PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
DONALD R. BARBE,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
No. 06-7550
THOMAS MCBRIDE, Warden; MOUNT
OLIVE CORRECTIONAL COMPLEX,
Respondents-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of West Virginia, at Wheeling.
Irene M. Keeley, Chief District Judge.
(5:04-cv-00053-IMK)
Argued: December 4, 2007
Decided: April 7, 2008
Before KING and SHEDD, Circuit Judges, and
Henry F. FLOYD, United States District Judge for the
District of South Carolina, sitting by designation.
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published opinion.
Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge Shedd and Judge Floyd
joined.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: William Jacob Watkins, Jr., WOMBLE, CARLYLE,
SANDRIDGE & RICE, Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellant.
Robert David Goldberg, Assistant Attorney General, OFFICE OF
2 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WEST VIRGINIA, Charleston,
West Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Darrell V. McGraw, Jr.,
Attorney General, Charleston, West Virginia, for Appellees.
OPINION
KING, Circuit Judge:
Donald R. Barbe, after unsuccessfully seeking habeas corpus relief
under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the Northern District of West Virginia,
appeals from the district court’s September 2005 dismissal of his peti-
tion. Barbe was convicted in 1999 in the Circuit Court of Ohio
County, West Virginia, of eight counts of incest, sexual assault, and
sexual abuse by a custodian, for offenses involving his granddaughter
(J.M.) and one other victim.1 Barbe was subsequently denied state
habeas corpus relief. In his federal habeas corpus petition, Barbe con-
tended, inter alia, that (1) he was deprived of his Sixth Amendment
right to the effective assistance of counsel in his state trial, and (2) his
Sixth Amendment confrontation right was contravened when the state
circuit court limited his cross-examination of a prosecution expert.
The confrontation issue arose from the circuit court’s application of
West Virginia’s rape shield law, and the circuit court’s ruling pre-
cluded Barbe from examining the expert concerning J.M.’s sexual
abuse by other men.2
Although the district court rejected Barbe’s claims on these two
issues, it granted him a certificate of appealability on each of them.
As explained below, Barbe was not denied the effective assistance of
counsel. His Sixth Amendment confrontation right was indisputably
contravened, however, by the state circuit court’s application of a per
se rule restricting cross-examination of the prosecution’s expert under
1
Although J.M. has been referred to in some of the underlying pro-
ceedings and submissions by her full name, we prefer to protect her ano-
nymity, as best we can, by using only her initials.
2
We use the term "sexual abuse" — except when referring to the spe-
cific state charges of sexual abuse against Barbe — as a generic term
encompassing various forms of sexual misconduct.
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 3
the state rape shield law — a ruling in conflict with what we term the
"Rock-Lucas Principle" established by the Supreme Court of the
United States. See Michigan v. Lucas, 500 U.S. 145, 151 (1991) (rec-
ognizing that, rather than adopting per se rule for precluding evidence
under rape shield statute, state courts must determine, on case-by-case
basis, whether exclusionary rule "is ‘arbitrary or disproportionate’ to
the State’s legitimate interests" (quoting Rock v. Arkansas, 483 U.S.
44, 56 (1987)). Because the circuit court’s Sixth Amendment error
had a substantial and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict as to the
offenses involving J.M., we are constrained to deem him entitled to
some habeas corpus relief. We therefore affirm in part, vacate in part,
and remand for the issuance of a writ that is consistent herewith.
I.
A.
1.
On September 19, 1999, a grand jury in Ohio County, West Vir-
ginia, returned a seventeen-count indictment against Barbe. The
indictment included multiple charges relating to three victims: involv-
ing victim J.M., three counts of sexual assault, three counts of incest,
and three counts of sexual abuse by a custodian (Counts One through
Nine); involving victim B.H., two counts of sexual assault (Counts
Ten and Eleven); and, involving victim S.S., six counts of sexual
abuse (Counts Twelve through Seventeen). At trial in the state circuit
court in December 1999, J.M., who was then eighteen years old, testi-
fied that Barbe, her maternal grandfather, had sexually abused her
"about a hundred times or more" when she was between the ages of
four and twelve and residing with Barbe and other family members.
J.A. 961.3 On cross-examination, J.M. admitted making a tape-
recorded pretrial statement to her mother concerning the matter, in
which she repudiated her earlier sexual abuse accusations against
Barbe. She also admitted initiating a meeting with Barbe’s defense
counsel, during which she executed an affidavit swearing that Barbe
had never sexually abused or inappropriately touched her. J.M. then
3
Citations to "J.A. ___" refer to the Joint Appendix filed by the parties
in this appeal.
4 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
asserted at trial that she was testifying truthfully to the jury about her
sexual abuse by Barbe, and that she had said otherwise on tape and
by affidavit in hopes of making the state criminal case "go away,"
because she did not want to have her "grandfather go to jail," her
"family to hurt anymore," or for "them to blame [her] for what
[Barbe] did to" her. Id. at 973.4
After J.M. testified, the prosecution called its expert, Ruth Ann
Anderson, a licensed clinical counselor, for opinion evidence "in the
area of counseling, specifically with regard to adults who have been
sexually abused as children." J.A. 990. On direct examination, Ander-
son testified for the prosecution that she had met with J.M. eleven
times over a five-month period and, in those meetings, J.M. had
related "three separate incidents of [sexual] abuse" involving Barbe.
Id. at 997-98. Based on symptoms J.M. exhibited at these meetings,
Anderson opined that J.M. had in fact been sexually abused as a child
because she fit the diagnostic criteria for post-traumatic stress disor-
der. In Anderson’s view, J.M. "very strongly fit[ ] that criteria." Id.
at 1002. The defense then sought to cross-examine Anderson about
J.M’s sexual abuse by men other than Barbe — abuse that might have
caused her psychological profile. Before Anderson responded to the
defense inquiry, the prosecution objected.
In the ensuing bench conference, the defense advised the state cir-
cuit court that it had been informed by Barbe that J.M. had previously
accused two other men of sexually abusing her. The defense further
advised the circuit court that there were witnesses available — in the
hallway outside the courtroom — to testify, based on personal knowl-
edge, about J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against those men.5 The
4
J.M. later wrote an undated letter to West Virginia’s Governor in
which she referred to the trial as having occurred "about six years ago."
J.A. 1390. In the letter, J.M. denied that Barbe had sexually abused her.
She claimed, by way of explanation, that she had been molested by a
male babysitter as a child and had utilized the details from that sexual
abuse to make up stories about her grandfather.
5
The defense also told the circuit court that the alleged sexual abuse
of J.M. by other men occurred in Florida (perpetrated by J.M.’s father’s
roommate, who had since fled a related criminal charge) and in the local
tri-state area (perpetrated by a restaurant employee or manager).
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 5
prosecution argued that the defense was precluded by West Virginia’s
rape shield law from questioning the prosecution’s expert about
J.M.’s alleged sexual abuse by other men. See W. Va. Code § 61-8B-
11; W. Va. R. Evid. 404(a)(3).6 The prosecution relied in this regard
on the legal principle established by State v. Quinn, 490 S.E. at 40
(concluding that, absent showing of falsity, alleged victim’s state-
Although the defense did not specify to the circuit court when the sexual
abuse by other men was alleged to have occurred, it must have been clear
to the court that it allegedly occurred prior to J.M.’s eighteenth birthday,
which J.M. testified fell just four months before Barbe’s trial. Indeed,
Barbe has since asserted in these federal habeas corpus proceedings that
J.M. was five years old at the time of the alleged abuse in Florida. The
record further reflects that, on June 18, 1998, J.M. (then seventeen years
old) filed an "Ohio Uniform Incident Report" alleging the offense of sex-
ual imposition against the manager of the St. Clairsville, Ohio restaurant
where she worked. J.A. 1536-39.
6
The Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia has recognized that
the rape shield law is comprised of both a statute, W. Va. Code § 61-8B-
11, and an evidence rule, W. Va. R. Evid. 404(a)(3). See State v. Quinn,
490 S.E.2d 34, 38 (W. Va. 1997). In objecting to the defense’s cross-
examination of its expert, the prosecution specifically invoked the statu-
tory component of the rape shield law, which provides, in relevant part,
as follows:
In any prosecution under this article [for a sexual offense] evi-
dence of specific instances of the victim’s sexual conduct with
persons other than the defendant, opinion evidence of the vic-
tim’s sexual conduct and reputation evidence of the victim’s sex-
ual conduct shall not be admissible: Provided, That such
evidence shall be admissible solely for the purpose of impeach-
ing credibility, if the victim first makes his or her previous sex-
ual conduct an issue in the trial by introducing evidence with
respect thereto.
W. Va. Code § 61-8B-11(b). The pertinent evidence rule makes an
exception to the general bar against character evidence for, inter alia, evi-
dence of "the victim’s prior sexual conduct with persons other than the
defendant, where the court determines at a hearing out of the presence
of the jury that such evidence is specifically related to the act or acts for
which the defendant is charged and is necessary to prevent manifest
injustice." W. Va. R. Evid. 404(a)(3).
6 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
ments about sexual abuse by others constitutes inadmissable evidence
under rape shield law). The prosecution asserted that the sole excep-
tion to the Quinn principle could be satisfied only if Barbe first dem-
onstrated a strong probability that J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations
against other men were false.
In response, the defense acknowledged that it could not rely on the
falsity exception to the Quinn principle, as it wanted to demonstrate
that J.M. had in fact been sexually abused by other men. The defense
sought to show that such abuse — and not abuse by Barbe — was the
predicate for J.M.’s psychological profile. Accordingly, instead of
relying on the falsity exception to the Quinn principle, the defense
essentially argued for an additional exception to that principle, assert-
ing that Quinn "never anticipated us being gagged while [an expert]
says that a victim exhibits all the classic signs of being sexually
abused." J.A. 1014. The defense also contended that Barbe would not
be accorded a fair trial if he was precluded from presenting evidence
of J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against other men, as an alternative
explanation for her psychological profile.7
Unpersuaded by the defense’s contentions, the state circuit court
ruled that the defense’s proposed line of inquiry into J.M.’s sexual
abuse accusations was barred by the West Virginia rape shield law
(the "Rape Shield Ruling"). The circuit court made the Rape Shield
Ruling on the premise that the defense had neither sought to prove,
nor proven, that such accusations were false — as was necessary to
rely on the falsity exception to the Quinn principle. In such circum-
7
The defense explained to the trial court why it should be permitted to
cross-examine the prosecution’s expert about J.M.’s sexual abuse accusa-
tions against other men as follows:
[U]nfortunately, I don’t think my client can get a fair trial unless
the jury now hears that yes, of course, she exhibits these prob-
lems because they came or could have just as easily come from
these other allegations she’s made against people.
***
. . . . I’m attempting to get in these accusations occurred, and
that’s why she exhibits the psychological profile[.]
J.A. 1012-13.
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 7
stances, as the circuit court saw it, "the rape shield statute applies,
period." J.A. 1014.8 As a result of the Rape Shield Ruling, the defense
had to proceed with its cross-examination of the prosecution’s expert
without inquiring into the possibility that J.M.’s psychological profile
was predicated on sexual abuse perpetrated by men other than Barbe.9
2.
The jury ultimately convicted Barbe of six offenses involving J.M.
(Counts Two, Three, Five, Six, Eight, and Nine), plus both offenses
involving B.H. (Counts Ten and Eleven). Barbe was acquitted on the
three remaining charges involving J.M, and all six charges involving
S.S. On January 31, 2000, the state circuit court sentenced Barbe, who
was then sixty-six years old, to imprisonment for not less than 80 nor
more than 190 years.10 On July 10, 2000, Barbe, through his trial
counsel, filed a petition for a direct appeal to the Supreme Court of
Appeals of West Virginia. In his petition, Barbe presented several
contentions of error, including the contention that, by its Rape Shield
8
Although the circuit court barred the defense from inquiring into
J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against other men, the court reassured
the defense that "[y]ou made your record, and your record is solid. And,
if you want to go up [to the state supreme court] and get another excep-
tion to the Quinn case, be my guest." J.A. 1014.
9
The witnesses for the prosecution also included B.H. and S.S., the
other two victims involved in the state charges against Barbe. B.H. testi-
fied that Barbe, who was her 4-H counselor, would sometimes drive her
home from the 4-H activities. She said that, on several of these occa-
sions, Barbe sexually abused her during the ride, but that she could spe-
cifically recall only two such incidents. S.S. testified that, when he was
in third grade, he was sexually abused by Barbe (his then neighbor) on
at least six occasions at Barbe’s house. Additionally, four similar act wit-
nesses testified, pursuant to West Virginia Rule of Evidence 404(b),
about alleged sexual abuse by Barbe for which he had not been charged.
Barbe did not take the stand on his own behalf.
10
Specifically, Barbe was sentenced to consecutive sentences of 15 to
35 years on each of Counts Two and Three, 5 to 15 years on Counts Five
and Six, 10 to 20 years on Counts Eight and Nine, and 10 to 25 years
on Counts Ten and Eleven, for an aggregate of 80 to 190 years. Thus,
60 to 140 years of Barbe’s aggregate sentence are for offenses committed
against J.M., and 20 to 50 years are for offenses committed against B.H.
8 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
Ruling, the circuit court misapplied the state rape shield law to pro-
hibit the defense from raising J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against
other men during cross-examination of the prosecution’s expert. On
February 6, 2001, the supreme court summarily denied Barbe’s peti-
tion for appeal, with two of the five justices of the court voting to
grant the petition. See State v. Barbe, No. 001865 (W. Va. Feb. 6,
2001).11
B.
Thereafter, Barbe filed a series of habeas corpus petitions and
appeals in the state and federal courts. Throughout these proceedings,
he has consistently and steadfastly asserted that the trial court’s Rape
Shield Ruling contravened his Sixth Amendment confrontation right.
See U.S. Const. amend VI ("In all criminal prosecutions, the accused
shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against
him."). Although he explicitly invoked the Rock-Lucas Principle by
name only in this appeal, he previously raised essentially the same
proposition, relying on state authorities. As explained above, under
the Rock-Lucas Principle, a state court cannot impose a per se rule for
disallowing evidence under a rape shield law; rather, it must deter-
mine, on a case-by-case basis, whether the exclusionary rule "is ‘arbi-
trary or disproportionate’ to the State’s legitimate interests." Michigan
v. Lucas, 500 U.S. 145, 151 (1991) (quoting Rock v. Arkansas, 483
U.S. 44, 56 (1987)).
1.
On February 23, 2001, Barbe filed a pro se petition for habeas cor-
pus relief in the state circuit court in which he had been tried, seeking
the appointment of counsel and contending, inter alia, that his trial
had been constitutionally impaired by the circuit court’s erroneous
Rape Shield Ruling. With respect to that Ruling, Barbe’s petition
asserted violations of his rights to a fair trial, the effective assistance
11
In West Virginia, there is no intermediate court of appeals and there
is no right of appeal from an adverse circuit court decision to the state
supreme court. Instead, such appeals to the supreme court are wholly dis-
cretionary. See W. Va. Const. art. VIII, § 4; Billotti v. Dodrill, 394
S.E.2d 32, 35-38 (W. Va. 1990).
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 9
of counsel, and to be confronted with the witnesses against him, all
under the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitu-
tion of the United States, as well as similar provisions of the Constitu-
tion of West Virginia. On August 3, 2001, the circuit court, acting as
the state habeas court, denied Barbe’s pro se petition without either
appointing counsel or conducting a hearing. See Barbe v. Painter, No.
01-C-77, slip op. at 3 (W. Va. Cir. Ct. Aug. 3, 2001). With respect
to the Rape Shield Ruling, the circuit court concluded that, to the
extent Barbe was "merely relitigating an evidentiary question that has
been [previously] addressed," he was barred under the doctrine of res
judicata from obtaining habeas corpus relief. Id. at 4. The circuit court
further rejected the notion that its Rape Shield Ruling yielded any
constitutional violations, specifically addressing what it termed claims
of "[c]ourt-induced ineffective assistance of counsel," id. at 3, and of
failure to permit questions on cross-examination resulting in "mani-
fest abuse or injustice" under prior state decisions, id. at 7 (internal
quotation marks omitted). The circuit court did not explicitly address
Barbe’s assertion that his confrontation right — under both the Sixth
Amendment and its state constitutional counterpart — had also been
contravened.
In October 2001, Barbe filed a petition for appeal in the state
supreme court concerning the circuit court’s denial of his pro se
habeas corpus petition. Thereafter, on January 24, 2002, the supreme
court granted limited relief, directing that Barbe be awarded a hearing
on his habeas corpus petition, and that counsel be appointed to repre-
sent him. See Barbe v. Coleman, No. 012171 (W. Va. Jan. 24, 2002).
In an amended petition for state habeas corpus relief filed in the
state circuit court by Barbe’s new lawyer on September 24, 2002,
Barbe outlined ten different ways in which his trial counsel was con-
stitutionally ineffective, including, but not limited to, counsel’s per-
formance with respect to the Rape Shield Ruling. Barbe also asserted,
inter alia, that the circuit court had erred in making that Ruling at
trial. In a memorandum of law supporting his amended habeas corpus
petition, filed February 3, 2003, Barbe specified that his Sixth
Amendment confrontation right was contravened by the Rape Shield
Ruling. Barbe contended that the circuit court should have balanced
his Sixth Amendment confrontation right against J.M.’s right to pri-
vacy and, upon doing so, allowed him to cross-examine the prosecu-
10 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
tion’s expert about J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against other men.
Among other authorities, Barbe relied on State v. Green, 260 S.E.2d
257, 261 (W. Va. 1979), in which the state supreme court recognized
that "[m]ost rape shield statutes that have been judicially examined"
— though not that of West Virginia — "provide for balancing Sixth
Amendment claims against a victim’s privacy rights." Barbe observed
that the state legislature had not heeded the Green court’s advice to
amend section 61-8B-11 to explicitly provide for such a balancing
during in camera proceedings, see Green, 260 S.E.2d at 264, but that
West Virginia Rule of Evidence 404(a)(3) was later adopted to allow
for certain evidence of a sexual offense victim’s prior sexual conduct
"where the court determines at a hearing out of the presence of the
jury that such evidence is specifically related to the act or acts for
which the defendant is charged and is necessary to prevent manifest
injustice." See supra note 6 (explaining that West Virginia rape shield
law in current form is comprised of both statute, W. Va. Code § 61-
8B-11, and evidence rule, W. Va. R. Evid. 404(a)(3)).12 Barbe further
observed that the state supreme court had since invoked Rule
404(a)(3) in State v. Quinn (the very case relied on by the circuit court
for its Rape Shield Ruling) to provide an example of when a true sex-
ual abuse allegation against someone other than the defendant may be
admissible under the rape shield law: "[I]f the causation of the alleged
enlargement of [the victim’s] vaginal area had been an issue at trial,
the [defendant’s] proposed use of evidence of [the victim’s] sexual
conduct might not have been prohibited by our rape shield law — if
the evidence were offered to rebut the inference that the [defendant’s]
conduct had caused the alleged enlargement." Quinn, 490 S.E.2d at
42 n.14. According to Barbe, the Quinn court’s example is analogous
to his case, and the Rape Shield Ruling was thus manifestly unjust
under Rule 404(a)(3), and violative of his Sixth Amendment confron-
tation right.13
12
The West Virginia Rules of Evidence, including Rule 404(a)(3),
became effective on February 1, 1985.
13
Barbe’s assertion that the circuit court should have balanced his Sixth
Amendment confrontation right against J.M.’s right to privacy is essen-
tially the same as raising the Rock-Lucas Principle. The Principle
requires a state court to determine, on a case-by-case basis, whether an
exclusionary rule "is ‘arbitrary or disproportionate’ to the State’s legiti-
mate interests." Lucas, 500 U.S. at 151 (quoting Rock, 483 U.S. at 56).
And, one such legitimate interest is in protecting sexual abuse victims
from "unnecessary invasions of privacy". Lucas, 500 U.S. at 150.
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 11
At the time Barbe filed his February 3, 2003 memorandum of law
in support of his amended habeas corpus petition, the state circuit
court had already conducted, on December 6, 2002, the supreme
court-mandated hearing. Thereafter, in a two-page opinion dated
April 8, 2003, the circuit court summarily denied Barbe’s request for
habeas corpus relief and dismissed his amended petition, stating that
"the Petition is without merit, and further is not deserving of a hear-
ing." Barbe v. Painter, No. 01-C-77, slip op. at 1 (W. Va. Cir. Ct.
Apr. 8, 2003).14
As a result, Barbe filed his third petition for appeal in the state
supreme court, again asserting, inter alia, that his trial counsel was
constitutionally ineffective and his Sixth Amendment confrontation
right was contravened by the Rape Shield Ruling. On February 11,
2004, the supreme court denied this petition for appeal, declining to
accord appellate review to the issues sought to be presented. See
Barbe v. Painter, No. 031859 (W. Va. Feb. 11, 2004).15
2.
On May 6, 2004, Barbe filed his federal habeas corpus petition,
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, in the Northern District of West Vir-
ginia. In the district court, Barbe (once again proceeding pro se) pre-
14
At oral argument before this Court, the State conceded that the circuit
court had erred in ruling in its April 8, 2003 opinion that Barbe’s
amended habeas corpus petition was "not deserving of a hearing." In fact,
the state supreme court had mandated such a hearing by its order of Janu-
ary 24, 2002, and, as noted, the circuit court had conducted a hearing on
December 6, 2002. Indeed, at this hearing, Barbe’s testimony was taken
and the circuit court established a briefing schedule. The parties subse-
quently filed their briefs but, on April 8, 2003, the circuit court pro-
ceeded as if none of this had ever occurred.
15
Two of the five justices of the supreme court voted to grant Barbe’s
final petition for appeal from the denial of state habeas corpus relief, on
the premise that cases involving sentences of life imprisonment, or sen-
tences that are effectively life sentences due to age (as in this case),
should be accorded appellate review. See Barbe v. Painter, No. 031859
(W. Va. Feb. 11, 2004). Those same two justices had previously voted
to grant Barbe’s first petition for appeal following his jury convictions.
See State v. Barbe, No. 001865 (W. Va. Feb. 6, 2001).
12 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
sented six grounds for relief, including that: (1) he was denied his
Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel in his
state trial (the "Ineffective Assistance Issue"); and (2) his Sixth
Amendment confrontation right was contravened by the state circuit
court’s Rape Shield Ruling (the "Confrontation Issue"). With respect
to the Confrontation Issue, Barbe relied on many of the same authori-
ties relied on in support of his amended state habeas petition —
including West Virginia Rule of Evidence 404(a)(3) and the state
supreme court’s decisions in State v. Green and State v. Quinn — for
the proposition that a trial court must balance the defendant’s Sixth
Amendment confrontation right against the victim’s right to privacy
in assessing rape shield law issues. The federal magistrate judge
reviewed and assessed Barbe’s claims and, on July 25, 2005, filed a
comprehensive report denying a hearing and recommending that
Barbe’s § 2254 petition be denied and dismissed with prejudice. See
Barbe v. McBride, No. 5:04-cv-00053-IMK (N.D. W. Va. July 25,
2005).
Barbe then filed objections to the magistrate judge’s report, and, on
September 28, 2005, the district court filed the order from which this
appeal arises, adopting the recommendations of the report and dis-
missing Barbe’s § 2254 petition with prejudice. See Barbe v.
McBride, No. 5:04-cv-00053-IMK (N.D. W. Va. Sept. 28, 2005).
Thereafter, on October 14, 2005, Barbe filed a pro se application with
the district court for a certificate of appealability ("COA"), pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c). On August 29, 2006, the court granted Barbe
a COA on both of the claims presented here — the Ineffective Assis-
tance Issue and the Confrontation Issue. In awarding the COA, the
court explained that, even though it had denied relief on these two
issues, they could nonetheless be deemed debatable by reasonable
jurists. See Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473, 484 (2000) ("Where a
district court has rejected [a petitioner’s] constitutional claims on the
merits, the showing required to satisfy § 2253(c) is straightforward:
The petitioner must demonstrate that reasonable jurists would find the
district court’s assessment of the constitutional claims debatable or
wrong.").
This Court received notification of the COA and Barbe’s appeal on
September 1, 2006, and we appointed counsel to represent him on
February 15, 2007. In his formal opening brief, Barbe specifically
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 13
invoked the Supreme Court decisions in Rock and Lucas with respect
to the Confrontation Issue, contending, inter alia, that "[u]nder clear
United States Supreme Court case law, per se exclusions under state
rape shield statutes are impermissible. State courts must make a case-
by-case determination of whether statutory restrictions are arbitrary or
disproportionate to the purpose they are designed to serve." Br. of
Appellant 11. We possess jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291
and 2253.
II.
We review de novo a district court’s denial of federal habeas cor-
pus relief on the basis of a state court record. See Tucker v. Ozmint,
350 F.3d 433, 438 (4th Cir. 2003). Having now conducted such
review, we affirm the district court with respect to its denial of relief
on the Ineffective Assistance Issue.16 We deem the Confrontation
Issue, however, to be a more troubling and serious constitutional
problem, and we thus dedicate the remainder of our decision to it.
Based on the following assessment, we vacate the district court’s dis-
16
On the Ineffective Assistance Issue, Barbe confined his claims to
three aspects of his trial counsel’s performance (which were among the
ten aspects raised in the state habeas corpus proceedings): failure to pro-
cure an expert witness, failure to object to the testimony of the similar
act witnesses, and failure to adequately prepare for trial. The district
court — applying the principles of Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S.
668, 687 (1984) (recognizing that ineffective assistance claim requires
showing (1) "that counsel’s performance was deficient," and (2) "that the
deficient performance prejudiced the defense") — concluded that
Barbe’s claims failed on Strickland’s first prong because the challenged
aspects of his counsel’s performance must be considered, under the
appropriate highly deferential standard, to be sound trial strategy. We
agree with the court’s assessment of the Ineffective Assistance Issue. See
United States v. Roane, 378 F.3d 382, 404-05 (4th Cir. 2004) ("Under the
first prong of Strickland, we apply a ‘strong presumption’ that a trial
counsel’s strategy and tactics fall ‘within the wide range of reasonable
professional assistance.’" (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689)). In any
event, Barbe has not satisfied Strickland’s second prong by demonstrat-
ing that "there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unpro-
fessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different."
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.
14 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
position of the Confrontation Issue in part, and remand for the issu-
ance of a writ of habeas corpus that is consistent herewith.
A.
We begin our assessment of the Confrontation Issue by identifying
the appropriate parameters of such review. Importantly, in consider-
ing federal habeas corpus issues involving state evidentiary rulings,
"we do not sit to review the admissibility of evidence under state law
unless erroneous evidentiary rulings were so extreme as to result in
a denial of a constitutionally fair proceeding." Burket v. Angelone,
208 F.3d 172, 186 (4th Cir. 2000). "It is only in circumstances
impugning fundamental fairness or infringing specific constitutional
protections that a federal question is presented." Spencer v. Murray,
5 F.3d 758, 762 (4th Cir. 1993) (internal quotation marks omitted);
see also Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 68 (1991) (explaining that,
"[i]n conducting habeas review, a federal court is limited to deciding
whether a conviction violated the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the
United States"). In light of these limitations on the scope of our
inquiry, we confine our consideration of the Confrontation Issue to
the question of whether the Rape Shield Ruling contravened Barbe’s
Sixth Amendment confrontation right, without examining such issues
as whether the state circuit court properly interpreted the West Vir-
ginia rape shield law itself.
Moreover, we observe that — although the state circuit court (as
the final state court to fully consider Barbe’s habeas corpus claims)
failed to provide an explicit explanation for its denial of relief on the
Confrontation Issue in its opinions of August 3, 2001, and April 8,
2003 (collectively, the "State Court Decision") — it did adjudicate the
Confrontation Issue on the merits. See Weeks v. Angelone, 176 F.3d
249, 259 (4th Cir. 1999) (recognizing that state habeas court may
adjudicate claim on merits but "give[ ] no indication of how it reached
its decision"). Accordingly, the State Court Decision is entitled to def-
erence pursuant to the 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Pen-
alty Act ("AEDPA"). See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); see also Fisher v. Lee,
215 F.3d 438, 445 (4th Cir. 2000) (observing that "[i]f the claim was
properly presented to the state court and the state court adjudicated it,
the deferential standard of review set forth in § 2254(d) applies").
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 15
AEDPA instructs us to utilize a two-step analysis to assess whether
Barbe is entitled to federal habeas corpus relief on the Confrontation
Issue. Under the first step of the AEDPA analysis, we may award
relief only if (a) the state court adjudication of the issue on its merits
"resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreason-
able application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by
the Supreme Court of the United States"; or (b) the adjudication "re-
sulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination
of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court pro-
ceeding." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). And, even if error is identified, habeas
corpus relief can only be granted, under the second step of the
AEDPA analysis, if the error had a "substantial and injurious effect
or influence in determining the jury’s verdict." Brecht v. Abrahmson,
507 U.S. 619, 637 (1993) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 684 (1986); Fullwood v. Lee,
290 F.3d 663, 679 (4th Cir. 2002). We now turn to and conduct our
two-step AEDPA analysis of the Confrontation Issue.
B.
Under the first step of the AEDPA analysis, we may award federal
habeas corpus relief to Barbe only if, inter alia, the state circuit
court’s adjudication of the Confrontation Issue on its merits "resulted
in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable appli-
cation of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
Supreme Court of the United States." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). As the
Supreme Court has explained, a state court decision is contrary to
clearly established federal law if the "court arrives at a conclusion
opposite that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a question of law or
if the state court decides a case differently than [the Supreme] Court
has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts." Williams v. Taylor,
529 U.S. 362, 413 (2000). A state court decision involves an unrea-
sonable application of federal law if the court "correctly identifies the
governing legal rule but applies it unreasonably to the facts of [the
particular] case," or if the court "is unreasonable in refusing to extend
the governing legal principle to a context in which the principle
should have controlled." Conaway v. Polk, 453 F.3d 567, 581 (4th
Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). "Stated simply, a fed-
eral habeas court making the ‘unreasonable application’ inquiry
16 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
should ask whether the state court’s application of clearly established
federal law was objectively unreasonable." Williams, 529 U.S. at 409.
For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the State Court Deci-
sion involves an objectively unreasonable application of federal law,
in that the state circuit court either "correctly identifie[d] the govern-
ing legal rule" — i.e., the Rock-Lucas Principle — "but applie[d] it
unreasonably to the facts," or was "unreasonable in refusing to extend
the governing legal principle to a context in which it should have con-
trolled." Conaway, 453 F.3d at 581 (internal quotation marks omit-
ted). Because of the sparse and cryptic nature of the circuit court’s
explanation for its denial of habeas corpus relief, we are uncertain if
the circuit court failed to assess whether the rape shield law was arbi-
trary or disproportionate to the State’s legitimate interests in the cir-
cumstances of Barbe’s case, or if it made the relevant assessment and
decided against Barbe. Indeed, the court failed to identify or discuss
a single state or federal legal authority (including Rock or Lucas) with
particular respect to Barbe’s contention that the Rape Shield Ruling
contravened his Sixth Amendment confrontation right. In any event,
either of these alternative bases for the State Court Decision amounts
to an objectively unreasonable application of federal law.
1.
By its Rape Shield Ruling at Barbe’s trial, the state circuit court
prohibited the defense from cross-examining the prosecution’s expert
about J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against men other than Barbe.
The defense had sought to demonstrate that J.M.’s sexual abuse by
other men was the predicate for her psychological profile as a victim
of child sexual abuse. The defense contended that, if it was prohibited
from questioning the expert about J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations
against others, Barbe would not be accorded a fair trial. The circuit
court sustained the prosecution’s objection to the defense’s proposed
line of inquiry, however, on the ground that it was barred by the West
Virginia rape shield law. More particularly, the circuit court, in mak-
ing the Rape Shield Ruling, purported to rely solely on State v. Quinn.
See 490 S.E.2d 34, 40 (W. Va. 1997) (concluding that, absent show-
ing of falsity, alleged victim’s statements about sexual abuse by oth-
ers constitutes inadmissible evidence under rape shield law). Because
Barbe was not relying on the falsity exception to the Quinn principle,
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 17
the circuit court concluded, applying a per se exclusionary rule, that
"the rape shield statute applies, period." J.A. 1014.17
As background on Quinn, the defendant therein — while on trial
for sexual misconduct toward a child (T.M.) by a custodian — had
been prohibited from cross-examining T.M. about her statements that
she had been sexually abused by persons other than Quinn. See 490
17
In the State’s appellate brief, it contends that Barbe’s trial counsel
did not possess a good faith basis for inquiring about other incidents of
sexual abuse. Significantly, this case began in Ohio County in December
1999. Since then, it has been before numerous courts and judges: It has
been considered by the state circuit court three times, by the state
supreme court three times, and by the federal magistrate judge and dis-
trict judge. Through all of these proceedings, the State never saw fit to
raise any issue with respect to lack of good faith. This point is being
asserted for the first time in this appeal, and, as a general proposition,
"issues that were not raised in the district court will not be addressed on
appeal." Incumaa v. Ozmint, 507 F.3d 281, 289 n.6 (4th Cir. 2007). We
see no need to diverge from the general practice here.
In any event, if we were to consider the merits of the good faith con-
tention, our outcome would be the same. Barbe’s defense counsel plainly
had a good faith basis for asking the prosecution’s expert if she was
aware of J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations against others, because Barbe
had related to his lawyer details of sexual abuse incidents that had alleg-
edly occurred in Florida and the local tri-state area. Counsel also advised
the trial court that witnesses were available, in the hallway outside the
courtroom, to testify about J.M.’s sexual abuse accusations. This proffer
is more than sufficient to establish a good faith basis to pursue the
defense’s proposed line of inquiry. See Michael H. Graham, Handbook
of Federal Evidence § 607:2 (6th ed. 2006) (explaining that to have good
faith basis, "[t]he examiner must have a reasonable factual foundation,
such as the credible report of another witness or one’s client" (emphasis
added)); see also Franklin D. Cleckley, Handbook on Evidence for West
Virginia Lawyers § 6-8(B)(2)(c) (4th ed. 2000) ("The good faith basis
does not have to be admissible evidence, but it must be something that
persuades the trial judge the question is proper, such as an affidavit, a
reliable record, or a potential live witness." (emphasis added)). Finally,
the trial court did not have an opportunity to make a determination on
this issue because it decided that the rape shield law applied, and ended
the discussion there, failing to accord Barbe the opportunity to further
establish that he was proceeding in good faith.
18 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
18
S.E.2d at 37-38. Quinn sought to demonstrate that T.M.’s sexual
abuse allegations against others were false and, thus, constituted evi-
dence that T.M. was also lying about him. See id. at 38. Quinn rea-
soned that, because "T.M.’s statements were false," they "were not
evidence of T.M.’s sexual conduct" within the protection of the state
rape shield law. Id.; see also supra note 6 (quoting relevant provisions
of rape shield law and explaining that, in current form, law is com-
prised of both statute, W. Va. Code § 61-8B-11, and evidence rule,
W. Va. R. Evid. 404(a)(3)). As the state supreme court observed,
however, the "rape shield law applied to T.M.’s statements to the
extent that the statements were true." Id. at 39. The supreme court
then held that, to avoid the exclusion of such statements under the
rape shield law, the defendant must "establish[ ] to the satisfaction of
the trial judge outside of the presence of the jury that there is a strong
probability that the alleged victim’s other statements are false." Id. at
40. And, the supreme court concluded that Quinn’s "proffer to the
trial court fell far short of showing a strong probability that T.M.’s
statements were false." Id. at 41.
Here, the state circuit court, in making its Rape Shield Ruling,
apparently interpreted Quinn to stand for the proposition that all true
sexual abuse allegations made by a victim against someone other than
the defendant are inadmissible under the rape shield law — i.e., that
"the rape shield statute applies, period." J.A. 1014. As relevant to the
limited Confrontation Issue before us, Barbe contended in his pro se
state habeas corpus petition that the Rape Shield Ruling contravened
his Sixth Amendment confrontation right. And, he expounded on this
contention in the memorandum of law supporting his amended state
petition, asserting therein (with citation to state authorities) that the
circuit court should have balanced his Sixth Amendment confronta-
tion right against J.M’s right to privacy. Nevertheless, the state circuit
court denied Barbe habeas corpus relief on the Confrontation Issue
without explicitly addressing its merits in either of the two opinions
comprising the State Court Decision to which we give deference
today — the August 3, 2001 opinion denying Barbe’s pro se state
habeas corpus petition, and the April 8, 2003 opinion dismissing his
amended state petition. Indeed, the court failed to identify or discuss
18
We reviewed the state supreme court’s Quinn in our decision in
Quinn v. Haynes, 234 F.3d 837 (4th Cir. 2000). See infra Part II.B.2.
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 19
a single state or federal legal authority (including Rock or Lucas) with
particular respect to Barbe’s contention that the Rape Shield Ruling
contravened his Sixth Amendment confrontation right.19
2.
Upon investigation, the state circuit court — in its role as the trial
court and the state habeas court — should have readily discovered the
Rock-Lucas Principle (as developed and discussed in Rock and Lucas,
as well as a myriad of other federal and state cases advancing the
same legal principle). Indeed, the Rock-Lucas Principle was exten-
sively discussed in Quinn v. Haynes, 234 F.3d 837 (4th Cir. 2000),
where we assessed on federal habeas corpus review the Sixth Amend-
ment claim in State v. Quinn, 490 S.E.2d 34 (W. Va. 1997) — the
very decision underlying the Rape Shield Ruling. Our Quinn decision
issued after Barbe’s December 1999 trial, but before he filed his ini-
tial state habeas corpus petition in February 2001.
In Rock, decided in 1987, the Supreme Court assessed whether a
19
Notably, although we rely on the Rock-Lucas Principle herein, it was
not necessary for Barbe to specifically name the Rock and Lucas deci-
sions in the state habeas corpus proceedings in order to exhaust his con-
frontation claim, or for the state circuit court to consider those decisions
(or any other applicable federal precedent) in order to refrain from an
unreasonable application of federal law. That is, Barbe’s confrontation
claim was "fairly presented" to the circuit court — and, thus, exhausted
— in that "[t]he ground relied upon [was] presented face-up and
squarely," "the federal question [was] plainly defined," and "both the
operative facts and the controlling legal principles" were identified. Mat-
thews v. Evatt, 105 F.3d 907, 911 (4th Cir. 1997) (internal quotation
marks omitted); see also supra note 13 (observing that "Barbe’s assertion
that the circuit court should have balanced his Sixth Amendment con-
frontation right against J.M.’s right to privacy is essentially the same as
raising the Rock-Lucas Principle"). And, in assessing the confrontation
claim, the circuit court was entitled to look to, for example, the state
authorities cited by Barbe. Cf. Early v. Packer, 537 U.S. 3, 8 (2002)
(concluding that, to avoid pitfall of rendering decision "contrary to" fed-
eral law, state court need not cite or even be aware of relevant Supreme
Court cases, "so long as neither the reasoning nor the result of the state-
court decision contradicts them").
20 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
per se evidentiary rule excluding testimony refreshed by hypnosis
contravened the petitioner’s right to testify on her own behalf as a
defendant in a criminal case. See Rock v. Arkansas, 483 U.S. 44, 45
(1987). The Court observed that "when a state rule of evidence con-
flicts with the right to present witnesses, the rule may not be applied
mechanistically to defeat the ends of justice, but must meet the funda-
mental standards of due process." Id. at 55 (internal quotation marks
omitted). Accordingly, the Court concluded that, "[i]n applying its
evidentiary rules a State must evaluate whether the interests served by
a rule justify the limitation imposed on the defendant’s constitutional
right to testify." Id. at 56. Importantly, the restrictions imposed "may
not be arbitrary or disproportionate to the purposes they are designed
to serve." Id.
Four years later, in 1991, the Supreme Court specifically extended
its holding in Rock to rape shield issues, by way of its decision in
Michigan v. Lucas, 500 U.S. 145 (1991). In Lucas, the Court vacated
a Michigan ruling that a notice-and-hearing requirement in the state’s
rape shield statute was always unconstitutional when used to bar the
admission of evidence concerning earlier sexual conduct involving a
rape victim and the accused. Id. at 148. In so doing, the Court recog-
nized that the rape shield statute "unquestionably implicates the Sixth
Amendment," in that, "[t]o the extent that it operates to prevent a
criminal defendant from presenting relevant evidence, the defendant’s
ability to confront adverse witnesses and present a defense is dimin-
ished." Id. at 149. The Court further observed, however, that "[t]his
does not necessarily render the statute unconstitutional," because
Sixth Amendment rights "may, in appropriate cases, bow to accom-
modate other legitimate interests in the criminal trial process." Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). Invoking Rock, the Court contin-
ued that "[r]estrictions on a criminal defendant’s rights to confront
adverse witnesses and to present evidence ‘may not be arbitrary or
disproportionate to the purposes they are designed to serve.’" Id. at
151 (quoting Rock, 483 U.S. at 56). Thus, the Court rejected the use
of any per se evidence rule favoring either the prosecution or the
defense, and specified that a state court must determine, on a case-by-
case basis, whether application of the rule "is ‘arbitrary or dispropor-
tionate’ to the State’s legitimate interests." Id. (quoting Rock, 483
U.S. at 56).
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 21
In our subsequent 2000 decision in Quinn v. Haynes, we assessed,
on federal habeas corpus review, whether the West Virginia supreme
court’s exclusion, in State v. Quinn, of evidence proffered to impeach
victim T.M. contravened Quinn’s Sixth Amendment confrontation
right. In making our assessment, we recognized and carefully
explained that the Rock-Lucas Principle constitutes clearly established
federal law. See 234 F.3d at 848-49 ("[T]he Supreme Court has estab-
lished an analytical framework that courts should use when evaluating
Confrontation Clause challenges based upon the exclusion of evi-
dence[, requiring them to] determine whether the rule relied upon for
the exclusion of evidence is ‘arbitrary or disproportionate’ to the
‘State’s legitimate interests.’" (citing Lucas, 500 U.S. at 151; Rock,
483 U.S. at 55)). We further recognized that
[i]f the state supreme court’s holding [in State v. Quinn]
under West Virginia’s rape shield law[ ] is arbitrary or dis-
proportionate to the interests the rape shield law was
designed to serve, the state supreme court applied federal
law in an objectively unreasonable way when it limited
Quinn’s presentation of impeachment evidence regarding
T.M.’s other allegations of sexual assault.
Id. at 849-50. We then concluded that the state supreme court’s exclu-
sion of Quinn’s proffered impeachment evidence was "neither arbi-
trary nor disproportionate to the State’s legitimate interests underlying
its implementation of its rape shield law," and, thus, that "the state
supreme court did not unreasonably apply federal law when it applied
the State’s rape shield law to limit Quinn’s proffered impeachment
evidence." Id. at 851. In short, we assessed the rape shield ruling at
issue under the Rock-Lucas Principle, and concluded that, in the cir-
cumstances presented, the ruling was neither arbitrary nor dispropor-
tionate to the State’s interests.
One of our sister circuits recently had occasion to evaluate and
apply such an approach to a rape shield issue in a federal habeas cor-
pus case. In White v. Coplan, the First Circuit, applying AEDPA prin-
ciples, reviewed a trial court’s decision to bar White, who was
accused of sexual assault, from offering evidence that his alleged vic-
tim had previously made similar accusations against other persons —
notwithstanding evidence of a reasonable probability of the falsity of
22 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
the other claims — premised on a rape shield law similar to West Vir-
ginia’s. See 399 F.3d 18, 24 (1st Cir. 2005). Relying on Rock and
Lucas, the First Circuit concluded that these decisions, "clear
although general, call[ ] for a balancing of interests depending on the
circumstances of the case." Id. The court of appeals also explained
that, even if a state rule of exclusion is generally defensible, it can be
applied in an unconstitutional manner to a particular set of facts. Id.
Finally, it recognized that White’s Sixth Amendment confrontation
right had been contravened at trial, because the state court’s failure
to admit the excluded evidence was an "unreasonable application" of
the controlling Rock-Lucas Principle. Id. at 25.
We now reiterate that the Rock-Lucas Principle constitutes clearly
established federal law determined by the Supreme Court of the
United States. The Rock-Lucas Principle clearly mandates that a state
court, in ruling on the admissibility of evidence under a rape shield
law, must eschew the application of any per se rule in favor of a case-
by-case assessment of whether the relevant exclusionary rule "is
‘arbitrary or disproportionate’ to the State’s legitimate interests."
Lucas, 500 U.S. at 151 (quoting Rock, 483 U.S. at 56).
3.
In making the Rape Shield Ruling at trial, the state circuit court
contravened the Rock-Lucas Principle. That is, the circuit court
applied a per se exclusionary rule, premised on its conclusion that,
because Barbe was not relying on the falsity exception to the rape
shield law recognized in State v. Quinn, "the rape shield statute
applies, period." J.A. 1014. As the Supreme Court explained in Lucas,
a court’s adoption and application of a per se exclusionary rule —
absent consideration of the specific facts of the case, and absent an
appropriate assessment of the legitimate competing interests of the
accused and the State — constitutes error. See Lucas, 500 U.S. at 153.
In the state habeas proceedings, Barbe adequately presented this con-
tention to the state circuit court. Although the issue was then squarely
before the circuit court, it failed to conduct the appropriate assessment
or, alternatively, failed to explain how it had made the assessment and
nonetheless ruled that applying the rape shield law in Barbe’s case
was neither arbitrary nor disproportionate to the State’s legitimate
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 23
interests. In either event, the State Court Decision involves an objec-
tively unreasonable application of clearly established federal law.
We premise our conclusion on several relevant factors that a court
should consider in conducting the Rock-Lucas assessment: (1) the
strength vel non of the state’s interests that weigh against admission
of the excluded evidence, see Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284,
295 (1973); (2) the importance of the excluded evidence to the pre-
sentation of an effective defense, see Davis v. Alaska, 415 U.S. 308,
319 (1974); and (3) the scope of the evidence ban being applied
against the accused, see Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 678-
79 (1986). These factors, derived from controlling Supreme Court
precedent, were aggregated for purposes of the Rock-Lucas Principle
in the First Circuit’s White decision. See White, 399 F.3d at 24.20 We
examine these factors in conducting our Rock-Lucas assessment of
Barbe’s Confrontation Issue.
a.
First, with respect to the strength vel non of the state interests that
weigh against admission of the evidence Barbe sought to utilize, the
State indisputably possessed a legitimate interest in having its rape
shield law enforced. See White, 399 F.3d at 24 (citing Chambers, 410
U.S. at 295). As Judge Williams explained in our Quinn decision,
"[t]he Supreme Court has recognized that a state has a valid interest
in protecting victims of sexual abuse from needless harassment,
humiliation, and ‘unnecessary invasions of privacy.’" Quinn v.
Haynes, 234 F.3d at 850 (quoting Lucas, 500 U.S. at 150).21 Addition-
20
The Supreme Court’s decisions in Chambers, Davis, and Van Arsdall
were rendered prior to Rock and Lucas, and address the Sixth Amend-
ment’s confrontation right.
21
Notably, a state’s interest in protecting sexual abuse victims from
harassment, humiliation, and invasions of privacy is especially compel-
ling when the testifying victim is a child, in that questioning about sexual
conduct is potentially "more psychologically damaging" to children.
Quinn, 234 F.3d at 850. In this situation, of course, J.M. was eighteen
years old when she testified at Barbe’s trial. Consequently, any risk of
psychological damage to J.M. from having prior sexual abuse incidents
discussed in court was mitigated by the fact that she was then an adult.
In any event, J.M. was not the witness being asked about such incidents;
rather, the inquiry was being made to the prosecution’s expert.
24 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
ally, a state rape shield law properly serves to encourage the victims
of sexual misconduct to institute and participate in legal proceedings
against sexual offenders. See Fed. R. Evid. 412 advisory committee’s
note.
b.
Second, we must evaluate the importance of the banned evidence
to Barbe’s presentation of an effective defense. See Davis, 415 U.S.
at 319. The Supreme Court has consistently characterized Sixth
Amendment guarantees in strong terms: "The rights to confront and
cross-examine witnesses and to call witnesses in one’s own behalf
have long been recognized as essential to due process." Chambers v.
Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 294 (1973); see also Davis, 415 U.S. at
315 ("The Sixth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees the right
of an accused in a criminal prosecution to be confronted with the wit-
nesses against him." (internal quotation marks omitted)).
In this matter, Barbe’s effort to cross-examine the prosecution’s
expert concerning J.M.’s sexual abuse by others was crucial to his
presentation of an effective defense. When the expert testified, the
defense had already impeached J.M.’s testimony with her previous
conflicting versions of her own story, showing that she was a con-
fessed liar. As noted earlier, J.M. initially accused Barbe of sexually
assaulting her, then made a tape recording and executed an affidavit
swearing that he had never sexually abused her. J.M. thereafter
asserted at trial that both her tape recording and affidavit were false
and that Barbe had, in fact, sexually abused her. To bolster J.M.’s
credibility, the prosecution presented its expert, who opined that J.M.
exhibited the psychological profile of an adult who had been sexually
abused as a child, and also testified that J.M. had related to her at least
three incidents of sexual abuse involving Barbe. That testimony, if
left uncontradicted and unimpeached, corroborated the trial testimony
of J.M. and created the sole logical inference that her psychological
profile resulted from abuse by Barbe.
Thus, Barbe’s trial defense on the J.M. offenses — an entirely logi-
cal and permissible one — was to show that J.M. was not a credible
witness, and that her sexual abuse by other men had caused her psy-
chological profile. When the state circuit court barred Barbe from
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 25
questioning the prosecution’s expert concerning J.M.’s abuse by oth-
ers, its Rape Shield Ruling undercut and effectively scuttled his
defense on the J.M. offenses. The jury was thus left with only one
permissible inference — that J.M.’s psychological profile resulted
from her abuse by Barbe, and that Barbe, consequently, was guilty of
having abused J.M.
c.
Finally, under Supreme Court precedent, see Van Arsdall, 475 U.S.
at 678-79, we must consider the scope of the evidentiary ban invoked
against Barbe. After the direct testimony of the prosecution’s expert,
Barbe was barred by the Rape Shield Ruling from any cross-
examination concerning J.M.’s sexual abuse by other men. As
explained above, the cross-examination of the expert concerning
J.M.’s sexual abuse by others was essential to Barbe’s presentation of
an effective defense, in that it was his only means to demonstrate an
alternative explanation for J.M.’s psychological profile and, thus, the
only way to rebut the inference created by the expert’s testimony.
Accordingly, although the Rape Shield Ruling only limited Barbe’s
cross-examination of the expert, its scope prevented Barbe from pre-
senting his defense on the J.M. offenses.
Having conducted the Rock-Lucas assessment, we are thus con-
strained to conclude that application of the West Virginia rape shield
law at Barbe’s trial was disproportionate to the State’s interests in
having the law applied. Barbe’s defense was critically impaired by the
Rape Shield Ruling and, in these circumstances, the Ruling indisputa-
bly contravened his Sixth Amendment confrontation right. The state
circuit court, as the state habeas court, thus unreasonably applied fed-
eral law by failing to extend the Rock-Lucas Principle to Barbe’s
Sixth Amendment confrontation claim, or, alternatively, by applying
that Principle but ruling against Barbe.22
22
Several of our sister courts of appeals have also concluded that a
defendant’s interests in introducing evidence that conflicts with a state
rape shield law outweighs the State’s interests in having the law applied.
See Tague v. Richards, 3 F.3d 1133 (7th Cir. 1993) (concluding defen-
dant’s confrontation right was violated when court barred evidence that
26 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
C.
In light of the foregoing, we are obliged to turn to the second step
of the AEDPA analysis — an assessment of whether the state circuit
court’s Sixth Amendment error in the Rape Shield Ruling had a sub-
stantial and injurious effect on the verdict. Under AEDPA, we are not
entitled to award relief to a habeas corpus petitioner unless the error
of which he complains resulted in, as the Supreme Court has
explained, a "substantial and injurious effect or influence in determin-
ing the jury’s verdict." Brecht, 507 U.S. at 637. If we are in "grave
doubt" concerning the effect of such a constitutional error, the habeas
petitioner is entitled to prevail. Fullwood, 290 F.3d at 679. Such a
"grave doubt" exists when, in the relevant circumstances, the question
is so evenly balanced that the reviewing court finds itself in "virtual
equipose" on the harmlessness issue. Id. Barbe contends that the Sixth
Amendment error in this case had a substantial and injurious effect on
the jury’s verdict with respect to all of his convictions. We will, in
that regard, first address the offenses involving J.M., and then turn to
those involving B.H.
1.
As related above, Barbe was indicted for sexually abusing three
victims: J.M., B.H., and S.S.23 He was convicted on two offenses
involving B.H. and six involving J.M., but was acquitted on all six
provided alternative explanation for physical evidence of sexual assault
of victim); United States v. Bear Stops, 997 F.2d 451 (8th Cir. 1993)
(relying on Rock and concluding that restriction on confrontation right
was disproportionate to purpose that rape shield statute was designed to
serve when the defendant was barred from introducing evidence of alter-
native explanation for victim’s psychological profile); United States v.
Begay, 937 F.2d 515 (10th Cir. 1991) (applying Federal Rules of Evi-
dence 403 and 412 and concluding that trial court’s exclusion of evi-
dence offering alternative explanation of sexual assault victim’s physical
symptoms contravened confrontation right).
23
In addition to J.M., B.H., and S.S., four other witnesses testified that
Barbe had sexually abused them in the past. No charges were instituted
against Barbe relating to the evidence of the four other witnesses.
BARBE v. MCBRIDE 27
charges involving S.S. and three of those involving J.M. Thus,
although the evidence may have established a pattern of abusive
behavior by Barbe, a reasonable doubt was nevertheless recognized
by his trial jury with respect to nine of the offenses alleged in the
indictment. As the record reflects, J.M. was the key witness against
Barbe on nine of the seventeen charges. And, importantly, she gave
contradictory and conflicting versions of her story on multiple occa-
sions. First, these proceedings began when J.M. accused Barbe of sex-
ual abuse. Then, prior to trial, J.M. made a tape-recorded statement,
and executed an affidavit, attesting that Barbe had never sexually
abused her at all. She thereafter changed her testimony again, assert-
ing to the jury at trial that Barbe had in fact sexually abused her when
she was a child.24
In order to deal with the multiple versions of J.M.’s story, the pros-
ecution utilized its expert evidence to corroborate J.M.’s trial testi-
mony and thus buttress the allegation that Barbe had indeed sexually
abused her. Barbe’s defense was thereafter circumscribed and effec-
tively scuttled by his inability to present the jury with — and thus
argue — an alternative explanation for J.M.’s psychological profile.
Accordingly, the jury was left with only one permissible inference —
that J.M.’s psychological profile resulted from her having been
abused by Barbe. In these circumstances, with J.M.’s contradictory
accounts of such abuse, and the state circuit court having barred
Barbe, by its Rape Shield Ruling, from presenting his defense on the
J.M. offenses, we are left with "grave doubt" concerning the injurious
effect of the Sixth Amendment error that occurred. In such circum-
stances, we must conclude that the Rape Shield Ruling had a substan-
tial and injurious effect on the jury’s verdict.
2.
Finally, Barbe maintains that the Sixth Amendment error perme-
ated his entire trial, including his convictions on two sexual abuse
offenses against B.H. On this point, he maintains that the expert’s tes-
timony supported the prosecution’s overall theory that Barbe was
simply an evil old man who took improper liberties with children.
24
Finally, J.M. changed her story at least one more time, in a post-trial
letter written to the Governor. See supra note 4.
28 BARBE v. MCBRIDE
Although this assertion might be somewhat plausible, our primary
basis for grave doubt concerning the injurious effect of the constitu-
tional error that occurred is simply this: J.M. presented so many con-
flicting and contradictory versions of the relevant events that the
expert testimony was essential to Barbe’s convictions on the six
offenses involving her. Those circumstances are not, however, appli-
cable to Barbe’s other two convictions, which relate to offenses
involving B.H. In fact, it is abundantly clear that the jury was capable
of evaluating the charges as to each distinct victim, based on its ver-
dict acquitting Barbe on certain counts and convicting him on others.
As a result, we award habeas corpus relief to Barbe only on his six
convictions relating to J.M. (Counts Two, Three, Five, Six, Eight, and
Nine). We deny any such relief on Barbe’s convictions relating to
B.H. (Counts Ten and Eleven).25
III.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the district court’s denial of
habeas corpus relief on the Ineffective Assistance Issue, vacate its
denial of relief on the Confrontation Issue as to the six convictions
involving J.M., affirm its denial of relief on the Confrontation Issue
as to the two convictions involving B.H., and remand for the issuance
of a writ that is consistent herewith.
AFFIRMED IN PART,
VACATED IN PART,
AND REMANDED
25
Although we vacate the district court’s denial of relief as to the con-
victions involving J.M., we leave intact Barbe’s convictions involving
B.H. and his sentence thereon, which appears to be an aggregate term of
20 to 50 years. See supra note 10.