Munyenyezi v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 19-2041
    BEATRICE MUNYENYEZI,
    Petitioner, Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Respondent, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    [Hon. Steven J. McAuliffe, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Thompson and Kayatta,
    Circuit Judges.
    Richard Guerriero, with whom Lothstein Guerriero, PLLC, was
    on brief, for petitioner.
    Mark T. Quinlivan, Special Assistant United States Attorney,
    with whom Scott W. Murray, United States Attorney, District of New
    Hampshire, and Andrew E. Lelling, United States Attorney, District
    of Massachusetts, were on brief, for respondent.
      Judge Torruella heard oral argument in this matter and
    participated in the semble, but he did not participate in the
    issuance of the panel's opinion in this case. The remaining two
    panelists therefore issued the opinion pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 46
    (d).
    March 3, 2021
    KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.         Petitioner Beatrice Munyenyezi
    was   convicted   of    procuring     naturalization       based     on   false
    statements to immigration officials about her conduct during the
    Rwandan   genocide,    see   
    18 U.S.C. § 1425
    (a),    and   of   procuring
    naturalization as an ineligible person, see 
    id.
     § 1425(b).                  Six
    years ago, we affirmed her conviction and sentence.             United States
    v. Munyenyezi, 
    781 F.3d 532
     (1st Cir. 2015).             Two years later, in
    Maslenjak v. United States, 
    137 S. Ct. 1918
     (2017), the Supreme
    Court described the role that a falsehood need play in acquiring
    citizenship to prove a violation of section 1425(a).               Pointing to
    differences between that description and the instructions given to
    the jury in her case, Munyenyezi seeks vacatur of her conviction
    through a petition      for habeas corpus relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (a).   Because Munyenyezi was not actually prejudiced by the
    instructions as given, we affirm the district court's denial of
    Munyenyezi's petition.       Our reasoning follows.
    I.
    A detailed discussion of the background of this case,
    including Munyenyezi's trial, appears in our above-cited opinion
    affirming Munyenyezi's conviction and sentence on direct appeal.
    We summarize that background briefly to provide relevant context
    for our discussion in this post-conviction litigation.
    This case arises out of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, during
    which members of Rwanda's majority ethnic group, the Hutus, killed
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    more than 700,000 Rwandans, mostly Tutsis, a minority ethnic group.
    The killing occurred at the behest of Rwanda's ruling party, the
    Hutu-dominated National Republican Movement for Democracy and
    Development    ("MRND").       The   MRND,     led   by   President   Juvénal
    Habyarimana, rose to power in 1973. President Habyarimana remained
    in office until his assassination on April 6, 1994, an event that
    brought Rwanda's long-running ethnic tensions to a head.                 MRND
    leaders seized on the president's death as an opportunity to demand
    violence against Tutsis.       Members of the military, police, and the
    Interahamwe, the MRND's youth militia, responded by carrying out
    mass     killings.    Across    Rwanda,      local   militias    constructed
    roadblocks where they checked passing Rwandans' identification
    cards to determine their ethnicity.          The militias detained Tutsis
    and then abused, tortured, and killed them.                 The campaign to
    eliminate Tutsis continued until July 1994.
    On April 19, 1994, a speech by Rwanda's new president to
    officials of the southern Rwandan city of Butare                  prompted   a
    systematic effort to hunt Tutsis in Butare using patrols and
    roadblocks.     One of those deadly roadblocks was on Butare's main
    road in front of the Hotel Ihuriro.
    The Hotel Ihuriro was home during the genocide for
    Petitioner    Beatrice   Munyenyezi,     her   husband,    and   their   young
    child.    Several facts about the occupants of the Hotel Ihuriro are
    uncontested:    Munyenyezi's husband, Shalom Ntahobali, was the son
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    of the hotel's owners.       Shalom's mother, Pauline Nyiramasuhuko,
    was an MRND cabinet minister.         His father, Maurice Ntahobali, was
    a former politician and the head of the National University in
    Butare.   Shalom himself led Butare's Interahamwe militia, which
    supervised the roadblock in front of the Hotel Ihuriro, and he
    developed a reputation as a brutal murderer.
    The    dispute   between     the    government   and    Munyenyezi
    centers on what Munyenyezi herself did during the genocide and
    whether   she    honestly   described    those    actions   to    immigration
    officials.      Between 1995 and 2003, Munyenyezi successively and
    successfully sought status as a refugee, which required a special
    "Visa 6" security clearance; as a lawful permanent resident; and
    then as a naturalized citizen of the United States.               During this
    lengthy march to citizenship, she submitted to formal interviews
    and completed various application forms, including a questionnaire
    specifically tailored for applicants who had been in Rwanda since
    April 1, 1994 ("the Rwandan Questionnaire") and an application for
    naturalization known as Form N-400.
    Several years after her naturalization, Munyenyezi drew
    the attention of United States officials when she testified on her
    husband's behalf at an international criminal court, claiming that
    there was no roadblock near her family's hotel and that her husband
    was not involved in the genocide.             Munyenyezi, 781 F.3d at 536.
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    After an investigation, the government concluded that Munyenyezi
    made the following five false statements on her Form N-400:
    One, in response to a question on her
    Form N-400 that asks, ["]have you ever . . .
    been a member of or associated with any
    organization, association, fund, foundation,
    party, club, society, or similar group in the
    United States or in any other place,["] . . .
    [Munyenyezi] did not disclose her membership
    in and association with the MRND and
    Interahamwe, and she responded by putting an
    "X" in the box marked ["]no[."]
    Two, in response to a question on her N-400
    that asked, ["]have you ever persecuted,
    either directly or indirectly, any person
    because of race, religion, national origin,
    membership in a particular social group or
    political   opinion,["] . . .    [Munyenyezi]
    responded by putting an "X" in the box marked
    "no" and failed to disclose her direct and
    indirect persecution of Tutsis during the
    Rwandan genocide.
    Three, in response to a question on her N-400
    that asked, ["]have you ever committed a crime
    or   offense   for   which    you   were   not
    arrested,["] . . . [Munyenyezi] failed to
    disclose her participation in genocide,
    murder, rape, kidnapping, and theft, and
    responded by putting an "X" in the box marked
    "no."    The government also alleges that
    [Munyenyezi] failed to disclose that she had
    previously violated United States criminal
    laws by providing false information in
    immigration interviews and documents, that is,
    the Form I-590, Form G-646, the Rwandan
    questionnaire, and Form I-485.
    Four, in response to a question on her Form N-
    400 that asked, ["]have you ever given false
    or misleading information to any U.S. official
    while applying for any immigration benefit or
    to   prevent   deportation,    exclusion,   or
    removal,["] . . . [Munyenyezi] responded by
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    putting an "X" in the box marked "no" and
    failed to disclose false information she
    provided in previous [i]mmigration documents,
    that is, the Form I-590, Form G-646, the
    Rwandan questionnaire, and Form I-485.
    Five, in response to a question on her N-400
    that asked, ["]have you ever lied to any U.S.
    Government official to gain entry or admission
    into the United States,["] . . . [Munyenyezi]
    responded by putting an "X" in the box marked
    "no" and failed to disclose the false
    information she provided on the Form I-590,
    Form G-646, and the Rwandan questionnaire.
    A federal grand jury indicted Munyenyezi.           In count one,
    the government alleged that Munyenyezi violated section 1425(a)
    when   she    "knowingly    procure[d] . . .        her   own   naturalization
    contrary to law . . . by knowingly providing false and fraudulent
    information as to material facts in her . . . Form N-400."              See 
    18 U.S.C. § 1425
    (a).        In count two, the government alleged that
    Munyenyezi was "not entitled" to naturalization because -- among
    other reasons -- she gave materially false information during the
    immigration    process     and   that    she   violated   section 1425(b)    by
    nevertheless "knowingly procur[ing] . . . [her] naturalization."
    See 
    id.
     § 1425(b).
    The first jury to consider the evidence deadlocked,
    necessitating a mistrial.           Munyenyezi's retrial ended in her
    conviction on both counts.
    Numerous    Rwandan        witnesses   testified     during    the
    government's case-in-chief.        At least four eyewitnesses testified
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    that they saw Munyenyezi decked out in the MRND's distinctively
    colored clothing, checking IDs and culling out Tutsis at the
    roadblock. Munyenyezi, 781 F.3d at 537. One of those eyewitnesses
    reported that Munyenyezi gave orders to have several Tutsis killed.
    Id.
    Several        immigration    officials             testified         about     how
    statements     disclosing      this     activity          would         have       affected
    Munyenyezi's    various      applications      in   her       pursuit         of   eventual
    naturalization.       That testimony established that naturalization
    would   probably      have    been    denied       if    she        had       admitted     to
    participating    in    persecution,     to     committing           a   crime      such    as
    kidnapping for which she had not been arrested, or to helping the
    Interahamwe     check     identification        cards          at       the     roadblock.
    Government     witnesses     also     explained         how     knowledge          of    MRND
    membership would have cast serious doubt on her receipt of a Visa 6
    security clearance and would have at least led to much more inquiry
    that may well have resulted in a denial of her applications.
    Following closing arguments, the trial judge instructed
    the jury that the "government must prove each of the following
    essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt" to establish a
    violation of section 1425(a):          "First, that the defendant procured
    or attempted to procure United States citizenship.                            And second,
    that it was contrary to the law for the defendant to procure such
    citizenship.       And    third,     that    the    defendant             knowingly       and
    - 8 -
    intentionally   provided   materially   false    statements   on   her
    Application for Naturalization, Form N-400."
    The judge next explained that "[t]he government alleges
    that the defendant procured United States citizenship [']contrary
    to law['] because it claims she violated federal law which makes
    it unlawful to give false material statements in connection with
    procuring or attempting to procure immigration and naturalization
    benefits."
    The judge then explained to the jury that to find that
    Munyenyezi violated section 1425(a), it had to "agree with regard
    to which specific false statement or statements the government has
    proved beyond a reasonable doubt" out of the five statements listed
    above.   And to find that the government proved the falsity of
    statements four and five, the judge instructed that the jury had
    to "agree as to at least one prior material false statement."       On
    appeal, both parties presume that the phrase "prior material false
    statement" refers only to a false statement about the conduct
    covered by statements one, two, or three.
    The trial judge    told the jury      that a statement is
    "material" if
    it has a natural tendency to influence or to
    be capable of influencing the decision of the
    decisionmaker to which it was addressed. So,
    in this case, a statement is "material" if the
    statement had a natural tendency to influence,
    or was capable of influencing, the decision of
    a government agency in making a determination
    - 9 -
    required to be made. The government need not
    show that the agency was actually influenced
    by the statement involved.     If a statement
    could have provoked governmental action, it is
    material regardless of whether the agency
    actually relied upon it.
    After this court affirmed Munyenyezi's conviction and
    sentence, she filed a timely habeas petition pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (a) seeking relief on several grounds.                  Her petition was
    pending when the Supreme Court held in Maslenjak v. United States,
    
    137 S. Ct. 1918
     (2017), that the government must show "that an
    illegality played some role in [the] acquisition" of citizenship
    to prove a violation of section 1425(a).               
    Id. at 1925
    .       With the
    district court's permission, Munyenyezi added a claim to her
    section 2255      petition   challenging       the    materiality       instruction
    based on Maslenjak.
    The district court rejected the claims raised in her
    initial section 2255 petition but did not address her Maslenjak
    claim.    Munyenyezi obtained a certificate of appealability from
    this court as to the Maslenjak claim alone.                After we remanded to
    allow    the    district   court    to    address    the   claim   in    the   first
    instance,       the   district     court    denied    Munyenyezi's       petition,
    reasoning that any error in the jury instructions was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt.               Munyenyezi then filed this timely
    appeal.
    - 10 -
    II.
    To prevail on the claim for relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (a), Munyenyezi need show that her sentence "was imposed in
    violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States" or "is
    otherwise subject to collateral attack."              
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (a).
    Munyenyezi did not raise at trial the argument now advanced in her
    post-conviction request for relief.          So, to rule in her favor, we
    would need to find not only that there was error in her trial, but
    also that there was "cause" not to have objected to the error and
    that "'actual prejudice' result[ed] from the error[]."                   United
    States v. Frady, 
    456 U.S. 152
    , 167–68 (1982).              As did the district
    court, we put to one side the "cause" requirement -- and the
    government's arguments on that issue and others -- to go right to
    the question of whether, assuming error, there was actual prejudice
    as a result of that error.
    To ascertain prejudice, we first examine the precise
    nature   of    the   error   said   to   have    caused    actual    prejudice.
    Munyenyezi      directs   our   attention       to   the    jury    instruction
    concerning the required relationship between a lie and the grant
    of citizenship.      Drawing on the notion of materiality, the trial
    judge told the jurors that, in order to support a conviction, a
    false statement must have "a natural tendency to influence, or
    [be] capable of influencing, the decision" of an immigration
    officer.      The judge further explained that it is enough if the
    - 11 -
    statement "could have provoked governmental action"; it need not
    have "actually" done so.
    Munyenyezi      argues   that     that   instruction      was   error
    because it did not comport with what the Supreme Court subsequently
    required   in    Maslenjak    to    show   that     a   defendant   "knowingly
    procure[d] . . . , contrary to law, the naturalization of any
    person."      
    18 U.S.C. § 1425
    (a).         In Maslenjak, the trial court
    instructed the jury that it could convict based on a finding that
    the defendant lied in procuring naturalization even if the lie was
    not "material" and "did not influence the decision to approve [her]
    naturalization."        137 S. Ct. at 1924 (alteration in original).
    After the Sixth Circuit affirmed the conviction, see United States
    v. Maslenjak, 
    821 F.3d 675
     (6th Cir. 2016), the Supreme Court
    granted certiorari.       It then vacated the Sixth Circuit's decision,
    finding    the       instruction    dispensing      with    any     materiality
    requirement improper.         Maslenjak, 137 S. Ct. at 1924.               In so
    finding, the Supreme Court established what at first blush may
    seem   like      a    causation-in-fact      requirement      regarding      the
    relationship between an illegal act and naturalization.               The Court
    several times explained that an illegality must have "played some
    role in" the acquisition of naturalization, id. at 1923, 1925,
    1927; that it "must have somehow contributed to the obtaining of
    citizenship," id. at 1925; and that "a jury must decide . . .
    whether a false statement sufficiently altered [the immigration]
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    processes as to have influenced an award of citizenship," id. at
    1928.
    When homing in on section 1425(a)'s application to lies
    to government officials, however, the Court made clear that the
    government need not prove that a lie did in fact cause, contribute
    to, or influence the award of citizenship.              Rather, retreating
    from notions of causation-in-fact, the Court explained that jurors
    need not focus on the actual decisionmaker in the immigration
    proceeding at issue.       Indeed, "the question of what any individual
    decisionmaker might have done with accurate information is beside
    the point."        Id.     Instead, "the proper causal inquiry under
    § 1425(a) is framed in objective terms:               To decide whether a
    defendant acquired citizenship by means of a lie, a jury must
    evaluate how knowledge of the real facts would have affected a
    reasonable government official properly applying naturalization
    law."     Id.    And in making those decisions, the jury can consider
    whether    a    truthful   response   "would   have   prompted   reasonable
    officials . . . to undertake further investigation" that "'would
    predictably have disclosed' some legal disqualification."            Id. at
    1929 (quoting Kungys v. United States, 
    485 U.S. 759
    , 774 (1988)).
    The difference between what Maslenjak requires and the
    instruction given in this case is subtle but substantive.           Reduced
    to its nub, Maslenjak requires proof that the truth would have
    predictably led a reasonable official to deny the application,
    - 13 -
    while the instruction here required that the government prove that
    the truth could have had such an effect.
    We will assume that this difference means the given
    instruction was erroneous. As we have stated, we are also assuming
    without deciding that there was due "cause" not to have challenged
    the instruction at trial.     So the pivotal question is whether the
    error resulted in "actual prejudice."       Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
    , 637 (1993) (quoting United States v. Lane, 
    474 U.S. 438
    ,
    449 (1986)).
    Courts have tinkered with the words used to describe
    exactly how one must ascertain "actual prejudice."     Brecht pointed
    to the formulation set forth in          the Supreme Court's earlier
    decision in Kotteakos:      "whether the error 'had substantial and
    injurious effect or influence in determining the jury's verdict.'"
    Brecht, 
    507 U.S. at 637
     (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 776 (1946)).   Kotteakos itself also stated that an error
    can be overlooked as not causing actual prejudice if the reviewing
    court "is sure that the error did not influence the jury, or had
    but very slight effect."    Kotteakos, 
    328 U.S. at 764
    .   Our circuit
    in 1994 reasoned that under Brecht no actual prejudice is shown
    "if it is 'highly probable' that the challenged action did not
    affect the judgment."      Singleton v. United States, 
    26 F.3d 233
    ,
    237 (1st Cir. 1994) (quoting United States v. Wood, 
    924 F.2d 388
    ,
    402 (1st Cir. 1991)) (applying Brecht to a section 2255 petition).
    - 14 -
    A year later, the Supreme Court spoke of not having "grave doubt"
    because one is convinced beyond "equipoise" that the error had not
    "substantially     influenced     the     jury's   decision."       O'Neal   v.
    McAninch, 
    513 U.S. 432
    , 435–36 (1995).             And while we thereafter
    continued to apply the Singleton formulation, see, e.g., Sustache-
    Rivera v. United States, 
    221 F.3d 8
    , 18 (1st Cir. 2000),1 the
    Supreme    Court   has   more   recently    pointed    us   towards   O'Neal's
    formulation of the pertinent inquiry, see Davis v. Ayala, 
    576 U.S. 257
    , 268, 276 (2015).      That inquiry as formulated in O'Neal begins
    by asking, "Do I, the judge, think that the error substantially
    influenced the jury's decision?"           
    513 U.S. at 436
    .      If the answer
    to that question is "yes," or if we are in "equipoise as to" the
    answer, then the error is not harmless.            
    Id. at 435
    .2
    With this inquiry in mind, we turn to Munyenyezi's
    argument that there is much reason to think that the "could have
    caused"     (rather      than    "would     have      caused")    instruction
    substantially influenced the jury's decision.            Munyenyezi contends
    that we must consider this harmless error argument de novo in
    reviewing the district court's denial of her habeas challenge to
    1    The government asks us to do so again here.
    2  We reject Munyenyezi's argument that we should apply a
    "beyond a reasonable doubt" test for harmlessness, as we might
    were this a review of a preserved claim of error on direct review.
    See Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (1967); see also United
    States v. Maslenjak, 
    943 F.3d 782
    , 787 (6th Cir. 2019).
    - 15 -
    her federal conviction, citing Pettiway v. Vose, 
    100 F.3d 198
    , 200
    (1st Cir. 1996) ("Our review of a harmless error determination on
    habeas corpus review is de novo.").               The government offers no
    objection or argument to the contrary, so we shall proceed with de
    novo review.
    Munyenyezi begins her argument by pointing out that the
    jury's general verdict did not specify which of the challenged
    statements it found to be false.               Building on this ambiguity,
    Munyenyezi constructs a two-part, "but-for" scenario that would
    warrant habeas relief.     First, she describes the jury's verdict as
    likely resting on a finding that Munyenyezi's only false statement
    was her denial of MRND membership.             In so arguing, she implicitly
    acknowledges that statements two3 and three,4 and part of one,5 if
    false, would have obviously concealed information that would have
    led   to   the   denial   of    her    various    applications   during   the
    naturalization process.        And she presumes, as does the government,
    3 In her second statement, Munyenyezi denied that she had
    "ever persecuted, either directly or indirectly, any person."
    4 In her third statement, Munyenyezi denied that she had
    "ever committed a crime or offense for which [she was] not
    arrested."
    5 By swearing that she had never "been a member of or
    associated with any organization, association, fund, foundation,
    party, club, society or similar group," Munyenyezi not only denied
    MRND membership but also Interahamwe membership in her first
    statement.
    - 16 -
    that statements four6 and five7 could only be found to be false
    based on a prior material false statement about activity addressed
    in statements one, two, or three.               Second, she predicts that a
    differently instructed jury would have found that a lie limited to
    denying MRND membership would not have played a role in her
    successful    pursuit    of    naturalization;     i.e.,     learning   of   MRND
    membership would not have caused reasonable officials to deny her
    application or to undertake an investigation that predictably
    would have led to its denial.            Because we find unconvincing her
    description    of    the      likely    basis    for   the    guilty    verdict,
    Munyenyezi's argument fails at the first step.
    Munyenyezi's description of the likely basis of the
    jury's actual verdict cannot be squared with the trial record,
    which reflects that the contest of proof and argument trained
    overwhelmingly      on   two    diametrically      opposed,     all-or-nothing
    versions of Munyenyezi's conduct in Rwanda.                  The government's
    witnesses testified that Munyenyezi was virtually all-in on the
    genocide:     She joined the MRND, wore its clothing, joined the
    Interahamwe, and actually checked identity cards at the roadblock
    6  In her fourth statement, Munyenyezi denied that she had
    "ever given false or misleading information to any U.S. official
    while applying for any immigration benefit or to prevent
    deportation, exclusion, or removal."
    7  In her fifth statement, Munyenyezi denied that she had
    "ever lied to any U.S. Government official to gain entry or
    admission into the United States."
    - 17 -
    to find Tutsi victims to be separated out for murder. Munyenyezi's
    defense was an across-the-board denial and a claim that those
    witnesses were lying.        She put on expert testimony suggesting that
    Rwandan   witnesses    tend    to   adhere    to   an   "official   narrative"
    promoted by their government.             Munyenyezi also called several
    witnesses who spent time at the Hotel Ihuriro during the genocide.
    According to them, Munyenyezi was always in the hotel caring for
    her young child, and she wore loose-fitting maternity clothes, not
    military fatigues or MRND clothing, because she was pregnant with
    twins who were born on November 20, 1994 (more than seven months
    after the genocide began).
    The closing arguments reflect the all-or-nothing nature
    of the case as presented to the jury.              According to Munyenyezi's
    counsel, the Rwandan genocide was an event "in which she had
    absolutely no part."        Moreover, Munyenyezi's counsel insisted that
    "[s]he wasn't a member of the MRND" and that the witnesses who
    said otherwise were "just wrong" and were "not telling the truth."
    The government, in turn, stressed that Munyenyezi lied about
    essentially everything to cover up her past.              The all-or-nothing
    approach by both sides was virtually compelled by the nature of
    the   evidence,   which     presented   no    readily    apparent   means   for
    concluding   that     the    government      witnesses    were   lying   about
    everything except MRND membership.
    - 18 -
    Munyenyezi     nevertheless       points   to     the   government's
    statement in its closing argument that if "she told a single lie,"
    she was guilty, and that "at a minimum she associated with the
    MRND."   This was an invitation to the jurors, claims Munyenyezi,
    to find against her only on her denial of MRND membership and a
    recognition by the government that its proof was not as strong on
    the other issues.        But in arguing that that lie was enough to
    convict, the government never suggested that there was any path in
    the record to find that that statement was false and the others
    true.    And even if the government's strongest claim was that
    Munyenyezi lied about MRND membership, the fact remains that the
    evidence pointing to across-the-board lying was strong unless one
    labeled the government's witnesses as liars and Munyenyezi and her
    witnesses as honest.
    The   district   court      characterized    the    record      at   the
    second trial as "overwhelmingly establish[ing]" her participation
    in murder.     And on her direct appeal we described the record as
    presenting a "vast and damning array of evidence against her."
    Munyenyezi, 781 F.3d at 540 (holding that any error in admitting
    into evidence Munyenyezi's international criminal court testimony
    was harmless).    On such a record, it is quite a stretch to think
    that the jury found that she and her witnesses at trial lied only
    by   falsely   denying    her   MRND    membership     yet    told   the    truth
    otherwise. The jury more likely viewed a lie about MRND membership
    - 19 -
    as the thirteenth stroke of Thomas Hardy's crazy clock:      "It was
    not only received with utter incredulity as regarded itself, but
    threw a doubt on all assurances that had preceded it."        Thomas
    Hardy, Far From the Madding Crowd 209–10 (First Vintage Classics
    ed. 2015).8 For these reasons, we reject as implausible the premise
    that Munyenyezi's conviction turned on a finding that she lied
    only about her MRND membership.   And with that premise rejected,
    and causation inexorable as to the other alleged lies, we find
    ourselves far past equipoise in answering "no" to the question of
    whether   the   assumed   Maslenjak    error   in   the   instruction
    substantially influenced the jury's decision.       See O'Neal, 
    513 U.S. at
    435–36.9
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the denial of
    Munyenyezi's petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
    8  With thanks to Dwight H. Sullivan & Eugene R. Fidell,
    Winding (Back) the Crazy Clock, 
    19 Green Bag 2d 397
    , 401 (2016).
    9  Because we agree with the government that Munyenyezi has
    failed to show actual prejudice, we decline to address the
    government's alternative argument that the concurrent sentence
    doctrine bars habeas relief here.
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