OPINION
This case is before us on remand from the Supreme Court for the second time. We reiterate the facts and course of litigation very briefly; a fuller exposition may be found in our earlier opinions and orders that we cite here.
I
Shirley Ree Smith was convicted in California state court of assault on a child resulting in death. The state court of appeal affirmed her conviction, and the California Supreme Court denied review. Smith then filed a federal habeas petition claiming that her conviction violated due process because the evidence was constitutionally insufficient. The district court denied the petition and Smith appealed. We reversed and directed issuance of the writ. Smith v. Mitchell,
The State’s petition for panel and en banc rehearing was denied, Smith v. Mitchell,
On remand, we held that Carey v. Musladin did not cast any doubt on our earlier conclusion that Smith’s case fell squarely within Jackson, and that the state court’s denial of her claim of constitutionally insufficient evidence was an unreasonable application of Jackson.
The State once again petitioned for certiorari. The Supreme Court granted the writ, vacated our judgment, and remanded for further consideration in light of McDaniel v. Brown, — U.S. -,
We have now examined Brown along with supplemental briefs from the parties addressing its potential effect on Smith’s case. We conclude that nothing in Brown is inconsistent with our prior decision or our method of reaching it. We accordingly reinstate our former decision, reported at
II
Brown involved a decision of this court that, like our decision in Smith, held that a state conviction failed to pass constitutional muster under the standard of Jackson v. Virginia. There the similarity of the two cases ends.
Brown’s conviction rested partly, but not entirely, on DNA evidence. In presenting that evidence, the prosecution’s expert introduced inaccuracies by testimony “equating random match probability with source probability, and [by] an underestimate of the likelihood that one of [the defendant’s] brothers would also match the DNA left at the [crime] scene.”
The Supreme Court went on, however, to rule that, even if the Mueller Report could have been considered, it did not render the evidence insufficient because it did not dispute that the DNA evidence matched the defendant. “That DNA evidence remains powerful inculpatory evidence even though the State concedes [its expert] overstated its probative value.... Even under Mueller’s odds, a rational jury could consider the DNA evidence to be powerful evidence of guilt.” Id. at 673.
The Supreme Court also faulted this court for treating inconsistencies in factual testimony (such as the time the defendant left a bar on the night of the crime, or the reason that he washed his clothes when he later arrived home) in a manner indicating that it had failed to review the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution. See id. The Supreme Court stated that this court “further erred in finding that the Nevada Supreme Court’s resolution of the Jackson claim was objectively unreasonable.” Id. at 674.
Ill
Our decision in Smith did not share the deficiencies that the Supreme Court pointed out in our opinion in Brown. First, and perhaps most important, the record in Smith’s case did not contain “powerful evidence of guilt,” Brown,
All of the expert testimony offered by both sides agreed that the amount of recent bleeding (approximately one or two tablespoons) was not sufficient to have caused death, nor was the small abrasion sufficient for that purpose. To the prosecution experts, however, the presence of blood supported the diagnosis of Shaken Baby Syndrome. There was no dispute, however, that the usual Shaken Baby Syndrome death occurs from massive bleeding or swelling of brain tissue that creates such crushing pressure against the brain stem that vital processes are interrupted and the baby dies. It was also agreed that in 80% or more of the cases of Shaken Baby Syndrome, there is bleeding in the retinas of the eyes. There are also frequently fractures in the arms or similar evidences of violence.
There was no swelling, and only a small, non-fatal amount of bleeding, in Etzel’s case. Etzel had no retinal bleeding, and no fractures or large bodily bruises common in cases of shaking. The scalp abrasion was minimal, and was not even discovered until well into the autopsy. The prosecution experts testified, however, that shaking caused the death even though the physical examination of the brain during and after autopsy could not demonstrate that fact. The experts testified that the shaking must have been so violent and severe that it directly tore or sheared parts of the brain stem, causing immediate cessation of vital activity such as breathing. This tear in the brain stem would not have been apparent in autopsy, according to the prosecution experts, because instantaneous death would have prevented any bleeding or swelling. No microscopic examination of the brainstem was performed following the autopsy because, as Dr. Erlich testified, “[W]e wouldn’t have seen anything anyway.” The fatal tear or shearing would not have been detectable. Dr. Ehrlich could not identify any source in the literature for her hypothesis of undetectable brain stem shearing, but said she had learned it from lectures and consultations.
The state of the trial record in this case, therefore, is entirely different in degree and kind from that in Brown. And there is no question that, in Brown, the Supreme Court relied heavily on the evidence of guilt that remained for the jury even if the expert’s inaccuracies were combed out. Indeed, in introducing its holding in Brown, the Court stated:
We granted certiorari to consider whether [the district and appeals] courts misapplied Jackson. Because the trial*1239 record, includes both the DNA evidence and other convincing evidence of guilt, we conclude that they did.
Next, it almost goes without saying that our decision was not subject to the error that was conceded by the defense in Brown: consideration of evidence that was not before the jury. Our decision in Smith that no rational jury could find Smith guilty beyond a reasonable doubt was based entirely on the evidence presented to the jury at trial. That aspect of Broum is inapplicable here.
Finally, we conclude that our decision in Smith did not fail to accept the prosecution’s view of any evidence of historical fact, thus failing to accord deference to the state court’s application of Jackson. See Brown,
As we indicated in our original opinion, we are acutely aware of the double layer of deference required by the Jackson standard when it is combined with the standard of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). See Smith,
IY
Pursuant to the Supreme Court’s mandate, we have further considered our decision in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in McDaniel v. Brown. For the reasons set forth above, and in light of our prior opinions and orders cited in Section I of this opinion, we conclude that Brown does not cast doubt on the correctness of our decision, of which we remain convinced. We accordingly reinstate our earlier judgment and opinion, as reported at
OPINION AND JUDGMENT REINSTATED.
Notes
. We recognize that, to permit relief by habeas corpus, the state court’s application of Jackson to the facts of this case must be " 'objectively unreasonable.' ” Brown,
