Appellant was convicted by a state court jury of aiding and abetting the second degree murder of a peace officer and of aiding and abetting the attempted murder of another peace officer. In his habeas corpus petition filed in federal district court appellant asserts two constitutional errors in his trial. First, he contends that the jury instruction given for aiding and abetting failed to state all the elements of the offense. As a result, appellant argues, the jury did not have the opportunity to find each element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt as required by
In re Winship,
I
It is undisputed that the jury instruction on aiding and abetting was deficient under
People v. Beeman,
*424 As there was clearly constitutional error in appellant’s trial, we are left with the question whether that error was harmless. The state courts and the district court held that the error was harmless because the overwhelming weight of the evidence established the element of specific intent beyond a reasonable doubt. Appellant argues that this was the wrong harmless error analysis. Instead, appellant urges us to apply the harmless error analysis advanced by Justice Scalia in Carella v. California. 1
In
Carella,
the Court held that a mandatory presumption in a California theft statute resulted in constitutional error, and the Court remanded the case for consideration of whether the error was harmless. Justice Scalia, concurring, explained in more detail what the harmless error analysis in such cases involves. Justice Scalia reasoned traditional harmless error analysis is inappropriate in- the context of incomplete jury instructions because it substitutes the appellate court’s findings of fact for the jury’s and is akin to an impermissible directed verdict.
Carella,
If jury instructions omit an element of the offense, constitutional error results because the jury has been precluded from finding each fact necessary to convict a defendant. To determine if the instructional error is harmless, Justice Scalia suggested a method of harmless error review that would allow an appellate court to conclude “the
jury
found the facts necessary to support the conviction.”
Id.
at 271,
“When the predicate facts relied upon in the instruction, or other facts necessarily found by the jury, are so closely related to the ultimate fact to be presumed that no rational jury could find those facts without also finding that ultimate fact, making those findings is functionally equivalent to finding the element required to be presumed.” Id.
Justice Scalia advanced this analysis as a way of reconciling
Sandstrom v. Montana,
We agree with Justice Scalia’s reading of these cases and adopt his harmless error analysis in the context of
Beeman
error. Indeed, without expressly adopting it, we have already employed the Scalia analysis in the context of
Beeman
error in
Leavitt v. Vasquez,
In applying the Scalia test to this case, we examine the findings made by the jury. The error is harmless if no rational jury would have made these findings without also finding that appellant had the specific intent to aid the murder and attempted murder. The record shows that the jury could have reached its verdict of aiding and abetting without finding that appellant had the specific intent to aid and abet the murder and attempted murder.
The jury instruction required the jury to find only that appellant knew the perpetrator’s criminal purpose and that appellant did some act of aiding, abetting, or encouraging the commission of the offense. Under the circumstances of this case, we cannot say a rational jury, which found that the appellant knew the perpetrator’s purpose in firing the gun at the officer, also would have necessarily found that appellant concurred in that purpose. The evidence showed that the perpetrator suddenly shot the officers from the car window at point-blank range, perhaps thinking that he and appellant were about to be arrested for robbery. Appellant did not argue that he did not know the perpetrator intended to kill the officers when he shot at such close range; rather, appellant’s main defense to the murder charges was that although he knew the perpetrator’s purpose, he was an “involuntary witness” to the shooting. Excerpts of Record, (“E.R.”), exhibit H at 6572.
As to the second element of aiding, abetting, or encouraging, there was at least one act of aiding and abetting in the record that did not require appellant to have the specific intent to aid the murder and attempted murder. The testimony at trial was that the murder weapon was usually carried by appellant. E.R. exhibit F at 5183-86. The jury could have found that appellant aided the murder by supplying *426 the murder weapon without necessarily finding that appellant intended the gun to be used to kill the officers.
As the district court found, there was other testimony at trial that indicated that appellant did have the specific intent to aid the murder. This testimony was vigorously challenged on cross-examination and in closing argument. Following Justice Sca-lia’s analysis, we cannot speculate about how the jury would have weighed this evidence had it been instructed to do so. Because we cannot determine that the jury necessarily found specific intent in order to reach its verdict, the instructional error was not harmless.
II
As we understand appellant’s “full faith and credit” argument, he is claiming that the California courts are bound to give dispositive effect to a Colorado Department of Motor Vehicles declaration executed by appellant and the witness declaring they had a common law marriage under Colorado law. The California courts considered the declaration, but they found that other evidence negated this expression of intent to be married. We affirm the district court’s denial of this claim because the California courts properly applied Colorado law in considering all the relevant evidence of the couple’s cohabitation and intent to hold themselves out as common law spouses.
See People v. Lucero,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part. The case is REMANDED and the district court is instructed to issue a writ of habeas corpus releasing appellant from the portion of his sentence due to the convictions for aiding and abetting murder and aiding and abetting attempted murder under Cal.Penal Code §§ 187, 664 3 unless the state grants appellant a retrial within 120 days.
Notes
. “ ‘After this opinion was filed, but before we entered the order denying the petition for rehearing, the Supreme Court clarified the governing harmless error standard.
Yates v. Evatt,
. Appellee suggests that we have at the same time used traditional harmless error analysis in
Beeman
cases, and we should affirm the district court in doing so here. However, a close look at the cases upon which appellee relies demonstrates that, while we did not cite Justice Sca-lia’s concurrence, we applied the same analysis. In
Willard v. People,
Likewise, in
Watts v. Bonneville,
In
Vicks v. Bunnell,
Finally, the passing comment in
United States v. Belgard,
. In the same trial, appellant was also convicted of violating Cal.Penal Code § 211, § 245(b), and § 12021. His convictions under these statutes were not the subject of this petition, and the portion of his sentence due to these convictions will not be affected by the issuance of the writ.
