Lead Opinion
OPINION
Raynard Cummings was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to
Factual Background
On June 2, 1983, Los Angeles Police Officer Paul Verna pulled over an Oldsmobile for rolling through a stop sign. During the traffic stop, one or more of the car’s occupants shot Verna six times.
At Cummings’s trial, he did not dispute. that he was one of three occupants in the car when the shooting occurred. He sat in the rear passenger seat, behind a friend, Kenneth Gay, who was riding in the front seat. Cummings’s wife, Pamela, was driving.
Both Gay and Cummings were charged with first-degree murder. The government contended that Cummings shot Officer Verna once, then passed the gun to Gay, who got out of the car and fired five more shots. Cummings contested the “two-shooter” theory, claiming that Gay fired all six shots.
Eyewitness accounts varied. Some witnesses lent credence to the two-shooter theory, while others expressed certainty that one person fired all six shots. Through forensic evidence and a crime scene reenactment, the prosecution sought to demonstrate that the first bullet likely came from Cummings’s perch in the back seat.
After nearly six months of trial proceedings, a courtroom deputy named David La Casella overheard a conversation between Cummings and Gay in their respective holding cells. According to La Casella, Cummings told Gay that the bullet described by the medical examiner as “number six” was the “one I put in the m— f-” — meaning the victim, Verna. The deputy was removed from his courtroom post and the next court' day testified to this exchange.
The jury convicted Cummings of first-degree murder. After a recess, the penalty phase commenced. To support its case for the death penalty, the prosecution introduced evidence that Cummings possessed a “shank” while in jail awaiting trial; participated in the robbery of a vacuum store; and schemed to use poisoned postage stamps to kill Gay and his wife, Robin Gay, to prevent them from testifying at his trial.
The prosecution also tried to introduce aggravating evidence related to Cummings’s incarceration in Delaware. During that time, Cummings had altercations with two prison guards and wrote a violent, profanity-laced letter that expressed his desire to kill police officers. Following the California Supreme Court’s decision in People v. Boyd,
In light of this evidentiary ruling, Cummings’s lawyers decided to present a “sterile” mitigation case. They told the court that, for “tactical reasons,” they would “very carefully ask [ ] witnesses not to get
In the penalty phase, the defense team put on testimony from three witnesses. A sheriffs deputy testified about violence in jail (presumably to demonstrate Cummings’s need to protect himself with a shank). Then, Cummings’s older brother Darrell related some of the hardships they faced during their childhood. Darrell told the jury that their parents had “knockdown, drag-out” fights, which once culminated in their mother stabbing their father with a knife. He also explained how their father frequently beat Raynard “extremely hard” with a belt or extension cord. Darrell stated that their mother began drinking to excess when her husband left her, and he revealed that she had recently been in a mental hospital. Finally, Cummings’s high school girlfriend testified about his rocky relationship with his family before his incarceration in Delaware.
During closing arguments in the penalty phase, Cummings’s lawyers made only passing reference to Cummings’s background and personal characteristics, instead arguing that “lingering doubt” about whether Cummings had shot Verna should lead the jury to choose a life sentence over the death penalty.
The jury voted for the death sentence, and the trial court imposed this sentence.
Procedural Background
In his appeal to the California Supreme Court, Cummings alleged that La Casella’s testimony violated his due process rights as defined in Turner v. Louisiana,
Cummings next filed a petition for habe-as relief with the California Supreme Court, alleging dozens of errors and supported by over 200 exhibits. The court rejected each of his claims as “untimely” and “lacking] merit.”
Cummings then filed a petition for habe-as corpus in the Central District of California on July 22, 1997. The court stayed federal proceedings while Cummings filed additional habeas claims with the California Supreme Court, including a claim that he was denied effective assistance of counsel at sentencing. When those claims were rejected, Cummings filed an amended habeas petition on October 13, 1998. The district court considered and denied each of Cummings’s claims over the ensuing years, entering a final judgment denying his petition on July 28, 2011.
The district court granted a Certificate of Appealability for Cummings’s claims that La Casella’s testimony violated his due process rights and that he was denied effective assistance of 'counsel at his sentencing proceedings. We ordered supplemental briefing on Cummings’s objection to the peremptory strikes under Batson v. Kentucky,
Standard of Review
Cummings’s petition is governed by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Pen
This is a demanding standard. Cummings is not entitled to relief if the state court is merely “incorrect.” Rather, we may only grant his petition if the state court’s decision was “unreasonable.” See Renico v. Lett,
Analysis
I. The Turner Claim — La Casella’s Testimony.
Cummings first alleges that the prosecution violated his due process rights by calling as a witness Deputy David La Ca-sella, who served as a courtroom bailiff and security officer during a portion of Cummings’s trial. La Casella testified that he overheard Cummings talking with Gay in their holding cells during a break in trial proceedings. During that conversation, Cummings stated that the bullet identified by the medical examiner as “number six” was “the one I put in the m — f-.” Based on the tone and circumstances of the conversation, La Casella understood this statement as Cummings’s confession to firing the first shot at Officer Verna. Cummings argues the former bailiffs testimony violated due process because La Ca-sella had undue influence by virtue of his role as the jury’s “official guardian.”
Turner deals with a seldom-litigated principle of criminal procedure, so we begin with an explanation of that case and its lone sequel in the Supreme Court, Gonzales v. Beto,
In Turner, two deputy sheriffs served both as courtroom bailiffs and prosecution witnesses in a three-day death penalty trial.
At trial, the deputies assumed multiple responsibilities. In addition to testifying about their investigation and the defendant’s statements, they “drove the jurors to a restaurant for each meal, and to their lodgings each night. The deputies ate with them, conversed with them, and did errands for them.” Id. at 468,
The Supreme Court held that these circumstances — with courtroom bailiffs moonlighting as star prosecution witnesses— violated due process and subverted the “basic guarantees of trial by jury.” Id. at
Seven years after Turner, the Court in Beto again found a due process violation where the prosecution’s case “rested almost totally upon the testimony of the country sheriff,” who also doubled as courtroom bailiff.
In both Turner and Beto, the Court based its due process analysis on two factors. First, the Court asked whéther the bailiff was a “key witness[ ]” or testified to some “uncontroverted or merely formal aspect of the case.” Turner,
Applying those principles, the California Supreme Court held that events in this case were distinguishable from Turner and Beto, and that Cummings’s “right to a fair trial” was not “undermined by the admission of La Casella’s testimony” and therefore did not violate due process. Cummings,
The facts surrounding La Casella’s tenure as bailiff and his trial testimony, elicited at an evidentiary hearing in state court, are essentially uncontested. As a result, our inquiry focuses on whether the California Supreme Court unreasonably applied Turner to those facts — a mixed question of law and fact properly analyzed under § 2254(d)(1). See Williams v. Taylor,
Under § 2254(d)(1), we must determine whether the California Supreme Court’s
Because Turner only applies where the testifying deputy was both a key witness and had continuous and intimate contacts with jurors, the California Supreme Court’s reasonable resolution of either prong suffices.
A. La Casella’s Testimony.
The threshold inquiry under Turner turns on the significance of the witness’s role at trial. The California Supreme Court concluded that La Casella “was not the principal or ‘key’ prosecution witness” and therefore did not come within the ambit of Turner. Cummings,
Turner is not limited to a case where the testifying, bailiff is the “principal” or sole witness to a crime — or, as the dissent framed it, a witness “whose testimony is absolutely necessary to establish guilt.” O’Scannlain Partial Dissent at 1156. The dissent mistakenly elevates “key” witness to linchpin witness. Instead, the bailiff need only be a “key” witness whose credibility is at issue, as opposed to a witness whose testimony is “confined to some un-controverted or merely formal aspect of the case for the prosecution.” Turner,
Here, La Casella did not testify about an uncontested issue or a matter of administrative housekeeping. Rather, he told the jury that Cummings had confessed to shooting Officer Verna. This revelation directly contradicted Cummings’s defense. Cummings’s confession to pulling the trigger ranks as “probably the most probative and damaging evidence that can be admitted against him.” Arizona v. Fulminante,
In closing arguments, the prosecutor repeatedly hammered home La Casella’s testimony and labeled him “perhaps the most important witness in this case.” The prosecutor was not exaggerating. He went on to tell the jury, “His testimony alone should lead you to convict this man of murder with special circumstances.” Cf. United States v. Brandyberry,
The government argues that La Casella was not a key witness because other evidence showed that Cummings shot the victim. It points out that five other witnesses testified to self-incriminating statements made by Cummings. But La Ca-sella’s testimony stood out because it
Turner does not require, as the California Supreme Court wrote, that the bailiff be the “principal” prosecution witness. Cummings,
B. La Casella’s Contacts with Jurors.
We now turn to the heart of the Turner analysis: whether La Casella had eontinuous and intimate association with jurors, such that his words had “undue credence” or “undue weight,” creating “an aura of probable prejudice.” Helmick,
The trial judge held an evidentiary hearing on La Casella’s contacts with jurors and admitted his testimony after concluding he “probably has one of the most minimal contacts and certainly isn’t the type of bailiff that gets involved in talking and kidding and joking with the jurors.... ” On appeal, the California Supreme Court described the trial court’s ruling: La Ca-sella’s “association with the jurors was so minimal and so professional that the probative value of his testimony outweighed any prejudice to Cummings from his status.” Cummings,
We give AEDPA deference to this determination, despite our conclusion with respect to the key witness issue.
When a state court’s adjudication of a claim is dependent on an antecedent unreasonable application of federal law, the requirement set forth in § 2254(d)(1) is satisfied. A federal court must then resolve the claim without the deference AEDPA otherwise requires.
Panetti v. Quarterman,
In Quarterman, Texas courts misapplied Ford v. Wainwright,
In contrast, our case is different because Turner sets out two independent lines of inquiry. The question of whether La Ca-sella had intimate and continuous contacts with the jury is not “dependent” on the question of whether he was a key witness. One conclusion is not tied to the other. Bound by § 2254(d)(1),. we ask whether California’s application of Turner’s second requirement was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law.”
La Casella served as a uniformed deputy for 57 days of Cummings’s six-month jury selection and murder trial. La Casel-la’s tenure was split. He served as a courtroom bailiff during jury selection, and then was a backup bailiff who sat in the back of the courtroom and provided security at trial.
During the long-running jury selection, La Casella was one of two courtroom bailiffs over three months when jurors were individually questioned regarding their death penalty views. La Casella handed excused jurors tickets that indicated they were free to leave, directed prospective jurors to their seats, and greeted jurors.
At the state court evidentiary hearing, La Casella testified that he did not socialize or “chit-chat” with jurors or potential jurors. The roughly two dozen times jurors asked La Casella a question, he usually asked them to write it down and passed the note along to the judge.
During trial, La Casella was reassigned to courtroom security duty. In this capacity, La Casella sat in the back of the courtroom and “ke[pt] an eye” on the audience, defendants Cummings and Gay, and hallway traffic. He continued to have some — albeit diminished — contact with jurors. Specifically, La Casella took notes from jurors on two occasions and responded to jurors who greeted him. He also unlocked the jury room three times when jurors were present.
Cummings argues that the California Supreme Court erred by failing to give appropriate weight to the length of La Casella’s 57-day tenure as bailiff. But as the California Supreme Court noted, La Casella had “relatively little direct contact with members of the jury....” Cummings, 18 Cal.Rptr.2d.796,
More broadly, Cummings argues that even if La Casella did not socialize with jurors, he was the jury’s “official guardian.” Cummings 'urges that Turner requires no more, pointing to its statement that the bailiff-juror “relationship was one which could not but foster the jurors’ confidence in those who were their official guardians during the entire period of the trial.”
In no way does Turner categorically bar testimony from any law enforcement officer who has served as bailiff during jury selection. Indeed, its two-prong analysis provides a foundation for determining, on a case-by-case basis, whether a bailiffs testimony results in a due process violation. As the Seventh Circuit noted in a similar habeas case, Turner “did not say how many or what types of associations would trigger due-process concerns,” making the case susceptible to a “range of reasonable interpretations.” Thurmer,
In sum, this case is not “materially indistinguishable from a relevant Supreme Court precedent.” Williams,
II. The Batson Claim — The Prosecutor’s Peremptories.
As an initial matter, the district court did not certify for appeal Cummings’s claim that the prosecutor violated Batson v. Kentucky,
Batson’s touchstone is purposeful discrimination:
A Batson challenge has three steps: first, the defendant must make a prima facie showing that a challenge was based on race; second, the prosecution must offer a race-neutral basis for the challenge; and third, the court must determine whether the defendant has shown purposeful discrimination.
Cook v. LaMarque,
At trial, Cummings’s counsel challenged the prosecutor’s use of peremptories against two black prospective jurors, Clarence Broussard and Leon Passmore, under People v. Wheeler,
The California Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s decision, holding that the “prosecutor adequately justified his actions.” Cummings,
Once again, under § 2254(d)(1), we consider whether the California Supreme
Turning to the merits, we consider the California Supreme Court’s determination in light of the prosecutor’s use of a peremptory strike against two of the African American potential jurors.
A. Clarence Broussard.
The prosecutor offered a litany of reasons for striking Broussard from the jury pool — from Broussard’s view on the death penalty to his brother’s prior run-in with the law.
On questioning, Broussard admitted that he had voted against the death penalty in a 1976 California referendum and said he would do so again because he did not believe it deterred crime. Striking a juror who opposes the death penalty, even one who promises to apply the law impartially, is a valid and non-pretextual reason for using a peremptory challenge. See, e.g., Crittenden,
The record also revealed that Broussard’s brother was tried and convicted of robbery in Los Angeles County five years earlier — by the same District Attorney’s Office that prosecuted Cummings. The California Supreme Court surely was not unreasonable to view this reason as non-pretextual. The coincidence of having the same prosecutor’s office at the helm goes beyond having a relative who was convicted of a crime, a circumstance that in itself has justified the use of a peremptory strike. See Murray v. Groose,
Cummings claims that the coincidence rationale is pretextual because the prosecutor failed to strike another white juror, even though that juror’s brother similarly was arrested for felony marijuana possession. But that juror supported the death penalty, which distinguished him from Broussard. Any comparison between the two jurors is unilluminating.
Taken together, these race-neutral reasons justified the prosecutor’s decision to strike Broussard.
Cummings also argues that two other reasons cited by the prosecutor were racially tinged and revealed the prosecutor’s true, discriminatory intent. The prosecutor made passing reference to a potential friendship among three black jurors and to Broussard’s own statements on race. During voir dire, Broussard said, “I would be less than honest if I said I was not aware that we are trying two black individuals, therefore I was going to make sure that we are fair in terms of the evidence as presented against those individuals.” Broussard also revealed that he had been “victimized by racial prejudice being born and raised in this town” and added: “It has had an impact on me in terms of the criminal justice system.”
Although these reasons touch on race, the record does not show that the strike was “based on” race or stereotyping. Hernandez,
Viewed in totality, we have little difficulty holding that the California Supreme Court did not unreasonably uphold the prosecutor’s strike of Broussard.
B. Leon Passmore.
The California Supreme Court, over the dissent of Justice Mosk, also upheld the prosecutor’s decision to strike Leon Pass-more, primarily because Passmore lived close to- the crime scene and may have known trial witnesses. Cummings,
, Passmore testified he had lived in West Lakeview Terrace, near the site of the murder, for eleven or twelve years. He also worked at a local high school and testified that if any students were called as witnesses he might know them.
Residency can be a valid reason for exercising a peremptory strike. See Stubbs v. Gomez,
Significantly, the first comparative juror lived in East Lakeview Terrace — “away” from West Lakeview Terrace where Pass-
The California Supreme Court was reasonable in crediting the prosecutor’s residency rationale, given the total lack of proof that similarly situated jurors were treated differently. See Cook,
Cummings’s habeas petition under Bat-son was properly denied.
III. The Strickland Claim — Cummings’s Counsel.
The California Supreme Court summarily denied Cummings’s petition alleging ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase of his trial. To prevail under AEDPA, Cummings must demonstrate that there was “no reasonable basis for the state court to deny relief’ under the standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington,
In Harrington, the Supreme Court stressed the deference permeating federal habeas review of ineffective assistance claims. It pointed out that “[t]he standards created by Strickland and § 2254(d) are both highly deferential, and when the two apply in tandem, review is doubly so.”
The crux of Cummings’s ineffective assistance claim is that his counsel’s presentation of mitigating evidence during the penalty phase did not adequately detail the difficulties he experienced as a child. During state habeas proceedings, Cummings’s counsel prepared a “social history report” that detailed his abusive upbringing and eventual descent into drug abuse and violent crime.
The social history report was largely cumulative of testimony that was introduced during penalty phase proceedings. For example, Cummings asserts that the jury did not learn about the extent of the violence in his household. His brother Darrell, however, testified that Raynard was subject to “extremely hard” beatings involving extension cords and belts. He also told the jury that their parents regularly had “knock-down, drag-out” fights that sometimes ended with their parents beating one another with household objects. The jury likewise heard Darrell testify that their mother had substance abuse issues and spent time in a mental hospital. The social history report contains more extensive recitation of her history of drug use, alcohol abuse, and psychiatric hospitalizations, but these details would not have changed the narrative of Cummings’s upbringing in any meaningful way.
To the extent the social history report offered mitigating evidence that was not cumulative, it is not compelling. The report notes that Cummings’s mother drank alcohol while pregnant. Although evidence that a defendant suffers from fetal alcohol syndrome may have a significant mitigating effect, Rompilla v. Beard,
The report details some evidence that calls into question Cummings’s mental well-being. School records indicate that Cummings exhibited symptoms of trauma in his home. While incarcerated in his early twenties, Cummings exhibited bizarre behavior such as spreading feces on the walls of his prison cell. However, a pre-trial psychiatric evaluation yielded no conclusions that his lawyers saw fit to use as evidence at trial,
Even if testimony about certain aspects of the social history report would have had some mitigating effect, this strategy would have triggered overwhelming aggravating evidence. See Wong v. Belmontes, 558
Although the prison assaults are relatively minor aggravating factors, introduction of the letter would have been devastating to Cummings’s defense. Cummings wrote: “[I]f I got to steal or kill for what I want, I will do that ... I might die, but the pig — one pig or two — is coming with me, and there will be funerals on both sides this time ... I will always hate pigs, the man, the system, and any White, Black or whatever who is on that side. I have a bullet for that m — f-, too, if he gets in my way.” This manifesto would not only have negated sympathy generated by tales of Cummings’s troubled upbringing, it also would have undermined any “lingering doubt” about his willingness to shoot a police officer.
.The mitigating effect of the evidence that the jury did not hear was limited in scope and would have opened the door to inflammatory and prejudicial aggravating evidence. The California Supreme Court had a “reasonable basis” to conclude that Cummings failed to demonstrate prejudice as a result of his counsel’s penalty phase presentation of evidence. We affirm the district court’s denial of Cummings’s habe-as petition as to his ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
Conclusion
Cummings’s petition for habeas relief is DENIED.
Notes
. The Court in Beto was fractured: Two justices signed on to Justice Stewart's concurring opinion, and two justices dissented.
. Chief Judge Thomas’s dissent sidesteps AEDPA and reviews Turner's special relationship prong de novo because, in his view, the California Supreme Court improperly layered a prejudice-balancing test on top of the Turner inquiry. See Thomas Partial Dissent at 38. A close look at the record reveals the source of this misapprehension of the court's opinion. In state court, Cummings based his challenge on both state evidentiary and constitutional grounds. At the outset of its analysis, presumably in a nod to Cummings's claim under California Evidence Code § 352, the California Supreme Court stated that "the probative value of [La Casella's] testimony outweighed any prejudice to Cummings.”
. Wheeler is California’s equivalent to, and the state-law precursor of, Batson. Cummings "preserved his federal constitutional claim because a Wheeler motion serves as an implicit Batson objection.” Crittenden v. Ayers,
. At the 11th hour in this appeal, Cummings argued in his reply brief that the prosecutor racially profiled another black juror who was dismissed for cause. The racial profiling argument was forfeited, because Cummings never made that argument to the California Supreme Court, the district court, or in his opening brief here. United States v. Scott,
. As Cummings acknowledged on appeal, this juror himself may have been black. If true, this is yet another reason why he is not a proper subject of comparative juror analysis.
. In light of this conclusion, we do not address whether Cummings’s alternative request for an evidentiary hearing on his counsel’s performance is barred by Cullen v. Pinholster,
. The government asserts we cannot consider this evidence because it was contained in a social history report prepared during habeas proceedings, and the report itself is inadmissible hearsay. The report, however, was not prepared to serve as admissible evidence.
. The notes from this evaluation appear to have been lost.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I agree with the majority that Raynard Cummings’s equal protection and ineffective assistance of counsel claims should be denied. I respectfully dissent, however, from the conclusion that Cummings’s due process claim must also be denied. The Supreme Court made clear in Turner v. Louisiana,
I
Bailiffs play an important role during criminal trials by maintaining order inside the courtroom and ensuring the safety of jurors and court officers. But when they step beyond that traditional role by testifying against the accused, their competing interests may deprive the defendant of due process.
Justice Stewart highlighted this danger in Beto, focusing on “the great prejudice inherent in the dual role of jury bailiff and key prosecution witness.”
Our adversary system of criminal justice demands that the respective roles of*1151 prosecution and defense and the neutral role of the court be kept separate and distinct in a criminal trial. When a key witness against a defendant doubles as the officer of the court specifically charged with the care and protection of the jurors, associating with them on both a personal and an official basis while simultaneously testifying for the prosecution, the adversary system of justice is perverted.
Id. at 1055-56,
Recognizing that this risk of “great prejudice” arises whenever a bailiff testifies for the prosecution, the Supreme Court in Turner and Beto held that the admission of such testimony may sometimes violate a criminal defendant’s due process rights. The Court’s due process inquiry in those cases focused on two factors: (1) the importance of the bailiffs testimony and (2) the nature of the bailiffs relationship with the jury.
In analyzing the first factor, the Court examined the extent to which the jury’s verdict in each case turned on the credibility of the bailiffs’ testimony. See Turner,
Deputy La Casella’s testimony regarding Cummings’s alleged confession was similarly crucial to the prosecution during the trial in this case. As the majority notes, La Casella was the only witness— other than a jailhouse informant who later recanted his testimony — to corroborate the coroner’s specific theory that Cummings fired the first shot and Gay fired the final five. See Op. 1141-42. Because multiple forensic experts and at least one eyewitness disputed the coroner’s theory of events, La Casella’s testimony proved cen
Given the primacy that the state itself attributed to La Casella’s testimony, I agree with the majority that “[ejven under AEDPA’s deferential standard of review, it is hard to credit the [state] court’s application of Turner’s first prong.” Op. at 1141. I would therefore hold that the California Supreme Court’s conclusion that La Casel-la was not a key witness constituted an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law as determined by Turner and Beto. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Unlike the majority, however, I would hold that the state court’s application of Turner ’s second prong — regarding the nature of the bailiffs relationship with the jury— also conflicts with these controlling precedents.
In Turner, the Supreme Court addressed this prong by noting that a “continuous and intimate association” between a testifying bailiff and the jury would give rise to a due process violation while a “brief encounter” would not.
Turner’s contacts inquiry is distinct from the general weighing of probative value and prejudice that California courts typically use to determine the admissibility of evidence. See Cal. Evid.Code § 352 (“The court in its discretion may exclude evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will ... create substantial danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.”). Unlike that balancing test, Turner’s focus is constitutional, not evidentiary, and centers on the potential prejudice resulting from the bailiffs relationship with the jury — without regard to the probative value of the bailiffs testimony.
Nevertheless, the California Supreme Court resolved the Turner question in this
“[W]hen a state court employs the wrong legal standard, the AEDPA rule of deference does not apply.” Cooperwood v. Cambra,
In sum, the California Supreme Court’s decision to deny Cummings’s due process claim is not entitled to AEDPA deference. The court’s analysis of the first Turner factor was objectively unreasonable while its analysis of the second factor was based on an incorrect legal standard and, thus, contrary to federal law. • Because the state court’s resolution of Cummings’s due process claim is not entitled to deference, this court should review that claim de novo.
II
Reviewing Cummings’s due process claim de novo, I would grant his petition for habeas relief. La Casella’s testimony was critical to the prosecution’s case against Cummings and, as explained above, the trial record easily demonstrates that he was a “key witness” under Turner ’s first prong. While Turner’s second prong presents a closer question, I would hold that it, too, weighs in Cummings’s favor since La Casella’s contacts with the jury were significant enough to result in prejudice.
First, La Casella served as a bailiff for a much longer period of time than the bailiffs in Turner and Beto. Although La Ca-sella may not have socialized with the jurors to the extent that the bailiffs did in those cases, he served as bailiff for more than three months during voir dire and continued to serve throughout the first week and a half of witness presentations. 'In contrast, the bailiffs in Turner served for only a three-day trial while the bailiff in Beto served for only a one-day trial. The Seventh Circuit has specifically pointed to Beto as a basis for granting habeas relief to a petitioner who had been convicted of robbery based on the testimony of a bailiff who served for just one day of trial. Agnew v. Leibach,
The nature of La Casella’s contacts with the jury likewise suggests that his testimony was unduly prejudicial. He testified that jurors had asked him roughly two dozen questions throughout the course of the trial, that he sometimes greeted jurors as they entered the courtroom, and that he unlocked the jury room for them on a handful of occasions. Although these encounters might have seemed inconsequential when La Casella was merely a bailiff, once he became the prosecution’s star witness, these interactions would have likely taken on added significance for at least some jurors. The standard for determining whether those interactions were permissible under Turner is not whether they rose to some abstract level of intimacy. Rather, the proper inquiry is whether it “would have undermined the basic guarantees of trial by jury to permit this kind of an association between the jurors and [a] key prosecution witness[ ]” who was not a bailiff. Turner,
In this case, the length and nature of La Casella’s association with the jury would have likely precluded him from serving as a witness had he not been assigned to the courtroom as a bailiff during Cummings’s trial. Indeed, it is difficult to imagine another witness being permitted to testify after interacting with jurors, however briefly, on more than two dozen occasions over the course of such a lengthy trial. Cf. Agnew,
For these reasons, I would hold that La Casella’s testimony infringed Cummings’s due process rights and would grant his petition for habeas relief.
. Of the nine eyewitnesses who testified at trial, only one claimed to see Cummings fire the first shot at Officer Verna from the car. That witness had failed to identify Cummings as the shooter on two prior occasions — during both a police lineup and grand jury proceedings — and admitted that he had previously lied under oath. The witness also admitted that he had changed his testimony to implicate Cummings only after he and a detective conducted a "walk-through” of the shooting following the preliminary hearing.
. Although the first prong of Turner — considering the significance of the bailiffs testimony — requires something akin to a traditional probative-value analysis, the focus of Turner nevertheless remains distinct from the admis
. Although the majority suggests that the state court’s application of the evidentiary balancing test was separate from its application of the Turner test, the language and structure of the opinion suggest otherwise. The state court specifically cited the balancing test in the middle of its discussion of Turner and Beto and, as noted above, situated its analysis of these cases within a broader discussion of the trial court's “Evidentiary Rulings.” The court's reliance on the balancing test therefore appears central — not merely incidental— to its resolution of the Turner issue.
. The prosecution itself may have sought to exploit this potential prejudice. In its closing argument, it stressed that La Casella was "a deputy sheriff who acted as security in this courtroom,” and told the jury, "if you don't convict [Cummings] of first-degree murder with special circumstances, you are telling Deputy La Casella in effect that he lied. I don't think you believe that.”
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part, dissenting in part, and concurring in the judgment:
I agree with Judge McKeown that the district court’s decision to deny the petition for habeas corpus must be affirmed. Therefore, I concur in her opinion, and in its excellent reasoning — except as to Section I.A. I respectfully dissent from Section I.A., and write separately to explain why the California Supreme Court’s conclusion that Deputy LaCasella was not a “key witness” under Turner must be afforded AEDPA deference.
I
I begin by noting that Section I.A. is dicta — whether it is included or excised, the result is the same because, as Section I.B. persuasively explains, Cummings cannot show that the California Supreme Court erred in evaluating Turner’s second prong — the “heart of the Turner analysis.”
Further, Section I.A. is not only unnecessary to resolution of this case, but is, in my view, incorrect. The California Supreme Court was not objectively unreasonable in concluding that a “key” witness under Turner must be the “principal” witness — not merely one of several witnesses whose testimony is probative of guilt. Furthermore, because its key witness analysis did not contravene Turner, and because its decision was not “so lacking in justification that there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement,” it is our obligation to defer to the state court’s conclusion. White v. Woodall, — U.S. -,
A
The majority opinion
While Turner “emphasized” that the bailiff-witnesses in that ease were the “key witnesses” whose testimony “must inevitably have determined whether Wayne Turner was to be sent to his death,”
Thus, the California Supreme Court’s conclusion that LaCasella “was not the principal or key prosecution witness,” Cummings,
II
I agree with Judge McKeown that the denial of Cummings’s petition must be affirmed. However, because the California Supreme Court was not “objectively unreasonable” in its interpretation of the minimal Supreme Court guidance on the Turner “key” and “principal” witness issue, and, although I concur in the rest of the opinion, I must respectfully dissent from Section I.A.
. Because Chief Judge Thomas agrees with Section I.A., I refer to it as part of the "majority opinion.”
. As the majority notes, LaCasella’s testimony was not the only testimony supporting the prosecution’s "first-shot” theory — "at least one eyewitness testified that the person in the back seat fired the first shot.”
