Case Information
*1 Before: CLAY, ROGERS, and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL ARGUED: Edward F. Roche, ROPES & GRAY LLP, Wаshington, D.C., for Appellant. Andrea M. Christensen-Brown, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Edward F. Roche, Jonathan S. Klarfeld, ROPES & GRAY LLP, Washington, D.C., Alexandra L. Roth, ROPES & GRAY LLP, New York, New York, Justin G. Florence, ROPES & GRAY LLP, Boston, Massachusetts, for Appellant. Andrea M. Christensen-Brown, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellee.
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OPINION
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SUTTON, Circuit Judge. In 2009, a Michigan jury convicted Scott Perreault of murdering his four-month-old daughter. He filed a habeas petition in federal court claiming that *2 police failed to honor his request for counsel and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial. The district court denied his petition. Because the state courts did not unreasonably apply the Supreme Court’s teachings in either аrea, we affirm.
I.
Perreault lived with his fiancée Jamie Newman and their four-month-old daughter Jenna Perreault. On the morning of September 2, 2008, Newman left Jenna at home with Perreault. At about 10:00 a.m., Perreault called 911 to report that Jenna had been injured. Police and paramedics arrived on the scene and found that Jenna had suffered a blunt-force trauma to the head. They rushed her to the hospital, where she died from her injuries two days later.
Perreault was indicted for first-degree felony murder and two counts of felony child abuse. At trial, he claimed that he had dropped Jenna while holding her in the kitchen, that he had fallen on top of her, and that she may have hit her head on an object in the kitchen as the two fell together. The State disputed this account, relying in part on the testimony of the emergency room doctor who treated Jenna, Dr. Matthew Deibel. Dr. Deibel testified that Jenna’s injuries could have been caused only by a narrow range of high-impact events, such as a high-speed car accident, a fall from several stories, or “a baseball bat to the head.” Based on this and other evidence, the State argued that Jenna’s injuries werе caused by her head striking a blunt object at a high speed. The jury found Perreault guilty of first-degree child abuse and first-degree felony murder. The court sentenced him to life in prison.
Perreault appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals. His counsel argued that there was
insufficient evidence to convict, and Perreault filed a supplemental brief on his own raising
twenty-two additional claims, including claims that his statements to police should have been
suppressed. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
People v. Perreault
, No. 293324, 2011 WL
1901994 (Mich. Ct. App. May 19, 2011). Mr. Perreault filed an application for leave to appeal
the Court of Appeals decision to the Michigan Supreme Court, raising the same claims he had
previously raised.
People v. Perreault
,
Pеrreault returned to the trial court and filed a motion for relief from judgment, arguing
for the first time that he had received ineffective assistance of trial counsel. The trial court
denied his claims, and the Court of Appeals denied leave to appeal. The Michigan Supreme
Court аlso denied leave to appeal.
People v. Perreault
,
Perreault filed a habeas petition in federal court. The district court denied relief but granted a certificate of appealability on two questions: (1) Whether Perreault’s statement during the police interrogation, “Well, then let’s call the lawyer then ‘cause I gave what I could,” constituted an unambiguous invocation of the right to counsel that required the police to stop questioning him? and (2) Whether Perreault’s trial counsel was ineffective because he failed to challenge the state expert’s testimony about the cause of Jenna’s injuries?
II.
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, federal courts may
override state criminal convictions only if the state court unreasonably applied clearly
established Supreme Court precedent or the conviction turned on unreasоnable findings of fact.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). As for legal conclusions, the state court decision must be objectively
unreasonable, not just wrong.
Harrington v. Richter
,
Right to Counsel
. Perreault argues that police failed to honor his right to counsel after he
requested an attorney during the interview. A suspect subject to custodial interrogation hаs the
right to consult with an attorney and to have counsel present during questioning.
Miranda v.
Arizona
, 384 U.S. 436, 444 (1966). If the suspect invokes that right, police must stop
questioning him until his attorney arrives or the suspect reinitiates discussion.
Edwards v.
Arizona
,
During Perreault’s police interview, the examining officer said that his story was
inconsistent, calling it “jacked up.”
Perreault
,
The Michigan Court of Appeals found that Perreault did not unambiguously ask for an attorney. Id. In its view, his statements were “akin to negotiations.” Id.
That is a plausible reading of Perreault’s statement. A reasonable police officer could interpret “Well, then let’s call the lawyer then ‘cause I gave what I could” to mean something like “That’s all I got; take it or leave it.” Negotiation literaturе has a name for this tactic: threatening to resort to the “best alternative to a negotiated agreement,” and it’s recognized as one of the most commonly employed bargaining strategies. See Jay A. Hewlin, The Most Overused Negotiating Tactic Is Threatening to Walk Away , Harv. Bus. Rev. (Sept. 18, 2017), https://hbr.org/2017/09/the-mоst-overused-negotiating-tactic-is-threatening-to-walk-away.
One sees something similar at car dealerships. When a would-be car purchaser threatens to walk away, that’s not because he wants to leave; it’s because he wants the salesman to lower the price or otherwise sweeten the deal. When a child threatens to call Mom if his older sister refuses to return a favorite toy, the goal is not to call Mom. The goal is to convince the older sister to return the toy or at least to give it back at some point. The threat works only if Mom is never called. So too of the threat: “Well, then, I will see you in court!” No one takes that as a request for litigation.
Consider federal regulatory schemes, which commonly allow private parties to negotiate
deals with one another in the shadow of binding arbitration should they fail to reach agreement.
See, e.g.
, FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. § 136a;
Thomas v. Union Carbide Agric. Prods. Co.
,
The point of these examples is not to show that Perreault’s statement could only be interpreted as a negotiating tactic. They merely show that the stаte court’s interpretation of the statement was a reasonable one.
Perreault claims that several circuit precedents prove that his statement amounted to an
invocation of counsel. Most of the cases, however, did not find an unequivocal invocation.
Compare Rogers v. Kerns
,
This exercise misunderstands our role at any rate. Circuit precedents do not constitute
“clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court” and cannot provide the
basis for relief under AEDPA.
Parker v. Matthews
,
Perreault adds that the Michigan Court of Appeals relied on his statements made after
requesting counsel in order to determine that the earlier statement was ambiguous, in violation of
Smith v. Illinois
, 469 U.S. 91, 100 (1984). But that’s not what happened. While the court
recognized that Perreault continued to speak to officers, it did so after noting that Perreault
“never clearly requested to call an attorney or have an attorney present” and that his statements
were “akin to negotiations.”
Perreault
, 2011 WL 1901994, at *9. Besides, habeas review
requires us to consider what arguments or theories supported or
could have supported
the state
court’s decision.
See Harrington
,
Perreault claims that the district court erred in treating the state court’s no-invocation ruling as a factual finding entitled to a presumption of correctness under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). The distinction makes little difference here given the deference AEDPA demands for conclusions of law and fact. Still, we agree with Perreault that this case turns on the legal effect of his statements rather than a factual dispute over what they were. The question is whether the state court unreasonably applied clearly established Supreme Court precedent. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). It did not.
Perreault asks us to remand his case to the district court to obtain a transcript of the police
interview introduced in the state court proceedings. But the Michigan Court of Appeals opinion
already recounts the relevant рortion of the police interview and provides plenty of context to
confirm the reasonableness of its conclusion.
See Perreault
,
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
. Perrеault separately argues that his trial counsel
provided ineffective assistance when he failed to cross-examine Dr. Deibel adequately about the
scientific basis for his testimony. Success on this claim is not easy. Perreault must prove that his
counsel’s performance was objеctively deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced his case.
Strickland v. Washington
, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). It gets worse. On top of that, he must
satisfy the
Strickland
requirements in the context of AEDPA’s deferential standard of review.
We ask, then, not whether counsel’s actions were reasonable but whether there is any reasonable
argument thаt counsel satisfied
Strickland
.
Harrington
,
Although the state court rejected the
Strickland
claim through a procedural-default ruling,
the court addressed the alleged deficiency on the merits as part of its ruling, meaning AEDPA
deference applies to the
Strickland
claim.
See Brooks v. Bagley
,
Defense counsel, to be sure, did not cross-examine Dr. Deibel on the medical basis for his opinion that Jenna’s injuries could not have been caused by a fall even if Perreault landed on top of her. But this was a reasonable strategiс decision. Another prosecution witness, Dr. Kanu Virani, the forensic pathologist who performed Jenna’s autopsy, testified that it was possible for her injury to have been caused by a fall followed by a 150-pound body landing on top of her, although he did not think that was the case here. In the face of conflicting prosecution witness testimony, it is within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance to leave well enough alone and avoid the risk of bolstering adverse testimony.
Dr. Virani, it is true, testified after Dr. Deibel at trial. But Dr. Virani acknowledged at
the preliminary examination that Jenna’s injuries could have been caused by a fall onto a hard
surface, if an adult fell on top of her. Defense counsel thus had good reason to know that Dr.
Virani would provide conflicting testimony later in the trial. But even if that was not the case,
his performance did not violаte the Sixth Amendment.
Strickland
requires that counsel exercise
“such skill and knowledge as will render the trial a reliable adversarial testing process”
considering all of the circumstances.
Strickland
,
Hoping for a different conclusion, Perreault invokes
Higgins v. Renico
,
In
Smith
, defense counsel fell short of reasonable professional standards for failing to
“conduct
any
investigation” into the state of the victim’s health.
See Smith
,
Perreault ends with a different tack. He asks us to remand his
Strickland
claim to the
district court to conduct an evidentiary hearing and review his claim again. But in reviewing
whether a state court unreasonably applied Supreme Court рrecedent, a habeas court generally
must take the state court record as it finds it.
See Cullen v. Pinholster
,
For these reasons, we affirm.
