Stewart v. Coalter

USCA1 Opinion









March 9, 1995 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 94-1626

GARY STEWART,

Petitioner, Appellee,

v.

WILLIAM COALTER,

Respondent, Appellant.

____________________

ERRATA SHEET

The opinion of this Court, issued on February 28, 1995,
should be amended as follows:

On cover sheet, under counsel listings, "petitioner" should
be "respondent" and "respondent" should be "petitioner".

On page 7, line 5 under "II.", remove "the" before "fact".

On page 18, line 6 of 2nd full paragraph, replace "Good's"
with "Stewart's".




































March 7, 1995 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 94-1626

GARY STEWART,

Petitioner, Appellee,

v.

WILLIAM COALTER,

Respondent, Appellant.

____________________



ERRATA SHEET


The opinion of this Court, issued on February 28, 1995,

should be amended as follows:

On page 2, lines 7-10, the final sentence of the paragraph

should read: "That ten very able judges before us have disagreed

so sharply over the evidence is a measure of the difficulty of

this case."

On page 12, lines 1-4, the first sentence of the paragraph

should read: "Why is it that nine judges (including the majority

on this panel) think that the stated facts permit a clear and

compelling inference of Stewart's guilt and four others

(including our dissenting colleague) think it plain that an

acquittal should have been ordered?"

On page 12, line 9, the word "eleven" should be "thirteen."


















UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 94-1626

GARY STEWART,

Petitioner, Appellee,

v.

WILLIAM COALTER,

Respondent, Appellant.

____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Selya, Boudin and Stahl,

Circuit Judges. ______________

____________________

William J. Meade, Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Bureau, _________________
with whom Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General, was on brief for __________________
respondent.
Patricia A. O'Neill, Committee for Public Counsel Services, _____________________
Public Counsel Division, for petitioner.


____________________

February 28, 1995
____________________





















BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. Gary Stewart was convicted by a _____________

jury in Massachusetts Superior Court of second degree murder.

After the Supreme Judicial Court upheld the conviction,

Stewart filed a habeas corpus petition and the district court

ultimately granted the writ, holding that the evidence at the

state trial was inadequate to permit a reasonable jury to

convict. That ten very able judges before us have disagreed

so sharply over the evidence is a measure of the difficulty

of this case.

I.

Stewart was indicted by a Middlesex grand jury on

August 1, 1986, and charged with the first degree murder of

Robert Perry. He was tried by a jury in a trial lasting

several days beginning on March 8, 1988. From the outset,

the Commonwealth's theory was that the actual murder of Perry

had been committed by John Good who was tried separately and

convicted of first degree murder. See Commonwealth v. Good, ___ ____________ ____

568 N.E. 2d 1127 (Mass. 1991). The evidence in Stewart's

trial, taken most favorably to the Commonwealth, showed the

following.

At about 1 a.m., on July 27, 1986--the day of Perry's

murder and about 11 hours before that event--Stewart, Good

and a third man were seen together entering a bar on

Cambridge Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The bar was

located about four blocks east of the Cambridge City Hospital



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and about five blocks west of the Harrington School, both of

which are also on Cambridge Street.

At about 7:50 a.m. that same morning, Stewart was seen

driving west on Cambridge Street near the Harrington School.

The car was a yellow or off-white Pontiac bearing

Massachusetts license plate 104-MND. Good was in the front

passenger seat and a third man was in the rear seat. As the

car passed a cat sleeping on a car hood on the opposite side

of the street, Stewart made a U-turn and drove back east on

Cambridge Street. Good then pointed a black handgun out of

the passenger side window and shot the cat twice, killing it.

The car then drove away with the passengers laughing.

At about 12 noon on the same day, Stewart was sitting in

the same car, which was parked on Maple Avenue in Cambridge.

Maple Avenue is a one-way street that runs south from

Cambridge Street commencing just east of the Cambridge City

Hospital. The car was parked several car lengths south of

the intersection with Cambridge Street. Fifteen minutes

earlier, at about 11:45 a.m., Perry had told his former wife

that he would be walking west along Cambridge Street from

Inman Square, which is on Cambridge Street several blocks

east of the hospital.

At about noon--this is inference but amply supported--

Good shot Perry three times with a .38 caliber handgun on

Cambridge Street just west of the intersection with Maple;



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one of the shots pierced Perry's heart, another his head, and

he was killed. Immediately afterward, Good, carrying the

handgun, ran diagonally down Maple Avenue to the Pontiac

parked on the east side of the street. Stewart then drove

the car south down Maple Avenue, accelerating to

approximately 45 miles per hour.1 A few blocks later, at

the intersection of Harvard and Dana Streets, Stewart ran a

stop sign and flashing red light and crashed into another

car.

Good exited from the Pontiac, told Stewart, "I'm getting

out of here," and quickly walked away. Stewart got out of

the car and leaned against the door. When the police came,

Stewart said to one of the policemen, "It's an ordinary

accident. I was trying to cross Harvard Street and continue

on Dana when this car to the left of me came along and struck

me." To another officer Stewart said: "What's the big deal?

This is only an accident. I'm the only one. I'm the only

one in the car." In the Pontiac the police found a brown

paper bag on the floor in front of the passenger seat

containing several live rounds of .38 ammunition of types

similar to that used to kill Perry.

This is the heart of the evidence offered at Stewart's

trial. There was one eye witness to the event at the bar;


____________________

1See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 90, 17 (establishing a speed ___
limit of 30 miles per hour for streets like Maple).

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another eye witness who saw the incident involving the cat; a

third eye witness who saw Good running to the car and Stewart

driving away after the shots; and a fourth who saw Good

looking out the car window as the car drove rapidly down

Maple Avenue. Several police officers and several passengers

from the other car in the crash testified to events at the

crash scene. There was no evidence of motive. Stewart

offered relatively little evidence at trial and did not

testify.

The trial judge charged the jury that under

Massachusetts law Stewart could be convicted of murder on a

"joint venture" theory if he aided in the crime and shared an

intent to murder. For first degree murder, said the trial

judge, the intent required included both premeditation and an

intent to kill or do serious injury; for second degree

murder, premeditation was unnecessary. The jury deliberated

for three hours and returned a verdict of second degree

murder. Afterwards, the trial judge indicated that a first

degree murder conviction might have been expected.

On appeal, Stewart argued that the evidence was

inadequate for a reasonable jury to find that he had known in

advance of Good's intent to commit murder. The Massachusetts

Appeals Court, by a two-to-one vote, agreed and ordered the

entry of judgment in Stewart's favor. Commonwealth v. ____________

Stewart, 571 N.E.2d 43 (1991). On further review, the _______



-5- -5-













Supreme Judicial Court reinstated the guilty verdict, all

five justices agreeing that the evidence was adequate to

allow the jury to conclude "that Good planned in advance to

kill Perry and that [Stewart] kn[ew] of this plan and

intended to aid Good in committing the murder." Commonwealth ____________

v. Stewart, 582 N.E. 514, 518 n.3 (1991). _______

From all the Commonwealth's evidence, the jury
reasonably could have inferred that [Stewart] and
Good had been driving up and down Cambridge Street
looking for Perry so Good could shoot him; . . .
and that [Stewart] deliberately parked on a side
street near Cambridge Street, and around the corner
from where Perry was soon to pass, in order to
facilitate a speedy escape after the murder. . . .
. [and] that [Stewart's] intent to assist was
further shown by evidence that Good ran directly to
[Stewart's] automobile after the shooting, that
without any hesitation or conversation, [Stewart]
immediately pulled away and sped up the street at a
high rate of speed; and that [Stewart] subsequently
covered Good's escape by lying to the police.

582 N.E.2d at 518.

Stewart then began the present habeas proceeding in

federal district court. 28 U.S.C. 2254. There, he argued

that a constitutional violation had occurred because upon the

record evidence adduced at the state trial no rational trier

of fact could have found proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 324 (1979). The district _______ ________

court reviewed the state trial record, took the same "view"

of the scene at Cambridge Street that the trial jury had

taken, considered the briefs and heard oral argument. On

June 6, 1994, the district court granted the writ and ordered



-6- -6-













Stewart's release after a brief period to permit the

Commonwealth to seek a stay.

The district court said that--contrary to the inference

drawn by the Supreme Judicial Court--there was insufficient

evidence that Stewart had been parked on Maple Avenue with

the knowledge that Perry was soon to pass nearby or to

facilitate a speedy escape after Good killed him. The

district court also said that the testimony did not show that

the car moved instantly upon Good's return or that Stewart

and Good did not converse at least briefly. At most, said

the district judge, Stewart might have been convicted as an

accessory to murder after the fact, a lesser crime with which

he was never charged and could not now be because the statute

of limitations had run. The Commonwealth then appealed and

we stayed the judgment pending review.

II.

The district court and the parties do not greatly differ

as to the applicable legal standard. Under Jackson, the _______

question that the habeas court must answer is "whether, after

viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the

prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found ___

evidence sufficient to prove the essential elements of the

crime beyond a reasonable doubt." 443 U.S. at 319. The

Commonwealth stresses that the habeas judge can only consider

the rationality of the verdict and is not to make his or her



-7- -7-













own evaluation of guilt or innocence. But the Commonwealth

does not dispute Stewart's claim that the habeas court is to

apply the quoted standard independently and without otherwise

deferring to the state courts.

We are not so sure that this standard does reflect the

current thinking of the Supreme Court. On the issue of the

proper constitutional standard, Jackson was a five-to-three _______

decision; every member of the Jackson majority is gone from _______

the Court; and the concurring trio--Justice Stevens joined by

Chief Justice Burger and Justice Rehnquist--argued for a

standard that asked whether there was some evidence to ____

support the disputed finding. Further, since both opinions

in Jackson held that the evidence was adequate to convict, _______

the choice between the two calibrations of the standard did

not matter in that case.

At first blush it may appear startling that federal

judges should effectively substitute themselves for state

judges in deciding whether a judgment of acquittal is

warranted in a state criminal case for lack of adequate

evidence. No one suggests that federal judges should review

ordinary state court rulings on evidence or procedure under a

de novo standard. And if one looks to core due process ________

principles, see Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165, 172 ___ ______ __________

(1952), a conviction on no evidence could well shock the __

average conscience; but some might find nothing shocking



-8- -8-













about a simple disagreement between federal and state judges

on how far to stretch an inference.

Neither of the two sequels to Jackson is illuminating. _______

Wright v. West, 112 S. Ct. 2482 (1992), involved a fractured ______ ____

Court with no majority opinion; and in Herrara v. Collins, _______ _______

113 S. Ct. 853 (1993), the majority opinion by Chief Justice

Rehnquist capsulized Jackson solely in order to distinguish _______

it. On a more general plane, the Court's narrowing of habeas

in the last decade is widely acknowledged. At the same time,

the Court has not formally retreated its prior position that

in habeas proceedings, federal courts--when they do reach the

merits--normally make independent decisions on constitutional

issues. Miller v. Fenton, 474 U.S. 104, 112 (1985). ______ ______

We are not certain how the Supreme Court will resolve

the

matter. The majority's statement in Jackson represents the _______

pole most favorable to defendants; at the other end of the

spectrum lies the possibility that the Court might adopt the

"some evidence" formulation of the Jackson concurrence or-- _______

pretty much the same thing under a different label--a notion

of limited deference to state tribunals. Possibly, even the

Supreme Court does not yet know how it would handle a case

like ours that is so close that the precise formulation could

dictate the result.





-9- -9-













While adopting a "some evidence" standard would greatly

simplify this case, we agree with the district court that the

more stringent literal language of Jackson should control our _______

inquiry. There is nothing ambiguous about the Jackson _______

standard, however hard it may be to apply it in a close case;

it was the stated position of a majority of justices; and the

standard has never been overruled. It is a tricky matter for

lower federal courts to anticipate the Supreme Court. In

this instance--especially because the Jackson rule is _______

directly concerned with innocence, see 443 U.S. at 323--we do ___

not think that we would be justified in diluting Jackson. _______

III.

Accordingly, we proceed to consider whether on the

record made in the trial court "any rational trier of fact" ___

could have found Stewart guilty of murder beyond a reasonable

doubt. Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319. This is an inquiry we make _______

de novo on a cold record without any special deference to _______

either the state's highest court, see Jackson, 443 U.S. at ___ _______

318-25, or the federal district court, see Scarpa v. DuBois, ___ ______ ______

38 F.3d 1, 9 n.5 (1st Cir.), petition for cert. filed (Nov. ________________________

21, 1994) beyond the persuasive power of their (conflicting)

interpretations of the record.

In many criminal cases that are close on the facts, the

closeness is concealed because an eye witness testifies to

the defendant's guilt. Eye witnesses, of course, can make



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mistakes; but the newspaper reader or the appellate court

reading the transcript after conviction sidesteps the doubt

because the factfinder has credited the witness, and that is

the end of the matter in all but the most extreme cases.

Only in circumstantial-evidence cases like this one do we

face head-on the disturbing truth that guilty verdicts rest

on judgments about probabilities and those judgments are

usually intuitive rather than scientific.

The essential facts of this case--those that the jury

was unquestionably entitled to find--are rather simple: the

prior association earlier that day of Good and Stewart;

Stewart's knowledge that Good was armed and vicious; the

parking of the car on a side street with Stewart at the

wheel; the murder of Perry by Good around the corner on

Cambridge Street; Good's hasty return to the car after the

shots; the high-speed getaway and the subsequent crash of the

car; and Stewart's lies to the police tending

(unsuccessfully) to shield Good from capture. There is also

no doubt about what inference of fact the jury had to draw in

order to convict Stewart of murder under a joint venture

theory. Although Massachusetts' label is uncommon, its joint

venture theory is essentially an aiding and abetting concept.

Stewart clearly aided Good's escape after the murder. The

difficult factual question is whether Stewart also knew that

Good was planning to commit a murder or, as would also be



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adequate under Massachusetts law, knew that Good was planning

to do grievous bodily harm to his victim. Commonwealth v. ____________

Moore, 556 N.E.2d 392 (Mass. 1990); Commonwealth v. Grey, 505 _____ ____________ ____

N.E.2d 171 (Mass. 1987).

Why is it that nine judges(including the majority on

this panel) think that the stated facts permit a clear and

compelling inference of Stewart's guilt and four others

(including our dissenting colleague) think it plain that an

acquittal should have been ordered? After all, the fact that

no one overheard Stewart and Good planning a murder is not

dispositive; agreements are frequently inferred from

circumstances. United States v. Moran, 984 F.2d 1299, 1300 ______________ _____

(1st Cir. 1993). The difference between the two viewpoints

expressed by the eleven judges, we think, lies primarily in

the different probabilities that each side implicitly assigns

to the possible alternative versions of what happened. ________

The Supreme Judicial Court thought it reasonably clear

that Good and Stewart must have been looking for Perry so

that Good could murder him; saw Perry proceeding east on

Cambridge Street; and then parked the car on a side street to

permit a quick getaway after Good accosted Perry. The

district court, by contrast, thought this to be conjecture

and said that there were other plausible explanations that

did not involve advance knowledge by Stewart that Good meant

to kill or assault Perry. Good lived a few blocks away from



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Maple Avenue; the district court conjectured that Stewart

might have been awaiting Good's return from his house when

Good encountered Perry on the way back.

We agree with the district court that there is very

little to show that Good and Stewart were searching for

Perry; but that is not a necessary component in a scenario

leading to Stewart's guilt. It would be adequate if it could

be inferred beyond a reasonable doubt either that Good and ______

Stewart were searching for Perry or that they happened to see __

Perry while cruising on Cambridge Street and Good then

proposed to murder Perry. Either possibility is consistent

with the evidence, and both involve prior knowledge by

Stewart of Good's intent. Both possibilities are also quite

plausible.

By contrast, we think that it is implausible to suppose

that Good was visiting or purporting to visit his home

located near but not on Maple Avenue. If this were so, as

the district court thought quite possible, there is no

apparent reason why Stewart's car would be parked on Maple

Avenue instead of in front of Good's home. This brings us to

Stewart's brief which, in its only conjecture about other ___

explanations, asserts:

[T]he evidence provides no clue whether Mr. Good
left Mr. Stewart's car with the innocent intention
of buying a newspaper, visiting a sick friend at
the hospital, or even, -- taking into account Mr.
Good's bad character -- robbing the hospital gift
shop.


-13- -13-













Assuming any of these purposes, it is at least possible that

Good might have rushed back to the car after murdering Perry

and spurred the unwitting Stewart into driving quickly away.

But why would anyone wanting a newspaper wait at the

wheel down the block on a side street where, so far as the

evidence goes, no newspaper vending machine is known to be

located? If Good were visiting a sick friend, why would

there not have been evidence at trial that he had such a

friend in the hospital--a fact that could almost certainly be

proved without Stewart's testimony? As for the robbery, one

would not normally think that a hospital gift shop would make

an inviting target--given the limited proceeds and the likely

presence of hospital guards--compared to any neighborhood

convenience store.

The point is not that the explanations proffered in

Stewart's brief are impossible but none of them seems at all

likely. And the two innocent ones--or any like them--are

also not easily squared with the high-speed getaway or with

the cover-up lies told by Stewart after the crash. The

record is, as the district court said, unclear as to whether

Stewart pulled instantly out of the space or had to maneuver;

but the evidence does show that Stewart drove away very fast,

and the later accident reinforces the point. Similarly,

Stewart's lies to the police--especially the spontaneous

denial that there was anyone else in the car--do not prove



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that he was privy to the crime in advance but reinforce the

impression.

Of course, where there is no eye witness one can imagine

innocent explanations for almost anything--here, for example,

that Good, having left to buy a newspaper, disclosed the

murder as he reentered the car and Stewart instantly decided

to protect his friend (by fleeing at high speed and then

lying to the police) although at grave risk to himself. But

this could reasonably seem far-fetched to a jury; and each

new gap-closing assumption--e.g., the supposed conversation ____

in the car--adds a new strain to the story.

Guilt beyond a reasonable doubt cannot be premised on

pure conjecture. But a conjecture consistent with the

evidence becomes less and less a conjecture, and moves

gradually toward proof, as alternative innocent explanations

are discarded or made less likely. Here, there is nothing at

all unlikely about the hypothesis that Good and Stewart were

either stalking Perry or chanced upon him and decided that

Good would kill him. No other explanation that is at all

likely has been suggested to us. "Beyond a reasonable doubt"

does not require the exclusion of every other hypothesis; it

is enough that all "reasonable" doubts be excluded. United ______

States v. Oreto, 37 F.3d 739, 753 (1st Cir. 1994); United ______ _____ ______

States v. Whiting, 28 F.3d 1296, 1303-04 (1st Cir. 1994). ______ _______





-15- -15-













At this point, Jackson's own objective standard turns _______

against the defendant. It makes no difference whether we or

the district judge would as jurors have voted to acquit

Stewart or whether we ourselves think that there is some

reasonable doubt. The question posed by Jackson is whether _______

"any" rational jury could on the evidence presented think

Stewart's knowing participation so likely as to exclude all

reasonable doubts. And rational people can have quite

different views about the likelihood that a quick getaway

implies prior planning or that one otherwise innocent would

lie to the police to protect a murderous companion.

The problem is that no scientific data exists on these

probabilities (and it might not be admissible if it existed).

Each judge and juror brings to the courthouse a bundle of

unarticulated assumptions about how the world works and about

the respective likelihoods of different concatenations of

events. That does not mean that we, or the district court,

or the state tribunals can escape the task of second-guessing

the jury to the limited extent necessary to direct verdicts,

apply Jackson, or consider such issues on appeal. But _______

variations in human experience suggest that one should expect

a considerable range of reasonable estimates about what is

likely or unlikely.

We do not have the same confidence as either the

district court or the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in



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assigning the probabilities in this case. All that we can

say, with the advantage of having both sets of views before

us, is that the case against Stewart was not overwhelming and

involved some uncertainties that cannot be erased, but it was

also not so weak as to render the jury verdict irrational. A

rational jury might well have acquitted without violating its

oath; but, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the

prosecution, a rational jury could also convict.

We have considered the case thus far in terms of the

scenarios suggested by the parties and the four other courts

that have had the Stewart case before them. Although other _______

Massachusetts joint venture cases have been cited to us by

the parties, each is distinguishable; and none would relieve

us of the duty under Jackson to make our own independent _______

assessment as to what a reasonable jury could infer on the

facts of this case. But we think that one additional

possibility is so patent that it calls out for comment even

though neither side has thought it useful to draw our

attention in this direction.

The association of Stewart and Good, the prior shooting,

the strategically parked car, the reasonably quick departure

and high speed escape, and the lies to the police

cumulatively suggest that Stewart was the knowing participant

with Good in a criminal joint venture. A rational jury

could, given the absence of other likely explanations, find



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the joint venture alternative so likely as to be beyond

reasonable doubt. In other words, we think that the jury,

although not obliged to do so, was entitled to reject any

notion (as posited by the district court) that Stewart was at

most shown to be an accessory after the fact. But just what

was the joint venture?

The only theory argued at trial by the prosecution, and

the only one covered by instructions to the jury, was that

the venture was one to murder Perry or to do him grievous

bodily harm. We think that another possibility suggests

itself as consistent with the evidence: that Good left the

car as part of a plan by Good and Stewart to rob someone on

Cambridge Street, whether Perry in particular or whoever

might come along, and that Perry was the victim of a robbery

gone awry. This scenario does not involve a shared intent to

commit murder or do bodily harm.

It may be enough to say that it is a substantially less

likely scenario than a planned murder, if only because of the

wounds inflicted on Perry. Two of the three shots--one to

the head and one to the heart--suggest an intent to kill; and

this is especially so of the former since the coroner said

that the shot entered at the back of the skull. Of course,

it is still possible that Perry resisted a robbery attempt

and was then killed, but the shot from behind makes this less

likely. We also have no reason to think that Perry (en route



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to meet his former wife for lunch) was armed, and there is no

evidence--which the prosecution would have had good reason to

offer if it existed--that Perry's wallet or property was

found in the car.

Ironically, if the joint venture were one to commit

robbery, it appears that Stewart would still have been guilty

of murder under the felony murder rule followed in

Massachusetts and in many other states. See, e.g., ___ ____

Commonwealth v. Claudio, 634 N.E.2d 902, 906-07 (Mass. 1994). ____________ _______

Of course, that would not be a basis for sustaining Stewart's

conviction on direct appeal since he was never charged with

felony murder. But we doubt whether it would be part of the

office of habeas corpus to release a prisoner whose "defense"

in seeking the writ was that he had committed murder but only

on a theory not properly presented to the jury.

IV.

Judges who have presided over criminal jury trials are

wont to say that the juries usually reach a correct, or at

least defensible, result on the evidence presented to them.

That is no reason to diminish further safeguards, such as the

directed verdict, against the tragic risk that an innocent

person may be sent to prison. It is a reason to hesitate

long and hard before concluding that a jury's judgment is

irrational.

The judgment of the district court is reversed. ________



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Dissent _______

follows. _______

















































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Stahl, Circuit Judge, dissenting: With respect, I Stahl, Circuit Judge, _____________

dissent. I agree with the district court that the evidence

was not adequate for a jury to find, beyond a reasonable

doubt, that Stewart was involved in a joint venture to commit

murder. See Stewart v. Coalter, 855 F. Supp. 464 (D. Mass. ___ _______ _______

1994). Unlike the majority, I am "loathe to stack inference

upon inference in order to uphold the jury's verdict."

United States v. Valerio, No. 94-1708, slip op. at 14 (1st ______________ _______

Cir. Feb. 27, 1995) (citing Ingram v. United States, 360 U.S. ______ _____________

672, 680 (1959)).

For the jury to return a verdict of second-degree

murder, it had to find that Good planned to kill or do

grievous bodily harm, that Stewart was aware of Good's plan,

and that Stewart intended to aid Good in carrying it out.

Commonwealth v. Stewart, 582 N.E.2d 514, 518 n.3 (Mass. ____________ _______

1990). I cannot see how a rational jury could have found,

beyond reasonable doubt, that Stewart had such knowledge and

intent. At most, I think that Stewart might have been

convicted as an accessory to murder after the fact, a crime

with which he was never charged. There is no evidence that

Stewart and Good entered into a joint venture to kill Perry.

When one reads the record, it is not "reasonably clear" that

Stewart and Good had been looking for Perry so that Good

could kill him. In fact, it is not even clear that Stewart





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knew Perry at all.2 It is undisputed that neither Stewart

nor Good could have known of Perry's two calls to his former

wife, during the second of which she finally agreed to meet

him at a restaurant in Inman Square, Cambridge, or that Perry

would be proceeding west on Cambridge Street. It is a

significant stretch to say that Stewart parked his car on a

side street to permit a quick getaway should Good

fortuitously accost Perry, especially since Good lived

nearby. Nor is there evidence that Stewart parked the car

where he did because it was a convenient place to await

Good's return after killing Perry, whom they had just

happened to see.3 Even if one accepts as true the disputed

testimony concerning Stewart's lies to the police after the

intersection accident, those lies do not prove that he was

privy to the crime in advance; at best, they support the

accessory argument.

In order to find the scenario postulated by the

majority, one has to conjecture and find evidence where none






____________________

2 There is also no evidence that Stewart and Good
entered into a joint venture to kill someone at random. In
fact, Good was convicted of the first-degree murder of Perry.
See Commonwealth v. Stewart, 582 N.E.2d at 515 n.1. ___ ____________ _______

3 I note that the jury, in returning a verdict of
second-degree murder, necessarily found that Stewart did not
premeditate.

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exists.4 I would grant the writ.


































____________________

4 I also disagree with the majority's speculation that
the current Supreme Court would abandon the Jackson rule _______
requiring us to determine "whether, after viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any ___
rational trier of fact could have found evidence sufficient
to prove the essential elements of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt," Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 324 _______ ________
(1979) (emphasis in original), in favor of the Jackson _______
concurrers' more limited inquiry into whether there was some ____
evidence to support the disputed finding, see id. at 326 ___ ___
(Stevens concurring). Majority at 7-8. I note that the
Court recently, in the context of constitutional trial
errors, made habeas review more, not less, generous. O'Neal ______
v. McAninch, No. 93-7407, 1995 WL 66598 (U.S. Feb. 21, 1995). ________

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