NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 18a0349n.06
No. 17-4094
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED
Jul 16, 2018
BRANDON L. HOBBS )
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Petitioner-Appellant, )
)
ON APPEAL FROM THE
v. )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT
)
COURT FOR THE
MARK HOOKS, Warden )
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
)
OHIO
Respondent-Appellee. )
)
)
BEFORE: KEITH, ROGERS, and KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judges.
ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Brandon Hobbs appeals the district court’s denial of his petition
for a writ of habeas corpus. In 2014, an Ohio jury convicted Hobbs of murder. Hobbs appealed
his conviction, alleging that his trial counsel had rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance
by failing to keep out certain prejudicial evidence about Hobbs’s history with drugs and guns. The
state appellate court affirmed Hobbs’s conviction, holding that his trial counsel had engaged in a
“legitimate trial strategy” to admit certain acts to lessen their significance to the jury and to bolster
Hobbs’s credibility by making him appear honest and transparent. On federal habeas, Hobbs again
asserts ineffective assistance. However, the district court properly denied Hobbs’s petition,
because the state appellate court’s conclusion that Hobbs’s trial counsel’s performance fell within
the wide range of reasonable professional assistance was neither contrary to clearly established
federal law nor based on an unreasonable determination of facts.
No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
In September 2012, Brandon Hobbs sold Jaron Kirkling a used Chevrolet Suburban.
Hobbs’s friend, Brandon Mackey, who was also Kirkling’s cousin, facilitated the sale. Initially,
Kirkling gave Hobbs a down payment and took possession of the vehicle, and Hobbs agreed to
transfer the title and registration once the vehicle was paid for in full. In October, the pair met at
a branch office of the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles to complete the transfer. Kirkling paid the
remaining balance, and Hobbs signed the required transfer forms. Hobbs believed that the vehicle
had been legally transferred to Kirkling, but he did not know that Kirkling did not have valid
driving privileges or that the Bureau accordingly had not accepted transfer of the registration
plates.
Soon after, Kirkling was caught on traffic cameras speeding through a school zone in the
Suburban. Because the vehicle’s plates were still registered to Hobbs, the City of Columbus sent
him a ticket in the mail for the speeding violation. Hobbs confronted Kirkling, and Kirkling
assured Hobbs that he would take care of the ticket and the plates. Kirkling reimbursed Hobbs for
the traffic ticket, but Kirkling never had the plates changed.
On November 11, 2012, Hobbs and his girlfriend, Shelby Abrams, went to Mackey’s home
to sell him and his girlfriend, Melody Gaston, drugs. Hobbs and Mackey were sitting in Hobbs’s
pick-up truck completing the drug transaction when Kirkling pulled into Mackey’s driveway.
Hobbs had not anticipated meeting up with Kirkling that day, but when Kirkling pulled into the
driveway Hobbs noticed that his plates were still on the Suburban, and he got out of his truck to
confront Kirkling. Hobbs asked Kirkling, “I thought you had took the tags off the truck, what’s
goin’ on?” Kirkling told Hobbs that he had not had a chance to change the plates yet. He failed
to tell Hobbs that the Bureau had refused to issue him new plates.
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Hobbs asked Mackey to keep Kirkling occupied while he and Abrams retrieved a
screwdriver from home to remove the plates from the Suburban. Mackey agreed, and Hobbs
returned shortly to remove the plates. Hobbs began removing the plates while Mackey and
Kirkling were smoking in the Suburban. Kirkling did not notice Hobbs remove the front license
plate, but when Hobbs began to remove the rear plate Kirkling realized what was happening, got
out of the Suburban, and the two men began to argue. Mackey called for Gaston to come out of
the house and deescalate the situation, and Gaston told Hobbs and Kirkling to “take it across the
street.” Meanwhile, Abrams went around to the rear of the Suburban and tried to remove one of
the screws from the license plate. What happened next is disputed.
According to Hobbs, Kirkling pushed Abrams to the ground when she tried to remove the
rear plate. Hobbs and Kirkling then began yelling at each other. Mackey tried to intervene, but
Hobbs and Kirkling continued to argue about the license plates. At some point Kirkling reached
into his waistband and pulled out a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun. Hobbs felt threatened
and pulled out his own .357 caliber Glock handgun in self-defense and fired several shots at
Kirkling, who fell to the ground. Hobbs grabbed both the Smith & Wesson and the Glock and left
with Abrams. Abrams’ version of events materially overlaps with Hobbs’s. Hobbs later arranged
for the guns to be turned over to authorities, and he surrendered himself to the sheriff’s office.
However, Mackey and Gaston told a very different story. According to Mackey, when
Kirkling noticed Abrams trying to remove the rear plate he moved her out of the way and told her,
“You not taking my tags today.” Immediately after that, Hobbs yelled, “Fuck this,” stepped back,
and shot Kirkling. Kirkling fell straight back, and Hobbs stepped forward, firing “three to four”
more rounds. Mackey then ran inside his house to grab his handgun, and he fired at Hobbs and
Abrams as they fled the scene. According to Mackey, Kirkling never drew a gun during the
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
incident, and Mackey testified that he never saw anything that day indicating that Kirkling had a
weapon. Gaston’s version of events materially overlaps with Mackey’s.
Kirkling died from his injuries, and Hobbs was indicted for murder with a firearm
specification, possession of a weapon under disability, and carrying a concealed weapon. At trial,
Hobbs defended against the murder charge by claiming that he had acted in self-defense. Thus,
the trial largely boiled down to whether the jury found Hobbs and Abrams’, or Mackey and
Gaston’s, version of events more believable.
During the prosecution’s case, Hobbs’s trial counsel attempted to impeach Mackey with
conflicting statements he had made to investigators about the shooting. Counsel also introduced
evidence comparing DNA samples taken from the Smith & Wesson with samples from Hobbs and
Kirkling. The test determined that Kirkling could not be excluded as a major contributor to the
mixture of DNA found on the Smith & Wesson, but the prosecution countered with testimony
showing ways Kirkling’s DNA could have ended up on the handgun. For example, the prosecution
introduced evidence about indirect transfer of DNA from one person to another.
Gaston took the stand towards the end of the prosecution’s case, and the bulk of her
testimony focused on the events surrounding the shooting. However, prior to Gaston’s testimony,
counsel filed a motion in limine seeking to keep out testimony regarding Hobbs’s history of drug
dealing and firearms possession. The trial court concluded that it would allow witnesses to testify
about Hobbs possessing guns and selling drugs under limited circumstances. But the trial court
held that Gaston could not provide gratuitous testimony about Hobbs selling drugs or possessing
guns, because such testimony would be “irrelevant” and “prejudicial.”
Although the trial court’s ruling on counsel’s motion purported to limit the admissibility
of evidence regarding Hobbs’s history with drugs and guns, Gaston was ultimately allowed to
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
testify that she had purchased drugs from Hobbs in the past and had seen guns in his home. For
example, the prosecutor was permitted to ask Gaston, “Have you ever seen [Hobbs] with a gun
before?” and “Have you bought drugs from Brandon Hobbs?” Counsel objected to the
prosecutor’s questions, but his objections were overruled, and Gaston was allowed to answer.
According to Hobbs, Gaston’s testimony was contrary to the trial court’s ruling on the motion in
limine because Gaston never claimed that she observed a drug sale prior to, or contemporaneous
with, Hobbs brandishing a gun on the day of the shooting, and she never drew a connection
between the firearms used during the homicide and the firearms she had observed at his residence
on prior occasions.
On cross-examination, counsel attempted to impeach Gaston by eliciting more details
about her drug purchases and by asking her to describe the guns she had observed at Hobbs’s
home. Counsel scored some points during cross. For example, he got Gaston to admit that she
often acted as a “middle person,” purchasing drugs for others, and Gaston conceded that she could
not say whether the firearms she observed at Hobbs’s home matched the make and model of the
handguns involved in the homicide. But after defense counsel elicited details about Gaston’s
monthly drug expenditures and her purchases of marijuana, cocaine, and pills from Hobbs the
judge intervened, telling counsel that “enough is enough.”
Abrams was the first witness for the defense, and the bulk of her testimony was related to
the events surrounding the shooting. But the prosecution again asked about Hobbs’s history with
drugs and guns, and Abrams testified that Hobbs sold drugs for a living and owned multiple
weapons. She also confirmed that Hobbs had sold drugs to Gaston in the past. This time counsel
did not object.
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
Hobbs was the next witness. Before direct examination, Hobbs introduced himself to the
jury: “Hi, everybody. I’m Brandon Hobbs. I’ve lived in Columbus all my life. I’m twenty-three
years of age. I work with Ieseil Homes Exterior temporarily. I also do some lawn care service,
and I also sell drugs from time to time.” Counsel then began direct by asking Hobbs about his
drug sales, and counsel questioned Hobbs about the firearms he possessed, including the Glock
used to shoot Kirkling. Hobbs then testified that he was carrying the gun on the day of the
homicide because he was carrying lots of cash he had made by “selling drugs.” The remainder of
counsel’s direct focused on the sale of the Suburban and the events surrounding the shooting.
With the door to Hobbs’s past opened, the prosecution took full advantage. On cross-
examination the prosecution got Hobbs to concede that he originally got the gun that he later used
to shoot Kirkling “off the streets.” The prosecution also got Hobbs to admit that “it didn’t matter
to [him]” whether the gun was stolen (it was). The prosecution elicited additional details about
Hobbs’s prior drug activity and about his history of carrying firearms. The prosecution asked
Hobbs about “all the different guns you’ve had at your house,” and “all the different guns you’ve
had [in your life].” Hobbs’s prior convictions for assault and improper handling of a firearm in a
motor vehicle were introduced to impeach Hobbs, and the prosecution asked whether Hobbs was
“afraid about the license plates being still in [his] name” because he had previously been “caught
with a gun in a car?” The prosecution also asked Hobbs about the relationship between drug
dealing and guns, and Hobbs conceded that stolen property, specifically firearms, is often used in
lieu of cash to purchase drugs. At no point did counsel object to this questioning.
Finally, during closing arguments the prosecution told the jury, “Do not convict [Hobbs]
of murder because he’s a dope dealer,” but he also told the jury,
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
[Defense counsel] says, “Don’t convict him because of the
number of guns he may have owned,” and I disagree with that.
Because the number of guns he owned in this case goes to
credibility. Goes to whether or not you believe he came up and told
the truth. . . . Folks, why would people be calling him to sell him
guns if they didn’t know he was in the market for guns? Why? Do
people just call you up and try and sell you stuff that you have no
interest in? Do your friends do that to you? Of course not. The
person who sold Hobbs the gun used to shoot [Kirkling] called
[Hobbs] because [he] knew where the market was. You know why
that is important? Because both State’s witnesses came in here and
told you, they had been to his house on numerous occasions; they
had seen him showing and passing around and handling guns with
other people. They told you, okay?
Counsel did not object. The district court subsequently instructed the jury that it could only use
Hobbs’s prior convictions for felonious assault and improper handling of a firearm in a motor
vehicle to decide his credibility.
The jury convicted Hobbs on all three counts, and the court sentenced Hobbs to a life prison
term with parole eligibility after eighteen years. Hobbs appealed his conviction, claiming that he
had been denied his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel. Hobbs claimed that
counsel’s performance was deficient because he had failed to keep out, and times had elicited,
inadmissible, prejudicial “other acts” evidence regarding Hobbs’s prior convictions and his history
with drugs and guns, but the Ohio Court of Appeals for the Tenth Appellate District affirmed
Hobbs’s conviction. The state appellate court concluded that counsel’s conduct was a “legitimate
trial strategy,” reasoning that “[d]efense counsel’s apparent strategy was to admit certain acts to
lessen their impact on the jury and to bolster Hobbs’s credibility so the jury would believe that
Kirkling threatened Hobbs, who then fired in self-defense.” The Ohio Supreme Court declined
review.
With his state remedies exhausted, Hobbs filed a timely petition for a writ of habeas corpus
in federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Hobbs again asserted that his trial counsel had
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance based on counsel’s failure to object to evidence
regarding Hobbs’s past convictions and his history with drugs and guns, as well as counsel’s failure
to request a curative instruction with respect to that evidence. Moreover, Hobbs complained that
counsel compounded the prejudice to his client by eliciting additional testimony regarding his
client’s drug trafficking and firearms activity.
The district court determined that the state appellate court’s conclusion that counsel’s
conduct amounted to a “legitimate trial strategy” was neither contrary to clearly established federal
law nor based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. The court concluded that despite
Hobbs’s arguments to the contrary, it was not persuaded that the record reflected that the state
appellate court unreasonably determined that defense counsel exercised a reasonable trial strategy.
The district court did, however, grant Hobbs a certificate of appealability. Hobbs timely appealed.
Ultimately, the district court’s dismissal of Hobbs’s habeas petition was proper. Under the
deferential standard applied to habeas petitions alleging ineffective assistance, it is not enough for
Hobbs to overcome the strong presumption that counsel’s representation was within the “wide
range” of reasonable conduct for counsel, which the Supreme Court has recognized “is never an
easy task.” Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 105 (2011) (quoting Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S.
356, 370–71 (2010)). In addition, Hobbs must show that the state appellate court’s application of
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), and its progeny was unreasonable under 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d). Harrington, 562 U.S. at 105. This showing is “all the more difficult” because “[t]he
standards created by Strickland and § 2254(d) are both ‘highly deferential,’ and when the two
apply in tandem, review is ‘doubly’ so.” Id. Indeed, “[w]hen § 2254(d) applies, the question is
not whether counsel’s actions were reasonable. The question is whether there is any reasonable
argument that counsel satisfied Strickland’s deferential standard.” Id. (emphasis added).
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
Here, a reasonable argument exists that, given the circumstances of Hobbs’s case, counsel’s
performance satisfied Strickland’s deferential standard. Hobbs admitted that he had shot and killed
Kirkling. In the face of Hobbs’s admission, counsel settled on a self-defense defense, which
required showing that Hobbs (1) was not at fault in creating the situation giving rise to the affray,
(2) he had a bona fide belief that he was in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm and that
his only means of escape from such danger was in the use of force, and (3) he did not violate any
duty to retreat or avoid the danger. State v. Williford, 551 N.E.2d 1279, 1281 (Ohio 1990). As is
often the case when a defendant claims self-defense, for Hobbs’s defense to be effective he needed
to take the stand to counter the prosecution’s narrative and establish the elements of his affirmative
defense. Accordingly, the success of Hobbs’s defense largely turned on whether the jury found
Hobbs’s, or Mackey and Gaston’s, account of the shooting more believable.
But having Hobbs testify came with challenges for counsel. Because Hobbs needed to
show that he was not at fault in creating the situation leading up to the shooting, he needed to
explain why he was at Mackey’s house, if not to confront Kirkling, and why he was carrying a
gun, if not to harm or threaten Kirkling. That meant Hobbs would have to testify that he was at
Mackey’s house to sell him and Gaston drugs and that he was carrying a gun because he had a
large amount of cash from other drug sales. Further, according to the state appellate court, Hobbs’s
prior convictions would likely be admissible to impeach Hobbs if he took the stand.1 In light of
these challenges, counsel needed to craft a strategy that would boost Hobbs’s credibility, lessen
Mackey’s and Gaston’s credibility, and diminish the significance of the negative evidence and
testimony that would be elicited.
1
Hobbs complains that the state appellate court is wrong that this evidence would have been admitted, but “[w]hen
considering a petition for the writ, ‘[t]he federal courts must defer to a state court’s interpretation of its own rules of
evidence and procedure.’” Shahideh v. McKee, 488 F. App’x 963, 965 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Miskel v. Karness,
397 F.3d 446, 453 (6th Cir. 2005)) (second alteration in original).
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
The state appellate court reasonably concluded that “under the facts of this case,” it could
be a “legitimate trial strategy” for counsel to “admit certain acts to lessen their significance to the
jury and to bolster [Hobbs’s] credibility so that the jury would believe his testimony,” while also
questioning the prosecution’s witnesses about their history of buying drugs and handling guns so
as to paint them with the same prejudicial brush used against Hobbs. Indeed, because credibility
was so central to Hobbs’s trial, it was not unreasonable for the state appellate court to conclude
that having Hobbs testify about his past transgressions could help the jury find him more credible
by making him appear transparent and forthcoming. Moreover, by cross-examining Gaston about
her and Mackey’s history with drugs and guns, counsel could arguably decrease the likelihood that
the jury would believe Mackey and Gaston over Hobbs merely because Hobbs had been involved
with drugs and guns, thereby leveling the credibility playing field. Finally, because both counsel
and the prosecution instructed the jury not to convict Hobbs because of his past with drugs and
guns, requesting an additional instruction was arguably unnecessary, and as the district court
acknowledged, requesting a more elaborate instruction might have only drawn more attention to
the uncharged conduct.2
2
At points, Hobbs appears to argue that counsel’s failure to request a curative instruction was an independent basis
for habeas relief, but such a free-standing ineffective assistance claim is procedurally barred because, as the district
court recognized, it was not fairly presented to the state court on direct appeal. On direct appeal Hobbs argued that
counsel had rendered ineffective assistance by failing to object to testimony about Hobbs’s prior convictions and his
history with drugs and guns, as well as by eliciting additional testimony about his past, but Hobbs mentioned counsel’s
failure to request a curative instruction in only two conclusory sentences in his brief to the state appellate court. “The
doctrine of exhaustion requires that the same claim under the same theory be presented to state courts before raising
it in a habeas petition.” Pillette v. Foltz, 824 F.2d 494, 497 (6th Cir. 1987). “If the claims presented in the federal
court were never actually presented in the state courts, but a state procedural rule now prohibits the state court from
considering them, the claims are considered exhausted, but are procedurally barred.” Martin v. Mitchell, 280 F.3d
594, 603 (6th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted). Thus, because “Ohio applies re judicata to bar the consideration of
constitutional issues that were not, but could have been, raised on direct appeal,” see id. at 604; see also State v. Cole,
443 N.E.2d 169, 171 (Ohio 1982), an independent claim for ineffective assistance predicated on counsel’s failure to
request a curative instruction is procedurally barred. We will accordingly only consider counsel’s failure to request a
curative instruction as factual support for Hobbs’s habeas claims that are properly before us.
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No. 17-4094, Hobbs v. Hooks
The state appellate court’s conclusion is supported by the facts and circumstances
evidenced in the record, and Hobbs has not cited any Supreme Court precedent establishing that
knowingly admitting certain prejudicial evidence to make a defendant appear more transparent is
contrary to Strickland and its progeny. To the extent that Hobbs relies on White v. McAninch,
235 F.3d 988 (6th Cir. 2000), to show that the state appellate court’s decision is contrary to federal
law, Hobbs’s argument is unpersuasive because habeas relief is warranted when the state court’s
decision is contrary to “clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court.”
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) (emphasis added). Moreover, because White filed his habeas petition prior
to April 24, 1996, pre-AEDPA law applied to that case. White, 235 F.3d at 995. Finally, in White,
the record clearly demonstrated that White’s counsel did not engage in any pre-trial investigation,
id. at 996, but here the state appellate court’s and district court’s conclusions that counsel adopted
his strategy after engaging in appropriate pre-trial research is reasonably supported by the record,
see infra. Thus, the state appellate court’s conclusion that Hobbs’s counsel did not render deficient
performance was neither contrary to federal law clearly established by the Supreme Court nor
based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. Accordingly, habeas relief is not warranted.
See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
Hobbs, however, asserts that counsel’s conduct was not strategy at all. According to
Hobbs, counsel’s conduct was the product of ignorance about Ohio evidence law and a failure to
perform basic legal research. Therefore, according to Hobbs, the state appellate court’s conclusion
that counsel was not constitutionally deficient is contrary to Strickland and its progeny, because
“[a]n attorney’s ignorance of a point of law that is fundamental to his case combined with his
failure to perform basic research on that point is a quintessential example of unreasonable
performance under Strickland.” Hinton v. Alabama, 571 U.S. 263, 274 (2014).
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However, the record reasonably supports the state appellate court’s conclusion that
counsel’s decisions were based on strategy, not ignorance. Whether counsel’s decisions were the
product of strategy is a question of fact for purposes of § 2254(d)(2). Carr v. Schofield, 364 F.3d
1246, 1264 (11th Cir. 2004); see also Wood v. Allen, 558 U.S. 290, 306 (2010) (Stevens, J.,
dissenting); Berryman v. Morton, 100 F.3d 1089, 1095 (3d Cir. 1996). A “federal court is to apply
a presumption of correctness to state court findings of fact for habeas corpus purposes unless clear
and convincing evidence is offered to rebut this presumption.” McAdoo v. Elo, 365 F.3d 487, 493–
94 (6th Cir. 2004). Moreover, “[t]he appeals court gives complete deference to the federal district
court’s and state court’s findings of fact supported by the evidence.” Id. at 494.
Here, unlike in the cases Hobbs cites—e.g., Washington v. Hofbauer, 228 F.3d 689, 704–
05 (6th Cir. 2000), and Hinton, 571 U.S. at 274—there is no direct evidence that counsel had a
basic misunderstanding of evidentiary principles or fundamental points of law. Instead, counsel
evidenced his familiarity with Ohio evidence law when he submitted a successful motion in limine
specifically seeking to limit testimony regarding Hobbs’s drug dealing and firearm possession.
When the prosecution elicited testimony contrary to the court’s initial ruling on the motion in
limine counsel objected, but he was overruled. Thus, counsel was at least familiar enough with
Ohio’s rules of evidence to craft and argue a successful motion in limine to limit “other acts”
evidence and to object when he believed the prosecution had exceeded the scope of the court’s
ruling on that motion. Further, counsel successfully objected to allowing the jury to take certain
evidence regarding Hobbs’s prior conviction for improper handling of a firearm into deliberations,
arguing that “[i]t was used for purposes of impeachment” and “[b]ecause it was limited in that
regard . . . it should not go back to the jury.” The state appellate court’s conclusion that counsel’s
conduct was the product of strategy is supported by counsel’s closing arguments:
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Mr. Hobbs did not seek to hide the truth. In fact, he wanted
the truth to be told during this trial. If you listen to his testimony
and you listen to Melody Gaston’s,3 they were very straightforward
with you. They didn’t try to hide anything. They didn’t try to
minimize anything. They told you like it was.
It didn’t matter whether or not the fact[s] were good; it didn’t
matter whether or not the facts were bad; it didn’t matter whether
the facts were ugly. They told you. This young man got on the stand
and said, “Yes, I sold drugs. Yes, I have convictions. Yes I
possessed of a firearm and I shouldn’t have had possession of a
firearm.” He didn’t try to hide from that. Neither did Ms. Gaston—
Ms. Abrams.
Thus, notwithstanding Hobbs’s arguments, the record reasonably supports the conclusion that
counsel’s conduct was a matter of strategy, not ignorance. Where there are two permissible views
of evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous for federal habeas
purposes. See Moore v. Mitchell, 708 F.3d 760, 786 (6th Cir. 2013) (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2);
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564, 574 (1985)).
The judgment of the district court is affirmed, and Hobbs’s petition for a writ of habeas
corpus is denied.
3
Although counsel said, “Melody Gaston’s,” context indicates that he meant “Abrams’.”
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