of his arrest. The court ruled that the evidence in the record supported the decision of the police to bring in the known associates of Williams after Williams was identified as one of the robbers.
The court further rejected Stone’s assertion that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the lineup identification wherein witness Means identified Stone. Although Stone was wearing the same fur-trimmed orange jacket at the lineup that he apparently wore during the abortive robbery and murder, the court distinguished the cases cited by Stone and held that because
In addition to alleging the above errors attributable to ineffective assistance of trial counsel, Stone alleged his appellate counsel afforded ineffective assistance of counsel for failure to raise the same errors on appeal. The supreme court rejected this claim on the same grounds that it rejected the claims on the basis of the trial record. Finally, just to cover all bases, Stone alleged that his post-conviction counsel below had also been ineffective. The supreme court rejected this claim as well.
E. Petition for Habeas Corpus
Armed with new counsel, Stone moved on to federal court to pursue the same claims rejected by the Indiana Supreme Court in his direct appeal and collateral attack. Stone also raised a number of new claims. The district court dismissed the new claims as procedurally defaulted because Stone failed to raise them in state court.
See Resnover v. Pearson,
II.
When considering a district court’s denial of a petition for writ of habeas corpus we review questions of law de novo,
Verdin v. O’Leary,
The long procedural history of this case generates several layers of analysis. Trial counsel challenged probable cause for arrest; however, appellate counsel failed to pursue the issue. Trial counsel preserved the issue of Stone’s confession, the introduction of Williams’ redacted confession, and the introduction of James’ statement, and appellate counsel pursued all three, albeit unsuccessfully. Neither trial nor appellate counsel raised the issue of Means’ identification, although the issue was raised on state collateral review as an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. To the extent issues are procedurally defaulted, petitioner relies on allegations of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel as the “cause” of the default, raising the question of whether there was “prejudice.”
McCleese v. United States,
A. Probable Cause for Stone’s Arrest
Stone alleges his trial and appellate counsel failed to adequately challenge his arrest, which he claims was without probable cause. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Stone v. Powell,
B. Stone’s Confession
Stone was seventeen when arrested. He lied about his age to the police, telling them he was nineteen so that he would be placed in the adult section of the jail where he could smoke. The police verified his age against prior arrest reports, not knowing that he had also lied about his age to the officers writing those reports.
4
Believing he was nineteen, the police did not call Stone’s parents before obtaining his
Miranda
waiver and confession. Indiana law, but not federal law, required such a call. Stone’s appellate counsel raised the issue on direct appeal and lost. The state supreme court rejected Stone’s claim that his confession was inadmissible because of his age and took the opportunity to narrow the holding of
Lewis v. State,
[W]here the police do not flaunt the rule of Lewis or seek to circumvent its requirements, but make a good faith and diligent effort to implement it in making the determination of the age of the suspect, and are frustrated in such effort by the misstatement of the suspect as to age, then and in that event, as a matter of state law, the requirements of Lewis will be deemed satisfied.
Stone v. State,
C. Admission of James’Statement
The state struck a plea agreement with Elliot James, one of Stone’s conspirators, in which James agreed to testify against his confederates. At trial James turned on the state and attempted to provide an alibi for Stone. James was declared a hostile witness and the state impeached him with the statement he provided the court at his change of plea hearing. In that statement James fingered Stone, describing how Stone confessed “I think I killed him” as they fled the bar. This would have been admissible as direct testimony against Stone had James testified. Under Indiana’s extant rules of evidence, the jury could consider the prior statement not only as impeachment but also as direct evidence of Stone’s guilt.
Patterson v. State,
D. Means’ Identification of Stone
Eyewitness John Means, who was a patron in the bar, described to police the distinctive orange-colored jacket Stone was wearing during the robbery. Apparently Stone was arrested wearing the same jacket and continued to wear the jacket at the police line-up where Means identified him. Stone’s counsel succeeded in preventing the prosecutor from introducing a photograph of the line-up at trial, but did not at trial or on direct appeal challenge Means’ identification of Stone. Means identified Stone at trial by walking over to him and placing his hand on Stone’s shoulder. Means testified that he was identifying Stone because he “knew what he looked like” and because he had recognized him “when I saw him again.” However Means also admitted that during the robbery it had been Stone’s jacket that stood out most in his mind. Stone did raise this issue in his post-conviction appeal for ineffective assistance. The state supreme court held that the failure to raise the issue was harmless due to Means’ in-court identification which was based solely on Stone’s facial appearance. Stone essentially challenges the credibility of Means’ identification, arguing it was infected by a suggestive line-up. Federal courts do not reevaluate the credibility of witnesses when conducting habeas review of state trials.
Chandler v. Richards,
E. Codefendant Williams’ Confession
At trial, the confessions of both Stone and his codefendant Williams were introduced in redacted form to comply with the requirements of
Bruton v. United States,
III.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Lorenzo Stone’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. The Supreme Court of Indiana has twice considered Stone's case.
Stone v. State,
. Stone also filed a premature federal petition for a writ of habeas corpus which was dismissed without prejudice, first by the district court in Stone-Bey v. Duckworth, No. S87-560 (N.D.Ind. November 6, 1987), and then on appeal by this court in Stone-Bey v. Duckworth, No. 87-2891 (7th Cir. April 4, 1988).
. The ''Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996." (Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214) was signed into law on April 24, 1996, while this case was pending on appeal. We need not determine to what extent the Act's amendments to federal habeas review govern cases pending when the Act became effective because we determine that even under the more expansive scope of review prior to the Act, Stone was not entitled to federal habeas corpus relief.
. Stone disputes the Indiana Supreme Court’s findings on this issue. While we view those findings as presumptively correct, we examine the record to determine if they are supported by the evidence. Stone’s argument that at the time of the state grand jury proceedings the police knew his real age does not undermine the court’s finding that at the time of Stone’s arrest the questioning officers believed him to be the age he stated.
.
Patterson
was overruled by the Indiana Supreme Court in
Modesitt v. State,
