Lead Opinion
Judge LUTTIG wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON and Judges RUSSELL, WIDENER, WILKINS, NIEMEYER, and WILLIAMS joined. Judge ERVIN wrote an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which Judges HALL, MURNAGHAN, HAMILTON, MICHAEL, and MOTZ joined.
OPINION
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia vacated the death sentence of Joseph Roger O’Dell III on federal habeas, holding that Simmons v. South Carolina,
Heeding the instruction of three Members of the Supreme Court that this case “should ... receive careful consideration,” O’Dell v. Thompson,
I.
Over ten years ago, on Tuesday, February 5,1985, 44-year-old Helen Schartner left the County Line Lounge in Virginia Beach around 11:30 p.m. O’Dell left the same nightclub sometime between 11:30 p.m. and 11:45 p.m. The next day, Schartner’s car was found in the parking lot of the County Line Lounge, and, around 3:00 p.m., her body was found in a muddy field across the highway from the club. Tire tracks consistent with the tires on O’Dell’s car were found near the body. Schartner had been killed by manual strangulation, with a force sufficient to break bones in her neck and leave finger imprints. She also had eight separate wounds on her head consistent with blows from the barrel of a handgun. About 10 days earlier, a handgun with a barrel that could cause wounds like those found on Schartner’s head had been seen in O’Dell’s car. Seminal fluid was found in Schartner’s vagina and anus. Enzyme tests on that fluid revealed that it was consistent with a mixture of O’Dell’s and Schartner’s bodily fluids. Spermatozoa also found in Sehartner’s genital swabs and genital scrapings were consistent with O’Dell’s.
The next aay, Thursday, Craig read the local newspaper account of Schartner’s murder, describing how she had last been seen at the County Line Lounge. Remembering that O’Dell customarily visited the County Line Lounge on Tuesday nights, Craig went to her garage and found the paper bag that O’Dell had told her he had left, containing several articles of bloody and muddy clothing. She brought the bloody clothes into the house and called the police.
O’Dell was arrested, and, despite the contrary story he had just told Craig, told the police that the blood on his clothes came from a nose bleed caused by being struck while attempting to stop a fight at another club on the night of February 5. Electropho-retic tests on the dried blood established that the blood on O’Dell’s jacket and shirt had the same enzyme markers as Schartner’s, a characteristic shared by only three out of a thousand people. O’Dell’s blood did not have the same markers. Likewise, dried blood found in O’Dell’s car proved consistent with Schart-ner’s but not with O’Dell’s. And, hairs found in O’Dell’s car were also consistent with Sehartner’s, but not O’Dell’s.
During his incarceration, O’Dell confessed to Steven Watson, a fellow inmate, that he had strangled Schartner after she refused to have sexual intercourse with him.
O’Dell was indicted for capital murder, abduction, rape, and sodomy. On his own motion, and after a court-appointed psychiatrist determined him competent, O’Dell quite ably defended himself pro se, with court-appointed attorney Paul Ray serving as standby counsel. O’Dell was tried, and, on September 10, 1986, the jury convicted him on all counts. The next day, the jury fixed his sentence for murder at death. The jury’s recommendation of death was based on its finding that both of Virginia’s statutory aggravating factors — future dangerousness and vileness — had been proven. J.A at 2506. The trial judge adopted the jury’s recommendation and sentenced O’Dell to death by electrocution for murder and to 40 years for rape and 40 years for sodomy. O’Dell appealed his sentence to the Supreme Court of Virginia, which affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court. O’Dell v. Commonwealth,
O’Dell filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Circuit Court of Virginia Beach on June 1, 1989, and an amended petition on July 3,1990, both of which were denied. J. A at 278-79. O’Dell attempted to appeal the denial to the Virginia Supreme Court, but he erroneously filed an “Assignments of Error” with the Supreme Court instead of a “Petition for Appeal,” as required by Virginia law. O’Dell attempted to correct the error, but by then the timé to file had expired and so the Virginia Supreme Court dismissed his perfected Petition for Appeal as untimely. The United States Supreme Court again denied certiorari on December 2, 1991, with three Justices issuing a statement respecting the denial of certiorari. See O’Dell,
O’Dell then filed this federal habeas petition on July 23, 1992. The district court, Judge James R. Spencer, held a full eviden-tiary hearing on O’Dell’s claim that new DNA evidence established that he was actually innocent. The court rejected that claim, along with numerous others, but vacated O’Dell’s death sentence because he had not been allowed to rebut the prosecution’s future dangerousness arguments with a showing that he would be ineligible for parole. In
II.
O’Dell, bom in 1941, began his criminal career at age 13 with a juvenile conviction for breaMng and entering, followed by five convictions over the next three years for auto theft. By 1958, O’Dell had turned violent. In- that year, he was convicted of assault three times and of threatening bodily harm once. The following year, he was convicted of attempted escape from prison. After being released from the penitentiary,- he returned five months later when his probation was revoked. He was then convicted of five armed robberies and five unauthorized uses of motor vehicles and sentenced to 24 years in prison. While imprisoned, O’Dell was convicted of second degree murder. In July of 1974, O’Dell was again paroled, whereupon he went to Florida and was promptly convicted of kidnapping and robbery, committed just seven months after his release from prison. The victim in that case testified that O’Dell had struck her several times on the head with his gun, choked her, and held a cocked gun to her head in an attempt to force her to submit to sexual advances. The Florida court sentenced him to 99 years in prison, but, inexplicably, O’Dell was paroled yet again in December of 1983. Fourteen months later, Helen Schartner was murdered.
Under Virginia law, “[a]ny person convicted of three separate felony offenses of (i) murder, (ii) rape or (iii) robbery by the presenting of firearms or other deadly weapon ... shall not be eligible for parole.” Va. Code § 53.1-151(B1). O’Dell certainly appears to have had the requisite number of violent felony convictions to be ineligible for parole under Virginia law. Therefore, he requested that he be allowed to respond to the prosecution’s arguments of future dangerousness by arguing that he was parole ineligible. J.A. at 2308, 2378-79, 2385-86. As required by Virginia law, however, the trial judge neither allowed O’Dell to argue his parole ineligibility nor provided the jury with any information regarding O’Dell’s ineligibility. J.A. at 2386. See Poyner v. Commonwealth,
A.
The question of whether a rule is “new” for purposes of Teague arises in two different circumstances: first, where, like here, a particular case is decided after petitioner’s conviction becomes final, and petitioner seeks the benefit of the rule of that case; and second, where petitioner seeks the extension of longstanding precedent. Cf. Stringer v. Black,
a federal court should apply Teague by proceeding in three steps. First, the court must ascertain the date on which the defendant’s conviction and sentence became final for Teague purposes. Second, the court must survey the legal landscape as it then existed, and determine whether a state court considering the defendant’s claim at the time his conviction became final would have felt compelled by existing precedent to conclude that the rule he seeks was required by the Constitution. Finally, even if the court determines that the defendant seeks the benefit of a new rule, the court must decide whether that rule falls within one of the two narrow exceptions to the .nonretroactivity principle.
O’Dell’s conviction became final on October 3, 1988, when the United States Supreme Court denied his petition for certiorari on direct appeal. See O’Dell v. Virginia,
We have suggested otherwise in several recent eases, see, e.g., Turner v. Williams,
These consequences of the formulations of the “new rule” inquiry embraced in Turner and Ostrander underscore the error of those two decisions. The very purpose of Teague was to halt federal habeas review even of state court interpretations of federal law that ultimately prove incorrect, provided they are reasonable. Yet under the reasoning of those two cases, federal courts would be reviewing and deciding on the merits countless state court judgments that are not only reasonable but, indisputably correct.
Thus, both locutions discussed in Turner and Ostrander would frustrate the principles of finality, comity toward state judicial tribunals, see Teague,
Therefore, Turner and Ostrander are today overruled to the extent they suggest that the bar of Teague is inapplicable if a petitioner’s challenge is merely “predicated on” prior caselaw or if prior caselaw merely “dictates petitioner’s challenge.” As the Supreme Court has consistently held, extant caselaw
The result of the case in question (here, Simmons) must also have been compelled because of the rule that the petitioner seeks. In making this determination, of course, the “rule” must be identified at the appropriately specific level of generality. The appropriate level of generality for identifying the rule is that level represented by the narrowest principle of law that was actually applied in order to decide the case in question. Thus, for example, as we held in Townes v. Murray,
The dissent argues that petitioner seeks the benefit of [Gardner’s] well-established rule, that “a capital defendant must be afforded a meaningful opportunity to explain or deny the evidence introduced against him at sentencing.” ... But ... the new-rule doctrine “would be meaningless if applied at this level of generality.”
Id. at -,
As the Supreme Court’s repeated analogy to the qualified immunity analysis confirms, the new rule analysis fundamentally asks the same question as does the qualified immunity analysis — whether a contrary conclusion would have been objectively unreasonable. Cf. Hogan v. Carter,
B.
As noted, the narrowest principle of law that was applied in order to decide Simmons was that applied by Justice O’Connor in her separate concurrence: “[w]here the State puts the defendant’s future dangerousness in issue, and the only available alternative sentence to death is life imprisonment without possibility of parole, due process entitles the defendant to inform the capital sentencing jury — by either argument or instruction — that he is parole ineligible.” 512 U.S. at -,
“Surveying the legal landscape” in 1988, Graham,
In 1988, a reasonable jurist would also have considered Skipper, where the Court vacated a death sentence because, in violation of the Eighth Amendment rule of Lockett v. Ohio,
The sole question upon which certiorari was granted in Skipper was whether, under the Eighth Amendment, the lower court’s decision was “inconsistent with th[e] Court’s decisions in Lockett and Eddings.” Id. at 4,
The relevance of evidence of probable future conduct in prison as a factor in aggravation or mitigation of an offense is underscored in this particular case by the prosecutor’s closing argument, which urged the jury to return a sentence of death in part because petitioner could not be trusted to behave if he were simply returned to prison. Where the prosecution specifically relies on a prediction of future dangerousness in asking for the death penalty, it is not only the rule of Lockett and Eddings that requires that the defendant be afforded an opportunity to introduce evidence on this point; it is also the elemental due process requirement that a defendant not be sentenced to death “on the basis of information which he had no opportunity to deny or explain.” Gardner v. Florida,430 U.S. 349 , 362,97 S.Ct. 1197 , 1207,51 L.Ed.2d 393 (1977).
Id. at 5 n. 1,
Were Gardner and Skipper the totality of the “legal landscape” in 1988, the claim that Simmons was not a new rule might, at least at first blush, have considerable force.
Of critical significance, however, in addition to Gardner and Skipper, a reasonable jurist in 1988 would also have confronted California v. Ramos,
In Ramos, the Court upheld the constitutionality of a death sentence under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments,
Importantly, the Court in Ramos also squarely rejected an argument by petitioner that was virtually indistinguishable in principle from that made by petitioner in Simmons. Ramos argued that an instruction as to the Governor’s power to commute a death sentence was required under “basic principles of fairness,” because, otherwise, the court’s instruction that the Governor could commute a life sentence, “create[d] the misleading impression that the jury can prevent the defendant’s return to society only by imposing the death sentence,” id. at 1010-11,
Petitioner argued that, in view of the public’s misunderstanding about the meaning of “life imprisonment” in South Carolina, there was a reasonable likelihood that the jurors would vote for death simply because they believed, mistakenly, that petitioner eventually would be released on parole.
512 U.S. at -,
The Briggs Instruction may well mislead the jury into believing that it can eliminate any possibility of commutation by imposing the death sentence. It indicates that the Governor can commute a life sentence without possibility of parole, but not that the Governor can also commute a death sentence. The instruction thus erroneously suggests to the jury that a death sentence will assure the defendant’s permar nent removal from society whereas. the alternative sentence will not.
Presented with this choice, a jury may impose the death sentence to prevent the Governor from exercising his power to commute a life sentence without possibility of parole.
Ramos,
No doubt, a reasonable jurist in 1988, considering whether the Constitution necessarily required the rule of Simmons, would also have focused immediately upon the broad principles of deference to state decisions regarding the substantive factors that juries may consider during sentencing, which underlay the Court’s decision to uphold California’s choice to inform the jury of the Governor’s power to commute a life sentence but not his power to commute a death sentence. In punctuation of this principle, the Court concluded its entire opinion as follows:
In sum, the Briggs Instruction does not violate any of the substantive limitations this Court’s precedents have imposed on the capital sentencing process. It does not preclude individualized sentencing determinations or consideration of mitigating factors, nor does it impermissibly inject an element too speculative for the jury’s deliberation. Finally, its failure to inform the jury also of the Governor’s power to commute a death sentence does not render it constitutionally infirm. Therefore, we defer to the State’s identification of the Governor’s power to commute a life sen-fence as a substantive factor to be presented for the sentencing jury’s consideration. Our conclusion is not intended to override the contrary judgment of state legislatures that capital sentencing juries in their States should not be permitted to consider the Governor’s power to commute a sentence _ We sit as judges, not as legislators, and the wisdom of the decision to permit juror consideration of possible commutation is best left to the States.
Id. at 1013-14,
Even more so, that jurist would have fixed immediately upon footnote 30 within this concluding passage. As Justice O’Connor, the author of Ramos and the necessary fifth vote in Simmons, observed in Simmons itself, see 512 U.S. at -,
[m]any state courts have held it improper for the jury to consider or to be informed — through argument or instruction — of the possibility of commutation, pardon, or parole.
Ramos,
In fact, not only the majority, but the full Court, recognized and approved, as constitutionally permissible, the practice of “nearly every jurisdiction which has considered the question” of not “permitt[ing] [juries] to con
The [Briggs] [Instruction invites juries to impose the death sentence to eliminate the possibility of eventual release through commutation and parole. Yet that possibility bears no relation to the defendant’s character or the nature of the crime, or to any generally accepted justification for the death penalty.... In my view, the Constitution forbids the jury to consider any factor which bears no relation to the defendant’s character or the nature of his crime, or which is unrelated to any pe-nological objective that can justify imposition of the death penalty. Our cases establish that a capital sentencing proceeding should focus on the nature of the criminal act and the character of the offender. ... Considerations such as the extent of premeditation, the nature of the crime, and any prior criminal activity have been considered relevant to the determination of the appropriate sentence.... [T]he mere possibility of a commutation “is wholly and utterly foreign to” the defendant’s guilt and “not even remotely related to” his blameworthiness. That possibility bears absolutely no relation to the nature of the offense or the character of the individual.... The possibility of commutation has no relationship to the state purposes that this Court has said can justify the death penalty.
Id. at 1021-23,
Looking to the actual practice in the several states as support for his argument, Justice Marshall continued:
The propriety of allowing a sentencing jury to consider the power of a Governor to commute a sentence or of a parole board to grant parole has been considered in 28 jurisdictions in addition to California. Of those jurisdictions, 25 have concluded, as did the California Supreme Court in this case, that the jury should not consider the possibility of pardon, parole, or commutation.
Id. at 1026,
The question, in any event, is not whether in fact the Court in this passage was limiting its approval to those state laws prohibiting reference to the possibility that the defendant might become parole eligible. The only question is whether it would have been objectively unreasonable for jurists not to read the passage as so limited. It would be the height of pedanticism to suggest that it would have been objectively unreasonable for the 1988 jurist to have understood the passage as extending to all state laws prohibits ing comment on parole, including those prohibiting comment as to parole ineligibility. Both the majority’s and the dissent’s language unquestionably swept broadly, suggesting no distinction whatsoever. And Ramos’ holding that the State of California was not constitutionally required to inform the jury that the Governor could also commute a death sentence, in the face of petitioner’s argument that not to do so left the jury with the belief that it could prevent his return to society only by sentencing him to death, would have been analytically indefensible had the Court there drawn such a distinction. Even in Simmons, which ultimately constitu-tionalized this very distinction, not a single Justice so much as suggested that the distinction had actually been drawn in Ramos, ten years earlier. Under these circumstances, to suggest now that the distinction was made then, and that the several states were objectively unreasonable in not divining it at the time, would be not only demoralizing to the state and lower courts, but also de
Finally, although the Supreme Court itself seemed to consider Caldwell v. Mississippi,
In contrast [to the instruction in Ramos ], the argument at issue here cannot be said to be either accurate or relevant to a valid penological interest. The argument was inaccurate, both because it was misleading as to the nature of the appellate court’s review and because it depicted the jury’s role in a way fundamentally at odds with the role that a capital sentencer must perform. Similarly, the prosecutor’s argument is not linked to any arguably valid sentencing consideration.
Id. at 336,
Significantly, Justice O’Connor joined the judgment and the opinion of the Court, except that part in which Justice Marshall in what consequently was only a plurality, discussed Ramos and the appropriateness of states allowing their juries to consider matters such as postsentencing appellate review. Id. at 341,
The Court correctly observes that Ramos does not imply that “States are free to expose capital sentencing juries to any information and argument concerning post-sentencing procedures” no matter how inaccurate. Certainly, a misleading picture of the jury’s role is not sanctioned by Ramos. But neither does Ramos suggest that the Federal Constitution prohibits the giving of accurate instructions regarding post-sentencing procedures.
Caldwell,
And critically as it bears on whether Simmons was required in the face of Ramos, Justice O’Connor specifically addressed herself to the “inaccuracy and unreliability” that results not from affirmatively providing false information, but merely from the failure to disabuse-jurors of every misconception they might have about the state’s post-sentencing processes — the veiy kind of “inaccuracy and unreliability” that the Court eventually held required the rule in Simmons:
Jurors may harbor misconceptions about the power of state appellate courts or, for that matter, this Court to override a'jury’s sentence of death. Should a State conclude that the reliability of its sentencing procedure is enhanced by accurately instructing the jurors on the sentencing procedure, including the existence and limited nature of appellate review, I see nothing in Ramos to foreclose a policy choice in favor of jury education.
Caldwell,
In sum, Caldwell would have appeared to the reasonable jurist as simply another chapter in the continuing debate on the Court over the extent to which states should be allowed discretion over whether to inform their juries of state post-sentencing laws and procedures — a chapter in which the Court, per Justice O’Connor, reconfirmed the broad discretion retained by the states over whether to apprise juries of state post-sentencing laws. In Ramos, for five Members of the Court, and again in Caldwell for four, but effectively five,
C.
A reasonable jurist in 1988, thus, would have found himself in something of a quandary. Footnote one of Skipper,' in combination with the plurality opinion in Gardner, at least suggested that due process might compel the rule in Simmons. However, the holding, reasoning, and express language of Ramos, and in particular the text at and of footnote 30, seemed to render it all but a certainty
1.
Since the reasonable state or federal lower court jurist was not at liberty to ignore either Gardner/Skipper or Ramos/Caldwell, and since the Supreme Court apparently viewed these cases as all compatible — it having not overruled Gardner in Ramos or Caldwell, nor Ramos and Caldwell in Skipper— that jurist would have been obliged to reconcile these cases by finding some “meaningful[ ] distin[ction]” between them, see Wright,
Parks asks us to create a rule relating, not to what mitigating evidence the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision, but to how it must consider the mitigating evidence. There is a simple and logical difference between rules that govern what factors the jury must be permitted to consider in making its sentencing decision and rules that govern how the State may guide the jury in considering and weighing those factors in reaching a decision. We thus cannot say that the large majority of federal and state courts that have rejected challenges to anti-sympathy instructions similar to that given at Parks’ trial have been unreasonable in concluding that the instructions do not violate the rule of Lockett and Ed-dings.
Id.
As Saffle distinguished between Lockett’s and Eddings’ rule as to what mitigating evidence the jury may consider, from Park’s proposed rule as to how the jury may consider that evidence, so also a jurist in 1988 could reasonably have distinguished Gardner’s and Skipper’s rule as to the defendant’s right to rebut prosecution claims with factual evidence, from Ramos’ rule (and Simmons’ rule) as to the defendant’s right to rebut prosecution claims with arguments from state law.
That is, a reasonable jurist could have concluded that the due process principle of Gardner and Skipper was that a trial court could not deny a capital defendant the opportunity to rebut arguments made by the State with relevant factual evidence about himself, his character, and his particular offense. Thus, the Court required the secret presen-tence report in Gardner, which provided “factual information” upon which the judge relied in sentencing Gardner to death, Gardner,
[t]here is no disputing that this Court’s decision in Eddings requires that in capital eases “ ‘the sentencer ... not be precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or record and any of the circumstances of the offense that defendant proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death.’ ” Equally clear is the corollary rule that the senteneer may not refuse to consider or be precluded from considering “any relevant mitigating evidence.”
Id. at 4,
In contrast, that 1988 jurist could have and, indeed, would have most reasonably understood Ramos, as apparently almost every jurist in fact did, as setting forth the principle that whether to instruct juries on state law — like the governor’s power to commute a sentence or the parole board’s power to parole a prisoner — is a decision left to the “wisdom of ... the States” by the Constitution. Ramos,
The Court today, relying in part on my opinion in Caldwell v. Mississippi, rejects petitioner’s claim that the introduction of evidence of a prior death sentence imper-missibly undermined the jury’s sense of responsibility. I write separately to explain why in my view petitioner’s Caldwell claim fails. The inaccuracy of the prosecutor’s argument in Caldwell was essential to my conclusion that the argument was unconstitutional. An accurate description of the jury’s role — even one that lessened the jury’s sense of responsibility — would have been constitutional. [Caldwell,472 U.S. at 342 ,105 S.Ct. at 2646 ] (“a misleading picture of the jury’s role is not sanctioned by [California v. Ramos ], [b]ut neither does Ramos suggest that the federal Constitution prohibits the giving of accurate instructions regarding post-sentencing procedures”).
Romano, 512 U.S. at -,
2.
Indeed, this very distinction between facts and legal power to subsequently modify sentences was suggested by Justice O’Connor in Simmons itself:
Unlike in Skipper, where the defendant sought to introduce factual evidence tending to disprove the State’s showing of future dangerousness, petitioner [here]*1234 sought to rely on the operation of South Carolina’s sentencing law in arguing that he would not pose a threat to the community if he were sentenced to life imprisonment.
Simmons, 512 U.S. at -,
And, at the very least, this was a reasonable distinction in 1988, considering also that relevant factual information, like secret sentencing reports or prior good behavior, cannot change with time, but a state’s legal standards and post-conviction procedures, like eligibility for commutation or parole, can always change long after the sentencing jury renders its verdict. Cf. Ramos,
That the Supreme Court in Simmons ultimately resolved any tension between the Gardner/Skipper right to rebut state arguments with factual evidence, and Ramos’ pronouncement that the states are owed deference as to whether to instruct their juries on the implications of state laws governing the powers of commutation and parole, and that' it resolved that tension by permitting argument based upon state law in the narrow circumstance of capital cases where future dangerousness is argued and the defendant is parole ineligible, is, of course, not determinative of the new rule inquiry. The question is not whether the distinction between arguments from factual evidence concerning the defendant’s character and offense and arguments from state law itself was necessarily correct, or whether it was ultimately accepted by the Court as dispositive; rather, the only question is whether it would have been objectively unreasonable for a jurist in 1988 — forced to grapple with and reconcile Gardner, Skipper, Ramos, and Caldwell — to have drawn this distinction, and therefore to have concluded that the rule in Simmons was not compelled. See Wright,
Even the Simmons plurality seems to have acknowledged as much. After noting that “[t]he few states that do not provide capital-
In holding that Simmons announced a new rule, we recognize that Justice Blaekmun stated in his opinion in Simmons that “[t]he trial court’s refusal to apprise the jury of information crucial to its sentencing determination ... cannot be reconciled with our well-established precedents interpreting the Due Process Clause,” and that “[t]he principle announced in Gardner [and] reaffirmed in Skipper ... compels ” this conclusion. Simmons, 512 U.S. at -,
[T]he fact that a court says that its decision is within the “logical compass” of an earlier decision, or indeed that it is “controlled” by a prior decision, is not conclusive for purposes of deciding whether the current decision is a “new rule” under Teague. Courts frequently view their decisions as being “controlled” or “governed” by prior opinions even when aware of reasonable contrary conclusions reached by other courts.
Id. We do not ascribe any particular significance to the fact that Justice Blaekmun used the word “compels” in Simmons, instead of “controlled” or “within the logical compass of,” as used by the Court in Butler. The point of the Butler passage, as we understand it, is that the hortatory dicta used in opinions to underscore their faithfulness to precedent should not be considered binding upon the separate question of whether they announced a new rule under Teague. Cf. Penry,
D.
Our conclusion that the determination in 1988 that the Constitution did not require O’Dell be allowed to argue parole ineligibility was a “reasonable, good-faith interpreta
As Justice Kennedy noted for the Court in Sawyer, “[s]tate courts are coequal parts of our national judicial system and give serious attention to their responsibilities for enforcing the commands of the Constitution.”
Mueller argues that the trial court violated his due process rights by refusing to instruct the jury that, pursuant to Code § 53.1-151(B1), he would not be eligible for parole.... We hold that the trial court did not err in its rulings here. This Court has held uniformly and repeatedly that information regarding parole eligibility is not relevant for the jury’s consideration. Further, the United States Supreme Court has expressly left the determination of this question to the individual states as a matter of state law. California v. Ramos,463 U.S. 992 , 1013-14,103 S.Ct. 3446 , 3460,77 L.Ed.2d 1171 (1983).
Although likewise not necessarily disposi-tive, the federal appellate courts’ views in 1988 are also “relevant,” Stringer,
In arriving at its decision [in Ramos ], the Court noted: “[o]ur conclusion is not intended to override the contrary judgment of state legislatures that capital sentencing juries in their state should not be permitted to consider the governor’s power to commute a sentence.30 ” In footnote 30 the Court stated that “[m]any state courts have held it improper for the jury to consider or to be informed — through argument or instruction — of Jie possibility of*1237 commutation, pardon, or parole.” [Ramos,463 U.S. at 1013 & n. 30,103 S.Ct. at 3460 & n. 30.] While not exactly on point, we think Ramos indicates that the Court would decide that while it is constitutionally permissible to instruct the jury on the subject of parole, such an instruction is not constitutionally required. We so hold.
In doing so, our circuit relied upon a decision of the Fifth Circuit, O’Bryan v. Estelle,
[W]e cannot say that an instruction on parole is constitutionally mandated in a capital case. See California v. Ramos, [463 U.S. 992 ,103 S.Ct. 3446 ,77 L.Ed.2d 1171 ] (1983) (instruction informing jurors in capital case that governor has power to commute “life sentence without possibility of parole” but not informing them of equivalent power to commute death sentence not unconstitutional).
We do not find persuasive O’Dell’s argument that Turner v. Bass and O’Bryan should be disregarded because they were decided before Skipper. The Skipper footnote addressing due process was merely a reaffirmation of the Gardner plurality, and it did not in any way draw into question Ramos. The reasonableness of the Bass and O’Bryan conclusion (now, under Simmons, held to be wrong) is confirmed by the fact that both circuits, like Virginia’s Supreme Court, continued with their holdings regarding instructions on parole long after Skipper. See Peterson v. Murray,
Nor do we believe it could even be contended that the decisions of the Fourth Circuit, the Fifth Circuit, and of the Virginia Supreme Court, that Ramos left the desirability of instructions on parole eligibility or ineligibility to the authority of the states, were in any way “objectively unreasonable.” See Stringer,
As Butler recognized in holding that Arizona v. Roberson,
E.
We therefore conclude that the rule in Simmons —that due process requires that a
It was, at the very least, not unreasonable for jurists to have concluded that the broad deference afforded the states with respect to informing juries of state law regarding commutation -and parole had not been withdrawn from them by a mere plurality and a single majority footnote, the latter of which treated the due process holding so dismissively that three Justices criticized the Court as having “unnecessarily abandon[ed]” this grounds for decision, Skipper,
As Justice O’Connor reminded in Johnson v. Texas [
When determining whether a rule is new, we do not ask whether it fairly can be discerned from our precedents; we do not even ask if most reasonable jurists would have discerned it from our precedents. We ask only whether the result was dictated by past cases, or whether it is “susceptible to debate among reasonable minds.”
Accordingly, we hold that Simmons announced a new rule under Teague, and, therefore, that O’Dell cannot- avail himself of the rule of Simmons, unless it falls within “one of the two narrow exceptions to the nonretroactivity principle.” Caspari,
F.
The first exception applies to those rules that place “‘certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to proscribe,’ ” Teague,
The second exception applies to “ “watershed rules of criminal procedure’ implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal procedure.” Id. (quoting Teague,
We therefore hold that Simmons announced a new rule of which O’Dell cannot avail himself.
III.
Before the federal district court on habeas, O’Dell raised innumerable constitutional claims. J.A at 281-84. Nine of those claims were raised for the first time at the state habeas proceeding,
A.
The Commonwealth also argues that ten additional claims of O’Dell’s before the federal habeas court are procedurally barred because the Virginia Supreme Court dismissed as untimely their appeal from the state habe-as proceeding.
1.
The federal habeas court, relying on James v. Kentucky,
On the face of those rules, however, we can discern no ambiguity whatsoever. Va. S.Ct. Rule 5:17(a)(l) (emphasis added) requires that a “petition for appeal” be filed with the clerk “[i]n every case in which the appellate jurisdiction of [the Virginia Supreme Court] is invoked....” Here, the Virginia Supreme Court’s appellate jurisdiction was invoked, and O’Dell did not file a petition for appeal.
The Virginia Supreme Court had appellate jurisdiction over this appeal under Va.Code § 17-116.05:1(B) (emphasis added), which provides that,
[i]n accordance with other applicable provisions of law, appeals lie directly to the Supreme Court from a conviction in which a sentence of death is imposed, from a final decision, judgment or order of a circuit court involving a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, ... and from [other proceedings not relevant here].
Contrary to the district court’s conclusion, J.A. at 290, this provision does not at all “indicate[] that the same procedural rules that apply to appeals of convictions in death penalty cases also apply to appeals from decisions of circuit courts involving habeas corpus petitions.” Rather, the section is a jurisdictional provision; the title of the section even reads, as it pertains to the above-quoted subsection, “[C]ases over which Court of Appeals does not have jurisdiction.”
Virginia does require the filing of assignments of error rather than a petition for appeal in its “Special Rule Applicable to Cases in Which Sentence of Death Has Been Imposed”:
(a) Upon receipt of a record pursuant to § 17-110.1 B, the clerk of this Court shall*1242 notify in writing counsel.... The case shall thereupon stand matured as if an appeal had been awarded to review the conviction and the sentence of death....
(b) Within 10 days after the Filing Date, counsel for the appellant shall file with the clerk ... assignments of error upon which he intends to rely for reversal of the conviction or review of the sentence of death.
Va. S.Ct. Rule 5:22 (emphasis added). It is plain, however, that this provision relates only to the direct review of death penalty sentences. That Rule 5:22 is confined to capital cases on direct review is confirmed on a number of grounds. First, the very title of the rule is “Special Rule Applicable to Cases in Which Sentence of Death Has Been Imposed.” A sentence of death is imposed at the end of the sentencing phase of the trial; in no manner is the sentence imposed by a subsequent denial of the writ of habeas corpus. This distinction is unmistakable in light of section 17-116.05:1, supra, which provides for direct review by the Supreme Court of both “conviction[s] in which a sentence of death is imposed” and “final decision[s], judgment[s] or order[s] of a circuit court involving a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.” If the two were identical, the provision of direct Supreme Court jurisdiction for each would be redundant. Additionally, the assignments of error referenced in Rule 5:22 are those “upon which [counsel] intends to rely for reversal of the conviction or review of the sentence of death.” Neither remedy is available upon appeal from a denial of a writ of habeas corpus; the denial of the writ can be either affirmed or reversed, but the underlying conviction and sentence are not being reviewed (they are only reviewable on direct appeal). Cf. Coleman v. Thompson,
Moreover, Rule 5:22 on its own terms is triggered by receipt of a record pursuant to Va.Code § 17-110.1(B), a section unquestionably addressing direct review of death sentences:
§ 17-110.1. Review of death sentence.—
A. A sentence of death, upon the judgment thereon becoming final in the circuit court, shall be reviewed on the record by the Supreme Court.
B. The proceeding in the circuit court shall be transcribed as expeditiously as possible, and the transcript filed forthwith ... and transmitted] ... to the Supreme Court.
C. In addition to consideration of any errors in the trial enumerated by appeal, the court shall consider and determine:
1. Whether the sentence of death was imposed under the influence of passion, prejudice or any other arbitrary factor; and
2. Whether the sentence of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant.
D. In addition to the review and correction of errors in the trial of the case, with respect to review of the sentence of death, the court may:
1. Affirm the sentence of death;
2. Commute the sentence of death to imprisonment for life; or
3. Remand to the trial court for a new sentencing proceeding.
F. Sentence review shall be in addition to appeals, if taken, and review and appeal may be consolidated.
That this section addresses only direct review is self-evident. See Payne v. Commonwealth,
Finally, part F makes absolutely clear that the entire section is addressed only to direct review of the death sentence itself (as even the title of the section sets forth), not even to the underlying conviction for capital murder. That underlying conviction may be, but, under this section need not necessarily be (“if taken”), consolidated with the direct review of the death sentence. Indeed, under Rule 5:22, that consolidation is automatic: “The case shall thereupon stand matured as if an appeal had been awarded to review the conviction and the sentence of death....”
Thus, the Virginia statutory scheme is not at all ambiguous. As a general rule, a petition for appeal must be filed in every case for which review is sought by the Virginia Supreme Court. For direct review of death sentences and their accompanying capital convictions, Rule 5:22 (itself, denominated a “special rule”) creates an exception, providing that assignments of error should instead be filed. But nowhere in that exception, or in section 17-110.1(B) to which it refers, is there any possible reference to appeals from a denial of a writ of habeas corpus. The only relevant reference to denials of writs of habe-as corpus is in section 17-116.05:1, which provides merely that jurisdiction shall he in the Supreme Court. And that section makes no reference to the form those appeals should take; so the general rule requiring a petition of appeal necessarily obtains.
We recognize that Justice Blackmun, joined by Justices Stevens and O’Connor, questioned whether the Virginia Supreme Court’s dismissal of these claims as untimely constituted a state ground “adequate” to bar federal habeas review. See O’Dell,
2.
Although the district court did not agree, J.A at 288, Justice Blackmun also commented that the Virginia Supreme Court’s rejection “may” not have been “independent,” in that it “fairly appears to rest primarily on federal law, or to be interwoven with the federal law,” Michigan v. Long,
the Virginia Supreme Court’s rejection may not be based on an independent state ground because Tharp v. Commonwealth,*1244 211 Va. 1 ,175 S.E.2d 277 (1970), requires the Virginia Supreme Court to consider whether a constitutional right was abridged before denying an extension of time for filing a petition for appeal.
O’Dell,
Justice Blackmun then noted that this case “may be distinguishable,” id. at 998 n. 5,
Ake was a direct review case. We have never applied its rule regarding independent state grounds in federal habeas. But even if Ake applies here, it does Coleman no good because the Virginia Supreme Court relied on an independent state procedural rule.
We are not convinced that Tharp stands for the rule that Coleman believes it does. Coleman reads that case as establishing a practice in the Virginia Supreme Court of examining the merits of all underlying constitutional claims before denying a petition for appeal or writ of error as time barred. A more natural reading is that the Virginia Supreme Court will only grant an extension of time if the denial itself would abridge a constitutional right. That is, the Virginia Supreme Court will extend its time requirement only in those cases in which the petitioner has a constitutional right to have the appeal heard.
Coleman,
We agree that the rule of Ake concerning the state procedural rules and underlying federal claims does not apply in the habeas context, and, regardless, because we read Tharp the same way that the Court in Coleman did, we hold that the Virginia Supreme Court’s application of Va. S.Ct. Rule 5:17(a)(1) was also an independent state ground sufficient to bar federal habeas review.
3.
Because the Virginia Supreme Court’s application of Rule 5:17(a)(1) was an “adequate and independent state ground,” federal habeas review of O’Dell’s defaulted claims, which are meritless in any event,
we [have repeatedly] emphasized the important interests served by state procedural rules at every stage of the judicial process and the harm to the States that results when federal courts ignore these rules: “ ... ‘Each State’s complement of procedural rules ... channels], to the extent possible, the resolution of various types of questions to the stage of judicial process at which they can be resolved most fairly and efficiently.’ ”
By filing late [petitioner] defaulted his entire state collateral appeal. This no doubt an inadvertent error, and [Virginia] concedes
Id. at 749-50,
B.
Having concluded that O’Dell proeedurally defaulted nineteen of his claims (the nine under Slayton and the ten under Rule 5:17(a)(l)), we now address whether the federal habeas court could nevertheless consider those claims on the merits. As the Court held in Coleman,
[i]n all cases in which a state prisoner has defaulted his federal claims in state court pursuant to an independent and adequate state procedural rule, federal habeas review of the claims is barred unless the prisoner can demonstrate cause for the default and actual prejudice as a result of the alleged violation of federal law, or demonstrate that failure to consider the claims will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.
On appeal, O’Dell does not even attempt to demonstrate cause and prejudice; instead, he argues that failure to consider his defaulted claims will result in a “fundamental miscarriage of justice” because he has presented new evidence of “áctual innocence.” O’Dell’s claim “of ‘actual innocence’ is not itself a constitutional claim, but instead a gateway through which a habeas petitioner must pass to have his otherwise barred constitutional claim considered on the merits.” Herrera v. Collins,
Last Term, thé Supreme Court held that the proper test for whether a habeas petitioner has established that his case is “extraordinary” enough to fall into that “narrow class of cases,” which “implicate] a fundamental miscarriage of justice,” McCleskey v. Zant,
The new evidence that O’Dell proffers as support for his claim of actual innocence is a recently conducted DNA test of blood found on O’Dell’s elothing. In his statement accompanying the denial of certiorari on direct review of the state habeas denial, Justice Blackmun expressed the view that “there are serious questions as to whether O’Dell committed the crime” in light of this DNA evidence. O’Dell,
1.
At O’Dell’s original trial, the Commonwealth’s expert Jacqueline Emrich testified at length about the numerous tests she performed upon the various relevant blood stains.
Helen Schartner had type O blood; O’Dell has type A JA at 1850, 1852. Five of the their enzyme markers were the same, and five were different. J.A. at 1853-55. Although not all ten enzymes types were identifiable from every single stain, each stain mentioned above proved to be type O blood and matched Helen Schartner’s blood (in a way inconsistent with O’Dell’s) for every single identifiable enzyme. In addition, Ms. Emrich also found one other blood stain in O’Dell’s car that was different from both Schartner’s and O’Dell’s blood. J.A. at 1871.
2.
Five years after the trial, O’Dell requested permission to have DNA testing performed on the evidence that was introduced at trial, testing which was not commonly available when he was tried in 1986. The Commonwealth consented, and O’Dell proposed that the evidence be sent to LifeCodes laboratory.
Before the state habeas court, and again before the federal habeas court, O’Dell presented expert testimony embracing the first LifeCodes conclusion and attacking the second. Specifically, his experts testified that, based upon their own evaluation of the Life-Codes data, the variations between the blood on the blue jacket and Sehartner’s blood exceeded LifeCodes’ own match criterion of 1.8%, and so the jacket should be considered “inconclusive” rather than a “match.” J.A. at 2602, 2860, 2871.
The Commonwealth’s experts agreed that the DNA tests proved that the blood on O’Dell’s shirt came from neither Schartner nor O’Dell, but they testified that the Life- . Codes data demonstrate that the blood on the blue jacket matched Helen Sehartner’s blood, for two réasons. First, as O’Dell’s experts were forced to largely concede, JA at 2869-71, the DNA patterns on the blue jacket fell well within the state laboratory’s and the FBI’s match criterion of 2.5%. JA at 2728, 2731, 2802, 2808, 2812-13, 2838. And second, as O’Dell’s experts again had to concede, J.A. at 2871-72, “band shifting” and “partial degradation,” had occurred in the samples and could account for the differentials, J.A. at 2804, 2821, 2839-40, 2990— which is why LifeCodes performed further tests and ultimately concluded the blue jacket was a “match,” JA. at 2732-33, 2738-39, 2840, 2891,2990.
O’Dell’s experts, in turn, had two responses. First, under the standards of the National Research Council — described by the Commonwealth’s expert as a committee issuing “recommendations,” not “accepted by the scientific community generally,” and currently under revision because “over 300 distinguished scientists” petitioned for their modification due to inaccuracies, JA at 2827-30— “[ejach laboratory should determine their own match criteria.” J.A. at 2832, 2857. But see JA at 2738, 2853. Therefore, O’Dell’s experts argued, it was improper for the Commonwealth’s experts to substitute the state laboratory’s and the FBI’s match criteria for LifeCodes’ (although it was apparently proper for them to substitute their conclusion for LifeCodes’). Second, according to O’Dell’s experts and that same NRC Report, use of a monomorphic probe — upon which LifeCodes relied to correct the conceded band shifting, JA at 2839-40 — is ineffective to correct band shifting. JA at 2840-43, 2872. Of course, O’Dell’s primary expert, Dr. Spence, a medical geneticist, performed approximately 98% of his work in a clinical environment where, if band shifting occurred, he could simply take another sample from his living patients. J.A. at 2880-87, 2598, 2604r-05. The Commonwealth’s expert countered, “[i]n the forensic field ... we only have so much of the sample. It is not like in the clinical laboratory environment where you have a lot of blood where you can go back and repeat a sample_. [Therefore] [w]e don’t ignore [band shifting and partiall-ing; we try to correct them].” J.A. at 2846-47, 2742-43.
3.
The federal habeas court’s factual findings regarding this testimony are not particularly helpful,
Nevertheless, the district court was forced to conclude, J.A. at 308, under the legal standard then in force, that O’Dell’s new evidence failed to establish actual innocence, because it did not demonstrate “by clear and convincing evidence that but for constitutional error, no reasonable juror would have found the petitioner” guilty of murder. This standard, established by the Court in Sawyer v. Whitley,
Because the federal district court applied Sawyer instead of Carrier, and because the court did in a footnote dictum find that O’Dell would have met a less demanding standard of “a ‘fair probability that, in light of all probative evidence avail ible at the time of his federal evidentiary hearing, ‘the trier of the facts would have entertained a reasonable doubt of his guilt,”’ J.A. at 308 n.18, O’Dell argues that, at the very least, we must remand the case to the district court to determine whether O’Dell’s evidence meets the newly applicable standard. Under the particular facts of this case, however, and given that the district court has already made the kinds of findings that are peculiarly within its province, we disagree.
The “fair probability standard relied upon by the district court in its obiter dictum, drawn from Justice Powell’s plurality opinion in Kuhlmann v. Wilson,
This question is a mixed question of fact and law;
a classic mixing of apples and oranges. “More likely than not” is a quintessential charge to the finder of fact, while “no reasonable juror would have convicted him in the light of- the new evidence” is an equally quintessential conclusion of law....
Id. at -,
The district court, in making this determination, must look at two elements: first, all of the evidence that the jury heard at trial, and second, the newly proffered evi
Ascertaining the credibility of evidence is “quintessentially” a task for the fact-finder, and so the district court’s factual findings regarding the credibility of testimony it has actually heard are findings subject to review only under a clearly erroneous standard. But the federal district court is in no better position than an appellate court to then add that new evidence to the evidence that was presented at trial or to speculate as to the likelihood that no reasonable juror would convict based on the sum of all the evidence. Both courts, reviewing a cold trial record, must determine whatever inferences and deductions logically and reasonably can be made from all of the evidence and then, to the best of their ability, guess as to the likelihood that no reasonable juror would make those inferences necessary for conviction. This is in some sense an application of “law” to facts. In any event, we believe that such determinations are, for lack of a better word, “mixed” questions of law and fact, and so are reviewable de novo.
In Schlup the Court remanded to the Court of Appeals with instructions to remand to the district court, but it did so there only because that was “the most expeditious procedure” in light of the “fact-intensive nature of the inquiry, together with the District Court’s ability to take testimony from the few key witnesses if it deems that course advisable.” — U.S. at ——,
Because the district court made sufficient factual findings as to the credibility of the witnesses that it heard, and because the remaining portion of the Carrier inquiry is simply an application of law to the combination of those facts and the trial record facts, we turn ourselves to the question of whether O’Dell has established that it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would convict him.
4.
We do not believe that O’Dell has come even close to meeting either the Kuhl-mann standard or the “similar” Carrier standard. A reasonable juror examining all of the evidence would have confronted the following.
First, the mountain of circumstantial evidence. On the night of the murder, both O’Dell and Schartner were at the County Line Lounge. O’Dell left the club within fifteen minutes of when Schartner left.
O’Dell’s first explanation for being covered in blood, which he gave his former girlfriend that next morning and which he now admits was a lie, was that he had vomited blood all over himself. His second explanation, which he told the police when he was arrested, was that the blood was from a nose bleed caused by being struck when he attempted to stop a fight at another club that same night.
Helen Schartner’s head had been beaten brutally with a “linear cylindrical object.” J.A. at 1414. O’Dell had been seen about a week earlier with a pellet gun in his ear, J.A. at 1581-36, and medical testimony established that Schartner’s wounds were consistent with the weight and shape of that type of pellet gun, J.A. at 1413-17. Moreover, tire tracks found at the crime scene had the “identical” design elements as the tires on O’Dell’s car, J.A. at 1258, 1266. After examining patterns for some two thousand different tires and four or five thousand different design units, the Commonwealth’s expert could not find a single tire, other than O’Dell’s, that matched the tire tracks found at the scene. J.A. at 1258-59,1263.
Additionally, the direct physical evidence linking O’Dell to the murder is overwhelming. On the right front seatcover of O’Dell’s ear, investigators found a head hair consistent with Helen Schartner’s but not with O’Dell’s hair. J.A. at 1912-13. On the “left seat driver’s seat back cover” of O’Dell’s ear, investigators found two hairs consistent with Schartner’s head hairs and inconsistent with O’Dell’s, three hairs consistent with O’Dell’s head hairs and inconsistent with Schartner’s, and two hairs consistent with neither’s. J.A. at 1913-14. And, on the right front floor mat of O’Dell’s car, investigators found one hair, consistent with Helen Schartner’s pubic hair, and not with O’Dell’s.- J.A. at 1914-15.
Investigators also found, in Schartner’s vagina and anus and on O’Dell’s shirt, seminal fluid that was consistent with a mixture of O’Dell’s and Schartner’s bodily fluids. J.A. at 1889-96. O’Dell on this appeal argues strenuously that the alleged “mixture” of bodily fluids found in Schartner’s anus shows that he could not have raped her, because Schartner could not secrete vaginal fluids from her anus. Not only is O’Dell not free to challenge this now on federal habeas (because he has proffered no new evidence relating to the seminal fluids and the Virginia Supreme Court expressly found that the vaginal and anal fluids were consistent with O’Dell’s, O’Dell,
Secretors are persons whose bodily fluids carry with them characteristics of their blood type; both Schartner and O’Dell were se-cretors. Schartner’s blood type was 0, and her PGM type and PepA type (the two enzymes that are evident in bodily fluids) were 2-1 and 1, respectively. O’Dell’s blood type is A, his PGM type 1, and his PepA type 1. Because both Schartner and O’Dell had the same PepA type (1), the presence of that enzyme is not particularly revealing. The
As Emrich explained, both blood types and enzyme types function in essentially the same way. Blood type A indicates the presence of the A antigen, type B indicates the presence of B, AB indicates the presence of both, and 0 indicates the presence of neither. If you mix A with B, the mixture is AB; if you mix either A or B with AB, the mixture is still AB; and if you mix A or B or AB with 0, the mixture is A, or B, or AB (depending on which you added to 0). Likewise, there are three common types of PGM, 1, 2, and 2-1. Type 2-1, like blood type AB, is simply a combination of types 1 and 2. Thus, if you mix 1 with 2, the combination is 2-1, as is the combination of either 1 or 2 with 2-1. JA. at 1881-88.
In Schartner’s vagina, Emrich found seminal fluid indicating blood type A, PepA 1, and PGM 2-1. J.A. at 1889-90. The blood type (A) is consistent with a mixture of O’Dell’s (A) and Schartner’s (0) bodily fluids, the PepA type is consistent with both of their fluids, and the PGM type (2-1) is consistent with a mixture of O’Dell’s (1) and Sehartner’s (2-1) bodily fluids. J.A. at 1890. That same mixture was found in Sehartner’s anus, J.A. at 1891-92, and on three stains on O’Dell’s shirt, J.A at 1895-96.
Even more incriminating were the spermatozoa found in Schartner’s genital swabs and in her genital scrapings. Those spermatozoa were blood type A, PepA 1, and PGM 1, consistent with O’Dell’s blood and enzyme types and not with Schartner’s. J.A. at 1893-94. Thus, the spermatozoa, which could only have come from a man, matched perfectly the sperm cells of Joseph O’Dell, and the seminal fluid, which presumably came from the same man who produced the spermatozoa, was entirely consistent with a mixture of O’Dell’s and Schartner’s bodily fluids.
And herein lies the obvious failing in O’Dell’s argument. O’Dell maintains that, because seminal fluid type A, PepA 1, PGM 2-1, was found in Schartner’s anus, and because the anus does not secrete vaginal fluids (and, presumably, he for some reason also asserts, by silent implication and without evidence, that there are no other bodily secretions in the anus), the man who raped Schartner must have had type A, PepA 1, PGM 2-1 semen, not type A, PepA 1, PGM 1 like O’Dell’s. But, as the expert testimony explained, seminal fluid is capable of mixing with other fluids to pick up their markers; the spermatozoa, on the other hand, were the man’s alone, and they were type A, PepA 1, PGM 1. Unless we are to indulge the fanciful possibility that the sperm and the seminal fluid found in Schartner came from different men, the only reasonable implication from this is that the rapist’s sperm and seminal fluid (prior to mixing with Schartner’s fluids) were both originally type A, PepA 1, PGM 1 — exactly like O’Dell’s.
In addition, a reasonable juror would also consider the testimony of Steven Watson, to whom O’Dell confessed to murdering Helen Schartner. Watson testified that O’Dell told him in jail that he had met Schartner at the County Line Lounge, bought her a few drinks, took her riding in his green Camaro, tried to “get a little” from her, and, when she refused to “give it up,” strangled her and dumped her body. J.A. at 1674,1685. Watson also testified that O’Dell had told him that “he was going to walk on the charge” because “they didn’t have no evidence” and “no one had actually seen him kill her.” J.A. at 1675, 1686. Watson further testified that he had never seen anything about the murder on television or in the newspaper, J.A at 1675, 1686, and that he had neither been offered nor received anything in return for his testimony, J.A at 1675-76,1680-82.
The jury heard at great length about Watson’s prior convictions, and O’Dell cross-examined him and other witnesses repeatedly attempting to uncover any deal between Watson and the authorities. J.A. at 1680-81, 1689-96, 2023-24,2050. In addition, the jury heard about the recent charges against Watson’s wife that had been dropped and against Watson that had been plea bargained to three years probation, J.A. at 1689-92, and it heard testimony from a state trooper that Watson “wanted a deal,” meaning “he didn’t want to go to prison,” J.A at 2050. Nonetheless, the Virginia Supreme Court expressly found that “O’Dell was unable to prove a
And, finally, there was all of the blood evidence introduced at trial. The Commonwealth’s expert, Ms. Emrich testified at length regarding the great quantities of blood found on O’Dell’s clothing and car, all of which was consistent with Schartner’s blood and inconsistent with O’Dell’s. See supra at 1247. Helen Sehartner’s combination of blood and enzyme type occurs in .3% (three out of a thousand) of the population; O’Dell’s occurs in .08% (eight out of ten thousand). J.A. at 1921. The DNA evidence that O’Dell introduced at the federal habeas hearing was in no way inconsistent with that testimony, J.A. at 2815, as even O’Dell’s expert was forced to concede, J.A. at 2636, 2878.
Plus, a reasonable juror would have been confronted with O’Dell’s new DNA evidence. That juror would have seen the LifeCodes Report, the Commonwealth’s experts, and O’Dell’s expert all agreeing that one of the stains on his shirt was from neither O’Dell nor Schartner. Of course, this evidence would have contradicted O’Dell’s “alibi,” that the blood on his clothing came from his own nose when he was struck stopping a bar fight.
And, finally, a reasonable juror could have considered that O’Dell had been previously convicted in Florida of a crime virtually identical to this one, and that he had been paroled, after serving eight years on a 99-year sentence, only fourteen months before Schartner was murdered. There, the victim testified that O’Dell had abducted her, robbed her, struck her several times on the head with his gun, and choked her, all in an effort to force her to submit to his sexual advances. See O’Dell,
When viewing all of this evidence — being together at the County Line Lounge, leaving within fifteen minutes of each other, being covered with blood, planning to go suddenly to Florida, having inconsistent alibis, plus the wounds matching his gun, the tracks matching his tires, the hairs, the semen, the spermatozoa, the blood enzymes, the blood DNA on the jacket, the confession, and the nearly identical earlier crime — we do not believe it can even remotely be claimed that O’Dell has established that it is more likely than not that no reasonable juror would have convicted him. The only thing that O’Dell has demonstrated is that one of the many blood stains on his clothing did not come from either himself or Helen Schartner; that he also had someone else’s blood on his shirt by no means shows, that he did not murder Helen Schartner, particularly in light of the vast other evidence that he did. We therefore hold that O’Dell has not passed through the “narrow” gateway of actual innocence, and so are barred from reviewing his procedurally defaulted claims on federal habeas.
TV.
O’Dell also challenges the federal district court’s decision to grant him a full evidentiary hearing on only the DNA evidence, without allowing him to present other “new” evidence disputing the expert testimony at trial concerning the effect of intermingling bodily fluids, other unspecified circumstantial evidence linking him to the crime, and the testimony of cellmate Stephen Watson that O’Dell had confessed. We conclude that the district court was entirely within its discretion in so limiting the hearing.
O’Dell had the full opportunity to develop these factual bases in state court. In Keeney v. Tamayo-Reyes,
is entitled to an evidentiary hearing if he can show cause for his failure to develop the facts in state-court proceedings and actual prejudice resulting from that failure.
The Court also “adopt[ed] the narrow exception to the eause-and-prejudiee requirement,” holding that
[a] habeas petitioner’s failure to develop a claim in state-court proceedings will be excused and a hearing mandated if he can show that a fundamental miscarriage of justice would result from failure to hold a federal evidentiary hearing.
Id. at 11-12,
O’Dell also claims that he has demonstrated cause and prejudice for his failure to develop the factual record in state court concerning Watson’s testimony. O’Dell has continually maintained that Watson gave false testimony about O’Dell’s confession in exchange for a plea agreement with the authorities, and he now proffers an affidavit of a private investigator who interviewed Watson some five years after the trial and claims to have uncovered some incriminating statements. O’Dell argues that Watson’s alleged perjury and the prosecution’s failure to correct that perjury (by disclosing that plea agreement as required by Brady v. Maryland,
We disagree. Although the alleged perjury and prosecution cover-up is external to
And, regardless, O’Dell could not possibly show any prejudice. First, his “new evidence” was of dubious value. The private investigator, who has never had his story subjected to cross-examination, claimed that Watson stated that he really did not know “how the girl was killed” (contradicting his trial testimony that O’Dell said he had strangled her), that O’Dell “could have been just bragging,” and that “[t]o [his] knowledge, there was no deals, they didn’t go through; ... [He] did not know of any deals at all. [He’s] not saying there wasn’t, but [he himself] did not know of any.” J.A. at 238-39 (emphasis omitted). None of these statements prove, or even suggest, the presence of a plea bargain, nor do they prove O’Dell’s innocence, as the district court expressly found before concluding “the new evidence does not merit a hearing.” J.A. at 345.
Second, even if it were of value, the evidence was almost certainly cumulative. The jury heard, at length, that Watson’s family had a reputation for untruthfulness, that Watson was a seven-time convicted felon, that Watson and his wife had recently been facing criminal charges, that Watson had wanted “to make a deal” to avoid prison time, and that recent charges against Watson’s wife had been dropped and Watson had received only three years probation on multiple breaking and entering charges. We do not think that O’Dell’s investigator’s claims would have substantially increased the reasons that the jury had to doubt Watson’s credibility and to scrutinize his story carefully.
Given the overwhelming other evidence of guilt detañed above, we are certain that nothing said by this investigator concerning Watson would have given any juror reasonable doubt as to whether O’Dell in fact murdered Helen Schartner on the night of February 5, 1985.
“Federal Courts are not forums in which to relitigate state trials.” Barefoot v. Estelle,
“[a]t trial, the court permitted O’Dell to fully develop all pretrial contacts and negotiations Watson had with the Commonwealth. O’Desll was unable to prove a plea agreement existed between Watson and the Commonwealth.”
O’Dell,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court granting- the petitioner’s writ of habeas corpus is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to reinstate the death sentence. Likewise, the portion of the district court opinion finding that petitioner had not procedurally defaulted the claims that he failed to properly appeal from the state habeas court is reversed. The remainder of the district court opinion, finding that petitioner has not demonstrated actual innocence, is affirmed under the legal standard of Schlup.
REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART.
Notes
. See also Penry v. Lynaugh,
. Justice Souter, for example, who authored the dissent in Graham, could not have been clearer as to this requirement of the "new rule” doctrine when he wrote in Wright that, "[t]o survive Teag-ue, [a rule] must be 'old' enough to have predated the finality of the prisoner’s conviction, and specific enough to dictate the rule on which the conviction may he held to be unlawful."
. See, e.g., Teague,
. To be sure, the Court’s decision in Ramos rested primarily on the Eighth Amendment. But the Court specifically considered, inter alia, whether the Briggs Instruction ran afoul of the due process concerns of reliability in sentencing that were identified in Gardner, concluding that Gardner “provid[ed] no support for respondent.”
Regardless, it was apparent in 1988, as it is still today, that the Eighth Amendment’s principles inform the Due Process capital sentencing inquiry. Therefore, a reasonable jurist could hardly be faulted either for resorting to both lines of the Court's cases, as the Court itself has repeatedly done, or for relying only on the line directly implicated in the case before him.
. Indeed, one federal district court rejected a pre-Simmons claim very much like that in Simmons on precisely this ground:
While Ramos did not address the precise issue raised here, it is instructive.... The Briggs Instruction [reviewed in Ramos ] informed the jury that a sentence of life imprisonment without parole may be commuted by the governor to a sentence that includes the possibility of parole. The jury in Ramos was not told that the governor could similarly commute a sentence of death to a lesser punishment. The California Supreme Court reversed the death sentence, in part because this combination of instructions allowed the jury to believe mistakenly that the "only way to keep the defendant off the streets is to condemn him to death.” The instructions given ... [here] could also produce this misapprehension in jurors: telling the jury that the alternative to death is*1227 imprisonment might lead it to believe that public safety would be assured only through the imposition of the death penalty. Despite this concern, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Briggs Instruction in Ramos, finding that it did not preclude individualized sentencing determination or introduce a speculative element injury deliberation.... In light of Ramos, [petitioner’s] appeal to the general principle that imposition of capital punishment must be based on reason, rather than emotion and caprice, is an insufficient basis on which to grant relief. All constitutional rules can be stated in very general terms, but general principles do not compel specific rules.
Albanese v. McGinnis,
. Justice Marshall was relying primarily, although not exclusively, on the Eighth Amend
. See, e.g., Ala.Code § 13A-5-46(e); Ark.Code Ann. 5-4-603(b); Cal. Pen.Code § 190.3; Conn. Gen.Stat. § 53a-46a(f); Del.Code Ann. tit. 11, § 4209(a); La.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 905.6; Mo. Ann. Stat. § 565.030.4; N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 630:5(IV); Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 61, § 331.21; Va.Code § 53.1-151(B1); Wash. Rev.Code Ann. § 10.95.030(1). The Court had been aware of similar laws for at least a decade. See Schick v. Reed,
. The Court did not so much as cite Caldwell in Simmons, foreclosing any argument (which O'Dell does not make, in any event) that Caldwell somehow compelled the result in Simmons. Presumably, Simmons did not neglect Caldwell merely because that case was decided under the Eighth Amendment, considering the Court’s liberal reliance upon Eighth Amendment cases elsewhere in the Simmons opinions and its routine cross-pollenization between its Eighth Amendment and its Due Process lines of cases in the capital sentencing context. Almost certainly, the Court avoided relying on Caldwell because it considered that case as limited to the affirmative provision of inaccurate information as to the proper role of the jury, as the Court had expressly held in 1986. Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 183 n. 15,
The infirmity identified in Caldwell is simply absent in this case: Here the jury was not affirmatively misled regarding its role in the sentencing process. The evidence at issue was neither false at the time it was admitted, nor did it even pertain to the jury’s role in the sentencing process.
. Justice Powell took no part in the consideration of Caldwell, so it might appear that only the three Caldwell dissenters agreed with Justice O’Con-nor. However, Justice Powell joined Justice O’Connor's majority opinion in Ramos, and, as he said for the majority in Darden v. Wainwright, decided only one year after Caldwell, "Caldwell is relevant only to certain lypes of comment— those that mislead the jury as to its role in the sentencing process in a way that allows the jury to feel less responsible than it should for the sentencing decision.”
. At this juncture in Skipper, the Court was discussing the requirements of the Eighth Amendment, not those of the Due Process Clause. However, the most natural implication would be that the rebuttal evidence that the defendant must be allowed to introduce under the Due Process Clause would be the same as that which the Court held he must be allowed to introduce under the Eighth Amendment — evidence concerning his character and offense.
. As the Fifth Circuit explained in Johnson,
Simmons ... announce[d] a new rule because it held that in some situations the states are no longer free to decide whether an instruction on parole should be given. This is inconsistent with the Court’s earlier ruling in California v. Ramos. In Ramos, the Court held, inter alia, that whether or not an instruction on post-sentencing contingencies was appropriate remained properly in the hands of the states.
. See also Caspari,
. The district court’s conclusion in footnote that the precedent in 1988 also dictated the result that the Eighth Amendment required that the jury be informed of future dangerousness, J.A. at 335, is inexplicable, considering that such a rule would be new even today. See Simmons, 512 U.S. at - n. 4,
. Because we hold that Simmons announced a new rule, we do not address whether the failure to give the Simmons instruction in this case was harmless error under Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Nevertheless, there are strong indications that even if it had been error, it would have been harmless under Brecht given the heinousness of the crime, O’Dell’s lengthy and frightening criminal record, and O’Dell’s own testimony from the stand that he would spend the rest of his life behind bars, J.A. at 2433. Moreover, the court's failure to inform the jury of parole ineligibility calls into question only the jury’s finding of future dangerousness, leaving the vileness finding untouched, which may be sufficient to sustain the death penalty under Zant v. Stephens,
having unanimously found that [O’Dell’s] conduct in committing the offense was outrageously wanton, vile or inhuman and it involved aggravated battery to the victim beyond the minimum necessary to accomplish the act of murder, and having considered the evidence in mitigation of the offense, unanimously fix his punishment at death.
J.A. at 2506.
. These claims were denominated Id, Ilh, IV, V, VI, X, XI, XVIII, and XXII in the federal district court. J.A. at 286.
. These claims were, denominated la, Ibi, Ibii, Ibiv, Ic, Ie, Ig, XVII, XX, and XXIII in the federal district court. J.A. at 285. Additionally, claims Id, V, VI, X, XI, XVIII, and XXII were also dismissed by the Virginia Supreme Court as untimely on appeal from the state habeas proceeding, but, because they were procedurally barred in any event under Slayton, see supra, we do not consider them further.
. On March 6, 1991, the deputy chief clerk of the Virginia Supreme Court and an assistant state attorney general informed O'Dell that he should have filed a petition for appeal rather than assignments of error. J.A. at 287 n.3. O’Dell claims that the state assistant attorney general then told him over the telephone that he had “no objection" to O'Dell trying to "supplement” his filing, and that the Commonwealth would not oppose that supplementation. Id. Regardless of whether such a phone conversation actually took place, the Commonwealth did in fact oppose the motion to amend when it was filed on March 8, and the Virginia Supreme Court denied that motion, as was its prerogative.
. That the full text of the Virginia Supreme Court opinion was but one sentence — "Finding that the appeal was not perfected in the manner provided by law, the Court rejects the petition for appeal in the above-styled case. Rule 5:17(a)(l),” J.A. at 216 — is of course of no moment. "[A] state court that wishes to rely on a procedural bar rule in a one-line pro forma order easily can write that ‘relief is denied for reasons of procedural default.' " Harris v. Reed,
.The Commonwealth argues, and O'Dell presents no evidence to the contrary, that "Virginia clearly and consistently requires the filing of a petition for appeal on any appeal from a judgment of the habeas corpus proceeding, regardless of whether the habeas case involves the death penally.” Respondent’s Reply Br. at 32. See, e.g., Yeatts v. Murray,
. Although unambiguous statutes or court rules are always "firmly established,” new procedural rules created after the time they had to be obeyed, see Ford,
. Prior to 1985, when this statute was amended to provide that appeals "involving” habeas corpus "lie directly” to the Supreme Court, such appeals were in the exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals. Titcomb v. Wyant,
That the 1985 amendment was simply an alteration in jurisdiction over all habeas appeals has been recognized by the Virginia Courts:
It is clear from the 1985 amendment to Code § 17-116.05:1(B) that effective July 1, 1985, the General Assembly terminated the jurisdiction of [Virginia's intermediate appellate courts] to hear and determine appeals from a final decision, judgment or order of a circuit court involving a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.... |T|he clear legislative intent expressed in the 1985 amendment [was] that habeas corpus cases on appeal from the circuit court go directly to the Supreme Court.
White v. Garraghty,
. Because these procedural rules are expressly set out in unambiguous state statutes and supreme court rules, and because in Virginia they have been regularly followed, see supra note 19, they are qualitatively different from the rule at issue in James. In James, the distinction between jury "instructions” and "admonitions” was "not always clear or closely hewn to,” as evidenced by the fact that the Kentucky Supreme Court had "recognized that the content of admonitions and instructions can overlap,” had "acknowledged that ‘sometimes matters more appropriately the subject of admonition are included with or as a part of the instructions,' ” and had used the terms interchangeably for a number of years (as had the trial courts).
. The Court in Coleman did comment that the Virginia Supreme Court had there not applied Tharp because that case concerns only petitions for appeal, as contrasted to the "purely ministerial” notice of appeal at issue in Coleman — but it did so only as an alternative holding, following the aforementioned analysis of Tharp and the qualifying phrase, "[e]ven if we accept Coleman's reading of Tharp." Id.
. The district court, because it found that Rule 5:17(a)(l) was not an adequate and independent state ground under James, proceeded to rule against O’Dell on the merits of these claims. Principally, the claims were that O’Dell was not competent to waive his right to counsel, that, at a minimum, his competency was never appropriately determined, and that even if he was competent, his waiver of the right to counsel was not voluntary, knowing, and intelligent. Although it should not have reached the claims, on the merits, the district court correctly rejected them.
First, the standard for competency to waive the right to counsel is whether the defendant has "sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding." Godinez v. Moran,
Second, O’Dell claims that his competency was never appropriately determined because Dr. Kreider is a "therapeutic psychiatrist” and not a "forensic psychiatrist.” Although O’Dell cites Ake for the proposition that "[wjhen the mental state of a defendant is at issue, due process
when a defendant demonstrates to the trial judge that his sanity,at the time of the offense is to be a significant factor at trial, the State must, at a minimum, assure the defendant access to a competent psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate examination and assist in ... the defense.
required to make a competency determination in every case in which a defendant seeks to plead guilty or to waive his right to counsel. As in any criminal case, a competency determination is necessary only when a court has reason to doubt the defendant's competence.
Godinez,
Regardless, Dr. Kreider was more than qualified to make the competency determination; he has an M.D. from .the University of Chicago School of Medicine, has completed a psychiatric residency at the Philadelphia Naval Hospital, and has served as a psychiatrist in the Navy and in private practice from 1965 to the present. J.A. at 2640-42. Both the state and federal habe-as courts found Dr. Kreider fully qualified to make the competency determination.
Finally, O’Dell' claims that his conviction must be vacated because he did not waive his right to counsel voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently. O'Dell claims that the district court’s refusal to replace defense counsel, with whom O'Dell had a confrontational and distrustful relationship, left O'Dell “no choice” but to dismiss counsel and proceed pro se. ' But "[t]he determination of whether or not the motion for substitution of counsel should be granted is within the discretion of the trial court.” United States v. Gallop,
[fjrom everything I've seen, since Mr. Ray was appointed in this case, he’s done everything in his power to get those material things that should be heard before the Court for a hearing, and I’ve absolutely no evidence whatsoever that this man hasn’t done an outstanding job for you at this point or that there is any credi- , bility whatsoever in the allegations which you have made with respect to him. None whatsoever.
J.A. at 319; see also J.A. at 3008. Although his opinion on Ray varied, at times, O'Dell also shared this assessment of Ray’s competency. J.A. at 435, 2513, 3008; Tr. 9/8/86 Vol. 53, 201-02. In any event, the trial court found that O'Dell was receiving adequate counsel and accordingly refused to substitute counsel. And, "once the trial court has appropriately determined that a substitution of counsel is not warranted, the court can insist that the defendant choose between continuing representation by his existing counsel and appearing pro se." Gallop,
It also appears that O'Dell’s waiver was knowingly and intelligently made. The trial court repeatedly warned O'Dell of the dangers of proceeding pro se, O’Dell was repeatedly asked if he understood what he was doing, and the court even allowed him to change his mind several times. J.A. at 318-19, 3007-08, 3011-12, 3016, 3021-22, 3332-33, 3340. If there was any problem in the attorney-client relationship, it was likely caused by O’Dell. As the federal habeas court concluded, “O'Dell’s distrust of Ray was not based on objective facts; it was based on pure speculation.” J.A. at 320.
And, an independent and thorough examination of the record reveals that O'Dell, who was "very intelligent,” had a college equivalency education, and "exhibited] tremendous [courtroom] skills,” J.A. at 3011, 2406, 3333, defended himself far more ably than many practicing attorneys could have done.
. Although O’Dell asserts that this new evidence is enough to meet the "extraordinarily high” threshold of a freestanding constitutional claim of actual innocence, Herrera,
. The Commonwealth argues that a claim of actual innocence cannot succeed unless the petitioner demonstrates that "but for a constitutional violation" his actual innocence would have been established. Respondent's Reply Br. at 19. Because none of the proeedurally barred constitutional claims prevented the jury from hearing the DNA evidence or any of the other evidence O'Dell claims proves his innocence, the Commonwealth maintains that they cannot be reviewed regardless of the new evidence.
Prior to Schlup, our circuit did require petitioners to link their exculpatory evidence to a specific constitutional error that prevented the jury from adequately considering the evidence. See Spencer v. Murray,
. Even if petitioner makes this showing, it may still he within the court’s discretion to decline to review his procedurally defaulted claims. As Justice O’Connor observed in Schlup, “the Court d[id] not, and need not, decide whether the fundamental miscarriage of justice exception is a discretionary remedy.” - U.S. at -,
. O’Dell now attacks Emrich as a "neophyte,” claiming that her testimony should be discounted. However, it is not clear on the record that O’Dell challenged her qualifications at trial, J.A. at 1827, and regardless, the Virginia Supreme Court expressly found that "the trial court did not err in admitting in evidence the results pf the electrophoretic tests,” O'Dell,
. The federal habeas court concluded, "[biased on the evidence at the evidentiary hearing, the blood on the jacket and the blood on the checkered shirt can be excluded as having a common origin. Again, based on the evidence, the DNA comparison of the blood on the checkered shirt and the victim’s blood yielded a result that is ‘inconclusive.’ ” J.A. at 307-08. This conclusion is unhelpful and, indeed, is somewhat odd, in that it restates an issue that nobody disputes, states another that is contrary to the evidence, and ignores the hotly contested issue in the testimony. Every expert agreed that the stain on the shirt could be "excluded" from coming from
. Justice O’Connor, a necessary member of the majority in Schlup, made clear that the Cotut did not "disturb the traditional discretion of district courts in this area, nor d[id] it speak to the standard of appellate review for such judgments.” — U.S. at -,
. In his briefing, O'Dell persists on disputing the time he left the club, relying on trial testimony that he was there over a half hour after Schartner left. See Petitioner’s Br. at 47. But the Virginia Supreme Court expressly found that O'Dell left within fifteen minutes of when Schart-ner left, O'Dell,
. O'Dell maintains that this second story is true and that trial testimony supported it. For this proposition, see Petitioner’s Br. at 7, O'Dell cites his own federal writ of habeas corpus, J.A. at 35. His writ in turn cites trial testimony, not that O’Dell was bloodied breaking up a fight, but merely that a fight had occurred at the Brass Rail bar that night and that when the supervisor went outside he did not see anyone other than O’Dell, who was covered in blood. O'Dell then claimed that the persons who had been fighting had left.
O’Dell concedes that this is contrary to the story he told Connie Craig, J.A. at 2432, but maintains that he lied to Craig only to prevent her from telling his parole officer he had been fighting at the bars, as she had done on a previous occasion. Of course, Craig testified that O’Dell went to the County Line Lounge on "practically” every Tuesday, J.A. at 1098, and that he had told her he had been at the County Line Lounge on the very night in question, J.A. at 1093-94, 1098.
. O’Dell claims to have new evidence now substantiating his claim that Watson had cut a deal, but that evidence does little to prove that claim. See discussion infra at 1254-1255.
. Dr. Guerrieri, an expert for the Commonwealth, explained at the state habeas hearing yet another way how the DNA exclusion of the shirt could still be consistent with the enzyme match on that same shirt:
One possibility would be that there are two different sources of genetic material in that particular stain; that is to say in the DNA testing, as well as the serology testing, a large portion of the stain is often consumed in the analysis. So if you sample one region — if Miss Emerich [sic] sampled one region in a particular location, and the commercial testing lab sample[d] adjacent to that, it's conceivable they could have been two different blood sources.
J.A. at 2751-52.
.Although his brief before this court argues that, during the alleged fight at the Brass Rail, he "became covered with the blood of the two other individuals,” Petitioner’s Br. at 7, the only support it cites for that proposition is his own federal petition for habeas corpus. That petition, in turn, states simply that "[djuring the course of this fight, O'Dell’s clothes became covered with blood.” J.A. at 35. Regardless, the Virginia Supreme Court expressly found "O'Dell told the police the blood came from a nose bleed caused by being struck while attempting to stop a fight at another club,” O'Dell,
. Because we reject O’Dell’s claims on the grounds that we do, we need not consider his claims under the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. Under that newly-enacted statute, O’Dell’s claims, of course, would have even less merit, given the considerably more demanding standards therein imposed on habeas petitioners.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I agree with the majority that the district court was correct in holding that O’Dell’s challenges to his conviction are without mer
However, I must respectfully dissent from that part of the majority opinion holding that the district court erred in vacating O’Dell’s death sentence on the basis of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Simmons v. South Carolina,
I.
A.
In Simmons v. South Carolina,
Before the United States Supreme Court, Simmons claimed that the trial court’s refusal to inform the jury that he would be ineligible for parole had violated his rights under the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.
We read the precise holding of Simmons, however, more narrowly. Justice O’Connor based her opinion concurring in the judgment, in which the Chief Justice and Justice Kennedy joined, on the “hallmark of due process” that a defendant is entitled to “meet the State’s case against him.” Id. at -,
B.
The Commonwealth concedes that the facts of this case are indistinguishable from
As a general proposition, ‘“a case announces a new rule if the result was not dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.’” Turner v. Williams,
First, the court must ascertain the date on which the defendant’s conviction and sen-fence became final for Teague purposes. Second, the court must “[s]urve[y] the legal landscape as it then existed,” and “determine whether a state court considering [the defendant’s] claim at the time his conviction became final would have felt compelled by existing precedent to conclude that the rule [he] seeks was required by the Constitution.” Finally, even if the court determines that the defendant seeks the benefit of a new rule, the court must decide whether that rule falls within one of the two narrow exceptions to the nonre-troactivity principle.
Id. at 390,
The two major cases on which the Simmons Court principally relied had been decided in 1977 and 1986. See Gardner v. Florida,
Each of the defendants in Gardner, Skipper, and Simmons were barred from presenting to the jury evidence of critical importance to the fact-finding process. The similarity between the situation that confronted Skipper and Simmons is especially striking. Surely a Constitution that entitles a defendant to rebut the prosecution’s argument of future dangerousness with evidence of his good behavior in prison likewise entitles him to inform the jury that he will remain incarcerated for life. Cf. id. at 5 n. 1,
In Turner v. Williams, we noted the “critical distinction between the extension of an existing rule on collateral review and the mere application of an existing normative rule ... to a new set of facts.”
The Simmons plurality reached the conclusion that its decision was “compel[ledJ ” by Gardner and Skipper, cases handed down years before O’Dell’s conviction became final. Simmons, 512 U.S. at -,
Similarly, that a judgment garners support from a substantial majority of the Court’s Justices provides an indication that a decision reasonably was expected. In the case before me, seven Justices accepted Simmons’ argument that his due process rights had been violated because he was not allowed to present evidence rebutting the state’s future dangerousness argument. I also note that a substantial majority of states had rejected the practice disapproved of in Simmons. At the time of that decision, “only two states other than South Carolina [had] a life-without-parole sentencing alternative to capital punishment for some or all convicted murderers but refusefd] to inform sentencing juries of this fact.” Simmons, 512 U.S. at -n. 8,
In arguing that Simmons announced a new rule, the Commonwealth and the majority rely heavily on California v. Ramos,
I recognize that some courts, including this one, had interpreted the language in Ramos broadly and reached what at first glance appears to be a result contrary to Simmons. Most of those decisions, however, actually did not involve a true Simmons situation: a capital defendant seeking to rebut the prosecution’s contention of future dangerousness with evidence of his statutory ineligibility for parole. Both Turner v. Bass,
Similarly, Simmons applied the rule announced in Gardner and reaffirmed in Skipper to a different, but related, factual situation: the particular evidence the defendant sought to introduce to rebut the prosecution’s evidence of future dangerousness was his statutory ineligibility for parole. As Justice Blaekmun explained, and the Commonwealth conceded by admitting that Ramos remained good law after Simmons, Ramos and its progeny are not inconsistent with Simmons. See Simmons, 512 U.S. at -,
Applying Teague “leaves something to be desired, for ‘[i]t is admittedly often difficult to determine when a case announces a new rule...’” Turner v. Williams,
C.
Having determined that Simmons applies, I turn now to the Commonwealth’s argument that any Simmons error was harmless. On habeas review, a constitutional violation must have had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.” Brecht v. Abrahamson,
The Commonwealth makes three specific arguments as to why the Simmons error suffered by O’Dell was harmless. First, it contends that the district court failed to find that O’Dell was ineligible'for parole. The Virginia Supreme Court found that O’Dell had been convicted of three felonies within the meaning of Virginia Code § 53.1-151(B1), making him ineligible for parole under state law. The fact that the federal district court failed to make a specific finding to that effect is immaterial. Furthermore, in light of the Commonwealth’s concession that O’Dell’s situation falls within Simmons, this argument is trivial.
Second, the Commonwealth argues that O’Dell actually informed the jury that he would remain imprisoned for the remainder of his life. As support for this proposition, it cites a rambling answer by O’Dell to a question about his age:
I am forty-five — will be 45 on September 20. It’s just like having a life sentence to go back to prison. I got sixteen years. I do fifteen on a life sentence. Okay. If I went back to prison without this conviction, I am doing a life sentence. I am doing a life sentence. I am never going to get out. It don’t make no difference. I am never going to get out.
Joint Appendix at 2438. Simmons does hold that a jury’s information about parole eligibility need not come by way of a court’s instruction; it can come from defense counsel instead. See Simmons, 512 U.S. at - -,
The Commonwealth’s third argument rests on its assertion that O’Dell’s jury sentenced him to death on the basis of two aggravating factors, vileness as well as future dangerousness. Under Zant v. Stephens,
II.
For these reasons, I am convinced that the district court’s decision was correct and should be affirmed in its entirety. To the extent that the majority opinion fails to do this, I am compelled to dissent therefrom.
I am authorized to state that Judges HALL, MURNAGHAN, HAMILTON, MICHAEL and MOTZ join in this concurring and dissenting opinion.
. Like the majority, I also decline to address the question of the applicability of the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1966 to this case.
. Simmons also raised a claim under the Eighth Amendment, the merits of which the Court’s plurality opinion declined to address. Simmons, 512 U.S. at - n. 4,
.Justice Scalia wrote a dissent in which Justice Thomas joined. Id. at -,
. We have found no authority from other federal appellate courts that addresses squarely the issue before us. In Stewart v. Lane,
After reviewing the state of the law in May, 1985, we conclude that the rule sought by Stewart and recognized by the Simmons Court, was not dictated by existing precedent. Simmons relies primarily on Skipper v. South Carolina and Gardner v. Florida. Stewart cannot benefit from the rule of Skipper, however, because the Supreme Court rendered its decision in that case eleven months after Stewart’s convictions became final.
Stewart,
Two other circuits have declined to express an opinion on whether Simmons announced a new rule. See Ingram v. Zant,
. The Simmons Court also cited Crane v. Kentucky,
. Nothing in Justice O'Connor’s opinion concurring in the judgment contradicts the plurality's conclusion that "it is clear that the State denied petitioner due process.” Simmons, 512 U.S. at -,
. According to Justice Blackmun:
It is true that Ramos stands for the broad proposition that we generally will defer to a State’s determination as to what a jury should and should not be told about sentencing.... States reasonably may conclude that truthful information regarding the availability of commutation, pardon, and the like, should be kept from the jury in order to provide "greater protection in [the States’] criminal justice system than the Federal Constitution requires.” Concomitantly, nothing in the Constitution prohibits the prosecution from arguing any truthful information relating to parole or other forms of early release.
But if the State rests its case for imposing the death penalty at least in part on the premise that the defendant will be dangerous in the future, the fact the alternative sentence to death is life without parole will necessarily undercut the State’s argument regarding the threat the defendant poses to society. Because truthful information of parole ineligibility allows the defendant to "deny or explain” the showing of future dangerousness, due process plainly requires that he be allowed to bring it to the jury’s attention by way of argument by defense counsel or an instruction from the court.
Simmons, 512 U.S. at -,
. In recognizing the analytical distinctions between these lines of authority, it should be remembered that Ramos falls chronologically between Skipper and Gardner. The Ramos Court found no need to overrule or limit Gardner. Likewise, the Skipper Court did not find it necessary to distance itself from Ramos to hold that a capital defendant is entitled to rebut evidence of future dangerousness.
. Assessing how a reasonable jurist might have analyzed any perceived conflict between Ramos and Skipper, it is much easier to distinguish the commutation power at issue in Ramos than the evidence of a capital defendant's good behavior at issue in Skipper. Compared with parole, commutation is a relatively minor power that is rarely invoked and less central to the question of future dangerousness. Most importantly, the impact of an instruction on the possibility of commutation in a capital jury’s sentencing deliberation is unclear.
. In Turner v. Bass, we determined that, "while it is constitutionally permissible to instruct the jury on the subject of parole, such an instruction is not constitutionally required.”
In Peterson, the petitioner would have been ineligible for parole only for a period of twenty years.
The other Court of Appeals case on which the Commonwealth relies, O’Bryan v. Estelle,
The state law cases on which the Commonwealth relies are similarly distinguishable. See, e.g., Jenkins v. Commonwealth,
. Because of my conclusion that O'Dell’s Simmons claim is not Teague-beared, I do not address his argument that Simmons fits within the Teague exception for " ‘watershed rules of criminal procedure’ implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.” See Turner v. Williams,
