Richard Briggs brought a habeas corpus petition challenging his state conviction for second-degree murder. Briggs contended that the prosecution’s failure to turn over to him the victim’s FBI “rap sheet” after a specific request violated due process. The district court denied the petition. We find that Briggs has exhausted his state remedies and remand to the district court for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the victim’s FBI record contained favorable and material evidence for the petitioner. FACTS
In 1974, Richard Briggs was tried for murder in Arizona Superior Court. Briggs took the stand at trial and argued self-defense. He had spent several hours drinking with the victim, and testified that the victim was the first aggressor after Briggs rejected the victim’s homosexual advances. On several occasions Briggs requested that the prosecution turn over information on the victim’s criminal record, including his FBI rap sheet. The trial court refused to order production. The jury convicted Briggs of second-degree murder, and he is currently serving a prison term of thirty to sixty years.
The Arizona Supreme Court affirmed the conviction, holding that the prosecutor’s failure to turn over the FBI rap sheet did not violate his obligation under
Brady v. Maryland,
Briggs filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition in district court on March 6, 1980, alleging that the prosecutor failed to disclose favorable evidence after several specific requests, thereby violating Brady. Briggs contended that the victim’s rap sheet showed a history of sexual assaults, and thus would have bolstered his claim of self-defense. Without granting a hearing, the district court summarily dismissed Briggs’ petition, finding only that the Brady issue “was considered and properly decided on direct appeal.” Briggs appeals the dismissal of his petition.
I. EXHAUSTION OF STATE REMEDIES
The State contends that Briggs has failed to exhaust his state remedies as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) and (c). This failure, according to the state, occurred because Briggs did not use established state procedures to gain the benefit of a change in state law that would have made the requested information available. That change took place after Briggs’ state appeal and before the filing of his habeas corpus petition. In
State v. Smith,
[T]he state has an obligation pursuant to [127 A.R.S., Rules of Criminal Procedure] 15.1 to disclose such information not in its possession or under its control if the state has better access to the information; if the defense shows that it has made a good faith effort to obtain the information without success; and if the information has been specifically requested by the defendant.
Rule 32.1(g) of the Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure allows one who has been convicted to secure appropriate relief when there has been a “significant change in the law” and there are sufficient reasons for retroactive application of the change. In light of Smith, the State therefore contends that Briggs must use Rule 32.1(g) to challenge the Brady violation, before he can seek federal habeas corpus relief.
Assuming that the
Smith
decision and Rule 32.1(g) provide Briggs with an additional state remedy, the exhaustion argument is without merit. In
Roberts v. LaVallee,
In
Francisco v. Gathright,
II. THE BRADY VIOLATION
In
Brady v. Maryland,
In the most recent case to address this issue, the Fifth Circuit held that even though the prosecutor did not have direct control over the victim’s FBI records, it was a violation of due process not to obtain them upon request. Martinez
v. Wainwright,
The State contends, however, that the record is inadequate to determine whether the victim’s rap sheet in the instant case was both material and favorable to Briggs, as required by
Brady. United States v. Gross,
We agree with the State that the record is inadequate to determine the favorable or material nature of the victim’s rap sheet. Neither the record nor the Arizona Supreme Court opinion refer to the contents of the rap sheet. The district court was therefore asked to evaluate Briggs’ unsupported but uncontroverted assertions that the victim had a record of sexual assaults, and to decide whether this information would have been both favorable and material to Briggs’ defense. If the victim’s record demonstrates that he had a history of violent homosexual assaults, Briggs could make a strong argument that failure to produce the rap sheet was a Brady violation.
Although we find the record inadequate, we do not believe it follows that Briggs’ petition was properly dismissed. The Arizona Supreme Court did not address the materiality issue because it held that the FBI records, if any, were not in the prosecution’s control. The district court summarily dismissed Briggs’ petition with
*872
out holding an evidentiary hearing. Briggs was never given an opportunity to demonstrate that the victim’s criminal record supported his defense. Therefore, the proper disposition is neither dismissal nor an automatic grant of Briggs’ petition based solely on his allegations. As we stated in
Taylor v. Cardwell,
If, as here, there are no such findings [by the state court] on a material issue, the district court must try to reconstruct them from the state court’s legal holding and to make its own findings if it cannot adequately do so. Ordinarily, the court should conduct an evidentiary hearing for this purpose.
See also Stone v. Cardwell,
Because the state court did not address Briggs’ contentions and the district court summarily dismissed his petition, we remand to the district court. On remand, the court should conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine the contents of the victim’s FBI rap sheet, and whether the contents would have been favorable and material to Briggs’ defense at trial.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Editor’s Note: The opinion of the United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit in
Smiddy v. Varney
published in the advance sheets at this citation
Notes
. In
Daboul v. Craven,
. If the prosecutor believes that the rap sheet contains material that ought not be divulged to the defendant, an appropriate request may be made to the court for issuance of a protective order.
. If the defendant only makes a general request or no request at all, the evidence is not material within the meaning of
Brady
unless it is sufficient to create a reasonable doubt about the defendant’s guilt.
United States v. Agurs,
