OPINION
A Michigan jury convicted Saejar Deonte Parker of the twin crimes of being a felon in possession of a firearm and felony-firearm. Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 750.224f, 750.227b. After exhausting his state-court remedies, Parker sought a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court, claiming that insufficient evidence supported the jury’s conclusion that he constructively possessed a firearm. Because Parker has shown that the state courts unreasonably applied
Jackson v. Virginia,
I
Parker rode in a white four-door Pontiac Grand Am with three men who, as the jury concluded, conspired to murder Fred Stewart (“the victim”). Jack Tillman drove the car, Elijah Tillman rode in the front passenger’s seat, Terrence Williams sat in the backseat on the passenger’s side, and Parker sat in the backseat on the driver’s side. As the victim sat in his wife’s car in his driveway drinking a beer sometime after 2 a.m., a man — either Elijah Tillman or Williams — approached the car and fired several shots into it, four of which struck the victim. 1 The shooter reentered the Grand Am and drove off.
*446 Michigan State Troopers Craig Tuer and Kenneth Campbell were on DUI patrol in their marked cruiser when they heard the gunshots. Soon after, they saw the Grand Am driving erratically; suspecting a drunk driver, they followed. When the troopers activated the cruiser’s sirens and flashers, a chase unfolded as the Grand Am increased speed, at times in excess of 60 miles per hour, and tried to evade the police. During the chase, the officers saw a door on the driver’s side open briefly: Tuer recalled two openings, while Campbell observed only one. Narrating a video of the chase, the officers spoke generally about “a” or “the” driver’s side, but when asked on cross-examination, Officer Campbell identified the opening door as the driver’s door. Based on the high-crime area they were patrolling, Officer Campbell assumed that the person opening the door was tossing drugs out of the car.
The chase ended when the Grand Am crashed into a tree and then a telephone pole. The driver, Jack Tillman, opened his door and took off running, and Officer Campbell chased him. Officer Tuer saw Elijah Tillman exiting the front passenger’s door, Williams crawling out the rear passenger’s side window, and Parker “moving in the compartment of the vehicle also coming in the direction of the driver’s side door.” Tuer ordered the men to stay in the car, and Parker complied immediately. When Parker later exited the Grand Am on the passenger’s side, he sat on the ground and, in a voice audible on the video, repeatedly told Tuer that he intended to follow his orders.
Tuer struggled to subdue both Elijah Tillman and Williams. Officer Chad Foer-ster soon arrived on the scene and assisted Tuer in securing the two men. During the struggle, as Foerster later testified, Parker protected him from Elijah Tillman: as Tillman reached into the car to pick up a gun from the front floorboard, Parker pushed his hand away.
A later search of the car yielded two pistols, one on the front passenger side’s floor and one on the passenger side’s backseat. Police also found a Luger pistol on the ground along the chase route off to the Grand Am’s passenger’s side. See supra n. 1.
Michigan charged the quartet with numerous crimes, including conspiracy to commit murder, assault with intent to commit murder, felon in possession of a firearm, and felony-firearm. At the close of evidence, Parker moved for a directed verdict on each of those counts. The trial court granted his motion as to the conspiracy and assault counts, concluding that there was “absolutely no evidence whatsoever that Mr. Parker participated in the assault with intent to murder or that he agreed to conspire in that fact, nor is there any evidence that he was an aider and abettor, mere presence being insufficient.” As for the possession counts, the court denied his motion “for the reason that the firearms were in plain sight,” explaining that the jury “could find that he had constructive, if not physical custody of a weapon.” The jury convicted Parker of the possession charges, and Parker was sentenced to 28 to 90 months in prison on the *447 felon-in-possession charge and a consecutive 2-year sentence for the felony-firearm charge.
When Parker appealed, the Michigan Court of Appeals rejected his sufficiency-of-the-evidenee challenge in a single paragraph:
Parker argues that his conviction for felon in possession was not supported by sufficient evidence because the prosecutor merely demonstrated that he was in the presence of firearms, not that he carried one. We disagree. The police found another pistol jammed in a locked position on the backseat where Williams and Parker sat, but the evidence suggested that Williams carried a Luger, used only the Luger in the shooting, and threw the Luger out his window during the chase. The evidence also showed that a driver’s side door repeatedly opened during the chase, suggesting that Parker attempted to dispose of the gun or use it against his pursuers. The pursuing officer also testified that Parker initially attempted to escape through the driver’s side door, but abandoned the attempt when the officer dragged Williams to the ground. From this evidence, a rational jury could reasonably conclude that Parker possessed the pistol at some point during the evening’s events.
Tillman,
Judge Hoekstra dissented:
I respectfully dissent from that part of the majority opinion that holds that the prosecution presented sufficient evidence to convict defendant Parker of felon in possession of a firearm. From my review of the evidence, I conclude that other than mere presence, the prosecution failed to produce any evidence to show that defendant possessed, constructively or otherwise, the weapons associated with this incident. A person’s mere proximity to contraband is insufficient, by itself, to prove possession.
In this case, the inability of the prosecution to establish defendant Parker’s involvement in the principal charges of assault with intent to murder or conspiracy to commit murder, or to show any connection to the weapons other than mere presence and the possibility of access by virtue of his presence, in my judgment causes a finding of guilt on the charge of felon in possession of a firearm to be unsustainable.
Id. (Hoekstra, J., dissenting) (internal citations and footnote omitted).
The Michigan Supreme Court denied Parker leave to appeal.
People v. Parker,
II
We review de novo the district court’s decision to grant or deny habeas corpus relief.
Wilson v. Mitchell,
As framed by AEDPA, the issue is whether the district court erred in concluding that the Michigan Court of Appeals unreasonably applied
Jackson v. Virginia,
Where we consider the jury’s verdict, we do so “with explicit reference to the substantive elements of the criminal offense as defined by state law.”
Id.
at 324 n. 16,
Parker challenges only the sufficiency of the evidence with regard to the possession element of each crime. Possession of a firearm under Michigan law can be either actual or constructive,
People v. Hill,
Therefore, in assessing whether the evidence against Parker sufficed for a rational jury to convict him of possessing a firearm beyond a reasonable doubt,
Jackson,
Michigan identifies several factors in support of the jury’s verdict: (1) Parker fled from law enforcement; (2) the officers saw an opening driver’s side door; (3) the gun was within Parker’s reach and in plain sight; and (4) as Williams exclusively used the Luger, Parker must have used the second gun in the backseat. Beyond Parker’s proximity to the firearm, however, “indicia of control” gleaned from this evidence is speculative at best.
Brown,
Parker’s Flight.
Michigan first contends that Parker’s efforts to exit the crashed Grand Am support the conclusion that he possessed the firearm, relying on the theory that evidence of flight from law enforcement is probative of guilt. But the state’s position suffers from both factual and legal infirmities. First, our reading of the trial transcript indicates that Parker’s movement from the back to the front seat and brief efforts to exit the car fall short of the sort of flight suggestive of guilt. Again, after the car crashed at high speed into a tree and then a telephone pole, the driver opened the front door and fled, Williams began climbing out the window, Elijah Tillman got out of the front door, and police observed Parker moving from the back to the front, as if to exit from the driver’s side door. Parker stopped immediately, however, when the officers ordered all of them to remain in the car. Parker later exited the car and repeatedly stated his cooperative intentions: As Trooper Tuer recounted, “Mr. Parker definitely made it clear that, hey ... I understand, you know, I’m right here, refers to me as Officer, refers to me as Sir, so he made it quite clear that ... he was not part of the problem any longer.” And as Officer Foerster described it, “Mr. Parker, you can hear him ... in the video saying I’m not doing nothing, sir, I’m right here. He at no time resisted.” Nevertheless, the Michigan Court of Appeals characterized Parker’s “escape efforts” more stridently than the testifying officers: “The pursuing officer also testified that Parker initially attempted to escape through the driver’s side door, but abandoned the attempt when the officer dragged Williams to the ground.”
Tillman,
Second, the state’s reliance on
United States v. Dillon,
The Opening Door. Another factor the state stresses to support the jury’s verdict is the officers’ observation that a driver’s side door repeatedly opened during the high-speed chase, presumably to fire upon the police or to throw the gun away. The state reasons that Parker must have opened his door because Jack Tillman was driving, but contrary to the state’s position and the Michigan Court of Appeals’ recounting of the facts, the testimony does not support these inferences. Trooper Tuer testified to seeing “the door open[ ]” and then open again, and identified the door as being on the driver’s side. Officer Campbell testified that “as soon as the siren was activated the driver side door of the vehicle open[ed] slightly, then it shut right back again.” He thought at the time, given the area, that the suspect was discarding drugs, not pointing a gun at him. He later testified that he saw the door open only once and clarified on cross-examination that it was the driver’s door. 6 Thus, the only testimony specifically identifying the open door pointed to the driver’s door, not Parker’s.
Within Arm’s Length and In Plain Sight.
The state also insists that the firearm’s being “within an arm’s reach” of Parker and “in plain sight” supports the conclusion that he constructively possessed the gun, but this is just proximity by another name. Presence near a firearm, without more, does not suffice to prove possession.
See Wolfe,
Williams’s Luger.
Finally, the state points us to evidence suggesting, as the Michigan Court of Appeals explained, that Williams, the other backseat occupant, “carried a Luger, used only the Luger in the shooting, and threw the Luger out his window during the chase.”
Tillman,
*452 Even making that leap, it is far from clear that Williams possessed the Luger— the jury acquitted him on the assault charge, suggesting that Tillman possessed two guns and used the Luger to shoot the victim, and that the backseat gun belonged to Williams. Admittedly, this observation has limited value given the evidence that Williams’s footprints matched those near the shell casings, supra n. 1, but it is consistent with the police finding the weapon attributed to Parker on the passenger’s side of the backseat, where Williams had been sitting and where he exited the ear through the window. What this observation does show is the exceedingly speculative nature of the inference that because Williams possessed the Luger, Parker must have possessed the backseat gun.
The state attempts to buttress its argument by pointing out that constructive possession can be joint — that is, both men could possess the weapon. In support, it quotes
Hill
for the proposition that Michigan “reeognize[s] the theory of joint firearm possession if the evidence suggests two or more defendants acting in concert.”
Ill
In arguing that the district court substituted its judgment for that of the state court, Michigan relies on the standard of review set forth in AEDPA. While stringent, AEDPA’s standard is not insurmountable. Recently, in
Brown v. Palmer,
this court noted that we continue to “distinguish reasonable speculation from sufficient evidence ... in establishing that the state court’s application of federal constitutional law as set forth in
Jackson,
Although Jackson v. Virginia and AEDPA dictate deferential standards, this is the rare case where the jury’s conclusion fails to conform to that of a rational jury, and where the Michigan Court of Appeals’ contrary conclusion was unreasonable. For these reasons, we affirm.
Notes
. The evidence at trial suggested that Williams shot the victim, as his footprints matched those found near the spent shell casings left from the shooting. The casings
*446
matched the bullets discharged from a Luger pistol found on the ground along the right side (passenger side) of the chase that ensued after the shooting. Nevertheless, the jury did not convict Williams on an assault charge predicated on the shooting. As the Michigan Court of Appeals observed, “Likely, the prosecutor failed to persuade the entire jury beyond a reasonable doubt that Williams, rather than Elijah Tillman, actually shot the victim.”
People v. Tillman,
Nos. 245442, 245443, 245894,
. The Michigan Supreme Court, relying on the United States Supreme Court’s dictate that the Double Jeopardy Clause does not proscribe a legislature from cumulatively punishing a particular crime,
see Ohio v. Johnson,
. The
Hill
court continued, “Put another way, a defendant has constructive possession of a firearm if the location of the weapon is known and it is reasonably accessible to the defendant.”
As applied, "reasonable access” is best calibrated to instances where a defendant com
*449
mits a crime emboldened by a firearm available, but not in hand.
See People v. Davis,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Arnold,
. We also note that the trial court instructed the jury opaquely on what constructive possession means: "The term 'possess' means to exercise control or authority over something at a given time. Possession may be actual or constructive, and may be joint as well as exclusive.”
. The state and Michigan Court of Appeals leave out this admission, and the Joint Appendix omits the page that answers the question, "Am I correct when I heard you, Trooper Campbell, say that it was the driver's side front door that you saw open on Elizabeth?” The officer replied, "Yes.” (State Trial Tr. vol. 5, 44-45, Oct. 24, 2002; J.A. 125-26).
