Thomas Yancey, an Illinois inmate who in 1975 was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to seventy-five to ninety years in prison, appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.
I.
The facts of the case are outlined in Yancey’s direct state appeal,
People v. Yancey,
In the district court, Yancey filed pro se a petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleging numerous grounds for relief. On appeal, where he is represented by counsel, he has narrowed his contentions to two: that during closing arguments the prosecutor unconstitutionally referred to Yancey’s failure to testify on his own behalf, and that Yancey was denied his right to effective cross-examination where the trial court refused to allow evidence of Dickens’s and Parks’s criminal histories to impeach their credibility.
II.
Yancey has preserved both of his claims for federal review. There is no question that he has exhausted his state remedies. Further, each of these claims was presented to the Appellate Court of Illinois and the Supreme Court of Illinois on direct review. Although both Yancey and the state have lost copies of Yancey’s petition for post-conviction review, the district court gave Yancey the benefit of the doubt on the issue of procedural default and reached the merits of the claims. We believe it immaterial in this case whether Yancey included these claims in his post-conviction petition:
res judicata
would have prevented Yancey from further litigating these claims in the Illinois state courts after the direct review process, but
res judicata
is not a bar to federal habeas review.
See Gomez v. Acevedo,
Under the recently amended § 2254(d), Yancey must show that Illinois’s adjudication of his claims:
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the *106 facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) (1996). The amended § 2254(d) applies to cases pending on the date of its enactment.
Lindh v. Murphy,
A.
Yancey first claims that during closing argument the prosecution unconstitutionally commented on his decision not to testify on his own behalf.
When Yancey was arrested, he gave two separate inculpatory statements, one to John Markham, an investigator for the Chicago Police Department, in the presence of another investigator, and one to Assistant State’s Attorney Harry Wilson in Markham’s presence. Both Markham and Wilson testified during Yancey’s trial that Yancey had admitted to participating in the murder. During closing argument, the prosecution stated:
Mr. Yancey’s statement is he took William Wilkerson up to the 11th floor and he participated in the pushing of that body, pushed that body into that elevator shaft.
You also heard the testimony of Assistant State’s Attorney Harry Wolfson [sic] regarding the statement of Mr. Yancey to the same effect that Investigator Markham testified.
Those statements, the testimony that you have heard from the witness stand, the testimony of Investigator Markham as to those statements, the fact that they were made, the testimony that you have heard from Assistant State’s Attorney Harry Wolfson [sic], the fact that Thomas Yancey made that statement to him — He testified as to what the two defendants told him— and that testimony which you have heard from that witness stand is unrebutted and uncontradieted.
After the defense’s objection was overruled, counsel said, “You are here to decide a case based upon the testimony you heard from that witness stand.” Yancey asserts that these comments necessarily focused the jury’s attention on Yancey’s failure to testify at trial.
As a corollary to a defendant’s constitutional right to decline to testify in his own defense, the Supreme Court has held that neither the prosecution nor the court may invite the jury to infer guilt from the defendant’s silence.
Griffin v. California,
Yancey relies heavily on this circuit precedent to support his constitutional claim, but under the new § 2254(d) it is “clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” not the circuit courts of appeals, that controls. We may no longer rely upon our own precedent to grant a writ of habeas corpus.
Liegakos v. Cooke,
The only Supreme Court ease that arguably supports Yancey’s claim is
Griffin,
*107
which specifically held that Amendment ... in its bearing on the States by reason of the Fourteenth Amendment forbids either comment by the prosecution on the accused’s silence or instructions by the court that such silence is evidence of guilt.”
Nor can the appellate court’s decision in Yancey’s ease be described as an unreasonable application of relevant law. The “unreasonable application” prong of § 2254(d)(1) speaks to the state court’s handling of mixed questions of law and fact.
See Lindh,
B.
Yancey also claims that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment right to effective cross-examination (an essential part of the right to confront witnesses) when it refused to allow him to impeach the credibility of the two juvenile accomplice witnesses, Dickens and Parks, by introducing evidence of their criminal histories. Dickens and Parks, who took part in the series of events culminating in Wilkerson’s death, were the main prosecution witnesses. They also had histories of offenses, including failure to return to a juvenile detention facility, armed robbery, and burglary.
Yancey,
Does “clearly established Federal law” entitle a defendant to use a juvenile witness’s criminal history to impeach that witness’s general credibility? In
Davis v. Alaska,
We do not believe that Yancey’s argument is supported by “clearly established” Supreme Court jurisprudence. Recently, we noted that “although the Supreme Court has frequently held that states must permit cross-examination that will undermine a witness’s testimony, it has never held — or even suggested — that the longstanding rules restricting the use of specific instances and extrinsic evidence to impeach a witness’s credibility - pose constitutional problems.”
Hogan v. Hanks,
This conclusion holds if we ask whether the state decision was an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law. When the Appellate Court of Illinois rendered its decision in 1978, it had only the benefit of
Davis.
Though it did not refer to
Davis
by name, the court clearly articulated the
Davis
rationale. It specifically held that the. limitation imposed by the Illinois Juvenile Court Act “does not preclude access to the juvenile records for impeaching the credibility of a juvenile witness by showing ‘a possible motive for testifying falsely,’ ”
Yancey,
Even were we to disregard the 1996 amendments and evaluate the claim under the old law, we would be disinclined to grant Yancey relief. Yancey complains that he was unable to explore Dickens’s and Parks’s criminal pasts thoroughly, but in fact he introduced a good deal of evidence about the two juveniles. The appellate opinion noted, “Andrew Dickens, 17 years old at the time of the trial, testified that he was then confined at St. Charles, Illinois, for escaping from the Illinois Youth Center at Hanna City, Illinois, where he had been confined for armed robbery.”
Yancey,
Affirmed.
Notes
. It is not apparent that Yancey's Fifth Amendment argument would prevail even under this circuit's caselaw (i.e., under pre-AEDPA standards). Yancey complains about the prosecutor’s characterization of the testimony Markham and Wilson gave regarding Yancey’s inculpatory statements. Yet, because there were at least two witnesses besides Yancey present during each post-arrest statement, the prosecutor's reference to that testimony as "unrebutted” and "uncontradicted” did not necessarily draw the jury's attention to Yancey's silence. This distinguishes Yancey’s case from the precedent on which he relies, because our cases emphasize that it is the fact that the defendant is the only one who can rebut or contradict the testimony that makes the prosecutor's arguments improper.
See generally Freeman,
