Ochoa v. Cockrell ( 2002 )


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  •                    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    For the Fifth Circuit
    No. 01-10289
    FACUNDO OCHOA,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    VERSUS
    JANIE COCKRELL, Director, Texas Department of
    Criminal Justice, Institutional Division,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    For the Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth Division
    (4:00-CV-1644-Y)
    May 10, 2002
    Before GARWOOD and DENNIS, Circuit Judges, and LITTLE,* District
    Judge.
    PER CURIAM:**
    The issues in this appeal from the denial of habeas relief are
    *
    Chief Judge of the Western District of Louisiana, sitting by
    designation.
    **
    Pursuant to 5th Cir. R. 47.5, the Court has determined that
    this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except
    under the limited circumstances set forth in 5th Cir. R. 47.5.4.
    1
    whether   the   state   prosecutor   violated   the   petitioner’s   Fifth
    Amendment rights by commenting on his failure testify and, if so,
    whether any resulting error was harmless.        We need not decide the
    first question because we hold that the prosecutor’s comments did
    not “have a substantial or injurious effect or influence” on the
    petitioner’s conviction regardless of whether they violated the
    Fifth Amendment. The district court’s order is therefore affirmed.
    I.   Facts and Procedural History
    On March 10, 1998, petitioner Facundo Ochoa was tried in a
    Texas state court for aggravated assault of a child and indecency
    with a child.1    The victim was the daughter of Ochoa’s longtime
    sporadic girlfriend, Debbie Ortiz.       Ortiz, Ochoa, and the victim
    were living with Ochoa’s mother at the time in question.
    During trial, the victim testified in detail about how Ochoa
    molested her twice over the span of a month.            The first attack
    occurred in December 1995, when the victim was eleven years old.
    The victim was sleeping on the couch when she awoke to Ochoa
    fondling her breasts and buttocks.         While she was still in a
    slumber, Ochoa removed her sweat pants and panties, pushed her legs
    apart, and forced his penis far enough into her vagina for it hurt.
    The victim testified that she was scared and that she pulled her
    legs together.     Ochoa stopped and left the room when the victim
    1
    See 
    Tex. Pen. Code Ann. §§ 21.11
    , 22.021 (Vernon 1994).
    2
    moved, but after a few minutes, he returned and began fondling her
    and licking her neck.     He then forced his penis into her mouth.     It
    was approximately 1:30 a.m. and the victim could smell beer on
    Ochoa’s breath.
    The second incident occurred in January of 1996.       It was late
    in the evening, and Ochoa was alone with the victim while her
    mother was out running an errand.        Once again, Ochoa began rubbing
    the victim’s breasts while she was sleeping on the living room
    couch.     The victim testified that when her mother returned from
    her errand, Ochoa stopped what he was doing and left the room.
    When Ms. Ortiz walked into the living room, she found her daughter
    on the couch crying; the daughter then revealed that Ochoa had been
    molesting her.
    The next morning, Ms. Ortiz brought her daughter to her
    mother’s house and contacted Child Protective Services (CPS).         The
    case was assigned to Nora DeWitt, a CPS investigator.         Ms. DeWitt
    arranged for the child to have an examination on February 5, 1996,
    at a children’s medical center.      The victim was examined by a CARE
    unit, which is a group of medical professionals specializing in
    forensic pediatrics.      Dr. Jan Leah Lamb, who headed the CARE team
    that     examined   the   victim,   testified   in   detail   about   her
    qualifications and the procedures for determining if a patient has
    been sexually molested.        Although she found no physiological
    evidence of abuse, Dr. Lamb testified that in her opinion, the
    victim had been molested.     She explained that due to the anatomy of
    3
    the vagina and the time that had lapsed between the assault and the
    examination, the lack of trauma to the victim’s vagina did not rule
    out molestation.    In fact, Dr. Lamb testified that there is no
    physical evidence of sexual abuse in most child abuse cases.
    CPS investigator Nora DeWitt also concluded that Mr. Ochoa had
    molested the victim.    As part of her investigation, Ms. DeWitt
    interviewed the victim, Ms. Ortiz, and Mr. Ochoa.   In light of the
    CARE evaluation and her own investigation, Ms. DeWitt closed this
    case finding “reason to believe that abuse had occurred.”2
    Finally, the state presented evidence that Mr. Ochoa admitted
    to engaging in indecent acts with the victim.   The victim’s mother
    testified that when she confronted Mr. Ochoa with her daughter’s
    allegations, he responded that “he had to do what he had to do.   He
    couldn’t get it from me, [so] he was going to get it from her.”
    Ms. Ortiz further testified that Mr. Ochoa specifically admitted to
    fondling her daughter’s breasts, but denied penetrating her.
    The essence of the petitioner’s defense was that the victim
    fabricated the molestation story to win her mother’s attention and
    that the lack of physical evidence discredited any claims of
    penetration. Mr. Ochoa’s strongest witness was Christina Martinez,
    Ochoa’s fifteen-year-old step-niece who was friends with the victim
    2
    Ms. DeWitt testified that when closing a child abuse case, CPS
    investigators classify the case in one of three ways: “One is
    reason to believe that abuse occurred, one being ruled out that
    abuse did not occur, and one of unable to be determined if abuse
    occurred or not.”
    4
    during the time in question.           Ms. Martinez testified that the
    victim told her that Mr. Ochoa had molested her.              But when Martinez
    made clear that the allegation was nothing to joke about, the
    victim retracted her allegation stating that she was “just playing”
    and that “[n]othing really happened.”
    According to the petitioner, the victim was starved for
    attention   from     her   mother    and   her    home     life   was   unstable.
    Witnesses testified that Ms. Ortiz would leave her daughter home
    alone while she was out all night and that Ms. Ortiz and Mr. Ochoa
    frequently engaged in violent arguments.            Ms. Ortiz testified that
    she has regularly warned the victim since she was six-years-old not
    to let men make sexual advances toward her.                   The petitioner’s
    theory was that Ms. Ortiz put the idea of making an outcry into the
    victim’s head by frequently warning her about men and that the
    victim made the outcry hoping to gain the attention of her absentee
    mom. The lack of physical evidence, the petitioner argued, further
    undermined the state’s case and discredited Dr. Lamb’s conclusion
    that the victim had been assaulted.
    Despite the petitioner’s pleas, however, the jury convicted
    Mr. Ochoa on both counts, and he was sentenced to two concurrent
    prison terms of fifty-five years each. On direct appeal, the state
    appellate court affirmed Ochoa’s conviction and sentence, and the
    Texas   Court   of    Criminal      Appeals      refused    his   petition    for
    discretionary review. Mr. Ochoa then filed a state application for
    habeas corpus relief; the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied
    5
    the petition without written order.
    On September 28, 2000, Mr. Ochoa filed a petition for habeas
    relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     in the Northern District of Texas.
    The district judge referred the case to a magistrate judge, who
    issued findings, conclusions, and a recommendation that habeas
    relief be denied.       On February 7, 2001, the district court issued
    its    order    adopting      the     magistrate     judge’s    findings       and
    recommendations, and granted summary judgment denying the petition
    for writ of habeas corpus.
    The petitioner later filed an application for certificate of
    appealability (COA) in the district court, but the COA was denied.
    On May 19, 2001, however, Mr. Ochoa filed an application for a COA
    in this court.       We granted Mr. Ochoa’s application for COA on July
    19, 2001, to review “whether his Fifth Amendment right was violated
    at    trial   when   the   prosecutor    commented    about    his   failure    to
    testify, and whether any error was harmless.”
    II.     Analysis
    To obtain habeas relief, a petitioner must either demonstrate
    that the state court’s decision “was contrary to . . . clearly
    established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the
    United States,” or “involved an unreasonable application of . . .
    clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court
    6
    of the United States.”3      A state court’s decision is “contrary to”
    clearly established federal law if it “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 this
    Court has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”4             A
    state court’s decision makes an “unreasonable application” of
    federal law “if the state court identifies the correct governing
    legal     principle   from   th[e]   [Supreme]   Court’s   decisions   but
    unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s
    case.”5     Although a district court may look to our rulings to
    support its decision as to whether the state court unreasonably
    applied federal law, “the focus of the habeas inquiry remains
    conflict with federal law established by the Supreme Court.”6           A
    state court’s determinations of factual issues are presumed correct
    and the applicant bears the burden of rebutting the presumption
    with clear and convincing evidence.
    A.    Comment on the Failure to Testify.
    The petitioner claims that he is entitled to habeas relief
    because the state prosecutor violated his Fifth Amendment rights by
    3
    Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    , 412-13 (2000).
    4
    
    Id.
    5
    
    Id.
    6
    Ledford v. Thomas, 
    275 F.3d 471
    , 474 n.2 (5th Cir. 2001).
    7
    commenting on his failure to testify.      Prosecutor Barbara Medley
    made the   following   allegedly   unconstitutional   comments   during
    closing arguments:
    PROSECUTOR:   Now, there’s also nothing in [the jury
    charge] that says how many witnesses you have to hear.
    There’s no requirement that you hear any more than one
    witness or base your decision based [sic] on more than
    one witness’[s] testimony.
    Just because a defendant chooses to commit a crime
    with no witnesses around doesn’t mean that he gets a free
    ride, okay? If you believe everything that [the victim]
    said beyond a reasonable doubt, you can base your
    decision solely on her testimony.
    DEFENSE: Objection on the comment on failure to testify.
    THE COURT: I didn’t so interpret, but I will instruct
    Counsel not to refer to the Defendant not testifying.
    PROSECUTOR:   I won’t, Your Honor.
    DEFENSE:   Can I have a ruling on my objection, please?
    THE COURT:    I’ll overrule your objection.
    PROSECUTOR:    You watched her.      You can judge her
    credibility.   With any witness that you saw, you can
    believe everything they say or none of what they say or
    you can believe some of it and not believe some of it.
    You are the sole judge of the credibility of every single
    witness.
    And you saw that child get up there. You saw how
    she told you what happened.      You heard her say how
    difficult it was. And pay attention to the details in
    what she told you and how that fits into the whole scheme
    of things.
    But we also brought you more than that. We also
    brought you her mother, which told you that this
    Defendant made some admissions to you.
    And Defense counsel is absolutely right. You can
    [sic] absolutely cannot consider the fact that the
    Defendant did not testify.
    8
    DEFENSE:    Comment on failure to testify.
    THE COURT:    Overruled.
    PROSECUTOR: You cannot hold that against him. But you
    also cannot speculate about any evidence that you did not
    hear. You must base your decision –
    DEFENSE:    Comment on failure to testify, Your Honor.
    THE COURT:    Overruled.
    PROSECUTOR: You must base your decision solely on the
    evidence that you did hear and judge the credibility of
    the evidence that you did hear.
    On direct review, the state appellate court found no constitutional
    violation in the prosecutor’s remarks.       Relying primarily on Texas
    appellate court decisions, the court held that the comments were
    appropriate      because   they   merely   recited   the   trial   judge’s
    instructions and did not draw attention to information that only
    the petitioner could have provided.7
    In Griffin v. California, the Supreme Court held that a state
    prosecutor may not comment on a defendant’s failure to testify at
    trial: “[T]he Fifth Amendment, in its direct application to the
    Federal Government and in its bearing on the States by reason of
    the Fourteenth Amendment, forbids either comment by the prosecution
    7
    Ochoa v. Texas, No. 2-98-134-CR, slip op. at 3-4 (Tex.
    App.–Fort Worth April 9, 1999, pet. denied) (“The prosecutor’s
    statement sought to affirm that, indeed, [Ochoa] does have a right
    not to testify and that the jury could neither hold that against
    him nor hypothesize on what he might have said. That is consistent
    with the jury’s instructions during voir dire and in the jury
    charge. The prosecutor did not rhetorically ask why [Ochoa] did
    not testify or call attention to evidence that could only be
    supplied by [Ochoa].”).
    9
    on the accused’s silence or instructions by the court that such
    silence is evidence of guilt.”8            We have clarified that “[t]he test
    for     determining          whether     the        prosecutor’s        remarks        were
    constitutionally impermissible is: (1) whether the prosecutor’s
    manifest intent was to comment on the defendant’s silence or (2)
    whether the character of the remark was such that the jury would
    naturally       and    necessarily      construe      it     as   a    comment    on   the
    defendant's silence.”9
    In United States v. Johnston,10 this court held under similar
    circumstances         that   a    prosecutor’s      comment       on   the   defendants’
    failure    to    testify         constituted    a    Fifth    Amendment      violation.
    Similar to the prosecutor’s comments in the present case, the
    prosecutor in Johnston took it upon himself to paraphrase the
    court’s instruction on the failure to testify:
    [The jury charge] reminds you that a defendant has the
    right not to testify. That is constitutional right. It
    is yours. It is mine. It is theirs. Please value it.
    I do.    Don’t take into consideration the fact that
    whether or not anyone testified in this case is
    inappropriate.
    But what you also can’t do in a situation like this
    is go back into that jury room and make up a story for
    them.    That is impermissible by law.    You can’t play
    “what if.”    You can’t say, “Well, if they testified,
    well, maybe they would have explained this. Maybe they
    would have said that.” That’s not allowed and that’s
    8
    
    380 U.S. 609
    , 615 (1965).
    9
    U.S. v. Grosz, 
    76 F.3d 1318
    , 1326 (5th Cir. 1996) (internal
    quotes and citations omitted).
    10
    
    127 F.3d 380
    , 398 (5th Cir. 1997).
    10
    fair.11
    The court found it irrelevant that the prosecutor was restating the
    district     court’s   instruction    not   to   consider    the   defendants’
    failure to testify as evidence of their guilt.              Regardless of the
    intent or legal accuracy of the statement, the court found that it
    had the effect of focusing the jury’s attention on the defendants’
    failure to testify.12     The Johnston panel also took issue with the
    prosecutor’s claim that the jury could not speculate on what the
    defendants might have said.          The panel reasoned that this claim
    impermissibly penalized the defendants for opting not to testify
    and noted that nothing prohibits the jury from “theorizing in their
    own minds as to a defendant’s version of the facts in the absence
    of testimony from the defendant.”13
    Despite the similarities between this case and Johnston, it is
    not clear that the state court unreasonably applied Supreme Court
    precedent in holding that prosecutor Medley’s statements did not
    violate Ochoa’s Fifth Amendment rights.              In United States v.
    Robinson,14 the Supreme Court held that a prosecutor’s direct
    comment on the defendant’s failure to testify did not violate the
    Fifth Amendment because it was responsive to the defendant’s
    11
    
    Id.
    12
    
    Id.
    13
    
    Id.
    14
    
    485 U.S. 25
    , 32 (1988).
    11
    argument that the government never gave him an opportunity to
    respond to the charges against him.         The court explicitly rejected
    the idea that any direct comment on the defendant’s failure to
    testify constitutes error.          Rather, the court explained that
    Griffin only prohibits prosecutors and judges “from suggesting to
    the jury that it may treat the defendant’s silence as substantive
    evidence of guilt.”15       Other post-Griffin Supreme Court cases also
    suggest that the Court has taken a narrower view of Griffin,
    prohibiting only “adverse comments” on a defendant’s failure to
    testify.16
    Thus, whether there was a constitutional violation in this
    case is a close question.        Under a broad reading of Griffin and
    under our factually similar holding in Johnston, the prosecutor’s
    statements    appear   to    make   an    impermissible   comment   on   the
    petitioner’s failure to testify.         The prosecutor’s statements that
    the jury “cannot consider the fact that [Ochoa] did not testify”
    and that the jury “cannot speculate about any evidence that you did
    not hear” were direct comments on Ochoa’s failure to testify and
    focused the jury’s attention on the issue.          Johnston, however, is
    15
    
    Id.
     (quoting Baxter v. Palmigiano, 
    425 U.S. 308
    , 319 (1976)).
    16
    See, e.g., Carter v. Kentucky, 
    450 U.S. 288
    , 298 (1981)
    (“[T]he Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments bar only adverse comment on
    a defendant’s failure to testify, and that ‘a judge’s instruction
    that the jury must draw no adverse inference of any kind from the
    defendant’s exercise of his privilege not to testify is a “comment”
    of an entirely different order.’”) (quoting Lakeside v. Oregon, 
    435 U.S. 333
    , 339 (1978)); Palmigiano, 
    425 U.S. at 319
    .
    12
    a   circuit     court    decision       and     does    not    constitute     “clearly
    established law as determined by the Supreme Court.”                       There is a
    colorable argument under Robinson and other more recent Supreme
    Court cases that the prosecutor’s comments were permissible because
    they were not “adverse comments” on Ochoa’s failure to testify;
    i.e., the prosecutor did not suggest that Ochoa’s failure to
    testify was evidence of his guilt.
    We need not resolve this close question of constitutional law
    in order to decide this case.            As discussed below, we hold that the
    prosecutor’s comments were harmless regardless of whether they
    violated Ochoa’s Fifth Amendment rights.
    B. Harmless Error.
    Even if there were a Fifth Amendment violation, Ochoa is not
    entitled to habeas relief if the error was harmless.                     The Supreme
    Court has instructed that the standard for establishing harmless
    error on collateral review is “less onerous” on the state than it
    is on direct review.17 In Brecht v. Abrahamson, the Court held that
    in a habeas case, an error is harmless unless it “had a substantial
    and      injurious   effect     or   influence     in     determining    the       jury’s
    verdict.”18      To     obtain   relief       under    this    standard,      a    habeas
    petitioner      must     show    that     the     error       resulted   in       “actual
    17
    Brecht v. Abrahamson, 
    507 U.S. 619
    , 636-38 (1993).
    18
    
    Id. at 637
    .
    13
    prejudice.”19       Because we determine that Ochoa has not established
    actual prejudice under Brecht, he is not entitled to habeas relief.
    This circuit’s opinion in United States v. Palmer20 provides
    the appropriate framework for deciding on direct review whether to
    reverse the        defendant’s    conviction     for    improper   prosecutorial
    argument. Under Palmer, three factors are relevant to the inquiry:
    “(1) the magnitude of the prejudicial effect of the prosecutor’s
    remarks, (2) the efficacy of any cautionary instruction by the
    judge,       and   (3)   the   strength   of   the   evidence    supporting   the
    conviction.”21       Although under Brecht the petitioner must make an
    even stronger showing of prejudice than a defendant on direct
    appeal, the Palmer analysis is nonetheless instructive.
    Under the first prong, we consider the magnitude of the
    prejudicial effect of the prosecutor’s remarks “in the context of
    the trial” and attempt “to elucidate their intended effect.”22                 In
    the context of this case, the prosecutor’s statements probably had
    little prejudicial effect because defense counsel raised Ochoa’s
    failure to testify before the prosecution did.                  The prosecutor’s
    reference to Ochoa’s failure to testify came only after Ochoa’s
    attorney prematurely raised the issue.                 In context, it is clear
    19
    
    Id.
    20
    
    37 F.3d 1080
     (5th Cir. 1994).
    21
    
    Id. at 1085
    .
    22
    
    Id.
    14
    that    the    prosecutor’s     comments    immediately      preceding    the
    defendant’s first objection made no reference to Ochoa’s failure to
    testify.      The defense attorney’s “[o]bjection on the comment on
    failure to testify” alerted the jury to the fact that Ochoa did not
    testify and elicited an instruction from the judge that emphasized
    the fact.     Thus, by the time the prosecutor actually remarked on
    the failure to testify, the issue was already before the jury.23
    The Supreme Court acknowledged the relevance of this point in
    Lockett v. Ohio.24       In Lockett, the defendant argued that the
    prosecutor made indirect references to his failure to testify by
    repeatedly     stating   that   his   involvement   in   a   conspiracy   was
    “unrefuted” and “uncontroverted.”25        The Court held that there was
    no reversible error because the defendant’s attorney drew the
    jury’s attention to his failure to testify before the state did:
    Lockett’s own counsel had clearly focused the jury’s
    attention on her silence, first, by outlining her
    contemplated defense in his opening statement and,
    second, by stating to the court and jury near the close
    of the case, that Lockett would be the “next witness.”
    When viewed against this background, it seems clear that
    the prosecutor’s closing remarks added nothing to the
    impression that had already been created by Lockett’s
    refusal to testify after the jury had been promised a
    23
    We do not mean to suggest that the prosecution has carte
    blanche to discuss inadmissible evidence any time a defendant
    raises a premature objection.     In the context of this case,
    however, and in light of the innocuous nature of the prosecutor’s
    comments, we believe that he prosecutor’s comments had little
    practical effect on the conviction.
    24
    
    438 U.S. 586
    , 595 (1978).
    25
    
    Id.
    15
    defense by her lawyer and told that Lockett would take
    the stand.26
    Furthermore, there is no indication that the prosecution
    intended to present Ochoa’s failure to testify as evidence of his
    guilt.       In the context of the state’s closing arguments, the
    prosecutor’s comments are merely responsive to defense counsel’s
    premature objection.     Thus, in light of the prosecution’s benign
    intent, coupled with the fact that the defense counsel put Ochoa’s
    failure to testify at issue before the state did, we believe that
    the prosecutor’s comments had little prejudicial effect on Ochoa’s
    conviction.
    As to the second prong of the Palmer analysis, the trial court
    issued two cautionary instructions relevant to this case.     During
    closing arguments, the district judge instructed the prosecutor in
    the presence of the jury “not to refer to the Defendant not
    testifying.”      Furthermore, the jury charge states that the jury
    “must not refer to or discuss any matters not in evidence.”       We
    have no reason to assume that the jury did not heed the trial
    court’s instructions.27     Moreover, when an objection to a jury
    charge is not properly preserved, the instruction must be clearly
    26
    
    Id.
    27
    See Lakeside v. Oregon, 
    435 U.S. 333
    , 340 & n.11 (1978) (“As
    this Court has remarked before: ‘[W]e have not yet attained that
    certitude about the human mind which would justify us in . . . a
    dogmatic assumption that jurors, if properly admonished, neither
    could nor would heed the instructions of the trial court . . . .’”)
    (quoting Bruno v. United States, 
    308 U.S. 287
    , 294 (1937)).
    16
    erroneous and prejudicial to warrant reversal.28                 Ochoa raises no
    objection to the court’s cautionary instruction or the sufficiency
    of the jury charge.        Thus, the second Palmer prong also points to
    the harmlessness of any potential error.
    In examining the third prong, we find convincing evidence
    supporting       Ochoa’s   conviction.       As    stated   above,   the    victim
    emotionally recounted the details of both molestations.                    She was
    duly cross-examined and the jury had the opportunity to judge her
    credibility.      The jury also heard from the victim’s mother, Debbie
    Oritz, who found the victim crying on the couch immediately after
    the second sexual assault.         Ms. Ortiz also testified that Ochoa
    admitted to assaulting her daughter because Ms. Ortiz was not
    satisfying his libido. Finally, two professionals having extensive
    experience with child abuse cases concluded that Mr. Ochoa abused
    the victim.      Although there was no physical evidence of trauma to
    the child’s genitalia, Dr. Lamb explained that the lack of physical
    evidence    is    common   and   that    it       is   neither   exculpatory   nor
    inculpatory of sexual abuse.
    In light of our Palmer analysis, Mr. Ochoa has not established
    that the statements in question “had a substantial and injurious
    effect or influence” on his conviction.                Each of the three Palmer
    factors weighs against a finding of “actual prejudice.”                 Thus, any
    potential error created by the prosecutor’s reference to Ochoa’s
    28
    United States v. Olano, 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 734-35 (1993).
    17
    failure to testify was harmless under the standard announced in
    Brecht v. Abrahamson.
    III.     Conclusion
    This case presents a close question of whether the prosecutor
    improperly commented on Mr. Ochoa’s failure to testify in his own
    defense.    Regardless     of   whether    the   statements   constitute     a
    violation   of   Fifth   Amendment    right   that   no   person   “shall    be
    compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself,”
    any such violation was harmless under Brecht v. Abrahamson.                 Mr.
    Ochoa therefore has not established a right to habeas relief.               The
    district court’s ruling is AFFIRMED.
    18