Constantino Carrera v. Robert Ayers, Jr. , 699 F.3d 1104 ( 2012 )


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  •                    FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CONSTANTINO CARRERA ,                  No. 08-99007
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    D.C. No.
    v.                   1:90-CV-00478-AWI
    ROBERT L. AYERS, JR.,                   OPINION
    Warden of the California
    State Prison at San Quentin,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of California
    Anthony W. Ishii, Chief District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted En Banc
    June 20, 2012—Pasadena, California
    Filed November 6, 2012
    Before: Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge, Harry Pregerson,
    William A. Fletcher, Raymond C. Fisher,
    Marsha S. Berzon, Richard C. Tallman, Richard R. Clifton,
    Susan S. Ikuta, N. Randy Smith, Mary H. Murguia, and
    Morgan Christen, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge William A. Fletcher;
    Dissent by Judge Pregerson
    2                      CARRERA V . AYERS
    SUMMARY*
    Habeas Corpus/Death Penalty
    The en banc court affirmed the district court’s denial of a
    28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas corpus petition in a pre-AEDPA
    case, raising a challenge under Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    (1986), for lack of prejudice. The panel held that Carrera
    could not establish prejudice at trial because he could not
    make a strong likelihood that prospective Hispanic jurors
    were challenged because of any specific bias. See People v.
    Wheeler, 
    583 P.2d 748
    (Cal. 1978). The panel also held that
    Carrera could not establish prejudice by showing that a
    Wheeler objection would have succeeded on direct appeal,
    based on the law as it existed when his conviction became
    final on direct appeal. The panel explained that, despite
    significant changes in the law while Carrera’s case was
    pending on appeal, the California Supreme Court would have
    applied the Wheeler standard instead of the Batson standard.
    Judge Pregerson dissented. He disagreed with the
    majority which, although it did not dispute that Carrera’s
    attorney erred, found that the ineffective assistance claim
    would not have had a “reasonable probability” of succeeding.
    Under his view, the majority reached its conclusion by
    misreading the record and the law. Judge Pregerson would
    hold that Carrera did not receive a fair trial because the
    prosecutor purposefully excluded Hispanic jurors and
    Carrera’s attorney did nothing to challenge him.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       3
    COUNSEL
    Stephen B. Bedrick, Oakland, CA for the Petitioner-
    Appellant.
    Clifford Edward Zall, Office of the California Attorney
    General, Sacramento, CA for the Respondent-Appellee.
    OPINION
    W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
    Petitioner-Appellant Constantino Carrera was found guilty
    in 1983 of first-degree murder of two people during a robbery.
    Carrera is Hispanic. The victims were white. During voir
    dire, the prosecutor peremptorily challenged 75 percent of the
    Hispanic-surnamed venirepersons.           By contrast, he
    peremptorily challenged only 26 percent of the white, non-
    Hispanic-surnamed venirepersons. At the time of Carrera’s
    trial, People v. Wheeler, 
    22 Cal. 3d 258
    (Cal. 1978), which
    held the use of peremptory challenges to strike venirepersons
    based solely on race to be a violation of the California
    Constitution, had been the law in California for five years.
    Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    (1986), had not yet been
    decided. Carrera’s counsel did not object under Wheeler to
    the prosecutor’s peremptory challenges.
    Carrera contends on habeas that his counsel’s failure to
    make a Wheeler objection was ineffective assistance of
    counsel under Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    (1984).
    4                      CARRERA V . AYERS
    We affirm the district court’s denial of relief, holding that
    Carrera has not satisfied the prejudice prong of Strickland.1
    I. Background
    Carrera and another person were convicted in separate
    trials in Kern County Superior Court in California for killing
    a white couple during a robbery. See Carrera v. Ayers, No.
    1:90-CV-00478-AWI, 
    2008 WL 681842
    , at *1 (E.D. Cal.
    Mar. 11, 2008). The other person, then seventeen years old,
    was statutorily ineligible for the death penalty and was
    sentenced to fifty years to life. 
    Id. at *2 n.3.
    Carrera, twenty
    years old at the time of the crime, was convicted of first-
    degree murder with special circumstances and was sentenced
    to death.
    The California Supreme Court affirmed Carrera’s
    conviction and death sentence on direct appeal. People v.
    Carrera, 
    49 Cal. 3d 291
    (1989). The court held that there had
    been multiple errors at trial, including an instructional error
    relating to Carrera’s intent to kill, but that the errors were all
    harmless. See 
    id. at 309–11. Carrera
    filed his federal habeas
    petition in 1990, before the effective date of the Anti-
    Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”). See
    Robinson v. Schriro, 
    595 F.3d 1086
    , 1099 (9th Cir. 2010).
    The federal district court set aside Carrera’s death
    sentence. The court found repeated instances of prosecutorial
    misconduct during trial: The prosecutor failed to correct
    1
    W e address in this opinion only Carrera’s Wheeler-based Strickland
    claim. W e address his other claims in an unpublished memorandum filed
    simultaneously with this opinion.
    CARRERA V . AYERS                         5
    testimony he knew was perjurious; he concealed inducements
    to two testifying jailhouse snitches; and he presented flatly
    inconsistent factual narratives at the separate trials of Carrera
    and his co-perpetrator. The court concluded that an intent-to-
    kill instructional error was not harmless because its
    application was tainted by prosecutorial misconduct.
    The district court subsequently denied Carrera’s guilt-
    phase claims. One of those was a claim that his trial counsel
    had provided ineffective assistance in failing to make a
    Wheeler objection. Carrera appealed.
    II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    We have appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291
    and 2253. “We review the district court’s denial of
    [Carrera’s] habeas petition de novo, and the district court’s
    findings of fact for clear error.” 
    Robinson, 595 F.3d at 1099
    .
    Because Carrera filed his federal habeas petition before the
    effective date of the AEDPA, we consider it under the pre-
    AEDPA standard of review. 
    Id. Ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims present mixed questions of law and fact. 
    Id. “Under pre-AEDPA law,
    we owe no deference to the state
    court’s resolution of questions of law or mixed questions of
    law and fact.” 
    Id. “We review the
    district court’s findings of
    fact for clear error.” 
    Id. III. Discussion A.
    Voir Dire
    Prior to voir dire, when the racial and ethnic composition
    of the venire panel was still unknown, Carrera’s counsel
    6                    CARRERA V . AYERS
    moved to quash the venire on the ground that there were
    insufficient procedures in place to ensure a panel that
    reflected the ethnic and racial diversity of Kern County. See
    People v. Buford, 
    182 Cal. Rptr. 904
    , 905 (Cal. Ct. App.
    1982) (addressing a jury challenge “on the ground that blacks
    were underrepresented on that jury and on other juries in [the]
    County as a result of systematic exclusion in the jury-
    selection process” (footnote omitted)). When the venire panel
    was chosen, it turned out that between eleven and fourteen
    members of the panel had Hispanic surnames, and at least
    four members were black. Carrera’s counsel withdrew her
    motion to quash.
    During voir dire, the prosecutor and Carrera’s defense
    counsel both asked questions directed to ethnicity. The
    prosecutor asked Hispanic-surnamed venirepersons if the fact
    that the defendant was of “Spanish descent” would affect their
    decision-making. Carrera’s counsel also asked questions
    directed to ethnicity. For example, she asked venireperson
    Martinez:
    If you were chosen as a juror in this case and you were
    the only one that had a Spanish surname sitting on the
    panel, would you feel that you would be under an
    undue hardship, so to speak, for want of a better word,
    feeling you would have to vote just as everyone else
    did simply because they might claim because you
    have got a Spanish surname maybe you were being
    more lenient or that sort of thing?
    The prosecutor exercised peremptory challenges to 75
    percent of the venirepersons with Hispanic surnames. Of
    eight prospective jurors with Hispanic surnames, the State
    CARRERA V . AYERS                         7
    exercised peremptory challenges to six; the other two were
    seated on the jury. An additional person with a Hispanic
    surname was seated as an alternate. By contrast, the
    prosecutor exercised peremptory challenges against 26
    percent (eleven of forty-one) white, non-Hispanic-surnamed
    prospective jurors. Five years earlier, the California Supreme
    Court had held that “the use of peremptory challenges to
    remove prospective jurors on the sole ground of group bias
    violates the right to trial by a jury drawn from a representative
    cross-section of the community under article I, section 16, of
    the California Constitution.” 
    Wheeler, 22 Cal. 3d at 276–77
    .
    Carrera’s counsel made no objection under Wheeler to the
    prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to Hispanic-
    surnamed venirepersons.
    B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim
    Carrera contends that his trial counsel’s failure to make a
    Wheeler objection was ineffective assistance of counsel in
    violation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel. To
    establish ineffective assistance of counsel under Strickland,
    a defendant must show both deficient performance and
    prejudice. Because we conclude that Carrera has not carried
    his burden of proof to show prejudice, we need not decide
    whether he has shown deficient performance.
    “[A]ny deficiencies in counsel’s performance must be
    prejudicial to the defense in order to constitute ineffective
    assistance under the Constitution.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 692
    . “The defendant must show that there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the
    result of the proceeding would have been different. A
    reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
    8                    CARRERA V . AYERS
    confidence in the outcome.” 
    Id. at 694 (emphasis
    added).
    The petitioner has “the burden of showing that the decision
    reached would reasonably likely have been different absent
    the errors.” 
    Id. at 696. The
    first step in a Wheeler objection was to show a prima
    facie case of unlawful discrimination. “If a party believes his
    opponent is using his peremptory challenges to strike jurors
    on the ground of group bias alone, he must raise the point in
    timely fashion and make a prima facie case of such
    discrimination to the satisfaction of the court.” 
    Wheeler, 22 Cal. 3d at 280
    . A prima facie case under Wheeler had
    three elements:
    First . . . [the party] should make as complete a record
    of the circumstances as is feasible. Second, he must
    establish that the persons excluded are members of a
    cognizable group within the meaning of the
    representative cross-section rule. Third, from all the
    circumstances of the case he must show a strong
    likelihood that such persons are being challenged
    because of their group association rather than because
    of any specific bias.
    
    Id. (emphasis added) (footnote
    omitted). “If the court finds
    that a prima facie case has been made, the burden shifts to the
    other party to show if he can that the peremptory challenges
    in question were not predicated on group bias alone.” 
    Id. at 281 (footnote
    omitted).
    Because we are evaluating the likelihood of success of
    Carrera’s hypothetical Wheeler objection in the context of an
    ineffective assistance claim, he has the burden to show under
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       9
    Strickland a reasonable probability he would have prevailed
    on a Wheeler claim. For the reasons that follow, we conclude
    that he has not carried his burden under Strickland.
    1. Prejudice at Trial
    The record shows that the prosecutor exercised
    peremptory strikes against six venirepersons with Hispanic
    surnames. Carrera concedes that one of the six — his
    counsel’s mail carrier — was properly struck. The record
    suggests obvious non-discriminatory reasons for four of the
    five remaining strikes. One prospective juror, Petra Celedon,
    appeared bitter about being called to jury service. A second
    prospective juror, Alice Hernandez, worked at the juvenile
    detention facility where Carrera’s co-defendant was held. A
    third prospective juror, Maria Carrillo, had a son who had a
    criminal record. A fourth prospective juror, Mary Garcia, told
    the court at the beginning of her voir dire that she could not
    impose the death penalty, though she later said that she could
    do so.
    Only one of the prosecutor’s peremptory challenges was
    problematic.       Prospective juror Lawrence Martinez
    unequivocally expressed his ability to impose the death
    penalty if, in his judgment, the circumstances warranted it.
    When asked if he had “family . . . involved in any type of
    charges or a trial,” Martinez responded that a friend had had
    a drunk driving charge but mentioned no family members.
    He had no connection to the victims, defendants, or witnesses.
    The record reveals no obvious non-discriminatory reason
    to challenge Martinez. But Wheeler required a stronger
    showing to establish a prima facie case. Not only were five
    10                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    of the six challenges to Hispanic-surnamed venirepersons
    relatively unproblematic; further, two Hispanic-surnamed
    persons were seated on the jury, and one Hispanic-surnamed
    person was seated as an alternate. Two California Court of
    Appeal cases, decided shortly after Carrera’s trial, highlight
    how difficult it would have been for Carrera to establish a
    prima facie case in these circumstances.
    In People v. Boyd, 
    212 Cal. Rptr. 873
    , 880–82 (Cal. Ct.
    App. 1985), a Court of Appeal held that, despite the
    prosecutor’s peremptory challenges to three black
    venirepersons, no prima facie case had been established under
    Wheeler because two black jurors were seated on the jury. In
    People v. Davis, 
    234 Cal. Rptr. 859
    , 866 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987),
    the prosecutor peremptorily challenged six black
    venirepersons, but allowed three black jurors to be seated.
    The court wrote:
    [T]he presence of two and then three members of the
    cognizable group in the jury box at all times afforded
    the defendant a representative cross-section of the
    community and afforded equal protection to all, the
    defendant, the prospective jurors excused and the
    community at large. There was no prima facie case of
    exclusion for group bias demonstrated at any time.
    
    Id. at 869. The
    California Supreme Court overruled Boyd and
    Davis, but not until four years after Carrera’s trial. See
    People v. Snow, 
    44 Cal. 3d 216
    , 225–26 (1987).
    CARRERA V . AYERS                        11
    2. Prejudice on Appeal
    Carrera can also demonstrate prejudice by showing that a
    Wheeler objection would have succeeded on direct appeal.
    His counsel’s failure to make a Wheeler objection at trial was
    a procedural default under state law that prevented him from
    making a Wheeler challenge on appeal. See Carrera, 
    49 Cal. 3d
    at 331 n.29 (Cal. 1989) (noting “[t]he requirement that a
    contemporaneous motion be made to object to a prosecutor’s
    use of peremptory challenges to exclude prospective jurors of
    one racial group”); 
    Wheeler, 22 Cal. 3d at 284
    n.32
    (“[P]eremptories [were] not ‘open to examination’ unless and
    until on a timely motion the trial court is satisfied there is a
    prima facie showing that jurors are being challenged on the
    sole ground of group bias.”).
    If Carrera’s counsel had made a Wheeler objection at trial,
    that objection would have been preserved for appellate
    review. In some circumstances, the failure to make an
    objection results in an undeveloped record, such that it is
    difficult or impossible to know what rulings would have
    resulted on appeal had a proper record been developed. Here,
    however, there is no such difficulty, for the record at trial was
    sufficiently developed to permit a meaningful evaluation of a
    prima facie case under Wheeler.
    We must determine whether Carrera was prejudiced on
    appeal based on the law as it existed when his conviction
    became final on direct appeal. His conviction became final
    on April 23, 1990, when the United States Supreme Court
    denied certiorari. See Carrera v. California, 
    495 U.S. 911
    (1990).
    12                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    While Carrera’s case was pending on appeal, there were
    two significant changes in the law. First, in 1987 the
    California Supreme Court overruled Boyd and Davis. The
    court held in Snow that the presence of group members on a
    jury does not, by itself, prevent a defendant from making a
    prima facie case under Wheeler. It wrote, “[W]e disapprove
    language in People v. Davis suggesting that the presence of
    two or three Blacks in the jury box following voir dire
    precludes the trial court from finding a prima facie case of
    exclusion.” 
    Snow, 44 Cal. 3d at 225–26
    (citation omitted).
    After Snow, California courts were required to review all the
    circumstances surrounding voir dire to determine whether an
    objecting party had established a prima facie case of
    discrimination under Wheeler.
    In People v. Allen, 
    260 Cal. Rptr. 463
    , 469 (Cal. Ct. App.
    1989), a Court of Appeal noted that “the exclusion of
    disproportionate numbers of minority jurors per se” does not
    automatically establish a prima facie case of discrimination
    under Wheeler. “[T]he law is clear that a prima facie case of
    group bias requiring prosecutorial explanation arises only if
    from all the circumstances of the case the trial court finds a
    strong likelihood that the persons were being challenged
    because of their group association rather than specific bias.”
    
    Id. (emphasis in original).
    Relevant circumstances included
    the extent the prosecutor questioned the jurors struck on
    peremptory challenges. People v. Trevino, 
    39 Cal. 3d 667
    ,
    688 (1985) (“The district attorney exercised peremptory
    challenges to remove six Hispanics from the jury after asking
    them few if any questions on voir dire.”), disapproved on
    other grounds by People v. Johnson, 
    47 Cal. 3d 1194
    ,
    1219–20 (1989); People v. Allen, 
    23 Cal. 3d 286
    , 294 (1979)
    (noting as one of four factors of defendant’s prima facie case
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       13
    “that the district attorney had excluded many black persons
    after engaging in no more than desultory voir dire” (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted)); People v. Moss,
    
    233 Cal. Rptr. 153
    , 157–58 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986) (“Although
    the prosecutor questioned [one of the two black jurors]
    extensively on voir dire . . . , he asked no questions at all of
    [the other black juror].”). Other relevant circumstances
    included the common characteristics other than race among
    the venirepersons, see People v. Turner, 
    42 Cal. 3d 711
    , 719
    (1986); 
    Trevino, 39 Cal. 3d at 688
    ; 
    Allen, 23 Cal. 3d at 34–35
    ; 
    Moss, 233 Cal. Rptr. at 157–58
    , as well as indications
    of specific bias apparent in the record, see, e.g., 
    Turner, 42 Cal. 3d at 719–20
    ; 
    Allen, 152 Cal. Rptr. at 468–69
    .
    Second, in 1986 the United States Supreme Court held in
    Batson v. Kentucky that racially discriminatory peremptory
    challenges violate the Equal Protection Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment. Batson applied retroactively to all
    cases then pending on direct review. See Griffith v. Kentucky,
    
    479 U.S. 314
    , 322–23 (1987). A prima facie case under
    Wheeler required the objecting party to “show a strong
    likelihood that such persons are being challenged because of
    their group association rather than because of any specific
    bias.” 
    Wheeler, 22 Cal. 3d at 280
    (emphasis added). A prima
    facie case under Batson requires only that the objecting party
    show “that the totality of the relevant facts gives rise to an
    inference of discriminatory purpose.” 
    Batson, 476 U.S. at 93–94
    (emphasis added).
    In 2003, the California Supreme Court concluded that the
    Wheeler and Batson standards for making out a prima facie
    case were the same, and that Wheeler’s “strong likelihood of
    discrimination” continued to be the governing standard. See
    14                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    People v. Johnson, 
    30 Cal. 4th 1302
    , 1313–14 (2003). Two
    years later, the United States Supreme Court disagreed with
    the California Supreme Court, holding that the Wheeler and
    Batson standards are different, and that the less demanding
    Batson standard controls. Johnson v. California, 
    545 U.S. 162
    (2005).
    We must evaluate Carrera’s ineffective assistance claim
    under the law the California Supreme Court would have
    applied on direct appeal in 1990. When Carrera’s appeal was
    decided, the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
    Johnson was still fifteen years in the future. We therefore
    apply Wheeler’s “strong likelihood” standard, rather than
    Batson’s “raise an inference” standard, in determining
    whether Carrera would have been able to establish a prima
    facie case in the California Supreme Court on appeal.
    A California appellate court deciding a Wheeler objection
    in 1990 would have examined the record not merely for
    evidence of group bias but also for evidence of specific bias
    against individual venirepersons. See, e.g., 
    Turner, 42 Cal. 3d at 719
    ; 
    Allen, 260 Cal. Rptr. at 468–69
    . Carrera argues that
    the prosecutor’s six peremptory strikes of Hispanic-surnamed
    venirepersons would have been enough to establish a prima
    facie case of specific bias under Wheeler. We have already
    summarized the evidence with respect to those strikes. We
    conclude that the absence of an obvious non-discriminatory
    reason with respect to one prospective juror out of six would
    not have been enough to enable Carrera to establish a prima
    facie case. Not only was the evidence of specific bias against
    venireperson Martinez relatively weak; further two Hispanic-
    surnamed venirepersons were seated on the jury and one was
    seated as an alternate. In Snow, the California Supreme Court
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       15
    had held that the presence of group members on the jury was
    not, by itself, sufficient to defeat a prima facie case of
    discrimination under Wheeler, but their presence continued to
    be relevant to a determination whether, under all the
    circumstances, a prima facie case had been established.
    Carrera argues further that a prima facie case of group
    bias can be shown “because the prosecutor questioned
    minority jurors differently than white jurors . . . .” The
    prosecutor engaged in far more than a “desultory voir dire”
    with the struck jurors. Cf. 
    Allen, 23 Cal. 3d at 294
    . It is true
    that the prosecutor asked Hispanic-surnamed venirepersons
    whether the fact that the defendant was “of Spanish descent”
    would affect their deliberations, and that he did not ask
    potential white jurors similar ethnicity-based questions.
    However, asking questions about potential bias is the purpose
    of voir dire. Indeed, as we noted above, Carrera’s counsel
    also asked ethnicity-based questions of the Hispanic-
    surnamed venirepersons.
    Were we reviewing the prosecutor’s actions in a different
    procedural posture or under current law, we might well reach
    a different conclusion. But evaluating an ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim on the record before us, under
    Wheeler as it was interpreted in 1990, we cannot say Carrera
    has carried his burden of proof to show that he was prejudiced
    by his counsel’s failure to object to the prosecutor’s
    peremptory strikes. Carrera has not shown a “reasonable
    probability” that on direct review, he would have succeeded
    under Wheeler in showing “a strong likelihood” that
    challenges to Hispanic-surnamed venirepersons were made
    “because of their group association.”
    16                       CARRERA V . AYERS
    Conclusion
    Because Carrera is unable to establish that his trial
    counsel’s failure to make a Wheeler motion was prejudicial,
    he has not established an ineffective assistance of counsel
    claim under Strickland. We therefore affirm the district court.
    AFFIRMED.
    PREGERSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    A fair trial requires the selection of a fair jury. That didn’t
    happen in Constantino Carrera’s case because his defense
    counsel was incompetent.
    Michael Vedrasco, the prosecutor in defendant Carrera’s
    case, struck seventy-five percent of potential Hispanic jurors,
    but only twenty-six percent of potential white jurors.
    Carrera’s defense attorney, Donnalee Huffman,1 failed to
    object. The majority concludes that attorney Huffman’s
    failure to object to the prosecutor’s striking of prospective
    Hispanic jurors did not amount to ineffective assistance of
    counsel. I disagree.
    Both the United States Constitution and the California
    Constitution guarantee a defendant in a criminal case a fair
    and impartial jury. U.S. Const. amend. VI; Cal. Const., art. I,
    § 16. In People v. Wheeler, the California Supreme Court
    established that racial bias in jury selection violates this
    constitutional guarantee. People v. Wheeler, 
    583 P.2d 748
    ,
    1
    Huffman used her married name, Mendez, during Carrera’s trial.
    CARRERA V . AYERS                      17
    755 (Cal. 1978). To support a Wheeler motion, the defense
    attorney must “show a strong likelihood” that the prosecutor
    struck prospective jurors because of their “group association.”
    
    Id. at 764. Once
    the defense attorney presents such evidence,
    “the court must determine whether a reasonable inference
    arises that peremptory challenges are being used on the
    ground of group bias alone.” 
    Id. (emphasis added). The
    majority opinion only cites Wheeler’s “strong
    likelihood” standard and ignores its “reasonable inference”
    standard. See Maj. op. at 13. Under California’s evidence
    laws, however, both standards mean a preponderance of the
    evidence. Cal. Evid. Code § 115 (“Except as otherwise
    provided by law, the burden of proof requires proof by a
    preponderance of the evidence.”). While the majority opinion
    distinguishes the Wheeler standard from Batson’s “inference”
    standard, the California courts at the time of Carrera’s 1983
    trial applied Wheeler’s “reasonable inference” standard even
    though the Batson decision was years in the future. See
    People v. Fuller, 
    186 Cal. Rptr. 283
    , 296 (Ct. App. 1982)
    (“[A] fair reading of Wheeler requires only that the court find
    a reasonable inference of group bias once an appropriate
    foundation is laid.”).
    Furthermore, the California Supreme Court would have
    been required to apply the Batson standard to Carrera’s 1989
    appeal. The Supreme Court held in Batson v. Kentucky that
    a defendant creates a prima facie case of unconstitutional jury
    selection by raising an “inference of purposeful
    discrimination.” Batson v. Kentucky, 
    476 U.S. 79
    , 94 (1986).
    Because Carrera’s case was pending on direct review when
    the Supreme Court decided Batson in 1986, Batson governed
    Carrera’s case on appeal to the California Supreme Court.
    18                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    See Griffith v. Kentucky, 
    479 U.S. 314
    , 322–23 (1987). The
    standard for showing a constitutional violation in Carrera’s
    case cannot be stricter than what the Supreme Court mandated
    in Batson v. Kentucky. See Cooper v. Aaron, 
    358 U.S. 1
    , 18
    (1958) (“the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of
    the law of the Constitution”).
    The Sixth Amendment guarantees defendants the effective
    assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 685-86 (1984). If Carrera had received effective
    assistance, there is a “reasonable probability” that he would
    have succeeded in his Wheeler claim. See 
    id. at 694. And
    even if a Wheeler objection failed to persuade the trial judge,
    the objection would have preserved the Wheeler motion so
    that Carrera could have raised it on his direct appeal. Thus,
    defense counsel’s incompetence deprived Carrera of his
    opportunity to raise a Wheeler motion before the state trial
    court and, because this was a death penalty case, on direct
    appeal to the California Supreme Court. See Cal. R. Ct. 8.600
    (“If a judgment imposes a sentence of death, an appeal by the
    defendant is automatically taken to the [California] Supreme
    Court.”).
    As a result of defense counsel’s incompetence and the
    prejudice Carrera suffered, I would grant his request for
    Habeas relief.
    I. Carrera’s Attorney Fell Below an Objective Standard
    of Performance in Failing To Present a Wheeler
    Motion
    There are a number of reasons why defense counsel
    Huffman may have failed to present a Wheeler motion. But
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       19
    none of these reasons was strategic and none was excusable.
    For example, Huffman was defending Carrera against a
    murder charge brought by the District Attorney’s office, while
    also working with that same District Attorney’s office to
    secure the conviction of her husband, who shot her in the arm
    and told her that he “meant to kill” her. Huffman’s divided
    loyalties may have dulled her vigorous representation of
    Carrera.
    Or perhaps Huffman failed to make a Wheeler motion
    because she was simply–and woefully–unprepared. Huffman
    rushed to trial without an investigator because her investigator
    had been her husband–until the time he tried to kill her. She
    had no money to hire a new one because she faced bankruptcy
    and was saddled with more than $100,000 in debt. So, she
    cut corners. Unprepared and distracted, Huffman may not
    have been aware that the prosecutor’s disproportionate strikes
    of Hispanic jurors warranted an objection.
    We will never know why Huffman sat silently at counsel
    table while the prosecutor struck six out of the eight
    prospective Hispanic jurors, despite the fact that Wheeler had
    been on the law books for five years. When asked in a
    declaration prepared for Carrera’s direct appeal why she made
    no Wheeler motion, Huffman said: “I don’t know why at this
    time. No strategic reason.”
    But any competent attorney would have objected to the
    prosecutor’s highly disproportionate peremptory challenges
    of Hispanic jurors. When this case was on appeal to the
    California Supreme Court, a defense attorney, Guyton
    Jinkerson, who in the past had qualified as an expert on
    ineffective assistance said as much in evaluating Huffman’s
    20                  CARRERA V . AYERS
    performance. Jinkerson declared in 1987 that Huffman’s
    performance “fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness under the prevailing professional norms.” He
    added that but for Huffman’s “unprofessional errors, the
    result of the proceeding would have been different.”
    Indeed, I suggest that under the performance prong of
    Strickland v. Washington, Huffman’s failure to raise a
    Wheeler motion clearly “fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness.” 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
    . Her silence
    during these proceedings was not a “strateg[ic] choice . . .
    within the range of professionally reasonable judgments.” 
    Id. at 699. Rather,
    it was ineffective performance. The majority
    does not contest this point. Maj. op. at 7. Instead, the
    majority opinion denies Carrera’s claim based on Strickland’s
    prejudice prong, finding that Carrera’s Wheeler motion would
    not have succeeded, had Huffman raised it.
    II. Carrera Suffered Prejudice as a Result of his
    Attorney’s Failure to Make a Wheeler Motion
    To demonstrate Strickland prejudice, Carrera must show
    that there is a “reasonable probability” that the outcome
    would have been different but for his attorney’s error. See
    
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    . We’ve interpreted “reasonable
    probability” to mean “one sufficient to undermine confidence
    in the outcome, but . . . less than the preponderance more-
    likely-than-not standard.”         Lambright v. Schriro,
    
    490 F.3d 1103
    , 1121 (9th Cir. 2007) (internal quotations
    omitted).
    The majority holds that Carrera cannot show a reasonable
    probability that he would have succeeded in challenging the
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       21
    striking of six of the eight Hispanic jurors. See Maj. op. at 9.
    But Carrera’s evidence of unconstitutional racial bias matched
    Wheeler’s examples of evidence that demonstrates prejudicial
    jury selection. The prosecutor struck “most” of the Hispanic
    jurors. See 
    Wheeler, 583 P.2d at 764
    . He also “used a
    disproportionate number of his peremptories against the
    group” by directing thirty-five percent of his strikes against
    Hispanics although they comprised only sixteen percent of the
    jurors in the box. See 
    id. Since no Wheeler
    challenge was actually made, it is hard
    to know what explanation the prosecutor would have
    provided for his strikes of Hispanic jurors. Nonetheless, the
    majority offers a few “obvious” explanations from its reading
    of the record. See Maj. op. at 9. Upon closer scrutiny,
    however, these explanations are neither obvious nor
    reasonable.
    A. The Record Does Not Show Legitimate, Non-
    Prejudicial Reasons for Striking the Hispanic
    Jurors
    1. Prospective Juror Lawrence Martinez
    The majority concedes that the peremptory strike of
    Lawrence Martinez “was problematic.” See Maj. op. at 9.
    Martinez “unequivocally expressed his ability to impose the
    death penalty,” had no family members with any type of
    criminal history, and had no connection to any of the parties
    or witnesses in Carrera’s case. Maj. op. at 9. Striking
    Martinez was improper. As California Justice Stanley Mosk
    emphasized two years before he presided over Carrera’s
    appeal, “[t]he exercise of one improper challenge is, of
    22                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    course, sufficient to establish a [Wheeler] violation.” People
    v. Ledesma, 
    729 P.2d 839
    , 881 (Cal. 1987) (Mosk, J.,
    concurring). Had defense counsel Huffman objected to
    prosecutor Vedrasco’s improper strike of Martinez, that
    objection alone could have established a Wheeler violation.
    2. Prospective Juror Petra Celedon
    The majority finds an “obvious” reason for striking Petra
    Celedon. According to the majority, “prospective juror, Petra
    Celedon, appeared bitter about being called to jury service.”
    Maj. op. at 9. But as Celedon herself clarified, she was not
    bitter about jury service. A special education teacher,
    Celedon was sorry she was absent from school on the day she
    reported for jury duty in particular. As she explained: “this is
    a special day for [students] and some of them have been very
    anxious because I am not going to be there today.”
    Prospective jurors were told that the trial would not start until
    the following week, after the end of the school year. Celedon
    told the prosecutor that after school finished for the year, she
    would have no problem serving as a fair juror. But while
    Celedon’s school let out for the summer well before the start
    of trial, the prosecutor nonetheless struck her, and the
    majority sees no problem.
    3. Prospective Juror Alice Hernandez
    The majority finds an “obvious non-discriminatory”
    reason for the prosecutor’s strike of Alice Hernandez: she
    “worked at the juvenile detention facility where Carrera’s co-
    defendant was held.” Maj. op. at 9. Under questioning by
    Huffman, Hernandez stated that she worked in housekeeping,
    did not know the co-defendant, and had never heard of the
    CARRERA V . AYERS                      23
    case. Furthermore, the prosecutor never asked Hernandez any
    questions about her employment or whether her employment
    had any impact on her ability to serve as an impartial juror.
    This lack of follow-up questioning raises a red flag under
    Green v. LaMarque, 
    532 F.3d 1028
    , 1033 (9th Cir. 2008),
    which explained that if a prosecutor challenges a juror for a
    factor on which he asked no questions, that lack of further
    questioning tends to establish that the factor was pretextual.
    Had the prosecutor given the same reason for striking
    Hernandez as the majority advances, this court likely would
    have found the reason to be pretext. Nevertheless, the
    majority is somehow comfortable that Hernandez was struck
    because she worked in housekeeping at the juvenile detention
    center, not because she was Hispanic.
    4. Prospective Juror Maria Carrillo
    In the case of Maria Carrillo, the majority speculates that
    the prosecutor struck her because she “had a son who had a
    criminal record.” Maj. op. at 9. Again, this explanation is
    less than satisfying in light of this case’s record. As a
    teenager, Carrillo’s son was arrested once for stealing. The
    arrest occurred fifteen years before Carrera’s trial. When the
    prosecutor asked Carrillo whether she had any bad feelings
    toward the court or the police, she answered no. The
    majority’s justification is even less convincing because the
    prosecutor did not exercise peremptory strikes against two
    white jurors even though their sons had more serious criminal
    records. Those records involved convictions for theft and
    drug possession, and even prison time.
    The majority’s speculation, had it been offered by the
    prosecutor, would have fallen under the Supreme Court’s
    24                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    definition of pretext. See Miller-El v. Dretke, 
    545 U.S. 231
    ,
    241 (2005) (“If a prosecutor’s proffered reason for striking a
    [minority] panelist applies just as well to an otherwise-similar
    [non-minority] who is permitted to serve, that is evidence
    tending to prove purposeful discrimination”); see also Snyder
    v. Louisiana, 
    552 U.S. 472
    , 483-84 (2008). This court found
    pretext where a prosecutor claimed that he discharged a black
    juror because her relative had a criminal history while he
    seated white jurors whose relatives had equivalent criminal
    histories. 
    Green, 532 F.3d at 1033
    . The majority seeks to
    justify the prosecutor’s exercise of a peremptory strike against
    Carrillo stating reasons this court has rejected when offered
    by a prosecutor. I cannot go along with that.
    5. Prospective Juror Mary Garcia
    The majority justifies the strike of Mary Garcia because,
    the majority insists, Garcia “told the court at the beginning of
    her voir dire that she could not impose the death penalty,
    though she later said she could do so.” Maj. op. at 9. As the
    majority opinion concedes, Garcia said that she could impose
    the death penalty and that she would, in appropriate
    circumstances. Asked by the court if she could “think of a
    case where the crime for instance is so vicious that the death
    penalty should be imposed,” Garcia said “yeah.” Asked
    whether she could vote for the death penalty in such a case,
    she said “yes.” Asked once more by the court whether she
    opposed the death penalty, Garcia gave her final answer:
    “no.” But, Thomas Yale, a white juror, also expressed
    reservations about the death penalty. Nevertheless, the
    prosecutor did not exercise a peremptory strike against Yale,
    and he served as a juror.
    CARRERA V . AYERS                      25
    In short, the record shows one peremptory strike against
    a Hispanic juror that even the majority opinion concedes to be
    “problematic” and four strikes of Hispanic jurors where there
    is no plausible explanation other than racial prejudice. This
    record cried out for Carrera’s counsel, Huffman, to make a
    Wheeler objection. When Carrera’s case was on appeal to the
    California Supreme Court, prosecutor Vedrasco filed an
    affidavit that he “could have come up with specific reasons
    justifying each of [his] challenges.” That statement is
    unsupported by the record.
    Moreover, the prosecutor’s credibility is doubtful, given
    his misconduct in prosecuting the case. This misconduct was
    so severe that the U.S. District Court vacated Carrera’s death
    sentence because the court determined that the prosecutor had
    “elicited contradictory evidence,” “argued inconsistently” at
    the separate trials of Carrera and the juvenile co-defendant,
    and “concealed the fact of inducements to inmate witnesses.”
    Carrera v. Ayers, No. 1:90-CV-00478-AWI, 
    2008 WL 681842
    , at *2 (E.D. Cal. Mar. 11, 2008). The question is not
    whether “the prosecutor might have had good reasons to
    strike the prospective jurors. What matters is the real reason
    they were stricken.” Paulino v. Castro, 
    371 F.3d 1083
    , 1090
    (9th Cir. 2004).
    B. The Fact that Two Hispanic Jurors Were Seated
    Does Not Undermine a Wheeler Claim.
    In attempting to demonstrate that Carrera cannot show a
    “reasonable probability” of succeeding on his Wheeler claim,
    the majority concludes that the Wheeler motion would have
    likely failed under the law at the time because two Hispanic
    jurors made it onto the jury. Maj. op. at 10. To support this
    26                   CARRERA V . AYERS
    claim, the majority relies on a pair of California appellate
    court cases, People v. Boyd, 
    212 Cal. Rptr. 873
    , 880-82
    (Ct. App. 1985) and People v. Davis, 
    234 Cal. Rptr. 859
    , 866
    (Ct. App. 1987). But those cases were not on the books at the
    time of Carrera’s 1983 trial. And in People v. Snow, the
    California Supreme Court overruled both cases before
    Carrera’s appeal, so they would never have governed
    Carrera’s Wheeler motion. See People v. Snow, 
    746 P.2d 452
    ,
    457 (Cal. 1987) (“we disapprove language in People v. Davis
    . . . suggesting that the presence of two or three Blacks in the
    jury box following voir dire precludes the trial court from
    finding a prima facie case of exclusion.”).
    People v. Snow explained that “the fact that the prosecutor
    passed or accepted a jury containing two Black persons [does
    not] end our [Wheeler] inquiry, for to so hold would provide
    an easy means of justifying a pattern of unlawful
    discrimination which stops only slightly short of total
    exclusion.” 
    Id. at 456-57 (internal
    quotations omitted). Just
    as in Carrera’s case, the prosecutor in Snow struck six out of
    eight minority jurors. 
    Id. at 457. The
    defense attorney in
    Snow objected to those disproportionate strikes despite the
    prosecutor’s acceptance of two African-American jurors. In
    Snow, the California Supreme Court held that the defense
    attorney had successfully established a prima facie case for a
    Wheeler motion, and thus reversed the conviction. 
    Id. at 457- 58.
    Unlike the defense attorney in Snow, Carrera’s defense
    counsel did not object to the disproportionate strikes of
    minority jurors. Had she done so, the California Supreme
    Court would have been guided by the decision it made three
    years earlier in Snow, and it likely would have found that the
    CARRERA V . AYERS                       27
    two Hispanic people on Carrera’s jury did not negate the other
    discriminatory peremptory juror strikes.
    III.   Conclusion
    The Supreme Court has long held that a “fair trial in a fair
    tribunal is a basic requirement of due process.” In re
    Murchison, 
    349 U.S. 133
    , 136 (1955). Carrera did not receive
    a fair trial because the prosecutor purposefully excluded
    Hispanic jurors, and Carrera’s attorney did nothing to
    challenge him. The majority does not dispute that Carrera’s
    attorney erred, but it somehow finds that Carrera’s claim
    would not have had a “reasonable probability” of succeeding.
    The majority reaches that conclusion by misreading the record
    and the law. I respectfully dissent.