Lead Opinion
Petitioner-appellant Jay Wesley Neill appeals the denial of habeas relief, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254, from four death sentences. This appeal presents, among other issues, the question of whether Oklahoma can constitutionally apply its statute permitting introduction of victim impact evidence during a capital sentencing proceeding at a trial for crimes occurring prior to that statute’s enactment. We conclude Oklahoma can do so without violating the Ex Post Facto or Due Process Clauses. We, therefore, affirm the denial of relief on this, and the remainder of Neill’s habeas claims.
I. FACTS
A jury sentenced Neill to death after convicting him of four counts of first degree malice murder stemming from Neill’s armed robbery of a Gerónimo, Oklahoma bank in December 1984. Neill did not contest his guilt during the trial’s first stage. The State’s evidence established that Neill, then age nineteen, and his co-defendant, Grady Johnson, age twenty-one, were roommates involved in a homosexual relationship. In 1984, they were having serious financial difficulties. During the week before the bank robbery, the pair purchased two knives, obtained a gun permit, bought a .32 caliber handgun and ammunition, and made plane reservations to San Francisco for Friday afternoon, December 14. On that Friday, shortly after 1:00 P.M., Neill robbed the bank. During the robbery, Neill stabbed three bank employees to death. All three women died from multiple stab wounds to their head, neck, chest and abdomen. One woman was seven months pregnant. Neill also attempted to decapitate each woman with a knife.
Five customers entered the bank during the robbery. Neill forced all five to lie face down in the back room where the employées had been stabbed. He then shot each customer in the head, killing one and wounding the other three. Neill denied attempting to shoot the fifth, an eighteen-month-old child. The child’s father testified, however, that he saw someone point a gun at his child’s head and fire several times. The weapon, by this time, was out of ammunition.
Neill and Johnson then flew to San Francisco, where they spent some of the approximately $17,000 stolen from the bank on expensive jewelry and clothing, hotels, limousines and cocaine. FBI agents arrested the pair there three days after the robbery.
At sentencing, the State charged and the jury found, as to each murder, three aggravating factors: Neill had created a great risk of death to more than one person; he had' committed the murders to avoid arrest and prosecution; and the murders were especially heinous, atrocious or cruel. The jury imposed four death sentences, as well as twenty years’ imprisonment for each non-capital conviction.
The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Neill’s convictions and death sentences, and denied post-conviction relief. See Neill v. State,
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
Because Neill filed his federal habeas petition after the effective date of the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), that Act governs this appeal. See Williams v. Taylor,
Where the state court did not address the merits of a habeas claim, however, this court reviews the district court’s decision de novo, reviewing any factual findings only for clear, error. See, e.g., Thomas v. Gibson,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Application of Oklahoma’s newly enacted victim impact legislation at Neill’s retrial. In 1991, after Neill’s first trial, the United States Supreme Court, reversing its earlier precedent, held that states could constitutionally admit victim impact evidence during capital sentencing proceedings. See Payne v. Tennessee,
Neill relies on Carmell. That case, however, is distinguishable. In Carmell, the Supreme Court addressed the retrospective application of a Texas law providing that certain sex offenses could be established solely on the victim’s testimony, when previously they would have required additional corroborating evidence. See
In contrast, Oklahoma’s victim impact statute does not change the quantum of evidence necessary for the State to obtain a death sentence, nor does it otherwise subvert the presumption of innocence. See id. at 530-34,
This case is more analogous to Thompson, upon which the district court relied to deny Neill habeas relief. In Thompson, the Court held that retrospectively applying a state statute permitting handwriting experts’ testimony did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. See
“Statutes which simply enlarge the class of persons who may be competent to testify in criminal cases are not ex post facto in their application to prosecutions for crimes committed prior to their passage; for they do not ... alter the degree, or lessen the amount or measure, of the proof which was made necessary to conviction when the crime was committed.... The crime for which the present defendant was indicted, the punishment prescribed therefor, and the quantity or the degree of proof necessary to establish his guilt, all remained unaffected by the subsequent statute .... [Alterations which do not increase the punishment, nor change the ingredients of the offence, or the ultimate facts necessary to establish guilt, but — leaving untouched the nature of the crime and the amount or degree of proof essential to conviction — only remove existing restrictions upon the competency of certain classes of persons as witnesses, relate to modes of procedure only, in which no one can be said to have*1191 a vested right, and which the State, upon grounds of public policy, may regulate at pleasure."
Id. at 385-86,
perceive any ground upon which to hold a statute to be ex post facto which does nothing more than admit evidence of a particular kind in a criminal case upon an issue of fact which was not admissible under the rules of evidence as enforced by judicial decisions at the time the of-fence was committed. . . . The statute [at issue] did nothing more than remove an obstacle . . . that withdrew from the consideration of the jury testimony which, in the opinion of the legislature, tended to elucidate the ultimate, essential fact to be established.
Id. at 387,
Neill argues, however, that Thompson is distinguishable from his case because, while expert handwriting testimony could benefit either the State or the defendant, Oklahoma's victim impact evidence benefits only the State and would always be detrimental to the capital defendant. See also Carmell,
B. Second-stage jury instruction. Oklahoma law provides that, if a capital sentencing jury cannot reach a unanimous verdict within a reasonable time, the trial court shall impose a life sentence, either with or without the possibility of parole. See Okla. Stat, tit. 21, § 701.11. The Eighth Amendment, however, does not require the trial court to instruct jurors on the consequences of their failure to agree. See Jones v. United
Because the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals denied relief solely on state law grounds, see Neill,
Although the prosecutor did, at one point, misstate Oklahoma law, his argument as a whole did not mislead the jury. Following his misstatement that the jury’s failure to reach a unanimous sentencing decision would result in another retrial, the prosecutor argued that if defense counsel could get one juror to vote against the death penalty, that punishment could not be imposed. See Trial tr. vol. V at 1321. Defense counsel also argued to the jury that, if one of them believed death was not the appropriate punishment, that juror should hold out and the judge would eventually declare a deadlock and impose a life sentence without the possibility of parole. See id. at 1308, 1313. Further, the prosecutor ended his argument by asserting that there was no mistrial at sentencing and that if one juror “cannot agree [to a death sentence], then it’s life without parole.” Id. at 1327. In light of the entire record, then, the prosecutor’s single misstatement did not mislead the jury concerning its sentencing role. An instruction on the consequences resulting from the jury’s failure to reach a unanimous sentencing decision, therefore, was unnecessary. See Jones,
For these same reasons, Neill’s claims that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to object to the prosecutor’s misstatement, and to object to the prosecutor’s argument generally concerning the possibility of another retrial, lack merit.
C. Denial of impartial jury. A capital defendant may challenge for cause any juror who will automatically vote to impose a death sentence upon a first degree murder conviction. See Morgan v. Illinois,
1. Procedural posture. Because Neil did not challenge these three jurors until his state post-conviction application, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals held he had waived these claims. See Neill,
The State's procedural bar, however, is not adequate to preclude habeas review of Neill's ineffective-assistance claim because the same attorney represented Neil both at trial and on direct appeal. See English v. Cody,
2. Ineffective assistance of trial counsel. This court's inquiry is thus limited to whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to ask these three jurors if they would automatically vote to impose a death sentence upon Neill's first degree murder conviction. To succeed, Neill must establish both that counsel's performance was deficient and Neill's defense was thereby prejudiced. See Strickland v. Washington,
Generally, "[a]n attorney's actions during voir dire are considered to be matters of trial strategy," which "cannot be the basis" of an ineffective assistance claim "unless counsel's decision is . . so ill chosen that it permeates the entire trial with obvious unfairness." Nguyen v. Reynolds,
[l]awyers experienced in the trial of capital cases have widely varying views about addressing the delicate balance between the disqualification of jurors whose personal beliefs prevent them from ever imposing the penalty of death under Witherspoon v. Illinois,391 U.S. 510 , 520-23,88 S.Ct. 1770 ,20 L.Ed.2d 776 (1968), and those who would automatically recommend that sentence if they found the defendant guilty. Morgan,504 U.S. 719 ,112 S.Ct. 2222 ,119 L.Ed.2d 492 . The difficulty of the task is greater where[, as here,] there has been widespread publicity and public comment about the crime, the investigation and pre-trial proceedings.
Here, defense counsel indicated to Neill, prior to trial, that he intended to concentrate specifically on voir dire matters and he hoped thereby to create reversible error. See Post-conviction application, app. E at 4, 14, 16. Further, either defense counsel or the prosecutor asked all other prospective jurors whether they would consider imposing a sentence less than death. Trial counsel, therefore, was well aware of the need for this inquiry. Nevertheless, the record is insufficient to permit this court to determine whether defense counsel’s failure to ask only these three jurors whether they would automatically vote for a death sentence was strategic and, if so, whether that strategy was reasonable.
Regardless, Neill has failed to establish any resulting prejudice. See Smith v. Robbins,
To that end, Neill proffers his investigators’ affidavits indicating that, four years after the trial, Juror Loggins “felt that the death penalty was the only appropriate punishment for murder, under any circumstances,” Post-conviction application, app. H at 4,12, and Juror Hyde “felt that if you take a life, you deserve the same sentence,” id. at 16, 17. The district court, however, did not abuse its discretion in refusing to consider these affidavits, deeming them inadmissible hearsay.
Even assuming this court could consider these affidavits, cf. Walker,
Apart from these affidavits, Neil points to Juror Hannabass’s response to the question posed to him during voir dire as to whether he could consider imposing a death sentence. Juror Hannabass answered “I can do it. I would like to.” Trial tr. vol II. at 470-71. Neither defense counsel nor anyone else further questioned this juror concerning his ability to consider imposing a sentence less than death. Nonetheless, this ambiguous voir dire response, without more, is insufficient to establish that Juror Hannabass would have automatically voted to impose a death sentence, upon Neill’s first degree murder conviction. Cf. Moore v. Gibson,
For these same reasons, neither the investigators’ affidavits nor the voir dire transcript are sufficient to have required the district court to conduct an evidentiary hearing. See Walker,
D. Prosecutorial misconduct.
1. Procedural default. Because Neill did not assert any prosecutorial misconduct until his state post-conviction application, the Oklahoma appellate court deemed him to have waived these claims. See Neill,
The state appellate court also deemed Neill to have waived his claims alleging trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to this prosecutorial misconduct, because Neill had also failed to raise those claims until his state post-conviction appli
2. Trial counsel’s ineffective assistance. Neill argues his trial attorney was constitutionally ineffective for failing to object to the prosecutor’s improper remarks made during second-stage closing argument. Neill must again establish both trial counsel’s deficient performance and resulting prejudice. See Strickland,
First, during closing argument, the prosecutor addressed each of Neill’s five proposed mitigating factors, arguing none of them justified a sentence less than death under Oklahoma law. While Neill has the right to have the jury consider any constitutionally relevant mitigating evidence he presents, see, e.g., Buchanan v. Angelone, 522 U.S. 269, 276,
Secondly, in response to defense counsel’s argument that the responsibility to impose, or to prevent, a death sentence rested with each individual juror, the prosecutor argued that “an undue and unfair burden has been placed ... squarely on your shoulders that if any of you do not hold out then it’s gonna be your responsibility and you’re gonna be the one that has caused Jay Neill to be executed. That’s not our law.” Trial tr. vol. V at 1314. Later, the prosecutor informed jurors that they were “only one step in the process.” Id. at 1326.
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
Neill also complains that the prosecutor violated Caldwell by suggesting to jurors that their decision to impose a death sentence was just a recommendation. In addition, Neill challenges the prosecutor’s remarks again urging jurors not to “put the undue burden on your shoulder that you’re the cause of the person losing their life or you’re the cause of starting this
Lastly, Neill challenges as inflammatory the prosecutor’s remarks concerning Neill’s homosexuality. The prosecutor, challenging Neill’s proffered mitigating factor that he was acting under an extreme emotional disturbance when he committed these crimes, as a result of his fear of losing his relationship with Johnson, noted Neill was “a vowed homosexual. He had a gay lover he didn’t want to lose.” See id. at 1283. The prosecutor then compared Neill’s situation to the breakup of a heterosexual relationship or marriage, arguing neither instance justified murder. See id. These comments on Neill’s homosexuality were accurate, in light of the evidence, and were relevant to both the State’s case and Neill’s defense theory. See Clayton v. Gibson,
The prosecutor made additional remarks aimed at Neill’s homosexuality. Because defense counsel did object to those remarks, see Trial tr. vol. V at 1285-86, however, he was not constitutionally ineffective.
E. Ineffective representation at sentencing.
Neill argues his defense attorney ineffectively represented him during the capital sentencing proceeding by failing to investigate and present additional mitigating evidence. Although the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals held Neill had waived this claim by failing to raise it on direct appeal, see Neill,
Neill must establish both that trial counsel’s representation at sentencing was deficient, and he was thereby prejudiced. See Strickland,
The jury found that Neill had robbed a bank, killing four, wounding three others and attempting to shoot an eighteen-month-old child. The jury further found the existence of three aggravating factors as to each of the four murders. Overwhelming evidence supported these find
Neill now argues that trial counsel should have investigated and presented additional available mitigating evidence from Neill’s friends and family indicating that he was, among other things, clean cut, loving, well behaved, easygoing, nonviolent, caring, funny, outgoing, with lots of friends and girlfriends, compassionate, intelligent, loved, devoted to his family, hardworking, and sincere in his apologies for the crimes. Neill further asserts defense counsel should have obtained a psychiatric evaluation, which would have shown that Neill had previously suffered a number of head injuries resulting in unconsciousness and he had deficits in his reasoning, judgment and problem-solving abilities, which would have been exacerbated by his emotional stress at the time these crimes occurred.
In light of the State’s strong case and the number of aggravators the jury found, there is no reasonable probability that, had trial counsel presented this additional mitigating evidence, the jury would have imposed a sentence less than death. See, e.g., Walker,
F. Trial court’s refusal to define further life sentence without possibility of parole. The trial court instructed jurors that they could consider imposing sentences of death, life imprisonment, or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Neill challenges the trial court’s refusal to instruct further as to the meaning of life without parole. The state appellate court held Neill had waived this claim by failing to raise it on direct appeal. See Neill,
This court has previously determined that the trial court need not further define life without the possibility of parole. See Mayes v. Gibson,
G. Cumulative error. Because there was no constitutional error, Neill has also failed to establish any cumulative error warranting habeas relief. See, e.g., Clayton,
Having considered the record and the parties’ arguments, we AFFIRM the denial of habeas relief.
Notes
. The State had initially tried Neill and Johnson jointly. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, however, reversed their resulting convictions, holding, among other errors, that the trial court should have severed their trials. See Neill v. State,
. Admitting victim impact evidence, however, does not weight the capital sentencing proceeding in the State's favor. Rather, Payne held the State could present victim impact evidence, in part, to counter a capital defendant's right to present any mitigating evidence. See
. As explained in section 111(D)(1), infra, while Neill has procedurally defaulted his prosecutorial misconduct allegations, we will address his related ineffective-assistance claims.
. The district court specifically addressed only the affidavits concerning Juror Loggins.
. Neill does assert that his appellate attorney was ineffective for failing to raise these prose-cutorial misconduct claims on direct appeal. See Appellant’s Reply Br. at 11. The relevant inquiry here is whether the omitted claims were clearly meritorious. See Johnson v. Gibson,
. We also deny Neill’s motion for a certificate of appealability, see 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c), on his claims challenging the trial court's admission of gruesome crime scene and autopsy photographs, and the jury's consulting a Bible during its deliberations. Neill has failed to show that either claim makes a "substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” Id. § 2253(c)(2); see also, e.g., English v. Cody,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because the prosecutor’s blatant homophobic hatemongering at sentencing has no place in the courtrooms of a civilized society, and Neill’s appellate counsel’s failure to raise the issue on direct appeal constitutes clear and plain prejudicial neglect, I respectfully dissent. Correctly or incorrectly, we have encapsulated the applicable Strickland jurisprudence into the term “dead-bang winner.” See United States v. Cook,
While thinly disguising his intent by denying that a person’s “sexual preference” is an “aggravating circumstance,” the prosecutor deviously and despicably incited the jury with the following statement:
If I could ask each of you to disregard Jay Neill and take him out of the person but consider these things in a generic way. I want you to think briefly about the man you’re setting [sic] in judgment on ... and believe me, ... you have every thing in this case, the good, the bad, everything that the law allows to aid you in this decision. But just generic, just put in the back of your mind what if I was sitting in judgment on this person without relating it to Jay Neill, and I’d like to go through some things that to me depict the true person, what kind of person he is. He is a homosexual. The person you’re sitting in judgment on — disregard Jay Neill. You’re deciding life or death on a person that’s a vowed [sic] homosexual.... But these are areas you consider whenever you determine the type of person you’re setting [sic] in judgment on.... The individual’s homosexual. He’s in love with Robert Grady Johnson. •
(V Trial Tr. at 1285-86, 87.) I sternly reject the prosecutor’s disavowal and the “he brought it up” post hoc rationalization that this somehow justifies the use of hate as an appropriate adversarial tool.
Moreover, the record evidence calls into question whether Neill was sentenced to death by an impartial jury, which further erodes my confidence in the jury’s sentence. I would grant habeas relief and vacate Neill’s sentence.
The majority declines to reach the issue of the prosecutor’s homophobic comments, concluding (1) that Neill’s counsel at trial was not constitutionally ineffective because he objected to the remarks and (2) without examining, or even quoting, the prosecutor’s remarks, that Neill’s counsel on direct appeal was not ineffective “[bjecause none of the[ ] prosecutorial misconduct claims have merit.” (Majority Op. at 1195 n. 5.) While the objection mitigates the ineffectiveness of Neill’s counsel’s performance at Neill’s trial,
The Sixth Amendment requires that criminal defendants receive effective assistance of counsel both at trial and during a direct appeal as of right. See Evitts v. Lucey,
Nevertheless, appellate counsel renders ineffective assistance by “omitting a ‘dead-bang winner,’ even though counsel may have presented strong but unsuccessful claims on appeal.” Id. at 395 (citing Page,
Turning, then, to the nature of the prosecutor’s comments, I think they are susceptible of only one possible interpretation: among other factors, Neill should be put to death because he is gay. The prosecutor urged the jury to consider “some things that ... depict the true person, what kind of person” Neill is. (V Trial Tr. at 1286.) According to the prosecutor, the “true person,” the “kind of person” Neill is can be summed up in four words: “He is a homosexual.” (Id.)
As the prosecutor knew, emphasizing that Neill was gay likely had a tremendous negative impact on jurors. See, e.g., Stockton v. Murray,
The State seeks to explain away the prosecutor’s comments by claiming that Neill’s “sexual orientation was relevant to the issues in the case because it was the problems arising from the relationship with Johnson that provided the motivation for the robbery and murders.” (Appellee’s Br. at 42.) It is true that Neill did not attempt to hide the nature of his romantic relationship and that he argued that problems in the relationship were a factor contributing to his criminal activity. However, the State’s contention suffers from a fundamental misunderstanding of the purpose of Neill’s mitigating evidence. Neill introduced evidence of the emotional and financial stresses in his relationship to show that the robbery was the act of a desperate man, not that of a depraved killer. The prosecutor was within his rights in criticizing the nature of Neill’s mitigating evidence, as when he stated “Any of you been in a relationship that broke up? Did that justify or warrant you going out and killing four people and shooting three others? ... The fact that you’re losing a lover does not put you in the emotional state where it would justify this.” (V Trial Tr. at 1283.) However, references to the fact that Neill was “a vowed [sic] homosexual” (id.) and had a “gay lover” (id.) add nothing to the critique and only serve to highlight the irrelevant and prejudicial fact of Neill’s sexual orientation. The prosecutor’s comments a few pages later in the transcript are totally unresponsive to Neill’s mitigation evidence and are designed solely to inflame the jury’s prejudices:
But just generic, just put in the back of your mind what if I was sitting in judgment on this person without relating it to Jay Neill, and I’d like to go through some of the things that to me depict the true person, what kind of person he is. He is a homosexual. The person you’re sitting in judgment on — -disregard Jay Neill. You’re deciding life or death on a person that’s a vowed [sic] homosexual.
(Id. at 1286.)
As an additional justification for the prosecutor’s comments, the State notes that it was Neill himself who “introduced the issue of his sexual orientation.” (Ap-pellee’s Br. at 42.) To my mind that argument is no different from claiming that a Jewish defendant opens the door to a prosecutor’s anti-Semitic arguments by wearing a yarmulke in the presence of jurors.
At their core, the prosecutor’s statements are tantamount to urging the jury to return the death sentence because a defendant fits within any other group that has been the target of prejudice and discrimination. See generally Debra T. Landis, Annotation, Prosecutor’s Appeal in Criminal Case to Racial, National, or Religious Prejudice as Ground for Mistrial, New Trial, Reversal, or Vacation of Sentence — Modem Cases,
The prejudicial impact of bigoted comments at the penalty phase of a capital trial was aptly described by the Nevada Supreme Court. In Dawson v. State,
Finally, I note the ineffectiveness of Neill’s counsel on appeal for failing to raise the prosecutorial misconduct claim is highlighted by several additional facts: the prosecutor’s comments were “obvious from the trial record ... [and] ‘leaped out upon even a casual reading of [the] transcript,’ ” Cook,
I cannot sanction — because I have no confidence in — a proceeding tainted by a prosecutor’s request that jurors impose a death sentence based, even in part, on who the defendant is rather than what he has done. For the reasons described, I believe Neill’s appellate counsel omitted a “dead-bang winner” on appeal, and Neill has thus shown cause and prejudice excusing his procedural default.
II
My confidence in Neill’s sentence is further undermined by the likelihood that he was denied an impartial jury due to the failure of both the court and his trial counsel to inquire on voir dire whether three members of the jury were predisposed to impose the death penalty. Neill proffers affidavits prepared by the Oklahoma Indigent Defender System (“OIDS”) reporting statements made by two of the jurors, Rusella Loggins and Glen Nelson Hyde, III, during interviews with OIDS investigators. Loggins told an investigator that she believed death was the only appropriate punishment for murder under any circumstances. Hyde, the jury foreman, told another investigator that when a person takes a life, he or she deserves the same sentence. Neill also points to a third juror’s voir dire response in which he stated that he would “like” to impose a death sentence. (II Trial Tr. at 471.)
I agree with the majority that we are constrained to review Neill’s biased jury claim through the lens of ineffective assistance of counsel. Such claims are evaluated under the familiar two-pronged ap
Against that background is the requirement that persons the state wishes to execute be convicted and sentenced by impartial juries. In particular, the Supreme Court held in Morgan v. Illinois,
Neill’s counsel’s performance was deficient based on the requirement of an adequate voir dire. Despite receiving a response that indicated that Juror Han-nabass “would like to” sentence Neill to death, “[njeither defense counsel nor anyone else further questioned this juror concerning his ability to consider imposing a sentence less than death.” (Majority Op. at 1195.) This deficiency was exacerbated by the fact that the entire trial revolved around the penalty phase. Neill’s trial counsel basically conceded guilt (a reasonable decision considering the overwhelming evidence against Neill). That situation should have made Neill’s counsel especially vigilant concerning jurors’ attitudes about the death penalty as it was certain that they would be called upon to decide whether death was the appropriate punishment. Under those circumstances, failing to ask jurors their views on the death penalty could not have been a viable strategy.
In addition, I question the majority’s contention that “the record is insufficient to permit this court to determine whether defense counsel’s failure to ask only these three jurors whether they would automatically vote for a death sentence was strategic.” (Majority Op. at 1194.) To the contrary, the record in this case clearly indicates that it was counsel’s strategy to question jurors about their views on the death penalty. In letters to Neill, his counsel stated that he would “concentrate” on voir dire (Post-Conviction Application App. E at 4) and that he was aware
As for the prejudice prong, the majority concludes that the proffered affidavits are both hearsay and too conclusory to merit habeas relief. While I agree that standing alone the affidavits do not merit vacating Neill’s sentence,
Ill
I would grant habeas relief and vacate Neill’s sentence.
. I have serious reservations about the viability of the "dead-bang winner” standard in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in Smith v. Robbins,
. In addition to his objection, Neill’s counsel could have moved for a mistrial.
. The real significance of a successful ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim is that it provides the necessary “cause” to excuse the procedural default barring habeas review of the underlying issue. See, e.g., Murray v. Carrier,
. We have recognized that reviewing the merits of a defendant's claim "in order to determine whether he received ineffective assistance from his appellate counsel” "places us in an awkward position.” Banks,
. Even considered in isolation, the affidavits do raise sufficiently serious allegations to require an evidentiary hearing. Neill “is entitled to an evidentiary hearing 'if his allegations, if true and not contravened by the record,' entitle him to habeas relief.” Walker v. Gibson,
