Melvin Mikes, a California state prisoner, appeals the district court’s order dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Following a trial by jury, Mikes was convicted of murder in the first degree 1 and commission of an offense with the use of a deadly or dangerous weapon, and was sentenced to state prison for 25 years to life. The California Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment and the California Supreme Court denied Mikes’ petition for review without explanation or citation of authorities. Mikes contends on habeas review that the inculpatory evidence, which consisted exclusively of fingerprint evidence, was insufficient to support his conviction. We agree,
I. Facts
On March 10, 1980, Harold Hansen was found dead in the basement of his fix-it shop, with the pockets of his clothing turned inside out. The shop, which was located on the main floor of the building, had been burglarized. Near Hansen’s body, police investigators found three chrome posts — a three-foot post, a six-foot post, and a “turnstile” post — all of which constituted portions of a disassembled turnstile unit. 2 Hansen had purchased the turnstile (in assembled or disassеmbled form) at a hardware store’s going out-of-business sale, approximately four months prior to his death. 3 The investigators determined that the assailant used the three-foot post to murder Hansen.
The government’s case against Mikes rested exclusively upon the fact that his fingerprints were among those found on the posts that lay adjacent to the victim’s body. The officers lifted a total of 46 fingerprints from the area designated as the crime scene. Of the 16 fingerprints that were identifiable, the police determined that six belonged to Mikes and ten did not. Thirty were nоt sufficiently clear to permit identification of the source. In particular, the government introduced evidence that five “consecutive” prints were found on the three-foot post — the murder weapon. The prosecution’s expert testified *356 that he identified the first and fourth of the consecutive prints as Mikes’ right forefinger and right little finger, respectively. The remaining three prints on the murder weapon were unidentifiable. Three of fifteen prints found on the six-foot post, and one of two prints from the “turnstile” post belonged to Mikes. Other unidentifiable prints were аlso found on these posts. None of the prints taken from the fix-it shop area, where the police discovered a number of empty jewelry boxes strewn about, or from the jewelry boxes themselves, or from the stair rail leading to the basement, was identified as Mikes’. 4 In fact, none of the fingerprints found anywhere on the premises except on the posts was identified as Mikes’.
II. Standard of Review
We review
de novo
a district court’s decision to deny a petition for writ of habeas corpus.
Barker v. Estelle,
III. Analysis
The critical question presented by this case is whether the evidence of Mikes’ fingerprints on three posts, one of which was identified as the murder weapon, is sufficient
by itself
to allow a rational trier of fact to convict him of murder. The prosecution’s case rested exclusively on the theory that Mikes’ fingerprints were impressed on these objects
during the commission of the crime.
We have held that fingerprint evidence alone may under certain circumstances support a conviction.
United States v. Scott,
Here, the prosecution introduced no evidence placing the defendant at the scene of the crime — either on the day of the murder or on any other occasion. Nor did the prosecution find any items stolen from the deceased in Mikes’ possession. Nor, unlike
Scott,
the one case in which we upheld a conviction based on fingerprint evidence alone, did the defendant’s fingerprints appear on any recovered stolen property. Finally, none of the fingerprints found on any of the objects located in the areа actually burglarized, the fix-it shop itself, was identified as Mikes’. The
only
evidence that the prosecution introduced to tie Mikes to the murder, or the burglary, was his fingerprints found on several posts of a disassembled turnstile — one of which posts served as the murder weapon— bought by the decedent four months prior to his death, and kept in the basement. The issue in this case is whether that fingerprint evidence, standing alone, is sufficiently probative to allow a reasonable juror to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that Mikes committed the murder. While the government neеd not exclude all inferences or reasonable hypotheses consistent with innocence,
United States v. Miller,
The government argues that the posts were inaccessible to the petitioner because they were kept in Hansen’s basement, a location from which Hansen excluded the generаl public, and which Mikes did not have permission to enter. The government’s argument falls far short of showing the inaccessibility of the posts to Mikes. Mikes’ conviction cannot be upheld unless the record shows that the objects in question were inaccessible to him during the “relevant time.” The “relevant time” is defined as the time prior to the commission of the crime during which the defendant reasonably could have placed his fingerprints on the object in question and during which such prints might have remained on that object. We must examine, in each case, the circumstances surrounding the custody or location of the object, as well as its function, the accessibility of the *358 object to the defendant, and the extent to which the object was or could have been handled by others. As we consider whether the record is sufficient to warrant the inference that Mikes did not have access to the posts during the relevant period, our inquiry must center on the specific facts regarding these circumstances; in this connection, we must carefully examine both generally and specifically the nature and character of the fingerprint evidence at issue, particularly with respect to the question of durability.
While the prosecution did not offer any evidence regarding the age of the fingerprints found on the posts, the defense expert testified that fingerprints can last indefinitely. This is consistent with the testimony of government experts in other cases.
See, e.g., United States v. Corso,
The testimony in the record establishes that Mikes’ fingerprints were found on “ordinary” turnstile posts — the type often used in public places, such as a grocery or other commercial store. Immediately prior to Hansen’s purchase, the posts were offered for sale in a hardware store as part of its going-out-of-business sale. For some indeterminate period prior to the stоre’s offering them for sale, the posts presumably were used for their ordinary purpose and were accessible to the general public, as parts of an operating turnstile unit. The evidence in the record is wholly insuffi- *359 eient to preclude the reasonable possibility that Mikes’ fingerprints were placed on the posts during the period prior to Hansen’s acquisition of them. To the contrary, it establishes that the posts were fully accessible to the general public, including Mikes, during that period and that Mikes’ fingerprints could well have been placed on the posts prior to Hansen’s purchase of them. Specifically, Mikes could have handled the posts while they were in the hardware store, either in their assembled or disassembled form. Under the evidence presented, the fingerprints in question could have been placed on the posts by a person who disassembled the turnstile, a person who sold the turnstile to Hansen, or any person who considered buying the turnstile prior to Hansen’s acquisition. It is also possible, though less likely, that the fingerprints could have been impressed on the posts on the last ocсasion on which the turnstile was in general use, either in the hardware store or elsewhere. 9
In order to support a finding that Mikes is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, the record must demonstrate that he in fact touched the posts at the time the crime was committed and not at some earlier point. Under our judicial system, the defendant has no duty to explain the presence of his fingerprints.
Borum,
The government argues that this case is similar to
United States v. Scott,
Scott is obviously an entirely different case from the one before us. Scott does not depend upon a showing that the defendant’s fingerprints were impressed upon the оbjects at the time of the commission of the crime. Indeed, in Scott the defendant may well have left his fingerprints on the battery long before entering the savings and loan institution; likewise, if the defendant wore gloves during the theft (or even if he did not but had co-conspirators), his fingerprints may have been impressed on the stolen checks some time after the crime was committed. The combination of the showing that defendant’s property was found at the scene of the crime and that the defendant had handled checks stolen from the association during or after their theft provided a sufficient basis upon which a jury could reasonably have inferred that the accused committed the crimes. Unlike in Scott, the prosecution in the case before us presented no evidence that Mikes’ prints were found on the allegedly stolen property. Nor did the prosecution in the case before us offer sufficient evidence that the property on which Mikes’ fingerprints were found was previously inaccessible to him. Finally, none of the property containing Mikes’ prints was property which was brought to and left at the crime scene during the commission of the offense. Thus, Scott is different from the case befоre us in almost every material respect.
On the basis of similar, and perhaps more probative, evidence than is presented here, other circuits have concluded that fingerprint evidence is insufficient to support a conviction in the absence of an adequate showing that the fingerprints could have been impressed only at the time of the crime. In
Borum v. United States,
The clear principle arising from the cases decided by our fellow circuits is that, in a case resting upon the premise that the defendant impressed his fingerprints on an object at the time of the commission of the crime and supported solely by evidence that the defendant’s fingerprints were found on that object, the record must contain sufficient evidence to permit a jury, applying the beyond a reasonable doubt standard, to draw the inference that the defendant touched the object
during the commission of the crime.
That is a principle that we have ourselves acknowledged on more than one occasion,
see Talbert,
As the court said in
Borum,
“to allow this conviction to stand would be to hold that anyone who touches anything which is found later at the scene of a crime may be convicted.”
Borum v. United States,
CONCLUSION
We do not purport to set forth a rule specifying the precise quantum of fingerprint evidence needed to sustain a conviction. But, in a case in which the prosecution’s theory is that the defendant’s fingerprints were placed on the murder weapon at the time of the commission of the crime or were left at the scene of the crime during its commission, the record must show that the object was inaccessible to the defendant or that the defendant did not have access to the crime scene, during the relevant period prior to the crime’s commission. The prosecution here rested its case upon the theory that Mikes’ fingerprints were placed on the murder weapon at the time the crime was committed; however, the record fails to establish that the turnstile posts were inaccessible to him during the relevant period preceding the commission of the offense. We therefore hold that Mikes’ conviction violated his right to due process. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded to that court with instructions to grant the writ of habeas corpus.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Mikes was charged with and convicted of first degree murder because he allegedly committed the murder during the course of a burglary. The burglary allegation was the sole criterion for the determination of the degree of murder.
. Officer John Miller, one of the investigating officers in Hansen's death, testified that the posts were of "the type that are in grocery stores where they have the short three-foot pipes, then the longer ones to designate a particular area people should go ... [and] the actual turnstile, the bar with several bars sticking out.” There is no evidence in the record that the posts came from more than one turnstile unit. The defense argues in its brief on appeal, as it did below, that they were all part of a single turnstile. In its responsive brief, the prosecution does not take issue with that contention.
.There is no evidence in the record as to whether the turnstile was assembled or disassembled at the time it was purchased by Hansen. Robert Grant, a friend of Hansen’s, testified that he first saw the pipes in their disassembled state after Hansen had placed them in his basement.
. With respect to the unidentifiable prints in the sales area, on the jewelry boxes and on the stair rail, the government expert stated that he made no effort to determine whether Mikes could be eliminated as a possible source of those prints. As a result, we do not know whether all or some of those unidentifiable prints were sufficiently clear to determine if they did not belong to Mikes. However, the government expert witness did testify that with respect to the unidentifiable prints on the posts he did undertake such an examination. He concluded that, with the exception of one print on the "turnstile" post, which clearly did not belong to Mikes, he could not determine whether or not those prints belonged to Mikes or some other individual(s).
. The standard of review for cases addressing the sufficiency of the evidence is identical for direct appeals and habeas review.
See, e.g., United States v. Talbert,
. In
Talbert,
we stated that
Borum
and its progeny are applicable in cases where fingerprint evidence is the only evidence linking the defendant to the crime.
See Talbert,
. From a practical standpoint, this evidentiary showing is even more criticаl in cases, like the one before us, in which fingerprints other than the defendant’s, or unidentifiable prints, also appear on the murder weapon; however, the showing is essential even when it is only the defendant’s prints that appear on a particular item.
See Borum,
. In
Stevenson
v.
United States,
. The government's expert also stated that the five consecutive prints were in a “grasping-type" pattern. The government contends that this evidence provides additional support for the conclusion that Mikes used the post to murder Hansen. The argument has little persuasive force, however, because only two of the five prints were identified as Mikes and the policе fingerprint experts did not find any palm or thumb prints belonging to Mikes on the post. More important, people generally grasp turnstile posts while using them for the purpose normally intended, or in connection with any of the functions discussed above. Therefore, the "grasp” does not tend to support the theory that the person whose fingerprints reflected the act of grasping used the post in a violent fashion.
. In
Talbert,
The conviction in
Crenshaw
also did not hinge solely upon fingerprint evidence. To the contrary, in
Crenshaw
we stated that the evidence of three clear fingerprints left by one of the robbers at the bank provided “additional” evidence of the defendant’s guilt.
Crenshaw,
. In another appeal decided the same day, the D.C. Circuit affirmed Borum's conviction for an unrelated incident of housebreaking and robbery on the basis of fingerprint evidence.
See Stevenson v. United States,
