Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc.
I concur fully in the panel’s decision and write separately to emphasize why the
Judge Raggi
Under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 35(a)(2), en banc consideration is appropriate only for matters of exceptional importance. This case entirely fails to meet that very demanding requirement. On the contrary, this case is as sui generis as we are likely to see. It breaks no new AEDPA ground. It delivers to Young, who will remain incarcerated on other charges, a victory in name alone: a retrial after approximately 19 years of incarceration. It affects no pending cases; nor does it affect the disposition of any case any of us is likely to see in the future. It leaves the law of identification testimony unaltered. In other words, it raises no issues having any systemic consequences for the development of the law and the administration of justice in this Circuit, which is what en banc review should be about. Recently, in Watson v. Geren,
While this case is decidedly unexceptional for Rule 35 purposes, it does expose differences among us over the proper role of federal habeas review post-AEDPA. At one end of the spectrum, there are respected jurists who believe that habeas is essentially an artifact that should be limited almost to the point of nonexistence and might not even be available in cases of actual innocence. See In re Troy Anthony Davis, — U.S.-,
I turn first to the criticism of our citations to social science research regarding eyewitness identifications. I take up the issue first because our citation to social science literature, while somewhat unusual, was, in the panel’s view, an important service to the bench and bar.
As we pointed out in the panel opinion, eyewitness identification testimony is typically reliable and is, and should be, routinely accepted by juries. As we resolved
. We concluded that it was a good idea to make trial judges aware of the existence of this information, in effect, as additional tools to help them with their work. I wrestled with how best to do this, as much of this information is contained in technical journals that are not especially easy to access. If you are not in the specialized field, you would be unlikely to know the journals even exist. We ultimately concluded that referencing the studies in an opinion was the best approach. That way, they could quickly and easily be accessed by law clerks and CJA attorneys, for example.
The opinion thus aims to point the bench and bar to the existence of the studies and to go no further. The opinion is explicit that our conclusion that the in-court identification in question lacked an independent source was not “compelled or controlled” by the literature we cited. Young v. Conway,
For more than 25 years, our court has acknowledged social science’s findings regarding the problems associated with eyewitness identification testimony. In United States v. Luis, for example, we endorsed a “flexible approach” to trial judges’ use of “a specific eyewitness charge in order to ameliorate the concerns expressed in ... [United States v. Wade ] relating to the dangers inherent in eyewitness testimony that may lead to misidentification.”
As we merely highlighted the existence of these studies, our reference to the studies did not violate Pinholster,
A more grounded and well-accepted understanding of Pinholster is that it prohibits us from relying on evidence beyond the state court record to reach our result. See Pinholster,
The next issue Judge Raggi raises in support of en banc review is our decision on the merits upholding the district court’s conclusion that the New York courts unreasonably applied Wade. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The most important thing to realize when evaluating Judge Raggi’s arguments is that they are not those of counsel for respondent, the Monroe County District Attorney’s office. The District Attorney’s brief did not contest the district court’s finding that there was no independent source for the identification. This omission by the party directly affected speaks volumes. The fair inference is that the District Attorney’s office concluded that the district court was correct on the merits; otherwise the issue would have been front and center in its brief to us. Consequently, where we are left on the dispositive issue in the case is that Judge Raggi not only disagrees with the panel, she also disagrees with both parties to the appeal. She then proceeds to make arguments on behalf of the District Attorney’s office that, for whatever reason, it elected not to make for itself.
Judge Raggi’s dissent advances two basic arguments. The first is not especially important. The New York Court of -Appeals concluded that it could not disturb the holding of the Appellate Division that an independent source existed because it was an issue of fact beyond its review. See People v. Young,
What our opinion does turn on, which Judge Raggi takes up in her second argument, is our finding that a closely-divided (3-2) panel of the New York Appellate Division unreasonably applied Wade in deciding that Mrs. Sykes’s identification of
The panel’s opinion goes through the Wade factors
Mrs. Sykes’s opportunity to view the perpetrator was so limited that after the crime she could not assist police in preparing a sketch of the perpetrator. When initially shown a photograph array, which included Mr. Young, neither Mrs. nor Mr. Sykes selected him. It was only in the unconstitutional police lineup, in which Mr. Young was the only person whose photo was also included in the earlier array, that Mrs. Sykes — but not Mr. Sykes — selected Mr. Young. Not only did Mrs. Sykes view Mr. Young in the lineup, she also observed Mr. Young as the defendant throughout the first trial.
On this record, the district court found that Mrs. Sykes’s identification of Petitioner Young, eight years later, had no independent source, but rather it “stemmed from the suggestive courtroom setting in which Petitioner was obviously the accused [or] [a]t best ... relied on the suppressed, illegal pre-trial identification where Mrs. Sykes saw Petitioner and heard his voice.” Young v. Conway,
In the face of such facts and findings, Judge Raggi suggests that the New York courts did not unreasonably err, but may
Bearing the standard for the Appellant, Judge Raggi, relying on Harrington v. Richter, — U.S.-,
As a final matter allegedly meriting en banc review, Judge Raggi argues that our decision violates Stone v. Powell, which established that a state prisoner may not be granted federal habeas relief on a Fourth Amendment claim if he has had a full and fair opportunity to litigate, that claim in state court.
Judge Raggi takes the position that Stone can never be waived and that we were therefore obligated sua sponte to impose Stone’s bar despite the District Attorney’s failure to raise it. She contends that while Stone is not jurisdictional, “it is categorical” and therefore every petitioner must show the denial of a full and fair opportunity to litigate his claim in state court as a “prerequisite” to federal review. If demonstrating that the denial of a fair opportunity is a requirement for federal review on the merits, however, then by definition, Stone would be jurisdictional. But the Supreme Court has clearly stated that Stone is not jurisdictional; and it has never held that a petitioner must show a denial of a full and fair opportunity in state court as a prerequisite to federal review of his Fourth Amendment claims.
Although the law is divergent throughout the circuits, a fair reading is that the weight of authority is that courts may, but are not required, to raise Stone sua sponte. See Tart v. Massachusetts,
Judge Raggi dismisses the authority from the other circuits as dicta, and relies heavily on the Ninth Circuit’s divided panel opinion in Woolery v. Arave,
Finally, I do not believe it is possible to advance persuasive arguments in support of the proposition that this issue meets the test for exceptionalism under Rule 35. This case is entirely a one off. The chances of any of us ever seeing a Fourth Amendment habeas case in which the government fails to cite Stone v. Powell are far too low to estimate. I cannot figure out why the District Attorney’s office, in its nearly forty-page district court memorandum of law, raised procedural default, exhaustion and various other alleged bars
For these reasons, I concur in the denial of rehearing en banc.
Notes
. Judge Raggi is joined by Judge Cabranes and Judge Livingston.
. Accord State v. Lawson,
. The Innocence Project is an organization dedicated primarily to providing pro bono legal and related investigative services to indigent prisoners whose actual innocence may be established through post-conviction evidence. It pioneered the post-conviction DNA model that has led to the exoneration of 289 innocent persons to date, the vast majority of whom were originally convicted based, at least in part, on the testimony of eyewitnesses who turned out to be mistaken.
. According to Wade, to determine whether a particular identification can be considered independent of any earlier taint, the following factors are to be considered: (1) the pri- or opportunity to observe the alleged criminal act; (2) the existence of any discrepancy between any post-crime description and the defendant’s actual description; (3) any identification of another person; (4) the identification by picture of the defendant prior to the identification; (5) the failure to identify the defendant on a prior occasion; and (6) the lapse of time between the alleged act and the lineup identification. 388 Ü.S. at 240-41,
. We have not hesitated in the past to require the state, in the context of a § 2254 habeas proceeding, to bring to the district court's attention a decision of this Court which would have eviscerated the petitioner’s position on appeal. See Stevens v. Miller,
. The cases Judge Raggi cites from this Circuit are unhelpful as they involved situations where the Stone issue was raised below so there was no question regarding waiver (Graham v. Costello,
. In urging otherwise, Judge Parker submits that nothing more is at stake here than our personal disagreement about the "proper role of federal habeas review post-AEDPA.” Ante at 80. In fact, Judge Parker’s disagreement is not with those of us seeking en banc review, but with the Supreme Court, which has defined the "proper role of habeas review” in Stone v. Powell, Harrington v. Richter, and Cullen v. Pinholster. Appellate courts' failure to adhere to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 as construed by the Supreme Court has triggered reversal or
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc:
A panel of the court grants habeas relief to a recidivist armed robber based on its determination that the New York Court of Appeals does not understand, and therefore unreasonably applied, a precept of criminal law known to every law student: the independent-source rule pronounced in United States v. Wade,
More troubling still, in granting habeas relief based on its own Wade analysis of petitioner’s Fourth Amendment challenge, the panel puts this court at odds with controlling Supreme Court precedents in three respects. First, the panel grants habeas relief to a state prisoner who does not allege, and who cannot demonstrate, that he was denied a full and fair opportunity to litigate ' his Fourth Amendment claim in state court as required by Stone v. Powell,
These are errors of exceptional importance that misdirect our habeas jurisprudence, and we should correct them en banc before they are corrected for us. See Fed. R.App. P. 35(a)(2).
A. The Charged Robbery
On the night of March 29, 1991, a man armed with a sledgehammer and an axe forcibly entered the home of Lisa and William Sykes and, wielding the axe over the head of the wheelchair-bound Mr. Sykes, threatened to kill him if Mrs. Sykes did not surrender the couple’s money and valuables. Not surprisingly, Mrs. Sykes complied. Among items taken that would later link petitioner Rudolph Young to the robbery were binoculars bearing the name “Sykes,” three watches, and a pair of gloves.
B. Fourth Amendment Challenge to Mrs. Sykes’s Identification
At issue on habeas review was Mrs. Sykes’s in-court identification of Young as the robber. The problem was not that her identification was infected by suggestive police procedures, so as to raise Fourteenth Amendment due process concerns. Rather, it was that she first identified Young at a lineup found to be the fruit of an unlawful arrest. See People v. Young,
The admission of this tainted line-up identification at Young’s first trial prompted reversal of his conviction on direct appeal. See id. at 906,
After a Wade hearing, the trial court determined that Mrs. Sykes had the requisite independent basis for making a trial identification. Although the robber had worn a blanket over his body and a scarf over the lower part of his face, the court credited Mrs. Sykes that she “really stared” at him for five tó seven minutes at close range in well-lit conditions, to see if he was someone she recognized. Hr’g Tr. 34, People v. Young, Ind. No. 91-0402 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Mar. 11, 1999). He was not. Nevertheless, as a consequence of her attention, Mrs. Sykes formed a strong mental image of the robber’s eyes. See id. at 35 (stating that, for nights after robbery, she would awaken “seeing those eyes in nightmares”). Mrs. Sykes’s deliberate focus on the robber’s face was evident even to him, because he told her at one point, “Don’t look at my face.” Id. at 32.
In initially describing the robber, Mrs. Sykes told police that he was a black male in his twenties, approximately five-feet-ten-inches tall, with a medium build. See id. at 34. Although Young is black, he was 34 years old at the time of the Sykes robbery, and is six-feet to six-feet-one-inch tall. See Trial Tr. 302-03, People v. Young, Ind. No. 91-0402 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Jan. 10, 12-14, 2000). The state trial court, with the advantage of seeing and hearing Mrs. Sykes, did not think these discrepancies indicated that her in-court identification would be influenced by the lineup. Nor was it so persuaded by Mrs. Sykes’s inability to help create a composite sketch of the robber soon after the crime, crediting her explanation that she had mistakenly understood that she would have had to have seen the robber’s full face to help with a sketch. See Mar. 11, 1999 Hr’g Tr. 34. The court similarly credited Mrs. Sykes that she was unable to identify Young from a photo array two days before the lineup because a “photograph is not a real person” and “did not look real” to her. Id. at 64. She stated that she was able to identify Young from among six men in the lineup based on his eyes and voice. Indeed, she asserted that she could have made the lineup identification based on Young’s eyes alone. See id. at 77-78. She maintained that, even eight years after the crime, she had a recollection of the robber’s eyes that was independent of seeing Young in the lineup, testimony credited by the trial court. See id.
C. Retrial and Sentencing
At Young’s retrial, the defense vigorously cross-examined Mrs. Sykes about the
After the jury found Young guilty, the sentencing judge heard evidence of Young’s extensive criminal history — including convictions for murder in North Carolina, robbery in Georgia, and robbery and burglary in New York—as well as his admission to committing 140 to 150 burglaries between 1988 and 1991. See Sent. Hr’g Tr. 76, 114-15, 128, People v. Young, Ind. No. 91-0402 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. July 14, 2000); App’x of State Court Records 181, Young v. Conway,
D.Appellate Review
On direct appeal, Young argued, among other things, that Wade precluded Mrs. Sykes’s in-court identification. The Appellate Division rejected the argument, holding by a vote of three to two that the prosecution had carried its burden to establish that the trial identification ■ rested on a basis independent of the Fourth Amendment-tainted lineup. See People v. Young,
The New York Court of Appeals granted review and affirmed by a vote of six to one. See People v. Young,
E.Section 225k Petition
On consent of the parties, Young’s habe-as petition was, decided by a magistrate judge, who ruled in Young’s favor and vacated his convictions for the Sykes robbery. See Young v. Conway,
II. Discussion
A. Stone v. Powell Precludes Habeas Review of Young’s Fourth Amend- ■ ment Challenge
For almost 40 years, it has been well established that “where the State has pro
In concluding otherwise, the panel observes that (1) Stone’s bar is not jurisdictional, and (2) the state forfeited its claim to the bar by raising it on appeal without having done so in the district court. See Young v. Conway,
In support, the panel quotes the following language from Stone:
In sum, we hold only that a federal court need not apply the exclusionary rule on habeas review of a Fourth Amendment claim absent a showing that the- state prisoner was denied an opportunity for a full and fair litigation of that claim at trial and on direct review. Our decision does not mean that the federal court lacks jurisdiction over such a claim....
The panel’s reliance on respondent’s failure to invoke Stone in the district court to absolve Young from this burden not only lacks support in Stone jurisprudence but also creates a “circuit split.” In Woolery v. Arave, the Ninth Circuit acknowledged that Stone’s bar was prudential, but nonetheless concluded that it was “founded in policy considerations that oblige the court to raise the issue sua sponte if the state neglects to assert it.”
Notably, Woolery reached this conclusion in the case of a petitioner who had at least pleaded the denial of an opportunity to litigate his Fourth Amendment claim in state court. In dissent, Judge Reinhardt thought that the state’s failure to respond to this pleading permitted the district
As further justification for not holding Young to his Stone burden, the panel suggests that identification challenges fall outside Stone’s paradigm because identification evidence “lacks the typical indicia of reliability that ordinarily weigh against re-litigating a Fourth Amendment claim on collateral review.” Young v. Conway, 698 F.3d • at 87; but see id. at 80 (acknowledging that “much eyewitness identification testimony is reliable”); ante at 80 (reiterating that “eyewitness identification testimony is typically reliable”). The contention is not persuasive and contravenes the instructions of the Supreme Court. Stone does not admit exceptions based on the types of evidence subject to Fourth Amendment challenges. Having made the general determination that application of the exclusionary rule to collateral Fourth Amendment challenges would deprive fact-finders of “typically reliable” evidence that was “often the most probative information bearing on ... guilt or innocence,” Stone v. Powell,
In sum, because Young has -not pleaded, and the record would not permit him to prove, that he was denied an opportunity fully and fairly to litigate his Fourth Amendment Wade claim in the New York courts, this court should clarify en banc that the claim is barred from federal habe-as review by Stone v. Powell.
B. The Panel’s Identification of Wade Error Misconstrues New York Precedent and Defies Harrington v. Richter
Even if Stone did not bar habeas review of Young’s Fourth Amendment challenge, the panel’s award in his favor fails to comport with 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). That section states that federal habeas relief “shall not be granted” to a state prisoner with respect to any claim adjudicated on the merits in state court unless the adjudication “resulted in a decision that was [1] contrary to, or [2] involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law,” as pronounced by the Supreme Court. Although the panel purports to find both conditions satisfied here, see Young v. Conway,
In order to find New York’s rejection of Young’s in-court identification challenge “contrary to” established Supreme Court precedent, ‘ the panel concludes that the New York Court of Appeals misunderstands the Wade rule, operating under the “mistaken impression that' the independent source inquiry [is] an ‘issue of fact,’ ” rather than a mixed question of law and fact. Young v. Conway,
The New York Court of Appeals effectively acknowledged that Young’s Wade challenge raised a question of law as well as fact when it summarized his argument on appeal to contend that it was “impossible” as a matter of law “to find by the requisite clear and convincing evidence that the lineup .would not influence [Mrs. Sykes’s] in-court identification.” People v. Young, 7 N.Y.3d at 44,
Our own precedent follows this approach. In Karavos Compania Naviera S.A. v. Atlantica Export Corp.,
Accordingly, this court should withdraw the unwarranted charge that the New York Court of Appeals does not understand Wade and the conclusion the panel derives therefrom, i.e., that New York’s affirmance of Young’s conviction was “contrary to” federal law as clearly established by the Supreme Court. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
2. The Panel’s Failure To Adhere to Harrington v. Richter
Insofar as the panel also charges the New York Court of Appeals with “an unreasonable application of the correct standard” enunciated in Wade, Young v. Conway,
Here, one Court of Appeals and two Appellate Division judges thought that the record did not satisfy the independent-source requirement. But six Court of Appeals judges, three Appellate Division judges, and the trial judge — the only one who actually saw the identifying witness— concluded that it did. A review of the various state court opinions precludes a conclusion that any of these jurists was other than “fairminded” in reaching the conflicting determinations. In such circumstances, the fact that the panel shares the minority view is not enough to denominate the majority view “unreasonable.” See id. (“It bears repeating that even a strong case for relief does not mean the state court’s contrary conclusion was unreasonable.”). Indeed, the three judges who join in this dissent think it entirely reasonable for the state courts to have resolved the Wade question in favor of allowing Mrs. Sykes to make an in-court identification. See infra at 96-97.
New York’s refusal to preclude Mrs. Sykes’s in-court identification of Young cannot be deemed “beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Id. That conclusion is reinforced by the'fact that Wade’s rule — that an in-court identification following a tainted (as opposed to suggestive) lineup must have an independent basis — is general rather than specific. “[T]he more general the rule” at issue in a § 2254 petition, “the more leeway [state] courts have in reaching outcomes in case-by-case determinations.” Yarborough v. Alvarado,
Although the panel doubts that Mrs. Sykes — a woman it has never seen or heard testify — could have formed a sufficient independent basis for identifying Young during the robbery, there is considerable record evidence that “could have supported” the state courts’ contrary conclusion. Id. To begin, Mrs. .Sykes’s unhesitating identification of Young from among six men in a non-suggestive lineup necessarily derived from a source independent of the lineup. See United States v. Crews,
On this record, the state courts’ Wade determination — at all three levels of review — that Mrs. Sykes’s in-court identification of Young would rest on her independent recollection of the crime and not the tainted lineup can hardly be said to reflect an error so “well understood and comprehended in existing law” as to be “beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Harrington v. Richter,
In holding that New York courts unreasonably applied Wade, the panel cites extensively to social science literature discussing risks inherent in eyewitness identifications. See Young v. Conway,
In an effort to evade Pinholster, the panel suggests that its “conclusion that Mrs. Sykes’s in-court identification lacked an independent source is reinforced, but not compelled or controlled by, the literature we discuss.” Young v. Conway,
The panel’s Pinholster error is compounded, moreover, by the fact that the cited extrinsic materials do not speak to the independent-source question at issue. Their focus is the general reliability of eyewitness identifications. Reliability is a
Further, even with respect to reliability, the cited social science literature speaks only in terms of probabilities, not absolutes.
What such social science literature might inform are trial court decisions as to
In the ongoing debate about the proper trial use of social science studies on the reliability of eyewitness identifications, our own court has thus far come out in favor of district courts’ broad discretion to exclude such evidence, see United States v. Lumpkin,
III. Conclusion
In sum, this case warrants en banc review to correct panel errors with respect to three Supreme Court precedents:
2. To justify conducting its own Wade analysis and granting habeas relief, the panel both (a) mistakenly charges the New York Court of Appeals with failing to understand Wade and (b) fails to accord the state courts’ Wade analysis of the independent basis for Mrs. Sykes’s in-court identification the AEDPA deference required by Harrington v. Richter, — U.S.-,
3. The panel supports its habeas grant by reference to social science studies not in the state court record, contrary to Cullen v. Pinholster, — U.S.-,
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc.
. Although the panel hints that the lineup was suggestive because Mrs. Sykes had previously viewed a photo array including Young's picture, see Young v. Conway,
. Wade established this independent-source rule in the context of a lineup tainted by denial of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. See
The Supreme Court subsequently applied Wade to an identification challenge grounded in a Fourth Amendment violation in United States v. Crews,
. The witness explained how, at police direction, she recovered the binoculars from the person to whom she had sold them, and the binoculars were put into evidence at trial. See Trial Tr. 136.
. Any number of non-jurisdictional rules are categorical. AEDPA categorically precludes habeas grants except where state rulings are "contrary to” or "an unreasonable application of” clearly established federal law. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1); see also Eze v. Senkowski,
. The panel suggests that the Ninth Circuit is but one of four courts to have addressed— and the only one to have found — a sua sponte obligation by courts to apply the Stone bar. See Young v. Conway,
. Young failed to assert that he was denied an opportunity to litigate his Fourth Amendment claim in the state courts not only in his initial pro se § 2254 petition, but also in his counseled brief to this court responding to the state's invocation of the Stone bar.
. The New York Court of Appeals’ decision precludes any suggestion that it failed to understand that the Wade standard requires "clear and convincing evidence that the lineup would not influence [Mrs. Sykes’s] in-court identification.” People v. Young,
. In urging otherwise, Judge Parker suggests that even the district attorney effectively conceded on appeal that Mrs. Sykes’s identification was not supported by an independent source. See ante at 83. Respectfully, this overstates the record. In the district court, respondent argued that the state courts’ independent-source finding was not a clearly unreasonable application of federal law, but failed to argue that the point was barred from habeas review by Stone. On appeal, he argued only the Stone point, without repeating the merits argument. However flawed these strategic choices, I do not think they can fairly be construed to concede error in the state courts’ independent-source ruling — let
. Raheem v. Kelly,
. Even when reliability rather than deterrence is the concern, a witness’s inability to see a person’s face does not necessarily preclude an in-court identification. See, e.g., Willis v. Garrison,
. Judge Parker contends that because “every single Wade factor turned against a finding of an independent source” in this case, it "makes no difference” how New York courts weighed the factors. Ante at 85. The conclusion that every Wade factor turned against an independent-source finding depends on a federal habeas court assigning different weight to relevant evidence than New York courts did in reaching a contrary Wade determination. It is that action by the district court, repeated by the panel, that cannot be reconciled with Harrington and Yarborough.
. Three studies cited by the panel are referenced in footnotes to an article that was submitted to the state trial court as part of the defense's proffer of expert identification testimony that it sought to introduce at trial. See App’x of State Court Records 132 n. 6, 134 n. 16 & 136 n. 36. Neither the studies themselves nor any of the other social science materials cited by the panel were ever made part of the state court record or even cited to state courts in support of Young's Wade challenge.
. Judge Parker suggests that such a construction of Pinholster would preclude judges from even reading briefs that might reference any extrinsic materials. See ante at 82. Not so. A habeas court presented with extrinsic materials in a brief or appendix need only make clear that the materials will play no part in its deliberations to satisfy Pinholster. That is hardly what occurred in this case.
. As noted supra at 96-97, Mrs. Sykes's unhesitating ability to identify Young from among six men in a non-suggestive lineup is powerful evidence that she possessed a basis for identifying him at trial independent of the lineup.
. Judge Parker suggests that, by pointing out that the extrinsic materials cited by the panel do not speak to the independent-source question at issue, I effectively acknowledge that the panel “could not have relied” on them in deciding this case. Ante at 82-83. I respectfully disagree. The panel’s extensive citation to these materials demonstrates its reliance. See Young v. Conway,
. See, e.g., Charles A. Morgan III, et at, Accuracy of Eyewitness Memory for Persons Encountered During Exposure to Highly Intense Stress, 27 Int’l J.L. & Psychiatry 265, 274 (2004) (observing that, while high stress had negative impact in about half of cases studied, stress had no impact on memory of many individuals, and for minority of subjects, eyewitness memory was better for high-as compared with low-stress conditions); Nancy Mehrkens Steblay, A Meta-Analytic Review of the Weapon Focus Effect, 16 Law & Human Behav. 413, 417 (1992) (stating that presence of weapon during crime has only a "relatively small effect,” reducing correct identifications by approximately 10%); Robert K. Bothwell et al., Cross-Racial Identification, 15 Personality & Soc. Psychol. Bull. 19, 23 (1989) (concluding that own-race bias accounts for "11% of the variance in recognition ability of Black subjects and 10% of the variance in recognition ability of White subjects”).
.A Special Master Report prepared for the Supreme Court of New Jersey reviewed much of the same social science literature as the panel, found it reliable, but nevertheless cautioned that the impact variables such as a perpetrator’s disguise, use of a weapon, victim stress, race differentials, multiple pre-trial identifications, time lapses between crime and identification, etc., have on the reliability of
. Insofar as Judge Parker suggests that the panel’s citation to extrinsic materials was intended only to alert “the bench and bar to the existence of the studies and to go no further," ante at 81 (emphasis added); see also id. at 80 (stating that citations to extrinsic materials rendered "important service to the bench and bar”), that narrow purpose is hardly evident in an opinion that integrates extrinsic materials throughout a Wade assessment that Pin-holster required be based only on the record before the state court. See e.g., Young v. Conway,
. "AEDPA deference” is, of course, shorthand for the requirements of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in the denial of rehearing en banc:
I concur fully in Judge Raggi’s comprehensive and forceful dissent from the denial of en banc review. I write separately only to summarize and underscore why the panel decision is wrong and necessitates review.
First, the panel decision is inconsistent with not one but several precedents of the Supreme Court. It erroneously states that the New York Court of Appeals misunderstood and misapplied the independent-source rule of United States v. Wade,
Second, the panel decision ignores the bar to habeas relief enunciated in Stone v. Powell,
Third, the panel decision improperly condones referencing, in a habeas proceeding, materials that were never part of the state court record. Any such practice is obviously unsound, but it also has the additional distinction of being in direct contravention" of the instruction of the Supreme Court in Cullen v. Pinholster,
In sum, any, one of these errors is grave enough to require en banc review. The fact that the panel decision makes all of them compounds the harm done. The result will be great confusion in the habeas jurisprudence of this Circuit and in that of other courts that may be misled in following the panel’s lead. And absent review by a higher authority, we will have to live with the baleful consequences of this unfortunate decision for many years to come.
Lead Opinion
AMENDED ORDER
Following disposition of this appeal on October 16, 2012, Respondent-Appellant James Conway filed a petition for rehearing in banc. An active judge of the Court requested a poll on whether to rehear the case in banc. A poll having been conducted and there being no majority favoring in banc review, rehearing in banc is hereby DENIED.
. Richard C. Wesley, Circuit Judge, was re-cused from consideration of the matter.
