Respondent Joseph Costello, Superintendent of the Mid State Correctional Facility, appeals from the grant of Sidney Hawkins’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Johnson, J.).
See Hawkins v. Costello,
No. 00 CV 1343(SJ),
BACKGROUND
In June 1994, two New York City police officers were on patrol in Brooklyn. They saw two men running on the sidewalk, looking over their shoulders as they ran. The officers recognized one of the men as a man they knew by the sobriquet “Eddie-Ed.” The police officers also saw Sidney Hawkins standing behind the two men in front of a grocery store. Hawkins was holding a gun.
Hawkins ran into the grocery store. One of the officers pursued him and arrested him inside the store. The officers recovered the gun from behind a counter, and Hawkins was charged with criminal possession of a weapon.
In March 1995, the New York Supreme Court, Kings County, conducted a bench trial. Hawkins’s defense was that Eddie-Ed had brandished a gun at him during a dispute over a debt Hawkins owed Eddie-Ed. According to Hawkins, he grabbed the gun from Eddie-Ed in order to protect himself.
Mark McCormack, one of the officers who arrested Hawkins, testified about the events surrounding Hawkins’s arrest. He also testified that a few months after the arrest, he saw Eddie-Ed on a street corner. After the two exchanged pleasantries, Officer McCormack “mentioned” Hawkins’s arrest.
On cross-examination, Hawkins’s attorney attempted to explore the substance of Officer McCormack’s conversation with Eddie-Ed in order to support Hawkins’s innocent possession defense. The prosecution objected to the following question: “And during this conversation, isn’t it a fact that [Eddie-Ed] had told you ... that the weapon was his?” The court sustained the objection and struck the question from the record. Hawkins’s attorney then asked Officer McCormack, “And in this conversation that you had with [Eddie-Ed], didn’t he tell you that you were arresting the wrong person for ownership of the weapon?” The prosecution again objected. The court initially overruled the objection because it did not ask for “a direct quote.” The prosecution, however, explained why it believed the question called for hearsay. The court then reversed itself and sustained the prosecution’s objection to the question. Hawkins’s attorney also asked Officer McCormack if he knew “who the owner of that weapon is?” The prosecution once again objected, and the court sustained the objection, ruling that “owner” “is a legal term. The trier of facts has to determine who the *241 owner means.” Notably, Hawkins’s attorney never sought to make an offer of proof regarding why he thought Eddie-Ed’s putative out-of-court statements were admissible through Officer McCormack’s testimony.
At the close of trial, the court found Hawkins guilty of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. After finding that Hawkins was a persistent violent felony offender under New York law, the court sentenced him to eight years’ to life imprisonment.
Hawkins appealed his conviction to the Appellate Division, Second Department. He argued,
inter alia,
that the trial court improperly restricted his cross-examination of Officer McCormack. In 1999, the Appellate Division affirmed the conviction.
People v. Hawkins,
The New York Court of Appeals denied Hawkins leave to appeal.
People v. Hawkins,
In 2000, Hawkins filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. Among other things, the petition alleged that the trial court unconstitutionally restricted his cross-examination of Officer McCormack.
In January 2003, a magistrate judge (Chrein, M.J.), to whom the district court had referred Hawkins’s petition, construed Hawkins’s pro se claim as a contention that he was unconstitutionally prohibited from presenting exculpatory evidence. The magistrate found that if Eddie-Ed had told Officer McCormack that the gun belonged to him, Officer McCormack’s testimony to that fact would have been admissible hearsay as a statement against penal interest and the trial court’s refusal to allow such testimony would have been a denial of Hawkins’s due process right to introduce exculpatory evidence. The magistrate ordered a hearing to determine what Eddie-Ed told Officer McCormack. At the same time, he recommended rejection of Hawkins’s other claims, and he appointed counsel to represent Hawkins.
In April 2003, the State submitted an affidavit from Officer McCormack in which he stated that he did not remember his near-decade-old conversation with Eddie-Ed. Thus, Officer McCormack had no “recollection whatsoever of anything [Eddie-Ed] said to [him].” The State filed an additional affidavit in which it included Eddie-Ed’s last known address.
In May 2003, the magistrate rescinded the hearing order and gave Hawkins time to develop evidence regarding the substance of Eddie-Ed’s statements to Officer McCormack. When Hawkins failed to do so, the magistrate issued a report and recommendation in which he recommended that Hawkins’s habeas petition be denied in full.
Hawkins objected to the report and recommendation, arguing that the “Magistrate Judge unconstitutionally placed the burden on petitioner to offer proof as to what [Officer McCormack] would have testified.” In April 2005, the district court rejected the magistrate’s recommendation and granted in part Hawkins’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court essentially assumed that if the trial court permitted Officer McCormack to answer Hawkins’s counsel’s questions, he would have testified that Eddie-Ed stated that the gun was his, and therefore Hawkins *242 was prevented from presenting exculpatory evidence. The court based this assumption on its finding that the lack of evidence regarding what Eddie-Ed actually said to Officer McCormack is “entirely attributable” to the State because the trial court sustained the prosecution’s objections to Hawkins’s counsel’s questions. The district court ordered the State to immediately release Hawkins.
The State moved for a stay of Hawkins’s release pending appeal. The district court granted an interim stay pending its decision on the State’s motion. Seven months later, the district court denied the State’s motion for a stay pending appeal, lifted its interim stay, and ordered the State to release Hawkins within fifteen days.
Hawkins v. Costello,
No. 00 CV 1343,
The State immediately moved this Court for a stay pending appeal, which we granted. Thus, Hawkins remains incarcerated during our consideration of this appeal.
DISCUSSION
The State argues that the district court erred in granting Hawkins’s habeas petition. We agree.
We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant or deny a habeas petition.
Jenkins v. Artuz,
I. The Deference Afforded to the State Court Adjudication
When a state court adjudicates a habeas petitioner’s claim on the merits, we must afford that decision the deferential standard of review established by the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”) in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Sellan v. Kuhlman,
Applying AEDPA deference, a federal court may grant a writ of habeas corpus if the state court’s adjudication on the merits “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established, Federal law as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.”
1
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). “Clearly established Federal law” “refers to the holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the Supreme] Court’s decisions as of the time of the relevant state-court decision.”
Williams v. Taylor,
A state court adjudication is “contrary to” federal law if it “arrives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law” or if it “decides a case differently than [the Supreme] Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
Id.
at 412-13,
*243
“Unreasonableness is determined by an ‘objective’ standard.”
Gersten v. Senkowski,
AEDPA does not require that the state court adjudication under review cite Supreme Court cases.
Early v. Packer,
II. Clearly Established Federal Law
Long before the Appellate Division’s adjudication of Hawkins’s claim, the Supreme Court made clear that a criminal defendant has a constitutional right— grounded in the Sixth Amendment’s Compulsory Process and Confrontation Clauses and the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause — to “a meaningful opportunity to present a complete defense.”
Crane v. Kentucky,
While a defendant has the right to present a complete defense, that right is not without limits and “may in appropriate cases, bow to accommodate other legitimate interests in the criminal trial process.”
Id.
at 295,
III. “Contrary to” or “Unreasonable Application of’
We can quickly dispense with AEDPA’s “contrary to” prong. In deciding Hawkins’s claim, the state court did not decide a question of law differently from the Supreme Court; and this case does not present a set of facts materially indistinguishable from a Supreme Court case. Thus, the state court adjudication is not “contrary to” clearly established federal law.
See Williams,
In considering whether the exclusion of evidence violated a criminal defendant’s right to present a complete defense, we start with “the propriety of the trial court’s evidentiary ruling.”
Wade,
If potentially exculpatory evidence was erroneously excluded, we must look to “whether ‘the omitted evidence [evaluated in the context of the entire record] creates a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist.’ ”
Justice v. Hoke,
On the other hand, if the evidentiary ruling was correct pursuant to a state evidentiary rule, our inquiry is more limited. We consider whether the evidentiary rule is “ ‘arbitrary’ or ‘disproportionate to the purposes [it is] designed to serve.’ ”
United States v. Scheffer,
A. The Propriety of the Trial Court’s Evidentiary Ruling
We cannot say that the trial court’s exclusionary rulings were erroneous as a matter of New York evidentiary law. It appears that the trial court excluded Officer McCormack’s answers to Haw
*245
kins’s counsel’s questions as hearsay.
2
Hearsay is inadmissible in New York courts unless it falls within an exception to the rule.
See People v. Huertas, 75
N.Y.2d 487, 492,
New York law does provide a potentially applicable exception to its hearsay rule for statements against a declarant’s penal interest so long as certain requirements are met.
See People v. Thomas,
B. Infringement on a “Weighty Interest”
As explained above, when a trial court has not made a state evidentiary error, we must consider whether the evidentiary rule the court applied is arbitrary or disproportionate to the purposes it is designed to serve, and we can only find the rule arbitrary or disproportionate if it infringes on a “weighty interest of the accused.”
Scheffer,
If we knew — or perhaps more precisely if the trial court had reason to have known — that Eddie-Ed had confessed ownership of the gun to Officer McCormack, then we might well have found that the trial court’s exclusion of that evidence infringed on Hawkins’s weighty interest in presenting exculpatory evidence.
See People v. Almodovar,
Significantly, neither Hawkins nor the district court has directed us to any cases in which a court found a violation of a criminal defendant’s right to a meaningful opportunity to present a defense where the court so ruling did not know the substance of the excluded evidence. And we have not found any cases in which the Supreme Court or this Court found a violation of that right where it was not “able to appreciate the significance of the excluded evidence.”
3
See Gov’t of the Virgin Islands v. Smith,
C. The Absence in the Record of the Substance of Eddie-Ed’s Out-of-Court Statements
Finally, we consider the district court’s conclusion that the absence of information in the record about Eddie-Ed’s conversation with Officer McCormack is “entirely attributable” to the State because the trial court sustained the prosecution’s objection to Hawkins’s counsel’s questions. The district court went on to find that “[t]o deny [Hawkins’s] claim on the basis of the fact that he has not presented such evidence when the trial court erroneously barred him from presenting exactly that evidence would be unreasonable and unjust.” (Emphasis added.) We disagree with this analysis.
First,
as we discussed above, the trial court did not “erroneously” exclude the evidence. Instead, it excluded hearsay evidence in accord with well-established New York evidentiary law designed to exclude unreliable evidence.
See Scheffer,
Second,
as we have explained, when the trial court made its initial exclusion ruling, the proverbial ball was in Hawkins’s court. As a matter of New York law, it was incumbent upon his counsel to alert the trial court to a basis, if there was any, upon which the out-of-court statements were admissible.
See Tyrrell v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
Hawkins contends that his opening statement “clearly alerted the Court to the defense that the weapon was in temporary possession of [Hawkins], after having been removed from the true owner,” and thus the trial court had a sufficient offer of proof to allow Officer McCormack to answer Hawkins’s counsel’s questions. That is not correct. The opening statement certainly alerted the trial court to Hawkins’s defense of innocent possession. That is a far cry, however, from an indication that Eddie-Ed told Officer McCormack that the gun was his. Simply because a hoped-for answer would support an asserted defense does not indicate a basis for admission of that answer into evidence.
* * *
We cannot say that the state court adjudication was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law. Thus Hawkins’s habeas petition must be denied.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s grant of Hawkins’s ha-beas petition and remand with directions to dismiss the petition.
Notes
. A federal court may also grant the writ if the state court adjudication "resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). Hawkins has not invoked this provision.
. One of the trial court's rulings could perhaps be read as based on something other than hearsay. When Hawkins's counsel asked Officer McCormack if he knew "who the owner of that weapon is,” the trial court sustained the prosecution’s objection, stating that the "trier of facts has to determine who the owner means.” It is clear from the context, however, that Hawkins's counsel was simply trying to find a backdoor through which to introduce Eddie-Ed’s putative out-of-court statements. Thus, while the trial court's articulation of why it sustained the objection is perhaps awkward, we think it most likely that the objection was sustained on hearsay grounds.
.
Pennsylvania v. Ritchie,
. In this regard, we find it telling that at no point has Hawkins, his trial counsel, or his subsequent counsel ever indicated a basis upon which to suspect that Eddie-Ed spontaneously confessed to Officer McCormack that the gun belonged to him.
