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[PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 21-13756
____________________
BRANDON WASHINGTON,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE
OF ALABAMA,
COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONS,
WARDEN, HOLMAN CORRECTIONAL FACILITY,
Respondents-Appellees.
____________________
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2 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Alabama
D.C. Docket No. 2:18-cv-01091-ACA-GMB
____________________
Before WILSON, JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judges, and CONWAY,∗ District
Judge.
WILSON, Circuit Judge:
Brandon Washington, an Alabama prisoner, appeals the dis-
trict court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, filed
pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district judge granted a Certifi-
cate of Appealability (COA) on whether trial counsel provided in-
effective assistance for failing to convey to Washington a favorable
plea offer of thirty years’ imprisonment during his capital murder
trial.
We find that Washington has shown by clear and convincing
evidence that the state habeas court’s determinations that Wash-
ington would not have accepted the plea offer and that the state
trial court would not have accepted an agreement between Wash-
ington and the District Attorney were unreasonable. We also find
that the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeal’s (ACCA’s) determina-
tion that Washington received the plea offer was unreasonable. Be-
cause we find that the state habeas court’s factual determinations
were unreasonable, Washington has cleared the hurdle created by
∗ Honorable Anne C. Conway, United States District Judge for the Middle Dis-
trict of Florida, sitting by designation.
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 3
the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996,
28
U.S.C. § 2254 (AEDPA).
Because Washington cleared the AEDPA hurdle, we could
review his claim de novo, but we find it is best for the district court
to conduct an evidentiary hearing on Washington’s claim. Thus,
we VACATE the district court’s denial of Washington’s habeas pe-
tition and REMAND for an evidentiary hearing.
I.
First, we will review Washington’s criminal trial and direct
appeals. Second, we will address Washington’s state habeas peti-
tion. Last, we will review Washington’s federal habeas petition.
A.
Alabama indicted Washington for one count of capital mur-
der for the robbery and killing of Justin Campbell, a worker at a
local RadioShack. Alabama sought the death penalty. At the time,
Washington was 18 years old and a freshman at Miles College.
In January 2006, Washington proceeded to trial. After the
lead detective testified, Deputy District Attorney (D.A.) Mike An-
derton extended a mid-trial offer of life with parole to Washington
via Washington’s counsel, Emory Anthony. The trial court asked
D.A. Anderton about that offer and the outcome. The following
exchanged occurred:
MR. ANDERTON: Your Honor, prior to the begin-
ning of the proceedings this morning, I saw Mr. An-
thony and I have spoken with the family of Justin
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4 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
Campbell. We extended an offer to Mr. Anthony on
behalf of his client to allow Brandon Washington to
plead guilty to the murder and receive a sentence of
life in this case. It was -- it is my understanding that
Mr. Anthony spoke to the Defendant and spoke to, I
believe the Defendant’s grandmother, along with his
co-counsel, Brandon Taylor, the four of them in a
room, and Mr. Anthony has told me that Mr. Wash-
ington does not wish to accept that offer.
MR. ANTHONY: And for the record, that is correct.
THE COURT: And Mr. Anthony, do you believe
you’ve had sufficient time to discuss the offer with
your client, and he understands it?
MR. ANTHONY: Well, he understands, and that is
why I brought his grandmother back in there. And
you know, for the record, he is saying he didn’t do it.
He is saying he is not guilty.
THE COURT: He pleads not guilty?
MR. ANTHONY: Right.
THE COURT: Okay.
The trial proceeded, and the jury found Washington guilty
of capital murder. The jury recommended the death penalty,
which the trial court accepted.
Washington appealed. The ACCA overturned his death sen-
tence and remanded the case to the trial court for resentencing,
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 5
finding it was plain error to sentence Washington without the ben-
efit of a presentence investigation report. Washington v. State,
106
So. 3d 423, 432–35 (Ala. Crim. App. 2007). Again, the trial court
imposed the death penalty. Washington again appealed. This time,
the Alabama Supreme Court overturned his death sentence be-
cause the trial court plainly erred by admitting improper victim-
impact testimony. Ex parte Washington,
106 So. 3d 441, 447 (Ala.
2011).
In 2012, at the third sentencing, Alabama did not seek the
death penalty, and Washington received a life sentence without the
possibility of parole. The ACCA affirmed.
B.
In 2013, Washington filed his state habeas petition, alleging
ineffective assistance of counsel claims under Strickland v. Washing-
ton,
466 U.S. 668 (1984). Alabama moved to dismiss, arguing that
Washington’s trial counsel could not have been ineffective because
D.A. Anderton was so impressed by their performance at trial that
he offered a second mid-trial plea deal of thirty years. But Wash-
ington claimed that he did not receive the offer. Although the trial
record included the exchange between the state trial court, D.A.
Anderton, and Anthony about the life offer, there is nothing in the
record about the thirty-year plea deal. As a result, Washington
amended his petition to include trial counsel’s failure to communi-
cate the plea deal in violation of Missouri v. Frye,
566 U.S. 134 (2012).
Washington sought an evidentiary hearing on this issue. In
support, Washington submitted an affidavit from his grandmother,
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6 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
Amanda Washington, who adopted Washington when he was thir-
teen years old and was paying for his criminal defense counsel. In
the affidavit, Amanda stated:
3. During the trial, Mr. Anthony asked me to accom-
pany him to a conference room off the courtroom to
discuss with him and Brandon [Washington] a plea
deal offered by the district attorney. Mr. Anthony said
that the district attorney had offered Brandon a plea
of life in prison with the possibility of parole. Bran-
don did not want to accept the plea offer of life and I
did not attempt to persuade him to take the offer.
4. I recently learned from Brandon’s current lawyer
that during the trial the district attorney extended
Brandon a plea offer through Mr. Anthony for 30
years in prison. That is the first time I had ever heard
of a plea offer for 30 years. I never heard Mr. Anthony
mention any plea offer other than life in prison. Based
on my relationship with Brandon, I am confident that
if any other offer had been communicated to him, he
would have told me about it.
Washington moved to take Amanda’s deposition to preserve
her statement because she was in poor health. The state habeas
court 1 granted Washington’s motion unless the parties stipulated
“for the Court to consider the content of [Amanda’s] Affidavit as
true.” The parties agreed to the stipulation that Amanda’s affidavit
1 The same judge presided over Washington’s criminal trial, all three sen-
tencings, and state habeas proceedings.
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 7
is true. In light of Amanda’s affidavit and the lack of discussion on
the record about this other, mid-trial plea deal, the state habeas
court ordered Anthony and D.A. Anderton to submit affidavits ad-
dressing whether Alabama extended the thirty-year plea deal dur-
ing trial.
D.A. Anderton submitted an affidavit that said Anthony was
effective at representing Washington, which led to D.A. Anderton
offering a plea agreement “that involved a number of years.” D.A.
Anderton could not “recall the number of years offered, but recol-
lect[ed] that the offer was for a term of less than a life.”
Anthony submitted an affidavit that said D.A. Anderton
“made an offer of 30 years” and that Anthony “talked with Brandon
Washington and his Grandmother, [but] Brandon refused to accept
the plea offer.”
The state habeas court denied Washington’s petition and re-
quest for an evidentiary hearing. The court acknowledged that
Amanda’s affidavit and Washington’s petition conflicted with An-
thony’s and Anderton’s affidavits. Despite this, the state habeas
court noted that:
[T]he record is clear that the Defendant, in the midst
of being on trial in a capital murder case, wherein he
faced a serious threat of conviction and the death pen-
alty, refused an offer of Life with the possibility of pa-
role. In fact the record is clear, and it is this Court’s
recollection, that the Defendant, standing in the open
court with his attorney, the prosecutor, the victim’s
family and the press, through his attorney, maintained
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8 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
his innocence to the charge. In fact, his position in
rejecting the offer of settlement, was that “he is say-
ing he didn’t do it, he is saying he is not guilty.”
The state habeas court also noted that there was no signifi-
cant difference between life with parole and a thirty-year sentence.
But the court continued:
Regardless of whether this offer of 30 years was
placed on the record, it is both Mr. Anderton’s and Mr.
Anthony’s recollection, that any offer of settlement
for less than Life was communicated and rejected by
the Defendant. Evidence of the Defendant’s position
at that time, is made clear from the record in this case
cited above. Therefore, this court does not find that
[Washington] has met his burden under Frye of show-
ing a “reasonable probability” that the Defendant
would have accepted a thirty year offer, or that this
Court would have accepted the plea agreement, after
the Defendant had proclaimed his innocence in the
open and very public courtroom. [Washington] has
not proven counsel’s performance ineffective, or that,
but for [counsel’s] performance, the result would have
been different under Strickland.
Washington appealed to the ACCA. For Washington’s Frye
claim, the ACCA found that:
Thus, the circuit court resolved the disputed issue,
i.e., whether a 30-year plea offer was communicated
to Washington, in the State’s favor. The circuit court
also found, based on the affidavits as well as its own
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 9
recollection of the proceedings, that there was not a
reasonable probability that Washington would have
accepted a 30-year plea offer nor that [trial judge]
would have approved it. Washington points to the
fact that the parties stipulated to the truth of his
grandmother’s affidavit. However, Ms. Washington’s
affidavit stated that she “never heard Mr. Anthony
mention any plea offer other than for life in prison”
and that based on her relationship with Washington,
she was “confident” that he would have told her
about any other plea offers. Thus, her testimony does
not rule out the possibility that Washington may have
chosen not to tell her about the offer.
* * *
The affidavits of Mr. Anthony and Mr. Anderton,
though contrary to Washington’s assertion in his pe-
tition, constitute sufficient evidence on which the cir-
cuit court could have based its findings, i.e., that de-
fense counsel did in fact communicate a 30-year plea
deal to Washington that he rejected. Further, the trial
court did not find Washington’s assertion that he
would have accepted [] the plea deal to be credible.
Thus, Washington failed to prove his claim that coun-
sel rendered deficient performance under Frye. A pe-
titioner must meet both prongs of Strickland, i.e., de-
ficient performance and prejudice, in order to prove a
claim that counsel was ineffective. Accordingly,
Washington failed to meet his burden of proof and
the trial court was correct to deny this claim.
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10 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
Ultimately, the ACCA affirmed the state habeas court’s denial of
Washington’s state habeas petition.
C.
Washington filed his federal habeas petition in the Northern
District of Alabama again alleging ineffective assistance of counsel
based on his counsel’s failure to relay a thirty-year plea offer to him.
A magistrate judge recommended denying Washington’s petition
on the merits, explaining that Washington failed to establish defi-
cient performance. Specifically, the magistrate judge found that
“the ACCA had a reasonable justification for concluding, as it did,
that the affidavits could be harmonized to find that Anthony re-
layed the 30-year offer to” Washington. Washington timely ob-
jected, raising a number of challenges.
The district judge agreed with Washington on just one
point—the magistrate judge should have addressed the Strickland
prejudice prong—but ultimately found that the state court’s deter-
mination on that prong was reasonable. Washington v. Marshall, No.
2:18-CV-1091-ACA-GMB,
2021 WL 4409096, at *1 (N.D. Ala. Sept.
27, 2021). In focusing on the prejudice prong, the district court ex-
plained that the two factual determinations—that Washington
would not have accepted the thirty-year offer and that the state
court would not have accepted the plea agreement—were reason-
able.
Id. at *4.
But the district court granted Washington a COA on
whether trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
convey to Washington a favorable plea offer of thirty years’
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 11
imprisonment during his capital murder trial.
Id. at *5. Washing-
ton timely appealed.
II.
Because the ACCA denied Washington’s ineffective assis-
tance of counsel claims, our review is subject to AEDPA. See Lynch
v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr.,
776 F.3d 1209, 1217 (11th Cir. 2015).
Under AEDPA, a federal court can grant relief to a state pris-
oner only if he shows that the state court’s determination of his
claim resulted in a decision that was (1) “contrary to, or involved
an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” or (2)
“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)(1)–(2).
Because Washington argues that the ACCA’s factual find-
ings were unreasonable, we review only under § 2254(d)(2). A
state habeas court’s findings of fact are presumed to be correct and
the petitioner bears “the burden of rebutting the presumption of
correctness by clear and convincing evidence.” Id. § 2254(e)(1).
When determining whether a state court’s decision was based on
an unreasonable determination of facts, we must focus on the par-
ticular factual reasons for “why state courts rejected a state pris-
oner’s federal claims, and to give appropriate deference to that de-
cision.” Wilson v. Sellers,
138 S. Ct. 1188, 1191–92 (2018) (internal
citation omitted).
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12 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
“Even if the state court made a clearly erroneous factual de-
termination, that doesn’t necessarily mean the state court’s ‘deci-
sion’ was ‘based on’ an ‘unreasonable determination of the facts in
light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.’” Pye
v. Warden, Ga. Diagnostic Prison,
50 F.4th 1025, 1035 (11th Cir. 2022)
(en banc). “Depending on the importance of the factual error to
the state court’s ultimate decision, that decision might still be rea-
sonable even if some of the state court’s individual factual findings
were erroneous—so long as the decision, taken as a whole, doesn’t
constitute an unreasonable determination of the facts and isn’t
based on any such determination.”
Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted). “If reasonable minds reviewing the record might disa-
gree about the [factual] finding in question, on habeas review that
does not suffice to supersede the trial court’s determination.”
Brumfield v. Cain,
576 U.S. 305, 314 (2015) (cleaned up).
III.
Washington argues that the state habeas court made three
unreasonable determinations of fact about his ineffective assistance
of counsel claim.
To succeed on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim,
Washington must demonstrate: (1) that his lawyer rendered defi-
cient performance, such that he “made errors so serious that coun-
sel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed . . . by the Sixth
Amendment,” and (2) that these errors prejudiced the defense,
such that the “deficient conduct more likely than not altered the
outcome in the case.” Strickland,
466 U.S. at 687, 693.
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 13
Washington claims that his counsel was ineffective for not
informing him about D.A. Anderton’s mid-trial plea offer.
“[D]efense counsel has the duty to communicate formal offers
from the prosecution to accept a plea on terms and conditions that
may be favorable to the accused.” Frye,
566 U.S. at 145. When an
attorney fails to convey a plea agreement, the petitioner may be
able to prove deficient performance, thus satisfying the first prong
of Strickland. See
id.
To satisfy the prejudice prong of Strickland where counsel
has failed to communicate a plea offer, the petitioner must show:
(1) “a reasonable probability” that the petitioner would have ac-
cepted the plea; (2) the prosecution would not have withdrawn or
canceled the plea; (3) the trial court would have accepted the plea;
and (4) as a result of accepting the plea, the ultimate conviction
would have been for a lesser charge or sentence than what the pe-
titioner received.
Id. at 147; see also Lafler v. Cooper,
566 U.S. 156,
168 (2012).
Addressing the prejudice prong, Washington argues that the
state habeas court unreasonably concluded that because he re-
jected the State’s first plea offer for life imprisonment and main-
tained his innocence at trial, (1) he would not have accepted the
thirty-year plea offer, and (2) the state trial court would not have
accepted a thirty-year plea deal. And under the performance
prong, Washington argues that the ACCA unreasonably concluded
that Anthony communicated the thirty-year plea offer to him. We
address each prong in the order Washington argued them.
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14 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
A. Prejudice
The ACCA did not address the prejudice prong, so to con-
duct our review we must look to the last reasoned state court deci-
sion. See Wilson,
138 S. Ct. at 1192. The state habeas court’s deci-
sion on this prong relied on two factual determinations. It ex-
plained that Washington failed to show a reasonable probability
that Washington “would have accepted a thirty year offer,” or that
the state trial court “would have accepted the plea agreement, after
[Washington] had proclaimed his innocence in the open and very
public courtroom.”
In concluding that Washington proclaimed his innocence in
an open and public courtroom, the state habeas court referenced a
single excerpt in the record. There, without prompting by the
court, D.A. Anderton told the court that he had extended an offer
of life imprisonment to Anthony, who relayed that Washington did
not want to accept that offer. Anthony then explained that was
correct and stated that he had sufficient time to discuss the offer
with Washington. Anthony further explained that Washington un-
derstood the plea but said that “he didn’t do it. He is saying he is
not guilty.” Washington did not say anything directly to the court.
We are tasked with determining whether it was reasonable
to conclude that Washington’s maintaining his innocence, through
his attorney, automatically belied his claim that he would have
taken the thirty-year plea offer. The Constitution affords all de-
fendants—both at the state and federal levels—several rights dur-
ing criminal prosecution, including requiring the prosecution to
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prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See U.S. Const. amends. V,
XIV; see also Taylor v. Kentucky,
436 U.S. 478, 485–86 (1978) (“[T]he
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment must be held
to safeguard ‘against dilution of the principle that guilt is to be es-
tablished by probative evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt.’”);
In re Winship,
397 U.S. 358, 362 (1970) (collecting cases that show
the Court “has long assumed that proof of a criminal charge be-
yond a reasonable doubt is constitutionally required”). It is inap-
propriate for courts to rely solely on a defendant’s assertion of this
right when considering whether he would have accepted a plea of-
fer.
The Sixth Circuit, confronted with a similar situation, found
that the petitioner’s “declarations of innocence do not prove . . .
that he would not have accepted a guilty plea.” Griffin v. United
States,
330 F.3d 733, 738 (6th Cir. 2003). In Griffin, the petitioner
filed a habeas petition under
28 U.S.C. § 2255, arguing that he
would have taken a plea agreement had one been communicated
to him.
Id. at 735. The government argued that even if the plea
deal had been communicated, the record did not support that the
petitioner would have taken the plea offer because of the peti-
tioner’s many protestations of his innocence.
Id. at 738. The Sixth
Circuit disagreed.
Id. The Sixth Circuit reasoned that
Defendants must claim innocence right up to the
point of accepting a guilty plea, or they would lose
their ability to make any deal with the government.
It does not make sense to say that a defendant must
admit guilt prior to accepting a deal on a guilty plea.
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16 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
It therefore does not make sense to say that a defend-
ant’s protestations of innocence belie his later claim
that he would have accepted a guilty plea. Further-
more, a defendant must be entitled to maintain his in-
nocence throughout trial under the Fifth Amend-
ment.
Id. Considering the record, the Sixth Circuit determined that an
evidentiary hearing was necessary to determine whether the peti-
tioner would have accepted the plea offer had he known about it.
Id. at 739.
We found the Sixth Circuit’s reasoning persuasive in Lalani
v. United States,
315 F. App’x 858, 861 (11th Cir. 2009) (per curiam).
There, the petitioners filed a habeas petition under
28 U.S.C.
§ 2255, arguing that their trial counsel was ineffective for failing to
secure a plea agreement, and that they would have taken a plea
agreement despite their claims of innocence.
Id. at 859. To deter-
mine whether the petitioners made a viable Strickland claim, we re-
lied on Griffin, which found it did “not make sense to say that a
defendant’s protestations of innocence belie his later claim that he
would have accepted a guilty plea.”
Id. at 861 (quoting Griffin,
330
F.3d at 738). As a result, we held that the petitioners’ claims of in-
nocence did not prevent them from showing prejudice in support
of ineffective assistance of counsel claims for failing to communi-
cate a plea offer.
Id. Ultimately, we remanded to the district court
to conduct an evidentiary hearing.
Id. at 861–82.
Like we found in Lalani, we find the Sixth Circuit’s reasoning
persuasive and formally adopt it here. A defendant has a right to
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 17
maintain his innocence without entirely jeopardizing his ability to
later claim that he would have accepted a subsequent, uncommu-
nicated plea offer.
We hold that when a petitioner states that he would have
taken a plea offer while maintaining his innocence, the state court
cannot use that as the only factual determination to support a find-
ing that the petitioner failed to meet the prejudice prong of Strick-
land. To be sure, those protestations of innocence are relevant to
determining whether the petitioner would have accepted a plea of-
fer and should be considered along with other facts, such as why
the petitioner chose to reject other offers and the discussions that
petitioner had with his counsel about those offers. As a result, this
circumstance will often require an evidentiary hearing to consider
those relevant facts.
In finding that Washington would not have accepted the
thirty-year plea offer, the state habeas court also relied on its own
assumption that Washington would not have accepted the thirty-
year offer because he had previously rejected a plea offer of a sen-
tence of life with the possibility of parole. Based on the state ha-
beas court’s calculations—and without briefing or input from the
parties—the court determined that there was no significant differ-
ence between a thirty-year sentence and a sentence of life with pa-
role. This finding was unreasonable. There was no evidence in the
record to support an inference that Washington, who was an eight-
een-year-old college freshman at the time of his conviction, would
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18 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
have rejected a thirty-year plea offer simply because he had previ-
ously rejected an offer of life in prison.
With respect to the state habeas court’s finding that the state
trial court would not have accepted the thirty-year plea deal be-
cause Washington maintained his claim of innocence, this determi-
nation, too, was unreasonable. To be sure, under Alabama law, it
is within a state trial judge’s discretion whether to accept or reject
a plea agreement between the prosecution and a defendant. See
Ala. R. Crim. P. 14.3(b) (“[T]he court may accept or reject the agree-
ment or may defer its decision as to acceptance or rejection until
receipt of a presentence report.”). Here, though, the dispositive
question is not whether this state habeas judge—who presided over
Washington’s trial, three separate sentencings following two rever-
sals by State appellate courts, and his post-conviction proceedings
one decade later—would not have accepted the District Attorney’s
thirty-year plea offer. The question is whether a reasonable jurist
would not have accepted a thirty-year deal extended by D.A. An-
derton and agreed to by Washington. It was unreasonable for the
state habeas judge to rely on Washington’s purported proclamation
of innocence to determine, after the fact, that she would not have
accepted the thirty-year deal at the time of trial.
The state habeas court relied only on Washington’s earlier
rejection of the life-with-parole plea offer and Washington’s claim
of innocence to support its findings that he would have also re-
jected a thirty-year plea offer and that the state trial court would
not have accepted the plea. Because Washington was entitled to
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 19
maintain his innocence, this reasoning supporting the state habeas
court’s determinations that neither Washington nor the state trial
court would have accepted the plea offer was unreasonable. The
state habeas court’s finding that Washington’s rejection of the life-
with-parole offer indicated he would have also rejected the thirty-
year offer because the two sentences were not significantly differ-
ent was also unreasonable because it was not supported by any ev-
idence in the record.
B. Deficient Performance
The ACCA explained that despite the state habeas court hav-
ing to take Amanda’s affidavit as true, the affidavits of Anthony and
D.A. Anderton show that Washington was told about the thirty-
year plea offer. Thus, the ACCA found that Washington had not
shown deficient performance. Washington argues that this was an
unreasonable determination of facts, and we agree.
To start, there is very little information in the record about
this thirty-year plea offer. We have D.A. Anderton’s affidavit es-
tablishing that the plea offer was communicated to Anthony, and
Anthony’s confirmation of that plea offer. Anthony then attests
that he told Washington, who rejected the offer. Washington in
his state habeas petition says he did not receive the plea offer. If
these facts were all that we had to go on, our decision would be
simple—the state court resolved conflicting accounts—and the
question of deference would be straight forward. See Consalvo v.
Sec’y for Dep’t of Corr.,
664 F.3d 842, 845 (11th Cir. 2011) (per cu-
riam) (“Determining the credibility of witnesses is the province and
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20 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
function of the state courts, not a federal court engaging in habeas
review.”). But it is not all we have to go on. There is also the affi-
davit from Washington’s grandmother, Amanda, which the parties
agreed that the state habeas court should have taken as true.
Because the parties agreed that the state habeas court should
take Amanda’s affidavit as true, the court was not required to de-
termine whether it believed Amanda over Anthony. Rather, the
court had to accept Amanda’s affidavit as true, and that requires
that the court resolve any inconsistences between her affidavit and
Anthony’s in her favor. But the court did not do that. Instead, the
court focused only on Anthony’s and Anderton’s affidavits to make
its factual finding that Washington received and rejected the thirty-
year plea offer.
In reviewing the state habeas court’s holding, the ACCA fo-
cused on the fact that Amanda’s affidavit did not “rule out the pos-
sibility that Washington may not have chosen to tell her about the
offer.” However, the ACCA’s reasoning misses the mark and, in
fact, showcases that the affidavits truly contradict each other.
As we noted above, Amanda’s affidavit said that she “never
heard Mr. Anthony mention any plea offer other than life.” Doc.
1-23 at 42. Now, this statement alone is not enough to show that
the ACCA made an unreasonable determination about whether
Washington told Amanda about the plea offer. But consider how
this compares to Anthony’s affidavit, where he claimed that he
“talked with Brandon Washington and his Grandmother” about
the thirty-year plea offer. Anthony’s affidavit clearly indicates
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21-13756 Opinion of the Court 21
that—if at all—he told Washington and Amanda together about the
thirty-year plea offer. So whether Washington told Amanda about
the plea offer separately is irrelevant. Anthony averred that he told
Washington and Amanda, and Amanda—whose affidavit the state
court was bound to consider as truthful—said she never heard an-
ything about a thirty-year plea offer. Thus, the record does not
support the ACCA’s factual finding that Amanda may not have
heard about the plea deal simply because Washington may not
have chosen to tell her.
The ACCA used that finding alone to support its determina-
tion that Anthony told Washington about the thirty-year plea offer.
Because that factual determination is not supported by the record
and is clearly erroneous, the ACCA’s determination that Washing-
ton received the plea offer was unreasonable.
IV.
Because Washington has established that the state courts
made unreasonable determinations of the facts,
28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d)(2), he has overcome AEDPA deference. Thus, we must
review de novo whether Washington has shown that his counsel
was ineffective under Strickland. But we are reluctant to do so in
the first instance for two reasons. First, as discussed above, Wash-
ington’s protestations of innocence cannot be considered in a vac-
uum but should be evaluated with his reasons for why he did not
take the prior plea, why he would have taken the thirty-year plea,
and any relevant information from Anthony. Second, even though
Amanda’s affidavit is to be taken as true, there is very little evidence
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22 Opinion of the Court 21-13756
from Anthony and Washington about this second plea offer. To
properly consider Washington’s claim that he never received the
thirty-year plea offer and he would have accepted it had Anthony
communicated it with him, there needs to be factual development
from Washington and Anthony about their attorney-client rela-
tionship, their communication, and the thirty-year plea offer.
Washington has repeatedly requested an evidentiary hear-
ing, and in light of him clearing the AEDPA hurdle, he should be
given an opportunity to present his evidence. See Madison v.
Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr.,
761 F.3d 1240, 1248–49 (11th Cir. 2014).
V.
We vacate the district court’s order denying Washington’s
habeas petition and its order denying an evidentiary hearing. We
remand this case to the district court for an evidentiary hearing and
to consider Washington’s Strickland claim de novo.
VACATED and REMANDED.