Louisiana Attorney General James D. Caldwell (“the State”) appeals the district court’s order granting the habeas corpus petition filed by Defendant-Appellee Clint Martinez (“Martinez”). Martinez’s first murder trial ended in a declaration of mistrial. When the State sought to retry him оn the murder charge, Martinez moved to prevent the trial under the doctrine of Double Jeopardy. His motion was granted, but reversed on appeal. Martinez then filed for federal habeas and the State stayed Martinez’s prosecution pending the disposition of his federal petition. For the reasons discussed below, we VACATE the district court’s order and DENY Martinez’s habeas petition.
I
In 2002, the State tried Martinez for second-degree murder in a three-week trial that included testimony from twelve experts and forty other witnesses, including Martinez. After three hours of deliberations, the jury summoned the state trial judge, Judge James J. Best (“Judge Best”), to the jury room. After receiving no objections from counsel, Judge Best entered the jury room, jurors immediately informed him they could not reach a verdict, and jurors stated that thе vote was deadlocked at nine to three in favor of acquittal. 1 Judge Best did not elicit, and may have even tried to prevent, this disclosure. When Judge Best returned to the courtroom, he notified both parties that the jury was deadlocked, and stated that the votе stood at nine to three. Judge Best did not, however, tell the parties the direction of the vote. Once Judge Best disclosed the nine to three vote, counsel and the judge, via a series of off the record sidebar conferences, discussed the possibility of a mistrial. Neither party formally moved for a mistrial, but the parties apparently agreed that the court should poll the jury and enter a mistrial if the jury was deadlocked. Judge Best summoned the jury back into the courtroom. In response to Judge Best’s inquiries, the foreperson stated that the jury was deadlocked and that additional time would not help the jury reach a verdict. Judge Best asked both parties whether they had objections to the declaration of a mistrial; neither *241 party objected and Judge Best declared a mistrial. Mоments after the day’s proceedings ended, one of Martinez’s attorneys learned that Judge Best had, in fact, known the direction of the jury’s vote when the parties had discussed a mistrial with the judge.
When Martinez learned that the State intended to retry him on the murder charge, hе moved to quash the indictment on the ground that a second trial would subject him to double jeopardy. The Louisiana Supreme Court assigned Judge Jerome M. Winsberg (“Judge Winsberg”) as judge ad hoc to preside over the hearing on the motion. Following a two day evidentiary hearing, Judge Winsberg concluded that Judge Best had acted “improperly” in failing to disclose to counsel the full details of his interaction with the jury and that by failing to provide the direction of the jury’s vote, Judge Best had “inadvertently goaded [the defense] to ask for the mistrial.”
State v. Martinez,
05-466, p. 8 (La.App. 1 Cir. 7/26/06);
After exhausting his remedies in the Louisiana courts, Martinez sought habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. 2 A federal magistrate judge considered the habeas petition, applied a de novo standard of review, and determined that Martinez had not satisfied the “intentional goading” standard articulated in Kennedy. The magistrate recommended that Martinez’s habeas petition be dismissed with prejudice and concluded a retrial of Martinez would not violate his Fifth Amendment rights. The parties objected tо the magistrate’s Report and Recommendation and the district court considered the objections. The district court, like the magistrate, reviewed Martinez’s habeas petition under a de novo standard. But the district court disagreed with the magistrate’s evaluation оf the trial proceedings and concluded that Judge Best had intentionally goaded Martinez into consenting to a mistrial. Based on this conclusion, the district court granted Martinez’s habeas petition. Dissatisfied with the district court’s ruling, the State appealed.
II
Before wе consider whether the district court correctly granted Martinez’s petition, we must evaluate whether that court erred by reviewing Martinez’s § 2241 petition de novo. The State argues that we should review § 2241 petitions with the same deference that we give habeas cоrpus petitions filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. This issue presents a question of first impression for our circuit.
For habeas petitions filed under § 2254, we must presume that a state court correctly determined questions of fact and we must give deference “to the state court’s decision unless it ‘wаs based
*242
on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.’”
Hill v. Johnson,
As a pretrial detainee, however, Martinez’s habeas petition is governed by § 2241. Section 2241 does not contain a standard of review, but the First, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits have all held that § 2254(d) deference never applies to habeas petitions brought by pretrial detainees under § 2241.
See Walck v. Edmondson,
The State asks us to break from these other circuits, arguing that the rationale for differentiating between § 2241 and § 2254(d) for deference purposes ceases once a state court has fully adjudicated “precisely the same claim nоw brought in federal” court. This argument is unavailing. The plain language of the statutes clearly demonstrates that § 2254 is textually distinct from § 2241: one explicitly mandates deference, the other does not. In addition, Congress enacted AEDPA, as it related to habeas reform, to “сurb the abuse of the statutory writ of habeas corpus,” and to “address problems of unnecessary delay.”
Caldwell v. Dretke,
Ill
The State argues that the district court erred by concluding that under Kennedy, Judge Best intentionally goаded the defense into requesting a mistrial. We agree.
The Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Clause protects a criminal defen
*243
dant from repeated prosecutions for the same offense. Under that clause, a defendant has the right “to have his trial completed by a particular tribunal.”
Wade v. Hunter,
When the defense moves for, or consents to, a mistrial, the Double Jeopardy Clause may bаr retrial if the government “intended to goad the defendant” into requesting a mistrial.
See United States v. Wharton,
In this case, we do not need to decide whether Judge Best should have notified the parties of the direction of the jury’s verdict. This is because the critical inquiry is what Judge Best intended to accomplish by intentionally withholding the direction of the jury’s vote. The district court concluded that Judge Best’s intent was illustrated by his “admission that he withheld the direction [of the jury vote] because he thought that if he revealed it the defense would not request a mistrial.”
Martinez v. Caldwell,
No. 08-617,
The district court concluded that the specific facts of what trаnspired at the sidebar conferences were “irrelevant; what matters is that Judge Best withheld information and the defense agreed to a mistrial.” This analysis, however, is erroneous. The gravamen of this case are the sidebar conferences. The fact that Judge Best withheld information is secondary to
why
he withheld that information. In answering that question, the district court’s analysis never moved beyond the Judge Best’s single-word “admission.” That “admission” came summarily near the end of a lengthy cross-examination in which Judge Best was, at times, inarticulate. In light of Judge Best’s entire testimony, his answer to this lone question appears to be a rote “yes,” not an admission of a bad faith conduct or an intent “to harass or prejudice” the defendant.
Dinitz,
IV
For the reasons discussed above, we VACATE the district court’s order and we DENY Martinez’s petition for habeas relief. 4
Notes
. In Louisiana, ten votes are required for a verdict on a second degree murder charge.
. The State noticed its intent to retry Martinez, but agreed not to proceed with prosecution pending disposition of Martinez's federal habeas petition.
. Q: "And the reason for that was that you knew or felt that if the defense had found out the vote was nine to three not guilty they would not have moved for a mistrial?”
A: "Yes.”
. We GRANT the Appellee’s Motion to File a Sur-Reply Brief.
