Montgomery v. Bagley ( 2009 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 09a0348p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    Petitioner-Appellee/Cross-Appellant, -
    WILLIAM T. MONTGOMERY,
    -
    -
    -
    Nos. 07-3882/3893
    v.
    ,
    >
    -
    Respondent-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. -
    MARGARET BAGLEY, Warden,
    -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Ohio at Toledo.
    No. 00-07298—Solomon Oliver, Jr., District Judge.
    Argued: June 17, 2009
    Decided and Filed: September 29, 2009
    Before: MERRITT, CLAY, and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Stephen E. Maher, OFFICE OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. Richard Marvin Kerger, KERGER & HARTMAN, LLC,
    Toledo, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Charles L. Wille, OFFICE OF THE OHIO
    ATTORNEY GENERAL, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. Richard Marvin Kerger,
    KERGER & HARTMAN, LLC, Toledo, Ohio, Lori A. McGinnis, Loudonville, Ohio, for
    Appellee.
    MERRITT, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CLAY, J., joined.
    GIBBONS, J. (pp. 18-21), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
    1
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                                 Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    I. Summary
    MERRITT, Circuit Judge. In this death penalty case, the State of Ohio, through the
    Respondent, Warden Margaret Bagley, appeals the District Court’s new trial order granting
    William T. Montgomery’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, and
    its subsequent denial of the State’s motion to reconsider that order. See Montgomery v.
    Bagley, 
    482 F. Supp. 2d 919
    (N.D. Ohio 2007). The District Court issued the writ based on
    a finding that the State, in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963), withheld an
    exculpatory, pretrial police report that would likely have altered the outcome of the case —
    a pretrial report that several witnesses had seen one of Montgomery’s purported victims alive
    four days after the State alleged that he had killed her. Montgomery cross-appeals the
    District Court’s denial of his petition on several alternative grounds, including the state trial
    court’s failure to grant a change of venue despite negative pretrial publicity, the State’s
    failure to disclose certain other Brady material, and the trial court’s failure to dismiss an
    incompetent juror.
    The key issue for us to resolve under Brady is whether the withheld police report is
    “material” to Montgomery’s jury conviction or the jury’s imposition of the death sentence
    when viewed in light of the other evidence presented at trial. The Warden’s argument that
    the withheld police report is not “material” has two components: First, given the strength
    of the other evidence at trial implicating Montgomery, the introduction of the police report
    would have made no difference in the outcome of the trial. Second, in affidavits submitted
    to the habeas court 23 years after the jury trial and seven weeks after the court had issued the
    writ, the State now claims that several of the pretrial police-report witnesses have retracted
    their earlier statements, which now proves that the exculpatory report could neither be
    effectively used in a new trial to cast doubt on the state’s case, nor could it have led to such
    evidence in the past.
    Montgomery argues that the evidence at trial implicated his co-defendant, Glover
    Heard, as the trigger man so that introduction of the withheld police report would have given
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                                 Page 3
    the jury reasonable doubt as to his guilt. Alternatively, on the issue of death, Montgomery
    also contends that the police report would probably have created enough doubt in at least one
    juror’s mind to raise a question about his role as the trigger man, resulting in that juror’s
    rejection of the death penalty for Montgomery. Under Ohio law, if only one juror rejects the
    death sentence, a life sentence would be imposed. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2929.03(D)(2).
    The law under Brady follows the common sense proposition that the State must
    disclose the “material exculpatory evidence to the defendant before trial,” not afterward. See
    Dist. Attorney’s Office for the Third Jud. Dist. v. Osborne, 
    129 S. Ct. 2308
    , 2319 (2009)
    (emphasis added). It directs us not to retry the case by weighing the existing evidence
    against the excluded evidence, but rather to determine whether the excluded evidence “could
    reasonably be taken to put the whole case in such a different light as to undermine
    confidence in the verdict.” Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 435 (1995). The Brady due
    process rule concerning disclosure of exculpatory evidence complements and supports the
    Sixth Amendment rule requiring that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy
    the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State.” The Brady rule
    contemplates the ultimate trial of factual issues in a contemporary trial by a jury, not by a
    subsequent trial in federal habeas court. See Kyles v. 
    Whitley, 514 U.S. at 439-40
    (explaining that “the criminal trial . . . [is] the chosen forum for ascertaining the truth about
    criminal accusations”).
    In this capital case, the State is unable to effectively rebut three crucial propositions
    that control the outcome: (1) the withheld report is exculpatory and should have been
    disclosed before trial, (2) it is “material” because, if true, it would likely change the outcome
    of the trial, and (3) the ultimate determination concerning the truth of the withheld report —
    i.e., what actually happened — is for the state courts to resolve. Because, like the District
    Court, we believe that the withheld, exculpatory report “undermines confidence in the
    verdict” as to both the guilt and sentencing phases of Montgomery’s trial, we hold that
    Montgomery deserves a new trial where all of the relevant evidence is considered by the
    jury. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the District Court’s issuance of the writ and later
    denial of the State’s motion to reconsider. We pretermit the remaining issues raised in
    Montgomery’s cross-appeal.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                 Montgomery v. Bagley                                  Page 4
    II. Facts Found by State Courts and Procedural Background
    A. The Underlying Crime
    The Ohio Court of Appeals summarized the facts of the underlying crimes as
    follows:
    On March 25, 1986, the Lucas County Grand Jury returned a two count
    indictment charging [Montgomery] with the aggravated murders of Debra
    D. Ogle and Cynthia Tincher while committing or attempting to commit
    aggravated robbery, in violation of R.C. 2903.01(B). . . .
    On September 29, 1986, the case proceeded to a jury trial at which numerous
    witnesses testified, including Glover Heard, who was also indicted for the
    aggravated murders of Ogle and Tincher but who pled guilty to one count
    of complicity to murder. Through those witnesses, the following key
    evidence was presented. On February 20, 1986, [Montgomery] purchased
    a Bursa .380 automatic handgun from Cleland’s Gun Shop in Toledo, Ohio.
    This gun was subsequently identified as the weapon that was used to kill
    both Ogle and Tincher. At approximately 5:00 a.m. on March 8, 1986, after
    an apparent argument with his girlfriend, [Montgomery] went by taxi with
    Glover Heard to an apartment shared by Ogle and Tincher. [Montgomery]
    was acquainted with the victims but Heard was not. At this time,
    [Montgomery] was wearing a dark blue pinstriped suit jacket that he had
    borrowed from Randolph Randleman, his uncle.                   Subsequently,
    [Montgomery] asked Ogle to give him a ride home. After Ogle agreed, she,
    [Montgomery] and Heard left in her car. Before arriving at the destination,
    however, [Montgomery] had Ogle stop the car. He then walked her into a
    wooded area along Hill Avenue in Toledo, Ohio, while Heard remained in
    Ogle’s car, and then, for no apparent reason, [Montgomery] shot Ogle three
    times with the fatal wound inflicted while the gun was in direct contact with
    the top of her forehead. [Montgomery] then returned to the car and he and
    Heard drove back to the girls’ apartment. [Montgomery] instructed Heard
    to take Ogle’s car. Heard took the car but then abandoned it approximately
    one block from his residence. [Montgomery] returned to the girls’ apartment
    and shortly thereafter left with Cynthia Tincher in her car. After leaving the
    apartment, [Montgomery] had Tincher pull to the side of the road and
    thereupon shot her through the head from a range of twelve inches or less.
    Several witnesses testified that they saw a man of approximately
    [Montgomery’s] height and weight leaving Tincher’s car on the morning of
    March 8, 1986 at approximately 7:15. Those witnesses testified, however,
    that the person they saw was wearing a dark jacket with a hood pulled up
    around his face. Tincher’s body was discovered in her car at the corner of
    Wenz and Angola Roads in Toledo, Ohio at approximately 7:30 a.m. on
    March 8, 1986. [Montgomery] lives approximately one-half mile from that
    location. Thereafter, at approximately 12:00 noon on March 8, 1986,
    [Montgomery], Heard and two friends, Sidney Armstead and Eric Wilson,
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                Montgomery v. Bagley                                  Page 5
    got together to go to a mall. [Montgomery], however, was carrying a plastic
    bag and directed Armstead to first drive him to a dry cleaner. Armstead
    drove appellant to One Hour Martinizing where [Montgomery] got out of the
    car with the bag. Although they were unable to identify [Montgomery],
    employees of the laundry testified that on March 8, 1986, a black male
    showed them a soaking wet dark blue pin-striped suit jacket that he wanted
    cleaned in one hour. The employees explained that the jacket would have
    to dry out before it could be cleaned. They then hung the jacket to dry. One
    employee testified that as it dried, the jacket made a “brownish dripping
    mess on the floor.” She further testified that the jacket was badly stained
    and that she had to clean the jacket three times using a chemical cleaner.
    She could not identify, however, what the stains were. Subsequently, the
    jacket was picked up. Several days later, police officers obtained the jacket
    from Randolph Randleman who identified the jacket in court as the one
    which he had loaned to [Montgomery].
    As stated above, on March 8, 1986 at approximately 7:30 a.m., Tincher’s
    body was discovered in her car at the corner of Wenz and Angola. Soon
    thereafter, Ogle was listed as missing. The following day, however, Ogle’s
    car was discovered behind an abandoned house at 1031 Norwood.
    Thereafter, on March 10, 1986, Crime Stoppers received a telephone call
    from a Michael Clark who was at that time incarcerated in the Lucas County
    Jail. Upon interviewing Clark, officers obtained the name of Glover Heard.
    Officers located Heard and from Heard they obtained the name of
    [Montgomery]. Officers then gained permission from [Montgomery’s]
    mother to search her home, where appellant also lived. That search revealed
    a black leather jacket with a hood and the manual to the Bursa
    semi-automatic handgun. Subsequently, on March 12, 1986, officers went
    to Randolph Randleman’s home in an attempt to locate [Montgomery]. At
    approximately 12:00 noon, [Montgomery] arrived at the home and told
    officers that he knew the officers were looking for him and he wanted to talk
    about the homicide. He was then arrested and taken to the police station for
    questioning. During the interrogation, [Montgomery] initially stated that
    Heard had killed both girls with his, [Montgomery’s], gun. He then changed
    his story but ultimately admitted that he had gone to the girls’ apartment for
    a ride home. He continued to insist, however, that Heard had killed the girls
    and that he did not know where Ogle’s body was. Finally, however,
    [Montgomery] admitted that he might be able to show officers where Ogle’s
    body was and stated that it was on Hill Avenue near a market. Officers then
    took [Montgomery] to Hill Avenue and ultimately to a wooded area that
    appellant identified as the location. Several officers began searching the
    area while Sergeant Larry Przeslawski stayed in a patrol vehicle with
    [Montgomery]. After the officers searched one wooded area for a few
    minutes, [Montgomery] told Sergeant Przeslawski to direct the officers to
    search a different wooded area. Within five minutes, the officers located the
    body of Debra Ogle.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                     Montgomery v. Bagley                                  Page 6
    At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found [Montgomery] guilty of the
    aggravated murder of Debra Ogle with the specifications that said action
    involved the purposeful killing of two or more persons and that
    [Montgomery] was the principal offender while attempting to commit
    aggravated robbery. The jury further found [Montgomery] guilty of the
    lesser included offense of murder of Cynthia Tincher. At the conclusion of
    the mitigation phase, the jury recommended that [Montgomery] be sentenced
    to death. The trial court agreed with the jury’s recommendation and ordered
    that appellant be executed. . . .
    State v. Montgomery, No. L-98-1026, 
    1999 WL 55852
    , at *1-3 (Ohio Ct. App. Feb. 5, 1999)
    (internal citations omitted).
    B. Post-Conviction Relief in State Court
    After Montgomery’s conviction was upheld on direct appeal, he began pursuing
    post-conviction relief in state court. Montgomery submitted seventy claims for post-
    conviction relief to the state trial court, but his petition for relief was swiftly denied after the
    State successfully moved for summary judgment. The Ohio Court of Appeals reversed and
    remanded, holding that the trial court neglected to give Montgomery an adequate opportunity
    to respond to the State’s motion. On remand, the trial court permitted Montgomery to
    respond, only to later reject his claims for a second time. The Ohio Court of Appeals
    affirmed the denial of relief, and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to review that decision.
    C. Post-Conviction Relief in Federal Court
    Having exhausted his available means for post-conviction relief in state court,
    Montgomery filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Federal District Court. This time,
    he alleged forty-eight grounds for relief. After a comprehensive review of the matter, the
    District Court denied all of Montgomery’s claims except the alleged Brady violation arising
    out of the State’s withholding of the aforementioned police report. In pertinent part, the
    police report read as follows:
    [David Ingram] stated that he and several friends were at the Oak Hill
    apartments on Hill when they saw a Blue Ford Escort with Debbie Ogle
    driving around the complex. Later they again saw her as a passenger in the
    same auto. Debbie Ogle waved to them as they knew her from Rogers High
    School. She was with a white male with long sideburns. She did not appear
    distressed.
    J.A. at 2985.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                                Page 7
    The report was exculpatory in nature and important because the sighting of Ogle
    took place at 1:20 A.M. on Wednesday, March 12, 1986, four days after the State had argued
    that Montgomery murdered her. 
    Id. at 2984.
    The District Court not only concluded that the
    report was exculpatory but also found that there was no doubt that the State had refused to
    disclose the report — indeed, it only emerged after a formal request for police records some
    six years after Montgomery’s trial. 
    Id. at 2867.
    Finally, the District Court considered
    whether the report was material under Brady, that is, whether there was a “reasonable
    probability” that the outcome of Montgomery’s trial would have been different had he been
    privy to the police report. Finding that the police report met this standard, the District Court
    issued the writ.
    After the District Court issued the writ, a Toledo newspaper ran a story about the
    case and noted that the District Court’s decision was based on the withholding of the 1986
    police report. The news soon reached three of the people responsible for the police report,
    including David Ingram, the man who called in the report shortly after seeing a woman he
    and his friends said was Debra Ogle. Upon hearing the news, each of the witnesses
    telephoned the Toledo Police Department to retract their earlier statement. They claimed
    that the woman they had seen turned out to be Dianna Ogle, the victim’s younger sister, a
    claim they had not made at the time of trial or subsequently. At the behest of the police, the
    witnesses quickly signed sworn affidavits to this effect. The State then filed the affidavits
    in the District Court along with a Rule 59(e) motion to reconsider the writ based on this new
    evidence. Without passing on the materiality of the police report in light of the late-filed
    affidavits, the District Court denied the Rule 59(e) motion. It held that the affidavits were
    not properly before the court because they did not qualify as newly discovered evidence
    under Rule 59, and therefore the court could not justify altering or amending a final
    judgment on the merits.
    There are two distinct questions before our court. First, was the District Court
    correct to grant the habeas petition? And second, was the District Court correct in refusing
    to consider the late-filed affidavits under Rule 59(e)? We answer both in the affirmative.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                               Page 8
    III. The Habeas Petition
    The State challenges the issuance of the writ on three grounds. First, the State argues
    that the District Court did not give due deference to the findings of the Ohio state courts.
    Second, the State argues that the police report did not qualify as “evidence” under Brady
    because it would have been inadmissible at trial. And third, the State argues that the District
    Court erred as a matter of law in determining that the withheld evidence was “material”
    under Brady.
    A. Deference
    The deference issue necessarily turns upon the adequacy of the review of
    Montgomery’s Brady claim in state court. The Ohio Court of Appeals determined that such
    information developed during an “ongoing investigation” was not sufficiently exculpatory
    to require disclosure under Brady and limited its discussion only to the following conclusion:
    [Montgomery] asserted that the state wrongfully withheld exculpatory
    evidence that on March 12, 1986 at approximately 1:30 a.m., Debra Ogle
    was seen alive in the parking lot of her apartment complex by seven
    witnesses who went to high school with her. [Montgomery] supports this
    claim with a police report taken at approximately 2:30 a.m. on March 12,
    1986. At that time, Debra Ogle was still considered missing although her
    car had been discovered abandoned behind a home several blocks from the
    home of the co-defendant Glover Heard. That report reads in relevant part:
    “[David Ingram] stated that he and several friends were at the Oak Hill
    apartments on Hill when they saw a Blue Ford Escort with Debbie Ogle
    driving around the complex. Later they again saw her as a passenger in
    same auto. Debbie Ogle waved to them as they knew her from Rogers High
    School. She was with white male with long side burns. She did not appear
    distressed.”
    The lower court concluded that this isolated information, recorded in the
    course of an ongoing investigation when all of the facts were still being
    pieced together and in the face of overwhelming evidence presented at trial
    that Ogle had been killed on March 8, 1986, did not undermine confidence
    in the outcome of the trial. We agree and conclude that the trial court did
    not err in dismissing the fiftieth claim for relief.
    Montgomery, 
    1999 WL 55852
    , at *8.
    The District Court characterized this review as “cursory” and commented that the
    issue “warrants detailed analysis.” 
    Montgomery, 482 F. Supp. 2d at 976
    . It then went on to
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                                 Page 9
    discuss the question of deference under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act
    (AEDPA) in a detailed footnote:
    Section 2254(d)’s constrained standard of review only applies to claims
    adjudicated on the merits in the state court proceeding. Clinkscale v. Carter,
    
    375 F.3d 430
    , 436 (6th Cir. 2004). When a state court does not assess the
    merits of a petitioner’s habeas claim, the deference due under the AEDPA
    does not apply. Id.; Newton v. Million, 
    349 F.3d 873
    , 878 (6th Cir. 2003);
    Maples v. Stegall, 
    340 F.3d 433
    , 436-37 (6th Cir. 2003). In such a case, the
    habeas court is not limited to deciding whether that court’s decision was
    contrary to or involved an unreasonable application of clearly established
    federal law, but rather conducts a de novo review of the claim. 
    Maples, 340 F.3d at 436-37
    ; Benge v. Johnson, 
    312 F. Supp. 2d 978
    , 987 (S.D. Ohio
    2004).
    While the [Ohio] Court of Appeals addressed this claim, it failed to explain
    why the fact that the investigation was “ongoing” and “still being pieced
    together” was sufficient cause for the State’s failure to disclose it to the
    defense. This cursory [sic] may not be construed as an adequate [sic] to
    explain its reasoning. Moreover, to the extent that the Court of Appeals’s
    analysis of this claim is an “adjudication on the merits,” the court finds its
    application of Brady to be unreasonable because it failed to provide more
    than a conclusory statement regarding the materiality of the withheld report.
    
    Id. at 976
    n.44.
    The State attacks the District Court’s ruling on deference by directing our attention
    to Maldonado v. Wilson, 
    416 F.3d 470
    (6th Cir. 2005). In Maldonado, we held that where
    a state court decides a constitutional issue “‘without extended discussion,’” the district court
    “must conduct an independent review,” but that its “inquiry remains the AEDPA standard
    of whether the state court result is contrary to or unreasonably applies clearly established
    federal law.” 
    Id. at 476
    (quoting in part Harris v. Stovall, 
    212 F.3d 940
    , 943 (6th Cir.
    2000)). The District Court did not stray from this procedure here. After determining that
    the Ohio Court of Appeals gave Montgomery’s Brady claim unduly short shrift, the District
    Court rightly went on to perform an independent review. When that review led to a different
    conclusion, the District Court upheld it only after finding (as is required under AEDPA) that
    the state court’s determination to the contrary represented an objectively unreasonable
    application of clearly established federal law.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                    Montgomery v. Bagley                                Page 10
    B. “Evidence”
    The State’s argument that the withheld police report is not “evidence” under Brady
    because it was inadmissible hearsay is not well taken. The police report would have been
    inadmissible because it was hearsay, but “evidence affecting credibility falls within the
    general rule” requiring disclosure. Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
    , 154 (1972). The
    evidence would have seriously undermined the testimony of the State’s main witness, Glover
    Heard. On its face, the report 23 years ago would have led to witnesses who would have cast
    serious doubt on the State’s case. Failure to disclose such reports “not only deprives the
    defense of certain evidence, but also has the effect of representing to the defense that the
    evidence does not exist” causing defense counsel to “abandon lines of independent
    investigation, defenses, or trial strategies that it otherwise might have pursued.” United
    States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682-83 (1985) (“the reviewing court may consider directly
    any adverse effect that the prosecutor’s failure . . . might have had on the preparation or
    presentation of the defendant’s case.”). The report qualifies as exculpatory evidence, and
    we, therefore, must assess the possible effect of the report and its materiality at the time of
    the jury trial 23 years ago when defense counsel had to prepare and try the case.
    C. Materiality
    The State challenges the District Court’s finding on materiality on two grounds.
    First and foremost, the State argues that its case in trial court was so strong that any potential
    testimony of witnesses claiming to have seen Debra Ogle alive on March 12 would not have
    changed the outcome. The District Court responded to this argument as follows:
    [M]uch of the State’s case was made through co-defendant Heard, who gave
    police four different versions of his knowledge of the murders, and then
    testified to a fifth version at trial. While the State’s theory was that
    Montgomery committed the murder to rob Ogle, Heard admittedly wound
    up with Ogle’s car and wallet and testified that he was planning to take
    Ogle’s car even in the absence of Montgomery’s instruction to do so. Under
    the circumstances, where the State’s theory was that Tincher was killed to
    cover up Ogle’s murder, . . . the withheld police report revealing information
    suggesting that Ogle was seen alive four days after she was allegedly
    murdered would have severely undercut Heard’s credibility and destroyed
    the State’s timeline of the case.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                  Montgomery v. Bagley                              Page 11
    
    Montgomery, 482 F. Supp. 2d at 978
    . This conclusion makes sense. The police report
    strikes at the heart of the State’s case in directly contradicting Heard’s testimony. With
    Heard sufficiently impeached, there was a reasonable probability that the jury may have
    disbelieved his testimony that Montgomery was involved in the murders and, moreover, was
    the triggerman in both killings. The police report was thus material to the jury’s finding on
    guilt, giving rise to a violation of Montgomery’s right to due process. See Cone v. Bell, 
    129 S. Ct. 1769
    , 1772 (2009); 
    Brady, 373 U.S. at 87
    .
    The report was also material to the jury’s later decision to impose the death penalty,
    giving rise to Due Process and Eighth Amendment violations. In Lockett v. Ohio, 
    438 U.S. 586
    , 604 (1978) (plurality opinion), and its progeny, the Supreme Court established that the
    Eighth Amendment guarantees a capital defendant the right to introduce all relevant
    mitigating evidence in the penalty phase. The Court noted that “the Eighth and Fourteenth
    Amendments require that the sentencer, in all but the rarest kind of capital case, not be
    precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a defendant’s character or
    record and any of the circumstances of the offense that the defendant proffers as a basis for
    a sentence less than death.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original); see also Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 110 (1982).
    The Supreme Court has also held that the Due Process Clause requires that a state’s
    rules of evidence not be applied mechanically when doing so would preclude the defendant
    from introducing highly relevant evidence at the penalty phase. Green v. Georgia, 
    442 U.S. 95
    , 97 (1979) (citing 
    Lockett, 438 U.S. at 604-05
    ) (per curiam). Following Lockett and
    Eddings, the exclusion of hearsay testimony at the penalty phase of a death penalty case
    violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment where “[t]he excluded
    testimony was highly relevant to a critical issue in the punishment phase of the trial, and
    substantial reasons existed to assume its reliability.” 
    Id. In Green,
    the Court reversed the
    death sentence based upon the trial court’s application of Georgia’s hearsay rule to prohibit
    a witness’ testimony that the defendant’s accomplice in the capital murder had confessed to
    shooting and killing the victim after ordering the defendant to run an errand. The Court held
    that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment may require the admission of
    mitigating evidence even if state law rules of evidence would exclude it. See 
    Green, 442 U.S. at 96-97
    .
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                                Page 12
    The government’s star witness, Glover Heard, testified that Montgomery was the
    triggerman in both deaths. That damning testimony undoubtedly played a significant role
    in the jury’s decision to impose the death penalty on Montgomery. Had the jury heard
    testimony from the witnesses that they saw Debbie Ogle alive in the early hours of March
    12, long after the State contends she was killed by Montgomery, it may have raised enough
    doubt in the mind of one juror to sway that juror, even if he or she had voted to convict
    Montgomery of the murders, to reject the death penalty. If even one juror had rejected
    imposition of the death sentence, a life sentence would have been imposed. Ohio Rev. Code
    Ann. § 2929.03(D)(2). The fact that there may have existed even one juror with a doubt
    about Montgomery’s guilt or the nature of his participation in the crime leads us to question
    the reliability of the verdict as to the sentence and to conclude that the police report was
    material to the sentence imposed.
    Our dissenting colleague argues in her footnote 1 that the withheld police report is
    irrelevant and “unacceptable as a mitigating factor” at the capital sentencing or mitigation
    phase of the trial because she characterizes it merely as the kind of “residual doubt” evidence
    that may not be considered on the issue of death by the jury under Ohio law. The dissent’s
    proposed procedural rule forbidding the jury’s consideration of the police report in assessing
    evidence at the sentencing phase of the case excludes crucial evidence from the jury’s
    consideration of death. It violates both state and federal law for at least three reasons.
    1. The dissent does not recognize that her “residual” doubt argument necessarily
    presupposes that the exculpatory evidence concerning the nature of the crime was offered
    in evidence in the first place and assessed by the jury at the guilt phase of the trial. She does
    not notice that the Ohio statute, Ohio Rev. Code § 2929.04(B), expressly requires at
    sentencing that the
    trial jury . . . shall consider, and weigh . . . the nature and circumstances of
    the offense, the history, character and background of the offender, and all the
    following factors:
    ....
    (6) If the offender was a participant in the offense but not the principal
    offender, the degree of the offender’s participation in the offense and the
    degree of the offender’s participation in the acts that led to the death of the
    victim;
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                               Page 13
    (7) Any other factors that are relevant to the issue of whether the offender
    should be sentenced to death.
    (C) The defendant shall be given great latitude in the presentation of
    evidence of the factors listed in division (B) of this section and of any other
    factors in mitigation of the imposition of the sentence of death.
    In the instant case we are dealing with “original,” not “residual,” concealment of evidence
    at both stages of the trial. It was impossible for the jury to consider the exculpatory evidence
    at any phase of the case — guilt or mitigation — when the State had completely concealed
    the statutorily allowed evidence concerning the “circumstances of the offense,” and “the
    degree of the defendant’s participation in the offense.”
    2. Eighth Amendment law is not unclear or “up-in-the-air” on this subject. Eddings
    v. Oklahoma says that states must allow “any relevant mitigating evidence.” 
    455 U.S. 104
    ,
    113-14 (1982). Franklin v. Lynaugh, 
    487 U.S. 164
    (1988), cited by the dissent, supports this
    rule. It merely holds that a state court did not have to give a so-called “residual doubt”
    instruction to the jury. 
    Id. at 174.
    There was no Brady exculpatory evidence involved in the
    Lynaugh case. No evidence was concealed. The Supreme Court there makes it clear that
    “the [state] trial court placed no limitation whatsoever on petitioner’s opportunity to press
    the ‘residual doubts’ question with the sentencing jury.” 
    Id. “Consequently, it
    is difficult
    to see how the rejection of these instructions denied petitioner the benefit of any ‘residual
    doubts’ about his guilt.” 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court repeats and again makes it clear that the
    mitigating evidence rule is mandatory:
    Our edict [is] that, in a capital case, “‘the sentencer . . . [may] not be
    precluded from considering, as a mitigating factor, any aspect of a
    defendant’s character or record and any of the circumstances of the
    offense.’” Eddings v. Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 110 (1982) (quoting 
    Lockett, 438 U.S. at 604
    ) . . . .
    
    Franklin, 487 U.S. at 174
    (second emphasis added).
    3. Even if the question for the jury at sentencing could somehow be classified as an
    issue of “residual doubt,” the materiality inquiry in this Brady claim is necessarily backward
    looking. We must determine whether 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), and whether the withheld
    evidence “could reasonably be taken to put the whole case in such a different light as to
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                              Page 14
    undermine confidence in the [death] verdict,” Kyles v. Whitley, 
    514 U.S. 419
    , 435 (1995).
    As our dissenting colleague acknowledges, Montgomery was entitled to rely upon such
    evidence as a mitigating factor at the time of his conviction and sentence in 1986. See State
    v. Watson, 
    61 Ohio St. 3d 1
    , 17 (1991) (“Residual doubt of a capital defendant’s guilt may
    properly be considered in mitigation”). In fact, at that time, the Supreme Court recognized
    the residual doubt strategy as an “extremely effective argument for defendants in capital
    cases.” Lockhart v. McCree, 
    476 U.S. 162
    , 181 (1986). Thus, whatever language the dissent
    may use to characterize or denigrate the concealed report, the failure of the state to turn it
    over violated federal law at the time and is inconsistent with the present state statute quoted
    above, § 2929.04(B), enforcing the admissibility at sentencing of evidence concerning “the
    nature and circumstances of the offense” and “the degree of the offender’s participation.”
    *   *    *
    At oral argument, the State took the position that police and prosecutors must
    determine what is “material” for the purposes of Brady disclosures and, moreover, that this
    decision is immune from hindsight review by the courts. At oral argument, the following
    exchange took place:
    Court: I think [the State’s] position is that it’s up to the prosecutor and the
    police to decide whether such evidence as this [the withheld police report]
    is true or not true. And depending on whether the prosecutor decides that
    the [evidence] is true or not true turns the Brady materiality.
    State: Your Honor, that’s what I’m saying. That’s the position.
    Oral Argument, June 17, 2009. The State offers no support for this proposition and betrays
    a fundamental misunderstanding by the Attorney General of the law the State must follow.
    Under Brady, it is incumbent upon the State to turn over all favorable exculpatory evidence.
    It is not the sole arbiter of what must be turned over. See 
    Kyles, 514 U.S. at 39-40
    .
    As a secondary argument, the State contends that the police report was immaterial
    because it would not have led to the discovery of exculpatory evidence. For support, it relies
    on the three retraction affidavits filed 23 years later. The affidavits do not undermine the
    Brady claim until they become admissible and eligible for consideration.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                   Montgomery v. Bagley                              Page 15
    IV. Denial of the Rule 59(e) Motion to Alter or Amend
    The State appeals the District Court’s denial of its Rule 59(e) motion based on the
    three late-filed affidavits. Rule 59(e) permits the amendment, alteration, or vacation of a
    judgment after its entry. See 11 C. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane, Federal Practice and
    Procedure § 2810.1 (3d ed.1998). It is an “extraordinary remedy” and is therefore “used
    sparingly.” 
    Id. Rule 59(e)
    motions may be granted upon a showing of “newly discovered
    or previously unavailable evidence.” 
    Id. “To constitute
    ‘newly discovered evidence,’ the
    evidence must have been previously unavailable.”             Gencorp, Inc. v. Amer. Int’l
    Underwriters, 
    178 F.3d 804
    , 834 (6th Cir. 1999). This requires a showing that the evidence
    could not have been discovered previously with due diligence. See 11 C. Wright, A. Miller,
    & M. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2808 (3d ed.1998) (“The moving party must
    have been excusably ignorant of the facts despite using due diligence to learn about them.”);
    see also Bogart v. Chapell, 
    396 F.3d 548
    , 558 (4th Cir. 2005) (upholding the denial of a Rule
    59(e) motion where “the movant presented no legitimate justification for failing to timely
    submit the evidence and had advance notice of the . . . issues.”); Infusion Res., Inc. v.
    Minimed, Inc., 
    351 F.3d 688
    , 696-97 (5th Cir. 2003) (“[A] 59(e) motion to reconsider should
    not be granted unless . . . the facts alleged . . . could not have been discovered earlier by
    proper diligence.”); Committee for First Amendment v. Campbell, 
    962 F.2d 1517
    , 1523 (10th
    Cir. 1992) (“[T]he movant must show either that the evidence is newly discovered [and] if
    the evidence was available at the time of the decision being challenged, that counsel made
    a diligent yet unsuccessful effort to discover the evidence.”); Chery v. Bowman, 
    901 F.2d 1053
    , 1057 n.6 (11th Cir. 1990) (same).
    The District Court denied the State’s Rule 59(e) motion based on a finding that the
    affidavits did not qualify as “newly discovered evidence.” It explained:
    [The State] clearly cannot establish that [it] exercised due diligence in
    procuring this evidence . . . . As is apparent by the addresses listed on their
    affidavits, [the three affiants] still reside in the Toledo, Ohio area. [The
    State] has not shown any reason why these witnesses could not have been
    contacted prior to the court’s issuance of the March 31, 2007 Memorandum
    of Opinion [granting Montgomery’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus].
    We review the District Court’s denial of the Rule 59(e) motion for abuse of
    discretion, Betts v. Costco Wholesale Corp., 
    558 F.3d 461
    , 467 (6th Cir. 2009), and find no
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                       Montgomery v. Bagley                                     Page 16
    such error in this case. The District Court correctly noted that each of the affiants still lived
    in the Toledo, Ohio, area. What is more, the police report itself listed the name, address, and
    telephone number of David Ingram, the principal affiant who called in the report in 1986.
    Although this contact information may be outdated, it could have been used to locate Ingram
    and, through him, the two others who now claim that their 1986 sighting was in error. This
    fact, coupled with the State’s complete inaction (despite notice of Montgomery’s Brady
    challenge), is fatal. Without having made any effort to determine the veracity (or not) of the
    police report, the State cannot now argue that the information in the affidavits could not have
    been discovered with due diligence before the writ was issued.
    Where previously withheld evidence surfaces after the criminal trial has ended, it is
    the habeas court’s duty to examine the evidence carefully to determine whether it is
    “material” under Brady. To the extent that the State wishes to substantiate its claim that the
    evidence is not material, this is the time to do so. It is obviously wrong for the State to
    argue, as it does here, that it can first wait to see if a court hands down an unfavorable
    1
    opinion, and only then begin to look into the issue.
    The affidavits upon which the State asked the District Court to revisit its
    judgment on the Brady issue were readily discoverable at the time of trial, at the time the
    habeas petition was filed and long before the writ was issued. That the State did not
    “anticipate that the writ was going to be granted on that particular” claim, and therefore
    did not investigate it, is not a valid justification for the delay. Just as successive habeas
    petitions based on new evidence are dismissed where the evidence “could . . . have been
    discovered previously through the exercise of due diligence,” 28 U.S.C.
    § 2244(b)(2)(B)(I), the State, under Rule 59(e), is procedurally barred from challenging
    1
    The following exchange took place at oral argument:
    Court: So [the State] can wait until the ruling is in the federal District Court ten years
    later, and then come forward with whatever evidence [it needs to rebut the claim of a
    Brady violation]. Because now that’s the claim that’s attracted the District Court’s
    attention. . . . You can come forward with the out-of-court evidence – never heard of
    before – that should have been developed at the time of trial . . . and then litigate that
    issue after the writ of habeas corpus has been issued? What kind of judicial system
    would we have if that were the rule?
    The State: That’s habeas corpus, your Honor.
    Oral Argument, June 17, 2009.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                  Montgomery v. Bagley                             Page 17
    the grant of a habeas petition based on facts reasonably discoverable long before the writ
    was issued.
    At this point in the proceeding, as the District Court explained, the only proper
    venue in which the State may introduce the evidence in the affidavits is in state court on
    retrial. As the Supreme Court has recently reemphasized, the purpose of Brady is to
    require disclosure of “material exculpatory evidence to the defendant before trial.” Dist.
    Attorney’s Office for Third Jud. Dist. v. Osborne, 
    129 S. Ct. 2308
    , 2319 (2009)
    (emphasis added). The timing of the application of the Brady rule is designed so that
    any ultimate exculpatory issues can be addressed by the fact-finders at the time of trial,
    as contemplated by the Sixth Amendment. Our Constitution retains the Writ of Habeas
    Corpus in Article I § 9, but it is not its function to require the federal habeas court to
    conduct a later trial on the merits of a constitutionally defective state murder case. Our
    function is to review for significant constitutional errors and leave it for the state courts
    to retry the case when such errors are found.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the District Court’s issuance of the writ
    based on the Brady violation and its denial of the Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend.
    We pretermit the remaining issues raised in Montgomery’s cross-appeal.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                  Montgomery v. Bagley                            Page 18
    _________________
    DISSENT
    _________________
    JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Because the withheld
    police report is not material, I respectfully dissent.
    In order to establish a violation of Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963),
    Montgomery must show that the following three requirements are met: “The evidence
    at issue must be favorable to the accused, either because it is exculpatory, or because it
    is impeaching; that evidence must have been suppressed by the State, either willfully or
    inadvertently; and prejudice must have ensued.” Strickler v. Greene, 
    527 U.S. 263
    ,
    281–82 (1999). In terms of the first requirement, the pretrial police report—which
    indicated that several witnesses had seen one of Montgomery’s alleged victims alive four
    days after the State argued that he killed her—is favorable to Montgomery because it
    casts doubt on the State’s theory of the case. As for the second requirement, it is
    undisputed that this pretrial police report was suppressed by the State. Indeed,
    Montgomery was not aware of it until six years after his trial, when it was disclosed
    pursuant to a formal request for police records. In terms of the third requirement for a
    Brady violation, however, the parties dispute whether Montgomery “has established the
    prejudice necessary to satisfy the ‘materiality’ inquiry.” 
    Id. at 282.
    In order to establish
    prejudice, “the nondisclosure [must be] so serious that there is a reasonable probability
    that the suppressed evidence would have produced a different verdict.” 
    Id. at 281.
    “A
    reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
    outcome.’” Wilson v. Parker, 
    515 F.3d 682
    , 701–02 (2008) (quoting United States v.
    Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682 (1985)). I would find that Montgomery has not satisfied this
    third requirement.
    Montgomery argues that disclosure of this pretrial police report undermines
    confidence in his conviction. The evidence at trial, however, overwhelmingly implicated
    Montgomery as the triggerman in the deaths of Ogle and Tincher. First, both victims
    were shot with a .380 pistol that Montgomery bought approximately two weeks before
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                 Montgomery v. Bagley                            Page 19
    their deaths. Second, Montgomery’s uncle saw Montgomery drunk and in possession
    of the murder weapon only a few hours before Tincher was found shot dead
    approximately one-half of a mile from Montgomery’s home on March 8. Third,
    Montgomery admitted to being at Ogle and Tincher’s apartment on March 8, and it is
    undisputed that Ogle was reported missing sometime shortly after Montgomery’s
    acknowledged visit. Fourth, Montgomery was wearing a dark blue pin-striped suit
    during the night in question, and a few hours after Tincher was found dead and Ogle
    disappeared, Montgomery took a dark blue pin-striped suit to the dry cleaners that was
    soaking wet and that made a “brownish dripping mess on the floor” as it dried. Fifth,
    Heard testified that he was with Montgomery and witnessed Montgomery shoot Ogle.
    Finally, Montgomery showed police officers where Ogle’s body was on March 12.
    Given this overwhelming evidence that Montgomery shot Tincher and Ogle, the
    question is whether the Ohio Court of Appeals unreasonably applied Brady in its
    determination that the withheld police report is not material. The Ohio court found that
    the vague police report does not undermine confidence in Montgomery’s conviction.
    The police report stated that in the early morning of March 12, David Ingram “and
    several friends . . . saw a Blue Ford Escort with Debbie Ogle driving around . . . . Later
    they again saw her as a passenger in same auto. Debbie Ogle waved to them as they
    knew her from Rogers High School. She was with white male with long sideburns. She
    did not appear distressed.” Viewed alone, this police report could cast doubt on the
    State’s theory that Montgomery killed Ogle on March 8. However, when viewed in the
    context of the overwhelming evidence supporting the State’s theory that Montgomery
    did kill Ogle, the Ohio court was clearly not unreasonable in its determination that the
    report’s disclosure does not undermine confidence in the verdict.            It is worth
    emphasizing that Montgomery led police to Ogle’s body the same day of this alleged
    sighting. At noon on March 12, Montgomery voluntarily sought out the police and
    admitted to them that both Tincher and Ogle had been killed with his gun, though he
    stated that Heard had shot them. In other words, mere hours after the alleged sighting
    of Ogle, Montgomery had already confessed to the police that he had been involved in
    their murders and that they had been killed with his gun. In light of this overwhelming
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                        Montgomery v. Bagley                                       Page 20
    evidence of Montgomery’s guilt, I would find that the withheld police report is not
    material.
    “[S]aying that a particular nondisclosure was not a Brady violation in no way
    suggests that the prosecutor did not have a duty to disclose the information.” Bell v.
    Bell, 
    512 F.3d 223
    , 235 n.7 (6th Cir. 2007). However, in this case, I would find that
    failing to disclose the police report does not amount to constitutional error because
    Montgomery has not shown that the evidence would have created a reasonable
    probability of a different result at either the guilt phase of trial or at sentencing.1 
    Id. at 236.
    I would thus reverse the district court’s writ of habeas corpus on this ground.
    I also would deny habeas relief on Montgomery’s additional two claims.
    Although the majority opinion does not address Montgomery’s remaining claims, he also
    appealed the denial of relief on the following two grounds: (1) whether the trial court
    should have disqualified a juror who advised the court that she had been a psychiatric
    patient and that she had seen the defense psychiatrist in a dream twenty years earlier in
    which he appeared as the devil; and (2) whether the court should have ordered a change
    of venue on account of pretrial publicity. I agree with the district court’s reasoning and
    would deny Montgomery’s petition as to these two claims as well.
    1
    The majority opinion finds fault with focusing only on the guilt phase of trial in assessing the
    probability of a different result, overlooking the fact that the suppressed police report is irrelevant to any
    sentencing issue. The majority’s view necessarily is that a juror might have been persuaded by residual
    doubt—lingering doubts from the guilt phase of trial that, in theory, could affect a juror’s decision at
    sentencing. At the time of Montgomery’s conviction and sentencing, defendants were entitled to rely on
    residual doubt as a mitigating factor. See State v. Watson, 
    572 N.E.2d 97
    , 111 (Ohio 1991). But, in
    recognition of the illogic of its use, residual doubt has been deemed unacceptable as a mitigating factor
    under Ohio law, see State v. McGuire, 
    686 N.E.2d 1112
    , 1122–23 (Ohio 1997), a rule that has been applied
    retroactively, see State v. Bey, 
    709 N.E.2d 484
    , 503 (Ohio 1999), and is not constitutionally required
    because it is not relevant to sentencing considerations, namely the defendant’s character or record, or any
    circumstances of the offense, see Franklin v. Lynaugh, 
    487 U.S. 164
    , 174 (1988). The lack of relevance
    of the suppressed evidence to any sentencing issue highlights the implausibility of speculating that the
    suppressed evidence could have affected the sentence. In any event, the Ohio Court of Appeals did not
    unreasonably apply Brady because Montgomery has not shown a reasonable probability that the
    suppressed evidence would have produced a different outcome at either the guilt or sentencing phase.
    In response to this observation about the police report’s lack of impact on sentencing, the majority
    says that the dissent has created a procedural rule that would bar consideration of the police report in
    violation of state and federal law. The point I make has nothing to do with admissibility of the report or
    any evidentiary rule. My point is simply that if the police report had been admitted and considered, the
    likelihood that it would have affected sentencing is even less than the likelihood that its consideration
    would have affected the jury’s verdict of guilt.
    Nos. 07-3882/3893                 Montgomery v. Bagley                             Page 21
    First, Montgomery claims that a juror’s note to the court disclosing her previous
    psychiatric treatment and describing her dream about the defense psychiatrist
    demonstrates that she was biased, irrational, and incompetent. After receiving this note
    from the juror, the trial judge questioned the juror about her impartiality and
    competence. The trial judge retained the juror only after she reassured him that she
    could set aside her dream and determine the case solely based on the evidence at trial.
    I would find that the trial judge acted appropriately and that Montgomery has failed to
    offer clear and convincing evidence that the juror could not or did not remain impartial.
    See Williams v. Bagley, 
    380 F.3d 932
    , 944 (6th Cir. 2004) (noting that a trial court’s
    finding of impartiality is entitled to the presumption of correctness, as required by 28
    U.S.C. 2254(e)).
    As for the second claim, while this case did involve pretrial publicity, the
    relevant question in a challenge to the trial court’s decision not to change venue is
    whether the jurors “could not judge impartially the guilt of the defendant.” Patton v.
    Yount, 
    467 U.S. 1025
    , 1035 (1984). The Supreme Court has stated that a “trial court’s
    findings of juror impartiality may be overturned only for manifest error.” Mu’Min v.
    Virginia, 
    500 U.S. 415
    , 428 (1991) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).
    Montgomery has not demonstrated that there was a “pattern of deep and bitter prejudice
    shown to be present throughout the community,” Irvin v. Dowd, 
    366 U.S. 717
    , 727
    (1961) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted), such that the trial court’s findings
    of impartiality were manifest error.
    Because I would deny Montgomery’s petition for habeas corpus on all three of
    these grounds, I dissent.