Sarausad v. Porter ( 2007 )


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  •                                             Volume 1 of 2
    FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CESAR SARAUSAD,                      
    Petitioner-Appellee,        No. 05-35062
    v.                          D.C. No.
    CAROL PORTER,                            CV-02-02547-JCC
    Respondent-Appellant.
    
    CESAR SARAUSAD,                          No. 05-35192
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.                          D.C. No.
    CV-02-02547-JCC
    CAROL PORTER,
    OPINION
    Respondent-Appellee.
    
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Washington
    John C. Coughenour, Chief Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    November 15, 2005—Seattle, Washington
    Filed March 7, 2007
    Before: Stephen Reinhardt, William A. Fletcher, and
    Jay S. Bybee, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge William A. Fletcher;
    Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Reinhardt;
    Dissent by Judge Bybee
    2549
    2554                   SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    COUNSEL
    John J. Samson, Office of the Washington Attorney General,
    Olympia, Washington, for the respondent-appellant.
    Patricia S. Novotny, and David B. Zuckerman, Seattle, Wash-
    ington, for the petitioner-appellee.
    OPINION
    W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
    Petitioner Cesar Sarausad brings a petition for habeas cor-
    pus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his second-degree
    murder and two attempted second-degree murder convictions.
    We hold that the evidence was sufficient to support the con-
    victions under Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
     (1979).
    However, based on In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
     (1970), Sand-
    strom v. Montana, 
    442 U.S. 510
     (1979), and Estelle v.
    McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
     (1991), we hold that ambiguous jury
    instructions on accomplice liability, in combination with other
    factors, unconstitutionally relieved the State of its burden of
    proof of an element of the crimes with which he was charged.
    I.   General Background
    Sarausad is a naturalized citizen who immigrated as a child
    from the Philippines. At the time of the events in question,
    Sarausad was a 19-year-old student at the University of
    Washington in Seattle. He had recently graduated from
    Ingraham High School in Seattle. While still in high school,
    Sarausad had tutored other minority students in mathematics.
    Sarausad had become friends with some of his tutees and had
    eventually joined their gang, the 23rd Street Diablos (“the
    Diablos”).
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                   2555
    On the morning of March 23, 1994, Sarausad picked up
    three of his friends, Gerard Abad, Levi Arakelyan, and Lucas
    Gosho. These three were either Diablo members or associates.
    The four then drove in Sarausad’s car to the Pink Pantry con-
    venience store where they met Jerome Reyes, Gaurav Nayar,
    Brian Ronquillo, Michael Marckx, and Rocky Galbay, also
    members or associates of the Diablos. Reyes told the group
    that he had recently been chased from Ballard High School by
    members of another gang, the Bad Side Posse (“the BSP”).
    The group decided to go to Ballard to confront the BSP.
    The group first went to Shorewood High School, across the
    street from the Pink Pantry, to see if another member of the
    Diablos, Michael Vicencio, would join them. Vicencio told
    them that he would meet them later at the 7-Eleven. The
    group then went, without Vicencio, to Ballard High School in
    Sarasaud’s and Nayar’s cars. Sarausad’s car was in the lead.
    They drove past an area of the school where BSP members
    were thought to be, shouting insults, showing gang signs, and
    waving bandanas. They came back a few minutes later and
    stopped their cars near a group of six to ten students. They got
    out of the cars, and a yelling and pushing match ensued. After
    a short time, someone yelled that the police were there. The
    group got back into the cars and left. As they drove away,
    some of the Ballard students yelled that they were “weak.”
    The group then went to Nayar’s house, but Sarausad, Abad,
    and Reyes went to the 7-Eleven to get Vicencio. Vicencio fol-
    lowed Sarausad back to Nayar’s house in his car. Before
    Vicencio entered the house, Ronquillo met him outside and
    asked for Vicencio’s gun. Vicencio gave the gun to Ron-
    quillo. There is no evidence that Sarausad was present when
    Ronquillo asked for and was given the gun. At Nayar’s house
    the group listened to music, danced, and initiated a new mem-
    ber into the gang. They left when Nayar told them that his
    mother would be coming home soon.
    The group got into two cars, this time Sarausad’s and
    Vicencio’s. Though he was carrying Vicencio’s gun, Ron-
    2556                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    quillo rode in Sarausad’s rather than Vicencio’s car. Sarausad
    stopped his car a few blocks away from Ballard High School,
    and Vicencio pulled up beside him. There was a brief conver-
    sation between the people in the two cars. They then contin-
    ued on to the school with Sarausad leading, as he had done
    on the first trip.
    Melissa Fernandes, Ryan Lam, and Tam Nguyen were
    standing outside the school. As he approached, Sarausad
    slowed down to perhaps five miles per hour and drove closer
    to the curb. As Sarausad slowed the car, Ronquillo fired
    between four and ten shots from the front passenger seat. Lam
    and Nguyen dropped to the ground and were unharmed.
    Melissa Fernandes was hit. She died the next day at the hospi-
    tal. Brent Mason, a student who had just stepped out of shop
    class, was struck in the leg by a bullet fragment. Sarausad and
    Vicencio both drove away rapidly, with Sarausad’s car still in
    the lead.
    After leaving the school, the two cars stopped and Ron-
    quillo transferred Vicencio’s gun to Vicencio’s car. Then
    Sarausad and Vicencio both drove to the Northgate mall.
    Sarausad left the others at the mall and went home. The gun
    used in the murder was later destroyed by other members of
    the group.
    The State prosecuted Ronquillo (the shooter), Sarausad (the
    driver), and Reyes (a passenger in the back seat of Sarausad’s
    car). The State offered plea agreements and lenient treatment
    to others in the group on the condition that they testify against
    Ronquillo, Sarausad, and Reyes.
    All three defendants were charged with one count of first-
    degree murder, two counts of attempted first-degree murder,
    and one count of second-degree assault. The theory of the
    State’s case against Sarausad and Reyes was that they were
    accomplices, and were therefore guilty of murder despite not
    having fired any shots. The only seriously contested issue at
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                   2557
    Sarausad’s trial was whether he had the requisite knowledge
    to be an accomplice to murder. At the time of his trial, it was
    unclear under Washington law whether an accomplice had to
    have knowledge that the principal merely intended to commit
    a crime, or whether the accomplice had to know that the prin-
    cipal intended to commit the particular crime in question.
    Ronquillo was convicted on all counts as charged. Sarausad
    was convicted of the lesser-included crimes of one count of
    second-degree murder and two counts of attempted second-
    degree murder, and of one count of second-degree assault.
    The jury hung, and a mistrial was declared, as to Reyes.
    Sarausad’s counsel moved for a new trial. In a declaration
    in support of the motion, Sarausad’s counsel stated that during
    a post-verdict interview, jurors stated that the jury had been
    confused about what was required to prove accomplice liabil-
    ity. The court denied the motion. Sarausad’s counsel then
    moved for reconsideration, attaching declarations in which
    two jurors stated that the jury had been confused about
    accomplice liability. The court denied the motion for recon-
    sideration. Sarausad was then sentenced to more than 27 years
    in state prison.
    Sarausad’s convictions were affirmed on direct appeal by
    the Washington Court of Appeals. State v. Ronquillo, No.
    38540-5-I, 
    1998 WL 87641
    , at *9 (Wash. Ct. App. Mar. 2,
    1998). The Washington Supreme Court denied review. State
    v. Ronquillo, 
    966 P.2d 1277
     (Wash. 1998). Sarausad then
    sought collateral review through a personal restraint petition
    (“PRP”) in the Washington Court of Appeals. The Court of
    Appeals denied relief, see State v. Sarausad, 
    39 P.3d 308
    (Wash. Ct. App. 2001), and the Washington Supreme Court
    denied review.
    Sarausad then sought a writ of habeas corpus in federal dis-
    trict court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging his second-
    degree murder and two attempted second-degree murder con-
    2558                     SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    victions. He did not challenge his second-degree assault con-
    viction. In a thorough Report and Recommendation, the
    magistrate judge recommended that Sarausad’s habeas peti-
    tion be granted on two grounds — first, that there was insuffi-
    cient evidence to convict Sarausad, and, second, that the jury
    instructions, in combination with other factors, unconstitu-
    tionally relieved the State of its burden of proof. The district
    court agreed with the magistrate judge’s recommendation on
    both grounds and granted the writ subject to the State’s elec-
    tion to retry Sarausad.
    The State appeals. Sarausad cross-appeals, contending,
    inter alia, that the district court erred in holding that double
    jeopardy does not bar retrial after reversal of a conviction for
    insufficient evidence. Sarausad’s release has been stayed
    pending appeal.
    We reverse the decision of the district court on the
    sufficiency-of-the-evidence ground. However, we affirm on
    the ground that the State was improperly relieved of its bur-
    den of proof. We need not reach Sarausad’s claims on cross-
    appeal.
    II.    Standard of Review
    We review de novo the district court’s decision to grant a
    habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Ramirez v. Castro,
    
    365 F.3d 755
    , 762 (9th Cir. 2004) (as amended). Because
    Sarausad filed his petition after April 16, 1996, the Anti-
    Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
    (“AEDPA”) applies. Stevenson v. Lewis, 
    384 F.3d 1069
    , 1071
    (9th Cir. 2004). AEDPA provides that a federal habeas court
    shall not grant a writ of habeas corpus from a state court
    unless the adjudication of the claim
    (1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or
    involved an unreasonable application of, clearly
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                   2559
    established Federal law, as determined by the
    Supreme Court of the United States; or
    (2) resulted in a decision that was based on an
    unreasonable determination of the facts in light of
    the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
    Section 2254(d)(1) establishes a two-part test. First, there
    must be clearly established Supreme Court precedent. Wil-
    liams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 381, 412 (2000). Second, the
    state court decision must either be “contrary to” or an “unrea-
    sonable application” of that precedent. Id. at 384-86. The state
    court is not required to cite the controlling Supreme Court
    precedent so long as its decision is not “contrary to” or an
    “unreasonable application” of that precedent. Early v. Packer,
    
    537 U.S. 3
    , 8 (2002) (per curiam).
    The terms “contrary to” and “unreasonable application”
    have independent meanings. Bell v. Cone, 
    535 U.S. 685
    , 694
    (2002). A state court’s decision is “contrary to” clearly estab-
    lished Supreme Court precedent if “the state court arrives at
    a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme Court]
    on a question of law or if the state court decides a case differ-
    ently than [the Supreme Court] has on a set of materially
    indistinguishable facts.” Williams, 529 U.S. at 413. A state
    court’s decision is an unreasonable application of clearly
    established Supreme Court precedent “if the state court identi-
    fies the correct governing legal principle from [the Supreme
    Court’s] decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to
    the facts of the prisoner’s case.” Id.; see Gibson v. Ortiz, 
    387 F.3d 812
    , 814 (9th Cir. 2004). The “unreasonable application”
    clause requires more than that the state court decision be
    incorrect. Lockyer v. Andrade, 
    538 U.S. 63
    , 75 (2003).
    Rather, a federal habeas court making an “ ‘unreasonable
    application’ inquiry should ask whether the state court’s
    application of clearly established federal law was objectively
    2560                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    unreasonable.” Williams, 529 U.S. at 409. This analysis
    imposes a “ ‘highly deferential standard for evaluating state-
    court rulings’ ” and “ ‘demands that state court decisions be
    given the benefit of the doubt.’ ” Clark v. Murphy, 
    331 F.3d 1062
    , 1067 (9th Cir. 2003) (citations omitted).
    In determining whether a state court decision is “contrary
    to” or an “unreasonable application” of federal law under
    § 2254(d)(1), we look to the last reasoned decision of the state
    court. Barker v. Fleming, 
    423 F.3d 1085
    , 1091-92 (9th Cir.
    2005). We therefore review the Washington Supreme Court’s
    written order denying Sarausad’s petition for review of the
    Court of Appeals’ decision. To the extent that this denial
    relies on the Washington Court of Appeals’ denial of the PRP,
    we review that decision as well.
    III.   Discussion
    A.   Sufficiency of the Evidence
    [1] Under clearly established Supreme Court case law, due
    process requires that “no person shall be made to suffer the
    onus of a criminal conviction except upon sufficient proof —
    defined as evidence necessary to convince a trier of fact
    beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of every element
    of the offense.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 316 (1979)
    (explaining In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364 (1970)). To
    determine whether this due process right has been violated,
    the appropriate inquiry before the passage of AEDPA was a
    straightforward question of “whether, after viewing the evi-
    dence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any ratio-
    nal trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
    crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319
    (emphasis in original). We have recently joined our sister cir-
    cuits in using § 2254(d)(1) to evaluate a state court’s
    sufficiency-of-the-evidence determination under Jackson. See
    Juan H. v. Allen, 
    408 F.3d 1262
    , 1274 (9th Cir. 2005) (as
    amended); see also Ponnapula v. Spitzer, 
    297 F.3d 172
    , 179
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                   2561
    (2d Cir. 2002); Sanford v. Yukins, 
    288 F.3d 855
    , 863 (6th Cir.
    2002); Piaskowski v. Bett, 
    256 F.3d 687
    , 691 (7th Cir. 2001);
    Hurtado v. Tucker, 
    245 F.3d 7
    , 16 (1st Cir. 2001). Under 28
    U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), we inquire whether a state court determi-
    nation that the evidence was sufficient to support a conviction
    was an “objectively unreasonable” application of Jackson. See
    Juan H., 408 F.3d at 1275 n.13; see also Smith v. Mitchell,
    
    437 F.3d 884
    , 889 (9th Cir. 2006) (“Our task under AEDPA
    . . . is to determine whether the decision of the [state court],
    holding that the evidence was sufficient to convict [the defen-
    dant], was an unreasonable application of Jackson.”).
    Section 2254(d)(1) plainly applies to Jackson cases. A state
    court must decide under Jackson whether the evidence,
    viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, would
    allow any rational trier of fact to find the defendant guilty
    beyond a reasonable doubt. If the state court affirms a convic-
    tion under Jackson, a federal court is asked under
    § 2254(d)(1) to decide whether the state court adjudication
    “resulted in a decision that . . . involved an unreasonable
    application of[ ] clearly established Federal law, as deter-
    mined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” That is,
    we are asked to decide whether the state court’s application
    of Jackson was “objectively unreasonable.” Juan H., 408 F.3d
    at 1275 n.13.
    [2] By contrast, § 2254(d)(2) is not readily applicable to
    Jackson cases. Under § 2254(d)(2), the federal court must
    decide whether the state court adjudication “resulted in a deci-
    sion that was based on an unreasonable determination of the
    facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court pro-
    ceeding.” (Emphasis added.) Section 2254(d)(2) does not
    describe the task of a court in performing a Jackson analysis.
    A court under Jackson makes no “determination of the facts”
    in the ordinary sense of resolving factual disputes. Rather, the
    court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution without resolving any disputed factual questions.
    Our task under AEDPA in reviewing a state court’s holding
    applying Jackson is not to decide whether that court unrea-
    2562                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    sonably determined disputed facts. It is, rather, to decide
    whether the state court unreasonably applied the Jackson test
    of “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a rea-
    sonable doubt.”
    [3] We therefore evaluate a state court’s resolution of a
    Jackson sufficiency-of-the-evidence claim in all cases under
    § 2254(d)(1) rather than § 2254(d)(2), as we have already
    held in Juan H. The First Circuit has adopted guidelines for
    applying the “objective unreasonableness” test under
    § 2254(d)(1) to a state court decision applying Jackson. We
    believe that these guidelines are useful, though not all of them
    will necessarily apply in any particular case. The guidelines
    are as follows:
    (1) The focus of the inquiry is on the state court
    decision;
    (2) Even with the deference due by statute to the
    state court’s determinations, the federal habeas court
    must look to the “totality of the evidence” in evaluat-
    ing the state court’s decision;
    (3) The failure of the state court to consider at all
    a key argument of the defendant may indicate that its
    conclusion is objectively unreasonable; however, the
    paucity of reasoning employed by the state court
    does not itself establish that its result is objectively
    unreasonable;
    (4) The failure of a state court to give appropriate
    weight to all of the evidence may mean that its con-
    clusion is objectively unreasonable; and
    (5) The absence of cases of conviction precisely
    parallel on their facts does not, by itself, establish
    objective unreasonableness.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                  2563
    Hurtado, 245 F.3d at 18.
    In performing a Jackson analysis, “ ‘[c]ircumstantial evi-
    dence and inferences drawn from [the record] may be suffi-
    cient to sustain a conviction.’ ” Walters v. Maass, 
    45 F.3d 1355
    , 1358 (9th Cir. 1995) (quoting United States v. Lewis,
    
    787 F.2d 1318
    , 1323 (9th Cir.), amended by 
    798 F.2d 1250
    (9th Cir. 1986)). However, “ ‘mere suspicion or speculation
    cannot be the basis for creation of logical inferences.’ ” Id.
    (quoting Lewis, 787 F.2d at 1323). Where behavior is consis-
    tent with both guilt and innocence, the burden is on the State
    to produce evidence that would allow a rational trier of fact
    to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the behavior was
    consistent with guilt. United States v. Bautista-Avila, 
    6 F.3d 1360
    , 1363 (9th Cir. 1993). However, “the prosecution need
    not affirmatively ‘rule out every hypothesis except that of
    guilt[.]’ ” Wright v. West, 
    505 U.S. 277
    , 296 (1992) (citation
    omitted). A jury’s credibility determinations are “entitled to
    near-total deference under Jackson.” Bruce v. Terhune, 
    376 F.3d 950
    , 957 (9th Cir. 2004).
    [4] The Jackson standard “must be applied with explicit
    reference to the substantive elements of the criminal offense
    as defined by state law.” Chein v. Shumsky, 
    373 F.3d 978
    , 983
    (9th Cir. 2004) (en banc) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Under Washington law, Sarausad is guilty based on an
    accomplice liability theory if he “acted with knowledge that
    his . . . conduct would promote or facilitate the [murder].”
    State v. Cronin, 
    14 P.3d 752
    , 759 (Wash. 2000); see State v.
    Roberts, 
    14 P.3d 713
    , 736 (Wash. 2001) (as amended). Under
    Roberts and Cronin, it is not enough under Washington law
    that the accomplice had knowledge that the principal would
    engage in some kind of crime. He must have had knowledge
    that the principal would engage in the crime actually commit-
    ted. Roberts, 14 P.3d at 736; Cronin, 14 P.3d at 759. He need
    not be a lawyer. That is, he does not need to have “specific
    knowledge of the elements of the participant’s crime.” In re
    Domingo, 
    119 P.3d 816
    , 820 (Wash. 2005) (en banc). But he
    2564                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    does need to have “ ‘general knowledge’ of the crime
    charged” against the principal. Id.
    In ruling on Sarausad’s PRP, the Washington Court of
    Appeals held that “when viewed in the light most favorable
    to the State” the circumstantial evidence presented at trial was
    “sufficient to allow a rational jury reasonably to infer that
    Sarausad knowingly facilitated the drive-by shooting.” Sarau-
    sad v. State, 
    39 P.3d 308
    , 319 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001). In so
    holding, the court did not cite to controlling United States
    Supreme Court precedent, but such citation is not required.
    See Early v. Packer, 
    537 U.S. 3
    , 8 (2002) (per curiam). The
    Washington Supreme Court denied review in an unpublished
    order. We review the denial of Sarausad’s PRP to determine
    whether it was based on an “objectively unreasonable” appli-
    cation of Jackson.
    In support of its holding that there was sufficient evidence
    to sustain Sarausad’s conviction, the Court of Appeals wrote:
    [Witnesses] Gosho and Marckx testified that “cap-
    ping” was discussed on the return trip to the school.
    At some point before the shooting, Ronquillo tied a
    bandana over the lower part of his face and pulled
    the gun out of his pants. While parked side by side
    with the other carload of Diablos, Sarausad said,
    “Are you ready?” Sarausad then drove the car in
    such a manner as to facilitate a drive-by shooting,
    not in such a manner as to stop, park the vehicle and
    engage in fisticuffs. An expert in gangs testified
    about the kind of gang mentality that requires the
    gang to avenge its honor when one of its members
    is disrespected by a rival gang, and that causes the
    gang members to see violence is an acceptable
    means of regaining lost respect.
    Sarausad, 39 P.3d at 319 (footnote omitted). The Washington
    Supreme Court affirmed the Court of Appeals’ holding on
    evidentiary sufficiency without discussion of the evidence.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2565
    [5] The Court of Appeals’ statement that the evidence
    showed that “Gosho and Marckx testified that ‘capping’ was
    discussed on the return trip to the school” is incorrect. Con-
    trary to the Court of Appeals’ statement, Gosho never testified
    that “capping” (meaning “shooting”) was discussed on the
    return trip to the school. Gosho did testify about a conversa-
    tion concerning the possibility of a shooting, but that conver-
    sation took place before the return trip to the school. The
    distinction is important because Sarausad was driving the car
    in which Gosho was riding and almost certainly would have
    heard the conversation had it taken place in the car. But if the
    conversation took place before the return trip to the school, as
    Gosho testified, there is no direct evidence that Sarausad
    heard it. Gosho never testified that Sarausad participated in or
    heard the conversation.
    Gosho testified as follows:
    Q    (Prosecutor) You were asked about the plan that
    day. What was your understanding of the range
    of options with respect to shooting?
    A    (Gosho) I knew that it was one of the options,
    but I didn’t seriously think it was going to be
    because there were, you know, there was other
    options.
    Q    With respect to shooting being an option, do you
    recall what was said about that as an option?
    A    I can’t recall who said what. But, you know,
    somebody must’ve brought it up, that we could
    shoot as an option.
    Q    I’m sorry, what?
    A    I can’t recall one person saying that. But, you
    know, it was brought up as an option, so yeah.
    2566                 SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    Q   What was said specifically with respect to shoot-
    ing being an option?
    A   Well just that, you know, it was a possibility that
    we could, you know.
    Q   Was there anything mentioned with respect to a
    gun and shooting?
    A   I don’t recall exactly. But, you know, there must
    have been a gun if we were going to shoot.
    The prosecutor sought to refresh Gosho’s memory with a
    police report:
    Q   (Prosecutor) . . . . Do you recall at that point in
    the interview when Detective Maning was ask-
    ing you about the discussion regarding the possi-
    bilities with respect to shooting?
    A   (Gosho) Yes, I do.
    Q   Do you recall Detective Maning saying to you,
    “Okay. So somebody, well, we’ve got a gun, we
    can shoot them”? What was your response?
    A   It was, “Right.”
    Q   You said, “Right”?
    A   Yeah.
    Q   And Detective Maning responded by saying, “I
    mean, I don’t know. Is that what was said?”
    What was your response then?
    A   I said, “Well, I don’t recall specifically.”
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                       2567
    Q   Detective Maning then asked you, “But some-
    body said, ‘We’ve got a gun.’ ” And what was
    your response?
    A   I said, “Yeah.”
    On cross-examination, Gosho explained further:
    Q   (Reyes’s attorney) . . . . The answer to Detective
    Maning’s question at that time, did you under-
    stand that to mean that somebody had a gun
    right then in [Gaurav Nayar’s] house or in the
    car, or that there was a gun available to that
    group at some point?
    A   (Gosho) Well, they had said that a shooting was
    a possibility. So obviously, you know, yeah,
    there must’ve been access to a gun if there was
    going to be — I mean, if it was a possibility.
    Q   You answered some questions of some of the
    other attorneys that this was a general conversa-
    tion and you didn’t take it seriously. Is that cor-
    rect?
    A   Right.
    Q   You didn’t think that a shooting was actually
    being planned —
    A   Right.
    Also contrary to the Court of Appeals’ statement, Marckx
    did not testify that “capping” was discussed on the return trip
    to the school. Marckx had ridden in the back seat of Sarau-
    sad’s car on the return trip. He testified that an unidentified
    person in the back seat asked “Are we going to cap?” immedi-
    ately before Ronquillo began to shoot. There was no “discus-
    2568                 SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    sion” because no one had time to answer the question before
    the shooting started. The point is important because if there
    had been a “discussion” in the car before the shooting started,
    the discussion would have put Sarausad on notice of the pos-
    sibility of such a shooting when he slowed his car in front of
    the school.
    Marckx testified as follows:
    Q   (Prosecutor) Let me take you back briefly to the
    shooting itself when you guys were parked on
    14th Avenue Northwest where you were headed
    down to the school. Was there any discussion
    about capping or shooting?
    A   (Marckx) I heard someone say, “Are we going
    to cap?”
    Q   What does the term “cap” mean?
    A   Shoot.
    Q   That was in your car?
    A   Yes.
    Marckx testified that the question had been asked immedi-
    ately before the actual shooting:
    Q   (Ronquillo’s attorney) Now, you say that prior
    to the shooting you heard somebody say some-
    thing about capping.
    A   (Marckx) Yeah.
    Q   And that meant what to you?
    A   “Are we going to shoot?”
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                       2569
    Q   What did you say?
    A   I didn’t say anything, because right when it was
    said Brian [Ronquillo] was shooting.
    Q   You mean, he was shooting as it was being said?
    A   Immediately after it was said.
    The testimony continued:
    Q   (Sarausad’s attorney) . . . . This was a comment
    something to the effect of, “Are we going to
    cap.” Right?
    A   (Marckx) Um-hmm.
    Q   This happened just a moment or two before the
    actual shooting, is that correct?
    A   Yeah.
    Q   In fact, there was a single query, single question.
    A   Yeah.
    Q   There was no response to that other than the
    actual shooting. Is that correct?
    A   Yeah.
    Q   Before anyone could say anything in response to
    that, you noticed, you heard and realized the
    shooting was taking place.
    A   Yeah.
    [6] Thus, it was “objectively unreasonable” for the Wash-
    ington Court of Appeals to state that “Gosho and Marckx tes-
    2570                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    tified that ‘capping’ was discussed on the return trip to the
    school.” For purposes of our AEDPA review, we disregard
    this purported evidence in evaluating the Court of Appeals’
    conclusion that the Jackson standard had been satisfied. How-
    ever, given other evidence in the record, not limited to that
    described by the Court of Appeals, we hold that the court’s
    application of Jackson was not objectively unreasonable.
    Some of that other evidence was accurately described by
    the Court of Appeals. The court wrote that at some unspeci-
    fied point before the shooting, Ronquillo tied a bandana over
    the lower part of his face; that when the two cars were parked
    side-by-side before going back for the second trip to Ballard
    High School, Sarausad asked, “Are you ready?”; and that
    Sarausad slowed his car in front of the school in a manner that
    facilitated a drive-by shooting.
    Much of the other evidence was not described by the Court
    of Appeals. This evidence largely involves questions of when
    a gun was seen, when a gun was displayed or used, and when
    the use of a gun was discussed. Though circumstantial, this
    evidence goes to the likelihood that Sarausad knew that Ron-
    quillo had a gun on the return trip to Ballard High School and
    knew that Ronquillo intended to use it.
    The record contains evidence that it was Sarausad who
    went to get Vicencio at the 7-Eleven after the first trip to Bal-
    lard High School. Vicencio testified at trial that “others in the
    gang” knew that he had a gun. Sarausad was a member of the
    gang. Gosho testified that various options were discussed at
    Nayar’s house for a return trip to the school. He said, “[W]e
    might just look at them or fight them or yell at them or fight
    them or possibly shoot them. The prosecutor then asked,
    “You said possibly shoot them. Was that an option that was
    discussed with everybody in the house?” Gosho answered,
    “Yes.”
    Two witnesses testified that they thought they saw a gun in
    the hands of a Diablo during the first trip to the school. One
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                      2571
    of them testified that a Diablo had pulled a gun part way out
    of his pants. The other witness said that a Diablo had pointed
    something that “looked like a gun” at him. “It was either
    pointed at my neck or my face. . . . I just saw a gun was
    pointed at me.”
    Another witness testified that she had seen a red car cir-
    cling several times around Ballard High School with five or
    six male “kids” in it. Sarausad’s car was red. At one point, the
    car stopped and one of the passengers got out to pick up a hat.
    The witness described the passenger as having “a darker com-
    plexion.” This same witness testified that she later saw what
    she thought was a gun being held outside that same car:
    A: [As the car] came around the corner I saw what
    I thought somebody pulling something back in. And
    at that point, I turned to my girlfriend and I said, ‘I
    think I saw a gun.’ And the car, you know, sped off.
    ...
    Q: Could you tell where in the car the individual
    might have had a weapon was?
    A: Behind the driver. That’s where I saw the arm
    come back in.
    Q:   What made you think it was a weapon?
    A: Well, I think it’s not — it wasn’t like anything
    I’ve seen as a gun, except the barrel. I could see like
    a glint off of the barrel on it.
    The witness testified further, “And then shortly after that, I
    don’t know how long, heard the shots. . . . I would say at least
    six. . . . I mean it was constant, bang bang bang bang bang.”
    Sarausad admitted in his trial testimony that he had told a
    detective, in an interview after the shooting, that he suspected
    2572                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    that members of the other gang at Ballard High School had
    guns. However, Sarausad testified that he had not meant to
    tell the detective that he suspected this before the return to the
    school, but rather that he had begun to suspect this only after-
    wards. Sarausad further testified that, when the two cars
    stopped on their way back to the school, he had instructed
    those in the other car, “Follow me.” The prosecutor asked,
    “Beyond follow you, what was the plan?” Sarausad answered,
    “Well that we would drive by, drive towards them.” Sarausad
    testified that he was “not sure” whether Ronquillo had already
    pulled a bandana over his face when the car was stopped
    before getting back to the school.
    [7] For purposes of reviewing the Court of Appeals’ hold-
    ing that there was sufficient evidence under Jackson to sup-
    port Sarausad’s conviction, we assume that the jury was
    properly instructed on Washington’s accomplice liability law.
    That is, we assume, for present purposes, that the jury under-
    stood that Sarausad could be convicted of murder on a theory
    of accomplice liability only if he knew that Ronquillo
    intended to commit murder. The Court of Appeals described
    some of the evidence accurately, described some of it inaccu-
    rately, and failed to mention some of it. We have considered
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, as
    we are required to do under Jackson. We have not considered
    (or described here) the evidence that contradicted or mini-
    mized the importance of the evidence favoring the prosecu-
    tion. The evidence supporting the conclusion that Sarausad
    knew that Ronquillo planned to shoot students on the return
    trip to Ballard High School was somewhat thin, and it was cir-
    cumstantial. However, based on our review of all the evidence
    in the record, we conclude that the Court of Appeals was not
    “objectively unreasonable” in concluding that the Jackson
    standard was satisfied.
    B.   Impermissible Shifting of Burden of Proof
    [8] Clearly established Supreme Court case law provides
    that “the Due Process Clause protects the accused against
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2573
    conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of
    every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is
    charged.” Winship, 397 U.S. at 364. As a consequence, a jury
    instruction is constitutionally defective if it “ha[s] the effect
    of relieving the State of the burden of proof enunciated in
    Winship.” Sandstrom v. Montana, 
    442 U.S. 510
    , 521 (1979).
    Clearly established Supreme Court case law specifies the
    standard for reviewing an ambiguous instruction: “[W]e
    inquire ‘whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury
    has applied the challenged instruction in a way’ that violates
    the Constitution.” Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
    , 72 (1991)
    (citation omitted).
    The test stated in Estelle for ambiguous instructions was
    first articulated in deciding an Eighth Amendment challenge
    to a jury instruction in Boyde v. California, 
    494 U.S. 370
    , 380
    (1990), but Estelle employed the test to decide a Due Process
    Clause challenge to a jury instruction outside the Eighth
    Amendment context. Estelle, 502 U.S. at 66-67. Estelle made
    a point of stating that its articulation and application of the
    test was established law. The Court wrote, “So that we may
    once again speak with one voice on this issue, we now disap-
    prove the standard of Cage [v. Louisiana, 
    498 U.S. 39
     (1990)]
    and Yates [v. Evatt, 
    500 U.S. 391
     (1991)], and reaffirm the
    standard set out in Boyde.” Estelle, 502 U.S. at 73 n.4; see
    also Middleton v. McNeil, 
    541 U.S. 433
    , 437 (2004) (per
    curiam) (applying the established rule that “a jury instruction
    violates due process if . . . there is a reasonable likelihood that
    the jury has applied the challenged instruction in a way that
    violates the Constitution”) (internal quotation marks omitted);
    Patterson v. Gomez, 
    223 F.3d 959
    , 962 (9th Cir. 2000)
    (same). The Court in Estelle emphasized that, in determining
    whether there was a “reasonable likelihood” of misunder-
    standing, “the instruction ‘may not be judged in artificial iso-
    lation,’ but must be considered in the context of the
    instructions as a whole and the trial record.” Estelle, 502 U.S.
    at 72 (quoting Cupp v. Naughten, 
    414 U.S. 141
    , 147 (1973)).
    The Court noted in Boyde that “arguments of counsel gener-
    2574                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    ally carry less weight with a jury than do instructions from the
    court,” but they may sometimes “have a decisive effect on the
    jury.” Boyde, 494 U.S. at 384.
    1.   Background
    The only seriously contested issue during Sarausad’s trial
    was whether he knew that Ronquillo intended to commit mur-
    der on the return trip to Ballard High School. At the time of
    the trial, it was widely thought that Washington law did not
    require the accomplice to know what particular crime the
    principal intended to commit. During closing argument, the
    prosecutor carefully and repeatedly articulated this view of
    Washington law. She explained to the jury that accomplice
    liability was based on an “in for a dime, in for a dollar” the-
    ory. That is, if the accomplice knew that the principal
    intended to commit some crime — any crime — the accom-
    plice was liable for whatever crime the principal committed,
    even if the accomplice had no idea that the principal intended
    to commit that particular crime. Thus, under this view of the
    law, even if Sarausad believed that Ronquillo intended only
    to commit assault, Sarausad was nevertheless liable as an
    accomplice for the murder actually committed by Ronquillo.
    In her closing argument, the prosecutor said:
    Under the laws of the State of Washington, people
    who help commit crimes, people who set the wheels
    in motion, people who assist in the commission of
    crimes are called accomplices or aiders and abettors,
    as we more commonly know them to be. And in the
    eyes of the law, you are no less guilty because you
    drive the getaway car or because you solicit a crime
    to occur. You’re no less guilty for helping than you
    are for pulling the trigger.
    The defendants, Mr. Sarausad and Mr. Reyes, are
    classic accomplices. And let’s talk a little bit about
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                       2575
    the law of accomplice liability as it exists in our
    state. You’re going to have two instructions that talk
    about accomplice liability . . . .
    ....
    Let me give you a good example of accomplice
    liability. A friend comes up to you and says, “Hold
    this person’s arms while I hit him.” You say, “Okay,
    I don’t like that person anyway.” You hold the arms.
    The person not only gets assaulted, he gets killed.
    You are an accomplice and you can’t come back and
    say, “Well, I only intended this much damage to
    happen.” Your presence, your readiness to assist
    caused the crime to occur and you are an accom-
    plice. The law in the State of Washington says, if
    you’re in for a dime, you’re in for a dollar. If you’re
    there or even if you’re not there and you’re helping
    in some fashion to bring about this crime, you are
    just as guilty.
    ....
    The defendant, Mr. Sarausad, classic accomplice
    in this case. He’s the driver, he’s the wheelman. . . .
    Both these cases, ladies and gentlemen, the defen-
    dants, Mr. Sarausad and Mr. Reyes, they were both
    present and they were certainly ready to assist. . . .
    They were all there that day, especially these
    three, ready to back each other up in whatever hap-
    pened. In for a dime, they were in for a dollar and
    they were sticking together.
    In response, Sarausad’s lawyer argued that Washington
    accomplice liability was not based on “in for a dime, in for
    2576                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    a dollar.” In rebuttal, the prosecutor again stated that this was,
    indeed, Washington law. She said:
    And I’ve told you the old adage, you’re in for a
    dime, you’re in for a dollar. If their logic was cor-
    rect, they’re not ever an accomplice to anything. The
    getaway driver for a bank robbery would say, “I just
    told him to rob them, I didn’t tell him to shoot him,
    I didn’t do anything.” The example I gave you ear-
    lier, “I just told my friend to hold the arms down of
    this person while he hit him, I didn’t tell him to kill
    him, I’m not guilty of anything.” If you’re in for a
    dime, you’re in for a dollar.
    . . . . In for a dime, you’re in for a dollar.
    The defendant, Mr. Ronquillo, did not act alone.
    He acted with the assistance of the driver, Mr. Sarau-
    sad[.]
    The accomplice liability instructions in Sarausad’s case
    were based on Wash. Rev. Code § 9A.08.020. Jury Instruction
    45 stated the general concept of accomplice liability under
    Washington law: “You are instructed that a person is guilty of
    a crime if it is committed by the conduct of another person for
    which he is legally accountable. A person is legally account-
    able for the conduct of another person when he is an accom-
    plice of such other person in the commission of the crime.”
    Instruction 46 then provided a definition of accomplice liabil-
    ity:
    A person is an accomplice in the commission of
    a crime if, with knowledge that it will promote or
    facilitate the commission of the crime, he or she
    either:
    (1) solicits, commands, encourages, or
    requests another person to commit the
    crime or
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                           2577
    (2) aids or agrees to aid another person in
    planning or committing the crime.
    Instruction 47 defined intent: “A person acts with intent or
    intentionally when acting with the objective or purpose to
    accomplish a result which constitutes a crime.” Instruction 48
    defined knowledge: “A person knows or acts knowingly or
    with knowledge when he or she is aware of a fact, facts or cir-
    cumstances or result described by law as being a crime. . . .
    Acting knowingly or with knowledge also is established if a
    person acts intentionally.”1 (Emphasis added to all instruc-
    tions.)
    1
    Quoted in their entirety, the accomplice liability instructions were:
    No. 45: You are instructed that a person is guilty of a crime
    if it is committed by the conduct of another person for which he
    is legally accountable. A person is legally accountable for the
    conduct of another person when he is an accomplice of such
    other person in the commission of the crime.
    No. 46: A person who is an accomplice in the commission of
    a crime is guilty of that crime whether present at the scene or not.
    A person is an accomplice in the commission of a crime if,
    with knowledge that it will promote or facilitate the commission
    of the crime, he or she either:
    (1) solicits, commands, encourages, or requests another person
    to commit the crime or
    (2) aids or agrees to aid another person in planning or commit-
    ting the crime.
    The word “aid” means all assistance whether given by words,
    acts, encouragement, support or presence. A person who is pres-
    ent at the scene and ready to assist by his or her presence is aid-
    ing in the commission of the crime. However, more than mere
    presence and knowledge of the criminal activity of another must
    be shown to establish that a person present is an accomplice.
    No. 47: A person acts with intent or intentionally when acting
    with the objective or purpose to accomplish a result which consti-
    tutes a crime.
    No. 48: A person knows or acts knowingly or with knowledge
    when he or she is aware of a fact, facts or circumstances or result
    described by law as being a crime.
    2578                   SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    On the third day of its deliberations, the jury sent out the
    following note:
    Request clarification on instruction No. 11 & No. 12
    [first-degree murder instruction as to Sarausad] ele-
    ment (3) [that the intent to cause the death was pre-
    meditated]; does the “intent” apply to (the defendant
    only) or to (the defendant or his accomplice)?
    The judge responded: “Refer to instructions 46 and 47 and
    consider your instructions as a whole.”
    On the fifth day of deliberations, the jury asked to “rehear”
    Sarausad’s testimony. The judge responded that the
    “[t]estimony will not be repeated.” On the sixth day of delib-
    erations, the jury sent out the following note:
    Reference: Instruction No. 17 [second-degree mur-
    der instruction as to Sarausad] in “the crime of mur-
    der in the second degree (intentional).”
    Question: Does intentional apply to only the defen-
    dant or only his accomplice?
    The judge responded that the jury should “[r]efer to instruc-
    tions 45 & 46 and consider the instructions as a whole.”
    Finally, on the seventh day of deliberations, the jury sent
    out the following note:
    If a person has information which would lead a reasonable per-
    son in the same situation to believe that facts exist which are
    described by law as being a crime, the jury is permitted but not
    required to find that he or she acted with knowledge.
    Acting knowingly or with knowledge also is established if a
    person acts intentionally.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2579
    We are having difficulty agreeing on the legal def-
    inition and concept of “accomplice.”
    Question: When a person willing[ly] participates
    in a group activity, is that person an accomplice to
    any crime committed by anyone in the group?
    After conferring with counsel, the judge told the jury to
    “[r]eread instructions # 45, 46, 47 and 48, and consider your
    instructions as a whole.” The next day, the jury returned a
    verdict finding Sarausad guilty of second-degree murder, two
    attempted second-degree murders, and second-degree assault.
    Sarausad’s counsel moved for a new trial. In a declaration
    in support of the motion, counsel stated that during a post-
    verdict interview, at which both the trial judge and counsel
    were present, the jury foreman and other members of the jury
    stated that they did not think Sarausad intended to kill anyone,
    that they had been confused by the concept of accomplice lia-
    bility, and that they had been swayed by the prosecutor’s “in
    for a dime, in for a dollar” theory. The court denied the
    motion for a new trial.
    Sarausad’s counsel then moved for reconsideration. This
    time, he supplemented his motion with sworn declarations
    from two jurors. Both jurors stated that they found the accom-
    plice liability instructions to be very confusing and that they
    did not think Sarausad intended to facilitate the shootings.
    The court denied the motion for reconsideration. Sarausad
    was then sentenced to more than 27 years in state prison.
    On direct appeal to the Washington Court of Appeals,
    Sarausad argued that “in for a dime, in for a dollar” was an
    inaccurate statement of Washington law of accomplice liabil-
    ity. Specifically, in the words of the Court of Appeals, Sarau-
    sad argued “that to convict a person as an accomplice to a
    substantive crime that requires proof of intent, the State must
    prove that the accomplice intended to help the principal com-
    2580                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    mit that particular crime.” State v. Ronquillo, No. 35840-5-I,
    
    1998 WL 87641
    , at *8 (Wash. Ct. App. Mar. 2, 1998).
    The Court of Appeals disagreed with Sarausad’s argument.
    The court first quoted part of the Washington accomplice lia-
    bility statute. In relevant part, that statute provides:
    (1) A person is guilty of a crime if it is committed
    by the conduct of another person for which he is
    legally accountable.
    (2) A person is legally accountable for the conduct
    of another person when:
    ...
    (c) He is an accomplice of such other per-
    son in the commission of the crime.
    (3) A person is an accomplice of another person in
    the commission of a crime if:
    (a) With knowledge that it will promote
    or facilitate the commission of the crime, he
    (i) solicits, commands, encourages, or
    requests such other person to commit it;
    or
    (ii) aids or agrees to aid such other per-
    son in planning or committing it[.]
    Wash. Rev. Code § 9A.08.020 (1994) (emphasis added). The
    court then quoted Instruction 46, which closely tracked the
    statutory language. The only difference between the statute
    and the instruction was that the word “it,” which appears
    twice in the statute, was each time replaced by the words “the
    crime” in the instruction.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                        2581
    The Court of Appeals concluded that the statute, as well as
    the jury instructions, were based on the “in for a dime, in for
    a dollar” theory of accomplice liability. The court agreed with
    the prosecution’s statement of the law to the jury during her
    closing argument. It held that the statute and the instructions
    did not require that an accomplice have knowledge of the par-
    ticular crime the principal intended to commit.
    The Court of Appeals wrote:
    Sarausad misstates the law in Washington when
    he asserts that to be convicted as an accomplice, the
    State must prove that the accomplice had the mental
    state required for commission of the charged offense.
    His argument that an accomplice is only liable for
    that substantive offense which he willfully sought to
    bring about has specifically been rejected in Wash-
    ington.
    In order to convict an accomplice of intentional
    murder, the State need not show that the accomplice
    had the intent that the victim would be killed. RCW
    9A.08.020(3)(a) has no such requirement.
    Accomplice liability in Washington is premised
    on the following principles: (1) To convict of accom-
    plice liability, the State need not prove that principal
    and accomplice shared the same mental state, (2)
    accomplice liability predicates criminal liability on
    general knowledge of a crime, rather than specific
    knowledge of the elements of the principal’s crime,
    and (3) an accomplice, having agreed to participate
    in a criminal activity, runs the risk that the primary
    actor will exceed the scope of the preplanned illegal-
    ity.
    Ronquillo, 
    1998 WL 87641
    , at *9 (citations omitted). The
    Washington Supreme Court denied review without comment.
    State v. Ronquillo, 
    966 P.2d 1277
     (Wash. 1998).
    2582                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    In two other cases, decided shortly thereafter, the Washing-
    ton Supreme Court repudiated the “in for a dime, in for a dol-
    lar” theory that had been the basis for the Court of Appeals’
    affirmation of Sarausad’s conviction. In State v. Roberts, 
    14 P.3d 713
     (Wash. 2001) (as amended), Jury Instruction 7 had
    defined accomplice liability as follows:
    You are instructed that a person is guilty of a
    crime if it is committed by the conduct of another
    person for which he is legally accountable. A person
    is legally accountable for the conduct of another per-
    son when he is an accomplice of such other person
    in the commission of a crime.
    A person is an accomplice in the commission of
    a crime . . . if, with knowledge that it will promote
    or facilitate its commission, he either:
    (a) solicits, commands, encourages or requests
    another person to commit the crime; or
    (b) aids another person in planning or committing
    the crime[.]
    Id. at 735 (italics in original; underlining added). In rejecting
    the “in for a dime, in for a dollar” theory of accomplice liabil-
    ity and disapproving the jury instruction, the Washington
    Supreme Court wrote, “The Legislature . . . intended the cul-
    pability of an accomplice not extend beyond the crimes of
    which the accomplice actually has ‘knowledge,’ . . . . In con-
    trast, jury instruction 7 here essentially allowed the jury to
    impose strict liability on Roberts. The instruction, therefore,
    improperly departed from the language of the statute.” Id. at
    735-36.
    In State v. Cronin, 
    14 P.3d 752
     (Wash. 2000), the Washing-
    ton Supreme Court “adhere[d]” to its decision in Roberts:
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2583
    [T]he fact that a purported accomplice knows that
    the principal intends to commit “ ‘a crime’ ” does
    not necessarily mean that accomplice liability
    attaches for any and all offenses ultimately commit-
    ted by the principal. See Roberts, 14 P.3d at 736. In
    our judgment, in order for one to be deemed an
    accomplice, that individual must have acted with
    knowledge that he or she was promoting or facilitat-
    ing the crime for which that individual was eventu-
    ally charged.
    Id. at 758 (emphasis in original).
    Sarausad brought his PRP in the Washington Court of
    Appeals after the Washington Supreme Court decided Roberts
    and Cronin. Now sitting with three different judges from
    those who heard Sarausad’s direct appeal, the Court of
    Appeals wrote that the previous Court of Appeals panel had
    misinterpreted the Washington statute when it denied relief in
    Sarausad’s direct appeal based on the “in for a dime, in for a
    dollar” theory. State v. Sarausad, 
    39 P.3d 308
    , 313-14 (Wash.
    Ct. App. 2001). Recognizing that Roberts and Cronin had
    repudiated that reading of the statute, the Court of Appeals
    now held that Sarausad’s jury instructions “mirrored” the state
    statute on accomplice liability “and thus did not suffer from
    the fatal flaw in State v. Roberts.” Id. at 313. The Court of
    Appeals did not mention the fact that the prior panel on direct
    appeal in Sarausad’s case had held essentially the opposite.
    That is, it did not mention that the prior panel of the Court of
    Appeals had held that the Washington statute and Sarausad’s
    jury instructions meant the opposite of what the Washington
    Supreme Court later held the statute to mean in Roberts and
    Cronin, and that the prior panel had held that the statute and
    jury instructions were based on the now-repudiated “in for a
    dime, in for a dollar” theory of accomplice liability.
    Sarausad specifically argued to the second Court of
    Appeals panel that the prosecutor’s “in for a dime, in for a
    2584                 SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    dollar” argument misstated the law of accomplice liability and
    misled the jury, thereby relieving the State of its burden to
    prove every element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
    He argued that “the prosecutor erroneously assumed, and
    argued, that the jury could find Sarausad guilty as an accom-
    plice to murder if he had the purpose to facilitate an offense
    of any kind whatsoever, even a shoving match or fist fight.”
    Id. at 316-17. The Court of Appeals responded, “But this is
    not an accurate description of the prosecutor’s actual argu-
    ment.” Id. at 317. It continued, “[T]he prosecutor did not in
    fact argue that even if Sarausad drove to Ballard High School
    the second time having the purpose to facilitate only another
    shoving match or a fist fight, he nevertheless was guilty of
    murder.” Id. at 318 (emphasis in original). “Not once did the
    prosecutor suggest to the jury that it could or should convict
    Sarausad even if it believed that he returned to Ballard High
    School for the purpose of facilitating nothing more than
    another shoving match or a fistfight . . . .” Id. at 319.
    These statements by the Court of Appeals are flatly contra-
    dicted by the record. As is obvious from the trial transcript
    (quoted at length above), the prosecutor argued clearly,
    emphatically, and repeatedly that Sarausad could be convicted
    of accomplice liability for murder even if he believed that
    Ronquillo intended merely to commit assault. We quote again
    only a small portion of the prosecutor’s argument:
    Let me give you a good example of accomplice
    liability. A friend comes up to you and says, “Hold
    this person’s arms while I hit him.” You say, “Okay,
    I don’t like that person anyway.” You hold the arms.
    The person not only gets assaulted, he gets killed.
    You are an accomplice and you can’t come back and
    say, “Well, I only intended this much damage to
    happen.” . . . The law in the State of Washington
    says, if you’re in for a dime, you’re in for a dollar.
    Based in part on its incorrect description of the prosecutor’s
    argument, the Court of Appeals denied Sarausad’s PRP.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                   2585
    In an unpublished written order signed by the Court Com-
    missioner, the Washington Supreme Court denied review. The
    Court Commissioner, like the Court of Appeals, did not
    acknowledge that the Court of Appeals had held on direct
    appeal that the jury in Sarausad’s case had been permitted to
    convict based on the “in for a dime, in for a dollar” reading
    of the Washington statute. Instead, the Commissioner wrote,
    “[H]ere the trial court correctly instructed the jury that it
    could convict Mr. Sarausad of murder or attempted murder as
    an accomplice only if it found he knowingly aided in the com-
    mission ‘the’ [sic] crime charged.” In denying the PRP, the
    Commissioner, like the Court of Appeals, flatly misstated the
    record in describing the prosecutor’s argument to the jury.
    The Commissioner wrote, “The prosecutor never suggested
    Mr. Sarausad could be found guilty if he had no knowledge
    that a shooting was to occur.”
    2.   Discussion
    Under Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
     (1991), we first ask
    whether the jury instructions were ambiguous. If the instruc-
    tions were ambiguous, we then ask “in the context of the
    instructions as a whole and the trial record” whether there was
    a “reasonable likelihood that the jury has applied the instruc-
    tion in a way that violates the Constitution.” Id. at 72 (cita-
    tions and internal quotation marks omitted). We consider
    these questions in turn.
    a.   Ambiguous Jury Instructions
    The sole contested legal issue in Sarausad’s trial was
    whether he could be convicted as an accomplice to murder
    and attempted murder if he did not know that Ronquillo
    intended to commit murder. For three reasons, we conclude
    that the instructions given in his case were ambiguous with
    respect to this issue.
    [9] First, nowhere in the jury instructions is there an
    explicit statement that an accomplice must have knowledge of
    2586                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    the actual crime the principal intends to commit. The more
    important instructions are numbers 45 and 46. They state, in
    relevant part:
    [Number 45:] You are instructed that a person is
    guilty of a crime if it is committed by the conduct of
    another person for which he is legally accountable.
    A person is legally accountable for the conduct of
    another person when he is an accomplice of such
    other person in the commission of the crime.
    [Number 46, in part:] A person is an accomplice
    in the commission of a crime if, with knowledge that
    it will promote or facilitate the commission of the
    crime, he or she either:
    (1) solicits, commands, encourages, or
    requests another person to commit the
    crime or
    (2) aids or agrees to aid another person in
    planning or committing the crime.
    (Emphasis added.) The critical issue is the definition of the
    term “a crime,” as that term is used at the beginning of
    Instruction 46. That term could mean “the crime” actually
    committed by the principal (whatever it turned out to be), or
    it could mean “the crime” the accomplice had knowledge the
    principal intended to commit. It would be easy to add a sen-
    tence to the instructions stating which of the two possible def-
    initions is correct, but the instructions contain no such
    sentence.
    [10] Second, the Washington Supreme Court held that a
    very similar instruction in Roberts allowed the jury to find
    accomplice liability based on the “in for a dime, in for a dol-
    lar” theory. Instruction 7 in Roberts is almost identical to
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2587
    Instruction 45 in Sarausad’s case. Instruction 7 in Roberts
    provided, in relevant part:
    You are instructed that a person is guilty of a
    crime if it is committed by the conduct of another
    person for which he is legally accountable. A person
    is legally accountable for the conduct of another per-
    son when he is an accomplice of such other person
    in the commission of a crime.
    Roberts, 14 P.3d at 735 (emphasis added). The only differ-
    ence between the two instructions is that the words “the
    crime” at the very end of Instruction 45 in Sarausad’s case are
    replaced by the words “a crime” at the end of the just-quoted
    portion of Instruction 7 in Roberts. The Washington Supreme
    Court noted that the Washington accomplice statute used the
    words “the crime” in this place, where Instruction 7 used the
    words “a crime.” The Court held that under Washington law,
    an accomplice could be held liable for the crime committed
    by the principal only if he knew that the principal would com-
    mit that particular crime. Id. It then reversed Roberts’ convic-
    tion because Instruction 7 “essentially allowed the jury to
    impose strict liability on Roberts.” Id. at 736.
    Because it uses the words “the crime” where Instruction 7
    in Roberts used the words “a crime,” Instruction 45 in Sarau-
    sad’s case does not invite an erroneous construction to the
    same degree as the flawed instruction in Roberts. Indeed, in
    using the words “the crime,” Instruction 45 tracks the wording
    in the Washington accomplice liability statute more closely
    than Instruction 7. But the simple change from “a crime” to
    “the crime” in Instruction 45 does not, in our view, make the
    jury instructions in Sarausad’s case unambiguous, for the
    basic problem identified above remains: There is no sentence
    in the instructions specifically instructing the jury that a per-
    son can be guilty of “a crime” as an accomplice only if that
    person knows that “a crime” is “the crime” the principal
    intends to commit.
    2588                 SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    [11] Third, and perhaps most revealing, the Washington
    Court of Appeals on direct appeal held that the instructions
    given in Sarausad’s case were consistent with the Washington
    statute, and that both the instructions and the statute were
    based on the “in for a dime, in for a dollar” theory of accom-
    plice liability. Sarausad had argued to that court that Wash-
    ington law required that an accomplice must know “the
    crime” the principal intended to commit. The Court of
    Appeals disagreed, holding that it was sufficient under Wash-
    ington law that the accomplice know that the principal
    intended to commit “a crime,” whether it be the actual crime
    committed or some other crime. In reaching that conclusion,
    the court understood both the accomplice liability statute and
    the jury instructions to be based on this theory of accomplice
    liability.
    The judges on the Court of Appeals are well-trained profes-
    sionals, skilled in reading legal texts and experts in Washing-
    ton law. Those judges, on direct appeal, read the statute and
    the jury instructions as instructing the jury to convict Sarau-
    sad as an accomplice even if he did not know that Ronquillo
    intended to commit murder. Given the Court of Appeals’
    reading of the statute and the jury instructions on Sarausad’s
    direct appeal, we are hard pressed to read the very same stat-
    ute and instructions as unambiguously instructing the jury to
    do precisely the opposite — to convict Sarausad only if he
    knew that Ronquillo intended to commit murder.
    The dissent argues that the jury instructions could not have
    been deficient because they closely tracked the language of
    Washington’s accomplice liability statute. The argument con-
    tains an obvious flaw. If a statute is ambiguous, any jury
    instruction that mirrors the statutory language must also be
    ambiguous. The fact that an instruction quotes from a statute
    does nothing to make either the statute, or the instruction,
    more understandable.
    Criminal statutes are sometimes upheld and applied only
    after a court has given a narrowing or clarifying gloss to the
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2589
    statutory language. Many statutes, for example, fail to specify
    a scienter element. The Supreme Court has often held that
    such statutes have an implicit mens rea requirement and that
    trial courts must instruct jurors not to convict defendants
    without sufficient proof of their state of mind. Liparota v.
    United States, 
    471 U.S. 419
     (1985), is typical. Liparota had
    been convicted under a federal statute that made it unlawful
    to “knowingly . . . acquire[ ]” food stamps in an unauthorized
    manner. Id. at 420 n.1 (quoting 7 U.S.C. § 2024(b)(1)).
    Although the district court’s instructions closely tracked the
    language of the statute, the Supreme Court reversed Lipa-
    rota’s conviction. As the Court noted, the statute did not “ex-
    plicitly spell[ ] out the mental state required” to convict a
    defendant. Id. at 424. Under one reading, it was enough that
    the defendant knowingly acquired food stamps. Under another
    reading, it was necessary to prove not only that the defendant
    knowingly acquired food stamps, but also that he knew that
    the acquisition was unauthorized. The Court insisted on the
    latter construction: “[T]he Government must prove that the
    defendant knew that his acquisition or possession of food
    stamps was in a manner unauthorized by statute or regula-
    tions.” Id. at 433. The district court’s instructions in Liparota,
    despite their adherence to the statutory language, were defec-
    tive because they did not adequately convey the required
    mental state.
    Other cases similarly illustrate that jury instructions must
    frequently clarify, not merely parrot, the statute of conviction.
    As in Liparota, the Supreme Court in Staples v. United States,
    
    511 U.S. 600
     (1994), considered a statute that was silent on
    the subject of mens rea. The Court concluded that the jury
    should have been instructed that it could not return a convic-
    tion for unlawful possession of an automatic weapon unless
    the defendant knew that the “characteristics of his weapon”
    brought it within the scope of the statute. Id. at 604; see also
    Ratzlaf v. United States, 
    510 U.S. 135
    , 149 (1994) (holding
    that the jury should have been instructed that it could not con-
    vict the defendant unless he knew that his currency structur-
    2590                 SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    ing activities were unlawful); United States v. Speach, 
    968 F.2d 795
    , 796 (9th Cir. 1992) (reversing a defendant’s convic-
    tion for transporting hazardous waste under a “linguistically
    ambiguous” statute because the jury instructions failed to
    require proof that the defendant knew that the recipient of the
    waste lacked a permit); cf. Godfrey v. Georgia, 
    446 U.S. 420
    ,
    437 (1980) (Marshall, J., concurring in the judgment)
    (explaining that it is inappropriate “[t]o give the jury an
    instruction in the form of the bare words of the statute” when
    those words are “hopelessly ambiguous”).
    [12] The Washington courts have had serious difficulty
    parsing the Washington accomplice liability statute’s knowl-
    edge requirement, at times holding that it permits an “in for
    a dime, in for a dollar” theory, and at times holding the oppo-
    site. The jury instructions in Sarausad’s case, which essen-
    tially tracked the statutory language, were no less confusing
    than the statute itself. We therefore conclude that the jury
    instructions were, at the very least, ambiguous on the question
    of whether Sarausad could be convicted of murder and
    attempted murder on a theory of accomplice liability without
    proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Sarausad knew that
    Ronquillo intended to commit murder.
    b.   Likelihood of Misapplication
    [13] Establishing that the jury instructions were ambiguous,
    and that the jury could therefore have misunderstood them, is
    not enough to establish a constitutional violation under
    Estelle. Sarausad must also establish that there is “a reason-
    able likelihood that the jury has applied the challenged
    instruction in a way that violates the Constitution.” Estelle,
    502 U.S. at 72 (emphasis added, internal quotation marks
    omitted). Under Estelle, we ask whether there is a “reasonable
    likelihood” that the jury applied the instruction in a way that
    relieved the State of its burden to prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt every element of the crime of accomplice liability for
    murder under Washington law. Id. A defendant “need not
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2591
    establish that the jury was more likely than not to have been
    impermissibly inhibited by the instruction” in order to satisfy
    the “reasonable likelihood” standard. Boyde, 494 U.S. at 380.
    For four reasons, we believe the “reasonable likelihood” stan-
    dard has been met.
    [14] First, the evidence supporting the conclusion that
    Sarausad knew that Ronquillo intended to commit murder on
    the return trip to Ballard High School was somewhat thin. As
    indicated above, there was no direct evidence that Sarausad
    knew that Ronquillo intended to commit murder, and the
    Washington Court of Appeals on direct review overstated the
    strength of the limited circumstantial evidence. We described
    that evidence above from the perspective of a Jackson analy-
    sis, viewing it in the light most favorable to the prosecution.
    Even described from that perspective the evidence against
    Sarausad was thin. But there was also evidence that contra-
    dicted or minimized the strength of the evidence, which we
    did not describe.
    The dissent appears to misunderstand the import of our
    argument that the evidence against Sarausad was thin. We do
    not claim that the weakness of the evidence caused the jury
    to misunderstand the instructions. Rather, we contend that the
    fact that the jury convicted Sarausad despite the thin evidence
    that Sarausad knew of Ronquillo’s intent to commit murder
    suggests that the jury incorrectly believed that such proof was
    not required.
    [15] Second, the prosecutor argued clearly and forcefully
    for the “in for a dime, in for a dollar” theory of accomplice
    liability. The prosecutor could not have been clearer in her
    explanation of that theory. For example, she argued to the jury
    in rebuttal:
    And I’ve told you the old adage, you’re in for a
    dime, you’re in for a dollar. If their logic was cor-
    rect, they’re not ever an accomplice to anything. The
    2592                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    getaway driver for a bank robbery would say, “I just
    told him to rob them, I didn’t tell him to shoot him,
    I didn’t do anything.” The example I gave you ear-
    lier, “I just told my friend to hold the arms down of
    this person while he hit him, I didn’t tell him to kill
    him, I’m not guilty of anything.” If you’re in for a
    dime, you’re in for a dollar.
    [16] Third, in its notes sent to the judge during delibera-
    tions, the jury demonstrated substantial confusion about what
    the State was required to prove. In its first note, the jury asked
    for “clarification” on whether “ ‘intent’ appl[ied] to (the
    defendant only) or to (the defendant or his accomplice)?” In
    its second note, it asked, “Does intentional apply to only the
    defendant or only his accomplice?” Finally, in its third note,
    it wrote, “We are having difficulty agreeing on the legal defi-
    nition and concept of ‘accomplice.’ Question: When a person
    willing[ly] participates in a group activity, is that person an
    accomplice to any crime committed by anyone in the group?”
    [17] Fourth, after the Washington Supreme Court had clari-
    fied the meaning of the Washington statute in Roberts and
    Cronin, the Washington courts were able to deny Sarausad’s
    PRP only after misstating the record and ignoring the prose-
    cutor’s emphatic and repeated “in for a dime, in for a dollar”
    argument. The Court of Appeals wrote, “[T]he prosecutor did
    not in fact argue that even if Sarausad drove to Ballard High
    School the second time having the purpose to facilitate only
    another shoving match or a fist fight, he nevertheless was
    guilty of murder.” Id. at 318 (emphasis in original). It added,
    “Not once did the prosecutor suggest to the jury that it could
    or should convict Sarausad even if it believed that he returned
    to Ballard High School for the purpose of facilitating nothing
    more than another shoving match or a fistfight . . . .” Id. at
    319. The Court Commissioner of the Washington Supreme
    Court echoed the Court of Appeals. The Commissioner wrote,
    “The prosecutor never suggested Mr. Sarausad could be found
    guilty if he had no knowledge that a shooting was to occur.”
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2593
    The statements of both the Court of Appeals and the Court
    Commissioner are plainly incorrect. As shown above, the
    record reveals that the prosecutor repeatedly made precisely
    the argument that the Court of Appeals and the Court Com-
    missioner stated she did not make.
    [18] Taken together, these reasons lead us to conclude that
    there is a “reasonable likelihood” that the jury misapplied the
    ambiguous jury instructions, thereby relieving the State of its
    burden of proof of an element of the crimes with which
    Sarausad was charged. In so concluding, we consider neither
    Sarausad’s counsel’s declaration nor the two jurors’ declara-
    tions supporting Sarausad’s post-verdict motions for a new
    trial. The magistrate judge did consider the two jurors’ decla-
    rations, but the district court, citing Federal Rule of Evidence
    606(b), held that the magistrate judge erred in considering
    them. We agree with the district court that the declarations
    should not have been considered by the magistrate judge. See
    Fed. R. Evid. 606(b); Tanner v. United States, 
    483 U.S. 107
    ,
    120-27 (1987); United States v. Rutherford, 
    371 F.3d 634
    ,
    639-40 (9th Cir. 2004).
    c.   Harmless Error
    [19] For the same reasons that we conclude that the second
    step of Estelle is satisfied, we conclude that the constitutional
    error was not harmless. The parties agree that the test applica-
    ble to this case is “whether the error had substantial and inju-
    rious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
    California v. Roy, 
    519 U.S. 2
    , 5 (1996) (per curiam) (quoting
    Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
    , 637 (1993)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The error is not harmless if we are
    “in grave doubt as to the harmlessness of [the] error.” Roy,
    519 U.S. at 5 (quoting O’Neal v. McAninch, 
    513 U.S. 432
    ,
    437 (1995)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Sarausad’s
    counsel stated during closing argument to the jury, “There is
    no question that Cesar Sarausad assisted Brian Ronquillo.
    That’s beyond dispute. [H]e drove him to the scene. The ques-
    2594                 SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    tion is whether Cesar had knowledge that his assistance would
    promote or facilitate the crime[.]” Because the only disputed
    issue was whether Sarausad knew that Ronquillo intended to
    commit murder, relieving the State of its burden of proof on
    that issue was not harmless error.
    C.   Sarausad’s Remaining Claims
    Given our holding on Sarausad’s Winship/Sandstrom/
    Estelle claim, we do not need to reach his remaining claims.
    Conclusion
    [20] We affirm the district court with respect to Sarausad’s
    Winship/Sandstrom/Estelle claim. We remand to the district
    court to grant the writ and to order Sarausad’s release unless
    the State elects to retry him within a reasonable time.
    AFFIRMED and REMANDED.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER            2595
    Volume 2 of 2
    2596                   SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    REINHARDT, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissent-
    ing in part:
    I
    I concur in the majority holding that the ambiguous jury
    instruction on accomplice liability, when viewed in the con-
    text of the entire trial, unconstitutionally relieved the State of
    its burden of proof. I therefore join the decision to affirm the
    district court’s grant of habeas relief on that ground.
    I dissent, however, from the majority’s conclusion that the
    incredibly “thin” evidence the State presented at trial, maj. op.
    at 2591, was sufficient to support Sarausad’s convictions
    under Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
     (1979), and AEDPA.
    In fact, the evidence isn’t thin. It’s non-existent. The state
    court relied heavily on its determination that Sarausad heard
    a conversation about a plan to shoot the victim. Yet, there is
    absolutely no evidence in the record that he did. The majority
    itself points out that there was “no direct evidence” and “lim-
    ited circumstantial evidence” of Sarausad’s guilt. Maj. op. at
    2591. Unlike the majority, I would take the next step — a step
    compelled by its own description of the evidence. I would
    hold, with the district court, that the evidence against Sarau-
    sad was insufficient, would, like the district court, grant relief
    on his Jackson claim, and, finally, would hold that the Double
    Jeopardy Clause bars the State from retrying him.
    My disagreement with the majority on the Jackson issue
    relates both to its analysis and to its result. I strongly disagree
    with my colleagues’ assertion that “[w]e . . . evaluate a state
    court’s resolution of a Jackson sufficiency-of-the-evidence
    claim in all cases under § 2254(d)(1) rather than
    § 2254(d)(2).” Maj. op. at 2562 (emphasis added). As I will
    explain, I see nothing in law or logic preventing us from eval-
    uating Jackson claims under § 2254(d)(2), which authorizes
    us to grant habeas relief when the state court decision we are
    reviewing is “based on an unreasonable determination of the
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2597
    facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court pro-
    ceeding.” § 2254(d)(2). In fact, in this case, and in others in
    which the question is whether the state court has correctly
    addressed the evidence in the record, we cannot properly ana-
    lyze the state court decision without reviewing it under that
    provision. I do not think that any particular type of habeas
    claim, including a Jackson claim, must in all cases be consid-
    ered under only (d)(1) or (d)(2). See Weston v. Dormire, 
    272 F.3d 1109
    , 1112 (8th Cir. 2001) (analyzing a Jackson chal-
    lenge under both (d)(1) and (d)(2)). Based on the nature of the
    specific arguments Sarausad makes in this case, I believe that
    we are compelled to review his Jackson claim under
    § 2254(d)(2), as the district court did; I would therefore issue
    the writ on that ground. Having done so, I would correct the
    only error the able district judge made by holding in addition
    that, under the Double Jeopardy Clause, Sarausad may not be
    tried again. See Burks v. United States, 
    437 U.S. 1
    , 12-18
    (1978).
    II
    The majority states that Ҥ 2254(d)(2) is not readily appli-
    cable to Jackson cases.” Maj. op. at 2561. This is because, in
    the majority’s view, “[a] court under Jackson makes no
    ‘determination of the facts’ ” in the way that § 2254(d)(2)
    contemplates. Maj. op. at 2561. This characterization of the
    judicial decisionmaking process in Jackson cases is mistaken.
    Without question, the state court makes factual determinations
    in the course of reviewing a conviction under Jackson. As
    with any legal claim, the court must first determine what the
    facts are and then decide whether those facts support the legal
    basis for relief asserted by the defendant. To be sure, the ulti-
    mate question in a Jackson case — whether the evidence is
    sufficient to support the verdict — is a legal one. See Schlup
    v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 330 (1995). This observation, however,
    does not imply that the state court makes no “determination
    of the facts” on the way to rendering its legal decision. The
    state court must, after viewing the material in the record in the
    2598                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    light most favorable to the prosecution, decide what the “evi-
    dence” is before it can assess whether a rational factfinder
    could find the defendant guilty. It does so by reviewing the
    record and determining the relevant facts, often by drawing
    the inferences it concludes are appropriate. An unreasonable
    determination of what the evidence is — how it is properly to
    be characterized — may, as here, lead the state court to err in
    answering the ultimate legal question of sufficiency. It is
    therefore that determination — what the “evidence” is — that
    a federal habeas court may review, even if deferentially,
    under § 2254(d)(2). Viewing the evidence favorably to the
    prosecution does not, as the majority suggests, somehow
    relieve the state court of its obligation to make the determina-
    tion of what the “evidence” is: it simply describes the way in
    which the court goes about performing that task.
    It is true that in adjudicating a Jackson claim a state court
    need not actually determine factual conflicts in the record, or,
    put another way, that it must deem evidentiary conflicts to be
    resolved in favor of the state. See Wright v. West, 
    505 U.S. 277
    , 296-97 (1992) (plurality opinion). A state court may not,
    however, do what the state court did here: it may not, when
    determining whether to uphold a conviction, rely on “evi-
    dence” that does not appear in, or is contrary to, the record.
    If, for example, one witness testifies that the defendant pulled
    the trigger, while another witness testifies that he did not, the
    state court may credit only the first witness’s testimony in
    determining whether the evidence is sufficient. It may not,
    however, determine that a witness testified that the defendant
    pulled the trigger — and that this testimony provides the basis
    for upholding a guilty verdict — if no witness actually so tes-
    tified. To do so would not be to view the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the prosecution, but actually to misstate
    what the evidence is. When a state court commits such an
    egregious error, a federal court on habeas review need not,
    indeed may not, ignore it. If the state court’s error in deter-
    mining the facts was both critical and objectively unreason-
    able, habeas relief may be granted on a Jackson claim, just as
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                           2599
    it may in a case raising any other type of constitutional claim.
    See, e.g., Kesser v. Cambra, 
    465 F.3d 351
    , 353 (9th Cir.
    2006) (en banc) (granting habeas relief on a Batson claim
    because the state court decision resulted from an unreasonable
    determination of the facts). Determining that nonexistent facts
    exist (and then relying on them) of course involves an “unrea-
    sonable determination of the facts,” not an unreasonable
    application of the law, and thus is properly addressed under
    § 2254(d)(2), not (d)(1).1
    1
    The majority is completely mistaken in asserting that Juan H. v. Allen
    III, 
    408 F.3d 1262
     (9th Cir. 2005) (as amended), cert. denied, 
    126 S. Ct. 1142
     (2006), and 
    126 S. Ct. 1145
     (2006), previously decided that we may
    analyze Jackson claims only under § 2254(d)(1) and never under (d)(2).
    The open question that Juan H. resolved was not whether we should apply
    (d)(1) instead of (d)(2), but whether AEDPA affected our review of Jack-
    son claims at all — whether the extra layer of deference it requires is
    afforded in insufficiency of the evidence cases.
    In Bruce v. Terhune, 
    376 F.3d 950
     (9th Cir. 2004), one of the cases we
    cited in Juan H. as leaving the question open, we noted that “[t]he ques-
    tion whether AEDPA requires an additional degree of deference to state
    court resolution of sufficiency of the evidence claims is unsettled in our
    circuit.” Id. at 957. In Bruce we cited two post-AEDPA decisions that had
    reviewed Jackson claims without applying any extra deference as well as
    one decision that had noted in dicta that additional deference was appro-
    priate. See id. (citing cases). This was the conflict that Juan H. resolved.
    Neither Bruce nor Juan H. even remotely suggests that a review of a Jack-
    son claim under (d)(2) would be inappropriate. Nor does any of the four
    out-of-circuit cases that Juan H. cites, and on which the majority now
    relies, in any way suggest as much.
    There is, of course, no suggestion in Juan H. that the petitioner argued
    that the state court had determined any material facts unreasonably. Juan
    H. merely holds that we cannot review Jackson claims under AEDPA by
    conducting, as some of our prior decisions had, a straight application of
    Jackson. Although Juan H. tells us that under AEDPA, extra deference is
    required, Juan H. takes no position on whether, in a case presenting (d)(2)
    arguments, that deference may be paid under (d)(2) instead of (d)(1).
    Indeed, although the petitioner in Juan H. did not argue that his conviction
    stemmed from unreasonable factual determinations, we expressly noted in
    that case that “under § 2254(d)(2), a federal court may also grant a writ
    of habeas corpus if a material factual finding of the state court reflects ‘an
    2600                      SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    If the state court’s factual determinations are not objec-
    tively unreasonable, however, or if the petitioner does not
    challenge them, we may not ignore what the state court found
    the facts to be and analyze the record for ourselves.2 We must,
    for purposes of § 2254, accept its findings as correct. See Tay-
    lor, 366 F.3d at 1000 (“Once the state court fact-finding pro-
    cess survives [review for unreasonableness under
    § 2254(d)(2)] — or in those cases where petitioner does not
    raise [such a] challenge to the facts as found by the state court
    — the state court’s findings are dressed in a presumption of
    correctness . . . .”). We may then proceed under § 2254(d)(1)
    to determine whether the state court unreasonably applied
    Jackson in concluding that the evidence — as that court found
    it — was sufficient to support the verdict.3
    Jackson challenges in general are permissible under both
    (d)(1) and (d)(2), but these two types of challenges are differ-
    ent in kind. Assuming that the case does not involve new evi-
    dence presented for the first time in federal court, a petitioner
    bringing a Jackson challenge under (d)(1) argues that, accept-
    ing the state court’s factual determinations as correct — that
    is, accepting the state court’s characterization of what the evi-
    dence is — the state court applied Jackson in an “unreason-
    unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented
    in the state court proceeding.’ ” Juan H., 408 F.3d at 1270 n.8 (quoting
    § 2254(d)(2)). We did not suggest that the principle we had just
    announced — which follows directly from the statutory text — is inappli-
    cable to Jackson claims, one of the very claims we were considering in
    Juan H.
    2
    If “the state court should have made a finding of fact but neglected to
    do so,” we may make the finding ourselves. In such a case, the state
    court’s error is treated as an unreasonable determination of the facts under
    § 2254(d)(2). See Taylor v. Maddox, 
    366 F.3d 992
    , 1000-01, 1008 (9th
    Cir. 2004).
    3
    In such cases, we must presume that the state court’s factual determina-
    tions are correct. They may be rebutted, however, in what we term an “ex-
    trinsic” challenge, by clear and convincing evidence presented for the first
    time in federal court. See § 2254(e)(1); Taylor, 366 F.3d at 1000.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                         2601
    able” manner in concluding that such evidence was sufficient
    to show the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See,
    e.g., Torres v. Mullin, 
    317 F.3d 1145
    , 1151 (10th Cir. 2003)
    (noting intracircuit split regarding treatment of Jackson cases
    under AEDPA; analyzing Jackson claim under (d)(1) because
    “[i]n this instance,” the petitioner “does not contend that the
    [state court’s] factual findings are erroneous” but only that
    “the court’s ultimate conclusion — that the evidence is suffi-
    cient to support his . . . convictions — constitutes an unrea-
    sonable application of Jackson” (emphasis added)). A
    challenge under (d)(2), by contrast, asserts that, on the basis
    of the trial record, the state court’s factual determinations —
    its characterizations of the evidence — are “unreasonable”
    (not just wrong) and must be set aside, see Taylor, 366 F.3d
    at 1008, and that on the basis of the facts as properly deter-
    mined, the evidence is insufficient under Jackson to convict.
    Of course, in some cases a petitioner may argue that the state
    court both applied the law and determined the facts in an
    unreasonable manner, bringing challenges under both
    § 2254(d)(1) and (d)(2), and in such cases both provisions
    will be implicated.
    In actuality, in reviewing Sarausad’s Jackson claim, the
    majority employs § 2254(d)(2) although it denies doing so at
    every step. The majority spends five pages criticizing the state
    court’s most important factual determination — that the
    shooting was discussed in Sarausad’s car during the return
    trip to the school — concludes that the determination was
    “objectively unreasonable,” and sets the determination aside.
    Maj. op. at 2565-67. Without doubt, such actions may be
    undertaken only under § 2254(d)(2), not (d)(1). See Taylor,
    366 F.3d at 1008. In other words, after asserting that
    “§ 2254(d)(2) is not readily applicable to Jackson cases,” maj.
    op. at 2561, the majority readily applies it.4 Why the majority
    4
    The majority’s decision to set aside an objectively unreasonable state
    court factual determination also belies its unfounded assertion that state
    courts adjudicating Jackson claims make no factual determinations (or at
    least no factual determinations of the type cognizable under § 2254(d)(2))
    to begin with.
    2602                   SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    insists on asserting that § 2254(d)(2) is out of reach for Jack-
    son claims, then uses that very provision sub silentio for the
    limited purpose of setting aside a particular factual determina-
    tion, while continuing to maintain that the provision may not
    serve as the statutory basis for habeas relief, simply escapes
    me. The reason for the majority’s assertion is particularly dif-
    ficult to understand as AEDPA itself creates no hierarchy
    between (d)(1) and (d)(2), and as (d)(2) has served as the sole
    basis for habeas relief in other decisions of this court. In short,
    the majority actually holds that “a material factual finding of
    the state court” is objectively unreasonable”; it may then
    “grant a writ of habeas corpus” under § 2254(d)(2). See Juan
    H., 
    408 F.3d 1270
     n.8. For reasons I am unable to grasp, how-
    ever, the majority refuses to do so on the basis of an imagined
    categorical bar against issuing the writ under that section in
    cases involving Jackson claims.
    III
    Sarausad’s Jackson challenge belongs under § 2254(d)(2).
    While legal questions are ultimately involved, the core issue
    in Sarausad’s claim concerns the state court’s adoption of
    facts purportedly from, and characterization of facts purport-
    edly in, the record. Sarausad’s habeas argument centers on a
    number of factual matters as to which he contends the state
    court reached an objectively unreasonable determination,
    although one such wholly unwarranted and unreasonable fac-
    tual determination is clearly dispositive of the outcome.
    The magistrate judge, in findings the district court adopted,
    correctly understood that Sarausad was asserting a Jackson
    challenge under § 2254(d)(2), explicitly finding that Sarausad
    had satisfied that provision. She wrote, unequivocally, that
    “[t]he [state] appeals court’s conclusion that the cited evi-
    dence amounted to circumstantial evidence from which the
    jury could infer that petitioner knew of the gun was based on
    an unreasonable determination of the facts, in light of the tes-
    timony. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).” Later in her report, the mag-
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2603
    istrate judge reiterated that “the court’s presumption that the
    jurors [found that Sarausad knew that one of his passengers
    had a gun] was based on ‘an unreasonable determination of
    the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court
    proceeding.’ 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).” On appeal, the section of
    Sarausad’s opening brief that addresses the AEDPA standard
    argues that “[t]he Washington court’s analysis depends on a
    patchwork of multi-tiered and strained inferences.” The brief
    makes a number of arguments that the state court misappre-
    hended the record or drew factual conclusions that were
    unsupported by sufficient evidence. These are (d)(2) argu-
    ments. See Taylor, 366 F.3d at 999, 1001.
    It is our duty, then, in my opinion, to decide whether Sarau-
    sad’s claim under § 2254(d)(2) has merit. The magistrate
    judge’s extensive analysis of the evidence, as well as an inde-
    pendent review of the record, leads to the inevitable conclu-
    sion that the state court’s factual determinations, which
    formed the basis for its rejection of Sarausad’s Jackson claim,
    were objectively unreasonable, and that no justification for
    reversing the district court’s decision exists. Indeed, after ana-
    lyzing under (d)(2) each of the factual determinations on
    which the state court based its legal conclusion, and after
    perusing the record independently, I believe that there is virtu-
    ally no “evidence,” direct or circumstantial, as to Sarausad’s
    purported knowledge that is not a product of the state court’s
    unreasonable determination of the facts.
    In Taylor v. Maddox, we interpreted § 2254(d)(2), which,
    we explained, covers claims in which a petitioner “challenges
    the state court’s findings based entirely on the state record.”
    366 F.3d at 999. We deemed such claims “intrinsic” chal-
    lenges, and contrasted them with “extrinsic” attacks in which
    a petitioner seeks to overturn state court factfinding on the
    basis of evidence presented for the first time in federal court.
    Id. at 1000. Specifically, we wrote that state court findings
    may be unreasonable under § 2254(d)(2) where, inter alia,
    “the state courts plainly misapprehend or misstate the record
    2604                     SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    in making their findings, and the misapprehension goes to a
    material factual issue that is central to petitioner’s claim.” Id.
    at 1001. “Such a challenge may [also] be based on the claim
    that the finding” — not to be confused with the verdict itself
    — “is unsupported by sufficient evidence.” Id. at 999.5
    Finally, “[w]hen we determine that state-court fact-finding is
    unreasonable,” we continued, “we have an obligation to set
    those findings aside and, if necessary, to make new findings.”
    Id. at 1008. In performing our (d)(2) review, we of course
    give substantial deference to the state court findings. In Tay-
    lor, we applied the requisite deference and issued the writ
    under § 2254(d)(2), as the magistrate judge implicitly did
    here. The Taylor analysis fits the facts and circumstances of
    this case to a “t.”
    The state court’s key factual determinations in this case
    cannot withstand the deferential “intrinsic” review prescribed
    in Taylor. In its most important finding, the state court con-
    cluded that “Gosho and Marckx testified that ‘capping’ was
    discussed on the return trip to the school.”6 Sarausad v. Wash-
    ington, 
    39 P.3d 308
    , 319 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001). This fact, if
    true, would lend strong support to the State’s argument that
    Sarausad knowingly facilitated the shooting — it clearly
    “goes to a material factual issue that is central to petitioner’s
    claim.” Taylor, 366 F.3d at 1001. Without this finding, there
    is unquestionably insufficient evidence under Jackson of the
    only disputed element of the case — whether Sarausad knew
    of the intended criminal act. As the magistrate judge demon-
    5
    Although § 2254(e)(1) accords state court factual determinations a
    “presumption of correctness” rebuttable only by “clear and convincing
    evidence” (introduced at the federal habeas proceeding), these commands
    “do not apply to a challenge that is governed by the deference implicit in
    the ‘unreasonable determination’ standard of section 2254(d)(2).” Id. at
    1000. That is, § 2254(e)(1) does not apply to challenges brought under
    § 2254(d)(2).
    6
    “Capping” is shooting. Thus the purported testimony was that the sub-
    ject of shooting was discussed in Sarausad’s car when Sarausad and the
    others were in the vehicle on the way to the site of the offense.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                   2605
    strated, even under the deferential standard prescribed in Tay-
    lor, the state court’s “capping” determination was objectively
    unreasonable under § 2254(d)(2), and must be set aside.
    Indeed, as the majority concludes, maj. op. at 2565, 2567, nei-
    ther Gosho nor Marckx actually testified, as the state court
    found each did, that “capping” was “discussed” in Sarausad’s
    car. I agree with the majority that the state court’s determina-
    tion to the contrary — that is, its determination that two wit-
    nesses testified to damning facts to which they did not in
    actuality testify — is, therefore, obviously unreasonable and
    must be set aside. See maj. op. at 2569-70. I would do so,
    however, under § 2254(d)(2), not (d)(1).
    In another factual determination — this time one on which
    the majority does rely, maj. op. at 2572 — the state court
    found that Ronquillo, the shooter, “tied a bandana over the
    lower part of his face.” Sarausad, 39 P.3d at 319. The State
    seizes upon this finding to argue that, because it takes more
    than a moment to tie a bandana, the occupants of Sarausad’s
    car, including Sarausad (who was driving), had warning that
    a shooting was going to occur. Yet all of the car’s occupants
    testified that they did not see Ronquillo put on the bandana.
    Instead, the record contains several references to “pulling the
    bandana on,” and the magistrate judge, after carefully review-
    ing the record, characterized the action that way. As the mag-
    istrate judge concluded, the record contains no support for the
    assertion that Sarausad saw Ronquillo don the bandana. The
    difference between “tying” a bandana around one’s head and
    simply “pulling” up a pre-tied bandana may seem slight, but
    it is enormously important in the context of this case. Without
    the state court’s wholly unsupported — and thus objectively
    unreasonable, see Taylor, 366 F.3d at 999 — determination
    that Ronquillo tied the bandana on in a way that Sarausad
    would have seen, the State’s case, which already lacks suffi-
    cient evidence in the absence of the erroneous “capping”
    determination, falls even farther short of meeting the Jackson
    standard. All this, of course, is without even considering that
    the inference that the state court drew as to guilt from the
    2606                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    wearing or purported tying on of a bandana is, as the magis-
    trate judge found, wholly speculative. See United States v.
    Lewis, 
    787 F.2d 1318
    , 1323 (9th Cir. 1986) (“[M]ere suspi-
    cion or speculation cannot be the basis for creation of logical
    inferences.”).
    The state court also found that “Sarausad . . . drove the car
    in such a manner as to facilitate a drive-by shooting, not in
    such a manner as to stop, park the vehicle and engage in fisti-
    cuffs.” Sarausad, 39 P.3d at 319. This finding, on which the
    majority relies, maj. op. at 2571, also goes to a material fac-
    tual issue. The magistrate judge ruled this finding unreason-
    able because it was “an incorrect characterization of the
    complete testimony.” The only evidence lending support to
    the state court’s finding is the testimony of one witness,
    James Cooke, who described Sarausad’s driving as “swoop-
    ing.” Yet Cooke admits that in his initial statement to the
    police he did not describe the driving as “swooping.” In addi-
    tion, Cooke stated that he was directly behind Sarausad’s car,
    but every other witness testified that Vicencio’s car was
    behind Sarausad’s. Cooke also stated that when Sarausad sped
    off, there was no other car following. Again, every other wit-
    ness testified to the contrary. Multiple witnesses described the
    path of Sarausad’s car in a manner that was consistent with
    stopping to get out. Furthermore, as the State conceded at oral
    argument before this court, even if Sarausad did “swoop,”
    such driving was just as consistent with a planned fistfight as
    it was with a drive-by shooting. See United States v. Bautista-
    Avila, 
    6 F.3d 1360
    , 1363 (9th Cir. 1993).
    The same is true, as the magistrate judge found, of Sarau-
    sad’s “Are you ready?” comment. It is nothing but speculation
    to conclude that in uttering this question Sarausad meant “Are
    you ready to shoot someone?” rather than “Are you ready to
    fight?” Indeed, as the magistrate judge pointed out, the only
    witness who testified that Sarausad asked “Are you ready?”
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                       2607
    also testified that the Diablos had discussed returning to the
    school only for a fight, not for a shooting.7
    Without the “evidence” described above, and especially
    without the objectively unreasonable determination, wholly
    unsupported by the record, that a discussion of capping
    occurred in Sarausad’s vehicle, there is almost nothing to sug-
    gest that Sarausad had the slightest indication or reason to
    believe that a shooting might take place. In its effort to
    reverse the district court, however, the majority seizes upon
    tiny shreds of “evidence” that even the state court itself
    deemed entirely unworthy of comment. In addition to lending
    little support to the case against Sarausad, many of these bits
    of evidence are unsupported by the record; one is even contra-
    dicted by the majority’s own opinion.
    For example, the majority suggests that Sarausad was pres-
    ent for a conversation in which Gosho discussed the possibil-
    ity of a shooting, maj. op. at 2570, and that this provides a
    basis for the jury’s verdict. As noted above, the majority itself
    set aside the state court’s finding that the shooting was dis-
    cussed during the return trip to the school. Now the majority
    suggests that Gosho discussed the shooting at the house,
    before the return trip, while “everybody” was present. Maj.
    op. at 2570. But the majority elsewhere points out that “if the
    conversation [about shooting] took place before the return trip
    to the school, as Gosho testified, there is no direct evidence
    that Sarausad heard it. Gosho never testified that Sarausad
    participated in or heard the conversation.” Maj. op. at 2565.
    Furthermore, as the majority itself also reports, even if the
    conversation did occur within Sarausad’s earshot, nobody, not
    even Gosho, took it seriously. Maj. op. at 2567.
    7
    The majority recounts Sarausad’s “Follow me” comment as though it
    were an additional piece of evidence separate from the “Are you ready?”
    comment. The record is clear, however, that only one statement was
    uttered. One witness testified that the statement was “Are you ready?”
    while others testified that it was “Follow me” or “Follow us.”
    2608                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    As another example, the majority’s opinion relies on the
    testimony of witnesses who claimed to have seen “a gun in
    the hands of a Diablo” during the first trip to the school. Maj.
    op. at 2570. However, as the magistrate judge concluded after
    a careful analysis of the record, “there was no evidence what-
    soever that ties [the testimony] to whether [Sarausad] saw or
    knew of the alleged gun.” The district court’s factual finding
    is hardly clearly erroneous.
    The majority’s efforts to save the state court’s decision
    from its unreasonable factual determinations by combing the
    record for inconsequential shreds of evidence that do not actu-
    ally support an inference of guilt should not survive under
    § 2254(d)(2). Our review under (d)(2) is deferential, but “def-
    erence does not by definition preclude relief.” Miller-El v.
    Cockrell, 
    537 U.S. 3
    22, 340 (2003).
    IV
    A final question is whether a petitioner who has satisfied
    § 2254(d)(2) must also show that the state court’s application
    of law was “objectively unreasonable” under § 2254(d)(1), or
    instead may simply show that it constituted an error of consti-
    tutional magnitude. In the Jackson context, the question is
    whether a petitioner who demonstrates that the state court’s
    material factual determinations were objectively unreasonable
    must then show that, if the state court were to reject his Jack-
    son claim on the basis of the corrected facts, such rejection
    would constitute an objectively unreasonable application of
    Jackson under § 2254(d)(1). The answer must be “No.” Sec-
    tion 2254(d) is written in the disjunctive: to obtain federal
    habeas relief, a petitioner must show, in addition to a substan-
    tive federal constitutional violation, see § 2254(a), either that
    the state court decision was contrary to or an unreasonable
    application of clearly established Supreme Court law OR that
    it was based on an unreasonable determination of facts. See
    § 2254(d). By AEDPA’s own unambiguous terms, a petitioner
    need not satisfy both §§ 2254(d)(1) and (d)(2). See Davis v.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2609
    Grigas, 
    443 F.3d 1155
    , 1158-59 (9th Cir. 2006) (remanding
    to determine whether petitioner was entitled to relief under
    § 2254(d)(2) after expressly holding that he was not entitled
    to relief under § 2254(d)(1)). Both this court and the Supreme
    Court have granted habeas relief under § 2254(d)(2) without
    even mentioning (d)(1) or suggesting that its strictures must
    also be satisfied. See, e.g., Miller-El v. Dretke, 
    545 U.S. 231
    (2005); Kesser, 465 F.3d at 353; see also Kesser, 465 F.3d at
    371-72 (Wardlaw, Circuit Judge, concurring) (joining the
    majority’s opinion granting relief under § 2254(d)(2) and rec-
    ommending relief “on the alternative ground” of
    § 2254(d)(1)).
    The text and structure of AEDPA compel the conclusion
    that, where the state court decision rejecting a habeas petition-
    er’s constitutional claim resulted from an unreasonable deter-
    mination of the facts, the petitioner is entitled to relief if,
    under the corrected version of the facts, a constitutional viola-
    tion would be established. The deference due state courts
    under AEDPA has already been given and is overcome at the
    time the factual determination is set aside. There is no need
    for a further exercise of deference, or, as it might be put, for
    double deference. See, e.g., Rolan v. Vaughn, 
    445 F.3d 671
    ,
    683 (1st Cir. 2006) (affirming habeas relief for petitioner who
    satisfied § 2254(d)(2) and under the correct facts established
    a Strickland violation); id. (“Because we conclude that the
    [state court’s] findings of fact . . . were unreasonable and that,
    when looked at under the Strickland standard, [petitioner’s]
    attorney’s failure to investigate . . . fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness, and that there is a reasonable
    probability that but for that failure the result would have been
    different, we will affirm the grant of the writ of habeas corpus
    by the District Court.”).
    Specifically, in the context of sufficiency of the evidence,
    after making a successful § 2254(d)(2) argument, a petitioner
    need not also show that if the state court had applied Jackson
    to the proper facts and reached the same result, its adverse
    2610                       SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    decision would have been objectively unreasonable. A
    straight application of Jackson is all that is necessary once the
    requirements of (d)(2), and thus AEDPA, are satisfied. In
    Juan H. v. Allen III, we held that “after AEDPA, we apply the
    standard of Jackson with an additional layer of deference.”
    408 F.3d at 1274. But Juan H. is a (d)(1) case. It does not
    speak to how we apply Jackson after we have already satis-
    fied the provisions of AEDPA under (d)(2) and have already
    given the state court’s decision its proper level of deference.
    Juan H., as well as (d)(1), is simply inapposite to a (d)(2)
    challenge or, to put it differently, the “additional layer of def-
    erence” required by AEDPA has already been given. No
    super-deference is required by that statute.
    When a state court denies relief under Jackson on the basis
    of an unreasonably determined set of erroneous facts, and we
    set aside those factual findings under (d)(2) after giving them
    the requisite deference, and we then substitute either our own
    factual determinations or accept the district court’s, there is
    simply no state court decision that has considered the proper
    facts to which we can defer. Cf. Rompilla v. Beard, 
    545 U.S. 374
    , 390 (2005) (applying de novo review under AEDPA to
    an issue that the state court “never reached”). No state court
    has decided whether the facts, as properly determined, satisfy
    the Jackson standard. AEDPA is about deferring to state
    courts, not about blindly raising the bar for habeas petitioners
    seeking to establish constitutional violations; were we to
    “defer” to a state court decision that does not exist, we would
    be doing just that.8
    8
    Even if we did conclude, contrary to statutory text and structure, that
    a petitioner who satisfies § 2254(d)(2) must subsequently satisfy
    § 2254(d)(1) in order to obtain relief, I would still issue the writ on Sarau-
    sad’s Jackson claim. A state court decision upholding Sarausad’s convic-
    tion on the basis of the evidence that remains after the unreasonable
    factual determinations are set aside would constitute an objectively unrea-
    sonable application of Jackson.
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2611
    V
    The State presented insufficient evidence in this case to
    allow a rational factfinder to find Sarausad guilty of second-
    degree murder and attempt beyond a reasonable doubt. The
    contrary decision of the Washington Court of Appeals was
    “based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light
    of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.”
    § 2254(d)(2). Accordingly, we are required to grant relief on
    Sarausad’s Jackson claim under § 2254(d)(2). I would do so
    without hesitation. I cannot join an opinion that characterizes
    the State’s evidence as “thin” — as consisting of “no direct
    evidence” and “limited circumstantial evidence” — that
    describes in detail the state court’s severe distortions and mis-
    statements of the little potentially significant evidence that
    there is, and that then, relying on shreds of gossamer that the
    state court deemed unworthy even of mention, holds the evi-
    dence to be sufficient to bar habeas relief and thus permits
    Sarausad’s retrial in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
    See Burks, 437 U.S. at 12-18. I dissent from the majority’s
    holding on the Jackson claim.
    BYBEE, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    This case comes to us through an unusual set of proceed-
    ings. After Washington courts denied direct review of Sarau-
    sad’s appeal from his conviction, the Washington Supreme
    Court issued a “clarifying instruction” in State v. Roberts, 
    142 Wash. 2d 471
    , 
    14 P.3d 713
     (2000), which was relevant to
    Sarausad’s appeal. Sarausad v. State, 
    109 Wash. App. 824
    ,
    829, 
    39 P.3d 308
    , 311 (2001). In Sarausad’s second appeal,
    brought through a personal restraint petition, the Washington
    Court of Appeals “reexamine[d] the record in light of Rob-
    erts,” and confessed that in its prior opinion it “erred.” Id. at
    830, 837, 39 P.3d at 312, 315. On reconsideration, in a
    lengthy opinion, the Washington Court of Appeals held that
    2612                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    the jury instructions given in Sarausad’s case “complied with
    Roberts and the Washington accomplice liability statute.” Id.
    at 838, 39 P.3d at 316. The Washington Supreme Court,
    adopting a Commissioner’s ruling citing Roberts, found that
    “the trial court correctly instructed the jury” on accomplice
    liability.
    Notwithstanding the care with which the Washington
    courts reconsidered Sarausad’s claims in light of this clarifica-
    tion in Washington law, the majority finds that Washington
    courts should not have been trusted with their own jury
    instructions. Relying on hornbook platitudes from Estelle v.
    McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
     (1991), and In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
     (1970), the majority holds that the jury instruction at
    issue here was not only “ambiguous,” Maj. Op. at 2590, and
    thus “ ‘reliev[ed] the State of the burden of proof enunciated
    in Winship,’ ” id. at 2573 (quoting Sandstrom v. Montana,
    
    442 U.S. 510
    , 521 (1979)), but that there was a “reasonable
    likelihood” that the jury applied the instructions in an uncon-
    stitutional manner, id. at 2593. In so concluding, the majority
    implicitly finds that the jury instruction at issue “by itself so
    infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates
    due process,” Estelle, 502 U.S. at 72, that we must override
    the findings of Washington courts to the contrary.
    With all due respect to my colleagues in the majority, the
    judgment of the Washington courts bears no resemblance to
    the majority’s description. The jury instructions at issue here
    were in all material respects identical to the Washington stat-
    ute on accomplice liability and to a jury instruction specifi-
    cally approved by the Washington Supreme Court in Roberts.
    Neither the statute nor the instruction is ambiguous. More-
    over, the law the majority finds “clearly established” in
    Estelle and Winship could not have put the Washington courts
    on notice that their jury instructions were “ambiguous.” They
    could not have known that the instructions were an “objec-
    tively unreasonable” violation of the Due Process Clause.
    Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 409-11 (2000); see also 28
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                        2613
    U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Lastly, there was not a “reasonable like-
    lihood” of misapplication by the jury. I respectfully dissent in
    the majority’s conclusion to the contrary.1
    I
    The instructions given at Sarausad’s trial and at issue here
    are identical in all material respects to the Washington accom-
    plice liability statute. Instructions 45 and 46, as given in this
    case, provided that:
    [No. 45] You are instructed that a person is guilty
    of a crime if it is committed by the conduct of
    another person for which he is legally accountable.
    A person is legally accountable for the conduct of
    another person when he is an accomplice of such
    other person in the commission of the crime.
    [No. 46] A person is an accomplice in the com-
    mission of a crime if, with knowledge that it will
    promote or facilitate the commission of the crime, he
    or she either (1) solicits, commands, encourages, or
    requests another person to commit the crime or (2)
    aids or agrees to aid another person in planning or
    committing the crime.
    The word “aid” means all assistance whether
    given by words, acts, encouragement, support or
    presence. A person who is present at the scene and
    ready to assist by his or her presence is aiding in the
    commission of the crime.
    1
    I concur in the majority’s characterization of our task under AEDPA
    in reviewing a state court’s decision applying Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
     (1979). I agree with the majority that our review of a state
    court’s Jackson review occurs under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), and not 28
    U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2), see Maj. Op. at 2562, although I take issue with the
    majority’s particular application of § 2254(d)(1).
    2614                      SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    However, more than mere presence and knowl-
    edge of the criminal activity of another must be
    shown to establish that a person present is an accom-
    plice.
    Sarausad, 109 Wash. App. at 838 n.8, 39 P.3d at 316 n.8.
    Instruction 45 is, word for word, taken from subsections (1)
    and (2) of the Washington accomplice liability statute under
    which Sarausad was charged. WASH. REV. CODE § 9A.08.020.2
    Instruction 46 is, with a modification that is not relevant here,
    identical to subsection (3) of the Washington statute:
    (3) A person is an accomplice of another person in
    the commission of a crime if:
    (a) With knowledge that it will promote
    or facilitate the commission of the crime, he
    (i) solicits, commands, encourages, or
    requests such other person to commit it;
    or
    (ii) aids or agrees to aid such other per-
    son in planning or committing it; . . .
    . . . .3
    2
    Wash. Rev. Code § 9A.08.020 (1)-(2) provides, in pertinent part:
    (1) A person is guilty of a crime if it is committed by the
    conduct of another person for which he is legally accountable.
    (2) A person is legally accountable for the conduct of another
    person when:
    ....
    (c) He is an accomplice of such other person in the commis-
    sion of the crime.
    3
    For convenience, I have italicized the words in instruction 46 that were
    added to § 9A.08.020(3), and I have [bracketed] the words that appear in
    § 9A.08.020(3) but were omitted in the instruction:
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                           2615
    Moreover, these instructions were not written for Sarau-
    sad’s trial, but have been used in Washington for many years.4
    Instruction 46, for example, is nearly identical to instruction
    8 given in State v. Davis, 
    101 Wash. 2d 654
    , 656, 
    682 P.2d 883
    , 884-85 (1984). This instruction was expressly approved
    in State v. Roberts: “the jury instruction in Davis, unlike the
    jury instruction here, copied exactly the language from the
    accomplice liability statute: it allowed for a conviction as an
    accomplice if the accomplice acted ‘with knowledge that it
    will promote or facilitate the commission of the crime . . . .’ ”
    Roberts, 142 Wash. 2d at 511-12, 14 P.3d at 736 (quoting
    Davis, 101 Wash. 2d at 656, 682 P.2d at 884).5
    As a statement of Washington law, instructions 45 and 46
    could not have been clearer. As we recently wrote in United
    States v. Lyons:
    The difficulty with [defendants’] challenge is that
    the court’s instruction was a nearly verbatim quota-
    A person is an accomplice [of another person] in the commission
    of a crime if, with knowledge that it will promote or facilitate the
    commission of the crime, he or she either (1) solicits, commands,
    encourages, or requests [such other] another person to commit
    [it] the crime [;] or (2) aids or agrees to aid [such other] another
    person in planning or committing [it] the crime.
    4
    Section 9A.08.020 was taken from the Model Penal Code 2.06 (1985).
    See Roberts, 142 Wash. 2d at 510, 14 P.3d at 735.
    5
    The majority incorrectly states that “[a]t the time of the trial, it was
    widely thought that Washington law did not require the accomplice to
    know what particular crime the principal intended to commit.” Maj. Op.
    at 2574. In In re Domingo, the Washington Supreme Court expressly clari-
    fied that State v. Cronin, 142 Wash 2d. 568, 
    14 P.3d 752
     (2000), and Rob-
    erts, 
    142 Wash. 2d 471
    , 
    14 P.3d 713
     (2000), did not effect a substantial
    change in accomplice liability law, because Davis, 
    101 Wash. 2d 654
    , 
    682 P.2d 883
     (1984), and State v. Rice, 
    102 Wash. 2d 120
    , 
    683 P.2d 199
    (1984), established that an accomplice must have general knowledge of
    the specific crime committed by the principal. See 
    115 Wash. 2d 356
    , 362-
    66, 
    119 P.3d 816
    , 819-21 (2005).
    2616                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    tion from Madigan [v. Telemarketing Assocs., Inc.,
    
    538 U.S. 600
    , 624 (2003)]. It is difficult to under-
    stand the claim that the jury instruction was “flatly
    prohibited by the Supreme Court in Madigan” when
    the instruction quite appropriately quoted the con-
    trolling law.
    
    453 F.3d 1222
    , 1233 (9th Cir. 2006) (citation omitted),
    amended by 
    472 F.3d 1055
     (9th Cir. 2007). As in Lyons, the
    only thing “difficult to understand” in this case is how the
    majority finds that an instruction that “quite appropriately
    quoted the controlling law” is ambiguous.
    II
    Tracing the history of Washington state courts on the issue
    reveals that the instructions in this case avoid past infirmities
    and reflect the endorsed approach. The instructions here com-
    pletely satisfy the Washington Supreme Court’s concerns in
    Roberts. Roberts argued that the instruction on accomplice
    liability given at his trial permitted the jury to convict him if
    he had general knowledge that his accomplice might commit
    any crime and not just the crime charged. See Roberts, 142
    Wash. 2d at 509, 14 P.3d at 734-35. The instruction given in
    Roberts’s case was materially different from the instructions
    given here and in Davis. The faulty instruction in Roberts,
    with key words italicized by the Washington Supreme Court,
    provided:
    You are instructed that a person is guilty of a
    crime if it is committed by the conduct of another
    person for which he is legally accountable. A person
    is legally accountable for the conduct of another per-
    son when he is an accomplice of such other person
    in the commission of a crime.
    A person is an accomplice in the commission of
    a crime, whether present at the time of its commis-
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2617
    sion or not, if, with knowledge that it will promote
    or facilitate its commission, he either: (a) solicits,
    commands, encourages or requests another person to
    commit the crime; or (b) aids another person in plan-
    ning or committing the crime . . . .
    Id. at 510, 14 P.3d at 735. The material distinction between
    the Roberts instruction and the Washington accomplice liabil-
    ity statute was the use of “a crime,” as opposed to “the crime”
    in the first paragraph of the jury instruction. Id. (pointing to
    “the phrase ‘a crime’ in the first paragraph of instruction 7”
    and contrasting it with “the phrase ‘the crime’ in the parallel
    portion of the statute, RCW 9A.08.020(2)(c)”). According to
    the court, “ ‘the crime’ means the charged offense.” Id.
    Through that language, the legislature “intended the culpabil-
    ity of an accomplice not extend beyond the crimes of which
    the accomplice actually has ‘knowledge.’ ” Id. at 511, 14 P.3d
    at 735 (referring to WASH. REV. CODE § 9A.08.020). By con-
    trast, the instruction given in Roberts’s case “essentially
    allowed the jury to impose strict liability on Roberts” and
    “improperly departed from the language of the statute.” Id. at
    511, 14 P.3d at 735-36.
    The Washington Supreme Court approved the jury instruc-
    tion in Davis because it was “copied exactly” from the statute
    itself. Id. at 511-12, 14 P.3d at 736. The Court emphasized
    that Davis did “not impose strict liability on accomplices for
    any and all crimes but merely reaffirm[ed] our longstanding
    rule that an accomplice need not have specific knowledge of
    every element of the crime committed by the principal, pro-
    vided he has general knowledge of that specific crime.” Id. at
    512, 14 P.3d at 736.
    Roberts was followed by State v. Cronin, 
    142 Wash. 2d 568
    , 
    14 P.3d 752
     (2000). In Cronin’s case, the jury was issued
    the following instruction on accomplice liability:
    2618                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    A person who is an accomplice in the commission
    of a crime is guilty of that crime whether present at
    the scene or not.
    A person is an accomplice in the commission of
    a crime if, with knowledge that it will promote or
    facilitate the commission of a crime, he either: (1)
    solicits, commands, encourages or requests another
    person to commit the crime; or (2) aids or agrees to
    aid another person in committing a crime.
    Id. at 576-77, 14 P.3d at 756-57. Again, the court invalidated
    the jury instruction based on the use of the term “a crime.”
    Citing Roberts, the court concluded that “the fact that a pur-
    ported accomplice knows that the principal intends to commit
    ‘a crime’ does not necessarily mean that accomplice liability
    attaches for any and all offenses ultimately committed by the
    principal.” Id. at 579, 14 P.3d at 758. Instead, “in order for
    one to be deemed an accomplice, that individual must have
    acted with knowledge that he or she was promoting or facili-
    tating the crime for which that individual was eventually
    charged.” Id. Consequently, the instructions in Cronin’s case
    were found “legally deficient.” Id. It is not clear which refer-
    ence to “a crime” was most crucial to the court, however one
    can surmise that it was likely the third instance, which allows
    conviction based only on “knowledge that it will promote or
    facilitate the commission of a crime.” Id. at 576-77, 14 P.3d
    at 756 (emphasis added). This aspect of the instruction would
    not require knowledge of the specific crime to be committed,
    and would fail the rigid standard expressed in Roberts.
    There is no question that the jury in Sarausad’s case was
    properly instructed. The instruction mimicked the statute
    itself. The instruction suffered from none of the deficiencies
    identified in Roberts and Cronin because the jury was first
    instructed that it could not convict Sarausad unless it found
    that Sarausad was “an accomplice of such other person in the
    commission of the crime.” Sarausad, 109 Wash. App. at 838
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2619
    n.8, 39 P.3d at 316 n.8 (emphasis added). For that reason, it
    does not suffer from the infirmity within the Roberts instruc-
    tion. The jury was further instructed that Sarausad was an
    accomplice if he acted “with knowledge that it will promote
    or facilitate the commission of the crime.” Id. (emphasis
    added). Because of the specificity here, the instruction was
    not invalid like that in Cronin. Thus, the judgment of the
    Washington Court of Appeals that “the [trial] court properly
    instructed the jury as to the law of accomplice liability” is
    plainly correct, id. at 843, 39 P.3d at 318-19, as is the conclu-
    sion of the Washington Supreme Court that “the trial court
    correctly instructed the jury that it could convict Mr. Sarausad
    of murder or attempted murder as an accomplice only if it
    found he knowingly aided in the commission [of] ‘the’ crime
    charged.”
    III
    Notwithstanding the clarity of the Washington courts’ rul-
    ings in Roberts, Cronin, and Sarausad, the majority sows con-
    fusion where none exists. The majority notes that the first
    issue under Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
     (1991), is
    “whether the jury instructions were ambiguous” and con-
    cludes that “the jury instructions were, at the very least,
    ambiguous.” Maj. Op. at 2585, 2590. With all due respect, the
    majority has read neither the instructions nor Roberts closely
    enough.
    The majority observes that the instruction found deficient
    by the Washington Supreme Court in Roberts was “almost
    identical” to instruction 45 given at Sarausad’s trial. Maj. Op.
    at 2586 (emphasis added); see also id. at 2587 (“The only dif-
    ference . . . is that the words ‘the crime’ . . . in Sarausad’s
    case are replaced by the words ‘a crime’ . . . in Roberts.”).
    The trick is the word “almost.” The fact is, that in the ways
    in which it counts in Washington, Sarausad’s instructions
    were not identical to the instructions given in Roberts. In Rob-
    erts, the instruction began “A person is legally accountable
    2620                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    for the conduct of another person when he is an accomplice
    of such other person in the commission of a crime.” (Empha-
    sis added). By contrast, instruction 45 in Sarausad’s trial read
    “A person is legally accountable for the conduct of another
    person when he is an accomplice of such other person in the
    commission of the crime.” (Emphasis added). Unlike Sarau-
    sad’s instruction, the Roberts instruction did not require
    knowledge of the commission of the specific crime; rather, it
    merely (and erroneously) required knowledge of “a crime.”
    The critical difference between the two instructions is that the
    Sarausad instruction clearly attaches knowledge to the spe-
    cific crime, whereas the Roberts instruction seems to attach
    knowledge to any crime. Then, the words “its commission” in
    the Roberts instruction compound the problem. In Roberts,
    the instruction provides “A person is an accomplice in the
    commission of a crime . . . if, with knowledge that it will pro-
    mote or facilitate its commission . . . .” (Emphasis added).
    “Its” refers back to “a crime.” Had “its” referred back to “the
    crime,” and not “a crime,” then the Roberts instruction would
    have correctly stated Washington law. But Sarausad’s instruc-
    tion avoids this problem altogether because it explicitly
    requires knowledge of the commission of “the crime.” The
    majority minimizes the difference between the terms “a
    crime” in the Roberts instruction and “the crime” in Sarau-
    sad’s instruction, commenting that “th[is] simple change . . .
    does not . . . make the jury instructions . . . unambiguous.”
    Maj. Op. 2587. However, the distinction is critical in Wash-
    ington law, and it is widely understood, across Roberts, Cro-
    nin, and Davis, that it makes the difference in the accomplice
    liability instruction. Therefore, in no way does the same
    “basic problem” remain here as in Roberts. See Maj. Op.
    2587. That’s what Roberts was all about, and it fully explains
    the Washington courts’ rulings in this case as well.
    The contrast between the two instructions becomes even
    more evident when they are read in context with the preceding
    instruction in each case. In Roberts, the jury was instructed
    that “a person is guilty of a crime if it is committed by the
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2621
    conduct of another person for which he is legally accountable.
    A person is legally accountable for the conduct of another
    person when he is an accomplice of such other person in the
    commission of a crime.” Roberts, 142 Wash. 2d at 510, 14
    P.3d at 735 (first emphasis added). This instruction incor-
    rectly states Washington law because the second reference to
    “a crime” suggests that any crime committed by the principal
    makes the accomplice strictly liable. In Sarausad’s case, how-
    ever, the jury was instructed that “a person is guilty of a crime
    if it is committed by the conduct of another person for which
    he is legally accountable. A person is legally accountable for
    the conduct of another person when he is an accomplice of
    such other person in the commission of the crime.” Sarausad,
    109 Wash. App. at 838 n.8, 39 P.3d at 316 n.8 (emphasis
    added).
    When the instructions given in Sarausad’s case are com-
    pared with the full instruction 7 in Roberts, the majority’s
    claim that the instructions are “almost identical” evaporates
    entirely. It is this comparison that reveals the crucial ambigu-
    ity in the Roberts instruction. Because there was no similar
    ambiguity here, the controlling Supreme Court authority is
    not Estelle, but Weeks v. Angelone, 
    528 U.S. 225
     (2000). In
    that case, the Supreme Court stated clearly that there is no
    constitutional violation when a “jury was adequately
    instructed, and . . . the trial judge responded to the jury’s
    question by directing its attention to the precise paragraph of
    the constitutionally adequate instruction.” Id. at 234.
    The majority attempts to classify Sarausad’s instruction as
    less offensive than the Roberts instruction but still impermiss-
    ibly ambiguous under Estelle. The majority admits that the
    correction from “a crime” to “the crime” means that “Sarau-
    sad’s case does not invite an erroneous construction to the
    same degree as the flawed instruction in Roberts,” but finds
    that the lack of “an explicit statement that an accomplice must
    have knowledge of the actual crime the principal intends to
    commit” makes the instruction nonetheless defective. Maj.
    2622                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    Op. at 2586, 2587. Of course, the majority has no case law to
    support its proposition that an additional explicit statement is,
    or has ever been, required by Washington courts. In fact, the
    Washington Supreme Court’s express approval of the Davis
    instruction belies the existence of such a requirement. See
    Roberts, 142 Wash. 2d at 511-12, 14 P.3d at 736. Contrary to
    the majority’s argument, the corrected instruction alone in
    Davis, as here, sufficiently cured the defective language with-
    out any further explanation.
    Lastly, the majority rests its finding of ambiguity on evi-
    dence it deems “most revealing”—that the Washington Court
    of Appeals initially determined Sarausad’s instructions per-
    mitted his conviction as an accomplice “even if he did not
    know that Ronquillo intended to commit murder.” Maj. Op.
    at 2588 (emphasis omitted). However, this early conclusion
    was later repudiated by the same court. The majority may
    claim that it is “hard pressed to read the very same statute and
    instructions as unambiguously instructing the jury to do pre-
    cisely the opposite” now, Maj. Op. at 2588, but that is exactly
    what the Washington Court of Appeals’ retraction forces us
    to do. Moreover, ambiguity should not be read into the court’s
    correction, which unambiguously admits “we erred.” Sarau-
    sad, 109 Wash. App. at 837, 844, 39 P.3d at 315, 319. The
    earlier Court of Appeals’ erroneous understanding of accom-
    plice liability, see State v. Ronquillo, 
    1998 WL 87641
    , at *9
    (Wash. Ct. App. Mar. 2, 1998), did not affect the underlying
    jury instructions, which the later Court of Appeals deemed
    valid under a corrected view of the law, see Sarausad, 109
    Wash. App. at 844, 39 P.3d at 319 (finding that “the accom-
    plice liability instructions were sufficient, and nothing that the
    prosecutor argued to the jury required a remedial or supple-
    mental instruction from the trial court”). Although the court’s
    view of the applicable law changed, neither the existence nor
    the content of the second decision reveals ambiguity as to
    Sarausad’s jury instructions.
    Moreover, there is no inconsistency in the Washington
    Court of Appeals acknowledging its own error but reaching
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2623
    the same judgment. See Maj. Op. at 2588. Under the Court of
    Appeals’ initial reading of the statute, the instructions were
    correct. On reconsideration, the court had to determine
    whether those same instructions would satisfy a stricter read-
    ing of the statute, which they plainly did. In effect, the
    instructions would have satisfied either reading of the statute,
    although the prosecutor would have had grounds for objecting
    to the instructions at trial on the grounds that the instructions
    were too restrictive under the court’s original (and erroneous)
    reading of the statute. The Washington Court of Appeals did
    exactly what it was supposed to do in this case.
    IV
    Even if the instructions given here were ambiguous, it was
    not objectively unreasonable under clearly established
    Supreme Court law for Washington courts to conclude that
    the instructions were correct and fair. See 28 U.S.C.
    § 2254(d)(1). We can only applaud the Washington courts for
    admitting their prior error and reconsidering their judgment in
    Sarausad’s case. There is nothing in the decisions of the U.S.
    Supreme Court that should have alerted those conscientious
    courts that they were violating the Constitution when they did
    so. Yet, effectively, the majority is prepared to tell the Wash-
    ington courts that it was fine to admit error, and that it was
    fine to reconsider the judgment based on a revised under-
    standing of Washington law, but that Washington courts
    should not have been trusted with Washington law because
    their judgment on reconsideration is “objectively unreason-
    able.”
    Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of
    1996 (“AEDPA”), we may grant habeas relief only if “the
    adjudication of the claim . . . resulted in a decision that was
    contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of,
    clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme
    Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). The
    Court has explained that “an unreasonable application of fed-
    2624                   SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    eral law is different from an incorrect application of federal
    law.” Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 410 (2000) (emphasis
    omitted). Accordingly, “a federal habeas court may not issue
    the writ simply because that court concludes in its indepen-
    dent judgment that the relevant state-court decision applied
    clearly established federal law erroneously or incorrectly.” Id.
    at 411. Rather, “[a] state-court decision involves an unreason-
    able application of [the] Court’s clearly established prece-
    dents if the state court applies [the] Court’s precedents to the
    facts in an objectively unreasonable manner.” Brown v. Pay-
    ton, 
    544 U.S. 133
    , 141 (2005); see Sims v. Rowland, 
    414 F.3d 1148
    , 1151-52 (9th Cir. 2005).
    Specifically, “[a] state court decision is ‘contrary to’ clearly
    established Supreme Court precedent if the state court applies
    a rule that contradicts the governing law set forth in Supreme
    Court cases or if the state court confronts a set of facts materi-
    ally indistinguishable from those at issue in a decision of the
    Supreme Court and, nevertheless, arrives at a result different
    from its precedent.” Lambert v. Blodgett, 
    393 F.3d 943
    , 974
    (9th Cir. 2004) (citing Lockyer v. Andrade, 
    538 U.S. 63
    , 73
    (2003)) (other citations omitted). The “objectively unreason-
    able” standard of § 2254(d)(1) imposes a “highly deferential
    standard for evaluating state-court rulings” and “demands that
    state court decisions be given the benefit of the doubt.” Clark
    v. Murphy, 
    331 F.3d 1062
    , 1067 (9th Cir. 2003). Our inquiry
    begins and ends with the state court’s determination, and
    affords it great deference in the process. Synthesizing these
    principles, to grant habeas relief under AEDPA, we must,
    first, identify a clearly established holding of the U.S.
    Supreme Court and, second, demonstrate that the state court’s
    application of that holding is objectively unreasonable. See
    Penry v. Johnson, 
    532 U.S. 782
    , 792-93 (2001).
    The majority musters two cases, Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
     (1991), and In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
     (1970), for
    the proposition that an ambiguous jury instruction violates
    due process because it may “relieve[ ] the State of its burden
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                           2625
    to prove every element of the crime beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” Maj. Op. at 2584. As a statement of general law, the
    proposition cited by the majority is not to be doubted. In this
    case, however, the proposition is not particularly useful
    because it is so general, and neither Estelle nor In re Winship
    provides any guidance for determining what is an ambiguous
    instruction and at what point the ambiguity is of constitutional
    magnitude. See Victor v. Nebraska, 
    511 U.S. 1
    , 5 (1994)
    (“Although [Winship states] an ancient and honored aspect of
    our criminal justice system, it defies easy explication.”).6 The
    majority quotes from Estelle, 502 U.S. at 72 (“[I]n reviewing
    an ambiguous instruction such as the one at issue here, we
    inquire ‘whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury
    has applied the challenged instruction in a way’ that violates
    the Constitution.”) (quoting Boyde v. California, 
    494 U.S. 370
    , 380 (1990)), see Maj. Op. at 2573, but omits the sentence
    that followed it: “we also bear in mind our previous admoni-
    tion that we ‘have defined the category of infractions that vio-
    late ‘fundamental fairness’ very narrowly,’ ” id. at 2573
    (quoting Dowling v. United States, 
    493 U.S. 342
    , 352 (1990)).
    The majority now claims that the statute itself is ambiguous
    and “that an instruction quote[d] from a statute does nothing
    to make either the statute, or the instruction, more understand-
    able.” Maj. Op. at 2588. The majority follows this statement
    with citations to cases in which specific intent in federal stat-
    utes was relevant. See id. at 2588-90. However, these cases
    are not helpful here because they tell us nothing about the
    Washington instructions at issue. More revealing is the step
    the majority does not take. While claiming that the Washing-
    6
    If In re Winship has clearly established anything, it is that the state
    must prove every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt,
    including juvenile proceedings. See 397 U.S. at 363-64, 368. Sarausad
    does not contend, nor do I understand the majority to challenge, that the
    jury was not properly instructed with respect to proof beyond a reasonable
    doubt. See Victor, 
    511 U.S. 1
     (considering the constitutionality of varia-
    tions on that standard). I am not sure that citation to In re Winship contrib-
    utes anything to Sarausad’s particular challenge under AEDPA.
    2626                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    ton statute is ambiguous, the majority stops well short of
    claiming that the statute is unconstitutionally vague. Effec-
    tively, the majority suggests that the instructions could be
    improved and that this infirmity alone is sufficient to bring
    this case within Estelle or In re Winship.
    Contrary to the majority’s point is the Supreme Court’s
    recent decision in Brown v. Payton, 
    544 U.S. 133
     (2005). In
    Brown, a California death penalty case, the trial court gave a
    “catchall instruction” (“factor (k)”) in the penalty phase that
    “repeated the text of the statute.” Id. at 137. Payton asserted
    the instruction was ambiguous because it did not advise the
    jury that they could consider his postconviction conduct and
    because the prosecutor had misstated the law in his argument
    to the jury. See id. at 138-39. The California courts denied
    Payton relief, but we granted his petition for habeas relief
    under AEDPA because the trial court failed to correct the
    prosecutor’s misstatement and because the “instruction was
    likely to have misled the jury and it was an unreasonable
    application of th[e] Court’s cases for the California Supreme
    Court to have concluded otherwise.” Id. at 138-39, 141. The
    Supreme Court reversed our judgment. Relying largely on
    Boyde v. California, just as the majority does here, see Maj.
    Op. at 2573-74, the Court observed that even if the California
    court’s “conclusion was incorrect, it was not unreasonable,
    and is therefore just the type of decision that AEDPA shields
    on habeas review.” Id. at 143.
    Even accepting the broad statement from Estelle as “clearly
    established” law, the majority cannot, by any metric, demon-
    strate that the Washington courts’ judgment in this case was
    an “objectively unreasonable” application of the Court’s pre-
    cedents in Estelle and In re Winship. As I have demonstrated,
    supra, there is not even a genuine ambiguity in the Washing-
    ton instructions, much less one that is so obvious that it is
    “objectively unreasonable” of the Washington courts to
    neglect to correct it and requires our intervention. The major-
    ity has no cases to support its proposition, and no basis for its
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                    2627
    conclusion other than its own ipse dixit. In the end, the major-
    ity does not offer anything other than its own opinion to sup-
    port its conclusion that the instruction is ambiguous. See Maj.
    Op. at 2590. Improving Washington’s jury instructions is a
    noble enterprise, but it is not authorized by AEDPA.
    V
    Even if I thought there was some ambiguity in the instruc-
    tions and that the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence was suffi-
    ciently clear, I could not find that “there is a ‘reasonable
    likelihood’ that the jury misapplied the ambiguous jury
    instructions.” Maj. Op. at 2593 (quoting Estelle, 502 U.S. at
    72). The majority makes much of the fact that the jury asked
    the court three questions about the jury instructions during its
    deliberation. See Maj. Op. at 2592. But each time the jury
    asked a question, the court directed the jury’s attention to the
    precise paragraph of a constitutionally adequate instruction. It
    is hornbook law that “[a] jury is presumed to follow its
    instructions . . . and is presumed to understand a judge’s
    answer to its question.” Weeks, 528 U.S. at 234. As the
    Supreme Court noted, “[t]o presume otherwise would require
    reversal every time a jury inquires about a matter of constitu-
    tional significance, regardless of the judge’s answer.” Id. The
    majority takes us one step closer to this reality.
    The majority points to several concerns to rebut this pre-
    sumption, but none comes close to kind of evidence needed
    to nullify the jury’s verdict. First, the majority concludes that
    the “reasonable likelihood” standard is met because “the evi-
    dence against Sarausad was thin.” Maj. Op. at 2591. This is
    a remarkable leap of logic to posit that there is a causal rela-
    tionship between the strength of the government’s case and
    the probability of jury confusion. The majority’s assertion
    finds no support in the record, and there is simply no prece-
    dent in any court, let alone clearly established law of the
    Supreme Court, to suggest that a jury is more likely to misun-
    derstand its instructions because the government’s case is pur-
    2628                       SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    portedly weak. We have previously concluded that an
    instructional problem is compounded by the thinness of the
    evidence, see Lankford v. Arave, 
    468 F.3d 578
    , 586-89 (9th
    Cir. 2006), but we have not, as the majority does here, used
    the thinness of the evidence to prove the existence of the
    instructional problem.
    Second, the majority highlights that the prosecutor “clearly
    and forcefully” argued an “ ‘in for a dime, in for a dollar’ the-
    ory of accomplice liability.” Maj. Op. at 2591. But the major-
    ity cannot know the impact of this argument on the jury, other
    than the fact that the jury returned a guilty verdict and the
    majority doubts that conclusion. Even if the prosecutor’s
    statements were incorrect as a matter of Washington law, the
    majority cannot avoid the fact that the jury was properly
    instructed and that we presume that the jury understood and
    followed those instructions. See Weeks, 528 U.S. at 234; Rich-
    ardson v. Marsh, 
    481 U.S. 200
    , 211 (1987).7 While prosecu-
    torial misconduct may be independent grounds for
    overturning a conviction, mere misstatements have no place
    in an inquiry into whether the jury was properly instructed
    (Weeks) or whether the instructions were ambiguous (Estelle).
    The majority cites no cases to support its theory, much less
    clearly established precedent from the Supreme Court.
    Third, the majority asserts that “in its notes sent to the
    judge during deliberations, the jury demonstrated substantial
    confusion about what the State was required to prove.” Maj.
    Op. at 2592. But juror questions in and of themselves are not
    evidence of constitutional error. See Weeks, 528 U.S. at 234-
    7
    The presumption “is a pragmatic one, rooted less in the absolute certi-
    tude that the presumption is true than in the belief that it represents a rea-
    sonable practical accommodation of the interests of the state and the
    defendant.” Richardson, 481 U.S. at 211. As such, the presumption favors
    the state when the instructions are correct and favors the defendant when
    the instructions are in error. See, e.g., Martinez v. Garcia, 
    379 F.3d 1034
    (9th Cir. 2004).
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                     2629
    36. Rather, the relevant inquiry is whether the trial court prop-
    erly responded to the jury’s questions, which it did.
    On the third day of its deliberations, the jury requested
    “clarification on instruction No. 11 & 12 Element (3); does
    the ‘intent’ apply to (the defendant only) or to (the defendant
    or his accomplice)?” Instructions 11 and 12 were the first-
    degree murder instructions, and not the accomplice liability
    instructions, which were 46 and 47. The judge then pointed
    the jury to the latter: “Refer to instructions 46 and 47 and con-
    sider your instructions as a whole.” There was nothing errone-
    ous about the judge’s response, as he directed the jury to the
    specific instructions (35 instructions later) regarding accom-
    plice liability as related to first-degree murder.
    Three days later, on the sixth day of its deliberations, the
    jury sent the court the following note:
    Reference: Instruction 17 in “the crime of murder in
    the second degree (intentional).” Question: Does
    intentional apply to only the defendant or only his
    accomplice?”
    The judge responded that the jury should “[r]efer to instruc-
    tions 45 & 46 and consider the instructions as a whole.”
    Instructions 45 and 46 were the accomplice liability instruc-
    tions for the second-degree murder charge. There was nothing
    erroneous about the judge’s response this time either, as he
    directed the jury to the specific instructions (28 instructions
    later) regarding accomplice liability as related to second-
    degree murder.
    Finally, on the seventh day of deliberations, the jury sent
    the following note:
    We are having difficulty agreeing on the legal defini-
    tion and concept of “accomplice.” Question: When
    a person willing[ly] participates in a group activity,
    2630                  SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    is that person an accomplice to any crime committed
    by anyone in the group?
    The judge again instructed the jury to “[r]eread instructions
    # 45, 46, 47 and 48, and consider your instructions as a
    whole.” There was nothing erroneous about the judge’s
    response, as he directed the jury to the specific and unambigu-
    ous instructions regarding accomplice liability.
    The jury’s questions are certainly understandable given the
    facts, the complexity of the issue, and the length of the jury
    instructions. The questions were discerning ones and demon-
    strate that the jury was proceeding deliberately and methodi-
    cally. The questions were not the same inquiry repeated three
    times. The first question related exclusively to accomplice lia-
    bility and first-degree murder, while the second question—
    raised three days later—related exclusively to accomplice lia-
    bility and second-degree murder. The fact that the jurors
    deliberated for two full days before asking the second ques-
    tion indicates that the jury considered accomplice liability for
    the first-degree murder charge, and then moved on to the
    second-degree murder charge. These questions do not demon-
    strate a complete misunderstanding of accomplice liability.
    To my mind, the third question is the only one that even
    potentially illustrates that the jury experienced some confu-
    sion on this issue. And we know that the jury had a difficult
    time agreeing on a definition of accomplice liability because
    it said so. There is nothing wrong with that; we permit juries
    to ask questions precisely so that a judge can direct them to
    the answer. The trial court performed by the book, directing
    the jury’s attention to the relevant accomplice liability instruc-
    tions, which were unambiguous and correct statements of
    Washington law. The following day the jury returned a ver-
    dict. Under Weeks, our inquiry ends there.
    Moreover, there is other evidence that shows that the jury
    was satisfied with the judge’s directions and reached a reli-
    SARAUSAD v. PORTER                            2631
    able verdict. The jurors deliberated for some time after the
    judge’s responses. See Weeks, 528 U.S. at 235 (“It is also sig-
    nificant . . . that the jurors deliberated for more than two hours
    after receiving the judge’s answer to their question.”). Fur-
    ther, “[t]his particular jury demonstrated that it was not too
    shy to ask questions, suggesting that it would have asked
    another if it felt the judge’s response unsatisfactory.” Id. at
    235-36.
    Fourth and finally, the majority points again to the prosecu-
    tor’s “in for a dime, in for a dollar” argument, and suggests
    that “the Washington courts were able to deny Sarausad’s
    PRP only after misstating the record and ignoring th[at] argu-
    ment.” Maj. Op. at 2592. However, the majority gives too
    much weight to its asserted chronology. Although accomplice
    liability was clarified in Roberts and Cronin, these cases did
    not rewrite Washington law. Rather, cases such as Davis
    established the requirement that an accomplice must have
    knowledge of the intended crime, and the jury instructions at
    Sarausad’s trial reflect that long-standing principle. See supra
    at 2615 n.5. Therefore, the Washington courts were not in the
    position, as hinted by the majority, of needing to misstate the
    record to deny Sarausad’s petition under changed law. More-
    over, it is the province of these various Washington authori-
    ties to decipher the arguments made at Sarausad’s trial.
    Although the majority may opine that “the prosecutor repeat-
    edly made precisely the argument that the Court of Appeals
    and the Court Commissioner stated she did not make,” Maj.
    Op. at 2593, this conclusion is not for us to draw. Accepting
    the ultimate characterization by Washington authorities, I
    would find that the jury was properly instructed and, there-
    fore, there is not a “reasonable likelihood” that the jury
    applied the instructions in an unconstitutional manner.8
    8
    I object to the majority’s sub-silentio reliance on post-deliberation affi-
    davits from repentant jurors. See Maj. Op. at 2579. Although the majority
    ultimately disclaims reliance on the affidavits, see id. at 2593, the majority
    protests too much. Even mentioning the affidavits is objectionable for all
    2632                      SARAUSAD v. PORTER
    *****
    In sum, the Washington courts’ rulings are not “contrary to
    . . . clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
    Supreme Court.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). Sarausad’s jury was
    properly instructed, and we are required to find that they fol-
    lowed their instructions, even when the case is close. I would
    reverse the judgment of the district court.
    I respectfully dissent.
    the reasons the Federal Rules of Evidence have emphatically rejected a
    juror’s “testi[mony] as to any matter or statement occurring during the
    course of the jury’s deliberations or to the effect of anything upon that or
    any other juror’s mind or emotions.” FED. R. EVID. 606(b). We have held,
    for example, that Rule 606(b) “bars consideration of jurors’ statements
    that they ignored the court’s instructions and discussed a defendant’s fail-
    ure to testify during deliberations.” United States v. Rutherford, 
    371 F.3d 634
    , 640 (9th Cir. 2004); see also United States v. Falsia, 
    724 F.2d 1339
    ,
    1343 (9th Cir. 1983). This “buyer’s remorse” has the potential to turn jus-
    tice on its head, as individual jurors, pursued by counsel and pressured to
    explain the verdict, are turned into witnesses and advocates.