Petitioner-appellant Pedro Gutierrez appeals from a denial of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, entered on July 31, 2003, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Baer, J.). Petitioner contends that the New York state trial court admitted into evidence the recording of an anonymous 911 call in contravention of the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause. On direct appeal, the Appellate Division ruled that the trial court had properly admitted the evidence and that, even if the court had erroneously admitted the tape, such error was harmless in light of overwhelming evidence of petitioner’s guilt.
People v. Gutierrez,
BACKGROUND
A jury in the Supreme Court of New York, Bronx County, convicted Gutierrez of assorted crimes arising from a fatal shooting incident among rival drug dealers. The prosecution’s central theory was that the episode involved three shooters rather than two. The ballistics evidence recovered from the scene of the crime only corroborated the existence of two guns. Three witnesses testifying pursuant to federal cooperation agreements, two of whom testified to being the two other perpetrators in the shooting incident, provided eyewitness testimony directly identifying petitioner as a third shooter. The testimony of several non-cooperating witnesses was more equivocal. Over defense objection, the court admitted into evidence a 911 call from an anonymous driver, made within three minutes of the incident, under New York’s present sense impression exception to the rule against hearsay. The caller repeatedly described three young men as shooters. During summation, the prosecution highlighted the call as “one of the most important pieces of evidence.”
The Appellate Division, First Department, held that the call was sufficiently contemporaneous with the described event to qualify for admission under New York’s present sense impression exception, and “any error in admission of this evidence was harmless in view of the overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt.”
Gutierrez,
DISCUSSION
We review the denial of a writ of habeas corpus
de novo. Francolino v. Kuhlman,
The standard for harmless error on direct review is the familiar test established by
Chapman v. California,
A few years prior to AEDPA’s enactment, the Supreme Court held that
Chapman
did not apply to cases on collateral review.
Brecht,
*304 AEDPA amended 28 U.S.C. § 2254, in pertinent part:
(d) An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim—
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal Law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States
AEDPA § 104, 110 Stat. 1219,
codified at
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Thus, federal courts sitting in habeas review of state convictions must grant a measure of deference to claims “adjudicated on the merits” by state courts.
See Sellan v. Kuhlman,
While AEDPA’s amendments to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 do not expressly overrule the
Brecht
standard for harmless error on collateral review, as noted, the amended statute now requires habeas courts to evaluate state adjudications of federal claims with some deference.
Chapman
binds a state appellate court — directly reviewing a lower state court — to dispose of federal constitutional errors as harmless only if the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
E.g. People v. Crimmins,
Generally, we decline to resolve an open question until a case presents facts where the outcome differs depending on that question’s resolution.
See, e.g., Noble,
Indeed, this persistent similarity in outcomes is quite logical. On direct review,
Chapman
is considerably more generous to prejudiced defendants than is
Brecht. Chapman,
after all, requires a reviewing court to be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the error was harmless, while
Brecht
requires a reviewing court to identify a substantial and injurious effect on the verdict.
5
Consider, for example, a constitutional error grave enough to satisfy
Brecht’s
rigorous standard for granting habeas relief. If a reviewing state court had classified that same error as harmless under
Chapman,
it is unlikely that the state court applied
Chapman
reasonably.
6
See
*306
Francis S. v. Stone,
In its recent decision of
Mitchell v. Esparza,
The
Mitchell
Court then held that the Ohio Court of Appeals’ application of harmless error analysis merited deference under § 2254(d)(1) as it was not “an unreasonable
application
of clearly established Federal law.”
Id.
at 12,
Mitchell signals, and we therefore hold, that when a state court explicitly conducts harmless error review of a constitutional error, a habeas court must evaluate whether the state unreasonably applied Chapman. We do not presently reach the issue of whether or how to apply Brecht where the state court has not engaged in harmless error review, as, of course, those facts are not before us. 7 Nor does extend *307 ing the analytical framework of AEDPA to this matter blindfold habeas courts to constitutional error infecting state trials; what we have frequently labeled AEDPA deference is by no means blind obedience.
Here, the district court denied the writ on the grounds that the admission of the 911 call was not error at all under the Confrontation Clause, an issue we need not reach.
Gutierrez,
The Appellate Division held that “any error in admission of this evidence was harmless in view of the overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt.”
Gutierrez,
The
Crimmins
court discerned “two discrete considerations” to be relevant in harmless error analysis generally.
Id.
at 240,
In the instant case, the Appellate Division did not cite federal precedent in disposing of the Confrontation Clause claim, instead citing indirectly to New York’s interpretation of
Chapman. Gutierrez,
When a trial court admits statements violative of the Confrontation Clause, it is “virtually impossible to determine whether a jury did or did not ignore an inculpatory statement.”
Ryan v. Miller,
Petitioner argues that the Appellate Division’s classification of the 911 call’s admission as harmless error was objectively unreasonable as (1) the three eyewitnesses directly identifying him as a third shooter all testified pursuant to federal cooperation agreements, (2) the non-cooperating witnesses provided legally insufficient evidence to support the theory of the third shooter, (3) the ballistics evidence only supported the existence of two shooters, and the government’s explanation of why the ballistics evidence did not demonstrate a third shooter was highly speculative, and (4) the prosecutor emphasized the tape as summation as “one of the most *309 important pieces of evidence” corroborating the existence of a third shooter. According to petitioner, the 911 call was the only evidence beyond the cooperator testimony to provide independent corroboration of the prosecution’s theory of three shooters.
Assuming without deciding that the 911 call’s admission was erroneous, we hold that the Appellate Division’s harmlessness holding was an objectively reasonable application of
Chapman.
Petitioner’s argument fails because,
inter alia,
each cooperating eyewitness witness testified to his own violent history and to the cooperation agreement’s nature, exposing the potential influence of those agreements to the jury; the cooperators’ testimony established that the cooperators acted independently from one another in testifying against petitioner, as the cooperators testified to having had no contact with each other following their arrests; the pre-trial statements of a shooting victim, twice identifying petitioner to a police detective as the third shooter and as the person who shot him, were admitted into evidence though that witness unexpectedly failed to identify petitioner at trial; another non-cooperating bystander testified to hearing three different guns, including “fast” shots from semiautomatics and “slow” shots that sounded similar to a revolver firing; and evidence at trial showed petitioner carried a revolver that night. While the prosecution provided a somewhat thin explanation for the absence of ballistics evidence supporting a third gun, the admitted evidence did not directly contradict it. In addition, the prosecutor highlighted the 911 tape as only
one
of several important pieces of evidence that the prosecutor stressed during his lengthy summation. Given the overall strength of the prosecution’s case, the Appellate Division’s application of clearly established Supreme Court precedent governing harmless error review of Confrontation Clause errors as outlined in
Van Arsdall
was not objectively unreasonable.
See
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the Appellate Division reasonably applied Chapman in its harmless error analysis, and AFFIRM the denial of the writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. On appeal to this Court, petitioner argues that the Supreme Court's recent decision of
Crawford v. Washington,
. The Kotteakos standard is articulated as follows:
If, when all is said and done, the [court’s] conviction is sure that the error did not influence the jury, or had but very slight effect, the verdict and the judgement should stand .... But if one cannot say, with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error, it is impossible to conclude that substantial rights were not affected. The inquiry cannot be merely whether there was enough to support the result, apart from the phase affected by the error. It is rather, even so, whether the error itself had substantial in *304 fluence. If so, or if one is left in grave doubt, the conviction cannot stand.
Kotteakos,
. The circuits have divided on this question. In resolving the issue, some circuits take a two-step approach, evaluating whether the state court unreasonably applied
Chapman,
then further assessing the underlying error under
Brecht. Allen v. Lee,
Other Circuits have held
Brecht
to be the sole standard required.
See, e.g., Nevers v. Killinger,
The Eighth Circuit, in contrast, expressed doubt as to whether
Brecht
survived AEDPA at all.
Whitmore v. Kemna,
. Several of our fellow circuits have resolved the issue, albeit with different approaches as discussed in note 3,
supra,
in cases where the state appellate court conducted explicit harmless error review.
E.g. Aleman,
. We need not and do not speculate as to what factual scenarios might yield different outcomes under the two approaches.
. This logical overlap in outcomes under the two methods of inquiry into harmless error apparently motivated some Circuits to resolve the question by suggesting that
Brecht
"pre
*306
cisely captures” the congressional intent expressed in AEDPA, and thus
Brecht
survived AEDPA’s enactment.
See Nevers v. Killinger,
. We note that while
Mitchell
did not cite
Brecht,
the Supreme Court has favorably cited
Brecht
since AEDPA’s passage. For example, in
Penry v. Johnson,
. In contrast, New York's rule for harmless error of a non-constitutional dimension is "not so exacting,” requiring a different "level of convincement.”
Crimmins,
