On the evening of September 6, 1996, Michael Brad Magleby had five friends over to his house for a barbecue. United States v. Magleby, 241 F.3d 1306, 1308 (10th Cir.2001) (opinion on direct appeal). They talked about how they disliked people of other races and they listened to music and viewed web sites that expressed a similar view. Id. Eventually Mr. Magle-by told his friends about a group from the Kingdom of Tonga that had recently moved into the neighborhood. Id. Mr. Magleby and his minor friend L.M. resolved to burn a cross at the Tongans’ house. Id.
That night Mr. Mаgleby and L.M. built a cross, spray-painted it black, and purchased gasoline with which to douse it. Id. at 1309. They then proceeded to the Tongans’ house. Id. But before Mr. Ma-gleby could take the cross out, L.M. spotted several men outside the house. Id. In light of their presence, Mr. Magleby and L.M. decided that it would be unwise to carry on with the cross burning. Id. Instead, L.M. told Mr. Magleby about a house in which (here the evidence was disputed) either a “crackhead” or an African American lived and at which they could burn the cross. Id. Mr. Magleby and L.M. proceeded to burn the cross outside that house, which turned out to be the home of an interracial couple and their child. Id. The Government conceded that Mr. Magleby did not know anything about the residents until L.M. told him about them that night. Id.
On December 10, 1999, Mr. Magleby was convicted of burning and conspiring to *1139 burn a cross outside the home of an interracial couple, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 241 (conspiracy to violate civil rights) and 42 U.S.C. § 3631 (violation of civil rights). Id. His sentence was enhanced under 18 U.S.C. § 844(h)(1) for use of fire in the commission of the § 241 conspiracy. Id. We affirmed the conviction on the grounds raised on appeal. Id. at 1320.
Mr. Magleby then filed a motion for habeas corpus relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 in the United States District Court for the District of Utah. The district court denied the motion. Mr. Magleby now appeals that denial, contending that (1) the jury instructions permitted convictions for constitutionally protected speech; (2) § 844(h)(1) is unconstitutional as applied because it specially punishes symbolic speech that uses fire; and (3) a § 844(h)(1) enhancement does not аpply to a § 241 conspiracy unless fire was used in the process of agreement. None of these contentions was raised on direct appeal. But Mr. Magleby contends that they were so obvious at the time of direct appeal that the failure to raise them constituted ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, in which case Mr. Magleby is not procedurally barred from raising them on collateral review. We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 and affirm.
I. Jury Instructions
Mr. Magleby contends that the jury instructions did not convey that he could be convicted only if his cross burning constituted a threat of unlawful violence to identifiable persons, as required by the First Amendment,
see Virginia v. Black,
Free-speech protection is not limited to views tolerable to a majority. Only two years ago the Supreme Court reaffirmed that cross burning may be speech proteсted by the First Amendment.
See Black,
Mr. Magleby contends that the jury instructions in his case were contrary to the legal principles announced in
Black.
But he missed his best opportunity to raise this issue — namely, on his direct appeal. Ordinarily, this failure would bar a habeas corpus challenge.
See United States v. Cook,
As cause, he claims ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
See id.; Neill v. Gibson,
To evaluate this claim, we must examine the state of the law at the time of Mr. Magleby’s direct appeal — which was decided on March 7, 2001 — and the specific circumstances of this case. We conclude that Mr. Magleby did not receive ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, that he therefore fails to establish cause, and that his jury-instruction claims are therefore procedurally barred.
A. Law at the Time of Direct Appeal
Mr. Magleby now relies on Black. But his counsel on direct appeal can hardly be faulted for not pointing out the requirements of Black, which was decided two years after our decision in Mr. Magleby’s appeal. To determine whether Mr. Magle-by’s counsel was ineffective, we must look to earlier precedent. The parties join in referring us to a line of decisions in the Eighth Circuit, which largely anticipated Black; we agree with them that these decisions are Mr. Magleby’s best hope.
The seminal decision is
United States v. Lee,
United States v. McDermott,
[T]he Count II instructions permitted the jury to conclude that a threat of force was used if it found that McDer-mott “burned a cross in order to threaten.” By wording [the][i]nstruction ... in permissive terms, however, the court allowed the jury to convict without finding that the McDermotts burned the cross with the intent to threaten the use of force or at least cause blacks to reasonably fear the imminent use of force or violence. These instructions do not square with ... Lee, and constitute reversible error.
Id. at 410 (internal citations omitted). Because one could threaten action other than the use of force, burning a cross to threaten is not the same as burning a cross to threaten the use of force; but the instructions conveyed that the former *1141 would suffice, and so did not accurately state the law.
No reported federal appellate case contrary to the Eighth Circuit decisions had been decided at the time of Mr. Magleby’s direct appeal.
B. Application of the Law to the Jury Instructions
We now examine the jury instructions in this case to determine whether the failure to challenge them on First Amendment grounds on appeal, in light of the state of the law at the time, was objеctively unreasonable. Had Mr. Magleby challenged the jury instructions on direct appeal, we would have reviewed de novo whether the instructions as a whole accurately conveyed the applicable law.
See Gardetto v. Mason,
1. Instructions on the § 3631 Charge
On the § 3631 charge, instruction 27 states:
In order to establish the offense described by Section 3631 ... the Government must prove these five elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
First: The defendant used force or threat of force;
Second: The defendant intimidated or interfered with, or attemрted to intimidate or interfere with the right of Ron Henry and Robyn Henry [the interracial couple] to occupy [their] dwelling ...;
Third: The defendant engaged in the conduct described because of the race or color of one or both Ron Henry and Robyn Henry and because one or both Ron Henry and Robyn Henry were attempting to occupy their home free from racial discrimination;
Fourth: The defendant acted willfully;
Fifth: The defendant’s conduct involved the use of fire, that is erecting and setting on fire a cross.
Jury Instr. No. 27 (emphasis added), Aplt.App. at 81. Instruction 28 elaborates:
The term “force” includes the exercise and application of physical power. In common usage force means power, violence, compulsion, or restraint exerted upon or against a person or thing.
The term “threat of force” means precisely what the term implies — namely, a threat, either by words or gestures, to inflict some harm. While “force” itself requires somе physical manifestation of violence, “threat of force” falls short of actual violence and ordinarily signifies the expression of one person’s intention to act against another or to do some harm. As I instructed you before [in Instruction No. 22, on the § 241 charge — see below], to threaten or intimidate does not require the possibility of physical force or physical harm.
... [I]f you find that a defendant participated in burning a cross and you find that the defendаnt intended by the cross burning to threaten or frighten the victims, then you may find that he used *1142 force or the threat of force. The Government need not prove that the defendant actually intended to carry out the threat.
Jury Instr. No. 28, Aplt.App. at 82.
Mr. Magleby raises two challenges to these instructions. First, after summarizing the Eighth Circuit precedents, he complains that “[t]he trial court defined ‘force’ to include any form of ‘compulsion, or restraint exerted against a person or thing.’ ” Aplt. Br. at 22. But he provides absolutely no explanation why this language is troubling, except to say that it is “overbroad,” apparently because it did not require the threat of physical violence or force. Id. The complete language of the pertinent paragraph of the instruction, however, was: “The term ‘force’ includes the exercise and application of physical power. In common usage force means power, violence, compulsion, or rеstraint exerted upon or against a person or thing.” Jury Instr. No. 28, Aplt.App. at 82. In the context of Mr. Magleby’s trial, the flaw in this paragraph, if any, is not immediately apparent to us. The natural reading of the language in the instruction is that it is referring to physical force.
Mr. Magleby’s second complaint is that “[t]he court also explained: ‘As I instructed you before, to threaten or intimidate does not require the possibility of physical force or physical harm.’ ” Aplt. Br. at 22. Again, howevеr, the only thing he claims to be wrong with the sentence is that it is “overbroad.”
Id.
If there is a flaw, it is a subtle one. The sentence appears in a paragraph of the instructions devoted to the distinction between a
threat
of force and the actual
use
of force. Given that the elements instruction told the jury that it must find that “[t]he defendant used force or threat of force,” Aplt.App. at 81, the quoted sentence can best be understood as explaining that the government need not prove that the threat of force could or would actually be carried out.
See Black,
Reading the § 3631 instructions as a whole, we do not think that the failure of Mr. Magleby’s counsel on direct appeal to raise a First Amendment challenge to the instructions “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness,”
Strickland,
2. Instructions on the § 241 Charge
On the § 241 charge the district court instructed the jury:
Section 241 ... has three elements
First: That a conspiracy, agreement, or understanding existed;
Second: That the defendant knowingly and intentionally became a member of the conspiracy, agreement, or understanding;
Third: That the purpose of the conspiracy, agreement оr understanding was willfully to oppress, threaten or intimidate Ron Henry and Robyn Henry in the free exercise or enjoyment of the right to occupy their dwelling, or home, without intimidation or interference because of race.
*1143 Jury Instr. No. 18, Aplt.App. at 69. The district court went on:
The words “oppress,” “threaten” or “intimidate” are not used in any technical sense; they are to be understood in their ordinary meaning to cover a variety of conduct intended to threaten or frighten оther persons or to prevent or punish the free action of other persons. To oppress, threaten or intimidate does not require the possibility of physical force or of physical harm.
In this case, the Government has alleged that the plan and purpose of the defendant’s conspiracy was to burn a cross in the Henry family’s yard. If you find that there was a conspiracy whose plan was to burn a cross, and you find that the conspirators intended the cross burning to threaten, frighten or harass the victims, then you may find that the conspirators willfully acted “to oppress, threaten, and intimidate” within the meaning of the law.
Jury Instr. No. 22, Aplt.App. at 76.
We agree with Mr. Magleby that these instructions are flawed. They never define threat as requiring a threat of force; to the contrary, they assert that oppress, threaten, and intimidate are used in their everyday sense. Many acts short of unlawful violence may constitute oppression or intimidation in the everyday sense of these words. As Judge Richard Arnold рut it:
If, instead of burning a cross ... the defendant had distributed leaflets ... stating that the Ku Klux Klan was in the neighborhood, disliked black people, and wanted them to move out, the black residents ... could well have been threatened or intimidated in the sense allowed by the District Court’s instructions to the jury in this case.
United States v. Lee,
But it is not always objectively unreasonable for appellate counsel to forego a challenge to an improper instruction. Counsel may believe that the error is likеly to be considered harmless. That likelihood is considerable here. “Any error, defect, irregularity, or variance that does not affect substantial rights must be disregarded.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 52. Even the omission in a jury instruction of an essential element of the crime is subject to harmless-error review.
See Neder v. United States,
The flaw in the § 241 instructions is that they did not require the jury to find that Mr. Magleby conspired to threaten the use of
force.
But, as previously explained, the jury’s verdict on the § 3631 charge almost surely reflected a finding that Mr. Magle-by’s cross burning constituted a willful threat of force. Because the cross burning was the only object of the alleged § 241 conspiracy, it would be passing strange if the jury did not believe that Mr. Magleby and L.M. had conspired to threaten
force. Cf. Henderson v. Kibbe,
An additional factor in determining whether appellate counsel was ineffective is the absence at the time of the aрpeal of any authority from the Supreme Court or this circuit adopting the law set forth in the Eighth Circuit cross-burning decisions. In light of all the relevant considerations presented to us, we cannot say that it was objectively unreasonable for Mr. Magle-by’s appellate counsel not to raise First Amendment challenges to his convictions under §§ 241 and 3631.
*1144 II. The § 844(h)(1) Enhancement
We next turn to Mr. Magleby’s contentions that (1) the § 844(h)(1) enhancement was unconstitutional as applied to him because it speciаlly punishes his symbolic speech and (2) the enhancement did not apply to him because he used fire only to achieve an object of his § 241 conspiracy, not to achieve the agreement itself. Section 844(h)(1) provides:
Whoever—
(1) uses fire or an explosive to commit any felony which may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, ... shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such felony, be sentenced to imprisonment for 10 years. In the case of a secоnd or subsequent conviction under this subsection, such person shall be sentenced to imprisonment for 20 years.
A. First Amendment Challenge
The only difference between a § 844(h)(1) conviction and conviction of the underlying felony is that the § 844(h)(1) conviction requires the use of fire or an explosive. Mr. Magleby contends that the enhancement of his sentence under § 844(h)(1) is unconstitutional as an abridgment of the freedom of speech because it specially punishes his symbolic use of fire. He relies on
R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul,
Whоever places on public or private property a symbol, object, appellation, characterization or graffiti, including, but not limited to, a burning cross or Nazi swastika, which one knows or has reasonable grounds to know arouses anger, alarm or resentment in others on the basis of race, color, creed, religion or gender commits disorderly conduct and shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
Id.
at 380,
Mr. Magleby’s reliance on
R.A.V.
ignores, however, that the Supreme Court opinion made clear that a content-based distinction within a class of proscribable speech is permissible when the basis of the distinction is the same as the basis for proscribing the class of speech as a whole — for еxample, Congress may choose to ban only the most obscene obscenity.
Id.
at 388,
In view of the doubtful success of this First Amendment challenge to § 844(h)(1), we hold that failure to raise the challenge *1145 on direct appeal did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
B. § 844(h)(l)’s Applicability to § 241 Conspiracy
Section 844(h)(1) proscribes the “use[][of] fire or an explosive to commit any felony” (emphasis added). Mr. Magle-by contends that the § 844(h)(1) enhancement for use of fire in commission of the § 241 conspiracy was improper because the crime of conspiracy was complete on agreement and fire was not used in achieving agreement — thus fire was not used to commit conspiracy.
In support of Mr. Magleby’s argument, the
en banc
Seventh Circuit has held that § 844(h)(1) does not apply to a conspiracy offense that does not require an overt act unless fire was used in the process of agreement, because the conspiracy is complete — and thus “committed” — once the agreement is achieved.
See United States v. Colvin,
In any event, we need not resolve this issue today. Mr. Magleby is barred from raising it in this habeas proceeding because he did not raise it on direct appeal.
See Cook,
Whatever the merits of Mr. Ma-gleby’s § 844(h)(1) contention, it was not so obvious at the time of his direct appeal that counsel’s failure to raise it was unreasonable. No decisions had yet adopted his view. At the time of the appeal — which was decided on March 7, 2001 — even the Seventh Circuit applied § 844(h)(1) to non-overt-act § 241 conspiracies.
See United States v. Hartbarger,
Mr. Magleby nonetheless argues that it was unreasonable not to raise this contention on appeal because the district judge had pointed it out at trial. But Mr. Magle-by misreads the transcript. The district judge, in a colloquy with government counsel, did express doubt about the applicability of § 844(h)(1). Later, however, the district judge concluded that conspiracy was a continuing offense and that § 844(h)(1) would apply if the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that the use of fire was in furtherance of the conspiracy. This conclusion did not turn on the incorrect belief that § 241 requires an overt act: the district judge expressly recognized that § 241 does not require an overt act.
Consequently we hold that failing to raise the inapplicability-of- § 844(h)(1) contention on direct appeal was not ineffective assistance of counsel and that we therefore cannot reach this contention on collateral review.
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s denial of the § 2255 motion.
