Manuel Antonio Rodriguez v. Secretary, Florida Department of Corrections ( 2014 )


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  •              Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 1 of 72
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 11-13273
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:10-cv-22692-PCH
    MANUEL ANTONIO RODRIGUEZ,
    Petitioner - Appellant,
    versus
    SECRETARY, FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
    Respondent - Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (June 30, 2014)
    Before CARNES, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT and WILSON, Circuit Judges.
    TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:
    Petitioner, Manuel Antonio Rodriguez, is a Florida prison inmate sentenced
    to death for three murders committed during the course of a burglary on the
    evening of December 4, 1984, in Miami, Florida. He seeks the vacation of his
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    convictions for murder and armed burglary and of his death sentences on the
    grounds that the State (1) elicited or failed to correct false testimony during the
    guilt phase regarding the benefits it afforded a key prosecution witness in exchange
    for his testimony and (2) withheld evidence favorable to his defense during both
    the guilt and sentencing phases, in violation of the procedural due process rules
    established by the United States Supreme Court in Giglio v. United States 1 and
    Brady v. Maryland.2 The Florida Supreme Court found that neither violation had
    occurred, and therefore refused to disturb Petitioner’s convictions or death
    sentences. Rodriguez v. State (“Rodriguez II”), 
    39 So. 3d 275
    (Fla. 2010).
    Petitioner then turned to the United States District Court for the Southern District
    of Florida for relief, petitioning that court for a writ of habeas corpus. 3 The
    District Court, concluding that the Florida Supreme Court properly applied the
    1
    
    405 U.S. 150
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 763
    , 
    31 L. Ed. 2d 104
    (1972).
    2
    
    373 U.S. 83
    , 
    83 S. Ct. 1194
    , 
    10 L. Ed. 2d 215
    (1963).
    3
    See generally 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
    2
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    Giglio and Brady rules in denying Petitioner’s claims, 4 denied the writ. We
    affirm. 5
    I.
    A.
    On December 4, 1984, Virginia Nimer, her husband Wally Nimer, and her
    sister Genevieve Abraham planned on having dinner together at a Miami restaurant
    after Abraham visited two elderly friends, Sam and Bea Joseph, 6 at their
    apartment. 7 When she failed to appear at the restaurant and their phone calls to the
    Josephs’ telephone number were not answered, the Nimers went to the Josephs’
    4
    The District Court reached its conclusion under the standards set out in the
    Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214
    (codified as amended at 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241–55). See infra part III.A.
    5
    Our review of the denial of a writ of habeas corpus is limited to the issues presented in a
    certificate of appealability (“COA”) issued pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(1). The District
    Court granted Petitioner’s application for a COA as to these issues: (1) Whether
    “Brady/Giglio/Strickland violations . . . occurred during [Petitioner’s] trial [and] rendered his
    convictions unreliable,” and (2) whether “Brady violations that occurred during the penalty
    phase rendered his death sentence unreliable.” Strickland refers to Strickland v. Washington,
    
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984), and Petitioner’s claim that his attorneys
    failed to provide him with the effective assistance of counsel required by the Sixth Amendment’s
    Assistance of Counsel Clause, which is applicable to the States through the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s Due Process Clause. See Gideon v. Wainwright, 
    372 U.S. 335
    , 344, 
    83 S. Ct. 792
    , 796, 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 799
    (1963). Petitioner’s opening brief in this appeal abandoned the
    argument that his attorneys failed to provide the effective assistance of counsel Strickland
    requires. Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at 26 n.4. We therefore limit the appeal to Petitioner’s
    Brady and Giglio claims.
    6
    The Josephs were in their early 80s; Abraham was 73.
    7
    The apartment, number 9, was located in an apartment complex at 
    6080 S.W. 40th
    Street, in Miami.
    3
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    apartment. The front door was open about an inch. They entered the apartment
    and found Abraham and the Josephs dead.8 Abraham was seated in a chair near
    the front door and had a string of pearls around her left hand. Bea Joseph was face
    down on the floor between the kitchen wall and the dining room table. Clutched in
    her hands were a silver necklace and a bloody napkin. Sam Joseph was on the
    floor on the other side of the dining room table, with his legs under the table.
    According to the Medical Examiner, Abraham had a bullet lodged in her left
    shoulder. The bullet went through her right ear and into her head, fracturing the
    scalp bone and, continuing downward, two cervical vertebrae. The bullet severed
    her spinal cord almost completely and came to rest against her left shoulder blade.
    A second bullet lodged in the bone above her eye socket, but did not penetrate the
    brain. The entry wound was surrounded by soot and stippling, indicating that the
    bullet had been fired at close-range. The wound was consistent with a gun being
    fired next to the victim’s temple by someone standing while the victim was seated.
    The way the body was found indicated that the shot entered above the eye socket
    was the second shot. Death was caused by the first bullet.
    8
    Nothing about the scene indicated a forced entry into the apartment. Someone had
    entered the apartment and rummaged through the master bedroom, emptying drawers of a night
    stand beside the bed and the bedroom dresser, and had gone through the clothes in the walk-in
    closet. An empty jewelry box was at the foot of the bed, and Bea Joseph’s jewelry—including
    her diamond earrings and diamond watch—was missing.
    4
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    Bea Joseph’s lips were swollen and bloody, and her upper lip had a one-
    eighth-inch split. The injury appeared to have been caused by a blow from an
    elbow. A bullet had entered one-quarter of an inch to the right of the midline of
    her forehead. It penetrated the cranial cavity and into the left cerebral hemisphere
    from front to back, exiting through the back of the occipital lobe, and lodging in
    the bone in that area, fracturing it. Bea would have died very quickly as a result of
    this wound; within a couple of minutes, at most. A second bullet grazed the back
    of her neck. That it did not strike any part of her back indicated that her head and
    neck were bent forward at the time the wound was inflicted, probably after the shot
    to the forehead.
    Sam Joseph had an entry wound on the back of one hand, in the web
    between the thumb and index finger, and an exit wound on the palm of his other
    hand, indicating that the wounds were caused by one bullet. Another bullet pierced
    his left shoulder. Two more bullets entered his cheek, very close together in quick
    succession. One went into the cranial cavity, into the right cerebral hemisphere,
    after going through the maxilla. The bullet’s disruption of the frontal lobe would
    have caused his death within a few minutes. The other bullet entered the soft facial
    tissue and exited at the base of the neck, grazing the folds of the skin. This
    indicated that Sam’s head was thrown back at the time this shot was fired.
    5
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    Petitioner, his girlfriend Maria “Cookie” Malakoff, and their children lived
    in the same apartment complex as the Josephs. The Joseph family owned the
    apartment complex. Sam Joseph managed it and collected the rent.9
    On July 4, 1985, a tipster identifying himself as Antonio Heres Chait
    contacted the Metro-Dade Police Department,10 claiming to have information
    about the murders. He was referred to Detective William Venturi, the lead
    investigator in the case. After identifying himself and providing Venturi with his
    date of birth, social security number, current address, and telephone number, Chait
    informed Venturi that, in December 1984, he was living in the apartment complex
    where the murders took place; his apartment was number 3. He stated that, on the
    evening of December 4, he saw two males running from the apartment complex
    from the direction of apartment 9, and that he knew one of the men, whom he
    identified as “Juanito.” Detective Venturi asked Detective Daniel Baretta to look
    into the matter. Detective Baretta found nothing, except that Chait’s real name was
    9
    Tama Zaydon, the Josephs’ granddaughter, testified that her parents owned the building.
    The day before the murder, she visited the Josephs’ apartment which was kept impeccably neat.
    She saw it after the murders and said there was a “big mess everywhere.” Doc. 16-50, at 28.
    10
    In 1997, the Metro-Dade Police Department became the Miami-Dade Police
    Department.
    6
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    Manuel Antonio Rodriguez—the Petitioner in this case—and that he had a Metro-
    Dade Police Department number identifying a criminal record.
    On November 25, 1985, Petitioner called the police again, identifying
    himself as Antonio Traves. Detective Venturi met him and informed him that they
    knew his real identity and that he had given them bogus information in July.
    Petitioner admitted that he had lied, and then gave Venturi some new information
    that raised Venturi’s suspicions. Referring to the murders, Petitioner said that they
    occurred between 6:30 and 7:00 p.m., information Venturi had not provided him
    on July 4, 1985, and that he saw another individual leaving the area of apartment 9,
    whom he identified as “Geraldo.” Petitioner said that Geraldo “looked exactly like
    the composite” etching of the suspect the police had published, that he had seen
    Geraldo driving a white Camaro, and that he had been reluctant to reveal his name
    because he feared Geraldo due to Geraldo’s “violent past.” Doc. 16-53, at 87–88.
    The information proved worthless. On November 29, Detective Venturi
    summoned Petitioner to the police station, accused him of being involved with the
    murders, and read him his Miranda rights. 11 Petitioner waived his rights, including
    the right to the presence of counsel, and began responding to Detective Venturi’s
    11
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
    (1966).
    7
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    questions. He acknowledged knowing the Josephs; he had done some work for
    them. He referred to “Mr. Joseph” as “a very stingy person.” Doc. 16-53, at 93.
    When Venturi asked him to describe his participation in the murders, Petitioner
    “bowed his head down and he just began to cry,” said he was “getting sick,” and
    refused to answer further questions. Doc. 16-53, at 94. With that, the questioning
    ceased.
    By 1992, the murder investigation had become a “cold case,” dormant. The
    Metro-Dade police had received and investigated hundreds of leads, but all turned
    out to be false. In March of that year, Ralph Lopez called the Metro-Dade Police
    Department’s “Crime Stoppers” section, claiming to know who committed the
    murders. He was referred to two homicide detectives in the “cold case squad,”
    Gerard Crawford and Gregory Smith, who had inherited the case. 12 Lopez
    informed them that, in late 1984 or early 1985, his sister’s husband’s brother, Luis
    Rodriguez, told him that he and Tony Rodriguez had committed the murders.13
    12
    Detective Venturi had retired from the Metro-Dade Police Department in 1987.
    Detective Crawford was the lead investigator on the case going forward.
    13
    Lopez’s sister, Velia, was married to Isidoro Rodriguez, Luis Rodriguez’ brother.
    Lopez was acquainted with Tony Rodriguez (Petitioner) through Tony’s girlfriend, Cookie
    Malakoff, Luis’s step-sister.
    8
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    They had gone to the Josephs’ apartment for money—to steal the cash Mr. Joseph
    had on hand.
    With Lopez’s revelations in hand, the two detectives launched an extensive
    investigation—to set the stage for a meeting with Luis Rodriguez and, hopefully,
    to obtain his confession. By August 1993, they were ready. On August 3, they
    contacted Luis at his place of business in Orlando, told him they were investigating
    the Joseph/Abraham murders, and asked him if he would accompany them to the
    Orange County Sheriff’s office for questioning. He agreed. The detectives asked
    him about his background, family, and work history, and he was forthcoming.
    When Detective Crawford asked if he knew “Tony Rodriguez,” his “whole
    demeanor changed,” Doc. 16-62, at 83, and, following a cigarette break, he
    confessed to having participated in the homicides. A court reporter was
    summoned, and Luis repeated the confession under oath, on the record. A warrant
    for his arrest issued, and he was taken into custody.
    The next day, August 4, Detectives Crawford and Smith drove to the
    Tomoka Correctional Institution in Daytona Beach, where Petitioner was
    incarcerated.14 Petitioner was summoned. The detectives identified themselves
    14
    Petitioner was serving multiple prison sentences for a variety of crimes. See infra note
    21.
    9
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    and explained why they were there. Petitioner already knew; he had spoken to
    Cookie the day before about their investigation. The meeting was cordial, lasting
    perhaps an hour, after which the detectives went to Miami, and went to Cookie’s
    residence to interview her. Cookie was unavailable. She called Detective Smith
    on August 9, “insistent that she give [a] statement that day.” Doc. 16-63, at 7.
    “She said that she lived with the horror for years and that she needed to give a
    statement and tell the truth about what she knew.” Doc 16-63, at 8. Detective
    Smith asked Detective Nyberg to interview her.
    On August 9, a warrant issued for Petitioner’s arrest. On August 13,
    following his arrest that day, Detectives Smith and Crawford brought Petitioner to
    the Metro-Dade Police Headquarters in Miami. There, they advised him of his
    rights, which he waived, then asked him a series of preliminary questions
    concerning his level of education, proficiency in English, and mental state.
    Petitioner said he finished the ninth grade, had no problem in communicating in
    English, and had taken medication that morning, Trilafon and Benadryl. He said
    that the medication did not impair his ability to understand what was taking place,
    but it did make him a bit nervous and restless.
    After responding to these preliminary questions, Petitioner was asked about
    his relationship with Luis Rodriguez and Isidoro Rodriguez. He said they were
    “not trust worthy and that they were rumored to be criminals or engaged in
    10
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    criminal activity.” Doc. 16-63, at 30. The questioning then turned to Petitioner’s
    activities on the day of the murders. Petitioner, in answering their questions, was,
    in Detective Smith’s words, “very cooperative.” Doc. 16-63, at 33. At the same
    time, his answers were markedly inconsistent. With some answers he was not at or
    near the crime scene at all and in others he took Luis and Isidoro to the Josephs’
    apartment, number 9, and stood outside in the hallway after they entered it.
    Petitioner began by saying that he was in Homestead, Florida, the afternoon
    of December 4, 1984. Cookie, his daughter Natasha, and his stepson Landi stayed
    behind in their apartment, number 3. They soon left the apartment, though,
    because Cookie had placed “bug bombs” in all the rooms. On reflection, Petitioner
    thought she probably placed the bug bombs following his return from Homestead.
    After that, he, Cookie, and the children left the apartment and drove to his mother’s
    residence, where they stayed all night. On further reflection, Petitioner said that
    after leaving the apartment, they drove to Miami Children’s Hospital so Natasha
    could receive treatment for her heart condition.
    After relating this, Petitioner digressed and talked about a “conspiracy”
    involving the Josephs and the apartment complex. The conspiracy also involved
    some doctors for whom Cookie had worked who had purchased the complex
    following the murders. At this point in the interview, Detective Smith informed
    Petitioner that Luis Rodriguez had given a “detailed full confession” of the
    11
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    murders. Doc. 16-63, at 35. Upon hearing this, Petitioner said that Cookie’s
    family didn’t like him, that they would lie about him, and that he had been lying—
    giving a false alibi—so he could “cover for Cookie’s family.” Doc. 16-63, at 36.
    Cookie’s family, he said, was involved in the crime. Earlier in the conversation,
    Petitioner said that Luis Rodriguez was not present during the events that took
    place on December 4. After claiming that he had given a false alibi to cover for
    Cookie’s family, however, Petitioner said that Luis did come to their apartment
    that day for a visit.
    Detective Smith responded to this by informing Petitioner that in addition to
    Luis’s confession, Cookie and Isidoro had also implicated him in the homicides.
    Petitioner’s reply to that was, “I did not shoot anybody.” Doc. 16-63, at 38. He
    repeated the statement every time the detectives asked him what actually
    happened. At one point, he said, “I didn’t go inside.” Doc. 16-63, at 39. He
    explained that Luis had come from Orlando that day to visit with him and Cookie.
    Luis was in need of money and needed his help. Petitioner told Luis that his
    landlord would probably have money, from the rents he had collected, but that he
    would not assist Luis in taking the money. Luis’s response was that all Petitioner
    had to do was help him get inside the Josephs’ apartment and that he would handle
    the rest. Petitioner agreed.
    12
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    According to Petitioner, as he and Luis were walking toward the Josephs’
    apartment, they stopped so Luis could make a phone call. Moments later, Isidoro
    appeared on the scene. On arriving at the apartment, Petitioner knocked on the
    door. Mr. Joseph came to the door. Luis and Isidoro forced their way into the
    apartment and Petitioner remained outside, taking up a position at the corner of the
    building. Within seconds, Petitioner heard gunshots. Several minutes later, Luis
    and Isidoro came out. Isidoro left the scene. Petitioner and Luis went to
    Petitioner’s apartment, woke up Cookie and the children, and departed in
    Petitioner’s station wagon, with Cookie driving. They drew alongside a canal, and
    Luis threw several objects into the water. From there, they went to Miami Beach,
    dropped Luis off, and proceeded to Petitioner’s mother’s residence.
    B.
    On September 15, 1993, a Dade County, Florida, grand jury indicted
    Petitioner and Luis Rodriguez for the capital murder of Bea Joseph, Sam Joseph,
    and Genevieve Abraham and for armed burglary. At their arraignment before the
    13
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    Dade County Circuit Court, both defendants pled not guilty and demanded a trial
    by jury. 15
    Over the next several months, the parties engaged in extensive discovery.
    Among other things, the attorneys for the two defendants took the depositions of
    the material witnesses. These attorneys also moved the Circuit Court to suppress
    the statements the defendants made to the detectives investigating the crimes at
    issue. On April 10, 1995, following an evidentiary hearing, the court announced
    its rulings. The court denied Luis Rodriguez’s motion in full, finding that, on
    August 3, 1993, he freely and voluntarily confessed under oath before a court
    reporter, after waiving his Miranda rights.16 The court denied Petitioner’s motion
    with respect to his post-Miranda statements. On August 15, 1995, the Circuit
    Court granted the defendants’ motions to sever the case for trial.
    On April 25, 1996, in open court and in Petitioner’s presence, Luis
    Rodriguez and the State announced that they had entered into a plea agreement.
    Luis would plead guilty to three counts of second degree murder and one count of
    15
    The reasons for the delay during the 31 months between Petitioner’s arraignment in
    September 1993 and the start of trial in October 1996 are irrelevant to the issues involved in this
    appeal.
    16
    The court found that the initial statements Luis made to Detectives Crawford and Smith
    before he was advised of his rights were noncustodial and thus admissible at trial.
    14
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    armed burglary and would be sentenced on each count to life imprisonment, with a
    three-year mandatory minimum term, in exchange for his truthful testimony
    against Petitioner. 17 The court accepted the plea agreement, Luis entered pleas of
    guilty according to its terms, and the court sentenced him to concurrent sentences
    of life imprisonment.
    Luis pled guilty because the State had an open and shut case against him.
    He had confessed to premeditated murder under oath before a court reporter, and
    the cold-blooded circumstances under which it was committed were sufficiently
    aggravating to warrant capital punishment. To escape the death penalty, Luis had
    to accept the deal the State offered him.
    The trial of the State’s case against Petitioner was scheduled to begin on
    October 7, 1996. Luis would be the State’s star witness. It was obvious to
    Petitioner’s lawyers, Richard Houlihan and Eugene Zenobi, that they had to
    destroy Luis’s credibility if Petitioner were to avoid the death penalty. They had
    to convince the jury that Luis was lying to save his life. Their questioning of Luis
    on cross-examination would provide them with the means they needed to do that.
    17
    The plea agreement also required Luis to submit to a polygraph examination. Prior to
    Petitioner’s trial, the State moved the court to prevent Petitioner’s lawyers from informing the
    jury in any way of the fact that Luis had submitted to a polygraph examination. The court
    granted the motion.
    15
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    The plea agreement would serve as the foundation for the lawyers’ cross-
    examination. They would show the jury that Luis would do anything to avoid the
    death penalty—that he was prepared to say whatever the State wanted him to say
    to obtain Petitioner’s convictions for premeditated murder. To tie Luis down to the
    story he would tell the jury at trial, the lawyers took his deposition on May 9 and
    10, 1996, two weeks after he pled guilty to and was sentenced for second degree
    murder and armed burglary. They had already taken the depositions of Detectives
    Crawford and Smith and other witnesses who might shed light on the
    circumstances surrounding his decision to plead guilty and testify against
    Petitioner, so by the time they deposed Luis, they had a good idea of what his
    testimony was going to be.
    In questioning Luis on deposition, the lawyers had the benefit of his plea
    agreement with the State and a copy of the confession he had given Detectives
    Crawford and Smith under oath on August 3, 1993. They also knew of the kid-
    gloves treatment Luis had been afforded while being held in the Metro-Dade
    County Jail between August 3, 1993, and May 9, 1996. Crawford and Smith had
    accommodated Luis’s requests to visit his wife and family by arranging for him to
    16
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    see them at the Metro-Dade Police Station or the State Attorney’s office.18 At the
    police station, Luis met with his family in one of the interrogation rooms. On one
    occasion, when he was alone with his wife, they engaged in sexual intercourse.
    Most of these family visits, including the one when Luis and his wife had
    sex, occurred before Luis pled guilty and agreed to testify against Petitioner. Some
    visits took place afterwards. The Assistant State Attorney who was handling the
    case, Abraham Laeser, was aware of the visits. So were Luis’s attorneys.
    C.
    Petitioner’s trial began on schedule, on October 7, 1996. The State’s
    evidence portrayed the scene of the crime as the Nimers found it when they went to
    the Josephs’ apartment the evening of December 4, 1984; Petitioner’s visits to the
    Metro-Dade Police Department in July and November 1985; the investigation the
    police carried out after Ralph Lopez contacted “Crime Stoppers”; Luis Rodriguez’s
    arrest; and Petitioner’s interrogation by Detectives Crawford and Smith. Luis
    described the events that led up to the murders and how they occurred. The
    Florida Supreme Court, in affirming Petitioner’s convictions and death sentences,
    recounted what Luis told the jury:
    18
    Some of the visits were to celebrate certain special occasions, such as Luis’s daughter’s
    birthday and Christmas. During the various family visits, Luis met with his wife, daughter,
    mother, sisters, and mother-in-law, although not all were present on each occasion.
    17
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    Luis Rodriguez’[s] . . . testimony was somewhat different from
    his original confession.[19] At trial, Luis testified that in 1984 he was
    living in Orlando. He stated that Manuel called him and asked if he
    was interested in making money by assisting Manuel in committing a
    robbery. Manuel told Luis that Luis would be the lookout and that
    Manuel would do all of the work. Luis flew to Miami and met
    Manuel. They went to the Josephs’ apartment; Manuel knocked on
    the door and told Sam Joseph that Malakoff and the children were
    being held hostage and that they would be released only if the Josephs
    gave him money. Manuel then forced himself into the apartment.
    Luis followed and shut the door.
    Once inside the apartment, Manuel, who had brought two pairs
    of rubber gloves with him, put on one pair and told Luis to wear the
    other pair and not to touch anything in the apartment without the
    gloves. Sam Joseph offered to get money from the bedroom, but
    Manuel instructed Luis to look there instead. Luis found a gun in the
    Josephs’ bedroom, and Manuel became angry with Sam Joseph
    because he thought the offer to get money from the bedroom was
    actually a ruse to get the gun. Eventually, during the course of the
    crime, Manuel shot both Sam and Bea Joseph with a gun he had
    brought with him and then he ordered Luis to shoot Abraham with the
    gun Luis had found in the Josephs’ bedroom. Because Luis was
    scared, he did as he was told and then he fled. He stated that he did
    not receive any of the proceeds from the crime and flew back to
    Orlando the next day.
    Rodriguez v. State (“Rodriguez I”) 
    753 So. 2d 29
    , 34 (Fla. 2000). 20
    19
    In his initial confession, Luis Rodriguez stated that he had ingested cocaine and
    marijuana before the homicides, that he shot Abraham through a pillow, that he shot at two
    people, and that Manuel Rodriguez shot the Josephs after he shot Abraham.
    20
    The Florida Supreme Court’s opinion omits the fact that Genevieve Abraham arrived at
    the Josephs’ apartment after Petitioner and Luis had entered. They forced her into the apartment
    and made her sit in a chair by the front door.
    18
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    The State had Detective Crawford testify before it called Luis Rodriguez to
    the witness stand. On direct examination, Laeser asked Crawford to explain why
    Luis was allowed to visit with his wife and family at the Metro-Dade Police
    Station. Crawford said that allowing an accused to visit with family members was
    not uncommon, and other detainees awaiting trial were granted the same treatment
    as Luis. Petitioner’s lawyers thought that Crawford’s motive for providing the
    social visits in this case would be critical to the jury’s assessment of Luis’s
    credibility and therefore cross-examined Crawford about his reason for allowing
    the visits:
    Q [Mr. Zenobi]: Was this done for any ulterior motive, was this done
    so that he would be a cooperative witness or help with prosecution or
    anything like that?
    A [Det. Crawford]: No, sir.
    Q: Why was this done?
    Isidoro Rodriguez also testified as a prosecution witness, corroborating Luis’s testimony
    that he, Isidoro, was not involved in the homicides:
    Isidoro . . . provided documentation that he was working in another city at the
    time of the crimes. He also stated that, soon after the murders, his mother
    contacted him to tell him that she had found coins and jewelry in a bag under her
    trailer and that Manuel and Malakoff had shown up looking for it. Isidoro stated
    that he was aware of the murders in the building and that he took the bag back to
    Orlando, where he threw it into a field. Isidoro’s mother also testified and
    confirmed Isidoro’s story.
    Rodriguez 
    I, 753 So. 2d at 34
    –35.
    19
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    A: [Luis] requested these visits for [clothes] or contact with his
    daughter. And there again, we spoke with the supervisor, and there
    was no reason not to.
    Doc. 16-55, at 14.
    Q [Mr. Zenobi]: And it never crossed your mind that you were doing
    those things for any ulterior motive or any special favors you were
    granting to Mr. Rodriguez?
    A [Det. Crawford]: I don’t understand your question.
    Q: You weren’t doing this to have Luis Rodriguez testify in the case,
    you were doing it because you wanted to be good to Mr. Rodriguez?
    A: I wanted to be good to his daughter more than anything. I have no
    feelings for Mr. Rodriguez.
    Doc. 16-55, at 53.
    Laeser then asked Crawford about Luis’s conjugal visit with his wife:
    Q [Mr. Laeser]: Was Luis Rodriguez allowed to have, to the best of
    your knowledge, a personal visit with his wife or some other woman
    at any time?
    A [Det. Crawford]: Not on my pension.
    Q: When you answer that way?
    A: No, I am sorry. No, he wasn’t.
    ....
    Q: To the best of your knowledge, did it ever happen?
    A: No, sir.
    Doc. 16-65, at 74.
    20
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 21 of 72
    When Luis Rodriguez subsequently took the stand, he was asked, by both
    the prosecution and the defense, about the plea agreement and his family visits,
    including the conjugal visit. Laeser began his direct examination by addressing the
    plea agreement head-on:
    Q [Mr. Laeser]: Some time in the spring of 1996 did you enter into a
    contract or agreement with the state of Florida to testify truthfully?
    A [Mr. Rodriguez]: Yes, I did.
    Q: You originally were charged with three counts of first degree
    murder and one count of burglary. Were those the charges you
    eventually pled guilty to?
    A: Yes
    Q: Eventually were you sentenced for first degree murder, or second
    degree murder?
    A: Second.
    Q: For the second degree murder of Sam Joseph what sentence did
    you receive?
    A: Life.
    Q: For the second degree murder of Bea Sabe Joseph what sentence?
    A: The same.
    Q: For the second degree murder of Genevieve Abraham what
    sentence?
    A: The same.
    Q: For the crime of burglary while armed what sentence?
    A: Those are three years mandatory.
    21
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    Q: Did you receive a life sentence as to that count as well, along with
    the mandatory three years?
    A: Yes.
    ....
    Q: Did you review the plea, study it, discuss it with [your attorneys]
    before you signed it and agreed to it?
    A: I did discuss it with them, yes.
    ....
    Q: Did you sign the document after going over each page of it in
    court?
    A: Yes.
    ....
    Q: In terms of your agreement with the state of Florida is there any
    agreement whatsoever for you to get out on parole?
    A: There is none.
    Q: Has anybody promised you – to you or suggested to you that they
    are going to do you a favor after the trial is over and get you parole
    one day?
    A: They couldn’t.
    Doc. 16-60, at 57–60.
    Houlihan, on cross-examination, elaborated on the good deal Luis had made
    for himself in entering into the plea agreement:
    Q [Mr. Houlihan]: You were facing the death penalty?
    A [Mr. Rodriguez]: True.
    22
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 23 of 72
    Q: And the alternative punishment, if you were convicted of first
    degree murder, was a life prison sentence, but with a minimum
    mandatory twenty-five years in prison without eligibility for parole.
    Correct?
    A: Is that what it is?
    Q: Your lawyer didn’t tell you?
    A: All that I was told was that there was a twenty-five minimum
    mandatory on each count and that possibly I could get one of those
    charges overturned, to a death row conviction.
    Q: Okay. And the sentence could be consecutive. Right?
    A: Consecutive. Yes.
    Q: Which means you could get the death penalty three times for
    example, right?
    A: True.
    Q: Or you could get a minimum mandatory seventy-five years in
    prison. Right?
    A: True.
    Q: To you that means you will never get out.
    A: Of course.
    ....
    Q: Okay. Now, the plea you have taken was second degree, correct?
    A: True.
    Q: Life in prison with one minimum mandatory three year sentence?
    A: True.
    Q: And that is for a use of a gun?
    23
    Case: 11-13273   Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 24 of 72
    A: Right.
    Q: Right? Now, that does not have any minimum mandatory twenty-
    five years does it?
    A: True.
    Q: In fact, you can get out, from what you have been told and what
    you believe, maybe in ten years?
    A: I don’t know where you have been but I have already called
    Tallahassee myself, okay, admissions and release. Life sentence is a
    life sentence, period. There is no such thing as parole. Since 1984.
    Six months before this case occurred.
    ....
    Q: Okay. You remember we had a deposition on two separate days
    with you. You remember that?
    A: Yes.
    Q: Mr. Eugene Zenobi was there?
    A: Yes.
    Q: I was there?
    A: Yes.
    ....
    Q: And on May 10, 1996[,] you were asked the following questions
    and answers.
    ....
    Q: Okay. Question: Were you told anything about an estimate about
    the amount of jail time you would be doing by either your lawyers or
    by the state attorney or by the police?
    24
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 25 of 72
    Answer: After ten years that I would be able to petition and ask
    for clemency of some kind to the parole board, but it is at their
    discretion.
    Question: Were you told by your lawyers that your chances
    would be good because you cooperated?
    Answer: Yes. There is no guarantee of that.
    A: True.
    Q: Okay. So as we – as you testified supposedly truthfully today to
    the jury, right?
    A: True.
    Q: Do you think there is a chance you could get out in ten years?
    A: Anybody filing for clemency might have a chance. You are
    pleading to the governor of the state. That is anybody. That is
    anybody. It doesn’t mean that you are going to get anything out of it.
    ....
    Q: Do you plan to petition the clemency board or parole after ten
    years?
    A: I would. Yes.
    Q: You will. Do you expect to get it because of your cooperation?
    A: That is totally up to them.
    Q: Do you expect to get it?
    A: Ten years down the road I don’t even know who is going to be
    running the state of Florida. How am I supposed to know? I don’t
    know. I can only petition for it. That is all I can do. I can hope for
    that. I got a daughter. I have hope. I have got a mother out there.
    That is, you know, these things matter to me.
    Doc. 16-60, at 72–78.
    25
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 26 of 72
    Q: Is it not a fact that if you do not testify quote, truthfully, unquote –
    A: True.
    Q: – you get a different plea? You get a different sentence?
    A: I will go back to step one where I will be charged or tried for the
    original charges.
    Q: First degree murder?
    A: Right.
    Q: And who determines truthfulness?
    A: This Court right here.
    Q: This Court. What about those people over there?
    A: I don’t know what his discretion would be. I don’t know what
    your discretion would be. I know that I was told exactly what that
    plea agreement was all about and I knew that when I came inside this
    courtroom I couldn’t hold back anything.
    Doc. 16-61, at 38.
    Luis, on direct examination by Laeser and then on cross-examination by
    Houlihan, was questioned extensively about his family visitations, including the
    conjugal visit with his wife.
    Q [Mr. Laeser]: Have you seen [your family] at all since the time of
    your arrest?
    A [Mr. Rodriguez]: A couple of times.
    Q: At what places or what location was that?
    A: Over at the jail house I saw [my daughter] once. And from then I
    made contacts with detectives, I wanted to see them in a more
    26
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 27 of 72
    civilized environment and I went ahead and made contact with them
    at the station.
    Q: In total about how many times do you think that your wife and
    daughter saw you in the vicinity of the police station?
    A: About three times.
    Q: Does this happen in the last year or so, or closer to the time of your
    arrest?
    A: Closer to the time of my arrest.
    Doc. 16-59, at 62.
    Q: Aside from your wife and daughter had any other family members
    seen you over the months?
    A: Yes.
    ....
    Q: During one of these visits were you ever in a room alone with your
    wife only?
    A: Yes, I was.
    ...
    Q: In terms of your meeting with your wife, about this particular
    meeting about how long did it last?
    A: About five, ten minutes.
    Q: What was the reason that you might have told or asked to be alone
    with your wife?
    A: I needed to speak to her privately. My wife and daughter. My
    wife and my mother-in-law was also in the room and I wanted to also
    have a change of clothes that they had brought me, some new clothes.
    27
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 28 of 72
    Q: Did you do anything else while you were with your wife in that
    room other than what you told the police you were going to do?
    A: Yes, I did.
    Q: Did you have relations with your wife during those few minutes?
    A: Yes.
    Q: Did you in any way tell the police or let them know that this was
    going to take place?
    A: No.
    Q: Did they approve it or say “Go ahead and do whatever you want.”
    Anything like that?
    A: They never find out. I wouldn’t have been able to do it if they
    found out.
    Doc. 16-59, at 69–71.
    Houlihan pressed Luis on how he was able to engage in sexual intercourse in
    an interrogation room while the detectives stood by right outside:
    Q [Mr. Houlihan]: You testified already about, you know, you had
    relations with [your wife] in the Metro-Dade Police Department
    homicide interrogation rooms, right?
    A [Mr. Rodriguez]: Correct.
    Q: Now, there is peep holes in those rooms. You remember that?
    A: True.
    Q: Now, one of the officers told you or her to put a napkin – or napkin
    or pieces of paper over the peep hole?
    A: If I was speaking to my lawyer, that would seem something that I
    would want to tell him and that is exactly what I told my lawyer, that
    he maybe do this. But it didn’t happen like this. I took advantage of
    28
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 29 of 72
    the opportunity. I put a piece of paper on there. Nobody told me to
    do that.
    Q: You did that?
    A: True.
    Q: What kind of paper?
    A: Just got a piece of paper and I put it on the peep hole.
    Doc. 16-60, at 82–83.
    Detective Smith was also asked about the conjugal visit after Laeser called
    him to the stand. He denied that Luis had been granted permission for a conjugal
    visit with his wife and that he was aware of the sexual intercourse while it was
    taking place. He said that he learned about the event sometime later.
    Q [Mr. Zenobi]: Was [Luis] allowed any conjugal visits with his wife?
    A [Det. Smith]: Absolutely not.
    Doc. 16-63, at 85. On redirect examination, Laeser asked Smith about his
    motivation for permitting Luis to spend time with his family:
    Q [Mr. Laeser]: During the course of any of these family visits or
    anything else[,] did you have some sort of secret agreement with Luis
    Rodriguez as to what would happen in his case?
    A [Det. Smith]: No, sir.
    Doc. 16-64, at 8.
    The parties’ closing arguments at the conclusion of the guilt phase of the
    trial focused in large part on the credibility of Luis Rodriguez’s testimony.
    29
    Case: 11-13273     Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 30 of 72
    Houlihan went first, Laeser then argued for the State, and Houlihan closed with a
    rebuttal. In his opening argument, Houlihan pointed out that “Luis told you . . . he
    used the phrase ‘He was choking in fear of the death penalty.’ . . . ‘Choking in fear
    of the electric chair’ I believe is how he put it. Choking in fear. He is scared.”
    Doc. 16-64, at 86. Houlihan then asked,
    Well, what is so special about Luis Rodriguez that he is taken
    out over and over and over again by the Metro-Dade homicide people.
    And taken to homicide, taken here, taken there. Why? What is so
    special about him? That is not the normal way it is done. Totally
    different. Why?
    I told you in the beginning concerning a deal with the devil, if
    you remember that phrase. Luis Rodriguez is dishonest.
    ....
    He has come here and taken an oath to tell the truth and he has
    lied. He has lied, he says, because he is fearful of the electric chair.
    But he lies. He has not even up to this point told you the truth.
    Doc. 16-64, at 89–90.
    Now, this is the person that the state attorney, that the police
    entered into a deal with. A deal. They shook hands on it.
    “You come in and you tell us the truth and you get this second
    degree murder –” if you remember – “and live.”
    Up to this point Luis is facing – his worse [sic] fear was the
    electric chair, but the other fear was, if you recall from the evidence,
    life in prison; first degree murder with a minimum mandatory twenty-
    five years without parole.
    ....
    30
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 31 of 72
    So he enters into a deal. He shakes on it. “Come in here and
    tell the truth” and he gets second degree and life. And he talked to
    you about why he called up the parole commission. You remember?
    “Oh yes. I called up these clemency people.”
    Well, why is he doing that? He intends in ten years or so to get
    out.
    Is there some sort of agreement unseen by any of us? I don’t
    know, but that is his intention. Is – is he right, or is he wrong? One –
    three murders and one sentence for second degree murder. Why such
    a deal?
    Why does he have relations with his wife in the Metro-Dade
    Homicide Office? If you remember, some of the cops said “Well, I
    don’t know anything about that.” One of them, Crawford, said “You
    know, I could lose my pension if that happened.”
    You know, and he should lose his pension if he was a
    participant in that type of activity, because it is wrong.
    “It doesn’t happen.” It happened to him. Why? Somebody
    else sitting over in the Dade County jail, they don’t get taken out and
    taken over to homicide. Why this guy? What is going to happen?
    Doc. 16-64, at 91–92.
    Laeser, countering Houlihan’s argument, pointed out that Luis was not
    threatened or improperly motivated to testify a certain way:
    Did Luis Rodriguez say “I was threatened. I was forced. I was
    coerced. Police mistreated me in order to get me to give this
    statement.”
    Did the detective say “We had to raise our voices to him. We
    had to slap our hand on the table. We had to tell him we are going to
    do something to his mom and family” before he would admit what he
    did.
    31
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 32 of 72
    The witness didn’t say that. The witnesses said “As soon as we
    told him that we had spoken to Tony he broke down. And started to
    talk and hasn’t stopped since.”
    Doc. 16-65, at 69.
    And what is the cross examination of Crawford and Smith and
    all of the detectives? “You gave Luis Rodriguez special treatment
    didn’t you.”
    Yes. He was allowed to see his daughter on her birthday once
    three years ago.
    Yes. He was allowed to have his family see him for Christmas
    in the police station once three years ago. After his confession. After
    he had given a statement implicating this defendant. After he had said
    that “The only people involved in this crime were myself and Tony.”
    What – what do the police get out of being decent and letting
    him see his family? Do they get a new story, a new version, new
    facts, new suspects? Or are they just being decent to somebody who
    has already admitted his acts and asked for permission to see his
    family?
    Is there a motive to force Luis to continue to tell the truth?
    “Okay. You have told us the truth on August the 3rd. We want you
    to continue telling us the truth, so we are going to let you see your
    daughter on her birthday.”
    How’s that for a deal.
    Doc. 16-65, at 72–73.
    Luis Rodriguez had the greatest motivation in the world to tell
    the truth on that witness stand. He knows what happens if he lies
    about what happened to you jurors. He knows that his deal with the
    state is void. That means he gets reprosecuted. We seek the death
    penalty against him.
    He knows that every single conversation he has had with the
    police, law enforcement and prosecutors from the day of his plea in
    32
    Case: 11-13273     Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 33 of 72
    April until and including his testimony can be used against him to
    convict him.
    The only way he can keep himself from being reprosecuted is to
    tell the truth. That is his only obligation.
    What is his motive to lie to you jurors?
    ....
    In all of his cross examination, the special treatment and the
    fact that he was actually allowed to eat a lunch outside the jail, and
    everything else, does that change what he ever said in 1985? Does he
    tell Ralph Lopez “It was me and Tony.” In 1993 does he tell the
    police “It was me and Tony”? In 1996 in front of you jurors does he
    say “It was me and Tony”?
    What does the special treatment have to do with it? What is
    that all about? Other than a way to keep you from focussing [sic] on
    the fact that twenty-two witness and a hundred and three exhibits
    point to only one person on earth. This man. That is what every
    single bit of evidence that you have heard points.
    Doc. 16-65, at 89–91.
    During his rebuttal, Houlihan made one last attempt to discredit Luis and his
    testimony:
    Luis to this day hasn’t told the truth. What Luis has done, he
    started getting into the script because it was worth it to him to take the
    plea. . . . He cooperates with the police. He goes and sees his family.
    He will do whatever he perceives he needs to do for Luis.
    Doc. 16-66, at 28.
    On October 24, after thirteen days of testimony, the jury found Petitioner
    guilty on three counts of capital murder and one count of armed burglary, as
    33
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 34 of 72
    charged in the indictment. The trial of the penalty phase of the case was deferred
    to December 9. The Florida Supreme Court summarized the evidence presented at
    that time, to the same jury.
    The State presented evidence that Manuel Rodriguez had
    seventy-one prior violent felony convictions (the contemporaneous
    murders in this case, twenty-three convictions of armed robbery,
    seventeen for armed kidnaping, eight for aggravated assault with a
    firearm, and numerous convictions for carrying a concealed weapon
    and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon) and that he was on
    probation and parole at the time of the murders.
    Both the State and Manuel Rodriguez presented the testimony
    of numerous psychologists and psychiatrists who had evaluated
    Rodriguez over the preceding twenty years. Apparently, whenever
    Rodriguez was charged with a crime, a question of competency was
    raised and he was evaluated. Most of those who examined him agreed
    that he suffered from some sort of mental illness, but the testimony
    varied greatly in that some had previously found him to be
    incompetent and in need of hospitalization; others had found him to
    be malingering. None could testify to his state of mind at the time of
    the murders. The testimony did establish that Rodriguez had a long
    history of drug abuse. Several of his family members testified
    regarding his childhood and his mother’s mental problems.
    
    Id. at 35.21
    21
    The State established Petitioner’s 71 felony convictions through the live testimony of
    detectives in the Metro-Dade Police Department. They introduced certified copies of the
    convictions and described the crimes involved. Here is what that evidence disclosed:
    May 15, 1977: Armed Robbery of the DuPont Plaza Hotel. Information Count I:
    Robbery. Information Count II: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm while Engaged
    in Criminal Offense. Pled guilty on May 21, 1980 to robbery. Sentenced to ten
    years’ imprisonment and seven years’ probation.
    34
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014      Page: 35 of 72
    June 3, 1977: Armed Robbery of Zagami Supermarket. Information Count I:
    Robbery. Information Count II: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm while Engaged
    in Criminal Offense. Pled guilty on May 21, 1980 to robbery. Sentenced to five
    years’ imprisonment.
    July 8, 1982: Armed Robbery of the U-Totem convenience store. Information
    Count I: Carrying a Concealed Firearm. Information Count II: Grand Theft
    Second Degree (of the automobile that Rodriguez had driven to the U-Totem).
    Pled guilty to both counts. Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on each count
    to run concurrently on May 6, 1986.
    November 22, 1985: Carjacking outside a Ramada Inn. Information Count I:
    Robbery (of cash and jewelry from the car passenger). Information Count II:
    Robbery (of the car, cash, and jewelry from the car owner). Information Count
    III: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm while Engaged in a Criminal Offense. Pled
    guilty to all counts. Sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment for Counts I and II.
    Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for Count III, all sentences to run
    concurrently.
    January 11, 1988: Armed Robbery of a Fabric King fabric store. Information
    Count I: Robbery (of jewelry from a store clerk). Information Count II: Robbery
    (of cash from the store clerk). Information Count III: Robbery (of cash from a
    different clerk). Information Count IV: Kidnapping (of the first clerk).
    Information Count V: Kidnapping (of the second clerk). Information Count VI:
    Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Convicted Felon. Information Count VII:
    Carrying a Concealed Firearm. Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on
    May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment for Counts I through V.
    Sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment for Count VI. Sentenced to five years’
    imprisonment for Count VII. He was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory
    minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for these
    convictions but consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    January 19, 1988: Armed Robbery of a Burger King. Information Count I:
    Kidnapping (of a counter clerk). Information Count II: Robbery (of cash from the
    counter clerk). Information Count III: Robbery (of gift certificates from the
    Burger King). Information Count IV: Robbery (of jewelry from the counter
    clerk). Information Count V: Aggravated Assault (of the clerk). Information
    Count VI: Aggravated Assault (of a different clerk). Information Count VII:
    Aggravated Assault (of yet another clerk). Information Count VIII: Carrying a
    Concealed Firearm. Information Count IX: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by
    a Convicted Felon. Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on May 4, 1992.
    Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment for Counts I through IV. Sentenced to
    five years’ imprisonment for Counts V through VIII. Sentenced to fifteen years’
    35
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 36 of 72
    imprisonment for Count IX. He was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory
    minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for these
    convictions but consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    February 20, 1988: Armed Robbery of a Burger King (different than the one in
    the previous case). Information Count I: Armed Robbery. Information Count II:
    Aggravated Assault. Information Count III: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by
    a Convicted Felon. Information Count IV: Carrying a Concealed Firearm.
    Information Count V: Kidnapping (with a weapon). Pled nolo contendere to all
    counts. Adjudged convicted of all counts on May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty
    years’ imprisonment for Counts I and V. Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment
    for Counts II and IV. Sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment for Count III. He
    was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory minimum for use of a firearm. All
    sentences to run concurrently for these convictions but consecutively for
    sentences from other cases.
    March 17, 1988: Armed Robbery of a McDonald’s fast food restaurant.
    Information Count I: Kidnapping (of a counter clerk). Information Count II:
    Robbery (of the clerk). Information Count III: Robbery (of another clerk).
    Information Count IV: Carrying a Concealed Firearm. Information Count V:
    Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Convicted Felon. Adjudged guilty and
    convicted of all counts on May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment
    for Counts I and II. Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for Counts III and IV.
    Sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment for Count V. He was also sentenced to
    three years’ mandatory minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run
    concurrently for these convictions but consecutively for sentences from other
    cases.
    April 30, 1988: Armed Robbery of a Burger King (different than the other two
    Burger Kings robbed). Information Count I: Robbery (of a counter clerk).
    Information Count II: Kidnapping (of the clerk). Information Count III:
    Aggravated Assault. Information Count IV: Carrying a Concealed Firearm.
    Information Count V: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm while Engaged in a
    Criminal Offense. Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on May 4, 1992.
    Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment for Counts I and II. Sentenced to five
    years’ imprisonment for Counts III and IV. Sentenced to fifteen years’
    imprisonment for Count V. He was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory
    minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for these
    convictions but consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    September 14, 1988: Armed Robbery of Luna Beds bedding store. Information
    Count I: Kidnapping (of owner/wife). Information Count II: Kidnapping (of
    owner/husband). Information Count III: Robbery. Information Count IV:
    36
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014      Page: 37 of 72
    Carrying a Concealed Firearm. Information Count V: Unlawful Possession of a
    Firearm by a Convicted Felon. Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on
    May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment for Counts I and II.
    Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for Counts III and IV. Sentenced to fifteen
    years’ imprisonment for Count V. He was also sentenced to three years’
    mandatory minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for
    these convictions but consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    October 5, 1988: Armed Robbery of Indoor Gardener Florist. Information Count
    I: Robbery (of a clerk). Information Count II: Kidnapping (of the clerk).
    Information Count III: Robbery (of another clerk). Information Count IV:
    Kidnapping (of the other clerk). Information Count V: Unlawful Possession of a
    Firearm by a Convicted Felon. Information Count VI: Aggravated Assault.
    Information Count VII: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm while Engaged in a
    Criminal Offense. Information Count VIII: Carrying a Concealed Firearm.
    Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty
    years’ imprisonment for Counts I through IV. Sentenced to fifteen years’
    imprisonment for Counts V and VII. Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for
    Counts VI and VIII. He was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory minimum
    for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for these convictions but
    consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    November 11, 1988: Armed Robbery of Fantasy Travel. Information Count I:
    Kidnapping (of a travel agent). Information Count II: Kidnapping (of a second
    travel agent). Information Count III: Kidnapping (of a third travel agent).
    Information Count IV: Robbery (of the first travel agent). Information Count V:
    Robbery (of the second travel agent). Information Count VI: Robbery (of the
    third travel agent). Information Count VII: Carrying a Concealed Firearm.
    Information Count VIII: Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Convicted Felon.
    Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty
    years’ imprisonment for Counts I through VI. Sentenced to five years’
    imprisonment for Count VII. Sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment for Count
    VIII. He was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory minimum for use of a
    firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for these convictions but consecutively
    for sentences from other cases.
    November 14, 1988: Armed Robbery of a Clothestime clothing store.
    Information Count I: Kidnapping (of a store clerk). Information Count II:
    Kidnapping (of a different clerk). Information Count III: Robbery (of the store
    clerk). Information Count IV: Robbery (of the other clerk). Information Count
    V: Carrying a Concealed Firearm. Information Count VI: Unlawful Possession of
    a Firearm by a Convicted Felon. Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on
    37
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014      Page: 38 of 72
    One of the witnesses who testified for the State during the penalty phase was
    Detective Crawford. The State called Crawford for the purpose of rebutting the
    opinions of Petitioner’s psychologists and psychiatrists that Petitioner suffered
    from mental illness. Over Petitioner’s objection, Crawford testified that in
    September 1993, he spoke to Alejandro Lago, a jailhouse snitch, who, like
    Petitioner, was being held in the Metro-Dade County Jail. Lago was being
    detained on a charge of attempted first degree murder. 22 According to Crawford,
    Lago reported that Petitioner had informed him that he was being treated for
    mental illness and was on medication but did not need it—he was taking the
    May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment for Counts I through IV.
    Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for Count V. Sentenced to fifteen years’
    imprisonment for Count VI. He was also sentenced to three years’ mandatory
    minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for these
    convictions but consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    January 3, 1989: Armed Robbery of a Burger King (the same Burger King in the
    February 20, 1988, case). Information Count I: Kidnapping (of the counter clerk).
    Information Count II: Kidnapping (of the Burger King manager). Information
    Count III: Robbery (of the counter clerk). Information Count IV: Robbery (of the
    manager). Information Count V: Aggravated Assault. Information Count VI:
    Carrying a Concealed Firearm. Information Count VII: Unlawful Possession of a
    Firearm by a Convicted Felon. Adjudged guilty and convicted of all counts on
    May 4, 1992. Sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment for Counts I through IV.
    Sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for Counts V and VI. Sentenced to fifteen
    years’ imprisonment for Count VII. He was also sentenced to three years’
    mandatory minimum for use of a firearm. All sentences to run concurrently for
    these convictions but consecutively for sentences from other cases.
    22
    Lago was subsequently convicted of the charge. Doc. 16-72, at 81.
    38
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014     Page: 39 of 72
    medication “basically just to stay high” and “to give [it] to other inmates in trade
    for favors.” Doc. 16-72, at 83. Crawford went on to say that in December 1993,
    Lago gave him some of Petitioner’s medication and said that Petitioner told him
    that he “was going to act crazy.” Doc. 16-72, at 88.23
    After deliberating over the sentences to recommend the jury recommended
    by a unanimous vote that the court impose the death penalty for each murder. The
    court accepted the recommendation and sentenced Petitioner accordingly. 24 The
    court found six aggravating circumstances: (1) Petitioner had several violent felony
    convictions,25 and (2) the murders were committed while Petitioner was under a
    sentence of imprisonment, 26 (3) during the commission of armed burglary, 27 (4) to
    eliminate witnesses and avoid arrest, 28 (5) for pecuniary gain,29 and (6) were cold,
    23
    Petitioner’s counsel took Lago’s deposition on April 22, 1996. Crawford’s testimony
    of what Lago told him in September and December 1993 was consistent with Lago’s deposition
    testimony. Petitioner’s lawyers chose not to cross-examine Crawford or call Lago as a witness,
    presumably to rebut Crawford’s testimony. On Petitioner’s direct appeal, the Florida Supreme
    Court held that the trial court erred by allowing Crawford to testify about Lago’s statements, but
    that the error was harmless. See Rodriguez 
    I, 753 So. 2d at 44
    –45.
    24
    The court sentenced Petitioner to life imprisonment on the armed burglary count.
    25
    See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(b).
    26
    See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(a).
    27
    See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(d).
    28
    See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(e).
    29
    See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(f).
    39
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 40 of 72
    calculated and premeditated. 30 The court found no statutory mitigating
    circumstances, but found some nonstatutory mitigation; Petitioner “was and is
    mentally ill, . . . has a history of drug abuse and drug psychosis, and . . . is a good
    brother, loving father, and caring son.” Rodriguez 
    I, 753 So. 2d at 35
    . The court
    rejected as a mitigating circumstance the fact that Luis Rodriguez received
    concurrent life sentences for the three murders. 
    Id. D. The
    Florida Supreme Court affirmed Petitioner’s convictions and death
    sentences. Rodriguez 
    I, 753 So. 2d at 33
    . The United States Supreme Court
    denied certiorari review. Antonio Rodriguez v. Florida, 
    531 U.S. 859
    , 
    121 S. Ct. 145
    , 
    148 L. Ed. 2d 96
    (2000). Thereafter, Petitioner moved the Dade County
    Circuit Court to vacate his convictions and sentences pursuant to Florida Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 3.850. 31 In his motion, as amended, Petitioner presented
    twenty-two claims for relief. 32 We consider only the federal constitutional claims
    30
    See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(i).
    31
    Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 is titled “Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or
    Correct Sentence,” and sets out the procedures and requirements for obtaining relief.
    32
    The claims were based on both state law and federal constitutional law. See Rodriguez
    
    II, 39 So. 3d at 282
    n.5.
    40
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 41 of 72
    covered by the COA. 33 The Circuit Court denied them following an evidentiary
    hearing, and the Florida Supreme Court affirmed. Rodriguez 
    II, 39 So. 3d at 279
    .
    We frame these claims as the Florida Supreme Court did in its affirmance. 34 They
    are: (1) “[T]he State violated Giglio and Brady by suppressing information that in
    order to obtain Luis’s cooperation in testifying against Rodriguez, Luis was
    provided with special accommodations, including unsupervised visits with his
    family and being permitted to have sexual relations with his wife while in jail.” 
    Id. at 289.
    35 (2) “[T]he State violated Brady or Giglio because the State failed to
    33
    See supra note 5.
    34
    We do so because, in appealing the Circuit Court’s denial of Rule 3.850 relief,
    Petitioner’s brief described the claims he had presented to the Circuit Court and his arguments to
    the Florida Supreme Court on appeal in a rambling convoluted fashion that, for the most past,
    conflated his Giglio, Brady, and Strickland arguments. This accounts for the way in which the
    District Court framed the issues for this appeal in its COA. See supra note 5. The Florida
    Supreme Court, in addressing Petitioner’s arguments, rearranged, in part, the claims he had
    presented to the Circuit Court and in doing so expressed the gist of what Petitioner seemed to be
    contending.
    35
    Petitioner’s brief express this claim in these words:
    The State permitted and facilitated sexual visits between its key witness,
    Luis Rodriguez, and his wife while he was in police custody. Luis, the co-
    defendant turned snitch, was granted these special visits with his wife as well as
    visits from his family . . . in exchange for his continued cooperation. This was
    undisclosed consideration in violation of Brady . . . .
    Not only was the motive for the special visits hidden but the jury was
    misled as to the motive in violation of Giglio. The State improperly bolstered its
    key witness and failed to correct error in Detective Crawford’s testimony, thus
    misleading the jury as to the credibility of Luis.
    Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at 29.
    41
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 42 of 72
    disclose potential impeachment evidence . . . that Luis was promised help in
    obtaining parole.” 
    Id. at 288.
    “[T]he prosecutor presented false testimony and
    failed to disclose that Luis was promised assistance in obtaining parole if he
    testified against Rodriguez,” 
    id. at 289,
    in that Luis was led to believe that “he
    would be receiving assistance in obtaining parole based on some conversations he
    had ‘behind closed doors.’” 
    Id. at 290.36
    (3) The State violated Brady “when [it]
    failed to disclose two letters that jail inmate Willy Sirvas wrote to the prosecutor,
    prior to trial, alleging that Luis Rodriguez would lie.” 
    Id. at 285–86.
    These are the
    texts of the two letters dated August 10, 1995, and May 28, 1996, respectively:
    Dear Laeser-Hague:
    I’m in the same dormitory as inmate Luis Rodriguez # 93-
    65604. You have to ask for continuance on August 14. Rodriguez told
    me everything about the murders and he said that the state can’t
    pruebe [sic] him anything without a witness or pruebes [sic] that lead
    him to this murders. I will get in touch.
    ....
    Dear Mr. Abe Laeser and Andrew Hague:
    A year ago I wrote a letter to the state attorney office. And my
    letter ignore. [sic] Now, Mr. Richard Houlihan could use my
    36
    Petitioner’s brief expressed this claim this way: “The State did not disclose that the
    prosecutor promised to assist Luis in obtaining parole as part of his plea agreement.” Petitioner’s
    Corrected Br. at 28. “Based on conversations that were held ‘behind closed doors,’ Luis testified
    that he expected the State to fulfill additional promises that were never disclosed to defense
    counsel.” Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at 47.
    42
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 43 of 72
    testimony in court in reference to Luis Rodriguez lies to save his ass,
    is only one true. [sic]
    
    Id. at 286
    (alteration in original). 37 (4) The State violated Brady when it “fail[ed]
    to disclose letters pertaining to potential impeachment of Alejandro Lago, a
    witness whose hearsay statements were heard by the jury in the penalty phase
    through Detective Crawford.” 
    Id. at 283.
    “[T]he letters show[ed] that Lago
    received consideration in exchange for his assistance and that the results of a
    polygraph test that he took were considered suspect.” 
    Id. at 294.
    38
    The Florida Supreme Court affirmed the Circuit Court’s denial of these four
    claims as follows. As to claim (1), the Florida Supreme Court recounted that “Luis
    . . . was permitted to have visits with various members of his family [and] a
    meeting with his wife alone for about five or ten minutes and . . . had sexual
    relations with her.” 
    Id. at 289.
    However, Petitioner’s lawyers knew all about
    “these incidents” and “cross-examined Luis about [them] at trial.” 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    family and conjugal visits, standing alone, did not constitute a
    claim. Thus, whether claim (1) presented a valid ground for relief turned on the
    37
    Assistant State Attorney Andrew Hague assisted Abraham Laeser, the lead prosecutor,
    in handling the State’s case.
    38
    As note 
    23, supra
    , explains, in appealing his convictions and death sentence to the
    Florida Supreme Court, Petitioner challenged the admissibility of Detective Crawford’s
    testimony of what Lago had reported to him. The court found that the trial court erred in
    admitting Crawford’s testimony, but concluded that the error was harmless.
    43
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 44 of 72
    whether the State deliberately withheld from the defense Detectives Crawford and
    Smith’s motive or purpose in providing Luis with these “special
    accommodations”—in particular, in allowing him to have sex with his wife—
    which was to obtain his testimony against Petitioner. See 
    id. The Florida
    Supreme
    Court read this claim as having been brought under both Giglio and Brady. The
    Giglio aspect is that, with the prosecutor’s knowledge, the detectives lied about
    their motive and purpose in providing these special accommodations. The Brady
    aspect is that the prosecution withheld from the defense the reason for these special
    accommodations.
    The Circuit Court resolved this claim against Petitioner on the basis of the
    testimony Luis and the two detectives gave at the Rule 3.850 evidentiary hearing.
    As the Florida Supreme Court explained:
    At the evidentiary hearing, Luis testified that while he was unsure
    whether the police knew that he had sexual relations with his wife, the
    officers did suggest that, if he needed privacy with his wife, he should
    place a sticker over the peephole in the window of the door. The two
    officers testified at the evidentiary hearing that they were not aware
    Luis had sex with his wife and denied that they granted him
    permission to have sexual relations by using stickers to cover the
    peephole. The prosecutor testified that he did not knowingly present
    false testimony when the detectives testified at trial that they did not
    permit Luis to have sexual relations with his wife.
    
    Id. The Circuit
    Court denied the claim because it found the statements Luis made
    at the hearing incredible and the detectives’ statements credible. The Florida
    44
    Case: 11-13273    Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 45 of 72
    Supreme Court, bound by the rule that credibility determinations are matters for
    the trial court, found that
    competent, substantial evidence support[ed] the trial court’s factual
    findings. Luis’s recent testimony was contrary to his prior sworn
    statements at trial, and at times his testimony at the evidentiary
    hearing conflicted with other statements that he made during the
    hearing. Because Luis’s testimony was the primary support for this
    claim and his testimony was found to be not credible, Rodriguez is
    unable to establish the first prong of either a Brady violation or a
    Giglio violation. Further, even assuming the change of testimony that
    the police may have known about the sexual relations, the jury was
    already aware that Luis was being provided with special treatment and
    that the police knowingly permitted him to have some private time
    with his wife.
    
    Id. Because Rodriguez
    could not “establish either materiality or prejudice,” the
    Florida Supreme Court denied the claim. 
    Id. The Florida
    Supreme Court made short shrift of claim (2), that the State
    violated Brady or Giglio by withholding a promise it made to Luis “behind closed
    doors” that it would assist him in obtaining parole and allowing Luis to testify
    falsely to the contrary.
    Other than vague, conclusory statements, Rodriguez failed to present
    any evidence to support [t]his claim. During the evidentiary hearing,
    Luis testified that he thought he would be receiving assistance in
    obtaining parole based on some conversations he had “behind closed
    doors.” No specifics of these conversations were provided. Luis’s
    lawyer also was unable to provide any details as to specific assistance
    that Luis was to be given if he testified against Rodriguez. Luis
    agreed at the [Rule 3.850] evidentiary hearing that the plea agreement
    expressly states that no promises were being made about his sentence.
    45
    Case: 11-13273   Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 46 of 72
    Because Rodriguez has failed to sufficiently support his allegation as
    to an undisclosed agreement, he is not entitled to relief.
    
    Id. at 290.
    Turning to claim (3), the withholding of the Sirvas letters to prosecutors
    Laeser and Hague, the Florida Supreme Court, contrary to the Circuit Court,
    determined that Brady required the prosecutors to disclose the letters to the defense
    but concluded that the letters were not material. The Florida Supreme Court began
    its analysis of the claim by describing the circumstances under which Sirvas wrote
    the letters.
    Sirvas knew Luis because he was in a cell next to Luis when they
    were both at the Metro West Jail. According to Sirvas, Luis talked
    about his case and stated that the State offered him a deal to testify
    against his codefendant because he was facing the death penalty and
    the State could not prove the charges unless Luis testified. Luis told
    Sirvas that even though he and his codefendant had a pact not to
    testify against each other, he would testify against his codefendant and
    blame it on him.
    
    Id. at 286
    –87. Then, after concluding that the letters should have been disclosed to
    defense counsel, the court explained why the letters were not material, why
    Rodriguez had not demonstrated prejudice.
    Sirvas admitted at the evidentiary hearing that Luis did not tell
    him any of the specifics about the case itself and that he did not even
    know the codefendant’s name. This testimony was directly contrary
    to some of the statements in his 1995 letter in which Sirvas alleged
    that Luis had told him “everything.” Because his actual testimony
    contradicted his letters, Sirvas’s credibility is questionable.
    46
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014        Page: 47 of 72
    More importantly, Sirvas’s testimony at the evidentiary hearing
    shows that Sirvas did not know the underlying facts of the case and
    who participated in the crime. Thus, Rodriguez would have been
    unable to show how Luis lied about Rodriguez’s involvement. When
    Sirvas was questioned during the evidentiary hearing, he was asked
    directly about why he stated in his letter that he believed Luis would
    lie. Sirvas responded, “You know, he was lying because, you know,
    he was testifying, the defendant because I don’t even know his name
    or who he was. But he told me that the State is helping me, you
    know, how do you call it? A charge, you know, if I testify against my
    codefendant. That’s why he was lying, you know.” At no point did
    Sirvas provide any testimony that sufficiently explained why Sirvas
    thought that Luis would lie. Both his letter and his testimony assumed
    that because Luis decided to plead guilty to a lesser charge in order to
    avoid the death penalty, Luis would lie. The jury was aware that Luis
    had entered a plea in order to avoid the death penalty.
    
    Id. at 287–88
    (emphasis added).
    Claim (4) is rooted in Detective Crawford’s penalty-phase testimony about
    information Alejandro Lago had provided him. In the penalty phase, defense
    counsel called mental health experts to testify that Petitioner suffered from a
    mental illness. The State called Crawford in rebuttal to show that Petitioner did
    not have a mental illness and that he used the medication he had been prescribed to
    get high. Over Petitioner’s hearsay objection, Crawford related what Lago told
    him. 39
    39
    In addition to objecting to Crawford’s testimony as hearsay, Petitioner objected on the
    ground that the testimony would deny him his Sixth Amendment right of confrontation. The
    Sixth Amendment provides that, “[i]n all criminal cases, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to
    47
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014      Page: 48 of 72
    The Florida Supreme Court, in reviewing Petitioner’s convictions and death
    sentences on direct appeal, held that
    [a]llowing the testimony of a jailhouse informant to be heard through
    the testimony of another witness not only deprived Rodriguez of the
    opportunity to cross-examine Lago, but also improperly bolstered
    Lago’s statement by having a potentially more credible police officer
    repeat the statements of a potentially less credible jailhouse informant.
    This is because “when a police officer, who is generally regarded by
    the jury as disinterested and objective and therefore highly credible, is
    the corroborating witness, the danger of improperly influencing the
    jury becomes particularly grave.”
    Rodriguez 
    I, 753 So. 2d at 44
    (citation omitted). The court nonetheless concluded
    that “the admission of the testimony was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt
    given the number of strong aggravators in this case and the conflicting testimony
    as to Manuel Rodriguez’s mental health, including some testimony that he was a
    malingerer.” 
    Id. at 45.
    In claim (4), Petitioner argued that, in derogation of the Brady rule, the State
    withheld two letters Crawford and Smith had written on behalf of Lago indicating
    that “Lago received consideration in exchange for his assistance and that the
    results of a polygraph test that he took were considered suspect and that if the jury
    be confronted with the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. This provision is
    applicable to the states under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. See Pointer v.
    Texas, 
    380 U.S. 400
    , 406, 
    85 S. Ct. 1065
    , 1069, 
    13 L. Ed. 2d 923
    (1965).
    48
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014        Page: 49 of 72
    had been made aware of this information, the jury might have rejected the
    statements of Lago that were presented through [Crawford’s] testimony.”
    Rodriguez 
    II, 39 So. 3d at 294
    . 40 The letters were written on May 22, 1995, and in
    February 1996 on a Metro-Dade Police Department letterhead. The letters were
    addressed to “To whom it may concern.” The May 22 letter stated:
    Alejandro Lago has assisted this agency with several
    investigations. This assistance has been an immense help. The
    information on all cases has always been correct and accurate.
    Mr. Lago has been polygraphed on all issues and has always
    been truthful. It will become necessary for Mr. Lago to testify in
    these matters in the next couple of years. We are confident that he
    will continue to help us in a truthful manner.
    Whatever consideration you can extend to Mr. Lago would be
    greatly appreciated. Please feel free to contact the following persons
    for verification or detailed information.
    [Signed] Jarrett Crawford – Gregory Smith, Investigators, Metro-
    Dade Police Department, Homicide Bureau.
    Doc. 16-136, at 65. Smith testified at a Rule 3.850 hearing that he wrote the
    February 1996 letter, which is not in the record on appeal,41 at Lago’s request
    because Lago thought he might be deported.
    40
    Zenobi, testifying at a Rule 3.850 hearing, said that when Crawford took the stand
    during the penalty phase of the trial, he and Houlihan knew that Lago was a paid informant.
    41
    The transcript of the hearing reflects that the letter was made part of the record as an
    exhibit.
    49
    Case: 11-13273     Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 50 of 72
    The Florida Supreme Court assumed that Petitioner satisfied the Brady
    rule’s first prong—that the State had “willfully or inadvertently suppressed”
    exculpatory or impeaching evidence—but concluded that he had not shown
    “prejudice.” 
    Id. The court
    recalled that on direct appeal, it
    held the trial court erred in permitting Lago’s statements to be
    admitted through Detective Crawford. However, the Court explicitly
    determined that “the admission of the testimony was harmless beyond
    a reasonable doubt given the number of strong aggravators in this case
    and the conflicting testimony as to Manuel Rodriguez’s mental health,
    including some testimony that he was a malingerer.” Rodriguez[ 
    I], 753 So. 2d at 45
    . Turning to the Brady claim, the challenged
    documents would only have presented potential additional bases to
    impeach Lago’s statements, assuming they were admissible at all.
    This additional evidence would not change our harmless error analysis
    as set forth on direct appeal.
    
    Id. at 294–95.
    The Florida Supreme Court issued its Rodriguez II opinion on May 6, 2010,
    and denied rehearing on July 9, 2010. On July 26, 2010, Petitioner petitioned the
    United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida for a writ of habeas
    corpus. On January 3, he amended his petition with leave of court. Then, on May
    12, 2011, after reviewing the records of the prosecution of Petitioner’s case in the
    Circuit Court and before the Florida Supreme Court on direct appeal as well as the
    Rule 3.850 proceedings in those two courts, and considering the parties’
    submissions, the District Court deferred to the Florida Supreme Court’s
    adjudications of Petitioner’s claims in conformance with the Antiterrorism and
    50
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014      Page: 51 of 72
    Effective Death penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), 42 and denied the writ.
    Rodriguez v. Buss (“Rodriguez III”), 
    2011 WL 1827899
    (S.D. Fla. May 12, 2011).
    This appeal followed.
    II.
    A.
    AEDPA circumscribes federal court review of a petitioner’s constitutional
    claims. Where, as here, a constitutional claim has been adjudicated in state court, a
    federal court may not grant habeas relief unless the state court’s adjudication “was
    contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal
    law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” 28 U.S.C.
    § 2254(d)(1), or “was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light
    of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).
    The Supreme Court has explained the meaning of the three phrases
    contained in § 2254(d)(1). The phrase “clearly established Federal law” refers
    only to “the holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the Supreme] Court’s decisions
    as of the time of the relevant state-court decision.” Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 412, 
    120 S. Ct. 1495
    , 1523, 
    146 L. Ed. 2d 389
    (2000). A state court decision
    42
    Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (codified as amended at 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241–55).
    51
    Case: 11-13273     Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 52 of 72
    is “contrary to” a Supreme Court holding “if the state court arrives at a conclusion
    opposite to that reached by [the] Court on a question of law or if the state court
    decides a case differently than [the Supreme] Court has on a set of materially
    indistinguishable facts.” 
    Id. at 412–13,
    120 S. Ct. at 1523. A state court decision
    “involve[s] an unreasonable application of” a Supreme Court holding “if the state
    court identifies the correct governing legal principle from [the] Court’s decisions
    but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s case.” 
    Id. at 413,
    120 S. Ct. at 1523. A merely incorrect application of federal law, however, is
    not enough to warrant habeas relief. As for whether the state-court decision “was
    based on an unreasonable determination of the facts,” we must bear in mind that
    AEDPA establishes a presumption that the state court’s findings of fact are correct,
    and only “clear and convincing evidence” can rebut that presumption. 28 U.S.C.
    § 2254(e)(1).
    Section 2254(d)’s “standard for evaluating state-court rulings” is therefore
    “highly deferential,” Woodford v. Visciotti, 
    537 U.S. 19
    , 24, 
    123 S. Ct. 357
    , 360,
    
    154 L. Ed. 2d
    . 279 (2002) (internal quotation marks omitted), and “difficult to
    meet,” Harrington v. Richter, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    131 S. Ct. 770
    , 786, 
    178 L. Ed. 2d
    624 (2011); it “demands that state-court decisions be given the benefit of the
    doubt,” 
    Woodford, 537 U.S. at 24
    , 123 S. Ct. at 360. To obtain habeas relief, a
    state prisoner must show that “there is no possibility fairminded jurists could
    52
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 53 of 72
    disagree that the state court’s decision conflicts with [the Supreme] Court’s
    precedents”—“that the state court’s ruling . . . was so lacking in justification that
    there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any
    possibility for fairminded disagreement.” Harrington, ___ U.S. at ___, 131 S. Ct. at
    787.43
    B.
    A Giglio violation occurs when the prosecution solicits or fails to correct
    false or perjured testimony and “the false testimony could . . . in any reasonable
    likelihood have affected the judgment of the jury.” 
    Giglio, 405 U.S. at 153
    –54, 92
    S. Ct. at 766 (quoting Napue v. Illinois, 
    360 U.S. 264
    , 271, 
    79 S. Ct. 1173
    , 1178, 
    3 L. Ed. 2d 1217
    (1959)) (ellipses in original). The State violates Giglio if it
    “includes perjured testimony and . . . the prosecution knew, or should have known,
    of the perjury.” United States v. Agurs, 
    427 U.S. 97
    , 103, 
    96 S. Ct. 2392
    , 2397, 
    49 L. Ed. 2d 342
    (1976). Thus, to succeed on a Giglio claim, a petitioner must prove
    (1) that the prosecution used or failed to correct testimony that he knew or should
    have known was false and (2) materiality—that there is any reasonable likelihood
    the false testimony could have affected the judgment.
    43
    The above discussion makes it clear that § 2254(d) “creates a substantially higher
    threshold for obtaining relief than de novo review.” Renico v. Lett, 
    559 U.S. 766
    , 773, 130 S.
    Ct. 1855, 1862, 
    176 L. Ed. 2d 678
    (2010) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    53
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 54 of 72
    When considering a Giglio claim on federal habeas review, a petitioner must
    also satisfy the standard set forth in Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
    , 113 S.
    Ct. 1710, 
    123 L. Ed. 2d 353
    (1993). Specifically, a petitioner must demonstrate
    that the constitutional error—here the Giglio violation—“had substantial and
    injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.” 
    Id. at 637,
    113 S.
    Ct. at 1722 (internal quotation marks omitted). 44 Brecht can prevent a petitioner
    from obtaining habeas relief even if he can show that, were he raising a Giglio
    claim in the first instance on direct appeal before a state appellate court, he would
    be entitled to relief. See Guzman v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 
    663 F.3d 1336
    , 1355–
    56 (11th Cir. 2011) (finding a Giglio violation but denying habeas relief because
    the petitioner failed to demonstrate the error had a “substantial and injurious effect
    on the outcome of his trial”).
    Therefore, we cannot grant federal habeas relief on Petitioner’s Giglio claim
    unless (1) Petitioner demonstrates that the Florida Supreme Court’s adjudication
    was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, Giglio, or was based on an
    44
    “Because we consider the Brecht question in the first instance on federal habeas
    review, there is no state court Brecht actual-prejudice finding to review or to which we should
    defer.” Trepal v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    684 F.3d 1088
    , 1112 (11th Cir. 2012). We still
    defer to the state court’s factual findings. 
    Id. 54 Case:
    11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 55 of 72
    unreasonable determination of the facts, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), and (2) we find that
    the Giglio error was not harmless under Brecht. 45
    A Brady violation occurs when the prosecution withholds evidence
    favorable to an accused upon request, “irrespective of the good or bad faith of the
    prosecution.” 
    Brady, 373 U.S. at 87
    , 83 S. Ct. at 1196–97. As the Supreme Court
    has made clear, there are three components of a Brady violation: (1) the evidence
    at issue must be favorable to the accused, which means it is either exculpatory or
    impeaching, (2) the evidence must have been willfully or inadvertently suppressed
    by the prosecution, and (3) the accused must have been prejudiced as a result.
    Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    , 281–82, 
    119 S. Ct. 1936
    , 1948, 
    144 L. Ed. 2d 286
    (1999). Evidence is material, i.e., prejudicial, “if there is a reasonable
    probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different.” United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    ,
    682, 
    105 S. Ct. 3375
    , 3383, 
    87 L. Ed. 2d 481
    (1985) (opinion of J. Blackmun); 
    id. at 685,
    105 S. Ct. at 3385 (White, J., concurring in part and concurring in the
    45
    “Because the Brecht harmlessness standard is more strict from a habeas petitioner’s
    perspective than the Giglio materiality standard, federal courts confronted with colorable Giglio
    claims in § 2254 petitions in many cases may choose to examine the Brecht harmlessness issue
    first.” 
    Id. at 1113–14.
    55
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 56 of 72
    judgment). 46 We consider the materiality of the evidence withheld “collectively,
    not item by item.” Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 436, 
    115 S. Ct. 1555
    , 1567,
    
    131 L. Ed. 2d 490
    (1995). We have explained that the Brady materiality standard
    is more stringent than the Giglio standard because Brady requires a showing that
    the result would have been different had the prosecution disclosed the withheld
    evidence, whereas Giglio requires that the result could have been different had the
    prosecution not used perjured testimony. United States v. Alzate, 
    47 F.3d 1103
    ,
    1110–11 (11th Cir. 1995); see also Trepal v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    684 F.3d 1088
    , 1108 (11th Cir. 2012) (describing Giglio as “more defense-friendly” than
    Brady because under Giglio a defendant “has the lighter burden of showing that
    there is any reasonable likelihood that the false testimony could have affected the
    jury’s judgment” (internal quotation mark omitted)).
    We do not conduct a Brecht inquiry when analyzing a Brady claim because
    the latter subsumes the former. See 
    Kyles, 514 U.S. at 435
    , 115 S. Ct. at 1566
    (“[A] Bagley error could not be treated as harmless, since a reasonable probability
    46
    The full opinion in Bagley did not command a full majority of the Justices. However,
    Justice White, writing for himself, Chief Justice Burger, and Justice Rehnquist, endorsed Justice
    Blackmun’s formulation of the materiality standard for Brady violations. Subsequent Supreme
    Court cases have characterized the Bagley formulation as a holding, see, e.g., Kyles v. Whitley,
    
    514 U.S. 419
    , 433–34, 
    115 S. Ct. 1555
    , 1565, 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 490
    (1995), and we refer throughout
    this opinion to Bagley with the understanding that its “holding” is based on a coalition of
    opinions.
    56
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 57 of 72
    that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding
    would have been different necessarily entails the conclusion that the suppression
    must have had substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the
    jury’s verdict . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted) (citations omitted)).
    Accordingly, a federal habeas court cannot grant relief unless (1) Petitioner
    demonstrates that the state high court’s adjudication was contrary to or an
    unreasonable application of Brady or was based on an unreasonable determination
    of the facts, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), and (2) Petitioner shows that the prosecution
    violated Brady.
    With these principals in hand, we decide whether the District Court erred in
    holding that the Florida Supreme Court’s merits denials of Petitioner’s Giglio and
    Brady claims were “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of” the
    holdings in those decisions, or were “based on an unreasonable determination of
    the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 28
    U.S.C. § 2254(d).
    Petitioner has the burden of demonstrating such error. In the District Court,
    he chose to ignore the burden. As the court stated in its dispositive order,
    Petitioner, not taking into account the applicable standard of
    deference, failed almost entirely to brief his claims under the correct
    legal standard. For the majority of his claims, Petitioner failed to
    articulate why the Florida Supreme Court’s decision was an
    unreasonable determination of the facts or an unreasonable application
    57
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014      Page: 58 of 72
    of clearly established federal law. Indeed, Petitioner rarely cites to the
    opinions of the Florida Supreme Court. Moreover, Petitioner
    generally fails to articulate his claims in a manner such that the Court
    can easily discern exactly what claims he is asserting and the legal
    basis for them.
    Rodriguez III, 
    2011 WL 1827899
    at *9. Petitioner has employed the same strategy
    in this court. In his opening brief, he makes no attempt to tell us how the Florida
    Supreme Court, in adjudicating any of his claims, rendered a decision we ought to
    set aside pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) or (2). Nonetheless, we will assume
    that Petitioner contends that none of the adjudications passed muster under either
    § 2254(d) subsection and go from there, considering claims (1) through (4) in
    sequence.
    III.
    A.
    Claim (1) alleges violations under both Giglio and Brady. Petitioner’s
    Giglio claim is that Detectives Crawford and Smith lied when they denied
    arranging the family and conjugal visits to ensure Luis’s favorable testimony, 47 and
    47
    Detective Crawford allegedly lied in his responses to Zenobi’s questions on cross-
    examination about the reasons for Luis’s family visitations and Luis’s opportunity to have sex
    with his wife.
    Q [Mr. Zenobi]: Was this done for any ulterior motive, was this done so that he
    would be a cooperative witness or help with prosecution or anything like that?
    A [Det. Crawford]: No, sir.
    58
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 59 of 72
    that the prosecutor, Laeser, suborned the perjury. His Brady claim is that the State
    withheld evidence of the detectives’ motivations for arranging the family and
    conjugal visits. We address each claim in turn.
    1.
    Petitioner’s Giglio claim is premised on the allegation that Detectives
    Crawford and Smith provided Luis with family visits and an opportunity to have
    sex with his wife in order to secure Luis’s cooperation and favorable testimony
    against Petitioner. 48 He contends that the detectives were lying when they denied
    Q: Why was this done?
    A: [Luis] requested these visits for [clothes] or contact with his daughter. And
    there again, we spoke with the supervisor, and there was no reason not to.
    Doc. 16-55, at 14.
    Q [Mr. Zenobi]: And it never crossed your mind that you were doing those things
    for any ulterior motive or any special favors you were granting to Mr. Rodriguez?
    A [Det. Crawford]: I don’t understand your question.
    Q: You weren’t doing this to have Luis Rodriguez testify in the case, you were
    doing it because you wanted to be good to Mr. Rodriguez?
    A: I wanted to be good to his daughter more than anything. I have no feelings for
    Mr. Rodriguez.
    Doc. 16-55, at 53. Detective Smith allegedly lied when he reinforced what Crawford had said
    first, when in response to Laeser’s questions on direct examination, Smith said that he learned
    about Luis’s sex with his wife sometime after the event took place, and then when Zenobi asked
    him whether Luis was “allowed any conjugal visits with his wife,” and he answered, “Absolutely
    not.” Doc. 16-63, at 85.
    48
    Petitioner makes this allegation based on a letter Laeser wrote after Petitioner’s trial
    ended. As a result of Luis’s admission that he was able to have sex with his wife at the police
    59
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 60 of 72
    this allegation at trial, and that the prosecutor, Laeser, knew they were lying. At
    the Rule 3.850 hearing in the Circuit Court, Luis said he was unsure whether the
    detectives knew about the sex, but implied that they were aware of it because they
    suggested that he place a sticker over the peephole in the door of the interrogation
    room if he wanted privacy. The detectives testified, consistent with their trial
    testimony, that they never granted Luis permission or authority to have sexual
    intercourse with his wife. They further denied that they encouraged Luis to place a
    happy face sticker on the peephole; both testified that the first time they heard that
    claim was that day at the hearing. With respect to the family visits generally,
    Detective Crawford testified that he allowed the visits to occur “[s]trictly because
    the request was initially for his young daughter, her birthday, and having raised
    station, the Internal Affairs Division of the Metro-Dade Police Department investigated
    Detectives Crawford and Smith’s handling of Luis following his and Petitioner’s indictment.
    Laeser wrote the letter to Internal Affairs while the investigation was ongoing, and he defended
    the two detectives’ conduct. He stated that Luis had sexual intercourse with his wife without the
    permission of Detectives Crawford and Smith, and that the two detectives only learned of the
    event after it had occurred. The letter contains a statement that Petitioner claims is evidence
    that Laeser misled the jury about the nature of Luis’s family visitation privileges:
    In order to make certain that Luis Rodriguez would remain a co-operating
    witness, the State did not object to granting him some minor conveniences,
    consistent with the security needs of the case. For example, he was permitted to
    meet, on rare occasion, with his mother, sisters, wife, and young daughter in the
    homicide office or in my office, under the supervision of two or more officers.
    Doc. 16-143, at 30.
    60
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 61 of 72
    children we saw nothing wrong with the request with that man who was willing to
    cooperate being granted that request.” Doc. 16-90, at 78.
    The Circuit Court determined that Luis’s testimony at the Rule 3.850
    hearing was not credible and that the detectives had not testified falsely at trial or
    at the hearing when they denied permitting Luis to engage in sexual intercourse
    with his wife or seeking to ensure Luis’s cooperation; hence, the prosecutor did not
    suborn perjury.
    The question before the Florida Supreme Court was whether the Circuit
    Court’s credibility findings were clearly erroneous. It deferred to the credibility
    findings because “competent, substantial evidence support[ed]” them. Rodriguez
    II, 
    39 So. 3d
    . at 289. AEDPA requires that we presume those findings to be
    correct. See U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Petitioner has not rebutted the presumption.
    Therefore, we defer to the Florida Supreme Court’s decision that Petitioner failed
    to establish the factual predicate required for a Giglio violation.
    As an alternative holding, the Florida Supreme Court assumed that the
    detectives testified falsely, with the prosecutor’s knowledge, yet found no Giglio
    violation because the false testimony was not material, and so there was no
    prejudice. Petitioner disagrees. Apparently unaware of his Brecht burden to
    demonstrate that the false testimony “had substantial and injurious effect or
    influence in determining the jury’s verdict,” 
    Brecht, 507 U.S. at 637
    , 113 S. Ct. at
    61
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 62 of 72
    1722 (internal quotation marks omitted), Petitioner contends that the false
    testimony coupled with the prosecutor’s closing argument at the conclusion of the
    guilt phase of the trial misled the jury into returning verdicts of guilty and
    recommending the death penalty. 49
    This misleading-the-jury argument did not impress the Florida Supreme
    Court. As the court stated, “the jury was already aware that Luis was being
    provided with special treatment and that the police knowingly permitted him to
    have some private time with his wife.” Rodriguez 
    II, 39 So. 3d at 289
    . But that is
    not why he pled guilty to second degree murder and testified against Petitioner.
    The jury—everyone in the courtroom—knew that Luis did that to save his own
    skin, not because he was afforded a few family visits. We agree with the court that
    the visits—and the sexual intercourse, which took place long before Luis decided
    49
    Petitioner elaborates on this in his brief: (1) “[T]he jury was mislead [sic] by the
    prosecutor to believe, through the testimony of Detective Crawford and through ASA Laeser’s
    own arguments to the jury, that Luis was not given anything of value in exchange for his
    testimony and cooperation at trial.” Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at 38. (2) “[T]he prosecutor went
    to great lengths to bolster the testimony of Luis and mislead the jury as to the real value of
    keeping this ‘vital’ witness happy.” Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at 33. (3) “[T]he jury was clearly
    misled by the testimony of Detective Crawford and that misleading testimony was further
    exacerbated by the State’s closing argument.” Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at 31–32. (4) “The
    State improperly bolstered its key witness and failed to correct error in Detective Crawford’s
    testimony, thus misleading the jury as to the credibility of Luis.” Petitioner’s Corrected Br. at
    29. (5) “The integrity of the adversarial process at trial was destroyed by the State’s failure to
    correct Crawford’s testimony concerning the ‘ulterior motive’ and the subsequent affirmative
    argument that there was no ‘motive to force Luis to continue to tell the truth.’” Petitioner’s
    Corrected Br. at 34.
    62
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014   Page: 63 of 72
    to plead guilty and testify—lacked materiality. Moreover, assuming the truth of
    Petitioner’s scenario—the detectives provided Luis with family visitations,
    including an opportunity to have sex with his wife in order to secure his favorable
    testimony—Petitioner has not overcome his Brecht hurdle, that the purportedly
    false scenario had a substantial and injurious effect or influence over the jury’s
    verdict.
    2.
    Petitioner’s Brady claim is that the prosecution withheld the truth about the
    detectives’ motive in accommodating Luis’s requests for family visitations and
    providing him with an opportunity to have sex with his wife. The detectives’
    motive, Petitioner says, was to ensure that Luis would testify against him at trial,
    but they denied it. Petitioner’s problem is that his Brady claim is foreclosed given
    our deference to the Florida Supreme Court’s factual finding that the detectives’
    trial testimony was not false.
    We will assume, as the Florida Supreme Court did in reaching its alternative
    Giglio holding, that the detectives’ did lie about their motive in providing the
    family visitations and Luis’s opportunity to have sex with his wife, that their
    motive was in fact to ensure that Luis would testify against Petitioner, and that the
    prosecutor knew this to be their motive but did not disclose it to defense counsel or
    63
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014         Page: 64 of 72
    even to Luis. All Luis knew was that the detectives were accommodating his
    requests for family visits.
    Luis said that most of his family visitations occurred after his arrest in
    August 1993 and before he pled guilty in April 1996. What is clear is that the
    visits were not, as Zenobi implied in cross-examining Crawford and Smith, the
    quid pro quo for his testimony. The quid pro quo for his testimony was the State’s
    promise to take the death penalty off the table and accept pleas to second degree
    murder and armed robbery. If Luis refused to testify, the deal was off; his guilty
    pleas and life sentences would be set aside, and he would once again face an open-
    and-shut case and certain convictions for capital murder. 50 By the time he had
    50
    Luis’s plea agreement with the State provided that Luis would
    freely and fully offer testimony against [Petitioner] . . . at all forms of hearings,
    pre-trial conferences, and trials, without any objection or reservation whatsoever.
    This testimony shall be unconditional; without any claim of immunity, claim of
    privilege, or 5th Amendment claim of a right to refuse to incriminate himself.
    ....
    However, should the defendant, Luis Rodriguez, fail to [offer such
    testimony] . . . the original charges shall be re-instituted . . . . [T]he parties would
    also return to their pre-agreement status, with one exception. Any and all
    statements, information, evidence, or testimony which may have been offered by
    Luis Rodriguez after the entry of this agreement, but prior to the agreement
    having been voided shall be specifically admissible, without objection, in any
    subsequent hearing or trial of the defendant for the crimes charged in the instant
    information.
    64
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 65 of 72
    undergone defense counsel’s withering cross-examination and attacks on his
    credibility and stepped down from the witness stand, the jury well understood this.
    Luis had testified in order to avoid the death penalty.
    In sum, assuming that the detectives’ motivation for providing Luis visits
    with his family and a conjugal visit with his wife was not expressly communicated
    to the defense, the Florida Supreme Court’s decision that the information was not
    material, and that a Brady violation had not occurred, did not amount to an
    adjudication that was contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, the Supreme
    Court’s Brady holding.
    B.
    Claim (2) alleges, in brief, that the State violated Brady or Giglio by
    withholding a promise it made to Luis “behind closed doors” to assist him in
    obtaining parole and allowing him to testify falsely to the contrary. Without
    Doc. 16-143, at 22–24. In exchange for Luis’s testimony, the agreement provided that State would
    accept pleas to three counts of second degree murder and armed burglary and concurrent
    sentences of life imprisonment. The State Attorney also agreed
    to directly communicate with the proper authorities, in writing, to notify them of
    the terms of this agreement; and that the defendant has fully co-operated, pursuant
    to these terms, when he has testified against [Petitioner]. The length of actual
    sentence served, however, shall be in the exclusive control of the Department of
    Corrections. There is also no promise, express or implied, that the defendant will
    serve any specified portion of any of these prison sentences.
    Doc. 16-143, at 26.
    65
    Case: 11-13273   Date Filed: 06/30/2014     Page: 66 of 72
    referring to the Circuit Court’s rationale in rejecting the claim, the Florida Supreme
    Court searched the record for evidence to support the claim and found none. The
    court acknowledged that Luis testified in the Rule 3.850 proceeding that, based on
    conversations he had in the State Attorney’s office behind closed doors, he
    “thought” he would be receiving assistance in obtaining parole, but he provided no
    specifics beyond what was provided in the plea agreement. 51 Petitioner points to
    nothing in the record beyond the plea agreement that could have constituted an
    additional promise of assistance. Petitioner therefore fails to provide us with a
    reason why the Florida Supreme Court’s denial of the claim should not be afforded
    AEDPA deference.
    C.
    Claim (3) involves the Sirvas letters. After deciding that the letters should
    have been disclosed under Brady, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that the
    letters were not material. The main reason they were not was that Sirvas did not
    know anything about the murders and merely assumed that because Luis had taken
    a plea, he would lie if he testified against Petitioner at his trial. In short, his
    assumption lacked probative value. Petitioner does not explain why the court’s
    51
    See supra note 50.
    66
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 67 of 72
    materiality decision was wrong or how, under Florida law, Sirvas would be
    permitted to state his assumption to impeach Luis’s statement that he intended to
    tell the truth when called to testify at Petitioner’s trial. Absent the admissibility of
    Sirvas’s statement as impeachment, a Brady violation could not have occurred. As
    such, Petitioner is not entitled to relief on this claim.
    D.
    Claim (4) is that the prosecution, in violation of the Brady rule, withheld two
    letters Detectives Crawford and Smith wrote that could have impeached
    Crawford’s hearsay testimony in which he repeated statements Alejandro Lago, a
    jailhouse informant, made to Crawford in September and December 1993 to the
    effect that Petitioner admitted to Lago that he did not need the medication
    prescribed for his mental illness. The first letter, written to “To whom it may
    concern” on May 22, 1995, stated that Lago had provided assistance to the Metro-
    Dade Police Department in “several investigations,” that it had “always been
    correct and accurate,” that he had always passed a polygraph test and had “been
    truthful,” and that he would be testifying in these matters “in the next couple of
    years.” 52 Doc. 16-136, at 65. We do not know what Detective Smith said in the
    52
    The letter made no reference to Petitioner’s case.
    67
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014        Page: 68 of 72
    second letter, written to “To whom it may concern” in February 1996, but assume
    that it conveyed the same message as the May 22 letter. 53 Petitioner argues that the
    letters “show[ed] that Lago received consideration in exchange for his assistance
    and that the results of the polygraph test . . . were considered suspect and that if the
    jury had been made aware of this information, the jury might have rejected the
    statements of Lago” presented through Crawford’s testimony. Rodriguez II, 
    39 So. 3d
    at 294 (footnote omitted).
    The Florida Supreme Court noted that “to prevail on a Brady claim,
    [Petitioner] must show: (1) that favorable evidence—either exculpatory or
    impeaching, (2) was willfully or inadvertently suppressed by the State, and (3)
    because the evidence was material, [he] was prejudiced.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The court concluded that the letters were not material for two
    reasons. First, there were “substantial questions as to whether Lago had been
    promised any benefits for his assistance before [Petitioner’s] trial and whether the
    polygraph would have led to any favorable evidence.” 54 
    Id. Putting those
    53
    The second letter was introduced as an exhibit to Smith’s testimony during the Rule
    3.850 proceedings, but it is not part of the record in this appeal.
    54
    The court noted that in Florida, “polygraph evidence is generally inadmissible [but] the
    issue . . . focus[ed] on for purposes of determining a Brady violation is whether the evidence
    would lead to admissible substantive or impeachment evidence.” Rodriguez 
    II, 39 So. 3d at 294
    n.13 (ellipses in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    68
    Case: 11-13273       Date Filed: 06/30/2014       Page: 69 of 72
    questions aside, the court found that “the admission of the testimony was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt given the number of strong aggravators in this case and
    the conflicting testimony as to [Petitioner’s] mental health, including some
    testimony that he was a malingerer.” 
    Id. at 294–95
    (quoting Rodriguez I, 
    753 So. 2d
    at 454). The District Court concluded that the Florida Supreme Court, in
    finding that the withholding of the letters was not material, “properly analyzed
    [Brady] and made a reasonable application of that law to the facts.” Rodriguez III,
    
    2011 WL 1827899
    at 34. We agree. Petitioner failed to establish a Brady
    violation for the reason the Florida Supreme Court gave and because the letters
    would not have provided defense counsel with any information they did not
    already have at their disposal when Crawford took the witness stand in the penalty
    phase of Petitioner’s trial.
    What information did the letters contain that defense counsel did not already
    have after they took Lago’s deposition on April 22, 1996, four and a half months
    prior to Petitioner’s trial? Here is what they learned from Lago.
    Lago was in a Florida prison serving a lengthy sentence for attempted first
    degree murder.55 He was thirty-five years old, a “resident alien” who had come to
    55
    Lago had been sentenced for that offense on a plea of guilty in 1994.
    69
    Case: 11-13273        Date Filed: 06/30/2014        Page: 70 of 72
    the United States from Cuba in 1962. By the time he was thirty, he had been
    arrested at least fifteen times and convicted of seven felonies, and he had done time
    in prison. Lago met Petitioner on September 7, 1993, in the Metro-Dade County
    Jail. Both were pretrial detainees; Lago had been charged with attempted first
    degree murder, and Petitioner had been charged with three murders. Both were
    confined to one-person “safety cells.”56 They met that September day on the
    “recreation yard” during a routine one-hour session. Unbeknownst to Petitioner,
    Lago was a jailhouse snitch. With the exception of identifying the incriminating
    information he provided the Metro-Dade Police and the FBI, Lago answered in full
    all the questions defense counsel asked him about his cooperation with law
    enforcement as an informant. He told counsel that he had seen TV news reports
    about the murder charges lodged against Petitioner, and that this gave him all he
    needed to engage in conversation with Petitioner about Petitioner’s situation.
    Within two days, Petitioner told him he was “serving 40 years, that he [wasn’t]
    worrying about this because . . . every institution that he go he’s planning to play
    that he’s crazy.” Doc. 16-77, at 91–92. Petitioner informed Lago that he was
    being treated for a mental condition and had been prescribed medication. But, said
    56
    Lago was on the eighth floor of the Jail; Petitioner was on the ninth floor.
    70
    Case: 11-13273     Date Filed: 06/30/2014     Page: 71 of 72
    Petitioner, “I ain’t taking it. I’m just making them believe I’m taking the
    medication.” Doc. 16-77, at 92. Petitioner gave Lago the medication, usually for
    cigarettes. This went on for two months.
    Given Lago’s performance on deposition, and no doubt due to his lengthy
    criminal record, Laeser informed defense counsel that the State would not be
    calling Lago to testify in the guilt phase of Petitioner’s trial to rebut the expert
    opinion testimony defense counsel would be presenting concerning Petitioner’s
    mental condition. Laeser introduced the jury to the information Lago had provided
    by calling Crawford to the stand instead. Crawford told the jury what Lago said on
    deposition. Defense counsel could have cross-examined Crawford and, with
    leading questions, made the jury aware of Lago’s extensive criminal record and his
    consistent attempts to curry favor with law enforcement by snitching on those, like
    Petitioner, he became close to while in custody. The question becomes: what
    additional information, if any, would the letters have provided defense counsel as
    they faced Crawford on cross-examination?
    The letters would have informed counsel that Lago was a jailhouse snitch,
    who had “assisted [the Metro-Dade Police] with several investigations.” Doc. 16-
    136, at 65. Counsel already knew that, from questioning Lago on deposition. The
    letters would have informed them that the information Lago provided was “always
    . . . correct and accurate.” Doc. 16-136, at 65. Counsel knew that, too. The letters
    71
    Case: 11-13273      Date Filed: 06/30/2014    Page: 72 of 72
    would have informed counsel that Crawford and Smith were telling “To whom it
    may concern” that they would “greatly appreciate[ ]” “whatever consideration”
    they could “extend to Mr. Lago.” Doc. 16-136, at 65. This was implicit in Lago’s
    deposition testimony. Finally, the letters would have informed counsel that Lago
    had taken and passed several polygraph tests. That was known to counsel as well.
    In short, the letters added almost nothing to the information counsel obtained
    from Lago on April 22, 1996. They could have brought before the jury in cross-
    examining Crawford the same information they could have developed had they
    called Lago as a witness and examined him, as an adverse witness, with the same
    leading questions they could have asked Crawford. They chose not to cross-
    examine Crawford. Any prejudice Petitioner may have suffered was due not to the
    withheld letters, but to counsels’ decision to forego the cross-examination. As the
    Florida Supreme Court reasonably found, the letters were not material.
    IV.
    We have carefully considered the record in this case, the claims set out in the
    certificate of appealability, and the parties’ submissions in their briefs and at oral
    argument. We conclude that the District Court properly denied the claims and
    therefore AFFIRM its judgment.
    SO ORDERED.
    72