McLeod v. Peguese , 337 F. App'x 316 ( 2009 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 07-6551
    RICHARD L. MCLEOD,
    Petitioner - Appellant,
    v.
    JAMES V. PEGUESE, Warden,
    Respondent - Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore.      Andre M. Davis, District Judge.
    (1:05-cv-01589-AMD)
    Argued:   October 28, 2008                 Decided:   July 22, 2009
    Before WILKINSON and AGEE, Circuit Judges, and John T.
    COPENHAVER, Jr., United States District Judge for the Southern
    District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by unpublished opinion.     Judge Copenhaver wrote the
    opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson and Judge Agee joined.
    ARGUED: Mitchell Scott Ettinger, SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER &
    FLOM, L.L.P., Washington, D.C., for Appellant.       Edward John
    Kelley, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MARYLAND, Baltimore,
    Maryland, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Douglas F. Gansler, Attorney
    General of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    COPENHAVER, District Judge:
    On    October      27,     1992    a   Maryland        jury     convicted    Richard
    Lawton McLeod of the murder of Jacqueline Roberson.                               He was
    sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
    The Court of Special Appeals of Maryland affirmed his conviction
    on June 21, 1993, and his sentence on August 26, 1994.                           McLeod’s
    petition for a writ of certiorari was denied by the Maryland
    Court of Appeals on December 16, 1994.                       His petition for post-
    conviction    relief       to    the    Circuit       Court    for     Prince    George’s
    County, where he had been convicted, was denied on February 25,
    1998; leave to appeal was also denied.                      On July 16, 2001 McLeod
    filed a pro se petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     for a writ of
    habeas    corpus    with      the    United       States    District    Court    for     the
    District of Maryland, which was denied as being time-barred.
    Arguing that new evidence had been discovered that ought to
    have been disclosed to him by the State under Brady v. Maryland,
    
    373 U.S. 83
     (1963), McLeod returned to the Circuit Court for
    Prince George’s County and filed a motion to re-open his post-
    conviction proceedings on April 22, 2003.                          Following a two-day
    evidentiary      hearing        in   January,       2004,     that    court     issued    a
    statement of reasons, which included findings of fact, denying
    the motion.
    On   June     1,   2005     this   court       granted    McLeod’s       motion   for
    authorization to file a second or successive § 2254 petition for
    2
    a    writ    of       habeas        corpus.      See    
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (b)(3)(A).
    Following         a    non-evidentiary          hearing,     the      district       court,    on
    March 30, 2007, dismissed the petition with prejudice.                                   McLeod
    v. Peguese, 
    482 F. Supp. 2d 658
     (D. Md. 2007).                                   The district
    court       did       grant     McLeod’s       application      for    a       certificate    of
    appealability.                See     
    28 U.S.C. § 2253
    (c)(1)(A).                    This appeal
    ensued.
    Because McLeod has failed to meet the threshold requirement
    of 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (b)(2)(B)(ii), his successive § 2254 petition
    must be dismissed.                  That is, McLeod has failed to show that the
    facts   underlying             his    due     process   Brady    claim,        if   proven    and
    viewed in light of the evidence as a whole, would be sufficient
    to   establish          by    clear     and    convincing    evidence          that,   but    for
    constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found
    him guilty of murder.                 See § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii).
    Proceeding nevertheless to the merits, as did the district
    court, McLeod has not shown that the Circuit Court for Prince
    George’s County made an objectively unreasonable determination
    of the facts in light of all the evidence presented to it, or
    that it unreasonably applied clearly established federal law as
    determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.                                    See §
    2254(d).
    We affirm.
    3
    I.
    Jacqueline Roberson, then twenty-eight years old, was last
    seen waxing her car off to the side of Governor’s Bridge Road
    near the entrance to Izaak Walton League Park in Bowie, Maryland
    on August 10, 1987.            Three days later Roberson’s nude body was
    discovered in a wooded area approximately three hundred feet
    from the road.          Her body was found under leaves and branches,
    face    down,    with   her    hands   underneath        her    body   and   her    legs
    spread    apart.        Roberson’s     clothing,         consisting     of   a     white
    strapped t-shirt, a navy blue cut-off t-shirt and a pair of
    light blue jeans which had been cut off and made into shorts,
    were    found    next   to    her   body.        Her    undergarments    were      found
    beneath her.       The cause of death was determined to be two stab
    wounds to the abdomen, which had not been inflicted through the
    clothing.       There was no evidence of vaginal or anal penetration,
    and an autopsy failed to reveal the presence of semen in or on
    her person.
    A red “WMZQ, Country FM” bandana and a knife were found at
    or near the crime scene.            Hair found on the bandana, which was
    next to Roberson’s body, was determined to be that of a cat.                         No
    fingerprints or blood residue were found on the knife, which was
    discovered on the unpaved shoulder of Governor’s Bridge Road
    approximately one-hundred and fifty feet east of the entrance to
    Izaak    Walton     League     Park.            Six    latent   fingerprints       were
    4
    discovered        on    Roberson’s          car,    none        of   which      have       been
    identified.
    On    August     13,    1987,    the       same    day    Roberson’s         body    was
    discovered, McLeod was arrested for the rape of fifteen year old
    Lori Webb.        Webb was raped in her home earlier that day, and at
    the time of the rape was wearing a purple shirt and white shorts
    with    thin     red    stripes.        McLeod      subsequently         pled   guilty       to
    raping Webb and was sentenced to forty years in prison with
    fifteen years suspended.
    Detective Robert Edgar, and other members of the Prince
    George’s County Police Department (“PGPD”), interviewed a number
    of prospective witnesses and suspects in connection with the
    Roberson murder between August 13, 1987 and February 1, 1988.
    During this time, members of the PGPD interviewed Pamela Sue
    Fike.       Fike informed the PGPD that she was told by her brother,
    Christopher          Fike,    that     Harold      Freese       told     him    that       “the
    Saunders” were at Governor’s Bridge Road on August 10, 1987.
    Pamela       Fike’s    brother       also    told     her   that       he    believed       the
    Saunders may have killed Roberson because “they are the type
    that     may    do     something      like     that.”           Fike’s      statement       was
    memorialized in an undated, but signed, witness statement.
    On August 15, 1987, two days after McLeod’s arrest for the
    rape    of     Webb,   his    mother,       Barbara      Bricker,      found    a    pair    of
    shorts in McLeod’s room with a wax-like substance in the crotch
    5
    area.    She immediately contacted the PGPD.                 Detective Edgar went
    to Bricker’s home where he was given the shorts and other items
    of McLeod’s clothing.         At this point, McLeod became a suspect in
    the Roberson murder.
    Edgar first interviewed McLeod regarding Roberson’s murder
    on   February   1,    1988    at   the     Prince   George’s      County    Detention
    Center    (“Detention       Center”).           During   the   interview,      McLeod
    denied    any   involvement        in,    or    knowledge   of,    the    murder    and
    provided a written statement.              On that same day, and despite his
    denials,   McLeod     was    charged      with    the    murder   of    Roberson    and
    related offenses.           The following month, however, in March of
    1988, the charges were nolle prossed.
    Following      withdrawal      of    the   charges    against      McLeod,    the
    Roberson murder investigation remained at a standstill for more
    than two years.        At some point in 1991, Edgar decided to once
    again    actively    pursue    the       case,   enlisting     the     assistance    of
    Detective Douglas LaFoille to that end.                     During the summer of
    1991, Edgar and LaFoille asked one of McLeod’s acquaintances to
    send McLeod a letter designed to elicit an admission from McLeod
    regarding his involvement in the Roberson murder.                        Upon receipt
    of the letter, McLeod demanded that the letter’s true author
    contact him.
    During an October 2, 1991 interview conducted by Edgar and
    LaFoille, McLeod again denied any involvement in the Roberson
    6
    murder.    McLeod told the detectives that after being charged in
    February of 1988, he was approached by a fellow inmate named
    “Rick.”     McLeod said that Rick, who was later determined to be
    Richard    Nelson,      told    him     that     he       knew   that     McLeod    had      not
    murdered Roberson and that he knew who did.                            At the time of the
    interview, McLeod told the detectives that Nelson had provided
    the name of Roberson’s killer, but McLeod could not recall the
    name.     Some 12 years later, however, during the circuit court’s
    hearing    in    2004     on    McLeod’s         motion         to     re-open    the    post-
    conviction proceedings, McLeod testified that Nelson stated that
    the murderer’s name was “Brian.”                      Nelson allegedly told McLeod
    that Roberson was killed because she happened upon a drug deal
    and was “in the wrong place at the wrong time.”                            McLeod informed
    the detectives that Nelson had refused to speak with authorities
    and would deny ever having discussed the murder.                                 McLeod also
    provided two written statements, one setting forth what he could
    recall of his conversation with Nelson, and the other regarding
    his whereabouts on the day of Roberson’s murder.
    Nelson      was    known    by    the     PGPD       and    the    State’s    Attorneys
    Office to be a violent man with an extensive criminal history.
    Following the 1991 interview with McLeod, the PGPD undertook
    extensive efforts to locate him.                    At the time, the PGPD believed
    Nelson    was   either    a     suspect,       or     a    material      witness,       in   the
    Roberson        murder.        In     furtherance          of    the    effort    to    locate
    7
    Nelson,    Edgar        and       LaFoille    sought         the   assistance     of    state,
    federal     and     international             law      enforcement       agencies.          The
    detectives also contacted Nelson’s family members, friends and
    acquaintances.           In the fall of 1991, LaFoille was in contact
    with Nelson’s ex-wife, Karen Clark.                         As will be seen, the extent
    of the contacts, and the information exchanged between LaFoille
    and Clark, are in sharp dispute.                            Ultimately, the efforts to
    locate Nelson were to no avail.                            He was never found and his
    whereabouts remain unknown.
    In    April        of     1992,      McLeod       was    indicted      for   Roberson’s
    murder.       Prior          to    trial,     defense        counsel     moved    to    compel
    discovery, complaining that the State had not complied with its
    obligations under Brady.                  The trial court directed the State to
    produce any witness statements arguably containing exculpatory
    information.            In        an    attempt       to     comply    with   the       court’s
    directive,        the    lead          prosecutor,         Laura   Gwinn,     sent     defense
    counsel a letter.             The letter made no reference to Nelson’s ex-
    wife,     Karen    Clark,          and    failed       to    disclose     that    the    state
    possessed Pamela Fike’s written statement regarding what she had
    been told by her brother.                    The State did, however, provide the
    defense with a list of prosecution witnesses containing eighty-
    three names, including Fike’s.                        The defense attempted to locate
    Fike, but was unable to do so.
    8
    Beginning on October 21, 1992, McLeod was tried before a
    jury for the murder of Roberson and carrying a dangerous weapon
    openly with the intent to injure.                   The State presented evidence
    that McLeod owned a bandana and a knife like those found at the
    scene.    The State also showed that McLeod lived in a home with
    cats, which, according to the State, explained why cat hair was
    found on the bandana.             Members of McLeod’s family testified that
    when   they    visited      him    at    the    Detention    Center     following    his
    arrest   for    the    rape       of    Webb,      they   asked   why   he   had    been
    arrested.      According to McLeod’s step-father, William Bricker,
    McLeod   responded       “rape,        murder,     something.”      McLeod’s    mother
    testified that McLeod responded by asking “was it murder, was it
    rape or what?         He seemed very confused.”                  McLeod’s mother and
    step-father testified further that when asked how he could rape
    a fifteen year old, McLeod responded, “I thought she was older.”
    When   asked    by    his   family       to    describe    his    victim’s   clothing,
    McLeod stated, according to his step-father, “[a] blue pullover
    and blue shorts,” and according to his mother, “a pullover and
    navy blue shorts.”          The parties stipulated that Webb, who broke
    down in front of the jury and could not complete her testimony,
    would testify that she was raped in her home by McLeod on August
    13, 1987, and would have identified her clothing.                        The clothing
    Webb was wearing at the time of her rape was admitted into
    evidence.
    9
    The    State       offered,       and    the     court      admitted,         the    shorts
    smudged       with       car    wax    recovered        from       McLeod’s      room.         The
    Turtlewax® brand of car wax found on McLeod’s shorts was shown
    to be the same brand of wax used by Roberson the day of her
    murder.       McLeod would typically wax his step-father’s racecar
    once every two weeks, and the police recovered a container of
    Turtlewax® from McLeod’s home.                       There was a dispute as to the
    last time McLeod waxed his own car, and washed his clothing,
    prior    to       the    murder.         McLeod’s       mother          testified      that    she
    believed McLeod had waxed his car on August 7, 1987.                                  The State
    also    offered          evidence        that        McLeod       gave     his       step-father
    conflicting            alibis    regarding       his        whereabouts        the    night     of
    Roberson’s murder.
    The State argued that McLeod may not have acted alone in
    murdering         Roberson.            At      trial,       the     defense      specifically
    referenced other possible suspects, namely, Brian Rose and Wayne
    Hurley.        Upon being called by the defense, Rose invoked his
    Fifth Amendment rights and refused to answer any questions.                                     In
    closing, the State made reference to the defense’s claim that
    Rose murdered Roberson, stating “[w]e heard a lot about Brian
    Rose.   .     .    .    We     heard   that     he    has    a    red    and   white       striped
    bandana.          We heard from his mom that he had a cat.”                            Based on
    the    forgoing,         the     State      argued     that       the    defendant      had    not
    offered a reasonable hypothesis of innocence, and that based on
    10
    all the evidence, which cumulatively tended to show that McLeod
    was involved in Roberson’s murder, he should be found guilty.
    The defense argued, among other things, that in light of
    the   State’s      theory    that   McLeod       may   not   have     been   the     one
    wielding the knife, and because the evidence did not suggest
    that Roberson was killed during the course of an attempted rape,
    McLeod was not guilty of felony murder.                 The defense also argued
    that other people were seen near the crime scene with red WMQZ
    bandanas,    and    that    the   evidence       implicated    Rose    to    the    same
    extent as McLeod.          In sum, the defense argued that the State had
    not met its burden of proof.                On October 27, 1992, the jury
    convicted McLeod of first degree felony murder and carrying a
    dangerous    weapon     openly      with    intent      to    injure.        McLeod’s
    requests for post conviction relief on the murder charge failed.
    In March of 2001, nine years after his conviction, McLeod
    requested that the red bandana and cat hairs recovered from the
    scene be tested for DNA.              The State, however, had destroyed
    those    items,     McLeod’s      shorts,       Roberson’s    clothing,      and     the
    latent fingerprints taken from Roberson’s car.
    II.
    According to Karen Clark, she and Detective LaFoille were
    in contact on numerous occasions in the fall of 1991.                              Clark
    maintains that over the course of these contacts she informed
    11
    LaFoille of the following, which constitutes the core of the
    Brady claim: Nelson was a violent drug addict; during the summer
    of 1987 Nelson gave their son Richard Nelson III a red WMZQ
    bandana       and    Nelson    owned     a   matching     bandana;   at   some   point
    during the summer of 1987 Nelson demanded the return of their
    son’s bandana; 1 Nelson was adamant that the bandana be returned
    but would not tell Clark why; during the summer of 1987 she met
    with       Nelson    and    gave   him   the      son’s   bandana;   Nelson   carried
    knives      and     his    favorite    knife   was    wooden   handled    with   brass
    fittings, similar to the one found on the shoulder of Governor’s
    Bridge Road not far from where Roberson’s body was discovered;
    when she saw Nelson during the summer of 1987 she noticed that
    he had a new knife and upon inquiry Nelson told her that he had
    lost his favorite knife; and that Nelson had told her, before
    they married in 1983, that he was present when a young woman
    named Donna Dustin was murdered on November 17, 1973 in Anne
    Arundel County.            According to Clark, Nelson stated that Dustin’s
    head had been slammed into the bumper of a car and that his
    knife was used during the assault.                        Dustin’s body was found
    1
    Nelson was in a relationship and had a child with a woman
    named Virginia Acree who testified to the circuit court on
    January 13, 2004 that during the summer of 1987, Nelson
    occasionally stayed with her at her apartment in Frederick,
    Maryland.
    12
    approximately three miles from the spot where Roberson’s body
    was found.
    On     August    16,     2002,    Clark       wrote      to    McLeod        in    prison
    requesting the name and contact information of his attorney.
    McLeod complied with her request and on August 23, 2002 Clark
    met with McLeod’s counsel, Mitchell Ettinger.                           In addition to
    the information allegedly provided to Detective LaFoille, Clark
    told McLeod’s attorney that Nelson frequented Rips, a restaurant
    where Roberson worked during the summer.                       Clark also stated that
    Nelson was associated with Neil Vaughn, one of three individuals
    who     acknowledged        being     near    the       crime       scene    the        day   of
    Roberson’s murder.            Clark further informed counsel that during
    the   summer     of    1987,       Nelson    lived      with    his    then        girlfriend
    Virginia Acree and that Clark had received items from Nelson
    that summer with cat hair on them.                      Clark provided a business
    card containing the notation, “Hyattsville Chapter Izaak Walton
    League.”         The    business       card       was    allegedly          from        Nelson’s
    briefcase, and the notation allegedly in Nelson’s handwriting.
    Finally, Clark told counsel not only of the Donna Dustin murder,
    but also that in the fall of 1980, prior to her 1983 marriage to
    Nelson, he took her to a wooded area in Bowie, Maryland which he
    referred to as his “shrine.”                      At the “shrine,” Nelson asked
    Clark      to   lie    on    the    ground    and       pose    “in    some        particular
    position.”       Clark, who was under the impression Nelson wanted
    13
    her to pose in the nude, refused and walked away.                         Upon turning
    to look back, Clark saw Nelson masturbating.
    Following      receipt    of   this    information,         McLeod’s     attorney
    contacted Acree who confirmed that Nelson stayed with her during
    the summer of 1987.             Acree stated that she owned a cat at the
    time and that Nelson owned a number of bandanas, most of them
    red.    Acree also confirmed that Nelson was a violent man, and
    that during the summer of 1987, he frequently used drugs.
    As a result of this new information, on April 22, 2003
    McLeod filed a motion in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s
    County to re-open his post-conviction proceedings.                         The motion
    requested that the court hold an evidentiary hearing regarding
    alleged Brady violations.             McLeod argued that the State failed
    to disclose favorable and material information to the defense in
    the    form    of    Clark’s    statements         to    Detective    LaFoille.       On
    September 4, 2003 the circuit court scheduled an evidentiary
    hearing.      By order dated December 23, 2003, the court directed
    the State and PGPD to produce all witness statements taken in
    connection with the Roberson murder investigation.                              The only
    statements produced were created on or before February 1, 1988.
    The    State        confirmed     that       all        evidence     of   the     police
    investigation and all prosecution files created after that date
    had been lost or destroyed.              The State did retain and produce
    witness statements taken in connection with its initial 1987
    14
    investigation into the Roberson murder, including the statement
    of Fike.      Thus, in January of 2004, McLeod learned for the first
    time of Pamela Fike’s statement that her brother had heard that
    “the    Saunders”    were    at     Governor’s    Bridge     Road    on    August   10,
    1987, and that her brother had speculated that “the Saunders”
    may have been involved in Roberson’s murder because “they are
    the type that may do something like that.”
    In January of 2004 the circuit court held an evidentiary
    hearing      on   McLeod’s     motion     to     re-open    the     post-conviction
    proceedings.         The    court    heard     testimony    from,    among       others,
    McLeod, Clark, Acree, Gwinn, Edgar and LaFoille.                         Testimony was
    also received from the Chief Investigator of the Anne Arundel
    County State’s Attorneys Office, David Cordle.                     In the course of
    her continuing quest to learn of Nelson’s whereabouts, Clark
    became aware that Cordle was interested in the 1973 murder of
    Donna    Dustin.       Besides      the   Roberson       murder,    Clark       believed
    Nelson was involved in a number of other murders, and in late
    1998    or   early   1999    she    had   contacted      Cordle     to    discuss    the
    murders      of   Dustin    and     a   woman    named     Jeany    Kline.        Clark
    contacted Cordle again in December of 2000, and on February 9,
    2001    Cordle    spoke     with    Detective     LaFoille.         At    the   hearing
    numerous inconsistencies emerged regarding the content of the
    conversations of each Clark and Cordle with LaFoille.                        See infra
    pp. 29-34.
    15
    In    its    July    11,    2004   statement        of   reasons,    the    circuit
    court concluded that,
    [w]hen examining the totality of the circumstances and
    evidence presented at the hearing, as it relates to
    the credibility of Karen Clark and Detective Douglas
    LaFoille, the Court finds Detective LaFoille to be the
    more credible witness.   Consequently, the Court finds
    further that no information linking Richard Nelson to
    the murder of Jacqueline Roberson was provided by
    Karen Clark to Detective LaFoille in the Fall of 1991
    or at any time pertinent to the Defendant’s claim. . .
    . [T]he Court finds that the statement of Pamela Sue
    Fike, although arguably favorable, was not provided to
    the defense.   As to its materiality, however, it is
    non-existent and the Court so finds.
    State v. McLeod, No. CT92-0611X, slip op. at 25 (Md. Cir. Ct.
    Prince George’s County June 11, 2004).
    In the second § 2254 petition heard by the district court,
    McLeod contends that the circuit court unreasonably concluded
    that the State did not withhold exculpatory information in the
    form of Clark’s statements to Detective LaFoille and erred as a
    matter of law in finding Fike’s statement to be immaterial.                            On
    March     30,     2007,    following       a     non-evidentiary         hearing,     the
    district        court     dismissed     McLeod’s         petition   by         memorandum
    opinion.    McLeod, 
    482 F. Supp. 2d 658
    .
    III.
    We    review       the     district       court’s    dismissal       of    McLeod’s
    petition for a writ of habeas corpus de novo.                         See McNeil v.
    Polk, 
    476 F.3d 206
    , 210 (4th Cir. 2007); Buckner v. Polk, 453
    
    16 F.3d 195
    , 198 (4th Cir. 2006); see also LeFevers v. Gibson, 
    238 F.3d 1263
    , 1266 (10th Cir. 2001).
    A.
    A successive habeas corpus petition such as McLeod’s cannot
    be    filed     without       first    obtaining                pre-filing     authorization
    (“PFA”)       from    the     court        of    appeals.             See    
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (b)(3)(A);        In     re   Williams,          
    330 F.3d 277
    ,     279    (4th     Cir.
    2003).     In granting McLeod’s PFA motion, this court determined
    that McLeod made a “prima facie showing” that the claims in his
    petition satisfied the requirements of § 2244(b)(2)(B).                                    See §
    2244(b)(3)(C).        In pertinent part, § 2244(b) provides,
    (2) A claim presented in a second or successive habeas
    corpus application under section 2254 that was not
    presented in a prior application shall be dismissed
    unless--
    . . . .
    (B)(i) the factual predicate for the claim
    could not have been discovered previously
    through the exercise of due diligence; and
    (ii) the facts underlying the claim, if
    proven and viewed in light of the evidence
    as a whole, would be sufficient to establish
    by clear and convincing evidence that, but
    for   constitutional  error,   no reasonable
    factfinder would have found the applicant
    guilty of the underlying offense.
    §    2244(b)(2).        In    this    circuit         as    in     others,     “prima      facie
    showing”      is     understood       to    mean,          “a     sufficient       showing     of
    possible merit to warrant a fuller exploration by the district
    17
    court. . . .               If in light of the documents submitted with the
    [PFA        motion]      it    appears     reasonably     likely    that    the    [motion]
    satisfies the stringent requirements for the filing of a second
    or successive petition, we shall grant the [motion].”                             Williams,
    
    330 F.3d at 281
     (quoting Bennett v. United States, 
    119 F.3d 468
    ,
    469-70 (7th Cir. 1997)).                   The grant of a PFA motion, however, is
    “tentative          in     the   following      sense:    the   district     court       must
    dismiss the motion that we have allowed the applicant to file,
    without reaching the merits of the motion, if the court finds
    that        the   movant       has   not    satisfied     the   requirements       for   the
    filing of such a motion.”                    Bennett, 
    119 F.3d at
    470 (citing §
    2244(b)(4)).
    Enacted as part of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death
    Penalty       Act     of      1996   (“AEDPA”),      which   “greatly      restricts     the
    power of federal courts to award relief to state prisoners who
    file        second       or    successive      habeas      corpus    applications,”         §
    2244(b)(2)(B) is “one of two narrow exceptions” to the rule that
    a claim not presented in an earlier § 2254 petition must be
    dismissed. 2             Tyler v. Cain, 
    533 U.S. 656
    , 661 (2001).                        The
    district court held, and the parties do not dispute, that McLeod
    could       not   have        discovered     Clark’s     alleged    communication        with
    2
    The other narrow exception, found in § 2244(b)(2)(A) for
    certain claims based on new rules of constitutional law, does
    not apply here.
    18
    Detective LaFoille prior to August of 2002.                                Similarly, McLeod
    had   no    means       of    discovering          the    existence       of   Fike’s    written
    statement prior to January of 2004 when it was produced by the
    State.      The district court, therefore, correctly found that “the
    factual predicate for the claim could not have been discovered
    previously        through           the     exercise        of     due     diligence.”            §
    2244(b)(2)(B)(i).
    In order to “squeeze through the narrow gateway” created by
    § 2244(b)(2)(B), Felder v. McVicar, 
    113 F.3d 696
    , 698 (7th                                      Cir.
    1997), McLeod was also required to prove to the district court
    that “the facts underlying the claim, if proven and viewed in
    light      of   the     evidence          as   a    whole,       would    be    sufficient       to
    establish        by     clear       and     convincing          evidence       that,    but     for
    constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found
    the     applicant            guilty       of       the     underlying          offense.”          §
    2244(b)(2)(B)(ii).             If McLeod failed to make such a showing, the
    district        court    was        obliged     to       dismiss    the    petition      without
    reaching        the   merits.             Section        2244(b)(4)      directs       that   “[a]
    district court shall dismiss any claim presented in a second or
    successive application that the court of appeals has authorized
    to be filed unless the applicant shows that the claim satisfies
    the   requirements            of     this      section.”           See    United       States    v.
    Winestock,        
    340 F.3d 200
    ,      205       (4th    Cir.     2003)    (“When       the
    application is thereafter submitted to the district court, that
    19
    court must examine each claim and dismiss those that are barred
    under § 2244(b) . . . .”).            Respect for the finality of criminal
    judgments provides the impetus for the heavy burden placed on
    successive       §   2254    petitioners      by    §    2244(b)(2)(b)(ii).             See
    Calderon v. Thompson, 
    523 U.S. 538
    , 558 (1998) (“Section 2244(b)
    .   .   .   is   grounded     in   respect    for       the   finality      of    criminal
    judgments.”).        While noting this requirement, the district court
    proceeded to the merits of McLeod’s petition without applying §
    2244(b)(2)(B)(ii) to the underlying facts.
    Under § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii), a petitioner must not only show
    that reasonable doubt exists in light of the new evidence, but
    that no reasonable juror would have found him guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt.           Thus, the question initially to be resolved
    is, assuming the information allegedly disclosed by Clark to
    LaFoille     had     been    turned    over    to       the    defense,     and    Fike’s
    statement was also disclosed, whether this new evidence, viewed
    in conjunction with all the evidence, clearly and convincingly
    establishes      that   no    reasonable      fact      finder      would   have    found
    McLeod guilty.
    In an attempt to shoulder his heavy burden and satisfy §
    2244(b)(2)(B)(ii),          McLeod    characterizes           the   State’s      case   at
    trial as extremely weak and entirely circumstantial.                             He first
    points to the fact that the initial charges against him were
    nolle prossed, and contends that the evidence that was deemed
    20
    insufficient when the initial charges were dropped in February
    of 1988, was the same evidence relied upon when he was indicted
    in April of 1992.   McLeod also argues that the primary evidence
    relied upon by the State to tie him to Roberson’s murder was the
    red bandana with cat hair on it, and the knife.    According to
    McLeod, the defense, through Clark, would have established the
    following, taken verbatim from McLeod’s brief:
    • During the summer 1987, Nelson possessed two red
    WMZQ bandanas, one that he wore and one that he gave
    to his and Clark's minor son.
    • During the summer 1987, Nelson demanded that Clark
    take the WMZQ red bandana from her son and return it
    to Nelson, and that Clark complied.
    • Nelson possessed and wore on his belt a wood-handled
    knife with brass fittings on each end, matching
    exactly the description of the knife found at or near
    the crime scene.
    • During the summer 1987, Clark noticed that Nelson
    had a new knife and when she inquired what happened to
    old knife, he told her that he had “lost it.”
    • During the summer 1987, Nelson lived with a woman
    named Virginia Acree, who has confirmed that she lived
    with Nelson and that she owned a cat having the same
    color fur as the cat hairs found on the red WMZQ
    bandana. Acree also confirms that Nelson regularly
    wore red bandanas.
    • Nelson had a long history of violence, particularly
    toward women, and during the summer 1987 was heavily
    using drugs.
    • Nelson took Clark to a wooded area in Bowie,
    Maryland, which Nelson call his “shrine,” and asked
    her to lie on the ground naked while he masturbated.
    This sexual practice is consistent with the crime
    scene evidence presented by the State, namely that
    Roberson disrobed before being stabbed, that her
    21
    clothes were found folded underneath her body, and
    that there was no evidence of physical rape trauma or
    the presence of seminal fluid on or in the victim.
    • The wooded area Nelson referred to as his “shrine”
    is within three miles of where Roberson was murdered
    and is the very location where Dustin's nude and
    beaten body was found in 1973. Nelson admitted to
    Clark to having “wailed on” Dustin with a knife and
    accurately described injuries to Dustin that were
    never released to the public.
    • Nelson frequented a restaurant in Bowie, Maryland
    known as Rips and was known to spend a considerable
    amount of time there. Roberson, a school teacher,
    worked at Rips during the summer months as a waitress,
    thus providing a possible social nexus that never
    existed between the victim and any putative suspect,
    including McLeod.
    • Nelson was a friend to Neil Vaughn, who acknowledged
    to police that he was in Izaac Walton Park on the day
    that Roberson was murdered.
    • Nelson possessed a business card on which he wrote
    the name of the park where Roberson was last seen
    waxing her car.
    (McLeod’s Opening Br. at 29-30) (emphasis in original).            McLeod
    contends that had he been advised of the statements Clark says
    she made to LaFoille, the defense would have been able to “train
    the beacon directed at McLeod upon Nelson” who McLeod claims is
    the more likely perpetrator of Roberson’s murder.               (McLeod’s
    Reply Br. at 9).
    The   State   argues   that   even   assuming   McLeod’s    factual
    allegations are true, they do not satisfy § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii).
    While admitting that a red bandana with cat hair, and a knife,
    were part of the State’s case at trial, the State argues that
    22
    other evidence clearly implicated McLeod in Roberson’s murder.
    That evidence being: when asked by his family the reason for his
    arrest    following      the    Webb   rape,        McLeod      replied    that    it   was
    either rape or murder; Roberson was 28 years old when she was
    murdered, Webb was 15 at the time of her rape, and when informed
    of     Webb’s    age   following       his        arrest    for    her    rape,     McLeod
    responded by saying he thought she was older; when asked by his
    family to describe his victim’s clothing, McLeod’s description
    matched Roberson’s blue clothing, not Webb’s purple and white
    clothing; McLeod was placed in the vicinity of the murder the
    day it was committed by the pair of shorts smudged with the same
    brand of wax Roberson used to wax her car; and McLeod gave
    conflicting alibis to his step-father.                          (State’s Resp. Br. at
    22-24).       In reply, McLeod notes that he waxed his step-father’s
    race    car     frequently,     and    that       none     of    the   fingerprints      on
    Roberson’s      car    were    his.     He    points       out    that    the    allegedly
    conflicting alibis were regarding his whereabouts the evening of
    August 10, 1987, while Roberson was murdered in the afternoon.
    McLeod characterizes his statement that he thought his victim
    was older as unremarkable and defensive.
    With respect to his victim’s clothing, McLeod contends that
    the record does not support the inference the State sought to
    draw at trial.         Yet, the evidence was as follows.                        The day of
    her rape, Webb was wearing a purple shirt and white shorts with
    23
    thin red stripes.          An evidence technician testified that at the
    time of her murder, Roberson was wearing a navy-blue t-shirt
    with the sleeves cut off, a white strapped t-shirt and a “pair
    of   light      blue   jeans.”      (J.A.      at    190-91).       McLeod’s      mother
    testified       that   McLeod     indicated         his    victim   was    wearing      “a
    pullover and navy blue shorts.”                (J.A. at 119).          McLeod’s step-
    father testified that McLeod “mentioned blue.                       A blue outfit,”
    and upon further questioning stated a “blue pullover and blue
    shorts.”        (J.A. at 98-99).       While not an exact description of
    Roberson’s       clothing,       McLeod’s      response        is   more       likely    a
    description of Roberson’s predominantly blue outfit as opposed
    to Webb’s outfit of purple and white.
    McLeod attempts to diminish the incriminating force of his
    uncertainty regarding whether he had been arrested for rape or
    murder     by     noting    that    his     mother         testified      he    appeared
    disoriented at the Detention Center.                      Having been asked whether
    she visited McLeod at the Detention Center following his August
    13, 1987 arrest, Mrs. Bricker testified: “We did.                      And there was
    a lot of confusion during that time.”                     (J.A. at 117).        She also
    testified that when McLeod was asked what he had been arrested
    for, McLeod “asked was it murder, was it rape or what?                                  He
    seemed very confused.”           (J.A. at 118).             McLeod, though, was not
    a suspect in the Roberson murder until August 15, 1987, when his
    mother provided Detective Edgar with his wax smudged shorts.
    24
    McLeod’s      being      “confused”         does       not         explain     away         the
    incriminating fact that he included murder, along with rape, as
    a possible reason for what was his rape arrest.
    The only mention of the effect of Fike’s statement on the §
    2244(b)(2)(B)(ii)      inquiry     is       the    State’s     contention           that    its
    limited    evidentiary     value       is   self-evident.             Fike’s    statement
    regarding what her brother told her, which was what someone else
    told him –- namely, that the Saunders were at Governor’s Bridge
    Road on the date that Roberson was murdered -- is the epitome of
    inadmissible    hearsay.         See    Md.       R.   Evid.       5-802.      McLeod       has
    offered no evidence that “the Saunders” were involved in the
    Roberson murder, and the mere speculation of Fike’s brother that
    the Saunders “are the type that may do something like that” is
    sheer    conjecture.       The     circuit        court’s      conclusion       that        the
    materiality of Fike’s statement is “non-existent” is supported
    by the fanciful nature of the statement.                            McLeod, No. CT92-
    0611X, slip op. at 25.
    Undoubtedly,     accepting      Clark’s        assertions       regarding          what
    she told Detective LaFoille in the fall of 1991 as true, and
    assuming    that   the    information            had   been    turned        over    to     the
    defense,     McLeod    could     have       attempted         to    show     that     Nelson
    murdered Roberson.         That a jury would have been convinced that
    Nelson was the perpetrator, and McLeod was not involved, is far
    from a foregone conclusion.             Even assuming Clark’s testimony was
    25
    believed,      it   would       not     negate        the     several        incriminating
    statements made by McLeod at the Detention Center.                               Still, a
    reasonable juror may well have found that the evidence regarding
    Nelson created enough doubt as to McLeod’s guilt to acquit him.
    This, however, does not satisfy § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii).                                 McLeod’s
    burden was to show, by clear and convincing evidence, that no
    reasonable juror would have found him guilty; not merely that it
    is conceivable that he could have been acquitted.                             The evidence
    that   would    have    been    received         at   trial       as   a    result    of   the
    information     Clark    claims        to   have      conveyed         to   LaFoille       does
    present an alternative theory of Roberson’s murder.                            Yet, as the
    state has pointed out, it would not have rebutted or called into
    question much of the State’s case against McLeod.
    Even    accepting       as     proven     fact       the    evidence      allegedly
    provided by Clark, and that to which it leads, such evidence
    would be insufficient, when viewed in light of the evidence as a
    whole, to establish by clear and convincing evidence that no
    reasonable juror would have found the defendant guilty.                                McLeod
    thus failed to satisfy § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii) and dismissal of his
    petition was appropriate.
    26
    IV.
    Had McLeod’s petition satisfied § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii),
    dismissal was nevertheless appropriate on the merits.         Under the
    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 application
    of, clearly established Federal law, as
    determined by the Supreme Court of the
    United States; or
    (2) resulted in a decision that was based on
    an unreasonable determination of the facts
    in light of the evidence presented in the
    State court proceeding.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (d).
    A.
    Turning first to § 2254(d)(2), McLeod contends that the
    conclusion of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County that
    the State did not withhold evidence favorable to him, consisting
    of Karen Clark’s alleged statements to Detective LaFoille, was
    an   objectively   unreasonable   determination   of   the   facts.   In
    reaching its conclusion, the circuit court was presented with a
    pure question of fact that centered primarily on whether Clark
    or   LaFoille was the more credible witness.      If, consistent with
    27
    her testimony, Clark conveyed the information regarding Nelson
    to    LaFoille,    the    State       likely       violated     McLeod’s     due   process
    rights under Brady; if not, no Brady violation occurred.                                 But
    the   question     presented      for    review       is    a   narrow     one.     It   is
    whether,    applying       the    §    2254    framework,        it    was   objectively
    unreasonable for the circuit court to conclude that Clark did
    not convey the information regarding Nelson to LaFoille in the
    fall of 1991 and, as a consequence, to disregard Clark’s version
    of events.
    In the context of federal habeas challenges to state court
    judgments, “a determination of a factual issue made by a State
    court shall be presumed to be correct.                     The applicant shall have
    the burden of rebutting the presumption of correctness by clear
    and convincing evidence.”              § 2254(e)(1).            See Cagle v. Branker,
    
    520 F.3d 320
    , 323 (4th Cir. 2008).                         Discussing federal court
    collateral review of state court factual determinations under §
    2254(d)(2),       and    noting   federalism’s          call     for     deference,      the
    Supreme Court in Miller-El v. Cockrell stated,
    [f]actual determinations by state courts are presumed
    correct absent clear and convincing evidence to the
    contrary, § 2254(e)(1), and a decision adjudicated on
    the merits in a state court and based on a factual
    determination will not be overturned on factual
    grounds unless objectively unreasonable in light of
    the evidence presented in the state-court proceeding,
    § 2254(d)(2).
    28
    
    537 U.S. 322
    , 340 (2003).                 Deference, however, does not imply
    abandonment or abdication of judicial review and does not by
    definition preclude relief.                
    Id.
     (“A federal court can disagree
    with a state court's credibility determination and, when guided
    by AEDPA, conclude the decision was unreasonable or that the
    factual      premise        was     incorrect       by        clear      and     convincing
    evidence.”).
    At the circuit court’s hearing on McLeod’s motion to re-
    open   the   post-conviction          proceedings,         LaFoille        testified       that
    “everything and anything” was done to locate Nelson in the fall
    of 1991.      (J.A. at 1041).             LaFoille also testified that he did
    not recall meeting Clark.                  Clark, however, saved two message
    slips,    dated   October         14th    and    22nd    of    1991,     both     evidencing
    LaFoille’s attempts to contact Clark.                     One of the message slips
    contains LaFoille’s contact information, which he testified was
    both   accurate       and    in     his    handwriting.             It    is     undisputed,
    therefore,     that    some        interaction      between        Clark       and   LaFoille
    occurred.     McLeod argues that the circuit court’s conclusion was
    unreasonable      because         there    was    no     conflict        between       Clark’s
    testimony     that     she        provided      LaFoille       with      the    information
    regarding     Nelson,       and     LaFoille’s      testimony           that    he   did    not
    recall meeting Clark.              But simply because Clark claims to have
    told   LaFoille      certain       information,         which      he    does    not    recall
    receiving,     does     not       mean    that    Clark       in    fact       conveyed    the
    29
    information.        It is just as likely, as the circuit court found,
    that     LaFoille     does     not    remember      receiving         the    information
    because Clark never conveyed it to him.                      Indeed, if Clark did
    not in the fall of 1991 inform LaFoille of the bandanas and
    knives that she connects in a variety of ways to Nelson, it
    makes    sense      that   Detective    LaFoille       would      not,      twelve      years
    later, recall meeting her.
    In late 1998 or early 1999, after seeing a reference to
    Investigator        Cordle’s     investigation       into    the      death       of    Donna
    Dustin on the Bowie High School website, Clark called Cordle to
    discuss the deaths of Dustin, and another murder victim, Jeany
    Kline.      During the call, Clark asked Cordle to describe the
    cause of Kline’s death.              Cordle, however, was not familiar with
    the details of the Kline murder which had occurred outside his
    jurisdiction.        While nothing came of this initial call by Clark,
    Cordle testified that Clark was interested in locating her ex-
    husband, Nelson.
    Clark     contacted       Cordle      again     on      December           6,    2000.
    According      to    Cordle’s    testimony,        during    a    December         7,    2000
    meeting,    Clark      was    once   again      interested       in   locating         Nelson
    because    Clark      believed    Nelson     had     been   involved         in    Dustin’s
    murder and because “she wanted some resolution of what may have
    happened to him.”            (J.A. at 905).        Following this December 7th
    meeting, Cordle and Clark were in contact hundreds of times.
    30
    Throughout the course of their communications, Clark conveyed a
    great deal of information pertaining to her belief that Nelson
    was involved in a number of murders. 3                 Some of the information
    provided by Clark to Cordle implicated Nelson in certain murders
    in the Bowie, Maryland area, particularly Dustin’s.                     Regarding
    Nelson’s involvement in the Roberson murder, Cordle testified,
    “I don’t recall her saying that he admitted to being involved.”
    (J.A. at 910).
    At some point between December of 2000 and February of 2001
    Clark told Cordle that in October of 1991 LaFoille attempted to
    contact her seeking to locate Nelson.                However, despite Cordle’s
    testimony    that      Clark   was   very     open    and   detail    oriented    in
    discussing      her    attempts   to    locate    Nelson     and   determine     his
    involvement in the various murders, Cordle never testified that
    Clark    told    him    that   she     provided      LaFoille   any   information
    regarding Nelson’s involvement in the Roberson murder.
    At Clark’s behest, Cordle called LaFoille at his home in
    Michigan on February 9, 2001.            According to Cordle, during their
    3
    In addition to her effort to link Nelson to the Roberson
    murder, Clark attempted to link him to the murders of Dustin,
    Kline, and Tom King, a man who in Clark’s words was “an
    associate of Rick’s [Nelson] that went missing.” (J.A. at 961).
    Clark also contacted the police in an attempt to establish
    Nelson’s role in the death of several people she claims Nelson
    mentioned were buried on a farm in Mitchville, Maryland. The
    farm was searched, but no bodies were discovered.
    31
    conversation, LaFoille “stated that when he retired he may have
    taken a couple of boxes [of notes] and some personal records
    with him when he moved out to the Midwest.”                                    (J.A. at 879).
    During         cross-examination,        LaFoille         testified          that    he     made   no
    such       assertion      and    that    his    reference          to    files       during        the
    conversation was to files in Maryland.                          Cordle’s notes of the
    February 9th conversation read, “JW [Jimmy Weidemeyer] was very
    tight with Nelson.”              (J.A. at 1299). 4             LaFoille denied               making
    such       a   statement.        There    were      other      contacts,            or    attempted
    contacts,         between    Cordle      and    LaFoille,       but          their       extent    and
    existence are disputed.                 Cordle testified that LaFoille did not
    return two of his phone calls, made in March and April of 2001,
    and further that he spoke with LaFoille at some point between
    February         and     April   of     2001,       but     made        no     record       of     the
    conversation because LaFoille informed him that he was too busy
    to   search       for    records      regarding       Nelson.           LaFoille,          however,
    testified         that     he    returned       all       of   Cordle’s          phone       calls.
    Ultimately, the circuit court conceded that it was “perplexed by
    the discrepancies between the testimony of Detective LaFoille
    and that of Investigator Cordle.”                     McLeod, No. CT92-0611X, slip
    op. at 24.
    4
    Jimmy Weidemeyer was a suspect in the Dustin murder.
    32
    McLeod        maintains      that         the     inconsistencies            between
    LaFoille’s testimony and that of Cordle, and other witnesses,
    rendered all of LaFoille’s testimony unreliable.                                While there
    were discrepancies between the testimony of LaFoille and Cordle,
    these discrepancies do not render unreliable that which LaFoille
    said.     Even if LaFoille told Cordle that he “may” have documents
    pertaining to the Roberson case, this does not mean that he did
    have    them.         Indeed,     Cordle’s    notes       of    the    February      9,   2001
    conversation, upon which McLeod relies in arguing that Cordle,
    not     LaFoille,       accurately      testified        to     the    content     of     that
    conversation,         make   no    reference       to     LaFoille’s        possession      of
    notes    or     files.       Further,       as    found        by   the    circuit      court,
    LaFoille’s testimony was bolstered by the testimony of Detective
    Edgar and Gwinn:
    Detective   Robert   Edgar,  to   whom  Detective
    LaFoille reported, testified that he never heard of
    Karen Clark before the matter herein was filed. As the
    lead investigator, he was also actively involved in
    the search for Richard Nelson, and in the course of
    his interviews with Mr. Nelson's acquaintances and
    family members, no one directed him to, or even
    mentioned, Karen Clark. Similarly, Assistant State's
    Attorney Laura Gwinn had not heard of Karen Clark
    prior to the filing of this Motion.
    McLeod, No. CT92-0611X, slip op. at 20-21 (internal citation
    omitted).             Finally,     while     any        discrepancies        between       the
    testimony        of    Cordle     and    LaFoille         may       bear   on    LaFoille’s
    credibility, his credibility alone is not dispositive of whether
    33
    Clark, in fact, conveyed the information regarding Nelson to him
    in the fall of 1991.
    After      hearing      Clark’s     testimony,         in   its     statement          of
    reasons, the circuit court found that,
    From her testimony, it is clear to this Court
    that Ms. Clark is fixated on her former husband, his
    whereabouts, and his actions over approximately the
    past twenty-five years.    Ms. Clark’s continued focus
    on Mr. Nelson, whom she has admittedly not seen since
    1989,    seems to   have  emerged   with  single-minded
    determination in 1998 when she initially contacted
    Investigator Cordle, some seven years after her
    alleged conversations with Detective LaFoille.
    McLeod, No. CT92-0611X, slip op. at 18.                     One need only look to
    Clark’s    testimony       to     see   the    reasonableness       of       the    circuit
    court’s finding.           Clark’s description of Nelson’s courtship of
    her is of interest.          She testified that prior to their marriage,
    though    the       two   never    dated,      Nelson   stalked        and    beat        her.
    According to Clark, the reason she married and subsequently had
    a child with Nelson was because “[h]e threatened to murder my
    family    if    I    didn’t.”       (J.A.      at   959).        Yet,    despite          this
    brutality, Clark repeatedly testified to her desire to locate
    Nelson.
    Clark testified that after LaFoille contacted her in the
    fall of 1991, she met with him on three occasions and spoke with
    him on the telephone several times.                     According to Clark, the
    first     face-to-face       meeting     occurred       when     LaFoille          came     to
    Clark’s place of work, the McEldon Library at the University of
    34
    Maryland, and the two spoke for two hours.                       It is during this
    time that Clark claims to have informed LaFoille of much of the
    evidence      McLeod      contends      implicates     Nelson    in   the     Roberson
    murder.       Clark submitted an affidavit stating, and she testified
    that, in October of 1991 she accompanied LaFoille to the police
    station    to      look    at    photographs.        During     the   third    alleged
    meeting, Clark claims to have provided LaFoille with Nelson’s
    address book, which she obtained in 1987.                     According to Clark,
    the address book was never returned.
    Despite Clark’s testimony that she met with LaFoille on
    three occasions, once for two hours, she could not recall his
    height.       (J.A. at 947).         In a February 2001 email to LaFoille,
    Clark wrote,
    I don’t know if you remember me, but you came to see
    me in College Park to ask some questions about my ex-
    husband . . . which were somehow related to a case you
    were investigating about a woman that was murdered at
    Allen’s Pond.   I don’t remember what year that was,
    but Rick has been missing since Sept. 1989.      I was
    wondering if you ever managed to locate Rick, etc. I
    also remember discussing with you his relationship to
    some older members of the Pagan Motorcycle gang in
    Bowie as well as some other issues.
    (J.A.    at    1129).       McLeod      argued    to   the    circuit    court    that
    LaFoille’s response to the email, “I remember a lot of what you
    are talking about,” (id.), proves he remembered speaking with
    Clark.        As   noted    by    the   circuit    court,     however,   LaFoille’s
    response does not necessarily show he remembered meeting Clark.
    35
    In any event, acknowledging that Clark and LaFoille spoke to
    each other at some point does not compel the conclusion that
    Clark     disclosed    the     information        regarding        Nelson     as   she    now
    claims.
    Of all of Clark’s assertions, perhaps the most notable is
    her belated description of Nelson’s behavior at what he referred
    to   as    “the   shrine.”          While       the    shrine     was    purportedly       in
    relation to the murder of Dustin, not Roberson, Clark’s story is
    consistent with the lack of semen in or on Roberson’s person,
    and the fact she was not vaginally or anally penetrated.                                 Yet,
    despite     her   claim      that    she    divulged        a    mass    of    information
    regarding     Nelson      in   the    fall       of    1991,      Clark,      by   her    own
    admission,    inexplicably          neglected         to   inform      LaFoille    of    what
    occurred when she and Nelson visited the shrine in the fall of
    1980.      (J.A. at 938-39, 958).                 Clark’s first mention of the
    shrine was to Cordle at some point after she contacted him a
    second     time   on    December      6,     2000.          While      Nelson’s    alleged
    behavior at the shrine is consistent with Roberson’s injuries,
    Clark could have fabricated the story after learning the details
    of Roberson’s murder through the media or other sources.                                It is
    also possible that Nelson was somehow involved in the Roberson
    murder.       But      inculpation         of    Nelson         does    not    necessarily
    exculpate McLeod.         At trial the State argued that McLeod may not
    have acted alone in murdering Roberson, and evidence of Nelson’s
    36
    involvement in the murder does not negate the other evidence
    incriminating McLeod.            Finally, on cross examination in 2004,
    Clark suddenly recalled that,
    [s]hortly before he [Nelson] went missing, my last
    phone call with him was basically that he had
    information about this [the Roberson] case. Although,
    nothing   specifically,  he   didn’t  say  the  name.
    Although he said a woman murdered in Bowie up by
    Allen’s Pond and that people were going to try and
    kill him because of what he knew.
    (J.A.    at   955).      Yet,    this   critical,        and   damning,    piece    of
    information     was     omitted    from        Clark’s    affidavit,      which    was
    executed over a year earlier on August 23, 2002, describing the
    information she possessed implicating Nelson in the murders of
    Dustin, Kline and Roberson.
    Based on its conclusion that LaFoille, not Clark, was the
    more    credible      witness,    the   circuit     court      found   that   McLeod
    failed to demonstrate that the State withheld evidence favorable
    to him in violation of Brady.                   Rejecting McLeod’s contention
    that the circuit court’s finding was objectively unreasonable
    under § 2254(d)(2) and (e)(1), the district court stated that,
    this court is not persuaded that the state court's
    findings, and in particular its determinations of
    credibility   of   the   witnesses,  can    be   called
    "unreasonable" by a "clear and convincing" standard in
    light of the entirety of the evidence     presented in
    the state court proceedings. . . . As the fact finder,
    the state court weighed the credibility of the
    witnesses, and undertook to resolve the many conflicts
    in the evidence. After considering all the testimonial
    and documentary evidence presented, the state court
    concluded that LaFoille's testimony, as supported by
    37
    that of his supervisor Edgar, was more credible than,
    and should be weighed more significantly than, that of
    Clark.
    McLeod, 
    482 F. Supp. 2d at 666
    .
    Like the instant appeal, Cagle v. Branker involved review
    of a district court’s dismissal of appellant’s § 2254 petition
    challenging    the   credibility   determination        of    a    state     court.
    Affirming, this court stated,
    for a federal habeas court to overturn a state court's
    credibility judgments, the state court's error must be
    stark and clear.      Indeed, "federal habeas courts
    [have] no license to redetermine credibility of
    witnesses whose demeanor has been observed by the
    state trial court, but not by them." Marshall v.
    Lonberger, 
    459 U.S. 422
    , 434, 
    103 S.Ct. 843
    , 
    74 L.Ed.2d 646
     (1983).
    Cagle, 
    520 F.3d at 324
     (internal citation omitted).                    While the
    evidence does not compel the credibility determination reached
    by the state court, it certainly provides a sufficient basis for
    purposes of section 2254(d)(2) to support such a determination.
    See Wilson v. Ozmint, 
    352 F.3d 847
    , 860 (4th Cir. 2003).                        The
    circuit   court    witnessed    first   hand    the    testimony      of     Clark,
    LaFoille, Cordle and the other witnesses and the circuit court’s
    statement     of   reasons   provides    a     thorough      review     of    that
    testimony.     In deeming LaFoille the more credible witness, the
    circuit court did not act unreasonably, let alone commit “stark
    and   clear   error.”    This   being    the   case,    the       presumption    of
    correctness mandated by § 2254(e)(1) stands unrebutted.                      McLeod
    38
    has    failed     to    show   that         the    circuit      court’s       factual       finding
    resulted in a decision based on an unreasonable determination of
    the facts in light of the evidence as required by § 2254(d)(2).
    B.
    With     respect     to     §       2254(d)(1),      McLeod         argues        that    the
    circuit court erred as a matter of law in finding Fike’s written
    statement to be immaterial under Brady.                               See supra p. 25.               As
    this    court     has     noted,        §    2254(d)(1)         “is    quite      deferential.”
    Mosley v. Branker, 
    550 F.3d 312
    , 319 (4th Cir. 2008).                                           To be
    entitled to relief, a petitioner must show that “the state court
    decision was either contrary to, or an unreasonable                                   application
    of, clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme
    Court.”        Robinson v. Polk, 
    438 F.3d 350
    , 354-55 (4th Cir. 2006)
    (citing    §     2254(d)(1)).               A     decision      is    contrary        to    clearly
    established        federal     law          “if    the    state       court      arrives        at    a
    conclusion opposite to that reached by th[e] [Supreme] Court on
    a     question     of    law      or    if      the     state    court       decides        a    case
    differently        than     th[e]           [Supreme]     Court        has       on   a    set       of
    materially indistinguishable facts.”                            Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    ,     413    (2000).             A     state   court       unreasonably         applies
    clearly established federal law if it “identifies the correct
    governing legal principle from th[e] [Supreme] Court's decisions
    but    unreasonably        applies          that    principle         to   the    facts     of    the
    39
    prisoner's case.”         
    Id.
       The circuit court committed no such
    error here.
    For purposes of Brady, evidence withheld by the state is
    material “if there is a reasonable probability that, had the
    evidence    been    disclosed   to    the    defense,    the    result     of   the
    proceeding would have been different.”             United States v. Bagley,
    
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682 (1985).       While finding the statement “at least
    arguably favorable to the defense,” the circuit court determined
    that “the        justification for Ms. Fike’s brother’s suspicion,
    that being ‘they are the type that may do something like that,’
    strains the Court’s ability to conclude that such information
    could reasonably be taken to put the whole case in a different
    light as to undermine confidence in the verdict, and the Court
    declines to do so.”        McLeod, No. CT92-0611X, slip op. at 11-12.
    Thus,    after   identifying    the    appropriate      legal    standard,      the
    circuit court concluded that Fike’s statement was not material.
    The district court correctly found this conclusion not to be an
    unreasonable application of federal law as determined by the
    Supreme    Court,   and   rightly     left   the   decision     of   the   circuit
    court undisturbed.
    40
    V.
    McLeod’s second § 2254 petition was appropriately dismissed
    because it failed to satiate the demanding threshold requirement
    of § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii).         Even had § 2244(b)(2)(B)(ii) been met,
    McLeod   failed    to    show    that     the    circuit     court   made   an
    unreasonable   factual      determination        under   §   2254(d)(2),    or
    unreasonably      applied    federal       law     under     §   2254(d)(1).
    Accordingly, the judgment below is
    AFFIRMED.
    41