United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 05-1159
WILLIAM FURR,
Petitioner, Appellant,
v.
BERNARD BRADY,
Respondent, Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Patti B. Saris, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella, Circuit Judge,
Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Howard, Circuit Judge.
Dennis Shedd, for appellant.
Daniel M. Lieber, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Thomas
F. Reilly, Attorney General, was on brief for appellee.
March 3, 2006
CYR, Senior Circuit Judge. Willie Furr appeals from the
district court order which denied his petition for habeas corpus
relief, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, which sought to set aside his state court
conviction for possessing a firearm, receiving a firearm with an
altered serial number, being an armed career criminal, and
attempting to obstruct justice and to intimidate a witness. We
affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
Furr was arrested on November 3, 1999, outside Dorchester
High School.1 Upon their arrival at the scene, the police observed
Furr run toward them holding his right side, then toss what
appeared to be a gun, and yell to his nearby friend, Rahshjeem
Benson: “Yo, Six, grab the gun.” Furr told the police that he had
been shot by an unknown person, who had already fled the scene;
that is, by someone other than Benson. The police located and
arrested Benson, who was found hiding between two nearby cars, and
who pointed out to the police the firearm laying at his feet. The
gun appeared to the police to be the one Furr had tossed away
moments before.
In due course, Furr was arrested and charged in state
1
The material facts found by the state courts, see
Commonwealth v. Furr, 788 N.E.2d 592, 596 (Mass. App. Ct.), review
denied, 793 N.E.2d 375 (Mass. 2003), as recited here, are entitled
to a presumption of correctness on habeas review. See 28 U.S.C. §
2254(e)(1).
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juvenile court with possessing a firearm, Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch.
269, § 10(a), receiving a firearm bearing an altered serial number,
id. § 11C, being an armed career criminal, id. § 10G(a),2 and
attempting to obstruct justice and intimidate a witness, Mass. Gen.
Laws Ann. ch. 274, § 6; Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 268, § 13B.
Benson provided a written statement to the police, stating that the
firearm belonged to Furr, and that Furr had gotten rid of the gun
and yelled to Benson to pick it up. While in prison pending trial,
Furr sent an anonymous letter to Benson, stating that he had seen
and was disappointed by Benson’s written statement to the police,
that Benson’s statement was a lie, and that Benson should testify
at trial that he and the police had concocted the untruthful
statement. The Furr letter made veiled threats about harming
Benson’s mother and siblings. The letter was intercepted by the
police before it reached Benson.
At trial, the prosecution introduced both the Benson
statement to the police and Furr’s threatening letter. Furr
objected to the Benson statement, claiming that it was hearsay by
a non-testifying witness (viz., Benson), and that its introduction
would violate his rights under the Confrontation Clause. The court
overruled the objection, on the ground that Benson’s statement was
2
The predicate “violent crimes” charged under the armed career
criminal statute were Furr’s juvenile adjudications for armed
carjacking, kidnapping, and assault and battery with a dangerous
weapon. See Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 269, § 10G(a) & (e); Mass.
Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 140, § 121.
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not introduced to establish the truth of its contents (viz., that
the gun belonged to Furr) on the firearm possession count, but
rather for a legitimate nonhearsay purpose relating to the
obstruction/intimidation count (viz., to establish that petitioner
knew of Benson’s statement and intended to intimidate him). The
jury was instructed that it should consider the Benson statement
only in relation to the obstruction count, and not the firearm-
possession count. The jury found petitioner guilty on all counts.
The trial court decided the “armed career criminal”
charge, without a jury (with petitioner’s consent), and found him
guilty based upon his prior juvenile adjudications. See supra note
2. After petitioner was sentenced to 8-12 years’ imprisonment, he
appealed to the state appellate court, which affirmed in due
course, Commonwealth v. Furr, 788 N.E.2d 592, 596 (Mass. App. Ct.
2003), and the Supreme Judicial Court denied the ensuing
application for further appellate review.
In November 2003, the instant habeas petition was filed
in federal district court, on the grounds that (i) the admission of
the Benson statement violated Furr’s rights under the Confrontation
Clause; and (ii) the trial court ruling that his prior juvenile
adjudications qualified as “convictions” for purposes of the armed
career criminal statute was unforeseeable and therefore violated
his federal due process right to receive fair and adequate warning
that his conduct would expose him to criminal liability under that
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statute.
The magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation
that the habeas petition be denied, which was adopted in toto by
the district court, which subsequently granted a certificate of
appealability as to both the confrontation clause and due process
claims, which Furr now challenges on appeal.
II
DISCUSSION
A. The Standard of Review
We review the denial of the habeas corpus petition de
novo. See Phoenix v. Matesanz, 189 F.3d 20, 24 (1st Cir. 1999).
Pursuant to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, we
may grant habeas relief only if the challenged state court
adjudication “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or
involved an unreasonable application of clearly established Federal
law.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). The “contrary to” criterion is not
satisfied unless the state court “arrive[d] at a conclusion
opposite to that reached by [the United States Supreme] Court on a
question of law or if the state court decide[d] a case differently
than [the Supreme] Court has on a set of materially
indistinguishable facts.” Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 413
(2000); see Horton v. Allen, 370 F.3d 75, 80 (1st Cir. 2004), cert.
denied, 125 S. Ct. 971 (2005). The “unreasonable application”
criterion is satisfied where the state court “identifie[d] the
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correct governing legal principle from [the Supreme] Court's
decisions but unreasonably applie[d] that principle to the facts of
the prisoner's case.” Williams, 529 U.S. at 413. As this is
indeed a high hurdle, habeas relief will not lie, even though the
state-court interpretation or application of federal law was
erroneous, unless it is also shown to be objectively unreasonable.
See Horton, 370 F.3d at 80.
B. The Confrontation Clause Claim
Furr initially contends that the admission of the Benson
statement, absent any opportunity to cross-examine Benson, violated
Furr's rights under the Confrontation Clause. He relies upon
Bruton v. United States, 391 U.S. 123 (1968), and Tennessee v.
Street, 471 U.S. 409 (1985). The Bruton Court held that the
government could not introduce a non-testifying codefendant’s out-
of-court statement at a joint trial which also inculpated
defendant, even if the trial court instructed the jury that it
should consider the codefendant’s extrajudicial statement only as
evidence of the codefendant’s guilt, not the defendant’s. Bruton,
391 U.S. at 135-36. The Court observed that, although juries
normally are presumed to follow instructions, the Bruton situation
created too great a risk that the jury either would not or could
not segregate its reliance upon the inculpatory evidence only in
relation to the codefendant, and consequently that avoidance of any
such jury confusion was “vital” to the defendant. Id.
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In Street, however, the State introduced a codefendant’s
written statement to rebut the defendant’s contention that law
enforcement officials had coerced his confession. Street contended
that, prior to his confession, the sheriff had read the
codefendant’s statement to him, then forced Street to parrot the
details of that statement in Street's own confession. Street, 471
U.S. at 411. In order to rebut the defense theory that the Street
confession was coerced in this way, the State introduced the
codefendant’s written statement to demonstrate how it differed in
significant details from the Street confession. Id. at 411-12.
The trial court instructed the jury that the codefendant's
statement could not be considered for the truth of the matters
asserted (viz., Street’s participation in the burglary and murder),
but only to rebut the defense claim that Street had been coerced
into parroting the codefendant’s statement. Id. at 412.
In upholding the admission in evidence of the written
statement given by Street's codefendant, the Court distinguished
Bruton on the ground that the codefendant’s statement there was
hearsay, in that it was introduced to prove the truth of the
matters asserted (viz., codefendant’s guilt), whereas the State’s
use of the codefendant statement against Street was not hearsay, in
that it was introduced solely to enable the jury to compare the two
confessions and to assess Street’s contention that the sheriff had
coerced him into parroting his codefendant’s statement, rather than
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to prove that Street had participated in the burglary and murder.
Id. at 413-14. “The nonhearsay aspect of [the codefendant’s]
confession – not to establish what happened at the murder scene but
what happened when [Street] confessed – raised no Confrontation
Clause concerns.” Id. at 414.
The Court then observed that Street’s case was similar to
Bruton in one respect only: the jury might have disregarded the
limiting instruction and used the codefendant statement for the
improper purpose of inferring Street’s participation in the
burglary and murder. Id. In rejecting this prospect, the Court
first re-emphasized the “crucial” presumption that juries normally
follow their instructions. Id. at 415. The Street confession also
was crucial to the government’s ability to establish his
participation in the burglary and murder, and the Street allegation
that his confession had been coerced (hence was inadmissible) could
only be accurately evaluated if the jury were permitted to compare
it with the codefendant’s statement to determine what differences
(if any) the two versions contained. Id. Unlike in Bruton (viz.,
severance of the two codefendants' trial), the trial court had no
practicable alternatives to the admission of the codefendant
statement which not only would have fostered this essential truth-
finding function but also eliminated the risk that the jury would
disregard the limiting instruction and misuse the evidence, given
that (I) a redaction of the codefendant statement to remove all
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references to Street would have provided the jury an inaccurate
depiction of the codefendant’s statement, likely resulting in more
differences between it and the Street confession, and further
undercutting the Street coercion defense theory; and (ii) the
Street joint trial had already been severed from his codefendant’s.
Id. at 415-16 & 416 n.7. Finally, the Court rejected the Street
argument that it was constitutionally mandated that the State call
his codefendant to testify at Street's trial, then noted that the
codefendant had no personal knowledge as to the particular issue
regarding which his written statement was introduced: whether the
sheriff subsequently coerced Street into parroting the
codefendant’s confession. Id. at 416.
Citing Street, the state appeals court affirmed the
admission of the Benson “nonhearsay” statement for the purpose of
establishing the obstruction and intimidation count, rather than
the firearm possession count. Furr, 788 N.E.2d at 596-97. The
court noted further that the jury need not have decided whether the
contents of the Benson statement were true or false, but merely
that the Benson statement had induced Furr to threaten him. Id. at
597.
Now, on appeal from the district court order denying the
habeas petition, Furr contends that the state appeals court’s
decision was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application
of Street, because it held that it was entirely sufficient for
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Confrontation Clause purposes that the Benson statement was
nonhearsay and that the trial court had given a limiting
instruction, whereas the Street Court went on to weigh several
additional factors: (i) how important the codefendant’s statement
was to the prosecution’s case; (ii) whether there were practicable
alternatives to admitting the codefendant's statement, e.g.,
severance; and (iii) whether the prosecutor's closing arguments
encouraged the jury to misuse the codefendant’s statement against
Furr. Furr maintains that, had the state appellate court
considered these mandatory additional factors, it would have
concluded that the Benson statement was inadmissible, because (i)
it was not critical to the State’s case, since it unquestionably
was inadmissible on the firearm possession count; (ii) it was
practicable to require that the State sever the trial of the
firearm-possession count from the obstruction/intimidation count;
and (iii) the prosecutor's closing argument implicitly utilized the
Benson statement for hearsay purposes by asserting that Furr’s
letter to Benson evidenced Furr’s consciousness of guilt.
The state appellate court’s interpretation and
application of Street to the Furr case readily passes muster under
§ 2254(d)(1). Furr inappropriately extracted his proposed
interpretation not from the Street majority opinion, but from its
two-justice concurrence. Street, 471 U.S. at 417-18 (Brennan, J.,
concurring) (“The out-of-court confession is admissible for
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nonhearsay purposes only because that confession was essential to
the State’s rebuttal of respondent Street’s defense and because no
alternative short of admitting the statement would have adequately
served the State’s interest. . . . [T]he record contains no
suggestion that the State was engaged in any improper effort to
place prejudicial hearsay evidence before the jury.”). As the
Court issued a majority decision endorsed by six other justices,
however, and not merely a plurality opinion, the concurrence cannot
be considered a viable Court holding. See Alexander v. Sandoval,
532 U.S. 275, 285 n.5 (2001); cf. Marks v. United States, 430 U.S.
188, 193 (1977) (“When a fragmented Court decides a case and no
single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five
Justices, ‘the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position
taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the
narrowest grounds.’”) (citation omitted). Thus, the concurrence
simply did not command support from a majority of Justices.
As we noted in outlining the Street majority opinion, the
Court did not purport to prescribe a mandatory checklist of factors
to be considered in every case. Rather, it noted that, absent
other circumstances, it is sufficient that the codefendant
statement is nonhearsay – viz., not admitted for the truth of the
matter asserted, and provided the court gives a limiting jury
instruction to that effect. Street, 471 U.S. at 414 (“The
nonhearsay aspect of [the codefendant’s] confession – not to prove
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what happened at the murder scene but to prove what happened when
[Street] confessed – raises no Confrontation Clause concerns.”);
see Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 59 n.9 (2004) (“The
[Confrontation] Clause also does not bar the use of testimonial
statements for purposes other than establishing the truth of the
matter asserted.”).3 The Court then observed that, in some cases,
circumstances might exist which nonetheless could create a risk
that the jury might misuse the evidence, and thus rebut the normal
presumption that juries would follow limiting instructions.
Turning to the facts in the Street case, the Court noted the
absence of such special circumstances, observing that the
government obviously needed the jury to compare the contents and
details of the two confessions to rebut the Street coercion
defense. Id. at 416. At no point in its discussion, however, did
the majority purport to endorse the mandatory consideration of a
checklist of factors, let alone the factors which the two justices
in concurrence considered dispositive.
3
Furthermore, we reject the subsidiary contention that the
trial court did not give an adequate limiting instruction, in that
it failed to tell the jury in so many words that they could not
consider the “truth” of the Benson statement, but instead
instructed that the statement could be considered only with respect
to the obstruction/intimidation count. First, the two versions are
functionally equivalent, given that possession of a firearm was not
a fact necessary to establish the obstruction/intimidation count.
Second, and more importantly, the court further instructed: “[Y]ou
are not to consider the content of the [Benson] statement in
determining whether the defendant possessed the firearm or
ammunition.” No more was necessary.
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Furr points to no subsequent case which has interpreted
Street as imposing such a mandatory checklist. We frequently have
stated the Street case holding as: “In general, nonhearsay
statements or statements not offered for the truth of the matter
asserted do not raise Confrontation Clause concerns.” United
States v. Trenkler, 61 F.3d 45, 62 (1st Cir. 1995). Thus, the
determination as to whether the general rule of admissibility in
Street applies is assessed case by case, based upon the presence of
whatever special circumstances would create an unreasonable risk
that the jury disregarded their instructions.
Of course, for habeas-review purposes we need not
determine whether the state appellate court’s interpretation and
application of Street is legally correct, but simply that it was
neither “contrary to,” nor an “unreasonable application” of,
Street. Horton, 370 F.3d at 80. For the above-stated reasons, we
must conclude that it obviously was not. The state court
determined that the Benson statement was nonhearsay, because the
jury did not need to decide whether the contents of the Benson
statement were true or false, but merely whether the statement
prompted Furr to threaten him. Furr, 788 N.E.2d at 597. The fact
that the appeals court did not proceed to discuss the other factors
mentioned in the Street concurrence connotes, at most, that it did
not consider that the Furr case gave rise to any special
circumstances that might risk jury disregard of the limiting
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instruction.
Insofar as Furr suggests that the appeals court was
compelled, on the present record, to find (and hence discuss) any
such special circumstances, we must disagree. It is quite obvious
that the Benson statement was crucial for the prosecution to
establish the obstruction/intimidation count, because it was
necessary to prove that Benson made a statement, of which Furr had
acquired knowledge, and on account of which Furr threatened and
intimidated Benson. See Commonwealth v. Perez, 715 N.E.2d 76, 79
(Mass. App. Ct.) (“The witness intimidation statute [Mass. Gen.
Laws Ann. ch. 268, § 13B] applied if the defendants knew of the
criminal proceeding and believed that [the victim] was a potential
witness.”), review denied, 722 N.E.2d 976 (Mass. 1999).
Further, the Street Court simply observed as an aside, in
a footnote, that the trial court could not sever the defendant’s
and the codefendant’s trials as an alternative to admitting in
evidence the codefendant statement because their trials already had
been severed. Street, 471 U.S. at 416 n.7. This observation – in
the nature of a negative pregnant – reasonably cannot be construed
either as holding that the Court would have reached a different
decision had the trials not been severed, or that trial courts must
invariably consider severance as an alternative to admitting
nonhearsay evidence for limited purposes.
The challenged closing argument by the prosecution
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referred to the Furr letter to Benson, and suggested that its
contents demonstrated that Furr had a guilty conscience. The
prosecutor did not argue that the jury should draw such an
inference from the Benson statement. See Commonwealth v. Perez,
825 N.E.2d 1040, 1045 (Mass. 2005) (“‘It is well established that
evidence regarding threats or intimidation of key witnesses for the
prosecution is admissible to demonstrate consciousness of guilt.’”)
(citation omitted). Thus, the prosecution did not seek to lure the
jury astray from the limiting instruction.
Finally, Furr cites Thomas v. Hubbard, 273 F.3d 1164 (9th
Cir. 2002), overruled on other grounds, Payton v. Woodford, 299
F.3d 815, 829 n.11 (9th Cir. 2002), and United States v. Walker,
148 F.3d 518 (5th Cir. 1998), as illustrative decisions supporting
the view that the Massachusetts appeals court decision in the
present case is “contrary to” or an “unreasonable application” of
Street. Instead, Thomas and Walker stand for the unremarkable
proposition that, in certain circumstances, “out-of-court
[nonhearsay] statements [may be] so prejudicial that a jury would
be unable to disregard their substantive content regardless of the
purpose for which they are introduced and regardless of any
curative instruction.” Thomas, 273 F.3d at 1173 (finding such
special circumstances where statements were “emotionally charged,”
and that “the [other] evidence against the defendant was far from
overwhelming and the case came down to a credibility battle between
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the defendant and an accusing witness.”). As we already noted, the
inquiry into possible misuse of evidence by a jury was treated
quite flexibly in Street, see 471 U.S. at 414, and it was
reasonable for the state appeals court to determine that there are
no such extenuating circumstances in this case.
Moreover, the Benson statement can hardly be considered
unduly inflammatory. Its essential contents could readily be
inferred from Furr’s threatening letter, the admissibility of which
Furr has not challenged. Furthermore, unlike the State in Thomas,
the prosecution in the Furr case possessed other competent evidence
from which the jury rationally could infer that he possessed the
firearm, particularly the police officers’ own observations, upon
arriving at the scene of the shooting, that Furr tossed the firearm
away.
For all the above reasons, we conclude that the appeals
court decision is neither contrary to nor an unreasonable
application of the Street decision, and we therefore affirm the
district court ruling denying the habeas claim based upon the
Confrontation Clause.
C. The Due Process Claim
Furr was sentenced pursuant to the Massachusetts armed
career criminal statute, which provides: “Whoever, having been
previously convicted of a violent crime or of a serious drug
offense, both as defined herein, violates the provisions of
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paragraph (a) . . . of section 10 [viz., illegal possession of a
firearm] shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for
not less than three years nor more than 15 years.” Mass. Gen. Laws
Ann. ch. 269, § 10G(a) (emphasis added). “For the purposes of this
section, ‘violent crime’ shall have the meaning set forth in
section 121 of chapter 140.” Id. § 10G(e). “‘Violent crime’ shall
mean any crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one
year, or any act of juvenile delinquency involving the use or
possession of a deadly weapon that would be punishable by
imprisonment for such term if committed by an adult, that: (i) has
as an element the use, attempted use or threatened use of physical
force or a deadly weapon against the person of another; (ii) is
burglary, extortion, arson or kidnapping; (iii) involves the use of
explosives; or (iv) otherwise involves conduct that presents a
serious risk of physical injury to another.” Mass. Gen. Laws Ann.
ch. 140, § 121 (emphasis added). It is undisputed that Furr had
prior juvenile adjudications for armed carjacking, kidnapping, and
assault and battery with a dangerous weapon which satisfy the § 121
definition of “violent crime.” See supra note 2.
Furr contended in the state appeals court that subsection
10G(a) is “unduly vague” because it failed to place him on fair and
adequate notice that his prior juvenile adjudications counted as
prior “convictions,” thereby contravening his federal due process
rights. See Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U.S. 347, 354-55
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(1964). More particularly, Furr argues that (i) § 10G expressly
applies to persons “having been previously convicted of a violent
crime,” and does not say “or adjudicated”; (ii) Massachusetts law
long has presumed that, absent a clear legislative expression to
the contrary, the statutory term “conviction” does not encompass
juvenile adjudications, see Commonwealth v. Connor C., 738 N.E.2d
731, 738 (Mass. 2000); (iii) unlike § 10G(a), other sections of the
same statutory enactment use both the words “convictions” and
adjudications,” which suggests that the Legislature intended a
distinction; (iv) § 10G(a)'s and (e)’s cross-reference to the
definition of “violent crime,” in Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 140, §
121, is inconclusive, because that same cross-reference appears in
many other statutes besides § 10G, see id. ch. 140, § 129B(1)(I),
and thus could be read as merely imposing restrictions upon the
types of adult convictions which could be considered under §
10G(a); and (v) the juvenile statutes interpreted in Connor C. –
viz., Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 119, §§ 52, 54, 58 – are
distinguishable from § 10G since they expressly cross-referenced to
a repeat offender statute which used only the word “conviction,”
and not “adjudication.”
The state appeals court rejected Furr’s construction of
§ 10G(a), which presented an issue of first impression. The court
found that subsection 10G(e)’s cross-reference to the “violent
crime” definition “communicate[s] unmistakably a legislative intent
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that an adjudication of a juvenile as a youthful offender, a form
of aggravated juvenile delinquency, be taken as a ‘conviction’ for
purposes of [§] 10G.” Furr, 788 N.E.2d at 594-95 (observing that
otherwise the cross-reference was purposeless). The appeals court
analogized this cross-reference to the one in Connor C.: “‘If a
prior “adjudication” does not satisfy the “conviction” requirement
. . . then the Commonwealth could never indict a child for a second
or subsequent firearms offense . . . because a child is never
“convicted” of violating a statute.’” Id. at 595 (citation
omitted). Finally, the appeals court rejected the Bouie due-
process argument advanced by Furr:
[Defendant] also argues that [§] 10G is vague.
. . . Prescinding from the question whether
the defendant waived these points by not
raising them in the Juvenile Court, neither
has potency. Our discussion, interpretation,
and application of § 10G in this case dispose
of the claim that it [viz., § 10G] is
unfathomable.
Id. (emphasis added).
Unable to mount a direct challenge to the state appeals
court’s interpretation of the state statute, Furr is left to claim
that the appeals court decision is “contrary to” or an
“unreasonable application” of Bouie, viz., that the Due Process
Clause requires that a state criminal statute give fair and
adequate warning as to the nature of the conduct to be
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criminalized.4 First, he contends that the court employed the
wrong legal standard, by requiring him to demonstrate that the
statutory interpretation of § 10G, adopted by the appeals court,
was “unfathomable,” rather than merely “unforeseeable.” Bouie, 378
U.S. at 355. As the context of the above-quoted passage from the
appeals court decision makes clear, however, the court used the
“not unfathomable” phrase – not as an exegesis of the Bouie
standard – but simply to counter Furr’s argument that § 10G is
hopelessly vague, i.e., not amenable to any reasonable
interpretation. Accordingly, we cannot conclude that the appeals
court’s interpretation of § 10G is “contrary to” the due-process
standard set forth in Bouie.
Finally, Furr reiterates his proposed interpretation of
§ 10G, see supra, and suggests that it is so conclusively
reasonable as to render the appeals court’s contrary construction
unreasonable for purposes of habeas review. We disagree. The
Bouie “foreseeability” standard obviously is fluid and inexact.
The most that can be said in the instant case is that Furr and the
appeals court set forth two plausible statutory interpretations.
As Connor C. recognized, the word “conviction” is not so inherently
4
Brady contends that Bouie simply does not apply at all to the
prior conviction component of a recidivist statute, citing Dretke
v. Haley, 541 U.S. 386, 395 (2004) (noting that the Court has
exempted proof of prior convictions from some generally applicable
constitutional rules, such as the requirement that these “facts” be
proved beyond a reasonable doubt). We need not reach this issue.
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narrow or precise a term that it could never be used, either in
legal or common parlance, to encompass juvenile adjudications. Cf.
Lovely v. Cunningham, 796 F.2d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 1986) (noting that
Bouie found fault with state court’s adoption of broad definition
to words which normally had a narrow and precise denotation). Even
assuming that one might quibble somewhat with the court’s
suggestion that § 10G(e)’s cross-reference to the definition of
“violent crime” necessarily becomes purposeless unless the
Legislature meant to bring juvenile adjudications into the ambit of
§ 10G, it was hardly unreasonable for the appeals court to consider
that the Legislature likely foresaw this as among the necessary
consequences resulting from that incorporating cross-reference.5
Ironically, in contrast to this common-sense interpretation, the
Furr interpretation is convoluted, requiring an extensive
contextual analysis and comparison of a variety of statutes. Thus,
whatever the reasonableness of the Furr interpretation, there is no
question that it lacks the ready foreseeability of the state
appeals court’s construction. Accordingly, in light of the
deferential standard of habeas review, we conclude that the appeals
court’s application of § 10G to the facts in the Furr case was
neither “contrary to” nor an “unreasonable application” of Bouie.
5
The Furr efforts to circumscribe the holding in Connor C. are
unpersuasive, since he relies primarily upon the dissent in that
case, rather than the majority opinion.
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Affirmed.
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