Most of [Reed's] witnesses did not know Stacey Stites, and identified her from memory by viewing her photograph. Those who claimed to have known her were proven to be badly mistaken. All of these witnesses were family, friends, or associates of Reed’s. Reed was never able to identify anyone who was a friend, family member, or associate of Stacey Stites who claimed to have been aware of a relationship between Reed and Stites. In short, there is no reliable evidence that ties Reed to Stites before her murder.
(footnote omitted).
For example, one witness who claimed to know Stites from school stated that he saw Stites and Reed together several times, and that they kissed and called each other “baby.” The witness further stated that while the witness was in Bastrop County jail, Reed told him that he did not kill Stites. The CCA found these statements not credible because the evidence at trial showed that the witness could not have known Stites from school because Stites moved to Bastrop only after graduating. The witness’s general statements also offered no specific facts to be corroborated and did not comport with other evidence.
Two trial witnesses also were found not reliable by the CCA. Julia Estes testified at trial that she once saw Stites and Reed talking at H.E.B. Estes’s testimony was impeached by the fact that Reed and his family frequented Estes’s bar. Iris Lindley, a longtime friend of Reed’s parents, also testified that Stites came by Reed’s home looking for him. But Lindley initially misidentified Stites as “Stephanie, ” and also admitted to not knowing whether Reed and Stites were dating.
These witnesses are but a short selection of the many individuals who submitted evidence purportedly showing Reed’s relationship with Stites. As we have noted, the CCA concluded that the evidence as to all the “witnesses who affirmed a relationship between Reed and [Stites]” was “ unreliable.” Reed, 271 S.W.3d at 747. Reed provides no discussion of the individual witnesses’ testimonies. The district court saw no reason not to defer to the CCA’s credibility determination, and we see none. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).[8] As a result, Reed’s forensic evidence exists in a vacuum and only presents a possible factual scenario that is not borne out by any of the other evidence. To the extent Reed relies on other evidence not included in the relevant portion of his brief, we discuss that evidence in the course of addressing the claim under which it arises. We conclude that reasonable jurists would not debate the district court’s determination that Reed has failed to establish his actual innocence under Schlup and deny a COA on this basis.
B. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
Reed argues that his trial counsel was constitutionally deficient for failing to (1) refute the State’s forensic evidence; (2) present evidence of Stites’s and Reed’s alleged relationship; and (3) present evidence of Fennell’s bad character.[9] He contends that reasonable jurists would debate the correctness of the district court’s decision to deny relief. The State responds that all his ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claims were procedurally barred.
The standard for evaluating whether a counsel’s performance was constitutionally adequate is set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984). “First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient.” Id. at 687. “Second, the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense.” Id. To show deficient performance, “the defendant must show that counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.” Id. at 688. To demonstrate prejudice, a petitioner “must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 694. “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Id. “Unless a defendant makes both showings, it cannot be said that the conviction or death sentence resulted from a breakdown in the adversary process that renders the result unreliable.” Id. at 687.
Reed raised his ineffective assistance claims in his third state habeas petition. Because Reed did not raise these claims in his initial petition, and because it concluded that none of the exceptions under Article 11.071 § 5(a)(2) applied, the CCA dismissed Reed’s ineffective assistance claims “as an abuse of the writ.” Ex parte Reed, No. WR-50961-03, 2005 WL 2659440 (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 19, 2005). As Texas’s abuse-of-the-writ doctrine is an “independent and adequate state procedural rule, ” Coleman, 501 U.S. at 750, the district court found Reed’s ineffective assistance claims procedurally defaulted and did not consider them on the merits. It did, however, briefly consider whether procedural default as to those claims could be excused following the Supreme Court’s Martinez decision.[10]
In Martinez, the Supreme Court held that a petitioner may establish cause to excuse a procedural default as to an ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claim by showing that (1) his state habeas counsel was constitutionally deficient in failing to include the claim in his first state habeas application; and (2) the underlying ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claim is “substantial.” 132 S.Ct. at 1318; see Preyor v. Stephens, – F.App’x —, 2013 WL 3830160, at *8 (5th Cir. July 25, 2013); Sells v. Stephens, – F.App’x —, 2013 WL 3784348, at *8 (5th Cir. July 22, 2013). For a claim to be “substantial, ” a “ prisoner must demonstrate that the claim has some merit.” Martinez, 132 S.Ct. at 1318. Conversely, an “insubstantial” ineffective assistance claim is one that “does not have any merit” or that is “wholly without factual support.” Id. at 1319.
The district court concluded that it was not required to review Reed’s ineffective assistance claims under Martinez in light of our decision in Ibarra v. Thaler, 687 F.3d 222, 227 (5th Cir. 2012) (holding that Martinez does not apply to Texas court decisions). Ibarra has since been overruled by Trevino v. Thaler, in which the Supreme Court expanded Martinez’s reach because “the Texas procedural system—as a matter of its structure, design, and operation— does not offer most defendants a meaningful opportunity to present a claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel on direct appeal.” 133 S.Ct. 1911, 1921 (2013). Reed’s Martinez argument thus is no longer foreclosed.
However, although the district court’s reliance on Ibarra is incorrect following Trevino, and thus its procedural ruling is, at the very least, debatable, to obtain a COA Reed must still demonstrate that reasonable jurists would debate “whether the petition states a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right.” Slack, 529 U.S. at 478, 484; see also Womack v. Thaler, 591 F.3d 757, 758 (5th Cir. 2009); Blanton v. Quarterman, 287 F.App’x 407, 408 n.1 (5th Cir. 2008). Concluding that Reed has failed to state any debatable ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims, we deny a COA. We address each of the purported deficiencies of counsel below.[11]
1. Failure to refute State’s forensic proof
Reed asserts that his “trial counsel was deficient for not using competent experts to rebut the State’s plainly false inference that Stites’s death and intercourse with Reed coincided, ” and contradict the State’s anal rape theory. He draws attention to the fact that his trial jury clearly was concerned about the sperm found in Stites’s body, as evidenced by the fact that during its deliberations the jury asked questions about the sperm’s presence, condition, and durability. Reed relies on affidavits by Dr. Bayardo, Dr. Riddick, and criminal laboratory director Ronald Singer. The State argues that Reed can show neither deficiency nor prejudice as relating to trial counsel’s failure to submit evidence of the kind included in the affidavits. This is because his trial counsel actually retained a court-qualified expert in criminalistics and DNA analysis—Dr. Johnson. Moreover, the State contends that any evidence in the affidavits of Dr. Bayardo, Dr. Riddick, and Singer is cumulative, and does not alter the fact that Reed’s sperm was found in Stites’s body.
The CCA did not consider this claim because it was not raised in Reed’s initial state habeas petition. The district court concluded that the claim was procedurally barred and that our Ibarra decision foreclosed the possibility of review under Martinez. Although, as discussed, the district court’s procedural decision is debatable following Trevino, we conclude that Reed’s claim that trial counsel was ineffective for not adequately refuting the state’s forensic proof is not debatable, and thus does not require issuance of a COA.
Considering the first Strickland prong, Reed admits that his DNA expert Dr. Johnson testified at trial that sperm could survive longer than twenty-four hours, and only protests trial counsel’s reliance on Dr. Johnson because of her purported lack of credentials and first-hand criminal experience. Contrary to Reed’s apparent belief, his trial counsel’s representation does not fall below an “objective standard of reasonableness” merely because the retained expert is not the best or most knowledgeable in her field. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688. This is not a case of counsel failing to retain an expert or retaining an expert who could not address the issues disputed at trial. See Cox v. Cockrell, 62 F.App’x 557, 2003 WL 1202920, at *6 (5th Cir. 2003) (unpublished table decision) (counsel not deficient for calling expert who performed poorly, but because expert could not testify as to disputed issue). Comparing the affidavits Reed presents and the testimony of Dr. Johnson demonstrates that the crux of Reed’s argument—that sperm could remain intact for longer than twenty-four hours and that therefore the presence of Reed’s sperm could have been the product of a consensual sexual encounter between Reed and Stites—was presented at trial.
Reed’s contention that his case is similar to State v. Fitzpatrick, 118 So.3d 737 (Fla. 2013), is unpersuasive. Fitzpatrick was a case in which sperm evidence linked the defendant to the murder victim, and the key question was how long the sperm had been present in the victim. Id. at 748–49. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed the lower court’s decision to grant defendant a new trial based on counsel’s deficient performance. Id. at 741. The court found that “[t]he record repeatedly demonstrates that counsel did not adequately prepare himself to present an intelligent or knowledgeable defense with respect to the most important issue of [defendant's] trial: the timing of the alleged sexual encounter between [him] and [the victim].” Id. at 754. Most glaringly, “counsel failed to retain any forensic or medical experts, ” and failed to challenge the State’s experts or the physical evidence. Id. at 754–55.
Unlike trial counsel in Fitzpatrick, Reed’s defense team scrutinized the DNA evidence and the State’s experts. Reed’s assertion that a COA should issue because his “trial counsel failed to prepare for, or rebut through cross-examination or contradict by affirmative expert testimony, the State’s misleading forensics” ignores that Dr. Johnson testified as a DNA expert for the defense and provided testimony on the very issue Reed now challenges.
It also is not debatable that Reed fails to state a valid constitutional claim based on Strickland’s second prong—prejudice. Just as the affidavits do not establish Reed’s actual innocence they also do not make it “reasonably likely” that the result of Reed’s trial would have been different.[12] Harrington v. Richter, 131 S.Ct. 770, 792 (2011) (“[T]he difference between Strickland’s prejudice standard and a more-probable-than-not standard is slight and matters ‘only in the rarest case.’” (citation omitted)). The addition of Singer’s affidavit to that of Dr. Bayardo’s and Dr. Riddick’s does nothing to change this outcome.
In his affidavit, Singer challenges the nature of the substance (which appeared to be saliva) found on Stites’s brassiere and breasts, and the DNA evidence recovered from that substance. Specifically, Singer states that amylase testing of the type performed on the substance “cannot be relied upon to identify a specific body fluid such as saliva with accuracy.” Singer further states that “there is no evidence [that the crime scene examiner] changed gloves between the taking of evidentiary samples, ” and thus “ it is probable that [she] contaminated Ms. Stites’ brassiere and breasts with trace evidence . . . after having probed Ms. Stites’ genital area with her fingers and taking swabs and tape lists from Ms. Stites’ pubic area.”
We note that Singer’s affidavit merely recounts deficiencies in how the crime scene was secured and then infers, without further support, that the examiner did not change gloves while inspecting Stites’s body. But Singer himself states that “[t]he videotape of the crime scene . . . was poorly done, ” and “ does not completely record the activities at the crime scene.” A review of the video also reveals no unbroken sequence in which the examiner collected evidence from Stites’s genital area and then touched Stites’s chest. Reed also nowhere suggests that the presence of his sperm inside Stites was the result of improper crime scene investigation. Given this, there is nothing to support the contention that the alleged incompetence by police personnel at the crime scene prejudiced Reed.[13]
We conclude that Reed has failed to present a debatable ineffective-assistance-of-trial claim as to his trial counsels’ handling of the State’s forensic evidence.
2. Trial counsel’s failure to present witnesses substantiating Stites’s and Reed’s alleged relationship
Reed next argues that trial counsel should have presented additional witnesses who could testify as to his relationship with Stites. In support, he lists the affidavits of multiple witnesses who purportedly knew about the alleged relationship. In response, the State argues that the decision not to call the various witnesses Reed identifies was “a quintessential strategic decision that cannot be undone through the benefit of hindsight.” It further argues that any prejudice resulting from trial counsel’s failure to present these witnesses was speculative.
The CCA did not address the witnesses Reed points to in the context of his ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claim because Reed did not include that claim in his initial habeas petition. However, as we have noted supra, in considering whether Reed’s ineffective assistance claim should be considered because he met Article 11.071 § 5(a)(2)’s actual-innocence standard, the CCA concluded that the evidence as to all the “witnesses who affirmed a relationship between Reed and [Stites]” was “ unreliable.” Reed, 271 S.W.3d at 747. The district court refused to consider the merits of this claim, finding it procedurally barred.
Although, as discussed, the district court’s procedural ruling is debatable, Reed’s failure to actually discuss any of the affidavits he identifies, much less show how he was prejudiced by their omission at trial, means that he has failed to state a reasonably debatable claim under Strickland. We further note that, to the extent the CCA also made a credibility determination as to the witnesses Reed identifies, we defer to that factual finding unless Reed presents clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Having not done so, Reed’s request for a COA on this claim is denied. See Harrington, 131 S.Ct. at 792.
3. Trial counsel’s failure to present evidence of Fennell’s abuses against women and minorities
In the last of his ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel claims, Reed contends that trial counsel was deficient for not conducting a proper pretrial investigation. Such an investigation, Reed asserts, would have revealed that Fennell was a jealous, abusive, and racist individual, [14] against whom civil lawsuits alleging violence and racism had been filed. The State asks that we find this argument waived for inadequate briefing.
The CCA found this claim barred under its abuse-of-the-writ doctrine. The district court denied relief, holding that the claim was procedurally barred. As before, although the procedural part of the district court’s ruling is debatable, Reed’s failure to adequately brief his claim means that he has failed to state a debatable claim of the denial of a constitutional right.
We agree with the State that Reed has waived his request for a COA. Instead of fully briefing this issue, Reed instead relies on his federal habeas petition to fill in the gaps of his argument. We previously have declined to grant a COA in similar circumstances. See McGowen v. Thaler, 675 F.3d 482, 497 (5th Cir. 2012) (“We have held that a COA applicant waives claims by directing the appellate court to briefing before the district court to support his request for a COA. [Petitioner's] reference to his habeas petition therefore does not preserve his claims.” (footnote omitted)). As the State correctly argues, waiver is especially appropriate where, as here, the admissibility of much of the evidence Reed refers to is questionable, and Reed provides no defense of its admissibility. See Clark v. Thaler, 673 F.3d 410, 429 (5th Cir. 2012) (failure to assert meritless objection is not grounds for deficient performance); Thompson v. Thaler, 432 F.App’x 376, 379 (5th Cir. 2011). His request for a COA on this claim is denied.
C. Ineffective Assistance of Appellate Counsel
Reed identifies three challenges that his appellate counsel should have raised on direct appeal: (1) a jury instruction that allowed jurors to consider “good conduct time” against the forty years Reed would serve if sentenced to life in prison; (2) the jury not being instructed that a lack of unanimity on special issues during the penalty phase would result in a life sentence; and (3) the denial of a continuance motion to give Reed’s trial counsel additional time to prepare.[15] Reed argues that his appellate counsel’s failure to raise these issues rendered his appellate counsel’s representation constitutionally deficient under Evitts v. Lucey, 469 U.S. 387 (1985). The State argues that Reed’s ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claim is waived for inadequate briefing. Alternatively, the State contends that the claim is procedurally defaulted.
Reed detailed his ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claims in his third state habeas petition. The CCA dismissed these claims as abuses of the writ. The magistrate judge accordingly recommended that the claim be found procedurally defaulted. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation.
Reed does not appear to challenge the district court’s procedural ruling other than through his assertion of actual innocence under Schlup, which, as we have discussed, is unavailing. For the same reasons, the district court’s denial of habeas relief is not debatable.[16]
Even if we looked beyond the district court’s non-debatable procedural ruling to inquire into whether Reed has stated a valid claim of the denial of a constitutional right, we would find that Reed’s claims would fare no better. Reed’s “good conduct time” instruction argument fails because the relevant statutory provision—Article 37.071 § 2(e)(2)(B) (court shall “charge the jury that a defendant sentenced to confinement for life without parole . . . is ineligible for release . . . on parole”)—does not appear to have come into effect until after Reed’s trial. See 1999 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 140, § 1 (S.B. 39) (amending Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 37.071). Additionally, Reed’s argument fails to show how Reed suffered harm as a result of the jury instruction. See Ross v. State, 133 S.W.3d 618, 623 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (dispositive issue is “whether the jury was so misled or whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury applied the misleading parole charge in a way that prevented it from considering that a life-sentenced appellant would not be eligible for parole for forty years”).
Reed’s second argument, that the jury should have been informed that a lack of unanimity during the penalty phase would result in a life sentence, is a challenge to Texas’s so-called “12-10 Rule.”[17] Arguments similar to Reed’s repeatedly have been rejected by this court and Texas courts, most recently in Parr v. Thaler, 481 F.App’x 872, 878–79 (5th Cir. 2012). See, e.g., Druery v. Thaler, 647 F.3d 535, 542–45 (5th Cir. 2011); Greer v. Thaler, 380 F.App’x 373, 389 (5th Cir. 2010); Gonzales v. State, 353 S.W.3d 826, 837 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011). Reed presents no grounds to revisit those decisions.
Reed’s third argument is equally unavailing. He contends that his appellate counsel should have challenged the trial court’s denial of Reed’s continuance motion, and more broadly argues that his trial attorneys devoted too little time to preparing his defense. “There are no mechanical tests for deciding when a denial of a continuance is so arbitrary as to violate due process. The answer must be found in the circumstances present in every case . . . .” Hall v. Thaler, 504 F.App’x 269, 283 (5th Cir. 2012) (quoting Ungar v. Sarafite, 376 U.S. 575, 589 (1964)).
The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation to deny relief on this claim. The magistrate judge observed that “although Reed makes general allegations in his pleadings before this Court that having sufficient time is essential to preparing a defense to a capital case, he does not demonstrate with any specificity how his counsel was unprepared to move forward with trial in his case in March 1998.” Likewise in his brief to this court, Reed provides little explanation, and we therefore find it waived. See McGowen, 675 F.3d at 497. A brief review of the attorney billing records identified by the State also dispels any concerns that Reed’s defense team did not spend enough time preparing for trial.
Upon review of Reed’s ineffective-assistance-of-appellate-counsel claims, we conclude that even if the district court’s finding of procedural default is debatable, Reed’s underlying constitutional claims are not.
D. Appellate Counsel’s Conflict of Interest
Reed seeks a COA on his Sixth Amendment claim that his appellate counsel suffered from an actual conflict of interest because, while his appellate counsel represented him on direct appeal, his appellate counsel also represented Lawhon (who boasted of killing Stites) in a separate state habeas proceeding. Because of that dual-representation, Reed posits that his appellate counsel did not appeal the trial court’s exclusion of certain testimony concerning Lawhon’s confession. The State points out that Reed’s argument has changed from that which was presented in state court, and that we should not now consider Reed’s claim other than how it was presented there. The State adds that Reed’s conflict-of-interest claim lacks merit as evidenced by the fact that Reed can offer no supporting caselaw granting habeas relief in similar circumstances.
Reed raised his conflict-of-interest claim in his first state habeas petition, where he asserted prejudice resulting from the fact that his appellate counsel would not testify about conversations he had with Lawhon that might inculpate Lawhon in Stites’s murder. The CCA rejected this argument. In district court, Reed argued that his appellate counsel’s dual representation had an adverse effect because it resulted in appellate counsel not objecting to the exclusion of certain evidence of Lawhon’s alleged confession. The district court correctly observed that this was not the argument Reed raised in state court, and declined to consider it.
We agree with the district court and conclude that reasonable jurists would not disagree with that court’s disposal of the claim. Reed’s claim, albeit not procedurally barred on the basis of an independent and adequate state procedural rule, is unexhausted.[18] See Kittelson v. Dretke, 426 F.3d 306, 315– 16 (5th Cir. 2005). Section 2254(b)(1) requires that a petitioner first exhaust his state court remedies before proceeding in federal court. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A). AEDPA’s exhaustion requirement is “not satisfied if the petitioner presents new legal theories or factual claims in his federal habeas petition.” Anderson v. Johnson, 338 F.3d 382, 386 (5th Cir. 2003).
Even if Reed’s conflict-of-interest claim were considered on the merits, it would not be entitled to habeas relief. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2) (habeas relief may be denied on the merits, notwithstanding petitioner’s failure to exhaust state court remedies); cf. Miller v. Dretke, 431 F.3d 241, 245 (5th Cir. 2005) (“Because we hold [petitioner] is not entitled to habeas relief on the Brady-claim, we need not decide whether the district court erred in considering it.”). The jury heard evidence that Lawhon bragged about killing Stites, so any additional testimony to that effect would be cumulative. Reed’s description of the circumstances leading to the witnesses at issue not testifying is also misleading. It was not the case, as Reed asserts, that “[t]he Trial Court refused to allow [the two witnesses] to testify.” Instead, although they initially expressed their willingness to testify, after consulting with a court-appointed attorney, both witnesses decided to exercise their rights under the Fifth Amendment and not testify. Reed’s suggestion that the trial court acted improperly in ensuring that the witnesses were advised by counsel and fully understood their constitutional rights is baseless.
E. Brady
Reed seeks a COA with respect to the district court’s denial of his Brady claims. Reed contends that the State suppressed: (1) DNA evidence of the beer cans found at the murder scene; (2) witness testimony that Stites and Fennell were arguing the morning of the murder; (3) testimony by a witness who allegedly remembered Fennell threatening to kill Stites with a belt; (4) statements by two witnesses who claimed to have seen Stites driving around with one or two men the morning of the murder; (5) an affidavit by Fennell’s former girlfriend; (6) evidence of lawsuits filed against Fennell and the Giddings Police Department; (7) a letter by Fennell to the Giddings city manager; and (8) evidence of criminal corruption by the Bastrop county sheriff.[19]
To establish a Brady violation as to any of these claims, Reed had to prove that (1) the prosecution actually suppressed the statements, (2) the statements were favorable to him, and (3) the statements were material. See Kyles, 514 U.S. at 434; Brady, 373 U.S. at 87; see also Trottie v. Stephens, 720 F.3d 231, 251 (5th Cir. 2013). A petitioner’s Brady claim fails if the suppressed evidence was discoverable through reasonable due diligence. See United States v. Brown, 650 F.3d 581, 588 (5th Cir. 2011), cert. denied, 132 S.Ct. 1969 (2012). Suppressed evidence is material if “there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985); see United States v. Sipe, 388 F.3d 471, 485 (5th Cir. 2004).
Although we address Reed’s request for a COA as to each of his Brady claims below, we note that many of them are procedurally defaulted because Reed has failed to establish actual innocence under Schlup and does not separately argue that he has shown cause and prejudice to excuse procedural default as to any particular Brady claim.[20]
1. Beer-can-DNA evidence
Reed contends that the State suppressed a letter containing a DNA report that revealed a mixture of profiles from which Stites, Officer Hall, and Officer Selmala (the officer who investigated Fennell’s pickup truck) could not be excluded. He argues that “[i]t is uncontested that the State’s DNA report is exculpatory because it suggests that two officers (one closely associated with Fennell) were with Stites, drinking beer at the crime scene.” The State maintains that this claim is procedurally barred, and that Reed cannot show cause and prejudice to excuse the default. It further submits that even if the claim were considered on its merits, Reed cannot show prejudice because, at trial, Reed had access to the same DNA evidence and his DNA expert initially reached the same conclusion before conducting more refined Polymarker testing, which excluded Stites and the two police officers.
The CCA dismissed Reed’s Brady claim as an abuse of the writ. But although dismissing the claim, the CCA did consider the beer-can-DNA evidence, together with other evidence, in the context of Reed’s actual innocence claim. It found that “[a]lthough this new evidence may indeed arouse a healthy suspicion that Fennell had some involvement in Stacey’s death, [the court was] not convinced that Reed ha[d] shown by a preponderance of the evidence that no reasonable juror, confronted with this evidence, would have found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The magistrate judge, giving Reed the benefit of the doubt, recommended that the district court conclude that Reed had shown cause for the late filing of this Brady claim because it was unclear whether his defense team actually had received the State’s DNA report. But the magistrate judge also recommended that the district court find that Reed had not made a sufficient showing as to prejudice because Reed’s DNA expert, Dr. Johnson, initially reached the same result as the prosecution—that Reed was not a donor, but that Stites, Officer Hall, and Officer Selmala could not be excluded. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation.
Reed does not argue that the district court improperly found this claim procedurally defaulted. Instead, he only argues that his claim should be considered because he has satisfied his burden under Schlup or Martinez, or alternatively, that he has shown cause for not filing this Brady claim in his initial habeas petition and resulting prejudice. We already have concluded that a COA should not issue as to Reed’s Schlup actual innocence claim, see our discussion supra, and that he has insufficiently briefed his contention that Martinez should apply to his Brady claims. See In re Sepulvado, 707 F.3d at 554 & n.8; cf. Hunton, 732 F.3d at 1126–27.
Turning to whether Reed has sufficiently shown cause and default such that the district court’s procedural ruling is debatable, we note that, as an initial matter, it is unclear whether the State actually suppressed the report. The attorney responsible for handling the DNA evidence on Reed’s defense team simply could not recall whether the DNA report had been received. The fact that four copies of the report were made, only one of which was unaccounted for, suggests that it was. That aside, there are many other problems with this claim.
Most importantly, Reed cannot show that he was prejudiced by the State’s DNA report given that Reed’s own DNA expert, Dr. Johnson, reached the same result—namely, that Reed was not a donor, but that Stites, Officer Hall, and Officer Selmala could not be excluded from the beer-can DNA. See Holly v. Collins, 9 F.3d 103, 1993 WL 481732, at *4 (5th Cir. 1993) (unpublished table decision) (“Awareness of the information purportedly suppressed neutralizes any . . . impropriety for purposes of a Brady claim implicating evidence of that information.”). Dr. Johnson subsequently conducted Polymarker testing, which excluded all three individuals. The State declined to conduct further DNA testing in light of Dr. Johnson’s more refined results.
Reed’s Brady claim therefore does not arise out of the purported suppression of the State’s DNA evidence, but out of his own expert subsequently conducting additional testing that reached a contrary conclusion, which the State then adopted. In an apparent effort to strengthen the State’s and Dr. Johnson’s original DNA results (which could not exclude Stites, Officer Hall, and Officer Selmala), Reed points to testimony by Dr. Arthur Eisenberg. Dr. Eisenberg opines that the beer can contained DNA from as many as four individuals, one of whom probably was female. Although Stites, Fennell, and Officer Selmala were excluded, Dr. Eisenberg could not exclude Officer Hall as a contributor from the beer-can-DNA evidence. Importantly, Dr. Eisenberg’s review of the beer-can-DNA evidence is completely divorced in time from Reed’s trial. To prevail under Brady, Reed must show that the purported suppression of the State’s DNA report at trial materially affected the trial’s outcome, not that years later another DNA expert would opine that Officer Hall could not be excluded from the DNA mixture. See Lawrence v. Lensing, 42 F.3d 255, 257 (5th Cir. 1994) (“Brady claims involve ‘the discovery, after trial of information which had been known to the prosecution but unknown to the defense.’” (citation omitted)).
Reasonable jurists thus would not debate the district court’s procedural ruling denying habeas relief on this Brady claim.
2. Martha Barnett’s testimony
Reed argues that the district court effectively abdicated its duty under AEDPA to review his claim by failing to credit the testimony of Martha Barnett. In her affidavit, Barnett attests to seeing Stites and a man she later recognized as Fennell together in a loud confrontation between approximately 5:00 and 5:30 a.m. on the day of the murder. Barnett testified that the two were gesturing “like there was some kind of conflict.” Reed contends that a review of the relevant evidence shows that Barnett’s testimony should not have been discounted. The State counters that Reed has not overcome the state habeas court’s credibility determination.
Reed included his Brady claim relating to Barnett’s testimony in his third state habeas petition. The CCA concluded that Reed’s claim satisfied the requirements of Article 11.071 § 5(a), and remanded it to the state trial court for a live evidentiary hearing. The state trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law finding Barnett not credible for multiple reasons. These included that Barnett failed to satisfactorily explain why she did not report her sighting until over a year and a half after the murder; the disclosure occurred shortly after Fennell arrested her for driving under the influence; and Barnett claimed to have recognized Fennell from a newspaper article, despite the fact that no newspaper carried such a photograph. The trial court also found Barnett not credible because she changed the time she reported seeing Stites and Fennell from between 5:00 to 5:30 a.m. in her affidavit to approximately 4:45 a.m. during the evidentiary hearing. Additionally, Barnett’s alleged sighting did not comport with Stites’s usual schedule of reporting for work by 3:30 a.m., nor the fact that Stites evidently was on her way to work when she was murdered. Fennell’s truck, which Stites drove to work, also was found at 5:23 a.m., by which time Stites had already been killed. Lastly, Stites’s mother woke Fennell at 6:45 a.m.
The CCA similarly found Barnett’s testimony unreliable. Although finding parts of the trial court’s findings inconsistent with the record and “somewhat misleading, ” it concluded that they were “ largely supported by the record.” It determined that Reed had failed to show that the State was in possession of the information regarding Barnett prior to or during trial. Central to this determination was the chain of events by which Barnett first informed her attorney, Steven Keng, about seeing Stites and Fennell, and by which Keng then informed the Bastrop district attorney. After reviewing all the evidence of who told what when, the CCA upheld the state trial court’s credibility finding that Keng did not inform the Bastrop district attorney until after Reed’s trial. Discussing whether Reed had met his burden of showing actual innocence, the CCA also found the information provided by Barnett “unreliable” and “not credible.”
The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation that there was “nothing inconsistent with established federal law in the CCA’s reasoning, ” and that Reed also had not “ succeeded in demonstrating by clear and convincing evidence that any of the trial court’s or CCA’s findings of fact were unreasonable in light of the record before them.”
The district court appropriately deferred to the state habeas court’s credibility determination under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Reed attempts to overcome § 2254(e)(1)’s presumption of correctness by again arguing that Barnett disclosed her statements to Keng, who then passed them on to the Bastrop district attorney. It was the Bastrop district attorney, Reed alleges, who failed to disclose the statements to the defense team. According to Reed, the Bastrop district attorney “had professional and financial motives to deny his misconduct, ” because “ a prosecutor’s failure to disclose exculpatory evidence can lead to professional discipline or even criminal liability, ” and “ [a]t the time of the habeas hearing, [the district attorney] had a pending lawsuit against [a newspaper] for defamation arising from the paper’s coverage of the Reed case.” Assuming Reed is correct and the State suppressed Barnett’s statement, Reed still cannot show prejudice because the CCA’s determination that Barnett was not a credible witness is supported by unrebutted evidence. Reed points out that Fennell was not called by the state trial court to dispute Barnett’s testimony, and that the only motive Barnett had for implicating Fennell was his arrest of her for driving while intoxicated. But Reed’s arguments implicate exactly the type of credibility determination we, as a federal court, leave to the state court that was on-hand to observe the witnesses at issue. The district court’s conclusion that the CCA’s decision was not based on an unreasonable determination of the facts thus is not debatable, nor is its determination that Reed has failed to present clear and convincing evidence that the CCA’s credibility determination was erroneous.
3. Mary Blackwell’s testimony
Reed claims that the State suppressed a statement by Mary Blackwell. Blackwell’s affidavit states that in 1995, during a police academy training class, she overheard Fennell say to another attendee that if he ever discovered Stites (his then-girlfriend) cheating on him he would strangle her. Blackwell states that she then told Fennell that he would be caught because he would leave fingerprints, to which Fennell responded that he would use a belt. Blackwell also recalled Fennell yelling at Stites. The State responds that the prosecution indisputably did not learn of Blackwell’s statement, if at all, until after Reed’s trial, and thus Brady should not apply. Additionally, the State points out that Reed’s defense team had as much access to the evidence as the prosecution because one of Reed’s state habeas investigators was told about Blackwell’s statement. Finally, the State asks that the panel defer to the CCA’s determination that Blackwell’s statement was unreliable and not credible.
Reed included his claim that the State suppressed Blackwell’s statement in his third state habeas petition. As with Reed’s Brady claim relating to Barnett’s testimony, the CCA remanded this claim to the state trial court to conduct a live evidentiary hearing. The state trial court found Blackwell not credible. The trial court based its determination on the fact that other testimony showed Fennell was emotionally upset after Stites’s death; the attendee to whom Fennell allegedly made the remarks had no recollection of them, and no other attendee heard the alleged statements; Blackwell failed to report information relevant to the homicide investigation despite being a peace officer; Blackwell originally described Fennell as joking; and Blackwell claimed to be entirely unaware of the circumstances of Stites’s death despite attending Stites’s funeral, living in the area, and knowing Fennell. The CCA adopted the trial court’s findings. It specifically held that “although we question whether Fennell’s statement to Blackwell falls within Brady’s ambit because it was not alleged to have been disclosed until after Reed’s trial and therefore may be more properly characterized as newly discovered evidence, we will nevertheless defer to the trial judge’s credibility determinations and factfindings because our independent review of the record establishes that they are supported by the record.” (footnote omitted).
The magistrate judge determined that “the Texas courts’ conclusions on this claim are consistent with established federal law, and are based on a reasonable determination of the facts in light of the record, ” and accordingly recommended that the district court defer to those findings. The district court held that there was insufficient evidence “ to rebut the presumption of correctness of the state court’s credibility determination, ” and denied habeas relief.
“As a federal habeas court, ‘we must defer to the factual findings in the state court proceedings’ and ‘respect the ability of the fact-finder to evaluate the credibility of the witnesses.’” Jackson v. Miss. Dep’t of Corr., 359 F.App’x 499, 502 (5th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). Reed fails to offer any reason why the state court’s credibility determination as to Blackwell is erroneous. Instead, Reed argues that the district court failed to consider “the State’s pattern of suppressing exculpatory evidence” and that the assistant district attorney who allegedly learned of Blackwell’s statements had a motive “to deny misconduct and thereby avoid professional or even criminal liability.” As with Barnett’s testimony, Reed’s argument does not strike at the CCA’s underlying credibility determination, to which the district court correctly deferred. Reasonable jurists thus would not find the district court’s assessment of Reed’s Brady claim as it relates to Blackwell’s testimony debatable or wrong.
4. Brenda and Jennifer Praters’ statements
Reed argues that the State suppressed the written statements of Brenda and Jennifer Prater. The statements separately describe the Praters seeing Stites the day of the murder. Jennifer stated that she saw two people inside a car behind her house early that morning. She described the person in the driver’s seat as “dark complected, but not black” (possibly of “middle eastern descent”), and the person in the passenger seat as a “pale complected” woman with “big hair.” Jennifer asserts she was able to get a good look at the individuals because the car’s interior light was on. She was certain that Reed was not the man in the car. She subsequently recognized the woman as Stites, after seeing Stites’s picture in a newspaper. When confronted by police, however, Jennifer lied and told police she “didn’t know anything about” seeing a car the day of the murder.
Brenda stated that early on April 23, 1996, she saw a car go past her house twice. She saw three individuals in the car, the interior lights of which were on—a driver of darker complexion, but not black (possibly “Mexican”); a woman in the passenger seat with light complexion and “big dark hair”; and a white male in the back seat. Like Jennifer, Brenda claims later to have recognized the woman in the passenger seat as Stites from a newspaper article. When police came to speak with her, Brenda related what she saw.
The State argues that Reed’s Brady claim is procedurally defaulted. It further points out that there was no evidence, other than the Praters’ statements, that any police officers actually talked with Brenda and Jennifer Prater. The only notes in the State’s possession that possibly related to the statements referred to a “Mary Fisher, ” and were available to Reed. Finally, the State asserts that even if the statements are taken at face value, they are not material under Brady.
Reed’s Brady claim relating to Brenda and Jennifer Prater was included in his third state habeas petition. The CCA dismissed the claim as an abuse of the writ. The CCA subsequently discussed the Praters’ statements in the context of its actual innocence discussion. The CCA questioned the Praters’ credibility because they did not come forward with their information until September 2002. Jennifer’s credibility was suspect because her husband failed to corroborate her account. The CCA further observed that the Praters’ statements had “no continuity with any of the other new evidence offered by Reed and [did] not fit within the chronicle of events that the trial evidence support[ed].” Finding that Reed had failed to establish his actual innocence, the CCA refused to consider the merits of Reed’s Brady claim as to the Praters’ statements.
The district court concluded that the CCA’s credibility determination “was unreasonable in light of other record evidence, ” because Brenda reported her sighting to the police and because there was no basis for requiring an additional affidavit from Jennifer’s husband to find her account credible. Having determined that Reed established cause, the district court assumed actual prejudice to excuse the default. But it proceeded to find that Reed’s Brady claim failed on the merits. The court reasoned that “[t]here is nothing linking the eyewitness testimony by the Praters to Fennell, and the inferences Reed urges the court to draw from the Praters’ statements are far too speculative to have a meaningful impact on a reasonable juror’s assessment of the evidence.”
We find that the district court’s ultimate conclusion to deny habeas relief as to Reed’s Brady claim is not debatable. Although the district court found that Reed could show cause to excuse procedural default, and assumed resulting prejudice, it appears to us that Reed cannot meet this burden. Considering Jennifer’s statement first, Reed has failed to show cause. The CCA found her credibility suspect because she did not come forward with the information until several years after Stites’s murder. This is sufficient evidence on which to defer to the CCA’s credibility determination under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Jennifer did not approach authorities with the information she held. She also admitted lying to the police because she “knew that being a witness in a criminal investigation would be a hassle.” Reed has not disputed these facts. We thus defer to the CCA’s credibility determination as to Jennifer and conclude that there was no cause to excuse default because the State did not suppress the statement. We also find that Reed had failed to show prejudice as to the alleged suppression of Jennifer’s statement for the same reason we find no prejudice resulting from the purported suppression of Brenda’s statement.
As to Brenda’s statement, we agree with the district court that Reed has shown cause for excusing default because Brenda testified to having spoken with police authorities two days after the incident. Reed has not, however, shown actual prejudice, rendering the district court’s final disposition of the claim non-debatable. Although Brenda states that she saw Stites with two other men, Reed provides no explanation for who these individuals were. Instead, Reed asserts that the Praters’ accounts “fit” with Barnett’s testimony because they “likely observed Stites earlier than Barnett did.” As he puts it, “[i]f Stites was with other men just prior to her murder, that comports with the Fennell-Stites confrontation witnessed by Barnett and provides motive for Fennell to strangle Stites.” Reed’s argument fails partly because we defer to the CCA’s finding that Barnett’s testimony is not credible. Additionally, Brenda’s statement is not exculpatory. To the extent there was enough time for an individual to sexually assault Stites after she was seen by the Praters, a reasonable juror could just as easily believe that Reed, and not Fennell, committed the deed. The district court’s conclusion that “[i]n light of the other evidence inculpatory of Reed and the lack of credible evidence that Reed had consensual sex with Stites before her death, the Praters’ statements . . . do not undermine confidence in the verdict” is not debatable.
5. Pamela Duncan’s affidavit
Reed contends that Fennell’s former girlfriend, Pamela Duncan, reported Fennell’s abusive behavior to authorities. According to Duncan’s affidavit, Fennell was “extremely possessive and jealous, ” an abusive partner, and hostile toward African-Americans. Reed asserts a Brady violation on the basis of the State’s suppression of Duncan’s statement. The State argues that this claim is procedurally defaulted.
Reed presented his suppression-of-evidence claim concerning Duncan in his fourth state habeas petition. The CCA dismissed the claim as an abuse of the writ, but also considered the substance of Duncan’s affidavit as part of its Schlup analysis. The CCA concluded that this evidence did not undermine the jury’s verdict. The district court accepted the magistrate judge’s recommendation that this claim be found procedurally defaulted.
The district court’s treatment of this Brady claim is not debatable. Reed does not discuss how Duncan’s affidavit would have been material at trial, and thus he does not show prejudice to excuse the default. Likewise, there are substantial questions as to whether Duncan’s account actually was suppressed. The affidavit does not make clear which authorities she approached concerning Fennell’s behavior, and there is no other record of her doing so. It thus appears that Duncan’s statements would have been as accessible to Reed as they were to the prosecution. See Kutzner v. Cockrell, 303 F.3d 333, 336 (5th Cir. 2002) (“Brady does not obligate the State to furnish a defendant with exculpatory evidence that is fully available to the defendant through the exercise of reasonable diligence.”). As we have already concluded that Reed cannot show actual innocence under Schlup, Reed’s failure to establish cause for defaulting this claim and resulting prejudice renders the district court’s denial of habeas relief as to this Brady claim not debatable.
6. Lawsuits against Fennell and the Giddings Police Department
Reed complains that the State suppressed evidence of two lawsuits filed against Fennell and the Giddings Police Department, which alleged violence and lawlessness, including against minorities. The State contends that information relating to the suits was contained in public documents accessible to Reed.
Reed included this Brady claim in his third state habeas petition. The CCA dismissed it as an abuse of the writ. The district court found the claim procedurally defaulted.
We find the district court’s procedural ruling is not debatable. We agree with the State that the fact that lawsuits had been filed against Fennell and the Giddings Police Department was public information Reed could have discovered through reasonable diligence. See id. Additionally, Reed spends no time discussing the substance of his claim, and thus he has not shown that he suffered prejudice as a result of it being held procedurally barred.
7. Fennell’s letter to the Giddings city manager
The record contains a letter Fennell wrote to the Giddings city manager in which he states that “[Officer] Hall made several comments during the murder investigation of my fiancé[e]. I have learned to forgive and forget.” Reed characterizes this statement as inculpating Fennell in Stites’s murder because Fennell also described Officer Hall as being someone who would “burn anyone” to get a position. Reed states that the State suppressed Fennell’s letter. The State responds that the claim is procedurally defaulted, Reed has not proven the substance of Officer Hall’s comments, and the letter was not written until after trial.
Reed’s Brady claim as it relates to Fennell’s letter appeared in his fifth state habeas petition. The CCA dismissed the claim as an abuse of the writ. The district court accordingly found the claim procedurally defaulted.
Other than his assertion of actual innocence, Reed presents no reasons why the district court should have considered his procedurally defaulted Brady claim on the merits. In any event, a brief review of the letter confirms that Reed’s theory is wholly speculative, precluding habeas relief under Brady. See Moore, 534 F.3d at 462–63 (“highly speculative theory” insufficient to satisfy Brady’s materiality requirement). There is no cause to debate the district court’s procedural dismissal of this claim.
8. Corruption in the Bastrop Sheriff’s Department
Reed argues that “[t]he State’s failure to disclose the known corruption within the Bastrop County Sheriff Department deprived Reed of powerful evidence impeaching the credibility of the investigation.” The corruption Reed refers to is the indictment of a former Bastrop county sheriff for several offenses regarding the improper sale of county property and the wrongful use of inmate labor for personal benefit. The State dismisses Reed’s Brady claim as entirely failing to demonstrate how the former sheriff’s offenses were favorable to Reed’s defense, how this evidence was suppressed, or why it was material.
Reed included his claim that the State suppressed evidence of criminal misconduct by the former Bastrop county sheriff in his fifth state habeas petition. The CCA dismissed the claim as an abuse of the writ. The district court found the claim procedurally defaulted, and further found that even if Reed were able to establish cause and prejudice to overcome the state procedural default, his claim would fail on the merits.
Reed’s discussion of this Brady claim is limited to asserting that the State’s failure to disclose the information deprived him of powerful evidence to impeach the credibility of the investigation. As the State observes, however, Reed has not shown that this information could have been used to impeach anyone who actually participated in the investigation. We thus conclude that the district court’s procedural ruling is not debatable.
F. Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment violations
Reed alleges that his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment were violated when the jury was allowed to consider extraneous criminal allegations relating to a sexual assault committed in 1987, of which he was acquitted. In Reed’s view, the State was allowed during the penalty phase of trial to effectively retry the 1987 case and make closing remarks “designed to inflame and elicit fears in the jury.” The State counters that Reed’s argument is unsupported by any Supreme Court precedent, and would run against our own circuit precedent.
Reed raised this claim on direct appeal and in his first state habeas petition. It was denied on the merits in both proceedings. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation that Reed’s constitutional claim be denied based on Supreme Court and circuit precedent. We likewise deny a COA as to this claim.
In Harris v. Cockrell, 313 F.3d 238, 245–46 (5th Cir. 2002), this court addressed the question of whether a defendant’s right to fair sentencing is compromised “by the introduction of evidence concerning a crime for which he had been indicted but acquitted.” The Harris court expressly found that “[t]he introduction of evidence of extraneous offenses of which the defendant has been acquitted is consistent with due process, ” because “ [a]lthough due process requires the application of collateral estoppel, that doctrine does not preclude [the State] from relitigating an issue when it is presented in a subsequent action governed by a lower standard of proof.” Id. at 246 (quoting Dowling v. United States, 493 U.S. 342, 349 (1990)) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Harris court further reasoned that, “[b]ecause ‘extraneous offenses offered at the punishment phase of a capital trial need not be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, ‘ the relevant standard of proof necessarily was lower than that at [the defendant's] criminal trial.” Id. (citation omitted). “Collateral estoppel therefore did not preclude the introduction of evidence pertaining to these charges . . . .” Id.
Harris is dispositive of Reed’s claim, and we conclude that the district court’s decision to deny habeas relief on this claim is not debatable.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons discussed, we DENY a COA as to all of Reed’s claims.
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