Hicks v. Straub ( 2004 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206            2       Hicks v. Straub                            No. 03-1124
    ELECTRONIC CITATION: 2004 FED App. 0248P (6th Cir.)
    File Name: 04a0248p.06                       KENNEDY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which
    COOK, J., joined. ROGERS, J. (p. 35), delivered a separate
    concurring opinion.
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    _________________
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________                                                   OPINION
    _________________
    MICHAEL HICKS,                   X
    KENNEDY, Circuit Judge. The district court conditionally
    Petitioner-Appellee, -                           granted the petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28
    -
    -  No. 03-1124          U.S.C. § 2254 of Petitioner Michael Hicks, a Michigan
    v.                      -                       prisoner, on his claim that his Sixth Amendment right to
    >                      confrontation was violated at his first-degree murder trial
    ,                       when the prosecutor, during his opening statement, advised
    DENNIS M. STRAUB, Warden,         -
    Respondent-Appellant. -                             the jury that petitioner had confessed to the murder to a fellow
    jail inmate and, yet, subsequently failed, despite a good faith
    N                        effort, to produce that inmate as a witness.1 The district court
    Appeal from the United States District Court         found that the procedural default doctrine did not bar the
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.      review of petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim.
    No. 01-70951—Arthur J. Tarnow, District Judge.         Specifically, the court held that (1) petitioner had “fairly
    presented” his Confrontation Clause claim to the state courts
    Argued: March 18, 2004                     on direct review; (2) to the extent that the state courts on
    direct review would have found that petitioner procedurally
    Decided and Filed: July 29, 2004                defaulted his Confrontation Clause claim as a result of trial
    counsel’s failure to object to the underlying violation at trial,
    Before: KENNEDY, ROGERS, and COOK, Circuit              the ineffective assistance of trial counsel would have excused
    Judges.                                any such default; and, (3) petitioner had not procedurally
    defaulted his Confrontation Clause claim before the state
    _________________                        courts on collateral review because the state procedural
    ground upon which the state courts denied petitioner leave to
    COUNSEL                             appeal was inadequate to bar federal habeas review.
    ARGUED: Brad H. Beaver, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY               In reaching the merits of petitioner’s Confrontation Clause
    GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellant. Carole M.       Claim, the district court found that the prosecutor’s opening
    Stanyar, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Brad
    H. Beaver, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    Lansing, Michigan, for Appellant. Carole M. Stanyar,           1
    Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee.                                The court granted the petition unless the State of Michigan
    scheduled a new trial for petitioner within ninety days.
    1
    No. 03-1124                               Hicks v. Straub      3    4      Hicks v. Straub                             No. 03-1124
    statement comment concerning petitioner’s alleged confession                           A. Pre-Trial and Trial
    violated petitioner’s right to confrontation, and that this
    violation was not harmless error. The district court further          On July 25, 1993, petitioner was arrested and charged with
    found, pursuant to § 2254(d), that the prior state-court denial     the first-degree murder of Shawn Stalworth, who had been
    of petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim on the merits was        shot to death earlier that day as he was leaving his house in
    an unreasonable application of the pertinent, clearly-              Battle Creek, Michigan. Following his arrest, petitioner was
    established Supreme Court precedent.                                confined in a local jail, where he allegedly confessed to
    another inmate, Lorenzo Brand (“Brand”), that he had
    Respondent Dennis Straub appeals this grant of the writ of       committed the murder. Brand testified to this confession at
    habeas corpus on the following grounds: (1) the district court      petitioner’s preliminary hearing. At petitioner’s jury trial, the
    erred in reaching the merits of petitioner’s claim because          prosecutor, during his opening statement, stated, in pertinent
    petitioner procedurally defaulted his claim by failing to raise     part:
    it on direct review and because trial counsel’s failure to object
    did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel that would         Defendant was arrested. He was charged. He was
    excuse this default; (2) the district court violated 28 U.S.C.          arraigned. He was taken to the City of Battle Creek
    § 2254(e)(2) when it held an evidentiary hearing on                     lockup, not the county jail, but the lockup pending
    petitioner’s claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel           transfer, moving him over here. While he was there[,]
    because petitioner had failed to develop the factual basis              there was another person in the lockup. He goes, hey,
    underlying that claim in the state courts; and (3) assuming             my mom just saw you on a videotape . . . . He said my
    that the district court had the authority to reach the merits of        mom told me she just saw a person and they accused him
    petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim, it erred in granting           of homicide. You kill that man? What did he say? Yep,
    relief because the prosecutor’s remark did not violate                  yep.
    petitioner’s right to confrontation under the relevant, clearly-
    established Supreme Court precedent.                                At the close of the state’s case, the prosecutor informed the
    court that the state would not call Brand as a witness because
    For the reasons explained below, we REVERSE the district          it had been unable to locate him. The prosecutor admitted
    court’s grant of a writ of habeas corpus to petitioner under 28     that he did not believe that the state’s efforts to locate Brand
    U.S.C. § 2254.                                                      met with the due diligence required under Michigan case law
    for the admission of preliminary examination testimony. The
    I. Procedural History                            trial court agreed and declined to admit the testimony.
    Despite the prosecutor’s failure to produce Brand, defense
    Adjudication of respondent’s present appeal requires an           counsel neither objected to nor requested a mistrial based
    understanding of the complex procedural history that bears          upon the prosecutor’s opening statement relaying that
    upon that appeal in the state courts.                               confession. Further, defense counsel never mentioned the
    prosecutor’s statement regarding petitioner’s alleged
    confession in his opening statement, which he had reserved
    until the close of the prosecution’s case. Neither defense
    counsel nor the prosecutor mentioned the alleged confession
    in closing arguments.
    No. 03-1124                                   Hicks v. Straub         5    6          Hicks v. Straub                              No. 03-1124
    The trial court gave the jury the customary instruction that                        including arguing matters not in evidence, such as
    “[t]he lawyers’ statements and arguments are not evidence,”                           defendant’s supposed admission to committing the
    and further instructed:                                                               murder, and by repetitively cross-examining
    defendant on the irrelevant matter of his being a
    Lorenzo Brand is a missing witness whose appearance                                 marijuana dealer.
    was the responsibility of the [p]rosecution. You may
    infer that the witness’ testimony would have not been                     II.       Because of defense counsel’s failures[,] . . .
    favorable to the [p]rosecution’s case.                                              [defendant] was denied his rights to the effective
    assistance of counsel, to present an effective defense,
    However, because the prosecutor’s opening statement never                             and to a fair trial.
    named the jail inmate to whom petitioner allegedly confessed,
    and because no mention was ever made before the jury that                  Petitioner only asserted that these instances of prosecutorial
    Brand was that inmate, the jury had no knowledge with which                misconduct violated defendant’s rights to due process and a
    to tie the trial court’s “Brand” instruction to the prosecutor’s           fair trial; he never argued that this misconduct also violated
    opening statement regarding the alleged confession.2                       his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation. During his
    Moreover, immediately after this instruction, the district court           appeals in the state courts, petitioner argued that no curative
    gave an instruction as to when the jury could properly                     instruction could have remedied the prejudice to defendant.
    consider an unrelated out-of-court statement made by                       During the direct appeal, no one mentioned that the curative
    petitioner that had been admitted into evidence.                           instruction that identified Brand was referring to the jail
    inmate in the prosecutor’s opening statement to whom
    The jury convicted petitioner of first-degree murder and                 petitioner allegedly confessed. Since trial counsel never
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.                 objected to this alleged prosecutorial misconduct, petitioner
    The trial court sentenced petitioner to life imprisonment                  argued that this failure to object resulted in the requisite
    without parole on the murder conviction and to two years’                  manifest injustice which rendered any such objection
    imprisonment on the felony-firearm conviction.                             unnecessary, and, alternatively, that the failure amounted to
    an ineffective assistance of counsel. Thus, petitioner’s
    B. Direct Review                                  independent claim of ineffective assistance of counsel rested,
    in part, upon this failure by trial counsel.3
    Petitioner filed an appeal as of right in the Michigan Court
    of Appeals. Petitioner presented, among others, the following                Petitioner filed a motion to remand the case to the trial
    two claims:                                                                court for an evidentiary hearing on his claim of ineffective
    I.       Defendant . . . was denied a fair trial by the
    prosecutor’s numerous instances of misconduct,                         3
    Petitioner also argued that trial counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance when he failed to impeach a witness with testimony from his
    2
    preliminary examination; to make app ropriate motions, both before and
    The only plausible way for the jury to make the necessary             during trial; to cross-examine a witness concerning her in-court
    connection would have been to compare the list of witnesses mentioned      identification of defendant with her prior stateme nt that she could not
    during the voir dire with the actual witnesses called. W hether the jury   identify the perpetrator; and to pre pare petitioner’s alibi defense
    made that connection is unknown.                                           adequately.
    No. 03-1124                               Hicks v. Straub       7    8            Hicks v. Straub                               No. 03-1124
    assistance of trial counsel. The Michigan Court of Appeals           claims that he had presented to the Michigan Court of
    affirmed petitioner’s conviction and sentence. People v.             Appeals. Petitioner also filed a motion to remand the case to
    Hicks, No. 171833 (Mich. Ct. App. Nov. 8, 1996). As to the           the trial court for an evidentiary hearing on his ineffective-
    first claim, the court found that trial counsel, by failing to       assistance-of-trial-counsel claim. On November 7, 1997, the
    object to the alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct at       Michigan Supreme Court denied petitioner leave to appeal
    trial, had failed to preserve this claim for review absent a         and denied the motion for remand on the ground that it was
    miscarriage of justice. 
    Id. Noting that
    only a miscarriage of        “not persuaded that [it should review] the questions
    justice would excuse this failure, the court further found that      presented.” People v. Hicks, 
    456 Mich. 884
    (Mich. 1997).
    there was “no manifest injustice in the prosecutor’s comment
    during his opening statement that defendant allegedly                                      C. State Collateral Review
    confessed to the crime to a fellow inmate, even though the
    prosecution later failed to produce that witness.” 
    Id. The On
    January 29, 1999, petitioner filed a motion for relief
    court reasoned that the trial judge’s instruction to the jury that   from judgment in the trial court, pursuant to M.C.R. 6.500.4
    it “could assume that the witness the prosecution was unable         The record indicates that petitioner made the following two
    to produce would have testified unfavorably to the                   claims, among others, in that motion:
    prosecution, and that . . . [it was] not to consider defendant’s
    alleged out-of-court admission as evidence of his guilt”                 I.       [Petitioner was] denied his constitutional right to
    remedied any potential prejudice that may have resulted from                      confront witnesses against him when the prosecutor
    this comment.                                                                     advised the jury during opening statement that
    defendant had confessed to the murder, where the
    After noting that the defendant failed to properly preserve                    prosecutor without even the pretense of due
    the issue, the court of appeals nonetheless decided to address                    diligence failed thereafter to produce the witness to
    the merits of his ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim,                  the alleged confession, where defense counsel never
    and found that he “failed to overcome the presumption that he                     responded to the issue of the “confession” in any
    was afforded effective assistance of counsel.”                
    Id. way, and
    where the trial court’s instructions failed
    Specifically, the court held that “in each instance, the action
    [that] defendant suggests that counsel should have taken[]
    would have either been futile, or a matter of strategy that th[e]             4
    Petitioner had previously filed–on January 26, 1999–a writ of
    [c]ourt is unwilling to second-guess on appeal.” The                 habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Conceding that his petition
    Michigan Court of Appeals denied petitioner’s motion to              contained unexhausted claims, petitioner explained that he had filed the
    remand on the ground that petitioner “failed to identify an          petition to avoid a perceived violation of the applicable statute of
    limitations. Petitioner stated that he wanted to pursue state collateral
    issue sought to be reviewed on appeal and demonstrate by             review so as to exhaust these claims as well as to raise claims based upon
    affidavit or an offer of proof regarding the facts to be             a denial of his right to confrontation and upon a denial of his right to the
    established at a hearing,” as M.C.R. 7.211(c)(1)(a)(ii)              effective assistance of counsel. The district court dismissed the petition
    requires. People v. Hicks, No. 171833 (Mich. Ct. App. Dec.           without prejudice on Sep tember 2 9, 199 9, pursuant to the p arties’
    6, 1995).                                                            stipulation that 28 U.S.C. § 2 244 (d)(1 )’s one-year statute of limitations
    would be tolled during the pendency of state collateral review, and that
    any re-filed § 2254 petition would not constitute a “successive
    Petitioner then filed a delayed application for leave to
    petition” under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2). Hicks v. Straub, No. 99-
    appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court, presenting the same            70299 (E.D. Mich. September 29, 1999).
    No. 03-1124                                     Hicks v. Straub          9    10       Hicks v. Straub                                    No. 03-1124
    utterly to remedy the enormous prejudice to the                       petitioner argued that, although his Confrontation Clause and
    defendant.                                                            Due Process Clause claims are grounded on the same factual
    predicate, they are legally distinct. Therefore, he argued the
    II. [Petitioner was] deprived of the effective assistance                   Michigan Court of Appeals decided only the latter, but not the
    of counsel when trial counsel failed to object or                       former claim.6 Petitioner further argued that the ineffective
    move for mistrial based upon an obvious deprivation                     assistance of appellate counsel had prevented him from
    of the right to confront witnesses following the                        presenting his Confrontation Clause claim to the court of
    prosecutor’s unsupported statement to the jury that                     appeals. He asserted that both trial counsel and appellate
    the defendant had confessed, and where appellate                        counsel were ineffective for failing to identify and to raise the
    counsel failed to frame the issue properly as the                       Confrontation Clause claim at trial and on direct review,
    deprivation of the right to confront witnesses in                       respectively.
    violation of the Sixth Amendment.
    The trial court noted that the Michigan Court of Appeals
    In support of his claims, petitioner argued, for the first time,            had held that trial counsel was not ineffective. Nevertheless,
    that the trial court’s jury instruction on Brand was incapable                it stated that, “[b]ecause this is a first degree murder
    of curing the prosecutor’s statement to the jury that petitioner              conviction and a felony firearm conviction, . . . [it was]
    had confessed to a jail inmate because that statement never                   willing to address the underlying substance of the motion.”
    disclosed the name of that jail inmate while the court’s                      The court stated that, because defendant testified that he had
    instruction only referenced Brand by name, not by his role as                 an alibi defense and completely denied having anything to do
    the jail inmate to whom petitioner allegedly confessed.                       with the murder, the defense “clearly contradicted the
    Petitioner further argued that, had Brand testified, defense                  [p]rosecutor’s opening statement [that defendant had
    counsel would have had substantial evidence with which to                     confessed].” The trial court then noted that it had instructed
    impeach his testimony.                                                        the jury that the lawyers’ arguments and statements are not
    evidence and that the jury’s decision must be based upon only
    In an order dated March 16, 2000, the state trial court                     evidence. The court concluded that, “technically,” there is no
    denied petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment. People                   “confrontation issue” because, absent the prosecutor’s
    v. Hicks, No. 93-2188FC (Calhoun County Circuit Court                         statement, “there was no evidence brought into play against
    March 16, 2000). The court outlined its reasons for that                      the defendant.” While reading onto the record the Michigan
    denial at a hearing on March 6, 2000.5 During that hearing,                   Court of Appeals’ opinion denying petitioner’s ineffective-
    5
    During an earlier hearing, at which only the prosecutor appeared, the
    prosecutor argued that the Michigan Court of Appeals had decided all of            add ressed , so that motion is denied.
    the claims in petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment. The trial judge
    then stated:                                                                  Petitioner’s counsel failed to attend this hearing due to a scheduling error.
    The state co urt re-scheduled the hearing on p etitioner’s motion for
    That’s what I tho ught. I read the Court of Appeals opinion               March 6 , 200 0, at which hea ring bo th counsel were pre sent.
    again, the ineffective assistance, the alleged prosecutorial                   6
    misco nduc t, the comments made in the opening statement that                   Presumably in response to this contention, the prosecutor argued
    were never followed up about the jail compatriot claiming the             that petitioner should not be permitted to prese nt an arg ument that is
    [d]efendant made statements. In any event all of these have been          simply worded differently.
    No. 03-1124                                       Hicks v. Straub         11     12     Hicks v. Straub                           No. 03-1124
    assistance-of-counsel claim, the trial court underscored the                       I.   The trial court was clearly erroneous in rejecting
    following excerpt as the most important in its view:                                    defendant[]’s claim that he was denied his
    constitutional right to confront witnesses against him
    [T]he record provides no support for [d]efense’s                                      when the prosecutor advised the jury during opening
    proposition that counsel’s failure to object to the                                   statement that defendant had confessed to the
    admission of evidence, his failure to request a pretrial                              murder, where the prosecutor without even the
    lineup, his failure to extensively cross-examine an                                   pretense of due diligence failed thereafter to produce
    eyewitness, or his presentation of the [d]efendant’s                                  the witness to the alleged confession, where defense
    defense fell below the objective standard of                                          counsel never responded to the issue of the
    reasonableness. We find that defendant has failed to                                  “confession” in any way, and where the trial court’s
    overcome the presumption that he was afforded effective                               instructions failed utterly to remedy the enormous
    assistance of counsel.                                                                prejudice to the defendant.
    Based upon this excerpt, the trial court concluded that                            II. The trial court was clearly erroneous in rejecting
    petitioner had not presented a “specific discrete allegation of                        defendant[]’s claim that he was deprived of the
    ineffective assistance.” Rather, according to the trial court,                         effective assistance of counsel when trial counsel
    petitioner’s allegation “was wide-ranging” and involved a                              failed to object or move for mistrial based upon an
    “number of different areas . . . to demonstrate ineffective                            obvious deprivation of the right to confront
    assistance.” As a result, the trial court also agreed with the                         witnesses following the prosecutor’s unsupported
    court of appeals that trial counsel’s assistance was not                               statement to the jury that the defendant had
    ineffective, reasoning that defendant had posited an alibi                             confessed, and where appellate counsel failed to
    defense before the jury, and that the court had instructed the                         frame the issue properly as the deprivation of the
    jury that lawyers’ statements are not evidence. The court then                         right to confront witnesses in violation of the Sixth
    denied petitioner’s motion.7                                                           Amendment.
    Petitioner filed a delayed application for leave to appeal the                The Michigan Court of Appeals denied petitioner leave to
    trial court’s denial of his motion for relief from judgment in                   appeal on the ground that petitioner had failed “to meet the
    the Michigan Court of Appeals, presenting these claims:                          burden of establishing entitlement to relief under M.C.R.
    6.508.” People v. Hicks, No. 226074 (Mich. Ct. App.
    Aug. 11, 2000).
    Petitioner then filed a delayed application for leave to
    7                                                                            appeal in the Michigan Supreme Court, presenting the same
    W e note that the Michigan Court of Appeals’ decision, on direct          claims that he had presented to the Michigan Court of
    review, necessarily addressed only petitioner’s claim of ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel. We further note that, while the trial court, in
    Appeals. The Michigan Supreme Court denied petitioner
    denying petitioner’s post-conviction motion, did no t expre ssly articulate      leave to appeal, ruling that petitioner had failed “to meet the
    its reasoning for the denial of petitioner’s claim tha t appellate counsel was   burden of establishing entitlement to relief under M.C.R.
    ineffective for failing to raise a Confrontation Clause challenge on direct      6.508(D).” People v. Hicks, 
    463 Mich. 978
    (Mich. Feb. 26,
    review, such a holding implicitly follows from its express finding that trial    2001).
    counsel was not ineffective for failing to raise such a challenge at trial.
    No. 03-1124                                   Hicks v. Straub       13    14    Hicks v. Straub                              No. 03-1124
    D. Federal Collateral Review Before the District Court                         1. Procedural Default Consideration on State
    Collateral Review
    On March 9, 2001, petitioner filed a petition for a writ of
    habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Petitioner presented                  On state collateral review, the Michigan Supreme Court
    the following claims as grounds for relief:                               denied petitioner leave to appeal the trial court’s denial of his
    motion for relief from judgment on the ground that petitioner
    I.       Petitioner was denied his constitutional right to              failed “to meet the burden of establishing entitlement to relief
    confront witnesses against him when the prosecutor             under M.C.R. 6.508(D).” People v. Hicks, 
    463 Mich. 978
               advised the jury during opening statement that                 (Mich. Feb. 26, 2001). In so holding, the state court did not
    petitioner had confessed to the murder, where the              specify whether it was relying upon a particular subsection of
    prosecutor without even the pretense of due                    M.C.R. 6.508(D). Before the district court, petitioner and
    diligence failed thereafter to produce the witness to          respondent argued about whether the Michigan Supreme
    the alleged confession, where defense counsel never            Court’s denial rested upon an adequate and independent state
    responded to the issue of the ‘confession’ in any              procedural law and, in particular, about whether it relied upon
    way, and where the court’s instruction failed utterly          subsection (3) of M.C.R. 6.508(D). M.C.R. 6.508(D)(3)
    to remedy the enormous prejudice to the petitioner.            provides:
    II. Petitioner was deprived of the effective assistance of                The court may not grant relief to the defendant if the
    counsel when trial counsel failed to object or move                   motion . . . alleges grounds for relief, other than
    for mistrial based upon an obvious deprivation of the                 jurisdictional defects, which could have been raised on
    right to confront witnesses following the                             appeal from the conviction and sentence or in a prior
    prosecutor’s unsupported statement to the jury that                   motion under this subchapter [of post-appeal relief],
    the petitioner had confessed, and where appellate                     unless the defendant demonstrates (a) good cause for
    counsel failed to frame this issue properly as the                    failure to raise such grounds on appeal or in the prior
    deprivation of the right to confront witnesses in                     [post-appeal] motion, and (b) actual prejudice from the
    violation of the Sixth Amendment.                                     alleged irregularities that support the claim for relief.
    On October 15, 2002, the district court conducted an                        Respondent argued that, in denying petitioner relief under
    evidentiary hearing in which it found trial counsel was                   M.C.R. § 6.508(D), the Michigan Supreme Court implicitly
    ineffective, and conditionally granted petitioner a writ of               relied upon subsection (3). Respondent argued that
    habeas corpus on petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim.8                subsection (3) applied because, although petitioner had
    presented the factual predicate for his Confrontation Clause
    claim to the Michigan courts on direct review by virtue of his
    prosecutorial misconduct claim, he had not presented the legal
    argument for that claim until state collateral review.
    Petitioner concedes that he did not expressly present his
    8
    Confrontation Clause claim on direct review. However,
    The district court determined that habeas corpus relief was not      petitioner does argue that he “fairly presented” his
    warranted for his claims based on a witness’ in-court identification of   Confrontation Clause claim to the Michigan Court of Appeals
    him.
    No. 03-1124                                     Hicks v. Straub       15     16     Hicks v. Straub                                      No. 03-1124
    on direct review based solely on his presentation of the                       against the defendant in a prior appeal or proceeding
    factual predicate. Accordingly, petitioner argues that there                   under this subchapter [of post-appeal relief], unless the
    was no basis for procedural default under M.C.R.                               defendant establishes that a retroactive change in the law
    6.508(D)(3). Alternatively, petitioner argued that appellate                   has undermined the prior decision;
    counsel’s failure to raise the Confrontation Clause claim on
    direct review constituted ineffective assistance so as to excuse             In so holding, the district court reasoned that, although
    such default. In support, petitioner claimed that appellate                  “[p]etitioner could have presented his Confrontation Clause
    counsel buried the Confrontation Clause issue, the “most                     claim in a clearer manner,” he “fairly presented [it] to the
    significant constitutional deprivation in th[e] case,” in a                  Michigan state courts on direct review.” 
    Id. at 706.
    The
    “garden-variety prosecutorial misconduct claim,” and that, to                district court underscored that petitioner, in his brief to the
    the extent that his Confrontation Clause claim is meritorious,               Michigan Court of Appeals, argued that the prosecutor
    such ineffective assistance sufficiently prejudiced him.                     engaged in misconduct by relaying in his opening statement
    Respondent countered that petitioner’s appellate counsel did                 petitioner’s alleged confession to the murder and then
    not render ineffective assistance by framing the underlying                  subsequently failing, because of a lack of due diligence, to
    factual predicate as a prosecutorial misconduct claim – the                  produce that inmate as a witness at trial. 
    Id. Relying upon
    “normal” and “accepted” legal theory – rather than as a                      McMeans v. Brigano, 
    228 F.3d 674
    , 681 (6th Cir. 2000), the
    Confrontation Clause claim – an “unusual” and “creative”                     district court concluded that the facts underlying the
    legal theory. Petitioner also asserted that the Michigan                     “prosecutorial misconduct claim . . . [that petitioner
    Supreme Court’s “arbitrary and ambiguous” form order                         presented] in his state court briefs were ‘well within the
    denying him leave to appeal his post-conviction motion for                   mainstream of constitutional law’ [on the Confrontation
    relief from judgment did not constitute an adequate state                    Clause] such that the Michigan state courts should have
    procedural ground.                                                           recognized and addressed the Confrontation Clause issue.”
    
    Id. In further
    support, the district court posited that petitioner
    The district court held that the Michigan Supreme Court, in                had expressly presented his Confrontation Clause claim, as
    denying petitioner leave to appeal his motion for relief from                such, on state collateral review, and that the Michigan trial
    judgment under M.C.R. 6.508(D), relied upon subsection (2),                  court, on such review, had agreed with the prosecutor that
    not (3).9 Hicks v. Straub, 
    239 F. Supp. 2d 697
    , 706-07 (E.D.                 petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment only presented
    Mich. 2003). M.C.R. 6.508(D)(2) provides:                                    claims that he had previously presented to the state courts on
    direct review.10 
    Id. According to
    the district court, because
    The court may not grant relief to the defendant if the
    motion . . . alleges grounds for relief which were decided
    10
    Resp ondent’s brief states that “[t]he trial court, perceiving no
    difference in the claim from what had been presented during [p]etitioner’s
    9
    Petitioner asserted that because the Michigan courts had not decided    appeal of right, denied the m otion on the ground that [p]etitioner co uld
    his Confrontation Clause claim on direct review, the Michigan Supreme        not collaterally attack his conviction on grounds already presented in a
    Court, on co llateral review, could not have relied upon M.C.R.              prior appeal.” Thus, both the district court and respo ndent seem to
    6.508(D)(2) in denying petitioner lea ve to appe al his mo tion for relief   contend that the trial court’s denial of petitioner’s motion for relief from
    from judgment. Th us, petitioner conceded – albeit implicitly – that the     judgment rested on this ground . W hile the prosecutor made this argument
    Michigan Supreme Court denied him such leave pursuant to M.C.R.              before the trial court in the initial ex parte hearing, and while portions of
    6.508(D )(3).                                                                the subse quent hearing, on March 6, 2000 , reveal that the trial court
    No. 03-1124                                       Hicks v. Straub        17     18     Hicks v. Straub                                      No. 03-1124
    petitioner fairly presented his Confrontation Clause claim to                   petitioner had procedurally defaulted his prosecutorial
    the Michigan courts on direct review, the courts, not                           misconduct claim by failing to object at trial to its underlying
    petitioner, bear the blame for their failure to recognize and to                factual predicate – the prosecutor’s opening statement
    rule upon that claim. 
    Id. The district
    court found that the                     relaying petitioner’s purported confession. Respondent
    state courts’ failure to recognize and to address petitioner’s                  further argued that trial counsel’s failure to object to this
    fairly-presented Confrontation Clause claim in denying                          alleged Confrontation Clause violation did not constitute
    petitioner relief on direct review constituted a constructive                   ineffective assistance of counsel so as to excuse any such
    denial of that claim for purposes of M.C.R. 6.508(D)(2). 
    Id. default. Respondent
    asserted that petitioner’s trial counsel
    at 707. After finding that the Michigan Supreme Court                           chose not to object or move for a mistrial when the state
    denied petitioner leave to appeal under M.C.R. 6.508(D)(2),                     failed to produce Brand as a matter of trial strategy.
    the court held that this state procedural law is inadequate to                  Specifically, respondent maintained that the failure of Brand
    bar federal habeas review because it is “simply a rule of res                   to appear was a fortunate turn of events because Brand’s
    judicata barring a defendant from re[-]litigating claims in a                   testimony would only have strengthened the prosecution’s
    motion for relief from judgment which were decided                              case. Moreover, according to respondent, had trial counsel
    adversely to him in a prior state court decision.”11 
    Id. Thus, objected
    and received a mistrial, there would have been the
    the district court found that petitioner had not procedurally                   risk that the government, at the re-trial, would have been able
    defaulted his Confrontation Clause claim on state collateral                    to produce Brand as a witness.
    review. 
    Id. The district
    court held that, in case the Michigan Court of
    2. Procedural Default Consideration on Direct Review                           Appeals, on direct review, found petitioner’s Confrontation
    Clause claim procedurally defaulted due to his trial counsel’s
    Before the district court, respondent argued that, to the                     failure to object to that underlying violation at trial,12 that
    extent petitioner fairly presented his Confrontation Clause                     failure constituted ineffective assistance and, thus, excused
    claim to the state courts on direct review by virtue of                         any such procedural default. After conducting an evidentiary
    presenting the factual basis underlying his prosecutorial                       hearing on the matter, the district court agreed with petitioner
    misconduct claim, petitioner, nevertheless, procedurally                        that trial counsel’s assistance was objectively unreasonable
    defaulted that claim. As respondent pointed out, the                            for the following reasons: 1) it should have been obvious to
    Michigan Court of Appeals, on direct review, found that
    12
    examined the Michigan Court of Appeals’ decision, the trial court,                     On direct review, the M ichigan Court of Ap pea ls held that
    at that subsequent hearing, expressly considered the merits of                  petitioner had failed to p reserve his prosecutorial misconduct claim based
    petitioner’s claims. In its order denying petitioner’s motion for               upon the prosecutor’s opening statement on the ground that petitioner had
    failed to object to this statement at trial, and that, because the jury
    relief from judgment, the trial court adopted its reasoning at the              instructions remedied any prejudice resulting from this statement, no
    subsequent hearing as the basis for that denial.                                manifest injustice existed to excuse this failure. T hus, as respondent aptly
    11
    argued, to the exte nt that petitioner had raised his Confrontation C lause
    In so holding, the district court relied upon Ceja v. Stewart, 97 F.3d   claim on direct review by virtue of presenting the sam e facts underlying
    1246, 1253 (9th Cir. 1996), which held that a state court’s application of      his prosecutorial misconduct claim, the Michigan Court of App eals’
    the rule of res judiciata is not an adequate proce dural bar to foreclose       procedural-de fault ruling would apply with equal force to that claim as
    federal habeas relief.                                                          well.
    No. 03-1124                                    Hicks v. Straub        19    20    Hicks v. Straub                               No. 03-1124
    him that the prosecutor’s failure to produce Brand at trial                 to address it, a federal court must conduct an independent
    violated petitioner’s right to confrontation; 2) he had no                  review of that state court’s decision under 28 U.S.C.
    strategic reason not to object to this Confrontation Clause                 § 2254(d). 
    Id. at 707.
    The court reasoned that such a denial
    violation; 3) his purported reason for failing to object–that he            constituted an adjudication on the merits – albeit without any
    did not want the prosecution to produce Brand as a witness at               reasoning – for purposes of triggering § 2254(d). 
    Id. any re-trial–was
    “unreasonable” and “wholly unsupported by
    the record” due to the availability of substantial impeachment                 In reviewing petitioner’s Confrontation Clause Claim, the
    material against Brand;13 and 4) he did not even obtain an                  district court found that the prosecutor’s opening statement
    adequate curative instruction because the instruction that the              relaying petitioner’s purported confession violated
    trial court gave did not reference Brand as the jail inmate to              petitioner’s right to confrontation, and that this violation was
    whom petitioner allegedly confessed. 
    Id. at 712-13.
    The                     not harmless error. 
    Id. at 711.
    The district court further
    district court found that, because the prosecutor’s unsupported             found, pursuant to § 2254(d), that the prior state-court denial
    opening statement violated petitioner’s right to confront the               of petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim on the merits was
    witnesses against him, trial counsel’s deficient representation             an unreasonable application of the pertinent, clearly-
    sufficiently prejudiced petitioner. 
    Id. Pursuant to
    28 U.S.C.               established Supreme Court precedent. 
    Id. at 712;
    see
    § 2254(d), the district court further found that the prior-state            generally Pointer v. Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    , 403 (1965), Bruton
    court adjudication denying petitioner’s ineffective-assistance-             v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    (1968), and Frazier v. Cupp,
    of-trial-counsel claim on the merits constituted an                         
    394 U.S. 731
    (1969). Consequently, the district court
    unreasonable application of Strickland v. Washington, 466                   conditionally granted petitioner’s application for a writ of
    U.S. 668 (1984), the pertinent, clearly-established Supreme                 habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on his Confrontation
    Court precedent. 
    Id. Thus, the
    district court found the                     Clause claim. 
    Id. at 714.
    procedural default doctrine did not bar its review of
    petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim on the merits. 
    Id. II. Analysis
    3. Adjudication on the Merits                                 The provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
    Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214
    Relying upon Harris v. Stoval, 
    212 F.3d 940
    (6th Cir.                     (“ADEPA”), apply to petitioner’s habeas petition, which
    2000), the district court held that, where, as here, the                    petitioner filed after the effective date of the act. “In a habeas
    petitioner fairly presented his federal constitutional claim of             corpus proceeding, we review de novo a district court’s legal
    a violation of the confrontation clause to the state courts on              conclusions and its factual findings for clear error.” Lott v.
    direct review, and those courts, in denying that claim, failed              Coyle, 
    261 F.3d 594
    , 606 (6th Cir. 2001). We review de novo
    a district court’s determinations regarding a habeas
    petitioner’s procedural default of any of his claims. 
    Id. We 13
                                                                         review de novo a district court’s determinations concerning a
    According to petitioner, such impeachment evidence includes
    Bra nd’s admissions that he anticipated that the prosecutor “m ight” help
    habeas petitioner’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, a
    him out with charges that he was facing at the time, that the alleged       mixed question of law and fact. 
    Id. confession occurred
    within feet of a large sign warning that everything
    was being recorded , and the implausible nature of petitioner having
    confessed to a complete stranger at the very beginning of their
    conversation.
    No. 03-1124                              Hicks v. Straub     21    22     Hicks v. Straub                                       No. 03-1124
    A. Procedural Default                           Cir. 2000). If, pursuant to these standards, a petitioner
    procedurally defaulted his federal claim in state court, the
    Subject to two exceptions, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A)            petitioner must demonstrate either: 1) cause for his failure to
    prohibits a federal court from granting “[a]n application for a    comply with the state procedural rule and actual prejudice
    writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in custody             flowing from the violation of federal law alleged in his claim,
    pursuant to the judgment of a [s]tate court ... unless . . . the   or 2) that a lack of federal habeas review of the claim’s merits
    applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the courts       “will result in a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
    of the [s]tate.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(c) provides that an applicant    
    Coleman, 501 U.S. at 750
    ; see Murray v. Carrier, 477 U.S.
    has exhausted the remedies available in state courts only if he    478, 496 (1986) (specifying that a ‘fundamental miscarriage
    no longer has the right to raise the question presented by any     of justice’ will result “where a constitutional violation has
    available procedure under state law. The procedural default        probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually
    doctrine applies to bar a federal court’s review of a state        innocent”).
    prisoner’s federal claim where that prisoner failed to give the
    state courts a “full and fair” opportunity to resolve that                                    1. Direct Review
    claim–as the exhaustion doctrine requires–and the prisoner
    cannot cure that failure because state-court remedies are no         We find that, contrary to the district court’s conclusion,
    longer available. See O’Sullivan v. Boerckel, 
    526 U.S. 838
    ,        petitioner procedurally defaulted his Confrontation Clause
    848 (1999) (holding that the procedural default doctrine           claim by failing to fairly present it to the Michigan courts on
    preserves the integrity of the exhaustion doctrine, which “a       direct review.14 A petitioner must fairly present to the state
    prisoner could evade . . . by ‘letting the time run’ on state
    remedies”); Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    , 732 (1991)
    (holding that a “habeas petitioner who has defaulted his                14
    The district court and petitioner make much of the fact that
    federal claims in state court meets the technical requirements     respo ndent, in an ex parte hearing before the Michigan trial court on
    for exhaustion . . . [because] there are no state remedies any     petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment, argued that petitioner had
    longer ‘available’ to him,” and, thus, that the procedural         presented his Confrontation Clause claim to the state courts on direct
    default doctrine prevents a habeas petitioner from                 review, and that the state courts had decided that issue. In his brief here,
    circumventing the policy underlying the exhaustion doctrine).      petitioner contends that the doctrine of judicial estopp el should op erate to
    bar respondent from now asserting that petitioner had not fairly presented
    his Co nfrontation Clause claim to the state co urts on direct review.
    In deciding whether a petitioner procedurally defaulted a              Howeve r, as discussed below, the supreme court denied petitioner
    federal claim in state court, we must determine whether:           leave to appeal under M .C.R. 6.508(D)(3) on the ground that petitioner
    1) the petitioner failed to comply with an applicable state        had improperly failed to raise his Confrontation Clause claim on direct
    procedural rule; 2) the last state court rendering judgment on     review. Alterna tively, to the extent that p etitioner suggests that
    the claim at issue, in fact, enforced the applicable state         respo ndent’s prior inconsistent po sition was “successful” because the state
    trial court had relied upon it in denying petitioner’s motion, the actual
    procedural rule so as to bar that claim; and 3) the state          order denying that motion does not support such a claim. Attached to that
    procedural default is an adequate and independent state            order is not the transcript from the ex parte hearing, but the transcript
    ground properly foreclosing federal habeas review of the           from the subsequent hearing, in which the trial court expressly stated that
    petitioner’s federal claim at issue. Seymour v. Walker, 224        it would address the claim’s merits. Moreo ver, petitioner’s brief concedes
    F.3d 542, 554-55 (citing Maupin v. Smith, 
    785 F.2d 135
    , 138        that the trial court did not find a procedural default, but rather addressed
    the merits of his Confrontation Clause claim.
    (6th Cir. 1986)); Simpson v. Jones, 
    238 F.3d 399
    , 406 (6th               In any even t, we note that, in his habeas petition–and on state
    No. 03-1124                                       Hicks v. Straub         23     24   Hicks v. Straub                             No. 03-1124
    courts either the substance of or the substantial equivalent of                  pertinent] constitutional law.” 
    McMeans, 228 F.3d at 681
    the federal claim that he is presenting to a federal habeas                      (holding that “[g]eneral allegations of the denial of rights to
    court. A petitioner fairly presents a federal habeas claim to                    a ‘fair trial’ and ‘due process’ do not ‘fairly present’ claims
    the state courts only if he “asserted both the factual and legal                 that specific constitutional rights were violated.”) However,
    basis for his claim.” 
    McMeans, 228 F.3d at 681
    . See also                         a petitioner need not cite “book and verse on the federal
    Picard v. Connor, 
    404 U.S. 270
    , 276, 277-78 (1971) (holding                      constitution.” 
    Picard, 404 U.S. at 278
    (quotation marks and
    that petitioner’s challenge to the legality of the indictment                    citations omitted).
    was neither the “substantial equivalent” of nor entailed the
    same “ultimate question for disposition” as his equal                              Because his prosecutorial misconduct and Confrontation
    protection claim even though it relied upon the same factual                     Clause claims rest upon the same factual predicate, petitioner,
    basis, and, thus, that the state courts had no sua sponte duty                   by presenting his prosecutorial misconduct claim on direct
    to consider whether that factual basis resulted in a equal                       review, also presented the factual basis underlying his
    protection violation). As this Court has previously explained,                   Confrontation Clause claim. Thus, the issue is whether
    the exhaustion doctrine requires the petitioner to present “the                  petitioner, on direct review, presented either the substance of
    same claim under the same theory” to the state courts before                     or the substantial equivalent of the legal basis for his
    raising it on federal habeas review. Pillette v. Foltz, 824 F.2d                 Confrontation Clause claim. We find that he did not.
    494, 497 (6th Cir. 1987). In determining whether a petitioner
    “fairly presented” a federal constitutional claim to the state                     Petitioner referenced the underlying factual predicate
    courts, we consider whether: 1) the petitioner phrased the                       neither in terms relating to legal precedent on the
    federal claim in terms of the pertinent constitutional law or in                 Confrontation Clause nor in terms of a specific violation of
    terms sufficiently particular to allege a denial of the specific                 his right to confrontation. See Newton v. Million, 349 F.3d
    constitutional right in question; 2) the petitioner relied upon                  873, 877 (6th Cir. 2003) (holding that petitioner fairly
    federal cases employing the constitutional analysis in                           presented his federal claim to the state courts where he
    question; 3) the petitioner relied upon state cases employing                    phrased his claim in terms of the specific denial of a
    the federal constitutional analysis in question; or 4) the                       constitutional right–his right to due process of law under the
    petitioner alleged “facts well within the mainstream of [the                     Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments–and alleged the underlying
    facts upon which that claim was based even though he cited
    no cases employing federal constitutional analysis). Notably,
    collateral review–petitioner conceded that he ha d not raised his
    petitioner never mentioned the terms confrontation or cross-
    Confrontation Clause claim on direct review–that it was “distinct from the       examination. Rather, petitioner argued only that the
    general prosecutorial misco nduc t claim that” petitioner brought on direct      prosecutor’s opening statement amounted to the “argu[ing]
    review. In fact, petitioner made this contention so as to persuade the trial     facts not in evidence,” and that this instance of prosecutorial
    court that the state courts had not previously decid ed this claim and to        misconduct violated his constitutional right to a fair trial.
    prompt the trial court to address its merits. Moreo ver, petitioner also
    conceded to the district court, regarding his prior § 2254 p etition, that the
    Confrontation Clause claim that it presented had not been exhausted on
    In addressing the underlying factual foundation in his state
    direct review. Indeed, this representation prompted the parties to enter         court briefs, petitioner did not rely upon any federal legal
    into a stipulation to dismiss that petition so that petitioner could exhaust     precedent analyzing a claim under the Confrontation Clause,
    that claim. T hus, petitioner’s co ntention that the eq uities compe l us to     and only one case upon which he relied discussed the
    app ly the doctrine of judicial estopp el against respo ndent is not we ll-
    taken.
    No. 03-1124                                         Hicks v. Straub          25     26    Hicks v. Straub                              No. 03-1124
    Confrontation Clause.15 Petitioner’s single reference to one                        considered a habeas petitioner’s claim that the prosecutor’s
    case discussing the Confrontation Clause–where that case,                           conduct violated his right to confrontation. 
    Id. at 734.
    In that
    unlike here, involved the admission into evidence of                                case, the prosecutor, during his opening statement,
    transcripts of the former witnesses’ incriminating                                  summarized the anticipated testimony of Rawls, a witness
    testimony–is insufficient to fairly present a Confrontation                         who had pleaded guilty to the same offense for which the
    Clause claim based upon the prosecutor’s opening statement,                         petitioner was being tried. 
    Id. at 733.
    The summary “took
    which is not evidence. See 
    McMeans, 228 F.3d at 682
                                    only a few minutes to recite and was sandwiched between a
    (holding that, even though isolated state cases upon which                          summary of [the] petitioner’s own confession and a
    petitioner relied contained “a few brief references to the                          description of the circumstantial evidence [that] the [s]tate
    Confrontation Clause,” petitioner had not “fairly presented”                        would introduce.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    prosecutor did not
    his Confrontation Clause claim to the state courts on direct                        emphasize that summary in any particular way. 
    Id. review because,
    during that review process, petitioner focused                      Although, “[a]t one point[,] the prosecutor referred to a paper
    entirely on the state’s rape shield law, failed to cite any                         that he was holding in his hands to refresh his memory about
    federal precedent, and simply argued that the trial judge’s                         something Rawls had said, . . . he did not explicitly tell the
    restriction of his cross-examination denied him a “fair trial”                      jury that this paper was Rawls’ confession, nor did he purport
    and “due process”).                                                                 to read directly from it.” 
    Id. at 734.
    Yet, the state conceded
    that “the jury might fairly have believed that the prosecutor
    While the district court found that the factual predicate that                    was referring to Rawls’ statement.” 
    Id. Later, the
    prosecutor
    petitioner presented on direct review fell “well within the                         called Rawls to the stand. 
    Id. However, the
    trial court soon
    mainstream of” Confrontation Clause precedent, we disagree.                         dismissed Rawls from the stand after Rawls informed the
    Frazier v. Cupp, 
    394 U.S. 731
    (1969), best illustrates why we                       court that he would invoke his privilege against self-
    arrive at this conclusion. In Frazier, the Supreme Court                            incrimination as to every question concerning the events at
    issue. 
    Id. 15 Petitioner
    cited Peo ple v. Dye, 427 N.W .2d 5 01 (Mich. 19 88), in            Relying upon Bruton v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    (1968),
    arguing that the prosec utor’s “belated attempt to produce . . . Brand was          and Douglas v. Alabama, 
    380 U.S. 415
    (1965), in which the
    hardly a sign of good faith” and, thus, that the prosecutor was “unable to          Supreme Court found Confrontation Clause violations, the
    show due diligence in order to use . . . [Brand’s preliminary] examination          petitioner in Frazier argued before the Supreme Court that
    testimony.” In Dye, the Michigan Supreme C ourt addressed the substance
    of and purpose behind the Confrontation Clause; the court held, however,            “this series of events placed the substance of Rawls’
    that a “transcript of prior testimony may[,] nevertheless[,] b e offered in         statement before the jury in a way that ‘may well have been
    evidence upon a showing that the witness is unavailable and that the                the equivalent in the jury’s mind of testimony,’ and the
    testimony bears satisfactory indicia of 
    reliability.” 427 N.W.2d at 504-05
             statement ‘added substantial, perhaps even critical, weight to
    (relying upon M .C.L. § 768.26, which permits the prosecution to use a              the [g]overnment’s case in a form not subject to cross-
    prior witness’ testimony from a preliminary examination, a deposition, or
    a former trial where the prosecution cannot produce that witness at trial).         examination.’” 
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted). However, the
    As part of his duty to e stablish the witness’ unavailability, the M ichigan        Supreme Court distinguished petitioner’s case from Bruton as
    Supreme Court held that the prosecutor, at the defendant’s re-trial, had not        follows: “[U]nlike the situation in Bruton, the jury was not
    used due diligence in attempting to produce three witnesses who had                 being asked to perform the mental gymnastics of considering
    testified against the defendant at his first trial and, thus, that transcripts of   an incriminating statement against only one of two defendants
    those witnesses’ statements in the first trial were inadm issible. 
    Id. at 506-
    511 .                                                                               in a joint trial.” 
    Id. Here, unlike
    Bruton, but like Frazier, the
    No. 03-1124                             Hicks v. Straub     27    28    Hicks v. Straub                                 No. 03-1124
    jury was not required, via the admission into evidence of a co-   none was requested.”) The Court reasoned that it is not
    defendant’s confession inculpating petitioner, to consider that   remarkable “to assume that the jury will ordinarily be able to
    incrimination against only that co-defendant.                     limit its consideration to the evidence introduced during
    trial.” 
    Id. at 736.
    The Court also emphasized, however, that,
    The Frazier Court also distinguished Douglas as follows:        “[a]t least where the anticipated, and unproduced, evidence is
    not touted to the jury as a crucial part of the prosecution’s
    In Douglas, the prosecutor called the defendant’s               case, ‘it is hard . . . to imagine that the . . . minds of the jurors
    coconspirator to the stand and read his alleged confession      would be so influenced by such incidental statements during
    to him; the coconspirator was required to assert his            this long trial that they would not appraise the evidence
    privilege against self-incrimination repeatedly as the          objectively and dispassionately.’” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    The
    prosecutor asked him to confirm or deny each statement.         court held that nothing that occurred during the prosecution’s
    The Court found that this procedure placed powerfully           opening statement would warrant relief under the
    incriminating evidence before the jury in a manner which        Confrontation Clause. 
    Id. at 736-37
    (also finding that the
    effectively denied the right of cross-examination. Here,        prosecutor’s good faith in expecting the witness to testify,
    Rawls was on the stand for a very short time and only a         while not controlling as to a deprivation of the petitioner’s
    paraphrase of the statement was placed before the jury.         right of confrontation, precludes any finding of prosecutorial
    This was done not during the trial, while the person            misconduct).
    making the statement was on the stand, but in an opening
    statement. In addition, the jury was told that the opening         Here, as in Frazier, the prosecutor neither emphasized his
    statement should not be considered as evidence.                 reference to petitioner’s alleged confession in any way nor
    Certainly the impact of the procedure used here was             “touted” that confession as a crucial part of its case to the
    much less damaging than was the case in Douglas.                jury. The opening statement’s reference to petitioner’s
    purported confession lasted less than a minute. The reference
    
    Id. at 735
    (italics added). Here, unlike in both Douglas and      was “sandwiched” between summaries of the evidence that
    Frazier, the relevant witness, Brand, was not a co-conspirator    the government intended to produce, such as witnesses’
    who had inculpated petitioner while confessing to the crime.      testimony identifying petitioner and showing that he knew the
    In addition, unlike in both Douglas and Frazier, the              victim. Moreover, unlike in Frazier, the prosecutor did not
    prosecutor did not call Brand to the stand, and, thus, did not,   appear to summarize Brand’s preliminary examination
    by his questions, read either Brand’s entire preliminary          testimony in his statement, but, rather, referred to the
    examination testimony nor portions of it into the record.         purported confession generally. While the Supreme Court
    Clearly then, unlike in Douglas, Brand did not give credence      cautioned in Frazier that “[i]t may be that some remarks
    to those questions by consistently asserting his Fifth            included in an opening or closing statement could be so
    Amendment privilege.                                              prejudicial that a finding of error, or even constitutional error,
    would be unavoidable,” 
    id. at 736,
    a comparison of the facts
    The Frazier Court concluded that the limiting instruction     in this case to those in Frazier reveal that this is not such a
    that the jury was not to regard counsels’ statements as           case. The facts of petitioner’s case here are even less
    evidence was sufficient to protect the petitioner’s               damaging than those in Frazier where the Supreme Court
    constitutional rights. 
    Id. 734-36 (noting
    that, while “[a] more   found no Confrontation Clause violation. Thus, as Frazier
    specific limiting instruction might have been desirable, . . .    illustrates, the principle that petitioner claims his factual
    No. 03-1124                             Hicks v. Straub     29    30     Hicks v. Straub                                     No. 03-1124
    predicate invokes – “that a jury may not be told of a             review, respectively. As discussed above, the state trial court
    defendant’s confession [during the prosecutor’s opening           denied petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment. People
    statement] unless the witness to that alleged confession is       v. Hicks, No. 93-2188FC (Calhoun County Circuit Court
    subject to cross-examination”– does not fall “well within the     March 16, 2000). Both the Michigan Court of Appeals and
    mainstream of” Confrontation Clause precedent.                    the Michigan Supreme Court denied petitioner leave to appeal
    the trial court’s denial of his motion for relief from judgment
    Petitioner contends that his prosecutorial misconduct claim    on the ground that petitioner failed “to meet the burden of
    necessarily encompassed the “more serious” Confrontation          establishing entitlement to relief under M.C.R. 6.508(D).”
    Clause violation.        However, petitioner’s prosecutorial      People v. Hicks, 
    463 Mich. 978
    (Mich. Feb. 26, 2001).
    misconduct and Confrontation Clause claim involve distinct
    legal analyses. See 
    Frazier, 394 U.S. at 736-737
    (holding that      The district court held that petitioner failed to comply with
    a prosecutor’s good or bad faith in expecting a witness to        only M.C.R. 6.508(D)(2) based upon its previous finding that
    testify is not controlling in determining whether a defendant’s   petitioner had fairly presented his Confrontation Clause claim
    right of confrontation, was violated, but finding that, because   to the state courts on direct review and, thus, that the state
    of the prosecutor’s good faith there, no prosecutorial            courts had decided that claim against petitioner. Since we
    misconduct claim could lie). Were we to hold that petitioner      have concluded, as discussed above, that petitioner did not
    fairly presented his Confrontation Clause claim to the state      fairly present his Confrontation Clause claim to the state
    courts on direct review, state courts would be compelled to       courts on direct review, we conclude that petitioner failed to
    consider sua sponte all possible federal legal claims that a      comply with M.C.R. 6.508(D)(3) when he did not raise his
    petitioner’s factual allegations might arguably support. The      Confrontation Clause claim on direct review.16
    principle of comity underlying the exhaustion doctrine does
    not permit us to force state courts to do so.                       In denying petitioner leave to appeal his motion for relief
    from judgment under M.C.R. 6.508(D), the Michigan
    Because petitioner did not fairly present his Confrontation     Supreme Court, the last state court rendering judgment on
    Clause claim to the Michigan courts on direct review, the         petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim, actually enforced
    state courts, on such review, could not have actually enforced    M.C.R. 6.508(D)(3) against petitioner so as to bar its review
    any applicable state procedural rule against that claim. See      of that claim. As Simpson v. Jones, 
    238 F.3d 399
    , 407-08
    
    Seymour, 224 F.3d at 554-55
    . We now turn to whether the           (6th Cir. 2000), makes clear, the Michigan Supreme Court’s
    state courts enforced such a rule against his Confrontation       general invocation of M.C.R. 6.508(D) in denying such leave
    Clause claim on state collateral review.                          constitutes an adequate, implicit invocation of the specific
    procedural bar of whichever subsection of M.C.R. 6.508(D)
    2. State Collateral Review                        applies. See Burroughs v. Makowski, 
    282 F.3d 410
    , 413-14
    In a motion for relief from judgment under M.C.R. 6.500,
    petitioner submitted to the state trial court on collateral            16
    Because the state trial court, on collateral review, denied
    review his Confrontation Clause claim along with his claims       petitioner’s Confrontation Clause claim on the merits, petitio ner also
    of ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel          failed to comply with M.C.R. 6.508(D )(2). Yet, by finding that petitioner
    surrounding their failure to identify and to raise the            procedurally defaulted his Confrontation Clause claim under M.C.R.
    Confrontation Clause issue, as such, at trial and on direct       6.508(D )(3), we need not and do not decide whether petitioner also d id so
    unde r subse ction (2 ).
    No. 03-1124                              Hicks v. Straub     31    32     Hicks v. Straub                                      No. 03-1124
    (6th Cir. 2002) (applying Simpson). Because M.C.R.                 reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s deficient
    6.508(D)(3) was both firmly established and regularly              performance, the proceeding’s result would have been
    followed at the time of petitioner’s right to direct appeal, it    different. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-88
    , 694.
    constitutes an adequate and independent state procedural
    ground properly foreclosing federal habeas review of his             Here, petitioner has failed to establish that his appellate
    Confrontation Clause claim. See Friedman v. Smith, No. 02-         counsel’s failure to raise a Confrontation Clause claim on
    1255, 
    2003 WL 22976586
    , at * 7 (6th Cir. Dec. 5, 2003)             direct review constituted ineffective assistance under
    (finding that M.C.R. 6.508(D)(3), which the Michigan               Strickland so as to serve as cause to excuse his procedural
    legislature promulgated in 1989, has been regularly followed       default of that claim. Even assuming arguendo that appellate
    since 1990). We find, therefore, that petitioner procedurally      counsel’s failure to raise a Confrontation Clause claim on
    defaulted his Confrontation Clause claim on state collateral       direct review was objectively unreasonable so as to constitute
    review.                                                            deficient performance,17 petitioner has failed to demonstrate
    that this failure actually prejudiced him. Appellate counsel’s
    Even though petitioner procedurally defaulted his               failure to raise the Confrontation Clause claim on direct
    Confrontation Clause claim in state court, he may,                 review could only have prejudiced petitioner if there were a
    nevertheless, obtain federal habeas review of the claim if he      reasonable probability that counsel’s pursuit of that claim
    demonstrates either: 1) cause for his failure to comply with       would have resulted in a successful appeal. McFarland v.
    the state procedural rule and actual prejudice flowing from the
    violation of federal law alleged in his claim, or 2) that a lack
    of federal habeas review of the claim’s merits “will result in          17
    a fundamental miscarriage of justice.” Coleman, 501 U.S. at                Petitioner did not procedurally default his claim of ineffective
    750. Petitioner, pursuing the former route only, contends that     assistance of appellate counsel. State collateral review was the first
    opp ortunity that petitioner had to raise this claim. In denying petitioner’s
    his appellate counsel’s failure to raise his Confrontation         motio n for relief from judgm ent, the state trial court decided petitioner’s
    Clause claim on direct review constituted ineffective              ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claim against p etitioner–albeit
    assistance of counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment          without any reasoning. Thus, when the Michigan Supreme Court denied
    and, thus, serves as the requisite cause to excuse his             petitioner leave to appeal this denial under M.C.R. 6.508(D), it was
    procedural default under M.C.R. 6.508(D)(3). As to the             implicitly invoking only subsection (2) with respe ct to pe titioner’s
    prejudice component, petitioner contends that the                  ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claim.
    However, as the district court correctly found, M.C.R. 6.508(D)(2)
    Confrontation Clause violation alleged in his claim was            does not co nstitute a state procedural gro und that is adequate to bar
    meritorious and would have constituted reversible error.           federal habe as review. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1) prohibits a federal court
    from granting habea s relief to a state prisoner on a federal claim unless
    Attorney error that rises to the level of ineffective           that prisoner has exhausted all availab le remedies in state cour t with
    assistance of counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment          respect to that claim. Thus, a fed eral co urt may not justly find that a
    prisoner procedurally defaulted his federal claim simply b y virtue of
    may constitute cause for a procedural default. Murray, 477         receiving an adverse judgment on that claim while attempting to exhaust
    U.S. at 488-89. To establish that counsel’s assistance was         it in state court. Such a d octrinal Catch-22 would effectively foreclose
    ineffective, the petitioner must demonstrate that: 1) counsel’s    federal habe as relief. Ind eed, state priso ners cannot p ursue p ost-
    performance was deficient in that it “fell below an objective      conviction relief in federal court for fed eral claims for w hich the state
    standard of reasonableness”; and 2) this deficient                 court alread y granted such relief. In addition, as § 2254(d) illustrates,
    AEDPA contemplates federal habeas review following an adverse state-
    performance actually prejudiced him in that there is a             court adjudication on the merits of a state prisoner’s federal claim.
    No. 03-1124                                     Hicks v. Straub       33     34     Hicks v. Straub                                      No. 03-1124
    Yukins, 
    356 F.3d 688
    , 699 (6th Cir. 2004); see Williams v.                   claim on direct review cannot serve as cause for petitioner’s
    Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 392-93 (2000) (holding that, where                     procedural default of that claim.19
    counsel’s ineffective assistance did not deprive the petitioner
    “of any substantive or procedural right to which the law                       For the preceding reasons, we REVERSE the district
    entitled him,” the petitioner cannot satisfy Strickland’s                    court’s grant of a writ of habeas corpus to petitioner and
    “prejudice” component).                                                      remand to the district court with instruction to dismiss the
    petition for the writ.
    Petitioner contends that there is a reasonable probability
    that, but for appellate counsel’s failure to raise a
    Confrontation Clause claim on direct review, that claim
    would have prevailed and resulted in a reversal of his
    conviction. In support, he relies upon Frazier v. Cupp, 
    394 U.S. 731
    (1969), Bruton v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    (1968), Douglas v. Alabama, 
    380 U.S. 415
    (1965), and
    Pointer v. Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    , 407-08 (1965) (holding that
    the admission into evidence at the petitioner’s trial of a
    witness’ preliminary examination testimony inculpating the
    petitioner violated his right of confrontation where that
    witness did not testify at trial and where the petitioner did not
    have a “complete and adequate opportunity to cross-examine”
    that witness through counsel at the preliminary
    examination).18 However, as discussed above, this case
    materially differs from Bruton, Douglas, and Pointer.
    Petitioner’s reliance on Frazier is misplaced because the
    prosecutorial conduct in the present case is even less
    objectionable than in Frazier. Thus, petitioner has failed to
    demonstrate that there is a reasonable probability that, but for
    appellate counsel’s failure to raise a Confrontation Clause
    claim on direct review, that claim would have prevailed and
    resulted in a reversal of his conviction. Consequently,
    appellate counsel’s failure to raise a Confrontation Clause
    19
    18
    Petitioner has also failed to show the req uisite prejudice to ex cuse
    W e examine the merits of petitioner’s Co nfrontation Clause claim   his procedural de fault of his Confro ntation C lause claim. Because he has
    only to determine if appellate counsel was unconstitutionally ineffective    not established a C onfro ntation C lause vio lation in the first instance,
    for failing to raise it on direct review. See 
    McFarland, 356 F.3d at 701
        petitioner, thus, cannot establish that he suffered actual prejudice flowing
    n.3.                                                                         from such a violation.
    No. 03-1124                             Hicks v. Straub     35
    _________________
    CONCURRENCE
    _________________
    ROGERS, J., concurring. I concur in the result and in
    much of the majority’s opinion. It is not sufficiently clear to
    me, however, that on collateral review the Michigan Supreme
    Court relied upon MCR 6.508(D)(3), where such an inference
    relies entirely upon our after-the-fact determination that
    (D)(3) rather than (D)(2) was the appropriate provision to rely
    upon. In Burroughs, in contrast, it was “undisputed that
    Burroughs failed to properly present his arguments for state
    appellate 
    review.” 282 F.3d at 413
    . However, for the
    reasons given in the majority’s discussion of Douglas,
    Burton, and Frazier, petitioner has not adequately shown a
    violation of the Confrontation Clause under applicable
    Supreme Court precedents.