In March 1996 a Wisconsin jury found Yusef Williams guilty of first-degree murder, and the judge sentenced him to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after 45 years. After exhausting his state remedies, Williams filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, arguing, among other things, that his right to due process was violated when a bailiff testified during his trial. The district court denied his petition, but we certified his due-process claim for appeal. We now affirm the judgment of the district court.
At Williams’s trial the State presented two key witnesses. The first, Angelo Tate, testified that he and Williams lived in the same duplex, where Williams sold drugs from his basement apartment. On the evening of October 26, 1995, Tate saw Williams shoot one of his customers, Gary Cooper. Tate also testified that he saw Williams remove Cooper’s body from the house. The next day, Williams told Tate that he killed Cooper because of a dispute over drugs.
Next, the State elicited testimony from Tate’s friend, Lawanda Norris, who was visiting Tate the evening that Cooper was shot. Norris testified that she went to the basement — where Williams lived and sold drugs from — to use the bathroom and saw Williams and another man drag Cooper’s body outside and put it into a garbage can.
*742 The credibility of both witnesses was called into question during their testimony. Both admitted to using cocaine the evening that Cooper was shot. Tate testified that he had twice been convicted of a crime, and Norris admitted that she had six convictions. Furthermore, Tate admitted that he had not reported the shooting to the police and that he told the officers about it only after the police began questioning him.
Williams testified in his own defense. He denied killing Cooper and said that on the night of the shooting, he was staying with a friend, Debra Towns. Towns corroborated Williams’s story. Williams also testified that Tate had lied about the shooting because he was angry that Williams refused to give him free drugs and money. On cross-examination, Williams reported that, on the evening before his own testimony, he confronted Tate and asked him why he lied on the stand. According to Williams, Tate responded, “They made me say that.” Williams denied threatening to kill Tate and said that the bailiff heard their conversation that evening.
The State called the bailiff, Robert Haack, as a rebuttal witness. Haack testified that he had worked in the courtroom throughout the trial and that his responsibilities included “[sjecurity within the courtroom, and other duties as assigned.” He said that, the night before, while escorting Williams out of the courtroom, Williams saw Tate and started yelling at him. Haack put Williams in a room adjacent to Tate’s, and the rooms, which were separated by a window pane, were locked. Haack said that he saw Tate “cowering in a corner, fearing for his life.” Haack then testified that he briefly left this area of the building, and when he returned 15 minutes later, he heard Williams scream, “Angelo, you are dead.” He said that he did not hear Williams and Tate discuss whether Tate had lied during his testimony.
On direct appeal Williams’s appointed attorney filed a “no-merit report” and sought to withdraw under
Anders v. California,
The Wisconsin Supreme Court denied Williams’s petition for review, and Williams filed a petition for a writ of habe-as corpus raising 21 grounds for relief. A magistrate judge, presiding by consent of both parties, denied the petition, but we granted a certificate of appealability on the issue whether Haack’s testimony violated Williams’s due-process right.
Our de novo review of the district court’s judgment is governed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA).
See Julian v. Bartley,
Williams argues that the Wisconsin appellate court misapplied
Turner v. Louisiana,
We turn first to Williams’s assertion that the decision of the Wisconsin state court is contrary to federal law and conclude that the facts of Williams’s case are not “materially indistinguishable” from the facts before the Supreme Court in Turner. In Turner, the record showed substantial and detailed information about the bailiffs’ significant interaction with the jury. In particular, the bailiffs ate with, transported, conversed with, and ran errands for the jurors who were sequestered — and thus entirely dependent on the bailiffs— during a three-day trial. The record here, however, is largely silent about the type and extent of Haack’s interaction with the jury. Haack testified that he had been working in the courtroom throughout the trial. But, when asked about his duties during the trial, Haack made no mention of the jury and testified only that he performed “[sjecurity within the courtroom, and other duties as assigned.”
Furthermore, the bailiffs in Turner, testifying in their capacity as investigating officers, provided crucial testimony — including testimony about the defendant’s confession — that directly showed his guilt. By contrast, Haack testified in rebuttal only after Williams mentioned that Haack saw an interaction between Williams and *744 one of the State’s key witnesses. Moreover, Haack’s testimony involved his observations about Williams’s behavior during trial and did not go to whether Williams murdered Cooper.
Williams also urges us to compare his case to
Gonzales v. Beto,
Nevertheless, Williams’s situation differs markedly from that of the defendant in
Gonzales.
Like in
Turner,
but unlike this case, there was evidence that the bailiff in
Gonzales
had varied and close contacts with the jurors — he escorted them in and out of the courtroom, accompanied them to lunch, engaged in conversations with them, brought them drinks during their deliberations, and even stepped down from the witness stand during his testimony to escort them to the jury room.
Gonzales,
Williams next argues that the Wisconsin appellate court unreasonably applied the rule laid out
Turner.
The Supreme Court has explained that “the official character of the bailiff — as an officer of the court as well as the State — beyond question carries great weight with a jury.”
Parker v. Gladden,
First, Williams contends that the court misapplied Turner because it concluded that the level of interaction between Haack and the jurors was insufficient to raise due-process concerns. Williams argues that the court should have concluded that, *745 as bailiff, Haack “maintained a continuous association with the jury,” and that, even if Haack’s association with the jurors was not “continuous,” it was more than de min-imis, which, he contends, is all Turner requires. As evidence of the extent of Haack’s association with the jurors, Williams cites only Haack’s testimony that he was present in the courtroom throughout the trial and was in charge of security and other duties that he was instructed to perform. Nevertheless, Williams urges the court to conclude that because Haack was present through trial, his interactions with the jury while performing his “routine duties” were significant enough to raise a constitutional issue under Turner.
This is one possible interpretation of
Turner.
But the state court’s reasoning — that
Turner
requires “substantial contacts” between the testifying bailiff and the jurors, and that the record contained no evidence of this level of interaction — is also reasonable. The Court in
Turner
explained, ‘We deal here not with a brief encounter, but with a continuous and intimate association” between the testifying bailiffs and the jurors.
Turner,
In support of his argument, Williams calls our attention to
Agnew v. Leibach,
Under AEDPA, decisions of courts of appeal, while not controlling on what constitutes “clearly established federal law,”
see Schaff,
Moreover, the state court did not unreasonably apply the second prong of the
Turner
analysis. Williams argues that to meet
Turner’s,
second prong, he needed to establish only that the bailiff testified to disputed issues that were more than mere formalities. To support his contention, Williams points to the Court’s statement in
Turner
that the testimony of the bailiffs “was not confined to some uncontroverted or merely formal aspect of the case for the prosecution,”
Turner,
But, again, this is not the only reasonable way to interpret
Turner.
The testifying bailiffs in
Turner
were the officers who investigated the crime as well as the principal witnesses on the issue of the defendant’s guilt.
See Turner,
We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
