The Supreme Court has vacated our decision in this habeas proceeding with the instruction to reconsider it in light of
Carey v. Musladin,
— U.S.-,
Relying on our own well-settled precedent and what we conceived to be the teachings of the high court, we had held that the New York State Courts had unreasonably applied “clearly established” Sixth Amendment law in excluding Jose Rodriguez’s family frоm his criminal trial. Accordingly, we remanded the case to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Block, J.) with instructions to grant Rodriguez’s petition.
See Rodriguez v. Miller,
Our decision cannot stand after Musla-din. Thus, we are now obliged to conclude that Rodriguez’s petition must be denied and the district court affirmed.
BACKGROUND
A full recitation of the salient history of this suit may be found in our prior opinion.
See Rodriguez,
A. Rodriguez
In 1995, Rodriguez was tried in Kings County for selling coсaine to an undercover officer (the “Undercover”) in the Bush-wick area of Brooklyn. The State moved to close the courtroom during the Undercover’s testimony to protect his identity. The state court held a hearing pursuant to
People v. Hinton,
The state court found that this testimony was suffiсient to close the courtroom. Rodriguez, himself, conceded that some closure was necessary but argued that the court could not exclude his family on these facts alone. The court eventually ruled that it would permit Rodriguez’s mother and brother to attend the proceedings but only if they sat behind a screen to obscure the Undercover’s aрpearance. Fearing prejudice to his defense, Rodriguez objected to the screen and instructed his family not to attend his trial.
Rodriguez was convicted. The Appellate Division affirmed his conviction despite his claim that the courtroom closure violated his right to a public trial.
See People v. Rodriguez,
In June 2000, Rodriguez petitioned the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, again arguing the lack of a public trial. The district court denied the petition, holding that the state court’s decision was reasonable under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”).
See Rodriguez v. Miller,
No. 00-cv-3832,
In November 2003, we vacated and remanded for reconsideration in light of our then-recent opinion in
Yung v. Walker,
In February 2006, we again vacated the district court’s judgment. While conceding that the state court may have made findings that justified “barring the attendance of the general public,” we concluded that the state court had failed to make thе “particularized inquiry” necessary to exclude Rodriguez’s family members.
Rodriguez v. Miller,
In January 2007, the Supreme Court granted certiorari and vacated our decision for further consideration in light of its recent decision in
Carey v. Musladin,
— U.S.-,
B. Musladin
In Musladin, a habeas petitioner convicted of murder in California state court claimed that he had been denied his right to a fair trial because his viсtim’s family had been permitted to wear buttons bearing a photograph of the victim in the courtroom gallery throughout the proceedings. The district court denied habeas relief but granted a certificate of appealability.
The Ninth Circuit reversed.
See Musladin v. Lamarque,
The Ninth Circuit first noted that the appropriate “inherent prejudice” test is derived from the Supreme Court’s watershed decisions in
Estelle v. Williams,
Grafting its own
Norris
decision onto the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence proved critical to the Ninth Circuit’s analysis, as
Norris
dealt with prejudicial conduct by
private
courtroom spectators, as opposed to the
state-sponsored
conduct at issue in the Supreme Court’s decisions.
Compare Norris,
In December 2006, the Supreme Court vacated the Ninth Circuit’s decision.
See Musladin,
*140 In so doing, the Court gave the narrowest possible reading to its holdings in Williams and Flynn — essentially concluding that the two cases provided a rule for assessing only the prejudice of “state-sponsored courtroom practices.” Id. at 653. 1 Thus, the Court concluded that “[n]o holding of this Court required the California Court of Appeal to apply the test of Williams and Flynn to the spectators’ conduct” at issue in Musladin and thus held that the state court’s decision was not “contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law.” Id. at 654.
Rodriguez’s petition now returns to us for reconsideration in light of the teachings of Musladin.
DISCUSSION
As the parties agree, the sole issue confronting this Court on remand is whether the New York State Courts’ decision to exclude Rodriguez’s family from his trial involved an “unreasonable application of ... clearly established Federal law.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). 2 We conclude that it did not.
A. Clearly established federal law
“Clearly established federal law” refers only to the holdings of the Supreme Court.
Williams v. Taylor,
Unsurprisingly, the parties here have broken lances over the scope and sources of “clearly established federal law” on courtroom closures. The State insists that there are only two relevant authorities: the holdings of the Supreme Court in
In re Oliver,
1. In re Oliver
In
Oliver,
the Supreme Court overturned a contemner’s conviction pursuant to an antiquated “one-man grand jury” procedure on Sixth Amendment grounds because the Michigan trial court had excluded the entire general public “except the judge and his attaches.”
The
Oliver
Court did note that “without exception all courts have held that an accused is at the very least entitled to have his friends, relatives and counsel present, no matter with what offense he may be charged.”
Id.
at 271-72,
2. Globe Newspaper and Press-Enterprise
Globe Newspaper
and
Press-Enterprise
employed First Amendment balancing to create an embryonic version of the courtroom closure test that eventually reached its full expression in
Waller.
Indeed,
Waller
expressly incorporates these First Amendment standards into its rule. See
In
Globe Newspaper,
the Court held that to justify the exclusion of the press from criminal trials, the state must: (1) show a compelling government interest; and (2) narrowly tailor the courtroom closure to serve that interest.
To the extent that the general approach of
Globe Newspaper
or
Press-Enterprise
might aid Rodriguez,
Waller
has incorporated it and now stands as the new touchstone of case law on public trials. Rodriguez clearly does not fall within the narrow holdings of these freedom of the press cases. Neither
Globe Newspaper
nor
Press-Enterprise
held that the exclusion of the family and friends of the defendant should be subject to a heightened level of scrutiny. At best,
Globe Newspaper
simply repeated
Oliver’s
dicta.
See Globe Newspaper Co.,
3. Waller
Waller
provides the
ne plus ultra
of the Sixth Amendment right to a public trial: a four-part closure test. To close a proceeding: (1) the party seeking closure must advance an “overriding interest that is likely to be prejudiced”; (2) the closure must be “no broader than necessary to protect that interest”; (3) the court must consider “reasonable alternatives” to closure;
and
(4) the court must “make findings adequate to support the closure.”
Waller,
We do not believe — nor does the State truly argue — that the
Waller
test should be limited solely to the closure of suppression hearings.
Waller
expressly relied upon аnd incorporated decisions addressing closures in a variety of proceedings. See
id.
at 44-48,
Waller
does not demand a higher showing before excluding a defendant’s friends and family. Nor does
Waller’s
quotation of
Oliver
and its jeremiad against European judicial secrecy magically transmogrify the entire history of the common law right to a public trial into constitutional precedent.
See generally Oliver,
4. Yung and this Court’s precedent
AEDPA itself tells us that the decisions of the courts of appeals cannot provide clearly established federal law. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) (states must apply “clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States”).
*143
Williams v. Taylor
reinforced this principle.
See
It would appear that we can no longer do this.
Musladin
made short work of the Ninth Circuit’s use of
Norris
to clarify what previously hаd looked to be a broad rule against “inherent prejudice” in
Williams
and
Flynn. Musladin,
Thus, despite Rodriguez’s protestations, we can rely neither on
Guzman v. Scully,
In sum, as Rodriguez does not come within the narrow holdings of Oliver, Globe Newspaper, or Press-Enterprise, and cannot appeal to Supreme Court dicta or decisions of this Court, his petition stands or falls solely upon the application of the Waller test.
B. Application
“Under the ‘unreasonable application’ clause, a federal habeas court may grant the writ if the state court identifies the correct governing legal principle from [the Supreme] Court’s decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s case.”
Williams v. Taylor,
Here, the statе courts did not unreasonably apply clearly established federal law. As we indicated in our prior opinion, we found little fault with their application of the general
Waller
test in the abstract.
See Rodriguez,
Indeed, Rodriguez conceded at the Hinton hearing that some form of closure was necessary but argued that the court could not exclude his family based on the limited testimony in the record. This was the basis for our prior decision to grant the writ — relying principally on Yung — and it is precisely the basis now foreclosed by Musladin. Thus, Rodriguez’s petition must be denied.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At first blush, little in
Williams
and
Flynn
indicates that the Court intended to limit its holding to statе-sponsored conduct cases. The Court buttressed its narrow interpretation in
Musladin
by noting that "part of the legal test of
Williams
and
Flynn ...
ask[s] whether the practices furthered an essential
state
interest.”
Musladin,
. Rodriguez no longer appears to argue that the state courts’ decision to exclude his family was also directly "contrary to” clearly established federal law.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). To the extent he does, we note that the New York courts neither "arrivefd] at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law” nor "decide[d] a case differently than [the Supreme] Court ... on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
Williams v. Taylor,
.It is not clear whether courts should treat the underpinnings of Supreme Court decisions so cavalierly
outside
the AEDPA context. Individual Justices have cautioned against such a restrictive (and perhaps constrictive) reading of precedent, both in
Musladin, see, e.g.,
. Rodriguez reads Abdul-Kabir and Brewer to intimate that clearly established federal law comprises "all the governing legal principles and supporting reasoning contained in the Supreme Court’s decisions.” Such a broad interpretation warps the logic of those cases and would bring them into a direct conflict with Musladin, decided only six months earlier.
