Slutzker v. Johnson ( 2004 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2004 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    12-29-2004
    Slutzker v. Johnson
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 03-4046
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    Nos. 03-4046 & 03-4219
    STEVEN G. SLUTZKER
    Appellant in No. 03-4219
    v.
    PHILIP JOHNSON; *GERALD J. PAPPERT; STEPHEN A.
    ZAPPALA, JR., District Attorney, Allegheny County, PA,
    Appellants in No. 03-4046
    *Amended per Clerk’s Order of 08/17/04
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 99-cv-1952)
    District Judge: Honorable Gary L. Lancaster
    Argued October 4, 2004
    Before: SLOVITER, BECKER, and STAPLETON, Circuit
    Judges.
    (Filed December 29, 2004)
    DOUGLAS SUGHRUE (ARGUED)
    Allen & Sughrue
    428 Forbes Avenue
    Suite 1600
    1
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Attorney for Steven G. Slutzker
    RONALD M. WABBY, JR. (ARGUED)
    Office of District Attorney
    401 Allegheny County Courthouse
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Attorney for Philip Johnson et al.
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    BECKER, Circuit Judge.
    This is an appeal by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
    from an order of the District Court granting habeas corpus relief to
    Steven G. Slutzker from a twelve-year-old conviction in a nearly
    thirty-year-old murder case. When John Mudd Sr. was murdered in
    his home in late 1975, suspicion soon focused on Slutzker, who
    had been having an affair with Mudd’s wife, and who had
    attempted to hire a hit man to kill him. At the time, prosecutors
    could not assemble enough evidence to incriminate Slutzker, and
    no one was indicted for the crime. Fifteen years later, however,
    Mudd’s son, John Mudd Jr., approached police and claimed to have
    recovered previously repressed memories of his father’s
    murder—including an image of Slutzker fleeing the scene of the
    crime. Slutzker was arrested, prosecuted, and convicted of the
    murder, and was sentenced to life in prison.
    Slutzker filed a habeas corpus petition alleging numerous
    constitutional errors at his trial. The District Court granted habeas
    relief on two of these grounds, a Brady violation and ineffective
    assistance of counsel. The court granted a certificate of
    appealability on these two grounds, and also on a third—the trial
    court’s refusal to compel Mudd’s wife, Arlene Mudd Stewart, to
    2
    testify.1 Slutzker cross-appeals from the denial of relief on this
    issue.
    For the reasons set forth below, we will hold that the District
    Court was correct in finding a Brady violation, and that, although
    this claim was procedurally defaulted, Slutzker has demonstrated
    cause and prejudice sufficient to excuse the default. We will
    therefore affirm on that claim. We will also affirm the District
    Court’s denial of relief for the refusal to compel Arlene Mudd to
    testify. However, because we determine that the writ of habeas
    corpus should be granted due to the Brady violation, we will not
    reach the question whether Slutzker’s trial attorney rendered
    ineffective assistance. Although the District Court did not specify
    the exact nature of the relief granted, we think it clear that the court
    meant to order Slutzker released unless the Commonwealth elects
    to retry him, and we will therefore modify the District Court’s
    order to so provide.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    A. Background Facts
    The power went out at John Mudd Sr.’s house in
    Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, on December 28, 1975, at around
    11 p.m. Mudd went to check the fuse, and was shot six times with
    a .32 caliber handgun by an intruder who was secreted in the
    basement. Mudd’s wife Arlene, and their five-year-old son John Jr.,
    were upstairs at the time of the murder.
    Mudd’s neighbor Steven Slutzker soon became the prime
    suspect in the murder. He had been having an affair with Arlene
    Mudd; she had briefly moved out of her house and lived with him
    in the summer of 1975. Significant evidence showed that Slutzker
    had been planning to kill Mudd. In early December, Slutzker had
    purchased a .32 caliber handgun and asked a co-worker to show
    1
    We note that, although the District Court issued a certificate of
    appealability as to the two grounds on which it granted the habeas
    petition, such a certificate was not required: the Commonwealth may
    appeal a grant of habeas corpus as of right. Fed. R. App. P. 22(b)(3); see
    also United States ex rel. Tillery v. Cavell, 
    294 F.2d 12
    , 15 (3d Cir.
    1961).
    3
    him how to load it. On December 19, he had telephoned a friend,
    Michael Pezzano, and asked if Pezzano knew any hit men, because
    he wanted to kill Mudd to be with Arlene. A few days later,
    Slutzker offered to pay Pezzano $500 and provide him with the
    handgun he had purchased if Pezzano would kill Mudd. Pezzano
    said he would consider it, then reported this conversation to the
    state police. The police took no immediate action. Slutzker claims
    that Arlene had insisted that he kill Mudd because he had abused
    her; he also claims that he ended the conspiracy, and his
    relationship with Arlene, on December 26, 1975.
    The police investigated the murder and quickly tracked
    down Slutzker, who was staying (along with his six-year-old
    daughter Amy) at the house of friends, Patrick and Janet O’Dea, in
    McKeesport. The O’Deas told the police that Slutzker had stayed
    at their house on the night of the murder, that he had been drinking
    heavily, and that he had passed out on their bed at around 8 p.m.
    The O’Deas claim next to have seen Slutzker at around 1 a.m.,
    when they woke him to move him to the living-room couch so that
    they could go to sleep. 
    Id. at 63
    . While they were not completely
    consistent in all their statements, they generally represented that
    Slutzker could not possibly have awakened, sobered up, taken their
    car, and driven to Wilkinsburg and back to commit the murder
    within the time in which they left him alone. Slutzker’s car had not
    been moved from the O’Deas’ house on the night of the murder.
    Despite this alibi, the police arrested Slutzker for criminal
    homicide and solicitation to commit murder. Arlene Mudd was
    charged with solicitation. Janet O’Dea was charged with
    conspiracy for allegedly disposing of the murder weapon, which
    was never found. However, all homicide charges were dismissed
    at the coroner’s inquest, at which Arlene Mudd testified that
    Slutzker was not present when her husband was killed. Charges
    against Arlene M udd were also dismissed. Janet O’Dea was offered
    a deal if she would testify against Slutzker; she refused, and was
    tried for conspiracy and acquitted.
    Slutzker was convicted of solicitation on Pezzano’s
    testimony. See Commonwealth v. Slutzker, 
    393 A.2d 1281
     (Pa.
    Super. Ct. 1978). He served about a year in prison. He was
    released, moved away, remarried, and lived quietly for nearly
    fifteen years. Then, in November 1990, John Mudd Jr., who was
    five years old at the time of the murder, told police that he
    4
    remembered who killed his father. He said that he had repressed
    memories of seeing his father’s body at the foot of the basement
    stairs, and of seeing Slutzker fleeing from his house. Fifteen years
    later, he claims, he recovered those vivid memories while fighting
    with an acquaintance. He talked to the police in November 1990,
    and gave a comprehensive statement to a psychologist some four
    months later. On the basis of these statements, the Commonwealth
    brought murder charges against Slutzker and Arlene Mudd. The
    charges against Arlene Mudd were later dropped.
    The eyewitnesses who testified against Slutzker at trial
    included John M udd Jr.; Cynthia DeMann, a neighbor who testified
    that she saw Slutzker talking with Arlene Mudd shortly after the
    killing; Timothy Brendlinger, a policeman who also testified that
    he saw Slutzker talking with Arlene after the killing; and Amy
    Slutzker, Slutzker’s estranged daughter, who testified that she and
    her father were at home on the night of the murder, and that she
    saw him take a gun and leave the house minutes before the police
    arrived. Amy Slutzker was only six years old at the time of the
    murder. She did not claim recovery of repressed memory, only that
    she was afraid of her father and had previously declined to come
    forward with her story.
    Slutzker’s trial attorney, Charles Scarlata, never called the
    O’Deas to testify in support of Slutzker’s alibi. 2 He did attempt to
    call Arlene Mudd, but she claimed the Fifth Amendment privilege
    against self-incrimination, and the trial court refused to compel her
    to testify. In January 1992, the jury convicted Slutzker of murder.
    He was sentenced to life in prison.
    B. Post-Conviction Proceedings
    Slutzker appealed his conviction, raising a number of issues,
    including the competency of the recovered-memory testimony and
    the fact that the trial court did not compel Arlene Mudd to testify.
    The Pennsylvania Superior Court affirmed the conviction in
    October 1993; the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied a petition
    2
    Scarlata died in March 2000. Slutzker was represented by Chris
    Rand Eyster during his PCRA petition. He initially filed his federal
    habeas petition pro se; his current attorney, Douglas Sughrue, entered an
    appearance on May 8, 2002.
    5
    for allocatur in April 1994.
    In January 1996, Slutzker filed a petition under the
    Pennsylvania Post Conviction Relief Act, 
    42 Pa. Cons. Stat. §§ 9541-9545
     (PCRA). His PCRA petition raised sixteen issues
    relating to ineffective assistance of trial counsel. The PCRA court
    conducted evidentiary hearings, during which it took testimony
    from Scarlata. The court dismissed the petition, and the Superior
    Court affirmed; the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied review in
    November 1999.
    On December 1, 1999, Slutzker filed a pro se Petition for
    Writ of Habeas Corpus in the District Court for the Western
    District of Pennsylvania. The Petition was assigned to M agistrate
    Judge Kenneth J. Benson. In 2001, Slutzker, still representing
    himself, sent a subpoena to the W ilkinsburg police department
    (which had jurisdiction over the murder investigation) requesting
    any information relevant to his case. On September 11, 2001, the
    police sent him twenty-one police reports which apparently had not
    previously been disclosed to him or his lawyers. Upon receiving
    these materials, Slutzker wrote to Magistrate Judge Benson
    explaining the new evidence and the impact it might have had at
    trial. Slutzker never received a response to this letter.
    On September 12, 2002, the case was reassigned to
    Magistrate Judge Susan Paradise Baxter. On January 10, 2003,
    Slutzker, now represented by counsel, filed an Amended Petition
    for Habeas Corpus asserting a number of claims. Magistrate Judge
    Baxter rejected most of these claims in her final Report and
    Recommendation. However, she recommended granting the
    petition, and a certificate of appealability, on two grounds: a claim
    founded on Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
     (1963), on account of
    the previously undisclosed police reports, and a claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel, based on Scarlata’s failure to interview the
    O’Deas or call them as alibi witnesses. On a third issue, the failure
    to compel Arlene M udd to testify at trial, Magistrate Judge Baxter
    recommended denying relief, but granting a certificate of
    appealability. She recommended denying a certificate of
    appealability on all other grounds. On September 25, 2003, the
    District Court adopted the Magistrate Judge’s report and order. The
    Commonwealth then appealed, and Slutzker cross-appealed on the
    issue of Arlene Mudd’s refusal to testify.
    Our review of the District Court’s legal conclusions is
    6
    plenary. Stevens v. Delaware Corr. Ctr., 
    295 F.3d 361
    , 368 (3d Cir.
    2002). In this case, our review of the District Court’s factual
    findings is also plenary, because that Court relied solely on the
    state court record, and did not conduct an evidentiary hearing.
    Duncan v. Morgan, 
    256 F.3d 189
    , 196 (3d Cir. 2001).
    II. The Brady Claim
    The Commonwealth argues that the District Court erred in
    granting habeas relief on Slutzker’s Brady claim. It submits that the
    claim was procedurally defaulted; that the police reports had in fact
    been disclosed to the defense before trial; and that, even if they had
    not been disclosed, the Brady violation did not prejudice the
    outcome of Slutzker’s trial. We shall address each of these
    contentions below. First, however, to clarify the later discussion,
    we describe the disputed police reports in somewhat greater detail.
    A. The Police Reports
    The Brady evidence consists of twenty-one police reports
    detailing interviews with Mudd’s and Slutzker’s friends and
    neighbors conducted by the Wilkinsburg Police from December
    1975 through February 1976. The most important of the reports
    describes a January 15, 1976, interview with Cynthia DeMann,
    Mudd’s next-door neighbor. In two previous interviews with the
    police, on December 29 and 30, 1975, Mrs. DeMann had told
    police that she saw Arlene Mudd talking to a man in front of her
    house shortly after the murder, but that she was unable to identify
    him. The reports of these interviews were concededly turned over
    to the defense. In the January 15 interview, however, Mrs. DeMann
    definitively stated that the man she saw with Mrs. Mudd was not
    Slutzker. The police report says:
    Mrs. DeMann stated she thinks if it was Steve
    [Slutzker] standing in front of the house, she would
    have recognized him. She stated Steve is a very tall
    man, but the man that was standing out front was not
    very tall. Mrs. DeMann stated she thinks Steve is
    about 6 foot. Whoever it was beside her [Arlene
    7
    Mudd] was only about a forehead taller. 3
    These statements do not appear in the other interviews with Mrs.
    DeMann. The remaining police reports are of considerably lesser
    importance.4
    B. Procedural Barriers to Slutzker’s Claim
    Before reaching the merits of the alleged Brady violation,
    we consider the Commonwealth’s contention that it is procedurally
    defaulted. This contention depends on Pennsylvania’s PCRA time
    bar. Slutzker claims to have received the twenty-one previously
    undisclosed police reports on September 11, 2001. Under the
    Pennsylvania PCRA, a prisoner may file a challenge to his
    conviction for up to one year after the judgment becomes final,
    unless the facts upon which the challenge is predicated were
    unknown at that time. 
    42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 9545
    (b)(1). If the
    predicate facts are discovered after this one-year period, the
    prisoner must file his petition within sixty days of discovery. 
    Id.
    § 9545(b)(2).
    Slutzker’s conviction became final on May 17, 1994, when
    the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania denied his motion for
    reconsideration of its denial of direct review. See 
    42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 9545
    (b)(3) (judgment becomes final on conclusion of direct
    review). He filed a PCRA petition in January 1996, which perforce
    did not mention the then-undiscovered Brady documents. He was
    denied PCRA relief in September 1997, and fully exhausted his
    PCRA appeals, which concluded in November 1999. He filed a pro
    se petition for habeas corpus in federal court in December 1999.
    When Slutzker discovered the police reports, his pro se
    habeas petition was pending in the federal courts. He did not move
    to stay or dismiss this petition so as to file a second PCRA petition
    based on the newly discovered facts. The Commonwealth asserts
    that Slutzker’s failure to file a second PCRA petition led to a
    procedural default on the Brady issue. Because the Pennsylvania
    3
    The record does not disclose how tall Mrs. Mudd is, nor did the
    parties have any comment on the issue at oral argument.
    4
    The Magistrate Judge summarized the most important of these
    reports in her Report and Recommendation.
    8
    courts never had the opportunity to address this claim, the
    Commonwealth argues that it is now foreclosed.
    1. Exhaustion
    The starting point for our analysis is the habeas statute,
    which requires that prisoners exhaust their claims in state court
    before seeking relief from the federal courts. 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (b)(1)(A); see also Landano v. Rafferty, 
    897 F.2d 661
    , 668
    (3d Cir. 1990). There is no dispute that Slutzker has not exhausted
    his Brady claim. He discovered it in September of 2001, well after
    his PCRA appeals had terminated, and while his original pro se
    habeas petition was pending. He never returned to state court with
    a second PCRA petition, and thus denied the Pennsylvania courts
    the opportunity to rule on this claim. Under the doctrine of Fay v.
    Noia, 
    372 U.S. 391
     (1963), and Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. 509
    , 522
    (1982), federal courts must dismiss without prejudice habeas
    petitions that contain any unexhausted claims.5
    The exhaustion requirement does not apply, however, in
    cases where the state courts would not consider the unexhausted
    claims because they are procedurally barred. Doctor v. Walters, 
    96 F.3d 675
    , 681 (3d Cir. 1996); cf. Toulson v. Beyer, 
    987 F.2d 984
    ,
    987 (3d Cir. 1993) (“A petition containing unexhausted but
    procedurally barred claims in addition to exhausted claims, is not
    a mixed petition requiring dismissal under Rose.”). This conclusion
    stems from the doctrine that exhaustion is not required where
    pursuit of state remedies would be futile. Doctor, 
    96 F.3d at 681
    ;
    Szuchon v. Lehman, 
    273 F.3d 299
    , 323-24 n.14 (3d Cir. 2001); cf.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (b)(1)(B) (excusing exhaustion where “there is an
    absence of available State corrective process”). Where exhaustion
    is excused because of this form of futility, the habeas doctrine of
    procedural default may apply to bar relief. See infra Part II.B.2.
    5
    In Crews v. Horn, 
    360 F.3d 146
    , 151 (3d Cir. 2004), this Court,
    citing Zarvela v. Artuz, 
    254 F.3d 374
    , 379-80 (2d Cir. 2001), found that
    the one-year time limit on habeas petitions introduced by the
    Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act had altered the rule of
    Rose v. Lundy to allow a district court to stay, rather than dismiss, a
    mixed habeas petition. We shall have more to say about this “stay and
    abey” rule in Part II.B.3.b, infra.
    9
    The mere existence of a state procedural rule that would
    appear to bar relief is not, however, sufficient to avoid the
    exhaustion requirement. The policy behind the exhaustion
    requirement is to give state courts a full opportunity to address the
    petitioner’s claims. Doctor, 
    96 F.3d at 681
    . Given this, if there is
    any likelihood that the state courts would consider the merits of a
    petitioner’s unexhausted claim, the federal courts should dismiss
    his petition and allow him to seek relief in state courts. 
    Id. at 686
    (Scirica, J., concurring). We reach the merits only if state law
    “clearly foreclose[s] state court review of the unexhausted claims.”
    Toulson, 
    987 F.2d at 987
     (emphasis added).
    Here, however, it seems certain that the Pennsylvania courts
    would not entertain Slutzker’s Brady claim after the 60-day PCRA
    limit. The time limits under 
    42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 9545
    (b) are
    mandatory and jurisdictional in nature, Commonwealth v. Murray,
    
    753 A.2d 201
    , 203 (Pa. 2000), and “the PCRA confers no authority
    upon [any Pennsylvania] Court to fashion ad hoc equitable
    exceptions to the PCRA time-bar in addition to those exceptions
    expressly delineated in the Act,” Commonwealth v. Robinson, 
    837 A.2d 1157
    , 1161 (Pa. 2003); see also Commonwealth v. Eller, 
    807 A.2d 838
    , 845 (Pa. 2002). No argument that Slutzker had good
    reason for failing to file within the 60-day period is relevant,
    because
    the period for filing a PCRA petition is not subject to
    the doctrine of equitable tolling; instead, the time for
    filing a a PCRA petition can be extended only to the
    extent that the PCRA permits it to be extended, i.e.,
    by operation of one of the statutorily enumerated
    exceptions to the PCRA time-bar.
    Commonwealth v. Cruz, 
    852 A.2d 287
    , 292 (Pa. 2004) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); see also Commonwealth v. Fahy, 
    737 A.2d 214
    , 222 (Pa. 1999). The statutory exceptions are contained
    in § 9545(b)(1), and a petition invoking such an exception must be
    filed within 60 days of the time that the claim could have been
    presented, § 9545(b)(2). Here, it was not.
    Since Slutzker gets no help from the statutory exceptions,
    and since the Pennsylvania courts will not consider late-filed
    petitions, there is no doubt that Slutzker cannot now bring his
    Brady claim in the Pennsylvania courts. Thus his failure to exhaust
    that claim is excused under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (b)(1)(B).
    10
    2. The Procedural Default Framework
    This excuse from the exhaustion requirement does Slutzker
    no good, however, unless he can avoid the concomitant doctrine of
    procedural default. See Doctor, 
    96 F.3d at 683
    . This doctrine
    “applies to bar federal habeas when a state court declined to
    address a prisoner’s federal claims because the prisoner had failed
    to meet a state procedural requirement.” Coleman v. Thompson,
    
    501 U.S. 722
    , 729-30 (1991). 6 The raison d’être for the doctrine
    lies in the fact that a state judgment based on procedural default
    rests on independent and adequate state grounds. 
    Id. at 730
    ; see
    also Wainwright v. Sykes, 
    433 U.S. 72
    , 81-82 (1977).
    In this case, there is no doubt that Slutzker has defaulted on
    his Brady claims under Pennsylvania law. See supra Part II.B.1.
    Therefore, this Court may reach the merits of Slutzker’s Brady
    claims only “if the petitioner makes the standard showing of ‘cause
    and prejudice’ or establishes a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
    Lines v. Larkins, 
    208 F.3d 153
    , 166 (3d Cir. 2000); see also
    Coleman, 
    501 U.S. at 749-50
    .7 Slutzker argues that he has
    established cause and prejudice for his default.
    3. Cause and Prejudice
    6
    While Coleman concerned a case where the state court actually
    had declined to hear the petitioner’s claims, a case in which the state
    court certainly would have declined to hear those claims raises identical
    procedural default issues. See Szuchon, 
    273 F.3d at
    323-24 n.14.
    7
    Slutzker does not argue that there was a “fundamental
    miscarriage of justice,” which in the ordinary case requires a petitioner
    to establish “actual innocence” by proving “that it is more likely than not
    that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in the light of the
    new evidence.” Schlup v. Delo, 
    513 U.S. 298
    , 327 (1995). Given the
    quantity of evidence that the Commonwealth has produced to
    incriminate Slutzker, we have significant doubts that he could meet this
    stringent standard. At all events, we are required to address other
    possible grounds for excusing procedural default before examining
    “actual innocence.” See Dretke v. Haley, — U.S. —, 
    124 S. Ct. 1847
    ,
    1852 (2004).
    11
    The first step in establishing cause and prejudice is to
    establish cause, i.e., “some objective factor external to the defense
    [that] impeded counsel’s efforts to comply with the State’s
    procedural rule.” Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. 478
    , 488 (1986). We
    find that the unusual procedural posture of Slutzker’s petition
    constitutes such an objective, external factor.
    a. The Statute of Limitations
    When he received the previously undisclosed police reports,
    Slutzker had exhausted his PCRA appeals and had a pro se habeas
    corpus petition pending before the District Court. If he had
    amended his habeas petition to include the Brady claim, and
    simultaneously brought a second PCRA petition on this issue, his
    entire habeas petition would have been dismissed for failure to
    exhaust. Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. at 522
    . While this dismissal
    would have been without prejudice, and would have allowed re-
    filing, Slutzker’s eventual re-filing would have been time-barred by
    the provisions of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
    of 1996 (AEDPA). AEDPA provides a one-year limitations period
    for habeas corpus review of state convictions. 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(1). This period runs from the date that the conviction
    becomes final, § 2244(d)(1)(A), or the date on which the factual
    predicate of the claim could have been discovered,
    § 2244(d)(1)(D), and is tolled during the pendency of a properly
    filed application for state collateral review, § 2244(d)(2). 8
    The statute of limitations on Slutzker’s Brady claim began
    8
    Section 2244(d)(1) also identifies two other possible start dates
    for the statute of limitations—the date on which any state-created
    impediment to habeas filing ends, § 2244(d)(1)(B), or the date on which
    a retroactively applicable constitutional right is first recognized by the
    Supreme Court, § 2244(d)(1)(C)—which are not relevant here.
    Because Slutzker’s conviction became final in 1994, prior to the
    April 24, 1996, effective date of AEDPA, he had until April 23, 1997 to
    file a habeas petition. Burns v. Morton, 
    134 F.3d 109
    , 111 (3d Cir.
    1998). This period was tolled by his first PCRA petition from January
    1996 through November 1999, and Slutzker filed his federal petition in
    December 1999. Thus, when he filed his habeas petition, Slutzker had
    essentially a full year of the statute of limitations remaining.
    12
    running on September 11, 2001, when he received the police
    reports.9 The statute on Slutzker’s other claims, however, began
    running on the April 24, 1996, effective date of AEDPA, though it
    was tolled by his first PCRA petition from January 1996 through
    November 1999. See supra note 8; see also Fielder v. Varner, 
    379 F.3d 113
    , 118 (3d Cir. 2004) (finding that the AEDPA statute of
    limitations should be applied on a claim-by-claim basis). The
    statute was not, however, tolled during the pendency of Slutzker’s
    habeas petition from December 1999 through his discovery of the
    Brady documents in September 2001. This is the teaching of
    Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. 167
    , 172-73 (2001), which held that
    a previous habeas corpus petition that has been dismissed without
    prejudice for failure to exhaust does not toll the AEDPA statute of
    limitations for a later habeas petition. At the time he discovered the
    Brady documents, Slutzker’s habeas petition had been pending for
    nearly two years; had it been dismissed, even without prejudice, his
    claims would have been forever barred by § 2244(d).
    b. The Stay-and-Abey Possibility
    The Commonwealth argues, citing Merritt v. Blaine, 
    326 F.3d 157
     (3d Cir. 2003), that Slutzker could have amended his
    federal petition to assert the Brady claim, and then “requested that
    the current Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus be stayed until the
    completion of state review of his claim.” We do not find this
    argument compelling. Slutzker certainly could have requested such
    a stay, but in the fall of 2001 there was significant doubt that he
    would have received one, or that if he did it would be upheld on
    appeal. Merritt itself was decided some nineteen months after
    9
    Of course, the statute of limitations starts running from “the date
    on which the factual predicate of the claim or claims presented could
    have been discovered through the exercise of due diligence,”
    § 2244(d)(1)(D) (emphasis added), not the date on which the factual
    predicate actually was discovered. See Schlueter v. Varner, 
    384 F.3d 69
    ,
    74 (3d Cir. 2004). On the record before us, we cannot be sure whether
    Slutzker “could have” discovered the Brady materials prior to September
    11, 2001. But we note that, in general, Slutzker has been a paragon of
    due diligence, and the Commonwealth has not disputed that the Brady
    claim is timely.
    13
    Slutzker received the police reports, and did not squarely hold that
    such a “stay and abey” procedure was appropriate. Instead, it
    merely noted in a footnote that
    when petitioners have filed habeas actions in federal
    courts before they have fully exhausted their state
    remedies, many federal courts have suggested that
    the federal actions should be stayed to give the
    petitioners an opportunity to file their state action
    because an outright dismissal, even without
    prejudice, could jeopardize the timeliness of a
    collateral attack.
    
    326 F.3d at
    170 n.10. Not until Crews v. Horn, 
    360 F.3d 146
    , 151-
    52 (3d Cir. 2004), did we specifically hold that “[s]taying a habeas
    petition pending exhaustion of state remedies is a permissible and
    effective way to avoid barring from federal court a petitioner who
    timely files a mixed petition.”
    In Crews, we relied on Justice Stevens’s concurrence in
    Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. at 182-83
    , which stated that “in our
    post-AEDPA world there is no reason why a district court should
    not retain jurisdiction over a meritorious claim and stay further
    proceedings pending the complete exhaustion of state remedies.”
    Walker was decided in June 2001; four Justices agreed that mixed
    habeas petitions should be stayed rather than dismissed, while the
    other five did not discuss the issue. Most of the Courts of Appeals
    have held, before and after Duncan, that District Courts could stay
    mixed petitions when dismissal might render them untimely. See,
    e.g., Neverson v. Bissonnette, 
    261 F.3d 120
    , 126 n.3 (1st Cir.
    2001); Zarvela v. Artuz, 
    254 F.3d 374
    , 380-82 (2d Cir. 2001);
    Mackall v. Angelone, 
    131 F.3d 442
    , 445 (4th Cir. 1997); Brewer v.
    Johnson, 
    139 F.3d 491
    , 493 (5th Cir. 1998); Palmer v. Carlton,
    
    276 F.3d 777
    , 781 (6th Cir. 2002); Freeman v. Page, 
    208 F.3d 572
    ,
    577 (7th Cir. 2000); Calderon v. United States Dist. Court for the
    N. Dist. of Calif., 
    134 F.3d 981
     (9th Cir. 1998).
    Many of these cases from other Circuits were decided before
    Slutzker received his Brady materials, so a conscientious attorney
    in Slutzker’s position might have considered the “stay-and-abey”
    procedure as a possibility. (Slutzker was, of course, proceeding pro
    se at the time.) But before Crews, or at least Merritt, there was no
    Supreme Court or Third Circuit precedent approving this
    14
    procedure.10 Moreover, one Court of Appeals, the Eighth Circuit,
    had held that a District Court lacked the power to stay habeas cases
    pending state-court resolution of unexhausted claims. Carmichael
    v. White, 
    163 F.3d 1044
     (8th Cir. 1998).11 Even a prompt request
    for a stay would thus have carried the risk that the stay might be
    overturned on appeal, if we had chosen to follow the reasoning of
    Carmichael. If a stay were granted and then overturned, Slutzker’s
    claims would be dismissed under Rose v. Lundy as not fully
    exhausted, his limitations period would run, and all of his non-
    Brady habeas claims would become untimely.
    c. Parallel Proceedings
    As just explained, Slutzker would have been at grave risk if
    he had amended his habeas petition to include the Brady claim, and
    either dismissed or had that petition stayed to exhaust the claim in
    10
    Nor had any District Court in this Circuit allowed the
    procedure. In Beasley v. Fulcomer, Civ. A. No. 90-4711, 
    1991 WL 64586
     (E.D. Pa. Apr. 22, 1991), a somewhat analogous pre-AEDPA
    case, the Eastern District of Pennsylvania held a mixed habeas petition
    in abeyance, rather than dismissing it, because the petitioner was under
    a death sentence and this procedure would allow the District Court to
    continue its stay of execution until the state claims were resolved. But
    Beasley was not controlling precedent, and would not apply to Slutzker
    in any case because he did not face the death penalty. Furthermore, this
    Court’s decision in Christy v. Horn, 
    115 F.3d 201
    , 206-07 (3d Cir.
    1997), cast some doubt on the vitality of Beasley, dismissing rather than
    staying a mixed petition because we found that there was no danger that
    the petitioner would be executed during the pendency of his state court
    proceedings. We have not discovered any other pre-Merritt District
    Court decisions in this Circuit approving anything resembling the “stay
    and abey” procedure.
    11
    The Eighth Circuit’s refusal to stay mixed habeas
    petitions—and, thus, the validity of the other Circuits’ willingness to do
    so—is currently under review by the Supreme Court. See Rhines v.
    Weber, 
    346 F.3d 799
     (8th Cir. 2003), cert. granted, — U.S. —, 
    124 S. Ct. 2905
     (2004); cf. Pliler v. Ford, — U.S. —, 
    124 S. Ct. 2441
    , 2446
    (2004) (declining to “address[] the propriety of [the] stay-and-abeyance
    procedure”).
    15
    state courts. A third, and just as unappealing, option might have
    been for Slutzker to proceed separately with his unamended habeas
    petition, while separately bringing a second PCRA petition on the
    habeas claims. We have allowed state prisoners to seek federal
    habeas corpus relief while they also pursue state remedies on
    claims that are unrelated to their habeas claims. See Pringle v.
    Court of Common Pleas, 
    744 F.2d 297
    , 300 (3d Cir. 1984)
    (reversing dismissal of a habeas petition where petitioner was
    pursuing a parallel state appeal of a state-law sentencing issue); cf.
    Tillett v. Freeman, 
    868 F.2d 106
     (3d Cir. 1989) (reversing
    dismissal of a habeas petition that included an unexhausted claim
    cognizable only under state law). But these cases involved
    petitioners with fully exhausted federal claims, who brought their
    habeas petitions in parallel with state proceedings based solely on
    state law. Thus, we found that “none of the purposes attributed by
    the Rose v. Lundy opinion as support for its exhaustion rule have
    any application,” Tillett, 
    868 F.2d at 108
    , and held only that the
    exhaustion requirement of Fay and Rose “is not controlling when
    the unexhausted claim in question is one of state law,” Pringle, 
    744 F.2d at 300
    . As the unexhausted claim here is one of federal law,
    Pringle and Tillett provide only attenuated support for the view that
    Slutzker could have pursued parallel federal habeas corpus and
    state PCRA petitions.
    Even if this option was available, however, it would have
    presented dangers similar to those involved in staying or dismissing
    his entire petition. If Slutzker had been able to exhaust his Brady
    claim in state court while still litigating his remaining habeas
    claims in federal court, and if he had been denied PCRA relief on
    the Brady claim, any attempt to seek federal habeas review of that
    claim would be a “second or successive habeas corpus application”
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (b). See Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. at 520-21
    .
    For Slutzker to bring such a second habeas petition, he would have
    to petition this Court for leave to file the second petition,
    § 2244(b)(3), and demonstrate that “the facts underlying the claim,
    if proven, would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing
    evidence that, but for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder
    would have found [him] guilty of the underlying offense,”
    § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii). We doubt that Slutzker could have met such a
    stringent standard. See supra note 7.
    Thus, even if Slutzker had been able to pursue his exhausted
    16
    habeas claims in federal court while simultaneously exhausting his
    Brady claim in state court, doing so would nonetheless have
    essentially denied him the chance to receive any federal review of
    that claim, because it would be subject to the heightened barrier of
    § 2244(b).
    d. Conclusion
    When Slutzker received the Brady materials, then, he had
    four choices, none of them attractive. He could file a second PCRA
    petition on the Brady issue, see his pending habeas petition
    dismissed under Rose v. Lundy, and give up on all of his other
    habeas claims, which would immediately become time-barred. He
    could request a stay in his habeas proceeding, despite the lack of
    any Third Circuit precedent allowing such a stay, and risk
    untimeliness on all of his claims if such a stay was not granted and
    upheld on appeal. He could possibly attempt to proceed in parallel,
    in federal court on his exhausted habeas claims and in state court
    on his new Brady claim—an untried course that would eliminate
    any real possibility of federal review of the Brady issue. Or he
    could continue in federal court and procedurally default under the
    PCRA’s time limits. Slutzker chose the final option.
    We find that this difficult choice among four options, each
    of which would endanger Slutzker’s ability to obtain habeas review
    of all of his claims, constituted ample external cause for Slutzker’s
    default. While the Supreme Court has never “attempt[ed] an
    exhaustive catalog of such objective impediments to compliance,”
    Murray v. Carrier, 
    477 U.S. at 488
    , it has suggested that there are
    at least two common categories: “a showing that the factual or legal
    basis for a claim was not reasonably available to counsel, or that
    some interference by officials made compliance impractical,” 
    id.
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). The situation
    facing Slutzker fits within both of these categories.
    On the one hand, it is the Commonwealth’s own failure to
    disclose the Brady material that led to Slutzker’s dilemma. By
    waiting to disclose this material until after Slutzker had filed his
    federal habeas petition and until that proceeding had been pending
    for two years, the Commonwealth put him in a position where he
    could not comply with the applicable state limitation and federal
    exhaustion law without losing, or at least seriously jeopardizing,
    17
    his right to federal review of all of his constitutional claims.
    On the other hand, Slutzker’s difficulties were also due
    directly to the unsettled state of our case law: thus, the legal basis
    for his claim was in a very real sense unavailable. Of course, there
    is no argument that Slutzker’s Brady claim was not legally
    available in September of 2001: Brady itself had been the law of
    the land for nearly forty years, and the newly discovered police
    reports were factually sufficient to make out a Brady claim. But the
    legal posture of Slutzker’s petition might well have rendered relief
    unavailable to him, and the fact that he could make out a Brady
    claim would have done him little good if he had no way of actually
    obtaining review of that claim.
    Thus, because of the Commonwealth’s failure to disclose
    the police reports in a timely fashion, and because of the legal
    difficulties inherent in raising the Brady claim in September of
    2001, we find that Slutzker has demonstrated cause for his
    procedural default. As the law of this Circuit did not yet allow
    Slutzker to stay his pending habeas corpus petition, and as
    dismissing that petition would render a re-filing untimely, Slutzker
    faced an “objective impediment” to filing a second PCRA petition
    in state court. 12
    There remains the question of prejudice stemming from
    Slutzker’s default. The analysis of prejudice for the procedural
    default of a Brady claim is identical to the analysis of materiality
    under Brady itself. Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    , 282 (1999);
    see also Banks v. Dretke, 
    540 U.S. 668
    , —, 
    124 S. Ct. 1256
    , 1276
    12
    This conclusion does not depend upon Slutzker’s pro se status,
    as even an experienced attorney would have found no appealing
    alternative to procedural default here. Thus this case is readily
    distinguishable from Caswell v. Ryan, 
    953 F.2d 853
    , 862 (3d Cir. 1992).
    In Caswell, we noted that the Murray v. Carrier definition of cause,
    requiring an “objective factor external to the defense,” applied to pro se
    as well as represented petitioners, and held that a pro se petitioner’s
    failure to file a timely petition for allocatur in the Pennsylvania courts
    was a procedural default unexcused by cause and prejudice. But Caswell
    missed a PCRA deadline due to mere inadvertence or negligence,
    whereas Slutzker defaulted because he had a pending federal habeas
    petition, which could have been jeopardized by bringing a new state
    petition.
    18
    (2004). If the withheld evidence was material to Slutzker’s trial,
    then barring his petition on procedural grounds would create
    prejudice. We therefore turn to the merits of the Brady claim; we
    discuss materiality under Brady, and thus prejudice for the
    procedural default, in Part II.C.2, infra. As will appear, we find that
    there was in fact prejudice, and we conclude that Sluztker has
    demonstrated cause and prejudice sufficient to excuse his
    procedural default.
    C. The Merits of the Brady Claim
    It is clearly established that “the suppression by the
    prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request
    violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt
    or to punishment.” Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (1963).
    Brady thus envisions two requirements for overturning a verdict:
    (1) that evidence in the possession of the government was actually
    suppressed, and (2) that the suppressed evidence was material. In
    this case, the Commonwealth disputes both prongs of this test.
    Because of Slutzker’s failure to bring this claim before any
    Pennsylvania court, there is no state court decision on the merits of
    the Brady claim to which we owe deference under AEDPA. See
    infra Part III. We therefore analyze the issue de novo.
    1. Withholding of evidence
    First, the Commonwealth argues that there is no proof that
    the twenty-one police reports that Slutzker received on September
    11, 2001, had actually been withheld from him at his original trial.
    The Assistant District Attorney who had prosecuted Slutzker at his
    1991-1992 trial stated, during Slutzker’s 1997 PCRA hearing, that
    she had turned over all documents in her possession, and that this
    was her common practice.
    Slutzker, however, offers substantial evidence that the
    documents were not, in fact, turned over prior to trial. While
    Slutzker’s trial attorney, Charles Scarlata, died prior to September
    2001, his PCRA attorney, Chris Eyster, has represented that the
    twenty-one disputed police reports were not in Scarlata’s file when
    Eyster reviewed that file in developing the PCRA petition. Also
    probative is the fact that Scarlata, at trial, stated that Cynthia
    19
    DeMann was “interviewed twice” and “failed to identify” Slutzker.
    One of the disputed reports was of a third interview with Mrs.
    DeMann, in which she not only “failed to identify” Slutzker, but in
    fact positively stated that the man she saw was not Slutzker, and
    was significantly shorter than Slutzker. Scarlata never impeached
    Mrs. DeMann with these statements, though she was a crucial
    prosecution witness and he had impeached her with her prior
    failures to identify Slutzker. We view this omission as significant
    evidence that Scarlata did not, in fact, have the third DeMann
    report at the time of Slutzker’s trial.
    We are therefore not at all convinced by the
    Commonwealth’s contention that the disputed reports had been
    turned over to the defense prior to trial. The Commonwealth’s only
    evidence for this claim is a general statement by the prosecutor that
    it was her practice to turn over evidence to the defense; against
    this, there is both testimonial and circumstantial evidence
    indicating that the defense did not have access to the reports. It
    seems clear enough that Slutzker did not have access to the police
    reports before trial, and therefore that the first Brady prong is
    satisfied.13
    2. Materiality
    We next consider whether the suppressed police reports
    13
    There is a surprising dearth of precedent regarding the burden
    of proof of nondisclosure of Brady evidence. But see United States. v.
    Earnest, 
    129 F.3d 906
    , 910 (7th Cir. 1997) (“To be entitled to relief
    under Brady, the defendant must establish 1) that the prosecution
    suppressed evidence; 2) that the evidence was favorable to the defense;
    and 3) that the evidence was material to an issue at trial.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted and emphasis added)). We note that, in general,
    the prosecution is more likely to have knowledge of the contents of its
    files; traditionally, the burden of proof is allocated to the party that is
    better able to inform itself about the issue. Cf. Campbell v. United States,
    
    365 U.S. 85
    , 96 (1961) (“[T]he ordinary rule, based on considerations of
    fairness, does not place the burden upon a litigant of establishing facts
    peculiarly within the knowledge of his adversary.”). Nonetheless we
    need not decide this issue here, as Slutzker’s showing that the reports
    were withheld is convincing, and the Commonwealth has not put
    forward any forceful evidence to the contrary.
    20
    were “material either to guilt or to punishment.” Brady, 
    373 U.S. at 87
    . The Supreme Court has elucidated the Brady materiality
    standard as follows:
    [The] touchstone of materiality is a “reasonable
    probability” of a different result, and the adjective is
    important. The question is not whether the defendant
    would more likely than not have received a different
    verdict with the evidence, but whether in its absence
    he received a fair trial, understood as a trial resulting
    in a verdict worthy of confidence.
    Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 434 (1995). Evidence that tends to
    impeach prosecution witnesses may be material under this
    standard. United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 676 (1985).
    The District Court here found that two of the undisclosed
    police reports were material. The first of these was the January 15,
    1976, Cynthia DeMann interview. As noted above, Mrs. DeMann
    stated in this interview that the man she saw speaking to Arlene
    Mudd after the murder was not Slutzker, but was significantly
    shorter than Slutzker. At trial, fifteen years later, Mrs. DeMann
    testified that this man was, in fact, Slutzker; hence there is little
    doubt that the January 15 report constitutes material impeachment
    evidence. It directly contradicts M rs. DeMann’s trial testimony.
    While the defense was able to impeach Mrs. DeMann with two
    other police reports in which she failed to identify the man she saw
    speaking with Arlene Mudd, there is a significant difference
    between a failure to identify Slutzker and a definitive statement
    that the man she saw was not Slutzker. The latter is much more
    convincing impeachment evidence, and the failure to disclose it
    leaves us in doubt that the trial verdict was worthy of confidence.
    This is particularly true because Mrs. DeMann was perhaps
    the only credible eyewitness who testified to seeing Slutzker near
    the scene of the crime. The other three witnesses may not have
    been as believable to the jury as Mrs. DeMann. John Mudd Jr., who
    was five years old at the time of the murder, testified to “recovered
    memories” whose authenticity was strenuously disputed, and had
    obvious incentives to incriminate Slutzker. Amy Slutzker, who was
    six years old at the time of the murder and remembered nothing
    else from that time of her life, also spoke of dubious memories, and
    was obviously long estranged from her father. Officer Timothy
    Brendlinger, who did not know Slutzker’s appearance as well as
    21
    Mrs. DeMann did, was himself impeached at trial by the testimony
    of his partner, Officer Mangano, and by the contents of a report
    that he had made at the time of the murder. Officer Brendlinger’s
    report failed to mention seeing Arlene Mudd talking to anyone
    outside of her house on the night of the murder, and Officer
    Mangano testified that Brendlinger had not mentioned his
    identification of Slutzker at the time.
    As the Magistrate Judge put it, Mrs. DeMann “was the only
    [eyewitness] who was truly a disinterested party, in that she had no
    relation to the Commonwealth, the victim or the Petitioner.” Thus
    we find that denying Slutzker the opportunity to impeach her with
    her January 15 statement materially impacted the fairness of his
    trial.14 Although the Commonwealth presented significant evidence
    against Slutzker, the case for convicting him was far from
    overwhelming. The eyewitness accounts placing him at the scene
    were questionable, and the circumstantial evidence, while certainly
    i n c r im i n a t i n g , w a s a l s o c o n s is t e n t w i t h o t h e r
    conclusions—including that Arlene Mudd herself, or someone else
    acting at her behest, killed Mudd. If Slutzker had had a fair
    opportunity to impeach the most reliable eyewitness, the outcome
    of his trial might well have been different.
    In sum, we agree with the District Court that the police
    report describing Cynthia DeMann’s January 15, 1976, interview
    14
    The District Court also found that the statements of Dennis and
    Susan Ward, two other neighbors of the Mudds, were material. We
    cannot agree. The District Court read the Wards’ statements to “suggest
    that the unidentified man trying to calm Mrs. Mudd down outside her
    house, was actually Mrs. Mudd’s neighbor, Mr. Ward, not Petitioner,”
    and determined that Slutzker’s attorney would have called them to testify
    at trial if he had had access to the report. In fact, however, Mr. Ward told
    the police that he spoke to Mrs. Mudd in front of his own house at least
    ten minutes after the murder—not in front of the Mudd house
    immediately after the murder. The Wards also made a number of
    statements indicating that they believed Slutzker was involved in the
    murder. We therefore do not agree either that the defense would likely
    have called the Wards, or that their testimony would have proven helpful
    to the defense. Furthermore, we agree with the District Court that the
    remainder of the police reports do not meet the standard of materiality,
    for essentially the reasons set forth in the Magistrate Judge’s Report and
    Recommendations.
    22
    was material evidence, and that the Commonwealth’s failure to
    disclose it constituted a violation of due process. We reiterate that
    this conclusion also bears on our procedural default analysis:
    because we find that the report was material, we also find that
    prejudice would result from Slutzker’s procedural default. See
    supra Part II.B.3.d.
    III. The Fifth Amendment Claim
    In addition, we review the trial court’s refusal to compel
    Arlene Mudd (now Arlene Mudd Stewart) to testify. Arlene Mudd
    testified at the 1976 coroner’s inquest that Slutzker was not present
    at her house on the night of the murder. But she refused to testify
    at Slutzker’s 1991-1992 trial, invoking her Fifth Amendment
    rights, and the trial court did not force her to testify.
    Because the Pennsylvania trial court considered and rejected
    Slutzker’s demand that Arlene M udd be compelled to testify, we
    are limited in our review of that decision by AEDPA. Habeas relief
    may not be awarded on a claim considered on its merits by a state
    court unless the state court’s decision “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). Furthermore, the state court’s findings of fact “shall
    be presumed to be correct,” and the petitioner has the burden of
    rebutting this presumption by clear and convincing evidence. 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (e)(1).
    There is no doubt that Arlene M udd had a Fifth Amendment
    right to refuse to testify. She was herself a suspect in the murder,
    and in fact originally had been charged as a co-defendant. Her
    testimony might well have implicated her in the murder. Slutzker
    argues, however, that Arlene waived the privilege by testifying at
    the coroner’s inquest conducted after the murder in January 1976.
    We disagree.
    The law is clear that “a witness, in a single proceeding, may
    not testify voluntarily about a subject and then invoke the privilege
    against self-incrimination when questioned about the details.”
    Mitchell v. United States, 
    526 U.S. 314
    , 321 (1999) (emphasis
    added). On the other hand, “[i]t is settled by the overwhelming
    weight of authority that a person who has waived his privilege of
    silence in one trial or proceeding is not estopped to assert it as to
    23
    the same matter in a subsequent trial or proceeding.” In re Neff,
    
    206 F.2d 149
    , 152 (3d Cir. 1953) (refusing to compel testimony at
    trial where witness had testified to the same matter in grand jury
    proceedings). This is a general rule that would seem to apply with
    great force to the coroner’s inquest. See generally Michael A.
    DiSabatino, Annotation, Right of Witness in Federal Court To
    Claim Privilege Against Self-Incrimination After Giving Sworn
    Evidence on Same Matter in Other Proceedings, 
    42 A.L.R. Fed. 793
     (collecting cases). Thus, we think it clear that the trial court did
    not err in refusing to compel Arlene Mudd’s testimony.
    The District Court’s thorough analysis of this issue focused
    on the absence of any Supreme Court decision that directly
    addresses whether a waiver of the Fifth Amendment privilege in
    one proceeding waives the privilege in future proceedings, though
    it mentioned in a footnote that the question is settled among the
    Circuit Courts. The absence of such Supreme Court precedent is
    sufficient to deny habeas relief on this grounds: as there is no
    Supreme Court case on point, the trial court could not have decided
    this case contrary to such a precedent, or so unreasonably applied
    precedent as to fall within the AEDPA requirements. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d)(1).
    We note too that in United States v. Salerno, 
    505 U.S. 317
    ,
    319-20 (1992), the Supreme Court seems to have accepted the
    “hornbook law,” United States v. Fortin, 
    685 F.2d 1297
    , 1299
    (11th Cir. 1982), that a witness who testifies before a grand jury
    may nonetheless invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege if called to
    testify at trial. Salerno concerned the question whether transcripts
    of the witness’s grand jury statements could be admitted at trial
    when the witness claimed the Fifth Amendment privilege; it did not
    specifically address whether that assertion of the privilege was
    proper. The District Court noted that “the Salerno Court never
    considered, nor even discussed, the issue of whether the witness
    had waived his right to invoke the Fifth Amendment privilege by
    testifying previously before the grand jury.” While this is true, we
    think it significant that Salerno did not question the rule, accepted
    by this Circuit and most others, that testimony in one proceeding
    does not bar a witness from asserting the Fifth Amendment
    privilege in a separate proceeding.
    Therefore, we hold that Arlene M udd’s testimony at a
    coroner’s inquest did not waive her Fifth Amendment right against
    24
    self-incrimination in a criminal prosecution conducted fifteen years
    later, and we decline to grant habeas relief on this basis.
    IV. The Ineffective Assistance Claim
    The District Court also granted habeas relief on the ground
    that Charles Scarlata, Slutzker’s trial lawyer, provided
    constitutionally ineffective assistance in violation of Slutzker’s
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel. The basis for this determination
    was the fact that Scarlata had not called Slutzker’s friends Janet
    and Patrick O’Dea as alibi witnesses at Slutzker’s trial, nor had he
    interviewed them in preparing for trial. Slutzker argues that the
    O’Deas would have provided compelling alibi testimony that could
    have changed the outcome of his trial. The Commonwealth, on the
    other hand, contends that Scarlata’s decision not to call or
    interview the O’Deas was a sound tactical judgment, and that they
    would have been subject to impeachment about their personal
    involvement in or knowledge of the murder that would have proven
    disastrous to Slutzker’s defense.
    Inasmuch as we are affirming the grant of habeas corpus
    because of the failure to provide the defendant with the Brady
    material, we do not find it necessary to reach the District Court’s
    decision on the ineffective assistance claim. The legal standards in
    this area are somewhat unsettled, in part because one of our recent
    decisions, holding that an attorney’s decision not to interview all
    possibly relevant witnesses does not necessarily constitute
    ineffective assistance, is being reviewed by the Supreme Court. See
    Rompilla v. Horn, 
    355 F.3d 233
     (3d Cir. 2004), cert. granted,
    Rompilla v. Beard, 
    125 S. Ct. 27
     (Sept. 28, 2004). Therefore, we
    find it prudent to avoid ruling on the District Court’s decision on
    this issue.
    V. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the order of the
    District Court granting habeas corpus relief on the ground that the
    prosecution’s failure to disclose the twenty-one police reports
    denied Slutzker due process. We will also affirm the denial of
    habeas relief for the trial court’s failure to compel Arlene M udd to
    testify.
    25
    The parties expend much energy in debating the ambiguity
    of the District Court’s order, which stated only “that the petition for
    writ of habeas corpus is GRANTED” without specifying the exact
    form of relief provided. We therefore will modify that order to
    require the Commonwealth to release Slutzker unless it retries him
    within 120 days. See Herrera v. Collins, 
    506 U.S. 390
    , 403 (1993)
    (“The typical relief granted in federal habeas corpus is a
    conditional order of release unless the State elects to retry the
    successful habeas petitioner . . . .”).
    26
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-4046

Filed Date: 12/29/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (47)

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