MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This cause is before the court on Petitioner Timothy Charles Davis’ (“Davis”) petition for writ of habeas corpus, brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, for a decision on the merits. 1 Davis, who was seventeen years old at the time of the offense, was convicted of murder by a jury in an Alabama state court and sentenced to death. The judgment of conviction and sentence of death were affirmed on direct review, and Davis’ petition was rejected by state collateral proceedings.
In the present proceeding, timely brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Davis challenges the constitutional validity of his judgment of conviction and sentence of death. In light of the Supreme Court of the United States’ decision in
Roper v. Simmons,
which held that the execution of individuals who were under the age of eighteen at the time of their capital crimes is prohibited by the Eighth and Fourteenth amendments, Davis is no longer eligible for the death penalty.
See
In his petition, Davis also raises guilt-phase claims challenging the validity of his judgment of conviction. After careful consideration of the arguments of counsel, the relevant law and the record as a whole, the court finds that, as to Davis’ guilt-phase claims, Davis’ writ is due to be denied pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) because the decisions of the Alabama courts were not contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established, controlling Supreme Court precedent, and were not based on an unreasonable determination of the facts.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Procedural History
The following presents a synopsis of the procedural history of this case. Davis was tried before a jury in the Circuit Court of Coosa County, Alabama, on a charge of capital murder, namely, the intentional killing during a robbery of Mrs. Avis F. Alford (“Mrs.Alford”). On June 13, 1980, the jury returned a verdict of guilty against Davis for capital murder, and, pursuant to § 13-ll-2(a) of the Alabama Code, the predecessor to § 13A-5-40(a), fixed his punishment at death by electrocution. Pursuant to former Alabama Code §§ 13-11-3 and -4 (repealed and replaced by § 13A-5-45 and -47), after a separate sentencing hearing held on July 14, 1980, the Honorable Kenneth F. Ingram, who presided as the trial and sentencing judge, imposed a sentence of death consistent with the jury’s determination.
See Davis
*1143
v. State,
Davis’ judgment of conviction originally was reversed on appeal and remanded for a new trial on the authority of
Beck v. Alabama, 447
U.S. 625,
Upon remand, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Davis’ judgment of conviction and the sentence of death.
See Davis v. State,
On February 12, 1992, Davis, through counsel, filed a petition for relief from the judgment of conviction and sentence of death pursuant to Rule 32 of the Alabama Rules of Criminal Procedure. An amended petition was filed on November 18, 1994, and an evidentiary hearing was conducted by the Circuit Court of Coosa County on September 1, 1995. On September 29, 1995, Davis filed a motion to amend the Rule 32 petition, to which the State filed a written objection on October 28, 1995. The Rule 32 trial court did not rule on whether the motion to amend was accepted or rejected. On February 3, 1997, the Rule 32 trial court denied Davis’ petition. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the judgment of the Rule 32 trial court, denying Davis’ Rule 32 petition,
Davis v. State,
Davis’ extensive post-trial proceedings culminated in the filing of his timely habe-as petition in this court on April 28, 1999, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. During stage I of the proceedings, the court determined which of Davis’ claims could be heard on the merits. (See Doc. No. 68. 2 ) During these stage II proceedings, the court now decides the merits of the claims which are not procedurally barred.
B. The Crime
The crime of which Davis was convicted involves horrific instances of brutality, sodomy and murder. In
Davis v. State,
the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, in its decision affirming Davis’ judgment of conviction on direct appeal, succinctly summarized the facts which were adduced at trial.
See
On July 20, 1978, between 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m., at Alford’s Grocery in Coosa County, Alabama, 68-year-old Avis F. Alford was robbed, sodomized, and brutally murdered with a common steak knife. Her nude body was discovered at
*1144 approximately 5:30 p.m. inside her store next to the cash drawer counter, where she had been assaulted and stabbed in the back 17 times. The cash drawer was found open. The drawer contained no paper currency, but it did contain a few coins. Other coins were “scattered about” on the floor behind the counter. An autopsy revealed that Mrs. Alford had, indeed, died from the combination of knife wounds in her back, wounds which punctured her lungs and lacerated her aorta. She had lost a large volume of type “A positive” blood. Further analysis of samples taken during the autopsy revealed the presence of human sperm in the victim’s rectum.
Shortly after the murder, the appellant, accompanied by his wife and his mother, appeared at the murder scene and told the authorities that he had discovered Mrs. Alford’s body inside the store. He explained that when he realized she was dead, he “got scared and ran.” He later explained that in lifting the body he had “gotten blood all over” himself and that he had changed clothes at home before returning to report what he had seen. He also told the officers that on his way home after discovering the body he had seen two black men walking down the highway away from Alford’s store. However, when asked for a description of the two black men, the appellant “hemmed and hawed,” and could only state that one was tall and one was short.
Mrs. Alford was last seen alive inside the store at 4:30 p.m. A young white male on a motorcycle was seen riding into the parking lot at Alford’s Grocery at 5:05 p.m. The description of the motorcycle rider and the motorcycle generally matched the appearance of the appellant and his motorcycle on the day of the murder.
Curtis Smith identified the appellant in court. He testified that on the day of the murder, at approximately 5:30 p.m., he saw the appellant riding his motorcycle at the Covered Bridge a few miles from Alford’s store. He saw the appellant ride past the bridge, and he heard the motorcycle stop and “quiet down” for several minutes before the appellant returned to the bridge. The appellant stopped and told Smith that he, the appellant, had “taken a spill” on his motorcycle. The appellant was wearing a brown T-shirt and blue jeans and had blood on his right hand and arm and on his jogging shoes. He was bleeding from underneath one of his fingernails. He “pulled down to the rocks” beside the creek, washed off the blood, and rode away.
During the investigation immediately following the murder, Mrs. Alford’s wallet, which had been taken during the robbery-murder, was found in the woods a short distance past the Covered Bridge where Smith had seen the appellant. The investigating officers testified that, after talking with Smith, they drove slowly down the road and found, at the entrance to an old logging road, a disturbance in the dirt of the type a motorcycle would make “spinning out.” They searched the area and found the wallet.
Using metal detectors, the investigating officers also found, in the field across the highway from Alford’s Grocery, the murder weapon, a steak knife covered with type “A” human blood. Similar knives were seen in the kitchen of appellant’s residence.
The results of physical examinations and chemical analyses of the clothes the appellant was wearing at the time Mrs. Aford was murdered, including his motorcycle helmet, were particularly incriminating. Splattered blood was found on his motorcycle helmet and smeared and splattered blood was found on his blue jeans and shoes. Blood was
*1145 smeared on and around the button and the button hole used to fasten the jeans at the waist. Blood stains were found on the outside and on the inside of the jeans in the waist area. Bloodstains were also found in the area of the right knee and the lower leg. All of the stains of sufficient size to permit typing were type “A” human blood, whereas appellant’s blood type is type “0.”
A small bloodstain was found on the inside of appellant’s undershorts. On the outside of his undershorts in the area of the crotch there was a large yellowish-brown stain. This stain was a combination of human sperm mixed with fecal matter and human tissue of the type found inside the rectum.
In addition to this overwhelming circumstantial evidence against the appellant, the state presented evidence of an alleged confession by the appellant to Tracy Bignault, a fellow inmate of the appellant during appellant’s incarceration prior to trial. Bignault testified that the appellant admitted robbing and killing Mrs. Alford. Bignault related to the jury a detailed account of the crime as it was, allegedly, confessed to him by the appellant. Bignault’s testimony was consistent with the state’s circumstantial evidence. On cross-examination, however, Bignault admitted that in his original statement to the authorities he had left out many of the details. He explained that he did not tell the authorities the whole truth at that time because he was scared.
Appellant’s apparent motive for the crime was presented through the testimony of Steve Colvin. Colvin had sold the appellant the motorcycle the appellant was riding on the day of the murder, but the appellant had not made timely payments for it. At work on the morning of the murder, Colvin told the appellant that he, Colvin, needed some of the money the next day.
The appellant presented a defense in the nature of an alibi. On the day of the murder he was living in his grandmother’s home with his wife, his mother, and his grandmother. He had been living there for approximately five weeks. His mother testified that the appellant came home from work at 4:00 p.m. and ate supper with the family as usual. James Richardson, a young black boy in the neighborhood, borrowed appellant’s motorcycle shortly after the appellant came home from work and did not return it until 5:15 p.m. The appellant, then, took Richardson home and returned at 5:17 p.m. The appellant left again and returned at 5:40 p.m. He told his mother to call the police because he had found a dead woman inside Alford’s Grocery. After she had changed clothes, she immediately drove the appellant back to the store, where the appellant told the authorities what he had seen. On cross-examination appellant’s mother admitted that she had never told the authorities about James Richardson, and she could not remember the appellant saying anything about going down to the Covered Bridge before returning home from Alford’s Grocery. She also admitted that the family had some knives similar in appearance to the murder weapon, but stated that their knives were not the same size. Some were larger and some were smaller than the murder weapon. Appellant’s theory in defense was that someone else robbed and killed Mrs. Alford, that he got blood on himself when he found her body, and that Big-nault was lying and had fabricated appellant’s alleged confession in order to “make a deal” with the authorities.
Id.
III. FEDERAL HABEAS CORPUS STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because Davis is in state custody, his application for habeas review is controlled
*1146
by 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The amendments to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), which were enacted in 1996 as part of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), govern the court’s review of the claims in Davis’ petition for writ of habeas corpus.
See Nelson v. Alabama,
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), the court may grant habeas relief to a person in state custody, such as Davis, only if that person demonstrates that a claim “adjudicated on the merits” by the state court
(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 facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The purposes behind § 2254(d)’s limited parameters of review of state court judgments are twofold, the first being “to prevent ‘retrials’ on federal ha-beas,” and the second being “to give effect to state convictions to the extent possible under law.”
Williams v. Taylor,
By its express terms, § 2254(d)(1) confines the source of “clearly established Federal law” to decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.
See Williams,
Decisions emanating from claims adjudicated by state courts are deemed in aberration of “clearly established Federal law” only if one of two conditions is satisfied: The decision is (1) “contrary to” or (2) “involved an unreasonable application of’ the “clearly established Federal law.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
Williams,
With respect to the “unreasonable application” scenario, the standard is one of objective unreasonableness.
See id.
at 409,
At the same time, the
Williams
Court recognized that “[t]he term ‘unreasonable’ is no doubt difficult to define.”
As stated, the AEDPA also permits a court to grant a writ if the court concludes that the state court’s adjudication of the claim “resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the [s]tate court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). Relevant to § 2254(d)(2)’s analysis is the restriction delineated in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e): “A state court’s determinations of fact shall be ‘presumed to be correct,’ and the habeas petitioner ‘shall have the burden of rebutting the presumption of correctness by clear and convincing evidence.’ ”
Parker v. Head,
[flactual determinations by state courts are presumed correct absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary, § 2254(e)(1), and a decision adjudicated on the merits in a state court and based on a factual determination will not be overturned on factual grounds unless objectively unreasonable in light of the evidence presented in the state-court proceeding, § 2254(d)(2).
In addition to the foregoing law governing the standard of review, one oth
*1148
er legal premise is noteworthy. The federal habeas writ is not available to correct violations of state law. “[A] habeas petition grounded on issues of state law provides no basis for habeas relief’ pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Branan v. Booth,
IV. DISCUSSION
Davis seeks habeas corpus relief as to his sentence of death based upon the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Roper, supra,
and the court addresses this claim first. Davis also has raised and briefed six constitutional guilt-phase claims attacking the validity of his judgment of conviction which the court will address in the order in which the claims are asserted by Davis.
See Clisby v. Jones,
A. Davis’Sentence of Death
This case no longer involves implication of the death penalty. During the pen-dency of the present action, the Supreme Court of the United States granted certio-rari to consider “whether it is permissible under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States to execute a juvenile offender who was older than 15 but younger than 18 when he committed a capital crime.”
Roper v. Simmons,
On March 1, 2005, the Supreme Court issued its opinion, holding that “[t]he Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments forbid imposition of the death penalty on offenders who were under the age of 18 when their crimes were committed.”
Roper,
By order filed on March 4, 2005, this court directed the parties to file briefs addressing all issues remaining for review on the merits and discussing the effect of the Supreme Court’s decision in Roper on Davis’ death penalty claims, including his claim that the execution of offenders who were under the age of eighteen at the time their crimes were committed is unconstitutional. (Doc. No. 90 at 16-17.) On June 2, 2005, the State filed a supplemental brief conceding, albeit reluctantly, that the death penalty could not be imposed against Davis because he was under the age of eighteen when Mrs. Alford was robbed, murdered and sexually assaulted, crimes for which Davis has been convicted. (Id. at 17.)
The parties do not dispute that Davis was seventeen years old when Mrs. Alford was murdered, and the record amply sup
*1149
ports this uncontested fact. Davis’ certifí-cate of birth shows that Davis was born on March 18, 1961.
(See
Doc. No. 92, Ex. 1.) Mrs. Alford was murdered seventeen years later on July 20, 1978. The decisions of the state courts also contain references to Davis’ age at the time of the offense.
See, e.g.,
Ex parte
Davis,
Applying the Supreme Court’s decision in
Roper
to the undisputed fact that Davis was seventeen years old at the time the murder was committed, the court finds that Davis’ sentence of death is unconstitutional. Pursuant to an Alabama statute, an individual convicted of a capital offense must be sentenced to death or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
See
Ala.Code § 13A-5-39(l) (defining “capital offense” as “[a]n offense for which a[ ] defendant shall be punished by a sentence of death or life imprisonment without parole according to the provisions of this article”);
id.
§ 13A-5-40(a) (listing and defining Alabama’s capital offenses). Because the sentence of death is no longer constitutionally valid, the only sentencing alternative is life without parole.
See Adams v. State,
— So.2d-,
Davis’ petition, therefore, is due to be granted as to his sentence of death to the extent that the court must grant the petition, unless the State of Alabama sets aside Davis’ death sentence and imposes a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Consequently, the court finds, and Davis concedes
(see
Doc. No. 92 at 2, 7), that the remaining claims regarding the penalty phase of Davis’ trial now are moot.
See LeCroy v. Secretary, Florida D.O.C.,
B. Claims B and C: Davis’ Claims that He Was Denied His Fourth Amendment Right to a Fair and an Impartial Judge
1. Arguments of Counsel
In Claims B and C, Davis contends that, in the proceedings in his case in juvenile court, including the hearings governing detention, probable cause and juvenile transfer, he was denied due process, as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, because the presiding judge, Robert Teel, Jr. (“Judge Teel”), and the prosecutor, Frank Teel, are brothers. (Doc. No. 92 at 7.) Frank Teel was the assistant district attorney who participated in all stages of Davis’ prosecution. Because Davis was a juvenile when arrested, the initial proceedings were held in juvenile court. Judge Teel presided over the hearings in juvenile court, including two detention hearings held on July 25, 1978, and September 26, 1978, and a juve *1150 nile transfer hearing held on November 17, 1978, after which Davis’ case was transferred by Judge Teel to adult court.
Davis asserts that the state court “upheld the participation of the Teel brothers in this case” based solely on the application of Alabama law, but that the decision is “contrary to and an unreasonable application of’ Davis’ clearly established federal rights to “due process,” “a fair and impartial judge,” and “proceedings free from the appearance of impartiality.” (Doc. No. 95 at 7);
(see also
Doc. No. 92 at 8-9 (same).) In support of his argument, Davis relies on four United States Supreme Court opinions which he says clearly establish that the “appearance of impartiality” violates due process rights under the United States Constitution. (Doc. No. 29 at 9, citing
Turney v. Ohio,
The State, on the other hand, contends that Davis’ claim does not rise to the level of a due process violation because there was no evidence of actual or inherent bias presented during the state court proceedings. It points out that, on direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ independent scrutiny of the record uncovered no such evidence of bias. (Doc. No. 94 at 18-19, citing
Davis v. State,
Moreover, the State asserts that, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), in order for Davis to demonstrate that the state court’s decision is “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” Davis must cite precedent which is “identical at a high degree of specificity.” (Id. at 19-20.) The State says, however, that none of the Supreme Court decisions cited by Davis “supports his claim” with the requisite degree of factual specificity “that a judge must under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment disqualify himself from adjudicating a preliminary hearing and juvenile transfer hearing in which the judge’s brother is the assistant district attorney.” (Id. at 22.) Relatedly, the State contends that the Supreme Court opinions cited “are off point as ‘clearly established precedent.’ ” (Id.) Accordingly, the State contends that 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) forecloses habeas relief on this claim.
2. The State Court Decision
The state court rejected Davis’ argument that Judge Teel, who presided over the preliminary proceedings in Davis’ case, including the hearing concerning Davis’ certification as an adult, should have
sua sponte
recused himself because he was the brother of Frank Teel, the assistant district attorney who appeared in some of the same proceedings against Davis.
See Davis,
The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals also rejected Davis’ argument that his rights were violated based on the alleged “inherent bias” of Judge Teel. Id. It emphasized that Davis did not challenge Judge Teel’s qualifications until more than two years after Judge Teel’s final action in the case and that Davis had presented “no evidence of actual bias.” Id. The court held that Davis failed to overcome the “presumption that a judge is qualified and unbiased.” Id. Notwithstanding Davis’ failure to submit evidence of actual bias, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals reviewed the record of both the preliminary and juvenile transfer hearings. See id. It, however, “found no evidence, whatsoever, of any bias against [Davis].” Id. To the contrary, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals observed that “the preliminary hearing resulted in an order ‘releasing the appellant from detention,’ a ruling favorable to [Davis].” Id.
Furthermore, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals found that the facts adduced at the juvenile transfer hearing “well supported” Judge Teel’s discretionary decision to deny Davis’ motion for treatment as a youthful offender. Id. The court concluded that Judge Teel’s decision was not arbitrary, but was based upon a consideration of many factors, including the horrendous nature of the crime, the evidence that Davis absconded from the state after being released from detention following the preliminary hearing to be returned only through extradition proceedings, and the evidence that Davis confessed to a fellow inmate that he had murdered Mrs. Alford. See id.
Moreover, during the post-conviction proceedings, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals similarly rejected Davis’ ineffective assistance of counsel claim predicated on his trial attorneys’ failure to move to recuse Judge Teel based on his kinship to the assistant district attorney. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals observed that Davis “still has not presented any evidence of actual bias on the part of the district judge.”
Davis,
S. Analysis
a.) Threshold Issues Pertaining to the Standard of Review
Before discussing the merits, the court addresses two arguments raised by the parties pertaining to the standard of review. First, the court agrees with Davis’ position set forth in his reply brief (Doc. No. 95) that the fact-specific standard cited by the State applies only to the “contrary to,” and not to the “unreasonable application,” prong of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). As discussed in Section III of this Memorandum Opinion and Order, supra, § 2254(d)(l)’s guideposts have independent meaning and require separate analysis. Accordingly, the court finds that the standard argued by the State does not apply to Davis’ claims which Davis bases on the “unreasonable application” prong of § 2254(d)(1).
Second, Davis is correct that the decision of the state courts discussed neither federal constitutional principles nor decisions from the Supreme Court of the United States. It is not fatal, however, that state law governed the state courts’ analysis so long as the decision does not violate the proscriptions of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
See Mitchell v. Esparza,
b.) The Merits
Those threshold matters having been addressed, the court turns to the merits of Davis’ claim. As stated, Davis contends that the proceedings before Judge Teel violated his rights to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution because Judge Teel was impartial given his kinship to the prosecutor.
The right to a trial before an impartial judge is a paramount concept of due process of law. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees Davis a right to a fair and an impartial judge who is neutral, detached and free from “actual bias.”
In re Murchison,
The court carefully has reviewed the four Supreme Court opinions relied upon Davis, i.e., Murchison, Tumey, Offutt and Ward. (Doc. No. 29 at 9); (Doc. No. 95 at 6.) A summary of the facts and holdings of these opinions will aid the court’s discussion.
In
Murchison,
which involved a judge who acted as a “one-man judge-grand jury,”
Fairness of course requires an absence of actual bias in the trial of cases. But our system of law has always endeavored to prevent even the probability of unfairness. To this end no man can be a judge in his own case and no man is permitted to try cases where he has an interest in the outcome. That interest cannot be defined with precision. Circumstances and relationships must be considered. This Court has said, however, that “Every procedure which would offer a possible temptation to the average man as a judge ... not to hold the balance nice, clear, and true between the State and the accused denies the latter due process of law.” Tumey v. State of Ohio,273 U.S. 510 , 532,47 S.Ct. 437 ,71 L.Ed. 749 ... Such a stringent rule may sometimes bar trial by judges who have no actual bias and who would do their very best to weigh the scales of justice equally between contending parties. But to perform its high function in the best way “justice must satisfy the appearance of justice.” Offutt v. United States,348 U.S. 11 , 14,75 S.Ct. 11 ,99 L.Ed. 11 .
Id.
Tumey
and
Ward,
in turn, arose out of criminal trials in mayors’ courts in Ohio where the mayors also served as judges.
*1153
In
Tumey,
after a trial without a jury in “Liquor Court,” as the court was “popularly called,”
[I]t certainly violates the Fourteenth Amendment and deprives a defendant in a criminal case of due process of law to subject his liberty or property to the judgment of a court, the judge of which has a direct, personal substantial pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him in his case.
Id.
at 523,
Apart from the mayor’s pecuniary interest in the outcome of the proceedings, due process also was violated given the may- or’s responsibilities for the fiscal-well being of his village. The Court opined: “With his interest as mayor in the financial condition of the village and his responsibility therefor might not a defendant with reason say that he feared he could not get a fair trial or a fair sentence from one who would have so strong a motive to help his village by conviction and a heavy fine?”
Id.
at 533-34,
Similarly, in
Ward,
pursuant to a state statute, mayors were authorized to sit as traffic court judges. Exercising that statutory authority, the mayor in
Ward
convicted and fined the defendant for two traffic offenses.
See
Finally, in
Ojfutt,
the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of conviction because the trial judge, who invoked the use of summary contempt power post-trial, had become “personally embroiled” with the lawyer whom he held in contempt.
See
Davis contends that each of the foregoing Supreme Court decisions clearly establishes that due process “requires a judge to satisfy an ‘appearance of impartiality’ ” and that a judge’s sibling relationship to the prosecutor clearly offends the due process requirement of impartiality. (Doc. No. 95 at 6.) He cites language from those opinions, quoted above, including the phrases “justice must satisfy the appearance of justice” and due process does not
*1154
allow any “procedure” that “might lead [the] judge to hold the balance nice, clear and true between the state and the accused.” (Doc. No. 95 at 6-7 (quoting
Tumey,
Unquestionably,
Murchison, supra, Tu-rney, supra, Ward, supra,
and
Ojfutt, supra,
demonstrate that “[t]he requirement of [tribunal] neutrality has been jealously guarded by th[e] [Supreme] Court.”
Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc.,
The court finds instructive and persuasive the Third Circuit’s opinion in
Johnson v. Carroll,
The defendant argued that there was an “appearance of bias” on the part of the judge, given the occurrence of the out-of-court conversation, and he asserted that the failure of the judge to recuse himself violated his due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. Id. The federal district court agreed with the defendant that “the trial judge’s failure to recuse himself sua sponte gave rise to an appearance of bias and that the appearance of bias violated his due process rights.” Id. at 258. The defendant and the district court relied, in part, on the Supreme Court’s decision in Murchison, supra. The Third Circuit reversed.
For purposes of its analysis, the Third Circuit “assume[d] that there was an appearance of bias” and framed the issue as “whether the Supreme Court has ever held in any of its decisions existing at the time of the District Court’s judgment ... that an appearance of bias on the part of a state court judge, without more, violates the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.” Id. at 259. After summarizing the facts and holding in Murchison, supra, the Third Circuit recited *1155 the following language from the Murchison opinion:
The Court commented that although fairness certainly required “an absence of actual bias,” “our system of law has always endeavored to prevent even the probability of unfairness.” Id. The Court acknowledged that its “stringent rule may sometimes bar trial by judges who have no actual bias and who would do their very best to weigh the scales of justice equally between contending parties.” Id. However, “to perform its high function in the best way justice must satisfy the appearance of justice.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Id.
at 259-60 (quoting
Murchison,
The Third Circuit rejected the conclusion, reached by the district court, that the foregoing language clearly established that any “appearance of bias” contravened the Due Process Clause. Id. The court explained:
In re Murchison does not stand for that broad conclusion. Instead, its holding, as opposed to dicta, is confined to the basic constitutional principle of prohibiting a judge from adjudicating a case where he was also an investigator for the government. The rest of the language quoted in the preceding paragraph merely explains the holding. Even a generalized reading of the holding, that a judge cannot adjudicate a case where he has an interest in the outcome, does not stand for the conclusion, drawn by the District Court and [the defendant], that a judge with an appearance of bias, without more, is required to recuse himself sua sponte under the Due Process Clause. [The defendant] has not alleged, and there is no evidence, that the trial judge here had a personal interest in the outcome of the sentence.
Id. at 260 (brackets added). The Johnson court held that the fact that the judge had been exposed to disparaging remarks about the defendant through a third-party conversation with a former prosecutor did not fit within the parameters of the holding of Murchison and that the alleged bias of the judge arising from that conversation was insufficient, in and of itself, to rise to a constitutional level.
In
Del Vecchio,
involving a 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) petition, the Seventh Circuit, on rehearing
en banc,
was presented with the issue of whether a state trial judge, who as a former state attorney had supervised the prosecution of the defendant for a murder fourteen years earlier, should have disqualified himself in a second murder trial in which the defendant was convicted and the judge imposed the death sentence.
See
The Seventh Circuit concluded that equating the Supreme Court’s “appearance of justice” language, such as found in Murchison, with a holding that due process mandates a judge’s recusal “based solely on appearances” is an impermissible extension of the holdings from the Supreme Court. Id. at 1371. “Despite the Supreme Court’s broad pronouncements about the ‘appearance of justice,’ we cannot answer the due process question simply by concluding that it may have looked bad for [the trial judge] to preside at trial.” Id.
“The Supreme Court has never rested the vaunted principle of due process on *1156 something as subjective and transitory as appearance.” Id. at 1372. Rather,
[wjhen the Supreme Court talks about the “appearance of justice,” it is not saying that bad appearances alone require disqualification; rather, it is saying that when a judge is faced with circumstances that present “some [actual] incentive to find one way or the other” or “a real possibility of bias,” a court need not examine whether the judge actually was biased.
Id. (citations omitted).
The Seventh Circuit’s conclusion was based on a careful examination of Supreme Court precedent. After analyzing the Su-pi-eme Court’s opinions in Turney, Ward, and Murchison, among others, see id. at 1373-74, the Seventh Circuit observed that the “presumption of evenhandedness” was overcome only in those eases where the judges were subject to a “strong, direct interest in the outcome of a case.” Id. at 1373. In none of the opinions reviewed by the Seventh Circuit was disqualification based solely on the appearance of bias, and the decisions make clear that “not all ‘possible temptations’ toward bias require a judge to disqualify himself.” Id. at 1374.
The Seventh Circuit concluded that, under Supreme Court precedent, to demonstrate a Fourteenth Amendment due process violation,
&
defendant must show either “actual bias” or “an' influence or interest [the court] can conclusively presume would cause the average judge to be biased.”
Id.
at 1378, 1379. Neither was present in the defendant’s case.
See id.
at 1375-80;
Murchison,
Other courts have applied the foregoing standard to judicial bias cases.
See Harris v. State of Mo.,
To the extent that Davis claims that any appearance of bias is tantamount to a due process violation, the court finds that clearly established Supreme Court precedent is not so far reaching. The court is persuaded by the well-reasoned circuit court opinions of Johnson, supra, and Del Vecchio, supra, regarding their interpretation and application of Supreme Court precedent, that the mere “appearance of bias” on the part of the judge, without a showing of either actual bias or a personal, strong direct interest in the proceedings from which bias can be presumed, is insufficient to rise to the level of a constitutional violation. The court, thus, turns to a review of Davis’ allegations of bias in light of the foregoing teachings.
i.) Actual Bias
On Davis’ direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals observed that Davis had not argued actual bias and that its independent review of the record of the hearings handled by Judge Teel demon
*1157
strated that there was “no evidence, whatsoever, of any bias” against Davis.
Davis,
In this proceeding, Davis has not refuted the findings of the state court that there was no evidence of actual bias on the part of Judge Teel. Davis also has not cited any part of the record which reveals any actual bias on the part of Judge Teel, and the court is aware of no such evidence. Accordingly, the court finds that the decision of the Alabama court that Davis failed to show actual bias was not contrary to clearly established federal law, as articulated by the United States Supreme Court, or based on an unreasonable application of established principles.
ii.) Presumed Bias
In the state courts and now in this proceeding, Davis focuses on an alleged “inherent bias” flowing from the fact that a “pivotal decision” in his case, i.e., whether Davis would be tried as an adult, was decided by Judge Teel based upon the arguments of the prosecutor, who happened to be Judge Teel’s brother. (Doc. No. 95 at 5.) The issue then is whether there is any other evidence revealing that the relationship between Judge Teel and the prosecutor presented the type of personal, strong direct interest from which Judge Teel’s bias can be presumed.
The Supreme Court opinions cited by Davis present scenarios of substantial biased appearances, but the court finds that the facts here neither mirror, nor are comparable to, those in Murchison, Tumey, Ward and Offutt. There is no evidence that Judge Teel had a financial interest in Davis’ proceedings, and none is alleged by Davis; thus, Turney’s holding, followed in Ward, that a state court decision should be set aside where there is “the slightest pecuniary interest” on the part of the judge is inapplicable here. Nor do the facts present a merger of prosecutorial and judicial functions by Judge Teel. This case, therefore, is distinguishable from Murchison. Moreover, Davis did not personally attack Judge Teel through insulting, abusive, or contemptuous remarks from which it could be inferred that Judge Teel harbored personal animosity toward Davis. This case, therefore, is unlike Of-futt. In short, the court finds that Judge Teel faced none of the biasing influences involved in the cases in which the Supreme Court required disqualification.
Consequently, given this court’s conclusion that Supreme Court precedent in this area has not expressly dealt with the issue presented in this case, the court finds that the Supreme Court’s prior decisions have not involved facts which are “materially indistinguishable” from the facts of this case. It follows then that the state court ruling here was not contrary to federal law as articulated by decisions of the Supreme Court.
See Washington v. Crosby,
Nonetheless, Davis essentially asks this court to find that Judge Teel’s “close relationship” to the prosecutor, Frank Teel, automatically establishes a presumption of bias based on the more general principles espoused by the Supreme Court, in opinions such as Tumey, and, therefore, to find that the state court decision constituted an “unreasonable application” of Supreme Court precedent. The court, however, finds that Davis’ contention is undercut by language in Tumey.
*1158
In
Tumey,
and later repeated in
Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Lavoie, 475
U.S. 813, 820,
Davis, however, cites two federal circuit court opinions in support of his position that “[i]t is well established that a judge should not preside over proceedings in which a close relative is involved.” (Doc. No. 92 at 8) (citing
Potashnick v. Port City Constr. Co.,
Accordingly, the court finds that the state court decisions did not constitute an “unreasonable application” of the principles espoused by the Supreme Court, in opinions such as Tumey, discussed above, which emphasize the importance of impartiality. Davis simply has not presented, and the court has not uncovered, any Supreme Court precedent which would allow the court to presume bias because, during some of the same proceedings, siblings served as the prosecutor and the judge. The court concludes, therefore, that the blood kinship between the Teel brothers, in and of itself, does not satisfy the presumed bias test and that a contrary finding would constitute an unwarranted extension of Supreme Court precedent,
iii.) Conclusion
In sum, after a thorough review of the record and the relevant and controlling
*1159
Supreme Court law, the court finds that Davis has not “overcome a presumption of honesty and integrity in those serving as adjudicators.”
Withrow v. Larkin,
For all of the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that Davis has failed to present a federal habeas claim which resulted in a decision by the state court which was “contrary to ... clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” or involved “an unreasonable application ... of clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.”
Williams,
C. Claims E & F: Davis’ Claims that the State Court Committed Constitutional Error in Denying his Motion for Change of Venue and Request for an Individually-Sequestered Voir Dire
1. Arguments of Counsel
In Claims E and F, Davis asserts that, given the extensive pretrial publicity, he “was denied a fair trial by a fair and impartial jury, and due process in violation of the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution as a result of the trial court’s denial of his motion for a change of venue and failure to provide adequate voir dire to identify bias of jurors.” (Doc. No. 92 at 9.)
As to Claim E, concerning the trial court’s denial of his pretrial motion for a change of venue, Davis elaborates that the murder of Mrs. Alford and his prosecution received “a great deal of publicity in Coosa County,” as demonstrated by the testimony in the state trial court and the evidence introduced concerning articles published in the local newspaper, the
Alexander City Outlook. (Id.
at 9-10.) In support of Claim E, Davis also relies on the statements of several local residents who, during the state trial court hearing on the motion for change of venue, questioned whether Davis could receive a fair trial in Coosa County. Davis argues that “the extraordinary nature of the case and the overwhelming publicity surrounding it” so permeated the media in his small, rural community that it was impossible to select an impartial juror from that community.
(Id.
at 11.) He contends that, as a result of the pretrial publicity, he suffered actual and presumed prejudice, which he says is confirmed by the voir dire proceedings. (Davis Am. Pet. (Doc. No. 31) at 23-24, ¶¶ 42-43.) Davis contends that the state court’s denial of his motion for change of venue was “contrary to and involved an unreasonable application of’ Supreme Court precedent, including
Sheppard v. Maxwell,
Rebutting Davis’ arguments as to Claim E, the State contends that the trial court acted “well within” its “sound discretion” in denying the motion for- a change of venue and that neither
Sheppard, supra,
nor
Murphy, supra,
“supports] [Davis’] claim that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’s decision was contrary to and an unreasonable application of Federal law.”
*1160
(Doc. No. 94 at 25, 28.) Relying on the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ written decision, rejecting Davis’ arguments on direct appeal, the State contends that the state court “properly held” that a change of venue was not required on the basis of “‘inherent prejudice’” because, although “ ‘numerous,’ ” the newspaper articles were “ ‘factual and objective,’ ” with editorial coverage which “ ‘encouraged readers to disregard rumors,’ ” and a significant amount of time (i.e., fourteen months) passed between the murder and the venue hearing.
(Id.
at 25 (quoting
Davis,
In Claim F, Davis avers that he was denied a fair and an impartial jury for the additional reason-that the trial court failed to permit adequate voir dire, including an individually-sequestered voir dire. Davis essentially asserts that, when a defendant is tried in a venue consisting of a “small and close-knit” community which was subjected to extensive pretrial publicity about a case, “detailed questioning of prospective jurors” is constitutionally required. (Doc. No. 92 at 13-14.) Pointing out that the transcript of the voir dire consists of only twenty-nine pages (id. at 11), Davis says the questions were “few” and “conclusory,” particularly regarding “the subjects of pretrial publicity” and “knowledge of the victim and her family,” and that the limited voir dire prevented him from determining “the extent to which extra-judicial information or opinions would influence the jurors’ ability to be fair and impartial.” (Id.) As a consequence, Davis asserts that he lacked sufficient information from which he could ascertain the effect on the venire members of the pretrial publicity, their extra-judicial knowledge of the case, and their personally-held beliefs. (Id. at 11-12); (Davis 3rd Am. Pet., at 24-25, ¶¶ 47-50.) Davis, therefore, asserts that he lacked sufficient information to exercise his for-cause and peremptory challenges and to ascertain whether the jurors selected could give him a fair trial. (Davis 3rd Am. Pet. at 25, ¶ 50.)
In response to Davis’ position as to Claim F, the State reasserts its argument, previously rejected by this court on recommendation of the magistrate judge (see Doc. No. 49 at 5-8), that Davis’ claim that the trial court improvidently denied his motion for individual voir dire is procedurally barred from review by this court based on the undisputed fact that, although Davis raised the claim at trial, he did not raise the claim on direct appeal until he filed an application for rehearing in the Supreme Court of Alabama. (Doc. No. 94 at 24, 31-33.) In any event, the State argues that Davis is not entitled to relief on the merits because the state court’s determination did not involve an unreasonable application of or contravene clearly established Supreme Court law. (Id. at 34-37.)
2. Proceedings in State Court
In the state trial court, Davis filed a motion for change of venue. The trial was to take place in Coosa County, Alabama, but Davis urged a change of venue based on alleged prejudicial pretrial publicity. A hearing was held on Davis’ motion on September 18, 1979, at which time the state trial court heard testimony from several witnesses, including the publisher of the local newspaper, the Alexander City Outlook, and received evidence, namely newspaper clippings and affidavits. (P-21.)
At the hearing, Davis argued that the pretrial publicity arising from the reporting of the case in the Alexander City *1161 Outlook, a newspaper circulated in Coosa County every day except Saturday, when considered together with the gossip and rumors which allegedly pervaded the community where the murder occurred, made it impossible for Davis to receive a fair and an impartial trial in Coosa County.
At the hearing, the publisher of the Alexander City Outlook testified that he did not “know of any criminal case that ha[d] received the news coverage for the Alexander City Outlook that this case ha[d] received.” (P-21.) There also was evidence that the Alexander City Outlook was circulated primarily in Tallapoosa and Coosa counties, with limited circulation in Clay and Elmore counties, and that, on a “high” day, the total circulation of the Alexander City Outlook was a “little less than” six thousand. Of the six thousand, there were 850 home and/or business delivery subscribers in Coosa County. There was no evidence presented at the hearing of television or radio coverage concerning the murder of Mrs. Alford. Although at the conclusion of the hearing the State asked the court to take judicial notice of the number of residents in Coosa County, there was no evidence presented at the hearing as to the total population of Coosa County at that time or the number of potential eligible jurors in that county. 4
During the hearing, approximately forty-one newspaper articles reporting on the case were introduced. (P-21.) All of these articles were published in the Alexander City Outlook. Testimony also was received from three individuals, one of whom was a forty-five-year resident of Coosa County and two of whom worked for Russell Corporation in Tallapoosa County, where Davis’ mother and wife also were employed at the time. Two of these witnesses had read about the murder in the newspaper and one of those individuals subscribed to Alexander City Outlook. A third witness testified that there were “just as many” who believed Davis was guilty as believed he was innocent. These witnesses, however, testified that, based on the “gossip,” “publicity” and “talk in the community” surrounding the murder of Mrs. Alford, they did not think that Davis could receive a fair trial in Coosa County. (P-21.) Several similar affidavits also were introduced by Davis. The State, in turn, offered four affidavits in which citizens attested to the contrary, i.e., that Davis could receive a fair trial in Coosa County. (P-21.)
In a written, two-page order dated September 21, 1979, the trial court denied Davis’ motion for a change of venue. (P-26 at 1142. 5 ) In its order, the trial court acknowledged that there was opposing evidence submitted at the hearing demonstrating that Davis both “can” and “cannot” receive a fair trial. The trial court, however, stated that it “should deny [Davis’] Motion, unless the Court is reasonably satisfied, from all the evidence before the court, that [Davis] cannot receive a fair and impartial trial at this time in Coosa County.” (Id.) Denying the motion, the trial court reasoned:
The Court ... finds that the Alexander City Outlook, a newspaper published in Tallapoosa County, Alabama, from the time of the commission of this alleged *1162 crime to the present date of this hearing, did publish frequent accounts of this alleged crime. The Defendant’s Exhibit One, numbers forty-one newspapers. However, the Court notes that the first thirty-five newspapers in said exhibit do[] not even mention the Defendant’s name and it was in the thirty-sixth newspaper account of this alleged crime that the Defendant’s name was first mentioned and recited on November 20, 1978. Only five additional publications to the date of this hearing were published by said newspaper, which named the Defendant.
The Court further finds that this newspaper, from a total approximate circulation of six thousand, has a circulation to homes and businesses in Coosa County of approximately eight hundred and fifty papers.
The Court further finds that the evidence as to whether or not the Defendant can receive a fair and impartial trial at this time in Coosa County is conflicting and that the Defendant can receive a fair and impartial trial at this time in Coosa County, Alabama, and the Defendant’s rights can be further protected by proper voir dire of the jury venire and instructions by the Court.
Id.
Approximately nine months later, on June 9, 1980, jury selection in Davis’ case was held. The parties stipulated that the trial court had summoned 100 names from its jury box for service. (P-23 at 326.) Of those 100, approximately sixty-two or sixty-three were present for roll call. (Id.)
The Honorable Kenneth F. Ingram, then Circuit Judge, questioned the jurors as to their general qualifications to serve on a jury and excused six jurors during this phase. (P-1 at 363.) The trial court then explained different reasons which warrant a juror being excused for cause, one of those reasons being that a juror “has a fixed opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, which would bias [his or her] verdict.” (P-1 at 370.) Two jurors were excused for cause, not on the latter basis, but on the ground that they were older than 65 years of age. (P-1 at 370-372.)
The State conducted voir dire first. On the issue of jury bias, the prosecutor asked whether any juror had read or heard anything about the case which rendered him or her “so biased” to the point that he or she could not fairly judge the facts, as presented from the witness stand, and give Davis a “fair trial.” (P-1 at 374.) No response was given by any juror which prompted the prosecution to state: “No one stood and responded to that. That means everyone feels [who] is s[i]tting out here that you can put aside everything you heard outside and decide this case on what you hear inside the courtroom, is that right? Let the record show there was no response.” (P-1 at 375.)
When questioned by defense counsel, no juror responded to the following question: Are “there ... any of you out there on the Jury Venire, stand if you don’t believe a person is innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt?” (P-1 at 380.) In response to a different question revealing that one juror had frequented Mrs. Alford’s store, this particular juror indicated that, although she did not have a “fixed opinion about the case,” she did not believe that she could “reach a fair verdict.” (P-1 at 380-382.) This juror was challenged for cause by defense counsel and was stricken by the court; she, thus, did not serve on the actual jury. (P-1 at 382.)
When asked by defense counsel, fourteen of the potential jurors indicated that they had read a newspaper account about the case. (P-1 at 389.) Seven of those fourteen did not elaborate on what they had read. The other half volunteered the *1163 following information when asked if they had read about the case in the Alexander City Outlook: “I did[,] but I forgot it”; “I read it[,] but I didn’t keep up with it”; “I read it”; “I didn’t keep up with it” or read “all of it”; “I didn’t remember what I read,” and “[I read about it] right after it happened”; “I read a portion of it in the paper[;] I didn’t read all of it”; “I read a portion of it in the paper”, but “I don’t know what it was.” (P-1 at 389-90.)
Defense counsel then asked, “How many people have discussed this case with someone, at one time or another?” (P-1 at 390.) Six jurors, one of whom is not identified and two of whom are part of the fourteen above who had read about the case, indicated that at some point they had discussed the case. Some stated that their discussions had occurred “at work” or “among friends and relatives.” (P-1 at 390.)
Thereafter, defense counsel questioned the jury venire as to biases, if any. He asked: (1) do you “know anything about this case that you have heard on the outside or read that would [a]ffect your verdict?”; (2) “do any of you know anything that would [ajffect your case one way or another, concerning the serious nature of this case where the State is asking you to put Timothy Charles Davis to death, in the electric chair?”; and (3) are there “any of you who cannot listen to the evidence from the witness stand and return a verdict based solely upon the evidence and assure his defense lawyers here and the State of Alabama that you have no prejudice about this ease, and no pre-conceived opinions or verdicts in this case?” (P-1 at 391-92.) There is no indication in the record that any juror gave a response to the foregoing three questions. (Id.)
At the conclusion of defense counsel’s questioning during the voir dire process, the trial court observed that it had reserved a ruling on whether to allow individual voir dire examination. (P-1 at 392.) Responding to the trial court’s inquiry as to “exactly ... what” defense counsel “ha[d] in mind” to ask, Davis’ counsel stated that he sought to question individually those jurors who had stated that they had engaged in discussions about the case and those who had indicated that they had read about the case in the Alexander City Outlook. (Id.) Defense counsel proposed that the trial court'take these jurors, indicating that “[tjhere weren’t that many,” “outside the courtroom to chambers” for questioning. (P-1 at 392.)
The trial court stated that it was amenable to questioning these jurors individually outside the presence of the other jurors (P-1 at 392) but, at the same time, expressed concern about leaving the remainder of the jurors in the courtroom without court supervision. (P-1 at 392-393.) The trial court stated that it “want[ed] to accommodate” defense counsel and proposed, as an alternative, that defense counsel individually question each juror whom counsel had identified, while “shield[ing] that [juror] from the rest of the venire.” (P-1 at 393.) Defense counsel then asked for a “second” to confer about the matter and, thereafter, proposed a “solution.” (P-1 at 393.) As the “solution,” defense counsel requested that the court simply ask the jurors “to search their minds one more time to make certain they haven’t read or heard anything that keeps them from understanding the principle of the law that ... Davis is innocent” until proven guilty. (P-1 at 393.) The trial court, though, denied the request, finding the proposed question redundant of questions already asked by counsel. (P-1 at 393.) The trial court pointed out that defense counsel asked “several questions” pertaining to “newspaper accounts,” heard responses from the jurors, and questioned those jurors as to whether they believed that they could render a fair and an impar *1164 tial verdict based solely on the evidence, “not taking into account any newspaper article.” (P-1 at 394-95.)
Twelve jurors were selected to serve on Davis’ case. (P-1 at 400.) Three of the jurors who were selected to serve had read about the case: Saleta Heath, Elise McDonald, and Marvalyne Kelly. (P-1 at 400.) Heath is the individual, above, who stated that she “did” read about the case, but had “forgot[ten] it.” (P-1 at 389.) Kelly and McDonald identified themselves when asked if they had read “any newspaper accounts about this case,” but there is no further elaboration from either of these two jurors. (P-1 at 389.) After jury selection, the jury was sequestered for the trial and deliberations. (P-1 at 397-98.)
3. The State Court Decision
On direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Davis’ arguments that “the widespread publicity of the crime mandated a change of venue” and that the trial court “erred in denying [Davis’] motion for a change of venue.”
Davis,
Although the appellant presented evidence of numerous newspaper articles covering the crime, the record reveals that these articles were factual and objective in nature and that several editorials even encouraged readei-s to disregard rumors and withhold their judgments as to appellant’s guilt or innocence until after his trial. Consequently, the publicity did not demonstrate “inherent prejudice” against the appellant sufficient to mandate a change of venue. See Ex parte Magwood,426 So.2d 929 (Ala.1983), affirming426 So.2d 918 (Ala.Crim.App.1982); Robinson v. State,430 So.2d 883 (Ala. Crim.App.1983). Moreover, the mere passage of time between the crime and the venue hearing, a passage of approximately 14 months in the instant case, was another factor negating the prejudicial effect of the publicity surrounding the instant offense and justifying the trial court’s refusal to grant a change of venue. See, Magwood, supra; Robinson v. State, supra.
Furthermore, there was no proof of any “actual prejudice” among the prospective jurors. Those who had heard about the crime could remember very little about it. None, when questioned on voir dire, disclosed any preconceived notions or fixed opinions as to appellant’s guilt and all indicated that any prior knowledge would in no way affect their verdicts. The record clearly demonstrates compliance with the juror fairness and impartiality standards espoused in Murphy v. Florida,421 U.S. 794 ,95 S.Ct. 2031 ,44 L.Ed.2d 589 (1975). See, Anderson v. State,362 So.2d 1296 (Ala.Crim.App.1978); Giles v. State,554 So.2d 1073 (Ala.Crim.App. 1984).
Under these circumstances, the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion for a change of venue, a decision properly left to the sound discretion of the trial court, was not improper. See, Magwood, supra; Anderson v. State, supra; Moulds v. State,426 So.2d 942 (Ala.Crim.App. 1982).
Id.
Also, in a written opinion, on appeal from the state trial court’s judgment denying post-conviction relief, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Davis’ claim that his counsel was ineffective for failing to conduct adequate voir dire, “particularly concerning the issues of pretrial publicity, knowledge of the appellant and his family, knowledge of the victim and her family, and the jurors’ feelings and opinions about the death penalty.”
Davis,
*1165 A review of the record indicates that each of these areas was addressed during the voir dire examination. Moreover, as we stated in our opinion in the appellant’s direct appeal, there was no evidence that members of the venire were biased against the appellant. See Davis,554 So.2d at 1100 . Similarly, in the present proceeding, the appellant has not shown any evidence of bias, that he was prejudiced by trial counsel’s allegedly insufficient voir dire examination of potential jurors, and that there is a reasonable probability that the result of the trial would have been different if counsel has conducted additional voir dire examination. Strickland, supra. Again, he has made bare allegations and drawn legal conclusions that are not supported by facts. Rule 32.6(b), Ala. R.Crim. P.
Id.
A Analysis
Davis’ claim that he was denied a fair and an impartial jury arises from the guarantees of the Sixth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
See Ross v. Oklahoma,
a.) Procedural Bar
The State again has argued that Davis’ claim that he was improperly denied individually-sequestered voir dire is procedurally defaulted. The court has reviewed the record in this case and concludes that the State is correct that, on post-conviction review, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
erroneously
concluded that this claim was raised and addressed on direct appeal.
See Davis,
In
Harris v. Reed
the Supreme Court held that a federal court has the responsibility to determine whether a state court, in fact, based its denial of relief on procedural grounds.
The court, however, finds that it need not decide whether, in fact, this claim was proeedurally defaulted in the first instance because, as discussed below, the court concludes that the claim lacks merit.
b.) Pretrial Publicity as Pertains to the Alleged Necessity for a Change of Venue
“The standards governing a change of venue ultimately derive from the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment which safeguards a defendant’s sixth amendment right to be tried by ‘a panel of impartial, indifferent jurors.’ ”
Irvin v. Dowd,
On the other hand, a change of venue is not required merely because the crime and the defendant have been exposed to media coverage of which the potential jurors are aware. “[I]t is not required ... that the jurors be totally ignorant of the facts and issues involved.”
Irvin,
[i]n these days of swift, widespread and diverse methods of communication, an important case can be expected to arouse the interest of the public in the vicinity, and scarcely any of those best qualified to serve as jurors will not have formed some impression or opinion as to the merits of the case. This is particularly true in criminal cases. To hold that the mere existence of any preconceived notion as to the guilt or innocence of an accused, without more, is sufficient to rebut the presumption of a prospective juror’s impartiality would be to establish an impossible standard.
Id.
at 722-23,
There are two standards to guide courts when deciding whether the Fourteenth Amendment requires a change of venue due to alleged juror bias stemming from pretrial publicity: “actual prejudice” and “presumed prejudice.”
Meeks v. Moore,
Moreover, a state court’s finding of a juror’s impartiality on federal habeas review pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 only will be overturned for “manifest error.”
Depree v. Thomas,
1.) Presumed Prejudice
The threshold for demonstrating presumed prejudice is high, and the burden on Davis “is an extremely heavy one.”
U.S. v. Lehder-Rivas,
To decide whether Davis has presented evidence from which prejudice can be presumed, the court must examine “whether: (1) the pretrial publicity was sufficiently prejudicial and inflammatory; and (2) the publicity saturated the community in which the trial was held.”
Mills,
Moreover, the “quantum” of the publicity does not, standing alone, create a presumption that a defendant was denied a fair trial by an impartial jury.
Dobbert,
In addition to the volume and content of the pretrial publicity, two other factors are relevant in determining whether prejudice is presumed. First, the court should consider the amount of time which has elapsed between the peak pretrial publicity and the actual trial.
Murphy,
In support of his claim that he was denied a fair trial by virtue of the extensive pretrial publicity, Davis relies on two Supreme Court decisions:
Sheppard v. Maxwell, supra,
and
Murphy v. Florida,
In
Murphy,
which involved the robbery trial of a criminal defendant who previously had gained notoriety as a jewel thief, earning him the nickname “Murph the Surf,” the Supreme Court held that the defendant was not deprived of due process when the trial court denied his motion for change of venue. In part because of his flamboyant lifestyle and his prior criminal activities, including a murder conviction, the defendant received a lot of media coverage when he was arrested on the robbery charge at issue in
Murphy.
The Supreme Court rejected the defendant’s presumed prejudice claim, however, finding that the defendant had failed to demonstrate an inflamed community atmosphere.
See
Sheppard,
a federal habeas corpus proceeding, is one of the rare cases where the publicity reached the level required to constitute presumed prejudice.
6
The publicity, to put it mildly, was extraordinary. It
*1169
was so extraordinary, i.e., “massive, pervasive and prejudicial,” that the Supreme Court held that the defendant, a then prominent doctor in an Ohio suburb, was denied a fair trial in his prosecution for “bludgeoning] to death” his pregnant wife in their home in 1954. Consequently, the Supreme Court reversed the defendant’s judgment of conviction for murder in the second degree, holding that the defendant was denied a fair trial, in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See
The defendant, who was the prime suspect since day one of the murder, repeatedly was headlined in every
form of
the news media. Prior to the defendant’s arrest, the media emphasized the defendant’s lack of cooperation with law enforcement, his refusals to submit to a lie detector test and an injection of truth serum, his reluctance to be questioned outside the presence of counsel, and his alleged extramarital affairs.
Id.
at 338-39,
Another editorial demanded that the coroner hold an inquest, which the coroner did. The day after the newspaper’s invitation, in a packed gymnasium brimming with print, television and radio reporters, the coroner commenced a three-day inquest with the county prosecutor and detectives by his side and the defendant present by subpoena. During the inquest, which essentially turned into a pep rally for the prosecution, law enforcement officers “searched [the defendant] in full view of several hundred spectators,” and the defendant answered questions for more than five hours about his actions on the night of the murder and an alleged extramarital “love affair.”
7
Id.
at 340,
The area newspapers were replete with incriminating evidence against the defendant and demands for. his arrest. After the defendant’s arrest, the negative publicity, including front page headlines, intensified, becoming more sensational and satirical. For example, one newspaper featured a cartoon of the defendant’s head atop a sphinx, with a satirical caption reading: “T Will Do Everything in My Power to Help Solve This Terrible Murder.’ — Dr. Sam Sheppard.’ ”
Id.
at 341-42, 339-41,
*1170
Three months prior to the trial, the news media, by invitation of the coroner, provided in depth coverage, including photographs, of the defendant’s performance during a re-enactment of the events occurring on the day of the murder.
Id.
at 338, 354,
Moreover, the area newspapers published the names and addresses of each of the jury venire. As a result, prospective jurors received letters and telephone calls from both friends and foes.
Id.
at 342,
As Davis’ claim focuses on pretrial publicity,
9
it suffices for present purposes to observe that, during the entirety of the defendant’s trial in
Sheppard,
the courtroom was filled with a plethora of print, television and radio reporters, and the “intense publicity continued unabated.”
Id.
at 345,
The Supreme Court concluded that, although it could not “say that [the defendant] was denied due process by the judge’s refusal to take precautions against the influence of pretrial publicity alone,” the trial judge’s “arrangements” with the media, which resulted in pure “bedlam” and a “carnival atmosphere” during the trial, “caused [the defendant] to be de
*1171
prived of that ‘judicial serenity and calm to which [he] was entitled.’ ”
Id.
at 344-45, 358,
In view of the forgoing principles, the court turns to consideration of whether the pretrial publicity here was so intensive and extensive so as to compel a finding of presumed bias or preformed opinion. For the reasons to follow, the court finds that the facts of the case fall short of the pretrial media frenzy in Sheppard and more aptly fall within the permissible constitutional boundaries established in Murphy.
In this case, approximately twenty-three months elapsed between the date of the murder (i.e., July 20, 1978) and the commencement of the trial (i.e., June 9, 1980). Examining the nature of the pretrial publicity, the court discusses, first, the initial four months of news coverage and, second, the news coverage which occurred thereafter during the nineteen months preceding the trial. Third, the court examines Davis’ arguments generally relating to demographics. Fourth, the court compares the pretrial publicity in this case to that which occurred in Sheppard.
a.) The Initial Four Months of News Coverage
Davis emphasizes in these proceedings, and the court has not overlooked, the fact that the publisher of the Alexander City Outlook testified during the hearing on Davis’ motion for change of venue that he (the publisher) did not “know of any criminal case that ha[d] received the news coverage for the Alexander City Outlook that this case ha[d] received.” Undoubtedly, the senseless, violent murder of Mrs. Alford shocked the residents of Coosa County and received considerable newspaper coverage in the Alexander City Outlook, particularly during the immediate aftermath of the murder. Indeed, during the four months immediately following the murder, the media coverage of the murder and the unnamed “teenage” suspect was at its height. The court agrees with Davis that, at least during these four months, articles reporting on the case frequently appeared in the Alexander City Outlook. The evidence adduced at the hearing on Davis’ motion for change of venue reveals that at least thirty-eight articles appeared in the Alexander City Outlook between July 21, 1978 (i.e., the day after the murder) and November 20, 1978, when Davis was identified for the first time by name in a news article reporting that Davis had been certified as an adult for trial.
Although Davis has failed to point to any specific reference or statement in any of the numerous articles which he contends is unduly prejudicial, save one editorial which the court discusses below, the court independently has examined the articles in the record. The court concludes, as did the state court, that the articles are predominantly “factual and objective in nature.”
Davis,
A majority of the articles focus on the eight-week prolonged process surrounding the juvenile extradition proceedings which
*1172 Davis did not waive and which occurred in Georgia, where Davis relocated after the juvenile court initially determined that there was insufficient evidence to hold Davis. Although some of these articles report that Coosa County “authorities” considered Davis to be a “runaway” from the juvenile court system, arguably an in-culpatory description, the articles also reported Davis’ side of the story as relayed by his lawyers, i.e., that Davis’ release by the juvenile court was “unconditional,” meaning that it was Davis’ right to travel to Georgia if he so desired, and that Davis had left Coosa County because of death threats he had received. One editorial, on the subject of extradition, even cautioned readers from forming preconceived opinions as to the juvenile suspect’s decision to challenge the extradition proceedings, observing that, while the decision may appear “unwise,” the Alexander City Outlook did not “pretend to know all the factors which contributed to this decision either.”
The articles published during this four-month period also contain descriptions of the legal proceedings which had occurred to date and explain what would occur in upcoming hearings; for example, one article sets forth the factors which the trial court could consider when deciding whether “the young suspect in the Avis Alford murder case [would] be tried as a juvenile or as an adult.” In short, these articles report the events unfolding in the murder of Mrs. Alford and the “juvenile” suspect, and the court does not discern the articles as slanting one way or the other or as inflaming the senses.
In his brief, however, Davis relies, almost exclusively, on a particular editorial published in the Alexander City Outlook on August 2, 1978, as an indicator of the alleged untamed publicity allegedly surrounding the trial. (See Doc. No. 92 at 10 (citing P-21 at 192-93).) Davis quotes the portion of that editorial which refers to the “refusal” of the “seventeen year old suspect” to “voluntarily return to Alabama for a court hearing,” and describes the suspect’s “refusal” as one of many, but probably not the last, “peculiar turn” in the case. (Id.) Davis also cites the editorial’s comment of the potential of the case “becoming one of those trials that give the judicial system a bad name by its very excesses” and “becoming a circus that winds up not serving well the friends and relatives of the late Mrs. Alford or the suspect or the larger community, or the cause of justice.”
The court finds that the prejudicial impact, if any, of this editorial is minimal for at least four reasons. First, the editorial was published a mere two weeks after the murder and more than twenty-two months prior to the actual trial date. The editorial’s temporal nexus to the trial date, therefore, is remote. Second, Davis’ name is not mentioned in this article; thus, at the time of publication, readers would not have had any reason to associate Davis with the crime. Third, although Davis points out that the editorial announced that “community feelings are ... running high” and that “rumors are running rampant” (id.), any argument that the editorial comments portrayed the general attitude among Coo-sa County residents is substantially weakened based upon the publisher’s testimony that no scientific polls were used to determine the public opinions and that the editorial merely “reflected [his] feelings.”
Fourth, notably absent from Davis’ brief is any mention of other portions of the editorial which urge the community not to make, and to put aside, any preconceived judgments based upon rumors and innuendo. Specifically, the editorial reminds “everyone” that the suspect under investigation may not be the actual culprit, that the “current suspect ... enjoys the benefit of the presumption of innocence in the eyes of the law” and that hopefully “he enjoys *1173 that same presumption in the eyes of the community, unless it is proven otherwise.” The editorial further provides: “Here at the newspaper we are going to do our best to heed our own advice and to report legitimate developments in a complicated case which is of high interest to people in this area and at the same time screen out groundless rumors and avoid sensationalism.” Repeating its caution, the editorial concludes: “We would like for this matter to be adjudicated fairly and in a dignified atmosphere befitting its seriousness. We would like for this community to be calm and patient. We would like to see justice done.” Such cautioning is a far cry from inflammatory.
Another article, emphasized by Davis at the hearing on his motion for change of venue presumably due to its alleged inflammatory content, was published on August 3, 1978, the day after the above editorial, and is titled “Columbus Cops Lost Interest after Early Alford Case Inquiry.” This article included a statement that neighboring Georgia law enforcement authorities contacted the Coosa County Sheriffs Office, shortly after the murder of Mrs. Alford, in relation to its investigation of a series of stranglings in a Georgia locale. The article, however, was quick to dispel any suggestion that the main “suspect” targeted in the investigation of the murder of Mrs. Alford also was under investigation for the strangling murders in Georgia. Namely, the article includes a statement and quote that Georgia authorities discerned no connection between the crimes and that the Alford case presented a “completely different situation” from the murder investigation in Georgia. Moreover, the same article observed that the “suspect” in the Alford murder case was released “for lack of evidence” by a juvenile court, a fact which certainly was not prejudicial to Davis.
In its evaluation of whether the news coverage as a whole was sufficiently inflammatory, the court also has considered the nature and words chosen by the
Alexander City Outlook
to describe the brutal murder.
See, e.g., Meeks,
Moreover, it is noteworthy that at the hearing on the motion for a change of venue, it was stipulated that none of the thirty-five articles referenced during the hearing even mentioned Davis’ name, and the articles do not. Rather, given Davis’ juvenile status, the Alexander City Outlook identified Davis in the various articles by descriptions only, such as the “teenage suspect,” “youth suspected in the murder” of Mrs. Alford, the “seventeen[-]year[-]old suspect” and “young suspect.” The court finds that the fact that Davis’ name was withheld from publication is another factor which softens the prejudicial impact, if any, of the pretrial publicity during the initial four-month phase of intense reporting on the murder.
The first time Davis’ name appeared was in an article published on November 20, 1978, after Judge Teel certified Davis as an adult. Even then, in the same edition, the Alexander City Outlook included an editorial, titled “Decision Not a Verdict,” cautioning readers that no proceedings concerning Davis’ guilt or innocence had yet occurred and repeating its earlier caution that the readers must not “forget that in the eyes of the law any suspect remains innocent unless at the end of this long process a guilty finding is reached.” The editorial again urged readers “to avoid making judgments.”
The
Alexander City Outlook
issued other cautions, similar to the ones discussed above, throughout the course of its reporting on the murder case and the arrest of Davis. The editorials reveal not a bias against Davis, but quite to the contrary, an urging by the
Alexander City Outlook
to its readers to remain impartial and fair-minded and to withhold judgment until such time that a trial is held and the evidence received. The court finds that the
Alexander City Outlook
sought to neutralize any community prejudice against Davis, not to “arous[e] or incitfe] the passion of the community.”
Mills,
b.) The Nineteen Months Preceding the Trial
After the initial flurry of reporting, which occurred for approximately four months, the volume of news coverage on the murder in the Alexander City Outlook subsided significantly. During the nineteen months which preceded Davis’ trial date, that is, between November 21, 1978 (i.e., the day after the Alexander City Outlook published Davis’ name for the first time) and June 9,1980 (i.e., the first day of the trial), the record reveals that only seven articles were published in the Outlook. (See Vol. 14, Appeal to Alabama Court of Criminal Appeal, Pet. for Relief from Sentence.) Notably, only one of these seven articles appeared during the nine months immediately preceding the trial. The latter article, which was published in the Alexander City Outlook on June 8, 1980, merely alerted readers that Davis’ capital felony trial was to begin the next day. 10
Regarding the content of the news coverage during this nineteen-month time frame, the seven articles consist of news pertaining to Davis’ arraignment, his youthful-offender application, his motion for a change of venue based upon “pretrial publicity,” and the fact that a court-ordered psychological examination revealed that Davis was mentally competent to *1175 stand trial. (See Vol. 14, Appeal to Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals.) The court carefully has reviewed these articles and finds that they are factual in nature and do not contain innuendos or subtle gestures pointing a finger at Davis. Neither the titles nor the subject matter of these articles is inflammatory or sensational in nature. 11 There is nothing in the record which indicates that the news coverage up to this point was tilted against Davis or otherwise inflammatory.
As stated, courts consider as relevant the temporal proximity of the news coverage to the commencement of the trial, a factor which in this case weighs strongly against a finding of presumed prejudice. Considering that there was an appreciable decrease in news coverage for more than a year-and-a-half prior to the trial, in combination with the fact that the articles were predominantly factual in nature, the court finds that the evidence fully supports a finding of an absence of presumed prejudice.
See Murphy,
c.) Demographics
Davis argues that, even if the news coverage is deemed factual and objective, the state courts failed to consider the cumulative effect of the coverage in Alexander City Outlook of a brutal murder on a “small” community. Namely, he asserts that the decision of the state courts did not “take into account that factual and objective articles about a death penalty case involving horrific crimes, including murder and anal sodomy, against a storekeeper ... have a much greater and more prejudicial impact” on a small, rural community, “than factual and objective media coverage of a less serious and sensational crime in an area with a greater population.” (Doc. No. 92 at 12.) The court, however, is not persuaded that, in this case, the fact that pretrial publicity occurred in a county with a much smaller population than say, for example, metropolitan Miami-Dade County, Florida, where the crime and trial occurred in Murphy, supra, demonstrates presumed prejudice.
The court recognizes that the size of the town is a factor in determining the effect of pretrial publicity on the citizens of that community.
See Rideau,
First, the news coverage came from a single print source, i.e., the
Alexander City Outlook,
not all forms of the media as in
*1176
Sheppard.
Second, there were only 850 subscribers to the
Alexander City Outlook
in Coosa County, a county with a population at that time of approximately eleven thousand,
see supra
footnote 4. Third, as discussed in further detail in the next section of this opinion, most of the prospective jurors had not been exposed to the newspaper coverage concerning the ease. Only 26 percent of the potential jurors had read about the case, and those jurors who elaborated could recall little of what they had read. Moreover, only three of the twelve jurors empaneled had read a news account concerning the murder of Mrs. Alford. By comparison, in
Sheppard,
all but one of the selected jurors had read something about the case.
See
Davis also argues also that gossip and rumors pervaded the community, preventing the selection of a fair and an impartial jury in Coosa County. To this end, Davis points out that three witnesses testified on behalf of Davis at the hearing in the state trial court on the motion for a change of venue that the murder and Davis’ alleged involvement were hot topics of gossip in Coosa County and, in particular, at Russell Corporation where Davis’ mother worked at the time. These witnesses questioned whether Davis could receive a fair trial in Coosa County. No doubt the evidence was conflicting on this issue, a fact duly noted by the state trial court, given the opposing evidence submitted by the State.
(See
P-26 at 1142.) This court, however, finds that, as in
Meeks,
where the defendant presented eight affidavits attesting that “the murders were a topic of public conversation,” the similar affidavits submitted by Davis, do not come close to establishing presumed prejudice.
d.) Comparison of the Pretrial Publicity in Davis’ case to that which Occurred in Sheppard
Even adjusting for the smaller size of Coosa County as compared to larger metropolitan venues, the court finds that the pretrial publicity in Davis’ case does not begin to compare to the widespread television, radio and press coverage that bombarded the community and the trial in
Sheppard.
The articles covering Davis’ prosecution do not contain the type of incendiary remarks, as the articles in
Sheppard
which included, among other derogatory innuendos, descriptions of the defendant as a gun-toting, jury-tampering “liar” represented by a scheming lawyer; rhetorical questions inquiring why the defendant “wasn’t in jail” and “who will speak for Marilyn?”; and satirical portrayals of the defendant, such as the cartoon depicting the defendant as a tight-lipped sphinx.
See
There is no evidence in this case that radio or television publicity saturated the community; in fact, there is no mention or evidence of any coverage by either radio or television, a scenario which is completely antithetical to the inflammatory and extensive televised broadcasts and radio coverage outlined in Sheppard.
Moreover, Davis was not made a public spectacle in the media, as was the defendant in
Sheppard,
and nothing in the days preceding Davis’ trial occurred which was even remotely akin to the media’s coverage of the inquest in
Sheppard.
Furthermore, there is no evidence, as in
Sheppard,
that the jurors were subjected to direct persuasion from the public at large.
It becomes clear through the foregoing distinctions, which are merely representative and not inclusive, that the pretrial publicity in
Sheppard
was much more “massive,” “pervasive” and “virulent,” than the coverage in this case.
Id.
at 353-54,
e.) Summary of the Presumed Prejudice Analysis
In sum, having considered the totality of the news coverage, the court finds that the articles and editorials appearing in the Alexander City Outlook did not expose the potential or actual jurors to highly incriminating or inflammatory material, but rather consisted of predominantly factual, un-sensational coverage. The Alexander City Outlook issued several cautions throughout the course of its reporting on the murder case and developments. There also was a significant decline in news coverage over time, as only seven articles were published during the nineteen months preceding the trial. The court finds that the news coverage pales in comparison to the quantity and nature of articles which preceded the trial in Sheppard.
Accordingly, the court finds that the community where Davis’ trial was held was not so saturated by prejudicial and inflammatory pretrial publicity so as to render the state court’s denial of a change of venue violative of the principles of presumed prejudice enunciated in the Supreme Court’s pretrial publicity line of cases. The court, therefore, concludes that the decision of the state courts on the issue of presumed prejudice did not “re-sulte ] in a decision that ... involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
2.) Actual Prejudice and the Denial of Individually-Sequestered Voir Dire
Davis also contends that he suffered actual prejudice due to juror bias arising from the pretrial publicity and that the voir dire was inadequate to reveal the juror prejudice, compelling a conclusion that he was denied a fair trial in violation of the Sixth Amendment and the Due Pro *1178 cess Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. For the reasons to follow, the court disagrees.
To show “actual prejudice,” a defendant must demonstrate, first, that “ ‘one or more jurors who decided the case entertained an opinion, before hearing the evidence adduced at trial, that the defendant was guilty’ ” and, second, that this or “ ‘these jurors ... could not have laid aside these preformed opinions and rendered a verdict based on the evidence presented in court.’ ”
Meeks,
To hold that the mere existence of any preconceived notion as to the guilt or innocence of an accused, without more, is sufficient to rebut the presumption of a prospective juror’s impartiality would be to establish an impossible standard. It is sufficient if the juror can lay aside his impression or opinion and render a verdict based on the evidence presented in court.
Focusing on the actual jurors, as Meeks commands, the court observes that only three of the twelve empaneled jurors — or one-fourth — had read any account of the case, and one of those individuals had “forgotten]” what she had read. (P-1 at 389.) Notwithstanding their exposure to the news coverage, these three jurors assured the state trial court and the attorneys that they did not have a fixed opinion as to Davis’ guilt or innocence, flowing from the information they had read concerning the case or from any other extra-judicial source, and the other nine jurors who served on Davis’ case provided the same assurances. Namely, the panel which ultimately was selected to hear Davis’ case was questioned, alongside the entire veni-re, by the court, defense counsel and the prosecution, concerning whether any juror was “so biased” that objective consideration of the facts was impossible or whether any juror had “heard” or “read” anything which would affect his or her verdict. No juror indicated any biases in response to these questions. Moreover, no juror indicated that he or she had formed an opinion based on what he or she had read in the newspaper or otherwise had acquired knowledge about the case which would “affect [his or her] verdict.” Indeed, each juror in the venire pool indicated that he or she could remain impartial, notwithstanding the news coverage. Additionally, not one juror indicated that he or she did not believe in the presumption of innocence accorded to criminal defendants or could not “return a verdict based solely upon the evidence.” (P-1 at 374-75, 380, 392.)
In his present habeas proceeding, Davis has not identified any particular juror on his panel whom he says harbored a preformed opinion as to his guilt. In fact, during the jury selection process, there is no indication in the record that Davis challenged for cause any of the twelve jurors selected to hear his case, a fact which the Supreme Court of the United States has indicated is “strong evidence that [the defendant] was convinced the jurors were not biased and had not formed any opinions as to his guilt.”
Beck v. Washington,
Even if Davis had presented evidence indicating that one of the jurors who served on his case possessed a prejudicial bias, arising from an extra-judicial source, which he has not, Davis still would have the burden under the second Meeks prong of demonstrating that that particular juror or jurors could not have put aside the bias and rendered a verdict based solely on the evidence. In short, there simply is no *1179 evidence in the record to support either element of the Meeks’ two-pronged test for assessing the existence of actual prejudice among the jurors. 13
The court, however, recognizes that there are some instances when “[a] juror’s assurances that he can lay aside his impression or opinion and render a verdict based upon the evidence presented in court” is not “ ‘dispositive of the accused’s rights’ ” and that “it remains open to the defendant to demonstrate ‘the actual existence of such an opinion in the mind of the juror as will raise the presumption of partiality.’ ”
Marsden v. Moore,
In Marsden, where the defendant argued actual juror prejudice arising from pretrial publicity, “thirty-two of the forty prospective jurors had heard or read something about the case”; however, “only four of them stated that they had formed some type of an opinion on the case.” Id. at 1543. Rejecting the defendant’s argument of actual prejudice, the Eleventh Circuit observed that, of the latter four prospective jurors, only one “indicated that his previous opinion would affect” his verdict, and that this juror “was challenged for cause and did not become a member of [the defendant’s] jury.” Id.
Here, as in Marsden, during voir dire, the sole juror who indicated that she did not believe that she could “reach a fair verdict” was stricken upon defense counsel’s challenge and, thus, did not serve on the jury. (P-1 at 382.) Moreover, only 26 percent of the prospective jurors (fourteen out of fifty-four or fifty-five) reported reading about Davis’ case in the newspaper, as opposed to 80 percent of the jurors in Marsden who had been exposed to media coverage, and at least half of the foregoing prospective jurors in Davis’ case, when further questioned by defense counsel, said that their recollection of what they had read was only vague. 14 Based on *1180 these facts, the court finds that there was no “hostility” evidenced by jurors during the voir dire proceedings in Davis’ case which “suggests an impartiality that could not be set aside.” Id. at 1543.
The court’s analysis of actual prejudice (or, rather, the lack thereof) is not over, because, as stated above, Davis complains that the trial court did not permit him to question the potential jurors individually, particularly about their exposure to the newspaper reports about the case and that, therefore, he did not have “enough information to determine the extent to which extra-judicial information or opinions would influence the jurors’ ability to be fair and impartial.” (Doc. No. 92 at 11.) Without the opportunity to conduct an individually-sequestered voir dire, Davis claims that the voir dire proceedings were constitutionally inadequate and that he was denied an opportunity to expose the alleged actual biases of the jurors. Davis’ argument is not an insubstantial one.
See, e.g., Marsden,
Davis’ claim that he was denied a fair and an impartial jury based on the state trial court’s refusal to permit individually-sequestered voir dire is inextricably intertwined with his claim that the state trial court erred in denying his motion for a change of venue based upon alleged actual biases resulting from the pretrial publicity. The two claims intersect by virtue of the fact that voir dire must be constitutionally adequate to expose actual prejudices, even where the pretrial publicity, in and of itself, is insufficient to require a change of venue.
Jordan v. Lippman,
“[P]art of the guarantee of a defendant’s right to an impartial jury is an adequate voir dire to identify unqualified jurors.”
Morgan v. Illinois,
Although not cited by the parties, the court finds that the Supreme Court’s decision in Mu’Min, supra, is instructive. In Mu’Min, the Supreme Court was not squarely confronted with the issue of whether the United States Constitution requires individual sequestration of jurors for follow-up questioning on topics surrounding pretrial publicity, but the Supreme Court did address the issue of when the United States Constitution requires a state trial court to interrogate jurors with respect to the content of their exposure to pretrial publicity. Mu’Min, thus, provides guidance pertaining to a state trial court’s constitutional obligations when conducting voir dire on issues pertaining to the effect of pretrial publicity on the venire.
In
Mu’Min,
a federal habeas case following a state murder conviction, the defendant, who while serving time for first-degree murder, escaped from a prison
*1181
work detail and killed the owner of a store located in a nearby shopping center. In that ease, it was not questioned that the murder was the subject
of
extensive pretrial publicity by the news media.
During voir dire, sixteen of the prospective twenty-six jurors answered affirmatively when asked if they had learned information about the crime from either the news media or any other source.
See id.
at 419,
Moreover, although the trial court denied defense counsel’s motion for an indi
vidually-sequestered
voir dire, it separated the prospective jurors into panels of four in order to address the issue of pretrial publicity.
See id.
at 419, 420-21,
On certiorari before the Supreme Court of the United States, the defendant argued that his “Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury and his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment were violated because the trial court refused to question further prospective jurors about the specific contents of the news reports to which they had been exposed.”
Id.
at 417,
The Supreme Court first noted the distinction between the “requirements of voir dire” in state and federal court. As opposed to federal voir dire proceedings over which the Court “enjoy[s] more latitude in setting standards” pursuant to its “supervisory power,”
id.
at 424,
The Supreme Court expressly rejected the defendant’s argument “that the Fourteenth Amendment requires more in the way of voir dire with respect to pretrial publicity than [Supreme Court] cases have held that it does with respect to racial or ethnic prejudice,” and, thus, disagreed that the Fourteenth Amendment “require[s] precise inquiries about the contents of any news reports that potential jurors have read.”
Id.
at 424,
Undoubtedly, if counsel were allowed to see individual jurors answer questions about exactly what they had read [about the case], a better sense of the juror’s general outlook on life might be revealed, and such a revelation would be of some use in exercising peremptory challenges. But, since peremptory challenges are not required by the Constitution, Ross v. Oklahoma,487 U.S. 81 , 88,108 S.Ct. 2273 ,101 L.Ed.2d 80 ... (1988), this benefit cannot be a basis for making “content” questions about pretrial publicity a constitutional requirement.
Id.
at 424-25,
As a general rule, the Supreme Court observed that “trial court[s]” retain[ ] great latitude in deciding what questions should be asked on “voir dire,” including what questions should be asked about pretrial publicity, and, furthermore, that “primary reliance on the judgment of the trial court makes good sense.”
Id.
at 426-27,
The Supreme Court in
Mu’Min
also rejected the defendant’s argument that its decision in
Irvin v. Dowd,
[h]ad the trial court in this case been confronted with the “wave of public pas *1183 sion” engendered by pretrial publicity that occurred in connection with Irvin’s trial, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment might well have required more extensive examination of potential jurors than it undertook here. But the showings are not comparable; the cases differ both in the kind of community in which the coverage took place and in extent of media coverage.
Id.
at 429,
Applying the Supreme Court’s principles espoused in
Mu’Min,
the court is not persuaded that the failure of the state trial court in Davis’ case to permit individually-sequestered voir dire rendered the voir dire proceedings so inadequate that the resulting trial was fundamentally unfair.
Mu’Min,
First, as in
Mu’Min,
the court finds that the voir dire proceedings were “by no means perfunctory,” as multiple questions were posed to the venire for the purpose of discerning biases.
Id.
at 431,
Having carefully reviewed the voir dire proceedings, the court concludes that the state trial court’s examination of prospective jurors was within “the wide discretion granted to the trial court in conducting voir dire in the area of pretrial publicity and in other areas of inquiry that might tend to show juror bias.”
Mu’Min,
Second, the court finds that the pretrial publicity which occurred in this case, as outlined extensively in the preceding section, is in no way comparable to that which occurred in
Irvin,
so as to create a presumption of actual bias which automatically belies the jurors’ claims of impartiality.
Mu’Min,
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that the voir dire was sufficiently probing so as to satisfy constitutional standards and to protect Davis’ right to a fair trial by a panel of impartial jurors who were untainted by the pretrial publicity. Furthermore, the court concludes that Davis has failed to establish that the jurors who were actually impaneled in his case lacked the capacity to be fair and impartial. In short, the court finds no “manifest error” in the decisions of the state court.
Mu’Min,
5. Conclusion
In sum, based on the foregoing, the court rejects Davis’ Claims E and F that, *1185 based on the extensive pretrial publicity, the state court denied him a fair and an impartial jury by denying his motion for a change of venue and by failing to conduct an adequate and individually-sequestered voir dire. Based on the court’s assessment of Supreme Court precedent, the court finds that Davis has not shown that the decisions of the state courts were contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The court concludes that, under the totality of the circumstances, the failure of the state court to grant a change of venue or to conduct an individually-sequestered voir did not violate the principles laid down by the Supreme Court in the opinions discussed herein.
D. Claim D: The State’s Alleged Brady Violations
1. Arguments of Counsel
Claim D of Davis’ habeas petition implicates the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause and the Supreme Court’s principles emanating from
Brady v. Maryland,
Davis argues that the State’s alleged suppression of evidence entitles him to habeas relief, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) and (d)(2). Regarding § 2254(d)(1), Davis contends that the “standard for materiality” of suppressed evidence applied by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Supreme Court precedent, namely
Brady v. Maryland, supra,
and its lineage.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1); (Doc. No. 92 at 16, 17.) Davis’ argument in this regard has two components. First, Davis asserts that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ failure to analyze the “suppressed evidence individually[,] as opposed to cumulatively,” is contrary to and an unreasonable application of the holding in
Kyles v. Whitley
that exculpatory evidence must be “considered collectively, not item by item.”
Second, Davis says that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals “unreasonably applied an incorrect standard” (Doc. No. 92 at 17) when it concluded that evidence of Smith’s past convictions was not material because the evidence “ ‘would not have created a reasonable doubt as to [Davis’] guilt.’ ”
(Id.
(quoting
Davis,
Countering Davis’ contentions, the State maintains that the state court applied the correct standard of law as to materiality. Also relying on Kyles, supra, the State argues that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals was not required to analyze the allegedly suppressed evidence “collectively” because it specifically held that two of the three categories of undisclosed evidence of which Davis complains were neither favorable to the defense nor suppressed by the State. 16 (Doc. No. 94 at 50.) “In other words,” the State says that “courts are not required to determine whether the non-disclosure of multiple Brady items would have, when taken together, created a reasonable probability that the outcome of the proceedings would have been different unless the court first determines that the evidence was, in fact, favorable to the defendant and suppressed by the State.” (Id.) The State continues: “Because the Court of Criminal Appeals found that Davis failed to prove that two of the three items that he alleges constitute Brady material were favorable to him, its failure to analyze the materiality of these [three] items cumulatively did not constitute error.” (Id. at 51.)
Moreover, the State contends that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals “correctly found” that Smith’s two prior convictions for sexual assault — i.e., the third category of undisclosed evidence — were not material because Smith’s testimony was “strongly” corroborated by other evidence, and, therefore, “there is not a reasonable probability that had those convictions been known to the defense, the outcome of the trial would have been different.” (Doc. No. 94 at 38-41);
Davis,
2. The State Court Decision
Davis discovered the existence of the undisclosed evidence during his state post-conviction habeas proceedings. (Doe. No. 92 at 16);
see also Davis v. State,
Davis discovered the undisclosed evidence in time to present it to the state habeas court. After thorough discussion of Davis’
Brady
claim, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the lower court’s denial of post-conviction relief on this ground.
Davis, 720
So.2d at 1026-28. After quoting the applicable law, as set out in
Brady, supra, United States v. Bagley,
First, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals examined Davis’ claim that “the State violated
Brady
because it did not make the defense aware that Curtis Smith had two prior convictions involving sexual offenses.”
Id.
at 1027,
During discovery, the appellant asked that the State be required to make the defense aware of the prior convictions of State witnesses. The trial court denied that request. There is no absolute right to discovery, including discovery of prior convictions of witnesses or of possible impeachment evidence, in criminal cases. Smith v. State,639 So.2d 543 (Ala.Cr.App.1993); Bailey v. State,421 So.2d 1364 (Ala.Cr.App.1982). Rather, the trial court has discretion in determining whether to order discovery of the prior convictions of witnesses or other possible impeachment evidence, and such a decision will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion. Ross v. State,555 So.2d 1179 (Ala.Cr.App.1989); Williams v. State,451 So.2d 411 (Ala.Cr.App.1984); Wright v. State,424 So.2d 684 (Ala.Cr.App.1982); Mardis v. State,423 So.2d 331 (Ala.Cr.App.1982). The appellant has not shown that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his request for the prior convictions of the State’s witnesses.
Id.
at 1027,
Furthermore, there is no evidence that the State suppressed evidence of Smith’s prior convictions. One investigator who worked on the case testified that he *1188 checked Smith’s criminal record through the National Criminal Information Center just before the trial and did not find any prior convictions. The printout of this search supports his testimony that he did not know that Smith had any prior convictions. Further, the printout contradicts the statement of a witness who said that Smith had raped a woman before. Therefore, the appellant has not shown that the State suppressed this information in violation of Brady. See Donahoo and Kinder, supra.
Finally, Smith’s prior convictions, which occurred in 1947 and 1964, were not material. Although the appellant might have attempted to impeach Smith with these convictions, such impeachment would not have created a reasonable doubt as to the appellant’s guilt. “Evidence tending to impeach [the witness] on totally collateral grounds-a conviction from the remote past-would not have created a reasonable doubt. Thus, the fact of his conviction was not material in the constitutional sense.” Donahoo,552 So.2d at 896 . The appellant argues that the convictions would have destroyed Smith’s credibility as a witness. However, Smith’s testimony was strongly corroborated by the physical evidence, the appellant’s incriminating statements, and testimony of other witnesses. Even his trial attorneys admitted that Smith’s trial testimony was corroborated by other evidence. The appellant has not established that there is a reasonable probability that, had the convictions been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. Therefore, he has not established that a Brady violation occurred.
Id.
at 1027-28,
Next, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals discussed Davis’ claim that the State failed to disclose that Smith was a “suspect” in the murder investigation of Mrs. Alford:
The appellant also contends that the State improperly withheld evidence that Smith was a suspect in this case based on the following handwritten notation found in the Alabama Bureau of Investigation (ABI) file: “Ron Brant runs store Al. 22 in Ray community Home 234-7666 knows Smith sub. that raped a woman before, he lives on Covered Bridge Rd. approx. 40 years of age.” (SCR. 1134.) There is no indication that the abbreviation “sub.” is an abbreviation for “suspect.” It appears instead to mean “subject,” which is the way law enforcement officers referred to Smith during the Rule 32 proceedings. Further, the officers did not indicate that Smith was ever a suspect in the murder. The appellant has assumed and asserted that Smith was a suspect in the case, but he has not satisfied his burden of supporting that contention factually. Rule 32.3 and Rule 32.6(b), Ala. R.Crim. P. Therefore, the appellant has not shown that this notation was material or that the State suppressed it, and he has not proven that a Brady violation occurred. See Donahoo, Kinder, and Johnson, supra.
Id.
at 1028,
Finally, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Davis’ claim that the State violated Brady by failing to disclose that “Smith made an inconsistent statement about the color of the helmet worn by [Davis].” Id. The Court wrote:
In support of his contention, [Davis] introduced a handwritten note about Smith’s statements to police officers where the word “blue” was crossed out and replaced with the word “gold.” Based on this note, the appellant contends that Smith initially stated that the appellant’s helmet was blue and later at *1189 trial stated that it was gold. The only reference in the entire ABI file to a blue helmet is in that one handwritten note, the author of which is unknown. It was not in a formal statement made by Smith. Furthermore, the word “blue” is crossed out and the word “gold” is written above it. This is consistent with Smith’s trial testimony. The appellant’s claim that the State suppressed exculpatory evidence in this regard is not supported by the record. He also has not shown that there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would have been different if the note had been disclosed to the defense. Therefore, he has not shown that this correction in a note was material to the issues in his case, and he has not shown that a Brady violation occurred. See Donahoo, Kinder, and Johnson, supra.
Id.
3. The Clearly Established Supreme Court Latv
In
Brady v. Maryland,
the Supreme Court of the United States held that “the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates [Fourteenth Amendment] due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.”
In
Giglio,
the Government did not disclose the fact that the sole witness who could connect the defendant to the crime received a promise from the government that he would not be prosecuted if he testified against the defendant before the grand jury and at trial.
See
In
Bagley,
the Government failed to tender to the defense “evidence that the defense might have used to impeach the Government’s witnesses by showing bias or interest.”
After exploration and discussion of relevant precedent, the
Bagley
court expounded upon the standard of materiality for ascertaining when the prosecution violates the Constitution in suppressing favorable evidence: “The evidence is material only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
Id.
at 682,
Subsequently, in
Kyles,
the Supreme Court provided further context to the
Bagley
materiality standard.
Moreover, material exculpatory or impeaching evidence known by one member of the prosecutorial team, which includes law enforcement officers involved in the case, is imputed to all members of the team.
Giglio,
The foregoing principles can be condensed into three elements which must be proven to sustain a
Brady
violation: “(1) the evidence must be favorable to the accused, because it is either exculpatory or impeaching; (2) the evidence must have been suppressed by the State, either willfully or inadvertently; and (3) the evidence must be material so as to establish prejudice.”
Stephens v. Hall,
4. Analysis
Davis claims that the State violated his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process by failing to disclose three categories of impeachment evidence pertaining to a primary prosecution witness, Smith. It is not disputed by the State that it failed to turn over to Davis prior to trial (1) Smith’s two prior convictions for sexual assault, (2) the handwritten notation in the ABI file referring to Smith as a “sub.,” and (3) the anonymous handwritten note, discussing Smith’s statement and changing the description of Davis’ motorcycle helmet from “blue” to “gold.” In general terms, the issue is whether the state court’s determination that the failure of the State to disclose the foregoing evidence did not constitute a Brady violation contravenes the standards set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) and (d)(2).
a.) The Brady Cumulative Materiality Analysis
The court first addresses Davis’ contention that the state court’s determination was an unreasonable application of Supreme Court law because the state court failed to engage in a collective materiality inquiry in determining whether a
Brady
violation had occurred.
See Kyles, supra,
Kyles
provides that, for purposes of examining the materiality requirement, “the state’s disclosure obligation turns on the cumulative effect of all suppressed evidence favorable to the defense.”
The court’s inquiry, however, is not over because, even where a state court adheres to the “correct governing legal principle,” a state court’s decision constitutes an “unreasonable application of’ clearly established Supreme Court precedent if the court “unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s case.” Williams,
Regarding the first handwritten notation, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that Davis failed to provide any factual support for his assertion that the abbreviation “sub.” written after Smith’s name in the ABI file meant “suspect.” The Court observed that, given that the officers described Smith as the “subject” -during the post-conviction habe-as trial court proceedings and never referred to Smith as a “suspect,” the more logical, commonsense conclusion was that “sub.” stood for “subject,” not “suspect.”
See Davis,
Turning to the second handwritten notation, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals similarly concluded that there was no record support for Davis’ argument that the handwritten note, wherein the word “gold” was crossed out and substituted above was the word “blue,” meant that Smith changed his testimony in regard to the color of the helmet Davis was wearing on the day of the murder.
Id.
The Court pointed out that the source and author of the handwritten note were unknown and that the note was not Smith’s formal statement.
See id.
The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, thus, held that Davis’ “claim that the State suppressed exculpatory evidence in this regard [was] not supported by the record.”
Id.
In addition to concluding that the State did not “suppress!]” the latter notation, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, by pronouncing that there was no record evidence to support the argument that the evidence was “exculpatory,” necessarily concluded that the evidence was not “favorable.”
See, e.g., Strickler, 527
U.S. at 281-82,
In light of the AEDPA, the court finds that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ determination that the record was devoid of factual support to substantiate Davis’ arguments as to the two handwritten notations must be presumed correct by this court.
See 28
U.S.C. § 2254(e);
Little v. Johnson,
Because it rejected the above two categories of evidence on the first and second elements of
Brady,
the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals was not obliged to tackle the materiality inquiry “collectively” as to all three categories of the alleged
Brady
evidence.
Kyles,
b.) Smith’s Prior Convictions and Brady
i.) The State Appellate Court’s Formulation of the Brady Materiality Standard and Its Application of that Standard to the State’s Failure to Disclose Smith’s Prior Convictions
Davis asserts that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals applied the wrong legal standard when it held that the disclosure of Smith’s past convictions to the defense for use at the trial “ ‘would not have created a reasonable doubt as to [Davis’] guilt.’ ” (Doc. No. 92 at 17.) For the reasons to follow, the court is unpersuaded by Davis’ argument.
The foregoing standard recited by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals mirrors the language in the Supreme Court’s opinion in Agurs, supra:
The proper standard of materiality must reflect our overriding concern with the justice of the finding of guilt. Such a finding is permissible only if supported by evidence establishing guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. , It necessarily follows that if the omitted evidence creates a reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist, constitutional error has been committed. This means that the omission must be evaluated in the context of the entire record. If there is no reasonable doubt about guilt whether or not the additional evidence is considered, there is no justification for a new trial. On the other hand, if the verdict is already of questionable validity, additional evidence of relatively minor importance might be sufficient to create a reasonable doubt.
The foregoing aside for the moment, assuming
arguendo
that the
Agurs
standard is obsolete, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals also recited the test of materiality directly from
Bagley.
Specifically, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ conclusion that the alleged
Brady
evidence was immaterial also was based upon its determination that Davis failed to establish “that there is a reasonable probability that, had the convictions been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Davis,
In addition, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals appropriately followed the teachings of
Agurs
by considering the absence of the undisclosed evidence in light of the record as a whole.
See Davis,
ii.) The Brady Elements as Applied by the State Appellate Court to the Undisclosed Prior Convictions
Having concluded that the state appellate court identified the “correct governing legal principle” for evaluating the materiality of undisclosed evidence,
Williams,
The State has not challenged the fact that evidence of a government witness’ prior criminal history is evidence which is “favorable,” within the meaning of the first
Brady
element.
See Bagley,
The participation of Smith’s prior counsel as a special prosecutor in Davis’ case appears to be Davis’ strongest argument of suppression, as this fact arguably invokes the imputed knowledge rule of
Giglio. See
The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that Smith’s testimony was not material because it was “strongly corroborated by the physical evidence,”
Davis,
In this case, the court finds that the evidence in the record supports the conclusion reached by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, as demonstrated by the following facts. First, Davis made a statement which placed him at the crime scene around the estimated time of the murder, and a witness saw a motorcyclist enter the parking lot of the store around the general time of the murder on the day in question. This witness’ description “generally matched” that of Davis and his motorcycle.
Davis,
Moreover, the court finds that the evidence reasonably supports the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ determination that the remoteness of Smith’s prior convictions weakened the probative value of the evidence as a tool to impeach Smith’s credibility and “would not have created a reasonable doubt as to [Davis’] guilt”.
See Davis,
The court finds that, given the evidence adduced at trial which substantially corroborated Smith’s testimony, described above, and the fact that the undisclosed convictions were remote in time, the non-disclosed evidence, at best, presents a mere possibility that the convictions would have so undermined the credibility of Smith, a key prosecution witness, that the jury could not have believed his story as to his encounter with Davis on the day of the murder. However, “[t]he mere possibility that an item of undisclosed information might have helped the defense, or might have affected the outcome does not estab
*1198
lish materiality in the constitutional sense.”
Agurs,
In conclusion, the court finds that the potential impeachment material arising from Smith’s two prior convictions would not have created “a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Bagley,
E.
Claim H: Introduction at Trial of Davis’ Statements Allegedly Obtained in Violation of
Miranda v. Arizona,
1. Arguments of Counsel
Davis asserts that the admission at trial of certain incriminating statements made by Davis to law enforcement officers prior to receiving Miranda warnings violated his constitutional right to avoid self-incrimination. Davis’ argument in this habeas proceeding is twofold. First, relying on 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), he contends that the state courts’ determination that Davis was not “in custody” when he gave the incriminating statements “was based upon an unreasonable determination of the facts presented at trial.” (Doc. No. at 21); (Doc. No. 95 at 14, 17.) Second, citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), Davis argues that “[t]he decision of the Alabama courts was an unreasonable application of established federal law as determined by the United States Supreme Court.” (Doc. No. at 21.)
The State counters Davis’ arguments, asserting that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals “correctly held that Davis was not in custody when he made his exculpatory statements to law enforcement; thus, law enforcement was not required to read him the Miranda warnings.” (Doc. No. 94 at 52.) Therefore, the State contends that neither 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) nor (d)(2) provide relief for Davis. (Id. at 51.)
2. The State Court Decision
On direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals held that Davis’ statements given to two law enforcement officers on the day of the murder were exculpatory, non-custodial and volunteered, and, thus, Davis was not entitled to Miranda warnings. For the sake of thoroughness, the court sets out in full that portion of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision on this issue:
The state was permitted to introduce, through the testimony of two of the investigating officers, the exculpatory statements made by the appellant on the night of the murder but before he was taken into custody. The appellant insists that admissions of these statements violated § 12-15-67, Code of Alabama 1975, which prohibited the use of statements by a child, unadvised by counsel, made to law enforcement officers while in their custody. See also, A.R.Juv.P. 21 (1975).
The state argues, and we agree, that the statements in question were not made while the appellant was in the custody of the investigating officers. Sergeant James Boggs testified that the appellant and his mother approached Boggs at the murder scene less than an hour after the murder and told him that the appellant had found the victim inside the store, had “gotten scared,” and had gone home. Boggs explained that this information was unsolicited and that he im *1199 mediately introduced the appellant to Sheriff Vernon Peters of the Coosa County Sheriffs Department. He stated that he did not question the appellant, that he did not arrest him, and that at that time he did not consider the appellant a suspect in the murder.
Sheriff Peters testified that he was introduced to the appellant by Sergeant Boggs and that at Boggs’s suggestion he took the appellant to a nearby patrol car only because other people at the scene were beginning to crowd around them. He explained that he had no reason to suspect the appellant and had no reason to arrest him at that time. He did not place the appellant in custody. The appellant voluntarily made a statement essentially identical to what he had told Sergeant Boggs. The appellant added that on his way home after discovering the victim inside the store he had seen two black males walking down the highway away from the store. Peters asked him for a description of the two men. The appellant “hemmed and hawed” and reported only that one was tall and one was short. After the appellant had told Peters where he, the appellant, worked and that the clothes he had on were the same ones he had worn to work, Peters asked the appellant how he had managed to keep his clothes so clean. The appellant then “went to crying like” and revised his story about finding the body. He explained that he lifted the body to see if he could help in any way and “got blood all over himself’ and then went home and changed clothes. It was at this point that Sheriff Peters became suspicious and he immediately interrupted the appellant and read him his rights. The appellant was then taken into custody. Later that night he was arrested for Mrs. Alford’s murder.
There was also evidence that a driver’s license check of the appellant was made at some point while the appellant was in the car talking with Sheriff Peters. However, it was not clear from the record when that check was made or by whom it was authorized. Peters testified that he did not authorize it and knew nothing about it until after he had placed the appellant in custody, initially as a key witness in the investigation.
Under these circumstances, essentially uncontradicted in the record, it is our conclusion that the statements made to Sergeant Boggs and Sheriff Peters before Peters read the appellant his rights were not made while the appellant was in custody and, in fact, were exculpatory statements volunteered by the appellant. Compare, Harris v. State,376 So.2d 773 (Ala.Crim.App.), cert. denied,376 So.2d 778 (Ala.1979); Stewart v. State,398 So.2d 369 (Ala.Crim.App.), cert. denied,398 So.2d 376 (Ala,1981); Manigan v. State,402 So.2d 1063 (Ala.Crim.App.), cert. denied,402 So.2d 1072 (Ala.1981); Cork v. State,433 So.2d 959 (Ala.Crim.App.1983).
Therefore, the trial court did not err in admitting them into evidence.
Furthermore, appellant’s mother, the key witness for the defense, generally confirmed, from the witness stand, the substance of these statements and the circumstances that existed when they were made. Moreover, these statements were exculpatory and were not inconsistent with appellant’s theory in defense at trial, that he arrived at Alford’s Grocery after Mrs. Alford had been killed and left upon discovering the body only because he was “scared.”
Id.
at 1100-01. The Supreme Court of Alabama affirmed this aspect of the decision of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals without discussion.
See Davis,
*1200 3. The Trial Testimony
James Boggs, who on July 20, 1978, was employed as the post commander for the Alabama Department of Public Safety with the rank of Sergeant, testified at Davis’ trial. On July 20, at approximately 5:40 p.m., Sergeant Boggs received a radio call to report to Mrs. Alford’s store. (P-4 at 657-59, 677.) While surveying the scene, at approximately 5:55 p.m., a white male and white female, later identified as Davis and his mother, approached Sergeant Boggs. (Id. at 672-73.) Sergeant Boggs did not know these two individuals, stating that he “had never seen [Davis] before.” (Id. at 673.) The “lady spoke first,” stating, “ ‘[T]his is my son[;] he found her [Mrs. Alford], and it scared him and he come home, and I brought him back over here to tell you what he knows and what he had seen.’ ” (Id.) Davis spoke next, stating, “ T was over here riding my mo-torcyclef;] I went in there and found her[;] she had blood all over her.’ ” (Id. at 674.) Davis added, “ ‘[T]here were two [African-Americans] walking up the road.’” (Id.) Sergeant Boggs testified that, at this point, Davis was not a suspect. (Id. at 673.) Sergeant Boggs also stated that he did not ask Davis or his mother any questions. Instead, Sergeant Boggs called for Veston Peters, the Sheriff of Coosa County, Alabama, who also was at the scene of the murder. (Id. at 674-75.)
Sheriff Peters testified as to what occurred after Sergeant Boggs summoned him. 20 With Sergeant Boggs were “several” individuals, two of whom Sheriff Peters later learned were Davis and his mother. 21 (Id. at 718-19, 721.) Sergeant Boggs informed Sheriff Peters that these individuals needed to speak to him. (Id. at 720.) Sheriff Peters testified that he did not know Davis, that Davis was not a suspect at that time, that Davis was not in “custody,” and that Davis was not under any police restraint. (Id.)
Sheriff Peters testified that Davis’ mother spoke first. She said, “Tim [Davis] found her [Mrs. Alford,] and he run[,] and he wants to talk to you about it.” (Id. at 721.) Davis added to his mother’s comment that, when he left the store, he saw two African-Americans “walking up the road.” (Id.) Sheriff Peters testified that, because several individuals were beginning to “gather around,” Sergeant Boggs recommended that they “get in” one of the patrol cars where they would have “more privacy.” (Id.); (see also id. at 675.) At that point, Sheriff Peters, Davis and another officer (Corporal Gilliland) “went to” another officer’s “patrol car” which was parked “right in front of the store,” approximately ten to fifteen feet from where they were standing. (Id. at 722, 724.) Sheriff Peters testified that the patrol car, a Ford LTD, was new and had not yet been equipped with a protective “screen” between the front and back seats and that the locks on the back doors had not been removed, meaning that the back doors opened from the inside. (Id. at 722.)
Sheriff Peters testified that Corporal Gilliland and he “got in the front seat and [Davis] got in the back seat.” 22 (Id. at *1201 723, 708-09.) Sheriff Peters elaborated that neither he nor Corporal Gilliland “put” Davis in the back seat, but rather Davis was the one who “want[ed] to talk to ' [them].” 23 (Id.) Sheriff Peters stated that Davis was not a suspect, was not in custody, and was under no restraints. (Id. at 723-24.) Responding to the question of whether Davis could “have gotten out and walked away at any time,” Sheriff Peters said, “[H]e sure could.” (Id. at 724.) “[A]ll he had to do, was to open the door and step out.” (Id. at 709.) At this time, Sheriff Peters estimated that it was approximately 6:15 p.m., but Sheriff Peters said “it could [have been] a little sooner or little after.” (Id. at 724.)
Seated in the back seat of the patrol car, without any prompting, Davis told Sheriff Peters and Corporal Gilliland that “he went into the store and found Mrs. Alford” and “reached over and felt” her arm. (Id. at 724-25, 710.) Davis told the officers that, after surmising that Mrs. Alford was dead, “he panicked,” ran out the door, and saw two African-Americans “walking up the road” (Id. at 725.) At that point, Sheriff Peters asked Davis to describe the African-Americans. (Id. at 713.) Davis, however, “just kind of hem-hawed on that,” (id.), stating that one was “short” and the other was “tall”; Davis also may have given “some kind of a description of the clothing.” (Id. at 713-14, 725.) Sheriff Peters testified that Davis repeated this same story “two or three” times during the course of their conversation which lasted approximately 10 to 15 minutes. (Id. at 725, 713.)
After Davis had repeated his story “two or three” times, Sheriff Peters testified that he asked Davis some questions. First, Sheriff Peters asked Davis where he worked. (Id. at 725, 713.) Davis answered that he worked at Russell Mills’ Distribution Center in Alexander City. (Id. at 725, 713.) Second, Sheriff Peters asked Davis if he had worked that day to which Davis responded in the affirmative. (Id. at 713.) Third, Sheriff Peters remarked that Davis “looked mighty clean” and asked Davis if he was wearing the same clothes that he wore to work that day. (Id. at 725, 713.) At that point, Sheriff Peters testified that Davis “kind of went to crying like, or something, and said, ‘I’ll tell you truth, I went in and found her and raised her up and got blood on me.’ ” (Id.) At that point, Sheriff Peters said, “[W]ait a minute[;] I’m going to advise you of your rights,’ ” which he did. (Id.) After Sheriff Peters advised Davis of his Miranda rights, Sheriff Peters placed Davis in custody as a “material witness.” (Id. at 726.) There is no evidence that, after having been advised of his Miranda rights. Davis made any further statements or was asked any more questions by Sheriff Peters. (Id.) The same day, but later that evening, Davis was arrested for the murder of Mrs. Alford. (Id. at 728-30.)
A radio log book, maintained by a Department of Public Safety police communications officer, indicates that at 6:11 p.m. Corporal Gilliland requested a driver’s license check on Davis. (Id. at 683, 690.) Although Sheriff Peters did not dispute the information in the log book, he said that “he didn’t have any knowledge” that Davis’ driver’s license was being “checked.” (Id. at 713.)
A The Clearly Established Supreme Court Law
The Fifth Amendment commands that “[n]o person ... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const, amend. V. “[I]n-
*1202
custody interrogation^,” which place “inherently compelling pressures” on the individuals interrogated, chill the exercise of the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
Miranda v. Arizona,
These
Miranda
warnings or procedural safeguards apply only to “custodial interrogation.”
Id.
“By custodial interrogation,” the Supreme Court “mean[s] questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”
Id.; see also Rhode Island v. Innis,
In
Thompson v. Keohane,
Although the
Keohane
two-step inquiry remains unaltered, the level of “independent review” mandated by
Keohane
has
*1203
been tempered by the passage of the AEDPA, which became effective after the ruling in
Keohane.
The AEDPA mandates that courts also must accord deference to legal determinations made by a state court so that, in this proceeding, habeas corpus relief is not available to Davis unless the legal decision “involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
Yarborough v. Alvarado,
The Supreme Court’s opinion in
Alvarado, swpra,
is illustrative of the proper application of the foregoing standards. In
Alvarado,
the Supreme Court addressed the precise issue which is before this court, namely, whether “a state court unreasonably applied clearly established law when it held that the respondent was not in custody for
Miranda
purposes.”
Approximately a month after the murder, a detective with the Los Angeles County Sheriffs office who was in charge of the investigation “left word” at Alvarado’s house and with his mother that she wanted to talk to Alvarado. Alvarado’s parents brought him to the sheriffs station for an interview and sat in the lobby while Alvarado was interviewed in another room by the detective. For two hours, without being advised of his Miranda rights, Alvarado answered the questions posed by the detective.
Id.
At first, Alvarado denied any involvement or knowledge of the murder, but the detective “pressed on.”
Id.
The detective informed Alvarado that witnesses had identified him and that it was time for him to “tell the truth.”
Id.
at 657,
Finally, after an “appeal[] to [Alvarado’s] sense of honesty and the need to bring the man who shot [the victim] to justice,” Alvarado admitted that he helped the trigger man steal the truck, knew that this man was armed and helped him hide the weapon after the shooting.
Id.
at 658,
During the interview, toward its conclusion, the detective asked Alvarado two times if he “needed to take a break,” but Alvarado declined. Id. Alvarado’s parents drove him home after the interview. Id. A few months later, Alvarado was arrested for first-degree murder and attempted robbery. Id.
At his state trial, Alvarado moved to suppress his statements as violative of the holding in
Miranda. Id.
Finding that Alvarado was not in custody when he made the incriminating statements, the trial court denied the motion.
Id.
Alvarado subsequently was convicted.
Id.
at 658-59,
Alvarado then filed a § 2254 habeas petition in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. The district court denied the petition, concurring with the state court that Alvarado was not in custody for purposes of Miranda, and that, at the very least, the AEDPA’s deferential standard of review precluded relief. *1204 Id. The Ninth Circuit reversed, and the Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve whether the state court had unreasonably applied clearly established federal law in determining that Alvarado was not in custody and, thus, was not entitled to Miranda warnings. Id.
After discussing § 2254(d)(l)’s clearly-established law requirement and the pertinent Supreme Court precedent, including
California v. Beheler,
On the basis of those principles, the
Alvarado
Court concluded that the state court’s application of clearly established law was reasonable because “fair-minded jurists could disagree over whether Alvarado was in custody.”
Id.
The Court observed that the following factors weighed against a finding that Alvarado was in custody: “The police did not transport Alvarado to the station or require him to appear at a particular time”; the police “did not threaten him or suggest he would be placed under arrest”; “Alvarado’s parents remained in the lobby during the interview, suggesting that the interview would be brief’; the detective focused on the crime committed by the trigger man, rather than on Alvarado’s crime; the detective did not threaten Alvarado with arrest and prosecution; the detective twice asked Alvarado if he needed a break; and, after the interview, Alvarado went home with his parents.
Id.
at 664,
On the other hand, the Supreme Court recited that there were facts which cut against a non-custodial finding.
Id.
at 665,
After an examination of all of the foregoing facts, both for and against a finding of custody, the Supreme Court disagreed with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, holding:
These differing indications lead us to hold that the state court’s application of our custody standard was reasonable. The Court of Appeals was nowhere close to the mark when it concluded other *1205 wise. Although the question of what an “unreasonable application” of law might be difficult in some cases, it is not difficult here. The custody test is general, and the state court’s application of our law fits within the matrix of our prior decisions. We cannot grant relief under AEDPA by conducting our own independent inquiry into whether the state court was correct as a de novo matter. “[A] federal habeas court may not issue the writ simply because that court concludes in its independent judgment that the state-court decision applied [the law] incorrectly.” Relief is available under § 2254(d)(1) only if the state court’s decision is objectively unreasonable. Under that standard, relief cannot be granted.
Id. (internal citations omitted).
5. Analysis
In light of the foregoing standards, the court turns to the issue of whether Davis was in custody for the purposes of
Miranda
at the time he made statements to Sheriff Peters and Sergeant Boggs on July 20, 1978, the day of the murder. As to the first
Keohane
inquiry which involves a factual determination of the “circumstances surrounding the interrogation,”
First, Davis’ legal argument finds only limited support in the holdings of the Supreme Court of the United States. In
Stansbury v. California,
the Supreme Court reiterated that “[i]t is well settled ... that a police officer’s subjective view that the individual under questioning is a suspect, if undisclosed, does not bear upon the question whether the individual is in custody for purposes of Miranda[,]” that question being solely an objective one.
Second, as to this purely factual determination made by the state appellate court, a presumption of correctness attaches which can be overcome only by clear and convincing evidence to the contrary.
Miller-El,
Contrary to Davis’ suggestion, this court does not interpret the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ finding as being contrary to the record created by the log book that the request for the driver’s license check occurred at 6:11 p.m. The time of the request for the driver’s license check becomes material, if at all, only if it the facts demonstrate that the request occurred prior to Sheriff Peters advising Davis of his Miranda rights.
See Stansbury,
The remainder of Davis’ arguments, with one exception noted below, see infra footnote 28, involves challenges to the state court’s application of Supreme Court law to the historical facts. For the reasons to follow, however, the court finds that, in the best-case scenario for Davis, as in Alvarado, supra, reasonable jurors could disagree as to whether Davis was in custody when he was interviewed in the back seat of the patrol car and that, therefore, the admission at trial of Davis’ statement to Sheriff Peters did not involve an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent, because the objective facts and circumstances support the state court’s determination that Davis was not in custody.
On July 20, 1978, the day of the murder, Davis returned to Mrs. Alford’s store for the specific purpose of informing law enforcement officers that he had discovered Mrs. Alford’s dead body earlier that day, but overcome with panic had fled. It is clear from the record, and not challenged by Davis, that law enforcement officers did not play any role in Davis’ decision to leave his home and go back to the scene of the crime and that Davis voluntarily initiated contact with law enforcement authorities on July 20, 1978. (Doc. No. 92 at 18.) Moreover, when Davis, accompanied by his mother and wife, approached Sergeant Boggs, Sergeant Boggs did not ask Davis or his mother any questions. Rather, Davis’ mother, and then Davis himself, freely volunteered information. That the facts up to this point are indicative of a non-custodial conversation is not seriously challenged by Davis. Rather, Davis contends that “what may have begun as a consensual inquiry in a public place escalated into a custodial interrogation” once Davis was in the back seat of the patrol car. (Id. at 18-19.)
Davis is correct that the Supreme Court has recognized that the location of the interrogation is one factor in determining whether a suspect is in custody, but Davis has not cited any Supreme Court authority to the effect that “in custody” may be proved solely on the basis of questioning which occurs in a police cruiser. By com
*1208
parison, the Supreme Court has refused to hold that
Miranda
warnings are required “ ‘simply because the questioning takes place in the station house.’ ”
Beheler,
Additionally, once at the unmarked patrol car, the testimony indicates that Sheriff Peters did not direct Davis to sit in the back seat of the patrol ear. Rather, Sheriff Peters testified that Davis sat in the back seat on his own accord, with no prompting from him. There is no evidence that, prior to the issuance of the Miranda warnings, while seated in the back seat, Davis was told that he had to remain in the patrol car and could not leave. Davis also was not informed that he was a suspect or that he was under arrest.
Moreover, there is no evidence that Davis was physically restrained in any manner while seated in the unmarked patrol car. Davis was not handcuffed. Davis was not ensnared in a locked back seat with no way out of the patrol car. The door handle would have provided an escape, and there was no screen barrier between the front and back seats. The patrol vehicle was parked, not moving, and it was parked “right in front of the store,” not in an isolated, inaccessible area. (P4-724, 707);
Cf. U.S. v.
Bordeaux,
Finally, the interview in the patrol car lasted only ten to fifteen minutes. Davis initiated the dialogue, without being questioned, and, thereafter, Sheriff Peters asked Davis only four questions. There is no evidence that Sheriff Peters engaged in any type of coercive, harassing or deceptive tactics in talking with Davis. Weapons were never drawn.
The court finds that the foregoing facts, when judged by the principles espoused by the Supreme Court, are consistent with a determination that Davis was not in custody, i.e., that he could not have reasonably felt that he was restrained in his freedom of movement and was not free to terminate
*1209
the interview and leave.
See Miranda,
As in
Alvarado,
however, the court recognizes that not all of the facts point to a finding that the interview was non-eustodial. Other facts exist which arguably weigh in favor of a finding of custody. Davis was not expressly told that he was free to leave or that he was not a suspect.
See Alvarado,
Davis, however, argues that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals unreasonably failed to consider and give appropriate weight to Davis’ youthful age and the fact that he had no prior criminal background and, thus, no “familiarity with legal procedures.” (Doc. No. 92 at 20-21.) The Supreme Court in
Alvarado
disposed of this argument. In
Alvarado, supra,
the Court rejected the federal court of appeals’ conclusion that the state court had unreasonably applied clearly established law as to the meaning of “custody” because it did not consider the defendant’s age, which was seventeen, and the defendant’s “inexperience with law enforcement,” given the absence of a criminal record.
Id.
at 660, 666,
As to “reliance on [a defendant’s] prior history with law enforcement,” the Court
*1210
went one step farther, concluding that such reliance is “improper not only under the deferential standard of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), but also as a
de novo
matter.”
Id.
The Court acknowledged that “suspects with prior law enforcement experience may understand police procedures and reasonably feel free to leave unless told otherwise.”
Id.
“On the other hand, they may view past as prologue and expect another in a string of arrests.”
Id.
The Court concluded that consideration of a suspect’s familiarity with law enforcement procedures “turns too much on the suspect’s subjective state of mind and not enough on the ‘objective circumstances of the interrogation.’ ”
Id.
at 669,
Accordingly, based upon the principles espoused in Alvarado, the court finds that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision was not objectively unreasonable because it did not factor into its analysis Davis’ age and lack of a criminal record. The court observes that Justice O’Conner’s remarks, quoted in her concurring opinion, are particularly fitting in this case where Davis was seventeen years old, married and accompanied by his wife on the day in question. See id. (noting that age may be relevant to custody inquiry, but not in case of a seventeen-and-a-half year old because it is “difficult to expect police to recognize that a suspect is a juvenile when he is close to the age of majority” and “to ascertain what bearing it has on the likelihood that the suspect could feel free to leave”) (O’Connor, J., concurring).
Davis also argues that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals unreasonably applied the clearly established law established in
Miranda
by relying on the subjective beliefs of Sheriff Peters and Sergeant Boggs. (Doc. No. 95 at 18.) It is true that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals recited both Sergeant Boggs’ and Sheriff Peters’ testimony that they did not initially consider Davis a suspect as a factor in its analysis.
See Davis,
In sum, the court finds that the objective circumstances of Davis’ interview reasonably support a conclusion that Davis was not in custody and that, therefore,
Miranda
warnings were not required.
See Stansbury,
F.
Claim M: Davis’ Fourth Amendment Claim that his Undershorts were “Fruit of the Poisonous Tree” and the State’s Reliance on
Stone v. Powell,
1. Arguments of Counsel
Davis complains that law enforcement seized the undershorts which he was wearing on the day of the murder only “after a series of [three] interrogation techniques that each violated [ ] Davis’ Constitutional rights.” (Doc. No. 92 at 22.) First, he complains that he was questioned in the backseat of a patrol car, in violation of Miranda, a claim which this court addressed and rejected in the previous section of this opinion. (Id.) Second, Davis contends that, after being transported to the police station, he was “formally arrested” without probable cause for the murder of Mrs. Alford. (Id.) Third, Davis states that, at the station house, law enforcement illegally obtained a second statement from Davis, who was not advised by counsel, a statement which ultimately the trial court suppressed as violative of former § 12-15-67 of the Alabama Code. (Id.) Davis argues that his undershorts constituted “fruit” of the foregoing “illegally obtained statements and arrest” and, therefore, were inadmissible at trial, pursuant to the Fourth Amendment. (Id.)
The State, on the other hand, maintains that
Stone v. Powell,
2. State Trial Court Proceedings
In the state trial court in September 1979, approximately nine months prior to his trial, Davis filed a one-paragraph motion to suppress. (P-26 at 1131.) Therein, Davis moved
*1212 to suppress any and all materials seized by the State or its agents pursuant to all search warrants issued in this case and to suppress any and all materials seized by the State, or its agents other than those seized pursuant to the search warrants issued in this case in that, the Defendant states that any and all material seized by the State or its agents were seized against his will and seized illegally and in violation of his constitutional rights under the Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
(Id) The trial court continued the motion for a ruling at trial. (Id) Also, on June 3, 1980, less than a week prior to the trial, Davis filed in the trial court a separate “motion to suppress,” which focused solely on the exclusion of the undershorts. The basis for the latter motion was that Davis was a “juvenile” who was “arrested unlawfully and detained unlawfully in violation of his Constitutional rights and in violation of Alabama law,” and that “the undershorts were seized as a direct result of his unlawful illegal arrest.” (P-26 at 1164.)
On June 9, 1980, the day of the trial but prior to its commencement, the court heard arguments regarding Davis’ motion to suppress the undershorts, and the State stipulated to certain facts. (P-23 at 335-341.) Thereafter, the trial court denied the motion to suppress. (P-23 at 341.) The undershorts, thus, were admitted at trial. (See Vol. V at 791-97.)
It is not disputed that, on direct appeal to the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, Davis did not rely on the Fourth Amendment when presenting his argument that the undershorts should have been suppressed. 31 (Doc. No. 94 at 69); (Doc. No. 95 at 19-20); (P-27 at 70-71 (Davis’ Br. on Direct Appeal).) Instead, Davis rested his theory of suppression on § 12-15-67 of the Code of Alabama. 32 (Doc. No. 94 at 69); (Doc. No. 95 at 19-20.) In its published opinion, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals rejected his argument:
The trial court did not err in admitting into evidence the undershorts taken from the appellant on the night of the murder, after he had been officially arrested for Mrs. Alford’s murder. Appellant’s theory is that his undershorts should have been suppressed as “the fruit” of a statement taken in violation of § 12-15-67. We disagree.
The appellant was originally taken into custody between 6:15 and 6:30 p.m. on the night of the murder. As more and more information was obtained the investigation focused upon the appellant. He was officially arrested for Mrs. Alford’s murder at approximately 9:30 p.m. *1213 The appellant, unadvised by counsel, made a custodial statement at 10:05 p.m. That statement was obtained in violation of § 12-15-67 and was, therefore, suppressed by the trial court. At approximately 11:00 p.m., at the request of the same investigating officer who had earlier taken the inadmissible statement, the appellant voluntarily surrendered the undershorts he was wearing, the same undershorts he was wearing when arrested.
Despite appellant’s arguments to the contrary we are not persuaded that these undershorts were inadmissible. Although the undershorts were obtained after the inadmissible statement was obtained, the record does not confirm appellant’s theory that the undershorts were “the fruit” of that statement. There was evidence that the victim had been sexually attacked. The appellant had previously told the authorities that he had changed clothes after he discovered the victim. The investigators recovered from appellant’s residence the clothes he had removed before returning to the scene of the crime. An inventory revealed a T-shirt and blood splattered blue jeans and jogging shoes, but no undershorts. With this information, after the investigation had focused upon the appellant and he had been legally arrested for Mrs. Alford’s murder, the authorities were justified in obtaining the undershorts which the appellant was wearing at the time of his arrest. Thomas v. State,50 Ala.App. 227 ,278 So.2d 230 (1973); Turk v. State,53 Ala. App. 106 ,298 So.2d 37 (1974); Foy v. State,387 So.2d 321 (Ala.Crim.App. 1980). Whatever information was revealed in the inadmissible statement, there was sufficient independent information to justify the request for appellant’s undershorts.
There is no merit whatsoever in appellant’s argument that he was arrested illegally.
Davis,
Subsequently, Davis filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court of Aabama, seeking review of the Aabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ affirmance of the judgment of the conviction. Davis’ brief in support of his petition set forth numerous issues. One issue, namely “Issue IV,” was addressed to the admission at trial of Davis’ undershorts. Issue IV is titled, “Did the trial judge err to reversal in denying appellant’s motion to suppress the introduction into evidence of the undershorts taken from the appellant?” (P-34A at 24.) Therein, Davis argued as follows: “[T]he introduction of the shorts into evidence was specifically prohibited by the Juvenile Code due to the fact that the investigating officer had just taken a statement from [Davis] (the use of which was also prohibited) and that in said statement, [Davis] was quoted as stating that he had blood on his pants and changed them.” (Id. at 25-26.) Davis continued: “This statement taken in conjunction with the other inadmissible statements made to Ve-ston Peters and Sgt. Boggs obviously gave rise, either directly or indirectly, to the taking of the shorts from [Davis].” (Id. at 25-26.) He concluded: “Hence, this evidence should have been suppressed by the Trial Court. The undershorts were thus ‘fruit of the poisonous tree’ and their introduction into evidence mandates a reversal.” 33 (Id. at 26.)
*1214 On certiorari, the Supreme Court of Alabama affirmed the judgment of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals and summarily rejected Issue TV. After quoting “Issue IV,” among others, the Supreme Court of Alabama ruled as follows:
We have searched the record for any plain error or defect in the proceedings at trial and have reviewed the opinions of the Court of Criminal Appeals as they relate to the issues enumerated above and the opinions of the United States Supreme Court in Baldwin v. Alabama,472 U.S. 372 ,105 S.Ct. 2727 ,86 L.Ed.2d 300 ... (1985); Hopper v. Evans,456 U.S. 605 ,102 S.Ct. 2049 ,72 L.Ed.2d 367 ... (1982); Beck v. Alabama, 447 U.S. 625,100 S.Ct. 2382 ,65 L.Ed.2d 392 ... (1980), on remand,396 So.2d 645 (Ala.1981); and Ritter v. State,403 So.2d 154 (Ala.1981). Having done so, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Criminal Appeals as to issues I through XI and issue XIII, leaving issues XII, XIV, and XV for discussion in this opinion. See Davis v. State,554 So.2d 1094 (Ala. Crim.App.1986).
Ex parte Davis,
Davis then filed an application for rehearing which the Supreme Court of Alabama denied. (P-36). In his brief in support of his application for rehearing, Davis argued that his “undershorts” and other items of physical evidence “were all admitted into evidence against [ ] Davis in violation of his rights under the Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution,” as well as his rights under the Alabama Constitution. (P-36 at 19.) Furthermore, citing
Wong Sun v. United States,
After the Supreme Court of Alabama affirmed Davis’ judgment of conviction (and sentence of death), Davis sought post-conviction relief in state court. The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Davis’ contention “that the State improperly used his undershorts” as evidence at trial because the undershorts “were obtained as a result of an allegedly illegal detention of the appellant.”
Davis,
S. Analysis: Stone v. Powell
The nature of Davis’ claim is that Davis’ undershorts were obtained as a product of an alleged unlawful arrest and illegally-obtained statements and, thus, the undershorts should have been suppressed at trial pursuant to the “fruit of the poisonous
*1215
tree” doctrine of
Wong Sun, supra,
In
Stone,
the Supreme Court held that, if the State “has provided an opportunity for full and fair litigation of a Fourth Amendment claim, a state prisoner may not be granted federal habeas corpus relief on the ground that evidence obtained in an unconstitutional search or seizure was introduced at his trial.”
on its conviction that federal habeas corpus relief based on the application of the exclusionary rule, when the state courts had already afforded the opportunity for full and fair litigation of the issue, would make a minimal contribution to the ef-fectuation of fourth amendment rights compared to the substantial societal costs associated with exclusion of otherwise probative evidence.
In these proceedings, the State has seized on
Stone’s
language that a petitioner need only have an
“opportunity
for full and fair litigation,”
Davis presents a countervailing argument. Davis argues that on direct appeal he “did not receive meaningful appellate review, because the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals ... did not review Mr. Davis’ suppression claim with respect to the Fourth Amendment.” (Doc. No. 92 at *1216 26.) He lodges the same complaint as to the Supreme Court of Alabama’s treatment of his claim on direct appeal, asserting that its decision also was not predicated on Fourth Amendment principles. (Id.) Davis contends that, on direct appeal, these two tribunals “limited their review to whether [] Davis’ undershorts had to be suppressed because of a violation of Ala. Code § 12-15-67 (1975).” (Id. at 27); (Doc. No. 95 at 19.) He, thus, contends that Stone presents no obstacle to this court’s review of his Fourth Amendment claim. For the reasons to follow, the court disagrees with Davis.
Although in
Stone
the Supreme Court provided limited guidance as to the meaning of the phrase, “an opportunity for full and fair litigation,”
If police officers who are conducting a search or making an arrest are aware that the state criminal justice system provides an opportunity for full and fair litigation of fourth amendment suppression claims, the policy underlying the exclusionary rule will be served. That a defendant later at trial might choose not to assert his fourth amendment claim could not remove the system’s deterrence to police misconduct.
Id.
at 1192-93;
see also Smith v. Wainwright,
“where there are facts in dispute, full and fair consideration requires consideration by the fact-finding court, and at least the availability of meaningful appellate review by a higher state court. Where, however, the facts are undisputed, and there is nothing to be served by ordering a new evidentiary hearing, the full and fair consideration requirement is satisfied where the state appellate court, presented with an undisputed factual record, gives full consideration to defendant’s Fourth Amendment claims.”
Furthermore, a corollary principle, which emerged from
Stone,
is that error, if any, in a state court’s Fourth Amendment analysis or ruling does not provide a basis for federal habeas review.
See Gilmore v. Marks,
Here, turning to the litigation of Davis’ Fourth Amendment claim in the state court proceedings, in the state trial court, Davis’ trial counsel filed two motions which urged suppression of the undershorts, and the trial court thereafter held a pretrial hearing on the issue of the admissibility of the undershorts. Davis’ motions, although not detailed in their constitutional analyses, generally referenced the Fourth Amendment as a basis for suppression. Although the trial court ruled against Davis, there is no allegation or argument by Davis that the state trial court denied him an opportunity for presentation of a Fourth Amendment suppression claim. Not only was a corrective process available to Davis to challenge the admission of the undershorts on Fourth Amendment grounds, but it was employed by Davis when he filed his motions to suppress. Thus, Davis does not argue, and for obvious and sound reason, that the state trial court failed to provide him with an “opportunity” to move for the suppression of evidence based on a Fourth Amendment claim.
Additionally, the propriety of the admission at trial of Davis’ undershorts was raised on direct appeal, and the decision of the trial court was affirmed. Davis, however, complains that there was a breakdown in the appellate process on direct appeal, i.e., that he was denied “meaningful appellate review” (Doc. No. 92 at 26), because the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals did not consider Davis’ suppression claim in the context of the Fourth Amendment. (Doc. No. 92 at 26). The court, however, finds that Davis’ argument is unavailing because Davis did not present the issue concerning the suppression of the undershorts as a Fourth Amendment claim on direct appeal to the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, a fact implicitly conceded by Davis. (See Doc. No. 95 at 19.) In other words, the reason that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals did not reference Fourth Amendment principles in its analysis was due to the fact that Davis did not raise a Fourth Amendment issue on direct appeal.
Courts consistently have concluded that a petitioner who, for whatever reason, chooses not to raise a Fourth Amendment issue on appeal has not been deprived of a full and fair opportunity to litigate the claim.
See, e.g., Turentine v. Miller,
Based on the foregoing, the court finds that the fact that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals did not decide Davis’ appeal on Fourth Amendment grounds is insufficient to overcome the
Stone
bar because Davis did not frame his argument before the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals as a Fourth Amendment issue. In order to circumvent the
Stone
holding, Davis must demonstrate that he was denied the
opportunity
to advance the Fourth Amendment claim before the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals. Yet, Davis has not advanced such a contention. He had an opportunity to present his Fourth Amendment issue, and that is all that
Stone
requires.
Caver,
Davis, however, relies on
Agee v. White,
Davis, however, persists in his argument, asserting that on direct appeal he twice presented his Fourth Amendment issue to the Supreme Court of Alabama, once in his petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court of Alabama and again in his petition for rehearing before that court. The court carefully has considered this argument. 37 Stone, admittedly, did not *1219 specify whether a petitioner can forego an opportunity to litigate a Fourth Amendment claim in a lower appellate tribunal in favor of attempting to seize that opportunity in the higher appellate tribunal. The court, however, has not found, and Davis has not cited, any authority to the effect that a breakdown in the state appellate process occurs when a petitioner, who foregoes the first appellate opportunity on direct appeal to present a Fourth Amendment claim, is later denied a review on Fourth Amendment grounds by a higher appellate tribunal.
Based on the facts of this case, the court simply is not persuaded that Davis was denied an opportunity for a full and fair opportunity for review.
38
Cf McPhail v. Warden, Attica Correctional Facility,
In sum, the court finds that Davis has not demonstrated that the state court prevented him from litigating his Fourth Amendment claim. Davis was afforded every full and fair opportunity to litigate and have adjudicated his Fourth Amendment claim; therefore, pursuant to Stone, the court finds that it is barred from considering this claim. 39
*1220 VI. ORDER
Accordingly, for the reasons discussed herein, it is CONSIDERED and ORDERED that Davis’ petition for writ of habeas corpus as to his death sentence be and the same is hereby CONDITIONALLY GRANTED. The court shall issue a writ of habeas corpus unless, within 60 days from the date of this order, unless extended on further order of the court, the State of Alabama VACATES or SETS ASIDE Davis’ sentence of death and imposes a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The State is DIRECTED to notify the court instanter when the appropriate action correcting Davis’ sentence has been taken, and at such time the court will enter a final judgment in this action.
It is further CONSIDERED and ORDERED that Davis’ petition for writ of habeas corpus as to the remaining guilt-phase claims be and the same is hereby DENIED and that said claims are hereby DISMISSED with prejudice.
Notes
. Previously, the court adopted the recommendations of the magistrate judge that certain of Davis' claims are procedurally defaulted. (See Doc. Nos. 49, 60, 81, 87, 88.) As a result, in this opinion, the court does not address the merits of those claims which are procedurally defaulted. As to the issues which have been preserved for merit review and are not moot, the parties agree that an evidentiary hearing is not necessary. (See Doc. Nos. 72, 85.)
. Herein, all cites to document numbers refer to the docket in this federal habeas action.
. Although
Johnson
and
Del Vecchio
are not Supreme Court opinions,
see
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), the opinions nonetheless have assisted the court in deciphering the contours of the holdings of the Supreme Court and determining what constitutes “clearly established Federal law.”
Vick v. Williams,
. Although the actual statistics are not in the record as to the voter or total population of Coosa County during the relevant time period, this court notes that the U.S. Bureau of Census provides that in 1980 the total population of Coosa County was 11,377.
See
Fed. R.Evid. 201;
Knox v. Butler,
. The state court clerk's index recites that the trial court's order is on page 1142. The pages in the court's file, however, are not numbered.
. The Supreme Court of the United States has found presumed prejudice based on pretrial publicity in the following three cases:
Sheppard,
above;
Rideau,
. Indeed, one particular affair was suggested to have been the motive for the murder, but there also was additional coverage devoted to the defendant’s alleged and numerous illicit sexual relationships with other and women.
Sheppard,
. Indeed, the Supreme Court observed that the record contained “five volumes” of newspaper clippings from all three of the Cleveland newspapers during the period from the day of the murder until the defendant was convicted.
Sheppard,
. Davis has not attacked the atmosphere of the trial itself, and the record is devoid of any evidence suggesting that Davis was deprived of the “judicial serenity” to which he was entitled.
Sheppard,
. In other words, prior to June 8, 1980, there was an absence of coverage between September 17, 1979 and June 7, 1980.
. The factual nature of the articles is revealed by the articles’ titles: (1) "Davis Arraignment Slated” (not dated); (2) Friday, April 13, 1979, "Davis Files for 'Youthful' Status”; (3) July 19, 1979, "Davis Venue Hearing Ends”; (4) July 27, 1979, "Davis Found Able for Trial”; (5) August 12, 1979, "Davis to Face Murder Charges as an Adult”; (6) September 16, 1979, "Davis Venue Decision Due”; and (7) June 8, 1980, "Davis Trial Begins Monday.”
. In the next subsection, the court addresses, but rejects, Davis' contention that, notwithstanding the jurors' assertions of neutrality, the voir dire was inadequate to divulge preformed biases, particularly biases arising from the pretrial publicity.
. The court notes that, on. the question of whether pretrial publicity denied Davis a fair trial by a jury free from actual prejudices, the court finds that it is appropriate to consider as a mitigating factor any cautionary instructions given by the state trial court to the jury. Cf. U.S. v. Richmond, 222 F.3d 414, 416 (7th Cir.2000) (holding that trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying motion to continue due to pretrial publicity, in part, because court instructed jury on three separate occasions to consider only evidence presented in the courtroom). In Davis’ case, the state trial court reinforced during its instructions to the jury at the conclusion of the evidence that “[t]he jury should decide th[e] case solely on the evidence presented here in the courtroom.” (P-8 at 1001.) The court further instructed the jury to "completely disregard any press, television, or radio reports which [it] may have read, seen or heard,” stating that "[s]uch reports are not evidence, therefore, you [the jury] should not be influenced in any way or manner whatsoever by such publicity.” {Id.) The court's admonishment to the jury serves to lessen the negative impact, if any, of the pretrial publicity.
. The court notes that of the sixty-two or sixty-three jury members present at roll call for jury selection, the trial court excused six jurors when it generally qualified the jury and then excused two for "cause,” given their ages, leaving fifty-four or fifty-five jurors in the venire pool.
. The court recognizes that there is a distinction between this case and
Mu'Min
in that the trial court in
Mu’Min
segregated the venire into panels of four to make further inquiries as to the jurors’ ability to be impartial. At least one court, however, has recognized that such a distinction is not decisive.
Brown
v.
State,
. These two categories of evidence concern two handwritten notes in the ABI case file which Davis argues demonstrate that Smith initially was a suspect and that Smith changed his testimony regarding the color of Davis' motorcycle helmet.
. The
Bagley
court found the
Strickland
formulation to be “sufficiently flexible to cover the 'no request,' 'general request,’ and 'specific request' cases of prosecutorial failure to disclose evidence favorable to the accused[,]" i.e., the three categories of prosecutorial suppression discussed in
Agurs. Id.
at 682,
. The court has not overlooked the State’s other arguments of non-suppression. The court has considered the State’s contention that there can be no suppression when a defendant has cross-examination available to inquire of a government witness about that witness’ prior convictions. The court, however, has not found any authority, and the State has not cited any, to support its argument. At least one federal circuit court of appeals has refused to excuse the Government of its constitutional
Brady
obligations on the ground asserted by the State that "a defendant who does not have information about a witness’ criminal history may obtain it through the well-honored, traditional non
-Brady
method of simply asking the witness while he is testifying about his criminal history.”
Crivens
v.
Roth, 172
F.3d 991, 997 (7th Cir.1999). The Seventh Circuit observed in part, "[W]e find it entirely possible that [the state’s witness] would not have told the complete truth if asked about his criminal history based on the fact that he had previously lied to police officers and the courts as evidenced by his use of aliases.”
Id.
The court, thus, is not persuaded by this argument. Neither is the court convinced that the fact that Smith's prior
*1196
convictions arguably were "public records” and, thus, accessible to Davis, would excuse the State's failure to turn over the evidence.
Cf. Harbison
v.
Bell,
. The court notes that, pursuant to Alabama’s evidentiary law at the time, the issue of whether Davis would have been allowed to impeach Smith’s credibility based upon the prior convictions would have been a matter vested in the discretion of the trial judge, a decision which would have required consideration of the individual circumstances of the case, one factor being the remoteness of the prior convictions.
See Lanier v. State,
. Sheriff Peters testified that, at approximately 5:40 p.m. on July 20, 1978, he responded to a "call" and proceeded to Alford's Grocery on Fishpond Road. (P-4 at 699.) By approximately 5:50 p.m., he arrived at the store. (Id. at 700.) Sheriff Peters had just appraised the inside of the store when Sgt. Boggs summoned him. (Id.)
. Sheriff Peters also stated that he learned later that another of the individuals present, whom he describes as "a young girl," was Davis' wife. (P-4 at 705.)
. Sergeant Boggs did not accompany the officers and Davis. Rather, he stayed near the road and "tried to keep people from stopping on the road.” (P-4 at 676.)
. On cross-examination, Sheriff Peters was asked twice and twice denied that he “put” Davis in the car, instead stating that Davis "got” into the car. (P-4 at 735.)
. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve the question whether, in federal habe-as corpus proceedings, a state-court "in custody" determination for purposes of
Miranda
is a factual finding entitled to a presumption of correctness or a mixed question of law and fact warranting independent review by the federal habeas court.
See Keohane,
. With that said, however, the court recognizes that the Supreme Court in Stansbury noted in a parenthetical that instances “may arise in which the officer's undisclosed views are relevant in testing the credibility of his or her account of what happened during an interrogation[J” but again the Court emphasized that "it is the objective surroundings, and not any undisclosed views, that control the Miranda custody inquiry.” Id. Here, Sheriff Peters testified as to the facts surrounding his pre-Miranda conversations with Davis on July 20, 1978, emphasizing that Davis initially was not a suspect. Based on Stansbury's parenthetical statement, perhaps the fact that a driver’s license check was requested would bear on Sheriff Peters' credibility, but only if the evidence revealed that Sheriff Peters had knowledge thereof.
. Assuming
arguendo
that only 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2) is applicable, the court would reach the same result because the decision of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals was not based upon an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented to the state court.
See Rice v. Collins,
- U.S. -, -
. The court notes that another point during his testimony, Sheriff Peters also could not ascertain exactly what time it was when Sergeant Boggs summoned him to talk with Davis and his mother, stating that it was 6:00 p.m., "maybe” 6:15 p.m. or "something like that." (P-4 at 704.)
. In his brief, Davis asserts that testimony elicited from Sheriff Peters from a pretrial hearing which took place five days after the crime ‘‘demonstrates that the police took Mr. Davis to the police car.” (Doc. No. 95 at 16.) The court, however, finds that one must draw inferences which stretch the testimony beyond permissible parameters in order to reach Davis’ conclusion that Davis essentially was in custody when he accompanied the officers to the patrol car. Accordingly, to the extent that Davis has challenged as unreasonable the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals' factual determination that Davis was not in custody when the officers "took [Davis] to a nearby patrol car”
Davis,
. Davis cites
United States v. Mendenhall,
. The court notes that the absence of citation to U.S. Supreme Court precedent by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals does not alter this court's findings.
See Davis,
. In his brief on direct appeal, Davis confined his argument to the following:
Section 12-15-67 of the Code of Alabama, 1975, prohibits the use of the statements of a child or other information or evidence derived directly or indirectly from such statements made while in custody to police or law enforcement officers. The Appellant respectfully submits that the introduction of the shorts into evidence was specifically prohibited by the Juvenile Code due to the fact that the investigating officer had just taken a statement from the Appellant (the use of which was also prohibited) and that in said statement, the Appellant was quoted as stating that he had blood on his pants
and changed them. This statement taken in conjunction with the other inadmissible statements made to Veston Peters and Sgt. Boggs obviously gave rise, either directly or indirectly, to the taking of the shorts from the Appellant.
(P-27 at 71.)
. Section 12-15-67 of the Code of Alabama, 1975, now repealed but in effect at the time of these proceedings, automatically prohibited the use of statements and evidence obtained by law enforcement from a juvenile without advise of counsel while in custody. (See P-34A at 25.)
. By way of comparison, the court notes that Davis' argument in his brief filed in support of his petition for writ of certiorari differs only in one respect from the argument Davis presented to the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals on direct appeal, see supra footnote 31. Namely, on certiorari, Davis added the *1214 "fruit of the poisonous tree” language, cited above, but included no citation of authority.
. The court notes that the Supreme Court of Alabama’s citations to Supreme Court cases, i.e., Baldwin and Beck, pertain to issues surrounding the constitutionality of a sentence of death, not Fourth Amendment issues.
. The Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule, a judicially-created doctrine, precludes the use at trial, not only of evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment, but also "fruit of the poisonous tree” evidence "derived from the illegally seized evidence itself.”
U.S.
v.
Houltin,
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
the Eleventh Circuit adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit issued prior to October 1, 1981.
See
. It is noteworthy that Davis, at most, only indirectly presented a Fourth Amendment
*1219
claim in his petition for writ of certiorari on direct appeal. Davis argues, that, although he did not cite the Fourth Amendment in his discussion of this issue or cite any Supreme Court precedent, his use of the phrase "the fruit of the poisonous tree” constitutes "widely recognized language from
Wong Sun v. United States,
. The court notes that, even if the Supreme Court of Alabama erroneously decided on rehearing that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals already had adjudicated a Fourth Amendment claim, that fact would have no consequence as to the applicability of
Stone. See Christian v. McKaskle,
. The court notes, that if the court was faced with the task of resolving the Fourth Amendment issues, 28 XJ.S.C. § 2254(d) would bar relief as well. Although, on direct appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals did not expressly discuss the Fourth Amendment, it devoted considerable attention to Davis’ argument that the suppression of his undershorts constituted "the fruit” of an illegally-obtained statement.
Davis,
