OPINION
Antonio Mendoza appeals the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, after his conviction in Michigan state court of assault with intent to commit murder, malicious destruction of property, carrying a concealed weapon, and possession оf a firearm during the commission of a felony. During his trial, Mendoza was restrained in leg shackles that were not visible to the jury. He claims these shackles violated his constitutional rights because, he says, the jury likely knew he was wearing them. We affirm the district court’s denial of the writ.
I.
On August 15, 1998, as Chris Mehney drove home from grocery shopping, Antonio Mendoza intentionally crashed his vehicle into hers, causing it to run off the road into a ditch. Mehney escaped from her car and fled from Mendoza on foot. He caught up with her, twice hit her with the butt of a gun, and then shot her in the face. Mehney again tried to run, but Mendоza shot her several more times. She survived the attack.
Mendoza was later apprehended and tried in Michigan state court for the assault. At the county sheriffs recommendation, the court determined that Mendoza should wear leg shackles during trial. According to counsel for the Statе, the sheriff deemed Mendoza a flight and security risk based on “a series of incidents” that had occurred during Mendoza’s incarceration. Although the court acknowledged the sheriffs recommendation on the record, it did not otherwise cite any specific basis for its shackling decision.
The сourt concealed Mendoza’s shackles from the jury, however, by skirting both counsel tables with brown paper for the duration of the trial. In addition, the *652 court ordered the deputies transporting Mendoza to bring him in and out of the courtroom via a “back way” to “make sure that he is not unduly exposed to the jury.” The court also permitted Mendoza to testify unshackled.
Mendoza does not allege the jury saw him in leg shackles during trial. He does allege — as he alleged in the trial court— that, on the fourth day of trial, four jurors briefly observed him in a hallway wearing both hand and foot shackles as he was transported to the courtroom from jail. His counsel moved for a mistrial, arguing that even the brief sight of Mendoza in shackles unfairly prejudiced his defense.
The trial court denied the motion, noting among other things that Mendoza himself had already testified that he was in jail:
We have taken evеry step. We have both tables are [sic] draped. We — when he testified, there was some provision made to allow Mr. Mendoza to draw his sketch then to be on the stand without manacles. Deputies were present.
His own statements indicate that he is in the local county establishment run by the shеriffs department and I don’t know what the prejudice would be other than the fact that he is lodged. And by his statement and by the statement of the expert produced by the defense, that is common knowledge before the jury.
The court then offered to consider a curative instruction to the jury, though it is unclear from the record whether such an instruction was given.
The jury found Mendoza “guilty but mentally ill” on two counts of assault with intent to commit murder. The jury also found Mendoza guilty of malicious destruction of property over $100, carrying a concealed weapon, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. His numerous attempts to challenge his convictions in the Michigan appellate courts were unsuccessful.
Mendoza thereafter filed a habeas petition with the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, alleging 16 putative grounds for relief. Among them wаs that he was “denied a fair trial in violation of the U.S. Constitution, Amendments V and XIV, when he was presented to the jury in leg irons, despite the fact that he posed no threat of violence, flight or disruption to the court[.]”
The district court denied the petition on January 4, 2007. Mendoza filed a notice of аppeal and a motion for certificate of ap-pealability as to his 16 claims for relief. The district court granted the motion as to the shackling claim, but denied a certificate as to all the others.
II.
A.
We review
de novo
the district court’s decision to deny the writ of habeas corpus.
Ruimveld v. Birkett,
(d) An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to a judgment of State court shall not be granted with respect to any clаim that was adjudicated on the merits in a State court unless the adjudication of the claim—
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States[.]
The “сontrary to” and “unreasonable application” clauses in this section have “independent meaning[.]”
Williams v. Taylor,
“Unreasonable application” has bеen harder to define. The Supreme Court instructs that “a federal habeas court making the ‘unreasonable application’ inquiry should ask whether the state court’s application of clearly established federal law was objectively unreasonable.”
Id.
at 409,
What is required, then, is something more than a close question as to how fedеral law should have been applied in a particular case.
See, e.g., Bell v. Cone,
Finally, what qualifies as “clearly established law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” for purрoses of § 2254(d)(1), is itself clear. This phrase refers only “to the holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the Supreme] Court’s decisions as of the time of the relevant state-court decision.”
Williams,
B.
1.
Mendoza claims the Michigan state courts erred, to the requisite degree, in holding that his due-proсess rights were not violated by the circumstances in which he was shackled at trial. As an initial matter, we must determine whether Mendoza relies on clearly established law, as determined by the Supreme Court as of the time of the relevant state-court decisions. Id.
We conclude that he does. Mеndoza relies primarily on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Deck v. Missouri,
Deck
came down in May 2005, well after all of the relevant state-court decisions here. That would normally preclude Mendoza from relying upon the case in seeking habeas relief. But our court has twice held that the principles underlying
Deck
were, in fact, clearly established by the
*654
Supreme Court before its decision in
Deck. See Lakin v. Stine,
The question, then, is whether the Michigan state courts’ decisions with respect to Mendoza’s shackling were “contrary to” Deck or an “unreasonable application” of it. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). To answer that question, we must more closely examine Deck itself.
Carman Deck was convicted of cаpital murder. A sentencing phase followed, during which he was shackled, in plain view of the jury, with leg irons, handcuffs, and a belly chain. Deck was sentenced to death, and the Missouri Supreme Court affirmed.
Deck’s
facts and holding, therefore, concerned only
visible
restraints at trial. The Supreme Court was careful to repeat this limitation throughout its opinion.
See id.
at 630,
For at lеast two reasons, this limitation precludes any determination that the Michigan state courts acted “contrary to”
Deck
in Mendoza’s case. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). First, the Michigan courts did not hold that visible shackling, absent the determination of necessity required by
Deck,
was permissible. To the contrary, the trial court did everything pоssible to
prevent
Mendoza’s shackles from being visible to the jury. (“We have taken every step.”) The Michigan courts thus did not “arrive[ ] at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law[.]”
Williams,
Nor were the Michigan сourts objectively unreasonable in their application of (or, more precisely, their failure to apply) Deck’s holding here. Mendoza’s argument is that the jury likely suspected that the brown paper around each counsel’s table *655 was intended to conceal his leg restraints. Mendоza contends this suspicion would have been enhanced after several jurors observed him shackled in the courthouse hallway, while he was being transported to the courtroom. He therefore asserts he was prejudiced to the same extent that he would have been had his shackles been plainly visible to the jury during trial.
But the fact remains that Mendoza’s restraints were
not
visible to the jury during trial. And the clearly established precedent upon which he relies — namely,
Deck
— is expressly limited to cases where the defendant’s shackles
are
“visible to the jury” during trial.
Moreover, it is not obvious that
Deck
should be extended to the particular facts present here. Mendoza testified
unshackled
before the jury, which may have rebutted an inference that he
was
shackled behind the brown paper. Moreover, that he testified unshackled renders inapposite at least part of
Deck’s
rationale, namely, that shackles “can interfere with a defendant’s ability to participate in his own defense, say, by freely choosing whether to take the witness stand on his own behalf.”
Id.
at 630,
Finally, we do not think it esрecially significant that, according to Mendoza, several jurors saw him shackled while he was being transported to the courtroom. Restraining a defendant in the courtroom, and restraining him during transport there, are two very different things.
See, e.g., United States v. Moreno,
None of this is to say that Deck obviously should not be extended to these facts. But it is to say that this case presented the Michigan courts with a close question. And because the question was close, we are not free to hold that their resolution of it was objectively unreasоnable. The district court was correct to deny habeas relief on this ground.
2.
Mendoza’s remaining claim is that hallway-viewing incident — in which several jurors allegedly observed him shackled during transport — amounted to a stand-alone violation of his constitutional rights. As Mendoza himself concedes, however, the Supreme Court has not held that a defendant’s constitutional rights are violated when jurors see him shackled during transport to or from the courtroom. (There is, incidentally, authority from our
*656
court to the contrary.
See, e.g., Moreno,
III.
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s decision.
