Belmontes v. Brown ( 2005 )


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  •                                                       Volume 1 of 2
    FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    FERNANDO BELMONTES, Jr.,                    
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    No. 01-99018
    v.
    JILL L. BROWN, Warden, for the                      D.C. No.
    CV-89-00736-DFL
    California State Prison at San
    OPINION
    Quentin,*
    Respondent-Appellee.
    
    On Remand from the United States Supreme Court
    Filed July 15, 2005
    Before: Stephen Reinhardt, Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, and
    Richard A. Paez, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Reinhardt;
    Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by
    Judge O’Scannlain
    *Jill L. Brown is substituted for her predecessor, Jeanne S. Woodford,
    as Warden of California State Prison at San Quentin. See Fed. R. App. P.
    43(c)(2).
    8275
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                      8281
    COUNSEL
    Eric S. Multhaup, Mill Valley, California; Christopher H.
    Wing, Sacramento, California, for the petitioner-appellant.
    Mark A. Johnson, Deputy Attorney General, Sacramento,
    California, for the respondent-appellee.
    OPINION
    REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
    I.   PREAMBLE
    On July 15, 2003, we filed an opinion in this case holding
    that there is a reasonable probability that as a result of instruc-
    tional error the jury did not consider constitutionally mitigat-
    ing evidence at the penalty phase. We remanded to the district
    court for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus vacating the
    death sentence. Belmontes v. Woodford, 
    350 F.3d 861
     (9th
    Cir. 2003). The warden timely petitioned the Supreme Court
    for a writ of certiorari. On March 28, 2005, the Supreme
    Court granted the writ, vacated our judgment, and remanded
    the case “for further consideration in light of Brown v. Pay-
    ton, 544 U.S. ___, 
    125 S.Ct. 1432
    , ___ L.Ed.2d ___ (2005).”
    Brown v. Belmontes, 
    125 S.Ct. 1697
     (2005) (mem.).
    Upon careful consideration, we conclude that Payton does
    not affect our holding in the present case. Notwithstanding the
    similarity of the factual and legal issues, Payton was a post-
    AEDPA case and was decided under the highly deferential
    AEDPA standard, while the case before us is pre-AEDPA and
    is determined by the application of the ordinary rules of con-
    stitutional interpretation. Under AEDPA, if a state court rea-
    sonably determines the facts and correctly identifies the
    governing federal standard, a federal court can grant a writ of
    8282                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    habeas corpus only if the state court was objectively unrea-
    sonable in its application of clearly-established Supreme
    Court law. Such is not the case when AEDPA does not apply.
    In such circumstance, we simply resolve the legal issue on the
    merits, under the ordinary rules. Because we recognize “that
    AEDPA wrought substantial changes in habeas law,” Wil-
    liams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 387 n.14 (2000) (plurality
    opinion), we must be careful not to confuse AEDPA’s defer-
    ential standard of review with the pre-AEDPA standard we
    employ in this and in other pre-AEDPA cases. As Williams
    points out, if anything about AEDPA is clear, it is that “an
    unreasonable application of federal law is different from an
    incorrect application of federal law.” 
    Id. at 365
    . The issue
    here is not the AEDPA issue that the Court confronted in Pay-
    ton, but whether the state court engaged in an “incorrect”
    application of federal law.
    In Payton, the Supreme Court held that the state court was
    not objectively unreasonable in concluding that the use of
    California’s factor (k) did not unconstitutionally prevent the
    jury from considering relevant postcrime mitigating evidence.
    Payton did not hold, however, that the use of the challenged
    factor was itself constitutional or unconstitutional, either as a
    matter of fact or law. Unlike in Payton, here we are required
    to determine that very question and our determination must be
    made by applying the ordinary pre-AEDPA rules.
    In concluding in our earlier opinion that California’s factor
    (k), coupled with the trial judge’s instructions, resulted in a
    reasonable probability that the jury did not consider Bel-
    montes’ principal mitigating evidence, we reached an inde-
    pendent legal judgment as to the constitutionality of the
    challenged instruction. In doing so, we were free to, indeed
    required to, determine the constitutional question on its mer-
    its. Having carefully reviewed Payton, and our previous inde-
    pendent determination of the constitutional question at issue,
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                           8283
    we find no reason to change our judgment on the matter. We
    reaffirm our previous opinion, and reiterate it below.1
    II.   INTRODUCTION
    In this pre-AEDPA death penalty case, Petitioner Fernando
    Belmontes, Jr., appeals the district court’s denial of his peti-
    tion for writ of habeas corpus. Because the jury was not
    instructed that it must consider Belmontes’ principal mitiga-
    tion evidence, which tended to show that he would adapt well
    to prison and would likely become a constructive member of
    society if incarcerated for life without possibility of parole,
    and because there is a reasonable probability that the instruc-
    tional error affected the jury’s decision to impose the death
    penalty on Belmontes, we grant the petition with respect to
    the penalty phase. We reject, however, those claims that seek
    1
    Of the eight Justices who participated in the consideration of Payton,
    four specifically reached the same legal conclusion that we reach here:
    California’s factor (k) may cause a jury to fail to consider constitutionally
    relevant postcrime mitigating evidence. In addition to the three dissenting
    Justices in Payton — Justices Stevens, Souter, and Ginsberg — who
    would have found the use of California’s factor (k) unconstitutional even
    under the heightened deferential AEDPA standards, Justice Breyer, who
    joined the majority opinion, specially concurred to note that had he been
    making an independent determination of the constitutional issue on the
    merits, he likely would have held the “Payton’s penalty-phase proceedings
    violated the Eighth Amendment,” which “[i]n a death penalty case . . .
    requires sentencing juries to consider all mitigating evidence.” Payton,
    
    125 S.Ct. at 1442
     (Breyer, J., concurring). Two of the other four Justices
    in the majority held only that it was not objectively unreasonable for the
    state court to have concluded that the jurors most likely believed that the
    evidence in mitigation was permitted by California’s factor (k) and that
    they considered that evidence in their deliberation, but those Justices,
    O’Connor and Kennedy, expressed no view as to how they would have
    decided the constitutional question had they not been required to apply
    AEDPA’s highly restrictive standard. See Payton, 
    125 S.Ct. at 1442
    . Only
    two Justices, Scalia and Thomas, stated that regardless of whether they
    applied the pre- or post-AEDPA rules, they would have held that limiting
    a jury’s discretion to consider mitigating evidence does not constitute a
    constitutional violation. See 
    id.
     (Scalia, J., concurring).
    8284                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    relief from the judgment of conviction and the finding of spe-
    cial circumstances. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s
    decision in part, reverse in part, and remand with instructions
    to issue a writ vacating the death sentence.
    III.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.     The Crime, Its Investigation, and Pretrial Proceedings
    On the morning of Sunday, March 15, 1981, 19-year-old
    Steacy McConnell telephoned her parents and stated that she
    was afraid because several people, including codefendant
    Domingo Vasquez, had threatened her. Several hours later,
    McConnell’s parents arrived at her residence in Victor, Cali-
    fornia, and found her lying unconscious in a pool of blood.
    She died shortly thereafter from cerebral hemorrhaging
    caused by fifteen to twenty blows to her head with an iron
    bar. Her skull was cracked, and she had defensive injuries on
    her hands, arms, and feet. The house was ransacked and her
    stereo was missing.
    On the Tuesday preceding the murder, several people,
    including Vasquez and another codefendant, Robert “Bobby”
    Bolanos, partied at McConnell’s house. Although Bolanos left
    the residence early Wednesday morning, the party continued
    until Friday, when Vasquez stole a quantity of “black
    beauties”— amphetamine pills — from McConnell. Upon dis-
    covering the theft, McConnell threw Vasquez and his friends
    out of the house. The group subsequently discussed their dis-
    like of McConnell.
    Police investigation of the individuals who had been pres-
    ent at the party extended to Vasquez, and ultimately to
    Bolanos, who drove a distinctive black Chevy. The police rec-
    ognized Bolanos’ car as matching the description of the car
    that had been seen in McConnell’s driveway at the time of the
    murder. The police impounded the car and interrogated
    Bolanos. Bolanos eventually admitted that he had been
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8285
    involved in the events that led to McConnell’s death; he iden-
    tified Vasquez and Petitioner Fernando Belmontes, Jr., who
    had not been at the party but who had been visiting him over
    the weekend of the murder, as his coadventurers. On the
    strength of Bolanos’ statement, the police obtained a warrant
    and headed South to Ontario, where they arrested Belmontes
    at his brother’s home. Belmontes was nineteen at the time.
    Belmontes, Bolanos, and Vasquez were each charged with
    first degree murder and special circumstances. However,
    Bolanos soon arranged a deal with the prosecution in which
    he agreed to testify against Vasquez and Belmontes in
    exchange for a guilty plea to second degree burglary and
    immunity on the murder charge. At Vasquez’s preliminary
    hearing, Bolanos fingered Belmontes as the main assailant.
    After the preliminary hearing, the trial judge dismissed the
    special circumstances charge against Vasquez, and he pled
    guilty to second degree murder. That left Belmontes, who
    alone proceeded to trial.
    B.   The Guilt Phase
    Bolanos was the principal witness for the state. He testified
    that on the morning of Sunday, March 15, he and Belmontes
    drove to Vasquez’s residence to hang out. When they arrived,
    Vasquez was on the phone with McConnell. When Vasquez
    hung up the phone, he informed them that McConnell would
    not be home during the latter part of the day. The three were
    short of cash, and they agreed to burglarize McConnell’s resi-
    dence, steal her stereo, and “clean house.” Vasquez’s wife,
    Karrie Lynn, testified that as the men departed through the
    kitchen, Belmontes grabbed from the counter an iron dumb-
    bell bar, which she used for rolling tortillas.
    Bolanos told the jury that the three men drove to McCon-
    nell’s house in Bolanos’ vintage, black car and parked a short
    distance from the house. According to Bolanos, Belmontes
    stated that he would approach the house alone, on foot, carry-
    8286                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    ing the metal bar in case he needed to force entry, so that he
    could gather McConnell’s valuables and place them near the
    door to facilitate a quick getaway, and that the other two
    should wait for about five minutes and then bring the car
    around to McConnell’s house.
    Bolanos testified that the events unfolded as follows: Bel-
    montes left his wristwatch with him, concealed the bar under
    his jacket, and walked to McConell’s residence. Bolanos and
    Vasquez waited about five minutes, then drove up and backed
    into McConnell’s driveway. Vasquez tried to open the trunk
    but could not find the right key. Bolanos got out of the vehicle
    to assist Vasquez. He heard repeated knocking or banging
    noises coming from within the house. Bolanos unlocked the
    trunk and got back inside the car, while Vasquez walked to
    the front door to assist Belmontes. Shortly thereafter, Bel-
    montes and Vasquez emerged from the back door of the house
    carrying stereo components. Belmontes was sprinkled with
    blood on his face, pants, and shoes. Vasquez “looked like he
    had seen a ghost.” Belmontes stated that he had had to “take
    out a witness” because she was home. He explained that when
    McConnell heard Vasquez and Bolanos drive up, she looked
    away from him and he seized the opportunity to hit her with
    the bar approximately fifteen times.
    Lucy Flores, McConnell’s neighbor, testified that on the
    morning of the murder she watched Bolanos’ Chevy as it
    backed into McConnell’s driveway. She observed a man get
    out of the passenger side and try to unlock the trunk. He
    appeared to be having difficulty, whereupon the driver got out
    of the car and unlocked it. The driver got back in the car,
    while the passenger walked towards the front of McConnell’s
    house and met a third man. She did not see where the third
    man had come from. The two men headed toward the front of
    McConnell’s house. A short while later, she saw them exit
    McConnell’s house from the back door, carrying stereo equip-
    ment, which they loaded in the trunk before getting in the car
    and driving away.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                        8287
    Bolanos testified that, after leaving McConnell’s house, the
    three drove to the nearby city of Galt, where they intended to
    fence the stereo. En route, Belmontes wiped blood from the
    metal bar and his shoes. Belmontes threw the bar out of the
    window as they crossed a bridge over the Mokelumne River.2
    They went to the home of Manuel Vasquez, Domingo’s
    brother, where Belmontes changed his pants. The three con-
    tacted Raul Barron, who met them at the home of Irma
    Vasquez, Domingo’s sister, and purchased McConnell’s ste-
    reo components from them. Barron later testified that he paid
    $100 for the stereo to a man wearing a baseball cap (Bel-
    montes), who did most of the talking.
    Teresa Cobarrubio, Bolanos’ girlfriend, testified that
    Bolanos gave her fifteen dollars from the proceeds of the sale
    of the stereo. Acting scared, he informed her that he, Bel-
    montes, and Vasquez had burglarized McConnell’s residence.
    The following day, Bolanos and Cobarrubio read a newspaper
    account of McConnell’s murder, and Bolanos related further
    details of the crime. He told Cobarrubio that he had remained
    in the car, and that Belmontes had exited the house with blood
    on his clothes and had stated that he “had to take a witness
    out.”
    Bolanos testified that on Monday, March 16, Vasquez cal-
    led him to advise that he had been questioned by police and
    did not want to “take the rap” for the murder. Bolanos and
    Belmontes went to Vasquez’s house, where the three con-
    ferred. Karrie Lynn Vasquez testified that from the kitchen
    she overheard Belmontes say that he entered McConnell’s
    house alone and hit her multiple times with the bar before
    Vasquez joined him in the house.
    Barbara Murillo, Belmontes’ girlfriend, testified that after
    the meeting, Belmontes telephoned her and told her that he
    2
    Bolanos later led police to the location on the river bank from which
    the bar was recovered.
    8288                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    was “in trouble.” He reported that he had gotten into an argu-
    ment with McConnell at her house, become angry and hit her,
    and that she fell and “went to sleep,” although he “didn’t
    mean for her to go to sleep.”
    Detective Holman, the lead investigator, testified that Bel-
    montes furnished three tape-recorded statements shortly after
    his arrest. In the first statement, he denied any involvement in
    the crime. In the second, he admitted the burglary but denied
    hitting McConnell. In the third statement, he admitted hitting
    McConnell, but insisted that he only hit her once, and then
    only at Vasquez’s direction. He stated that the single blow he
    delivered caused McConnell to fall down, whereupon he
    dropped the bar and began searching the house for valuables,
    leaving Vasquez alone with McConnell. Belmontes contended
    that he did not pay attention to Vasquez’s actions during this
    period and did not observe how McConnell came to have suf-
    fered fifteen to twenty fatal blows to her head. Holman also
    testified that a small drop of blood found on the tongue of one
    of Belmontes’ shoes tested as “type O”—McConnell’s blood
    type.
    Dr. Maduros, the pathologist who performed the autopsy on
    McConnell, testified that she died from cerebral hemorrhag-
    ing caused by fifteen to twenty blows to the back left portion
    of her skull. She had a separate contusion on her right temple,
    which was caused by a single blow of lesser force that did not
    lacerate the skin. However, this blow alone would not have
    caused death and, if it had been the first, it would not likely
    have caused unconsciousness. Injuries to McConnell’s arms,
    hands, legs, and feet evidenced a struggle. According to Dr.
    Maduros, there would have been sounds “like a cracked pot”
    associated with the blows that fractured McConnell’s skull,
    and blood would have splattered in a manner consistent with
    the blood patterns found on the door jambs in her house.
    Belmontes testified in his own defense. He insisted that
    Vasquez dealt the fatal blows while he, Belmontes, searched
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                  8289
    the back part of the house for something to take. Belmontes
    recounted that he and Bolanos had gone over to Vasquez’s
    house, and that when Vasquez mentioned that McConnell
    would not be home, they decided to steal her stereo. Although
    they expected McConnell to be away, the plan was that Bel-
    montes would go to the door in case she turned out to be
    home; because of the unhappy denouement of her party a few
    days earlier, McConnell would become angry and suspicious
    if she saw Vasquez or Bolanos at her door. Although Bel-
    montes had met McConnell a few times in the past, she did
    not know that he was a friend of Vasquez and Bolanos.
    Belmontes’ version of events was consistent with Bolanos’
    up to the point of who struck the blows that killed McConnell.
    Belmontes agreed that Vasquez and Bolanos stayed in the car
    while he walked to McConnell’s front door. He stated that
    Vasquez had given him the metal bar to use to break a win-
    dow; but that he concealed it in his sleeve. According to Bel-
    montes, he knocked at McConell’s door and, to his surprise,
    she answered. As soon as he found out that she was home, he
    abandoned his intent to burglarize her residence. He told her
    that he was hitchhiking and had stopped by because it was
    raining. McConnell invited him in. She noticed a bulge in his
    sleeve and asked what it was. He showed her the bar and
    explained that he had it because he was hitchhiking. He used
    McConnell’s bathroom and then stood by the table and talked
    to her while she ironed clothes. McConnell told him that she
    was having problems with some people and asked him if he
    knew Domingo Vasquez. Belmontes said that he had met him.
    Belmontes’ testimony continued: Five minutes after he
    entered the house, Bolanos and Vasquez pulled into the drive-
    way. McConnell started walking toward the front door. Bel-
    montes followed behind her and was placing the bar back up
    his sleeve when Vasquez rapped on the door. Under Bel-
    montes version, when Bolanos’ car backed into the driveway,
    Vasquez would have had to proceed immediately to the front
    8290                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    door; he would not have had time to go to the trunk of the car
    to attempt to open it.
    According to Belmontes, after he knocked at the door to
    McConnell’s house, Vasquez pushed it open, saw McConnell,
    and ordered Belmontes to “hit her.” Belmontes followed
    Vasquez’ directive and, using a backhanded sweeping motion,
    struck McConnell on the side of her head with the bar. She
    fell to the floor. Belmontes dropped the bar, ran to the back
    bedroom, broke down the door, searched that room and the
    kitchen, and returned to the living room. He did not enter the
    master bedroom. Upon returning to the front of the house, he
    observed Vasquez standing over McConnell and holding the
    metal bar. He did not see Vasquez hit McConnell or hear any
    blows landing because he was not paying attention. He could
    not explain the presence of defensive bruises and contusions
    on McConnell’s hands, arms, and feet.
    The rest of Belmontes’ testimony is, with one significant
    exception, consistent with Bolanos’: Belmontes and Vasquez
    gathered the stereo components and exited from McConnell’s
    back door. They loaded the stereo components into the trunk.
    Vasquez got in the back seat, Belmontes rode shotgun, and
    Bolanos drove. According to Belmontes, while en route,
    Vasquez handed him the steel bar, which had flesh and hair
    residue on it, and then Vasquez (not Belmontes) stated that he
    had had to take out a witness. Belmontes, still wearing his
    gloves, wiped blood off the bar and set it down on the floor-
    board. He was uncertain whether there was blood on his pants
    when he left McConnell’s house; he said that the blood might
    have come off the bar when he placed it on the floorboard. He
    denied having wiped any blood off of his shoes and asserted
    that Bolanos and Vasquez told him to throw the bar out his
    window into the river, and that he complied.
    Belmontes concluded his testimony by stating that the three
    drove to Manuel Vasquez’ house, where he changed into a
    pair of Manuel’s pants. Manuel contacted Raul Barron, whom
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                           8291
    they then met at Irma Vasquez’ house. Barron bought the ste-
    reo for $100. Bolanos, Vasquez and Belmontes divided the
    money, bought some beer, and drove to the home of an
    acquaintance to purchase narcotics.
    Belmontes’ girlfriend, Barbara Murillo, testified that six
    months after the murder, she ran into Cobarrubio at the Grape
    Festival. Murillo believed that Belmontes was the murderer.
    However, when she asked Cobarrubio for further details about
    the crime, Cobarrubio claimed that Belmontes had been “set
    up” because he had no backup in the area, whereas Vasquez
    had a network of local friends.3
    After three hours of deliberation, the jury convicted Bel-
    montes of first degree murder with special circumstances. It
    also made special findings that Belmontes was the actual
    killer and that he had the specific intent that death occur.
    C.    The Penalty Phase
    At the penalty phase, the prosecution introduced minimal
    aggravating evidence. Detective Holman authenticated two
    autopsy photographs depicting McConnell’s wounds. William
    Cartwright, manager of a motel in Ontario, California, testi-
    fied to an incident in early 1979 in which an individual named
    Rudy met Belmontes at a motel and attempted to sell him a
    .32 caliber automatic handgun that he had acquired in a bur-
    glary. Belmontes reportedly examined the loaded weapon,
    cocked the trigger, pointed it at Rudy and stated, “I’ve got it
    now. Why buy it?” Rudy left the premises and Belmontes
    retained the weapon.
    3
    Cobarrubio testified that she recalled running into Murillo at the Grape
    Festival. Murillo had asked her whether she thought Belmontes “might
    have been set up.” Cobarrubio replied: “Well, he might have.” Cobarrubio
    testified further that in fact she had no information from any source that
    Belmontes had been set up but answered as she did because she felt sorry
    for Murillo.
    8292                    BELMONTES v. BROWN
    Steven Cartwright testified that he had a conversation with
    Belmontes in February 1979 in which Belmontes alluded to
    the fact that some people were upset with him. As Belmontes
    talked, he indicated that he had a gun in his belt by slapping
    his side, and he stated that he was not concerned because he
    had all the protection he needed. Ron Cutler, a California
    Youth Authority (“CYA”) counselor, testified that he once
    observed Belmontes swinging a chair as if he were about to
    hit another ward, but Cutler was able to intervene before a
    fight ensued. On cross examination, he admitted that Bel-
    montes was significantly smaller than the other youth.
    Barbara Murillo testified about a domestic violence inci-
    dent that occurred when she asked Belmontes to move out of
    their shared apartment and to give her his keys so he could not
    come back. During the fight that ensued, Murillo, who was
    four months pregnant with Belmontes’ second child, grabbed
    a “file” for protection and attempted to phone the police, but
    Belmontes cut the telephone cord with his knife. Belmontes
    pushed her and hit her on the head, at one point causing her
    to drop their infant daughter. He tried to choke her, but they
    were separated by friends who were present. Murillo fled
    through a window, but Belmontes dragged her back to the
    vicinity of the apartment. A neighbor eventually summoned
    the police, who arrived as Belmontes was leaving the prem-
    ises.
    Finally, the prosecution and defense stipulated that Bel-
    montes entered a plea of no contest in April 1979 to a charge
    of being an accessory after the fact to voluntary manslaughter.
    The court refused to allow the prosecutor to introduce evi-
    dence that Belmontes had actually murdered the victim, Jerry
    Howard.4 Consequently, the jury never heard any details of
    the murder or Belmontes’ alleged role in it.
    4
    The prosecutor’s proffer included testimony from an eyewitness who
    saw Belmontes shoot Howard, a CYA counselor to whom Belmontes had
    confessed that he did so, another individual who saw Howard get into a
    car with Belmontes on the evening he was killed, and the police officer
    who found the murder weapon at Belmontes’ house.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8293
    Belmontes’ mitigation presentation was also limited in
    scope, focusing on two themes: his family and personal his-
    tory and his capacity for rehabilitation and positive institu-
    tional adjustment. It was primarily the latter theme that
    defense counsel pressed upon the jury.
    Belmontes’ family history was one of poverty and violence.
    His maternal grandfather, Michael Salvaggio, testified to his
    daughter’s unhappy marriage to Belmontes’ father. Salvaggio
    recounted that his daughter was sixteen when she ran away
    from home and married Belmontes’ father, who was unem-
    ployed, refused to support his family, drank to excess, and
    beat her. Salvaggio said that he was “very close” to his grand-
    son until Belmontes was about thirteen but after that had little
    contact with him. However, Salvaggio continued, when Bel-
    montes was sixteen and his grandmother lay dying in the hos-
    pital, he visited her every day; he also attended her funeral.
    Carol Belmontes confirmed that her marriage to Bel-
    montes’ father was unhappy. Fernando Belmontes, Sr., was a
    violent alcoholic who “wouldn’t ever work,” and who beat
    her, breaking her arm on one occasion and stabbing her on
    another. Belmontes was ten years old when the marriage
    broke up. Mrs. Belmontes remarried. That marriage broke up
    five years later, when Belmontes was about fifteen, after
    which he became difficult to control. Belmontes had not lived
    with his mother since he was committed to the CYA two
    years before McConnell’s murder. He had a younger brother
    and sister, to whom he was “very close.”
    Belmontes again testified on his own behalf. He recounted
    that he had a poor relationship with his father, who often
    came home drunk and hit his mother. He did not like school
    and stopped attending in the ninth grade. He wanted to get a
    job so that he could help his mother pay the bills. Although
    he described his youth as “pretty hard,” he twice stressed that
    he did not want to “use it as a crutch.”
    8294                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    Robert Martinez, a close friend of Belmontes’ since their
    early teens, testified that he and Belmontes spent a great deal
    of time together, usually working on Martinez’s low-rider car.
    Belmontes served as best man at Martinez’s wedding and was
    someone he could turn to for advice and support when he
    argued with his wife. Martinez also testified that he felt Bel-
    montes was not a violent person. However, with defense
    counsel’s consent, this testimony was struck following an
    objection from the prosecutor, who argued that if this evi-
    dence was admitted, the prosecution should be allowed to
    impeach Martinez with the evidence regarding the Jerry How-
    ard murder.
    More important by far was the second mitigation theme—
    that Belmontes could lead a positive, constructive life if con-
    fined within an institutional setting. The state agrees that Bel-
    montes’ counsel, John Schick, presented “substantial
    evidence” in support of this theme in the form of a series of
    witnesses who testified to Belmontes’ behavior and achieve-
    ments during his prior CYA incarceration and to the likeli-
    hood that he would make positive contributions to the welfare
    of others if his life was spared. Belmontes himself testified
    that he was in the custody of the Youth Authority from early
    1979 until November 1980, four months prior to the crime.
    While at the CYA, he was employed on the fire crew at the
    Pine Grove Camp for one year, during which he worked his
    way up from last man to number two, a position of leadership
    and responsibility. Belmontes also testified that during his
    incarceration he became involved in the M-2 Christian spon-
    sorship program. He admitted that he initially entered the M-
    2 program as a way to get out of camp, but he explained that
    he was touched by the decency of his M-2 family, the Haros,
    and so gradually became curious about Christianity and
    embraced it.
    Belmontes continued by saying that he was paroled from
    the Youth Authority after serving his maximum sentence; that
    he stayed at the halfway house in Oakland for two weeks and
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8295
    then went to Southern California for a short period, returning
    with Murillo to the Lodi area to take a job with the forest ser-
    vice; and that he subsequently moved to Lodi in part so that
    he could be close to the Haros. However, outside of the insti-
    tution, Belmontes said, he had trouble maintaining his reli-
    gious commitment and “started going back to [his] old ways,”
    in part due to “pressure on the streets.” At the time of trial,
    he had not abandoned his religious beliefs but felt that he was
    no longer “dedicated one hundred percent” to his religious
    commitment. He testified that he would hope to make positive
    contributions to society if he were ordered incarcerated,
    though he had little specific idea of how he might do so.
    The Reverend Dale Barrett, chaplain at the Youth Authori-
    ty’s Pine Grove Facility, testified that he knew Belmontes
    from his participation in the M-2 Christian sponsorship pro-
    gram, which matched a local church-going family with a
    ward, who would be permitted to leave the facility to visit
    with the family at specified times each week. Barrett
    explained that Belmontes was matched with Beverly and Fred
    Haro and participated in the program for about a year. In addi-
    tion, Belmontes was baptized during his stay in the CYA.
    Only a small percentage of program participants who made a
    serious commitment to Christianity were baptized. Barrett felt
    that, unlike the many wards who stayed in the program only
    to get out of camp and manipulate favors from the sponsoring
    families, Belmontes had not “conned” them. Barrett testified
    that although he personally believed in the death penalty, he
    did not think Belmontes deserved to die because he was a
    “salvageable” person with “a lot of extenuating circumstances
    in his life.” Barrett was of the view that Belmontes’ involve-
    ment in the McConnell murder was attributable to “the enor-
    mity of the peer pressure and the kind of sociological
    circumstances that were part of his life,” and he thought that
    if Belmontes were granted a life sentence, he would make
    positive contributions to prison life through his involvement
    with the prison ministries.
    8296                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    Don Miller, assistant chaplain at the Youth Authority’s
    Preston Facility and the Northern California Director of the
    M-2 program, testified that he helped place Belmontes in a
    halfway house in Oakland upon his release from the CYA.
    Miller stated that, at the time, he felt “a little bit doubtful”
    about Belmontes’ ability to lead a productive life outside of
    a highly structured environment, like prison. Miller testified
    that Belmontes stayed at the halfway house for only two
    weeks before moving to the Lodi area to take a job with the
    forest service. During those two weeks, however, Belmontes
    returned to Preston on a few occasions to speak to wards
    about what life was like “on the outside.” Miller described
    Belmontes (and his message) as well-received by the CYA
    wards, and he believed that if Belmontes were committed to
    prison for a life term, he would be good at counseling other
    prisoners not to make the same mistakes that he had. Miller
    was enthusiastic about working with Belmontes in this capac-
    ity and stated that Belmontes “definitely would be used in the
    prison system for this kind of activity” because he related well
    to other prisoners, especially those who shared his ethnic
    background, and because these kinds of programs were “at the
    present time the only solution” to the troubling problem of
    recidivism among prisoners.
    Finally, several witnesses offered evidence with respect to
    Belmontes’ conversion to Christianity, which occurred during
    his first CYA incarceration, and his failure to maintain his
    religious commitment upon his release. Martinez’s wife Dar-
    lene, a born-again Christian, testified that she had known Bel-
    montes for six or seven years and considered him a close
    friend. Darlene recounted that when Belmontes visited them
    after his release from the Youth Authority, he told her that he
    was a born-again Christian. He also mentioned his disputa-
    tious relationship with his girlfriend, Murillo, and mentioned
    that he was planning to move in with her. During the conver-
    sation, Belmontes expressed concern that Murillo was not a
    Christian, and he worried that he would be unable to maintain
    his Christian faith on his own.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8297
    Beverly and Fred Haro, Belmontes’ M-2 sponsors and
    members of Reverend Barrett’s church, testified that Bel-
    montes spent Wednesday evenings and weekends with them
    for almost a year. They felt they had a good relationship with
    Belmontes, who attended church with them. They treated him
    like their own son, and he opened up to them and was a good
    influence on their own teenage son. They saw him several
    times after his release from the CYA. Fred Haro stated that he
    had “compassion as a son” for Belmontes and that Belmontes
    had been genuine in his commitment to the M-2 program and
    his affection for his sponsors. Beverly Haro felt that Barbara
    Murillo was a “definite negative factor” in Belmontes’ life.
    At the conclusion of the evidentiary stage, the court permit-
    ted Belmontes to address the jury personally during closing
    arguments. Belmontes stated that he did not think that his dif-
    ficult childhood excused his role in the McConnell murder.
    However, he explained that he could not handle the pressures
    of life outside of an institution, and he asked the jury to give
    him “an opportunity to achieve goals and try to better
    [him]self.” Belmontes’ attorney similarly stressed that Bel-
    montes could not “make it on the outside.” He argued that
    Belmontes had had a hard life but still retained his humanity.
    He characterized Belmontes as someone who thrived in a
    structured environment—as evidenced by his accomplish-
    ments while in the CYA—and asked the jury to spare Bel-
    montes’ life on the ground that he would make positive
    contributions if allowed to live out his natural life in prison.
    The judge instructed the jury according to the then-standard
    model jury instructions, which directed the jury to consider as
    mitigating evidence the defendant’s age, criminal history, and
    “[a]ny other circumstance which extenuates the gravity of the
    crime even though it is not a legal excuse for the crime.” In
    addition, the judge read a portion of a supplemental instruc-
    tion requested by the defense, which stated that the jury
    should view the statutory factors “merely as examples of
    some of the factors” that it could consider, that the jury
    8298                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    “should pay careful attention to each of these factors,” and
    that “any one of them standing alone” could support a life
    sentence. The trial judge refused to read the most important
    part of the requested instruction, which stated: “ “[Y]ou
    should not limit your consideration of mitigating circum-
    stances to these specific factors. You may also consider any
    other circumstances . . . as reasons for not imposing the death
    sentence.” The jury was not informed that it should consider
    mitigating evidence bearing on Belmontes’ probable future
    conduct if sentenced to life in prison without the possibility
    of parole. Shortly after Belmontes’ trial, the California legis-
    lature revised the model jury instructions to make clear that
    the jury must consider any aspect of the defendant’s character
    or record offered as a basis for a sentence less than death,
    “whether or not related to the offense for which he is on trial.”
    CALJIC 8.85(k) (6th ed. 1996).
    The jury deliberated for a day and a half before reaching a
    verdict. On the first day, after several hours of deliberations,
    the jury sent the judge a note asking, “What happens if we
    cannot reach a verdict?” and “Can the majority rule on life
    imprisonment?” The jury was brought back to the courtroom,
    and the judge reread a portion of the jury instructions, empha-
    sizing that “all 12 jurors must agree, if you can.” The trial
    judge refused to tell the jurors what would happen if they
    could not agree.
    The trial judge emphasized that if the jurors “[went] over
    the instructions again with one another,” they might find it
    easier to reach agreement. The jurors then asked the judge to
    clarify the instructions on the weighing of the aggravating and
    mitigating factors. One juror asked the trial judge whether the
    jury was supposed to take each listed (i.e., statutory) factor,
    decide whether it was aggravating or mitigating, and then
    “balance the sheet.” Rather than instruct the jurors that it was
    their duty to consider and, if appropriate, give effect to, all of
    the mitigating evidence presented by the defendant, whether
    comprehended by one of the statutory factors or not, the trial
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8299
    judge responded simply, “That is right,” even though no statu-
    tory factor comprehended the element of rehabilitation.
    Shortly thereafter, another juror asked whether it was possible
    for Belmontes to receive psychiatric treatment while in
    prison. The trial judge responded, “That is something you
    cannot consider in making your decision.” Following this col-
    loquy, the jury returned a death sentence.
    D.   Post-Trial
    The California Supreme Court affirmed Belmontes’ convic-
    tion and sentence in 1988, People v. Belmontes, 
    45 Cal. 3d 744
     (1988), and the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari in
    early 1989. Belmontes then filed a petition for writ of habeas
    corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern Dis-
    trict of California, which was held in abeyance while Bel-
    montes exhausted state remedies.
    Belmontes filed a state habeas petition and received a stay
    of execution from the California Supreme Court. The Califor-
    nia courts summarily dismissed Belmontes’ petition, refusing
    him compulsory process and denying him an evidentiary hear-
    ing on any of his claims. The California Supreme Court
    finally denied relief in 1992.
    In 1993, proceedings on the federal writ commenced before
    a magistrate judge. In 1996, he denied Belmontes’ request for
    an evidentiary hearing on certain claims but granted his
    motion to expand the record to include depositions, declara-
    tions, and reports submitted by the parties. The parties filed
    cross motions for summary judgment. In 2000, the district
    court withdrew the referral from the magistrate judge and, in
    August of that year, denied relief on all claims except six that
    had not yet been briefed. The court referred those six claims
    to the magistrate judge for a recommendation. In January
    2001, the magistrate judge recommended denying the out-
    standing claims, and in May 2001, the district court adopted
    the magistrate’s findings and recommendations, denied the
    8300                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    petition, and entered judgment against Belmontes. The district
    court issued a Certificate of Appealability for fifteen constitu-
    tional claims. This appeal timely followed.
    IV.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Because Belmontes filed his habeas petition prior to
    AEDPA’s effective date, we apply pre-AEDPA standards of
    review. Woodford v. Garceau, 
    123 S. Ct. 1398
    , 1401 (2003).
    State court factual findings are presumed correct unless one
    of eight enumerated exceptions applies. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d) (1994). The application of law to historical facts is
    reviewed de novo. Thompson v. Borg, 
    74 F.3d 1571
    , 1573
    (9th Cir. 1996).
    V.   GUILT PHASE ISSUES
    A.   Giglio and Napue Claims
    Belmontes alleges that the state deprived him of due pro-
    cess by failing to disclose that Bolanos had several misdemea-
    nor charges and that the prosecutor personally helped him
    achieve favorable dispositions on those charges. In a closely
    related claim, he contends that the prosecutor violated due
    process by failing to correct Bolanos’ false and misleading
    testimony that he had never been “busted” before his arrest
    for the McConnell murder.
    1.   Factual Background
    On the Wednesday morning before the murder, Bolanos
    drove into a traffic signal on his way home from McConnell’s
    house. A police officer witnessed the accident. After flunking
    a field sobriety test, Bolanos was taken into custody and
    charged with various misdemeanor driving offenses, includ-
    ing DUI and hit-and-run.
    One week later, Bolanos was charged with first degree
    murder for his role in the McConnell murder. He soon entered
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8301
    into an agreement in which he pled guilty to second-degree
    burglary in exchange for testifying against Vasquez and Bel-
    montes. He was granted immunity for his testimony and his
    sentence was left to the court’s discretion. He received no
    explicit promises of leniency from the prosecution.
    After Bolanos pled guilty to the burglary, he obtained a
    string of unusually favorable dispositions on several traffic
    offenses. First, with respect to the DUI/hit-and-run charges,
    his attorney appeared in municipal court along with Clark
    Sueyres, the district attorney who was prosecuting the case
    against Belmontes. On Sueyres’ motion, the charges were dis-
    missed in the interest of justice. Next, later that year, Bolanos
    was cited for driving an unregistered vehicle and driving with
    a suspended license. He was allowed to plead guilty to the
    lesser charge of driving without a valid license and assessed
    a $100 fine; the court dismissed the unregistered vehicle
    charge. The following April, Bolanos was again cited for
    driving an unregistered vehicle, driving with a suspended
    license, operating an unsafe vehicle, and driving with worn
    tires. Again, Sueyres personally asked the municipal court to
    dismiss the charges in the interest of justice. Bolanos, once
    again, pled guilty to driving without a valid license and paid
    a $75 fine. None of these matters was disclosed to the
    defense.
    At trial, Bolanos admitted on cross examination that he was
    testifying under court order in exchange for a grant of immu-
    nity and that he would face a murder charge if he refused to
    testify. However, Schick’s efforts to impeach Bolanos were
    hampered by the fact that Bolanos continually minimized both
    his own culpability and the benefits he received from the
    prosecution in exchange for his testimony. For example,
    Bolanos told the jury that his motive in testifying was “to tell
    the truth,” and he stated that because he “wasn’t even around
    when the crime happened,” he did not view the grant of
    immunity as a particular favor.
    8302                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    In addition, Bolanos was less than truthful when he testified
    about his prior contacts with law enforcement. When Schick
    questioned Bolanos about prior inconsistent statements that
    Bolanos had made to the police, Bolanos explained them by
    saying that he had made mistakes out of nervousness because
    it was “the first time I got busted.” In fact, Bolanos had been
    “busted” twice before. In addition to the DUI/hit-and-run inci-
    dent, Bolanos had previously been arrested for gun possession
    by Detective Holman, the same officer who arrested him for
    the McConnell murder. The arrest generated formal criminal
    charges, and Bolanos was sentenced to thirty days in a juve-
    nile facility, of which he served fifteen.
    2.   Giglio Claim
    The prosecution has an affirmative duty to turn over to the
    defense all evidence favorable to the accused, including
    impeachment evidence. Kyles v. Whitney, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 432
    (1995); Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
    ,154 (1972). The
    failure to disclose favorable evidence violates due process
    when the evidence is material. United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 678 (1985); Singh v. Prunty, 
    142 F.3d 1157
    , 1161
    (9th Cir. 1998). Evidence is material if there is a reasonable
    probability that, had it been disclosed to the defense, the out-
    come of the trial would have been different. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. at 682
    . A reasonable probability occurs when the suppression
    “undermines confidence in the outcome of the trial.” Kyles,
    
    514 U.S. at 434
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Belmontes argues that the prosecutor violated due process
    by failing to turn over material impeachment evidence con-
    sisting of the existence and unusual disposition of Bolanos’
    misdemeanor traffic offenses. The state responds that the
    prosecutor had no duty to disclose this evidence because the
    misdemeanor violations were not mentioned in the plea agree-
    ment and were not dismissed as consideration for Bolanos’
    testimony against Belmontes. In support of this argument, the
    state cites the deposition testimony of both Bolanos and his
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8303
    attorney to the effect that they did not perceive the dismissal
    of the traffic offenses as related to the immunity deal.
    [1] The state’s argument is without merit. We have held
    that when the state relies on the testimony of a criminal infor-
    mant, it has an obligation to disclose “all information bearing
    on that witness’s credibility,” including “the witness’s crimi-
    nal record . . . and any information therein which bears on
    credibility.” Carriger v. Stewart, 
    132 F.3d 463
    , 480 (9th Cir.
    1997). We further emphasized the importance of this rule in
    Benn v. Lambert, in which we held that “the state cannot sat-
    isfy its Brady obligation to disclose exculpatory and impeach-
    ment evidence by making some evidence available and
    asserting that the rest would be cumulative. Rather, the state
    is obligated to disclose all material information casting a
    shadow on a government witness’s credibility.” 
    283 F.3d 1040
    , 1057-58 (9th Cir. 2002) (internal quotation marks omit-
    ted). Here, the fact that the prosecutor personally appeared in
    municipal court to argue for favorable dispositions of
    Bolanos’ misdemeanor traffic offenses casts a shadow on
    Bolanos’ credibility regardless of whether such intervention
    was mentioned in the plea agreement or offered as consider-
    ation for Bolanos’ testimony. Had defense counsel known
    about the existence and disposition of the misdemeanor
    offenses, he could have impeached Bolanos by showing that
    he had a motive to say what the prosecution wanted to hear
    in hopes of obtaining a lighter sentence on his plea to second
    degree burglary. Even though Bolanos was not explicitly
    promised leniency, the fact that the prosecutor helped Bolanos
    obtain dismissals or reduced punishments on his traffic misde-
    meanors makes it more likely that he would intercede on
    Bolanos’ behalf when it came time for sentencing on the bur-
    glary charge. Thus, the evidence was clearly relevant and
    admissible for purposes of impeachment, and the district
    attorney should have disclosed it.
    [2] Nevertheless, we hold that Belmontes’ Giglio claim
    fails because, under the particular facts and circumstances of
    8304                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    this case, the undisclosed evidence was not material. This
    case presents different circumstances from those in Benn, in
    which we held that the prosecutor’s dispensation of similar
    favors on behalf of his star witness—including quashing a
    traffic ticket, dismissing a burglary charge, and postponing
    the filing of an arrest warrant until after Benn’s trial—were
    material benefits. 
    Id.
     In Benn, we held that the failure to dis-
    close these benefits necessitated a new trial, even though the
    prosecutor disclosed that he had made a deal with the infor-
    mant to seek a reduced sentence in exchange for his testimony
    against Benn, and defense counsel impeached the informant
    on this point. 
    Id.
    Aside from the fact that the undisclosed benefits in Benn
    may well have been more substantial than those at issue here,
    Benn is distinguishable for three reasons. First, Bolanos was
    actually involved in the McConnell murder, whereas the
    informant in Benn was a jailhouse snitch. Evidence that a jail-
    house snitch received material benefits from the prosecution
    is especially important because without that evidence the
    informant masquerades as a disinterested observer. See United
    States v. Bernal-Obeso, 
    989 F.2d 331
    , 333-34 (9th Cir. 2002)
    (describing practice of relying on criminal informants as
    “fraught with peril”). In this case, however, Bolanos was
    cross-examined extensively as to his role in the crime and the
    details of his immunity agreement, so the jury could not pos-
    sibly have viewed him as disinterested. Second, the impeach-
    ment evidence that was disclosed in Benn was relatively
    trivial; although the informant received sentencing leniency in
    his unrelated case, the leniency saved him only thirty-five
    days of jail time. Benn, 
    283 F.3d at 1057
    . Accordingly, “the
    number and nature of the undisclosed benefits was such that
    they would have impeached [the witness] more effectively”
    than the benefits that were disclosed. 
    Id. at 1058
    . By contrast,
    in the present case the impeachment evidence that was dis-
    closed was substantial: an agreement allowing Bolanos to
    plead guilty to second-degree burglary and receive immunity
    for the murder in exchange for his testimony. Finally, in Benn
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                   8305
    the prosecutor effectively downplayed the importance of the
    impeachment evidence in his closing argument. 
    Id.
     (quoting
    prosecutor’s argument that “[t]he reward he got was that in a
    6 to 12 month sentence, he got six months instead of nine
    months. Big reward.”). In this case, however, the prosecutor
    argued that the jury should view Bolanos’ testimony criti-
    cally, and the jury was so instructed. For these reasons, we
    conclude that Benn does not control our analysis here.
    [3] Here, the undisclosed benefits were not material
    because there is not a reasonable probability that the outcome
    of the trial would have been different if defense counsel had
    known about them. In making this judgment, we realize that
    Belmontes need not pass a sufficiency of the evidence test.
    Kyles, 
    514 U.S. at 434
    . “However, our fundamental concern
    remains whether there exists a reasonable probability that
    given disclosure of the evidence of benefits to [the witness],
    one or more members of the jury would have viewed [his] tes-
    timony in a different light.” Singh, 
    142 F.3d at 1163
    . In this
    case, Bolanos was impeached with his immunity agreement,
    including the fact that the charges filed against him were sub-
    stantially lower than the evidence would have warranted. The
    withheld evidence would not have added much, if anything.
    Moreover, Bolanos’ testimony was corroborated by that of
    several other witnesses, including disinterested witnesses like
    Lucy Flores and Barbara Murillo, who were not involved in
    the crime or related to the codefendants. Belmontes’ testi-
    mony to the contrary was uncorroborated and did not hold up
    well under cross examination. Had Bolanos’ testimony been
    less well-supported or the undisclosed benefits been greater,
    or had the prosecutor not urged and the judge not instructed
    the jury to view his testimony with suspicion, we might con-
    ceivably have reached a different conclusion. Nevertheless,
    given the extent of the corroborating evidence, the relative
    unimportance of the undisclosed benefits as compared to
    those that were disclosed, and the nature of the prosecutor’s
    statement, we cannot say that the jury would have viewed
    Bolanos’ testimony in a different light had it known that the
    8306                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    prosecutor had helped him to quash his misdemeanor traffic
    offenses or obtain lighter punishment on them. In short, the
    undisclosed benefits do not undermine our confidence in the
    verdict. In these circumstances, we hold that the withheld evi-
    dence was not material, and the claim must, therefore, be
    denied.
    3.   Napue Claim
    Belmontes also argues that the prosecution violated his due
    process rights by failing to correct Bolanos’ false assertion
    that he had never been “busted” before. The prosecutor has an
    independent, constitutional duty to correct testimony he
    knows to be false. Napue v. Illinois, 
    360 U.S. 264
    , 269-70
    (1959); N. Mariana Islands v. Bowie, 
    243 F.3d 1109
     (9th Cir.
    2001). If there is “any reasonable likelihood that the false tes-
    timony could have affected the judgment of the jury,” the
    conviction must be set aside. United States v. Agurs, 
    427 U.S. 97
    , 103 (1976).
    The state argues that the prosecution had no duty to correct
    the record because defense counsel was notified of the drunk-
    driving arrest at a pretrial hearing. Whether defense counsel
    is aware of the falsity of the statement is beside the point. The
    state overlooks the fact that the prosecutor’s duty to correct
    false testimony arises, not simply out of a duty of fairness to
    the defendant, but out of “the free standing constitutional duty
    of the State and its representatives to protect the system
    against false testimony.” Bowie, 
    243 F.3d at 1118
    . Therefore,
    regardless of whether defense counsel should have known that
    a state witness testified falsely, “[a] prosecutor’s ‘responsibil-
    ity and duty to correct what he knows to be false and elicit the
    truth,’ Napue, 
    360 U.S. at 269-70
    , 
    79 S. Ct. 1173
    , requires
    [him] to act when put on notice of the real possibility of false
    testimony.” 
    Id.
    The state also contends that the prosecution had no duty in
    this case because the word “busted” is ambiguous, and there-
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8307
    fore Bolanos may not have testified falsely at all. We do not
    find the word “busted” to be ambiguous. See Webster’s New
    World Dictionary 189 (3d college ed. 1988) (defining “bust”
    as “to arrest”). In this case, the prosecutor knew that Bolanos
    had been “busted” twice before: once for DUI/hit-and-run and
    once for gun possession. He had an independent duty to cor-
    rect the false testimony and elicit the truth.
    If there were any reasonable likelihood that Bolanos’ false
    testimony could have affected the judgment of the jury, we
    would be compelled to grant the petition with respect to this
    claim. Belmontes argues that a reasonable likelihood exists,
    pointing to the fact that the “first time I got busted” comment
    arose at a crucial part of defense counsel’s cross-examination.
    Bolanos used this false statement to explain his prior inconsis-
    tent statements on two critical points: the length of time
    Vasquez spent in the house and the alleged knocking noise
    that Bolanos heard when he got out of the car to open the
    trunk. He stated that he was nervous when he made the prior
    inconsistent statements to the officer because he had never
    been busted before. The testimony that was inconsistent was
    important because it tended to incriminate Belmontes and
    exculpate Vasquez by suggesting that McConnell was killed
    before Vasquez entered the house; it also was not directly cor-
    roborated by any other witness. Conceivably, if the jury knew
    that Bolanos had lied when trying to explain his prior incon-
    sistent statements on these points, it could have concluded
    that Bolanos was lying about the timing and the knocking
    noise, either to please the prosecution or to protect Vasquez.
    The jury then would have been more likely to believe Bel-
    montes’ testimony that Vasquez was the actual killer.
    Ultimately, however, we do not believe that Bolanos’ false
    testimony regarding the absence of prior arrests could have
    affected the judgment of the jury. As we explained, his testi-
    mony regarding the events surrounding the murder was in
    most respects corroborated by independent witnesses. Fur-
    thermore, the most damaging testimony of the trial came from
    8308                     BELMONTES v. BROWN
    Belmontes himself. On cross-examination, Belmontes con-
    ceded that for his version of events to be true, Vasquez would
    have had to have come directly from the car to the door with-
    out attempting to open the trunk, and there is direct evidence
    to the contrary from a disinterested eyewitness. Moreover,
    Belmontes refused to say that he had seen or heard Vasquez
    hitting McConnell, and he could not explain how Vasquez
    would have had enough time to both murder McConnell and
    ransack the front bedroom. Finally, Belmontes, but not
    Vasquez, had blood sprinkled on his clothes and shoe. On this
    record, we hold that there is no reasonable likelihood that
    Bolanos’ false testimony that his arrest in connection with the
    McConnell murder was “the first time I got busted” would
    have affected the judgment of the jury. We therefore deny
    relief on this claim.
    B.   Conflict of Interest
    Belmontes contends that he was deprived of due process
    and the effective assistance of counsel due to a conflict of
    interest arising from Schick’s multiple prior representations of
    Vasquez. See Cuyler v. Sullivan, 
    446 U.S. 335
     (1980). At the
    heart of the claim is the allegation that Schick, because of the
    conflict of interest, did not offer evidence of Vasquez’s vio-
    lent criminal history in support of his defense theory that
    Vasquez was the actual killer.5 Belmontes argues that this evi-
    dence was relevant and admissible for two purposes: first, to
    show that Vasquez was, in fact, the actual killer; and second,
    5
    Belmontes also argues that the trial judge independently violated his
    due process rights by failing to inquire adequately into the conflict and
    failing to advise Belmontes about the nature and consequences of the con-
    flict. We do not address this claim because Belmontes cannot prevail on
    it without showing that Schick labored under an actual conflict of interest
    that adversely affected his defense, a showing Belmontes cannot make for
    the reasons explained hereafter. Mickens v. Taylor, 
    535 U.S. 162
     (2002)
    (extending Cuyler burden of proof to situations in which trial judge failed
    to inquire into conflict about which he knew or reasonably should have
    known).
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                        8309
    to impeach Bolanos’ credibility by showing that his fear of
    retaliation by Vasquez caused him to place the blame on Bel-
    montes, rather than on the true murderer.
    1.   Factual Background
    During pretrial proceedings, Vasquez’s attorney brought a
    motion to recuse Schick as counsel for Belmontes. The
    motion was based on the fact that Schick’s law firm had rep-
    resented Vasquez in a 1979 murder case; Vasquez’s attorney
    feared that Schick had confidential information that he would
    use against Vasquez as part of his defense theory that
    Vasquez was the actual killer.6 Schick opposed the motion
    and filed a declaration in which he stated: (1) the attorney
    who represented Vasquez in 1979 had since left the firm; (2)
    the case against Vasquez was dismissed prior to trial; (3) he
    himself had acquired no confidential communications from
    Vasquez; and (4) the case file had been destroyed eight
    months earlier. The trial judge held a hearing and, based on
    these facts, denied the motion. The judge asked Belmontes if
    he wished to retain Schick as his lawyer, knowing that
    Schick’s firm had previously represented Vasquez. Belmontes
    said that he did.
    In postconviction proceedings, Belmontes’ attorneys
    learned that Schick’s connection to Vasquez was, in fact,
    much more extensive than he had disclosed to either Bel-
    montes or the trial court. Prior to entering private practice,
    Schick and the members of his criminal defense firm had
    worked at the local public defenders’ office. There, Schick
    and the members of his firm represented Vasquez on three
    occasions in addition to the 1979 murder charge. In August
    6
    Earlier, Vasquez’s counsel had successfully moved to recuse Schick’s
    investigator. This investigator had previously worked on Vasquez’s 1979
    murder case, and at the time of Belmontes’ trial he worked part-time in
    the public defender’s office, which represented Vasquez in the McConnell
    murder.
    8310                    BELMONTES v. BROWN
    1974, Schick had himself represented Vasquez on a gun pos-
    session charge; he had helped Vasquez negotiate a guilty plea.
    In November 1974, Patrick Riddle, a partner in Schick’s law
    firm, had represented Vasquez on a rape charge.7 In January
    1976, Douglas Jacobsen, the third partner in Schick’s firm,
    had represented Vasquez in a purse-snatching case that went
    to jury trial. Schick did not notify Belmontes or the court of
    these incidents of representation even though he remembered
    them at the time of the recusal motion.
    In 1994, Schick signed another declaration with respect to
    the conflict of interest claim. In that declaration, he averred
    that at the time of the recusal motion, he saw no relationship
    between any of Vasquez’s prior cases and the McConnell
    murder. He asserted that his representation of Belmontes was
    not inhibited by his prior representation of Vasquez and that
    his loyalty to Belmontes was complete and undivided. Schick
    stated that he considered calling Vasquez as a witness and
    would have been prepared to cross examine him fully had he
    taken the stand. However, he also admitted that he did not
    investigate Vasquez’s violent criminal history even though
    doing so would have been helpful to Belmontes’ defense.
    Schick stated that he did not make a tactical decision not to
    pursue this investigation. He explained that his normal proce-
    dure is to investigate the criminal record of a potential wit-
    ness; however, he did not consider Vasquez a potential
    witness until after he had entered a guilty plea.
    Schick testified at his deposition that he knew that he had
    a continuing duty of loyalty to Vasquez, but he did not view
    Belmontes’ defense as conflicting with that duty in any way.
    However, Schick admitted that he knew that the district attor-
    ney could revive the 1979 murder charge against Vasquez at
    any time (although he also stated that it never crossed his
    mind that the prosecution would do so as a result of any evi-
    7
    Schick avers that he was not aware of this case at the time he repre-
    sented Belmontes.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                   8311
    dence Schick presented at Belmontes’ trial). In addition,
    Schick recognized that even though Vasquez entered his
    guilty plea prior to Belmontes’ trial, Vasquez had an ongoing
    liberty interest in being viewed as an aider and abettor in the
    McConnell murder, and not the actual killer.
    2.   Discussion
    At the outset, we dispose of the state’s procedural objec-
    tions to the claim. The state first contends that the claim is
    unexhausted because Belmontes did not present to the Cali-
    fornia Supreme Court all of the facts underlying the claim.
    This argument fails because “new factual allegations do not
    render a claim unexhausted unless they ‘fundamentally alter
    the legal claim already considered by the state courts.’ ” Cha-
    con v. Wood, 
    36 F.3d 1459
    , 1468 (9th Cir. 1994) (quoting
    Vasquez v. Hillery, 
    474 U.S. 254
    , 260 (1986)). Here, although
    the additional facts add some evidentiary support to the claim,
    they do not “fundamentally alter” it. See Weaver v. Thomp-
    son, 
    197 F.3d 359
    , 364 (9th Cir. 1999) (holding that jury mis-
    conduct claim was properly exhausted when petitioner
    presented incidents of improper jury contact that differed in
    number, but not in kind, from what was presented to state
    courts). The essential factual and legal theories are the same
    as those presented to the California courts. Therefore, Bel-
    montes adequately exhausted the claim.
    Next, the state argues that the claim is barred by the Teague
    nonretroactivity doctrine. See Teague v. Lane, 
    490 U.S. 1031
    (1989). The government bases this argument on the Supreme
    Court’s recent statement that, as far as its own precedent is
    concerned, the question whether Cuyler extends to cases of
    successive representation is still open. Mickens v. Taylor, 
    535 U.S. 162
    , ___, 
    122 S. Ct. 1237
    , 1246 (2002). However, we
    have held that circuit court holdings suffice to create a
    “clearly established” rule of law under Teague. Bell v. Hill,
    
    190 F.3d 1089
    , 1091 (9th Cir. 1999). In this circuit, it was
    well-established at the time that Belmontes’ conviction
    8312                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    became final that conflicts of constitutional magnitude can
    arise from cases of successive representation. See, e.g., Mann-
    halt v. Reed, 
    847 F.2d 576
    , 579 (1988); United States v.
    Wheat, 
    813 F.2d 1399
    , 1402 & n. 1 (9th Cir. 1987), aff’d on
    other grounds, 
    486 U.S. 153
     (1988). Accordingly, the conflict
    claim is not Teague-barred.
    We also hold that Belmontes’ purported waiver of the con-
    flict of interest was invalid. “For a waiver to be knowing and
    intelligent, the defendant must have been sufficiently
    informed of the consequences of his choice.” Lockhart v. Ter-
    hune, 
    250 F.3d 1223
    , 1232 (9th Cir. 2001) (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted). Here, Schick failed to inform
    Belmontes or the court of the extent of his prior relationship
    with Vasquez. In addition, neither Schick nor the trial judge
    explained to Belmontes that Schick owed a continuing duty of
    loyalty to Vasquez, a duty that could potentially conflict with
    Belmontes’ defense theory—that Vasquez was McConnell’s
    actual killer. Under these circumstances, we conclude that
    Belmontes was not sufficiently informed of the consequences
    of his choice, and his waiver was therefore invalid. See Lock-
    hart, 
    250 F.3d at 1252-53
    , citing United States v. Curcio, 
    680 F.2d 965
    , 976-77 (8th Cir. 1982) (holding that waiver was
    ineffective when the defendant was informed of possible con-
    flict due to attorney’s prior representation of codefendant and
    told that conflict may arise from prior confidential communi-
    cations, but not told that conflict may arise from attorney’s
    continued loyalty to codefendant).
    [4] To establish a Sixth Amendment violation based on
    conflict of interest, the defendant must show that an actual
    conflict of interest adversely affected his lawyer’s perfor-
    mance. Cuyler, 
    446 U.S. at 338
    ; Mannhalt, 
    847 F.2d at 579
    .
    Generally, it is more difficult to demonstrate an actual conflict
    resulting from successive, rather than simultaneous, represen-
    tation. Mannhalt, 
    847 F.2d at 580
    . Conflicts of interest based
    on successive representation may arise if the current and for-
    mer cases are substantially related, if the attorney reveals
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                     8313
    privileged communications of the former client, or if the attor-
    ney otherwise divides his loyalties. 
    Id.
     Ultimately, however,
    an actual conflict of interest is one “that affected counsel’s
    performance—as opposed to a mere theoretical division of
    loyalties.” Mickens, 
    122 S. Ct. at 1243
    . In other words, the
    simple “possibility of conflict is insufficient to impugn a
    criminal conviction.” Cuyler, 
    446 U.S. at 350
    .
    We must decide whether the potential conflict of interest
    engendered by Schick’s prior representation of Vasquez rip-
    ened into an actual conflict. We begin by noting that there is
    no suggestion that Vasquez’s prior cases were substantially
    related to the McConnell murder or that Schick was in posses-
    sion of privileged communications from Vasquez. Therefore,
    if Belmontes is to demonstrate an actual conflict, he must
    show that Schick “divide[d] his loyalties” between Vasquez
    and Belmontes. Fitzpatrick v. McCormick, 
    869 F.2d 1247
    ,
    1252 (9th Cir. 1989), citing Mannhalt, 
    847 F.2d at 580
    . In
    engaging in this inquiry, we look beyond Schick’s protesta-
    tions to the contrary to see whether independent evidence in
    the record supports the allegation of divided loyalties. United
    States v. Shwayder, 
    312 F.3d 1109
    , 1119 (9th Cir. 2002)
    (“Human self-perception regarding one’s own motives for
    particular actions in difficult circumstances is too faulty to be
    relied upon, even if the individual reporting is telling the truth
    as he perceives it.”); Sanders v. Rawtelle, 
    21 F.3d 1446
    , 1452
    (9th Cir. 1994) (“The existence of an actual conflict cannot be
    governed solely by the perceptions of the attorney; rather, the
    court itself must examine the record to discern whether the
    attorney’s behavior seems to have been influenced by the sug-
    gested conflict.”).
    [5] After a careful examination of the record, we find no
    evidence that Schick divided his loyalties between Vasquez
    and Belmontes. Indeed, Belmontes’ entire defense was that
    Vasquez was the killer. This case is thus distinguishable from
    cases like Lockhart, Sanders, and Fitzpatrick, all of which
    addressed situations in which defense counsel sabotaged their
    8314                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    current clients’ case by refusing to raise the obvious defense
    that a former client was actually responsible for the murder.
    See Lockhart, 
    250 F.3d at 1230-31
     (where the evidence
    showed that the same person had committed both an earlier
    murder and the murder for which defendant was on trial,
    defendant’s trial counsel refused to present evidence that his
    former client had committed the earlier murder); Sanders, 
    21 F.3d at 1453
     (defense counsel successively represented two
    brothers who were accused of the same murder; the first
    brother confessed his guilt to defense counsel, who advised
    him to take the Fifth at his brother’s trial; at the trial, defense
    counsel put forth an unconvincing alibi defense rather than
    evidence that the first brother had committed the murder);
    Fitzpatrick, 
    869 F.2d at 1251-52
     (defense counsel refused to
    present defense that a former client actually committed the
    murder; because of the prior attorney-client relationship,
    defense counsel believed in the former client’s innocence to
    the detriment of his current client).
    Belmontes argues nevertheless that an actual conflict of
    interest affected Schick’s performance at his trial. According
    to Belmontes, even though Schick argued that Vasquez was
    the killer, he failed to support this theory with hard evidence.
    Belmontes asserts that Schick should have investigated
    Vasquez’s lengthy criminal record and presented it as evi-
    dence that Vasquez was the actual killer. He also asserts that
    Schick should have impeached Bolanos by showing that he
    was in fear for his life due to death threats issued by Vasquez
    and thus had a powerful motive to falsely shift the blame from
    Vasquez to Belmontes. Belmontes argues that the only possi-
    ble explanation for these lapses on Schick’s part is that he felt
    bound by a continuing duty of loyalty to Vasquez, and that
    this duty required him to refrain from presenting evidence that
    could have resulted in the revival of the 1979 murder prosecu-
    tion or impaired Vasquez’s prospects for an early parole on
    his second degree murder conviction in the current case.
    [6] We are of the view, however, that these alleged failings
    are too speculative to sustain a conflict of interest claim. This
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                        8315
    is not a case in which Schick failed to present evidence that
    went directly to Vasquez’s—and therefore Belmontes’—guilt
    or innocence. Rather, Schick sought squarely to place the
    blame on Vasquez, and did not overlook any direct evidence
    on that point. He simply failed to investigate and present evi-
    dence of Vasquez’s prior bad acts, which, if admissible, might
    have marginally affected whether a jury would have had a
    reasonable doubt as to Belmontes’ guilt. Given the absence of
    evidence suggesting that Vasquez was the actual killer and
    given the damaging nature of Belmontes’ own conflicting
    statements, any counsel might have failed to investigate and
    offer evidence regarding Vasquez’s criminal history. In short,
    we hold that this failure, standing alone, is not enough to
    show that Schick divided his loyalties between Vasquez and
    Belmontes. It is not “likely” that a conflict caused Schick to
    handle Belmontes’ case as he did. See United States v. Mis-
    kinis, 
    966 F.2d 1263
    , 1268 (9th Cir. 1992). Thus, Belmontes
    has not shown that he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment
    rights by an actual conflict of interest.
    C.    Involuntary Statement
    Belmontes argues that the prosecutor violated his due pro-
    cess rights by introducing into evidence his involuntary,
    inculpatory statements. However, Belmontes testified in his
    deposition that he spoke to the police freely and voluntarily.
    There was no due process violation here.
    D.   Counsel’s Failure to Challenge Arrest Warrant
    Belmontes claims that his trial counsel was constitutionally
    ineffective for failing to challenge his arrest warrant. He
    argues that the warrant in his case was facially insufficient to
    support a finding of probable cause because nothing in the
    warrant corroborated the allegation that Belmontes himself, as
    opposed to Bolanos, was involved in the crime.8
    8
    The warrant reads:
    Detective Elbert Holman, San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office,
    8316                    BELMONTES v. BROWN
    1.   Strickland Claim
    In order to prevail on his ineffectiveness claim, Belmontes
    must show that: (1) his trial counsel’s performance fell below
    an objective standard of reasonableness; and (2) there is a rea-
    sonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
    errors, the results of the proceeding would have been differ-
    ent. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 686 (1984). To
    will testify that: he responded to 17281 N. Sunrise St. Victor, CA
    on 3/15/81 in the early afternoon. The house was ransacked.
    Deputy St. Sure will testify he was the first deputy Sheriff to
    arrive at 17281 N. Sunrise. Steacy McConnell was on the floor
    being administered to by medical personnel. Steacy McConnell
    subsequently died.
    Dr. Madieros did the autopsy on Steacy McConnell. The cause
    of death was blunt trauma to the head.
    Bob Bolanos, after being advised of his Miranda rights, waived
    those rights and told Detective the following: That he went to the
    home of Domingo Vasquez, Jr. He was with Fernando Delmontes
    on 3/15/81. While at the Vasquez house, Vasquez called Steacy
    McConnell. Thereafter, the three of them talked about the fact
    that Steacy possessed some expensive property at her residence.
    Fernando Delmontes said he needed money to send to his wife
    in Los Angeles. Delmontes decided to burglarize the McConnell
    residence after Vasquez told them McConnell would not be
    home. Vasquez and Bolanos agreed to go with Delmontes.
    Bolanos drive them to McConnell’s in his car. Upon arriving in
    the vicinity, Delmontes got out, carrying an iron bar he had
    brought with him from Vasquez’s house.
    Delmontes told Bolanos to wait in the car for 30 minutes, then
    to drive to McConnell’s and get him.
    When they drove to McConnell’s, they opened the trunk, and
    Vasquez went into the house. Vasquez carried stereo speakers
    from the house to the car trunk. Delmontes followed Vasquez out
    with the receiver portion of the stereo. Delmontes was splattered
    with blood. Vasquez was not. Delmontes said McConnell was in
    the house, and when Bolanos drove up, he beat her with the iron
    bar. The stereo was later sold, and the proceeds divided.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8317
    satisfy Strickland’s prejudice prong in a Fourth Amendment
    context, Belmontes must demonstrate a reasonable probability
    that a motion to suppress would have succeeded and that the
    suppression of the warrant would have led to a different out-
    come at the trial. Kimmelman v. Morrison, 
    477 U.S. 365
    , 375
    (1986). The reasonableness of counsel’s performance is eval-
    uated from counsel’s perspective at the time of the alleged
    error. See 
    id. at 384
    .
    At the time of Belmontes’ trial, the federal Aguilar-Spinelli
    test applied to affidavits supporting warrant applications.
    Aguilar-Spinelli did not require independent corroboration of
    the facts set forth in the affidavit. Rather, under Aguilar-
    Spinelli, the affidavit on its face had to provide enough infor-
    mation so that a magistrate could determine: (1) that the infor-
    mant was reliable (the “veracity” prong); and (2) that his
    information was dependable (the “basis of knowledge”
    prong). Spinelli v. United States, 
    393 U.S. 410
     (1969); Agui-
    lar v. Texas, 
    378 U.S. 108
    , 114 (1964); United States v.
    Larkin, 
    510 F.2d 13
    , 15 (9th Cir. 1974). Under federal law,
    the affidavit met both prongs. Because the affidavit stated that
    Bolanos acquired his information through first-hand observa-
    tion, it satisfied the “basis of knowledge” prong, Aguilar, 
    378 U.S. at 114
    , and because it contained a statement against
    penal interest, it satisfied the veracity prong. United States v.
    Harris, 
    403 U.S. 573
    , 583-84 (1971) (holding that, in most
    cases, statements against penal interest are inherently reli-
    able); but see United States v. Hall, 
    113 F.3d 157
    , 159 (9th
    Cir. 1994) (declining to apply Harris to accomplice informant
    because “once a person believes that the police have sufficient
    evidence to convict him, his statement that another person is
    more important to his criminal enterprise than he gains little
    credibility from its inculpatory aspect”).
    Nor would the claim have had a reasonable probability of
    success under California law. According to the California
    Supreme Court, the affidavit contained sufficient corrobora-
    tion to support a finding of probable cause:
    8318                    BELMONTES v. BROWN
    The circumstances of the crime and evidence found
    at the crime scene — as summarized in the affidavit
    — corroborated Bolanos’ statement. . . . [T]rial
    counsel could reasonably have concluded that the
    affidavit contained sufficient corroboration of
    Bolanos’s hearsay statement; that the arrest warrant
    thus issued on probable cause; and that a de novo
    motion to quash the warrant would have proved
    futile.
    People v. Belmontes, 
    45 Cal. 3d 744
    , 768 (1988). We are
    bound by statements of the California Supreme Court as to
    California law. See Estelle v. McGuire, 
    502 U.S. 62
    , 67-68,
    (1991) (“[I]t is not the province of a federal habeas court to
    reexamine state court determinations on state law ques-
    tions.”). Accordingly, we must conclude that Schick would
    not have had a reasonable probability of success in challeng-
    ing the arrest warrant. Thus his failure to challenge the war-
    rant does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
    2.     Franks Claim
    Belmontes also alleges that material omissions in the affi-
    davit caused the magistrate to issue a warrant for which there
    was no probable cause. See Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    , 156 (1978). Under Franks, if a criminal defendant estab-
    lishes by a preponderance of the evidence that an officer reck-
    lessly omitted material information from the affidavit, and if
    the affidavit considered with the omitted evidence is insuffi-
    cient to establish probable cause, then the “warrant must be
    voided and the fruits of the search excluded to the same extent
    as if probable cause was lacking.” 
    Id.
    On appeal, Belmontes did not specify what evidence was
    omitted from the warrant, but he did refer to the California
    Supreme Court opinion, which described four categories of
    evidence: (1) The affiant, a police officer, was familiar with
    Vasquez’s violent history but did not know Belmontes; (2)
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8319
    Bolanos’ car had been identified at the scene of the crime; (3)
    Bolanos offered his statement only after his car was
    impounded and his girlfriend had incriminated him; and (4) at
    first, Bolanos lied when speaking to the police. Belmontes, 45
    Cal. 3d. at 769. Three of these omitted facts cast aspersions
    on Bolanos’ credibility because they highlight his strong
    motive to shift the blame for McConnell’s death to someone
    else. The fourth is plainly of no relevance. As to the three, the
    face of the affidavit makes clear that Bolanos was Miran-
    dized, which itself indicates that Bolanos was a suspect in the
    crime. The omitted details add more color to Belmontes’
    claims, but they do not change the basic calculus involved in
    determining Bolanos’ reliability. Accordingly, they are not
    material, and the Franks claim must be denied.
    E.   Doyle Claim
    Belmontes asserts that the prosecutor violated his due pro-
    cess rights by cross-examining him as to his post-arrest
    silence in violation of Doyle v. Ohio, 
    426 U.S. 610
     (1976).
    However, the Supreme Court has held that Doyle does not
    apply to a defendant who has waived his Miranda rights and
    voluntarily given a statement to the police. Anderson v.
    Charles, 
    447 U.S. 404
    , 408 (1980). Belmontes testified in his
    deposition that he understood his Miranda rights, waived
    them, and spoke freely and voluntarily to the police. No Doyle
    error occurred.
    F.   Unconstitutional Restriction on Cross Examination
    Belmontes contends that the trial judge violated his Sixth
    Amendment rights by unconstitutionally restricting his cross
    examination of Karrie Lynn Vasquez, Vasquez’s wife. Ms.
    Vasquez testified that she saw Belmontes take the iron bar
    from the kitchen and heard him admit to killing McConnell.
    Defense counsel sought to impeach her testimony by demon-
    strating that she was lying in order to increase Vasquez’s
    chances at an early parole by emphasizing Belmontes’ greater
    8320                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    culpability. This strategy was foiled because the trial judge
    refused to allow defense counsel to question Ms. Vasquez as
    to her knowledge of the length of Vasquez’s sentence.
    The Confrontation Clause protects a defendant’s right to
    cross examine witnesses as to potential bias. Delaware v. Van
    Arsdall, 
    475 U.S. 673
    , 679 (1986). However, the trial judge
    retains considerable latitude to impose reasonable limits on
    cross-examination based on harassment, prejudice, confusion
    of the issues, and relevance. 
    Id.
     Any error is subject to harm-
    less error review. 
    Id. at 684
    .
    Despite the fact that the trial judge prevented defense coun-
    sel from exploring Ms. Vasquez’s bias with respect to the
    length of Vasquez’s sentence, defense counsel cross-
    examined her extensively and effectively. Defense counsel
    elicited testimony that Ms. Vasquez had known her husband
    for eight years, bore his child, stayed with him in spite of his
    frequent infidelity, married him while he was in prison for the
    McConnell murder, and visited him in jail every weekend.
    The jury thus had ample reason to believe that Ms. Vasquez
    was biased in favor of her husband. In addition, counsel
    forced Ms. Vasquez to admit that, although she had been
    questioned extensively during the police investigation, it was
    not until the day before Belmontes’ trial that she first claimed
    to have heard him admit to the crime. This testimony strongly
    suggested that Ms. Vasquez was lying about what she claimed
    to have heard. Ms. Vasquez could not have been impeached
    much more effectively.
    In light of the extensive and effective cross-examination
    that occurred, and the minimal amount of additional force the
    excluded material would have added, the error, if any, could
    not have had a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s
    verdict. Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
    , 637-38 (1993).
    Accordingly, we deny relief on this claim as well.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                8321
    G.      Evidentiary Errors
    Belmontes argues that his trial was rendered fundamentally
    unfair by the introduction of hearsay and double-hearsay
    statements supporting Bolanos’ testimony that Belmontes was
    the actual killer. However, the California Supreme Court held
    that these statements were properly admitted prior consistent
    statements. We are bound by the opinion of the California
    Supreme Court in these matters of state law. Estelle, 
    502 U.S. at 67-68
    . As the Court has stated, “the Due Process Clause
    does not permit the federal courts to engage in a finely tuned
    review of the wisdom of state evidentiary rules.” Marshall v.
    Lonberger, 
    459 U.S. 422
    , 438 n.6 (1983). Here, the state-
    ments added little and did not render the trial fundamentally
    unfair.
    H.      Instructional Error
    Belmontes also challenges an instruction directing the jury
    not to speculate as to why other individuals involved in the
    crime were not on trial along with Belmontes. He claims that
    this instruction prevented the jury from considering the
    impact of Bolanos’ immunity agreement on his credibility.
    We must determine “whether the ailing instruction by itself so
    infected the entire trial that the resulting conviction violates
    due process.” Estelle, 
    502 U.S. at 72
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). We conclude that it did not, because the jury was
    also instructed that it should view Bolanos’ testimony with
    suspicion due to his involvement in the crime. Accordingly,
    we deny this claim also.
    I.     Fair Cross-Section
    Belmontes alleges that he was deprived of a jury comprised
    of a fair cross-section of the community because of the sys-
    tematic exclusion of minority jurors from the venire. How-
    ever, he provides no statistical data in support of his claim.
    Belmontes’ claim is thus barred by our decision in Thomas v.
    8322                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    Borg, 
    159 F.3d 1147
     (9th Cir. 1998). In that case, the peti-
    tioner argued that we should excuse his failure to provide the
    necessary statistical evidence because his trial counsel was
    constitutionally ineffective for failing to preserve it. 
    Id. at 1150
    . We held:
    [F]or purposes of our fair cross-section analysis, the
    reason for Thomas’ lack of evidence is immaterial.
    Because Thomas has provided us with insufficient
    statistical evidence to determine whether blacks were
    substantially underrepresented on jury venires or
    panels in Kern County at the time of his trial, his
    Sixth Amendment fair cross-section claim must be
    denied.
    
    Id. at 1150-51
    . Applying Thomas to the facts of this case, we
    must deny the claim.
    J.   Jury Misconduct
    Belmontes contends that the district court erred in denying
    him an evidentiary hearing on his juror misconduct claims. A
    habeas petitioner must meet two conditions to be entitled to
    a federal evidentiary hearing: He must (1) allege facts which,
    if proven, would entitle him to relief, and (2) show that he did
    not receive a full and fair hearing in a state court, either at the
    time of the trial or in a collateral proceeding. Id. at 1126-27.
    A petitioner who meets these conditions must receive a hear-
    ing. See, e.g., Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 420
     (2000) (hold-
    ing that because prisoner diligently pursued claim in state
    court, and was denied a hearing, he was entitled to a hearing
    in federal court); United States v. Navarro-Garcia, 
    926 F.2d 818
    , 822 (9th Cir. 1991) (“Unless the court is able to deter-
    mine without a hearing that the allegations are without credi-
    bility or that the allegations if true would not warrant a new
    trial, an evidentiary hearing must be held.”).
    Belmontes first asserts that the jurors based their decision
    on the view that “life without possibility of parole did not
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                         8323
    mean that Belmontes would spend the rest of his life in pris-
    on.” Belmontes is not entitled to relief on this claim because
    it concerns intrinsic jury processes. “[I]ntrinsic jury processes
    will not be examined on appeal and cannot support reversal.”
    United States v. Bagnariol, 
    665 F.2d 877
    , 887 (9th Cir. 1981).
    Belmontes next alleges that the jurors had improper con-
    tacts with members of the victim’s family. He bases this con-
    tention on an excerpt from the record in which the trial court
    reprimanded one of the jurors for talking to the victim’s father
    about motorcycles. After the reprimand, the trial court con-
    ducted a hearing and determined that the juror was not biased
    as a result of his contact with the victim’s father. Belmontes
    does not assert either that the hearing was not full or that it
    was not fair. Nor does he assert that he has any newly discov-
    ered evidence. Accordingly, he is not entitled to a federal evi-
    dentiary hearing on this claim.9
    Third, Belmontes asserts that several jurors prejudged his
    guilt and engaged in premature deliberations. However, even
    assuming that the jurors did the latter, Belmontes would not
    necessarily be entitled to relief. See, e.g., United States v.
    Klee, 
    494 F.2d 394
    , 396 (9th Cir. 1974) (denying motion for
    new trial even though jurors discussed the case during breaks
    and expressed premature opinions about the defendant’s
    guilt). A petitioner must allege facts which, if proved, would
    show that the premature deliberations prejudiced him to the
    extent that he did not receive a fair trial. United States v. Hen-
    drix, 
    549 F.2d 1225
    , 1229 (9th Cir. 1977). Belmontes has not
    done so here; indeed, he has not alleged any facts other than
    that premature deliberations took place.
    9
    Moreover, the state court’s factual determination is subject to a pre-
    sumption of correctness. Patton v. Yount, 
    467 U.S. 1025
    , 1037 n.12
    (1984); 
    29 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d) (1994). To overcome the presumption, Bel-
    montes must establish by clear and convincing evidence that the state
    court’s factual finding was erroneous. Patton, 
    467 U.S. at
    1037 n.12.
    However, he submitted no evidence tending to overcome the presumption,
    and the record contains none.
    8324                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    As to the alleged juror prejudgment, in his Amended Peti-
    tion for Writ of Habeas Corpus, Belmontes contends that “[a]
    sitting juror remarked, ‘Here comes the killer,’ whenever peti-
    tioner was brought into court.” While this claim, if true, might
    possibly entitle him to relief, see Dyer v. Calderon, 
    151 F.3d 970
    , 973 (9th Cir. 1998) (en banc) (“The bias or prejudice of
    even a single juror would violate [a criminal defendant’s]
    right to a fair trial.”), Belmontes did not include the issue in
    his request for an evidentiary hearing or present any facts that
    would entitle him to relief. Accordingly, the district court did
    not err in failing to afford him a hearing on that claim.
    Because Belmontes has not alleged facts that, if true, would
    entitle him to relief, we affirm the district court’s denial of an
    evidentiary hearing on his jury misconduct claims.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN            8325
    Volume 2 of 2
    8326                     BELMONTES v. BROWN
    VI.     SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES ISSUES
    A.   Racial Discrimination in Charging
    Belmontes alleges that the charging decision in his case
    violated the Eighth Amendment and the Equal Protection
    Clause because it was infected by racial discrimination
    against defendants whose victims were white. In support of
    his claim, Belmontes relies on an expert report prepared by
    Richard Berk, a well-respected professor of sociology and sta-
    tistics at the University of California, Los Angeles. Berk ana-
    lyzed prosecutors’ charging decisions in 122 death-eligible
    homicides committed in San Joaquin County from August
    1977 through 1986.10 In order to describe accurately the role
    of race and ethnicity in death penalty charging, he coded data
    for over 450 variables. After running numerous logistic
    regression tests, Berk concluded that the odds of being
    charged with special circumstances varied significantly
    according to the race of the victim. A defendant who killed a
    white person was five times more likely to be charged with
    special circumstances than a defendant who killed an African
    American and twenty times more likely to be charged than if
    the victim were Latino. Predictably, however, the govern-
    ment’s experts reviewed Berk’s report and the underlying data
    and opined that the data did not reveal a pattern of discrimina-
    tory charging in San Joaquin County. For the purposes of this
    opinion, we assume the accuracy and statistical validity of the
    Berk report.11
    10
    The data set consisted of probation department reports for all death-
    eligible homicides charged during the relevant time period, except 70
    cases for which the County lacked complete reports, 52 cases in which the
    defendants were not bound over for trial on murder charges, and six cases
    in which the defendants were female.
    11
    The district court questioned the relevance of the Berk report on the
    ground that Berk based his conclusions on “a model that used only four
    non-racial factors.” Although the tables printed in the report contained
    only four non-racial variables, the report stated that Berk and his team
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                         8327
    Belmontes’ claim of discriminatory charging is essentially
    a selective prosecution claim, and we analyze it under that
    rubric. Selective prosecution doctrine, however, poses signifi-
    cant hurdles for Belmontes. The government retains broad
    discretion as to whom to prosecute. Wayte v. United States,
    
    470 U.S. 598
    , 607 (1985). Because the decision to prosecute
    is based on such factors as the strength of the case, the gov-
    ernment’s enforcement priorities, and the case’s relationship
    to those priorities, the Supreme Court has stated that such
    decisions are “particularly ill-suited to judicial review.” 
    Id. at 607
    . Therefore, a presumption of regularity supports prosecu-
    torial judgments, and “in the absence of clear evidence to the
    contrary, courts presume that [prosecutors] have properly dis-
    charged their official duties.” United States v. Armstrong, 
    517 U.S. 463
    , 464 (1996) (quoting United States v. Chem. Found.,
    Inc., 
    272 U.S. 1
    , 14-15 (1926)). “So long as the prosecutor
    has probable cause to believe that the accused committed an
    offense defined by statute, the decision whether or not to
    prosecute, and what charge to file or bring before a grand
    jury, generally rests entirely in his discretion.” Bordenkircher
    v. Hayes, 
    434 U.S. 357
    , 364 (1978).
    [7] Yet, there is a line the prosecution may not cross.
    Although prosecutorial discretion is broad, it is not unlimited.
    United States v. Batchelder, 
    442 U.S. 114
    , 125 (1979).
    Rather, “a prosecutor’s discretion is ‘subject to constitutional
    constraints.’ ” Armstrong, 517 U.S. at 464 (quoting Bat-
    chelder, 
    442 U.S. at 125
    ). The decision to prosecute may not
    be based upon an unjustifiable standard such as race, religion,
    or other arbitrary classification, including the exercise of pro-
    tected statutory and constitutional rights. Armstrong, 517 U.S.
    actually considered many other variables in addition to those set forth in
    the tables. In his declaration, Berk characterized the small, six-variable
    model as “simply a summary” and stated that he considered all the vari-
    ables in the data set, which included many non-racial factors. We have no
    reason to disbelieve Berk’s sworn statement and can only conclude that
    the district court was mistaken.
    8328                      BELMONTES v. BROWN
    at 464; Wayte, 
    470 U.S. at 608
    . Likewise, the decision to
    charge the death penalty cannot rest on criteria that offend the
    Constitution. McCleskey v. Kemp, 
    481 U.S. 277
    , 293 (1987);
    Adamson v. Ricketts, 
    865 F.2d 1011
    , 1022-23 (9th Cir. 1988)
    (en banc), abrogated on other grounds, Walton v. Arizona,
    
    497 U.S. 639
     (1990), overruled, Ring v. Arizona, 
    536 U.S. 584
     (2002).
    [8] In order to prevail on a selective prosecution claim, a
    defendant must show that the prosecutorial policy both had a
    discriminatory effect and was motivated by a discriminatory
    purpose. Armstrong, 517 U.S. at 465; see also McCleskey,
    481 U.S. at 292 (“[T]o prevail under the Equal Protection
    Clause, [a defendant] must prove that the decisionmakers in
    his case acted with discriminatory purpose.”). To establish a
    discriminatory effect in a race discrimination case, a defen-
    dant must prove that similarly situated individuals of a differ-
    ent race, or whose victims were of a different race, were not
    prosecuted. Armstrong, 567 U.S. at 467.12
    12
    In Armstrong, the Supreme Court stated that “[t]o establish a discrimi-
    natory effect in a race case, the claimant must show that similarly situated
    individuals of a different race were not prosecuted. 517 U.S. at 465
    (emphasis added). Belmontes’ statistics do not meet this showing. Never-
    theless, although Belmontes’ claim is based on the race of his victim, not
    his own race, we do not read this sentence as barring our review. In
    McCleskey, the court examined a statistical study that showed statistical
    disparities according to the race of the victim. 481 U.S. at 286-87. In that
    case, the State argued that McCleskey did not have standing to raise a dis-
    crimination claim based on his victim’s race. Id. at 291 n.8. The Court
    concluded that McCleskey did have standing to raise this claim, id., and
    it addressed directly McCleskey’s argument that he was “discriminated
    against . . . because of the race of his victim.” Id. at 292. Armstrong did
    not discuss the issue of the victim’s race at all, nor did the majority opin-
    ion even mention McCleskey. That question was simply not before the
    Court. In short, we are confident that Armstrong did not intend to overrule
    the pertinent portion of McCleskey. Accordingly, we conclude that a
    defendant may bring a selective prosecution claim based solely on the race
    of his victim, and that to establish a discriminatory effect in a race-of-the-
    victim case, he must show that similarly situated individuals whose vic-
    tims were of a different race were not prosecuted.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8329
    [9] We reject the government’s contention that the Supreme
    Court rejected similar statistical evidence in McCleskey v.
    Kemp, and that Belmontes’ statistics are therefore “insuffi-
    cient as a matter of law.” The factual showing made by
    McCleskey was materially different from the showing made
    in this case. In McCleskey, the Supreme Court reviewed the
    claim of a Georgia prisoner who alleged that the Georgia cap-
    ital sentencing statute violated the Equal Protection Clause
    because it was administered in a racially discriminatory man-
    ner. 481 U.S. at 286. In support of his claim, McCleskey
    offered a sophisticated statistical study that demonstrated that
    Georgia defendants whose victims were white were 4.3 times
    as likely to receive a death sentence as those whose victims
    were black. Id. The Court denied his claim, holding that
    McCleskey’s statewide statistics did not meet his burden of
    proving that the imposition of the death penalty in his particu-
    lar case was the product of purposeful discrimination. Id. at
    293. We have similarly refused to allow petitioners in Califor-
    nia and Arizona to submit statistics that demonstrated racial
    disparities in the imposition of the death penalty statewide as
    evidence of discrimination in an individual case. See Carriger
    v. Lewis, 
    971 F.2d 379
    , 334 (9th Cir. 1992) (en banc) (Ari-
    zona); Harris v. Pulley, 
    885 F.2d 1354
    , 1374-75 (9th Cir.
    1989) (California). Unlike McCleskey, Carriger, and Harris,
    however, Belmontes offered statistics that provided informa-
    tion limited to the charging entity—the San Joaquin County
    District Attorney’s Office—and its death penalty charging
    practices over time. Thus he provided what the statistics in
    McCleskey lacked: information specific to the decisionmaker
    in his case. We conclude that statistics relating to the charging
    entity, such as those presented by Belmontes, are materially
    more probative of discrimination in capital charging than
    those considered by the Supreme Court in McCleskey. See
    United States v. Bass, 
    122 S. Ct. 2389
    , 2389 (2002) (approv-
    ing of “a showing regarding the record of the decisionmakers
    in respondent’s case”). Thus, Belmontes’ proffered statistics
    are not barred by McCleskey and may support a prima facie
    showing of unlawful charging discrimination.
    8330                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    [10] We next confront the question whether Belmontes’
    proffered statistical evidence proves a “discriminatory effect”
    under Armstrong. The statistics show that defendants whose
    victims were white were charged with special circumstances
    30% of the time, whereas similarly situated defendants whose
    victims were African American or Latino were charged with
    special circumstances only 19% and 6% of the time, respec-
    tively. Because Belmontes’ statistics revealed that individuals
    whose victims were white were far more likely to be charged
    with a capital offense than similarly situated individuals
    whose victims were non-white, we conclude that Belmontes
    established the requisite discriminatory effect. See 
    id.
    (approving of statistical evidence that assesses whether simi-
    larly situated individuals were treated differently).
    Under Armstrong, however, a discriminatory effect is not
    enough; Belmontes must also show that the decisionmakers in
    his case acted with a discriminatory purpose. Armstrong, 517
    U.S. at 465. Here, Belmontes must show that the San Joaquin
    County District Attorneys Office pursued a death sentence in
    his case “at least in part because of” the race of his victim.
    Wayte, 
    470 U.S. at 610
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Because Belmontes offered no non-statistical evidence on this
    point, we must decide whether his statistical evidence consti-
    tutes a prima facie showing of an intent to discriminate on the
    part of San Joaquin County District Attorney’s Office.
    The Supreme Court has not determined whether statistics
    relating exclusively to the prosecuting authority are sufficient,
    standing alone, to establish a prima facie claim of discrimina-
    tory intent in a capital charging case. On the one hand, the
    Court “has accepted statistics as proof of intent to discrimi-
    nate in certain limited contexts,” McCleskey, 481 U.S. at 293,
    and has held that appropriate statistics may be enough to
    establish a prima facie case in a number of circumstances,
    including challenges to the composition of the jury venire, id.,
    Title VII employment discrimination, id. at 294, legislative
    redistricting, Hunt v. Cromartie, 
    526 U.S. 541
    , 548-49 (1999),
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                           8331
    and contemporaneous challenges to a prosecutor’s acts. See,
    e.g., Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
     (1986). In addition, the
    Court has recently reaffirmed Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 
    118 U.S. 356
     (1886), in which the petitioner, a Chinese laundry owner,
    relied entirely on statistics to prove that the City of San Fran-
    cisco engaged in purposeful discrimination. See, e.g., Arm-
    strong, 517 U.S. at 464-65; McCleskey, 481 U.S. at 293 &
    n.12. On the other hand, the Court has held that statistical evi-
    dence, standing alone, is not enough to make out a prima facie
    case of discrimination with respect to a jury’s verdict. See
    McCleskey, 481 U.S. at 294-96 & 295 n.14. Although lan-
    guage in McCleskey suggests the “impropriety” of requiring
    a prosecutor to explain his charging decision years after it was
    made, id. at 296 & n.17, the Court acknowledged that, gener-
    ally, when a petitioner makes out a prima facie case of dis-
    crimination, a prosecutor must provide an explanation. Id. &
    n.18.13
    [11] While we think that Belmontes’ statistics provide a
    strong showing of intentional discrimination, we need not
    decide whether, in a discriminatory charging case, statistics
    standing alone can make out a prima facie case. Assuming
    arguendo that they can and that Belmontes has made out a
    prima facie case, here the State has provided evidence that is
    sufficient to overcome that showing. In his deposition, the
    prosecutor stated that when he decided to pursue a death sen-
    tence against Belmontes, he had reason to believe that prior
    to the McConnell murder Belmontes had shot and killed Jerry
    Howard. In short, the prosecutor asserted that he pursued a
    death penalty against Belmontes, not because of McConnell’s
    13
    We note that a decision to charge a capital rather than a non-capital
    offense is far more significant and important than a decision to challenge
    a particular juror. A charging decision is made with great deliberation over
    a period of time and is generally the product of a deliberative process
    involving more than one person. Moreover, unlike the case of a juror chal-
    lenge, there is a full record of the relevant events that ordinarily contains
    all of the objective factors upon which the decision-making would have
    been based.
    8332                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    death alone, but because he believed that Belmontes had actu-
    ally committed more than one murder. Moreover, the evi-
    dence in the record is sufficient to provide a good faith basis
    for such belief. Thus, there appears to be a legitimate, race-
    neutral reason for a prosecutor to seek a death sentence in this
    particular case, and therefore sufficient evidence to rebut the
    inference of discrimination raised by Belmontes’ statistical
    study. More important, Belmontes does not challenge the
    state’s assertion that the prosecutor’s explanation is sufficient
    to rebut his prima facie case. In his brief, he does not contend
    that the fact that a defendant is a double murderer is not a
    valid reason for seeking the death penalty; nor does he argue
    that the statistics show that racial disparity exists with respect
    to cases in which the defendant has killed, or is believed to
    have killed, more than one victim. Accordingly, we conclude
    that, even if Belmontes’ statistics were sufficient to raise a
    prima facie case of purposeful discrimination, the State has
    successfully rebutted it by offering the prosecutor’s legiti-
    mate, race-neutral explanation for his actions. We therefore
    deny the racial discrimination in charging claim.
    B.   Arbitrariness and Capriciousness in Charging
    Belmontes also argues, independent of his discrimination
    claim, that the charging of special circumstances in his case
    was so arbitrary and capricious that it violated the Eighth
    Amendment. According to Belmontes, his crime was one of
    the least aggravated of death-eligible crimes, yet he was one
    of only a very few defendants to actually receive the death
    penalty. In contrast, many defendants who committed far
    more heinous crimes than he obtained lesser punishments.
    According to Belmontes, this disparity shows that in San Joa-
    quin County at the time of his trial there was “no meaningful
    basis for distinguishing the few cases in which [a death sen-
    tence] is imposed from the many cases in which it is not.”
    Furman v. Georgia, 
    408 U.S. 238
    , 313 (1972) (White, J., con-
    curring). Belmontes argues that because the death penalty
    regime under which he was charged, convicted, and sentenced
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8333
    is indistinguishable from that struck down in Furman, his sen-
    tence must be vacated as unconstitutionally arbitrary and
    capricious.
    Belmontes’ claim, however, although styled as one of arbi-
    trary death penalty charging, is actually a claim of arbitrary
    imposition of the death penalty. He does not argue that the
    prosecutor’s decision to charge him with special circum-
    stances was arbitrary and capricious. Rather, he contends that
    it was arbitrary and capricious to impose the death penalty on
    him because other defendants who had committed more hei-
    nous crimes than he did not receive the death penalty. The
    Supreme Court considered and rejected this claim in
    McCleskey. 481 U.S. at 306-12. As we are bound by control-
    ling precedent, we must do the same.
    VII.    PENALTY PHASE ISSUES
    A.   Instructional Error
    Belmontes contends that the trial judge’s instructions to the
    jury prevented it from considering nonstatutory mitigating cir-
    cumstances relating to the likelihood that he would live a con-
    structive life in prison and make positive contributions to
    others if granted life without the possibility of parole. Because
    we conclude that there is a reasonable probability that as a
    result of instructional error the jury did not consider constitu-
    tionally relevant mitigating evidence, and because we believe
    that the error was not harmless, we grant the petition with
    respect to the sentencing phase.
    1.   Factual Background
    At Belmontes’ trial, the judge gave the jury the then-
    standard model jury instructions, modified to eliminate four
    factors that the prosecution and defense agreed had no rele-
    vance to the case. The jury was therefore instructed:
    8334                     BELMONTES v. BROWN
    In determining which penalty is to be imposed on the
    defendant you shall consider all of the evidence
    which has been received during any part of the trial
    of this case, except as you may be hereafter
    instructed. You shall consider, take into account, and
    be guided by the following factors, if applicable:
    (a) The circumstances of the crime of which the
    defendant was convicted in the present proceeding
    and the existence of any special circumstances found
    to be true.
    (b) The presence or absence of any criminal activ-
    ity by the defendant which involved the use or
    attempted use of force or violence or the express or
    implied threat to use force or violence.
    (c) The presence or absence of any prior felony
    conviction.
    (d) Whether or not the offense was committed
    while the defendant was under the influence of
    extreme mental or emotional disturbance.
    (e) Whether or not the defendant acted under
    extreme duress or the substantial domination of
    another person.
    (f) The age of the defendant at the time of the
    crime.
    (g) Any other circumstance which extenuates the
    gravity of the crime even though it is not a legal
    excuse for the crime.14
    14
    To remain consistent with the text of the statute and the Supreme
    Court’s terminology in Boyde, we will refer to this factor as “factor (k)”
    or “unadorned factor (k).”
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8335
    The judge also gave the jury half of a supplemental instruc-
    tion requested by the defense. The part that was given read:
    [T]he mitigating circumstances which I have read for
    your consideration are given to you merely as exam-
    ples of some of the factors that you may take into
    account as reasons for deciding not to impose a
    death penalty or a death sentence upon Mr. Bel-
    montes. You should pay careful attention to each of
    these factors. Any one of them standing alone may
    support a decision that death is not the appropriate
    punishment in this case.
    The other half of the instruction, which the trial judge refused
    to give, stated: “[Y]ou should not limit your consideration of
    mitigating circumstances to these specific factors. You may
    also consider any other circumstances . . . as reasons for not
    imposing the death sentence.”
    After several hours of deliberations, the jury sent the judge
    a note asking, “What happens if we cannot reach a verdict?”
    and “Can the majority rule on life imprisonment?” The jury
    was brought back to the courtroom, and the judge reread a
    portion of the jury instructions, emphasizing that “all 12
    jurors must agree, if you can.” The jurors asked again what
    would happen if they could not agree, but the court refused to
    tell them.
    The judge asked the jury: “Do you think if I allow you to
    continue to discuss the matter and for you to go over the
    instructions again with one another, that the possibility of
    making a decision is there?” The jurors agreed that they
    needed more time to deliberate. They then asked the follow-
    ing series of questions:
    JUROR HERN: The statement about the aggravation
    and mitigation of the circumstances, now, that was
    the listing?
    8336                    BELMONTES v. BROWN
    THE COURT: That was the listing, yes, ma’am.
    JUROR HERN: Of those certain factors we were to
    decide one or the other and then balance the sheet?
    THE COURT: That is right. It is a balancing pro-
    cess. Mr. Meyer?
    JUROR MEYER: A specific question, would this be
    an either/or situation, not a one, if you cannot the
    other [sic]?
    THE COURT: No. It is not that.
    JUROR MEYER: It is an either/or situation?
    THE COURT: Exactly. If you can make that either/
    or decision. If you cannot, I will discharge you.
    JUROR HAILSTONE: Could I ask a question? I
    don’t know if it is permissible. Is it possible that he
    could have psychiatric treatment during this time?
    THE COURT: That is something you cannot con-
    sider in making your decision.
    2.     Discussion
    The California death penalty statute has a unique mecha-
    nism for guiding the jury’s discretion. Instead of separate sets
    of aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the statute fea-
    tures an eleven-factor test which focuses the jury’s attention
    on the specifics of the crime and the background and charac-
    ter of the defendant. Tuilaepa v. California, 
    512 U.S. 967
    (1994); 
    Cal. Penal Code § 190.3
    . The first ten factors instruct
    the jury to evaluate various circumstances of the crime and
    the defendant’s age and prior convictions. See 
    Cal. Penal Code § 190.3
    . The jury itself decides whether these factors are
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8337
    aggravating or mitigating. People v. Benson, 
    52 Cal. 3d 754
    ,
    802 (1990). The eleventh factor — factor (k) — is intended
    to function as a catch-all that will enable the jury to consider
    any relevant mitigating circumstance that the defendant prof-
    fers as a basis for a sentence less than death. The jury is obli-
    gated to weigh and balance the aggravating and mitigating
    circumstances and must impose the death penalty if it deter-
    mines that the circumstances in aggravation outweigh those in
    mitigation. See 
    Cal. Penal Code § 190.3
    .
    [12] In this statutory scheme, the importance of factor (k)
    cannot be overstated. The Eighth Amendment requires that a
    capital jury consider all relevant mitigating evidence offered
    by the defendant and afford it such weight as it deems appro-
    priate. Penry v. Johnson, 
    532 U.S. 782
    , 797 (2001); see also
    Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 114-15 (1984) (“The
    sentencer . . . may determine the weight to be given relevant
    mitigating evidence. But [it] may not give it no weight by
    excluding such evidence from [its] consideration.”); Lockett v.
    Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
    , 604 (1978) (holding that the Eighth
    Amendment requires that the sentencer consider “as a miti-
    gating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or record
    and any of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant
    proffers as a basis for a sentence less than death”) (emphasis
    in original). This broad mandate includes the duty to consider
    mitigating evidence that relates to a defendant’s probable
    future behavior, especially the likelihood that he would not
    pose a future danger if spared but incarcerated. Skipper v.
    South Carolina, 
    476 U.S. 1
    , 4-5 (1986). Factor (k) provides
    the only mechanism for allowing the jury to consider a sub-
    stantial portion of many defendants’ mitigating evidence—
    indeed, all mitigating evidence that does not relate to the cir-
    cumstances of the crime or the defendant’s age and criminal
    record.
    [13] To pass constitutional muster, the trial judge’s instruc-
    tions must convey to the jury that factor (k) compels it to con-
    sider all relevant mitigating evidence proffered by the
    8338                    BELMONTES v. BROWN
    defendant as a basis for a sentence less than death. “[I]t is not
    enough simply to allow the defendant to present mitigating
    evidence to the sentencer.” Penry v. Lynaugh, 
    492 U.S. 302
    ,
    319 (1989). Rather, the trial judge’s instructions must convey
    “that the sentencer may not be precluded from considering,
    and may not refuse to consider, any constitutionally relevant
    mitigating evidence.” Buchanan v. Angelone, 
    522 U.S. 269
    ,
    276 (1998), citing Penry, 
    492 U.S. at 317-18
    ; Eddings, 455
    U.S. at 113-14; Lockett, 
    438 U.S. at 604
    .
    [14] At the time of Belmontes’ trial, factor (k) allowed the
    jury to consider “[a]ny other circumstance which extenuates
    the gravity of the crime even though it is not a legal excuse
    for the crime.” The Supreme Court had occasion to review
    this language in Boyde v. California, 
    494 U.S. 370
     (1990). In
    Boyde, the defendant had argued that the jury instruction was
    unconstitutional because there was a reasonable likelihood
    that the jury would construe the instruction as forbidding it
    from considering evidence unrelated to the crime—e.g., miti-
    gating evidence relating to the defendant’s background and
    character. However, the Supreme Court held that because of
    the view “long held by society” that a defendant with a disad-
    vantaged background or emotional or mental problems may
    be “less culpable than defendants who have no such excuse,”
    the jury was reasonably likely to have understood that the
    defendant’s evidence of “his impoverished and deprived
    childhood, his inadequacies as a school student, and his
    strength of character in the face of these obstacles” could have
    “extenuate[d] the gravity of the crime even though it [wa]s
    not a legal excuse for the crime.” 
    Id.
     at 381-82 & n.5. The
    Court held that, because the trial judge instructed the jury that
    it “shall consider all of the evidence which has been received
    during any part of the trial of this case,” there was no reason-
    able likelihood that the jury believed that factor (k) prevented
    it from considering the background and character evidence
    introduced by Boyde and its bearing on Boyde’s commission
    of the crime. 
    Id. at 383
     (emphasis in original).15 In other
    15
    The Court also defined “extenuates” to mean “lessens the seriousness
    of a crime as by giving an excuse.” 
    Id. at 381
    .
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                             8339
    words, the Supreme Court held that the unadorned factor (k),
    at least when accompanied by an appropriate clarifying
    instruction, was constitutional as applied to mitigating evi-
    dence relating to the defendant’s psychological make-up and
    history, which practically, if not legally, bore upon his com-
    mission of the crime and was offered for the purpose of
    reducing his culpability for the offense.
    The same type of evidence, however, can serve an alterna-
    tive forward-looking purpose, mitigating in a manner wholly
    unrelated to a petitioner’s culpability for the crime he com-
    mitted. This alternative purpose has nothing to do with per-
    suading the jury that the defendant is less culpable with
    respect to the crime because of some aspect of his family
    background, personal history, character, or mental capacity.
    Rather, as defined by the Supreme Court in Skipper v. South
    Carolina, the jury must “consider[ ] a defendant’s past con-
    duct as indicative of his probable future behavior” and
    “draw[ ] favorable inferences” about a defendant’s “probable
    future conduct if sentenced to life in prison.” 476 U.S. at 4-
    5(emphasis added).16 The Court characterized this kind of mit-
    igation as “an inevitable and not undesirable element of crimi-
    16
    In attempting to extend Boyde to issues of future conduct, the dissent
    errs by focusing on the temporal nature of the evidence rather than the
    purpose for which it is introduced. In the instant case, the operative dis-
    tinction is not between categories of “pre-crime” and “post-crime” evi-
    dence in the sense of when the acts that constitute the evidence occurred,
    but rather between a jury’s use of background and character evidence to
    mitigate culpability for the crime, as opposed to the use of the same type
    of evidence to draw favorable inferences about petitioner’s probable future
    conduct. This latter use of the evidence can, as Skipper holds, serve as a
    wholly separate and independent basis for a sentence less than death.
    Thus, the central question is not whether the jury “was able to consider
    and give effect to all of Belmontes’ mitigating evidence,” post at 8355
    (emphasis added), but rather what mitigating effect the jury understood to
    be permissible under the instruction as stated. Skipper requires that the
    jury understand that evidence must be given mitigating effect whether it
    bears on petitioner’s culpability for the crime or instead relates to petition-
    er’s future potential for constructive conduct.
    8340                     BELMONTES v. BROWN
    nal sentencing” and stated that, even though these kinds of
    inferences “would not relate specifically to petitioner’s culpa-
    bility for the crime he committed, there is no question but that
    such inferences would be mitigating in the sense that they
    might serve as a basis for a sentence less than death.” Id. at
    4-5 (emphasis added) (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted). Accordingly, the Court held that “[u]nder Eddings,
    such evidence may not be excluded from the sentencer’s con-
    sideration.” Id. at 5. The Court’s opinion in Boyde did not
    address whether a reasonable jury would have interpreted the
    unadorned factor (k) instruction to include the use of this
    same type of evidence for a forward-looking purpose which
    serves to mitigate without ameliorating the crime. Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at
    382 n.5 (distinguishing Boyde from Skipper on the
    ground that Boyde’s mitigation evidence “was introduced not
    to demonstrate that he was a ‘model prisoner’ like Skipper
    and therefore unlikely to present a risk of future dangerous-
    ness but . . . as part of petitioner’s overall strategy to portray
    himself as less culpable than other defendants due to his dis-
    advantaged background and his character strengths in the face
    of those difficulties.”).
    Belmontes contends that his Eighth and Fourteenth Amend-
    ment rights were violated because the trial judge’s instruc-
    tions failed to advise the jury to consider the portion of his
    mitigating evidence that tended to show that he would adapt
    well to prison and would become a constructive member of
    society if granted a life sentence. We review this claim of
    instructional error under the approach set forth by the
    Supreme Court in Boyde, which directs us to determine
    whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury under-
    stood the instruction in a manner that resulted in its failure to
    consider constitutionally relevant evidence. 
    494 U.S. at 380
    .
    Although Belmontes’ briefs emphasize the trial judge’s mid-
    deliberation colloquy with Juror Hern,17 the Court has held
    17
    We reject the government’s argument that the mid-deliberation
    exchange does not count as a jury instruction because it was “rather infor-
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                           8341
    that we must examine claims of instructional error in light of
    the record as a whole. 
    Id. at 377
    . Accordingly, in assessing
    Belmontes’ claim of instructional error, we consider the entire
    mid-deliberation colloquy as well as the original jury instruc-
    tions.
    [15] We begin with the original instructions. As stated
    above, Belmontes’ jury was instructed to consider and take
    into account “[a]ny other circumstance which extenuates the
    gravity of the crime even though it is not a legal excuse for
    the crime.” 
    Cal. Penal Code § 190.3.18
     Most naturally read,
    this instruction allows the jury to consider evidence that bears
    upon the commission of the crime by the defendant and
    excuses or mitigates his culpability for the offense. We now
    know that such evidence includes background and character,
    both of which tend to explain why the defendant committed
    the crime. By its plain language, however, the instruction does
    not encompass events or considerations that are unrelated to
    the defendant’s culpability. In particular, the instruction does
    not apply to those forward-looking considerations encom-
    mal” and occurred after the formal charge. See Shafer v. South Carolina,
    
    121 S. Ct. 1263
    , 1274 (2001) (labeling the trial judge’s answer to the
    jury’s mid-deliberation question an “instruction” and criticizing it because
    it “did nothing to ensure that the jury was not misled”); Bollenbach v.
    United States, 
    326 U.S. 607
     (1946) (reversing and remanding because a
    “supplemental instruction” from the trial court following a question by the
    jury was “simply wrong”); McDowell v. Calderon, 
    130 F.3d 833
    , 836 (9th
    Cir. 1997) (en banc), overruled in part on other grounds, Weeks v. Ange-
    lone, 
    528 U.S. 225
     (2000) (explaining that the trial judge’s duty to instruct
    the jury adequately “continues until a verdict is reached and returned. As
    they work towards a verdict, the jurors must stay in the channel charted
    for them by state law. To this end, they may need ongoing guidance.”).
    18
    The California legislature has since reformulated the instruction to
    direct the jury to consider “any sympathetic or other aspect of the defen-
    dant’s character or record [that the defendant offers] as a basis for a sen-
    tence less than death, whether or not related to the offense for which he
    is on trial.” CALJIC 8.85(k) (6th ed. 1996). See also People v. Easley, 
    34 Cal. 3d 858
     (1983) (recognizing that unadorned factor (k) had significant
    potential for jury confusion.).
    8342                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    passed by the Supreme Court’s decision in Skipper: evidence
    that allows the jury to evaluate the defendant’s probable
    future conduct if incarcerated for life without the possibility
    of parole—specifically, evidence that would tend to prove
    that Belmontes would likely live a constructive life if perma-
    nently confined within a structured prison environment. These
    important sentencing considerations are simply not in any
    respect “circumstance[s] that extenuate[ ] the gravity of the
    crime.” See Skipper, 
    476 U.S. at 4
     (stating that lack of future
    dangerousness does “not relate specifically to petitioner’s cul-
    pability for the crime he committed”); see also Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at
    382 n.5. Moreover, unlike in Boyde, “society” has not
    had a “long held view” that a defendant’s likely future con-
    duct can serve to mitigate or excuse his commission of a seri-
    ous crime. Rather, the doctrine is a legal concept peculiar to
    capital punishment cases. Thus, in the absence of a clear
    instruction on point, jurors are not likely to be aware in deter-
    mining the appropriate punishment in such cases that the
    defendant’s potential for a positive adjustment to life in prison
    constitutes a proper mitigating factor.
    [16] In the current case, the most important part of Bel-
    montes’ mitigation presentation was that the jury should spare
    his life because he had the potential, if confined within a
    prison setting, to contribute positively to prison life. Although
    the record made before the jury included a substantial amount
    of evidence about his difficult childhood, in his own testi-
    mony he repeatedly stated that he did not want to use his
    rough childhood “as a crutch” or an excuse. Thus, ultimately
    the more significant evidence related to his conduct during the
    period of his prior CYA incarceration and to his ability to
    conform his behavior to societal norms should he be confined
    within a structured prison environment. Belmontes’ counsel
    argued to the jury that the evidence demonstrated that if
    granted life without parole, he would adapt well to prison life,
    would make a positive contribution to the welfare of others,
    and would not pose a future danger to the guards or the other
    inmates.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                      8343
    [17] Unlike the background and character evidence in
    Boyde that tended to mitigate the offense, Belmontes’ mitiga-
    tion evidence was simply not covered by any natural reading
    of the words of the unadorned factor (k) instruction. To the
    contrary, that instruction, read most naturally, suggested to
    the reasonable juror that Belmontes’ evidence tending to show
    his probable future good conduct should be excluded from
    consideration, and thus that such evidence was governed by
    the earlier instruction that the jury “consider all of the evi-
    dence . . . except as you may be hereafter instructed.” At the
    least, the unadorned factor (k) instruction is ambiguous with
    respect to Skipper’s requirement that the jury be permitted to
    consider and give effect to evidence bearing on a defendant’s
    probable future good conduct when it decides whether to
    impose the death penalty, see 476 U.S. at 5, and thus with
    respect to the jury’s right to consider Belmontes’ most impor-
    tant mitigating evidence.
    [18] The court’s supplemental instructions only exacer-
    bated this problem. Belmontes’ counsel had requested instruc-
    tions that would have expressly instructed the jury that it
    “should not limit [its] consideration of mitigating circum-
    stances to these specific factors,” i.e., the factors listed in the
    original instruction. However, although the trial judge gave
    part of the instruction requested by defense counsel, he
    refused to give the most critical portion. Instead, the trial
    judge gave a set of contradictory instructions that failed to
    inform the jury that it could consider the portion of Bel-
    montes’ mitigating evidence bearing on his probable future
    conduct. The trial judge started out on the right track by
    instructing the jury that it should view the statutory factors
    “merely as examples of some of the factors” that it could con-
    sider. However, any clarity gained at the outset of the instruc-
    tion was immediately undone by a superceding qualifying
    directive. The judge added, “You should pay careful attention
    to each of these factors,” an instruction that a reasonable juror
    would almost certainly have understood to refer to the statu-
    tory factors, and particularly to the unconstitutionally limiting
    8344                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    unadorned factor (k). The trial judge then continued, “Any
    one of them [i.e., the factors] standing alone may support a
    decision that death is not the appropriate punishment in this
    case,” implying that only a statutory factor can support a sen-
    tence less than death. A juror who followed these instructions
    would likely think that he could not consider nonstatutory
    mitigating evidence—evidence not going to culpability—such
    as testimony tending to show that Belmontes would lead a
    constructive life if confined permanently within a structured
    environment. Still, the supplementary instructions did not end
    the matter.
    [19] Compounding the problems with the original and sup-
    plemental instructions were the trial judge’s responses to the
    jurors’ questions during the mid-deliberation colloquy. In that
    colloquy, the trial judge again directed the jury’s attention to
    the literal text of the original unadorned factor (k) instruction,
    which strongly implied that the jury could not consider evi-
    dence regarding the defendant’s probable future conduct. The
    jury had deliberated for several hours before it sent the judge
    a note indicating that it was deadlocked. The note read, “What
    happens if we cannot reach a verdict?” and “Can the majority
    rule on life imprisonment?” In the discussion that followed,
    the judge properly ascertained that further deliberations would
    probably be fruitful. He then suggested to the jury that it
    might be helpful to “go over the instructions again with one
    another” as they continued to deliberate. It was at this point
    that the jurors began to question the judge with respect to the
    aggravating and mitigating factors. Juror Hern asked, “The
    statement about the aggravation and mitigation of the circum-
    stances, now, that was the listing?” When the court responded
    affirmatively, she asked, “Of those certain factors we were to
    decide one or the other and then balance the sheet?”
    Juror Hern’s questions reveal that she did not understand
    that her duty as a juror was to consider all of Belmontes’ miti-
    gating evidence. The most reasonable way to interpret her
    first question is as an effort to clarify that the jury should look
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                             8345
    to the statutory factors (a) through (g) [or unadorned (k)], as
    read to the jury by the trial judge, to determine what counted
    as aggravating and mitigating circumstances. It appears that
    by asking, “that was the listing?,” Juror Hern wanted confir-
    mation that there was a finite list of factors for the jury to con-
    sider and that the list consisted of the statutory factors read to
    the jury by the judge. This interpretation is reinforced by
    Juror Hern’s next question: “Of those certain factors, we were
    to decide one or the other [e.g., whether the evidence is aggra-
    vating or mitigating] and then balance the sheet?” The struc-
    ture of this question separates the “certain factors” that appear
    in “the listing” from other factors that may not be reflected
    there. It makes it clear that at least one juror believed that the
    jury should consider, weigh, and balance only “those certain
    factors” that appeared in “the listing.” Of course, such a belief
    would have been incorrect; the jury was required to consider
    and evaluate Belmontes’ mitigating evidence relating to his
    potential adjustment to life in prison regardless of the fact that
    it was not listed in the statute.
    In any event, Juror Hern’s questions signified that she was
    not sure how to follow the judge’s instructions.19 “When a
    19
    The Supreme Court has frequently accepted jury questions as evi-
    dence that the trial judge’s original instructions were not sufficiently clear.
    See, e.g., Shafer, 
    121 S. Ct. at 1273
     (“Shafer’s jury left no doubt about its
    failure to gain from defense counsel’s closing argument or the judge’s
    instructions any clear understanding of what a life sentence means.”); Sim-
    mons v. South Carolina, 
    512 U.S. 154
    , 178 (1994) (“[T]hat the jury in this
    case felt compelled to ask whether parole was available shows that the
    jurors did not know whether or not a life-sentenced defendant will be
    released from prison.”); Bollenbach, 
    326 U.S. at 612
     (“The jury’s ques-
    tions . . . clearly indicated that the jurors were confused.”). We have done
    so as well. E.g., Morris v. Woodford, 
    273 F.3d 826
    , 840 (9th Cir. 2001)
    (citing fact that jury asked mid-deliberation question as evidence that it
    was confused by the original instruction); United States v. Frega, 
    179 F.3d 793
     (9th Cir. 1999) (stating that a reviewing court may infer from the
    jury’s questions that it was confused about a controlling legal principle).
    Here, as in those cases, Juror Hern’s questions strengthen our conviction
    that the original and supplemental instructions did not convey to the jury
    8346                      BELMONTES v. BROWN
    jury makes explicit its difficulties a trial judge should clear
    them away with concrete accuracy.” Bollenbach v. United
    States, 
    326 U.S. 607
    , 612-13, (1946). In this case, the trial
    judge had a duty to cure any ambiguity in his instructions by
    providing a clear description of the jury’s obligations. The
    judge should have answered Juror Hern’s questions by
    instructing the jury that “the listing” of mitigating factors was
    not exhaustive and that the jury’s duty was to consider and
    weigh all of the mitigating evidence presented by Belmontes
    during the sentencing phase. Cf. Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 383
    .
    Instead, however, the judge simply affirmed Juror Hern’s
    incorrect assumptions with a terse, “That is right.” In so
    doing, he not only failed to correct Juror Hern’s erroneous
    view, but he likely left all the jurors with the impression that
    they could consider mitigation evidence only if it appeared as
    one of the “certain factors” in “the listing.” As we have dis-
    cussed, Belmontes’ principal mitigating evidence does not fall
    in this category.
    The trial judge also instructed the jury that it could not con-
    sider a specific subject relating to Belmontes’ ability to adjust
    to prison life. Less than thirty seconds after Juror Hern’s
    inquiry, Juror Hailstone said: “Could I ask a question? I don’t
    know if it is permissible. Is it possible that he could have psy-
    that it could consider Belmontes’ nonstatutory mitigating evidence per-
    taining to his probable future behavior in prison if incarcerated for life.
    We need not rely on affirmative evidence of jury confusion in order to
    reach this conclusion, however. See Kelly v. South Carolina, 
    122 S. Ct. 726
    , 733 (2002) (“Time after time appellate courts have found jury
    instructions to be insufficiently clear without any record that the jury man-
    ifested its confusion.”). “A trial judge’s duty is to give instructions suffi-
    cient to explain the law, an obligation that exists independently of any
    question from the jurors or any indication of perplexity on their part.” 
    Id.
    To hold otherwise would condition our ability to redress serious constitu-
    tional violations on such subjective vagaries of fate as whether the jurors
    happened to ask a question instead of embarking boldly down the wrong
    path.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                           8347
    chiatric treatment during this time?” The trial judge
    responded: “That is something you cannot consider in making
    your decision.” He did not explain why the jury could not
    consider this issue, and immediately after issuing this
    response, he sent the jury off to resume its deliberations. The
    instruction not to consider possible future psychiatric treat-
    ment was misleading because of the judge’s failure to explain
    to the jury why it could not consider the prohibited subject;
    to the extent that the jury believed that it could not consider
    mitigating evidence relating to how Belmontes might behave
    in a controlled prison environment, the instruction as given
    would likely have confirmed its misconception.
    [20] Juror Hailstone’s question and the trial judge’s
    response are troubling because of the likelihood that the jury
    understood them in the context of the larger discussion about
    how to consider, weigh, and balance aggravating and mitigat-
    ing circumstances.20 In such case, the jury would have
    inferred from the trial judge’s response that it could not con-
    sider Juror Hailstone’s question, not because there had been
    no evidence presented on the subject at trial, but because it
    raised a consideration that did not relate to one of the “certain
    factors” set forth in “the listing,” or, to put it differently, to
    one of the factors bearing on the defendant’s culpability for
    the crime. The trial judge’s response thus likely reinforced the
    jury’s mistaken notion that Belmontes’ mitigation evidence
    20
    The government insists that the reason for his answer was obvious:
    There was no evidence presented on the topic of possible psychiatric treat-
    ment at Belmontes’ trial; therefore, the jury could not consider it. The gov-
    ernment argues that the jurors would have realized that this was why they
    could not consider Juror Hailstone’s question, and so the trial judge’s
    response could have had no effect on their deliberations. We reject this
    contention. The jurors at Belmontes’ trial were not lawyers; they were not
    schooled in the rules of evidence, and they had no reason to know that the
    trial judge’s response was based on an evidentiary concern (if, in fact, it
    was based on an evidentiary concern rather than on the trial judge’s mis-
    understanding of the law). It is far more likely that the jury would have
    viewed this question and its answer in the manner that we have described.
    8348                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    relating to his probable future good conduct if confined in a
    structured prison environment was irrelevant to the sentencing
    decision.
    The next question is whether the trial judge’s various
    instructions relating to limitations on the evidence that could
    be considered had an effect on the jury’s deliberations. We
    may not reverse the jury’s penalty determination unless the
    instructions actually created “a reasonable probability that the
    jury has applied the challenged instruction in a way that pre-
    vents the consideration of constitutionally relevant evidence.”
    Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 380
     (emphasis added). The jury’s decision
    must stand “if there is only a possibility of such an inhibi-
    tion.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    [21] We hold that there is a reasonable probability that, as
    a result of the court’s instructions, the jury in Belmontes’ case
    did not consider his principal mitigating evidence. The trial
    judge began by giving a faulty instruction, one that on its face
    arguably does not allow consideration of mitigating evidence
    pertaining to the defendant’s probable future good behavior in
    prison, as opposed to his culpability for the crime. He then
    rejected a significant part of the supplemental instruction that
    Belmontes proposed in an effort to solve the problem. The
    jurors were understandably confused, and they asked ques-
    tions of the court in an effort to clarify the scope of their duty.
    In the course of that dialogue, the trial judge endorsed Juror
    Hern’s view of the instructions, a view that strongly suggested
    that the jury could consider, weigh, and balance only “those
    certain factors” that appeared in “the listing.” Following that
    endorsement, the trial judge advised the jury without further
    explanation that, in making its decision, it could not consider
    the possibility that Belmontes could receive psychiatric treat-
    ment in prison. In sum, every instruction that the jury received
    tended to convey the message that the jury could not consider
    Belmontes’ mitigating evidence unless it related to his culpa-
    bility for the crime. Under these circumstances, there is, at the
    least, a reasonable probability that the jury did not consider
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8349
    Belmontes’ principal mitigation evidence—the evidence that
    provided the factual support for his argument in mitigation:
    that he would live a productive life if permanently incarcer-
    ated in a structured environment. Because “[t]he Eighth
    Amendment requires that the jury be able to consider and give
    effect to all relevant mitigating evidence offered by petition-
    er,” Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 377-78
    , the unadorned factor (k)
    instruction, as applied in Belmontes’ case, was unconstitu-
    tional.
    Having concluded that an error of constitutional magnitude
    infected the penalty phase of Belmontes’ trial, we turn finally
    to the question whether that error was nonetheless harmless.
    See Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 380
     (applying Brecht harmless error
    standard). Belmontes cannot obtain a new trial unless the
    instructional error had “a substantial and injurious effect” on
    the jury’s verdict. Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. at 637
    . We
    hold that it did.
    Our cases appear to be divided as to whether the petitioner,
    the state, or neither bears the responsibility for showing harm-
    less error under the Brecht harmless error standard. Compare
    Rodriguez v. Marshall, 
    125 F.3d 739
    , 744 (9th Cir. 1997)
    (placing burden on petitioner), with Keating v. Hood, 
    191 F.3d 1053
    , 1062 (9th Cir. 1999) (as amended) (placing burden
    on state), and Thompson v. Borg, 
    74 F.3d 1571
    , 1575 (9th Cir.
    1996) (rejecting burdens of proof in favor of an independent
    determination of whether a trial error had a substantial and
    injurious effect). In a recent case, we stated that “[t]he
    Supreme Court has made clear that whether a trial error had
    a substantial and injurious effect is not to be analyzed in terms
    of burdens of proof.” Mancuso v. Olivarez, 
    282 F.3d 728
    , 737
    n.4 (9th Cir.), as amended, 
    292 F.3d 939
     (2002), citing
    O’Neal v. McAninch, 
    513 U.S. 432
    , 436 (1995). In that case,
    we further stated that the reviewing court has “the responsibil-
    ity to determine this legal question ‘without benefit of such
    aids as presumptions or allocated burdens of proof that expe-
    dite factfinding at the trial.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting O’Neal, 
    513 U.S. 8350
                      BELMONTES v. BROWN
    at 437). However, O’Neal also stated that “it is the State that
    bears the “risk of doubt.” O’Neal, 513 at 438; Valerio v.
    Crawford, 
    306 F.3d 742
    , 746 (9th Cir. 2002)(en banc), cert.
    denied, 
    123 S. Ct. 1788
     (2003). Also, as we said only
    recently, we look to the State to instill in us a “fair assurance”
    that there was no effect on the verdict. See Morales v. Wood-
    ford, 
    336 F.3d 1136
    , 1148 (9th Cir. 2003) (“[T]he state must
    provide us with a ‘fair assurance’ that the error was harmless
    under Brecht.”); Valerio, 
    306 F.3d at 762
    ; see also O’Neal,
    
    513 U.S. at 443
     (“[T]he State normally bears responsibility
    for the error that infected the initial trial.”). Valerio and Mora-
    les stand for the proposition that only if the State has per-
    suaded us that there was no substantial or injurious effect on
    the verdict do we find the error harmless. Certainly, “if one
    is left in grave doubt [about the harmfulness of the error], the
    conviction cannot stand.” Mancuso, 
    282 F.3d at
    737 n.4
    (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 765
    (1946).
    [22] Here we need not consider the issue of burdens of
    proof any further. Regardless of the applicable rule, we are
    convinced that the instructional error in this case, which pre-
    vented the jury from considering and giving effect to Bel-
    montes’ most important mitigation evidence, had a substantial
    and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict. At the penalty phase
    of this trial the aggravating evidence was not strong. It basi-
    cally consisted of the fact that Belmontes was previously
    incarcerated in the youth facility for being an accessory after
    the fact to voluntary manslaughter, one domestic violence
    incident, and two occurrences relating to possession, or possi-
    ble possession, of a gun. The prosecutor candidly told the jury
    that there was not a lot in the way of aggravating evidence.
    He asked the jury to return a death sentence because of the
    circumstances of the crime itself. Yet the crime, though
    shocking and deplorable, was in essence a robbery gone
    wrong. The murder was not pre-planned, nor did it involve
    kidnapping, rape, torture, multiple victims, or any of the other
    especially heinous elements that usually are present when a
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                          8351
    jury votes for the ultimate penalty. In short, the McConnell
    murder was of the kind that generally does not result in a
    death penalty.21
    Under these circumstances, there is a reasonable probability
    that a properly instructed jury would have spared Belmontes’
    life had it believed that he would not pose a future danger if
    sentenced to life without parole, and that instead he would
    become a model prisoner who could contribute something of
    value to society. The state concedes that Belmontes presented
    “substantial” evidence in support of this mitigation theme.
    Several witnesses, including Belmontes himself, testified that
    although he had difficult in acting appropriately in the outside
    world, he thrived in the structured, institutional environment
    of prison. Belmontes described his experience on the CYA’s
    fire crew, during which he rose from last man to number two,
    a position of leadership and responsibility, and about his grad-
    ually increasing involvement in Christianity during his prior
    incarceration. Reverend Barrett spoke about Belmontes’ par-
    ticipation in the M-2 Christian sponsorship program, which he
    felt was genuine, and testified that in his opinion if granted a
    life sentence Belmontes would make positive contributions to
    prison life through his involvement with the prison ministries.
    One of Belmontes’ most important witnesses was Reverend
    Miller, who testified that Belmontes had been good at coun-
    seling young inmates not to repeat the mistakes that he had
    made and that he “definitely would be used in the prison sys-
    tem for this kind of activity” if granted life without parole.
    [23] The importance of this mitigation theme was stressed
    during closing arguments. In his allocution, Belmontes took
    responsibility for his actions and stated that he did not want
    21
    On this point, Belmontes submitted evidence that, of the thirty defen-
    dants who were tried for felony-murder in San Joaquin County between
    1977 and 1986, only two, including Belmontes himself, received a death
    sentence. Many defendants whose crimes by any measure were substan-
    tially more aggravated than Belmontes’ did not receive a death penalty.
    8352                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    to use his difficult childhood as an excuse. He asked the jury
    to give him the opportunity to rehabilitate himself, set goals,
    and make a positive contribution to the welfare of others
    while in prison. His counsel repeated this theme in his emo-
    tional closing argument, in which he asked the jury to spare
    Belmontes’ life on the ground that he would make positive
    contributions if allowed to live out his natural life in prison.
    Given the weakness of the aggravating evidence and the
    substantial nature of the mitigating evidence, we conclude
    that had the jury been properly instructed, and had it under-
    stood that it could consider and give effect to the evidence
    regarding Belmontes’ ability to function effectively in a
    prison setting, there is a reasonable probability that it would
    have returned a different verdict. Accordingly, Belmontes is
    entitled to relief on the sentencing phase.
    CONCLUSION
    Although we are disturbed by the prosecution’s failure to
    disclose impeaching evidence and to correct false testimony
    on the part of its principal witness, as well as by defense
    counsel’s failure to disclose the extent of his prior representa-
    tion of Vasquez and to pursue a full investigation of
    Vasquez’s background, and although we are at least as dis-
    turbed by the results of the study that showed the discrimina-
    tory racial effect of the County’s capital charging policies, we
    cannot conclude, for the reasons we have explained, that any
    of these occurrences served to violate Belmontes’ constitu-
    tional rights. Thus, we are compelled to deny relief with
    respect to the guilt phase, including the special circumstances
    finding. However, because the trial judge failed to instruct the
    jury that it was required to consider Belmontes’ principal mit-
    igation evidence, and because we conclude that this failure
    had a substantial and injurious effect upon the verdict, we
    reverse with respect to the sentencing phase. We remand to
    the district court with instructions to issue an appropriate writ
    vacating Belmontes’ death sentence.
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8353
    AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and
    REMANDED for issuance of the writ in accordance with this
    opinion.
    O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dis-
    senting in part:
    The court properly affirms Judge Levi’s determination that
    there was no constitutional error in Belmontes’s conviction
    for first-degree murder with special circumstances in state
    court. I am pleased to concur in its conclusions as to the guilt
    phase. Regrettably, as to the penalty phase, the majority
    strains mightily—and unpersuasively—to perceive constitu-
    tional error in the comprehensive and perfectly proper jury
    instructions given by the state trial judge. Because there sim-
    ply is no such error, and the Supreme Court has expressly told
    us so on two separate occasions, I must respectfully dissent
    from the court’s reversal of the district court’s denial of the
    petition for the writ with respect to the penalty phase.
    Over a decade ago, the Supreme Court in Boyde v. Califor-
    nia, 
    494 U.S. 370
     (1990), interpreted the same jury instruction
    at issue today, “factor (k),” and concluded that it was constitu-
    tionally sound. The Court held that there was no “reasonable
    likelihood that the jury . . . applied [factor (k)] in a way that
    prevent[ed] the consideration of constitutionally relevant evi-
    dence.” 
    Id. at 380
    . Factor (k)’s constitutionality was recently
    reaffirmed in Brown v. Payton, 544 U.S. ___, 
    125 S. Ct. 1432
    ,
    1442 (2005), where the Court again refused to invalidate a
    death sentence imposed pursuant to instructions that included
    factor (k). The Court reached that result even though the pros-
    ecutor had explicitly argued to the sentencing jury that factor
    (k) prohibited them from considering the defendant’s mitigat-
    ing evidence. 
    Id. at 1440
    .
    The majority nonetheless manages to distinguish Boyde and
    Payton, and reaches the extraordinary conclusion that there
    8354                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    was a reasonable likelihood that the jury refused to consider
    mitigating evidence that both the prosecution and the defense
    acknowledged was properly before it. Because the jurors were
    not constitutionally barred from making a death penalty deter-
    mination in this case, I would affirm.
    I
    At the close of the penalty phase, the state trial court judge
    began instructing the jury on aggravating and mitigating cir-
    cumstances as follows: “In determining which penalty is to be
    imposed on the defendant you shall consider all of the evi-
    dence which has been received during any part of the trial of
    this case, except as you may be hereafter instructed.” The
    court then read an enumerated list of seven factors, exhaustive
    with respect to aggravating circumstances, but only examples
    with respect to mitigating circumstances. The last of these
    factors, factor (k), instructs the jury to consider, “[a]ny other
    circumstance which extenuates the gravity of the crime even
    though it is not a legal excuse for the crime.” The majority,
    by misconstruing both Supreme Court precedent and the evi-
    dence in this case, concludes that the factor (k) instruction
    failed to provide an outlet for the jury to consider some of
    Belmontes’s penalty phase evidence.
    A
    The majority’s holding is based on the false premise that
    factor (k) limits the jury’s consideration only to circumstances
    that might excuse the crime. See supra, at 8341-42. But the
    Supreme Court has already explicitly rejected this proposi-
    tion. In Boyde, the Court held that factor (k) did not “limit the
    jury’s consideration to ‘any other circumstances of the crime
    which extenuates the gravity of the crime.’ [It directed the
    jury] to consider any other circumstance that might excuse
    the crime, which certainly includes a defendant’s background
    and character.” 
    494 U.S. at 382
     (emphases in original); see
    also 
    id. at 381
     (holding that there was “no[ ] . . . reasonable
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8355
    likelihood that Boyde’s jurors interpreted the trial court’s
    instructions to prevent consideration of mitigating evidence of
    background and character”). Boyde makes it perfectly clear
    that testimony relating to a defendant’s pre-crime background
    and character is within the jury’s purview under factor (k).
    Belmontes’s penalty phase presentation was entirely com-
    posed of such evidence. The witnesses who testified on his
    behalf spoke to his religious convictions and his behavior
    while a ward of the California Youth Authority (“CYA”)—all
    of which goes to his background and character before he mur-
    dered Steacy. While the majority attempts to paint such evi-
    dence as showing that he would be a model inmate if
    sentenced to life in prison, the testimony as actually presented
    deals exclusively with his character prior to the crime. In fact,
    not one witness who testified during the penalty phase testi-
    fied to Belmontes’s behavior after the murder.
    Belmontes’s religious conversion and ability to conform to
    prison are exactly the types of evidence that the Supreme
    Court held fit within the plain language of factor (k). See
    Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 382
     (holding that Boyde’s strength of
    character in the face of adversity was considered evidence
    that “excused” the gravity of the crime under factor (k)).
    Accordingly, under Boyde, the jury was able to consider and
    to give effect to all of Belmontes’s mitigating evidence. Noth-
    ing more was constitutionally required. Johnson v. Texas, 
    509 U.S. 350
    , 372 (1993) (holding that “a jury [need not] be able
    to give effect to mitigating evidence in every conceivable
    manner in which the evidence might be relevant”).
    Even so, the Supreme Court has held that inquiry into
    future dangerousness of a defendant “is not independent of an
    assessment of personal culpability.” 
    Id. at 369
    . In Johnson,
    the Court held that an instruction that asked jurors to consider
    the future dangerousness of a defendant provided ample
    opportunity for the jury to consider the defendant’s youth as
    mitigating evidence. 
    Id. at 369-70
    . Even though the statutory
    8356                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    factor did not explicitly provide that the jury could consider
    the defendant’s youth as a mitigating factor for culpability of
    the crime, the Court concluded that there was no reasonable
    likelihood that the jury would have thought it was foreclosed
    from considering it. 
    Id. at 370
    .
    Likewise, because factor (k) allows the jury to consider
    Belmontes’s character and background, there is no reason to
    think that the jury would have thought it was foreclosed from
    using such information to consider his future potential if sen-
    tenced to life in prison. As the Supreme Court has noted,
    “Consideration of a defendant’s past conduct as indicative of
    his probable future behavior is an inevitable and not undesir-
    able element of criminal sentencing.” Skipper v. South Caro-
    lina, 
    476 U.S. 1
    , 5 (1986) (emphasis added); see also Boyde,
    
    494 U.S. at 382
     (“Petitioner had an opportunity through factor
    (k) to argue that his background and character ‘extenuated’ or
    ‘excused’ the seriousness of the crime, and we see no reason
    to believe that reasonable jurors would resist the view, ‘long
    held by society,’ that in an appropriate case such evidence
    would counsel imposition of a sentence less than death.”); cf.
    Johnson, 
    509 U.S. at 370
    .
    Thus, while the majority scours the cold record decades
    after the trial to find an ambiguity in the sentencing instruc-
    tion, it is highly doubtful that the jury itself would have so
    found. “Jurors do not sit in solitary isolation booths parsing
    instructions for subtle shades of meaning in the same way that
    lawyers might.” Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 380-81
    . I see no reason
    why the jury would have resisted the inevitable consideration
    of Belmontes’s future potential in light of the character evi-
    dence presented.
    B
    The majority also ignores the Supreme Court’s advice that
    “[d]ifferences . . . in interpretation of instructions may be
    thrashed out in the deliberative process, with commonsense
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                      8357
    understanding of the instructions in light of all that has taken
    place at the trial likely to prevail over technical hairsplitting.”
    Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 381
    . That factor (k) permits the consider-
    ation of Belmontes’s character evidence is amplified when the
    penalty phase is viewed as a whole, particularly in light of the
    arguments made by counsel. See Payton, 
    125 S. Ct. at 1440
    (“Boyde . . . mandates that the whole context of the trial be
    considered.”).
    In Payton, the prosecutor explicitly argued during the pen-
    alty phase that factor (k) did not permit the jury to consider
    evidence of the defendant’s post-crime religious conversion.
    
    Id.
     Notwithstanding the trial judge’s failure to correct this
    misstatement of law, the Supreme Court concluded that
    habeas relief was not warranted because it was improbable
    that the sentencing jury would have disregarded the two days
    of mitigating evidence presented by the defense. 
    Id.
     In con-
    trast, during the penalty phase of Belmontes’s trial, both the
    prosecutor and the defense attorney urged the jury to consider
    the mitigating evidence, and the trial court likewise instructed
    the jury to consider all the evidence unless directed otherwise.
    See Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 383
     (relying in part on the fact that
    Boyde’s jury was instructed that it “shall consider all of the
    evidence which has been received during any part of the case”
    (emphasis in original)). The majority nevertheless concludes
    that the jury likely misunderstood its sentencing task after
    repeatedly receiving the same unambiguous directions from
    the prosecutor, the defense attorney, and the court.
    The jury heard, without objection, evidence regarding Bel-
    montes’s behavior in prison before the murder: how he had
    found God and how he could serve as an example to other
    inmates. In its closing argument, the prosecution stated, “I
    suspect you will be told . . . that the defendant’s religious
    experience is within that catchall [factor (k)] that relates to the
    defendant at the time he committed the crime, extenuates the
    gravity of the crime. I’m not really sure it fits in there. I’m not
    sure it really fits in any of them.” Even so, the prosecutor
    8358                       BELMONTES v. BROWN
    noted, “But I think it [Belmontes’s religious experience]
    appears to be a proper subject of consideration.”
    Later the prosecutor expounded on why the jury should
    consider Belmontes’s evidence:
    I suppose you can say it would be appropriate [to
    consider such evidence] because—in this fashion:
    The defendant may be of value to the community
    later. You recall the people talking about how he
    would have the opportunity to work with other pris-
    oners in prison. And I think that value to the commu-
    nity is something that you have to weigh in. There’s
    something to that.1
    Belmontes’s pleas were similar. Belmontes asked for life in
    prison because in prison “there is an opportunity to achieve
    goals and try to better yourself.” His counsel continued the
    argument, asking the jury to spare Belmontes’s life because
    he would make a positive contribution if his life were spared:
    “[W]hat I am suggesting to you and what I hope the evidence
    1
    The prosecutor’s admonition to the jury that it must consider Bel-
    montes’s mitigating evidence contrasts sharply with the statements of the
    Payton prosecutor, who forcefully argued that factor (k) required the jury
    to disregard all of the defendant’s mitigating evidence:
    “[Factor] K” says any other circumstance which extenuates or
    lessens the gravity of the crime. What does that mean? That to
    me means some fact— okay?—some factors at the time of the
    offense that somehow operates to reduce the gravity for what the
    defendant did. It doesn’t refer to anything after the fact or later.
    That’s particularly important here because the only defense evi-
    dence you have heard has been about this new born Christianity.
    ....
    What I am getting at, you have not heard during the past few
    days any legal evidence mitigation. What you’ve heard is just
    some jailhouse evidence to win your sympathy, and that’s all.
    You have not heard any evidence of mitigation in this trial.
    Payton, 
    125 S. Ct. at 1446
     (Souter, J., dissenting).
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                      8359
    suggests to you is Fernando Belmontes cannot make it on the
    outside. I think it is pretty clear from the development he
    undertook, the kind of experiences he had with the Haros as
    compared with his being placed out on his own.” He added:
    The people who came in here told you about him.
    They told you not only what they know of him, but
    they gave you, as best they could, under the very dif-
    ficult circumstances of somebody looking at the rest
    of their life in prison, a game plan, something he can
    do with his life, something he’s been able to do.
    We’re just suggesting the tip of the iceberg because
    who knows in 20, 30, 40, 50 years what sorts of
    things he can do, as he fits into the system, as he
    learns to set his goals, to contribute something in
    whatever way he can.
    At no time did the prosecutor object to the defense’s char-
    acterization, nor did the trial judge indicate that the parties’
    statements of law were not correct or that the jury could not
    consider any of the evidence. Nevertheless, the majority con-
    cludes that the jury thought that the witnesses wasted their
    time by testifying, and that the prosecutor, Belmontes, and
    Belmontes’s lawyer were not smart enough to realize they
    were all mistaken. See Payton, 
    125 S. Ct. at 1440
     (“for the
    jury to have believed it could not consider Payton’s mitigating
    evidence, it would have had to believe that the penalty phase
    served virtually no purpose at all”). In its world, the majority
    envisions a jury playing a game of “gotcha” with the lawyers,
    whereby the jury ignores everyone and applies its own
    instructions. Such a conclusion is pure fantasy and cannot jus-
    tify overturning the jury’s choice here. See Buchanan v. Ange-
    lone, 
    522 U.S. 269
    , 278-79 (1998) (“The parties in effect
    agreed that there was substantial mitigating evidence and that
    the jury had to weigh that evidence against petitioner’s con-
    duct in making a discretionary decision on the appropriate
    penalty. In this context, there is not a reasonable likelihood
    that the jurors in petitioner’s case understood the challenged
    8360                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    instructions to preclude consideration of relevant mitigating
    evidence offered by petitioner.” (emphasis in original; internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    II
    Even assuming, arguendo, that there was a reasonable like-
    lihood that the jury could have interpreted factor (k) to pro-
    hibit consideration of Belmontes’s character witnesses, the
    instructions were still constitutionally sufficient. To arrive at
    its result, the majority downplays the trial court’s initial
    instruction, in which the jury was told, “In determining which
    penalty is to be imposed on the defendant you shall consider
    all of the evidence which has been received during any part
    of the trial of this case, except as you may be hereafter
    instructed.” (emphasis added). Such a jury instruction alone is
    constitutionally sufficient to convey to the jury its duty to
    consider all mitigating evidence. See Buchanan, 
    522 U.S. at 277
     (holding that there was no likelihood of confusion when
    the jury had to indicate on the statutory verdict form that it
    had “considered the evidence in mitigation of the offense”
    and the trial court provided the following mitigation instruc-
    tion: “[I]f you believe from all the evidence that the death
    penalty is not justified, then you shall fix the punishment of
    the defendant at life imprisonment”); Johnson, 
    509 U.S. at 368
     (holding that a jury instruction that stated that the jury
    could consider all the mitigating evidence presented during
    both the guilt and penalty stage was sufficient to inform the
    jury that it could consider evidence of defendant’s youth);
    Blystone v. Pennsylvania, 
    494 U.S. 299
    , 307-08 (1990) (“In
    petitioner’s case the jury was specifically instructed to con-
    sider, as mitigating evidence, any ‘matter concerning the char-
    acter or record of the defendant, or the circumstances of his
    offense.’ This was sufficient to satisfy the dictates of the
    Eighth Amendment.” (citation omitted)); cf. Tuilaepa v. Cali-
    fornia, 
    512 U.S. 967
    , 979 (1994) (“A capital sentencer need
    not be instructed how to weigh any particular fact in the capi-
    tal sentencing decision.”).
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                      8361
    The trial court’s duty is simply to convey to the jury that
    all mitigating evidence must be considered and may be given
    effect when it deliberates on a defendant’s capital sentence.
    Buchanan, 
    522 U.S. at 276
    . The absence of any specific
    instruction to the jury to consider the defendant’s ability to
    adjust to an institutional setting is utterly irrelevant. 
    Id. at 277
    (“By directing the jury to base its decision on ‘all the evi-
    dence,’ the instruction afforded jurors an opportunity to con-
    sider mitigating evidence.”).
    Even if the jury were confused by the subsequent enumera-
    tion of individual factors—perhaps thinking that its consider-
    ation of mitigating evidence was limited to such factors—the
    confusion would have been short lived. After reading the enu-
    merated factors, the court instructed, “[T]he mitigating cir-
    cumstances which I have read for your consideration are
    given to you merely as examples of some of the factors that
    you may take into account as reasons for deciding not to
    impose a death penalty or a death sentence upon Mr. Bel-
    montes.” The majority, however, fixates, not on the clear lan-
    guage of such directive, but on the two sentences that directly
    follow: “You should pay careful attention to each of these fac-
    tors. Any one of them standing alone may support a decision
    that death is not the appropriate punishment in this case.”
    According to the majority, these sentences somehow obfus-
    cate the clarity of the court’s instructions.
    We must look at these instructions in their entirety, how-
    ever. See Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 378
     (“we accept at the outset the
    well-established proposition that a single instruction to a jury
    may not be judged in artificial isolation, but must be viewed
    in the context of the overall charge” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)). The judge instructed:
    I have previously read you a list of aggravating
    circumstances which the law permits you to consider
    if you find that any of them is established by the evi-
    dence. These are the only aggravating circumstances
    8362                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    that you may consider. You are not allowed to take
    account of any other facts or circumstances as the
    basis for deciding that the death penalty would be an
    appropriate punishment in this case.
    However, the mitigating circumstances which I
    have read for your consideration are given to you
    merely as examples of some of the factors that you
    may take into account as reasons for deciding not to
    impose a death penalty or a death sentence upon Mr.
    Belmontes. You should pay careful attention to each
    of these factors. Any one of them standing alone
    may support a decision that death is not the appropri-
    ate punishment in this case.
    When these instructions are read in context, there is little
    doubt that the court conveyed the message that the enumer-
    ated factors were not the exclusive mitigating circumstances
    that the jury could consider. The court first instructed the jury
    how to apply the aggravating circumstances, specifically that
    it could not consider any non-enumerated factors. The court
    then contrasted consideration of aggravating factors with miti-
    gating factors, which it noted were merely “examples of some
    of the factors” that the jury could consider. The fact that the
    court further instructed that the jury should consider each of
    the mitigating factors (recall that “factors” refers to all miti-
    gating circumstances and not, as the majority implies, to the
    enumerated circumstances read by the judge), as any one
    alone might support life in prison, was unlikely to confuse the
    jury, when viewed in totality.
    The trial court’s additional instruction reinforced the con-
    stitutional requirement of conveying to the jury that it is “not
    . . . precluded from considering, and may not refuse to con-
    sider, any constitutionally relevant mitigating evidence.”
    Buchanan, 
    522 U.S. at 276
    . Instead of confusing the jury, the
    trial court’s instructions made it clear that all evidence that
    was presented must be considered. Moreover, the instruction
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                    8363
    that the majority concludes was “critical,” supra, at 8343,
    substantively adds nothing. Rather than speculating that the
    jury was too dim to understand what it was told by the court,
    we must presume that the jury understood the instructions
    taken as a whole. Weeks v. Angelone, 
    528 U.S. 225
    , 234
    (2000).
    III
    According to the majority, however, it is the series of ques-
    tions between individual jurors and the judge that proves the
    jury’s confusion. After the jury deliberated for several hours,
    it sent the judge a note asking, “What happens if we cannot
    reach a verdict?” and “Can the majority rule on life imprison-
    ment?” The judge refused to tell the jury what would happen
    if they could not agree, but told them that it would discharge
    them if they could not reach an agreement. He then asked,
    “Do you think if I allow you to continue to discuss the matter
    and for you to go over the instructions again with one another,
    that the possibility of making a decision is there?”
    At this time, individual jurors asked the judge some ques-
    tions.
    JUROR HERN: The statement about the aggravation
    and mitigation of the circumstances, now, that was
    the listing?
    THE COURT: That was the listing, yes, ma’am.
    JUROR HERN: Of those certain factors we were to
    decide one or the other and then balance the sheet?
    THE COURT: That is right. It is a balancing pro-
    cess.
    ....
    8364                  BELMONTES v. BROWN
    JUROR HAILSTONE: Could I ask a question? I
    don’t know if it is permissible. Is it possible that he
    could have psychiatric treatment during this time?
    THE COURT: That is something you cannot con-
    sider in making your decision.
    In the majority’s view, Juror Hern’s use of the term “list-
    ing,” and the judge’s failure to note that the “listing” was not
    exclusive as to mitigating circumstances, shows that individ-
    ual jurors were confused by the instruction. I respectfully dis-
    agree. The jury did not submit a formal question to the judge
    to indicate that it was confused as to its duties or the instruc-
    tions, and no informal follow-up questions were asked by any
    jurors. And while the answers the judge gave the juror might
    have been cryptic, they were not incorrect. Cf. Bollenbach v.
    United States, 
    326 U.S. 607
    , 613 (1946).
    Most importantly, just before the judge answered these
    informal questions, he asked the jury “to go over the instruc-
    tions again.” Under existing Supreme Court authority, any
    confusion with regard to its responsibilities would have been
    cleared up with another such review. See Weeks, 
    528 U.S. at 233-34
     (holding that no likelihood of confusion existed when
    the trial judge referred back to his original instruction when
    the jury asked a question regarding the instructions them-
    selves). And if, after reviewing the instructions once again,
    jurors were still confused about the evidence they could con-
    sider, they likely would have asked for a formal clarification.
    See 
    id. at 234
     (noting that the jury did not submit a follow-up
    question after the judge referred it back to the original instruc-
    tions). While it is possible that after reviewing the instructions
    again, confusion might have arisen, it was certainly not rea-
    sonably likely. See Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 380
    .
    Incredulously, the majority also takes issue with Juror Hail-
    stone’s question regarding whether Belmontes could receive
    psychiatric treatment while in prison. The court properly
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                      8365
    instructed the jury that it could not consider such potentially
    mitigating evidence. And for good reason: no such evidence
    was ever introduced at any stage of the trial. Indeed, the jury
    was prohibited from such considerations. See Hughes v. Borg,
    
    898 F.2d 695
    , 700 (9th Cir. 1990) (“State defendants have a
    federal constitutional right to an impartial jury and jurors have
    a correlative duty to consider only the evidence that is pre-
    sented in open court.”); see also TXO Prod. Corp. v. Alliance
    Res. Corp., 
    509 U.S. 443
    , 468 (1993) (Kennedy, J., concur-
    ring) (“Unlike a legislature, whose judgments may be predi-
    cated on educated guesses and need not necessarily be
    grounded in facts adduced in a hearing, a jury is bound to
    consider only the evidence presented to it in arriving at a
    judgment.” (citations omitted)).
    There was absolutely nothing wrong with the trial judge’s
    instruction that the jury could not consider evidence that was
    not presented; indeed, it would have been unconstitutional for
    him to have said otherwise. Yet, the majority ignores such
    niceties. If the jury were truly confused by the judge’s answer,
    surely it would have asked a follow-up question of some sort.
    Nonetheless, without any basis in the record, the majority
    concludes that the judge’s perfectly proper statement was
    likely to confuse.
    IV
    The majority concludes that the jurors listened to all the
    evidence regarding Belmontes’s character, listened to the
    prosecution and the defense tell it to consider such evidence,
    and listened to the trial court tell it that it must consider all the
    evidence presented; yet the majority holds that the jury was
    confused about whether it could consider the evidence pres-
    ented. Such conclusion, with all due respect, is simply beyond
    belief; such holding turns the entire proceeding “into a virtual
    charade.” Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 383
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    8366                 BELMONTES v. BROWN
    The jury, in reality, returned a death sentence for Bel-
    montes, not because of a confusing jury instruction, but
    because he murdered nineteen-year-old Steacy McConnell in
    cold blood, striking her 15-20 times in the head with an iron
    dumbbell he had brought with him to her house in case of
    such an encounter; I sincerely doubt the family and friends of
    Steacy would share the majority’s callous view that her mur-
    der was not “especially heinous.”
    Not surprisingly, the prosecution was able to portray Bel-
    montes as a violent young man by focusing on his past behav-
    ior: his armed theft of a loaded handgun, his tendency to carry
    such a weapon, his fight with another ward while in the CYA
    after pleading guilty to being an accessory after the fact to
    voluntary manslaughter, and his battery of his pregnant girl-
    friend, which caused her to drop their two-year-old daughter.
    It is such violent, antisocial behavior, not an ambiguous jury
    instruction, that placed him in the situation he now finds him-
    self.
    Perhaps the jury simply did not believe that a convicted
    murderer might be a particularly good role model to other
    inmates, despite Reverend Miller’s testimony that Belmontes
    would be good at counseling other inmates not to repeat his
    “mistakes.” After all, Steacy’s murder was hardly a “mis-
    take.” Perhaps Belmontes’s jailhouse conversion to Christian-
    ity, which mysteriously lapsed as soon as he returned to
    society, and his ascent to the top of CYA’s fire crew, could
    rightly have been seen as manipulative ploys to gain early
    release for his previous crimes. Cf. Payton, 
    125 S. Ct. at 1442
    (“Testimony about a religious conversion spanning one year
    and nine months may well have been considered altogether
    insignificant in light of the brutality of the crimes, the prior
    offenses, and a proclivity for committing violent acts against
    women.”).
    By concluding that the trial court’s jury instructions were
    unconstitutional, the majority ignores the “strong policy
    BELMONTES v. BROWN                          8367
    against retrials years after the first trial where the claimed
    error amounts to no more than speculation.” Boyde, 
    494 U.S. at 380
    . There is nothing in the record which would lead me
    to believe that there was a reasonable probability that the jury
    was confused about its sentencing duties; therefore I would
    affirm the denial of the petition for the writ as to the penalty
    phase. I must respectfully dissent from the majority’s refusal
    to do so.2
    2
    Belmontes also contends that he was deprived of constitutionally effec-
    tive counsel during the penalty stage of his trial. His claim is without
    merit. See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 694 (1984); Gerlaugh
    v. Stewart, 
    129 F.3d 1027
    , 1035-36 (9th Cir. 1997).