Lead Opinion
OPINION
Petitioner Manuel Tarango, Jr. appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas . corpus. He claims violation of his due process right to a fair and impartial jury, where a police vehicle followed Juror No. 2, a known holdout against a guilty verdict, for approximately seven miles, on the second day of deliberations, in a highly publicized trial involving multiple police victims. Tarango argues that the Nevada Supreme Court’s decision upholding his convictions “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law,” see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), because the court failed to consider whether the contact be
We hold that the Nevada Supreme Court’s decision was contrary to Mattox v. United States,
BACKGROUND
On December 5, 1999, a rock band of off-duty Las Vegas police officers,. Metro Mike’s Pigs in a Blanket, was performing at a local bar called Mr. D’s. The bar was filled with off-duty police officers. A group of masked men entered the bar announcing a robbery, and a shoot-out ensued. Several patrons were shot, one robber was shot and killed, and one police officer, Officer Dennis Devitte, was shot several times. The surviving robbers escaped the scene and, six years later, Tarango was brought to trial on seven felony counts. The 2005 trial received considerable local media attention, and numerous Las Vegas Metro police officers attended as both witnesses and spectators.
After the jury began its deliberations, on November 1, 2005, the foreperson sent a note to the trial judge indicating that the jury had “reached a stalemate” because of a “problem juror” who had “made it very clear he does not want to be part of [the] process [and] is refusing to discuss or interact with the other jurors.” The “problem juror” separately wrote to the judge indicating that he had “doubt of which [he] feel[s] is beyond the limit of reasonable doubt,” and that deliberations were “not curing [his] doubt.” In his note, the “problem” juror identified himself as Juror No. 2.
Over Tarango’s objection,
On November 3rd, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported the guilty verdict in an article titled Man Convicted in 1999 Case. The article referenced “a juror who spoke to the Review-Journal.” Discussing the jury’s deliberation process, the interviewed juror mentioned the hold-out juror: “the case was close to a hung jury because one juror seemed.unwilling to convict following nearly two days of deliberations.”
On November 4th, prompted by the previous day’s newspaper article, Juror No. 2 wrote a letter to the court referencing the article:
I am the one Juror mentioned in the article.... I am also the Juror that wrote you the note during deliberations. It read: “I have doubt beyond the limit of what I consider reasonable doubt.” I also stated, “I did not believe further deliberations would cure that doubt.”Further deliberations in fact, did not cure my doubt.
However, when returning to re-deliberate Wednesday November 2nd from the Henderson area, a Metro squad car followed me northbound on 1-95 and into the downtown area.
I found that action unnerving.
I realize the State has much time and money invested in this case. There were [sic] no alternate Juror. I concluded Metro somehow knew who I was and knew of my unwillingness to convict. I have never been in trouble with the law. Therefore, I relinquished my vote under duress. I only ask, within the law, please show [Tarango] leniency.
One week later, on November 11th, Juror No. 2 emailed Tarango’s trial attorney, Marc Saggese, and attached a copy of his “Letter to the Judge.” The juror told Sag-gese that he felt “compelled to notify” Saggese of the letter. Saggese promptly filed a motion to dismiss all charges with prejudice or, alternatively, to grant a new trial on the ground of juror misconduct, arguing that Juror No. 2’s communication indicated that the deliberation process had been tampered with in violation of Taran-go’s right to due process. • Under- Nevada law, juror misconduct refers to two categories of conduct: (1) intrinsic misconduct, that is, “conduct by jurors contrary to them instructions or oaths;” and (2) extrinsic misconduct, or “attempts' by third parties to influence the jury process.”
In support of the motion, Saggese submitted a declaration indicating that, after the trial court-read the juror notes into the record and while deliberations were ongoing, Saggese overheard Deputy District Attorney Marc DiGiacomo report to Detective James Vacarro over the phone that one juror, Juror No. 2,'was holding out. Saggese thus indirectly corroborated Juror No. 2’s stated belief that he was being targeted as a hold-out juror by introducing evidence that members of the Las Vegas police department both knew that Juror No. 2 favored acquittal and had knowledge of Juror No. 2’s identity.
The trial court held a full hearing on Tarango’s motion the following month. Juror No. 2, Defense Attorney Saggese, Detective Vacarro, and Deputy D.A. DiGiaco-mo were all called to testify regarding their knowledge of the alleged events and communications in question. At the hearing, the court limited the questioning of
[Right after getting on the freeway,] I was in the center lane [of US-95]. I noticed a Metro squad car behind me; fairly close behind me.... He was close enough I couldn’t see his front-wheels or bumper. And, I looked down and I was not exceeding the speed limit.
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I signaled and got over to the far right lane anticipating being pulled over and he stayed tight behind me.
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I maintained under the speed limit anticipating being pulled over. A couple minutes and he never lit up, he never indicated that he was ... going to pull me over. So I just maintained right lane position under the speed limit. This continued on.
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[At Eastern Avenue] there was a lot of traffic entering the freeway.... [T]here was so many cars trying to merge into the freeway that the Metropolitan squad car actually pulled up closer to prevent anyone from pulling in between our vehicles.
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And as soon as the ... exit to Las Vegas Boulevard came, I even slowed down under 50, and that’s a long exit there. It’s, um, a quarter mile, half a mile, and even at that, he maintained position.
And he’s not pulling me over. He’s not ... giving me a citation for nothing. He followed me down the hill, and at the stoplight for Lás Vegas Boulevard.... He followed me, still tight. And there’s several stop lights, something, Stewart, and then Carson is where the juror parking garage is. And we did get a red light there. He was still behind me. I took a right to enter the ... jurors parking lot. That’s when he relieved me from the escort or whatever he was doing. That’s when he left me alone.
When questioned, Juror No. 2 indicated that he could not tell whether the driver of the vehicle was male or female, and he could not report the squad car number. However, Juror No. 2 averred that the car behind him was “a Metropolitan black and white vehicle.” When questioned a second time, Juror No. 2 reiterated that the car remained “consistently” tight behind him for the duration of his commute to the
At the end of the hearing, the court orally denied Tarango’s motion to dismiss or to grant a new trial. The trial court did not discredit Juror No. 2’s testimony, and made one factual finding that Juror No. 2 “was followed closely, tightly, however you want to state it from Tropicana on US-95 to Las Vegas Boulevard and Carson.”
I don’t think there’s any evidence of juror misconduct. There were no attempts to influence the jury. There’s no outside influence on this particular juror. There’s no communication or contact. The alleged conduct is ambiguous, it’s vague and nonspecific in content. I’m required to consider this extrinsic influence in light of the trial as a whole, and consider the weight of the evidence against Mr. Tarango and with that, and based on the [Meyer] decision, and the reasonable person test that I’m required to apply. I don’t think that Mr. Tarango has met his burden. Therefore, the motion is denied.6
Weeks later, at a televised proceeding on February 8, 2006, the trial court denied Tarango’s motion to reconsider on the basis of jury misconduct and entered judgment against him. The trial court sentenced Tarango to a 22-58 year term of imprisonment. Tarango promptly appealed the denial.
In September 2007, the Nevada Supreme Court affirmed the state trial court’s denial of Tarango’s motion for a new trial. Tarango v. State,
The Nevada Supreme Court first concluded that Juror No. 2’s letters to the trial court were properly deemed inadmissible to prove that Juror No. 2 had voted guilty in violation of the jury instructions or contrary to his oath as a juror, reasoning that “for misconduct to be proved it ‘must be based on objective facts and not the state of mind or deliberative process of the jury.’ ” Id. slip op. at 6 (quoting Meyer,
The Nevada Supreme Court further held that there was no evidence of an improper external influence on Juror No. 2. Although the Nevada Supreme Court assumed “arguendo that [Juror, No. 2] was followed by a marked police car,” and, observed that “any unauthorized communication between law enforcement and a juror about a matter pending before a jury may be ‘presumptively prejudicial,’ ” the court concluded that “[Juror No. 2] failed to show by objective facts that there was an improper external communication between him and the police.” Id. slip op. at 6-7. The Nevada Supreme Court explained that “it is not clear whether being followed by a marked car qualifies as a communication at all. It is even more dubious as to whether such a ‘communication’ was about a matter pending before the jury.” Id. slip op. at 7. 'In other words, having found that no “communication” had occurred, the Nevada Supreme Court determined that the alleged influence of the non-communicative contact was “too speculative” to sustain Tarango’s motion for a new trial and did not reach the second prong of the misconduct inquiry — whether the contact was prejudicial. Id.
Following state habeas proceedings, Tarango timely filed his federal habeas petition on .March 15, 2010. The federal district court for the District of Nevada was “tempted to say that the fact Juror 2 rendered his verdict based not upon the law and evidence, but because of his perception of a threat, is dispositive.” However, without citing authority, the district court concluded that “Supreme Court case law is clear that objective proof of external contact is required.” It further concluded that-the state court did not err in concluding that no external contact had occurred, although the. court found that determination “debatable.”'The district court therefore dismissed Tarango’s petition in September 2013, upholding as reasonable the state court’s determination that Tarango had failed to show any improper external contact.
On October 16, 2013, the district court granted Tarango a Certificate of Appeala-bility" as to Ground One of his amended petition, and Tarango filed a Notice of Appeal the same day. Ground One reads as follows:
Tarango was convicted because one of the jurors believed that the State was trying to intimidate him, and not because he believed Tarango was guilty. As such, Tarango is incarcerated in violation of his right to a Fair Trial, an Impartial Jury, and Due Process under the 6th and 14th Amendments of the United States Constitution.
Tarango raises only the certified issue in his appeal before us.
DISCUSSION
I.
We review de novo a district court’s denial of a habeas corpus petition. Hurles v. Ryan,
Where a.state court fails to apply the clearly established federal law, applying an incorrect standard in reaching its decision, “the state court’s adjudication [is] contrary to clearly established law.” Lafler v. Cooper, — U.S. -,
In conducting this review, we look to the “last reasoned decision” by a state court addressing the issue at hand. Miles v. Ryan,
II.
The Nevada Supreme Court, after assuming that Juror No, 2 was followed by a police car, decided that such contact did not implicate Tarango’s right to due process because it did not amount to a “communication,” much less a communication “about a matter pending before the jury.” The court declined to consider whether the police tail could have prejudiced the verdict, We hold that the Nevada Supreme Court violated clearly established Supreme Court case law, first by limiting its inquiry to whether the contact amounted to a “communication ... about a matter pending before the jury” and, second, by failing to examine the potential impact of the non-communicative contact on Juror No. 2’s verdict.
A.
In criminal trials, well-entrenched Supreme Court authority “absolutely” forbids “external causes tending to disturb the [jury’s] exercise of deliberate and unbiased judgment ... at least until their harmlessness is made to appear.” Mattox v. United States,
Clearly established federal law provides that any unauthorized “private communication, contact, or tampering di
B.
The Supreme Court has not established a bright-line test for determining what constitutes a possibly prejudicial “external” influence on a jury. The Court has devoted more recent attention to clarifying what “falls on the ‘internal’ side of the line.” Warger v. Shauers, — U.S. -,
In more recent decisions interpreting the Mattox rule, the Court has clarified that an external contact need not be intentional, Gold v. United States,
The Supreme Court has identified an “extraneous influence” requiring judicial inquiry into prejudice in cases where the jury heard and read information about the defendant’s propensity for murder, which was not admitted into evidence, Mattox,
C.
Mattox requires a trial court to examine possible prejudice when it is confronted with evidence of an external contact that has a “tendency” to be “injurious to the defendant.” Mattox,
To be sure, “it is virtually impossible to shield jurors from every contact or influence that might theoretically affect their vote.” Smith,
Mindful of this reality, and given the need to preserve the finality of a jury’s verdict, courts universally prohibit jurors from impeaching their own verdicts through evidence of their internal deliberative process. See, e.g., Tanner,
Once a defendant shows an external occurrence having a tendency toward prejudice, federal law clearly requires a trial court to investigate the harmlessness or actual prejudice of the occurrence. Mattox,
III.
In sum, the governing Supreme Court case law can be distilled as follows: Where a court receives information, Remmer,
In this case, the Nevada Supreme Court assumed a contact — albeit not a “communication” — occurred. Our case law compels our conclusion that the contact in question had enough of a tendency to influence the jury’s verdict so as to necessitate judicial inquiry into prejudice. It was thus, error for the Nevada Supreme Court not to conduct a prejudice analysis merely because Juror No. 2’s police tail did not amount to a “communication .,. about a matter pending before the jury.”
A,
Assuming the truth of Juror No. 2’s testimony that he had been followed closely for seven miles on the second day of deliberations,
In light of this, we have little trouble concluding that the contact that the Nevada Supreme Court assumed occurred had enough potential for ‘prejudice to cross Mattox’s low threshold. Las Vegas police officers were deeply entangled in this case as victims,’ witnesses, investigators, and trial spectator's. Juror No, 2 testified that he had been closely followed’ by a marked police car for over sevén miles. See Parker,
B.
Thus, because the state court assumed that the contact did in fact occur and clear
Certainly, there may be circumstances in which a trial court finds a juror’s allegations of an external contact are unsupported by sufficient evidence, or in which the allegations are so implausible or incredible that they may be reasonably disregarded. There may also be cases in which an alleged external contact suggests paranoia or some underlying mental incompetence on the juror’s part. See Tanner,
Here, Juror- No. 2’s testimony was not discredited. To the contrary, crediting Juror No. 2’s testimony about a plausible external contact with a juror reluctant to convict, the Nevada Supreme Court declined to consider whether Juror No. 2 may have been prejudiced by the police tail.
IV.
Because the Nevada Supreme Court failed to consider the prejudicial impact of the contact, in violation of the law clearly established in Mattox, we may evaluate Tarango’s claim “without deference to the state court’s decision” and “unencumbered by the deference AEDPA normally requires.”
Under our precedent, where an external contact with the jury is shown, a trial court should determine whether the contact “raises a risk of influencing the verdict.” Caliendo,
Although the anti-impeachment rule, codified as Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b)(1), prohibits juror testimony regarding “any juror’s mental processes concerning the verdict,” an exception to the rule permits juror testimony about whether “an outside influence was improperly brought to bear on any juror.” Fed. R. Evid. 606(b)(2)(B). This court has accordingly deemed admissible limited juror testimony to determine “the impact [of an outside influence] upon the juror, and whether or not [the outside influence] was prejudicial.” Remmer,
Unlike Nevada law, our precedent instructs, that a court should not limit juror testimony to “the existence of [an external contact].” Rutherford,
Consistent with the principles announced in Rutherford, the district court should admit Juror No. 2’s. statements about how the police tail impacted him, although not how it impacted his deliberations and verdict. Therefore, Juror No. 2’s statement that he found the police tail “unnerving” is admissible, as are his statements that he “concluded Metro somehow knew who [he] was.” By contrast, Juror No. 2’s statements that he “relinquished his vote under duress,” and “still [has] doubt as an X-Juror” are not admissible.
Because the scope of the evidentiary-hearing was narrowly circumscribed in the state trial court, the record before us is insufficient to determine whether the police tail influenced the verdict and preju-dicéd Tarango. We accordingly remand for the district court to hold an evidentiary hearing and apply the proper standard to determine whether the Nevada courts violated Tarango’s due process right to a fair and impartial jury by failing to adequately consider allegations of a prejudicial external influence on the jury. Following this court’s precedent, the district court should permit Tarango to offer limited evidence to show prejudice, see Caliendo,
Notes
. Tarango argued that Juror No. 2’s note indicated that the jury was hung, and moved for a mistrial, there being no alternate jurors left to take Juror No. 2’s place.
. Meyer further clarifies the distinction:
The first category includes jurors failing to follow standard admonitions not to discuss the case prior to- deliberations, accessing media reports about the case, conducting independent research or investigation, discussing the case with nonjurors, basing their decision on evidénce not admitted, discussing sentencing or the defendant's failure to testify, making'a decision on the basis of bias or prejudice, and lying during voir dire. It also includes juror incompetence issues such as intoxication. The second category involves attempts to influence the jury’s decision through improper contact with jurors, threats, or bribery.
. During voir dire, the parties and the trial court learned various details about Juror No. 2’s life. Juror No. 2 had served in the Air Force for four years doing “flight instrument trainers [sic), [and] navigation.” He completed both high school and also trade school in electronics. At the time of his jury service, Juror No. 2 was employed as a network administrator, was married, and had a daughter. He had lived in Clark County, Nevada since 1991.
. Meyer also observes, though, that where juror misconduct involves "extrinsic information or contact with the jury, juror affidavits or testimony establishing the fact that the jury received the information or was contacted are permitted.” Meyer,
. Having taken judicial notice of a roadmap of Las Vegas, Nevada, we confirm that the distance from East Tropicana Avenue on US-95 to South Las Vegas Boulevard and East Carson Avenue is approximately 7.5 miles.
. Juror No. 2 wrote a second letter to the trial judge following the hearing. The letter begins, "Your Honor; Please accept this letter as an apology. I was given the privilege to serve as a Juror and I failed.” Juror No. 2 went on to apologize to God, his fellow Jurors, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, and the "Citizens of this Great State Nevada.” He explained that his verdict was "untrue to [his] conscience,” because he "let fear of reprisal enter into [his] mind and heart.” As a result, Juror No. 2 expressed his desire "to nullify [his] verdict.” Juror No. 2 conceded that his request "may not be taken legally,” because he was ignorant of legal procedures, but that he "personally nullifies] [his] verdict to all those that will forgive me.”
.The Nevada Supreme Court did not cite any United States Supreme Court authority in rendering its decision, but this is immaterial provided the state law is not inconsistent with clearly established federal law. See Early v. Packer,
. In Smith, for example, the Court held that the district court properly conducted a hearing that explored the "effect” of a juror’s relationship with the prosecutor’s office before concluding that the defendant was not prejudiced by that relationship.
. The dissent incorrectly characterizes our holding as requiring an inquiry into prejudice even where the alleged contact or communication is unsubstantiated. Dissent at 957, To be clear, we agree that if the trial court had discredited Juror No, 2’s testimony and found that no pursuit occurred, then neither the trial court nor the Nevada Supreme Court would have had any cause to examine prejudice, See Caliendo,
. The dissent suggests that Mattox "expressly” requires "proof that jury tampering actually occurred,” Dissent at 957, but this argument misses the point. The Nevada Supreme Court presumed an unauthorized external
. The trial court specifically found that Juror No. 2 “testified he was followed closely, tightly, however you want to state it from Tropicana on US-95 to Las Vegas Boulevard and Carson,” The trial court did not discredit Juror No. 2’s testimony, and appears to have accepted the allegation as true, at least for the sake of its decision denying Tarango’s motion to dismiss. In any event, our review is limited to the Nevada Supreme Court’s decision, see Miles,
. The dissent suggests that the cited Supreme Court cases are insufficiently specific to support our holding. See Dissent at 958. To the contrary, Mattox and its progeny set forth a standard that “clearly extend[s]” to the case before us. See Wright v. Van Patten,
. Meyer, which the Nevada Supreme Court relied upon, appears to require the same of Nevada courts. Although Meyer rejects “the position that any extrinsic influence is automatically prejudicial,” it does not limit the occasions in which a court must consider the possibility of prejudice. See
.The dissent cites a number of Ninth Circuit AEDPA cases that were reversed by the Supreme Court, and in which the Supreme Court “chastised us” for ignoring AEDPA’s demanding standard. See Dissent at 953-54. These -cases have no bearing on the issue presented in this appeal.
. The Nevada Supreme Court has identified a similar dichotomy in its own construction of Supreme Court case law prohibiting external influences on criminal juries. Meyer,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I agree with the majority that if a member of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department purposefully tail-gated á holdout juror on" the freeway for over sevén miles, because the juror was a holdout, such conduct might constitute external jury contact requiring further inquiry from the court. However, the Nevada Supreme Court determined that the juror’s assumption that the police officer targeted him as the holdout juror was speculative and unsubstantiated.
Appellant Manuel Tarango moved for a néw trial in the state court on the basis'of an “outside influence on the jury process.” Nevada Supreme Court Order, p. 1. According to the Nevada Supreme Court, the holdout juror conveyed that “he thought he had been followed by a police car.” Id., p. 2. (emphasis added). Because he felt intimidated, the juror changed his vote to guilty from not guilty.
The Nevada Supreme Court also noted that a recent newspaper article attributed the juror’s change of heart to the fact that “the other jurors were able to convince the holdout to convict_” Id., p. 4. After discussing the juror’s email to the trial judge and the juror’s follow-up letter, the Nevada Supreme Court concluded that the trial court properly excluded from consideration the juror’s emails to the trial judge and" defense counsel under N.R.S. 50.065(2) and the Nevada casé of Meyer v. State,
Upon an inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment:
(a) A juror shall not testify concerning the effect of anything upon the juror’s or any other juror’s mind or emotions as influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from the verdict or indictment or concerning the juror’s mental processes in connection therewith.
(b) The affidavit or evidence of' any statement by a juror indicating an effect of this kind is inadmissible for any purpose.
In Meyer, the Nevada Supreme Court interpreted N.R.S. 50.065. Initially, the court referenced Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b), which it identified as an embodiment of “the long-standing common-law rule against admission of jury testimony to impeach a verdict ...”
• Importantly, the Nevada Supreme Court made a distinction between juror misconduct and jury tampering. See id. at 454-55. Citing Supreme Court authority, the court identified' extraneous influence as jury tampering rather than juror misconduct. See id. at 455 (citing Remmer I; see also Remmer v. United States (Remmer II),
Under this framework established by its precedent, the Nevada Supreme Court ruled that, after excluding the inadmissible evidence of the juror’s state of mind and of the deliberative process of the jury, there was insufficient evidence that the juror committed misconduct. See Nevada Supreme Court Order, p. 6.
The Nevada Supreme Court then turned to the asserted extraneous influence of a police car following the juror on the freeway.
In the last ten years, the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly rebuked this Circuit for attempting to make end-runs around the formidable obstacles to review contained in the AEDPA. As the majority acknowledges, habeas relief under the AEDPA is available only if the decision of the state court decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States, or ... was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented at the State Court proceeding.” Majority Opinion, p. 945 (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)-(2)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Despite our recurring acknowledgment of this demanding standard, the Supreme Court has constantly chastised us for failing to take our professed acknowledgment to heart. In Glebe v. Frost, — U.S. -,
In Nevada v. Jackson, — U.S. ——,
There are three problems with the majority’s analysis. The first is that Mattox is “far afield” from the dispositive issue in this case. Jackson,
1. Reliance on Mattox
Mattox, a case decided in 1892, is notable not only for its age and obvious predating of the AEDPA, but for its unremarkable holding. In Mattox, the United States Supreme Court addressed the denial of a motion for a new trial made by a defendant who was tried in federal court. See
The Supreme Court observed that the affidavits submitted by the jurors were properly received because they refrained from articulating “what influence, if any, the communication of the bailiff and the reading of the newspaper had upon them, but confined their statements to what was said by the one [the bailiff] and read from the other [the newspaper].” Id. at 147,
The Court held that “[pjrivate communications, possibly prejudicial, between jurors and third persons ... or the officer in charge, are absolutely forbidden, and invalidate the verdict, at least unless their harmlessness is made to appear.” Id. at 150,
that the defendant had been tried for his life once before; that the evidence against him was claimed to be very strong by those who had heard all the testimony; that the argument for the prosecution was such that the defendant’s friends gave up all hope of any result but conviction; and that it was expected that the deliberations of the jury would not last an hour before they would return a verdict ...
Id. at 150-51,
The Court described the extraneous statement from the bailiff as informing the jury “that this was the third person Clyde Mattox had killed ...” Id. at 151,
Considering these facts, it is unremarkable that the Supreme Court held that the undisputed evidence of jury tampering warranted the grant of a new trial. However, nothing in the holding or reasoning of Mattox supports the majority’s disregard of the state court’s determination that Tar-ango’s evidence of jury tampering was speculative. The majority cites Mattox for the proposition that the trial court was compelled to “consider the prejudicial effect of any external contact that has a ‘tendency' to influence the verdict....” Majority Opinion, p. 946. However, the majority’s analysis conveniently omits the discussion in Mattox of the undisputed evidence that established, without challenge, the existence of the external contact. See Mattox,
It cannot be fairly said that Mattox compels consideration of the prejudicial effect of speculative evidence of jury tampering. Rather, as with other factual determinations, the existence of jury tampering is a matter to be resolved by the trial court. See Uttecht v. Brown,
The majority also relies on our decision in United States v. Armstrong,
The other cases cited by the majority as clearly established Federal law are similarly “far afield.” In Remmer I,
In Smith v. Phillips,
2. Failure to defer to the Nevada Supreme Court
The Supreme Court has consistently and repeatedly stressed our obligation on ha-beas review to defer to the rulings and factual determinations made by the state courts. See Uttecht,
The majority’s disregard of the state court’s determination and substitution of its alternate conclusion strays from our appointed role on habeas review. See Richter,
3. No supporting Supreme Court authority
Under the rule expressed by the majority, a trial court would have to conduct a prejudice analysis whenever an allegation of jury tampering is made, even if the trial court ultimately determines that the allegation is unsubstantiated. See Majority Opinion, p. 948 n.9 (discounting the trial court’s determination that the allegation of jury tampering was “ambiguous, vague and nonspecific”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
No Supreme Court precedent, supports the majority’s rationale. As previously noted, Remmer I and Mattox involved .undisputed evidence of extraneous influence. See Remmer I,
The Supreme Court has addressed the tendency of this Circuit to reach beyond the confines of Supreme Court precedent. In Lopez,
CONCLUSION
I have no quarrel with the notion that we must faithfully adhere to the panoply of procedural protections afforded the criminal defendant. However, on habeas review, we are cabined by the deference owed to state court decisions and by the requirement that relief be granted only if the decision of the state court was contrary to established Supreme Court authority. Mattox is not that authority in this case.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly reminded us that the standard for relief on habeas review “is difficult to meet ... because it was meant to be...Richter,
Because the majority cites no applicable Supreme Court authority to support its grant of habeas relief, because the majority completely disregards the findings of the state courts, and because the majority fails to adhere to the confines of habeas review, I respectfully dissent.
. The majority mischaracterizes my description of the state courts' factual determination, See Majority Opinion, p, 948 n.9. The state court did not discredit, and I did not describe the state courts’ finding as discrediting, Juror No. 2’s statement that he "thought he was followed by a police car.” Nevada Supreme Court Order, p. 2. What the state courts did discredit, and what I did describe the state courts as finding, was a lack of substantiation that the police car was following Juror No, 2 on the freeway because he was a holdout juror. There was insufficient evidence in the state courts’ view that a tail-gating police •officer in rush-hour morning traffic constituted an improper external influence. Rather than focusing on whether Tarango submitted evidence of an external influence, see, e.g., Mattox v. United States,
. The majority takes judicial notice of a road-map of Las Vegas, Nevada to approximate the distance involved as 7.5 miles. See Majority Opinion, p. 943 n.5. The majority should have also taken notice that US-95 is the only freeway that accesses downtown from east on Tropicana Boulevard, and therefore it would not be unusual for a police officer to take that route to police headquarters downtown.
. The majority malees light of the many rebukes we have received from the Supreme Court for ignoring the demanding standard under which we review habeas cases. See Majority Opinion, p. 950 n.14. I doubt the Supreme Court will be amused.
. Curiously, the majority opinion implies that a newspaper article is not a "cpmmunication.” Majority Opinion, p. 946. Nothing could be further from the truth. See Hilliard v. Arizona,
... The majority completely ignores the fact that the state court never found that the police officer was aware of the identity of the holdout juror. For that reason, the state court merely assumed that there was a tail-gating, not that there was "external contact.”' The assumption' of "external contact” is made by the majority.
. The majority accuses me of missing the point, see Majority Opinion, p. ,948-49 n.,10, but it is the majority that is off-base. The state courts NEVER "presumed an unauthorized external contact with a juror had .occurred.” Id. The most the state courts assumed was that a police car tail-gated Juror No. 2 during . morning rush-hour traffic on the only freeway that accesses downtown from east Tropicana Boulevard. The majority presumes the rest.
. The majority takes issue with, and in the process implicitly concedes, my point that the Supreme Court cases relied upon by the majority "are insufficiently specific.” Majority Opinion, p. 950 n.12. In the very next sentence, the majority seeks to "extend” the standards set forth in "Mattox and its progeny.” Id. However, the Supreme Court has expressly instructed us against extending its precedent beyond its specific holdings. See White v. Woodall, — U.S. —,
