Cone v. Bell , 129 S. Ct. 1769 ( 2009 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2008                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U. S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    CONE v. BELL, WARDEN
    CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
    THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    No. 07–1114. Argued December 9, 2008—Decided April 28, 2009
    After the State discredited petitioner Cone’s defense that he killed two
    people while suffering from acute psychosis caused by drug addiction,
    he was convicted and sentenced to death. The Tennessee Supreme
    Court affirmed on direct appeal and the state courts denied postcon
    viction relief. Later, in a second petition for state postconviction re
    lief, Cone raised the claim that the State had violated Brady v. Mary
    land, 
    373 U. S. 83
    , by suppressing witness statements and police
    reports that would have corroborated his insanity defense and bol
    stered his case in mitigation of the death penalty. The postconviction
    court denied him a hearing on the ground that the Brady claim had
    been previously determined, either on direct appeal or in earlier col
    lateral proceedings. The State Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed.
    Cone then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Federal Dis
    trict Court. That Court denied relief, holding the Brady claim proce
    durally barred because the state courts’ disposition rested on ade
    quate and independent state grounds: Cone had waived it by failing
    to present his claim in state court. Even if he had not defaulted the
    claim, ruled the court, it would fail on its merits because none of the
    withheld evidence would have cast doubt on his guilt. The Sixth Cir
    cuit agreed with the latter conclusion, but considered itself barred
    from reaching the claim’s merits because the state courts had ruled
    the claim previously determined or waived under state law.
    Held:
    1. The state courts’ rejection of Cone’s Brady claim does not rest on
    a ground that bars federal review. Neither of the State’s asserted
    justifications for such a bar—that the claim was decided by the State
    Supreme Court on direct review or that Cone had waived it by never
    properly raising it in state court—provides an independent and ade
    2                             CONE v. BELL
    Syllabus
    quate state ground for denying review of Cone’s federal claim. The
    state postconviction court’s denial of the Brady claim on the ground it
    had been previously determined in state court rested on a false prem
    ise: Cone had not presented the claim in earlier proceedings and, con
    sequently, the state courts had not passed on it. The Sixth Circuit’s
    rejection of the claim as procedurally defaulted because it had been
    twice presented to the Tennessee courts was thus erroneous. Also
    unpersuasive is the State’s alternative argument that federal review
    is barred because the Brady claim was properly dismissed by the
    state postconviction courts as waived. Those courts held only that
    the claim had been previously determined, and this Court will not
    second-guess their judgment. Because the claim was properly pre
    served and exhausted in state court, it is not defaulted. Pp. 15–19.
    2. The lower federal courts failed to adequately consider whether
    the withheld documents were material to Cone’s sentence. Both the
    quantity and quality of the suppressed evidence lend support to
    Cone’s trial position that he habitually used excessive amounts of
    drugs, that his addiction affected his behavior during the murders,
    and that the State’s contrary arguments were false and misleading.
    Nevertheless, even when viewed in the light most favorable to Cone,
    the evidence does not sustain his insanity defense: His behavior be
    fore, during, and after the crimes was inconsistent with the conten
    tion that he lacked substantial capacity either to appreciate the
    wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform it to the requirements of
    law. Because the likelihood that the suppressed evidence would have
    affected the jury’s verdict on the insanity issue is remote, the Sixth
    Circuit did not err by denying habeas relief on the ground that such
    evidence was immaterial to the jury’s guilt finding. The same cannot
    be said of that court’s summary treatment of Cone’s claim that the
    suppressed evidence would have influenced the jury’s sentencing rec
    ommendation. Because the suppressed evidence might have been
    material to the jury’s assessment of the proper punishment, a full re
    view of that evidence and its effect on the sentencing verdict is war
    ranted. Pp. 20–26.
    
    492 F. 3d 743
    , vacated and remanded.
    STEVENS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNEDY,
    SOUTER, GINSBURG, and BREYER, JJ., joined. ROBERTS, C. J., filed an
    opinion concurring in the judgment. ALITO, J., filed an opinion concur
    ring in part and dissenting in part. THOMAS, J., filed a dissenting opin
    ion, in which SCALIA, J., joined.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                              1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–1114
    _________________
    GARY BRADFORD CONE, PETITIONER v. RICKY
    BELL, WARDEN
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    [April 28, 2009]
    JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
    The right to a fair trial, guaranteed to state criminal
    defendants by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment, imposes on States certain duties consistent
    with their sovereign obligation to ensure “that ‘justice
    shall be done’ ” in all criminal prosecutions. United States
    v. Agurs, 
    427 U. S. 97
    , 111 (1976) (quoting Berger v.
    United States, 
    295 U. S. 78
    , 88 (1935)). In Brady v. Mary
    land, 
    373 U. S. 83
     (1963), we held that when a State sup
    presses evidence favorable to an accused that is material
    to guilt or to punishment, the State violates the defen
    dant’s right to due process, “irrespective of the good faith
    or bad faith of the prosecution.” 
    Id., at 87
    .
    In this case, Gary Cone, a Vietnam veteran sentenced to
    death, contends that the State of Tennessee violated his
    right to due process by suppressing witness statements
    and police reports that would have corroborated his trial
    defense and bolstered his case in mitigation of the death
    penalty. At his trial in 1982, Cone asserted an insanity
    defense, contending that he had killed two people while
    suffering from acute amphetamine psychosis, a disorder
    2                      CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    caused by drug addiction. The State of Tennessee discred
    ited that defense, alleging that Cone’s drug addiction was
    “baloney.” Ten years later, Cone learned that the State
    had suppressed evidence supporting his claim of drug
    addiction.
    Cone presented his new evidence to the state courts in a
    petition for postconviction relief, but the Tennessee courts
    denied him a hearing on the ground that his Brady claim
    had been “previously determined,” either on direct appeal
    from his conviction or in earlier collateral proceedings. On
    application for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    , the Federal District Court concluded that
    the state courts’ disposition rested on an adequate and
    independent state ground that barred further review in
    federal court, and the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Cir
    cuit agreed. Doubt concerning the correctness of that
    holding, coupled with conflicting decisions from other
    Courts of Appeals, prompted our grant of certiorari.
    After a complete review of the trial and postconviction
    proceedings, we conclude that the Tennessee courts’ rejec
    tion of petitioner’s Brady claim does not rest on a ground
    that bars federal review. Furthermore, although the
    District Court and the Court of Appeals passed briefly on
    the merits of Cone’s claim, neither court distinguished the
    materiality of the suppressed evidence with respect to
    Cone’s guilt from the materiality of the evidence with
    respect to his punishment. While we agree that the with
    held documents were not material to the question whether
    Cone committed murder with the requisite mental state,
    the lower courts failed to adequately consider whether
    that same evidence was material to Cone’s sentence.
    Therefore, we vacate the decision of the Court of Appeals
    and remand the case to the District Court to determine in
    the first instance whether there is a reasonable probability
    that the withheld evidence would have altered at least one
    juror’s assessment of the appropriate penalty for Cone’s
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                   3
    Opinion of the Court
    crimes.
    I
    On the afternoon of Saturday, August 10, 1980, Cone
    robbed a jewelry store in downtown Memphis, Tennessee.
    Fleeing the scene by car, he led police on a high-speed
    chase into a residential neighborhood. Once there, he
    abandoned his vehicle and shot a police officer.1 When a
    bystander tried to impede his escape, Cone shot him, too,
    before escaping on foot.
    A short time later, Cone tried to hijack a nearby car.
    When that attempt failed (because the driver refused to
    surrender his keys), Cone tried to shoot the driver and a
    hovering police helicopter before realizing he had run out
    of ammunition. He then fled the scene. Although police
    conducted a thorough search, Cone was nowhere to be
    found.
    Early the next morning, Cone reappeared in the same
    neighborhood at the door of an elderly woman. He asked
    to use her telephone, and when she refused, he drew a
    gun. Before he was able to gain entry, the woman
    slammed the door and called the police. By the time offi
    cers arrived, however, Cone had once again disappeared.
    That afternoon, Cone gained entry to the home of 93
    year-old Shipley Todd and his wife, 79-year-old Cleopatra
    Todd. Cone beat the couple to death with a blunt instru
    ment and ransacked the first floor of their home. Later,
    he shaved his beard and escaped to the airport without
    being caught. Cone then traveled to Florida, where he
    was arrested several days later after robbing a drugstore
    in Pompano Beach.
    A Tennessee grand jury charged Cone with two counts
    ——————
    1 From  the abandoned vehicle, police recovered stolen jewelry, large
    quantities of illegal and prescription drugs, and approximately $2,400
    in cash. Much of the cash was later connected to a grocery store rob
    bery that had occurred on the previous day.
    4                      CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    of first-degree murder, two counts of murder in the perpe
    tration of a burglary, three counts of assault with intent to
    murder, and one count of robbery by use of deadly force.
    At his jury trial in 1982, Cone did not challenge the over
    whelming physical and testimonial evidence supporting
    the charges against him. His sole defense was that he was
    not guilty by reason of insanity.
    Cone’s counsel portrayed his client as suffering from
    severe drug addiction attributable to trauma Cone had
    experienced in Vietnam. Counsel argued that Cone had
    committed his crimes while suffering from chronic am
    phetamine psychosis, a disorder brought about by his drug
    abuse. That defense was supported by the testimony of
    three witnesses. First was Cone’s mother, who described
    her son as an honorably discharged Vietnam veteran who
    had changed following his return from service. She re
    called Cone describing “how terrible” it had been to handle
    the bodies of dead soldiers, and she explained that Cone
    slept restlessly and sometimes “holler[ed]” in his sleep.
    Tr. 1643–1645 (Apr. 20, 1982). She also described one
    occasion, following Cone’s return from service, when a
    package was shipped to him that contained marijuana.
    Before the war, she asserted, Cone had not used drugs of
    any kind.
    Two expert witnesses testified on Cone’s behalf. Mat
    thew Jaremko, a clinical psychologist, testified that Cone
    suffered from substance abuse and posttraumatic stress
    disorders related to his military service in Vietnam. Ja
    remko testified that Cone had expressed remorse for the
    murders, and he opined that Cone’s mental disorder ren
    dered him substantially incapable of conforming his con
    duct to the law. Jonathan Lipman, a neuropharmacolo
    gist, recounted at length Cone’s history of illicit drug use,
    which began after Cone joined the Army and escalated to
    the point where Cone was consuming “rather horrific”
    quantities of drugs daily. App. 100. According to Lipman,
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                  5
    Opinion of the Court
    Cone’s drug abuse had led to chronic amphetamine psy
    chosis, a disorder manifested through hallucinations and
    ongoing paranoia that prevented Cone from obeying the
    law and appreciating the wrongfulness of his actions.
    In rebutting Cone’s insanity defense the State’s strategy
    throughout trial was to present Cone as a calculating,
    intelligent criminal who was fully in control of his deci
    sions and actions at the time of the crimes. A key compo
    nent of that strategy involved discrediting Cone’s claims of
    drug use.2 Through cross-examination, the State estab
    lished that both defense experts’ opinions were based
    solely on Cone’s representations to them about his drug
    use rather than on any independently corroborated
    sources, such as medical records or interviews with family
    or friends. The prosecution also adduced expert and lay
    testimony to establish that Cone was not addicted to drugs
    and had acted rationally and intentionally before, during,
    and after the Todd murders.
    Particularly damaging to Cone’s defense was the testi
    mony of rebuttal witness Ilene Blankman, who had spent
    time with Cone several months before the murders and at
    whose home Cone had stayed in the days leading up to his
    arrest in Florida. Blankman admitted to being a former
    heroin addict but testified that she no longer used drugs
    and tried to stay away from people who did. She testified
    that she had never seen Cone use drugs, had never ob
    served track marks on his body, and had never seen him
    exhibit signs of paranoia.
    Emphasizing the State’s position with respect to Cone’s
    ——————
    2 The State also cast doubt on Cone’s defense by eliciting testimony
    that Cone had enrolled in college following his return from Vietnam
    and had graduated with high honors. Later, after serving time in
    prison for an armed robbery, Cone gained admission to the University
    of Arkansas Law School. The State suggested that Cone’s academic
    success provided further proof that he was not impaired following his
    return from war.
    6                           CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    alleged addiction, the prosecutor told the jury during
    closing argument, “[Y]ou’re not dealing with a crazy per
    son, an insane man. A man . . . out of his mind. You’re
    dealing, I submit to you, with a premeditated, cool, delib
    erate—and even cowardly, really—murderer.” Tr. 2084
    (Apr. 22, 1982). Pointing to the quantity of drugs found in
    Cone’s car, the prosecutor suggested that far from being a
    drug addict, Cone was actually a drug dealer. The prose
    cutor argued, “I’m not trying to be absurd, but he says he’s
    a drug addict. I say baloney. He’s a drug seller. Doesn’t
    the proof show that?” 
    Id., at 107
    .3
    The jury rejected Cone’s insanity defense and found him
    guilty on all counts. At the penalty hearing, the prosecu
    tion asked the jury to find that Cone’s crime met the crite
    ria for four different statutory aggravating factors, any
    one of which would render him eligible for a capital sen
    tence.4 Cone’s counsel called no witnesses but instead
    rested on the evidence adduced during the guilt phase
    proceedings. Acknowledging that the prosecution’s ex
    perts had disputed the existence of Cone’s alleged mental
    disorder, counsel nevertheless urged the jury to consider
    Cone’s drug addiction when weighing the aggravating and
    ——————
    3 In his closing rebuttal argument, the prosecutor continued to press
    the point, asserting: “There aren’t any charges for drug sales, but that
    doesn’t mean that you can’t look and question in deciding whether or
    not this man was, in fact, a drug user, or why he had those drugs. Did
    he just have those drugs, or did he have those drugs and thousands of
    dollars in that car? Among those drugs are there only the drugs he
    used? How do we know if he used drugs? The only thing that we ever
    had that he used drugs, period, is the fact that those drugs were in the
    car and what he told people. What he told people. But according to
    even what he told people, there are drugs in there he didn’t even use.”
    Tr. 2068 (Apr. 22, 1982).
    4 The jury could impose a capital sentence only if it unanimously
    determined that one or more statutory aggravating circumstances had
    been proved by the State beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the
    mitigating circumstances of the case did not outweigh any statutory
    aggravating factors. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §39
    –2–203(g) (1982).
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                    7
    Opinion of the Court
    mitigating factors in the case.5 The jury found all four
    aggravating factors and unanimously returned a sentence
    of death.6
    II
    On direct appeal Cone raised numerous challenges to
    his conviction and sentence. Among those was a claim
    that the prosecution violated state law by failing to dis
    close a tape-recorded statement and police reports relating
    to several trial witnesses. See App. 114–117. The Ten
    nessee Supreme Court rejected each of Cone’s claims, and
    affirmed his conviction and sentence. State v. Cone, 
    665 S. W. 2d 87
     (1984).7 Cone then filed a petition for postcon
    ——————
    5 As defense counsel emphasized to the jury, one of the statutory miti
    gating factors it was required to consider was whether “[t]he capacity of
    the defendant to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to
    conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially
    impaired as a result of mental disease or defect or intoxication which
    was insufficient to establish a defense to the crime but which substan
    tially affected his judgment.” §39–2404(j)(8).
    6 Specifically, the jury found Cone had committed one or more prior
    felonies involving the use or threat of violence, see §39–2404(i)(2); the
    murders had been committed for the purpose of avoiding, interfering
    with, or preventing Cone’s lawful arrest or prosecution, see §39–
    2404(i)(6); the murders were especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel in
    that they involved torture and depravity of mind, see §39–2404(i)(5);
    and Cone had knowingly created a risk of death to two or more persons,
    other than the victim murdered, during his act of murder, see §39–
    2404(i)(3). The Tennessee Supreme Court later observed that by
    finding Cone guilty of murder in the first degree during the perpetra
    tion of a burglary, the jury implicitly found the existence of an addi
    tional statutory aggravating factor: that the murders occurred while
    Cone was committing a burglary, §39–2404(i)(7). State v. Cone, 
    665 S. W. 2d 87
    , 94 (1984).
    7 In summarizing the trial proceedings the Tennessee Supreme Court
    observed: “The only defense interposed on [Cone’s] behalf was that of
    insanity, or lack of mental capacity, due to drug abuse and to stress
    arising out of his previous service in the Vietnamese war, some eleven
    years prior to the events involved in this case. This proved to be a
    tenuous defense, at best, since neither of the expert witnesses who
    8                            CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    viction relief, primarily raising claims that his trial coun
    sel had been ineffective; the Tennessee Court of Criminal
    Appeals affirmed the denial of that petition in 1987. Cone
    v. State, 
    747 S. W. 2d 353
    .
    In 1989, Cone, acting pro se, filed a second petition for
    postconviction relief, raising myriad claims of error.
    Among these was a claim that the State had failed to
    disclose evidence in violation of his rights under the
    United States Constitution. At the State’s behest, the
    postconviction court summarily denied the petition, con
    cluding that all the claims raised in it had either been
    “previously determined” or “waived.” Order Dismissing
    Petition for Post-Conviction Relief in Cone v. State, No. P–
    06874 (Crim. Ct. Shelby Cty., Tenn., Jan. 2, 1990).8 At
    that time, the court did not specify which claims fell into
    which category.
    Cone appealed the denial of his petition to the Tennes
    see Court of Criminal Appeals, asserting that the postcon
    viction court had erred by dismissing 13 claims—his
    ——————
    testified on his behalf had ever seen or heard of him until a few weeks
    prior to the trial. Neither was a medical doctor or psychiatrist, and
    neither had purported to treat him as a patient. Their testimony that
    he lacked mental capacity was based purely upon his personal recita
    tion to them of his history of military service and drug abuse.” 
    Id., at 90
    .
    8 Under Tennessee law in effect at the time a criminal defendant was
    entitled to collateral relief if his conviction or sentence violated “any
    right guaranteed by the constitution of [Tennessee] or the Constitution
    of the United States.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –30–105 (1982); see also
    §40–30–102. Any hearing on a petition for postconviction relief was
    limited, however, to claims that had not been “waived or previously
    determined.” See §40–30–111. A ground for relief was “previously
    determined” if “a court of competent jurisdiction ha[d] ruled on the
    merits [of the claim] after a full and fair hearing.” §40–30–112(a). The
    claim was waived “if the petitioner knowingly and understandingly
    failed to present it for determination in any proceeding before a court of
    competent jurisdiction in which the ground could have been presented.”
    §40–30–112(b)(1).
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                   9
    Opinion of the Court
    Brady claim among them—as previously determined
    when, in fact, they had not been “previously addressed or
    determined by any court.” Brief for Petitioner-Appellant
    Gary Bradford Cone in No. P–06874, pp. 23–24, and n. 11.
    In addition Cone urged the court to remand the case to
    allow him, with the assistance of counsel, to rebut the
    presumption that he had waived any of his claims by not
    raising them at an earlier stage in the litigation. Id., at
    24.9 The court agreed and remanded the case for further
    proceedings.
    On remand counsel was appointed and an amended
    petition was filed. The State once again urged the post
    conviction court to dismiss Cone’s petition. Apparently
    conflating the state-law disclosure claim Cone had raised
    on direct appeal with his newly filed Brady claim, the
    State represented that the Tennessee Supreme Court had
    already decided the Brady issue and that Cone was there
    fore barred from relitigating it. See App. 15–16.
    While that petition remained pending before the post
    conviction court, the Tennessee Court of Appeals held for
    the first time that the State’s Public Records Act allowed a
    criminal defendant to review the prosecutor’s file in his
    case. See Capital Case Resource Center of Tenn., Inc. v.
    Woodall, No. 01–A–01–9104–CH–00150, 
    1992 WL 12217
    (Jan. 29, 1992). Based on that holding, Cone obtained
    access to the prosecutor’s files, in which he found proof
    that evidence had indeed been withheld from him at trial.
    Among the undisclosed documents Cone discovered were
    statements from witnesses who had seen him several days
    before and several days after the murders. The witnesses
    described Cone’s appearance as “wild eyed,” App. 50, and
    ——————
    9 See Swanson v. State, 
    749 S. W. 2d 731
    , 734 (Tenn. 1988) (courts
    should not dismiss postconviction petitions on technical grounds unless
    the petitioner has first had “reasonable opportunity, with aid of coun
    sel, to file amendments” and rebut presumption of waiver (internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    10                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    his behavior as “real weird,” id., at 49. One witness af
    firmed that Cone had appeared “to be drunk or high.”
    Ibid. The file also contained a police report describing
    Cone’s arrest in Florida following the murders. In that
    report, a police officer described Cone looking around “in a
    frenzied manner,” and “walking in [an] agitated manner”
    prior to his apprehension. Id., at 53. Multiple police
    bulletins describing Cone as a “drug user” and a “heavy
    drug user” were also among the undisclosed evidence. See
    id., at 55–59.
    With the newly discovered evidence in hand, Cone
    amended his postconviction petition once again in October
    1993, expanding his Brady claim to allege more specifi
    cally that the State had withheld exculpatory evidence
    demonstrating that he “did in fact suffer drug problems
    and/or drug withdrawal or psychosis both at the time of
    the offense and in the past.” App. at 20. Cone pointed to
    specific examples of evidence that had been withheld,
    alleging the evidence was “exculpatory to both the jury’s
    determination of petitioner’s guilt and its consideration of
    the proper sentence,” and that there was “a reasonable
    probability that, had the evidence not been withheld, the
    jurors would not have convicted [him] and would not have
    sentenced him to death.” Id., at 20–21.10 In a lengthy
    affidavit submitted with his amended petition, Cone ex
    plained that he had not raised his Brady claim in earlier
    proceedings because the facts underlying it “ha[d] been
    revealed through disclosure of the State’s files, which
    occurred after the first post-conviction proceeding.” App.
    18.
    After denying Cone’s request for an evidentiary hearing,
    ——————
    10 As examples of evidence that had been withheld, Cone pointed to
    “statements of Charles and Debbie Slaughter, statements of Sue Cone,
    statements of Lucille Tuech, statements of Herschel Dalton, and
    patrolman Collins” and “statements contained in official police reports.”
    App. 20.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            11
    Opinion of the Court
    the postconviction court denied relief on each claim pre
    sented in the amended petition. Many of the claims were
    dismissed on the ground that they had been waived by
    Cone’s failure to raise them in earlier proceedings; how
    ever, consistent with the position urged by the State, the
    court dismissed many others, including the Brady claim,
    as mere “re-statements of previous grounds heretofore
    determined and denied by the Tennessee Supreme Court
    upon Direct Appeal or the Court of Criminal Appeals upon
    the First Petition.” App. 22.
    Noting that “the findings of the trial court in post
    conviction hearings are conclusive on appeal unless the
    evidence preponderates against the judgment,” the Ten
    nessee Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. Cone v. State,
    
    927 S. W. 2d 579
    , 581–582 (1995). The court concluded
    that Cone had “failed to rebut the presumption of waiver
    as to all claims raised in his second petition for post
    conviction relief which had not been previously deter
    mined.” 
    Id., at 582
     (emphasis added). Cone unsuccess
    fully petitioned for review in the Tennessee Supreme
    Court, and we denied certiorari. Cone v. Tennessee, 
    519 U. S. 934
     (1996).
    III
    In 1997, Cone filed a petition for a federal writ of habeas
    corpus. Without disclosing to the District Court the con
    trary position it had taken in the state-court proceedings,
    the State acknowledged that Cone’s Brady claim had not
    been raised prior to the filing of his second postconviction
    petition. However, wrenching out of context the state
    appellate court’s holding that Cone had “waived ‘all claims
    . . . which had not been previously determined,’ ” the State
    now asserted the Brady claim had been waived. App. 39
    (quoting Cone, 927 S. W. 2d, at 581–582).
    In May 1998, the District Court denied Cone’s request
    for an evidentiary hearing on his Brady claim. Lamenting
    12                      CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    that its consideration of Cone’s claims had been “made
    more difficult” by the parties’ failure to articulate the state
    procedural rules under which each of Cone’s claims had
    allegedly been defaulted, App. to Pet. for Cert. 98a, the
    District Court nevertheless held that the Brady claim was
    procedurally barred. After parsing the claim into 11
    separate subclaims based on 11 pieces of withheld evi
    dence identified in the habeas petition, the District Court
    concluded that Cone had waived each subclaim by failing
    to present or adequately develop it in state court. App. to
    Pet. for Cert. 112a–113a. Moreover, the court concluded
    that even if Cone had not defaulted his Brady claim, it
    would fail on its merits because none of the withheld
    evidence would have cast doubt on Cone’s guilt. App. to
    Pet. for Cert. 116a–119a. Throughout its opinion the
    District Court repeatedly referenced factual allegations
    contained in early versions of Cone’s second petition for
    postconviction relief rather than the amended version of
    the petition upon which the state court’s decision had
    rested. See, e.g., 
    id.,
     at 112a.
    After the District Court dismissed the remainder of
    Cone’s federal claims, the Court of Appeals for the Sixth
    Circuit granted him permission to appeal several issues,
    including the alleged suppression of Brady material.
    Before the Court of Appeals, the State shifted its proce
    dural default argument once more, this time contending
    that Cone had “simply never raised” his Brady claim in
    the state court because he failed to make adequate factual
    allegations to support that claim in his second petition for
    postconviction relief. App. 41. Repeating the District
    Court’s error, the State directed the Court of Appeals’
    attention to Cone’s pro se petition and to the petition
    Cone’s counsel filed before he gained access to the prosecu
    tion’s case file. 
    Id.,
     at 41–42, and n. 7. In other words,
    instead of citing the October 1993 amended petition on
    which the state court’s decision had been based and to
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)          13
    Opinion of the Court
    which its order explicitly referred, the State pointed the
    court to earlier, less developed versions of the same claim.
    The Court of Appeals concluded that Cone had proce
    durally defaulted his Brady claim and had failed to show
    cause and prejudice to overcome the default. Cone v. Bell,
    
    243 F. 3d 961
    , 968 (2001). The court acknowledged that
    Cone had raised his Brady claim. 
    243 F. 3d, at 969
    . Nev
    ertheless, the court considered itself barred from reaching
    the merits of the claim because the Tennessee courts had
    concluded the claim was “previously determined or waived
    under 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –30–112.” 
    Ibid.
    Briefly mentioning several isolated pieces of suppressed
    evidence, the court summarily concluded that even if
    Cone’s Brady claim had not been defaulted, the sup
    pressed evidence would not undermine confidence in the
    verdict (and hence was not Brady material) “because of
    the overwhelming evidence of Cone’s guilt.” 
    243 F. 3d, at 968
    . The court did not discuss whether any of the undis
    closed evidence was material with respect to Cone’s sen
    tencing proceedings.
    Although the Court of Appeals rejected Cone’s Brady
    claim, it held that he was entitled to have his death sen
    tence vacated because of his counsel’s ineffective assis
    tance at sentencing. See 
    243 F. 3d, at 975
    . In 2002, this
    Court reversed that holding after concluding that the
    Tennessee courts’ rejection of Cone’s ineffective
    assistance-of-counsel claim was not “objectively unreason
    able” within the meaning of the Antiterrorism and Effec
    tive Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA). See Bell v. Cone,
    
    535 U. S. 685
    , 699.
    In 2004, following our remand, the Court of Appeals
    again entered judgment ordering a new sentencing hear
    ing, this time based on the purported invalidity of an
    aggravating circumstance found by the jury. Cone v. Bell,
    
    359 F. 3d 785
    . Again we granted certiorari and reversed,
    relying in part on the deferential standard that governs
    14                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    our review of state-court decisions under AEDPA. See
    Bell v. Cone, 
    543 U. S. 447
    , 452–458 (2005) (per curiam).
    Following our second remand, the Court of Appeals
    revisited Cone’s Brady claim. This time, the court divided
    the claim into four separate subclaims: “(1) evidence re
    garding [Cone’s] drug use; (2) evidence that might have
    been useful to impeach the testimony and credibility of
    prosecution witness Sergeant Ralph Roby; (3) FBI re
    ports;[11] and (4) evidence showing that prosecution wit
    ness Ilene Blankman was untruthful and biased.” 
    492 F. 3d 743
    , 753 (2007). Noting that it had previously found all
    four subclaims to be procedurally defaulted, the court
    declined to reconsider its earlier decision. See 
    ibid.
     (citing
    Cone, 
    243 F. 3d, at
    968–970). At the same time, the court
    reiterated that the withheld evidence “would not have
    overcome the overwhelming evidence of Cone’s guilt in
    committing a brutal double murder and the persuasive
    testimony that Cone was not under the influence of
    drugs.” 
    492 F. 3d, at 756
    . Summarily discounting Cone’s
    contention that the withheld evidence was material with
    respect to his sentence, the court concluded that the intro
    duction of the suppressed evidence would not have altered
    the jurors’ finding that Cone’s alleged drug use did not
    “vitiate his specific intent to murder his victims and did
    not mitigate his culpability sufficient to avoid the death
    sentence.” 
    Id., at 757
    .
    Judge Merritt dissented. He castigated the State not
    only for withholding documents relevant to Cone’s sole
    defense and plea for mitigation, but also for its “falsifica
    ——————
    11 In the course of federal habeas proceedings, Cone had obtained
    access to files from the Federal Bureau of Investigation where he found
    additional previously undisclosed evidence not contained in the state
    prosecutor’s case file. The suppressed FBI documents make repeated
    reference to Cone’s drug use and corroborate his expert’s representation
    that he had used drugs during his prior incarceration for armed rob
    bery. See 
    id.,
     at 26–28.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)           15
    Opinion of the Court
    tion of the procedural record . . . concerning the State’s
    procedural default defense to the Brady claim.” 
    Id., at 760
    . Over the dissent of seven judges, Cone’s petition for
    rehearing en banc was denied. 
    505 F. 3d 610
     (2007).
    We granted certiorari, 554 U. S. ___ (2008), to answer
    the question whether a federal habeas claim is “proce
    durally defaulted” when it is twice presented to the state
    courts.
    IV
    During the state and federal proceedings below, the
    State of Tennessee offered two different justifications for
    denying review of the merits of Cone’s Brady claim. First,
    in connection with Cone’s amended petition for state
    postconviction relief, the State argued that the Brady
    claim was barred because it had been decided on direct
    appeal. See App. 15–16. Then, in connection with Cone’s
    federal habeas petition, the State argued that Cone’s claim
    was waived because it had never been properly raised
    before the state courts. See 
    id., at 39
    . The District Court
    and the Court of Appeals agreed that Cone’s claim was
    procedurally barred, but for different reasons. The Dis
    trict Court held that the claim had been waived, App. to
    Pet. for Cert. 102a, while the Court of Appeals held that
    the claim had been either waived or previously deter
    mined, Cone, 
    243 F. 3d, at 969
    . We now conclude that
    neither prior determination nor waiver provides an inde
    pendent and adequate state ground for denying Cone
    review of his federal claim.
    It is well established that federal courts will not review
    questions of federal law presented in a habeas petition
    when the state court’s decision rests upon a state-law
    ground that “is independent of the federal question and
    adequate to support the judgment.” Coleman v. Thomp
    son, 
    501 U. S. 722
    , 729 (1991); Lee v. Kemna, 
    534 U. S. 362
    , 375 (2002). In the context of federal habeas proceed
    16                      CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    ings, the independent and adequate state ground doctrine
    is designed to “ensur[e] that the States’ interest in correct
    ing their own mistakes is respected in all federal habeas
    cases.” Coleman, 
    501 U. S., at 732
    . When a petitioner
    fails to properly raise his federal claims in state court, he
    deprives the State of “an opportunity to address those
    claims in the first instance” and frustrates the State’s
    ability to honor his constitutional rights. 
    Id., at 732, 748
    .
    Therefore, consistent with the longstanding requirement
    that habeas petitioners must exhaust available state
    remedies before seeking relief in federal court, we have
    held that when a petitioner fails to raise his federal claims
    in compliance with relevant state procedural rules, the
    state court’s refusal to adjudicate the claim ordinarily
    qualifies as an independent and adequate state ground for
    denying federal review. See 
    id., at 731
    .
    That does not mean, however, that federal habeas re
    view is barred every time a state court invokes a proce
    dural rule to limit its review of a state prisoner’s claims.
    We have recognized that “ ‘the adequacy of state proce
    dural bars to the assertion of federal questions’ . . . is not
    within the State’s prerogative finally to decide; rather,
    adequacy ‘is itself a federal question.’ ” Lee, 
    534 U. S., at 375
     (quoting Douglas v. Alabama, 
    380 U. S. 415
    , 422
    (1965)); see also Coleman, 
    501 U. S., at 736
     (“[F]ederal
    habeas courts must ascertain for themselves if the peti
    tioner is in custody pursuant to a state court judgment
    that rests on independent and adequate state grounds”).
    The question before us now is whether federal review of
    Cone’s Brady claim is procedurally barred either because
    the claim was twice presented to the state courts or be
    cause it was waived, and thus not presented at all.
    First, we address the contention that the repeated pres
    entation of a claim in state court bars later federal review.
    The Tennessee postconviction court denied Cone’s Brady
    claim after concluding it had been previously determined
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                 17
    Opinion of the Court
    following a full and fair hearing in state court. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –30–112(a) (1982). That conclusion rested
    on a false premise: Contrary to the state courts’ finding,
    Cone had not presented his Brady claim in earlier pro
    ceedings and, consequently, the state courts had not
    passed on it. The Sixth Circuit recognized that Cone’s
    Brady claim had not been decided on direct appeal, see
    Cone, 
    243 F. 3d, at 969
    , but felt constrained by the state
    courts’ refusal to reach the merits of that claim on post
    conviction review. The Court of Appeals concluded that
    because the state postconviction courts had applied a state
    procedural law to avoid reaching the merits of Cone’s
    Brady claim, “an ‘independent and adequate’ state
    ground” barred federal habeas review. 
    243 F. 3d, at 969
    .
    In this Court the State does not defend that aspect of the
    Court of Appeals’ holding, and rightly so.
    When a state court declines to review the merits of a
    petitioner’s claim on the ground that it has done so al
    ready, it creates no bar to federal habeas review. In Ylst
    v. Nunnemaker, 
    501 U. S. 797
    , 804, n. 3 (1991), we ob
    served in passing that when a state court declines to
    revisit a claim it has already adjudicated, the effect of the
    later decision upon the availability of federal habeas is
    “nil” because “a later state decision based upon ineligibil
    ity for further state review neither rests upon procedural
    default nor lifts a pre-existing procedural default.”12
    When a state court refuses to readjudicate a claim on the
    ground that it has been previously determined, the court’s
    ——————
    12 With the exception of the Sixth Circuit, all Courts of Appeals to
    have directly confronted the question both before and after Ylst, 
    501 U. S. 797
    , have agreed that a state court’s successive rejection of a
    federal claim does not bar federal habeas review. See, e.g., Page v.
    Frank, 
    343 F. 3d 901
    , 907 (CA7 2003); Brecheen v. Reynolds, 
    41 F. 3d 1343
    , 1358 (CA10 1994); Bennett v. Whitley, 
    41 F. 3d 1581
    , 1582 (CA5
    1994); Silverstein v. Henderson, 
    706 F. 2d 361
    , 368 (CA2 1983). See
    also Lambright v. Stewart, 
    241 F. 3d 1201
    , 1206 (CA9 2001).
    18                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    decision does not indicate that the claim has been proce
    durally defaulted. To the contrary, it provides strong
    evidence that the claim has already been given full consid
    eration by the state courts and thus is ripe for federal
    adjudication. See 
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    (b)(1)(A) (permitting
    issuance of a writ of habeas corpus only after “the appli
    cant has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of
    the State”).
    A claim is procedurally barred when it has not been
    fairly presented to the state courts for their initial consid
    eration—not when the claim has been presented more
    than once. Accordingly, insofar as the Court of Appeals
    rejected Cone’s Brady claim as procedurally defaulted
    because the claim had been twice presented to the Ten
    nessee courts, its decision was erroneous.
    As an alternative (and contradictory) ground for barring
    review of Cone’s Brady claim, the State has argued that
    Cone’s claim was properly dismissed by the state postcon
    viction court on the ground it had been waived. We are
    not persuaded. The state appellate court affirmed the
    denial of Cone’s Brady claim on the same mistaken ground
    offered by the lower court—that the claim had been previ
    ously determined.13 Contrary to the State’s assertion, the
    ——————
    13 As recounted earlier, Cone’s state postconviction petition contained
    numerous claims of error. The state postconviction court dismissed
    some of those claims as waived and others, including the Brady claim,
    as having been previously determined. In affirming the denial of
    Cone’s petition the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals summarily
    stated that Cone had “failed to rebut the presumption of waiver as to
    all claims raised in his second petition for post-conviction relief which
    had not been previously determined.” Cone v. State, 
    927 S. W. 2d 579
    ,
    582 (1995). Pointing to that language, the State asserts that the
    Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals denied Cone’s Brady claim not
    because it had been previously determined, but because it was waived
    in the postconviction court proceedings. Not so. Without questioning
    the trial court’s finding that Cone’s Brady claim had been previously
    determined, the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the denial of
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                    19
    Opinion of the Court
    Tennessee appellate court did not hold that Cone’s Brady
    claim was waived.
    When a state court declines to find that a claim has
    been waived by a petitioner’s alleged failure to comply
    with state procedural rules, our respect for the state-court
    judgment counsels us to do the same. Although we have
    an independent duty to scrutinize the application of state
    rules that bar our review of federal claims, Lee, 
    534 U. S., at 375
    , we have no concomitant duty to apply state proce
    dural bars where state courts have themselves declined to
    do so. The Tennessee courts did not hold that Cone
    waived his Brady claim, and we will not second-guess
    their judgment.14
    ——————
    Cone’s postconviction petition in its entirety. Nothing in that decision
    suggests the appellate court believed the Brady claim had been waived
    in the court below.
    Similarly, while JUSTICE ALITO’s parsing of the record persuades him
    that Cone failed to adequately raise his Brady claim to the Tennessee
    Court of Criminal Appeals, he does not argue that the court expressly
    held that Cone waived the claim. A review of Cone’s opening brief
    reveals that he made a broad challenge to the postconviction court’s
    dismissal of his petition and plainly asserted that the court erred by
    dismissing claims as previously determined on direct appeal or in his
    initial postconviction petition. See Brief for Petitioner-Appellant in No.
    02–C–01–9403–CR–00052 (Tenn. Crim. App.), pp. 7, 14. The state
    appellate court did not state or suggest that Cone had waived his Brady
    claim. Rather, after commending the postconviction court for its
    “exemplary and meticulous treatment of the appellant’s petition,” Cone,
    927 S. W. 2d, at 581, the appellate court simply adopted without
    modification the lower court’s findings with respect to the application of
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –30–112 to the facts of this case. The best reading
    of the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision is that it was
    based on an approval of the postconviction court’s reasoning rather
    than on an unmentioned failure by Cone to adequately challenge the
    dismissal of his Brady claim on appeal.
    14 Setting aside the state courts’ mistaken belief that Cone’s Brady
    claim had been previously determined, there are many reasons the
    state courts might have rejected the State’s waiver argument. The
    record establishes that the suppressed documents which form the basis
    for Cone’s claim were not available to him until the Tennessee Court of
    20                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    The State’s procedural objections to federal review of the
    merits of Cone’s claim have resulted in a significant delay
    in bringing this unusually protracted case to a conclusion.
    Ultimately, however, they provide no obstacle to judicial
    review. Cone properly preserved and exhausted his Brady
    claim in the state court; therefore, it is not defaulted. We
    turn now to the merits of that claim.
    V
    Although the State is obliged to “prosecute with ear
    nestness and vigor,” it “is as much [its] duty to refrain
    from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful
    conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring
    about a just one.” Berger, 
    295 U. S., at 88
    . Accordingly,
    we have held that when the State withholds from a crimi
    nal defendant evidence that is material to his guilt or
    punishment, it violates his right to due process of law in
    violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. See Brady, 
    373 U. S., at 87
    . In United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U. S. 667
    , 682
    (1985) (opinion of Blackmun, J.), we explained that evi
    dence is “material” within the meaning of Brady when
    there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence
    been disclosed, the result of the proceeding would have
    been different. In other words, favorable evidence is sub
    ject to constitutionally mandated disclosure when it “could
    reasonably be taken to put the whole case in such a differ
    ——————
    Appeals’ 1992 decision interpreting the State’s Public Records Act as
    authorizing the disclosure of prosecutorial records. Soon after obtain
    ing access to the prosecutor’s file and discovering within it documents
    that had not been disclosed prior to trial, Cone amended his petition for
    postconviction relief, adding detailed allegations regarding the sup
    pressed evidence recovered from the file, along with an affidavit ex
    plaining the reason why his claim had not been filed sooner. See App.
    13, 18. The State did not oppose the amendment of Cone’s petition on
    the ground that it was untimely, and it appears undisputed that there
    would have been no basis under state law for doing so. See Brief for
    Petitioner 7, n. 1.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                   21
    Opinion of the Court
    ent light as to undermine confidence in the verdict.” Kyles
    v. Whitley, 
    514 U. S. 419
    , 435 (1995); accord, Banks v.
    Dretke, 
    540 U. S. 668
    , 698–699 (2004); Strickler v. Greene,
    
    527 U. S. 263
    , 290 (1999).15
    The documents suppressed by the State vary in kind,
    but they share a common feature: Each strengthens the
    inference that Cone was impaired by his use of drugs
    around the time his crimes were committed. The sup
    pressed evidence includes statements by witnesses ac
    knowledging that Cone appeared to be “drunk or high,”
    App. 49, “acted real weird,” ibid., and “looked wild eyed,”
    id., at 50, in the two days preceding the murders.16 It also
    includes documents that could have been used to impeach
    ——————
    15 Although the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as
    interpreted by Brady, only mandates the disclosure of material evi
    dence, the obligation to disclose evidence favorable to the defense may
    arise more broadly under a prosecutor’s ethical or statutory obligations.
    See Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at 437
     (“[T]he rule in Bagley (and, hence, in
    Brady) requires less of the prosecution than the ABA Standards for
    Criminal Justice Prosecution Function and Defense Function 3–3.11(a)
    (3d ed. 1993)”). See also ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct
    3.8(d) (2008) (“The prosecutor in a criminal case shall” “make timely
    disclosure to the defense of all evidence or information known to the
    prosecutor that tends to negate the guilt of the accused or mitigates the
    offense, and, in connection with sentencing, disclose to the defense and
    to the tribunal all unprivileged mitigating information known to the
    prosecutor, except when the prosecutor is relieved of this responsibility
    by a protective order of the tribunal”). As we have often observed, the
    prudent prosecutor will err on the side of transparency, resolving
    doubtful questions in favor of disclosure. See Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at 439
    ;
    United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U. S. 667
    , 711, n. 4 (1985) (STEVENS, J.,
    dissenting); United States v. Agurs, 
    427 U. S. 97
    , 108 (1976).
    16 The State contends that the statements were made by witnesses
    who observed Cone during and immediately after he committed robber
    ies; therefore, it is not surprising that Cone appeared less than “se
    rene.” See Brief for Respondent 46. Although a jury would have been
    free to infer that Cone’s behavior was attributable to his criminal
    activity, the evidence is also consistent with Cone’s assertion that he
    was suffering from chronic amphetamine psychosis at the time of the
    crimes.
    22                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    witnesses whose trial testimony cast doubt on Cone’s drug
    addiction. For example, Memphis police officer Ralph
    Roby testified at trial that Cone had no needle marks on
    his body when he was arrested—an observation that
    bolstered the State’s argument that Cone was not a drug
    user. The suppressed evidence reveals, however, that
    Roby authorized multiple teletypes to law enforcement
    agencies in the days following the murders in which he
    described Cone as a “drug user” and a “heavy drug user.”
    See 
    id.,
     at 55–58.17 A suppressed statement made by the
    chief of police of Cone’s hometown also describes Cone as a
    serious drug user. See Cone, 
    243 F. 3d, at 968
    . And un
    disclosed notes of a police interview with Ilene Blankman
    conducted several days after the murders reveal discrep
    ancies between her initial statement and her trial testi
    mony relevant to Cone’s alleged drug use. App. 72–73. In
    sum, both the quantity and the quality of the suppressed
    evidence lends support to Cone’s position at trial that he
    habitually used excessive amounts of drugs, that his ad
    diction affected his behavior during his crime spree, and
    that the State’s arguments to the contrary were false and
    misleading.
    Thus, the federal question that must be decided is
    whether the suppression of that probative evidence de
    prived Cone of his right to a fair trial. See Agurs, 427
    ——————
    17 As the dissent points out, Roby did not testify directly that Cone
    was not a drug user and FBI Agent Eugene Flynn testified that, at the
    time of Cone’s arrest in Pompano Beach, Cone reported that he had
    used cocaine, Dilaudid, and Demerol and was suffering from “slight
    withdrawal symptoms.” See post, at 7, 11. See also Tr. 1916, 1920
    (Apr. 22, 1982). It is important to note, however, that neither Flynn
    nor Roby corroborated Cone’s account of alleged drug use. Taken in
    context, Roby’s statement that he had not observed any needle marks
    on Cone’s body invited the jury to infer that Cone’s self-reported drug
    use was either minimal or contrived. See id., at 1939. Therefore,
    although the suppressed evidence does not directly contradict Roby’s
    trial testimony, it does place it in a different light.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                  23
    Opinion of the Court
    U. S., at 108. Because the Tennessee courts did not reach
    the merits of Cone’s Brady claim, federal habeas review is
    not subject to the deferential standard that applies under
    AEDPA to “any claim that was adjudicated on the merits
    in State court proceedings.” 
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    (d). Instead,
    the claim is reviewed de novo. See, e.g., Rompilla v.
    Beard, 
    545 U. S. 374
    , 390 (2005) (de novo review where
    state courts did not reach prejudice prong under Strick
    land v. Washington, 
    466 U. S. 668
     (1984)); Wiggins v.
    Smith, 
    539 U. S. 510
    , 534 (2003) (same).
    Contending that the Federal District Court and Court of
    Appeals adequately and correctly resolved the merits of
    that claim, the State urges us to affirm the Sixth Circuit’s
    denial of habeas relief. In assessing the materiality of the
    evidence suppressed by the State, the Court of Appeals
    suggested that two facts outweighed the potential force of
    the suppressed evidence. First, the evidence of Cone’s
    guilt was overwhelming. Second, the evidence of Cone’s
    drug use was cumulative because the jury had heard
    evidence of Cone’s alleged addiction from witnesses and
    from officers who interviewed Cone and recovered drugs
    from his vehicle.18 The Court of Appeals did not thor
    oughly review the suppressed evidence or consider what
    its cumulative effect on the jury would have been. More
    over, in concluding that the suppressed evidence was not
    material within the meaning of Brady, the court did not
    distinguish between the materiality of the evidence with
    respect to guilt and the materiality of the evidence with
    respect to punishment—an omission we find significant.
    Evidence that is material to guilt will often be material
    ——————
    18 In pointing to the trial evidence of Cone’s drug use, the Court of
    Appeals made no mention of the fact that the State had discredited the
    testimony of Cone’s experts on the ground that no independent evi
    dence corroborated Cone’s alleged addiction and that the State had
    argued that the drugs in Cone’s car were intended for resale, rather
    than personal use.
    24                     CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    for sentencing purposes as well; the converse is not always
    true, however, as Brady itself demonstrates. In our semi
    nal case on the disclosure of prosecutorial evidence, defen
    dant John Brady was indicted for robbery and capital
    murder. At trial, Brady took the stand and confessed to
    robbing the victim and being present at the murder but
    testified that his accomplice had actually strangled the
    victim. Brady v. State, 
    226 Md. 422
    , 425, 
    174 A. 2d 167
    ,
    168 (1961). After Brady was convicted and sentenced to
    death he discovered that the State had suppressed the
    confession of his accomplice, which included incriminating
    statements consistent with Brady’s version of events. 
    Id., at 426
    , 174 A. 2d, at 169. The Maryland Court of Appeals
    concluded that Brady’s due process rights were violated by
    the suppression of the accomplice’s confession but declined
    to order a new trial on guilt. Observing that nothing in
    the accomplice’s confession “could have reduced . . .
    Brady’s offense below murder in the first degree,” the
    state court ordered a new trial on the question of punish
    ment only. Id., at 430, 174 A. 2d, at 171. We granted
    certiorari and affirmed, rejecting Brady’s contention that
    the state court’s limited remand violated his constitutional
    rights. 
    373 U. S., at 88
    .
    As in Brady, the distinction between the materiality of
    the suppressed evidence with respect to guilt and punish
    ment is significant in this case. During the guilt phase of
    Cone’s trial, the only dispute was whether Cone was “sane
    under the law,” Tr. 2040 (Apr. 22, 1982), as his counsel
    described the issue, or “criminally responsible” for his
    conduct, App. 110, as the prosecutor argued. Under Ten
    nessee law, Cone could not be held criminally responsible
    for the murders if, “at the time of [his] conduct as a result
    of mental disease or defect he lack[ed] substantial capacity
    either to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to
    conform his conduct to the requirements of law.” Graham
    v. State, 
    547 S. W. 2d 531
    , 543 (Tenn. 1977). Although we
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)          25
    Opinion of the Court
    take exception to the Court of Appeals’ failure to assess
    the effect of the suppressed evidence “collectively” rather
    than “item by item,” see Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at 436
    , we never
    theless agree that even when viewed in the light most
    favorable to Cone, the evidence falls short of being suffi
    cient to sustain his insanity defense.
    Cone’s experts testified that his drug addiction and
    posttraumatic stress disorder originated during his service
    in Vietnam, more than 13 years before the Todds were
    murdered. During those years, despite Cone’s drug use
    and mental disorder, he managed to successfully complete
    his education, travel, and (when not incarcerated) function
    in civil society. The suppressed evidence may have
    strengthened the inference that Cone was on drugs or
    suffering from withdrawal at the time of the murders, but
    his behavior before, during, and after the crimes was
    inconsistent with the contention that he lacked substan
    tial capacity either to appreciate the wrongfulness of his
    conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of
    law. See Graham, 547 S. W. 2d, at 543. The likelihood
    that the suppressed evidence would have affected the
    jury’s verdict on the issue of insanity is therefore remote.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the Sixth Circuit did not err
    by denying habeas relief on the ground that the sup
    pressed evidence was immaterial to the jury’s finding of
    guilt.
    The same cannot be said of the Court of Appeals’ sum
    mary treatment of Cone’s claim that the suppressed evi
    dence influenced the jury’s sentencing recommendation.
    There is a critical difference between the high standard
    Cone was required to satisfy to establish insanity as a
    matter of Tennessee law and the far lesser standard that a
    defendant must satisfy to qualify evidence as mitigating in
    a penalty hearing in a capital case. See Bell, 
    535 U. S., at 712
     (STEVENS, J., dissenting) (“[T]here is a vast difference
    between insanity—which the defense utterly failed to
    26                         CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of the Court
    prove—and the possible mitigating effect of drug addiction
    incurred as a result of honorable service in the military”).
    As defense counsel emphasized in his brief opening state
    ment during penalty phase proceedings, the jury was
    statutorily required to consider whether Cone’s “capacity
    . . . to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to
    conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was
    substantially impaired as a result of mental disease or
    defect or intoxication which was insufficient to establish a
    defense to the crime but which substantially affected his
    judgment.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §39
    –2–203(j)(8) (1982). It is
    possible that the suppressed evidence, viewed cumula
    tively, may have persuaded the jury that Cone had a far
    more serious drug problem than the prosecution was
    prepared to acknowledge, and that Cone’s drug use played
    a mitigating, though not exculpating, role in the crimes he
    committed.19 The evidence might also have rebutted the
    State’s suggestion that Cone had manipulated his expert
    witnesses into falsely believing he was a drug addict when
    in fact he did not struggle with substance abuse.
    Neither the Court of Appeals nor the District Court fully
    considered whether the suppressed evidence might have
    persuaded one or more jurors that Cone’s drug addiction—
    especially if attributable to honorable service of his coun
    try in Vietnam—was sufficiently serious to justify a deci
    sion to imprison him for life rather than sentence him to
    death. Because the evidence suppressed at Cone’s trial
    ——————
    19 We agree with the dissent that the standard to be applied by the
    District Court in evaluating the merits of Cone’s Brady claim on re
    mand is whether there is a reasonable probability that, had the sup
    pressed evidence been disclosed, the result of the proceeding would
    have been different. See post, at 5. Because neither the District Court
    nor the Court of Appeals considered the merits of Cone’s claim with
    respect to the effect of the withheld evidence on his sentence, it is
    appropriate for the District Court, rather than this Court, to do so in
    the first instance.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)           27
    Opinion of the Court
    may well have been material to the jury’s assessment of
    the proper punishment in this case, we conclude that a
    full review of the suppressed evidence and its effect is
    warranted.
    VI
    In the 27 years since Gary Cone was convicted of mur
    der and sentenced to death, no Tennessee court has
    reached the merits of his claim that state prosecutors
    withheld evidence that would have bolstered his defense
    and rebutted the State’s attempts to cast doubt on his
    alleged drug addiction. Today we hold that the Tennessee
    courts’ procedural rejection of Cone’s Brady claim does not
    bar federal habeas review of the merits of that claim.
    Although we conclude that the suppressed evidence was
    not material to Cone’s conviction for first-degree murder,
    the lower courts erred in failing to assess the cumulative
    effect of the suppressed evidence with respect to Cone’s
    capital sentence. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court
    of Appeals is vacated, and the case is remanded to the
    District Court with instructions to give full consideration
    to the merits of Cone’s Brady claim.
    It is so ordered.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            1
    ROBERTS, C. J., concurring in judgment
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–1114
    _________________
    GARY BRADFORD CONE, PETITIONER v. RICKY
    BELL, WARDEN
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    [April 28, 2009]
    CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS, concurring in the judgment.
    The Court’s decision is grounded in unusual facts that
    necessarily limit its reach. When issues under Brady v.
    Maryland, 
    373 U. S. 83
     (1963), are presented on federal
    habeas, they usually have been previously addressed in
    state proceedings. Federal review is accordingly sharply
    limited by established principles of deference: If the claim
    has been waived under state rules, that waiver typically
    precludes federal review. If the claim has been decided in
    the state system, federal review is restricted in light of the
    state court’s legal and factual conclusions. The unique
    procedural posture of this case presents a Brady claim
    neither barred under state rules for failure to raise it nor
    decided in the state system.
    When it comes to that claim, the Court specifies that the
    appropriate legal standard is the one we set forth in Kyles
    v. Whitley, 
    514 U. S. 419
    , 435 (1995) (whether “the favor
    able evidence could reasonably be taken to put the whole
    case in such a different light as to undermine confidence
    in the verdict”). See ante, at 20–21, 26, n. 19. I do not
    understand the majority to depart from that standard, and
    the majority certainly does not purport to do so.
    That leaves only application of the accepted legal stan
    dard to the particular facts. It is highly unusual for this
    Court to engage in such an enterprise, see Kyles, 
    supra,
     at
    2                        CONE v. BELL
    ROBERTS, C. J., concurring in judgment
    458 (SCALIA, J., dissenting), and the Court’s asserted basis
    for doing so in this case is dubious, see post, at 1, 4–5
    (THOMAS, J., dissenting).
    In any event, the Court’s review of the facts does not
    lead it to conclude that Cone is entitled to relief—only that
    the courts below did not adequately consider his claim
    with respect to sentencing. See ante, at 26 (“Neither the
    Court of Appeals nor the District Court fully considered
    whether the suppressed evidence” undermines confidence
    in Cone’s sentence). The Court simply reviews the facts in
    the light most favorable to Cone, concludes that the evi
    dence does not undermine confidence in the jury’s deter
    mination that Cone is guilty, but sends the case back for
    “full consideration” of whether the same is true as to the
    jury’s sentence of death. Ante, at 25–27.
    So this is what we are left with: a fact-specific determi
    nation, under the established legal standard, viewing the
    unique facts in favor of the defendant, that the Brady
    claim fails with respect to guilt, but might have merit as
    to sentencing. In light of all this, I see no reason to quar
    rel with the Court’s ruling on the Brady claim.
    In considering on remand whether the facts establish a
    Brady violation, it is clear that the lower courts should
    analyze the issue under the constitutional standards we
    have set forth, not under whatever standards the Ameri
    can Bar Association may have established. The ABA
    standards are wholly irrelevant to the disposition of this
    case, and the majority’s passing citation of them should
    not be taken to suggest otherwise. See ante, at 21, n. 15.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                  1
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–1114
    _________________
    GARY BRADFORD CONE, PETITIONER v. RICKY
    BELL, WARDEN
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    [April 28, 2009]
    JUSTICE ALITO, concurring in part and dissenting in
    part.
    We granted certiorari in this case to answer two ques­
    tions:
    “1. Is a federal habeas claim ‘procedurally defaulted’
    because it has been presented twice to the state
    courts?
    “2. Is a federal habeas court powerless to recognize
    that a state court erred in holding that state law pre­
    cludes reviewing a claim?” Pet. for Cert. i.
    Both of these questions are based on a factually incor­
    rect premise, namely, that the Tennessee Court of Crimi­
    nal Appeals, the highest state court to entertain peti­
    tioner’s appeal from the denial of his second petition for
    state postconviction relief,1 rejected petitioner’s Brady2
    claim on the ground that the claim had been previously
    ——————
    1 Because  the Tennessee Supreme Court denied discretionary review
    of the decision of the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals decision
    affirming the denial of petitioner’s second amended petition for post­
    conviction relief, we must look to the decision of the latter court to
    determine if the decision below was based on an adequate and inde­
    pendent state ground. See Baldwin v. Reese, 
    541 U. S. 27
    , 30–32
    (2004); O’Sullivan v. Boerckel, 
    526 U. S. 838
    , 842–843 (1999).
    2 Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U. S. 83
     (1963).
    2                      CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    decided by the Tennessee Supreme Court in petitioner’s
    direct appeal. Petitioner’s argument is that the State
    Supreme Court did not decide any Brady issue on direct
    appeal, that the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals
    erred in holding otherwise, and that the Sixth Circuit
    erred in concluding that the Brady claim had been proce­
    durally defaulted on this ground. Petitioner is quite cor­
    rect that his Brady claim was not decided on direct appeal,
    and the Court in the present case is clearly correct in
    holding that a second attempt to litigate a claim in state
    court does not necessarily bar subsequent federal habeas
    review. See ante, at 8–9.
    But all of this is beside the point because the Tennessee
    Court of Criminal Appeals did not reject petitioner’s Brady
    claim on the ground that the claim had been previously
    determined on direct appeal. Rather, petitioner’s Brady
    claim was simply never raised before the Tennessee Court
    of Criminal Appeals, and that court did not rule on the
    claim at all.
    Because the Sixth Circuit’s decision on the issue of
    procedural default rests on the same mistaken premise
    that the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals rejected
    petitioner’s Brady claim on the ground that it had been
    previously determined, I entirely agree with the majority
    that the Sixth Circuit’s decision on that issue cannot be
    sustained and that a remand is required. I cannot join the
    Court’s opinion, however, for two chief reasons.
    First, the Court states without explanation that “Cone
    properly preserved and exhausted his Brady claim in the
    state court” and that therefore the claim has not been
    defaulted. Ante, at 20. Because Cone never fairly raised
    this claim in the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals, the
    claim is either not exhausted (if Cone could now raise the
    claim in state court) or is procedurally defaulted (if state
    law now provides no avenue for further review). I would
    leave these questions for resolution in the first instance on
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            3
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    remand.
    Second, the Court, again without explanation, remands
    this case to the District Court, not the Court of Appeals. I
    see no justification for this step.
    I
    In order to understand the tangled procedural default
    issue presented in this case, it is necessary to review the
    far-from-exemplary manner in which the attorneys for
    petitioner and respondent litigated the Brady claim in the
    state courts.
    On direct appeal, petitioner did not raise any Brady
    claim. As the Court notes, petitioner did claim that the
    State had violated a state discovery rule by failing to
    provide prior statements given by certain witnesses and
    that therefore the testimony of these witnesses should
    have been stricken. App. 114–117; State v. Cone, 
    665 S. W. 2d 87
    , 94 (Tenn. 1984). Although this claim con­
    cerned the State’s failure to turn over information, it is
    clear that this was not a Brady claim.
    The first appearance of anything resembling the claim
    now at issue occurred in 1993 when petitioner’s experi­
    enced attorneys filed an amendment to his second petition
    for postconviction relief in the Shelby County Criminal
    Court. This petition included a long litany of tangled
    claims. Paragraph 35 of this amended petition claimed,
    among other things, that the State had wrongfully with­
    held information demonstrating that one particular prose­
    cution witness had testified falsely concerning “petitioner
    and his drug use.” App. 13–14. This nondisclosure, the
    petition stated, violated not only the Fifth and Fourteenth
    Amendments to the Constitution of the United States
    (which protect the due process right on which Brady is
    based) but also the Fourth, Sixth, and Eighth Amend­
    ments to the United States Constitution and four provi­
    sions of the Tennessee Constitution.
    4                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    Two months later, counsel for petitioner filed an
    amendment adding 12 more claims, including one (¶41)
    alleging that the State had abridged petitioner’s rights by
    failing to disclose evidence that petitioner suffered from
    drug problems. Id., at 20. According to this new submis­
    sion, the nondisclosure violated, in addition to the previ­
    ously cited provisions of the federal and state constitu­
    tions, five more provisions of the state constitution,
    including provisions regarding double jeopardy, see Tenn.
    Const., Art. I, §10, ex post facto laws, §11, indictment, §14,
    and open courts, §17.
    The Shelby County Criminal Court was faced with the
    task of wading through the morass presented in the
    amended petition. Under 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –30–112
    (1990) (repealed 1995),3 a claim could not be raised in a
    postconviction proceeding if the claim had been “previ­
    ously determined” or waived. Citing the State Supreme
    Court’s rejection on direct appeal of petitioner’s claim that
    the prosecution had violated a state discovery rule by
    failing to turn over witness statements, the State incor­
    rectly informed the court that the failure-to-disclose­
    exculpatory-evidence claim set out in ¶41 had been “previ­
    ously determined” on direct appeal. App. 15–16. The
    Shelby County Criminal Court rejected the claim on this
    ground, and held that all of petitioner’s claims had either
    been previously determined or waived. 
    Id., at 22
    .
    Given the importance now assigned to petitioner’s
    Brady claim, one might think that petitioner’s attorneys
    would have (a) stressed that claim in the opening brief
    that they filed in the Tennessee Court of Criminal Ap­
    ——————
    3 Tennessee law has since changed. Currently, the Tennessee Post-
    Conviction Procedure Act bars any second postconviction petition, see
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. §40
    –30–102 (2006), and permits the reopening of a
    petition only under limited circumstances, §40–30–117. These restric­
    tions apply to any petition filed after the enactment of the Post-
    Conviction Procedure Act, even if the conviction occurred long before.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                     5
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    peals, (b) pointed out the lower court’s clear error in con­
    cluding that this claim had been decided in the direct
    appeal, and (c) explained that information supporting the
    claim had only recently come to light due to the production
    of documents under the State’s public records act. But
    counsel did none of these things. In fact, the Brady claim
    was not mentioned at all.
    Nor was Brady cited in the reply brief filed by the same
    attorneys. The reply brief did contain a passing reference
    to “the withholding of exculpatory evidence,” but the brief
    did not elaborate on this claim and again failed to mention
    that this claim had never been previously decided and was
    supported by newly discovered evidence.4
    The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the
    decision of the lower state court, but the appellate court
    made no mention of the Brady claim, and I see no basis for
    concluding that the court regarded the issue as having
    been raised on appeal.
    Appellate courts generally do not reach out to decide
    issues not raised by the appellant. Snell v. Tunnell, 
    920 F. 2d 673
    , 676 (CA10 1990); see Powers v. Hamilton Cty.
    Public Defender Comm’n, 
    501 F. 3d 592
    , 609–610 (CA6
    2007); see also Galvan v. Alaska Dept. of Corrections, 
    397 F. 3d 1198
    , 1204 (CA9 2005) (“Courts generally do not
    decide issues not raised by the parties. If they granted
    relief to petitioners on grounds not urged by petitioners,
    ——————
    4 After referring to a long list of claims (not including any claim for
    the failure to disclose exculpatory evidence), the reply brief states:
    “[I]t is clear that meritorious claims have been presented for adjudica­
    tion. These claims have not been waived and a remand for a hearing is
    essential in order to enable Mr. Cone to present evidence and prove the
    factual allegations, including those relating to his claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel, Petition ¶¶15, 16, 44, R–67, 71 and 141 and of the
    withholding of exculpatory evidence. Petition ¶41, R–139.” Reply Brief
    of Petitioner-Appellant in No. 02–C–01–9403–CR–0052, p. 5 (emphasis
    added) (hereinafter Reply Brief).
    6                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    respondents would be deprived of a fair opportunity to
    respond, and the courts would be deprived of the benefit of
    briefing” (footnote omitted)). Nor do they generally con­
    sider issues first mentioned in a reply brief. Physicians
    Comm. For Responsible Medicine v. Johnson, 
    436 F. 3d 326
    , 331, n. 6 (CA2 2006); Doe v. Beaumont Independent
    School Dist., 
    173 F. 3d 274
    , 299, n. 13 (CA5 1999) (Garza,
    J., dissenting); Doolin Security Sav. Bank, F. S. B. v.
    Office of Thrift Supervision, 
    156 F. 3d 190
    , 191 (CADC
    1998); Boone v. Carlsbad Bancorporation, Inc., 
    972 F. 2d 1545
    , 1554, n. 6 (CA10 1992). And it is common to prac­
    tice for appellate courts to refuse to consider issues that
    are mentioned only in passing. Reynolds v. Wagner, 
    128 F. 3d 166
    , 178 (CA3 1997) (citing authorities).
    The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals follows these
    standard practices. Rule 10(b) of that court states quite
    specifically: “Issues which are not supported by argument,
    citation to authorities, or appropriate references to the
    record will be treated as waived in this court.” The court
    has applied this rule in capital cases, State v. Dellinger, 
    79 S. W. 3d 458
    , 495, 497, 503 (Tenn. 2002) (appendix to
    majority opinion); Brimmer v. State, 
    29 S. W. 3d 497
    , 530
    (1998), and in others. See, e.g., State v. Faulkner, 
    2001 WL 378540
     (Tenn. Crim. App., Sept. 10, 2001) (73-year
    sentence for first-degree murder). And in both capital and
    noncapital cases, the court has refused to entertain
    arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief. See
    State v. Gerhardt, 
    2009 WL 160930
     (Tenn. Crim. App.,
    Jan. 23, 2009) (capital case); Carruthers v. State, 
    814 S. W. 2d 64
    , 68 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1991) (capital case); Cammon
    v. State, 
    2007 WL 2409568
    , *6 (Tenn. Crim. App., Aug. 23,
    2007) (noncapital case).5 Thus, unless the Tennessee
    ——————
    5 In a footnote in his reply brief, petitioner stated that he was not
    waiving any claim presented in the court below and asked the appellate
    court to consider all those claims. See Reply Brief 3, n. 1. But the
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                  7
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    Court of Criminal Appeals departed substantially from its
    general practice, that court did not regard petitioner’s
    Brady claim as having been raised on appeal.
    In the decision now under review, the Sixth Circuit held
    that “[t]he Tennessee courts found that Cone’s Brady
    claims were ‘previously determined’ and, therefore, not
    cognizable in [his] state post-conviction action.” 
    492 F. 3d 743
    , 756 (2007). In my judgment, however, there is no
    basis for concluding that the Tennessee Court of Criminal
    Appeals thought that any Brady issue was before it. A
    contrary interpretation would mean that the Tennessee
    Court of Criminal Appeals, disregarding its own rules and
    standard practice, entertained an issue that was not men­
    tioned at all in the appellant’s main brief and was men­
    tioned only in passing and without any development in the
    reply brief. It would mean that the Tennessee Court of
    Criminal Appeals, having chosen to delve into the Brady
    issue on its own, ruled on the issue without even mention­
    ing it in its opinion and without bothering to check the
    record to determine whether in fact the Brady issue had
    been decided on direct appeal. Such an interpretation is
    utterly implausible, and it is telling that the majority
    in this case cites no support for such an interpretation in
    the opinion of the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals’
    opinion.
    The Sixth Circuit’s decision on the question of proce­
    dural default rests on an erroneous premise and must
    therefore be vacated.
    II
    I also agree with the Court that we should not affirm
    the decision below on the ground that the Brady claim
    lacks substantive merit. After its erroneous discussion of
    ——————
    Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals has specifically held that claims
    may not be raised on appeal in this manner. See Leonard v. State, 
    2007 WL 1946662
    , *21–*22 (Tenn. Crim. App., July 5, 2007).
    8                          CONE v. BELL
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    procedural default, the Sixth Circuit went on to discuss
    the merits of petitioner’s Brady claim. In its 2001 opinion,
    the Court of Appeals recognized that the prosecution’s
    Brady obligation extends not only to evidence that is
    material to guilt but also to evidence that is material to
    punishment. See Cone v. Bell, 
    243 F. 3d 961
    , 968 (2001)
    (citing Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 
    480 U. S. 39
    , 57 (1987)).
    But neither in that opinion nor in its 2006 opinion did the
    court address the materiality of the information in ques­
    tion here in relation to petitioner’s punishment. See 
    492 F. 3d, at 756
     (“A review of the allegedly withheld docu­
    ments shows that this evidence would not have overcome
    the overwhelming evidence of Cone’s guilt in committing a
    brutal double murder and the persuasive testimony that
    Cone was not under the influence of drugs” (emphasis
    added)). Therefore, despite the strength of the arguments
    in JUSTICE THOMAS’ dissent, I would leave that question to
    be decided by the Sixth Circuit on remand.
    III
    The Court, however, does not simply vacate and remand
    to the Sixth Circuit but goes further.
    First, the Court states without elaboration that peti­
    tioner “preserved and exhausted his Brady claim in the
    state court.” Ante, at 20. As I have explained, petitioner
    did not fairly present his Brady claim in his prior appeal
    to the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals, and therefore
    that claim is either unexhausted or procedurally barred.
    If the State is not now foreclosed from relying on the
    failure to exhaust, see 
    28 U. S. C. §2254
    (b)(3), or on proce­
    dural default,6 those questions may be decided on remand.
    ——————
    6 Unlike exhaustion, procedural default may be waived if it is not
    raised as a defense. Banks v. Dretke, 
    540 U. S. 668
    , 705 (2004) (allow­
    ing for waiver of “procedural default” “based on the State’s litigation
    conduct” (citing Gray v. Netherland, 
    518 U. S. 152
    , 166 (1996))). Here,
    it appears that the State has consistently argued that petitioner’s
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                 9
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    Second, the Court remands the case to the District
    Court rather than the Court of Appeals. A remand to the
    District Court would of course be necessary if petitioner
    were entitled to an evidentiary hearing, but the Court
    does not hold that an evidentiary hearing is either re­
    quired or permitted. In my view, unless there is to be an
    evidentiary hearing, there is no reason to remand this
    case to the District Court. If the only purpose of remand is
    to require an evaluation of petitioner’s Brady claim in
    light of the present record, the District Court is not in a
    superior position to conduct such a review. And even if
    such a review is conducted in the first instance by the
    District Court, that court’s decision would be subject to de
    novo review in the Court of Appeals. 
    492 F. 3d, at 750
    ;
    Cone v. Bell, 
    243 F. 3d, at
    966–967 (CA6 2001); see United
    States v. Graham, 
    484 F. 3d 413
     (CA6 2007); United States
    v. Miller, 
    161 F. 3d 977
    , 987 (CA6 1998); United States v.
    Phillip, 
    948 F. 2d 241
    , 250 (CA6 1991). Accordingly, I see
    no good reason for remanding to the District Court rather
    than the Court of Appeals. And if the majority has such a
    reason, it is one that it has chosen to keep to itself.
    *   *     *
    For these reasons, I would vacate the decision of the
    Court of Appeals and remand to that court.
    ——————
    Brady claim was procedurally defaulted, but the State’s supporting
    arguments have shifted. Whether the question of procedural default
    described in this opinion should be entertained under the particular
    circumstances here is an intensely fact-bound matter that should be
    left for the Sixth Circuit on remand.
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            1
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 07–1114
    _________________
    GARY BRADFORD CONE, PETITIONER v. RICKY
    BELL, WARDEN
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    [April 28, 2009]
    JUSTICE THOMAS, with whom JUSTICE SCALIA joins,
    dissenting.
    The Court affirms Gary Cone’s conviction for beating an
    elderly couple to death with a blunt object. In so doing,
    the majority correctly rejects Cone’s argument that his
    guilty verdict was secured in violation of his rights under
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U. S. 83
     (1963). The majority
    declines, however, to decide whether the same evidence
    that was insufficient under Brady to overturn his convic
    tion provides a basis for overturning his death sentence.
    The majority instead remands this question to the District
    Court for further consideration because it finds that the
    Court of Appeals engaged in a “summary treatment” of
    Cone’s Brady sentencing claim. See ante, at 25–27.
    I respectfully dissent. The Court of Appeals’ allegedly
    “summary treatment” of Cone’s sentencing claim does not
    justify a remand to the District Court. Cone has failed to
    establish “ ‘a reasonable probability that, had the evidence
    been disclosed to the defense, the result of the [sentencing]
    proceeding would have been different,’ ” Kyles v. Whitley,
    
    514 U. S. 419
    , 435 (1995) (quoting United States v. Bagley,
    
    473 U. S. 667
    , 682 (1985) (opinion of Blackmun, J.)). As a
    result, I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Ap
    2                           CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    peals. 1
    I
    This case arises from a crime spree 28 years ago that
    began with Cone’s robbery of a jewelry store in Memphis,
    Tennessee, and concluded with his robbery of a drugstore
    in Pompano Beach, Florida. Along the way, Cone shot a
    police officer and a bystander while trying to escape the
    first robbery, attempted to shoot another man in a failed
    carjacking attempt, unsuccessfully tried to force his way
    into a woman’s apartment at gunpoint, and murdered 93
    year-old Shipley Todd and his 79-year-old wife, Cleopatra.
    When he was tried on two counts of first-degree murder in
    1982, Cone’s sole defense was that he did not have the
    requisite intent to commit first-degree murder because
    he was in the grip of a chronic amphetamine psychosis.
    The jury rejected the defense and convicted Cone of both
    murders.
    At sentencing, the Tennessee jury found beyond a rea
    sonable doubt that four statutory aggravating factors
    applied to Cone’s offense: (1) Cone had been convicted of
    one or more previous felonies involving the use or threat of
    violence; (2) he had knowingly created a great risk of
    death to two or more persons other than the victim during
    his act of murder; (3) the murder was especially heinous,
    atrocious or cruel in that it involved torture or depravity of
    mind; and (4) the murder was committed for the purpose
    of avoiding a lawful arrest. Tr. 2151–2152 (Apr. 23, 1982);
    see also State v. Cone, 
    665 S. W. 2d 87
    , 94–96 (Tenn.
    ——————
    1 Because I would affirm on the basis of the Court of Appeals’ alterna
    tive holding below, I do not reach the issues of procedural default
    resolved by the majority. See United States v. Atlantic Research Corp.,
    
    551 U. S. 128
    , 141, n. 8 (2007); Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of North
    ern New Eng., 
    546 U. S. 320
    , 332 (2006); Ardestani v. INS, 
    502 U. S. 129
    , 139 (1991).
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                   3
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    1984). 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §39
    –2-203(i) (1982).2 Cone ar
    gued to the jury at sentencing that his “capacity . . . to
    appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform
    his conduct to the requirements of the law was substan
    tially impaired as a result of mental disease or defect or
    intoxication which was insufficient to establish a defense
    to the crime but which substantially affected his judg
    ment.” See §39–2-203(j)(8). But the jury found that nei
    ther this, nor any other mitigating factor, outweighed the
    aggravating factors. The jury, as required by Tennessee
    law, unanimously sentenced Cone to death. See §39–2
    203(g).
    For almost three decades, Cone’s case has traveled
    through the Tennessee and federal courts. This Court has
    twice reversed decisions from the Court of Appeals that
    invalidated Cone’s conviction and sentence. See Bell v.
    Cone, 
    535 U. S. 685
     (2002); Bell v. Cone, 
    543 U. S. 447
    (2005) (per curiam). On remand from this Court’s latest
    decision, the Court of Appeals directly considered whether
    a handful of police reports, law enforcement bulletins, and
    notes that were allegedly withheld from Cone’s trial attor
    neys could have changed the result of Cone’s trial or sen
    tencing. And, for the second time, the Court of Appeals
    held that there was not a “ ‘reasonable probability’ ” that
    the evidence would have altered the jury’s conclusion “that
    Cone’s prior drug use did not vitiate his specific intent to
    murder his victims and did not mitigate his culpability
    sufficient to avoid the death sentence.” 
    492 F. 3d 743
    , 757
    (CA6 2007). The Court of Appeals, therefore, held that
    neither Cone’s conviction nor his sentence was invalid.
    ——————
    2 The Tennessee Supreme Court later concluded that the record in
    Cone’s case was doubtful as to evidence supporting the second circum
    stance given the lapse in time between the initial events of the escape
    and the Todd murders. Cone, 665 S. W. 2d, at 95. The court, however,
    determined that the existence of the other three factors rendered any
    possible error in this factor harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Ibid.
    4                       CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    See ibid.; Cone v. Bell, 
    243 F. 3d 961
    , 968 (CA6 2001). We
    should affirm the Court of Appeals and put an end to this
    litigation.
    II
    According to the majority, the Court of Appeals’ decision
    affirming Cone’s death sentence is too “summary,” ante, at
    25, and the facts are such that, on further examination,
    Cone “might” be able to demonstrate that it is “possible”
    that the contested evidence would have persuaded the jury
    to spare his life, ante, at 25–26. On this reasoning, the
    majority remands the case directly to the District Court
    for “full consideration [of] the merits of Cone’s [sentencing]
    claim.” Ante, at 27. I disagree on all counts. Remanding
    the sentencing issue to the District Court is an “unusual
    step” for this Court to take. House v. Bell, 
    547 U. S. 518
    ,
    557 (2006) (ROBERTS, C. J., concurring in judgment in part
    and dissenting in part). Furthermore, in this case, it is a
    step that is legally and factually unjustified. There is not
    “ ‘a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been
    disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would
    have been different.’ ” Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at
    433–434 (quot
    ing Bagley, 
    473 U. S., at 682
     (opinion of Blackmun, J.)).
    A
    The majority’s criticism of the Court of Appeals’ alleg
    edly “summary treatment” of the sentencing question is
    misplaced. Before the Court of Appeals, Cone dedicated
    eight pages of his opening brief to arguing that the impli
    cated evidence was material to his guilt or innocence, but
    spent only one paragraph arguing its materiality to his
    death sentence. See Brief for Appellant in No. 99–5279
    (CA6), pp. 40–48. The Court of Appeals’ focus on the guilt
    phase, rather than the sentencing phase, simply followed
    Cone’s lead. See 
    492 F. 3d, at 755
     (“In his most recent
    brief, claiming that his receiving the withheld evidence
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                     5
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    would have resulted in a different sentence, Cone has
    made only conclusory arguments”).3        There is nothing
    defective about a judicial decision that summarily rejects
    an abbreviated legal argument, especially where, as here,
    the burden of proving the materiality of the contested
    evidence was on Cone.4
    B
    In remanding this matter to the District Court, the
    majority makes two critical errors—one legal and one
    factual—that leave the false impression that Cone’s Brady
    claim has a chance of success. First, the majority states
    that “[i]t is possible that the suppressed evidence” may
    have convinced the jury that Cone’s substance abuse
    played a mitigating role in his crime and “[t]he evidence
    might also have rebutted the State’s suggestion” that
    Cone’s experts were inaccurately depicting the depth of his
    drug-induced impairment. Ante, at 26 (emphasis added);
    see also ante, at 26–27 (remanding “[b]ecause the evidence
    suppressed at Cone’s trial may well have been material to
    the jury’s assessment of the proper punishment in this
    case” (emphasis added)). But, as the majority implicitly
    ——————
    3 The assertion by the majority, ante, at 26, n. 19, and JUSTICE ALITO,
    ante, at 8 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part), that the
    Court of Appeals did not address the merits of the sentencing issue at
    all is flatly wrong. See 
    492 F. 3d, at 757
     (rejecting Cone’s Brady claim
    because the proffered evidence would not have altered the jury’s con
    clusion “that Cone’s prior drug use did not vitiate his specific intent to
    murder his victims and did not mitigate his culpability sufficient to
    avoid the death sentence” (emphasis added)).
    4 The majority does not attempt to justify its remand by contending
    that it is necessary because the record is insufficient to decide the
    claim. Nor could it persuasively contend a remand is necessary so that
    the District Court can hold an evidentiary hearing. Such a hearing
    would shed no additional light on the trial proceedings or the relative
    impeachment value of the withheld documents. Cone himself agrees
    that “this Court should resolve the merits of [his] Brady claim.” Reply
    Brief for Petitioner 24; see also Brief for Respondent 26–27.
    6                       CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    acknowledges, see ante, at 26, n. 19, this is not the correct
    legal test for evaluating a Brady claim: “The mere possibil
    ity that an item of undisclosed information might have
    helped the defense, or might have affected the outcome of
    the trial, does not establish ‘materiality’ in the constitu
    tional sense.” United States v. Agurs, 
    427 U. S. 97
    , 109–
    110 (1976) (emphasis added).
    Rather, this Court has made clear that the legal stan
    dard for adjudicating such a claim is whether there is a
    “reasonable probability” that the jury would have been
    persuaded by the allegedly withheld evidence. Kyles,
    
    supra, at 435
    ; Bagley, 
    supra, at 682
     (opinion of Blackmun,
    J.). It simply is not sufficient, therefore, to claim that
    “there is a reasonable possibility that . . . testimony might
    have produced a different result . . . . [P]etitioner’s burden
    is to establish a reasonable probability of a different re
    sult.” Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U. S. 263
    , 291 (1999) (em
    phasis in original). To satisfy the “reasonable probability”
    standard, Cone must show that “the favorable evidence
    could reasonably be taken to put the whole case in such a
    different light as to undermine confidence” in the jury’s
    sentencing determination. Kyles, 
    supra, at 435
    . The
    Court must view the record “as a whole,” Sawyer v.
    Whitley, 
    505 U. S. 333
    , 374 (1992) (STEVENS, J., concur
    ring in judgment), and determine whether the absence of
    the disclosure prevented Cone from receiving “ ‘a trial
    resulting in a [sentence] worthy of confidence.’ ” Strickler,
    
    supra, at 290
     (quoting Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at 434
    ).
    In the context of this case, for Cone to establish “ ‘a
    reasonable probability that, had the evidence been dis
    closed to the defense, the result of the [sentencing] pro
    ceeding would have been different,’ ” 
    id., at 435
    , he must
    not only demonstrate that the withheld evidence would
    have established that he was substantially impaired as a
    result of drug abuse or withdrawal; Cone also must estab
    lish that the addition of the allegedly withheld evidence
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)                     7
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    ultimately would have led the jury to conclude that any
    mitigating factors (including substantial impairment)
    outweighed all of the established aggravating factors. See
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. §39
    –2-203(g).5
    Second, the majority incorrectly claims that to prevail
    on his Brady claim, Cone must demonstrate simply that
    the withheld evidence supported the inference that he
    “was impaired by his use of drugs around the time his
    crimes were committed.” See ante, at 21. This is factually
    inaccurate because there was already significant evidence
    of Cone’s drug use at trial. To establish that the allegedly
    withheld evidence would reasonably have had any impact
    on his case, Cone must instead show that the evidence
    would have supported his claim of substantial mental
    impairment from drug use.
    There was extensive evidence at trial that supported the
    inference that Cone was not only a longstanding drug
    user, but that he was in fact using drugs at the time of his
    crimes. The State itself presented significant evidence on
    this point. For example, it presented proof that officers
    found marijuana cigarette butts, empty drug vials, and
    loose syringes in the car that Cone abandoned immedi
    ately after the jewelry store robbery. Tr. 1505–1509 (Apr.
    19, 1982). The State also did not challenge testimony from
    Cone’s mother that Cone used drugs. 
    Id., at 1647
    , 1648–
    1653 (Apr. 20, 1982). And, most tellingly, the State intro
    duced evidence that Cone was abusing three drugs—
    ——————
    5 The majority asserts that the standard under Tennessee law for
    demonstrating mental defect or intoxication as a mitigating factor at
    sentencing is “far lesser” than the standard for demonstrating insanity
    in the guilt phase of a criminal trial. Ante, at 25. But the mitigating
    factor still requires a showing that Cone’s mental capacity was “sub
    stantially impaired” as a result of mental defect. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §39
    –
    2-203(j)(8). In any event, the only authority cited by the majority for its
    assertion that the standard is “far” lesser than that for insanity is
    JUSTICE STEVENS’ lone dissent in a prior appeal in this case. Ante, at
    25.
    8                           CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    cocaine, Dilaudid, and Demerol—at the time of his arrest
    and was suffering “slight withdrawal symptoms” from
    them. 
    Id.,
     at 1915–1916, 1920 (Apr. 22, 1982). As the
    Court of Appeals explained, “[i]t would not have been news
    to the jurors, that Cone was a ‘drug user.’ ” 
    492 F. 3d, at 757
    .6
    In contrast, what was contested by the State during
    trial was Cone’s defense that his drug use was so signifi
    cant that it caused him to suffer from extreme ampheta
    mine psychosis at the time of the murders. One of Cone’s
    expert witnesses, a neuropharmacologist, testified that by
    the summer of 1980, when the crimes occurred, Cone was
    ingesting “ferociously large doses” of drugs and that his
    increasing tolerance and use of amphetamines caused a
    chronic amphetamine psychosis. Tr. 1736–1737, 1744–
    1747, 1758–1759 (Apr. 21, 1982). The expert further
    testified that if a person with chronic amphetamine psy
    chosis were to go into withdrawal, he could suffer extreme
    mood swings, “a crashing depression,” and a state of weak
    ness so severe that “he could barely lift himself.” 
    Id.,
     at
    1857–1859. In this expert’s view, these symptoms could
    cause a person to “lose his mind.” Id., at 1859.
    The State contradicted that testimony with significant
    ——————
    6 Althoughthere were two occasions during closing arguments where
    prosecutors intimated that Cone was not a drug user, see Tr. 2014–
    2015, 2068 (Apr. 22, 1982), the State’s argument otherwise consistently
    focused on the real issue in the case: that Cone was not so significantly
    affected by his drug use around the time of his crimes that he was “out
    of his mind” or “drug crazy” during the critical days of August 1980.
    See id., at 2023–2024, 2071–2084. The majority’s focus on two brief
    excerpts from the State’s closing argument fails to faithfully view the
    record “as a whole” for purposes of a Brady analysis. See Sawyer v.
    Whitley, 
    505 U. S. 333
    , 374 (1992) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judg
    ment); see also Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U. S. 263
    , 290–291 (1999)
    (finding no reasonable probability of a different result even when
    prosecutor’s closing argument relied on testimony that could have been
    impeached by withheld material).
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            9
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    evidence that Cone did not act like someone who was “out
    of his mind” during the commission of his crimes. Rather,
    the State argued, Cone behaved rationally during his
    initial Tennessee robbery, his subsequent escape, his
    flight from Tennessee to Florida after the Todd murders,
    his Florida robbery, and his subsequent arrest. See, e.g.,
    
    id.,
     at 2074–2084 (Apr. 22, 1982). To substantiate this
    argument, the State called FBI Special Agent Eugene
    Flynn to the stand. Agent Flynn testified that, when
    captured, Cone coherently detailed his travel from Ten
    nessee to Florida, explained his efforts to evade detection
    by shaving his beard and buying new clothes, and initi
    ated negotiations for a plea bargain. 
    Id.,
     at 1918–1921.
    The State also presented testimony from a friend of
    Cone’s, Ilene Blankman, that she saw no indication that
    Cone was under the influence of drugs or severe with
    drawal in the days immediately following the murder of
    the Todds. 
    Id.,
     at 1875–1876, 1882–1883 (Apr. 21, 1982).
    Viewing the record as a whole, then, it is apparent that
    the contested issue at trial and sentencing was not
    whether Cone used drugs, but rather the quantity of
    Cone’s drug use and its effect on his mental state. Only if
    the evidence allegedly withheld from Cone was relevant to
    this question whether Cone suffered from extreme am
    phetamine psychosis or other substantial impairment
    would the evidence have been exculpatory for purposes of
    Brady. See Order Denying Motion for Evidentiary Hear
    ing and Order of Partial Dismissal, Cone v. Bell, No. 97–
    2312–M1/A (WD Tenn., May 15, 1998), App. to Pet. for
    Cert. 119a, n. 9 (explaining that “the issue at trial was not
    whether Cone had ever abused any drugs (he clearly had),
    but whether he was out of his mind on amphetamines at
    the time of the murders”); Tr. 2115–2116 (Apr. 23, 1982).
    III
    With the legal and factual issues correctly framed, it
    10                     CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    becomes clear that Cone cannot establish a reasonable
    probability that admission of the evidence—viewed either
    individually or cumulatively—would have caused the jury
    to alter his sentence.
    A
    1
    Cone first argues that he was improperly denied police
    reports that included witness statements regarding Cone’s
    behavior around the time of his crime spree. The first
    statement was given by a convenience store employee,
    Robert McKinney, who saw Cone the day before he robbed
    the Tennessee jewelry store. When asked whether Cone
    appeared “to be drunk or high on anything,” McKinney
    answered, “[w]ell he did, he acted real weird . . . he just
    wandered around the store.” App. 49. But McKinney
    subsequently clarified that Cone “didn’t sound drunk” and
    that the reason Cone attracted his attention was because
    he “wasn’t acting like a regular customer”; he was “just
    kinda wandering” around the store. Motion to Expand the
    Record in No. 97–2312–M1 (WD Tenn.), Exh. 2, pp. 3, 4.
    Contrary to the majority’s assertion, this interview is not
    convincing evidence “that Cone appeared to be ‘drunk or
    high’ ” when McKinney saw him. Ante, at 21. McKinney’s
    clarification that he had characterized Cone’s behavior as
    “weird” because Cone appeared to be killing time rather
    than acting like a normal shopper undermines the impli
    cation of McKinney’s earlier statement that Cone looked
    “weird” because he might have been drunk or on drugs.
    Thus, there is little chance that McKinney’s statement
    would have provided any significant additional evidence
    that Cone was using drugs, let alone provide sentence
    changing evidence that he was substantially impaired due
    to amphetamine psychosis.
    The second statement was given by Charles and Debbie
    Slaughter, who both witnessed Cone fleeing from police
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)           11
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    after the jewelry store robbery and reportedly told police
    that he looked “wild eyed.” App. 50. Cone had just robbed
    a jewelry store, shot a police officer and a bystander, and
    was still fleeing from police when seen by the Slaughters.
    It is thus unlikely that their observation of a “wild eyed”
    man would have been interpreted by the jury to mean that
    Cone “was suffering from chronic amphetamine psychosis
    at the time of the crimes,” ante, at 21, n. 16, rather than to
    mean that Cone looked like a man on the run.
    The third statement is contained in a police report
    authored by an officer who helped apprehend Cone after
    the Florida drugstore robbery. He reported that he saw a
    suspect “at the rear of Sambos restaurant. Subject was
    observed to be looking about in a frenzied manner and also
    appeared to be looking for a place to run.” App. 53. Noth
    ing in this police report either connects Cone to drug use
    or appears otherwise capable of altering the jury’s under
    standing of Cone’s mental state at the time of the crimes.
    It certainly makes perfect sense that Cone was “looking
    about in a frenzied manner,” ibid.; he had just robbed a
    drugstore and was about to engage in a gun battle with
    police in order to evade arrest. The police officer’s descrip
    tion of Cone’s appearance under these circumstances thus
    does not “undermine confidence” in Cone’s sentence.
    Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at 435
    .
    2
    The next category of documents that Cone relies upon to
    establish his Brady claim are police bulletins. Some of the
    bulletins were sent by Memphis Police Sergeant Roby to
    neighboring jurisdictions on the day of the Todd murders
    and the day after. The bulletins sought Cone’s apprehen
    sion and alternatively described him as a “drug user” or a
    “heavy drug user.” App. 55–58. Cone asserts that he
    could have used these bulletins to impeach Sergeant
    Roby’s trial testimony that the sergeant did not see any
    12                         CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    track marks when visiting Cone in jail a week later. Tr.
    1939 (Apr. 22, 1982). Cone’s reasoning is faulty for two
    key reasons. First, Sergeant Roby never testified that
    Cone was not a drug user. His only trial testimony on this
    point was simply that he observed no “needle marks” on
    Cone’s arm when taking hair samples from him a few days
    after Cone’s apprehension. 
    Ibid.
     Second, the bulletins
    establish only “that the police were initially cautious
    regarding the characteristics of a person who had commit
    ted several heinous crimes.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 119a, n.
    9. The bulletins would not have tended to prove that the
    fugitive Cone was, in fact, a heavy drug user—let alone
    “out of his mind” or otherwise substantially impaired due
    to amphetamine psychosis—at the time of his crimes.7
    3
    Cone also argues that material was withheld that could
    have been used to impeach Ilene Blankman’s testimony
    that Cone did not appear to be high or in withdrawal when
    she helped him obtain a Florida driver’s license during his
    efforts to evade arrest in Florida. Tr. 1875–1882 (Apr. 21,
    1982). But he again fails to meet the standard for excul
    patory evidence set by Brady.
    Cone first points to police notes of a pre-trial interview
    with Blankman, which did not reflect the statement she
    gave at trial that she saw no track marks on Cone’s arm.
    App. 72–73. But Blankman was questioned at trial about
    ——————
    7 Alert bulletins sent by the FBI similarly identified Cone as a “be
    lieved heavy drug user” or a “drug user.” App. 62–70. Cone argues
    that these bulletins could have been used to impeach FBI Agent Flynn’s
    testimony about Cone’s arrest in Florida. The bulletins would not have
    constituted material impeachment evidence, however, for the second
    reason identified above. In addition, the bulletins would not have
    contradicted any of FBI Agent Flynn’s testimony; he in fact stated at
    trial that Cone reported using three drugs and was undergoing mild
    drug withdrawal when he was captured in Florida. Tr. 1915–1916
    (Apr. 22, 1982).
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)            13
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    her failure to initially disclose this fact to police, Tr. 1903
    (Apr. 21, 1982), so the jury was fully aware of the omis
    sion. Disclosure of the original copy of the police notes
    thus could not have had any material effect on the jury’s
    deliberations. Moreover, the missing notes also recorded a
    damning statement by Blankman that Cone “never used
    drugs around” her and she “never saw Cone with drug
    paraphernalia.” App. 73. Thus, it is difficult to accept
    Cone’s argument that he would have benefited from the
    introduction of notes from Blackman’s pretrial interview.
    If anything, these police notes would have undermined his
    mitigation argument.
    Cone next relies on a report that describes a woman’s
    confrontation with the prosecution team and Blankman at
    a restaurant during trial. During the encounter, the
    woman accused Blankman of lying on the stand in order to
    frame Cone for the murders. 
    Id.,
     at 74–75. The report
    indicates that the prosecutors politely declined the
    woman’s numerous attempts to discuss the merits of the
    case and that Blankman said nothing. Id., at 75. Nothing
    about this encounter raises doubts about Blankman’s
    credibility.
    Last, Cone points to “correspondence in the district
    attorney’s files suggest[ing] that the prosecution had been
    unusually solicitous of [Blankman’s] testimony.” Brief for
    Petitioner 45. But the correspondence was completely
    innocuous. One of the notes, sent in response to Blank
    man’s request for a copy of her prior statement, expressed
    to Blankman that her “cooperation in this particular
    matter is appreciated.” App. 76. The prosecutor then sent
    a letter to confirm that Blankman would testify at trial.
    Id., at 77. And finally, after trial, the prosecutor sent a
    note to inform Blankman of the verdict and indicate that
    they “certainly appreciate[d] [her] cooperation with [them]
    in the trial of Gary Bradford Cone.” Id., at 78. There is
    nothing about these notes that “tend[s] to prove any fact
    14                     CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    that is both favorable to Cone and material to his guilt or
    punishment.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 116a.
    B
    Viewing the record as a whole, Cone has not come close
    to demonstrating that there is a “reasonable probability”
    that the withheld evidence, analyzed individually or cu
    mulatively, would have changed the result of his sentenc
    ing. Much of the impeachment evidence identified by
    Cone is of no probative value whatsoever. The police
    bulletins do not contradict any of the trial testimony; the
    restaurant encounter was innocuous; and the correspon
    dence sent by prosecutors to Blankman does not under
    mine her testimony or call Cone’s mental state into doubt.
    If the remaining evidence has any value to Cone, it is
    marginal at best. There was testimony that Blankman
    did not initially tell police that Cone lacked track marks.
    See Tr. 1903 (Apr. 21, 1982). McKinney clarified in his
    statement that Cone’s activity in the store was consistent
    with a person killing time, not the use of drugs or alcohol.
    And the behavior described by the Slaughters and the
    Florida police officer is more naturally attributable to the
    circumstances of Cone’s flight from the police than to any
    inference that Cone was “out of his mind” or otherwise
    substantially impaired due to amphetamine psychosis.
    Countering the trivial value of the alleged Brady mate
    rial is the clear and overwhelming evidence that during
    Cone’s crime spree, he was neither sufficiently insane to
    avoid a conviction of murder nor substantially impaired by
    his drug use or withdrawal-related psychosis. There was
    substantial evidence that Cone carefully planned the
    jewelry store robbery and was calm in carrying it out, Tr.
    at 974–976, 1014 (Apr. 16, 1982), 1350–1352 (Apr. 17,
    1982), 1501 (Apr. 19, 1982), 2075 (Apr. 22, 1982); that he
    successfully eluded police after engaging them in a shoot
    out, id., at 1053–1064 (Apr. 16, 1982); that, after hiding
    Cite as: 556 U. S. ____ (2009)           15
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    overnight, he concocted a ruse to try to gain illegal entry
    to a residence, id., at 1205–1208 (Apr. 17, 1982); that he
    murdered the Todds after they declined to cooperate with
    his efforts to further elude police, id., at 1681 (Apr. 20,
    1982); that he took steps to change his appearance at the
    Todd residence and then successfully fled to Florida, id., at
    1918–1919 (Apr. 22, 1982); that he arrived in Florida
    exhibiting no signs of drug use or severe withdrawal, id.,
    at 1875–1882 (Apr. 21, 1982); that he obtained false iden
    tification in a further effort to avoid apprehension, id., at
    1881–1882, and that he denied any memory lapses and
    described undergoing only minor drug withdrawal when
    police arrested him, id., at 1919–1920 (Apr. 22, 1982).
    Given this wealth of evidence, there is no “reasonable
    probability” that the jury would have found that Cone was
    entitled to the substantial impairment mitigator had the
    evidence he seeks been made available to him.
    And even if Cone could have presented this evidence to
    the jury at sentencing and established an entitlement to
    this mitigator, he still has not demonstrated a reasonable
    probability that it would have outweighed all of the aggra
    vating factors supporting the jury’s death sentence. See
    id., at 2151–2154 (Apr. 23, 1982). In its decision on direct
    appeal, the Tennessee Supreme Court was well aware of
    the evidence regarding the “degree and extent of [Cone’s]
    drug abuse.” Cone, 665 S. W. 2d, at 90. As part of its
    required independent review of whether the mitigation
    evidence was sufficiently substantial to outweigh the
    aggravating factors, see 
    Tenn. Code Ann. §39
    –2-205, the
    Tennessee court nevertheless concluded that the sentence
    was “not in any way disproportionate under all of the
    circumstances, including the brutal murders of two elderly
    defenseless persons by an escaping armed robber who had
    terrorized a residential neighborhood for twenty-four
    hours.” 665 S. W. 2d, at 95–96. None of Cone’s proffered
    evidence places that conclusion, made by both the jury and
    16                     CONE v. BELL
    THOMAS, J., dissenting
    the Tennessee Supreme Court, “in such a different light as
    to undermine confidence” in Cone’s sentence. Kyles, 
    514 U. S., at 435
    ; see also Strickler, 
    527 U. S., at 296
    .
    IV
    This Court should not vacate and remand lower court
    decisions based on nothing more than the vague suspicion
    that error might be present, or because the court below
    could have been more clear. This is especially so where, as
    here, the record before the Court is adequate to evaluate
    Cone’s Brady claims with respect to both the guilt and
    sentencing phases of his trial. The Court’s willingness to
    return the sentencing issue to the District Court without
    any firm conviction that an error was committed by the
    Court of Appeals is inconsistent with our established
    practice and disrespectful to the lower courts that have
    considered this case. Worse still, the inevitable result will
    be years of additional delay in the execution of a death
    sentence lawfully imposed by a Tennessee jury. Because I
    would affirm the judgment below, I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-1114

Citation Numbers: 173 L. Ed. 2d 701, 129 S. Ct. 1769, 556 U.S. 449, 2009 U.S. LEXIS 3298

Judges: Stevens, Roberts, Alito, Thomas, Scalia

Filed Date: 4/28/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (41)

richard-reynolds-david-borrell-rolando-felix-julio-aracho-robert-santillo , 128 F.3d 166 ( 1997 )

Bell v. Cone , 125 S. Ct. 847 ( 2005 )

Coleman v. Thompson , 111 S. Ct. 2546 ( 1991 )

Ardestani v. Immigration & Naturalization Service , 112 S. Ct. 515 ( 1991 )

O'Sullivan v. Boerckel , 119 S. Ct. 1728 ( 1999 )

Kyles v. Whitley , 115 S. Ct. 1555 ( 1995 )

Wiggins v. Smith, Warden , 123 S. Ct. 2527 ( 2003 )

Strickler v. Greene , 119 S. Ct. 1936 ( 1999 )

House v. Bell , 126 S. Ct. 2064 ( 2006 )

Pennsylvania v. Ritchie , 107 S. Ct. 989 ( 1987 )

Douglas v. Alabama , 85 S. Ct. 1074 ( 1965 )

Cone v. State , 1995 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 258 ( 1995 )

Norman Silverstein v. Robert Henderson , 706 F.2d 361 ( 1983 )

Sawyer v. Whitley , 112 S. Ct. 2514 ( 1992 )

Rompilla v. Beard , 125 S. Ct. 2456 ( 2005 )

United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co. , 26 S. Ct. 282 ( 1906 )

jane-doe-by-their-next-friends-susan-doe-mary-doe-lisa-doe-june-doe-by , 173 F.3d 274 ( 1999 )

Gary Bradford Cone v. Ricky Bell, Warden, Riverbend Maximum ... , 243 F.3d 961 ( 2001 )

Brady v. Maryland , 83 S. Ct. 1194 ( 1963 )

Swanson v. State , 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 70 ( 1988 )

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