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Julio Alvarez v. Robert Ercole
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Julio Alvarez v. Robert Ercole
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2013
(Argued: April 10, 2014 Decided: August 18, 2014)
Docket No. 13‐2828‐pr
JULIO ALVAREZ,
Petitioner‐Appellee,
– v. –
ROBERT ERCOLE, Superintendent of Green Haven Correctional Facility, and
ANDREW CUOMO, Attorney General of the State of New York,
Respondents‐Appellants.
Before: JACOBS, CALABRESI, and LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judges.
Respondents appeal the decision of the District Court for the Southern District of
New York (McMahon, J.) to grant Petitioner‐Appellee Julio Alvarez a writ of
habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 based on the New York state trial court’s
violations of Alvarez’s Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause right. Alvarez
was convicted of manslaughter and assault for a 2002 shooting that killed Bronx
drug dealer Daniel Colon and wounded two others. Alvarez is serving a 45‐year
prison sentence. At trial, the state court prohibited Alvarez from questioning a
detective as to whether the police had pursued provided leads contained in an
investigative report. It did so on the ground that the proffered cross‐examination
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would lead to the introduction of inadmissible hearsay, and also that the
proposed line of questioning had the potential to confuse the jury due to the
purportedly insufficient connection between the cross‐examination and Colon’s
death. Because the trial court erred when it excluded all cross‐examination
related to the report, and because this error denied Alvarez evidence that was
essential to his defense, we AFFIRM the District Court’s order granting Alvarez’s
habeas petition.
WILLIAM CARNEY, The Legal Aid Society, New
York, N.Y., for Petitioner‐Appellee.
CYNTHIA A. CARLSON (Joseph N. Ferdenzi and
Mary Jo L. Blanchard, on the brief), Assistant
District Attorneys, for Robert T. Johnson, Bronx
County District Attorney, Bronx, N.Y., for
Respondents‐Appellants.
CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner‐Appellee Julio Alvarez was sentenced in 2004 to 45 years’
imprisonment for shooting and killing Daniel Colon and wounding two others.
At trial, Alvarez’s defense strategy was to show that the New York City Police
Department investigation had been incomplete in ways that created reasonable
doubt that the government had proved its case against him. In support of this
argument, Alvarez sought to cross‐examine the lead detective to show that the
police had not investigated leads provided by a witness, Edwin Vasquez, whose
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tips were memorialized in a detective’s notes and an investigative DD5 report.
The trial court prohibited Alvarez from pursuing this line of questioning, ruling
that it would lead to the introduction of impermissible hearsay. But Alvarez
sought to cross‐examine the detective about the Vasquez report in order to show
that the police had not pursued known leads, and not to show that the content of
the Vasquez report was true. Hence, the trial court’s ruling was error.
Moreover, by further cutting off this line of questioning through an alternate
“clear link” ruling, the trial court effectively denied Alvarez the opportunity to
develop his only defense. Taken together, the trial court’s evidentiary rulings
unreasonably applied clearly established Sixth Amendment law and drastically
impaired Alvarez’s ability to present that defense.
This error was by no means harmless because (as the district court
observed) “[t]here was no forensic evidence tying [Alvarez] to the crime—no
ballistics, no DNA, no fingerprints”; the eyewitnesses differed as to the color,
make, and features of the car from which the killers fired; one victim failed to
identify Alvarez until the police told him “we got the guy” and took him to a
line‐up; and the prosecutor, on summation, called criticism of the police
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investigation “speculation” and “submit[ted] to” the jury that the detectives “did
a good job on this case” and “followed up on leads.”
We therefore affirm the judgment of the District Judge (McMahon, J.)
granting Alvarez’s habeas petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Homicide in Hunts Point, New York
Around 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 6, 2002, Margie Rodriguez heard
gunshots from the street below her Hunts Point, Bronx apartment and called 911.
From her sixth floor window, Rodriguez saw two men drive off in a gray car
with a distinctive sunroof. Daniel “Dapper Dan” Colon, a local drug dealer, had
been shot twice and lay dying in the street.
Moments earlier, Dan Colon had met with two teen‐aged crack dealers: 15
year‐old Manny Colon (no relation to Dan) and 19 year‐old Aramis Fournier.1
Dan, Manny, and Fournier had discussed a recent police raid on their stash
house at 735 Bryant Avenue. As Dan, Manny, and Fournier walked down Bryant
Avenue, a car pulled up; one of its two occupants hopped out, said, “What’s up
now, Dap?” and then opened fire. Despite gunshot wounds to his leg, Manny
1 To avoid confusion, we refer to Dan Colon and Manny Colon by their first
names.
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fled on foot while Fournier, who was also hit, played dead. Both of the teenagers
survived. Dan, however, died en route to the hospital.
NYPD officers questioned Manny and Fournier within hours of the
shooting, but neither identified the shooter or the driver. Fournier said that the
car was “possibly a Toyota,” and Manny described it as “a small gold or silver
car.” That same day, NYPD Detective Donnelly interviewed Ariel Roche, a car
mechanic working on Bryant Avenue. Donnelly jotted notes during the
interview, which he turned into a DD5 investigation report. According to
Donnelly’s notes and the DD5, Roche told Donnelly that, at the sound of gunfire,
he had run to the shop’s door, facing onto Bryant Avenue. Roche saw an
Hispanic male in his twenties get into the back of a four‐door gold or gray
Maxima or Altima type vehicle. Roche said the man was carrying a gun.
Donnelly’s notes include Roche’s description of watching the gold or gray car
back down Bryant Avenue (a one‐way street), make a turn, and then head
northwest on Hunts Point Avenue. The car, Roche said, had New York plates.
The day after the shooting, a Sunday, Manny told police that he
remembered the shooter’s name was “Julio.” On Monday, April 8, Detective
DeSalvo in the 44th Precinct called Detective Monaco in the 41st (who was
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investigating Dan’s homicide). DeSalvo had detained Edwin Vasquez, a
computer technician who claimed to have information about Dan’s murder.
Detective Monaco interviewed Vasquez, taking hand‐written notes which he
later turned into a DD5 investigative report. According to the report, Vasquez
told Monaco that either late on the night of Dan’s murder, or early the following
morning, Vasquez’s longtime acquaintance “Julio” told Vasquez that he “took
care of” his “problem” with a man who had argued with Julio’s wife, “Vianchi.”
In the report’s words, Vasquez told the detectives that “the guy who was killed”
had insulted both Julio and Vianchi, a slight that Julio could not “let . . . lie.” The
report also included Vasquez’s description of Julio as a Dominican man in his
thirties who used the nickname “Chan” or “Chang,” drove a gray or charcoal‐
colored Acura Legend, and hung around a dark‐skinned man known as the
“General.”
The DD5 shows that Vasquez also gave the detective a phone number for
Julio. Monaco’s notes from this interview include information additional to the
DD5 report, like his notation “rips drug dealers—JULIO” on a page with Julio’s
nicknames, physical description, phone number, and what appear to be
directions to Julio’s home in Hunt’s Point, near the shooting. Below the
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directions, Monaco also jotted “borrowed 9 mm” and included several possible
nicknames for Julio’s wife: “His wom[a]n is ‘Chena[,]’ ‘China[,]’ or ‘Cheena[.]’”
Another page of Monaco’s notes adds that Julio’s “partner,” “Herniniel”
(“General” in Spanish, according to Monaco) lives in Yonkers. The DD5 report
states that Monaco ran a “Nitro” database search using the nicknames that
Vasquez gave for Julio. The database produced two potential suspects. But
when Monaco showed Vasquez photo arrays containing pictures of these
suspects, Vasquez denied recognizing any as “Julio.”
On April 9, 2002—three days after the shooting—Detective Alfred showed
Fournier a photo array that included Respondent‐Appellee Julio Alvarez’s
image. Fournier did not identify anyone. On April 10, Alfred showed Manny a
photo spread, again including Alvarez’s photo, whom Manny identified as the
shooter. On April 12, almost a week after the shooting, Alfred again showed
Fournier a photo spread including Alvarez’s picture. Fournier said that Alvarez
looked like the shooter but he was not sure, and failed to definitively identify
anyone. Learning that the police were looking for him, Alvarez turned himself
in and was arrested on April 15, 2002. Detective Alfred told Fournier and
Manny, “We got the guy,” and asked them to view an in‐person lineup, which
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included Alvarez. Both shooting victims identified Alvarez.2 Police searched
Alvarez’s car pursuant to a warrant and found a box of 9 millimeter bullets in the
trunk. The NYPD Firearms Analysis Unit could not link these bullets to any gun
used in the shooting.
Over a year before trial, the Bronx district attorney gave Alvarez redacted
copies of the DD5 reports and notes from Roche’s and Vasquez’s interviews. The
redacted versions blacked out Roche’s name and both witnesses’ birthdates and
contact information. Vasquez’s report included his unredacted, full name in one
location as well as the phone number that Vasquez attributed to “Julio.” The
police apparently never called Julio’s number, nor did they use the directions to
locate Julio’s home. Soon after receiving the Vasquez DD5 report, defense
counsel used the number Vasquez attributed to “Julio” to identify “Julio
Guerrero,” who lived near the shooting on Bryant Avenue, was married to a
woman named “Bianchi,” and drove a silver Acura. The state court had a bench
warrant out for Guerrero’s arrest on a minor traffic offense, but Guerrero was
never apprehended, and defense counsel could not locate him.
2 The reliability of this in‐person identification is not before us on appeal.
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Defense counsel also sent a private investigator to Roche’s garage address.
But the investigator, not knowing Roche’s name, hit a wall when each of the
employees denied having talked to the police. Despite Alvarez’s continued
request for the redacted contact information for Vasquez and Roche, the Bronx
district attorney refused to disclose it until after jury selection for Alvarez’s trial.
By that time, Vasquez had moved and changed his phone number, and Roche
had relocated to Puerto Rico.
B. State Court Proceedings
Alvarez proceeded to a jury trial before Bronx County Supreme Court
Judge Edward Davidowitz. To testify to the police investigation into Dan’s
homicide, the state called lead Detective Alfred (Detective Monaco had retired,
and the state did not call him.) When defense counsel asked Alfred to explain
the investigating officers’ reaction to the leads generated by Vasquez (and
included in the DD5 report), the government objected that the question called for
impermissible hearsay. Defense counsel argued that two avenues permitted the
questioning: (1) as a remedy for the state’s Brady violation (in not disclosing the
witness’s contact information until trial); and (2) as non‐hearsay evidence of the
shoddy police investigation, by showing that the police had not tried to track
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down Vasquez’s “Julio.” Judge Davidowitz rejected Alvarez’s Brady claim and
agreed with the district attorney that the cross‐examination called for
impermissible hearsay. The state court explained, “the ultimate conclusion that
[defense counsel] want[s] the jury to reach is that had [Detective Alfred] pursued
this investigation further, it would have resulted in an arrest of someone else,
and that . . . is bringing out hearsay.” Plus, the state court ruled, such
questioning was barred by a state evidentiary rule requiring a “clear link”
between evidence implicating a culpable third party and the defendant’s charged
crime. See People v. Primo, 96 N.Y. 2d 351, 356 (2001). As it happens, the case
cited by the state judge eliminated any heightened “clear link” evidentiary
standard, choosing instead the “general balancing analysis that governs the
admissibility of all evidence.” See id.
Similarly, the state court prevented Alvarez from cross‐examining Alfred
about Roche’s DD5. Judge Davidowitz again rejected Alvarez’s argument that
the Roche report should be admitted to remedy the state’s alleged Brady
violation. The state court denied any Brady violation had occurred. Moreover,
Judge Davidowitz doubted the ultimate value of Roche’s DD5. As the Appellate
Division observed, Roche’s description of the shooter’s car was “somewhat
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equivocal and self‐contradictory” and cumulative of Margie Rodriguez’s
testimony.3 People v. Alvarez, 845 N.Y.S.2d 230, 231 (1st Dep’t 2007).
The jury acquitted Alvarez of murder but convicted him of manslaughter
and two counts of assault. Judge Davidowitz sentenced Alvarez to 45 years’
imprisonment: a 25‐year term for manslaughter and two 10‐year terms for his
assault convictions, each to run consecutively.
C. § 2254 Proceeding
The Appellate Division affirmed Alvarez’s conviction, People v. Alvarez, 845
N.Y.S.2d at 232, and Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye of the New York Court of
Appeals denied Alvarez’s request for leave to appeal, People v. Alvarez, 9 N.Y.3d
1030 (2008). Alvarez then filed a habeas petition in the Southern District of New
York under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, arguing that (1) the government’s delayed
disclosure of information for Roche and Vasquez violated Brady v. Maryland, 373
U.S. 83 (1963); (2) that the trial court violated Alvarez’s Sixth Amendment
Confrontation Clause right when it barred all cross‐examination of Detective
Alfred on the Roche and Vasquez DD5 reports; and (3) the trial court’s
3 Rodriguez testified at trial that Alvarez’s gold Toyota Camry was not the car
she saw the shooters use to leave the crime scene as she watched from her
window overlooking Bryant Avenue. She described the shooters’ vehicle as a
smaller, gray or silver car with an oval‐shaped sunroof.
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instruction on “transferred intent” violated his right to due process under the
Fourteenth Amendment.
District Judge McMahon granted Alvarez’s habeas petition, holding that
the trial court’s decision to bar all questioning of Detective Alfred regarding the
Vasquez DD5 was an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent
interpreting the Confrontation Clause, and that this error prevented Alvarez
from receiving a fair trial. The District Court rejected Alvarez’s remaining
arguments (including his Brady claim and his alleged Confrontation Clause
violation based on the Roche DD5) because they did not meet the high threshold
of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”).
The government appealed; Alvarez did not cross‐appeal. Accordingly,
neither the Brady nor the Roche confrontation issues are before us. We agree
with the District Court that the trial court’s decision to prohibit Alvarez from
questioning Detective Alfred about the Vasquez DD5 was neither a “reasonable
limit[] on . . . cross‐examination[]” nor “harmless” error. Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
475 U.S. 673, 679‐80 (1986). We, therefore, affirm the District Court.
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II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s decision to grant a writ of habeas corpus
under § 2254 de novo. Hawkins v. Costello, 460 F.3d 238, 242 (2d Cir. 2006).
Section 2254, as amended by AEDPA provides:
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 . . . .
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). An “unreasonable application” occurs when “the state court
identifies the correct governing legal principle from [the Supreme] Court’s
decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s
case.” Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 413 (2000). We assess “unreasonableness”
objectively. See Brinson v. Walker, 547 F.3d 387, 392 (2d Cir. 2008). “[A]n
unreasonable application of [Supreme Court law] must be objectively
unreasonable, [and] not merely wrong.” White v. Woodall, 134 S. Ct. 1697, 1702
(2014) (internal quotation marks omitted). Yet, the trial court’s decision need not
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teeter on “judicial incompetence” to warrant relief under § 2254(d). Francis S. v.
Stone, 221 F.3d 100, 111 (2d Cir. 2000).
B. “Clearly Established” Right to Confrontation
Supreme Court law clearly establishes that, under the Sixth Amendment’s
Confrontation Clause, a criminal defendant must have “a meaningful
opportunity to cross‐examine witnesses against him.” Brinson, 547 F.3d at 392
(citing Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39, 51 (1987)). See also Davis v. Alaska, 415
U.S. 308, 315 (1974) (holding that this confrontation right is applicable to state
and federal defendants alike) (citing Pointer v. Texas, 380 U.S. 400 (1965)). The
Confrontation Clause does not, however, guarantee unfettered cross‐
examination. See Delaware v. Fensterer, 474 U.S. 15, 20 (1985) (per curiam). The
trial court has “broad discretion . . . ‘to impose reasonable limits on . . . cross
examination based on concerns about . . . harassment, prejudice, confusion of the
issues, . . . or interrogation that is repetitive or only marginally relevant.’”
Brinson, 547 F.3d at 394 (quoting Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. at 679).
“Combining the standard for restricting cross‐examination with the
AEDPA standard, in order to grant [a] habeas petition we would have to
conclude not only that the trial court abused its ‘broad discretion’ by precluding
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cross‐examination . . . but also that the [state appellate court] could not
reasonably have determined that the [evidence] would have been excludable had
the trial court properly applied ‘standard rules of evidence’ . . . .” Watson v.
Greene, 640 F.3d 501, 510 (2d Cir. 2011) (quoting Wade v. Mantello, 333 F.3d 51, 62
(2d Cir. 2003)). “On habeas corpus, . . . we do not sit to review the trial judge’s
exercise of discretion, but rather to assess whether the state court’s denial of [the
defendant’s] Confrontation Clause claim was reasonable.” Id. at 511. Moreover,
for habeas to be warranted, the trial court’s denial must not have been harmless,
that is, it must have had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in
determining the jury’s verdict.” Brinson, 547 F.3d at 395 (quoting Brecht v.
Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 637 (1993)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
We “start with the propriety of the trial court’s evidentiary ruling.”
Hawkins, 460 F.3d at 244 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Bronx County
Supreme Court prohibited Alvarez from cross‐examining Detective Alfred about
the Vasquez DD5 report on the ground that the questions solicited inadmissible
hearsay. In this respect, the trial court abused its discretion.
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1.
The state court’s conclusion—that the Vasquez DD5 “contained multiple
layers of hearsay, and depended, for its relevancy, on at least some level being
true”—would have been correct had Alvarez offered the report as a means of
establishing the truth of its content (i.e., that the “problem” that Vasquez’s friend
“Julio” had “t[aken] care of” was the murdered Dan Colon and that when “Julio”
called Vasquez soon after the shooting, he was confessing to Dan’s murder). See
People v. Alvarez, 845 N.Y.S.2d at 232. But that was not the object of Alvarez’s
cross‐examination. Alvarez sought to demonstrate that the NYPD had failed to
take even obvious, preliminary steps to investigate the leads that were generated
by Vasquez’s interview—summarized in the Vasquez DD5. Alvarez’s strategy,
which defense counsel heralded during opening and emphasized in closing, was
to show that the NYPD’s incomplete investigation indicated that the NYPD had
prematurely concluded that Alvarez was the guilty party, and in that way to
raise a reasonable doubt that Alvarez was in fact responsible. This defense
theory did not depend on the veracity of any of Vasquez’s (or, for that matter,
Julio’s) statements.
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2.
In a later ruling, the state trial court justified its decision to restrict
Alvarez’s inquiry into the Vasquez DD5 by citing a New York evidentiary rule
governing admission of evidence implicating a third party. In People v. Primo, the
New York Court of Appeals recently clarified that this rule – formerly known as
the “clear link” rule – requires state trial courts to balance the probative value of
defense evidence implicating a third party against its potential for causing
prejudice and confusion, a standard rule of evidence. See 96 N.Y.2d at 356
(clarifying that state courts should analyze the “admissibility of third‐party
culpability evidence under the general balancing analysis that governs the
admissibility of all evidence” and not under any higher standard). The state
court’s ruling on this alternate ground was also clearly unreasonable under
established Sixth Amendment law: not only was it incorrect, but it left Alvarez
without any means of supporting his defense theory. See Olden v. Kentucky, 488
U.S. 227, 232 (1988) (per curiam) (reversing conviction where “the limitation
[placed on cross‐examination] was beyond reason” given its centrality in
undermining a lead witness’s testimony). For the reasons that follow, we
therefore conclude that the trial court abused its discretion and “could not
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reasonably have determined” that this line of questioning was precluded under
the proper application of this rule, as well as “standard rules of evidence
concerning admissibility.” See Watson, 640 F.3d at 510 (internal quotation marks
omitted).
First, the trial court’s application of Primo was wrong – and unreasonably
so – under this standard balancing test. Alvarez’s counsel specifically argued
that the purpose of the line of questioning regarding the Vasquez DD5 was not to
show that an alternate perpetrator had in fact committed the crime, but was
pursued to demonstrate that there was an alternate suspect that the police had
disregarded in their investigation. The trial court’s ruling instead was entirely
predicated on the assumption that Alvarez was trying to present evidence of
“third‐party culpability.”
Second, the trial court’s grounds for barring this line of inquiry were
seriously flawed. On the probative value side of the scale, there is no doubt that
the content of the DD5 supported an inference that the police did not pursue the
lead provided to them by Vasquez – an omission that could have led the jury
seriously to doubt the adequacy of the murder investigation. But this fact was
wholly overlooked by the state court. On the contrary, the judge asserted that
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Vasquez’s description in the DD5 “does not, in my judgment, match the
Defendant” because there was “an automobile that’s described that does not fit
any automobile that I know of that’s involved in this case,” nor was there any
other evidence of a dispute between Dan Colon and “a Julio” or his wife. There
are certainly enough parallels, however, that could be drawn between the
alternate suspect and the information the police had about the murder to make
Julio Guerrero a person of interest in the investigation: Guerrero’s first name, his
general physical characteristics, and his automobile’s color and appearance were
consistent with the descriptions given to the police by eyewitnesses to the
shooting. And had detectives investigated the lead, they would quickly have
learned that Guerrero lived not far from the crime scene.
Of course, there was a risk that the jury would have interpreted this line of
questioning to suggest Julio Guerrero’s guilt of the crime – the type of confusion
or unfair prejudice this rule was intended to prevent. And as we have said, “trial
judges retain wide latitude insofar as the Confrontation Clause is concerned to
impose reasonable limits” to avoid such harms. Watson, 640 F.3d at 510 (quoting
Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. at 479). In the unusual circumstances of this case, however,
the combined effect of the state trial court’s erroneous hearsay and Primo rulings
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entirely precluded Alvarez from fleshing out his main defense theory: that the
police investigation into the murder was flawed and had improperly disregarded
a promising alternate suspect.
In Watson v. Greene, we held that there had been no Confrontation Clause
violation when the trial court prohibited the defendant in a homicide prosecution
from cross‐examining a police witness about the contents of an anonymous
phone tip, contained in another officer’s note. 640 F.3d at 511. The tip was
traced to an off‐duty officer who explained that she called in the tip after
overhearing her family members repeat rumors relating to another suspect’s
involvement in the murder. Id. at 510. The police never discovered the identity
of the officer who recorded her tip. Id. at 504. Watson held that the trial court’s
exclusion was not an “unreasonable” application of Sixth Amendment law for
these reasons: (a) the likelihood that the note would cause confusion; (b) the
police department’s inability to determine the note’s author; (c) the strength of
the evidence the police already possessed may have indicated to the jury that a
disregard of the note “did not reflect a serious lack of thoroughness in the police
investigation”; and (d) the fact that the defendant had available to him, and
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indeed had introduced, ample alternative evidence to discredit the police
investigation. Id. at 511‐12.
The present case is quite different, for the trial court’s exclusion left
Alvarez without any support for his theory of the case. And the district attorney
repeatedly emphasized that shortcoming in summation, labeling as
“speculation” criticism of the police investigation and “submit[ting] to” the jury
that the detectives “did a good job on this case” and “followed up on leads.” “By
thus cutting off all questioning about an event the State conceded had taken
place,” the state court disabled Alvarez from contradicting Detective Alfred’s
portrayal of the NYPD investigation as thorough and reliable. See Van Arsdall,
475 U.S. at 677, 679 (the Confrontation Clause is violated when “the trial court
prohibited all inquiry into” a potential source of bias on the part of a witness, a
ruling that “kept from the jury facts . . . that were central to assessing [the
witness’s] reliability”); Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 302 (1973) (holding
that state evidentiary rules “may not be applied mechanistically to defeat the
ends of justice” where the result is the exclusion of “testimony . . . critical to [the]
defense”). Moreover, we cannot determine regarding the Vasquez lead (as the
panel could in Watson as to the anonymous note) that the disregard of the lead,
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given the relative weakness of the case against Alvarez, would not have been
taken by the jury as “reflect[ing] a serious lack of thoroughness in the police
investigation.” See 640 F.3d at 511. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial
court’s total exclusion of inquiry into the Vasquez DD5 was an “unreasonable
application” of clearly established Sixth Amendment law.
Was it, however, harmless?
C. Harmless Error Analysis
“[B]ecause of the deference we afford to state courts, we ‘find an error
harmless unless it had substantial and injurious effect or influence in
determining the jury’s verdict.’” Corby v. Artus, 699 F.3d 159, 169 (2d Cir. 2012)
(quoting Fry v. Pliler, 551 U.S. 112, 116 (2007)). The Supreme Court in Delaware v.
Van Arsdall listed the following factors to determine whether a state trial court’s
exclusion of evidence amounted to harmless error: (1) “the overall strength of the
prosecution’s case;” (2) “the importance of the witness’[s] testimony;” (3)
“whether the testimony was cumulative;” (4) “the presence or absence of
evidence corroborating or contradicting the testimony of the witness on material
points;” and (5) “the extent of cross‐examination otherwise permitted.” 475 U.S.
at 684. The state has a “significant burden of persuasion” to convince the court
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that any error was harmless. Fry, 551 U.S. at 122 (Stevens, J., concurring in part
and dissenting in part).
All five Supreme Court factors favor Alvarez. See Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. at
684. The importance to the defense of cross‐examining Detective Alfred about
unpursued leads in the Vasquez DD5 cannot be overstated. Alvarez’s strategy
was to introduce enough suspicion about the thoroughness of the NYPD
investigation to plant a reasonable doubt that the government met its burden of
proof. By excluding this entire line of questioning, the trial court deprived
Alvarez of evidence essential to his primary defense. Moreover, the trial court’s
ruling deprived Alvarez of any supporting evidence, since Vasquez and Guerrero
could not be found, and it appears that the state court never agreed to permit
Detective Monaco to testify. That is to say, in this case, testimony tending to
discredit the NYPD investigation would not have been cumulative; indeed, it
would have been Alvarez’s only such evidence. Cf. Corby, 699 F.3d at 167
(finding no Confrontation Clause violation when, allowed limited cross‐
examination, the defendant “was able to show that [the witness] had a motive to
lie” and “that, to the extent [the witness] would falsely accuse anyone, [the
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defendant] was the most plausible candidate.”) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
By prohibiting Alvarez from questioning Detective Alfred about the
Vasquez DD5, the trial court allowed the jury to get the impression that the
defense had nothing other than rhetoric to contradict the prosecutor’s statement
in summation that the NYPD’s investigation into Dan Colon’s murder was
“thorough.” Cf. Davis, 415 U.S. at 318 (1974) (“[C]ounsel was unable to make a
record from which to argue why [the witness] might have been biased or
otherwise lacked that degree of impartiality expected of a witness at trial. On the
basis of the limited cross‐examination that was permitted, the jury might well
have thought that defense counsel was engaged in a speculative and baseless line
of attack on the credibility of an apparently blameless witness . . . .”) The
government capitalized on this evidentiary gap in its summation, characterizing
Alvarez’s skepticism of the NYPD investigation as plain “speculation.” And,
having effectively ensured that they would not hear evidence to the contrary, the
district attorney assured the jurors, “Detective Alfred, I submit to you, did a
good job on this case.”
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To bolster its harmlessness argument, the state contends, and the First
Department agreed, that Julio Guerrero could have been Julio Alvarez’s
accomplice/passenger—the “two Julios theory,” if you will. This possibility, the
state tells us, renders any error harmless. See Resp’ts’ Br. at 61. The notion that
two similar‐looking fellows named “Julio,” with no obvious relationship or
common motive, committed the crime together is laughable. But, even apart
from this, the failure to investigate Guerrero, whatever his role in the shooting,
still reflects poorly on the police investigation of Alvarez. It is hard to believe
that the jury would not have found material to its evaluation of the police
investigation the government’s failure to follow up on Guerrero.
Finally, and of particular significance here, we consider a sixth factor in
addition to the Supreme Court’s five: “[W]hether the cross‐examination of which
the defendant was deprived was of a nature that was likely to affect the result.”
Brinson, 547 F.3d at 396. The government’s case against Alvarez was “far from
overwhelming.” Id. There was no forensic evidence tying Alvarez to the
shooting. The two witnesses who identified Alvarez, Aramis and Manny, did so
based on observations made during a shootout—as Manny, wounded, ran from
the scene and Aramis played dead in the street. And Margie Rodriguez—shown
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photographs of Alvarez’s car at trial—insisted that his was not the car she had
seen fleeing the shooting.
Had the jury additionally known that the police did not pursue Vasquez’s
tips, it could have concluded that the police prejudged Alvarez’s guilt. On this
basis, the jury might well have found reasonable doubt that Alvarez was
responsible. The jury never heard how Vasquez told Detective Monaco that
“Julio” had admitted, on the night of the shooting, that Julio “took care of” his
“problem,” or that Vasquez had told the police that he understood Julio to be
confessing his involvement in Dan Colon’s murder. Nor did the jury learn that
Vasquez gave the police information to track down Julio—including his physical
description, his car make and color, his phone number, his wife’s name and
nicknames, his sidekick’s name and car make, and directions to his house—and
that the NYPD, nevertheless, did not pursue any of these leads. A properly
instructed jury—clearly cautioned not to treat testimony about the contents of
the Vasquez DD5 as evidence of Julio Guerrero’s guilt—might, nonetheless,
easily have concluded that the NYPD ignored these leads because it had already
set its sights on Julio Alvarez. As a result, Alvarez’s manslaughter and assault
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convictions—gained without the jury’s knowledge of the Vasquez DD5—were
far from inevitable.
Whether the jury would ultimately have agreed that the police
investigation was so wanting as to raise a reasonable doubt about Alvarez’s guilt
is not for us to decide. It is sufficient that the jury might well have reached that
conclusion, had it learned of the many links—including Guerrero’s name,
proximity, car color, and “borrowed 9 mm” gun—between Julio Guerrero and
the shooting. But for the trial court’s unreasonable interpretation of clearly
established Sixth Amendment law and the error that resulted from that
interpretation, the jury might well have acquitted Alvarez not only of murder,
but of any involvement in the crime. See Brinson, 347 F.3d at 397.
III. CONCLUSION
We, therefore, AFFIRM the District Court’s order granting Alvarez’s
petition for habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The case is remanded to the
District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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