David Simmons again appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition challenging his conviction on two counts of first degree aggravated murder, and one count of conspiracy to commit murder, on the ground that juror misconduct violated his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial. The district court held that it was bound by the state court’s finding that the juror read one newspaper article that she shouldn’t have read; but as that article contained only background and biographical information about the attorneys involved in the case, the district court concluded that the verdict could not have been affected.
On Simmons’s first appeal, we remanded to let him augment the record with new evidence that the juror had read more than the one article. The district court in turn stayed proceedings to allow the state court to take another look. After an evidentiary hearing, the original trial judge found that Simmons did not carry his burden of showing additional misconduct. Although Simmons appealed that ruling to the Washington Court of Appeals and the appeal is still pending, he asked the district court to lift its stay and resolve his petition. It did, adversely, in a published opinion, Simmons v. Blodgett,
However, Simmons’s appeal raises two other issues that are unusual: first, whether we should hear this appeal in the first place, since appellate proceedings in the State of Washington are on-going; and, second, whether O’Neal v. McAninch,
I
The district court wrestled with whether it should consider Simmons’s habeas petition prior to full exhaustion of his state appeals,
Given the fact that failure to exhaust is not an absolute bar to appellate consideration of habeas claims, Granberry v. Greer,
II
Simmons contends that under O’Neal v. McAninch,
In O’Neal, the Court was concerned with how a federal habeas court should respond when it reviews a state-court judgment from a criminal trial, finds constitutional error, and is in grave doubt about whether or not that error is harmless. “Grave doubt” means that, “in the judge’s mind, the matter is so evenly balanced that he feels himself in virtual equipoise as to the harmlessness of the error.” 513 U.S. at-,
Simmons submits that he is likewise entitled to relief because the spirit and logic of O’Neal follows through to situations where the equipoise has .to do with whether an error occurred in the first place. He reasons that under the Court’s definition of “grave doubt,” the state trial judge here was in “grave doubt” and “virtual equipoise” as to whether the juror read more than one article because the judge couldn’t say that she did or that she didn’t. When the trial judge is undecided about the occurrence of a prejudicial error, Simmons argues, the state must bear the risk of equipoise. Therefore, in his view, the district court went astray here because it failed to recognize that habeas relief must be granted in all cases of grave doubt, and because it improperly relied on case law establishing the preponderance of the evidence as the applicable burden of proof in all cases.
We disagree. As Justice Breyer, writing for the Court, made clear:
[W]e deliberately phrase the issue in this case in terms of a judge’s grave doubt, instead of in terms of “burden of proof.” The case before us does not involve a judge who shifts a “burden” to help control the presentation of evidence at a trial, but rather involves judges who apply a legal standard (harmlessness) to a record that the presentation of evidence is no longer likely to affect.
Id. at---,
As Simmons did not carry his burden of proving that constitutional error occurred, O’Neal is not implicated and his claim for habeas relief fails.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Simmons's pending appeal has to do only with the 1994 evidentiary hearing; his direct criminal appeals were exhausted before he filed his federal habeas petition.
. No one suggests, however, that Simmons’s state court appeal is not progressing appropriately.
. Simmons also claims that the district court erred in denying him an evidentiary hearing, and leave to amend, but we agree with the district court on both issues.
