On Motion To Stay The Mandate
The State of Wisconsin has filed a motion to stay this court’s mandate so that it may file a petition for writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court of the United States. The State argues that there is a reasonable probability that four justices will vote to grant certiorari and a reasonable possibility that five justices will vote to reverse this court’s judgment. See Books v. City of Elkhart,
I
The State submits that it meets the requirement for likelihood of success on the merits — in this context, of obtaining a grant of certiorari and reversal of this court’s decision — based on our failure to apply correctly, or at all, recent holdings of the Supreme Court. I conclude that the State misapprehends both the holdings of the Supreme Court and our opinion in this case.
A.
The State first maintains that, because the panel did not apply AEDPA deference with respect to the performance prong of Strickland v. Washington,
Where a state court’s decision is unaccompanied by an explanation, the habeas*534 petitioner’s burden still must be met by showing there was no reasonable basis for the state court to deny relief. This is so whether or not the state reveals which of the elements in a multipart claim it found insufficient, for § 2254 applies when a “claim,” not a component of one, has been adjudicated.
Id. at 784.
There are several reasons why this passage from Harrington is inapplicable to the present case. First, Harrington addresses the situation in which a state-court decision “is unaccompanied by an explanation.” Here, the state appellate court issued an opinion and wrote: “We do not address whether counsel’s performance was deficient because we conclude that, even assuming deficient performance, Sussman cannot show prejudice.” R.5, Ex. B at 2. Seeking to invoke Harrington, the State asks that we treat this statement as a holding devoid of explanation that Mr. Sussman had failed to establish substandard performance. Clearly, however, the state court cannot both assume deficient performance and hold that counsel’s performance was not deficient. Second, the Supreme Court in Harrington did not disturb its approach in Wiggins v. Smith,
Finally, even if Harrington somehow signaled the Court’s willingness to revisit Wiggins, the present case does not present it with a clear opportunity to do so. In Sussman, although the panel stated that it would not apply AEDPA deference to the performance prong, it also observed that, in this context, “[cjonsideration of [the performance prong] necessarily overlaps with our consideration of the prejudice prong of the Strickland analysis,” Sussman v. Jenkins,
B.
Relying on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Premo v. Moore, — U.S.-,
In Premo, the Supreme Court considered “the adequacy of representation in providing an assessment of a plea bargain without first seeking suppression of a confession assumed to have been improperly obtained.” Premo,
The Supreme Court concluded that “[t]he Court of Appeals was wrong to accord scant deference to counsel’s judgment, and doubly wrong to conclude it would have been unreasonable to find that the defense attorney qualified as counsel for Sixth Amendment purposes.” Id. at 740. It noted that, although the Strickland standard is the same whether counsel’s alleged missteps occurred “before, during, or after trial,” “at different stages of the case that deference may be measured in different ways.” Id. at 742. When evaluating counsel’s actions in seeking an early plea bargain, the Court noted that habeas courts must consider the potential risks to the defendant in delaying a bargain, including “giv[ing] the State time to uncover additional incriminating evidence that could have formed the basis of a capital prosecution.” Id. The Court then concluded, “In these circumstances, and with a potential capital charge lurking, Moore’s counsel made a reasonable choice to opt for a quick plea bargain. At the very least, the state court would not have been unreasonable to so conclude.” Id. at 742-43. The Court then went on to observe that the Ninth Circuit had erred in holding that the Oregon state court’s conclusion on the reasonableness of counsel’s actions was “contrary to” Fulminante, which did not concern the Strickland standard at all, but involved “the admission of an involuntary confession in violation of the Fifth Amendment,” id. at 743 (internal quotation marks omitted); indeed, the Court believed that the Ninth Circuit had misconstrued Fulminante itself, see id. at 744.
This ease does not concern, of course, a plea bargain, and, therefore, neither counsel’s actions nor the state court’s ruling must be evaluated “in light of the uncertainty inherent in plea negotiations.” Id. at 743. More fundamentally, here there was a clear relationship, on the record, between the Strickland standard and the state court’s ruling on “futility.” The state court held, and indeed, explained, that Mr. Sussman had not suffered any prejudice under Strickland because his motion to admit evidence would not have been successful. This estimation was based on a misapprehension of federal law, namely the Supreme Court’s Confrontation Clause jurisprudence. Nothing in Premo suggests that, when a state court makes an error of federal constitutional law that necessarily affects its Strickland calculus, a federal court should ignore that error in
The State faults this aspect of our opinion on another ground. The State maintains that, in assessing the state court’s actions, we looked to our own case, Redmond v. Kingston,
The State believes that this is especially egregious because “the Wisconsin Court of Appeals and the district court never squarely addressed the separate Confrontation Clause challenge because Sussman chose only to present them with a Strickland challenge.” Motion to Stay at 9. The State accuses this court of raising and writing the “winning Confrontation Clause argument ... without ever giving the respondent a fair opportunity to address it.” Id. However, as we noted at several points in our opinion, Mr. Sussman presented to the state courts the potential Confrontation Clause problems raised by the trial court’s failure to allow him to elicit testimony on the complainant’s alleged prior false allegations of sexual abuse. See Sussman,
Moreover, in its brief to this court, the State acknowledges Mr. Sussman’s efforts to raise the issue before the district court: “Sussman relies heavily on this court’s decision in Redmond v. Kingston,
Finally, I note that, despite the State’s view of the alleged serious overreaching by the panel, the State did not choose to bring this issue to the panel by way of a petition for rehearing, or to the whole court by way of a petition for rehearing en banc.
C.
The State also faults us for “scour[ing] the state court record for ‘arguments!”] ... that undermined, rather than ‘supported’ ” the state court’s decision. Motion to Stay at 10. The State believes that this approach, which it attributes to us, is inconsistent with Harrington’s approach that requires a habeas court to “determine what arguments or theories supported ... the state court’s decision ... and then ... ask whether it is possible fairminded jurists could disagree that those arguments or theories are inconsistent with the holding in a prior decision of this Court.” Id. (quoting Harrington,
This is not a fair comment on our decision. As noted earlier, our main problem with the state court’s analysis of the prejudice prong was that it was based on a misapprehension of the injury done to the Confrontation Clause rights of Mr. Suss-man. With respect to this issue, we considered whether the state court reasonably could have read the Court’s Confrontation Clause jurisprudence so as to disallow the testimony that Mr. Sussman sought to elicit. See Sussman,
II
The burden is on the party seeking a stay to establish that it will suffer irreparable injury. Books,
For these reasons, the motion to stay is denied.
It is so ordered.
