On July 31, 1986, a Ouachita Parish, Louisiana grand jury indicted Petitioner Kenneth Magouirk for the first degree murder of Katherine Thomas. In October 1986, the government amended the indictment to charge Magouirk with second degree murder. At Magouirk’s first trial, in 1987, the jury was also instructed on lesser included offenses. The jury found Mago-uirk guilty of manslaughter, and in September 1987 Magouirk was sentenced to serve 21 years at hard labor. In October 1995, he filed a petition for habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the Western District of Louisiana, challenging his conviction. This petition was denied, and he appeals.
This case arises out of events that occurred on the evening of Good Friday, 1986. Katherine Thomas was abducted from her home, killed and thrown into the Ouachita River.
See State v. Magouirk,
About one year prior to trial, Magouirk confessed to his jail cellmate, Alfred Dur-byn, that he was responsible for Thomas’ murder. Durbyn reported the confession, and his lawyer arranged for him to make a recorded statement to the sheriff. Dur-byn’s statement related that Magouirk told Durbyn that he had taken Thomas from her home, forced her to perform oral sex, and then killed her. Durbyn’s statement also asserted that Magouirk threatened to kill him if he revealed Magouirk’s confession. Magouirk later moved to suppress this statement.
In October 1986, the trial court held a hearing on Magouirk’s motion to perpetuate testimony. Magouirk called Durbyn, who repeated the details of Magouirk’s confession. Magouirk’s counsel claimed surprise and requested permission to treat Durbyn as a hostile witness. The state argued that there was no surprise because the content of Durbyn’s testimony had been disclosed in discovery. The court denied Magouirk’s request to treat Durbyn as a hostile witness.
Magouirk’s trial was scheduled to begin on June 15, 1987. In early June, Mago-uirk and Durbyn engaged in a brief altercation. As Durbyn was being transferred from the jail to testify, he informed the district attorney’s investigator that he had decided not to testify. When he took the stand, he testified that his earlier statements at the hearing to perpetuate testimony were not true; he then asserted his Fifth Amendment rights and refused to testify further. The trial court informed him that the Fifth Amendment did not protect him in this situation, ordered him to testify, and ultimately held him in contempt.
*552 The government then moved to have Durbyn declared “unavailable” so that his testimony at the perpetuation hearing could be introduced. Magouirk objected, arguing that he had no opportunity to cross-examine Durbyn in the earlier hearing, and that admission of the testimony would violate his Sixth Amendment right to confront and cross-examine witnesses. The court allowed Durbyn’s prior recorded testimony to be played for the jury. Ma-gouirk attempted to call Durbyn as a hostile witness later in the trial, but the trial court refused. Magouirk was convicted of manslaughter.
He appealed, and the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit found that the admission of Durbyn’s prior testimony violated Magouirk’s Confrontation Clause rights, and remanded the ease for a new trial. On a petition for rehearing, the state argued for the first time that Mago-uirk had waived his right to confrontation through his own misconduct. The Court of Appeal remanded the case for a hearing on the issue whether the government knew or should have known of the facts that gave rise to Durbyn’s refusal to testify, and, if not, whether Magouirk’s alleged misconduct constituted a waiver. The trial court found that Magouirk had waived his right to cross-examine the witness. The Court of Appeal then affirmed the conviction and sentence.
Years later, Magouirk filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which was denied. On June 18, 1998, we affirmed in part, vacated in part and remanded the habeas case on the issues: 1) whether the state waived its right to argue that Magouirk waived his Confrontation Clause rights; 2) whether Magouirk waived his Confrontation Clause rights; and 3) whether there was insufficient evidence to convict Mago-uirk of manslaughter.
Magouirk v. Phillips,
Magouirk filed a notice of appeal and a motion requesting a certificate of appeala-bility, and the district court denied the certificate of appealability. This court granted Magouirk a certificate of probable cause in November 1999. 1
In this appeal, Magouirk raises three claims: 1) that the State waived its right to argue that Magouirk had forfeited his Confrontation Clause rights; 2) that the district court erred in finding that the state had proven that Magouirk waived his Confrontation Clause rights; and 3) that the district court erred in finding that there was sufficient evidence to support Magouirk’s conviction.
Because Magouirk filed his petition prior to the enactment of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), the standards of review to be applied are those that existed prior to the enactment of the statute. Under pre-AEDPA law, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) required federal courts in habeas corpus proceedings to accord a presumption of correctness to state court findings of fact, while state court determinations of law were to be reviewed
de novo. See Johnson v. Puckett,
I.
Magouirk first argues that the prosecution waived its right to argue that he forfeited his Confrontation Clause rights because the prosecution did not lay
*553
a proper foundation to show waiver at trial. As we discuss below, in order to have Durbyn’s testimony admitted at trial, the government had to show 1) that Dur-byn was unavailable and 2) that his testimony bears adequate indicia of reliability. Magouirk argues that the only reason the prosecution failed to do this at trial is that the prosecutor did not know that the right to confrontation could be waived by misconduct. As we noted in deciding Mago-uirk’s first appeal to this court, “[w]hether Magouirk waived his right to confront Durbyn is a federal question of constitutional dimension. Whether the state waived its right to raise Magouirk’s waiver by failing to assert the argument at trial is a matter of state law.”
Magouirk v. Phillips,
II.
It is clear to us that Magouirk’s Confrontation Clause rights were violated. The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in part that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” The Louisiana Court of Appeal unequivocally found that the opportunity to cross-examine Durbyn was thwarted: “The record reveals that every attempt by defense counsel to cross-examine Mr. Durbyn was thwarted by the prosecution’s objections which were sustained by the trial court.”
State v. Magouirk,
Durbyn’s testimony could have been admissible if it fell within a firmly rooted hearsay exception. This is because such statements “are so trustworthy that adversarial testing would add little to their reliability.”
Idaho v. Wright,
In cases in which the prior testimony of a now-unavailable witness has been deemed admissible, the defendant has usually had the opportunity to cross-examine the witness at the previous hearing. For example, in
Ohio v. Roberts,
the Supreme Court concluded that defense counsel had had the opportunity to conduct “the equivalent of significant cross-examination” at a preliminary examination.
Another issue impacts on whether a defendant’s confrontation rights have been violated: whether the declarant’s truthfulness is clear from surrounding circumstances or additional evidence. See Fed.R.Evid. 807 (residual exception to the hearsay rule). In Idaho v. Wright, the Supreme Court held:
[I]f the declarant’s truthfulness is so clear from the surrounding circumstances that the test of cross-examination would be of marginal utility, then the hearsay rule does not bar admission of the statement at trial.
It is apparent that Magouirk’s Confrontation Clause rights were violated. However, Magouirk’s claim fails because he waived his right to assert his rights under the Confrontation Clause.
III.
A defendant’s rights under the Confrontation Clause may be forfeited by his own misconduct.
See Illinois v. Allen,
The analysis that led us to find the Thevis testimony admissible extends to this case. Even if Durbyn was not effectively cross-examined at the preliminary hearing, Magouirk’s actions should not be rewarded. Although in Thevis the defendant had the potential witness murdered, such a drastic approach to securing unavailability is a flagrant example of why the waiver principle must apply. Here, the procurement of unavailability still constituted an intelligent and knowing waiver. It is not so much the severity of the behavior, but rather the intent underlying it and its effectiveness, that constitutes a waiver.
The Eighth Circuit came to the same conclusion in
United States v. Carlson,
in
*555
which the court approved admission of the hearsay testimony because the defendant had intimidated the witness into not testifying — despite the fact that the defendant was unable to cross-examine the witness at any time.
Other circuits have found that testimony in such circumstances is admissible, even if the witness was not cross-examined at all. In
United States v. Aguiar,
the Second Circuit encountered a witness who declined to testify because of a threatening letter he had received from the defendant.
See
What this court is left to determine, then, is whether the district court erred in finding that there is a preponderance of the evidence
2
that 1) Magouirk procured Durbyn’s unavailability and 2) he did so for the purpose of preventing him from testifying.
See Thevis,
IV.
The final basis for this appeal is Mago-uirk’s argument that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction. Mago-uirk’s argument here is two-pronged: first, that there was insufficient evidence to support the conclusion that Thomas’ death was a homicide, not an accident; and sec *556 ond, that Magouirk was the assailant. The first prong is without merit. The second is governed by whether Durbyn’s testimony was admissible.
Magouirk’s argument here is premised on a determination that Durbyn’s testimony was inadmissible. He makes no argument that, with Durbyn’s testimony, there was insufficient evidence to convict. Because we find that Durbyn’s recorded testimony was admissible, there is no need for us to address this issue in the form presented by Magouirk. 3
Because Magouirk does not raise a sufficiency of the evidence claim that encompasses all the evidence — including Dur-byn’s testimony — we need not address whether the other evidence alone was sufficient to support a conviction.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
Notes
. A certificate of probable cause, rather than a certificate of appealability, was warranted in this case because that is what is required for § 2254 petitions filed before April 24, 1996, the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act.
See Green v. Johnson,
. This court has already held that a preponderance of the evidence standard applies to this finding, and that is the law of the case.
Magouirk v. Phillips,
. Even if we had found that Durbyn’s testimony was erroneously admitted at trial, we would still not have to decide whether there was sufficient evidence to convict. We would simply reverse and remand for retrial. This court has held that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not prohibit retrial of a defendant following reversal of his conviction for error in the admission of evidence even if the evidence, sans the inadmissible evidence, was insufficient to sustain the defendant's conviction.
See United States v. Sarmiento-Perez,
