Opinion
No. 10-1548.
Cash, Acting Warden v. Maxwell.
[MAJORITY â Justice Sotomayor]
C. A. 9th Cir. Motion of respondent for leave to proceed in forma pau-peris granted. Certiorari denied.
Statement of
Justice Sotomayor
respecting the denial of certiorari.
The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 requires that federal habeas courts extend deference to the factual findings of state courts. But âdeference does not imply abandonment or abdication of judicial review.â Miller-El v. Cockrell, 537 U. S. 322, 340 (2003). Congress stated in no uncertain terms that federal habeas relief remains available when a state courtâs holding is âbased on an unreasonable determination of the facts.â 28 U. S. C. § 2254(d)(2). In this case, the state courtâs denial of relief to respondent Bobby Joe Maxwell was premised on its factual finding that there was âno credible or persuasive evidence Sidney Storch lied at [Maxwellâs] trial in 1984.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 137. Because the Ninth Circuit meticulously set forth an avalanche of evidence demonstrating that the state courtâs factual finding was unreasonable, see Maxwell v. Roe, 628 F. 3d 486, 498-506 (2010), I agree with the Courtâs decision to deny certiorari.
Sidney Storch was one of the most notorious jailhouse informants in the history of Los Angeles County. During a 4-year period in the mid-1980âs, he testified in at least a half-dozen trials, each time claiming that the defendant had confessed to him in prison. See Rohrlich & Stewart, Jailhouse Snitches: Trading Lies for Freedom, L. A. Times, Apr. 16, 1989, p. 30 (âSaid inmate Daniel Roach: âIt seems that half the world just confesses to Sidney Storchââ).
Throughout this period, however, evidence mounted that Storch repeatedly was fabricating inmatesâ confessions for personal gain. As even the State acknowledges, Storchâs signature method was to fashion inmatesâ supposed confessions from publicly available information in newspaper articles. 2 Record 262. At Maxwellâs postconviction hearing, one former county prosecutor explained that he declined to use Storch in a high-profile 1986 murder case after determining âStorch was not telling the truth about [the defendantâs] alleged statements,â and had lied about having heard a confession at a time when he was not in the defendantâs cell. 9 id., at 1824. Another prosecutor later refused to use Storch in a different case after discovering that his âtestimony was similar to the newspaper accounts of the case.â Id., at 1825. In 1987, sheriffâs deputies even confiscated a manual written by Storch instructing other jailhouse snitches how to fabricate confessions. None of this was out of character for Storch, who was discharged from the Army in 1964 because he was a ââhabitual liar,ââ and was arrested repeatedly for crimes of dishonesty, including forgery, fraud, and false impersonation â including falsely impersonating a Central Intelligence Agency officer. 628 F. 3d, at 498.
As the Ninth Circuit explained at length, both before and after Maxwellâs trial, various police officers and prosecutors believed Storch to be unreliable, dishonest, and willing to set up defendants for his own ends. At Maxwellâs postconviction hearing, one police officer described how Storch sought to âset... upâ someone during a forgery investigation, 6 Record 1118; another detective testified that he would have put Storch on a Los Angeles Police Department list of unreliable informants prior to Maxwellâs trial. Not long after Maxwellâs trial, prosecutors refused to put Storch on the stand, believing him to have fabricated defendantsâ confessions. And even the State conceded that Storch lied about a variety of material facts at Maxwellâs own trial, including his own criminal record and his motivation for testifying. This powerful evidence supported Maxwellâs claim that Storch falsely testified about Maxwellâs supposed confession â using precisely the same modus operandi that Storch used time and again to falsely implicate other defendants. See 628 F. 3d, at 504-505.
The dissent labels all of this evidence âcircumstantial.â Post, at 1143 (opinion of Scalia, J.). It insists that it is possible that Storch repeatedly falsely implicated other defendants, and fabricated other material facts at Maxwellâs trial, but uncharacteristically told the truth about Maxwellâs supposed confession. Of course, that is possible. But it is not reasonable, given the voluminous evidence that Storch was a habitual liar who even the State concedes told other material lies at Maxwellâs trial.
Here, the Ninth Circuit recognized that 28 U. S. C. § 2254(d)(2) imposes a âdaunting standard â one that will be satisfied in relatively few cases.â 628 F. 3d, at 500 (internal quotation marks omitted). The court below found that standard met only after describing, in scrupulous detail, the overwhelming evidence supporting the conclusion that Storch falsely testified at Maxwellâs trial â attempting to manipulate the integrity of the judicial system as he did in numerous other cases. I agree with the Ninth Circuitâs determination. But even to the extent that the dissent sees error in that determination, the Ninth Circuit conducted precisely the inquiry required by § 2254(d)(2) and our precedents. âThe principal purpose of this Courtâs exercise of its certiorari jurisdiction is to clarify the law.â Caperton v. A. T. Massey Coal Co., 556 U. S. 868, 902 (2009) (Scalia, J., dissenting). Mere disagreement with the Ninth Circuitâs highly factbound conclusion is, in my opinion, an insufficient basis for granting certiorari. See this Courtâs Rule 10.
The dissent suggests two police officers testified that Storch provided them âaccurate and reliable informationâ when working with Storch several years before Maxwellâs trial. See post, at 1143. In fact, when asked if Storch provided âaccurate information,â one officer stated: âAs far as I know, yes. I donât remember any of this being either good or bad . . . .â 6 Record 1091. The second officer, when asked if Storch was a âreliable individual,â responded that âit would depend on what time,â id., at 1117-1118, and noted that he had ceased all contact with Storch well before Maxwellâs trial, after Storchâs attempt to âset . . . upâ a prospective defendant, id., at 1118.
The dissent implies that there was strong evidence suggesting that Storch was truthful. But the testimony by two other jailhouse informants who contended that Maxwell confessed to them, see post, at 1144, was properly deemed âludicrousâ by the state appellate court. App. to Pet. for Cert. 174. One informant was committed to a mental hospital, and informed the district attorney before trial that his story implicating Maxwell had been ânothing more than a story of untruths founded by an âimaginary delusion.â â Tr. 6532. The other informant claimed that Maxwell confessed to 10 murders while raping him during the middle of the day in his cell. That story was refuted by another inmate, and when the informant attempted to obtain bail on the basis of his testimony regarding Maxwell, another court denied relief. See, e. g., id., at 6744-6754.
The dissent also ignores that the physical evidence against Maxwell was largely circumstantial, and that the Stateâs prosecutor acknowledged that he had regarded the case against Maxwell as âweak from an evidential standpoint.â 9 Record 1844. Three men who briefly saw the killer provided a description of a man taller and heavier than Maxwell. And when Maxwell was placed in a lineup, and made to say a remark all three men had heard the killer say, none of the three identified Maxwell. One of the eyewitnesses even stated âyou got everybody up there that doesnât look anything like him.â Tr. 8641A.
[DISSENT â Justice Scalia,]
Justice Scalia,
with whom Justice Alito
joins, dissenting.
The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 put an end to federal-district-court readjudication of issues already decided, with full due process of law, in state criminal cases. It provides that a writ of habeas corpus challenging a state criminal conviction shall not be granted with respect to any claim âadjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings,â unless that state adjudication
â(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
â(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.â 28 U. S. C. § 2254(d).
We have called this a âdifficult to meet. . . and highly deferential standardâ which âdemands that state-court decisions be given the benefit of the doubt,â Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U. S. 170, 181 (2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). It forbids federal courts âto second-guess the reasonable decisions of state courts,â Renico v. Lett, 559 U. S. 766, 773 (2010).
I believe that in this ease the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit unquestionably ignored these commandsâ thereby invalidating two 26-year-old murder convictions which the intervening loss of witnesses and evidence will likely make it impossible to retry. I dissent from the Courtâs decision not to grant certiorari and summarily reverse the Ninth Circuitâs judgment.
I
In the late 1970âs, 10 homeless men were murdered in downtown Los Angeles â a series of murders that came to be known as the âSkid Row Stabberâ killings. Respondent Bobby Joe Maxwell was charged with all 10 murders, and in 1984 a California jury convicted him of two counts of first-degree murder and one related count of robbery. Maxwell was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, and his convictions were affirmed on direct appeal.
In 1995, Maxwell filed a habeas corpus petition in the California Supreme Court, alleging that a prosecution witness, Sidney Storch, had given false testimony at trial. Storch, a former cellmate of Maxwellâs, had testified that, after reading the newspaper account of a palm printâs being found at the scene of one of the murders, Maxwell stated he was not prone to that type of mistake because he âwore gloves with the fingers cut off so as to keep his hands warm and leave his fingers free.â 3 Record 537. The California Supreme Court issued an order to show cause whether Maxwell was entitled to relief based on his allegation of false testimony, returnable to the Superior Court. After conducting an eviden-tiary hearing that extended over the course of two years and included the testimony of more than 30 witnesses and the introduction of over 50 exhibits, the Superior Court issued a 34-page opinion concluding that Storch had not lied and denying the habeas petition. App. to Pet. for Cert. 137. In 2001, Maxwell again filed a habeas petition in the California Supreme Court, alleging, inter alia, that the State had violated his right to due process by failing to disclose certain evidence relating to Storch. See Brady v. Maryland, 373 U. S. 83, 87 (1963). The court summarily denied the petition. App. to Pet. for Cert. 105.
Maxwell then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus under § 2254 in the United States District Court for the Central District of California, renewing his claims that his conviction violated his right to due process because (1) it was based on the false testimony of Storch; and (2) the State failed to disclose favorable and material evidence regarding Storch. The District Court dismissed the petition, id., at 47, but the Ninth Circuit reversed. Maxwell v. Roe, 628 F. 3d 486 (2010).
II
A
First, the Ninth Circuit set aside the state habeas courtâs determination that Storch had not fabricated his testimony. It based that action on nothing more than circumstantial evidence indicating that Storch was generally an untruthful person. For example, the court pointed to various mistruths Storch purportedly told at trial (regarding, for example, his criminal history and his motivation for coming forward). But as the Ninth Circuit itself recognized, those lies âd[o] not alone establish that Storch lied about the confession.â Id., at 501. The Ninth Circuit also concluded that Storch âmisrepresented his sophistication and experience as a jailhouse informant.â Ibid. This finds no support in the record. App. to Pet. for Cert. 119-120. Storchâs only testimony as to his informant history was that he had never before testified for the district attorney, 3 Record 551; no evidence in the habeas record contradicts that. The Ninth Circuit went on to conclude that Storch had a history of falsely implicating individuals. But any evidence of this, as the state court noted, was highly speculative, see, e. g., App. to Pet. for Cert. 136 â and two officers testified at the state evidentiary hearing that in various cases Storch had provided them with accurate and reliable information. Id., at 125-126. Finally, the Ninth Circuit accorded significance to trials subsequent to Maxwellâs in which Storch allegedly testified falsely. The state court had concluded that these post-trial events did not establish the falsity of Storchâs testimony, id., at âą 136-137, and the Ninth Circuit apparently agreed, see 628 F. 3d, at 503 (âThe evidence of Storchâs later lies under oath does not establish the nature of his testimony at Maxwellâs trialâ).
In sum, the evidence relied on by the Ninth Circuit might permit, but by no means compels, the conclusion that Storch fabricated Maxwellâs admission. And that leaves out of account (just as the Ninth Circuit inexplicably did) the other evidence suggesting that Storch was not lying â including testimony that Maxwell confessed the crime, indeed confessed the crime much more explicitly, to two cellmates other than Storch. The statement of Justice Sotomayor makes its task far too easy by setting out to show the unreasonableness of the California courtâs statement that there was âno credible or persuasive evidence Sidney Storch lied,â ante, at 1139 (internal quotation marks omitted). It is not the courtâs statements that are at issue here. To establish even a wild exaggeration is not to establish what § 2254(d)(2) requires: that the state courtâs âdecision . . . was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts.â (Emphasis added.) The only factual determination necessary to support the California courtâs decision was that Maxwell had not established that Storch lied. And it is of course that point to which the California court directed its attention. (â[Certain evidence] does little to establish whether [Storch] lied about [Maxwellâs] admissions in 1984.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 136.) What Justice Sotomayor calls âthe overwhelming evidence supporting the conclusion that Storch falsely testified at Maxwellâs trial,â ante, at 1140, consists of nothing more than evidence which establishes, at most, that Storch was a habitual liar. That may well provide reason to suspect that Storch testified falsely at Maxwellâs trial; or even to think it likely that Storch testified falsely; but it does not remotely support the conclusion that it was unreasonable to determine that Maxwell had not established that Storch testified falsely. In finding the state courtâs determination not merely wrong but unreasonable, the Ninth Circuit plainly did what we have said § 2254(d) forbids: It âuse[d] a set of debatable inferences to set aside the conclusion reached by the state court.â Rice v. Collins, 546 U. S. 333, 342 (2006).
To make matters worse, having stretched the facts, the Ninth Circuit also stretched the Constitution, holding that the use of Storehâs false testimony violated the Fourteenth Amendmentâs Due Process Clause, whether or not the prosecution knew of its falsity. See 628 F. 3d, at 506-507. We have never held that, and are unlikely ever to do so. All we have held is that âa conviction obtained through use of false evidence, known to be such by representatives of the State, must fall under the Fourteenth Amendment.â Napue v. Illinois, 360 U. S. 264, 269 (1959) (emphasis added). This extension of due process by the Ninth Circuit should not be left standing.
B
The Ninth Circuit also concluded that the California Supreme Court unreasonably applied Brady. In its view, the prosecution committed a Brady violation by failing to disclose two pieces of impeachment evidence: (1) the difference between Storchâs original plea deal and the plea deal Storch negotiated independently from his public defender after he offered to testify; and (2) Storchâs cooperation with law enforcement officials in the years preceding Maxwellâs trial. The Ninth Circuit said that this evidence was material to Maxwellâs guilt (which is what a violation of Brady requires, see Strickler v. Greene, 527 U. S. 263, 280 (1999)), because âStorchâs testimony was crucial to the prosecutionâs caseâ and the evidence âcould have been used to undermineâ Storchâs credibility. 628 F. 3d, at 512.
Neither of these contentions is remotely true. As for the âcrucialâ nature of Storchâs testimony: Storch was just one of four cellmates who recounted Maxwellâs incriminating statements, and there was ample other evidence of Maxwellâs guilt, including an eyewitness identification and evidence of Maxwellâs palm print near one of the murder scenes. And as for the potential utility of the undisclosed evidence in refuting Storchâs less-than-crucial testimony: According to the Ninth Circuit, evidence that Storch originally had a plea deal of 36 months, which improved to 16 months after he offered to testify, would have âprovided Maxwell with impeaching evidence relevant to Storchâs motivation for testifying.â Id., at 510. But the jury already knew that Storch would not have testified without a deal. Storch said on the stand that he faced the possibility of six yearsâ imprisonment on pending charges and received a 16-month deal in exchange for his testimony; and responded in the negative when asked whether he âwould be willing to bring forth this story and tell the D. A. to forget the kindness that he is showing towardsâ him. 3 Record 562-563. The additional knowledge that he secured a deal that improved his sentence from 36 months to 16 months (rather than from 6 years to 16 months) would have done nothing to reduce the jurorsâ belief in his testimony.
The Ninth Circuit also erred in concluding that evidence of Storchâs prior activity as a police informant would have helped to contradict his testimony that he had never before testified for the district attorney. See 628 F. 3d, at 511. The recitation of this non sequitur is its own refutation.
Finally, the Ninth Circuitâs conclusion that both pieces of evidence could have been used to establish Storchâs sophistication as an informant does not hold water. To begin with, the court erred in its belief that Storch âindependently negotiatedâ the new deal, id., at 498. While it was true enough that Storch âworked a deal . . . without his public defender,â id., at 510, that does not establish that he negotiated a deal on his own. As Maxwell acknowledges, Storch âobtained a private lawyer to work outâ the deal. Brief in Opposition 14. Moreover, the jury was aware of this-fact because Storch himself testified to it. 3 Record 596. And it is incomprehensible how the substitution of a 16-month-instead-of-36-month deal for a previous 16-month-instead-of-6-year deal demonstrates Storchâs sophistication. Of similarly questionable value is evidence of Storchâs prior activity as a police informant. Contrary to the Ninth Circuitâs intimations, this would not have portrayed Storch as a wheeler-dealer who trumped up stories to receive decreased sentences. Indeed, there was no evidence that Storch received anything in exchange from the police, App. to Pet. for Cert. 125-126, and as I have described, supra, at 1143, two officers testified at the evidentiary hearing that information he provided them was reliable.
In view of the evidence, it is not possible to say that the California Supreme Courtâs denial of the claim âwas so lacking in justification that there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement.â Harrington v. Richter, 562 U. S. 86, 101 (2011). In fact, it seems clear that Maxwell was not entitled to relief.
* * *
It is a regrettable reality that some federal judges like to second-guess state courts. The only way this Court can ensure observance of Congressâs abridgment of their habeas power is to perform the unaccustomed task of reviewing utterly fact-bound decisions that present no disputed issues of law. We have often not shrunk from that task, which we have found particularly needful with regard to decisions of the Ninth Circuit. See, e. g., Cavazos v. Smith, ante, p. 1 (per curiam) (reinstating California conviction for assault on a child resulting in death); Felkner v. Jackson, 562 U. S. 594 (2011) (per curiam) (reinstating California conviction for sexual attack on a 72-year-old woman); Premo v. Moore, 562 U. S. 115 (2011) (reinstating Oregon conviction for murder of a kidnaped victim); Knowles v. Mirzayance, 556 U. S. 111 (2009) (reinstating California first-degree murder conviction); Rice v. Collins, 546 U. S. 333 (2006) (reinstating California conviction for cocaine possession); Kane v. Garcia Espitia, 546 U. S. 9 (2005) (per curiam) (reinstating California conviction for carjacking and other offenses); Yarborough v. Gentry, 540 U. S. 1 (2003) (per curiam) (reinstating California conviction for assault with a deadly weapon); Woodford v. Visciotti, 537 U. S. 19 (2002) (per curiam) (reinstating capital sentence for California prisoner convicted of first-degree murder, attempted murder, and armed robbery). Today we have shrunk, letting stand a judgment that once again deprives California courts of that control over the Stateâs administration of criminal justice which federal law assures. We should grant the petition for certiorari and summarily reverse the Ninth Circuitâs latest unsupportable § 2254 judgment.
The evidence identified by Justice Sotomayoe is similarly inconclusive, and the state habeas court reasonably discounted it. For instance, the so-called âmanual,â ante, at 1139 (emphasis deleted), is all but illegible, 2 Record 461; as the state court recognized, the portions that can be read do not reveal whether Storch was instructing another inmate to âprovid[e] substance or style.â App. to Pet. for Cert. 133. And the opinion of the prosecutor who declined to use Storch in a trial that postdated Maxwellâs by nearly three years, ante, at 1139, was deemed â[u]nconvincingâ by the state court, since it was based ,on jail records of questionable accuracy, App. to Pet. for Cert. 134.