Twenty-three years ago, Kenny Miller went to visit his 21-year-old brother, Tommy, who lived with his pregnant 19-year-old wife, Kimberly, in a trailer near Koko-mo, Indiana. When he arrived, he discovered a gruesome scene: Tommy and Kimberly had been shot to death, Tommy with six bullets and Kimberly with three. Marvin Bieghler was eventually tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for the two murders in 1983. His convictions and death sentence were upheld by the Indiana Supreme Court, both on direct appeal 2 years later,
Bieghler v. Indiana,
First, the senseless facts as determined by the state courts, which we accept as true on this collateral review. Bieghler was a major drug supplier in Kokomo. He obtained his drugs in Florida and had others, including Tommy Miller, distribute them in the Kokomo area. Several witnesses, including a Bieghler bodyguard named Harold “Scotty” Brook, testified that prior to the murders, someone within Bieghler’s drug-dealing operation gave information to the police which led to the arrest of a distributor and the confiscation of some dope. An incensed Bieghler declared repeatedly that when he found out who blew the whistle, he would “blow away” the informant. Eventually, Bieghler began to suspect that Tommy Miller was the snitch: he told associates that he was going to get him.
A major portion of the State’s case rested on the testimony of Brook, who was not prosecuted for his role in the events. According to that testimony, Bieghler and Brook spent the day of the murders drinking beer and getting high on marijuana. During the evening, Bieghler spoke of getting Tommy Miller. Around 10:30 or 11:00 p.m. they left a tavern and drove to Tommy’s trailer. Bieghler got out of the car and went inside carrying an automatic pistol. Brook followed and saw Bieghler pointing the weapon into a room. Biegh-ler and Brook then ran back to the car and drove away. Later that night, a distraught Bieghler tearfully announced that he was leaving for Florida. Tommy’s and Kimberly’s bullet-ridden bodies were discovered the next morning. Police learned that nine shell casings found at the murder scene matched casings from a remote rural location where Bieghler fired his pistol during target practice. At trial, an expert testified that the two sets of casings were fired from the same gun.
Bieghler contends that the prosecution violated his due process rights by exploiting, at trial, his failure to talk to the police after his arrest. He also claims that he was denied effective assistance of counsel. Because Bieghler’s petition was filed after April 24, 1996, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AED-PA) governs our analysis. Under the AEDPA, a federal court may not grant a writ unless a final state court decision in the case was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), or was “based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding,”
id.
§ 2254(d)(2). A state court decision is “contrary to” established Supreme Court precedent when the state court reaches a legal conclusion opposite to that of the Court or decides a case differently than the Court despite “materially indistinguishable facts.”
Williams v. Taylor,
According to Bieghler, the prosecution, during its cross-examination of him and again during closing argument, exploited the fact that, after being advised of his
Miranda
rights, he elected to remain silent and not give arresting officers the version of the night’s events he related on the witness stand. If so, this was a constitutionally impermissible tactic under
Doyle v. Ohio,
Bieghler cites several references by the prosecutor to his post-arrest, post-Miranda-warning silence. His trial counsel, however, did not object to these references and therefore forfeited subsequent challenges to them.
E.g., United States v. Jacques,
At trial, Bieghler took the stand and denied complicity in the murders. He testified about being at other places with other people when the Millers were killed. On this appeal, he complains about several questions put to him by the state’s attorney during cross-examination. The prosecutor asked: “[P]rior to the beginning of this trial, did you ever tell the story that you’ve told today to anyone besides your attorneys?”, “Were you ever given any opportunity to tell the story to anyone?”, and “Did you give it?” In response to the last question, Bieghler answered, “No, I exercised my Miranda rights.” The prosecutor then asked three questions concerning Bieghler’s understanding of his Miranda rights before moving on to another subject. It is the State’s contention that no reference was made to Bieghler’s silence. He was merely fairly cross-examined, says the State, about his direct testimony for the purpose of testing his credibility as a witness.
In an argument that’s a little hard to follow, Bieghler contends that this snippet from the prosecutor’s closing remarks to the jury ran afoul of the rule announced in Doyle:
Kenny Cockrell’s the one that took the Fifth. Kenny Cockrell’s the one that wouldn’t answer when I asked if he was doing something to Bobby Nutt because a deal went bad. He took the Fifth. Didn’t want to be discriminated against. I’m growing to hate that train. As a matter of fact, that train came by during my examination of the Defendant. I don’t know, maybe it was my imagination, maybe I wanted to see it, but did you see him, about right before the train came by started to get, his voice was a little different about the time when he left Dusty’s? You can talk about that. Maybe I only saw it because I wanted to.
A little later, Bieghler sees error in this statement from the prosecutor’s closing argument:
The Defendant denies that he was there. And even though it’s not testimony, looking through it in the opening statement, [Defense Counsel] Mr. Scruggs said that he, the Defendant went there that night to Bobby Nutt’s. Now the only person that’s important to me is, I was looking, I was listening, waiting to hear so that I would know what the Defendant was going to say. You know, I didn’t hear him until he sat up here, and you heard him just like I did. He had everything I had but I could never talk to him. I couldn’t use prior incon *705 sistent statements to impeach him because I didn’t have any. He never said anything ....
The State contends that the prosecutor’s statements in closing argument were meant to show that Bieghler had an opportunity to hear the State’s evidence, and make an assessment of it, before he elected to take the stand and give his testimony. It was fair game, the State says, to argue that it gathered and presented its evidence without knowing what Bieghler’s version of the events would be until he revealed it during the trial.
We do not believe that the questions and closing argument comments ran afoul of Doyle. In none did the prosecutor equate Bieghler’s silence with guilt, the evil condemned in Doyle as undermining the privilege against self-incrimination. The prosecutor, in closing argument, did say that Bieghler “never said anything ... ”, which runs close to the Doyle line, but we don’t think he crossed it, and we emphasize there was no explicit invitation for the jury to infer guilt from Bieghler’s decision to stay quiet after he was arrested; at best, any reference was very indirect.
Indeed, the prosecution’s conduct in this case was a far cry from what transpired in Doyle, which featured repeated and blatant exploitation of the defendants’ post-arrest silence. In that case, Jefferson Doyle and Richard Wood were arrested together and charged with selling marijuana to an informant named William Bonnell. Bonnell had arranged to buy 10 pounds from the defendants for $1,750, but narcotics agents could only muster $1,320. Under the watchful eye of four agents, Bon-nell met Doyle and Wood in a parking lot and completed the transaction. Minutes later, the two discovered that they had been shorted and began circling the neighborhood looking for Bonnell. Agent Kenneth Beamer promptly arrived at the scene, arrested Doyle and Wood, and gave them Miranda warnings. Police then found $1,320 in the car.
Both defendants said for the first time at trial that Bonnell had framed them and that they were buyers, not sellers. Each testified that they originally agreed to buy 10 pounds of marijuana from Bonnell but decided at the last minute to buy a lesser amount. When they informed Bonnell of the change of heart, Bonnell grew angry, threw $1,320 into their car, and left the parking lot with the 10 pounds of marijuana in hand. Perplexed, Doyle and Wood went looking for Bonnell to find out why he had thrown the money into the car. During cross-examination, the prosecution asked them why they had not told the frame-up story right away to Agent Beam-er. The prosecution asked questions like “I assume you told [Beamer] all about what happened to you?”; “[i]f that is all you had to do with this and you are innocent, when Mr. Beamer arrived at the scene why didn’t you tell him?”; “[b]ut in any event you didn’t bother to tell Mr. Beamer anything about this?”; “[tjhat’s why you told the police department and Kenneth Beamer when they arrived ... about your innocence?”; “[y]ou said nothing at all about how you had been set up?”; and “[b]ut you didn’t protest your innocence at that time?” The Court concluded that these questions were attempts to use the defendants’ silence against them, which deprived them of due process in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Unlike the questions asked in Doyle, the prosecution here did not use Bieghler’s silence against him.
The prosecution’s questions and statements in this case were also far less egregious than those in other cases where
Doyle
violations were found to have occurred. For instance, in
Lieberman v. Washington,
Similarly, in
Feela v. Israel,
Nor is this case anything like
United States ex rel. Allen v. Franzen,
Now, when by the way, did the defendant first say self-defense? Did he say this to officer Terry Melloy, I just shot my wife, I had to do it, she came at me with a knife in the kitchen! Did he say that? Did he say, she was going into her purse, I thought she had a gun, I had to shoot her! Or did he even say, I shot my wife in self-defense. No, none of these.
* * * * * %
After he shot his wife five times and stood over her and sent the hammer home on an empty cylinder, did he then say, oh my God, I had to do it. I thought she was going for a gun. No, what he said was, she’s dead now. The defendant could not say self-defense because there was no self-defense. The defendant is a cold blooded, brutal murderer.
The prosecutor’s comments and questions in our case were nothing like this diatribe. 1
*707
In contrast to
Doyle
and these other cases, the prosecution here did not argue that Bieghler’s initial silence undermined the reliability of his trial testimony nor at any point did it use his silence as evidence of guilt. As we explained in
Splunge v. Parke,
Moreover, even if we were moved to conclude that a
Doyle
violation occurred, we would have to find that it was harmless because it did not have a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Bieghler’s remaining arguments center on the performances of his lawyers. He claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel because his lawyers failed to: (1) object to evidence of his past drug usage; (2) present mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of his trial; and (3) present alibi evidence. To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Bieghler has to show two things. First, he must demonstrate that his lawyers performed deficiently, i.e., that their mistakes were so serious that they deprived him of “counsel” within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment. Second, he must show prejudice.
See Strickland v. Washington,
The Indiana Supreme Court’s rejection of Bieghler’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel under
Strickland,
was eminently reasonable.
3
Although Bieghler’s lawyers did not object to evidence of his past drug use, they held back for strategic reasons. One of Bieghler’s lawyers testified that they decided to pursue a strategy of “candor and sincerity” in order to bolster Bieghler’s credibility in the eyes of the jury, a reasonable tactical decision that courts will not second-guess.
See id.
at 689,
For all these reasons, the judgment of the district court denying Bieghler’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is Affirmed.
Notes
. Our case is also less egregious than those in which alleged
Doyle
violations occurred after the defendant opened the door to government questioning by commenting on his own post-arrest behavior. In these cases, the prosecution went beyond impeaching the defendant’s testimony regarding his post-arrest conduct, which is proper, and instead argued that the defendant’s silence was inconsistent with his claim of innocence.
See United States v. Gant,
. Bieghler also cites a comment by the prosecutor that the motive for remaining silent is to avoid being incriminated. But this comment was made in the context of discussing the testimony of another witness, not Bieghler. See
Hough v. Anderson,
. Bieghler contends that the Indiana Supreme Court applied the wrong legal standard in evaluating his claims, but that is folly. Indeed, the language cited by Bieghler from the state court’s adjudication comes directly from Strickland.
