United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 00-2364
WILLIAM A. BARRESI, II
Petitioner, Appellant,
v.
MICHAEL J. MALONEY,
Respondent, Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Edward F. Harrington, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella and Lipez, Circuit Judges,
and McAuliffe,* District Judge.
Kenneth G. Littman for appellant.
Linda A Wagner, Assistant Attorney General, with whom
Thomas F. Reilly, Massachusetts Attorney General, was on brief for
the appellee.
July 23, 2002
*
Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.
McAULIFFE, District Judge. William A. Barresi, II, was
convicted in Massachusetts of raping a child under sixteen years of
age, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 265, § 22A, and committing an indecent
assault and battery on a child under fourteen years of age (the
same child), id. § 13B. The Massachusetts Appeals Court affirmed
his convictions, Commonwealth v. Barresi, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 907,
705 N.E.2d 639 (1999), and the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
("SJC") denied, without opinion, his Application for Leave to
Obtain Further Appellate Review (commonly referred to as an
"ALOFAR"). Commonwealth v. Barresi, 429 Mass. 1106, 710 N.E.2d 604
(1999). Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Barresi then petitioned the
United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts for
habeas corpus relief. The district court dismissed the petition,
holding that Barresi had not fairly presented his federal
constitutional claims to the SJC and, therefore, had not exhausted
available state court remedies. Although the issue is open to
reasonable debate, because we conclude that Barresi did adequately
present his federal claims, we reverse and remand the habeas
petition for consideration on its merits.
I.
Prior to his criminal trial, Barresi filed a motion under
the Commonwealth's Rape Shield Law, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 233, §21B,
seeking leave to introduce evidence that his alleged sexual assault
victim had tested positive for chlamydia, a sexually transmitted
disease. Based upon those positive test results, as well as his
own test results, which revealed that he had never been infected
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with any chlamydia organism, Barresi hoped to persuade the jury
that he could not have repeatedly raped the complainant and,
consequently, that her accusations against him were false.
Barresi also wanted to show that the complainant made up
the rape and assault charges to deflect her mother's scorn.
According to Barresi, when the young complainant realized her
mother was about to discover that she had been sexually active (for
perhaps as long as a year) with at least one, and possibly two or
more, teenage boys, she fabricated the charges against Barresi to
create a plausible diversionary explanation for her sexually
transmitted disease. To support that theory of defense, Barresi
sought to introduce evidence that the complainant reported the
alleged sexual assaults to the police after she had had an argument
with her mother, and then ran off to meet with one of the boys with
whom she allegedly had an ongoing sexual relationship. Barresi
implicitly suggested that at that meeting the two concocted the
false rape charges against him, after which the complainant was
taken to the police station where she reported the fabricated story
to law enforcement officers.
A pretrial hearing was held on Barresi's motion for leave
to introduce evidence related to the complainant's sexual history.
At that hearing, Barresi presented a physician he intended to call
as a medical expert at trial. Although the doctor was able to give
a general explanation of chlamydia and its mode of transmission, he
conceded that he had never actually treated patients with the
disease, and that his understanding of it was based largely upon
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information he had gleaned from medical text books. In ruling that
Barresi could not introduce the medical expert's testimony at
trial, the presiding judge concluded that the doctor lacked
sufficient knowledge to give an expert opinion about the incubation
period of chlamydia, or the likelihood that a person who had
intercourse with an infected partner might contract the disease.
The trial judge also concluded that the Massachusetts Rape Shield
Law precluded introduction of evidence concerning the complainant's
prior sexual conduct with the teenage boy(s), notwithstanding
Barresi's asserted intent to introduce that evidence solely to
impeach her testimony, and not merely to establish that she was
sexually promiscuous. Finally, the trial judge precluded Barresi
from introducing testimony from two boys concerning a false
accusation of rape the complainant had allegedly leveled against
one of them.
Following a three day trial, the jury convicted Barresi
on both counts. His appeal to the Massachusetts Appeals Court
unambiguously asserted, among other things, that the trial court's
refusal to allow him to introduce evidence of the complainant's
prior sexual relationship with the teenage boy(s), as well as its
refusal to allow testimony from his medical expert, violated his
right to confront adverse witnesses, as guaranteed by the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. While it
did not directly address Barresi's federal constitutional claims,
the Commonwealth's intermediate appellate court ruled that the
trial judge neither abused his discretion nor committed an error of
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law in excluding the challenged evidence. Barresi, 705 N.E.2d at
641. Accordingly, Barresi's convictions were affirmed.
Barresi filed a timely ALOFAR with the SJC, the essential
thrust of which was that the trial court erred in its
interpretation and application of the Massachusetts Rape Shield
Law. Barresi did, however, at least allude to the federal
constitutional issues he had pressed more forcefully before the
intermediate appellate court. The SJC denied Barresi's ALOFAR
without opinion.
Barresi then filed a petition for federal habeas corpus
relief, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, reiterating his claims that
the trial court's evidentiary rulings violated his rights under the
Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Commonwealth moved to dismiss
the petition, arguing that with regard to his federal
constitutional claims, Barresi had failed to exhaust the remedies
available to him in state court. The district court agreed,
holding that because Barresi's ALOFAR did not fairly present his
constitutional claims to the SJC, those claims were not exhausted.
Therefore, Barresi's habeas petition was dismissed. We
subsequently granted Barresi's application for a certificate of
appealability, see generally Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U.S. 473
(2000), and this appeal followed.
II.
The merits of Barresi's habeas petition are not at issue,
so we make no comment in that regard. The sole question presented
here is a procedural one: whether the federal constitutional claims
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Barresi advances in his habeas petition were fairly and
recognizably presented in his appeal to the SJC. That is, we must
decide whether Barresi exhausted available state remedies as to
those issues. Our review is de novo. See Adelson v. DiPaola, 131
F.3d 259, 262 (1st Cir. 1997).
Barring certain exceptional circumstances not present
here, a habeas petitioner in state custody may not advance his or
her constitutional claims in a federal forum unless and until the
substance of those claims has been fairly presented to the state's
highest court. This exhaustion requirement, codified at 28 U.S.C.
§§ 2254(b) and (c), embodies principles of federal-state comity and
is designed to provide state courts with an initial "opportunity to
pass upon and correct alleged violations of [their] prisoners'
federal rights." Picard v. Connor, 404 U.S. 270, 275 (1971)
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The petitioner
bears the heavy burden of demonstrating satisfaction of the
exhaustion requirement. See Adelson, 131 F.3d at 262; Nadworny v.
Fair, 872 F.2d 1093, 1098 (1st Cir. 1989). To carry that burden,
the petitioner must show that "he tendered his federal claim [to
the state's highest court] in such a way as to make it probable
that a reasonable jurist would have been alerted to the existence
of the federal question." Casella v. Clemons, 207 F.3d 18, 20 (1st
Cir. 2000) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
The Supreme Court has made it clear that a federal claim
is not exhausted merely because the facts that underlie it have
been previously placed before the state's highest court. See
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Picard, 404 U.S. at 277. Importantly, however, a petitioner need
not express his federal claims in precisely the same terms in both
the state and federal courts. See, e.g., id. at 277-78 (holding
that the claims advanced by a habeas petitioner before the state's
highest court must be the "substantial equivalent" of those raised
in his or her federal habeas petition).
We have noted that there are myriad ways in which a
petitioner might satisfy his or her obligation to fairly present a
federal constitutional issue to a state's highest court. They
include:
(1) citing a specific provision of the
Constitution; (2) presenting the substance of
a federal constitutional claim in such manner
that it likely alerted the state court to the
claim's federal nature; (3) reliance on
federal constitutional precedents; and (4)
claiming a particular right specifically
guaranteed by the Constitution.
Gagne v. Fair, 835 F.2d 6, 7 (1st Cir. 1987) (citations omitted).
But the list developed in Gagne is merely illustrative; it does not
purport to be exhaustive. So, for example, in Nadworny, we
recognized that there "is yet another species of exhaustion which
merits attention. An individual's claim, arising under and
asserted in terms of state law, may, as a practical matter, be
indistinguishable from one arising under federal law." 872 F.2d at
1099.
It necessarily follows that each case in which a
petitioner is alleged to have inadequately presented his or her
federal constitutional claims to the state's highest court is both
sui generis and fact-driven, turning on its own unique
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circumstances. See, e.g., Adelson, 131 F.3d at 262 (observing that
"our de novo appellate review of a district court's dismissal of a
habeas petition for want of exhaustion is necessarily case-
specific"). In determining whether a petitioner presented his or
her federal claims to the state's highest court "face-up and
squarely," Martens v. Shannon, 836 F.2d 715, 717 (1st Cir. 1988),
we consider issues of probability - whether it is more likely than
not that a reasonable jurist would recognize the constitutional
dimensions of the petitioner's claims, given the manner in which
those claims were presented. See Nadworny, 872 F.2d at 1101.
To resolve the question before us, then, we must direct
our attention primarily to Barresi's ALOFAR. See Adelson 131 F.3d
at 263 ("[T]he decisive pleading [under Massachusetts practice] is
the application for further appellate review, and we must determine
whether the petitioner fairly presented the federal claim to the
SJC within 'the four corners' of that application.") (quoting Mele
v. Fitchburg Dist. Court, 850 F.2d 817, 823 (1st Cir. 1988)).
Nevertheless, while our inquiry must focus on the "four corners" of
the ALOFAR, we have never held that appellate review is confined to
an examination of that pleading in isolation. Rather, we have
acknowledged that, under certain circumstances, the pleadings and
filings submitted by a habeas petitioner to lower state courts
(e.g., a motion for new trial or a brief submitted to an
intermediate appellate court) provide "a backdrop against which his
later filings [must] be viewed." Scarpa v. DuBois, 38 F.3d 1, 7
(1st Cir. 1994). In fact, in Scarpa, we explicitly rejected the
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proposition that prior circuit precedent restricts the exhaustion
inquiry exclusively to an examination of the petitioner's ALOFAR.
Id. at 8 n.3.1
III.
Turning to the facts of this case, we are persuaded that,
while petitioner certainly could have raised his federal
constitutional issues in a more plain and direct manner, his
ALOFAR, particularly when read against the "backdrop" of his
earlier filings in the intermediate appellate court, was minimally
sufficient to apprise the SJC of the continuing federal
constitutional dimension of his appeal.
1
At first glance, it might appear that Mele and Scarpa are
at odds. In Mele, for example, we observed that, "[u]nder the
SJC's practice as we understand it, the court receives the papers
and briefs from the lower court only if - and after - it grants an
ALOFAR." 850 F.2d at 822. That observation led us to conclude
that, at least when the SJC denies an ALOFAR, federal exhaustion
review should be limited to the "four corners" of that pleading.
Id. at 823. More recently, however, we determined that,
notwithstanding the fact that the SJC denied a petitioner's ALOFAR,
the federal exhaustion inquiry must not be limited exclusively to
an examination of the petitioner's ALOFAR. Scarpa, 38 F.3d at 7.
Despite the apparent conflict, Mele and Scarpa are not
inconsistent. In cases like Mele, where it is clear that a
petitioner has, on appeal to the SJC, abandoned federal
constitutional claims advanced before the lower courts, it is
entirely appropriate to limit the exhaustion inquiry to the "four
corners" of the ALOFAR. If, however, it cannot be said that the
petitioner abandoned his or her federal claims on appeal to the
SJC, federal exhaustion review includes consideration of the
petitioner's lower court filings as a "backdrop" to his or her
ALOFAR. Compare Mele, 850 F.2d at 822 (concluding that because the
petitioner's ALOFAR did not even mention federal constitutional
issues, the "SJC cannot be presumed to have a duty to look for a
needle in a paper haystack - let alone a haystack located in
someone else's barn"), with Scarpa, 38 F.3d at 7 n.3 (rejecting the
State's "crabbed reading" of Mele and its assertion that the
court's review must necessarily be limited to the "four corners" of
the ALOFAR, since the record revealed that the petitioner had
"consistently asserted" his federal constitutional claims).
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We begin with Barresi's intermediate appellate brief. In
that pleading, Barresi unmistakably argued that the trial court's
evidentiary rulings deprived him of rights guaranteed by the Sixth
and Fourteenth Amendments. For example, Barresi asserted that "[a]
criminal defendant possesses a constitutional right under the Sixth
and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution as well
as under Article 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights to
'confront' adverse witnesses, even where it reveals confidential or
privileged information." In support of that proposition, Barresi
cited both federal and state precedent. Later in that same brief,
he asserted that the trial court's rulings "undermined [his] due
process guarantees and destroyed [his] right to present a
meaningful defense to these charges. Such a denial of the right of
'confrontation' as guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments and Article 12 of the Massachusetts Declaration of
Rights had a significant impact on the outcome of the trial and
constitutes reversible error." Given those direct invocations of
rights protected by the federal Constitution, Barresi's case
presents a situation not unlike the one we confronted in Scarpa,
where we observed that "by identifying the Sixth Amendment in his
motion for a new trial, petitioner cites a specific provision of
the Constitution, and, at the same time, provided a backdrop
against which his later filings had to be viewed." 38 F.3d at 7
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
Unlike his intermediate appellate brief, however,
Barresi's ALOFAR is far less direct in describing his federal
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claims. Facially, it seems primarily devoted to his claim that the
trial court misconstrued and misapplied the Massachusetts Rape
Shield Law. Consequently, much of that pleading is dedicated to
discussing principles of statutory construction under applicable
state law. Nevertheless, the ALOFAR also discloses that Barresi
continued to seek vindication of rights protected by the United
States Constitution. Barresi alleged, for example, that the trial
court's refusal to allow him to introduce expert medical testimony
deprived him of "an opportunity to present an effective challenge
to the complainant's credibility." He also asserted that the trial
court's rulings amounted to "an impermissible infringement on [his]
right to cross-examine [the complainant]," and, as a consequence,
he claimed that his "due process guarantees [were] undermined" by
the disputed trial court rulings.
To support his ALOFAR arguments, Barresi provided
citations to state judicial opinions in which the SJC directly
addressed the same federal constitutional rights he was invoking.
For example, to support his assertion that the trial court's
repeated denial of his requests to inquire into the complainant's
recent sexual conduct with one of her contemporaries amounted to an
"impermissible infringement of the right to cross-examine her,"
Barresi relied upon Commonwealth v. Elliot, 393 Mass. 824, 473
N.E.2d 1121 (1985). In Elliot, the SJC addressed the federal
constitutional issues implicated when a criminal defendant is
precluded from introducing evidence aimed at impeaching or
otherwise cross-examining a victim of sexual assault:
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We are aware of the ordeal rape complainants
must undergo in assisting the prosecution of
their attackers. The Legislature has shown
sensitivity to a complainant's plight. G.L.
c. 233, § 21B. At the same time we cannot
lose sight of the defendant's right,
guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution
and by art. 12 of the Commonwealth's
Declaration of Rights, to confront adverse
witnesses "by means of cross-examination
directed toward revealing possible biases,
prejudices, or ulterior motives of the witness
as they may relate directly to issues or
personalities in the case at hand."
473 N.E.2d at 1123-24 (quoting Davis v. Alaska, 415 U.S. 308, 316
(1974)). Barresi's ALOFAR also relied upon Commonwealth v.
Stockhammer, 409 Mass. 867, 570 N.E.2d 992 (1991), to support his
claim that the trial court's application of the Massachusetts Rape
Shield Law deprived him of federally protected due process rights.
Stockhammer, in turn, relied upon Elliot in pointing out that "rape
convictions have been reversed on a number of occasions because of
rulings by trial judges prejudicially infringing on the right to
cross-examine the complainant." 570 N.E. 2d at 998.
Without question, it would be better, and far less risky,
for habeas petitioners to highlight the federal nature of claims
presented to a state's highest court by plainly describing them in
federal terms and by citing federal precedent. Nevertheless, there
are circumstances under which a habeas petitioner, like Barresi,
may still fairly present a federal constitutional claim,
notwithstanding his or her exclusive reliance upon state court
precedent:
It is true, of course, that deployment of
federal authority sometimes is not a
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prerequisite to adequate presentation of a
federal claim to the state courts.
Nevertheless, such occasions will be few and
far between, and they invariably will involve
some suitable surrogate for explicit reference
to federal authorities, say, an emphasis on
federal due process rights in the petitioner's
cited state cases or an analysis of state law
that adopts or parallels federal
constitutional analysis.
Adelson, 131 F.3d at 263 (citations omitted); see also Scarpa, 38
F.3d at 8 ("Although [citation to federal authorities] is strongly
recommended if only to avoid controversies of this nature, we have
specifically declined to adopt a bright-line rule. The guidelines
we have promulgated in respect to exhaustion are intended to be
instructive, rather than to comprise the sole corridors through
which the actual embodiment of fair presentation may pass.")
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted); Nadworny, 872
F.2d at 1099 ("[A] wooden rule which unfailingly denies exhaustion
if no federal cases were cited stateside seems to us too
restrictive.").
Although Barresi's ALOFAR relies almost entirely upon
state precedent to support his federal constitutional claims, the
decisions he cites do directly address the federal constitutional
issues central to his effort to obtain a new trial. And, those
decisions recognize and discuss the federal constitutional issues
plainly implicated when a state's rape shield law arguably
conflicts with a criminal defendant's constitutionally protected
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right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses — the very
point Barresi has argued all along.1
In summary, then, several factors, considered in light of
the entire record, persuade us that Barresi met, albeit minimally,
the exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2254. First, his ALOFAR
alleges that the trial court's adverse evidentiary rulings deprived
him of the right to present an effective challenge to the
complainant's credibility and infringed his right to cross-examine
her. When a state rape shield statute operates to "prevent a
criminal defendant from presenting relevant evidence" and
diminishes his or her "ability to confront adverse witnesses and
present a defense," the statute "unquestionably implicates the
Sixth Amendment." Michigan v. Lucas, 500 U.S. 145, 149 (1991).
Second, the ALOFAR specifically asserts that, as a consequence of
the challenged trial court rulings, Barresi's right to due process
1
That a criminal defendant has a constitutionally
protected right to cross-examine adverse witnesses is well
established and widely recognized. In Pointer v. Texas, 380 U.S.
400 (1965), for example, the Supreme Court observed:
There are few subjects, perhaps, upon which
this Court and other courts have been more
nearly unanimous than in their expressions of
belief that the right of confrontation and
cross-examination is an essential and
fundamental requirement for the kind of fair
trial which is this country's constitutional
goal. Indeed, we have expressly declared that
to deprive an accused of the right to cross-
examine the witnesses against him is a denial
of the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of due
process of law.
Id. at 405. More recently, in Davis v. Alaska, 415 U.S. at 320,
the Court called the ability to effectively cross-examine adverse
witnesses in a criminal case a "vital constitutional right."
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was infringed. Third, Barresi's ALOFAR invokes state decisional
authority that specifically addresses the federal constitutional
character of issues he sought to litigate. Finally, the ALOFAR's
"backdrop" -- Barresi's intermediate appellate brief -- plainly and
unequivocally raised the same federal constitutional issues
presented in the ALOFAR, and relied upon citations to appropriate
federal authority.
So, notwithstanding the lack of citation to any federal
authority in the ALOFAR itself, when viewed against the "backdrop"
of Barresi's lower court pleadings, the ALOFAR was minimally
sufficient to alert a reasonable jurist to the fact that Barresi
was seeking review of alleged trial court errors that had a decided
federal constitutional dimension. And, unlike the petitioner in
Mele, nothing in the record suggests that Barresi abandoned the
federal constitutional claims he advanced before the intermediate
appellate court. That conclusion is compelled by Barresi's
references in the ALOFAR to his "due process guarantees," his right
to "present an effective challenge to the complainant's
credibility," the trial court's alleged "impermissible infringement
on [his] right to cross-examine her," as well as his reliance on
state court precedent that unambiguously considered and addressed
the federal constitutional dimension of those issues.
Consequently, while it is rare that a petitioner will be found to
have successfully presented a federal constitutional claim to a
state's highest court without referring to federal precedent, see
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Adelson, 131 F.3d at 263, in our judgment, this case manages to
fall across the line separating exhausted from unexhausted claims.
IV.
As noted earlier, resolving cases like this requires an
individualized, case-specific, factual inquiry. Whether a
petitioner's enigmatic state pleadings were sufficient, alone or in
combination, to apprise a reasonable jurist of the federal
constitutional dimensions of his or her claims will often prove
difficult to determine. Reasonable minds can, of course, fairly
debate the ultimate resolution of such fact-specific issues.
Nevertheless, rather than impose "bright line" rules likely to
prove overly restrictive, we think it appropriate to continue to
focus primarily on the claims actually presented in the pleadings
filed in the state's highest court -- the ALOFAR in the
Commonwealth -- but also to consider the "backdrop," comprised of
earlier filed pleadings. Here, although Barresi's ALOFAR is hardly
a model worthy of emulation, it was, in our judgment, minimally
sufficient to apprise a reasonable jurist that Barresi was seeking
to vindicate federally protected constitutional rights of
confrontation and cross-examination.
The district court's order dismissing Barresi's habeas
corpus petition for want of exhaustion is vacated and the petition
reinstated. The matter is remanded to the district court for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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