NOTICE: This opinion is subject to
formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the
United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington,
D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in
order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print
goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 13–1428
_________________
RON DAVIS, ACTING WARDEN, PETITIONER
v.
HECTOR AYALA
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 18, 2015]
Justice Alito delivered the opinion of the
Court.
A quarter-century after a California jury
convicted Hector Ayala of triple murder and sentenced him to death,
the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit granted Ayala’s
application for a writ of habeas corpus and ordered the State to
retry or release him. The Ninth Circuit’s decision was based on the
procedure used by the trial judge in ruling on Ayala’s objections
under
Batson v.
Kentucky, 476 U. S. 79 (1986) ,
to some of the prosecution’s peremptory challenges of prospective
jurors. The trial judge allowed the prosecutor to explain the basis
for those strikes outside the presence of the defense so as not to
disclose trial strategy. On direct appeal, the California Supreme
Court found that if this procedure violated any federal
constitutional right, the error was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt. The Ninth Circuit, however, held that the error was
harmful.
The Ninth Circuit’s decision was based on the
misapplication of basic rules regarding harmless error. Assuming
without deciding that a federal constitutional error occurred, the
error was harmless under
Brecht v.
Abrahamson, 507
U. S. 619 (1993) , and the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), 28 U. S. C. §2254(d).
I
A
Ayala’s conviction resulted from the attempted
robbery of an automobile body shop in San Diego, California, in
April 1985. The prosecution charged Ayala with three counts of
murder, one count of attempted murder, one count of robbery, and
three counts of attempted robbery. The prosecution also announced
that it would seek the death penalty on the murder counts.
Jury selection lasted more than three months,
and during this time the court and the parties interviewed the
prospective jurors and then called back a subset for general
voir dire. As part of the jury selection process, more
than 200 potential jurors completed a 77-question, 17-page
questionnaire. Potential jurors were then questioned in court
regarding their ability to follow the law. Jurors who were not
dismissed for cause were called back in groups for
voir dire, and the parties exercised their peremptory
challenges.
Each side was allowed 20 peremptories, and the
prosecution used 18 of its allotment. It used seven peremptories to
strike all of the African-Americans and Hispanics who were
available for service. Ayala, who is Hispanic, raised
Batson
objections to those challenges.
Ayala first objected after the prosecution
peremptorily challenged two African-Americans, Olanders D. and
Galileo S. The trial judge stated that these two strikes failed to
establish a prima facie case of racial discrimination, but he
nevertheless required the prosecution to reveal the reasons for the
strikes. The prosecutor asked to do this outside the presence of
the defense so as not to disclose trial strategy, and over Ayala’s
objection, the judgegranted the request. The prosecution then
offered several reasons for striking Olanders D., including
uncertainty about his willingness to impose the death penalty. The
prosecution stated that it dismissed Galileo S. primarily because
he had been arrested numerous times and had not informed the court
about all his prior arrests. After hearing and evaluating these
explanations, the judge concluded that the prosecution had valid,
race-neutral reasons for these strikes.
Ayala again raised
Batson objections when
the prosecution used peremptory challenges to dismiss two
Hispanics, Gerardo O. and Luis M. As before, the judge found that
the defense had not made out a prima facie case, but ordered the
prosecution to reveal the reasons for the strikes. This was again
done
ex parte, but this time the defense did not
expressly object. The prosecution explained that it had challenged
Gerardo O. and Luis M. in part because it was unsure that they
could impose the death penalty. The prosecution also emphasized
that Gerardo O.’s English proficiency was limited and that Luis M.
had independently investigated the case. The trial court concluded
a second time that the prosecution had legitimate race-neutral
reasons for the strikes.
Ayala raised
Batson objections for a
third and final time when the prosecution challenged Robert M., who
was Hispanic; George S., whose ethnicity was disputed; and Barbara
S., who was African-American. At this point, the trial court agreed
that Ayala had made a prima facie
Batson showing. Ayala’s
counsel argued that the strikes were in fact based on race. Ayala’s
counsel contended that the challenged jurors were “not
significantly different from the white jurors that the prosecution
ha[d] chosen to leave on the jury both in terms of their attitudes
on the death penalty, their attitudes on the criminal justice
system, and their attitudes on the presumption of innocence.” App.
306. Ayala’s counsel then reviewed the questionnaire answers and
voir dire testimony of Barbara S. and Robert M., as
well as the statements made by three of the prospective jurors who
had been the subject of the prior
Batson objections, Galileo
S., Gerardo O., and Luis M. Counsel argued that their answers
showed that they could impose the death penalty. The trial court
stated that it would hear the prosecution’s response outside the
presence of the jury, and Ayala once more did not object to that
ruling. The prosecution then explained that it had dismissed the
prospective jurors in question for several race-neutral reasons,
including uncertainty that Robert M., George S., or Barbara S.
would be open to imposing the death penalty. The prosecution also
emphasized (among other points) that Robert M. had followed a
controversial trial, that George S. had been a holdout on a prior
jury, and that Barbara S. had given the impression during
voir dire that she was under the influence of drugs.
The trial court concluded, for a third time, that the prosecution’s
peremptory challenges were based on race-neutral criteria.
In August 1989, the jury convicted Ayala of all
the charges except one of the three attempted robberies. With
respect to the three murder convictions, the jury found two special
circumstances: Ayala committed multiple murders, and he killed
during the course of an attempted robbery. The jury returned a
verdict of death on all three murder counts, and the trial court
entered judgment consistent with that verdict.
B
Ayala appealed his conviction and sentence,
and counsel was appointed to represent him in January 1993. Between
1993 and 1999, Ayala filed 20 applications for an extension of
time, 11 of which requested additional time to file his opening
brief. After the California Supreme Court eventually ruled that no
further extensions would be granted, Ayala filed his opening brief
in April 1998, nine years after he was convicted. The State filed
its brief in September 1998, and Ayala then asked for four
extensions of time to file his reply brief. After the court
declared that it would grant him no further extensions, he filed
his reply brief in May 1999.
In August 2000, the California Supreme Court
affirmed Ayala’s conviction and death sentence.
People v.
Ayala, 24 Cal. 4th 243, 6 P. 3d 193. In an opinion
joined by five justices, the State Supreme Court rejected Ayala’s
contention that the trial court committed reversible error by
excluding the defense from part of the
Batson hearing. The
court understood Ayala to challenge the peremptory strikes under
both
Batson and its state-law analogue,
People v.
Wheeler, 22 Cal. 3d 258, 583 P. 2d 748 (1978). The
court first concluded that the prosecution had not offered matters
of trial strategy at the
ex parte hearing and that, “as a
matter of state law, it was [error]” to bar Ayala’s attorney from
the hearing. 24 Cal. 4th, at 262, 6 P. 3d, at 203.
Turning to the question of prejudice, the court
stated:
“We have concluded that error occurred
under state law, and we have noted [the suggestion in
United
States v.
Thompson, 827 F. 2d 1254 (CA9 1987),]
that excluding the defense from a
Wheeler-type hearing may
amount to a denial of due process. We nonetheless conclude that the
error was harmless under state law (
People v.
Watson
(1956) 46 Cal.2d 818, 836), and that, if federal error occurred,
it, too, was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt (
Chapman v.
California (1967) 386 U. S. 18 ) as a matter of federal
law. On the record before us, we are confident that the challenged
jurors were excluded for proper, race-neutral reasons.”
Id.,
at 264, 6 P. 3d, at 204.
The court then reviewed the prosecution’s
reasons for striking the seven prospective jurors and found that
“[o]n this well-developed record, . . . we are confident
that defense counsel could not have argued anything substantial
that would have changed the court’s rulings. Accordingly, the error
was harmless.”
Id., at 268, 6 P. 3d, at 207. The court
concluded that the record supported the trial judge’s implicit
determination that the prosecution’s justifications were not
fabricated and were instead “grounded in fact.”
Id., at 267,
6 P. 3d, at 206. And the court emphasized that the “trial
court’s rulings in the ex parte hearing indisputably reflect
both its familiarity with the record of voir dire of the
challenged prospective jurors and its critical assessment of the
prosecutor’s proffered justifications.”
Id., at 266–267, 6
P. 3d, at 206.
The California Supreme Court also rejected
Ayala’s argument that his conviction should be vacated because most
of the questionnaires filled out by prospective jurors who did not
serve had been lost at some point during the decade that had passed
since the end of the trial. The court wrote that “the record is
sufficiently complete for us to be able to conclude that [the
prospective jurors who were the subject of the contested
peremptories] were not challenged and excused on the basis of
forbidden group bias.”
Id., at 270, 6 P. 3d, at 208.
And even if the loss of the questionnaires was error under federal
or state law, the court held, the error was harmless under
Chapman and its state-law analogue. Two justices of the
State Supreme Court dissented. We then denied certiorari. 532
U. S. 1029 (2001) .
C
After the California Supreme Court summarily
denied a habeas petition, Ayala turned to federal court. He filed
his initial federal habeas petition in 2002, but then went back to
state court to exhaust several claims. In December 2004, he filed
the operative federal petition and argued, among other things, that
the
ex parte hearings and loss of the questionnaires
violated his rights under the Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth
Amendments.
In 2006, the District Court denied Ayala relief
on those claims. The District Court read the decision of the
California Supreme Court to mean that the state court had not
decided whether the
ex parte proceedings violated
federal law, and the District Court expressed doubt “whether the
trial court’s procedure was constitutionally defective as a matter
of clearly established Federal law.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 145a.
But even if such a violation occurred, the District Court held, the
state court’s finding of harmlessness was not contrary to or an
unreasonable application of clearly established law and thus could
not be overturned under AEDPA. The District Court also rejected
Ayala’s argument about the lost questionnaires, concluding that,
even without them, the record was sufficient to resolve Ayala’s
other claims.
In 2013, a divided panel of the Ninth Circuit
granted Ayala federal habeas corpus relief and required California
either to release or retry him.
Ayala v.
Wong, 756
F. 3d 656 (2014). Because Ayala’s federal petition is subject
to the requirements of AEDPA, the panel majority began its analysis
by inquiring whether the state court had adjudicated Ayala’s claims
on the merits. Applying
de novo review,[
1] the panel held that the
ex parte
proceedings violated the Federal Constitution, and that the loss of
the questionnaires violated Ayala’s federal due process rights if
that loss deprived him of “the ability to meaningfully appeal the
denial of his
Batson claim.”
Id., at 671. The
panel folded this inquiry into its analysis of
the question whether the error regarding the
ex parte
proceedings was harmless.
Turning to the question of harmlessness, the
panel identified the applicable standard of review as that set out
in
Brecht and added: “We apply the
Brecht test
without regard for the state court’s harmlessness determination.”
756 F. 3d, at 674 (internal quotation marks omitted).[
2] The panel used the following
complicated formulation to express its understanding of
Brecht’s application to Ayala’s claims: “If we cannot say
that the exclusion of defense counsel with or without the loss of
the questionnaires likely did not prevent Ayala from prevailing on
his
Batson claim, then we must grant the writ.” 756
F. 3d, at 676. Applying this test, the panel majority found
that the error was not harmless, at least with respect to three of
the seven prospective jurors. The panel asserted that the absence
of Ayala and his counsel had interfered with the trial court’s
ability to evaluate the prosecution’s proffered justifications for
those strikes and had impeded appellate review, and that the loss
of the questionnaires had compounded this impairment.
Judge Callahan dissented. She explained that the
California Supreme Court’s decision that any federal error was
harmless constituted a merits adjudication of Ayala’s federal
claims. She then reviewed the prosecution’s explanations for its
contested peremptory challenges and concluded that federal habeas
relief was barred because “fairminded jurists can concur in the
California Supreme Court’s determination of harmless error.”
Id., at 706.
The Ninth Circuit denied rehearing en banc, but
Judge Ikuta wrote a dissent from denial that was joined by seven
other judges. Like Judge Callahan, Judge Ikuta concluded that the
California Supreme Court adjudicated the merits of Ayala’s federal
claims. Instead of the panel’s “de novo review of the record
that piles speculation upon speculation,” she would have found that
the state court’s harmlessness determination was not an
unreasonable application of
Chapman. 756 F. 3d, at
723.
We granted certiorari. 574 U. S. ___
(2014).
II
Ayala contends that his federal constitutional
rights were violated when the trial court heard the prosecution’s
justifications for its strikes outside the presence of the defense,
but we find it unnecessary to decide that question. We assume for
the sake of argument that Ayala’s federal rights were violated, but
that does not necessarily mean that he is entitled to habeas
relief. In the absence of “the rare type of error” that requires
automatic reversal, relief is appropriate only if the prosecution
cannot demonstrate harmlessness.
Glebe v.
Frost, 574
U. S. ___, ___ (2014) (
per curiam) (slip op., at 3).
The Ninth Circuit did not hold—and Ayala does not now contend—that
the error here falls into that narrow category, and therefore Ayala
is entitled to relief only if the error was not harmless.
The test for whether a federal constitutional
error was harmless depends on the procedural posture of the case.
On direct appeal, the harmlessness standard is the one prescribed
in
Chapman, 386 U. S. 18 : “[B]efore a federal
constitutional error can be held harmless, the court must be able
to declare a belief that it was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt.”
Id., at 24.
In a collateral proceeding, the test is
different. For reasons of finality, comity, and federalism, habeas
petitioners “are not entitled to habeas relief based on trial error
unless they can establish that it resulted in ‘actual
prejudice.’ ”
Brecht, 507 U. S., at 637 (quoting
United States v.
Lane, 474 U. S. 438, 449 (1986)
). Under this test, relief is proper only if the federal court has
“grave doubt about whether a trial error of federal law had
‘substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the
jury’s verdict.’ ”
O’Neal v.
McAninch, 513
U. S. 432, 436 (1995) . There must be more than a “reasonable
possibility” that the error was harmful.
Brecht,
supra, at 637 (internal quotation marks omitted). The
Brecht standard reflects the view that a “State is not to be
put to th[e] arduous task [of retrying a defendant] based on mere
speculation that the defendant was prejudiced by trial error; the
court must find that the defendant was actually prejudiced by the
error.”
Calderon v.
Coleman, 525 U. S. 141, 146
(1998) (
per curiam).
Because Ayala seeks federal habeas corpus
relief, he must meet the
Brecht standard, but that does not
mean, as the Ninth Circuit thought, that a state court’s
harmlessness determination has no significance under
Brecht.
In
Fry v.
Pliler, 551 U. S. 112, 120 (2007) , we
held that the
Brecht standard “subsumes” the requirements
that §2254(d) imposes when a federal habeas petitioner contests a
state court’s determination that a constitutional error was
harmless under
Chapman. The
Fry Court did not
hold—and would have had no possible basis for holding—that
Brecht somehow abrogates the limitation on federal habeas
relief that §2254(d) plainly sets out. While a federal habeas court
need not “formal[ly]” apply both
Brecht and
“AEDPA/
Chapman,” AEDPA nevertheless “sets forth a
precondition to the grant of habeas relief.”
Fry,
supra, at 119–120.
Under AEDPA, 28 U. S. C. §2254(d):
“An application for a writ of habeas
corpus on behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of
a State court shall not be granted with respect to any claim that
was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings unless the
adjudication of the claim—
“(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.”
Section 2254(d) thus demands an inquiry into
whether a prisoner’s “claim” has been “adjudicated on the merits”
in state court; if it has, AEDPA’s highly deferential standards
kick in.
Harrington v.
Richter, 562 U. S. 86,
103 (2011) .
At issue here is Ayala’s claim that the
ex parte portion of the
Batson hearings violated
the Federal Constitution. There is no dispute that the California
Supreme Court held that any federal error was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt under
Chapman, and this decision
undoubtedly constitutes an adjudication of Ayala’s constitutional
claim “on the merits.” See,
e.g., Mitchell v.
Esparza, 540 U. S. 12 –18 (2003) (
per curiam).
Accordingly, a federal habeas court cannot grant Ayala relief
unless the state court’s rejection of his claim (1) was contrary to
or involved an unreasonable application of clearly established
federal law, or (2) was based on an unreasonable determination of
the facts. Because the highly deferential AEDPA standard applies,
we may not overturn the California Supreme Court’s decision unless
that court applied
Chapman “in an ‘objectively unreasonable’
manner.”
Id., at 18 (quoting
Lockyer v.
Andrade, 538 U. S. 63, 75 (2003) ). When a
Chapman decision is reviewed under AEDPA, “a federal court
may not award habeas relief under §2254 unless
the harmlessness
determination itself was unreasonable.”
Fry,
supra, at 119 (emphasis in original). And a state-court
decision is not unreasonable if “ ‘fairminded jurists could
disagree’ on [its] correctness.”
Richter,
supra, at
101 (quoting
Yarborough v.
Alvarado, 541 U. S.
652, 664 (2004) ). Ayala therefore must show that the state court’s
decision to reject his claim “was so lacking in justification that
there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law
beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.” 562
U. S., at 103.
In sum, a prisoner who seeks federal habeas
corpus relief must satisfy
Brecht, and if the state court
adjudi-cated his claim on the merits, the
Brecht test
subsumes the limitations imposed by AEDPA.
Fry,
supra, at 119–120.
III
With this background in mind, we turn to the
question whether Ayala was harmed by the trial court’s decision to
receive the prosecution’s explanation for its challenged strikes
without the defense present. In order for this argument to succeed,
Ayala must show that he was actually prejudiced by this procedure,
a standard that he neces-sarily cannot satisfy if a fairminded
jurist could agree with the California Supreme Court’s decision
that this procedure met the
Chapman standard of
harmlessness. Evaluation of these questions requires consideration
of the trial court’s grounds for rejecting Ayala’s
Batson
challenges.
A
Batson held that the Equal Protection
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits prosecutors from
exercising peremptory challenges on the basis of race. 476
U. S., at 89. When adjudicating a
Batson claim, trial
courts follow a three-step process:
“First, a defendant must make a prima
facie showing that a peremptory challenge has been exercised on the
basis of race; second, if that showing has been made, the
prosecution must offer a race-neutral basis for striking the juror
in question; and third, in light of the parties’ submissions, the
trial court must determine whether the defendant has shown
purposeful discrimination.”
Snyder v.
Louisiana, 552
U. S. 472 –477 (2008) (internal quotation marks and
alterations omitted).
The opponent of the strike bears the burden of
persuasion regarding racial motivation,
Purkett v.
Elem, 514 U. S. 765, 768 (1995) (
per curiam),
and a trial court finding regarding the credibility of an
attorney’s explanation of the ground for a peremptory challenge is
“entitled to ‘great deference,’ ”
Felkner v.
Jackson, 562 U. S. 594, 598 (2011) (
per curiam)
(quoting
Batson, 476 U. S., at 98, n. 21). On direct
appeal, those findings may be reversed only if the trial judge is
shown to have committed clear error.
Rice v.
Collins,
546 U. S. 333, 338 (2006) . Under AEDPA, even more must be
shown. A federal habeas court must accept a state-court finding
unless it was based on “an unreasonable determination of the facts
in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.”
§2254(d)(2). “State-court factual findings, moreover, are presumed
correct; the petitioner has the burden of rebutting the presumption
by ‘clear and convincing evidence.’ ”
Collins,
supra, at 338–339 (quoting §2254(e)(1)).
In this case, Ayala challenged seven of the
prosecution’s peremptory challenges. As explained above, the Ninth
Circuit granted relief based on the dismissal of three potential
jurors. The dissent discusses only one, Olanders D. We will devote
most of our analysis to the three individuals discussed by the
Ninth Circuit, but we hold that any error was harmless with respect
to all seven strikes.
B
1
Ayala first contests the prosecution’s
decision to challenge Olanders D., an African-American man. The
prosecution stated that its “primary” reason for striking Olanders
D. was uncertainty about whether he could impose the death penalty,
and the prosecutor noted that Olanders D. had written on his
questionnaire that he did not “believe in the death penalty.” 50
Reporter’s Tr. on Appeal 6185 (hereinafter Tr.). Providing
additional reasons for this strike, the prosecutor first stated
that Olanders D.’s responses “did not make a lot of sense,” “were
not thought out,” and “demonstrate[d] a lack of ability to express
himself well.” App. 283. The prosecutor also voiced doubt that
Olanders D. “could actively participate in a meaningful way in
deliberations with other jurors” and might have lacked the “ability
to fit in with a cohesive group of 12 people.”
Ibid.
The trial court concluded that the strike was
race-neutral. The judge stated: “Certainly with reference to
whether or not he would get along with 12 people, it may well be
that he would get along very well with 12 people. I think the other
observations of counsel are accurate and borne out by the record.”
50 Tr. 6186. The California Supreme Court found that the evidence
of Olanders D.’s views on the death penalty provided adequate
support for the trial judge’s finding that the strike exercised
against him was not based on race, and the court further found that
defense counsel’s presence would not have affected the outcome of
the
Batson hearing. The Ninth Circuit reversed, but its
decision rested on a misapplication of the applicable
harmless-error standards.
2
As the trial court and the State Supreme Court
found, Olanders D.’s
voir dire responses amply support
the prosecution’s concern that he might not have been willing to
impose the death penalty. During
voir dire, Olanders D.
acknowledged that he wrote on his questionnaire, “ ‘I don’t
believe in the death penalty,’ ” App. 179, and he agreed that
he had at one time “thought that [the death penalty] was completely
wrong,”
id., at 177. Although he stated during the
voir dire that he had reconsidered his views, it was
reasonable for the prosecution and the trial court to find that he
did not clearly or adequately explain the reason or reasons for
this change. When asked about this, Olanders D. gave a vague and
rambling reply: “Well, I think it’s—one thing would be the—the—I
mean, examining it more closely, I think, and becoming more
familiar with the laws and the—and the behavior, I mean, the change
in the people, I think. All of those things contributed to the
changes.”
Id., at 178.
The Ninth Circuit reversed because it speculated
that defense counsel, if present when the prosecution explained the
basis for this strike, “could have pointed to seated white jurors
who had expressed similar or greater hesitancy” in imposing the
death penalty. 756 F. 3d, at 678. The Ninth Circuit wrote that
a seated white juror named Ana L. was “indistinguishable from
Olanders D. in this regard” and that she had “made almost precisely
the same statement in her questionnaire.”
Ibid.
The responses of Olanders D. and Ana L.,
however, were by no means “indistinguishable.” Olanders D.
initially voiced unequivocal opposition to the death penalty,
stating flatly: “I don’t believe in the death penalty.” He also
revealed that he had once thought it was “completely wrong.” Ana
L., by contrast, wrote on the questionnaire that she
“
probably would not be able to vote for the death penalty,”
App. 109 (emphasis added), and she then later said at
voir dire that she could vote for a verdict of
death.
In a capital case, it is not surprising for
prospective jurors to express varying degrees of hesitancy about
voting for a death verdict. Few are likely to have experienced a
need to make a comparable decision at any prior time in their
lives. As a result, both the prosecution and the defense may be
required to make fine judgment calls about which jurors are more or
less willing to vote for the ultimate punishment. These judgment
calls may involve a comparison of responses that differ in only
nuanced respects, as well as a sensitive assessment of jurors’
demeanor. We have previously recognized that peremptory challenges
“are often the subjects of instinct,”
Miller-El v.
Dretke, 545 U. S. 231, 252 (2005) (citing
Batson, 476 U. S., at 106 (Marshall, J., concurring)),
and that “race-neutral reasons for peremptory challenges often
invoke a juror’s demeanor,”
Snyder, 552 U. S., at 477.
A trial court is best situated to evaluate both the words and the
demeanor of jurors who are peremptorily challenged, as well as the
credibility of the prosecutor who exercised those strikes. As we
have said, “these determinations of credibility and demeanor lie
peculiarly within a trial judge’s province,” and “in the absence of
exceptional circumstances, we [will] defer to the trial court.”
Ibid. (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted).
“Appellate judges cannot on the basis of a cold record easily
second-guess a trial judge’s decision about likely motivation.”
Collins, 546 U. S., at 343 (Breyer, J.,
concurring).
The upshot is that even if “[r]easonable minds
reviewing the record might disagree about the prosecutor’s
credibility, . . . on habeas review that does not suffice
to supersede the trial court’s credibility determination.”
Id., at 341–342 (majority opinion). Here, any similarity
between the responses of Olanders D. and Ana L. is insufficient to
compel an inference of racial discrimination under
Brecht or
AEDPA.
Ayala contends that the presence of defense
counsel might have made a difference because defense counsel might
have been able to identify white jurors who were not stricken by
the prosecution even though they had “expressed similar or greater
hesitancy” about the death penalty. We see no basis for this
argument. The questionnaires of all the jurors who sat and all the
alternates are in the record, and Ana L., whom we just discussed,
is apparently the white juror whose answers come the closest to
those of Olanders D. Since neither Ayala nor the Ninth Circuit
identified a white juror whose statements better support their
argument, there is no reason to think that defense counsel could
have pointed to a superior comparator at the
ex parte
proceeding.
3
In rejecting the argument that the prosecutor
peremptorily challenged Olanders D. because of his race, the
California Supreme Court appears to have interpreted the
prosecutor’s explanation of this strike to mean that Olanders D.’s
views on the death penalty were alone sufficient to convince him to
exercise a strike, see 24 Cal. 4th, at 266, 6 P. 3d, at 206,
and this was certainly an interpretation of the record that must be
sustained under 28 U. S. C. §2254(d)(2). As a result, it
is not necessary for us to consider the prosecutor’s supplementary
reason for this strike—the poor quality of Olanders D.’s
responses—but in any event, the Ninth Circuit’s evaluation of this
reason is also flawed.
The Ninth Circuit wrote that its independent
“review of the voir dire transcript reveal[ed] nothing that
supports the prosecution’s claim: Olanders D.’s answers were
responsive and complete.” 756 F. 3d, at 679. The record,
however, provides sufficient support for the trial court’s
determination. Olanders D.’s incoherent explanation during
voir dire of the reasons for his change of opinion
about the death penalty was quoted above. He also provided a
chronology of the evolution of his views on the subject that did
not hold together. He stated that he had been “completely against
the death sentence” 10 years earlier but seemed to suggest that his
views had changed over the course of the intervening decade. See
App. 176–177. However, on the questionnaire, which he had completed
just a month before the
voir dire, he wrote
unequivocally: “I don’t believe in the death penalty.”
Id.,
at 179. And then, at the time of the
voir dire, he said
that he would be willing to impose the death penalty in some cases.
Id., at 180. He explained his answer on the questionnaire as
follows: “I answered that kind of fast[.] [N]ormally, I wouldn’t
answer that question that way, but I mean, I really went through
that kind of fast. I should have done better than that.”
Id., at 179–180. These answers during
voir dire
provide more than sufficient support for the prosecutor’s
observation, which the trial court implicitly credited, that
Olanders D.’s statements “did not make a lot of sense,” “were not
thought out,” and “demonstrate[d] a lack of ability to express
himself well.”
In ordering federal habeas relief based on their
assessment of the responsiveness and completeness of Olanders D.’s
answers, the members of the panel majority misunderstood the role
of a federal court in a habeas case. The role of a federal habeas
court is to “ ‘guard against extreme malfunctions in the state
criminal justice systems,’ ”
Richter, 562 U. S.,
at 102–103 (quoting
Jackson v.
Virginia, 443
U. S. 307 , n. 5 (1979) (Stevens, J., concurring in
judgment)), not to apply
de novo review of factual
findings and to substitute its own opinions for the determination
made on the scene by the trial judge.
C
Ayala next challenges the prosecution’s use of
a peremptory challenge to strike Gerardo O., a Hispanic man. The
prosecution offered three reasons for this strike: Gerardo O. had a
poor grasp of English; his answers during
voir dire and
on his questionnaire suggested that he might not be willing to
impose the death penalty; and he did not appear to get along with
the other prospective jurors. The trial judge accepted this
explanation, as did the State Supreme Court.
The Ninth Circuit, however, rejected the state
courts’ determinations based on speculation that defense counsel,
if present at the
in camera hearing, “likely could have
called into question all of the prosecution’s stated reasons for
striking Gerardo O.” 756 F. 3d, at 680. The Ninth Circuit
thought that it could grant Ayala relief simply because it “[could
not] say that Ayala would not have shown that the trial court would
or should have determined that the prosecution’s strike of Gerardo
O. violated
Batson.”
Id., at 682. But that is not the
test. The inquiry under
Brecht is not whether the federal
habeas court could definitively say that there were no winning
arguments that the defense could have made. Instead, the evidence
in the record must raise “grave doubt[s]” about whether the trial
judge would have ruled differently.
O’Neal, 513 U. S.,
at 436. This requires much more than a “reasonable possibility”
that the result of the hearing would have been different.
Brecht, 507 U. S., at 637 (internal quotation marks
omitted). And on the record in this case, Ayala cannot establish
actual prejudice or that no fairminded jurist could agree with the
state court’s application of
Chapman.
We begin with the prosecution’s explanation that
it challenged Gerardo O. because of his limited English
proficiency. During
voir dire, Gerardo O. acknowledged
that someone else had written the answers for him onhis
questionnaire “[b]ecause I couldn’t—I cannot read—I cannot spell
that well.” App. 163. He added that he “didn’t get” some of the
words on the questionnaire.
Ibid. Gerardo O.’s testimony
also revealed that he might well have been unable to follow what
was said at trial. When asked whether he could understand spoken
English, he responded: “It depends if you make long words. If you
make—if you go—if you say it straight out, then I might understand.
If you beat around the bush, I won’t.”
Id., at 166. At that
point, defense counsel and Gerardo O. engaged in a colloquy that
suggests that defense counsel recognized that he lacked the ability
to understand words not used in basic everyday speech, “legal
words,” and rapid speech in English:
“Q: I’ll try not to talk—use any legal words or
lawyer talk—
“A: Okay.
“Q: —and talk regular with you. If you don’t
understand anything I say, stop me and tell me, okay?
“A: Okay.
“Q: If you’re selected as a juror during the
trial, and you know you’re serving as a juror and listening to
witnesses, can we have your promise that if a witness uses a word
you don’t understand, you’ll put your hand up and let us know?
“A: Yeah.
. . . . .
“Q: There’s one more problem that you’re
going to have with me, and that is that sometimes . . . I
talk real fast . . . .”
Id., at 166–167.
It is understandable for a prosecutor to strike
a potential juror who might have difficulty understanding
English.[
3] The jurors who were
ultimately selected heard many days of testimony, and the
instructions at both the guilt and the penalty phases included
“legal words” and words not common in everyday speech. The
prosecution had an obvious reason to worry that service on this
jury would have strained Gerardo O.’s linguistic capability.
The Ninth Circuit reached a contrary conclusion
by distorting the record and the applicable law. The Ninth Circuit
first suggested that Gerardo O.’s English-language deficiencies
were limited to reading and writing, 756 F. 3d, at 680, but as
the portions of the
voir dire quoted above make clear,
that was not true; the record shows that his ability to understand
spoken English was also limited. The Ninth Circuit then suggested
that “[t]he prosecution’s purported reason for striking Gerardo O.
. . . was directly related to his status as someone who
spoke Spanish as his first language,”
ibid., but the
prosecutor voiced no concern about Gerardo O.’s ability to speak
Spanish or about the fact that Spanish was his first language. The
prosecution’s objection concerned Gerardo O.’s limited proficiency
in
English. The Ninth Circuit quoted the following statement
from
Hernandez v.
New York, 500 U. S. 352, 363
(1991) (plurality opinion): “ ‘[T]he prosecutor’s frank
admission that his ground for excusing th[is] juror[ ] related
to [his] ability to speak and understand Spanish raised a
plausible, though not a necessary, inference that language might be
a pretext for what in fact [was a] race-based peremptory
challenge[ ].’ ” 756 F. 3d, at 680 (alterations in
original). This statement, however, did not concern a peremptory
exercised due to a prospective juror’s lack of English proficiency.
Instead, it concerned the dismissal of
Spanish-speaking members of the venire for fear
that, if seated, they might not follow the English translation of
testimony given in Spanish. See 500 U. S., at 360. The Ninth
Circuit’s decision regarding Gerardo O. was thus based on a
misreading of the record and a distortion of our case law. And
neither Ayala nor the Ninth Circuit has identified anything that
defense counsel might have done at the
ex parte hearing
to show that the prosecutor’s concern about Gerardo O.’s limited
English proficiency was pretextual.
The prosecution’s second proffered reason for
striking Gerardo O. was concern about his willingness to impose the
death penalty, and as the trial court found, this observation was
also supported by the record. Indeed, when asked in
voir dire how he felt about imposing the death penalty,
Gerardo O. responded that he was “[k]ind of shaky about
it. . . . I’m not too sure if I can take
someone else’s life in my hands and say that; say, you know,
‘death,’ or something.” App. 168. In response to another question
about his thoughts on the death penalty, he replied: “I don’t know
yet. It’s kind of hard, you know, to pick it up like that and say
how I feel about the death penalty.” 15 Tr. 1052. Answering a
question about whether his thoughts on the death penalty would
affect how he viewed the evidence presented at trial, he responded,
“I don’t know, sir, to tell you the truth.” App. 165. And when
asked if he had “any feeling that [he] would be unable to vote for
the death penalty if [he] thought it was a case that called for
it,” Gerardo O. responded once again, “I don’t know.” 15 Tr. 1043.
While Gerardo O. did say at one point that he might be willing to
impose the death pen-alty, he qualified that statement by adding
that he would be comforted by the fact that “there’s eleven more
other persons on the jury.” App. 170.
What we said above regarding jurors who express
doubts about their openness to a death verdict applies as well
here. The prosecution’s reluctance to take a chance that Gerardo O.
would ultimately be willing to consider the death penalty in
accordance with state law did not compel the trial judge to find
that the strike of Gerardo O. was based on race.
Nor is there a basis for finding that the
absence of defense counsel affected the trial judge’s evaluation of
the sincerity of this proffered ground for the strike. Defense
counsel had a full opportunity during
voir dire to
create a record regarding Gerardo O.’s openness to the death
penalty. And defense counsel had the opportunity prior to the
ex parte proceeding on the Gerardo O. strike to compare
the minority jurors dismissed by the prosecution with white jurors
who were seated. Counsel argued that the answers on the death
penalty given by the minority jurors were “not significantly
different from [those of] the white jurors that the prosecution
ha[d] chosen to leave on the jury.”
Id., at 306. The trial
judge asked counsel for “particulars,” and counsel discussed
Gerardo O., albeit briefly.
Id., at 307–308. Thus, there is
no reason to believe that counsel could have made a more persuasive
argumentat the
ex parte proceeding than he made during
thisexchange.
The prosecution’s final reason for striking
Gerardo O. was that he appeared to be “a standoffish type of
individ-ual” whose “dress
and . . . mannerisms . . . were
not in keeping with the other jurors” and who “did not appear to be
socializing or mixing with any of the other jurors.”
Id., at
298. The trial judge did not dispute that the prosecution’s
reflections were borne out by the record. The California Supreme
Court affirmed and also emphasized that “the trial court’s rulings
in the ex parte hearing indisput-ably reflect both its
familiarity with the record of voir dire of the challenged
prospective jurors and its critical assessment of the prosecutor’s
proffered justifications.” 24 Cal. 4th, at 266–267, 6
P. 3d, at 206.
In light of the strength of the prosecution’s
first two reasons for striking Gerardo O., it is not at all clear
that the prosecution proffered this final reason as an essential
factor in its decision to strike, but in any event, there is no
support for the suggestion that Ayala’s attorney, if allowed to
attend the
ex parte hearing, would have been able to
convince the judge that this reason was pretextual. The Ninth
Circuit, however, was content to speculate about what might have
been. Mixing guesswork with armchair sociology, the Ninth Circuit
mused that “[i]t is likely that Gerardo O.’s dress and mannerisms
were distinctly Hispanic. Perhaps in the late 1980’s Hispanic males
in San Diego County were more likely than members of other racial
or ethnic groups in the area to wear a particular style or color of
shirt, and Gerardo O. was wearing such a shirt.” 756 F. 3d, at
680–681. As for the prosecution’s observation that Gerardo O. did
not socialize with other jurors, the Ninth Circuit posited that,
“perhaps, unbeknownst to the trial judge, Gerardo O. did
‘socializ[e] or mix[ ]’ with a number of other jurors, and had
even organized a dinner for some of them at his favorite Mexican
restaurant.”
Id., at 681.
This is not how habeas review is supposed to
work. The record provides no basis for the Ninth Circuit’s flight
of fancy.
Brecht requires more than speculation about what
extrarecord information defense counsel might have mentioned. And
speculation of that type is not enough to show that a State Supreme
Court’s rejection of the argument regarding Gerardo O. was
unreasonable.
D
The final prospective juror specifically
discussed in the Ninth Circuit’s decision was Robert M., who is
Hispanic. The prosecution’s primary proffered reason for striking
Robert M. was concern that he would not impose the death penalty,
though the prosecution added that it was troubled that he had
followed the Sagon Penn case, a high-profile prosecution in San
Diego in which an alleged murderer was acquitted amid allegations
of misconduct by police and prosecutors. In addition, the
prosecution also explained to the trial court that Robert M. scored
poorly on its 10-point scale for evaluating prospective jurors. The
trial court accepted the prosecutor’s explanation of the
strike.
With respect to the prosecution’s concern that
Robert M. might not be willing to impose the death penalty, the
Ninth Circuit found that defense counsel, if permitted to attend
the
in camera proceeding, could have compared Robert M.’s
statements about the death penalty to those of other jurors and
could have reminded the judge that Robert M. had “repeatedly stated
during voir dire that he believed in the death penalty and
could personally vote to impose it.” 756 F. 3d, at 682. But as
with Olanders D. and Gerardo O., we cannot say that the prosecution
had no basis for doubting Robert M.’s willingness to impose the
death penalty. For example, when asked at one point whether he
could vote for death, Robert M. responded: “Well, I’ve though[t]
about that, but it’s a difficult question, and yeah, it is
difficult for me to say, you know, one way or the other. I believe
in it, but for me to be involved in it is—is hard. It’s hard to
accept that aspect of it, do you know what I mean?” App. 149–150.
In response to another question, he said: “It would be hard, but I
think I could, yes. It’s—it’s hard to say, you know—and I don’t
care who the person is—to say that they have to put somebody away,
you know. It’s very hard.”
Id., at 154. These are hardly
answers that would inspire confidence in the minds of prosecutors
in a capital case.
While the Ninth Circuit argued that defense
counsel’s absence at the
in camera hearing prejudiced the
trial judge’s ability to assess this reason for the strike of
Robert M., the Ninth Circuit failed to mention that defense counsel
specifically addressed this issue during
voir dire. At
that time, he pointedly reminded the judge that Robert M. had made
several statements during
voir dire that were favorable
to the death penalty.
Id., at 307. The trial judge thus
heard defense counsel’s arguments but nevertheless concluded that
the record supplied a basis for a legitimate concern about whether
Robert M. could impose the death penalty. That Ayala’s attorney did
not have the opportunity to repeat this same argument once more at
the
in camera proceeding does not create grave doubt about
whether the trial court would have decided the issue
differently.
As for the prosecution’s second proffered reason
for striking Robert M.—that he had followed the Sagon Penn
case[
4]—the Ninth Circuit
placed great emphasis on the fact that a seated white juror had
followed a different murder trial, that of Robert Alton
Harris.[
5] But the Penn and
Harris cases were quite different. Harris was convicted while Penn
was acquitted; and since the Harris case was much older, the
experience of following it was less likely to have an effect at the
time of the trial in this case.
E
Ayala raised a
Batson objection about
the prosecution’s use of peremptory challenges on four additional
jurors, George S., Barbara S., Galileo S., and Luis M. The Ninth
Circuit did not address these prospective jurors at length, and we
need not dwell long on them. With respect to all four of these
prospective jurors, we conclude that any constitutional error was
harmless.
Of these four additional jurors, Ayala’s brief
in this Court develops an argument with respect to only two,
George S. and Barbara S. And while Ayala’s
attorney claimed that George S. was Hispanic, the prosecutor said
that he thought that George S. was Greek. In any event, the
prosecution offered several reasons for striking George S. The
prosecutor noted that one of his responses “was essentially, ‘you
probably don’t want me to be a juror on this case.’ ”
Id., at 312. The prosecutor was also concerned about whether
he would vote for death or even a life sentence and whether he
would follow the law as opposed to his personal religious beliefs.
In addition, the prosecutor noted that George S. had previously
been the sole holdout on a jury and that his prior application to
be a police officer had been rejected, for reasons that were not
clear. The trial court accepted these explanations.
Ayala contests only two of these justifications.
He quibbles that George S. had not been a “ ‘holdout,’ ”
but instead had been the dissenting juror in a civil case on which
unanimity was not required. This observation does not render the
prosecution’s proffered justification “false or pretextual.” Brief
for Respondent 46. The fact that George S. had been willing to
dissent from a jury verdict could reasonably give a prosecutor
pause in a capital case since a single holdout juror could prevent
a guilty verdict or death sentence. The most that Ayala can
establish is that reasonable minds can disagree about whether the
prosecution’s fears were well founded, but this does not come close
to establishing “actual prejudice” under
Brecht. Nor does it
meet the AEDPA standard. Ayala also points out that a seated white
juror, Charles C., had been re-jected by a police force, but George
S. admitted that he had applied to law enforcement because he was
“trying to get out of the Army,” App. 222, and the reasons for his
rejection were not clear. Charles C., by contrast, had received a
qualifying score on a law enforcement exam but was not hired
because a position was not available.
As for Barbara S., the prosecution struck her
because, during
voir dire, she appeared to be “under
the influence of drugs” and disconnected from the proceedings.
Id., at 314. The prosecution emphasized that she had “an
empty look in her eyes, slow responses, a lack of really being
totally in tune with what was going on.”
Ibid. It added that
she appeared “somewhat angry,” “manifest[ed] a great deal of
nervousness,” and seemed like someone who would be unlikely to
closely follow the trial.
Ibid. The trial judge thought that
Barbara S. appeared nervous rather than hostile, but he agreed that
she gave incomplete answers that were sometimes “non sequiturs.”
Id., at 315. He concluded, “I certainly cannot quarrel
. . . with your subjective impression, and the use of
your peremp-tory challenge based upon her individual manifestation,
as opposed to her ethnicity.”
Ibid. Ayala points to the
trial court’s disagreement with the prosecutor’s impression that
Barbara S. was hostile, but this ruling illustrates the trial
judge’s recollection of the demeanor of the prospective jurors and
his careful evaluation of each of the prosecutor’s proffered
reasons for strikes. And the fact that the trial judge’s impression
of Barbara S.’s demeanor was somewhat different from the
prosecutor’s hardly shows that the prosecutor’s reasons were
pretextual. It is not at all unusual for individuals to come to
different conclusions in attempting to read another person’s
attitude or mood.
IV
The pattern of peremptory challenges in this
case was sufficient to raise suspicions about the prosecution’s
motives and to call for the prosecution to explain its strikes. As
we have held, the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits a prosecutor from
striking potential jurors based on race. Discrimination in the jury
selection process undermines our criminal justice system and
poisons public confidence in the evenhanded administration of
justice.
In
Batson, this Court adopted a procedure
for ferreting out discrimination in the exercise of peremptory
challenges, and this procedure places great responsibility in
thehands of the trial judge, who is in the best position to
determine whether a peremptory challenge is based on an
impermissible factor. This is a difficult determination because of
the nature of peremptory challenges: They are often based on subtle
impressions and intangible factors. In this case, the conscientious
trial judge determined that the strikes at issue were not based on
race, and his judgment was entitled to great weight. On appeal,
five justices of the California Supreme Court carefully evaluated
the record and found no basis to reverse. A Federal District Judge
denied federal habeas relief, but a divided panel of the Ninth
Circuit reversed the District Court and found that the California
Supreme Court had rendered a decision with which no fairminded
jurist could agree.
For the reasons explained above, it was the
Ninth Circuit that erred. The exclusion of Ayala’s attorney from
part of the
Batson hearing was harmless error. There is no
basis for finding that Ayala suffered actual prejudice, and the
decision of the California Supreme Court represented an entirely
reasonable application of controlling precedent.
* * *
The judgment of the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.