Kamienski v. Hendricks , 332 F. App'x 740 ( 2009 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2009 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    5-28-2009
    Kamienski v. Hendricks
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential
    Docket No. 06-4536
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    Recommended Citation
    "Kamienski v. Hendricks" (2009). 2009 Decisions. Paper 1299.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2009/1299
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    NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 06-4536
    _____________
    PAUL KAMIENSKI,
    Appellant
    v.
    ROY L. HENDRICKS, Administrator;
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY;
    OCEAN COUNTY PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE
    ______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. No. 02-cv-03091)
    District Judge: Stanley R. Chesler
    _______________
    Argued April 16, 2009
    Before: McKEE, SMITH, and VAN ANTWERPEN, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: May 28, 2009)
    Timothy J. McInnis, Esq. (Argued)
    Law Office of Timothy J. McInnis
    521 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1700
    New York, NY 10175
    Counsel for the Appellant
    1
    Samuel J. Marzarella, Esq. (argued)
    Marlene Lynch Ford
    Prosecutor of Ocean County New Jersey
    119 Hooper Avenue
    P.O. Box 2191
    Toms River, NJ 08754
    Counsel for Appellees
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    McKee, Circuit Judge
    Paul Kamienski appeals from the final order of the United States District Court for
    the District of New Jersey denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. In that
    petition, Kamienski challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to support his 1987
    conviction for murder and felony murder in New Jersey state court. The sole question
    certified to us on appeal from the order denying habeas relief is whether the evidence was
    sufficient to prove Kamienski guilty of first degree murder and felony murder beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Based upon our careful review of the record, and despite the very
    deferential standard that limits our inquiry, we believe that no reasonable juror could
    conclude that the evidence admitted against Kamienski at his trial established that he was
    guilty of murder or felony murder beyond a reasonable doubt, and the New Jersey courts’
    conclusion to the contrary is an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme
    Court precedent. Accordingly, as we shall explain below, we hold that the district court
    erred in denying Kamienski’s petition, and we will therefore remand to the district court
    2
    with instructions to grant relief.1
    I. Factual Background 2
    On September 24, 1983, the body of Henry “Nick” DeTournay was recovered from
    the waters of Barnegat Bay in New Jersey. The body was wrapped in a blanket and a
    sleeping bag and tied to a cement block, and Kamienski’s business card was found in one
    of Nick’s pockets. Writing on the back of that card referred to an apartment phone
    number and a “boat” phone number for “Paul and Donna.” The following day, Barbara
    DeTournay’s body was found in the bay wrapped in a brown blanket not far from where
    Nick’s body had been recovered. Subsequent investigation established that both Nick and
    Barbara DeTournay had been killed by multiple gun shot wounds inflicted several days
    before their bodies were discovered.
    The ensuing investigation by the Ocean County Prosecutor’s office eventually
    focused on Paul Kamienski, Anthony Alongi and Joseph Marsieno.3 Investigators
    developed the theory that the DeTournays had been killed in the course of a large drug
    deal. However, investigators were not able to formally charge anyone for the murders
    1
    We have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253.
    2
    Since the only issue before us is the sufficiency of the evidence, we must set forth
    the evidence that was developed at trial in some detail. We must state the facts in the
    light most favorable to the government, and draw all reasonable inferences from those
    facts in the government’s favor.
    3
    Joseph Marsieno is also referred to as “Marzeno” and “Marseno” in various
    places in the record. Like the district court, we shall refer to him as “Marsieno.”
    3
    until October of 1987 when Kamienski, Alongi, and Marsieno were charged with robbery,
    murder and conspiracy to distribute the cocaine that the DeTournays had been trying to
    sell.
    Thereafter, the three defendants were tried jointly. Donna Duckworth, who was
    Kamienski’s girlfriend from 1981 to 1987, was the main witness against Kamienski.
    Kamienski and Duckworth “partied” regularly and frequently shared cocaine. Duckworth
    and Kamienski met the DeTournays in the summer of 1982 when the DeTournays docked
    their boat at the New Jersey marina where Kamienski kept his boat. In 1983, Nick
    DeTournay visited Kamienski on his boat a few days before Labor Day to inquire if
    Kamienski knew anyone interested in purchasing a large quantity of cocaine, and
    Kamienski stated that he did. During the summer of 1983, Kamienski was buying the
    cocaine he and Duckworth used from Marsieno and Alongi, whom they had met
    previously.
    During a Labor Day weekend party, Kamienski took the DeTournays to Alongi’s
    home and introduced them to Alongi. During that meeting Kamienski vouched for
    Alongi to the DeTournays, and he also vouched for the DeTournays to Alongi.
    Christine Longo, Barbara DeTournay’s sister, testified that Barbara DeTournay
    had told her that she (Barbara) had spent time during the Labor Day weekend on the boat
    4
    of a friend named “Paul,” who was a funeral director.4 Thereafter, Barbara advised
    Christine that she and her husband were trying to sell some cocaine and that they would
    “be set for life” because of a cocaine deal they had arranged. Longo did not know how
    much cocaine was involved, but she could tell that it was a “large quantity.”
    Duckworth testified that on September 9, a few days after Labor Day, she heard
    Kamienski telling someone on the phone “he didn’t have a scale and to get off the boat.”
    When Duckworth inquired, Kamienski told her that he had been speaking to Nick
    DeTournay. Phone records that were admitted into evidence showed a call from
    Kamienski to the residence where the DeTournays were staying on September 9, 1983.
    There is no further indication in the record of communications between Kamienski and
    the DeTournays between September 9 and September 19, 1983 when the DeTournays
    were murdered.
    Kamienski and Duckworth attended a party at Alongi’s house on Saturday,
    September 17, and there was talk about good quality cocaine becoming available in the
    very near future. According to Duckworth, Marsieno and Alongi were the ones who
    spoke of the upcoming deal. “Buddy” Lehman, a user who purchased cocaine from
    Alongi, also heard Alongi make these statements. Marsieno told his girlfriend, Jeanne
    Yurcisin, that “he was expecting to get a great deal of cocaine, that it was supposed to be
    4
    It is clear from all of the testimony that the “Paul” that Christine was referring to
    was Paul Kamienski.
    5
    very good, and it was supposed to burn at 88 to 92 percent, and it was coming up from
    Florida from friends of Paul and Donna’s.”
    Jeffrey Sidney was the associate of the DeTournays’ responsible for driving the
    cocaine from Florida to New Jersey where he checked in to the Holiday Inn in Toms
    River. He testified for the prosecution under a grant of immunity. According to Sidney,
    the drug deal was initially scheduled for Sunday, September 18. On that day, he met Nick
    in the parking lot of the Holiday Inn at 11:30 a.m., but Nick told him that the “people still
    weren’t ready and they were getting their money together.” At 4:00 p.m. on the 18th,
    Jeanne Yurcisin received a telephone call from Marsieno, in which Marsieno told her to
    “pick him up at the Holiday Inn” and “to be there at eight o’clock, not to be a minute late,
    because he would be carrying.”
    According to Duckworth’s testimony, she and Kamienski spent the day of the 18th
    on Kamienski’s boat and then met Alongi, Marsieno and Jackie Sullivan 5 at the bar of the
    Holiday Inn Hotel for drinks around 6:00. Duckworth could not recall what the men
    talked about, as she interacted primarily with Sullivan. However, there was no testimony
    that anyone at that meeting discussed the pending cocaine transaction. There was also no
    testimony that Kamienski met with the DeTournays on the 18th or ever told anyone
    (including Duckworth) about any meeting with the DeTournays on the 18th.
    5
    Jackie Sullivan was Alongi’s girlfriend in 1983. By the time of the trial, the two
    had married and Jackie Sullivan became Jackie Alongi. Both names appear in the record
    and the briefing, but refer to the same person.
    6
    Jeanne Yurcisin, Marsieno’s girlfriend, testified that she did pick Marsieno up at
    8:00 that evening from the Holiday Inn as instructed and that he was carrying a briefcase.
    Yurcisin testified: “as we were pulling away, he said, those lousy MF'ers, He said that
    they wanted to see the money first, and that he -- he had no intention of paying them any
    money, that he would kill them before they got any of his money.” Yurcisin also testified
    that later, at his condo, Marsieno opened the briefcase and that it contained only a gun
    and no money.
    As noted above, the drug deal was postponed from September 18, to Monday,
    September 19, at 3:00 p.m. according to Sidney, the drug courier. On the 19th, the deal
    was further delayed until later in the afternoon. At 5:00 p.m. on the 19th, Barbara was
    dropped off at the Holiday Inn to meet Sidney and collect the cocaine. She told Sidney
    that instead of Nick coming back with the money, a “distinguished man” would be
    picking her up. Thereafter, Sidney saw Barbara get into a car matching the description of
    Alongi’s car around 5:00 p.m. Sidney never saw or heard from either of the DeTournays
    again.
    Alongi’s neighbor, Mr. Hunt, testified that he saw Nick’s car pull into Alongi’s
    driveway and saw Nick get out of the car and shake Alongi’s hand sometime between
    3:00 and 6:00 p.m. on Monday, September 19.
    Duckworth testified that Kamienski drove her to a friend’s house and dropped her
    off there at about 2:30 p.m. on the 19th. She testified that this was unusual because
    7
    Kamienski’s license was suspended and he never drove. Furthermore, the two of them
    were virtually inseparable during that period as they were always together.
    According to Duckworth, Kamienski subsequently picked her up and brought her
    to the Alongi residence around “dusk,” and Kamienski then directed her to wait in the
    kitchen with Jackie Sullivan. However, Duckworth did not heed his instruction. Rather,
    she went outside towards the dock where she saw Kamienski “standing by the dock”
    looking towards Alongi, who was in a boat.6 She saw a blanket and sleeping bag in the
    boat and “what appeared . . . to be a body shape in the sleeping bag.” The sleeping bag
    was blue and she also saw a brown blanket in the boat. The dock was wet. Alongi started
    to lunge at Duckworth when he saw her, but Kamienski told Alongi that Duckworth was
    “alright,” and she went back inside.
    After Duckworth returned to the house, she and Sullivan went to the mall and then
    to a liquor store. When they returned, Marsieno was also there, and they all shared
    drinks. According to Duckworth, Alongi took her upstairs and showed her a gun, a phone
    that said “hitman” on it, and then warned her: “if I didn’t be quiet, I’d end up like my
    friends.” Alongi also told Duckworth that “Paul wouldn’t be able to save me if I open my
    mouth . . . .”
    When Kamienski and Duckworth left Alongi’s house that evening, Duckworth
    6
    Presumably, this was the black marquis boat that belonged to Sullivan’s brother
    which the government believes was used to dump the DeTournays’ bodies into the bay.
    8
    asked Kamienski what happened. Kamienski responded by telling her: “he couldn’t
    control what happened” and added that “Nick went first, Barbara didn’t suffer.”
    Kamienski then warned her: “if we didn’t shut up that he wouldn’t be able to save me or
    himself.” Upon returning to Kamienski’s boat, Duckworth noticed that it was harder to
    board the boat than usual because it had been moved slightly forward in its berth and a
    box which contained polishing towels and rags had been moved.
    Duckworth also testified that cocaine became very plentiful in late September after
    this incident, and Kamienski was looking for a “grinder” after the murders.7 There was
    also testimony that after the murders, Marsieno would give small amounts of cocaine to
    both Alongi and Kamienski without asking for payment.
    Duckworth also recounted that on October 1, 1983, she, Marsieno, Kamienski,
    Alongi, Sullivan, and Yurcisin met at a restaurant. There, she heard Marsieno state:
    “[t]hey were like scared puppies . . . it was easy.” When Duckworth exhibited some
    discomfort, Marsieno told her to “straighten up or [she] could end up like them . . .”.
    Duckworth also testified that the day Nick DeTournay’s body was found and the
    police came to question Kamienski, he instructed her to call Alongi. Telephone records
    show that Kamienski called Alongi 5 times in the 6 days following the discovery of the
    bodies. Finally, Buddy Lehman - a member of Paul and Donna’s social circle - testified
    7
    According to Duckworth’s testimony, a “grinder” is an appliance that is used to
    convert rock cocaine into powder. Sidney testified that the DeTournays’ cocaine was in
    rock form.
    9
    that the same day Nick’s body was found (but before Barbara’s body was recovered),
    Kamienski told him: “[M]y friends from Florida have been murdered.” (Emphasis
    added).
    Duckworth’s testimony included the fact that the blankets the DeTournay’s bodies
    were wrapped in when discovered were similar to blankets that she had seen on
    Kamienski’s boat. She also stated that a towel that was found with the bodies resembled
    one she had seen Kamienski use to polish his boat, and she testified on direct that the
    hitch knots depicted in photos of the recovered bodies that were used to tie the bodies to
    cement blocks were the “same type of knots that [Kamienski] would tie.” 8
    There was more testimony at trial regarding evidence linking Alongi and Marsieno
    to the crimes, but that evidence was not admitted against Kamienski and has no bearing
    on Kamienski’s appeal.9
    8
    The government makes much of this testimony on appeal. See State’s Br. at 36-
    37 (“Duckworth had been boating since age five and was familiar with how to secure
    boats and the knots boaters used to secure them. Kamienski used a peculiar ‘hitch’ knot
    to secure a boat, rather than that taught to Duckworth.”) However, the state’s selective
    reliance on that testimony is misleading because Duckworth conceded on cross
    examination that there was nothing unique about the knots, and that the hitch knot is a
    common boater’s knot. When asked if she had seen other people tie knots like the ones
    used to secure the bodies, she responded that she had in “many circumstances.”
    Accordingly, the fact finder could only conclude from that portion of her testimony that
    Kamienski knew how to tie a common “hitch knot,” used in boating.
    9
    In fact, throughout its brief, counsel for the government has used the term
    “defendants” in a manner that included Kamienski without specifying which of the three
    defendants the evidence refers to. In several of those references, the evidence being
    discussed pertained only to Marsieno and/or Alongi, and not to Kamienski. Moreover,
    the government’s brief frequently includes facts based on testimony that was admitted
    10
    II. Procedural History
    In October, 1987, approximately four years after the killings, a grand jury sitting in
    Ocean County, New Jersey, returned an indictment against Paul Kamienski, Anthony
    Alongi, and Joseph Marsieno. The indictment charged each defendant with two counts of
    first degree murder, one count of felony murder, conspiracy to commit murder and/or
    robbery, and conspiracy to possess cocaine with the intent to distribute. The
    prosecution’s theory at trial was that Marsieno committed the murders during a drug deal
    for three kilograms of cocaine and that Alongi and Kamienski were accomplices to the
    robbery and the murder.
    Although it is not determinative of our inquiry into the sufficiency of the evidence
    supporting Kamienski’s convictions for murder, or felony murder, it is nevertheless
    instructive to note that the prosecutor made the following argument during his closing to
    the jury:
    Paul Kamienski was there when [the DeTournays] were murdered.
    Paul Kamienski was there because he put this deal together, he had brokered
    it, the DeTournays trusted him. He was the person they trusted.
    ***
    only against Marsieno and/or Alongi. Although counsel does note that such evidence was
    admitted only against the other defendant(s), it is clearly irrelevant in determining if the
    evidence admitted against Kamienski was sufficient. Moreover, including such evidence
    in the brief is both unhelpful and misleading as only Kamienski’s appeal is before us.
    Counsel for the government has consistently either misunderstood or ignored the
    limitations and propriety of including such evidence responding to Kamienski’s appeal.
    11
    Am I going to say does Paul Kamienski know that they're going to get
    killed? I don't think so. Not from the evidence and testimony that I've heard.
    Paul Kamienski is there because he is part and parcel, he put this drug deal
    together, he made it work, he was there.
    And you know what, Tony [Alongi] and Joe [Marsieno] they didn't
    have any money, but you know what they had, they had a gun and they killed
    the DeTournays. They murdered them. They murdered them in cold blood.
    And Kamienski was there and that didn't end the murder, a bullet through the
    chest or through the head did not end a murder, a murder is finished and the
    murder ended when that body is disposed of. And I submit to you that's what
    occurred at that point in time was that Paul Kamienski assisted Marzeno and
    Alongi in getting rid of the bodies. That he assisted, he helped, he rendered
    his countenance to that in getting rid of the bodies. He was there. He
    never-I'll say this, he never expected it to happen, he didn't expect them to be
    murdered. He said that to Donna as soon as they got outside. I couldn't
    control the situation, but it happened. And he was there and he helped
    dispose of the bodies.
    ***
    ... I’ve indicated to you that I don’t think that Paul Kamienski - - I
    don’t think that [he] was a part of a conspiracy to murder those people, I
    think he very clearly was a part of the conspiracy, that second conspiracy to
    possess that cocaine with intent to distribute it.
    (Emphasis added). The jury acquitted all defendants of the charges of conspiracy to
    commit murder and conspiracy to commit robbery. However, the jury convicted the
    defendants of felony murder, and conspiracy to possess cocaine with the intent to
    distribute. Marsieno was found guilty, as the principal actor, of murder in the first
    degree. Kamienski and Alongi were found guilty as accomplices to murder in the first
    degree.
    Thereafter, the trial court granted post-verdict motions filed by Kamienski and
    12
    Alongi in which they each requested judgments of acquittal on the murder convictions, or
    in the alternative, a new trial on those charges. During oral argument on those post-
    verdict motions the prosecutor agreed with the following statement by the trial court:
    “prior to the afternoon of the 19th there was nothing suggesting that [Kamienski] knew of
    and agreed to assist in or conspired to commit a robbery or a murder . . . [a]nd the jury so
    found.” Accordingly, the district court granted Kamienski’s motion for judgment of
    acquittal on the murder charges.
    The court reasoned that since the jury acquitted Kamienski on the conspiracies to
    rob and murder, the state was required to show some evidence of Kamienski’s conduct
    before, during or after the murders to establish his guilt as an accomplice to the murders.10
    However, the court concluded that there was insufficient evidence to convict Kamienski
    of accomplice liability for either murder or felony murder. In reaching that decision, the
    court expressed concern about portions of the jury charge on accomplice liability.
    However, the court held that it could not order a new trial based upon the purportedly
    erroneous jury charge because the state had not produced sufficient evidence to establish
    Kamienski’s guilt for murder or felony murder. Thus, the court entered a judgment of
    acquittal on those charges in favor of Kamienski.
    The state appealed, and the Appellate Division reversed and reinstated
    10
    The prosecutor agreed that disposing of the bodies after the fact, absent
    something more, was not sufficient for accomplice liability for murder thereby retreating
    from the “continuing crime” of murder theory that he had argued to the jury.
    13
    Kamienski’s murder convictions. The Appellate Division found no error in the jury
    charges and concluded: “where a jury is instructed properly, an acquittal under a theory of
    conspiracy does not as a matter of law preclude a conviction as an accomplice.” 11 State v.
    Kamienski, 
    603 A.2d 78
    , 80 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1992). The Appellate Division
    believed that the evidence was sufficient to convict Kamienski of accomplice murder
    and/or felony murder, and it therefore reinstated Kamienski’s murder convictions. 
    Id. 89-95. Thereafter,
    the New Jersey Supreme Court refused Kamienski’s application for
    review of the decision of the Appellate Division.
    After exhausting his state remedies, Kamienski filed a timely petition under 28
    U.S.C. § 2254 in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. He
    challenged his murder convictions on several grounds, including the sufficiency of the
    evidence. The district court denied the petition because it did not believe that the New
    Jersey Appellate Division’s holding was an unreasonable application of federal law under
    AEDPA. It explained: “[a]s set forth in the Appellate Division’s discussion, there is
    evidence from which a reasonable jury could have found efforts by Kamienski to
    facilitate the robbery and murder.”
    11
    The Appellate Division believed that the trial court granted Kamienski’s motion
    for a judgment of acquittal because the jury verdict was inconsistent. However, the court
    did not grant relief because of inconsistent verdicts (which are allowed); rather, the trial
    court granted judgment of acquittal based upon its conclusion that the prosecution had not
    produced sufficient evidence to establish Kamienski’s guilt on those charges beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    14
    Thereafter, the District Court granted a certificate of appealability “on the question
    of whether [Kamienski’s] criminal conviction was based on legally insufficient evidence
    in violation of [Kamienski’s] rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution.” 12
    Accordingly, we are presented with the single claim: whether Kamienski’s murder
    convictions are supported by sufficient evidence. Kamienski’s primary argument is that
    his murder convictions should be vacated under § 2254(d)(1) because the “evidence failed
    to prove all the required actus reus or mens rea elements of these offenses beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” 13
    III. Standard of Review
    We review de novo a district court’s grant or denial of a petition for a writ of
    habeas corpus. Pazden v. Maurer, 
    424 F.3d 303
    , 310 (3d Cir. 2005). However, like the
    district court, our review is circumscribed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
    Penalty Act (“AEDPA”). Under AEDPA:
    (d) An application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a person in
    custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted with
    respect to any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court
    proceedings unless the adjudication of the claim—
    (1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable
    12
    Additional motions followed that are not relevant to this appeal.
    13
    Kamienski makes an alternative argument that his petition should be granted
    under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2254(d)(2) and (e)(1) because the appellate court’s fact finding
    conclusions were unreasonable and clearly erroneous. Because we find that Kamienski’s
    petition should be granted based on his first argument, we need not reach the second.
    15
    application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
    Supreme Court of the United States . . . .
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). “A state-court decision is ‘contrary to’ clearly established federal
    law if the state court (1) ‘contradicts the governing law set forth in [the Supreme] Court’s
    cases’ or (2) ‘confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision
    of [the Supreme] Court and nevertheless arrives at a [different] result.’” Lambert v.
    Blackwell, 
    387 F.3d 210
    , 234 (3d Cir. 2004) (quoting Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    ,
    405-06 (2000)). On the other hand, “[a] state-court decision ‘involve[s] an unreasonable
    application’ of clearly established federal law if the state court (1) ‘identifies the correct
    governing legal rule from [the Supreme] Court’s cases but unreasonably applies it to the
    facts of the particular . . . case’; or (2) ‘unreasonably extends a legal principle from
    [Supreme Court] precedent to a new context where it should not apply or unreasonably
    refuses to extend that principle to a new context where it should apply.’” 
    Id. at 234
    (quoting 
    Williams, 529 U.S. at 407
    ). “[A]n unreasonable application of federal law is
    different from an incorrect application of federal law.” 
    Williams, 529 U.S. at 410
    (emphasis in original). Thus, habeas relief requires not only a determination that the state
    court decision on the merits applied clearly established federal law erroneously or
    incorrectly, but also that the state court’s application was unreasonable. 
    Id. at 411;
    see
    also Waddington v. Sarausad, 
    129 S. Ct. 823
    , 831 (2009).
    Kamienski argues that the state court unreasonably applied Jackson v.Virginia’s
    constitutional requirement that every element of a crime be established beyond a
    16
    reasonable doubt. 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 316 (1979) (“Winship presupposes as an essential of the
    due process guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment that no person shall be made to
    suffer the onus of a criminal conviction except upon sufficient proof - defined as evidence
    necessary to convince a trier of fact beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of every
    element of the offense.”). A conviction will withstand a challenge under Jackson if,
    when “viewing the evidence [in the light] most [favorable] to the government, there is
    substantial evidence to support the jury’s guilty verdict.” United States v. Wexler, 
    838 F.2d 88
    , 90 (3d Cir. 1988);
    In a habeas proceeding, however, we do not simply conduct a de novo review of
    the state court’s application of that rule. Rather, we must review its sufficiency-of-the-
    evidence decision under the highly deferential standard of AEDPA. Our task, therefore,
    is to determine whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the state, it
    was objectively unreasonable for the Appellate Division to conclude that a rational trier
    of fact could have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Kamienski was guilty of felony
    murder or first-degree murder.
    IV. Discussion.
    The New Jersey Code defines felony murder as follows:
    criminal homicide constitutes murder when . . . (3) It is committed when
    the actor, acting either alone or with one or more other persons, is engaged
    in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or flight after committing
    or attempting to commit robbery, sexual assault, arson, burglary,
    kidnapping, carjacking, criminal escape or terrorism . . . . and in the course
    of such crime or of immediate flight therefrom, any person causes the
    17
    death of a person other than one of the participants
    N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3). Here, the state’s theory was that all three defendants were guilty
    of felony murder because the killings occurred in the course of a robbery. A killing in the
    course of a drug deal would not qualify as felony murder under New Jersey’s statute,
    because distribution of illegal drugs is not one of the predicate felonies listed in the New
    Jersey statute defining felony murder. Thus, for Kamienski to have been guilty of felony
    murder, the state had to produce sufficient evidence to allow a reasonable juror to
    conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that he knowingly participated or aided in the
    commission of a robbery.
    The state also charged Kamienski and Alongi with first degree murder based on
    their roles as Marsieno’s accomplices. Under N.J.S.A. 2C11-3a, first-degree murder
    occurs when “the actor purposely causes death . . . . or . . . [t]he actor knowingly causes
    death.” “Purposely” is defined as follows:
    A person acts purposely with respect to the nature of his conduct or a result
    thereof if it is his conscious object to engage in conduct of that nature or to
    cause such a result. A person acts purposely with respect to attendant
    circumstances if he is aware of the existence of such circumstances or he
    believes or hopes that they exist.
    N.J.S.A. 2C:2-2. “A person acts knowingly with respect to the nature of his conduct or
    the attendant circumstances if he is aware that his conduct is of that nature, or that such
    circumstances exist, or he is aware of a high probability of their existence. A person acts
    knowingly with respect to a result of his conduct if he is aware that it is practically certain
    18
    that his conduct will cause such a result.” N.J.S.A. 2C2-2b(2).
    The New Jersey Crimes Code specifies that “a person is legally accountable for the
    conduct of another person when . . . he is an accomplice of such other person in the
    commission of an offense.” N.J.S.A. 2C:2-6(b)(3).
    A person is an accomplice of another person in the commission of an
    offense if: (1) With the purpose of promoting or facilitating the commission
    of the offense; he (a) Solicits such other person to commit it; (b) Aids or
    agrees or attempts to aid such other person in planning or committing it. . . .
    N.J.S.A. 2C2-6(c). New Jersey’s Supreme Court has instructed that “[f]or both the
    accomplice and his partner to be guilty, ‘it is essential that they shared in the intent which
    is the crime’s basic element.” State v. White, 
    484 A.2d 691
    , 695 (N.J. 1984); see also
    State v. Torres, 
    874 A.2d 1084
    , 1092 (N.J. 2005). Thus, to find Kamienski guilty as an
    accomplice to first-degree murder, the state must show that Kamienski shared the specific
    intent to kill the DeTournays.
    The state has identified copious evidence that Kamienski was involved in the sale
    of cocaine from the DeTournays to Marsieno and Alongi, and the government clearly
    proved that he was, even though Kamienski testified in his own behalf and denied all
    involvement. The jury clearly disbelieved his blanket denial, and the jury’s conclusion
    that Kamienski brokered a cocaine sale between the DeTournays and Marsieno is
    supported by overwhelming evidence.
    Kamienski introduced the DeTournays to Marsieno knowing they were looking for
    a drug buyer, and he vouched for the actors involved in the transaction, and helped
    19
    arrange the sale of cocaine. There is also more than sufficient evidence to allow the jury
    to conclude that Kamienski was involved in disposing of the DeTournays’ bodies and
    covering up their murders.14 However, the state has not identified any direct or
    circumstantial evidence that would allow a reasonable jury to conclude that Kamienski
    knew of Marsieno’s intent to rob and/or murder the DeTournays before Marsieno shot
    them. Moreover, there is nothing other than rank speculation to suggest that he shared
    Marsieno’s intent to rob and/or murder the DeTournays.
    As noted above, the state’s murder theory against Kamienski had been based on
    some abstract notion that the crime of murder is a continuing offense that includes
    attempts to dispose of the victim’s body. That is a theory that is as unique as it is baseless
    and the state has not pursued it on appeal. Rather, the state now argues that the evidence
    was sufficient to prove that Kamienski knew of Marsieno’s plans to kill the DeTournays
    and that he assisted by ensuring that Duckworth was not a witness to the crime.
    Deference to a jury verdict, even under AEDPA’s deferential standard, does not
    allow rank speculation to substitute for proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Ironically, the
    prosecutor’s closing argument to the jury and post trial representations to the court are the
    most accurate assessment of the evidence the government produced at trial. The
    prosecutor who tried this case candidly conceded that the state had not proven either the
    14
    The state did not charge Kamienski with being an accessory-after-the-fact for his
    role in hiding the DeTournays’ murder, nor was he charged with obstruction of justice.
    20
    murder or felony murder charge against Kamienski, and we agree.
    As noted earlier, the prosecutor told the jury in closing:
    Am I going to say does Paul Kamienski knew that they're going to
    get killed? I don't think so. Not from the evidence and testimony that I've
    heard. Paul Kamienski is there because he is part and parcel, he put this
    drug deal together, he made it work, he was there.
    ***
    He was there. He never-I'll say this, he never expected it to happen, he
    didn't expect them to be murdered. . . . but it happened. And he was there
    and he helped dispose of the bodies.
    ***
    I’ve indicated to you that I don’t think that Paul Kamienski - - I don’t
    think that [he] was a part of a conspiracy to murder those people, I think he
    very clearly was a part of the conspiracy, that second conspiracy to possess
    that cocaine with intent to distribute it.
    The prosecutor made a similar remark to the court while opposing Kamienski’s
    motion for a judgment of acquittal or a new trial. He agreed with the judge’s observation
    that: “prior to the afternoon of the 19th there was nothing suggesting that [Kamienski]
    knew of and agreed to assist in or conspired to commit a robbery or a murder . . . [a]nd
    the jury so found.”
    This case is therefore a bit of a paradox. While arguing for a conviction of first
    degree murder and felony murder, the prosecutor conceded that the evidence did not
    establish that Kamienski had the mental state required for a conviction of first degree
    murder or that he had the knowledge required for a conviction of felony murder.15 The
    15
    It is not clear whether these admissions rise to the level of a judicial estoppel that
    would now preclude the government from taking a contrary litigation stance and now
    21
    trial judge who saw all of the witnesses and heard their testimony agreed that the
    government had not proven either charge beyond a reasonable doubt and entered a
    judgement of acquittal for Kamienski on both of those charges. Although the Appellate
    Division subsequently reinstated those convictions, our examination of this record
    convinces us that the Appellate Division’s decision was an unreasonable application of
    clearly established Supreme Court precedent requiring proof of each element of a crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    We realize that “[i]nferences from established facts are accepted methods of proof
    when no direct evidence is available. It is [nevertheless] essential . . . that there be a
    logical and convincing connection between the facts established and the conclusion
    inferred.” United States v. Bycer, 
    593 F.2d 549
    , 550 (3d Cir. 1979). When we asked the
    state to provide a supplemental brief on appeal identifying the evidence from which a jury
    could reasonably find Kamienski’s shared intent to rob and/or murder (or assist in those
    crimes) the state repeatedly directed us to evidence showing his complicity in the drug
    deal or evidence showing his involvement in the disposal of the bodies after the murders
    insisting that its evidence established Kamienski was guilty of murder and felony murder
    beyond a reasonable doubt. See Ryan Operations G.P. v. Santiam-Midwest Lumber Co.,
    
    81 F.3d 355
    , 358 (3d Cir. 1996) (“The basic principle of judicial estoppel . . . is that
    absent any good explanation, a party should not be allowed to gain an advantage by
    litigation on one theory, and then seek an inconsistent advantage by pursuing an
    incompatible theory.”). However, since Kamienski does not claim that the government’s
    prior concession precludes it from arguing that the evidence was sufficient to convict
    Kamienski of murder and felony murder on appeal, we need not explore that issue.
    22
    had been committed. Neither is sufficient to sustain Kamienski’s murder convictions.
    At argument before us, the state stressed that Kamienski had sequestered
    Duckworth on the day the drug deal was to be struck and invited us to connect dots that
    would reveal a picture of his knowledge of the robbery Marsieno was apparently planning
    and Kamienski’s shared intent to kill the DeTournays. However, based on our review of
    the evidence, the picture is simply not there and its existence can not be inferred absent
    the kind of guesswork that due process prohibits. Indeed, we can not accept the state’s
    view of the evidence without choking all vitality from the requirement of proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    The government’s arguments to the contrary rely not on inferences but on
    speculation. Although Kamienski and Duckworth had used cocaine together in the past,
    jurors must speculate to conclude that Kamienski’s attempts to remove her from the scene
    of a very substantial cocaine deal on September 19th suggest anything more than his
    reluctance to have her witness the only major cocaine transaction he was involved in
    during their relationship (at least there was no evidence of any other large cocaine
    transaction).16 “[I]f the evidence tends to give equal or nearly equal circumstantial
    16
    We note that the state must rely on an inference to even place Kamienski at the
    scene when the shootings took place. At trial and on appeal, the argument was that
    because Kamienski took the unusual step of separating himself from Duckworth at the
    time designated for the drug deal and because he later told her that he “couldn’t control
    what happened,” he must have witnessed the shootings. While the use of inference to
    conclude Kamienski was present when the DeTournays were shot is permissible, the state
    must show more than presence to convict for murder.
    23
    support to guilt and to innocence . . . reversal is required: When the evidence is essentially
    in balance, a reasonable jury must necessarily entertain a reasonable doubt.” See United
    States v. Ortega Reyna, 
    148 F.3d 540
    , 543 (5th Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted); see also United States v. Wexler, 
    838 F.2d 88
    , 92 (3d Cir. 1988)
    (vacating conviction for conspiracy to transport hashish where “the evidence is just as
    consistent, for example, with a conspiracy to transport stolen goods, an entirely different
    crime”).
    This record does not contain evidence that would allow an inference that
    Kamienski purposely or knowingly assisted Marsieno in killing the DeTournays.
    Marsieno was clearly the “trigger man,” and there is nothing to suggest that Kamienski
    had any part in actually causing the DeTournays’ death or that he even knew that
    Marsieno intended to bring a gun to the drug deal. Nor is there any evidence to support
    an inference that Kamienski knew Marsieno had a gun and did not intend to pay for the
    drugs he was trying to get from the DeTournays. Kamienski’s mere presence at a meeting
    the night before in the bar of the Holiday Inn cannot supply that inference because there is
    no evidence of the substance of the conversation among those involved in the drug
    transaction. See United States v. Cooper, 
    567 F.2d 252
    , 254 (3d Cir. 1977) (vacating
    conspiracy conviction where record contained no evidence to show defendant-passenger
    knew contents of locked trunk compartment contained marijuana). Although Marsieno
    had the briefcase containing a gun and no cash when Jeanne Yurcisin picked him up from
    24
    the bar that night at 8:00 pm, there is nothing to support an inference that Kamienski
    knew that Marsieno was only bringing a gun and no cash. Jeffrey, the drug courier,
    testified that he was told by the DeTournays on the 18th that the people buying the
    cocaine were “still getting their money together.” To the extent Kamienski was involved
    in the actual exchange, the evidence only allows an inference that Kamienski believed,
    like the DeTournays, that Marsieno intended to pay for the cocaine he was to buy the next
    day.
    We realize, of course, that Kamienski received cocaine from Marsieno at no
    charge after the murders. The government argues that this should be viewed as “hush
    money,” a reward for Kamienski’s involvement in the murders, or payment of his share of
    the robbery proceeds. However, even if the jury inferred that the cocaine was given to
    buy Kamienski’s silence, it would still not establish knowledge of a robbery or murder
    before Marsieno killed the DeTournays. Following the killings, Marsieno had every
    reason to keep Kamienski happy and quiet, and the record can not be stretched to infer
    that Marsieno’s gifts of cocaine to Kamienski reflect anything more. See Ortega 
    Reyna, supra
    .
    We realize, of course, that each strand of evidence need not establish guilt beyond
    a reasonable doubt, nor even support an inference of guilt by itself. Rather, we must view
    each strand as it is connected to the whole and determine if the totality of evidence,
    viewed in the light most favorable to the government, establishes guilt beyond a
    25
    reasonable doubt. Nevertheless, the web of evidence the government produced here
    simply does not allow a reasonable juror to conclude that Kamienski was guilty of murder
    or felony murder beyond a reasonable doubt. To paraphrase the prosecutor at trial,
    Kamienski “was [not] part of a conspiracy to murder these people. [The evidence does
    establish] very clearly [that] he was a part of the . . . conspiracy to possess . . . cocaine
    with intent to distribute it,” but that is all he should have been convicted of.
    Accordingly, we are convinced that the Appellate Division’s conclusion regarding
    the sufficiency of the evidence underlying Kamienski’s convictions was erroneous; the
    more difficult question is whether it was also “unreasonable” under AEDPA.17 Although
    the sufficiency question is legal one, the answer requires close scrutiny of the record and
    an assessment of the evidence produced for each offense of conviction and for each
    defendant. As we have noted, there was more than ample evidence of Kamienski’s role
    17
    It is not clear whether the Appellate Division’s conclusion that the state
    produced sufficient evidence to convict Kamienski of murder and felony, was merely
    dicta and therefore not entitled to AEDPA deference. The court stated: “[t]hese appeals
    raise two significant issues: (1) . . . voir dire . . . and (2) whether an acquittal on a
    conspiracy to rob and to murder precluded a conviction on those substantive offenses as
    an 
    accomplice.” 603 A.2d at 80
    . However, after summarizing the government’s evidence
    (as set forth above), the court concluded that: “[t]he jury could have believed that
    although Kamienski was not part of an agreement or conspiracy to rob the DeTournays . .
    . or to murder them, he did purposefully lend assistance and aid to Marzeno in the
    commission of the robbery and murders. It was up to the jury to determine the meaning
    and significance of Kamienski’s conduct.” 
    Id. at 93.
    Accordingly, since the state court
    opined that the evidence was sufficient to convict Kamienski of murder and felony
    murder, we will assume arguendo that its conclusion is entitled to AEDPA deference
    whether or not the conclusion was an actual “decision on the merits,” or mere dicta.
    26
    in brokering a drug transaction. However, the Appellate Division conflated that proof
    into its inquiry into evidence of murder and felony murder. Doing so was not only error,
    it was unreasonable; it allowed Kamienski to be convicted on something less than proof
    of “every element of the offense” of conviction beyond a reasonable doubt. 
    Jackson, 443 U.S. at 316
    (discussing Winship).
    The Appellate Division also unreasonably applied the standard governing when
    inferences may be relied upon to establish elements of a criminal offense beyond a
    reasonable doubt. That standard requires that the inference in question must be “more
    likely than not to flow” from the facts already established. Leary v. United States, 
    395 U.S. 6
    , 36 (1969). The “more likely than not standard” is well established. It cannot be
    satisfied here because the record simply does not allow a reasonable juror to infer that
    Kamienski intended that the DeTournays be robbed or killed. Thus, the district court
    erred in concluding that the state court’s decision to reinstate Kamienski’s convictions for
    murder and felony murder was a reasonable application of Supreme Court precedent to
    the facts of this case.
    V. Conclusion
    Accordingly, for all the reasons we have set forth above, we will reverse the
    district court’s order denying habeas relief and remand to that court for it to issue the writ.
    27