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[PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 22-10313
____________________
THANQUARIUS R. CALHOUN,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
WARDEN, BALDWIN STATE PRISON,
COMMISSIONER, GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF CORREC-
TIONS,
Respondents-Appellees.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Georgia
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2 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
D.C. Docket No. 3:21-cv-00019-CDL-CHW
____________________
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, ABUDU, and ED CARNES, Cir-
cuit Judges.
ED CARNES, Circuit Judge:
Thanquarius Calhoun led police officers on a reckless, high-
speed chase that resulted in a crash and the death of a passenger in
his car. Calhoun was charged with and convicted by a jury of eight
crimes arising from his flight and the crash, including felony mur-
der. After his convictions and sentence of life imprisonment were
affirmed by the Supreme Court of Georgia, Calhoun filed a federal
habeas petition. This is his appeal from the district court’s denial
of his petition. The primary issues he has raised in this appeal de-
pend on Georgia law questions that were decided against him by
the state’s highest court on direct appeal. That lets you know how
this appeal is going to come out.
I.
It all began when Calhoun, driving over 95 miles per hour
in a 70 mile-per-hour zone on an interstate highway, sped past an
officer in an unmarked car. The officer activated his car’s blue
lights and siren and gave chase. Instead of pulling over, Calhoun
accelerated. He had two other people with him in his car. One in
the front passenger seat and another in the back seat.
A number of other officers joined the chase, but Calhoun
thwarted their initial attempts to stop him. The officers tried to
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box in his car by surrounding it with theirs –– a tactic known as a
“moving roadblock” –– but that didn’t work. They also tried to
stop his car with stop sticks (a tire deflation device), but that didn’t
work either.
Calhoun raced on at speeds of more than 115 miles per hour,
weaving through traffic, turning in front of other vehicles, and us-
ing the emergency lane to pass other cars. At one point, he drove
through a Department of Transportation construction site, slow-
ing down only “a minimal amount” before resuming his breakneck
speed. At another point, he swerved out of the way of an officer
who was stopping traffic in one of the lanes. Calhoun’s last-minute
swerving forced another officer who was in the chase to plow his
car through the median to avoid running over the officer who was
stopping traffic.
The chase lasted for 21 miles, and during it Calhoun aver-
aged a speed of 90 miles per hour, which was more than 20 miles
an hour above the speed limit. His top speed of 118 miles an hour
was almost 50 miles an hour above the speed limit. Throughout
the chase Calhoun drove erratically, recklessly, and dangerously in
his efforts to escape the pursuing officers.
Having learned of the chase, Georgia State Patrol Post Com-
mander Al Whitworth and Trooper Donnie Saddler waited in their
respective patrol cars for Calhoun to get where they were located
further down the highway. Because Calhoun had thwarted every
technique used thus far in the effort to stop him, and he was speed-
ing toward a particularly busy exit, Whitworth radioed Saddler that
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4 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
“if [they] ha[d] the opportunity and there [was] a safe way, [they
would] use the PIT maneuver” to bring Calhoun’s car to a halt.
The PIT (“Precision Immobilization Technique”) 1 maneu-
ver is a technique used by law enforcement officers to stop fleeing
vehicles. To execute the PIT maneuver, an officer matches the
speed of the fleeing vehicle with his patrol car and “tap[s]” its left
or right rear bumper, causing the vehicle to spin out.
After Post Commander Whitworth and Trooper Saddler
both joined the pursuit, Saddler got his patrol car close enough to
use the PIT maneuver on Calhoun’s vehicle, which was then driv-
ing at 111 miles per hour. The PIT maneuver caused Calhoun’s
vehicle to travel off the right side of the roadway, strike a ditch, and
flip over. Calhoun and the backseat passenger survived the crash,
but front seat passenger Marion Shore was killed.
As for Calhoun’s motive in fleeing so desperately, during the
chase, counterfeit $100 bills were flying from his car and littering
parts of the roadside. See Calhoun v. State, 839 S.E.2d 612, 619 (Ga.
2020) (“[T]he counterfeit bills were relevant to explain why Cal-
houn engaged in such dangerous behavior leading up to the fatal
crash.”). Still more counterfeit bills were found “within the debris
of the wreck scene.” Not only that, but “just two weeks before this
incident, Calhoun had been involved in a different high-speed
chase,” and by the time of this trial he had been charged with
1 In the record, this is sometimes referred to as the “Precision Intervention
Technique” or the “Pursuit Intervention Technique.”
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fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer, reckless driving, and
speeding stemming from his earlier flight from officers. Id. at 618.
And his driver’s license had also been suspended. Id. at 615.
II.
For his criminal behavior during this latest flight from offic-
ers, Calhoun was charged with felony murder, homicide by vehicle
in the first degree, fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer,
reckless driving, speeding, failure to maintain his lane, driving with
a suspended license, and failure to wear a seatbelt. The felony mur-
der and the homicide by vehicle charges grew out of the death of
his passenger, Marion Shore. The felony that provided the basis
for Calhoun’s felony murder charge was the fleeing or attempting
to elude a police officer charge.
At trial both Post Commander Whitworth and Trooper Sad-
dler testified during direct examination by the prosecution about
the use of the PIT maneuver. Whitworth testified that before de-
ciding to use it, officers should consider how much traffic is on the
roadway, any pedestrian traffic on either side of the roadway, and
any obstacles on the side of the roadway such as trees or businesses.
Saddler testified that when he was trained on using the PIT
maneuver the vehicles were traveling at thirty-five miles per hour,
but there was no Georgia State Patrol guideline on the maximum
speed at which the maneuver could be performed. He also ex-
plained that when deciding to perform the PIT maneuver, officers
should consider the danger of the situation, the reason the vehicle
was fleeing, and any potential danger to the public that the
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6 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
maneuver would cause. During cross-examination, Saddler was
not questioned further about whether it is safe to perform the PIT
maneuver at high speeds or the factors an officer should consider
when deciding whether to use the maneuver in a given circum-
stance.
During his closing argument, defense counsel argued that
before Calhoun could be convicted of felony murder, “[t]he State
has to prove that whatever Mr. Calhoun did[,] it caused Marion
Shore to die.” He also argued that Trooper Saddler was the “sole
cause of Marion Shore’s death.” In its closing argument the State
argued that “[t]he ultimate issue for [the jury] to decide in this case
is did the defendant’s actions by fleeing or attempting to elude a
police officer cause the death of Marion Shore.” The State told the
jurors that they could watch the video of the chase and see that it
was foreseeable that someone could die as a result of Calhoun’s
reckless driving.
Defense counsel did not request a jury charge on proximate
cause even though Georgia’s felony murder statute and homicide
by vehicle statute each requires proof of it to impose criminal lia-
bility. See Wilson v. State, 883 S.E.2d 802, 809 (Ga. 2023); Hartzler v.
State, 774 S.E.2d 738, 742 (Ga. Ct. App. 2015). Instead of instructing
the jury on proximate cause specifically, the court instructed the
jury that “a person commits the crime of felony murder when, in
the commission of a felony, that person causes the death of another
human being.” Defense counsel did not object to that instruction.
The judge also charged the jury that “fleeing and attempting to
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 7
elude a police officer constitutes a felony” when the fleeing person
“operates his vehicle in excess of 20 miles an hour above the posted
speed limit or flees in traffic conditions which place the general
public at risk of receiving serious injury.”
The jury found Calhoun guilty on all counts and the court
sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
III.
Calhoun eventually filed a motion for a new trial contending
that he did not receive effective assistance of counsel. See Calhoun,
839 S.E.2d at 614 n.1 (recounting the appellate history and the re-
mand necessary for consideration of that motion). In his motion,
Calhoun complained that his defense counsel, Joe Louis Brown, Jr.,
failed to present a proximate/intervening cause defense to the fel-
ony murder charge and did not request a jury instruction on it. He
argued that if Brown had presented the defense that the PIT ma-
neuver was an intervening cause in Shore’s death, he would not
have been convicted of felony murder.
At the hearing on the motion for new trial, Calhoun offered
testimony from Stephen S. Rushton, a troop commander for the
Georgia State Patrol who trained Trooper Saddler on how to con-
duct the PIT maneuver in 2012. He testified that the Georgia Pub-
lic Safety Training Center conducts PIT maneuver training at 35–
45 miles per hour because it would be dangerous and ineffective to
train at higher speeds. Rushton also testified that in some circum-
stances, where the driver’s identity is known and he does not pose
a threat to public safety, the prudent course is to discontinue the
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8 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
pursuit and attempt to arrest the suspect with a warrant later. He
explained that when deciding whether to execute the PIT maneu-
ver, officers should weigh the danger of letting the fleeing vehicle
escape against the danger of executing the maneuver, and that the
risk to passengers in the fleeing vehicle should be considered in this
calculus. Trooper Saddler testified that although the maximum
speed at which he had trained to perform the PIT maneuver was
35 miles per hour, he had executed the maneuver at over 100 miles
per hour in the field prior to conducting the maneuver here.
Calhoun also presented at the hearing the testimony of Dr.
Geoffrey Alpert, a sociologist and criminology professor whom he
had retained to testify about police procedure related to the PIT
maneuver. Dr. Alpert testified that it is unsafe to perform the PIT
maneuver when a fleeing vehicle is driving over 40 miles per hour
and that most police departments limit its use to 35 miles per hour.
After considering all of the evidence, the trial court denied
Calhoun’s motion for a new trial, determining that he had failed to
establish either the deficient performance or prejudice prong of an
ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
Calhoun appealed his conviction and the denial of his mo-
tion for a new trial to the Supreme Court of Georgia. Calhoun, 839
S.E.2d at 615. The Court stated that to succeed on his ineffective
assistance of counsel claim, Calhoun had to “show that his lawyer
performed at trial in an objectively unreasonable way” and also
that the lawyer’s “deficient performance prejudiced the defense,
which requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious that
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they likely affected the outcome of the trial.” Id. (quotation marks
omitted). The Court concluded that Calhoun had not met that
dual burden. Id. at 616–19.
Calhoun argued that on the felony murder charge “trial
counsel should have focused on developing a defense establishing
that the PIT maneuver was an intervening cause of Marion Shore’s
death,” which would have ruled out the proximate cause element
of that crime. Id. at 616 (quotation marks omitted). The Supreme
Court of Georgia assumed without deciding that counsel’s perfor-
mance was deficient in that regard, but it held that the claim still
failed because Calhoun had not established he had suffered preju-
dice as a result. Id. at 616–17.
The Court explained that: “Proximate cause exists when the
accused’s act or omission played a substantial part in bringing
about or actually causing the victim’s injury or damage and the in-
jury or damage was either a direct result or a reasonably probable con-
sequence of the act or omission.” Id. at 616 (alteration omitted) (quo-
tation marks omitted). A defendant’s action sometimes is not the
“legal cause” of the injury or damage if some other act “inter-
venes.” Id. (quotation marks omitted). But if the intervening act
“could reasonably have been anticipated, apprehended, or foreseen
by the original wrong-doer, the causal connection is not broken,
and the original wrong-doer is responsible for all of the conse-
quences resulting from the intervening act.” Id. (quotation marks
omitted). In other words, proximate cause is not affected by a rea-
sonably foreseeable intervening cause.
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The Supreme Court of Georgia determined that Calhoun
did not present enough evidence — at trial and in the hearing on
the motion for a new trial combined — to establish that Trooper
Saddler’s use of the PIT maneuver was an intervening cause that
severed the causal chain linking Calhoun’s actions with Shore’s
death. See id. at 616–17. At most, the Court held, the evidence
showed that he may have been negligent in performing the PIT
maneuver, and the negligence of a third party is “generally insuffi-
cient to constitute [an] intervening cause.” Id. at 617 (citing Neal v.
State, 722 S.E.2d 765, 767–68 (Ga. 2012)).
The Court did consider Dr. Alpert’s testimony, including his
opinion that a PIT maneuver shouldn’t be used on a fleeing vehicle
going faster than 40 miles per hour. But it concluded that Cal-
houn’s evidence merely “challenged Trooper Saddler’s judgment
in deciding to perform the PIT maneuver,” which was insufficient
to show that Saddler had broken the causal chain. Id. The Court
also pointed out that Dr. Alpert was a sociologist “qualified as an
expert on police procedures,” not an expert on “actually performing
the maneuver.” Id. at 616–17 (quotation marks omitted).
The Supreme Court of Georgia determined that it was: “rea-
sonably foreseeable — and not abnormal — that Calhoun’s high-
speed antics might cause another car — whether law enforcement
or not — to strike Calhoun’s vehicle or otherwise cause Calhoun
to lose control of his vehicle, resulting in a catastrophic incident for
Calhoun, his passengers, or occupants of other vehicles.” Id. at 617.
On the core state law issue that the ineffective assistance of counsel
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claim depended on, the Supreme Court of Georgia’s decision es-
tablishes that use of the PIT maneuver in this case was not an un-
foreseen intervening cause, meaning that Calhoun proximately
caused Shore’s death. Id. Any deficient performance on behalf of
his counsel relating to proximate cause did not prejudice Calhoun.
Id.
The Court also rejected Calhoun’s argument that Brown
was ineffective for failing to request a jury instruction on proximate
or intervening cause. It held, as a matter of Georgia law, that “the
jury was adequately instructed on causation with respect to felony
murder,” and “even if the jury had been presented with Calhoun’s
additional evidence and these [proposed] jury instructions, [the
Court could not] say that a reasonable jury would have reached a
different verdict.” Id. at 617 n.3.
After losing in state court, Calhoun filed an application for a
writ of habeas corpus in federal district court under 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254, contending he received ineffective assistance of counsel at
trial. The district court denied his application and denied him a
certificate of appealability. We granted him one to determine:
Whether the Georgia Supreme Court’s rejection of
Mr. Calhoun’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim
resulted in a decision that was contrary to or involved
an unreasonable application of clearly established
Federal law, or resulted in a decision that was based
on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light
of the state court record, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
IV.
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“We review de novo a district court’s denial of habeas relief
on an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, which presents a
mixed question of law and fact.” Pye v. Warden, Ga. Diagnostic
Prison, 50 F.4th 1025, 1034 (11th Cir. 2022) (en banc). For each
claim for relief, we review “the last state-court adjudication on the
merits.” Sears v. Warden GDCP, 73 F.4th 1269, 1280 (11th Cir. 2023)
(quotation marks omitted). We presume the state court’s findings
of fact are correct, and the petitioner bears “the burden of rebutting
the presumption of correctness by clear and convincing evidence.”
28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).
When reviewing § 2254 habeas applications from state pris-
oners based on claims previously decided by a state court on the
merits, federal courts generally apply the “highly deferential stand-
ard[]” established under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA). Pye, 50 F.4th at 1034 (quotation
marks omitted). That standard “demands that state-court decisions
be given the benefit of the doubt.” Sears, 73 F.4th at 1279 (quota-
tion marks omitted).
The exception to the rule of deference is that federal courts
decide federal issues in habeas cases without deference to the state
courts’ decisions of those issues if the state court proceedings
(1) “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an un-
reasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as deter-
mined by the Supreme Court of the United States;” or (2) “resulted
in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of
the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court
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proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1)–(2). If either of those excep-
tions is met, we are to decide for ourselves if Calhoun’s ineffective
assistance of counsel claims have merit. Adkins v. Warden, Holman
CF, 710 F.3d 1241, 1249–50, 1255 (11th Cir. 2013).
Calhoun contends that the Supreme Court of Georgia’s de-
cision was contrary to or involved an unreasonable application of
the federal ineffective assistance of counsel standard because that
court misstated the standard in its analysis. He is right about that,
although it doesn’t entitle him to federal habeas relief.
V.
For reasons we will explain, we agree with Calhoun that the
Supreme Court of Georgia appears to have applied a stricter preju-
dice standard than the one mandated by the United States Supreme
Court for claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. Accordingly,
instead of applying AEDPA deference to its prejudice holding, we
must decide that issue de novo. See Adkins, 710 F.3d at 1255. But,
also for reasons we will explain, even a de novo review results in the
self-evident conclusion that the Supreme Court of Georgia’s state-
ment and application of Georgia law on intervening cause was nec-
essarily (one might say automatically) correct. Because of that state
law applicable to this case, Calhoun has not carried his burden of
persuading us there is a reasonable probability of a different result
if counsel had done as Calhoun says he should have regarding an
intervening cause defense; our confidence in the outcome of the
trial has not been undermined.
A.
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A state court determination is contrary to clearly established
law if “the court arrived at a conclusion opposite to the one reached
by the Supreme Court on a question of [federal] law.” Sears, 73
F.4th at 1279. That happened here. The correct standard for inef-
fective assistance of counsel is set out in Strickland v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668 (1984). That progenitor decision (cited in more than
219,000 decisions so far) holds that to establish ineffective assis-
tance a petitioner must show that his counsel’s performance was
outside the wide range of reasonable professional assistance and
that deficient performance prejudiced his defense. Id. at 687.
Strickland also held that proving prejudice requires showing
that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unpro-
fessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been dif-
ferent. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to under-
mine confidence in the outcome.” Id. at 694. The Court cautioned
that the reasonable probability standard was not a preponderance
or likelihood standard and, as a result, “a defendant need not show
that counsel’s deficient conduct more likely than not altered the
outcome in the case.” Id. at 693. Ineffective assistance prejudice
can exist “even if the errors of counsel cannot be shown by a pre-
ponderance of the evidence to have determined the outcome.” Id.
at 694.
That is the problem with the Supreme Court of Georgia’s
statements about the prejudice issue involving the intervening
cause question in this case. Its opinion states that: “nothing pre-
sented at [Calhoun’s] hearing on the motion for new trial would
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have established that the use of the PIT maneuver was an interven-
ing cause,” Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at 616 (emphasis added), or that “a
reasonable jury would have reached a different verdict,” id. at 617 n.3
(emphasis added), or that counsel’s errors “likely affected the outcome
of the trial,” id. at 615 (emphasis added) (quoting Jones v. State, 827
S.E.2d 879, 885 (Ga. 2019)), or “affect[ed] the outcome of Calhoun’s
trial,” id. at 617 (emphasis added). All of those formulations are
versions of the preponderance standard.
The proper prejudice standard is not preponderance. It’s not
what “would have” been established but for the error or deficiency
of counsel, or what verdict the jury “would have reached” but for
it, or whether it actually did “affect the outcome.” Instead of a
probability of a different result, there need be only a “reasonable
probability” of a different result. The difference is whether it is
more likely than not the result would have been different under
the preponderance standard compared to whether there is enough
possibility that there would have been a different result that the
reviewing court’s confidence in the outcome is undermined.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694. The correct prejudice standard puts a
lesser burden on the petitioner than the one the Supreme Court of
Georgia stated. See generally United States v. Watkins, 10 F.4th 1179,
1183–84 (11th Cir. 2021) (en banc) (explaining that the reasonable
probability standard is “a lesser showing” than a preponderance
standard).
We know that this type of error ordinarily strips a state court
decision of AEDPA deference because the Supreme Court told us
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16 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
that it would in Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 405–06 (2000).
There the Court gave an example of where a state court’s decision
would be contrary to clearly established federal law, disqualifying
it from AEDPA deference. The Court’s example was: “[i]f a state
court were to reject a prisoner’s claim of ineffective assistance of
counsel on the grounds that the prisoner had not established by a
preponderance of the evidence that the result of his criminal pro-
ceeding would have been different.” Id. That, the Court said,
would make the resulting decision “contrary to, or involve[] an un-
reasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as deter-
mined by the Supreme Court of the United States” within the
meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). See id.
A word of caution, or actually a full paragraph of it, is appro-
priate here: The Supreme Court’s decision in Williams and our de-
cision today should not be misread to mean that a state court deci-
sion isn’t entitled to AEDPA deference unless the opinion quotes
with precision, without shorthand references, and with flawless
consistency the proper federal standard of reasonable probability
of a different result. The Supreme Court has made it clear that a
perfectly articulated, non-flub, ambiguity-free discussion of the
prejudice component is not required in a state court opinion for
AEDPA deference to be due. See Holland v. Jackson, 542 U.S. 649,
654–55 (2004) (“[T]he statement [in the state court opinion] that
respondent had ‘failed to carry his burden of proving that the out-
come of the trial would probably have been different but for those
errors’ . . . is permissible shorthand when the complete Strickland
standard is elsewhere recited.”) (emphasis added); Woodford v.
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Visciotti, 537 U.S. 19, 23–24 (2002) (“The California Supreme
Court’s opinion painstakingly describes the Strickland standard. Its
occasional shorthand reference to [the reasonable probability] stand-
ard by use of the term ‘probable’ without the modifier may perhaps
be imprecise, but if so it can no more be considered a repudiation
of the standard than can this Court’s own occasional indulgence in
the same imprecision.”) (emphasis added); Early v. Packer, 537 U.S.
3, 8 (2002) (For a state court decision to be entitled to deference in
a federal habeas proceeding, it “does not require citation of our
cases –– indeed, it does not even require awareness of our cases, so
long as neither the reasoning nor the result of the state-court deci-
sion contradicts them.”); see also Hall v. Head, 310 F.3d 683, 700
(11th Cir. 2002) (“While [some of the state court’s opinion] may be
read to suggest that the state court required more certainty of a
different outcome than Strickland requires, it nevertheless appears
to us that the state court was simply using abbreviated language in
making its findings, especially since the state court opinion made abun-
dantly clear that it applied exactly the right federal law.”) (emphasis
added).
But that “close-enough” wrinkle in, or exception to, the Wil-
liams v. Taylor rule does not apply to the Supreme Court of Georgia
decision in this case. It doesn’t because the opinion that accompa-
nied the Calhoun decision repeatedly stated and used the prepon-
derance of the evidence/“would have” standard instead of the rea-
sonable probability/confidence-in-the-outcome standard that
Strickland mandates. This isn’t a case where there was only the
occasional use of shorthand references or abbreviated language for
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18 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
the correct law and where the state court opinion elsewhere made
“clear that it applied exactly the right federal law.” Hall, 310 F.3d
at 700. Nor is it a case where the state court did not expressly state
the prejudice standard it was applying. Instead, the Calhoun opin-
ion stated, several times, a prejudice standard that Strickland itself
rejected and that Williams v. Taylor gave as an example of what
would be clearly contrary to federal law.
For those reasons, we must treat the Supreme Court of
Georgia’s decision of the ineffective assistance of counsel claim as
contrary to clearly established federal law, and we must decide the
issue de novo. See Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U.S. 156, 173 (2012) (when a
state court applies the wrong standard in deciding an ineffective
assistance of counsel claim, a federal habeas court is to decide the
claim applying the correct standard); Daniel v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of
Corr., 822 F.3d 1248, 1260 (11th Cir. 2016). Deciding the federal
issue de novo does not mean that we decide de novo the state law
issues that are bound up in the federal ones. Far from it. Instead,
we still must honor any state supreme court’s holdings on state law
issues, even if they are decisive in a federal habeas or other pro-
ceeding.
B.
In conducting our de novo analysis of the federal ineffective
assistance of counsel claims, we will begin and end with the preju-
dice requirement.
It is undisputed that Calhoun led law enforcement on a long,
extremely reckless, high-speed chase that endangered the lives of a
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number of people and culminated in a crash in which one person
lost her life. See Part I, supra; see also Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at 615.
Calhoun does not dispute those material, historical facts. What he
does dispute is whether his wrongful and felonious conduct was
the proximate cause of the death, instead of the PIT maneuver that
officers used to end the chase being an intervening cause that broke
the causal chain between his wrongful conduct and the death.
While ineffective assistance of counsel is a federal constitutional
claim, the proximate cause and intervening cause issues that are at
the heart of the prejudice component of the federal constitutional
claim are not federal issues but pure issues of Georgia law. The
State of Georgia can define proximate and intervening cause any
way it wishes. And when it comes to deciding how Georgia law
defines those terms, there is one and only one court that’s supreme.
It’s not this Court. It’s not even the United States Supreme Court.
1.
In fact, the Supreme Court itself has long and consistently
held that a state supreme court is the “ultimate exposito[r] of state
law,” meaning that what it says about its own state law is without
question that state’s law. See Riley v. Kennedy, 553 U.S. 406, 425
(2008) (alteration in original) (quoting Mullaney v. Wilbur, 421 U.S.
684, 691 (1975)); Johnson v. United States, 559 U.S. 133, 138 (2010)
(“We are . . . bound by the [state] Supreme Court’s interpretation
of state law, including its determination of the elements of [the stat-
ute of conviction].”); Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 U.S. 407, 425 (“De-
finitive resolution of state-law issues is for the States’ own courts
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20 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
. . . .”), modified on denial of reh’g, 554 U.S. 945 (2008); Wisconsin v.
Mitchell, 508 U.S. 476, 483 (1993) (“There is no doubt that we are
bound by a state court’s construction of a state statute.”); see also In
re Cassell, 688 F.3d 1291, 1292 (11th Cir. 2012) (“[T]he United States
Supreme Court ‘repeatedly has held that state courts are the ulti-
mate expositors of state law.’”) (quoting Mullaney, 421 U.S. at 691).
The Supreme Court has applied the principle of state high
court supremacy over state law issues specifically to federal habeas
review of state court convictions. Bradshaw v. Richey, 546 U.S. 74,
76 (2005) (“We have repeatedly held that a state court’s interpreta-
tion of state law, including one announced on direct appeal of the
challenged conviction, binds a federal court sitting in habeas cor-
pus.”); Wainwright v. Goode, 464 U.S. 78, 84 (1983) (“[V]iews of the
state’s highest court with respect to state law are binding on the
federal courts.”); Estelle v. McGuire, 502 U.S. 62, 67–68 (1991) (“[I]t
is not the province of a federal habeas court to reexamine state-
court determinations on state-law questions.”); Mullaney, 421 U.S.
at 690–91 (rejecting an argument “that the Maine Supreme Judicial
Court’s construction of state law should not be deemed binding on
[the Supreme] Court since it marks a radical departure from prior
law, leads to internally inconsistent results, and is a transparent ef-
fort to circumvent [a Supreme Court precedent]”) (footnote omit-
ted).
We have, of course, applied that same principle in many ha-
beas decisions ourselves. Jones v. GDCP Warden, 753 F.3d 1171, 1191
(11th Cir. 2014) (“[A] state’s interpretation of its own laws or rules
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 21
provides no basis for federal habeas corpus relief . . . .”) (quotation
marks omitted); Pinkney v. Sec’y, DOC, 876 F.3d 1290, 1299 (11th
Cir. 2017) (“[S]tate law is what the state courts say it is. As the Su-
preme Court and this Court have repeatedly acknowledged, it is
not a federal court’s role to examine the propriety of a state court’s
determination of state law.”) (internal citations omitted); Green v.
Georgia, 882 F.3d 978, 988 (11th Cir. 2018) (“On habeas review, fed-
eral courts may not second guess state courts on questions of state
law. . . . Accepting the [state court’s] interpretation of Georgia law,
it was thus correct in holding that [the petitioner] did not suffer
Strickland prejudice.”); In re Dailey, 949 F.3d 553, 558 n.4 (11th Cir.
2020) (“The district court concluded that [the petitioner’s] claim
could also be read to assert that the state court committed an error
of state law when it denied the claim during state post-conviction
proceedings. It correctly held that such an argument was not cog-
nizable in federal habeas proceedings.”) (internal citations omit-
ted); cf. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala., Inc. v. Nielsen, 116 F.3d 1406,
1413 (11th Cir. 1997) (“The final arbiter of state law is the state su-
preme court, which is another way of saying that [a state’s] law is
what the [state] Supreme Court says it is.”).
Because the Supreme Court of Georgia, after reviewing all
of the evidence in Calhoun’s case, held that under Georgia law Cal-
houn proximately caused Shore’s death, see Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at
616–17, that is the final answer to that state law question. Because
it held that the PIT maneuver and the manner in which it was per-
formed in this case was not an intervening cause, that is the final
answer to that state law question. We have no authority to
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22 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
question the Supreme Court of Georgia’s determination about
what constitutes proximate cause and what constitutes intervening
cause and how the two fit together in Georgia law. See Estelle, 502
U.S. at 72 (“[O]ur habeas powers [do not] allow us to reverse [Cal-
houn’s] conviction based on a belief that the [Supreme Court of
Georgia] incorrectly interpreted” Georgia law). What the Supreme
Court of Georgia says is Georgia law is Georgia law.
Police chases are dangerous; they often involve the fleeing
vehicle and the officers in pursuit driving at dangerous speeds and
breaking traffic laws. It is foreseeable that driving a fleeing vehicle
in the perilously reckless way that Calhoun did would result in
someone’s death. It does not matter if performing the PIT maneu-
ver was the best choice the officers had for ending the dangerous
chase, or whether most officers would have performed the PIT ma-
neuver at those high speeds.
What matters is that the Supreme Court of Georgia author-
itatively decided as a matter of Georgia law that: “it was reasonably
foreseeable — and not abnormal — that Calhoun’s high-speed an-
tics might cause another car — whether law enforcement or not —
to strike Calhoun’s vehicle or otherwise cause Calhoun to lose con-
trol of his vehicle, resulting in a catastrophic incident for Calhoun,
his passengers, or occupants of other vehicles.” Calhoun, 839 S.E.
2d at 617. The Supreme Court of Georgia also decided that any
questions about the propriety or wisdom of using the PIT maneu-
ver in the circumstances were insufficient for that maneuver to
have been an intervening cause under Georgia law. Id. at 616–17.
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 23
Because it has been authoritatively and finally decided by the
Supreme Court of Georgia that Calhoun proximately caused
Shore’s death under Georgia law, and that the use of the PIT ma-
neuver was not an intervening cause of her death under Georgia
law, any asserted errors or failures of trial counsel regarding those
issues are not prejudicial: they do not undermine our confidence in
Calhoun’s conviction for felony murder. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at
694 (holding that to establish ineffective assistance prejudice a peti-
tioner “must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but
for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
would have been different,” and “[a] reasonable probability is a
probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome”).
2.
In an attempt to undermine the Supreme Court of Georgia’s
decision of the Georgia law issues of proximate cause and inter-
vening cause, Calhoun contends that in reaching its decision that
court made multiple determinations of the facts about the PIT ma-
neuver that were unreasonable within the meaning of 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d)(2). The Supreme Court of Georgia considered all of the
evidence presented both at trial and in the motion for new trial. See
Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at 616–17. Not just the facts concerning the
PIT maneuver, but also the undisputed facts about the 21-mile
chase that Calhoun led the officers on, averaging speeds of 90 miles
per hour and reaching 118 miles per hour at one point, weaving,
swerving, using the emergency lane to pass cars, and causing a
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24 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
patrol car to plow through the median to avoid running over some-
one.
Calhoun cites 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2) as authority for his ar-
gument about the facts, but neither that nor any other provision in
AEDPA supports the position that habeas relief is due. The only
purpose and effect of § 2254(d)(2) is to strip a state court’s decision
on a federal constitutional claim of the deference that it would oth-
erwise be due under the opening part of § 2254(d) and to thereby
require de novo review. See Sears, 73 F.4th at 1295 (“[B]ecause we’ve
already determined that [the state court decision] was based on an
unreasonable determination of the facts . . . . we are unconstrained
by § 2254’s deference and must undertake a de novo review of the
record.”) (quotation marks omitted); Cooper v. Sec’y Dep’t of Corr.,
646 F.3d 1328, 1353 (11th Cir. 2011) (“Thus, the state court’s deci-
sion on prejudice was ‘based on an unreasonable determination of
the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court pro-
ceeding’ and we will review [the petitioner’s] claim de novo.”) (cita-
tion omitted). We are already giving Calhoun’s ineffective assis-
tance claim de novo review because of § 2254(d)(1), see Part V.A.,
supra; § 2254(d)(2) does not affect that.
It is important to distinguish between § 2254(d) conditional
deference to a state court’s decision of a federal claim, such as inef-
fective assistance of counsel, and what might be called “uncondi-
tional deference” to a state high court’s decision of a state law issue
in a federal habeas case. We are not applying the former; we are
applying the latter. To be sure, absolute deference to holdings on
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 25
state law issues that are intertwined in a federal claim can deter-
mine the outcome of a federal habeas case. But the source of ab-
solute deference to state supreme courts on state law issues does
not come from § 2254(d) or any other AEDPA provision. It is
grounded instead in fundamental tenets of federalism and the di-
chotomy of state and federal law that shapes our federal-state sys-
tem. And it is compelled by the dozen or so decisions of the Su-
preme Court and this Court that are cited in Part V.B.1., supra.
3.
There is another problem with Calhoun’s challenge to the
Supreme Court of Georgia’s proximate cause and intervening
cause rulings. His strong focus on the wisdom, or lack of it, in the
officers’ use of the PIT maneuver in this case betrays a lack of un-
derstanding of proximate cause/intervening cause law in Georgia.
That law does not depend on whether the most immediate or spe-
cific instrumentality of death was foreseeable, but on whether it
was reasonably foreseeable that the result of the defendant’s con-
duct might be catastrophic for someone through whatever imme-
diate instrumentality produced it –– “whether law enforcement or
not.” Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at 617 (emphasis added). The focus of
foreseeability in Georgia law is macro, not micro. The Ponder and
Smith decisions show that, thereby refuting Calhoun’s position. See
Ponder v. State, 616 S.E.2d 857 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005); Smith v. State, 681
S.E.2d 161 (Ga. 2009). (And, of course, so does the decision of the
Supreme Court of Georgia in Calhoun’s own case.)
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26 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
Ponder was an appeal involving a conviction for first degree
homicide by vehicle. 616 S.E.2d at 858. Late one night while being
chased by two police vehicles with their sirens and blue lights on,
the defendant drove at speeds of 80 to 90 miles per hour with his
headlights off, running several stop signs and side-swiping two ve-
hicles along the way. Id. at 858–60. While chasing Ponder, Ser-
geant Scott drove his patrol car “into an uphill grade passing lane
of the highway as if he intended to pass Ponder,” and then made “a
sudden evasive maneuver[] to avoid a collision between his and
Ponder’s vehicle and while doing so, lost control of his vehicle and
collided with [an] oncoming” car driven by an innocent third party.
Id. at 859. Sergeant Scott was killed in the collision. See id.
As a result of Scott’s death, Ponder was charged with first
degree homicide by vehicle, see id. at 858 & n.1, which is defined to
include “caus[ing] the death of another person through” fleeing or
attempting to elude a police officer. See Ga. Code §§ 40-6-393(a),
40-6-395(a). To sustain a conviction under that statute, the State
had to prove “that the defendant’s conduct was the proximate
cause as well as the cause in fact, of the death.” Ponder, 616 S.E.2d
at 859 (quotation marks omitted). The Court of Appeals of Georgia
explained what proximate cause means:
An injury or damage is proximately caused by an act
or a failure to act whenever it appears from the evi-
dence in the case that the act or omission played a
substantial part in bringing about or actually causing
the injury or damage and that the injury or damage
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 27
was either a direct result or a reasonably probable
consequence of the act.
Id. Applying that standard, the Court upheld the conviction be-
cause “Ponder’s actions of eluding an officer at high speed in a reck-
less manner played a substantial part in bringing about Sgt. Scott’s
death and . . . the death was a reasonably probable consequence of
Ponder’s actions.” Id. at 860 (cleaned up). It reached that decision
even though Sergeant Scott had pulled into an uphill passing lane
at a high rate of speed and lost control of his car. See id. at 859. But
for that the head-on collision with an oncoming car and Scott’s
death would not have happened. Still, the Court of Appeals held
that Ponder’s high-speed flight and recklessness was the proximate
cause of Scott’s death. Id. at 860. It did not hold that Scott’s actions
were an intervening cause.
Four years after the Court of Appeals of Georgia’s Ponder de-
cision, the Supreme Court of Georgia issued its Smith decision af-
firming a conviction for first degree homicide by vehicle, specifi-
cally for causing the death of another person while fleeing or at-
tempting to elude an officer. See Smith, 681 S.E.2d at 162–63. An
escaped prisoner driving a truck was being chased by a deputy sher-
iff in a patrol car with its blue lights flashing and siren going. Id. at
162; see id. at 163 (Hunstein, C.J., dissenting). The pursuit contin-
ued for three or four miles at 75 miles per hour, which was 20 miles
an hour over the posted speed limit. See id. at 163 (Hunstein, C.J.,
dissenting). Both the fleeing prisoner and the pursuing deputy
were running a red light while speeding through an intersection.
Id. at 162.
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28 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
The prisoner managed to prevent his truck from colliding
with any of the other vehicles that were at the intersection. See id.
But the deputy was driving so close behind the fleeing truck that
he couldn’t see in time whether there were any other vehicles at
the intersection, causing his vehicle to crash into a car stopped at
the red light. Id. The woman who was waiting for the light to
change was killed. See id.
In his appeal, Smith contended that the facts did not estab-
lish the necessary proximate cause element of first degree homicide
by vehicle. Id. at 162; see also id. at 163 (Hunstein, C.J., dissenting).
Citing favorably the Court of Appeals’ Ponder decision, the Su-
preme Court of Georgia rejected that argument and held that
Smith’s reckless flight was the proximate cause of the innocent mo-
torist’s death. Id. at 162. That holding in Smith necessarily estab-
lishes as a matter of Georgia law that the actions of the pursuing
deputy in speeding toward the intersection when he couldn’t see if
there were any vehicles there, which resulted in a collision with a
car stopped at the redlight, was not an intervening cause as that
term is defined in Georgia case law. See id.
In Smith the Vehicle Pursuit Policy applicable to the deputy
provided that he could exceed the speed limit during a chase only
if he “exercises due regard for the safety of all persons,” and he
must terminate the pursuit if “the risk of continuing outweighs the
danger of permitting the suspect to escape.” Id. at 164 n.2 (Hun-
stein, C.J., dissenting). Yet, violations of those policies did not
transform the pursuing deputy’s driving into an intervening cause
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 29
that prevented defendant Smith’s driving from being a proximate
cause of the death. See id. at 162.
At oral argument, Calhoun’s counsel attempted to distin-
guish Smith from this case by contending that the crash in Smith
was an unavoidable accident while the crash caused in this case was
not an accident because the officers intentionally used the PIT ma-
neuver. But the deputy in the Smith case intentionally chose to fol-
low closely behind the fleeing truck, and because of that deliberate
choice he couldn’t see the innocent motorist’s vehicle stopped at
the redlight until it was too late. See id. Both Smith and the present
case involved actions that an officer intentionally took during a
high-speed chase that endangered lives. In both cases the officers’
actions contributed to a crash and a death. But in each case the
Supreme Court of Georgia held as a matter of state law that the
criminal recklessness of the fleeing driver, not the officer’s actions,
was the proximate cause of the death.
The Supreme Court of Georgia in this case held that “it was
reasonably foreseeable –– and not abnormal –– that Calhoun’s
high-speed antics might cause another car — whether law enforce-
ment or not –– to strike Calhoun’s vehicle or otherwise cause Cal-
houn to lose control of his vehicle, resulting in a catastrophic inci-
dent for Calhoun, his passengers, or occupants of other vehicles.”
Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at 617 (emphasis added). Just as in Smith, prox-
imate cause was established by dangerous and reckless driving in
an effort to elude law enforcement. See id.; see also Smith, 681 S.E.2d
at 162. And just as in Smith, the actions of the pursuing officer in
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30 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
this case were not an intervening cause of the death, as “interven-
ing cause” is defined in Georgia law.
Because Calhoun proximately caused his passenger Shore’s
death under Georgia law, he did not suffer prejudice due to any
alleged deficiencies or errors of his trial counsel. He has not carried
his burden of establishing a reasonable probability of a different re-
sult if his trial counsel had taken different actions regarding the
proximate cause/intervening cause issue. Our confidence in the
outcome of the trial is not undermined.
VI.
For similar reasons we reject Calhoun’s claim that his attor-
ney rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by not requesting
specific jury instructions on proximate and intervening cause. In
rejecting this claim the Supreme Court of Georgia expressly held
that the jury was adequately instructed on the applicable state law.
Calhoun, 839 S.E.2d at 617 n.3. The words of the United States Su-
preme Court in another case fit well here: “The [state] Supreme
Court expressly held that the jury instruction correctly set forth
state law, and we have repeatedly held that ‘it is not the province
of a federal habeas court to reexamine state-court determinations
on state-law questions.’” Waddington v. Sarausad, 555 U.S. 179, 192
n.5 (2009) (citation omitted) (quoting Estelle, 502 U.S. at 67–68).
Alternatively, look at it this way. The most Calhoun could
have been entitled to is instructions on what the Georgia courts
have decided is the relevant state law on a subject. The law regard-
ing proximate and intervening cause was determined in and stated
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22-10313 Opinion of the Court 31
by the Georgia Court of Appeals in Ponder and by the Supreme
Court of Georgia both in Smith and in Calhoun’s own appeal.
Given that law, and the undisputed facts of Calhoun’s highly reck-
less behavior, which endangered the lives of many people, there is
no reasonable probability of a different result had the jury been in-
structed precisely in accord with the decisions in Ponder, Smith, and
Calhoun. Our confidence in the outcome of the trial is not under-
mined by any shortcoming in the instructions.
That conclusion necessarily follows from the Supreme
Court’s instructions in Strickland that when deciding whether a pe-
titioner was prejudiced by an error of counsel: “An assessment of
the likelihood of a result more favorable to the defendant must ex-
clude the possibility of arbitrariness, whimsy, caprice, ‘nullifica-
tion,’ and the like.” 466 U.S. at 695. That’s because “[a] defendant
has no entitlement to the luck of a lawless decisionmaker.” Id.
That means “[t]he assessment of prejudice should proceed on the
assumption that the decisionmaker [would] reasonably, conscien-
tiously, and impartially apply[] the standards that govern the deci-
sion.” Id. We have no doubt about what any properly instructed
jury reasonably, conscientiously, and impartially applying the legal
standards governing proximate and intervening cause that were set
out in Ponder, Smith, and Calhoun, would have found. It would have
found that Calhoun proximately caused the death of Marion Shore,
a passenger who had the misfortune to be riding in his car when he
drove it with great recklessness and total disregard for human life,
and it would have found that no tactic of law enforcement,
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32 Opinion of the Court 22-10313
including the PIT maneuver, was an intervening cause under Geor-
gia law.
VII.
In essence, Calhoun asks us to decide that the Supreme
Court of Georgia misunderstood and misapplied Georgia law. By
definition, it did not do that. Calhoun’s claims fail and he is not
entitled to habeas relief.
AFFIRMED.