Crespin v. State of New Mexico , 144 F.3d 641 ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                       F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    PUBLISH
    MAY 7 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    FELIX CRESPIN,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO; ELOY                           No. 97-2046
    MONDRAGON, Secretary of
    Corrections for the State of New
    Mexico; and ATTORNEY GENERAL
    OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Mexico
    (D.C. No. CIV-94-367-LH)
    Judith A. Rosenstein, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Albuquerque, NM, for
    the Plaintiff - Appellant.
    Joel K. Jacobsen, Assistant Attorney General (Tom Udall, New Mexico Attorney
    General, with him on the brief), Santa Fe, NM, for Defendants - Appellees.
    Before TACHA, HENRY and LUCERO, Circuit Judges.
    LUCERO, Circuit Judge.
    This case requires us to revisit the appropriate standard to be applied under
    the federal Confrontation Clause when determining the admissibility of a non-
    testifying accomplice’s confession. We conclude that an incorrect standard was
    applied.
    Felix Crespin is a prisoner in New Mexico state custody, convicted of
    armed robbery and related charges. He seeks habeas relief, contending that the
    admission at trial of the custodial confession of a non-testifying co-defendant
    violated his rights under the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment. The
    United States district court dismissed with prejudice Crespin’s petition for a writ
    of habeas corpus pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    . We agree with petitioner that
    admission of the confession amounted to constitutional error. Applying harmless
    error review, we deny habeas relief.
    I
    On June 5, 1990, Crespin and co-defendants Rebecca Miles and Albert
    Fuentes were charged with armed robbery, conspiracy to commit armed robbery,
    aggravated battery, and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery in connection
    with a hold-up and stabbing at an Allsup’s convenience store in Albuquerque,
    New Mexico in the early morning hours of May 22, 1990. Crespin and Miles
    were also charged with evading an officer and Miles with tampering with
    evidence. Miles and Fuentes pled no contest to reduced charges. Miles was
    -2-
    sentenced to nine years in prison, six of which were suspended, and Fuentes to
    eighteen months, three of which were suspended.
    At Crespin’s trial, the prosecution called Miles to testify. Miles, who was
    represented by an attorney, declined to answer any questions about the robbery.
    Although the trial court ordered her to respond, and she was advised that she had
    no Fifth Amendment privileges as a result of her plea, she steadfastly refused to
    testify. The trial court held her in summary contempt.
    The government then moved to admit into evidence Miles’s out-of-court
    statement to the police. Asserting that Miles was an unavailable witness, the
    government contended that the statement, in which she confessed to the crime,
    qualified as a hearsay exception under New Mexico Rule of Evidence 11-804(B).
    The trial court granted the request, concluding that the statement contained
    sufficient indicia of reliability to satisfy Confrontation Clause concerns under
    both the New Mexico and United States Constitutions.
    Police Officer Jeff House, who took Miles’s confession the morning of May
    25, 1990, was subsequently called to the stand. House testified that Miles offered
    the statement “openly and willingly,” and no threats or promises were made in
    exchange. He then read an edited version of Miles’s statement, in which she
    recounts that at about 1:30 a.m. on Tuesday, May 22, 1990, while she was buying
    a quart of whiskey, some friends of hers were approached by two men in a car.
    -3-
    As Miles approached the car, she saw “‘a big old knife sticking out of both of
    their waists of their pants.’” Trial Tr. Vol. II at 155. After her friends left, the
    two men, whom Miles did not know, offered her a ride, and Miles, who was
    “‘already buzzing by then,’” got into their car. 
    Id.
     Her statement continues:
    “They drove around and wouldn’t let me out. One of them
    said, ‘I need some money.’ And I didn’t have any money to
    give them because I had just bought that booze.
    “I started drinking some more of the Jack Daniels because I was
    scared. They were acting all freakie . . . .
    “[W]e went into the Allsup’s. They told me to run in. He told
    me to run in and do it. I told him I didn’t want to do it, that I
    was scared. I had never done that before and I was all drunk
    already.
    “They put the knife in my hand by the door of the Allsup’s.
    And I guess that’s where I approached the clerk guy in the
    store. I don’t remember stabbing him, but I remember seeing a
    lot of blood and . . . the other [guy] standing next to me telling
    me [to] open the cash register. He had a knife too.
    “I remember grabbing some ones from the cash register and
    slipping over a bunch of cigarettes and I guess his blood, too.
    We were running to the car. The other guy pushed me in the
    middle and took the knife from me. . . .
    “I was all scared and I didn’t know what to do. We took off
    quick and went around the corner.”
    
    Id. at 155-56
    .
    According to Miles’s statement, as the three were fleeing in the car she
    spotted a police officer and tried futilely to get the others to stop. Eventually, she
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    kicked the driver and forced the car to stop. She was then grabbed by the male
    passenger who told her to run. Miles continues: “‘I didn’t to run [sic] because I
    was scared. I ran and crawled under a trailer . . . . I left the money there because
    I didn’t want it. Then I climbed over a fence and that’s when the police came up
    and arrested me.’” 
    Id. at 157
    .
    After Miles made her statement, Officer House asked her a number of
    questions. He read this question-and-answer exchange to the jury as well. In
    response to House’s questions, Miles indicated that robbing the store was her
    accomplices’ idea:
    “QUESTION:          Before you got to the Allsup’s, did they
    discuss or tell you how they wanted you to
    do this robbery?
    “ANSWER:            They just said to run in and do it and that
    they would be behind me. And I said,
    ‘Okay, but just don’t get me in trouble.’ I
    knew I was doing something wrong.
    “QUESTION:          Do you remember which one of the male
    subjects gave you the knife before you
    entered the Allsup’s?
    “ANSWER:            The one with the tattoos, the one in the
    passenger side.
    “QUESTION:          Did the passenger go into the
    Allsup’s with you?
    “ANSWER:            Yes.”
    -5-
    
    Id. at 159-60
    . Miles could remember few details about either the stabbing or the
    robbery:
    “QUESTION:         Do you remember stabbing the clerk at the
    Allsup’s?
    “ANSWER:           If I did, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to do that.
    I don’t remember anything about that.
    “QUESTION:         Do you remember saying anything to
    the clerk?
    “ANSWER:           No, I don’t.
    “QUESTION:         Did the other subject who went into the
    Allsup’s with you, the passenger with the
    tattoos, stab the clerk at any time?
    “ANSWER:           I don’t know.
    “QUESTION:         Do you remember if the subject who went
    into the Allsup’s with you said anything to
    the clerk?
    “ANSWER:           Yes. He was telling the clerk to open
    the cash register.”
    
    Id. at 160-61
    . Miles also suggested that she was intimidated because the two men
    had weapons:
    “QUESTION:         In your opening statement you stated the
    two male subjects showed you their knives.
    Did you ever use these knives to -- did they
    ever use these [knives] to threaten you or
    force you to do anything you didn’t want to
    do?
    -6-
    “ANSWER:             I thought that they were going to use the
    knives against me if I didn’t do what they
    wanted me to do. I was scared. But they
    never actually threatened me with the
    knives.
    “QUESTION:           Is there anything else you would like to add
    to your statement?
    “ANSWER:             I’m sorry to the clerk. And I’ll do anything
    to help pay him back. I never did this
    before. I didn’t mean to hurt him. I was
    drunk to the point where I didn’t know what
    I was doing. And it will never happen
    again, I promise you that.”
    
    Id. at 165
    . Miles stated that since the arrest she had seen the two men only in
    court. House then read a concluding clause, signed by Rebecca Miles, which
    attested to the statement’s voluntariness and accuracy.
    The only eyewitness to the robbery was store manager Dale Autry, the
    stabbing victim. Autry testified that two individuals, a male and a female, entered
    the store around 2:30 a.m. According to Autry, the woman asked him “[w]here is
    the money?,” 
    id. at 35
    , and, as he went to open the cash register, she stabbed him.
    During this time, “[t]he male was sitting there telling the girl to, ‘Hurry up so we
    can get out of the store.’” 
    Id. at 41
    . Autry also testified,
    A.     . . . I told the male to tell her to back off because I
    wouldn’t open [the register] with her stabbing on
    the register.
    Q.     Okay. And what did he say?
    -7-
    A.    He told her to back off, “He’ll give you the
    money,” and stuff.
    Q.    Okay. And did she back off?
    A.    Yes.
    
    Id. at 43
    . The clerk testified that both individuals exited the store together. On
    cross-examination, he agreed that the male did not have a knife and did not
    participate in the stabbing. He also testified that only the woman demanded and
    took money.
    In court Autry readily identified Crespin as the male in the store. He
    admitted on cross-examination, however, that he had been unable to identify
    Crespin from a photo array three days after the crime, though he had picked out a
    photo of Miles as the female robber. Autry also admitted that, in response to a
    question from the police soon after the crime, he had stated that the male
    perpetrator did not have tattoos on his arms. It is undisputed that both Crespin
    and Fuentes have tattoos on their arms.
    Crespin was arrested a short time after the crime, several blocks from the
    crime scene. The arresting officer, as well as other officers who participated in
    the arrest and booking, testified that there appeared to be blood on his shirt, jeans
    and arms. The clothing, with what appeared to be dried blood, was admitted into
    evidence, as were photos taken at the time of arrest of Crespin’s hand and arms,
    which also appeared to have blood on them.
    -8-
    The jury was instructed that the defendant could be found guilty of the
    crimes charged either as a principal or as an accomplice. The accomplice
    instruction states:
    The defendant may be found guilty of a crime even though he
    himself did not do the acts constituting the crime, if the state
    proves to your satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt that:
    1.    The defendant intended that the crime be committed;
    2.    The crime was committed;
    3.    The defendant helped, encouraged or
    caused the crime to be committed.
    R. Proper at 203. 1 After deliberating for about eight hours, the jury convicted
    Crespin on all counts. 2 Crespin was qualified as a second habitual offender and
    sentenced to 30 years in prison.
    II
    A
    The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment, made applicable to the
    states through the Fourteenth Amendment, see Pointer v. Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    ,
    1
    Prior to submitting the case to the jury, the court granted defendant a
    directed verdict dismissing the charge of evading a police officer for lack of evidence.
    2
    On December 18, 1990, defendant moved for a retrial based on an alleged
    letter by Miles to Crespin asserting that Crespin had not been with her on the night of the
    robbery. At a hearing on this new evidence, Miles again refused to testify, invoking her
    Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Lacking proper authentication, the
    new evidence was not admitted for its truth, and the motion for a new trial was denied.
    -9-
    403 (1965), provides that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy
    the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const.
    amend. VI. This provision “reflects a preference for face-to-face confrontation at
    trial, and . . . ‘a primary interest secured by [the Sixth Amendment] is the right of
    cross-examination.’” Ohio v. Roberts, 
    448 U.S. 56
    , 63 (1980) (quoting Douglas
    v. Alabama, 
    380 U.S. 415
    , 418 (1965)). Accordingly, “the prosecution must
    either produce, or demonstrate the unavailability of, the declarant whose
    statement it wishes to use against the defendant.” Roberts, 
    448 U.S. at 65
    . The
    statement must also demonstrate sufficient “indicia of reliability” to justify
    admission. 
    Id. at 65-66
    . Crespin does not dispute the declarant’s unavailability;
    rather, he challenges the statement’s reliability.
    Confessions of accomplices or co-defendants are “presumptively unreliable
    as to the passages detailing the defendant’s conduct or culpability because those
    passages may well be the product of the codefendant’s desire to shift or spread
    blame, curry favor, avenge himself, or divert attention to another.” Lee v.
    Illinois, 
    476 U.S. 530
    , 545 (1986); see also New Mexico v. Earnest, 
    477 U.S. 648
    ,
    649 (1986) (Rehnquist, J., concurring) (noting state must overcome a “weighty
    presumption of unreliability” to sustain admission of statement). In order to rebut
    this presumption of unreliability and inadmissibility, New Mexico must
    demonstrate both that the statement contains “‘particularized guarantees of
    - 10 -
    trustworthiness’ . . . drawn from the totality of circumstances that surround the
    making of the statement and that render the declarant particularly worthy of
    belief,” and that the statement is “so trustworthy that adversarial testing would
    add little to its reliability.” Idaho v. Wright, 
    497 U.S. 805
    , 820-21 (1990).
    “[H]earsay evidence used to convict a defendant must possess indicia of
    reliability by virtue of [its] inherent trustworthiness, not by reference to other
    evidence at trial.” 
    Id. at 822
    . Custodial confessions “have traditionally been
    viewed with special suspicion.” Earnest v. Dorsey, 
    87 F.3d 1123
    , 1131 (10th
    Cir.), cert. denied, 
    117 S. Ct. 527
     (1996).
    On direct appeal, the New Mexico Court of Appeals upheld Crespin’s
    conviction, agreeing with the trial court that Miles’s statement contained
    sufficient indicia of reliability to rebut Crespin’s constitutional claims. State v.
    Crespin, No. 13,029, slip op. at 2-6 (N.M. Ct. App. Apr. 27, 1992), cert. denied,
    
    113 N.M. 702
     (1992). On habeas review, the federal district court dismissed
    Crespin’s petition. Crespin v. New Mexico, Civ. No. 94-0367 (D.N.M. Jan. 6,
    1997). In evaluating the reliability of the hearsay statements, we presume the
    factual findings of the New Mexico state court and the federal district court are
    correct unless clearly erroneous, see Brewer v. Reynolds, 
    51 F.3d 1519
    , 1522
    (10th Cir. 1995); the overall determination of reliability is a mixed question of
    - 11 -
    law and fact reviewed de novo. See Earnest, 
    87 F.3d at 1131
    ; Myatt v. Hannigan,
    
    910 F.2d 680
    , 685 (10th Cir. 1990).
    Relying on New Mexico state law’s four-factor inquiry, the New Mexico
    Court of Appeals concluded that Miles’s statement was reliable:
    The state can rebut the presumption that Miles’ statement was
    unreliable by showing: (1) Miles was not offered leniency in
    exchange for her statement; (2) the statement was against Miles’
    penal interest; (3) Miles did not attempt to shift blame from herself
    to defendant; and (4) independent evidence was presented at trial
    which substantially corroborated Miles’ statement.
    Crespin, No. 13,029, slip op. at 3 (citing State v. Earnest, 
    744 P.2d 539
     (N.M.
    1987) and State v. Gallegos, 
    781 P.2d 783
     (N.M. Ct. App. 1989)). 3
    In support of its first conclusion, the state court found that Miles was not
    offered leniency in exchange for her statement. Appellant presented no evidence
    contradicting Officer House’s testimony or Miles’s signed statement that compels
    a different conclusion. The relative leniency of Miles’s sentence as contrasted
    3
    The federal district court found that the statement bore adequate indicia of
    reliability based on the first two factors:
    In reviewing Rebecca Miles’ statement, there is nothing in it to indicate that
    the statement was involuntary, or that she was coerced or threatened. . . . As
    found by both the trial court and the New Mexico Court of Appeals, Miles
    admitted she was in the store with the knife, she took the money, and she
    knew what she did was wrong.
    Magistrate Judge’s Proposed Findings and Recommended Disposition at 12 (adopted by
    district court in Crespin v. New Mexico, Civ. No. 94-0367 (D.N.M. Jan. 6, 1997)).
    - 12 -
    with that of appellant is not persuasive evidence to the contrary. As the state
    court noted, “Miles was a first time offender while defendant had been convicted
    of prior offenses . . . [and] defendant was also offered a reduced maximum
    sentence during plea bargaining which . . . defendant refused.” Crespin, No.
    13,029, slip op. at 3.
    Turning to the second factor, the state court concluded that Miles’s
    statement was against her penal interest. The court set forth the correct legal
    standard, examining whether the statement “so far tends to subject the declarant
    to criminal liability that a reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not
    have made the statement unless she believed it to be true.” Id. at 4; see
    Williamson v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 594
    , 603-04 (1994). The court emphasized
    Miles’s awareness that the statement would lead to criminal liability: “[Miles]
    admitted that she was in the store with a knife and that she took money from the
    cash register. She knew her conduct was wrong. The trial court was not required
    to infer from these facts that Miles could not reasonably believe she would be
    prosecuted.” Crespin, No. 13,029, slip op. at 4.
    We accept the state court’s finding that Miles subjected herself to some
    liability in portions of her statement. However, the state court relied on an
    erroneously limited view of the statement’s overall effect on Miles’s liability in
    concluding that the statement as a whole was against her penal interest. The court
    - 13 -
    only considered whether the statement subjected her to any liability and did not
    consider whether the statement as a whole significantly reduced the extent of that
    liability.
    “[W]hether a statement is self-inculpatory or not can only be determined by
    viewing it in context . . . [and] in light of all the surrounding circumstances.”
    Williamson, 
    512 U.S. at 603
    ; see also Earnest, 
    87 F.3d at 1134
     (implying that
    statement against penal interest analysis would be improper if it “assumed that the
    entire narrative was reliable merely because some elements of it were self-
    inculpatory”). In her statement, Miles did not admit to committing the stabbing
    and claimed she could not remember anything about it; the clerk’s testimony,
    however, indicates she was the stabber. Miles also claims that she did not
    remember demanding money of the store clerk and states that her companion told
    the clerk to open the cash register. Yet, according to the clerk’s testimony, it was
    she, the female robber, who demanded money. She emphasized her drunken state
    and implied that her accomplices threatened her. Because Miles may reasonably
    have thought such a statement would decrease her practical exposure to criminal
    liability, the statement was not reliable as being against her penal interest. Cf.
    Williamson, 
    512 U.S. at 601
     (stating that court “may not just assume . . . that a
    statement is self-inculpatory because it is part of a fuller confession, and this is
    especially true when the statement implicates someone else”); 
    id.
     at 604
    - 14 -
    (O’Connor, J., concurring) (holding that codefendant’s statement was not properly
    admitted because “[a] reasonable person in [declarant’s] position might even
    think that implicating someone else would decrease his practical exposure to
    criminal liability, at least as far as sentencing goes”); Earnest, 
    87 F.3d at 1134
    (noting that proper analysis requires inquiry “into particularized guarantees of
    trustworthiness surrounding those portions of the statement incriminating
    [defendant], including the fact that the entire statement inculpated both [declarant
    and defendant] equally, rather than relying on mere proximity to statements
    inculpatory of [declarant]”) (emphasis added). 4
    The appeals court also concluded, in support of the reliability of Miles’s
    statement, that “the trial court could have inferred . . . that she attempted to
    spread responsibility for the crimes on all three participants rather than to shift
    4
    According to the concurring opinion, our analysis improperly intrudes on
    the state court’s role as finder of fact. However, in conducting the requisite de novo
    review of whether the admission of this statement violates the Confrontation Clause, we
    can take neither the statement itself nor the state court’s “indicia of reliability” in
    isolation. Nor can we assume that the state court’s legal analysis is correct merely
    because the state court has recited the proper legal test. We are charged with examining
    the statement in its entirety in the context of the trial record and “in light of all the
    surrounding circumstances,” Williamson, 
    512 U.S. at 603
    , to determine whether the state
    court’s application of the legal test — here, the state court’s analysis of whether the
    statement is against Miles’s penal interest — is constitutionally sound. We must review
    this legal analysis de novo. See, e.g., Earnest, 
    87 F.3d at 1131, 1133-34
     (conducting de
    novo review of whether statement is against penal interest of declarant in order to
    evaluate its admissibility); cf. State v. Sanchez, 
    811 P.2d 92
    , 96 (N.M. Ct. App. 1991)
    (“[W]hether a statement bears sufficient indicia of reliability to permit its admission into
    evidence under Rule 11-804(B) is generally a question of law.”)
    - 15 -
    blame from herself to the two men.” Crespin, No. 13,029, slip op. at 5. The court
    erred in this analysis as well. See Lee, 
    476 U.S. at 544
     (stating that inquiry bears
    on the “question of whether the confession was . . . free from any desire, motive,
    or impulse [declarant] may have had either to mitigate the appearance of his own
    culpability by spreading the blame or to overstate [defendant’s] involvement”).
    Lee precludes the distinction between spreading and shifting blame upon which
    the court of appeals predicated its opinion. Miles’s statement dilutes her
    involvement in both the stabbing and the robbery by leaving open the possibility
    that an accomplice may have stabbed the victim and by explicitly asserting that it
    was her accomplice who demanded money of the store clerk. By mitigating her
    own responsibility for the crimes, the statement clearly entangles the
    considerations of motive which guide our analysis under Lee.
    Finally, the state court pointed to the existence of independent
    corroborating evidence in support of admitting Miles’s statement. That is
    impermissible because,
    the use of corroborating evidence to support a hearsay statement’s
    “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness” would permit
    admission of a presumptively unreliable statement by bootstrapping
    on the trustworthiness of other evidence at trial, a result we think at
    odds with the requirement that hearsay evidence admitted under the
    Confrontation Clause be so trustworthy that cross-examination of the
    declarant would be of marginal utility.
    - 16 -
    Wright, 
    497 U.S. at 822
    . 5 The prosecution’s argument that consideration of this
    factor adds “another hurdle” for the prosecution and thus benefits the defendant is
    disingenuous at best. See Appellee’s Br. at 22. Under the Confrontation Clause,
    use of corroborating evidence to bolster a statement’s reliability impermissibly
    eases the prosecution’s burden on the pertinent issue in the inquiry — the
    “inherent trustworthiness” of the statement itself. Wright, 
    497 U.S. at 822
    .
    Because we find the lower courts did not, either explicitly or implicitly,
    correctly apply the “indicia of reliability” in analyzing Miles’s statement, we
    conclude that “on the record before us, there is no occasion to depart from the
    time-honored teaching that a codefendant’s confession inculpating the accused is
    inherently unreliable.” Lee, 
    476 U.S. at 546
    . We hold that admission of the
    statement violated the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment.
    B
    But for harmless error review, this would conclude our opinion.
    Confrontation Clause violations, however, are constitutional trial errors subject to
    harmless error analysis. See Delaware v. Van Arnsdall, 
    475 U.S. 673
    , 684
    (1986); United States v. Joe, 
    8 F.3d 1488
    , 1497 (10th Cir. 1993). A federal court
    5
    This approach may be appropriate when analyzing admissibility under the
    New Mexico constitution. See Sanchez, 
    811 P.2d at 95
    . But our inquiry on the
    admissibility of the statement is governed by the federal constitution, under which this
    factor is improperly considered.
    - 17 -
    reviewing a state court determination in a habeas proceeding should not grant
    relief unless the court finds the trial error “‘had substantial and injurious effect or
    influence in determining the jury’s verdict.’” Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
    , 637 (1993) (quoting Kotteakos v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 750
    , 776 (1946)). 6
    To obtain relief for the error, the habeas petitioner must “establish that it resulted
    in ‘actual prejudice.’” Brecht, 
    507 U.S. at 637
     (citation omitted). Where a court
    “is in grave doubt as to the harmlessness of the error . . . the [habeas] petitioner
    must win.” O’Neal v. McAninch, 
    115 S.Ct. 992
    , 995 (1995). We examine
    Miles’s statement in light of the entire record to determine the error’s possible
    effect on the jury. Tuttle v. Utah, 
    57 F.3d 879
    , 884 (10th Cir. 1995).
    6
    Appellant argues that the Brecht/Kotteakos standard governs only if the
    state courts applied on direct appeal the harmless error test from Chapman v. California,
    
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (1967) (appropriate standard is whether federal constitutional error is
    “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt”). Because the courts below found no federal
    constitutional error and therefore did not apply the Chapman test, appellant argues that
    this court should apply the higher standard of review. Appellant’s Br. at 42, n.17; see
    also Starr v. Lockhart, 
    23 F.3d 1280
    , 1292 (8th Cir. 1994) (applying Chapman harmless
    error standard on collateral review where state court has not reviewed for error); Orndoff
    v. Lockhart, 
    998 F.2d 1426
    , 1430 (8th Cir. 1993) (same). While appellant’s position has
    some merit, we cannot accommodate it. This Circuit has rejected this approach and
    applies the Brecht/Kotteakos standard regardless of whether the state courts applied
    harmless error analysis on direct appeal. See Brewer, 
    51 F.3d at 1529
     (rejecting the
    holding in Starr and applying lesser Kotteakos harmless error review). We note that the
    Supreme Court has rejected the argument that Confrontation Clause errors merit a higher
    standard of review than other constitutional trial errors. See Coy v. Alabama, 
    487 U.S. 1012
    , 1021 (1988); Van Arnsdall, 
    475 U.S. at
    684 .
    - 18 -
    Viewing the error in light of the evidence presented at trial as a whole, we
    find the error harmless. See Wright, 
    497 U.S. at 823
     (“[T]he presence of
    corroborating evidence more appropriately indicates that any error in admitting
    the statement might be harmless, rather than that any basis exists for presuming
    the declarant to be trustworthy.”). Undoubtedly, Miles’s statement was important
    to the prosecution’s case. Independent evidence, however, substantially
    supported his convictions for conspiracy and as an accomplice to the armed
    robbery and aggravated battery. The statement was not required to place him in
    the store at the time of the robbery. At trial, Dale Autry firmly identified Crespin
    as the male present at the crime scene, in the face of rigorous cross-examination.
    Autry’s description of Crespin’s actions and statements during the robbery —
    urging Miles to hurry up, advising Autry to turn over the money, acting as a
    possible lookout or supervisor while observing the crime in commission, and
    leaving the store with Miles once she obtained the money — provides further
    support for the jury verdict that Crespin was guilty of the crimes charged. When
    stopped by the police, Crespin lacked a plausible alibi for his presence in the area
    of the crime scene in the early morning hours. Additionally, several police
    officers testified to seeing blood on Crespin’s arm, hand and clothes at the time of
    his stop and arrest, and the jury received evidence, in the form of the clothing and
    photographs, supporting this testimony. In light of the overwhelming evidence
    - 19 -
    properly presented to the jury, we are confident that the constitutional error did
    not have a substantial and injurious effect in determining the jury’s verdict.
    AFFIRM.
    - 20 -
    97-2046, Crespin v. New Mexico
    TACHA, Circuit Judge, concurring
    I concur in the judgment but write separately to express my view that the
    majority misinterprets 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d), which requires us to presume that the
    factual findings of the New Mexico courts are correct.
    The issue before us is whether the admission of Ms. Miles’s out-of-court
    statement to the police violated the defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights. As the
    majority points out, this issue ultimately turns on whether the statement contains
    “particularized guarantees of trustworthiness” that make it uncommonly worthy of
    belief. See Lee v. Illinois, 
    476 U.S. 530
    , 543 (1986) (discussing Ohio v. Roberts,
    
    448 U.S. 56
    , 66 (1980)). People are very unlikely to inculpate themselves falsely;
    therefore, the fact that a statement is against a declarant’s penal interests “is itself
    one of the ‘particularized guarantees of trustworthiness’ that makes a statement
    admissible under the Confrontation Clause.” Williamson v. United States, 
    512 U.S. 594
    , 605 (1994).
    The state court found that Ms. Miles’s statement was against her penal
    interest and admissible. The majority disagrees and finds a violation of the
    Confrontation Clause. The majority bases its disagreement with the state court on
    a point of fact, which the statute obligates us to presume correct, rather than a
    point of law. I therefore cannot join its reasoning.
    In habeas corpus actions, federal courts must give great deference to the
    factual findings made by state courts. According to the relevant statute, “‘a
    determination after a hearing on the merits of a factual issue, made by a State
    court of competent jurisdiction . . . shall be presumed to be correct’ unless one of
    eight enumerated circumstances is established.” Williamson v. Ward, 
    110 F.3d 1508
    , 1513 n.7 (10th Cir. 1997) (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)). 1 In habeas corpus
    appeals, therefore, we must carefully separate factual issues from legal issues, and
    take issue only with the latter.
    Distinguishing between law and fact is always a difficult enterprise, see
    Pullman-Standard v. Swint, 
    456 U.S. 273
    , 288 (1982), and particularly so with
    regard to whether a statement is against a declarant’s penal interest. There are
    several reasons to call that determination a legal one. To begin with, the Supreme
    Court has said that factual issues under section 2254(d) are limited to “basic
    primary, or historical facts: facts in the sense of a recital of external events and
    the credibility of their narrators.” Thompson v. Keohane, 
    116 S. Ct. 457
    , 464
    (1995) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). The penal interest
    question cannot be resolved solely by review of historical facts. To determine
    1
    The portion of section 2254 applicable here was amended by the Anti-Terrorism
    and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 after Crespin filed his petition for a writ of
    habeas corpus. Because the statute was passed after Crespin filed his petition, however,
    the amendments do not apply here. See Nelson v. Walker, 
    121 F.2d 828
    , 833 n.4 (2d Cir.
    1997) (citing Lindh v. Murphy, 
    117 S. Ct. 2059
    , 2068 (1997)).
    -2-
    whether a statement is against the declarant’s penal interest, courts apply an
    objective legal standard to pure historical facts: they ask if the statement “‘so far
    tend[s] to subject the declarant to . . . criminal liability . . . that a reasonable
    person in the declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless
    believing it to be true.’” Williamson, 
    512 U.S. at 606
     (Scalia, J., concurring)
    (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(3)); see also Thompson, 
    116 S. Ct. at 465
    (determining that whether a person is “in custody” is a legal question because it
    requires court to apply an objective standard to the facts); Earnest v. Dorsey, 
    87 F.3d 1123
    , 1131 (10th Cir.) (suggesting that mixed question of law and fact is not
    entitled to presumption of correctness), cert. denied, 
    117 S. Ct. 527
     (1996).
    Furthermore, outside the habeas corpus context, courts have found the penal
    interest question to be a legal one. See, e.g., United States v. Barone, 
    114 F.3d 1284
    , 1296 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 
    118 S. Ct. 614
     (1997); United States v. Costa,
    
    31 F.3d 1073
    , 1077 (11th Cir. 1994).
    A strong case can also be made, however, for classifying the penal interest
    issue as a factual one for purposes of section 2254(d). At the Supreme Court’s
    own admission, it “has classified as ‘factual issues’ within § 2254(d)’s compass
    questions extending beyond the determination of ‘what happened.’” Thompson,
    
    116 S. Ct. at 464
    . When an “issue falls somewhere between a pristine legal
    standard and a simple historical fact,” the distinction at times has turned not on
    -3-
    analysis, but rather on a practical consideration of which judicial actor is better
    situated to decide the disputed issue. Miller v. Fenton, 
    474 U.S. 104
    , 114 (1985).
    Thompson, the Court’s most recent pronouncement on section 2254(d), does not
    repudiate that approach. Thompson approves of two decisions that classify mixed
    questions of law and fact -- specifically, a defendant’s competency to stand trial
    and juror impartiality -- as “facts” for purposes of section 2254(d) because the
    “resolution [of those issues] depends heavily on the trial court’s appraisal of
    witness credibility and demeanor.” See Thompson, 
    116 S. Ct. at 465
    .
    More importantly, Thompson suggests that there is little if any point in
    classifying a mixed question of law and fact as “law” if de novo appellate review
    of the question will not produce opinions that draw lines and make later decisions
    easier. See 
    id.
     at 466 n.14 (“[T]he likely absence of precedential value cuts
    against requiring plenary appellate review of a district court’s determination.”).
    The penal interest question is notoriously resistant to clarifying precedent. It is
    the kind of question that “can only be determined by viewing it in context,” and
    that is “a fact-intensive inquiry, which . . . require[s] careful examination of all
    the circumstances surrounding the criminal activity involved.” Williamson, 
    512 U.S. at 603, 604
    .
    Whether the penal interest issue is one of fact -- and therefore entitled to a
    presumption of correctness -- or law is a close question. The majority reviews it
    -4-
    de novo without discussion. Even assuming, without conceding, that the majority
    is correct and the presumption does not attach to the finding on penal interest,
    however, the majority opinion still fails to observe the commands of section
    2254(d).
    Regardless of whether a mixed question of law and fact is governed by
    section 2254(d), it is undisputed that “the questions of fact that underlie [the]
    ultimate conclusion are governed by the statutory presumption.” Sumner v. Mata,
    
    455 U.S. 591
    , 597 (1982) (per curium) (emphasis in original). In this case,
    therefore, we must presume that the state court correctly determined issues of
    historical fact, such as Ms. Miles’s reasons for making the statement. The
    majority gives no deference to that factual finding.
    The majority acknowledges that the state court “set forth the correct legal
    standard.” Maj. Op. at 13. The operative question was whether the statement so
    far tended to subject the declarant to criminal liability that a reasonable person in
    the declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless she believed it
    to be true. See Williamson, 
    512 U.S. at 603-04
    . The majority disagrees with the
    court’s application of the facts to this legal standard, but not for reasons that one
    could call legal.
    Instead, the majority’s conclusion hinges on its belief that Ms. Miles did
    not tell the truth and tried to minimize her role in the robbery:
    -5-
    In her statement, Miles did not admit to committing the stabbing and
    claimed she could not remember anything about it; the clerk’s
    testimony, however, indicates she was the stabber. Miles also claims
    that she did not remember demanding money of the store clerk and
    states that her companion told the clerk to open the cash register.
    Yet, according to the clerk’s testimony, it was she, the female robber,
    who demanded money. She emphasized her drunken state and
    implied that her accomplices threatened her.
    Maj. Op. at 14 (emphasis added). This passage, which forms the basis for the
    majority’s disagreement with the state court, makes a number of conclusions.
    By contrasting Ms. Miles’s statement with the testimony of the clerk, the court
    concludes that Ms. Miles was the stabber, that she demanded the money from
    the clerk, that she in fact remembered doing those things at the time she made
    her statement, and that she chose to hide those facts from the police in order to
    minimize her role in the robbery.
    All of these conclusions are factual in nature -- in fact, they are
    archetypes of factual questions. Who stabbed the clerk and who demanded
    money are classic questions of “what happened.” More importantly, it is
    beyond doubt that the credibility of Ms. Miles’s statement and her particular
    reasons for making it are facts. See United States v. Bohl, 
    25 F.3d 904
    , 909
    (10th Cir. 1994) (describing intent as quintessentially a factual question);
    Davidson’s Estate v. Commissioner, 
    158 F.2d 239
    , 243 (10th Cir. 1946) (“The
    impelling motive in each case is a question of fact . . . .”); Thompson, 116 S.
    -6-
    Ct. at 464 (stating that factual issues are “facts in the sense of a recital of
    external events and the credibility of their narrators”) (emphasis added)
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    The state courts did not make explicit factual findings to the contrary,
    but that is immaterial. In a habeas appeal, we must presume correct both the
    explicit and the implicit factual findings of the state courts. See Lujan v.
    Tansy, 
    2 F.3d 1031
    , 1035 (10th Cir. 1993). The state court implicitly found
    that Ms. Miles did not intentionally minimize her role in the crime when she
    made her statement to the police. If she knowingly concealed the extent of her
    involvement and emphasized the actions of the others, her statement would not
    have been genuinely self-inculpatory. Rather, it would be clear to any court
    that the statement was motivated by a desire to decrease her liability at the
    expense of her co-defendants. A court could not find such a deceitful
    statement to possess the required “particularized guarantees of
    trustworthiness.” Lee, 
    476 U.S. at 543
    .
    The majority intimates that the state courts may not have evaluated the
    truthfulness of the statement, even implicitly. According to the majority, the
    state “appeals court looked only to whether Miles’s statement subjected her to
    any liability.” Maj. Op. at 14 (emphasis in original). That court, however, did
    not use an “any liability” test. Instead, it correctly noted that a statement
    -7-
    against interest is one that “so far tended to subject [the declarant] to criminal
    liability that a reasonable man in his position would not have made the
    statement unless he believed it to be true.” State v. Crespin, No. 13,029, slip
    op. at 2. This standard does not include statements that attempt to “mitigat[e
    the declarant’s] responsibility for the crimes,” Maj. Op. at 16, as the majority
    characterizes Ms. Miles’s confession. Therefore, the majority bases its
    disagreement with the state court on an implicit factual finding of the state
    court.
    The presumption of correctness in 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d) requires us to
    accept the state court’s contrary finding and therefore find the statement to be
    one against the declarant’s penal interests. That is enough to make the
    statement admissible under the Confrontation Clause. See Williamson v.
    United States, 
    512 U.S. at 605
    . Thus, I find no constitutional error in this
    case.
    For the reasons outlined above, I respectfully disagree with the
    majority’s analysis and concur in the judgment.
    -8-