Lead Opinion
Opinion by Chief Judge KOZINSKI; Concurrence by Judge BEA.
OPINION
Edward L. Meras, a California state prisoner, appeals the district court’s order denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. He claims that testimony introduced during his trial violated his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation. He’s probably right, but he loses anyway.
Background
Intruders broke into Richard Peabody’s home, stabbed him multiple times and stole property. Soon after, police found a bloodstained pair of blue jeans in Meras’s apartment. Criminalist Jennai Lawson performed DNA analysis on the blood and produced a lab report concluding that it was Peabody’s. Lawson testified at Meras’s first trial, which ended in a hung jury. She was busy during Meras’s second trial, so the state called her supervisor, Jill Spriggs, to testify to the contents of her report. Meras objected that Lawson’s report was hearsay, and introducing it through Spriggs would violate his right to confront witnesses against him. The court overruled the objection, holding that the report was admissible under the business records exception to the hearsay rule, and allowed Spriggs to testify to its contents:
Q. [D]oes the file reflect where Ms. Lawson got [the jeans] from?
A. Yes, she got them from the freezer.
Q. Great. Did she also receive blood samples associated with ... Edward Meras and Richard Peabody?
A. Yes.
Q. And did she perform DNA typing analysis on those items of evidence?
A. Yes.
Q. And what were the results of the tests that she performed on those items?
A. The ... genetic profile, obtained from blood stains on the ... jeans[, is] the same as Richard Peabody’s.
The jury found Meras guilty of robbery, burglary and assault with a deadly weapon. He appealed the Confrontation Clause ruling, but the California Court of Appeal affirmed in a reasoned decision. People v. Meras, No. F044043,
Analysis
We review the district court’s decision de novo. Doody v. Ryan,
1. We must first decide what constitutes “clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” for purposes of Meras’s Confrontation Clause claim. See Lockyer v. Andrade,
Meras relies on three Supreme Court decisions: Crawford v. Washington,
Meras argues that we can nevertheless rely on Melendez-Diaz and Bull-coming because their holdings were “dictated by precedent existing at the time [his] conviction became final” and are therefore retroactive under Teague v. Lane,
In Greene, the Supreme Court left open the question of “[wjhether § 2254(d)(1) would bar a federal habeas petitioner from relying on a decision that came after the last state-court adjudication on the merits, but fell within one of the exceptions recognized in Teague,
2. In Crawford,
Meras argues that forensic lab reports are testimonial because they’re produced in anticipation of litigation. But Crawford didn’t “clearly establish” such a rule. The Court identified “[vjarious formulations” that had been offered to define the “core class of ‘testimonial’ statements.” Crawford,
The question presented by Meras’s claim—whether forensic lab reports are testimonial—“was exactly one of those areas of uncertainty.” Likely v. Ruane,
Courts further distinguished forensic lab reports from testimonial statements on the ground that the former are “not based on speculation, opinion, or guesswork, but instead [are] founded in scientific testing to determine the physical and chemical composition of the substance and the amount or quantity of the substance.” Pruitt,
When the Supreme Court eventually held that forensic lab reports are testimonial, four Justices vigorously dissented. Writing on their behalf was Justice Kennedy, who was with the majority in Crawford. While continuing to believe Crawford was correctly decided, he wrote for the Melendez-Diaz dissenters that the majority “swe[pt] away an accepted rule governing the admission of scientific evidence” that had “been established for at least 90 years” and “extended] across at least 35 states and six Federal Courts of Appeals.” Melendez-Diaz,
In light of the extensive, reasoned disagreement between the lower courts as to the question presented by Meras’s claim, and between the Justices when they reached the issue, “we cannot say that the state court unreasonably applied clearly established Federal law.” Bailey v. Newland,
* * *
We therefore have a case here where the state court probably committed constitutional error, but we are not free to correct it. This is the nature and effect of AEDPA. See Brown v. Payton,
AFFIRMED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and concurring in judgment:
I join the great majority of Chief Judge Kozinski’s opinion, because it clearly comes to the correct conclusion under the deferential standard of review we are required to apply under AEDPA. But I
1.
As a matter of current constitutional law, it is clear after Melendez-Diaz that DNA reports like the one at issue here are “testimonial statements,” and so a defendant has a Sixth Amendment right to confront in open court whoever carried out the test, arrived at the result, and prepared the report proffered as proof of the test and its result. That does not end the matter, though. Were we reviewing this case de novo, we would be faced with two additional, difficult questions because there are two exceptions to the strict requirements of the Confrontation Clause that may be applicable here. I discuss them briefly only to signal that the questions are difficult and unresolved, and that I therefore do not think we can conclude that Meras’s Confrontation rights “probably” were violated. I offer no answers to the questions.
First, the Supreme Court recognized an exception to the general rule that a testimonial statement may not be admitted into evidence absent the declarant’s availability for cross-examination. Crawford v. Washington,
The question is hard for two reasons. First, the Supreme Court has rarely addressed what it means to be “unavailable” for Confrontation Clause purposes. In the few cases it has squarely answered this question, it has articulated a standard: the prosecution must show it made a “good-faith effort” to secure the testimony of a witness. See Ohio v. Roberts,
Second, and entirely independent of that question, Spriggs’ testimony may also fall under a specific “supervisor” exception to Crawford identified by Justice Sotomayor in her concurrence in Bullcoming v. New Mexico, — U.S.-,
But Justice Sotomayor, who provided the fifth vote for the majority and wrote a separate concurrence, specifically observed that Bullcoming had a “limited reach” and was “not a case in which the person testifying is a supervisor, reviewer, or someone else with a personal, albeit limited, connection to the scientific test at issue.” Id. at 2722 (Sotomayor, J., concurring). Whether that person may be permitted to testify in place of the report’s primary author under the Confrontation Clause was therefore explicitly left open. Id.
Our case implicates that open question. Spriggs was Lawson’s supervisor. She testified that she was “the one that technically reviewed the case notes for this case and signed as technical reviewer.” Bull-coming did “not address what degree of involvement [with a report’s preparation] is sufficient” to allow a supervisor to testify in place of the primary author, but Spriggs may have had enough involvement here to satisfy the Confrontation Clause. Id. at 2722; see also Op. 1190-91. Again: we do not know. The issue is unresolved.
2.
Were we reviewing this case de novo, we would be forced to answer those questions to determine if Meras’s Confrontation Clause rights were violated. The ultimate resolution of these legal questions will be important in the wake of Crawford, a “landmark decision” that drastically changed the landscape of the Confrontation Clause. Ocampo v. Vail,
To be sure, the majority does not explicitly “decide” these questions, but rather it says that Meras’s Sixth Amendment rights “probably” were violated. The trouble with saying this in an opinion is that the Federal Reporter is not the same thing as a law review. The latter, not the former, is the appropriate venue for speculation as to how hypothetical legal questions would be resolved. After all, the majority’s statement, in a published opinion, that Meras’s rights were “probably” violated will have ramifications in future cases that we or other courts will have to decide some day. When that future case is before a court, a nice quotation from a Ninth Circuit opinion can provide powerful ammunition for lawyers, even if the quotation is dicta. This is especially important to us because dicta, in the Ninth Circuit, can have precedential effects. See McOmie-Gray v. Bank of Am. Home Loans,
In sum, I fully agree that the California courts did not unreasonably apply Sixth Amendment law here, and therefore I concur in the judgment of the court to affirm denial of the writ. I cannot agree, however, that we should express any opinion at all on the unresolved questions that are also addressed by the majority.
Notes
. See Hardy v. Cross,-U.S.-,
. Expressing an opinion on whether some action "probably” violated the Constitution were there to be a de novo review could even affect the outcome of future § 1983 actions. Our case likely will not have such effects, since prosecutors are absolutely immune from suit for their conduct “in presenting the State’s case” in court. See Burns v. Reed,
