UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 98-30789
IVRIN BOLDEN, JR.,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
WARDEN, WEST TENNESSEE HIGH SECURITY FACILITY,
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
For the Western District of Louisiana
October 27, 1999
Before POLITZ, JOLLY, and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.
POLITZ, Circuit Judge:
Ivrin Bolden, Jr., currently a prisoner at West Tennessee High Security
Facility, appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition which
relates to a Louisiana state conviction. For the reasons assigned, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Bolden was tried in Louisiana state court in 1988 for the murder of Brenda
Spicer. He testified at trial and denied killing or having had physical contact with
her. The jury acquitted. Bolden later confessed to killing Spicer and was charged
with perjury for his testimony at the murder trial.
Because a detailed factual background of this high-profile case is provided
in the opinions of the Louisiana Supreme Court1 and the Louisiana Third Circuit
Court of Appeals,2 we need only summarize the facts relevant to this appeal. On
March 6, 1987 the body of Brenda Spicer, a former basketball player at Northeast
Louisiana University, was found in a trash dumpster on campus in Monroe,
Louisiana. The coroner stated that the victim had been killed by strangulation at
approximately 7:00 p.m. the previous evening. The coroner found sperm in the
victim’s rectum and vagina, and saliva on the victim’s breasts.
Bolden was tried for Spicer’s murder. The State sought to demonstrate that
Bolden murdered Spicer because he was jealous of her close relationship with his
girlfriend, Joel Tillis. The State’s case was largely circumstantial; no eyewitnesses
testified that Bolden had physical contact with or murdered Spicer. The State’s
theory of the case was that Bolden took Spicer to a storage locker unit on March
5, 1987, murdered her, and then went to a campus basketball game. At half-time
Bolden allegedly went back to the storage locker and moved Spicer’s body to the
dumpster. To bolster this theory, the State presented evidence that Spicer met
Bolden at approximately 5:45 p.m., that Bolden attended the basketball game and
was taking pictures on the floor to establish an alibi, and that Bolden was seen
running away from the basketball arena at half-time. Physical tests performed on
1
State v. Bolden, 639 So. 2d 721 (La. 1994).
2
State v. Bolden, 680 So. 2d 6 (La. App. 1996).
2
the seminal fluid and saliva indicated a type A secretor, a category in which Bolden
and 80% of the population belong.
At trial, Bolden testified on his own behalf as follows:
Q. Did you meet Brenda Spicer at that storage locker on March
5th?
A. No, I did not at any time that day.
Q. The only time you saw Brenda Spicer is when she gave you that
camera and the $5.00?
A. I saw her earlier in the dorm and the last time I saw her was at
the intersection when she had given me the camera.
Q. Did you have any kind of physical struggle or contact with
Brenda Spicer that day?
A. No, I didn’t, didn’t have any contact with her at all physically.
Q. Did you have any kind of sexual intercourse with Brenda
Spicer?
A. Never did.
Q. You never have?
A. No, I haven’t.
Q. Did you kill Brenda Spicer on March 5th?
A. No, I did not.
The jury acquitted Bolden of Spicer’s murder.
Bolden and Tillis later moved to Tennessee. In 1989, Tillis disappeared and
her body was found in Arkansas. Bolden, although a suspect in her murder, was
never arrested and eventually moved to New Jersey and began to live with Jennifer
Spurlock. In 1991, Bolden filed a complaint against Spurlock with local police in
New Jersey. During the investigation of this complaint, Bolden admitted to killing
Joel Tillis and Brenda Spicer.3 Bolden pled guilty in Tennessee to involuntary
3
On April 23, 1991, Bolden gave a statement to New Jersey police in part as follows:
Q. What were the circumstances surrounding the death of Ms. Spicer?
A. I went, um, I asked her come to like, we had a storage unit, and I asked
her to come there with me and then I was trying to talk to her, you
know, I had been asking her and asking her to, you know, try to give
3
manslaughter in the death of Tillis and received a ten-year sentence.
Bolden was charged in Louisiana with perjury in connection with his
testimony in Spicer’s murder trial. Prior to the perjury trial, Bolden moved to
dismiss the charges as violating the collateral estoppel component of the double
jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment, a motion which the state trial court denied.
The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s ruling and remanded the
case for further proceedings. The court found that the perjury prosecution was not
barred by the murder trial because the jury could have found that reasonable doubt
was present in the first trial. Specifically, the court noted that this was not a
situation in which the jury was presented with two conflicting versions of the facts
and was forced to determine the veracity of one over the other, as would have been
the case if there had been eyewitness testimony contradicting defendant’s
statements.4
Additionally, assuming arguendo that the jury necessarily determined
Bolden’s credibility in the murder trial, the Louisiana Supreme Court enunciated
a rule of law, relying primarily on the dicta of other courts, and held that when the
me some time with Joel and she just, you know, she just kept saying
that she was going to be with Joel no matter what, and so I just, I got
mad with her and I strangled her.
Q. And where did this take place at, the storage area?
A. Yeah.
Q. And where was the storage area located?
A. Not far from the college campus in Monroe, Louisiana.
Q. And after you strangled her, what did you do?
A. Took her body back to the campus and put it in the dumpster and went
back to the game or I went back to the dorm or something.
4
Bolden, 639 So. 2d at 725 (citations omitted).
4
State produces new evidence that the defendant lied under oath at the first trial,
collateral estoppel does not bar a subsequent perjury prosecution. The court found
that this rule would bolster the policy considerations behind collateral estoppel,
noting that
[o]n the one hand, there is a concern that allowing an acquittal to
insulate the defendant from perjury will give a defendant “an
uncontrollable license to testify falsely,” with a resulting detriment to
the reliability of evidence. On the other hand, there is an apprehension
that allowing a prosecution for perjury will give the state a “second
shot” at defendant for the same wrong, or allow an overzealous
prosecutor to use the perjury trial to retry issues already determined in
defendant’s favor. The concern that the state should not be given a
second chance based on the same evidence was central to the Court’s
holding in Ashe.5
At the perjury trial, the jury listened to a tape recording of Bolden’s
confession, as well as to witnesses who testified about the confession, 6 and heard
from three additional witnesses: (1) Dr. George McCormick, the coroner who
performed the autopsy on Spicer, testified that she died of manual strangulation;
(2) Rudeen Crawford, the owner of a gas station across from the storage warehouse
where the murder was allegedly committed, testified that he saw a black man and
white woman talking outside of the storage unit shortly before 6:00 p.m. on March
5, 1987; (3) Jim Gregory, a sergeant with the Monroe Police Department, testified
5
Id. at 726 (citing Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436 (1970), other citations omitted). In
footnote five of its opinion, the Louisiana Supreme Court noted that under state law Bolden’s
unsworn statement to police may, by itself, be insufficient to convict him of perjury and
stated that at trial the State would have to produce corroborating evidence to demonstrate that
his New Jersey confession was truthful. Id. at 726 n.5.
6
New Jersey officers Captain Robert Scara, Captain Michael King, and Sergeant Cook
testified that Bolden was read and waived his rights, and that Bolden was not threatened or
coerced into making his statement.
5
that Spicer’s body was found in a trash dumpster on the Northeast Louisiana
University campus, and stated that he obtained blood and hair samples from the
storage unit floor. These three witnesses had testified at the Spicer murder trial.
The jury found Bolden guilty of perjury and he received the maximum
sentence, ten years imprisonment at hard labor, to run consecutively with the
Tennessee sentence. The Louisiana appellate court affirmed his conviction7 and
the state Supreme Court denied review.8
On November 20, 1997, Bolden filed a § 2254 habeas corpus petition in
federal district court asserting six grounds for relief, including a claim that the
perjury trial violated the collateral estoppel component of the double jeopardy
clause. The magistrate judge recommended, and the district court agreed, that the
petition should be denied. Specifically, the district court found, without
mentioning the standard of review under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act (AEDPA), that Bolden’s double jeopardy rights were not violated
because the jury could have found that the State failed to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Bolden murdered Spicer without deciding whether his
testimony was credible and without deciding whether Bolden in fact killed Spicer.
The district court granted a certificate of appealability on the only issue
currently before the court, the double jeopardy claim.
ANALYSIS
7
State v. Bolden, 680 So. 2d 6 (La. App. 1996).
8
State v. Bolden, 683 So. 2d 286 (La. 1996).
6
Because Bolden’s § 2254 petition was filed on November 20, 1997, the
AEDPA applies to this action.9 As amended by the AEDPA, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)
pertinently provides that:
(d) An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in
custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted
with respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State
court proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim–
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable
determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the
State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Pure questions of law are reviewed under the “contrary to” standard, while
pure questions of fact are reviewed under the “unreasonable determination of the
facts” standard.10 Bolden, however, raises mixed questions of law and fact which
are reviewed under the “unreasonable application” standard.11 An
application of law to facts is unreasonable only when it can be said
that reasonable jurists considering the question would be of one view
that the state court ruling was incorrect. In other words, we can grant
habeas relief only if a state court decision is so clearly incorrect that
it would not be debatable among reasonable jurists.12
9
See Lindh v. Murphy, 521 U.S. 320 (1997).
10
Drinkard v. Johnson, 97 F.3d 751, 767-68 (5th Cir. 1996).
11
Id.
12
Id. at 769 (emphasis in original).
7
This standard of review is akin to the “clearly erroneous” standard. 13 Prior to the
enactment of the AEDPA, however, pure questions of law and mixed questions of
law and fact were reviewed de novo.14
I
Central to the instant case, in Ashe v. Swenson the Supreme Court opined
that the double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment incorporates the collateral
estoppel doctrine, which provides that “when an issue of ultimate fact has once
been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated
between the same parties in any future lawsuit.” 15 In determining whether
collateral estoppel bars subsequent criminal prosecutions, we engage in a two-step
analysis. Initially, we must decide which facts necessarily were decided in the first
proceeding. Then we must consider whether the facts necessarily decided in the
first trial constitute essential elements of the offense in the second trial. In
criminal cases, collateral estoppel
is not to be applied with the hypertechnical and archaic approach of a
19th century pleading book, but with realism and rationality. Where
a previous judgment of acquittal was based upon a general verdict, as
is usually the case, this approach requires a court to examine that
record of a prior proceeding, taking into account the pleadings,
13
Mata v. Johnson, 99 F.3d 1261, 1267 (5th Cir. 1996), vacated in part on reh’g, 105
F.3d 209 (5th Cir. 1997).
14
Johnson v. Puckett, 176 F.3d 809 (5th Cir. 1999), reh’g and reh’g en banc denied,
184 F.3d 820 (5th Cir. 1999). We note with concern that neither party nor the district court
cited Drinkard or the standard of review under the AEDPA. We emphasize that under the
AEDPA’s deferential review scheme, it is essential for arguments and decisions to give due
focus to the appropriate standard of review.
15
Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 443 (1970).
8
evidence, charge, and other relevant matter, and conclude whether a
rational jury could have grounded its verdict upon an issue other than
that which the defendant seeks to foreclose from consideration.16
Bolden first contends that his acquittal of Spicer’s murder necessarily
determined that his statements that he did not kill Spicer or have physical contact
with her were true, and thus would prevent a perjury conviction based upon those
statements. He points to the prosecutor’s closing argument in which she
specifically raised Bolden’s credibility to the jury and notes that the State’s
evidence was almost exclusively circumstantial. Bolden asserts that it ignores the
reality of the trial to argue that the jury acquitted him, but did not believe his
statements were true.
Second, Bolden argues that his acquittal also necessarily determined that he
did not in fact murder Spicer. Accordingly, he contends that the determination of
this fact negates an essential element of the perjury charge, that he made a false
statement. Bolden asserts that to prove this element -- that his statements that he
did not kill Spicer or have physical contact with her were false -- the State would
have to relitigate the entire murder trial. Finally, Bolden contends that the newly
obtained evidence, the confession, should be irrelevant to the determination
whether collateral estoppel applies to this situation.
The State contends that the acquittal in the murder trial did not necessarily
mean that the jury believed Bolden’s testimony; rather, the jury simply could have
found that the State did not meet its burden of proof. The State also places great
16
Id. at 444 (internal quotation marks omitted).
9
emphasis on Bolden’s subsequent confession, noting that it did not pursue Bolden
and did not use the murder trial as a “dry run” for the perjury charges. Finally, the
State maintains that a defendant who testifies falsely must suffer the consequences
of that action, including conviction for perjury.
II
In this AEDPA habeas proceeding, we do not undertake a de novo review of
the state court decisions. Instead, under the directives of Drinkard, we may only
grant habeas relief if the Louisiana court’s ruling that collateral estoppel did not bar
the perjury conviction was an unreasonable application of clearly established law
as determined by the United States Supreme Court. Stated simply, we may proceed
only if reasonable jurists would be of one mind that the Louisiana court’s ruling
was incorrect.
To determine the facts necessarily decided in Bolden’s first trial under the
first step of the collateral estoppel analysis, we must examine the elements of the
statutes under which Bolden was charged. In Louisiana, second-degree murder is
defined as “the killing of a human being . . . [w]hen the offender has a specific
intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm.”17 Perjury, on the other hand, is
defined as the intentional making under oath of a false oral statement in a judicial
proceeding, when the statement is material to an issue or question in controversy.18
Both the Louisiana Supreme Court, in reviewing a pre-trial motion to quash
17
La. Rev. Stat. § 14:30.1.
18
La. Rev. Stat. § 14:123.
10
the perjury charge, and the intermediate appellate court, on direct appeal of the
perjury conviction, found that the veracity of Bolden’s statement and the inquiry
whether Bolden murdered Spicer were not necessarily decided in the murder trial
because the jury simply could have determined that the State did not prove its case
beyond a reasonable doubt. We cannot say that this finding is an unreasonable
application of clearly established federal law. We are keenly aware that every
criminal case raising a collateral estoppel challenge theoretically might seek to rely
on this burden of proof proposition, an action that if not carefully applied could
undermine and eventually defeat the purposes of the collateral estoppel doctrine.
We emphasize that in this case, after reviewing the record, evidence, and charge
as we are instructed to do by Ashe, we are persuaded beyond peradventure that the
jury’s finding of reasonable doubt, and not the truthfulness of Bolden’s statement
or the conclusion that he did not murder Spicer, was the only issue necessarily
determined by the acquittal on the murder charge.19
As the Louisiana Supreme Court noted, at the murder trial the State produced
no eyewitnesses, presented only inconclusive physical evidence, and included some
evidence of motive and opportunity, countered, however, by alibi evidence of the
defendant’s attendance at the basketball game. Based upon the entire record and
surrounding circumstances, we agree with the state court’s finding that the murder
19
The State does not offer the persuasive contention that, because second degree murder
requires a specific intent to kill or inflict great bodily harm, the jury could have based its
acquittal on a finding of no intent, rather than a finding that Bolden did not kill Spicer. This
proposition supports our conclusion that the truthfulness of Bolden’s statements and whether
he killed Spicer were not necessarily determined in the first trial.
11
trial jury very likely could have based its verdict on issues other than those
presented in the perjury trial. At the very minimum, reasonable jurists would not
be of one mind that this ruling was incorrect.20 Further, under the second step of
the collateral estoppel analysis, the fact necessarily decided in the murder trial was
not an essential element of the perjury trial.
We conclude that the state court decision finding that collateral estoppel did
not bar Bolden’s perjury prosecution was not an unreasonable application of federal
law. Accordingly, the district court’s denial of § 2254 relief was not in error.
The judgment appealed is AFFIRMED.
20
Because of today’s disposition, we are not required to reach the question of the
Louisiana Supreme Court’s alternative adoption of the “new and additional evidence”
exception to later perjury prosecutions, but opt to address this issue for the sake of
completeness. In Bolden, the court decided that, even if a jury necessarily determined in the
first trial issues raised by the second prosecution, collateral estoppel would not bar a
subsequent perjury prosecution if new and additional evidence obtained after the original
trial proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant lied under oath. State v. Bolden,
639 So. 2d 721, 725-26 (La. 1994).
Posing a purely legal question, the adoption of this exception would be judged under
the AEDPA’s “contrary to” standard. See Drinkard, 97 F.3d at 767-68. Were we to decide
this issue, we would find that this exception is not “contrary to” federal law as established
by the Supreme Court.
A primary concern of the Supreme Court in Ashe was the prosecution’s use of the
first trial as a “dry run” for the second prosecution. Ashe, 397 U.S. at 447. When new and
additional evidence of perjury is obtained in good faith, as was done in this case, the “dry
run” concern is not present. Furthermore, as the Louisiana Supreme Court noted, this rule
balances the concern that the prosecution will get a “second shot” at the defendant with the
concern that the defendant will have an “uncontrollable license” to testify falsely at the first
trial, without fear of repercussions. Bolden, 639 So. 2d at 726. Further, this rule is bolstered
by the Supreme Court’s holding that criminal defendants do not have a constitutional right
to testify falsely. See Nix v. Whiteside, 475 U.S. 157 (1986).
12